A Celtic Psaltery by Alfred Perceval Graves
page 117 of 205 (57%)
page 117 of 205 (57%)
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Ah! that glance of tender yearning
She is turning earthward yet. BEHIND THE VEIL (After Islwyn, 1832-1878, the Welsh Wordsworth) What say ye, can we charge a master soul With error, when beyond all life's experience Between the cradle and the grave, it rises, Whispering of things unutterable, breaks its bond With outward sense and sinks into itself, As fades a star in space? Hath not that soul A history in itself, a refluent tide Of mystery murmuring out of unplumbed deeps, On distant inaccessible strands, whereon Memory lies dead amid the monstrous wreckage Of jarring worlds? Are yonder stars above As spiritually, magnificently bright As Poesy feigns? May not some slumbering sense, A memory dim of those diviner days, When all the Heavens were yet aglow with God, Transfuse them through and through with glimmering grace And glory? Still the Stars within us shine, And Poesy is but a recollection |
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