SOMETHING impelled her from the hearth; Whispers and winds drew her along; But still, unconscious of the earth, She read her book of golden Song. Old legends stirred her as she read Of life victoriously unfurled, Of glories gone but never dead, And Beauty that redeemed the world. "Oh Songs," she sighed, "your world was fair; My own holds no such lovely things; No glow, no magic anywhere" And then, a starta flash of wings... And, with the rush of surging seas, Over her swept the world's replies: The lyric hills, the buoyant breeze And all the sudden singing skies! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PORTRAIT OF A BABY by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET THE HILL ABOVE THE MINE by MALCOLM COWLEY SOLDIER by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON IRELAND; WRITTEN FOR THE ART AUTOGRAPH DURING IRISH FAMINE by SIDNEY LANIER BOOTH'S PHILIPPI by EDGAR LEE MASTERS |