THE trembling train clings to the leaning wall Of solid stone; a thousand feet below Sinks a black gulf; the sky hangs like a pall Upon the peaks of everlasting snow. Then of a sudden springs a rim of light, Curved like a silver sickle. High and higher -- Till the full moon burns on the breast of night, And a million firs stand tipped with lucent fire. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO MARK ANTHONY IN HEAVEN by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE COLISEUM by EDGAR ALLAN POE BREAK, BREAK, BREAK by ALFRED TENNYSON A SONG FOR THE SINGLE TABLE ON NEW YEAR'S DAY by ELIZABETH FRANCES AMHERST LILIES: 30. THE WHOLE by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) JOB 3:3-26. JOB CURSETH THE DAY, AND SERVICES OF HIS BIRTH by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |