MORN in the East! How coldly fair It breaks upon my fever'd eye! How chides the calm and dewy air! How chides the pure and pearly sky! The stars melt in a brighter fire -- The dew, in sunshine, leaves the flowers -- They, from their watch, in light retire, While we, in sadness, pass from ours. I turn from the rebuking morn, -- The cold gray sky, and fading star, -- And listen to the harp and horn, And see the waltzers near and far -- The lamps and flowers are bright as yet, And lips beneath more bright than they, -- How can a scene so fair beget The mournful thoughts we bear away! 'Tis something that thou art not here, Sweet lover of my lightest word! 'Tis something that my mother's tear By these forgetful hours is stirr'd! But I have long a loiterer been In haunts where Joy is said to be, And though with Peace I enter in, @3The nymph comes never forth with me!@1 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ANGLOSAXON STREET by EARL (EARLE) BIRNEY THE HILL WIFE: HOUSE FEAR by ROBERT FROST UPON HIS PICTURE by THOMAS RANDOLPH THE RELAPSE by JOSEPH BEAUMONT SONG OF SOLOMON: AWAKE by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 103. WRITTEN AT FLORENCE: 1 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT ON THE NIGHT EXPRESS by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE ON THE DEATH OF COMMODORE OLIVER H. PERRY by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD |