OVER the great city, Where the wind rustles through the parks and gardens, In the air, the high clouds brooding, In the lines of street perspective, the lamps, the traffic, The pavements and the innumerable feet upon them, I Am: make no mistakedo not be deluded. Think not because I do not appear at the first glancebecause the centuries have gone by and there is no assured tidings of methat therefore I am not there. Think not because all goes its own way that therefore I do not go my own way through all. The fixed bent of hurrying faces in the streeteach turned towards its own light, seeing no otheryet I am the Light towards which they all look. The toil of so many hands to such multifarious ends, yet my hand knows the touch and twining of them all. All come to me at last There is no love like mine For all other love takes one and not another; And other love is pain, but this is joy eternal. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE FORSAKEN MERMAN by MATTHEW ARNOLD THE THREE ENEMIES by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI BIVOUAC ON A MOUNTAIN SIDE by WALT WHITMAN WHEN by SARAH CHAUNCEY WOOLSEY TO HIS LYRE by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE POET: A RHAPSODY by MARK AKENSIDE THE BROKEN WATER WHEEL by GHALIB IBN RIBAH AL-HAJJAM POEM FOR PICTURE: TO A DRAWING OF A HORSE BY GEORGIO DI CHIRICO by FRANK ANKENBRAND JR. |