FROM this carved chair wherein I sit to-night, The dead man read in accents deep and strong, Through lips that were like Chaucer's, his great song About the Beryl and its virgin light; And still that music lives in death's despite, And though my pilgrimage on earth be long, Time cannot do my memory so much wrong As e'er to make that gracious voice take flight. I sit here with closed eyes; the sound comes back, With youth, and hope, and glory on its track, A solemn organ-music of the mind; So, when the oracular moon brings back the tide, After long drought, the sandy channel wide Murmurs with waves, and sings beneath the wind. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO A SCREEN-MAKER by MARIANNE MOORE ON THE RHINE by WILLIAM LISLE BOWLES HYPOCRISY by SAMUEL BUTLER (1612-1680) THE BALLAD OF CHRISTMAS by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 32. AL-KHABIR by EDWIN ARNOLD TWO SONNETS FROM NEW YORK: QUESTIONS by ADELAIDE NICHOLS BAKER |