Who wouldn't ride as high as Bellerophon If he had such a splendid horse to ride? I cannot feign content, debate upon Matters of recklessness; I cannot hide My envy of that furious golden leap Dizzily into the sun: Through every even Step of my humble horse I hear the steep Hoof of Pegasus beating the clouds of heaven. Bellerophon fell more swift than the rain sighing Over the flattened field where he sprawled dead. But marvellous, even that moment before dying -- Ere the wild upward ecstasy could dim: The tumult of the wind about his head, The march of thunders driving under him. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AFFIRMATION by LOUIS UNTERMEYER SECRECY PROTESTED by THOMAS CAREW VALENTINES TO MY MOTHER: 1884 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI THE PRINCESS: SONG by ALFRED TENNYSON INCIDENT CHARACTERISTIC OF A FAVOURITE DOG by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH S. JAMES BP. OF JERUSALEM by JOSEPH BEAUMONT STEEL OR GOLD?; THE QUESTION by LOUISA SARAH BEVINGTON THE AUTHOR OF 'THE GREAT ILLUSION' by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |