So thou art come again, old black-winged night, Like a huge bird, between us and the sun, Hiding, with out-stretched form, the genial light; And still, beneath thine icy bosom's dun And cloudy plumage, hatching fog-breathed blight, And embryo storms, and crabbed frosts, that shun Day's warm caress. The owls from ivied loop Are shrieking homage, as thou cowerest high, Like sable crow pausing in eager stoop On the dim world thou gluttest thy clouded eye, Silently waiting latest time's fell whoop, When thou shalt quit thine eyrie in the sky, To pounce upon the world with eager claw, And tomb time, death, and substance in thy maw. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HUMAN ABSTRACT, FR. SONGS OF EXPERIENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE THE QUAKER GRAVEYARD by SILAS WEIR MITCHELL ANACTORIA by ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE THE FOUNTAIN OF PITY by HENRY BATAILLE WINTER NIGHT by GORDON DALE CLARKE |