THERE is a light in darkness which the soul Can seldom know, until the sense have crept From height to height across the shadowless peaks Which sentinel thy valley; there are deeps In thy green hollows, where still thought could lie Through summer noons unending, glad with dreams; There too are twilights, sudden-black with storm, When thunder speaks from the unapproachable hills, And earth shakes at the arrows of his light. Then have I heard a cithern's tinkling sound, And hollow bursts of laughter from the hall, While awful thunder shook the world again. Then have I seen pale clouds retreat before The glory of God's coming, and soft night Die down in splendor on the voiceless Horn; And while keen players bent above their board, Have watched the gold of distant stars appear Circling in music over you white brows. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO HESTER [SAVORY] by CHARLES LAMB A WORD TO THE WEST END by THOMAS ASHE DON'T YOU WISH YOU KNEW! by A. H. B. IN THE WHITE LAND by KONSTANTIN DMITRIYEVICH BALMONT A TRIBUTE TO DAD by CLARA MCKEE BEEDE PSALM 57 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE L'AMITIE EST L'AMOUR SANS AILES by GEORGE GORDON BYRON BALLAD TO THE TUNE OF 'I'LL HAVE MY LOVE, OR I'LL HAVE ONE' by PATRICK CAREY |