Classic and Contemporary Poetry
EVENING TRANQUILLITY, by DAVID MACBETH MOIR Poet's Biography First Line: How still this hour! The mellow sun Last Line: Grief's sail is furl'd for evermore! Alternate Author Name(s): Delta Subject(s): Calm; Silence; Sleep; Placid; Undisturbed; Tranquility | ||||||||
I. How still this hour! the mellow sun Withdraws his western ray, And, evening's haven almost won, He leaves the seas of day: Soft is the twilight reign, and calm, As o'er autumnal fields of balm The languid zephyrs stray; Across the lawn the heifers roam, The wearied reaper seeks his home. II. The laden earth is rich with flowers, All bathed in crimson light; While hums the bee, mid garden bowers With clustering roses bright: The woods outshoot their shadows dim; O'er the smooth lake the swallows skim In wild erratic flight; Moor'd by the marge, the shallop sleeps, Above its deck the willow weeps. III. 'Tis sweet, in such an hour as this, To bend the pensive way, Scan Nature, and partake the bliss Which charms like hers convey: No city's bustling noise is near; And but the little birds you hear, That chant so blithe and gay; And ask ye whence their mirth began? Perchance since free, and far from man. IV. Their little lives are void of care; From bush to brake they fly, Filling the rich ambrosial air Of August's vermeil sky: They flit about the fragrant wood; Elisha's God provides them food, And hears them when they cry: For ever blithe and blest are they, Their sinless span a summer's day. V. Yon bending clouds all purpling streak The mantle of the west; And trem'lously the sunbeams break On Pentland's mountain crest: Hill, valley, ocean, sky, and stream, All wear one placid look, and seem In silent beauty blest; As if created Natures raised To Heaven their choral songs, and praised. VI. Above yon cottage on the plain The wreathy smoke ascends; A silent emblem, with the main Of sailing clouds it blends; Like a departed spirit gone Up from low earth to Glory's throne To mix with sainted friends, Where, life's probation voyage o'er, Grief's sail is furl'd for evermore! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A COTTAGE IN THE MIDST' by KENNETH REXROTH STILL ON WATER by KENNETH REXROTH THE LOVE POEMS OF MARICHIKO: 6 by KENNETH REXROTH REVELATION by LOUIS UNTERMEYER TO A FRIEND by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD PAX BRITANNICA by ALFRED AUSTIN THE RUSTIC LAD'S LAMENT IN THE TOWN by DAVID MACBETH MOIR |
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