I DREAMED one man stood against a thousand, One man damned as a wrongheaded fool. One year and another he walked the streets, And a thousand shrugs and hoots Met him in the shoulders and mouths he passed. He died alone And only the undertaker came to his funeral. Flowers grow over his grave anod in the wind, And over the graves of the thousand, too, The flowers grow anod in the wind. Flowers and the wind, Flowers anod over the graves of the dead, Petals of red, leaves of yellow, streaks of white, Masses of purple sagging . . . I love you and your great way of forgetting. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LILIES: 11. 'I NEED THEE' by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) PASSING HOURS by HELENA A. BOOTH THE ROCK OF LIBERTY; A PILGRIM ODE, 1620-1920: 2. STRUGGLE by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN AMBITION by MARY CAROLYN DAVIES SLIPPERS by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES TO SIR HENRY WOTTON (2) by JOHN DONNE |