As one who strays from out some shadowy glade, Fronting a lurid noontide, stern, yet bright, O'er mart and tower, and castellated height, Shrinks slowly backward, dazed and half afraid -- So I, whose household gods their stand have made Far from the populous city's life and light, Its roar of traffic and its stormy might, Shrink as I pass beyond my woodland shade. The wordy conflict, the tempestuous din Of these vast capitals, on ear and brain Beat with the loud, reiterated swell Of one fierce strain of passion and of sin, Strange as in nightmare dreams the mad refrain Of some wild chorus of the vaults of Hell. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPIGRAM: TO FOOL, OR KNAVE by BEN JONSON THE SONG OF HIAWATHA: HIAWATHA'S DEPARTURE by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW SONNET TO MASTER GABRIELL HARVEY, DOCTOR OF LAWES by EDMUND SPENSER THE CASE OF ALBERT IRVING WILLIAMSON by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS SONNETS OF MANHOOD: 15. ONE NIGHT WITH THEE by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) ARISTOPHANES' APOLOGY; BEING THE LAST ADVENTURE OF BALAUSTION: PART 1 by ROBERT BROWNING SONNET ON MOOR PARK - WRITTEN AT LEE PRIORY, AUGUST 10, 1826 by SAMUEL EGERTON BRYDGES |