Page:The poems of Edmund Clarence Stedman, 1908.djvu/89

ALICE OF MONMOUTH Stretched from an unknown height; and lo! a band

Of scintillant jewels twined around the wrist,

Sapphire and ruby, opal, amethyst,

Turquoise, and diamond, linked with flashing joints.

Its wide and puissant reach began to clasp,

In countless folds, the interclashing points

Of outshot light, gathering their angry hues—

North, south, east, west—with noiseless grasp,

By some divine, resistless law,

Till everywhere the wondering watchers saw

A thousand colors blend and interfuse,

In aureate wave on wave ascending higher,—

Immeasurable, white, a spotless fire;

And, glory circling glory there, behold

Gleams of the heavenly city walled with gold!

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With the effulgent reflex of that light,)

When these celestial omens shall be fulfilled,

Our strife be closed and the nation purged of sin,

And a pure and holier union shall begin;

And a jarring race be drawn, throughout the land,

Into new brotherhood by some strong hand;

And the baneful glow and splendor of war shall fade

In the whiter light of love, that, from sea to sea,

Shall soften the rage of hosts in arms arrayed,

And melt into share and shaft each battle-blade,

And brighten the hopes of a people great and free.

But, in the story told of a nation's woes,

Of the sacrifices made for a century's fault,

The fames of fallen heroes shall ever shine,

Serene, and high, and crystalline as those

Fair stars, which reappear in yonder vault;

In the country's heart their written names shall be,

Like that of a single one in mine and thine.

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