A place for all poetry lovers to find works from all the giants of poetry, both past and present
An Acre Of Grass - by William Butler Yeats
Picture and book remain,
An acre of green grass
For air and exercise,
Now strength of body goes;
Midnight, an old house
Where nothing stirs but a mouse.
My temptation is quiet.
Here at life's end
Neither loose imagination,
Nor the mill of the mind
Consuming its rag and bonc,
Can make the truth known.
Grant me an old man's frenzy,
Myself must I remake
Till I am Timon and Lear
Or that William Blake
Who beat upon the wall
Till Truth obeyed his call;
A mind Michael Angelo knew
That can pierce the clouds,
Or inspired by frenzy
Shake the dead in their shrouds;
Forgotten else by mankind,
An old man's eagle mind.
Labels
Alfred Tennyson
Charlotte Bronte
D H Lawrence
Edgar Allan Poe
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Emily Dickinson
Jane Austen
John Donne
John Keats
Louisa May Alcott
Mark Twain
Matthew Arnold
Oscar Wilde
Raj Sharma
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Robert Frost
Robert Louis Stevenson
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Sara Teasdale
Sir Philip Sidney
Sylvia Plath
William Blake
William Butler Yeats
William Shakespeare
William Wordsworth