COME down, ye Spirits! in your might, come down! Come down, ye Spirits of this midnight hour; Come down in all your dim sublimity And majesty of terror! How I joy To meet you in your own dark territories, And hold mysterious converse in a tongue That hath quite perished among the sons Of fallen man! Ye Spirits that do roam With unconfined footsteps o'er the paths Of measureless eternity; -- ye who skim The bosomed cloud, or pace with hasty step The earth's green surface, and its every spot, Though ne'er so lone, deserted, and profound; Repeople with strange sounds and voices sweet, Which circle round, even when all else is still, And breed in vulgar breasts a nameless dread And awe inexplicable; which bids the flesh To creep, as if its every fibre were A many-footed and a living thing, Come down! come down! I hear ye come! I hear your sounding wings Beat the impassive air with mighty strokes, And in the flickering moonshine I can see Your shadowy limbs, descending like a mist Of fleecy whiteness, on the slumbering earth. And now I hear the mingled harmonies Of all your voices, fill the vaulted sky. Ye call upon me -- and my soul is glad To meet you on your pilgrimage, and join Its feeble echoes to your mighty song. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE DONG WITH A LUMINOUS NOSE by EDWARD LEAR FABLE: 16 by ANTOINE VINCENT ARNAULT EVENING TRAINS by MARY TRUE AYER FRAGMENTS INTENDED FOR DEATH'S JEST-BOOK: SAD AND CHEERFUL SONGS by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES A.G.A.V. by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |