BEFORE the day the gleaming dawn doth flee: -- All yesternight I had a dreary dream; Methought I walk'd in desert Academe Among fallen pillars -- and there came to me, All in a dim half-twilight silently, A very sad old man -- his eyes were red With over-weeping -- and he cried and said "The light hath risen but shineth not on me." Beautiful Athens, all thy loveliness Is like the scarce remember'd burst of spring When now the summer in her party dress Hath clothed the woods, and fill'd each living thing With ripest joy -- because upon our time Hath risen the noon, and thou wert in thy prime. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IN LOVE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO MARK ANTHONY IN HEAVEN by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE DEAD PAN by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING A SONNET by JAMES KENNETH STEPHEN TO THE KING OF THULE by HENRI ALLORGE VARIATIONS ON A THEME by ALFRED GOLDSWORTHY BAILEY POLYHYMNIA: VERSES TO LORD NORREYS, SELECTION by WILLIAM BASSE |