I followed once a fleet and mighty serpent Into a cavern in a mountain's side; And, wading many lakes, descending gulphs, At last I reached the ruins of a city, Built not like ours but of another world, As if the aged earth had loved in youth The mightiest city of a perished planet, And kept the image of it in her heart, So dream-like, shadowy, and spectral was it. Nought seemed alive there, and the bony dead Were of another world the skeletons. The mammoth, ribbed like to an arched cathedral, Lay there, and ruins of great creatures else More like a shipwrecked fleet, too great they seemed For all the life that is to animate: And vegetable rocks, tall sculptured palms, Pines grown, not hewn, in stone; and giant ferns, Whose earthquake-shaken leaves bore graves for nests. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WERE I BUT HIS OWN WIFE by ELLEN MARY PATRICK DOWNING THE GREEK AT CONSTANTINOPLE by RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES ON HIS BEING [OR, HAVING] ARRIVED AT THE AGE OF TWENTY-THREE by JOHN MILTON THE HEART KNOWETH ITS OWN BITTERNESS' (2) by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI ECCLESIASTICAL SONNETS: PART 3: 34. MUTABILITY by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH THE LOVER: A BALLAD by MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU |