by H. Bowman
Slowly the light is fading
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Language: English
Slowly the light is fading Down in the crimson west -- Songs half heard in the twilight, Dying softly to rest. Broken snatches of music, Stirring the depths that sleep, Where memory patient bideth Her silent watch to keep. Oh songs! Oh light! Oh silence! Oh thoughts that come and go! Oh sad, sweet dreams of sunset, Whose yearning none may know -- Sad, for their backward looking To sunsets out of sight -- Sweet, for a hope rings through them, Of yet undying Light. Why can I never utter My dreamings as they rise -- Frame them in worthy setting, Meet for other eyes? Why must I bear it always, This weight of thoughts unsaid? Words hide but never sound them, Those depths unfathomèd. The hidden core of meaning Lies always out of reach -- A shy, with-drawing secret, That will not yield to speech. None but the masters shew it -- For me -- my lips are sealed -- I only know of something That lieth unrevealed. Perhaps beyond the sunsets, The opened lips may come; -- Down, down among the shadows, We wander blind and dumb. But there the free expression, The purgèd eye and ear, The ripened full fruition Of all we wait for here.
M. Lang sets stanza 1
About the headline (FAQ)
View text with all available footnotesCopied from An Offering. Second Series, ed. by M. B. London, H. K. Lewis : 1882.
Text Authorship:
- by H. Bowman , "Sunset dreams" [author's text checked 1 time against a primary source]
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Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]
This text was added to the website: 2012-05-19
Line count: 40
Word count: 202