A common folk I walk among; I speak dull things in their own tongue: But all the while within I hear A song I do not sing for fear How sweet, how different a thing! And when I come where none are near I open all my heart and sing. I am made one with these indeed, And give them all the love they need Such love as they would have of me: But in my heartah, let it be! I think of it when none is nigh. There is a love they shall not see; For it I live, for it will die. And oft-times, though I share their joys, And seem to praise them with my voice, Do I not celebrate my own, Ay, down in some far inward zone Of thoughts in which they have no part? Do I not feelah, quite alone With all the secret of my heart? O when the shroud of night is spread On these, as Death is on the dead, So that no sight of them shall mar The blessed rapture of a star Then I draw forth those thoughts at will; And like the stars those bright thoughts are; And boundless seems the heart they fill: For every one is as a link; And I enchain them as I think; Till present and remembered bliss, And better, worlds on after this, I haveled on from each to each Athwart the limitless abyss In some surpassing sphere I reach. I draw a veil across my face Before I come back to the place And dull obscurity of these; I hide my face, and no man sees; I learn to smile a lighter smile, And change, and look just what they please. It is but for a little while. I go with them; and in their sight I would not scorn their little light, Nor mock the things they hold divine; But when I kneel before the shrine Of some base deity of theirs, I pray all inwardly to mine, And send my soul up with my prayers: For Iah, to myself I say I have a heaven though far away; And there my Love went long ago, With all the things my heart loves so; And there my songs fly, every one: And I shall find them there, I know, When this sad pilgrimage is done. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ASOLANDO: SUMMUM BONUM by ROBERT BROWNING WOMEN MEN'S SHADOWS by BEN JONSON MY LITTLE GIRL by SAMUEL MINTURN PECK IAMBICUM TRIMETRUM, FR. LETTER TO HARVEY by EDMUND SPENSER HORATIAN ECHO by MATTHEW ARNOLD TO MISS RIGBY, ON HER ATTENDANCE UPON HER MOTHER AT BUXTON by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |