THE blue above immeasurably deep, And blue around for many a shimmering mile, Where sky and sea unbosom all they keep, In open secret, to the lonely Isle, Yea, as of old, when Christ's Apostle came, And saw, and heardthere all things are the same. O Isle of Visions, shall there be again The open vision ever? Are the days So evil that among all living men None may interpret now the light that strays Still earthward through the thin and wavering screen, None say, in rapt assurance, "I have seen"? The cloud-built Citybuilt of all things rare The many voices breaking on the shore, The trumpets that run, blowing, down the air, These baffle our dull senses; evermore We look and listen, and remain unstirred, Waiting for some one who has seen and heard. Perhaps he sleeps; perhaps the dream is on Of things that were, and are, and still shall be, Stars, swords, white horses, piercèd hands; anon The River and Tree of Life, and no more sea. He will proclaim it, ere the age go quite, Our Poet, when the Angel whispers, "Write." For he will find in common sights and sounds More keen than we to listen and to look Beauty and truth from the eternal bounds, And he shall write them in his own new book, And be the prophet-poet of our choice, O Island of the Vision and the Voice! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE NEED FOR MEN by JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS by THOMAS HOOD SONNET by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS MINIVER CHEEVY by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 51. WILLOWWOOD (3) by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI TIPPERARY: 5. BY OUR OWN EUGENE FIELD by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS |