O ROSY red, O torrent splendour Staining all the Orient gloom, O celestial work of wonder -- A million mornings in one bloom! What, does the artist of creation Try some new plethora of flame, For his eye's fresh fascination? Has the old cosmic fire grown tame? In what subnatural strange awaking Is this body, which seems mine? These feet towards that blood-burst making, These ears which thunder, these hands which twine On grotesque iron? Icy-clear The air of a mortal day shocks sense, My shaking men pant after me here. The acid vapours hovering dense, The fury whizzing in dozens down, The clattering rafters, clods calcined, The blood in the flints and the trackway brown -- I see I am clothed and in my right mind; The dawn but hangs behind the goal. What is that artist's joy to me? Here limps poor Jock with a gash in the poll, His red blood now is the red I see, The swooning white of him, and that red! These bombs in boxes, the craunch of shells, The second-hand flitting round; ahead! It's plain we were born for this, naught else. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...RAHEL TO VARNHAGEN by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON A FOREST HYMN by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT THE BUOY-BELL by CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER NO SONGS IN WINTER by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE STORY OF ZERBIN AND ISABELLA, FR. ORLANDO FURIOSO by LUDOVICO (LODOVICO) ARIOSTO TO A DEAD JOURNALIST by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: FATIMA by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON STANZAS IN PROSPECT OF DEATH by ROBERT BURNS MASQUE AT THE MARRIAGE OF THE EARL OF SOMERSET: MASQUERS FIRST DANCE by THOMAS CAMPION |