Page:Poems Proctor.djvu/81

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE BLUE ABOVE POTOMAC.
The fairest clouds that deck the sky
Above Potomac's tide are seen;—
The soft tints of the sea-shell's dye;
The hues that in Damascus vie
(Those bowers Barada wanders by)
With sunsets Hermon shines between;
When tranquil evening's latest ray
O'er Tyre and Sidon melts away
Through gold and rose and violet
Till Sharon's plain with dew is wet,
And the hills darken, one by one,
And night comes down on Lebanon.

Rare as the cloud by Volga's stream
When morning over Asia shone;
The cloud which caught its crimson beam
And sailed o'er earth and sky supreme,
Wrapped in that fiery-purple gleam—
An eagle from the Oural blown,
A messenger of bliss or ban
With wide wings drifting past Kazan!
And dome and cross and minaret
A moment in its bloom were set;
Then flame and purple paled to gray
And down the steppe dissolved in day.