FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   >>  
anthem The angels once did sing.] Glory in excelsis! Let the heavens ring; In excelsis Deo! Welcome, new-born King. Gloria in excelsis! Over the sea and land, In excelsis Deo! Chant the anthem grand. Gloria in excelsis! Let us all rejoice! In excelsis Deo! Lift each heart and voice. Gloria in excelsis! Swell the hymn on high; In excelsis Deo! Sound it to the sky. Gloria in excelsis! Sing it sinful earth. In excelsis Deo! For the Saviour's birth. Thus joyful and victoriously, Glad and ever so gloriously, High as the heavens, wide as the earth, Swelleth the hymn of the Saviour's birth. THE VOICE IN THE PINES. PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE. The morn is softly beautiful and still, Its light, fair clouds in pencilled gold and gray Pause motionless above the pine-grown hill, Where the pines, tranced as by a wizard's will, Uprise as mute and motionless as they! Yea! mute and moveless; not one flickering spray Flashed into sunlight, nor a gaunt bough stirred; Yet, if wooed hence beneath those pines to stray, We catch a faint, thin murmur far away, A bodiless voice, by grosser ears unheard. What voice is this? What low and solemn tone, Which, though all wings of all the winds seemed furled, Nor even the zephyr's fairy flute is blown, Makes thus forever its mysterious moan From out the whispering pine-tops' shadowy world? Ah! can it be the antique tales are true? Doth some lone Dryad haunt the breezeless air, Fronting yon bright immitigable blue, And wildly breathing all her wild soul through That strange unearthly music of despair? Or can it be that ages since, storm-tossed, And driven far inland from the roaring lea, Some baffled ocean-spirit, worn and lost, Here, through dry summer's dearth and winter's frost, Yearns for the sharp, sweet kisses of the sea? Whate'er the spell, I harken and am dumb, Dream-touched, and musing in the tranquil morn; All woodland sounds--the pheasant's gusty drum, The mock-bird's fugue, the droning insect's hum-- Scarce heard for that strange, sorrowful voice forlorn! Beneath the drowsed sense, from deep to deep Of spiritual life its mournful minor flows, Streamlike, with pensive tide, whose currents keep Low murmuring 'twixt the bounds of grief and sleep, Yet locked for aye for sleep's divine repose. ASP
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   >>  



Top keywords:

excelsis

 

Gloria

 

Saviour

 
motionless
 

strange

 

heavens

 

anthem

 

roaring

 

driven

 
tossed

inland

 

spirit

 

shadowy

 
summer
 

dearth

 

baffled

 

antique

 

breathing

 

breezeless

 

bright


Fronting

 

wildly

 
despair
 

immitigable

 

unearthly

 

mournful

 

Streamlike

 
spiritual
 

forlorn

 
sorrowful

Beneath
 

drowsed

 
pensive
 

locked

 
divine
 

repose

 

bounds

 

currents

 

murmuring

 

Scarce


harken

 

Yearns

 

kisses

 

touched

 

musing

 

droning

 

insect

 

tranquil

 
woodland
 

sounds