ALTAR whereon the lordly sacrifice Of incense from the reverent vales below Is offered at the dawn's first kindling glow And when the day's last smouldering ember dies, Around thee, too, the kindred sympathies Of life -- itself a vapor -- breathe and flow, And yearn beyond thy pinnacle of snow To wing the trackless region of the skies. Thy shadow broods above me, and mine own Sleeps as a child beneath it. O'er my dreams Thou dost, as an abiding presence, pour Thy spirit in the melancholy moan Of cavern winds and far-resounding streams, As sings the ocean to the listening shore. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TWO WITCHES: 2. THE PAUPER WITCH OF GRAFTON by ROBERT FROST TO DR. PRIESTLEY. DEC. 29, 1792 by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD BROOK IN DROUGHT by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN A NEW PILGRIMAGE: 1 by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT THE THREE SAD SHEPPARDESSES, GOE TO A LITTLE TABLE, WHERE THEY SINGE by ELIZABETH BRACKLEY |