A MONUMENT of love! more glorious love Than ever bloom'd beneath the eternal sun, Than any which the poets harp upon, Or old Romance hath into being wove. It stood far distant from the under grove, Upon a mountain pinnacle, alone; Large as the giant piles of Babylon, Silent as if no living thing did move Within its halls; the whisper echoes slept, Subdued to silence by the lordly gloom, For with a timid air the daylight crept, And hardly broke into the middle room, Where a dark-veiled woman sat and wept -- 'Twas Artemisia by her husband's tomb! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BLOOD ON THE WHEEL by ALEXANDER ANDERSON SONNET ON PIETRO REGGIO HIS SETTING TO MUSIC MR. COWLEY'S POEMS by PHILIP AYRES A LETTER by PHILIP JAMES BAILEY THE WEDDING DAY; OR, THE BUCCANEER'S CURSE; A FAMILY LEGEND by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM THIRD YPRES by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN SONNETS FOR NEW YORK CITY: 1. NEW YORK AT SUNRISE by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH THE CATBIRD by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON VISTAS OF LABOR: 4. FACTORY CHILDREN by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |