Unseeing Eyes
Ye build no prison so narrow, nor with walls
So dense to every sunbeam’s passing glance
As the dark cells of stolid ignorance
Where not a ray from star or planet falls;
Dragging invisible chains the victim crawls
Hither & yonder with no sure advance,
No conscious vision of the broad expanse
Around, & o’er him in these regal halls
Of the Great King who would have made him free
Of all by reverent searching, but alas!
The impenetrable armor none can see
Has shut him closer in than towers of brass,
With earth below, & star-worlds trooping by,
No path is for his feet, no window for his eye!
II.
The gold of sunset, & the orient pearl
Of early dawn, anon suffused with mist
Of molten chrysoprase & amethyst,—
The boreal hosts that o’er the pole unfurl
Their luminous banners as they wheel, & hurl
- Title
- Unseeing Eyes
- Alternative Title
- The gold of sunset, and the orient pearl
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 170, BG
- Poems by George and Ruth Burleigh, held by Little Compton Historical Society, Box A47.24, Loose Materials
- Subject
- Knowledge
- Education
- Northern Lights
- Philosophy
- note
- The manuscript copy from which I was working for the transcription is obviously incomplete, cutting out a few lines into the second section. The search will continue for a complete version of this poem.
- Media
-
Unseeing Eyes