The New Day: Sonnets By Thomas Gordon Hake: With a Portrait of the Author by Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Edited, with a Preface, by W. Earl Hodgson |
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The New Day: Sonnets | ||
74
LXXIV.
[But Nature never sleeps; her rounded eyes]
But Nature never sleeps; her rounded eyesAre worlds of light the wasteless suns enfolding;
Whoever sleepeth, he as surely dies,
The heirloom of ancestral slumberers holding;
The spectre waiting on the night but shows
How half in shadow dreamy death is doled,
Then darker, tomb-shaped, leaves all to repose,
Old slumbers into one long slumber rolled.
The world's retiring list is daily out,
Names honoured and dishonoured are paraded;
Kings, who in public die, the most devout;
But for a court above, how clad, how jaded!
Even Nature wonders at these new recluses—
So fierce their fights, and now so tame their truces.
The New Day: Sonnets | ||