Orrick, poet-laureate of St. Louis, and Albert, king of Belgium, are stopping at the Waldorf-Astoria. This could only happen in New York, and the people packing Fifth Avenue, sidewalks, windows, house-tops, flag-poles, waiting for the king, not the poet, to emerge -- this could only happen in people -- for a king, not a poet, has to do with heads, and an appeal to heads makes people emerge, wary as turtles. Is it feet carry them? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SLEEPING BEAUTY by SAMUEL ROGERS NORTHERN FARMER, NEW STYLE by ALFRED TENNYSON AFTER THE PLAY by HAMILTON FISH ARMSTRONG SONNET TO THE KYNGE by THEODORE AGRIPPA D' AUBIGNE AN EPITAPH ON A DUTCH CAPTAIN by PHILIP AYRES TO SLEEP, WHEN SICK OF A FEVER by PHILIP AYRES HYMN, COMPOSED FOR THE CHILDREN OF A SUNDAY SCHOOL by BERNARD BARTON |