Oft had a melancholy star, Of human aspect mild, In pensive vigil gazed upon A sleeping child, And whitened, as the wave of light Dispelled the vision from his sight. Behind the sun, disconsolate, The livelong summer day, In love and loneliness he sighed The hours away, Till roused from reverie to feel The twilight vapors o'er him steal. Night after night, all tremulous, Distraught, and paler grown, He saw, enamoured of the spell, That form alone, Nor found amid the realms of air A paragon of love so fair. "Alas!" and silently a tear The swelling thought betrayed, "Forlorn, sweet child, my destiny Apart!" he said; "A phantom of perpetual night To woo thy slumbering orbs of light! "Lost in sublimity of space Above the eternal snow That clothes in raiment virginal The peaks below, In vain this rhapsody of sighs To life the fringes of thine eyes. "O, for some charm melodious! A seraph-tone -- to sweep In throbbing syllables adown The tide of sleep, And with the conscious smile to raise Thy spirit to my wistful gaze!" He ceased; for, hark! a nightingale From dreams all passion-wrought, Wakes into song, interpreting Thy plaintive thought, Till, soft as lily white, The eyelids blossom with delight. And lo! the child in ecstasy Of reverence hath bent Upon the burning satellite His gaze intent, While blend in rapture of desire The mortal and immortal fire. Serene but coldly beautiful At dewy dawn of day, A moon-pale masterpiece of Death In marble lay, And o'er it, tremulously far, The splendor of the morning star. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OH! BLAME NOT THE BARD by THOMAS MOORE THE BUS by MABEL WARREN ARNOLD FINDING CYNTHIA IN PAIN, AND CRYING; A SONNET by PHILIP AYRES ODE 13. ON THE CHARMS OF PEACE by BACCHYLIDES MOTHER AND CHILD (WAR VICTIMS) by EVELYN D. BANGAY THE CONVERSION by RALPH WILHELM BERGENGREN PSALM 137. 'BY THE RIVERS OF BABYLON' by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE |