NOT a single cloud bedims the sky, Not a shadow falls below, But crocodiles creep, enfeebled by heat, Through the lotus flowers that grow On the banks of the Nile, the placid Nile, The Nile of ages ago. So sluggish and wan it wanders on Where the citron and doum palms grow, Where Sphinxes stare, through the lurid air, At the sun in its molten glow; That's called the Nile, the tranquil Nile, Of ages and ages ago. On the purple sheen of its mirror heart Her galleys bend and row, And Egypt's queen can still be seen, Of olden lands the foe. Ah! this was the Nile, the ancient Nile, The Nile of the long ago. By ashen banks of the ancient stream The acacia tree bends low, The ibis stands in this tomb of lands, As if in a pallor of woe, On the banks of the Nile, the sacred Nile, The Nile of ages ago. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ARCHITECT AT THE EDGE OF THE SEA by KAREN SWENSON IN A MYRTLE SHADE by WILLIAM BLAKE COUSIN NANCY by THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT BERNARDO DEL CARPIO by FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS IN HOSPITAL: 4. BEFORE by WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY THE FAIR THIEF by CHARLES WYNDHAM |