OF bronze and blaze The north, to-night! So adequate its forms, So preconcerted with itself, So distant to alarms, -- An unconcern so sovereign To universe, or me, It paints my simple spirit With tints of majesty, Till I take vaster attitudes, And strut upon my stem, Disdaining men and oxygen, For arrogance of them. My splendors are menagerie; But their competeless show Will entertain the centuries When I am, long ago, An island in dishonored grass, Whom none but daisies know. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MEMORY OF THE IRISH DEAD by JOHN KELLS INGRAM THE FEMALE CONVICT by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON SONNET: 9 by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY SEVEN SAD SONNETS: 1. THE HAPPENING by MARY REYNOLDS ALDIS PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 65. AL-WAJID by EDWIN ARNOLD |