When to the sun a man hath raised his eye Too long, thenceforth he sees persistently A floating, livid spot; I for one moment madly bent my gaze, With youth's audacity, on Glory's blaze, The blaze became a blot. Since then, on all things, melancholy, dark, I trace despairingly the spectral mark I strive in vain to shun: Must it forever on my life intrude? Alas! none other than the eagle's brood Unblinded face the sun! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A LETTER FROM ITALY by JOSEPH ADDISON JILTED by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR THE LOST SHEEP by SARAH PRATT MCCLAIN GREENE THE ILIAD: ACHILLES OVER THE TRENCH by HOMER THAT NATURE IS A HERACLITEAN FIRE & OF THE COMFORT OF THE RESURRECTION by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS THE LOW-BACKED CAR by SAMUEL LOVER |