Page:The poems of Richard Watson Gilder, Gilder, 1908.djvu/283

Rh Forgetting that pure beauty is impearled

A thousand perfect ways, and none is best.

Sometimes I deem that dawn upon the ocean

Thrills deeper than all else; but, sudden, there,

With serpent gleam and hue, and fixèd motion,

Niagara curves its scimitar in air.

So when I dream of sunset, oft I gaze

Again from Bellosguardo's misty hight,

Or memory ends once more one day of days—

Carrara's mountains purpling into night.

There is no loveliest, dear Love, but thee—

Through whom all loveliness I breathe and see.

MUSIC IN SOLITUDE

I

this valley far and lonely

Birds sang only,

And the brook,

And the rain upon the leaves;

And all night long beneath the eaves

(While with soft breathings slept the housèd cattle)

The hivèd bees

Made music like the murmuring seas;

From lichened wall, from many a leafy nook,

The chipmunk sounded shrill his tiny rattle;

Through the warm day boomed low the droning flies,

And the huge mountain shook

With the organ of the skies.

II

Dear these songs unto my heart;

But the spirit longs for art,

Longs for music that is born