I We are they who dream no dreams, Singers of arising day Who undaunted, Where the sword of reason gleams, Follow hard, to hew away The woods enchanted. Through each dark and rustling byway Evil things have fled before us: We pursue them: We have carved an open highway, We have sung of Truth in chorus As we slew them. II Though the shapes had something human, Though sweet lips and eyes entreated By their beauty: Though processions of tall women Looked and lured, we undefeated Did our duty. Though fair children, running after, Held out hands of supplication, Smiled and cried, Yet we watched with bitter laughter When delusion's fair creation Smitten, died. III Where are they, the half-deceivers Statue-forms and young men's fancies, Gods of Greece? Dryads, where your groves and rivers, Where thy chaste and woodland dances, Artemis? Shadows, shadows! None will follow Cyprian maids; or voices sighing From the sea; Veiled is Iris, dark Apollo, Dead the Queen who called the dying Hecate. * * * V Where are they who crushed the East With ribaldry and song, and where The lewd viziers? Where the girls who crowned the feast For the Lords who had no care Of blood or tears? Where the millions who, forgotten, Fought for Selim's sultanate And filled Gehenna? Where the sword? -- but dim and rotten Lies the sword that cleft the gate Of proud Vienna. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GHOSTS OF A LUNATIC ASYLUM by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET ATELIER CEZANNE by CLARENCE MAJOR BOTANICAL GARDENS by EDGAR LEE MASTERS GREEN RIVER by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT DARKNESS by GEORGE GORDON BYRON SONNET TO THE RIVER OTTER by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE THOSE VARIOUS SCALPELS by MARIANNE MOORE |