ABOVE him in the city street, The flame of noon increased; With tumult as when armies meet, Life urged her great and least; 'Mid din and turmoil, dust and heat, Went driven man and beast. @3He felt the salt wind on his face, The wet sand at his feet; He saw the white sails lift again, He heard the singing sailor men Above the combers' beat; And half the way across the world the song came clear and sweet.@1 Above the dismal lodging hung The heavy heat of day; The swarming insects buzzed and clung; Within the gas-light's ray Men wrangled in an alien tongue, Or slept as cattle may. @3He felt the cool of dew-damp fields, He heard the fiddles play The old remembered dancing tune; He saw the white midsummer moon, And mocking -- luring -- gay, The sound of one girl's laughter came from half a world away.@1 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ELEGY: 11. THE BRACELET; UPON THE LOSS OF HIS MISTRESS'S CHAIN by JOHN DONNE THE IRISH SPINNING-WHEEL by ALFRED PERCEVAL GRAVES RECESSIONAL (1) by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON TO THE BELOVED by ALICE MEYNELL BARS FIGHT, AUGUST 28, 1746 by LUCY TERRY WINTER TREE by WALTER R. ADAMS TANGLED TRAILS by GLADYS NAOMI ARNOLD OSSIAN'S ADDRESS TO THE SUN IN 'CARTHON' by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |