HERE Icarus fell, the youth of dauntless heart, Who dared to wing his flight through heaven's domain-- Here fell his limbs, his plumes bestrewed the main, Whose fall doth envy to great souls impart. Blest travail of a mind, no perils thwart, Which drew such profit from so little pain; O happy loss, full of so vast a gain, Though vanquished, over time thou victor art. The untried path could not his youth repress, The power denied him, not the hardiness; The sun's fierce splendour lit his funeral pyre. He died; in glory's quest he found his doom, High heaven his glorious aim, the sea his tomb; How nobler fate, or richer grave desire? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...RYTON FIRS by LASCELLES ABERCROMBIE THE WRECK OF THE DEUTSCHLAND by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS QUATRAIN: SPENDTHRIFT by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH DANGEROUS PASSING by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN EPITAPH ON ONE DROWNED IN THE SNOW by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) TO THE READER OF MASTER WILLIAM D'AVENANT'S PLAY, 'THE WITS' by THOMAS CAREW TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 3. THE COMING OF THE LORD by EDWARD CARPENTER |