THE lizard rested on the rock while I sat among the ruins, And the pride of man was like a vision of the night. Lo, the lords of the city have disappeared into darkness, The ancient wilderness hath swallowed up all their work. There is nothing left of the city but a heap of fragments; The bones of a vessel broken by the storm. Behold the waves of the desert wait hungrily for man's dwellings, And the tides of desolation return upon his toil. All that he hath painfully built up is shaken down in a moment, The memory of his glory is buried beneath the billows of sand. Then a voice said, Look again upon the ruins, These broken arches have taught generations to build. Moreover the name of this city shall be remembered, For here a poor man spoke a word that shall not die. this is the glory that is stronger than the desert; God hath given eternity to the thought of man. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE WHITE WOMEN by MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE IN PROGRESS by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI LUCY (5) by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH MY SHIP by ELIZABETH AKERS ALLEN ON THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER, EMPEROR OF THE RUSSIAS by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD LITTLE SISTER by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON CREOLE SLAVE SONG: THE DIRGE OF SY. MALO by GEORGE WASHINGTON CABLE THE TRAGICAL HISTORIE OF PYRAMUS AND THISBE by ABRAHAM COWLEY |