Zophiel - A Poem by Maria Gowen Brooks
page 33 of 69 (47%)
page 33 of 69 (47%)
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XXIX. Save that 'twas all tranquillity; that reigned O'er fragrance sound and beauty; all was mute-- Save when a dove her dear one's absence plained And the faint breeze mourned o'er the slumberer's lute. XXX. It chanced, that day, lured by the verdure, came Zophiel, now minister of ill; but ere He sinned, a heavenly angel. The faint flame Of dying embers, on an altar, where Raguel, fair Egla's sire, in secret vowed And sacrificed to the sole living God, Where friendly shades the sacred rites enshround;--(2) The fiend beheld and knew; his soul was awed, And he bethought him of the forfeit joys Once his in Heaven;--deep in a darkling grot He sat him down;--the melancholy noise Of leaf and creeping vine accordant with his thought. XXXI. |
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