FRIENDLY it stands, that Inn upon the plain, And keen the lamps burn through the cryptic night. How jocund sound the voices, and how bright The cheer! How warm the housing from the rain! The traveler, once arrived, forgets the long, Blank journey leading thither; all the dim, Mysterious days are nothing now to him, Seated amidst the food and wine and song. But when, the reckoning paid, his comrades fled, He steps upon the road and moves away, His soul is puzzled sore -- he can not say What Inn it was, or by whom tenanted. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GETTING A WORD IN by JAMES GALVIN A LETTER FROM A GIRL TO HER OWN OLD AGE by ALICE MEYNELL EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 27. THE POWER OF ELOQUENCE IN LOVE by PHILIP AYRES POLYHYMNIA: SONNET TO LADY FALKLAND UPON HER GOING TO INTO IRELAND by WILLIAM BASSE A COMMENT ON THE SCRIPTURE: 'IN THE BEGINNING WAS THE WORD', JOHN, I,1 by JOHN BYROM |