Should you lay ear to these lines, you will not catch a distant drum of hoofs, cavalcade of Arabians, passionate horde bearing down, destroying your citadel -- but maybe you'll hear -- should you just listen at the right place, hold it tenaciously, give your full blood to the effort -- maybe you'll note the start of a single step, always persistently faint, wavering in its movement between coming and going, never quite arriving, never quite passing -- and tell me which it is, you or I that you greet, searching a mutual being -- and whether two aren't closer for the labour of an ear? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPISTLE TO JOHN LAPRAIK, AN OLD SCOTTISH BARD by ROBERT BURNS YOUTH AND CUPID by ELIZABETH I PANDOSTO, THE TRIUMPH OF TIME: IN PRAISE OF HIS BEST-BELOVED FAWNIA by ROBERT GREENE SHERIDAN'S RIDE [DECEMBER 19, 1864] by THOMAS BUCHANAN READ A LIFE'S PARALLELS by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST by ALISON RUTHERFORD PSALM OF THOSE WHO GO FORTH BEFORE DAYLIGHT by CARL SANDBURG |