"Who sings?" said the Spirit of Music, And smiled on her peers: "Sweet Sorrow, sing Thou!" Sorrow answered, "I cannot for tears," "Bright Hope, give a tongue to the poems I read in thine eyes." Hope answered, "My thoughts are all clouded, And lost in the skies." "Then Joy, put thy mouth to the bugle! A note, for my sake." Calm creature, she sleeps in the sunshine, And will not awake. But hush! a soft sound stealeth onwards, Like the flight of a dove; Ah, I find that the Song that is sweetest Comes ever from Love. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...STUDY FOR A GEOGRAPHICAL TRAIL; 2. ILLINOIS by CLARENCE MAJOR THE TREASURES OF THE DEEP by FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS A DIRGE by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI TRISTRAM AND ISEULT by MATTHEW ARNOLD INVITATION TO PETERHEAD by JAMES HAY BEATTIE AT STRATFORD-ON-AVON by H. T. MACKENZIE BELL A SONG OF DAWN AT DUSK by WILLIAM ROSE BENET THE MYSTIC CIRCLE by ABBIE FARWELL BROWN ON CLEADA'S HILL THE MOON IS BRIGHT by JEREMIAH JOSEPH CALLANAN |