Poems by Walter R. Cassels
page 16 of 155 (10%)
page 16 of 155 (10%)
|
At night when clouds are dark and drear, They moan about the lattice sore, And murmur sighs for evermore, That fill us with a chilly fear, Oft glancing at the well-barr'd door-- At night, in moonlight or in gloom, They wander round the drooping thatch, Like some poor exile thence to catch Fond glimpses of each well-loved room, And sigh beside the unraised latch-- O unseen Wind! art thou alone, Thus breathing round the sleeping land? Or roams with thee a spirit band, Blending sad voices with thine own,-- Voices that once with cheerful tone Made music round the sleeping land? ORAN (_from the Greenhouse, unperceived_). Ah! her dear voice. How all my nature thrills, My heart, my brain, beneath the mellow sound, Like some great dome with holy music fill'd! She is the lark, above my listening soul Hovering still with carols from Heaven's gate. She is the perfumed breeze, that evermore Sweeps music from the Aeolian strings of life. She is the sea, that fills with sweetest sound |
|