FLING him amongst the cobbles of the street Midmost along a mob's most turbid tide; Stun him with tumult upon every side -- Wrangling of hoarsened voices that repeat His awful guilt and howl for vengeance meet; Let white-faced women stare, all torrid-eyed, With hair blown forward, and with jaws dropped wide, And some face like his mother's glimmer sweet An instant in the hot core of his eyes. Then snatch him with claw hands, and thong his head That he may look no way but toward the skies That glower lividly and crackle red, -- There let some knuckled fist of lightning rise -- Draw backward flickeringly and knock him dead. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A HOUSE by JOHN COLLINGS SQUIRE MISPLACED SYMPATHY by CHARLES FOLLEN ADAMS PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 7. AL-MAUMIN by EDWIN ARNOLD THE QUAKER POET; VERSES ON SEEING MYSELF SO DESIGNATED by BERNARD BARTON CLIO, NINE ECLOGUES IN HONOUR OF NINE VIRTUES: 3. OF CONTENTMENT by WILLIAM BASSE |