To The Poet
Aye, doubt, and hope, and dream!
(Thou canst not choose)—and question the Divine!
Thus—since of earth—did They, whose holier gleam
Was clouded erst, as thine.
Souls that, like Setting Suns,
Have left their radiance flung on sea and shore—
The Wise, the Pure, the Everlasting Ones,
They who have gone before.
But muse no more in rhyme!
Lest, haply, fond imaginings and hopes,
In their inception truthful or sublime,
Perish in wordy tropes.
In quiet mark them roll,
The grand, still shadows of eternity—
And mighty Thoughts, that move along the soul
Like clouds upon the sea.
(Thou canst not choose)—and question the Divine!
Thus—since of earth—did They, whose holier gleam
Was clouded erst, as thine.
Souls that, like Setting Suns,
Have left their radiance flung on sea and shore—
The Wise, the Pure, the Everlasting Ones,
They who have gone before.
But muse no more in rhyme!
Lest, haply, fond imaginings and hopes,
In their inception truthful or sublime,
Perish in wordy tropes.
In quiet mark them roll,
The grand, still shadows of eternity—
And mighty Thoughts, that move along the soul
Like clouds upon the sea.
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