HE knocked, and I beheld him at the door-- A vision for the gods to verify. "What battered ancientry is this," thought I, "And when, if ever, did we meet before?" But ask him as I might, I got no more For answer than a moaning and a cry: Too late to parley, but in time to die, He staggered, and lay shapeless on the floor. When had I known him? And what brought him here? Love, warning, malediction, hunger, fear? Surely I never thwarted such as he?-- Again, what soiled obscurity was this: Out of what scum, and up from what abyss, Had they arrived--these rags of memory? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO ONE IN BEDLAM by ERNEST CHRISTOPHER DOWSON SPELT FROM SIBYL'S LEAVES by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS THE DIRGE [FOR FIDELE], FR. CYMBELINE by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE TO FOREIGN LANDS by WALT WHITMAN RHENISH AUTUMN; TO TOUSSAINT LUCA by GUILLAUME APOLLINAIRE SEASIDE THOUGHTS by BERNARD BARTON THE WISDOM OF MERLYN by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT EAST SIDE MOVING PICTURE THEATRE - SUNDAY by MAXWELL BODENHEIM |