In the blue opal of a winter noon, When all the world was a white floor Lit by the northern sun, I saw with naked eyes a midday star Burn on like gleaming spar, Where all its fellows of the mighty dusk Had perished one by one. When I shall have put by the vagrant will, And down this rover's twilight road Emerge into the sun, Be thou my only sheer and single star, Known, named, and followed far, When all these Jack-o'-lantern hopes and fears Have perished one by one! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ANGEL, FR. SONGS OF EXPERIENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE MENELAUS AND HELEN by RUPERT BROOKE 23RD STREET RUNS INTO HEAVEN by KENNETH PATCHEN IN MEMORIAM A.H.H.: 78 by ALFRED TENNYSON KNOWLEDGE by HENRY DAVID THOREAU FOR THE INAUGURATION OF A PUBLIC SCHOOL, CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY by WALT WHITMAN THE WORLD'S WAY by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH |