The Sun Cup
The earth is the cup of the sun,
That he filleth at morning with wine,
With the warm, strong wine of his
From the vintage of gold and of light,
Fills it, and makes it divine.
And at night when his journey is done,
At the gate of his radiant hall,
He setteth his lips to the brim,
With a long last look of his eye,
And lifts it and draineth it dry,
Drains till he leaveth it
Empty and hollow and dim.
And then, as he passes to sleep,
Still full of the feats that he did,
Long ago in Olympian wars,
He closes it down with the
Of its slow-turning luminous lid,
Its cover of darkness and stars,
Wrought once by Hephaestus of
With violet and vastness and gold.
Archibald Lampman
Other author posts
A Prayer
Oh earth, oh dewy mother, breathe on Something of all thy beauty and thy might, Us that are part of day, but most of night, Not strong like thee, but ever burdened
Winter Uplands
The frost that stings like fire upon my cheek, The loneliness of this forsaken ground, The long white drift upon whose powdered peak I sit in the great silence as one bound; The rippled sheet of snow where the wind blew Across the open fields for ...
With The Night
O doubts, dull passions, and base fears, That harassed and oppressed the day, Ye poor remorses and vain tears, That shook this house of clay:
Lament Of The Winds
We in sorrow coldly witting, In the bleak world sitting, sitting, By the forest, near the mould, Heard the summer calling, calling,