GREAT Fortune is an hungry thing, And filleth no heart anywhere. Though men with fingers menacing Point at the great house, none will dare, When Fortune knocks, to bar the door Proclaiming: "Come thou here no more!" Lo, to this man the Gods have given Great Ilion in the dust to tread And home return, emblazed of heaven; If it is writ, he too shall go Through blood for blood spilt long ago; If he too, dying for the dead, Should crown the deaths of alien years, What mortal afar off, who hears, Shall boast him Fortune's Child, and led Above the eternal tide of tears? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MONTEREY [SEPTEMBER 23, 1846] by CHARLES FENNO HOFFMAN PLAYING IT SAFE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS AFTER THE NIGHT by NOUREDDIN ADDIS BIRTHDAY LINES TO AGNES BAILLIE by JOANNA BAILLIE SONNET: 2 by RICHARD BARNFIELD THE RUSSIAN STUDENT'S TALE by MATHILDE BLIND |