Stagnant this wintry gloom. Afar The farm-cock bugles his 'Qui vive?' The towering elms are lost in mist; Birds in the thorn-trees huddle a-whist; The mill-race waters grieve. Our shrouded day Dwindles away To final black of eve. Beyond these shades in space of air Ride exterrestrial beings by? Their colours burning rich and fair, Where noon's sunned valleys lie? With inaudible music are they sweet -- Bell, hoof, soft lapsing cry? Turn marvellous faces, each to each? -- Lips innocent of sigh, Or groan or fear, sorrow and grief, Clear brow and falcon eye; Bare foot, bare shoulder in the heat, And hair like flax? Do their horses beat Their way through wildernesses infinite Of starry-crested trees, blue sward, And gold-chasm'd mountain, steeply shored O'er lakes of sapphire dye? Mingled with lisping speech, faint laughter, Echoes the Phoenix' scream of joyance Mounting on high? -- Light-bathed vistas and divine sweet mirth, Beyond dream of spirits penned to earth, Condemned to pine and die?. . . Hath serving Nature, bidden of the gods, Thick-screened Man's narrow sky, And hung these Stygian veils of fog To hide his dingied sty? -- The gods who yet, at mortal birth, Bequeathed him Fantasy? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CINQUAIN: AMAZE by ADELAIDE CRAPSEY THE ORCHARD PIT by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI SORCERY by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH SIMPKIN by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: TO THE QUEEN OF SERPENTS by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON VERSES DESIGNED FOR AN INFIRMARY by JOHN BYROM |