Kindred
George Sterling
Musing, between the sunset and the dark, As Twilight in unhesitating hands Bore from the faint horizon’s underlands, Silvern and chill, the moon’s phantasmal ark, I heard the sea, and far away could mark Where that unalterable waste expands In sevenfold sapphire from the mournful sands, And saw beyond the deep a vibrant spark. There sank the sun Arcturus, and I thought: Star, by an ocean on a world of thine, May not a being, born like me to die, Confront a little the eternal Naught And watch our isolated sun decline— Sad for his evanescence, even as I?
Next 10 Poems
- George Sterling : Night Sentries
- George Sterling : Omnium Exeunt In Mysterium
- George Sterling : Spring In Carmel
- George Sterling : The Ashes In The Sea
- George Sterling : The Black Vulture
- George Sterling : The Dust Dethroned
- George Sterling : The First Food
- George Sterling : The Last Days
- Wallace Stevens : A High-toned Old Christian Woman
- Wallace Stevens : Anecdote Of Canna
Previous 10 Poems
- George Sterling : A Legend Of The Dove
- Edmund Spenser : Whilst It Is Prime
- Edmund Spenser : Visions Of The Worlds Vanitie.
- Edmund Spenser : The Tamed Deer
- Edmund Spenser : The Shepheardes Calender: October
- Edmund Spenser : The Shepheardes Calender: April
- Edmund Spenser : The Faerie Queene: Book I, Canto I
- Edmund Spenser : The Faerie Queene, Book Vi, Canto X
- Edmund Spenser : The Faerie Queene, Book Iii, Canto Vi
- Edmund Spenser : The Faerie Queene, Book I, Canto Iv ( Excerpts )