In the wild and lurid desert, in the thunder-travelled ways,
’Neath the night that ever hurries to the dawn that still delays,
There she clutches at illusions, and she seeks a phantom goal
With the unattaining passion that consumes the unsleeping soul:
And calamity enfolds her, like the shadow of a ban,
And the niggardness of Nature makes the misery of man:
And in vain the hand is stretched to lift her, stumbling in the gloom,
While she follows the mad fen-fire that conducts her to her doom.
| About the poet |
|
| By the same poet |
| An Epitaph |
| Wordsworth’s Grave |
| Lacrimae Musarum |
| The Ballad of Semmerwater |
| Our Men |
| The Prince’s Quest |
| Vita Nuova |
| April |
| World Strangeness |
| Estrangement |
| Changed Voices |
| England and Her Colonies |
| Related books |
| Sir William Watson at amazon.co.uk |
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