Clutching the brink with hands and feet and knees, With trembling heart, and eyes grown strangely dim, A part thyself and parcel of the frieze Of that colossal temple raised to Time, To gaze on horror, till, as in a crime, Thou and the rocks become accomplices. There is no voice, no life 'twixt thee and them. No life! Yet, look, far down upon the breeze Something has passed across the bosom bare Of the red rocks, a leaf, a shape, a shade. A living shadow! Ay, above thee there, Weaving majestic circles overhead, Others are watching.This is the sublime To be alone, with eagles in the air. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GROWING GRAY by HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON EXODUS FOR OREGON by CINCINNATUS HEINE MILLER SIDNEY GODOLPHIN by CLINTON SCOLLARD PUCK AND THE FAIRY, FR. A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE THE TWO MASKS by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH ISLE OF BEAUTY by THOMAS HAYNES BAYLY LADIES FAIR by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH THE ROCK OF LIBERTY; A PILGRIM ODE, 1620-1920: 2. STRUGGLE by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN |