Love Poem Menu
Google
Web  
www.love-poems.name
 
Poets

Christina Rossetti

Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Emily Dickinson

Oscar Wilde

Ralph Waldo Emerson

William Shakespeare

Alfred Lord Tennyson

Thomas Moore

William Morris

Elizabeth B. Browning

Robert Browning

George Herbert

Robert Herrick

William Butler Yeats

Poems by Category
Sad Love Poems
Short Love Poems
Funny Love Poems
Teenage Love Poems
Wedding Poems
Anniversary Poems
Readers Poems
Contributed Poems
Poem Collections

Love Poem Collection - 1

Love Poem Collection - 2

Love Poem Collection - 3

Love Poem Collection - 4

Love Poem Collection - 5

Love Poem Collection - 6

Love Poem Collection - 7

Love Poem Collection - 8

Love Poem Collection - 9

Love Poem Collection - 10

Love Poem Collection - 11

Random Love Poems - 1

Random Love Poems - 2

Random Love Poems - 3

Random Love Poems - 4

Random Love Poems - 5

Google
Our poster stores
framed posters
humor posters
model posters
movie posters
sports posters
Great Websites
Free Diet Plans

 Top Paying Keywords

 Keyword Suggestions

 Everything you want to know about everything!

Work from Home

Free View Webcams

notMensa IQ Tests

Christmas Jokes
World History

Baby Name Chooser

Poker Online

Top 100 Baby Names

Text Links

Online Advertising

Flowers

Top searches

Links

 
 
 

The best Love Poems on the internet.

The Sky Watcher by William Wilfred Campbell

 

Black rolls the phantom chimney-smoke
Beneath the wintry moon;
For miles on miles, by sound unbroke,
The world lies wrapt in its ermine cloak,
And the night's icy swoon
Sways earthward in great brimming wells
Of luminous, frosty particles.
Far up the roadway, drifted deep,
Where frost-etched fences gleam;
Beneath the sky's wan, shimmering sleep
My solitary way I keep
Across the world's white dream;
The only living moving thing
In all this mighty slumbering.
Up in the eastern range of hill,
The thin wood spectrally
Stirs in its sleep and then is still
(Like querulous age) at the wind's will.
My shadow doggedly
Follows my footsteps where I go,
A grotesque giant on the snow.
Out where the river's arms are wound,
And icy sedges cling,
There comes to me as in a swound
A far-off clear, thin, vibrant sound,--
The distant hammering
Of frost-elves as they come and go,
Forging, in silver chains, his woe.
I stand upon the hill's bleak crest
And note the far night world:
The mighty lake whose passionate breast,
Manacled into arctic rest,
In shrouded sleep is furled:
The steely heavens whose wondrous host
Wheel white from flaming coast to coast.
Then down the night's dim luminous ways,
Meseems they come once more,
Those great star-watchers of old days
The lonely, calm-ones, whose still gaze,
On old-time, orient shore,
Dreamed in the wheeling sons of light,
The awful secrets of earth's night.
They come, those lofty ones of old,
And take me by the hand,
And call me brother; ages rolled
Are but a smoke-mist; kindred-souled,
They lift me to their band;
Like lights that from pale starbeams shine,
Their clear eyes look with peace on mine.
In language of no common kind
These watchers speak to me;
Their thoughts the depths of heaven find
Like plummets true. It were a kind
Of immortality
To spend with them one holy hour,
And know their love and grasp their power.
And wrapt around with glad content,
I learn with soul serene,
Caught from the beauty that is blent
In earth, the heaven's luminous tent,
The frost-lit dreams between,
And something holier out of sight,
Glad visions of the infinite.
Then backward past the sere hill's breast,
The spectral moaning wood,
With great peace brooding in my breast,
I turn me toward the common rest
Of earth's worn brotherhood;
But as I pass, a sacred sign,
Each lays his holy lips on mine:--
Gives me the golden chrism of song,
Tips my hushed heart with fire;
Till high in heaven I hear that throng
Who march in mystic paths along,
Great Pleiades, The Lyre,
The Te-Deum of the ages swell,
To earth-tuned ear inaudible.

<-- Previous     |     Next -->

<< From our collection of Love Poem by William Wilfred Campbell >>

More Love Poems