I caught, for a second, across the crowd -- Just for a second, and barely that -- A face, pox-pitted and evil-browed, Hid in the shade of a slouch-rim'd hat -- With small gray eyes, of a look as keen As the long, sharp nose that grew between. And I said: 'Tis a sketch of Nature's own, Drawn I' the dark o' the moon, I swear, On a tatter of Fate that the winds have blown Hither and thither and everywhere -- With its keen little sinister eyes of gray, And nose like the beak of a bird of prey! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BALLAD MADE AT THE REQUEST OF HIS MOTHER .. PRAY TO OUR LADY by FRANCOIS VILLON ELEGY: 18. LOVES PROGRESS by JOHN DONNE THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM BY THE BABYLONIAN HORDES by ISAAC ROSENBERG WHERE SHALL I DIE? by MARIA ABDY THE DAUGHTERS OF ATLAS by AESCHYLUS AN AUTUMN NIGHT by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS VERSES DESIGNED TO BE SENT TO MR. ADAMS by ELIZABETH FRANCES AMHERST |