Same theme and scheme as Yeats' "
Sailing to Byzantium," written as an ottava rima. Comparing the two is a great help in that it shows the distance I've yet to go!
The city of the golden lights delights
In youth and patronage. The father's face,
Before the closing day restrains the sights
Most humbling to us of the human race,
Brings peace. But we have seen the brighter lights
Shining from fair Byzantium, and raise
The banners of the angels high. What age
Can poison we who live within that cage?
Perhaps some Grecian Urn will bring us life
And we will live in orchards, red-rimmed fair
Before the setting, rising sun. The knife
Of youth oft cuts those who do not beware
Such visions, seemingly devoid of strife
Yet offering the temptation of the snare -
Ours is the subtler path, who fleeing come
To grace the streets of artifice, Byzantium.
The Empire sleeps, yet still it dreams the song
That lifts us to the golden boughs of spring.
Who is to say the way of art is wrong,
That we aught not to raise jewelled wings and sing
Full throated as the poets did in days long gone!
None but the hands our fathers left to ring
Last season's bells, that we may listen thoughtfully
And see our pleasures in the light of melancholy.
For tomorrow:
Tolkien. Okay, I'm being biased because I love his poetry, sue me
.