| Poems and dramas of George Cabot Lodge | ||
27
DAWN
The swoon of night's delicate whisper, the tense wide stillness of birth,
The holy awaiting of sound in the soul of the slumberous earth,
The peace compelling our tears for the shame of the agonized flesh,
Ere creation has riven its grave-clothes and come on the world afresh.
The holy awaiting of sound in the soul of the slumberous earth,
The peace compelling our tears for the shame of the agonized flesh,
Ere creation has riven its grave-clothes and come on the world afresh.
The dawn that hath come like a song aflame on the lips of the world,
The grasses' hymn to the dew, and the resonant wave that is hurled
From the reticent soul of the waters, and about the death-bed of night
Resurrection pulsating like music, and the heavens enormous with light.
The grasses' hymn to the dew, and the resonant wave that is hurled
From the reticent soul of the waters, and about the death-bed of night
Resurrection pulsating like music, and the heavens enormous with light.
Dear God! how the pulses beat faster, as, lo! with the rush of a wind,
From the labyrinth caves of our slumber we feel we have brought forth a mind;
And the shock as the shock of battle, when our vision rends the veil
As the sun swims in blood on the waters;—'t is the Life of our life doth prevail!
From the labyrinth caves of our slumber we feel we have brought forth a mind;
And the shock as the shock of battle, when our vision rends the veil
28
The exquisite fabric of morning, too pure for the spoken word,
From the cedar-tree woven with twilight has uttered the song of a bird,
'T is the wild, pure pæan of pity, ever new since the world began,
'T is the sadness fragrant with promise—a day that is given to Man!
From the cedar-tree woven with twilight has uttered the song of a bird,
'T is the wild, pure pæan of pity, ever new since the world began,
'T is the sadness fragrant with promise—a day that is given to Man!
| Poems and dramas of George Cabot Lodge | ||