Athirst in spirit, through the gloom Of an unpeopled waste I blundered, And saw a six-winged Seraph loom Where the two pathways met and sundered. He set his fingers on my eyes: His touch lay soft as slumber lies -- And like an eagle's, scared and shaken, Did my prophetic eyes awaken. He touched my ears, and lo! they rang With a reverberating clang: I heard the spheres revolving, chiming, The angels in their soaring sweep, The monsters moving in the deep, The vines low in the valley climbing. And from my mouth the Seraph wrung Forth by its roots my sinful tongue, The idle tongue that slyly babbled, The vain, malicious, the unchaste, And the wise serpent's sting he placed In my numb mouth with hand blood-dabbled; And with a sword he clove my breast, Drew forth the heart that shook with dread And in my gaping bosom pressed A glowing coal of fire instead. Upon the wastes, a lifeless clod, I lay, and heard the voice of God: "Arise, O prophet, look and ponder: Arise, charged with my will and spurred! As over roads and seas you wander, Kindle men's hearts with this, my Word." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE WILD HONEYSUCKLE by PHILIP FRENEAU THE DARK MAN by NORA (CHESSON) HOPPER TO A PINE TREE by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL SONG FOR A LITTLE HOUSE by CHRISTOPHER DARLINGTON MORLEY FOR THE YOUNGEST by CHARLES WESLEY LITTLE BELL by THOMAS WESTWOOD MUSIC; AND THE SAVAGE BREAST by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS ODES: BOOK 2: ODE 4. TO THE HON. CHARLES TOWNSHEND, IN THE COUNTRY by MARK AKENSIDE |