I DREAMED I saw that ancient Irish queen, Who from her dun, as dawn had opened wide, Saw the tall foemen rise on every side, And gazed with kindling eye upon the scene, And in delight cried, "Noble is their mien." "Most kingly are they," her own host replied, Praising the beauty, bravery, and pride As if the foe their very kin had been. And then I heard the innumerable hiss Of human adders, nation with poisonous breath Spitting at nation, as if the dragon rage Would claw the spirit, and I woke at this, Knowing the soul of man was sick to death And I was weeping in the Iron Age. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A WINTER NIGHT by SARA TEASDALE PATIENCE TAUGHT BY NATURE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING LAMENT FOR FLODDEN [FIELD] by JEAN ELLIOT (1727-1805) LAST SONNET (REVISED VERSION) by JOHN KEATS A WOMAN'S QUESTION by ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER WASHINGTON MONUMENT BY NIGHT by CARL SANDBURG THE RIVER DUDDON: SONNET 34. AFTER-THOUGHT by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH MERCURY; ON LOSING MY POCKET MILTON AT LUSS NEAR BEN LOMOND by ROBERT ANDREWS |