The Poems of Emma Lazarus, Volume 1






MATINS.

     Gray earth, gray mist, gray sky:
     Through vapors hurrying by,
     Larger than wont, on high
       Floats the horned, yellow moon.
     Chill airs are faintly stirred,
     And far away is heard,
     Of some fresh-awakened bird,
       The querulous, shrill tune.
     The dark mist hides the face
     Of the dim land: no trace
     Of rock or river's place
       In the thick air is drawn;
     But dripping grass smells sweet,
     And rustling branches meet,
     And sounding water greet
       The slow, sure, sacred dawn.
     Past is the long black night,
     With its keen lightnings white,
     Thunder and floods: new light
       The glimmering low east streaks.
     The dense clouds part: between
     Their jagged rents are seen
     Pale reaches blue and green,
       As the mirk curtain breaks.
     Above the shadowy world,
     Still more and more unfurled,
     The gathered mists upcurled
       Like phantoms melt and pass.
     In clear-obscure revealed,
     Brown wood, gray stream, dark field:
     Fresh, healthy odors yield
       Wet furrows, flowers, and grass.
     The sudden, splendid gleam
     Of one thin, golden beam
     Shoots from the feathered rim
       Of yon hill crowned with woods.
     Down its embowered side,
     As living waters slide,
     So the great morning tide
       Follows in sunny floods.
     From bush and hedge and tree
     Joy, unrestrained and free,
     Breaks forth in melody,
       Twitter and chirp and song:
     Alive the festal air
     With gauze-winged creatures fair,
     That flicker everywhere,
       Dart, poise, and flash along.
     The shining mists are gone,
     Slight films of gold swift-blown
     Before the strong, bright sun
       Or the deep-colored sky:
     A world of life and glow
     Sparkles and basks below,
     Where the soft meads a-row,
       Hoary with dew-fall, lie.
     Does not the morn break thus,
     Swift, bright, victorious,
     With new skies cleared for us,
       Over the soul storm-tost?
     Her night was long and deep,
     Strange visions vexed her sleep,
     Strange sorrows bade her weep:
       Her faith in dawn was lost.
     No halt, no rest for her,
     The immortal wanderer
     From sphere to higher sphere,
       Toward the pure source of day.
     The new light shames her fears,
     Her faithlessness, her tears,
     As the new sun appears
       To light her godlike way.

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