Poems (Gould, 1833)/The Waterfall
Appearance
THE WATERFALL.
Ye mighty waters, that have joined your forces,
Roaring and dashing with this awful sound,
Here are ye mingled; but the distant sources
Whence ye have issued, where shall they be found?
Roaring and dashing with this awful sound,
Here are ye mingled; but the distant sources
Whence ye have issued, where shall they be found?
Who may retrace the ways that ye have taken,
Ye streams and drops? who separate you all,
And find the lovely places ye 've forsaken,
To come and rush together down the fall?
Ye streams and drops? who separate you all,
And find the lovely places ye 've forsaken,
To come and rush together down the fall?
Through thousand, thousand paths have ye been roaming,
In earth and air, who now each other urge
To the last point! and then, so madly foaming,
Leap down at once, from this stupendous verge.
In earth and air, who now each other urge
To the last point! and then, so madly foaming,
Leap down at once, from this stupendous verge.
Some in the low'ring cloud awhile were centred,
That in the stream beheld its sable face,
And melted into tears, that falling entered
With sister waters on the sudden race.
That in the stream beheld its sable face,
And melted into tears, that falling entered
With sister waters on the sudden race.
Others, to light that beamed upon the fountain,
Have from the vitals of the rock been freed,
In silver threads, that, shining down the mountain,
Turned off among the verdure of the mead.
Have from the vitals of the rock been freed,
In silver threads, that, shining down the mountain,
Turned off among the verdure of the mead.
And many a flower that bowed beside the river,
In opening beauty, ere the dew was dried,
Shook by the breeze, has been an early giver
Of her pure offering to the rolling tide.
In opening beauty, ere the dew was dried,
Shook by the breeze, has been an early giver
Of her pure offering to the rolling tide.
Thus from the veins, through earth's dark bosom pouring,
Many have flowed in tributary streams;
Some, in the bow that bent, the sun adoring,
Have shone in colors borrowed from his beams.
Many have flowed in tributary streams;
Some, in the bow that bent, the sun adoring,
Have shone in colors borrowed from his beams.
But He, who holds the ocean in the hollow
Of his strong hand, can separate you all!
His searching eye the secret way will follow,
Of every drop that hurries to the fall!
Of his strong hand, can separate you all!
His searching eye the secret way will follow,
Of every drop that hurries to the fall!
We are like you, in mighty torrents mingled,
And speeding downward to one common home,
Yet there's an eye that every drop hath singled,
And marked the winding ways through which we come.
And speeding downward to one common home,
Yet there's an eye that every drop hath singled,
And marked the winding ways through which we come.
Those who have here adored the Sun of heaven,
And shown the world their brightness drawn from him,
Again before him, though their hues be seven,
Shall blend their beauty, never to grow dim.
And shown the world their brightness drawn from him,
Again before him, though their hues be seven,
Shall blend their beauty, never to grow dim.
We bless the promise, as we thus are tending
Down to the tomb, that gives us hope to rise,
Before the Power to whom we now are bending,
To stand his bow of glory in the skies!
Down to the tomb, that gives us hope to rise,
Before the Power to whom we now are bending,
To stand his bow of glory in the skies!