(SHE) Come with our voices, let us war, And challenge all the spheres, Till each of us be made a star, And all the world turn ears. (HE) At such a call, what beast or fowl, Of reason empty is? What tree or stone doth want a soul? What man but must lose his? (SHE) Mix then your notes, that we may prove To stay the running floods, To make the mountain quarries move, And call the walking woods! (HE) What need of me? Do you but sing, Sleep, and the grave will wake. No tunes are sweet, nor words have sting, But what those lips do make. (SHE) They say the angels mark each deed, And exercise below, And out of inward pleasure feed On what they viewing know. (HE) O sing not you then, lest the best Of angels should be driven To fall again; at such a feast, Mistaking earth for heaven. (SHE) Nay, rather both our souls be strained To meet their high desire; So they in state of grace retained, May wish us of their choir. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DOMESDAY BOOK: AT FAIRBANKS by EDGAR LEE MASTERS BUCOLIC COMEDY: FLEECING TIME by EDITH SITWELL IN A STRANGE CITY by LOUIS UNTERMEYER FRAGMENTS INTENDED FOR DEATH'S JEST-BOOK: A BEAUTIFUL NIGHT by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES THE MEANING OF THE LOOK by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE ERL-KING by JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE THE BARD; A PINDARIC ODE by THOMAS GRAY |