The nights were not made for crowds, and they sever You from your neighbour, and you shall never Seek him, defiantly, at night. But if you make your dark house light, To look on strangers in your room, You must reflect -- on whom. False lights that on men's faces play Distort them gruesomely. You look upon a disarray, A world that seems to reel and sway, A waving, glittering sea. On foreheads gleams a yellow shine, Where thoughts are chased away, Their glances flicker mad from wine, And to the words they say Strange heavy gestures make reply That struggle in the buzzing room; And they say always "I" and "I," And mean--they know not whom. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE HERETIC: 4. HUMILITY by LOUIS UNTERMEYER HOLY POEMS: 2 by GEORGE BARKER THE SUPPLIANT by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON CORINNA TO TANAGRA, FROM ATHENS by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR JANUARY, 1795 by MARY DARBY ROBINSON MARCH'S DAUGHTER by MAUDE PHILIPS BOARD LYDFORD JOURNEY by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) WRETTEN MY ME ON THE DEATH OF MY CHILD PERIGRENE PAYLER by MARY CAREY |