Classic and Contemporary Poetry
AN UNTOLD STORY, by WILLIAM SHARP Poet's Biography First Line: When the dark falls, and as a single star Last Line: For twice dead he who dies this second death. Alternate Author Name(s): Macleod, Fiona Subject(s): Death; Hearts; Dead, The | ||||||||
I When the dark falls, and as a single star The orient planets blend in one bright ray A-quiver through the violet shadows far Where the rose-red still lingers 'mid the grey: And when the moon, half-cirque around her hollow, Casts on the upland pastures shimmer of green: And the marsh-meteors the frail lightnings follow, And wave lapse into wave with amber sheen -- O then my heart is full of thee, who never From out thy beautiful mysterious eyes Givest one glance at this my wild endeavour, Who hast no heed, no heed, of all my sighs: Is it so well with thee in thy high place That thou canst mock me thus even to my face? II Dull ash-grey frost upon the black-grey fields: Thick wreaths of tortured smoke above the town: The chill impervious fog no foothold yields, But onward draws its shroud of yellow brown. No star can pierce the gloom, no moon dispart: And I am lonely here, and scarcely know What mockery is "death from a broken heart," What tragic pity in the one word: Woe. But I am free of thee, at least, yea free! No more thy bondager 'twixt heaven and hell! No more there numbs, no more there shroudeth me The paralysing horror of thy spell: No more win'st thou this last frail worshipping breath, For twice dead he who dies this second death. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A FRIEND KILLED IN THE WAR by ANTHONY HECHT FOR JAMES MERRILL: AN ADIEU by ANTHONY HECHT TARANTULA: OR THE DANCE OF DEATH by ANTHONY HECHT CHAMPS D?ÇÖHONNEUR by ERNEST HEMINGWAY |
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