God would not let the spheric lights accost This God-loved man, and bade the earth stand off With all her beckoning hills whose golden stuff Under the feet of the royal sun is crossed. Yet such things were to him not wholly lost, -- Permitted, with his wandering eyes lightproof, To catch fair visions rendered full enough By many a ministrant accomplished ghost, -- Still seeing, to sounds of softly-turned book-leaves, Sappho's crown - rose, and Meleager's Spring, And Gregory's starlight on Greek-burnished eves: Till Sensuous and Unsensuous seemed one thing, Viewed from one level, -- earth's reapers at the sheaves Scarce plainer than Heaven's angels on the wing. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HOME, SWEET HOME, FR. CLARI, THE MAID OF MILAN by JOHN HOWARD PAYNE JOURNEY by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN SONNET: 8. TO THE RIVER ITCHIN, NEAR WINTON by WILLIAM LISLE BOWLES A LYNMOUTH WIDOW by AMELIA JOSEPHINE BURR MORAG'S FAIRY GLEN by WILLIAM CAMERON THE RING OF DEATH by C. G. A. COLLES TREE OF KNOWLEDGE. THAT THERE IS NO KNOWLEDGE by ABRAHAM COWLEY MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL; A STATUETTE: 2; SONNET by DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK |