No sound of bird now breathes from the hushed walls. Only the wind whistles through the long night Where ghosts of the dead wander. And less bright, The moon shimmers on swirling snow that falls On snow-whipped fields. Approach the eerie calls Of yowling wolves. And in the filtered light, The fosses of the walls are frozen tight With blood and bodies where the wild pack yawls. Spent are its arrows, bowstrings snapped in twain, Its warring engines useless from the blast. The strength of its war steeds is ebbed away; The strange fire dead that it had hurled in vain Upon the Mongols as they plundered past. Genghis Kha Khan has scampered through Cathay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO HIS CONSCIENCE by ROBERT HERRICK AFTERNOON ON A HILL by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY IN STATE by BYRON FORCEYTHE WILLSON IMAGES: 2 by RICHARD ALDINGTON OF GENERAL GOURAUD by ROBERTA BALFOUR THE ARGO'S CHANTY by WILLIAM ROSE BENET PSALM 76 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE LINES [WRITTEN] IN THE TRAVELLER'S BOOK AT ORCHOMENUS by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |