This watery vague how vast! This misty globe, Seen from this center where the ferry plies, It plies, but seems to poise in middle air, Soft gray below gray heavens, and in the West A rose-gray memory of the sunken sun; And, where gray water touches grayer sky, A band of darker gray pricked out with lights, A diamond-twinkling circlet bounding all; And where the statue looms, a quenchless star; And where the lighthouse, a red, pulsing flame; While the great bridge its starry diadem Shows through the gray, itself in grayness lost! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DARKLING THRUSH by THOMAS HARDY ON RECEIVING [THE FIRST] NEWS OF THE WAR by ISAAC ROSENBERG SOLOMON AND THE WITCH by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS JIM'S WHISTLE by ALEXANDER ANDERSON THE REASON by LEONARD BACON (1887-1954) INCOGNITA IN THE TEMPLE OF THESEUS by SEYMOUR GREEN WHEELER BENJAMIN |