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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE GOLDEN AGE, by ERNEST FRANCISCO FENOLLOSA Poet Analysis First Line: This world was not Last Line: Of its christ again. | |||
THIS world was not As it now is seen: It once was clothed With a deeper green; And rarer gems Than the ice-caves hold The sea brought up On the sands of gold. But rust of ages, The breath of Time, The meadows covered With early rime; And the wild grass faded, The gems were gone, And the wave fell cold As it thundered on. In bygone ages The world was fair, And the moon-god played With her golden hair; And the paling stars With love-white arms Bent down to welcome A sister's charms. The air lay sweet With the breath of pines; The hill-tops glowed With their wealth of mines; And sweet, and low, And rich, and free, The wild, dark music Stole over the sea. And the sea-waves laughed At the saffron moon; And the musk-rose smiled With her soul of June; And the golden age Of Nature's years No warning heard Of her coming tears. But the hand of man Was the sword of death: A poison lurked In his savage breath, And the wealth of years And the glow of years Were drowned in a flood Of swelling tears. The world was fair In the days of yore; But that golden age Shall come no more. The sun may shine, And wild flowers bloom; But the goal of all Is the open tomb, -- The end of all Is the silent grave; And beauty lies In the cold still wave. And the world shall harden The hearts of men Till it hear the voice Of its Christ again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CHAMBER MUSIC: 15 by JAMES JOYCE PRELUDE; FOR GEOFFREY GORER by EDITH SITWELL KING DAVID by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET THE BALLAD OF WILLIAM SYCAMORE (1790-1880) by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET THE LITTLE BLACK-EYED REBEL by WILLIAM MCKENDREE CARLETON EPIGRAM: A LAME BEGGAR by JOHN DONNE THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 68 by OMAR KHAYYAM |
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