At Algeciras - A Meditaton Upon Death
William Butler Yeats
The heron-billed pale cattle-birds That feed on some foul parasite Of the Moroccan flocks and herds Cross the narrow Straits to light In the rich midnight of the garden trees Till the dawn break upon those mingled seas. Often at evening when a boy Would I carry to a friend— Hoping more substantial joy Did an older mind commend— Not such as are in Newton’s metaphor, But actual shells of Rosses’ level shore. Greater glory in the Sun, An evening chill upon the air, Bid imagination run Much on the Great Questioner; What He can question, what if questioned I Can with a fitting confidence reply.
Next 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : At Galway Races
- William Butler Yeats : At The Abbey Theatre
- William Butler Yeats : Baile And Aillinn
- William Butler Yeats : Beautiful Lofty Things
- William Butler Yeats : Before The World Was Made
- William Butler Yeats : Beggar To Beggar Cried
- William Butler Yeats : Blood And The Moon
- William Butler Yeats : Broken Dreams
- William Butler Yeats : Brown Penny
- William Butler Yeats : Byzantium
Previous 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : At Aleciras -- A Meditaton Upon Death
- William Butler Yeats : Are You Content?
- William Butler Yeats : Another Song Of A Fool
- William Butler Yeats : Anashuya And Vijaya
- William Butler Yeats : An Irish Airman Forsees His Death
- William Butler Yeats : An Image From A Past Life
- William Butler Yeats : An Appointment
- William Butler Yeats : An Acre Of Grass
- William Butler Yeats : Among School Children
- William Butler Yeats : Alternative Song For The Severed Head In `the King Of The Great Clock Tower'