Page:The city of dreadful night - and other poems (IA cityofdreadfulni00thomrich).pdf/57

 And men regard with passionate awe and yearning The mighty marching and the golden burning, And think the heavens respond to what they feel.

Boats gliding like dark shadows of a dream, Are glorified from vision as they pass The quivering moonbridge on the deep black stream; Cold windows kindle their dead glooms of glass To restless crystals; cornice, dome, and column Emerge from chaos in the splendour solemn; Like faëry lakes gleam lawns of dewy grass.

With such a living light these dead eyes shine, These eyes of sightless heaven, that as we gaze We read a pity, tremulous, divine, Or cold majestic scorn in their pure rays: Fond man! they are not haughty, are not tender; There is no heart or mind in all their splendour, They thread mere puppets all their marvellous maze.

If we could near them with the flight unflown, We should but find them worlds as sad as this, Or suns all self-consuming like our own Enringed by planet worlds as much amiss: