The city’s steeple-towers remove away,
Each singly; as each vain infatuate Faith
Leaves God in heaven, and passes. A mere breath
Each soon appears, so far. Yet that which lay
The first is now scarce further or more grey
Than the last is. Now all are wholly gone.
The sunless sky has not once had the sun
Since the first weak beginning of the day.
The air falls back as the wind finishes,
And the clouds stagnate. On the water’s face
The current breathes along, but is not stirred.
There is no branch that thrills with any bird.
Winter is to possess the earth a space,
And have its will upon the extreme seas.
(Dante Gabriel Rossetti)
More Poetry from Dante Gabriel Rossetti:
Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems based on Topics: Heaven, Water, Space, Birds, Winter- A Death-Parting (Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems)
- A Little While (Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems)
- Dante At Verona (Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems)
- The White Ship Henry I. Of England.-25t (Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems)
- Jenny (Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems)
- The Burden of Nineveh (Dante Gabriel Rossetti Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Heaven Poems, Birds Poems, Water Poems, Winter Poems, Space PoemsBased on Keywords: finishes, stagnate, infatuate, steeple-towers
- One Day And Another: A Lyrical Eclogue - Part I (Madison Julius Cawein Poems)
- Parisina (Lord George Gordon Byron Poems)
- The Golden Legend: VI. The School Of Salerno (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Poems)
- Of The Nature Of Things: Book II - Part 03 - Atomic Forms And Their Combinations (Lucretius Poems)
- The School Of The Heart. Lesson The Second. (Henry Alford Poems)