Form The Green Helmet And Other Poems
William Butler Yeats
HIS DREAM I SWAYED upon the gaudy stem The butt-end of a steering-oar, And saw wherever I could turn A crowd upon a shore. And though I would have hushed the crowd, There was no mother's son but said, "What is the figure in a shroud Upon a gaudy bed?' And after running at the brim Cried out upon that thing beneath -- It had such dignity of limb -- By the sweet name of Death. Though I'd my finger on my lip, What could I but take up the song? And running crowd and gaudy ship Cried out the whole night long, Crying amid the glittering sea, Naming it with ecstatic breath, Because it had such dignity, By the sweet name of Death.
Next 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : Fragments
- William Butler Yeats : Friends
- William Butler Yeats : From A Full Moon In March
- William Butler Yeats : From The 'antigone'
- William Butler Yeats : Girl's Song
- William Butler Yeats : Gratitude To The Unknown Instructors
- William Butler Yeats : He Bids His Beloved Be At Peace
- William Butler Yeats : He Gives His Beloved Certain Rhymes
- William Butler Yeats : He Hears The Cry Of The Sedge
- William Butler Yeats : He Mourns For The Change That Has Come Upon Him And His Beloved, And Longs For The End Of The World
Previous 10 Poems
- William Butler Yeats : For Anne Gregory
- William Butler Yeats : Fergus And The Druid
- William Butler Yeats : Father And Child
- William Butler Yeats : Fallen Majesty
- William Butler Yeats : Ephemera
- William Butler Yeats : Ego Dominus Tuus
- William Butler Yeats : Easter, 1916
- William Butler Yeats : Down By The Salley Gardens
- William Butler Yeats : Demon And Beast
- William Butler Yeats : Death