Across a gaudy room I looked and saw his face, Beneath the sapless palm-trees, in the gloom Of the distressing place, Where everyone sat tired, Where talk itself grew stale, Where, as the day began to fail, No guest had just the power required To rise and go: I strove with my disgust; But at the sight of him my eyes were fired To give one glance, as though they must Be sociable with what they found of fair And free and simple in a chamber where Life was so base. As when a star is lit In the dull evening sky, Another soon leaps out to answer it, Even sothe bright reply Came sudden from his eyes, By all but me unseen; Since then the distance that between Our lives unalterably lies Is but a darkness, intimate and still, Which messages may traverse, where replies May sparkle from afar, until The night becomes a mystery made clear Between two souls forbidden to draw near: Creator, why? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CHURCH MONUMENTS by GEORGE HERBERT REALISM by ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON HIS NAME WAS KEKO by THEODORE BRIDGMAN THE SALLE MONTESQUIEU; A PARISIAN REMINISCENCE by WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER LIFE PASSES ON by MARIANNE CLARKE FREDERICK HENRY HEDGE, D.D. ON HIS 80TH BIRTHDAY by CHRISTOPHER PEARSE CRANCH |