BEWARE! His eye is not less stern and cold Than that of her who cuts the fatal thread; Arrows of mischief in his beams are shed, Disease and death that seek the guarded fold; And treason flourishes, and hate grows bold. His light was in the spaces overhead When Cæsar fell at Pompey's statue dead, And Father Tiber trembled as he rolled. Pity the child that opens now its eyes For the first time and meets that baleful stare; Pity the ship that out of harbor flies, If Saturn reigns, although the winds be fair; Good fortune withers at the root and dies While that large planet travels through the air. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WHEN DE CO'N PONE'S HOT by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR WRITTEN IN KEATS' 'ENDYMION' by THOMAS HOOD THE CHERRY TREES by PHILIP EDWARD THOMAS IMAGES: 2 by RICHARD ALDINGTON THE IVY; ADDRESSED TO A YOUNG FRIEND by BERNARD BARTON GILBERT: 2. THE WELCOME HOME by CHARLOTTE BRONTE ANTICIPATION by EMILY JANE BRONTE BEAUTY CRUCIFIED by ANNA SHAW BUCK TO SIR ASTON COCKAYNE, ON HIS TRAGEDY OF OVID by CHARLES COTTON |