His hair lit up the tea-shop like a fire, The naked flame of youth made manifest -- Young hunger's unappeasable desire Devouring cakes and cream with eager zest: While cheek by jowl, an old man, bald and blind And peaked and withered as a waning moon, With toothless, mumbling gums, and wandering mind Supped barley-water from a tremulous spoon. I turned a moment: and the man was gone: And as I looked upon the red-haired boy, About him in a blinding glory shone The sons of morning singing together for joy. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET: 129 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE DOST THOU ASK? by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS THE WIRES by ALEXANDER ANDERSON WAR DEAD by PATRICK JOHN MCALISTER ANDERSON AT ELLIS ISLAND by GEORGE LAWRENCE ANDREWS SONGS IN ABSENCE: 10 by ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH HORACE: SONG AT THE END OF ACT 4 by PIERRE CORNEILLE TO DELIA: DEDICATORY SONNET TO LADY MARY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE by SAMUEL DANIEL |