Morning, a glass door, flashes
Gold names off the new city,
Whose white shelves and domes travel
The slow sky all day.
I land to stay here;
And the windows flock open
And the curtains fly out like doves
And a past dries in a wind.
Now let me lie down, under
A wide-branched indifference,
Shovel-faces like pennies
Down the back of the mind,
Find voices coined to
An argot of motor-horns,
And let the cluttered-up houses
Keep their thick lives to themselves.
For this ignorance of me
Seems a kind of innocence.
Fast enough I shall wound it:
Let me breathe till then
Its milk-aired Eden,
Till my own life impound it-
Slow-falling; grey-veil-hung; a theft,
A style of dying only.
End of the poem
15 random poems
- Chloris in the Snow by William Strode
- On A Fowler, By Isidorus by William Cowper
- The Mystic Isle by Rainbow Reed
- Robert Burns: O, Were I On Parnassus Hill:
- The Sick Man and the Nightingale poem – Amy Levy poems | Poems and Poetry
- Flower by Rabindranath Tagore
- Владимир Маяковский – Рассказ одного об одной мечте
- Li Po, the moon and me by Raj Arumugam
- To Morrow
- Wolves by Mary Bone
- Владимир Корнилов – Репертуар
- Sonnet 44: If the dull substance of my flesh were thought by William Shakespeare
- Robert Burns: Ploughman’s Life, The:
- Easter Communion poem – Gerard Manley Hopkins poems
- The Farmer’s Woldest D’ter by William Barnes
Some external links:
Duckduckgo.com – the alternative in the US
Quant.com – a search engine from France, and also an alternative, at least for Europe
Yandex – the Russian search engine (it’s probably the best search engine for image searches).
Philip Arthur Larkin (1922-1985), Commander of the Order of the British Empire, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, Cavalier of the Order of the Companions of Honour, was an English poet, novelist, and librarian.