Tom The Lunatic
William Butler Yeats
Sang old Tom the lunatic That sleeps under the canopy: ‘What change has put my thoughts astray And eyes that had s-o keen a sight? What has turned to smoking wick Nature’s pure unchanging light? ‘Huddon and Duddon and Daniel O’Leary. Holy Joe, the beggar-man, Wenching, drinking, still remain Or sing a penance on the road; Something made these eyeballs weary That blinked and saw them in a shroud. ‘Whatever stands in field or flood, Bird, beast, fish or man, Mare or stallion, cock or hen, Stands in God’s unchanging eye In all the vigour of its blood; In that faith I live or die.’
Next 10 Poems
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- William Butler Yeats : Two Songs Of A Fool
- William Butler Yeats : Two Songs Rewritten For The Tune's Sake
- William Butler Yeats : Two Years Later
- William Butler Yeats : Under Ben Bulben
- William Butler Yeats : Under Saturn
- William Butler Yeats : Under The Moon
- William Butler Yeats : Under The Round Tower
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- William Butler Yeats : Tom O'roughley
- William Butler Yeats : Tom At Cruachan
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- William Butler Yeats : To Some I Have Talked With By The Fire
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- William Butler Yeats : To An Isle In The Water