WHEN he for whom, through portals strangely wrought Of eye and ear, the watchful senses bore From realms of light and sound a stintless store, Or thrilled, with many a subtler message fraught, Down myriad fibres fine: when he is taught To leave the league of nerve with brainDeath's lore In that new world shall he indeed no more Remember days when these have served his thought? For haply there may power that passeth men's Wait on his will, to make the mirroring lens, The quivering cord, poor tools of mortal wight, Weak aid and cumbrous seem, and so for him Earth-life on memory loom all dusk and dim As ways trod once through blinding mirk of night. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AN EPIGRAM ON SCOLDING by JONATHAN SWIFT LINES TO BE SPOKEN BY THOMAS DENMAN.....WHEN FOUR YEARS OLD by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER (DEDICATED TO MISS ELLA F. KENNEDY) by SARA S. BASHEFKIN ECCE IN DESERTO by HENRY AUGUSTIN BEERS SUBMARINE BADINAGE by BERTON BRALEY ON ANDREW TURNER by ROBERT BURNS |