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PAPERS ON LITERATURE AND ART.
Eyes pure from human tear or smile, |
Yet ruling all on earth, |
And limbs whose garb of golden air |
Was Dawn’s primeval birth. |
With tones like music of a lyre, |
Continuous, piercing, low, |
The sovran lips began to speak, |
Spoke on in liquid flow, |
It seemed the distant ocean’s voice, |
Brought near and shaped to speech, |
But breathing with a sense beyond |
What words of man may reach. |
Weak child! Not I the puny power |
Thy wish would have me be, |
A roseleaf floating with the wind |
Upon a summer sea. |
If such thou need’st, go range the fields, |
And hunt the gilded fly, |
And when it mounts above thy head, |
Then lay thee down and die. |
The spells which rule in earth and stars, |
Each mightiest thought that lives, |
Are stronger than the kiss a child |
In sudden fancy gives. |
They cannot change, or fail, or fade, |
Nor deign o’er aught to sway, |
Too weak to suffer and to strive, |
And tired while still ’t is day. |
And thou with better wisdom learn |
The ancient lore to scan, |
Which tells that first in Ocean’s breast |
Thy rule o’er all began; |
And know that not in breathless noon |
Upon the glassy main, |
The power was born that taught the world |
To hail her endless reign. |