He read the vaulted heavens for his book. Stars, variable and constant, were like friends. He watched the Seven Sisters as they danced, And knew by heart the paths Arcturus wends. Peering long hours into his telescope, He swept the mystic vastness of the night -- The shadowed, lonely mountains of the moon Brought to his dreaming soul their weird delight. And now -- since on the wings of wind he's flown, Life's little span on this earth-planet done -- For his rapt eyes what yet may be in store? What fadeless stars, what never-setting sun? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PICKING AND CHOOSING by MARIANNE MOORE EMBLEMS OF LOVE: 17. THE DIFFICULT ADVENTURE by PHILIP AYRES TO HIS EXCELLENCY by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES THE WANDERER: 5. IN HOLLAND: DEATH-IN-LIFE by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON THE HUMMING-BIRD by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON THE CURSE OF MINERA by GEORGE GORDON BYRON THE VAIN QUESTION by ADA CAMBRIDGE |