Eleven O'clock
Amy Lowell
The front door was hard and heavy, It shut behind me on the house of ghosts. I flattened my feet on the pavement To feel it solid under me; I ran my hand along the railings And shook them, And pressed their pointed bars Into my palms. The hurt of it reassured me, And I did it again and again Until they were bruised. When I woke in the night I laughed to find them aching, For only living flesh can suffer.
Next 10 Poems
- Amy Lowell : Epitaph In A Church-yard In Charleston, South Carolina
- Amy Lowell : Epitaph Of A Young Poet Who Died Before Having Achieved Success
- Amy Lowell : Fatigue
- Amy Lowell : Fish
- Amy Lowell : Fool's Money Bags
- Amy Lowell : Fragment
- Amy Lowell : Francis Ii, King Of Naples
- Amy Lowell : Frankincense And Myrrh
- Amy Lowell : Fringed Gentians
- Amy Lowell : From One Who Stays
Previous 10 Poems
- Amy Lowell : Dreams
- Amy Lowell : Drawing-room
- Amy Lowell : Diya [original Title Is Greek, Delta-iota-psi-alpha]
- Amy Lowell : Crowned
- Amy Lowell : Crepuscule Du Matin
- Amy Lowell : Convalescence
- Amy Lowell : Coffee
- Amy Lowell : Climbing
- Amy Lowell : Clear, With Light, Variable Winds
- Amy Lowell : Behind A Wall