How can he unenraptured stand Who marvelously may command Seven suns in either hand? Turning on a twisted thread, Constellations green and red Float above his placid head, And as he walks, each hollow ball, A bobbing planet smooth and small, Must with his motion rise and fall. He who for silver would possess Cheaply a private world, no less, To satisfy his happiness, Wholly his own to loose or bind, May with this merchant quickly find The bubble brightest to his mind; Then, having bought, may watch it go Slowly to nothing, and may know, Seeing it shrink, all worlds are so. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AN INTERNATIONAL EPISODE (1889) by CAROLINE KING DUER RHAPSODY ON A WINDY NIGHT by THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT BLUE-BUTTERFLY DAY by ROBERT FROST SONNET: ADDRESSED TO HAYDON (2) by JOHN KEATS THE REPLY OF Q. HORATIUS FLACCUS TO A ROMAN 'ROUND-ROBIN' by ALFRED AUSTIN EVENING by SYLVIA HORTENSE BLISS GHOST OF THE BEAUTIFUL PAST by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |