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Page:Poems Procter.djvu/179

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A VISION.
159
Slowly across the gleaming sky,A crowd of white angels are passing by.Like a fleet of swans they float along,Or the silver notes of a dying song.Like a cloud of incense their pinions rise,Fading away up the purple skies.But hush! for the silent glory is stirred,By a strain such as earth has never heard;
"Open, O Heaven! we bear her,This gentle maiden mild,Earth's griefs we gladly spare her,From earthly joys we tear her,  Still undefiled;And to thine arms we bear her,  Thine own, thy child.
Open, O Heaven! no morrowWill see this joy o'ercast,No pain, no tears, no sorrow,Her gentle heart will borrow;  Sad life is past;Shielded and safe from sorrow,  At home at last."
But the vision faded and all was still,On the purple valley and distant hill.No sound was there save the wailing breeze,The rain, and the rustling cypress-trees.