The bards falter in shame, their running verse Stumbles, with marrow-bones the drunken diners Pelt them for their delay. It is a something fearful in the song Plagues theman unknown grief that like a churl Goes common-place in cowskin And bursts unheralded, crowing and coughing, An unpilled holly-club twirled in his hand, Into their many-shielded, samite-curtained, Jewel-bright hall where twelve kings sit at chess Over the white-bronze pieces and the gold; And by a gross enchantment Flails down the rafters and leads off the queens The wild-swan-breasted, the rose-ruddy-cheeked, Raven-haired daughters of their admiration To stir his black pots and to bed on straw. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE REVEILLE by FRANCIS BRET HARTE HIGH FLIGHT by JOHN GILLESPIE MAGEE JR. MODERN LOVE: 1 by GEORGE MEREDITH MAUBERLEY: 5. MEDALLION by EZRA POUND ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 64 by PHILIP SIDNEY COMFORT IN AFFLICTION by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN BLEUE MAISON by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 66. THE THREE AGES OF WOMAN: 1 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |