A Spirit came upon me in the night, And led me gently down a rocky stair Unto a peopled garden, green and fair, Where all the day there was an evening light. Trees out of every nation blended there. The citron shrub its golden fruit did train Against an English elm: 'twas like a dream Because there was no wind; and things did seem All near and big, like mountains before rain. Far in those twilight bowers beside a stream The soul of one who had but lately died Hung listening, with a brother at his side; And no one spoke in all that haunted place, But looked quietly into each other's face. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A PASSER-BY by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES A MIDSUMMER'S NOON IN THE AUSTRALIAN FOREST by CHARLES HARPUR SAINT TERESA'S BOOK-MARK by THERESA OF AVILA LET US HAVE PEACE by NANCY BYRD TURNER THE BURIED FLOWER by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN BOX-CAR LETTERS by KARLE WILSON BAKER URANIA; THE WOMAN IN THE MOON: DEDICATION TO HENRY, PRINCE OF WALES by WILLIAM BASSE |