THE sun from the west glares back, And the sun from the watered track, And the sun from the sheets of glass, And the sun from each window-brass; Sun-mirrorings, too, brighten From show-cases beneath The laughing eyes and teeth Of ladies who rouge and whiten. And the same warm god explores Panels and chinks of doors; Problems with chymists' bottles Profound as Aristotle's He solves, and with good cause, Having been ere man was. Also he dazzles the pupils of one who walks west, A city-clerk, with eyesight not of the best, Who sees no escape to the very verge of his days From the rut of Oxford Street into open ways; And he goes along with head and eyes flagging forlorn, Empty of interest in things, and wondering why he was born. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ST. JOHN'S, CAMBRIDGE; SONNET by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW ON A BOY'S FIRST READING OF THE PLAY OF 'KING HENRY THE FIFTH' by SILAS WEIR MITCHELL MARECHAL NIEL by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 40. FAREWELL TO JULIET (2) by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT A HERO OF SAN JUAN HILL by OLIVA WARD BUSH PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY: OF PROPRIETY by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY ISRAEL'S GOD by LAWRENCE COHEN |