'T is not to honor thee by verse of mine I bear a record of thy wondrous power; Thou stand'st alone, and needest not to shine With borrowed lustre: for the light is thine Which no man giveth; and, though comets lower Portentous round thy sphere, thou still art bright; Though many a satellite about thee fall, Leaving their stations merged in trackless night, Yet take not they from that supernal light Which lives within thee, sole, and free of all. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...YOUTH AND ART by ROBERT BROWNING STORY OF THE GATE by HARRISON ROBERTSON SALOME by GUILLAUME APOLLINAIRE THE GLORIOUS GIFT OF GOD by BENJAMIN BEDDOME TO A LADY IN ILLNESS by SAMUEL EGERTON BRYDGES A LOVER, ON AN ACCIDENT NECESSITATING DEPARTURE, CONSULTS WITH REASON by THOMAS CAREW |