Page:The city of dreadful night - and other poems (IA cityofdreadfulni00thomrich).pdf/65

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
The City of Dreadful Night.
51

Again I sank in that repose unsweet,
Again a clashing noise my slumber rent;
The warrior's sword lay broken at his feet:
An unarmed man with raised hands impotent
Now stood before the sphinx, which ever kept
Such mien as if with open eyes it slept.

My eyelids sank in spite of wonder grown;
A louder crash upstartled me in dread:
The man had fallen forward, stone on stone,
And lay there shattered, with his trunkless head
Between the monster's large quiescent paws,
Beneath its grand front changeless as life's laws.

The moon had circled westward full and bright,
And made the temple-front a mystic dream,
And bathed the whole enclosure with its light,
The sworded angel's wrecks, the sphinx supreme:
I pondered long that cold majestic face
Whose vision seemed of infinite void space.

XXI.

Anear the centre of that northern crest

Stands out a level upland bleak and bare,
From which the city east and south and west
Sinks gently in long waves; and throned there