By one who in his hand a lamp doth hold More bright the East became, the ocean turned Richard Watson Gilder (1844-1909] DAWN ON THE HEADLAND DAWN—and a magical stillness: on earth, quiescence pro found; On the waters a vast Content, as of hunger appeased and stayed; In the heavens a silence that seems not mere privation of sound, But a thing with form and body, a thing to be touched and weighed! Yet I know that I dwell in the midst of the roar of the cosmic wheel, In the hot collision of Forces, and clangor of boundless Strife, Mid the sound of the speed of the worlds, the rushing worlds, and the peal Of the thunder of Life. William Watson (1858– THE MIRACLE OF THE DAWN WHAT would it mean for you and me If dawn should come no more! Its rose above the shore! Our souls bow down before. Dawn-Angels 1269 What wonder that the Inca kneeled, The Aztec prayed and pled And sacrificed to it, and sealed, With rites that long are dead, The marvels that it once revealed To them it comforted. What wonder, yea! what awe, behold! What rapture and what tears That now each day appears, – Once every thousand years! To see it even as God When Light rose, earthquake-shod, O’er deeps the whirlwind trod. What shoutings then and cymballings Arose from depth and height! And thunders, burning-white, Of Earth received the Light. Think what it meant to see the dawn! The dawn, that comes each day!What if the East should ne'er grow wan, Should nevermore grow gray! That line of rose no more be drawn Above the ocean's spray! Madison Cawein (1865-1914) DAWN-ANGELS a All night I watched awake for morning, At last the East grew all a flame, And with their singing morning came. Along the gold-green heavens drifted Pale wandering souls that shun the light, Had beat the bars of Heaven all night. A troop of shining spirits went, But some divine dream-element. Some held the Light, while those remaining Shook out their harvest-colored wings, (Whose sound was Light) on earthly things. They sang, and as a mighty river Their voices washed the night away, A. Mary F. Robinson (1857– MUSIC OF THE DAWN AT SEA, OCTOBER 23, 1907 In far forests' leafy twilight, now is stealing gray dawn's shy light, And the misty air is tremulous with songs of many a bird; While from mountain steeps descending, every streamlet's voice is blending With the anthems of great pine trees, by the breath of daylight stirred. But I turn from Fancy's dreaming of the green earth, to the gleaming Of the fluttering wings of morning rushing o'er the jewelled deep; And the ocean's rhythmic pounding, with each lucent wave resounding, Seems the music made when God's own hands His mighty harpstrings sweep. Virginia Bioren Harrison (18 Rêve du Midi 1271 A SUMMER NOON a a Who has not dreamed a world of bliss sunny solitude? William Howitt (1792–1879) RÊVE DU MIDI Under the grass; When soft the shadows lie, And the idle winds go by, Then, when the silent stream Up to the sun; When the moth forgets to play, Then, from the noise of war Dropped from the sky,- Banish to silence drear,- Some melancholy gale With her sighs; Glories that faded fast, As poised on vibrant wings, To the red flowers, — I linger in delight, Rose Terry Cooke (1827–1892) |