JUBILANT the music through the fields a-ringing, -- Carol, warble, whistle, pipe, -- endless ways of singing, Oriole, bobolink, melody of thrushes, Rustling trees, hum of bees, sudden little hushes, Broken suddenly again -- Carol, whistle, rustle, humming, In reiterate refrain, Thither, hither, going, coming, While the streamlets' softer voices mingle murmurously together; Gurgle, whisper, lapses, plashes, -- praise of love and summer weather. Hark! A music finer on the air is blowing, -- Throbs of infinite content, sounds of things a-growing, Secret sounds, flit of bird under leafy cover, Odors shy floating by, clouds blown swiftly over, Kisses of the crimson roses, Crosses of the lily-lances, Stirrings when a bud uncloses, Tripping sun and shadow dances, Murmur of aerial tides, stealthy zephyrs gliding, And a thousand nameless things sweeter for their hiding. Ah! a music more than these floweth on forever, In and out, yet all beyond our tracing or endeavor, Far yet clear, strange yet near, sweet with a profounder sweetness, Mystical, rhythmical, weaving all into completeness; For its wide, harmonious measures Not one earthly note let fall; Sorrows, raptures, pains and pleasures, All in it, and it in all. Of earth's music the ennobler, of its discord the refiner, Pipe of Pan was once its naming, now it hath a name diviner. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PRAYER TO THE OCEAN by GEORGE SANTAYANA THE FAIRY THORN; AN ULSTER BALLAD by SAMUEL FERGUSON ODE IN MEMORY OF THE AMERICAN VOLUNTEERS FALLEN FOR FRANCE by ALAN SEEGER THE BEACHCOMBER by MILDRED DOSCH BANTA PSALM 10. UT QUID DOMINE by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE QUATRAIN by CHARLES GRANGER BLANDEN AN APPREHENSION by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |