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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
I AND YOU, by NIKOLAI (NIKOLAY) STEPANOVICH GUMILEV Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Yes, I come from another country Last Line: "and harlot will cry: ""friend, arise!" Alternate Author Name(s): Gumilyov, Nikolay | |||
YES, I come from another country, To your world I can never belong. Tinkling guitars cannot please me, I want a wild desolate song. I do not read my verses in drawing-rooms To black-coats and dresses like shrouds. I read my verses to dragons, To the waterfalls and to the clouds. I love like an Arab in the desert Who flings himself on water and drinks, Not like a knight in a picture Who looks at the stars and thinks. I shall not die in a bedroom With a priest and a lawyer beside me. I shall perish in a terrible ravine With a mass of wild ivy to hide me. I shall not go to a Protestant heaven, Open to all in tidy blue skies, But to a place where thief and publican And harlot will cry: "Friend, arise!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CAPTAINS by NIKOLAI (NIKOLAY) STEPANOVICH GUMILEV INDEPENDENCE DAY, 1956, A FAIRY TALE by JAMES GALVIN TO GERMANY by CHARLES HAMILTON SORLEY THE DISCOVERY; SONNET by JOHN COLLINGS SQUIRE THE ROSE TREE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS TO THE SOLITUDE OF FONTENAY by GUILLAUME AMFRYE LILIES: 8 by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) HOW THE WINNING FOUR WEST HOME by WILLIAM ROSE BENET |
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