Alice Meynell (Элис Мейнелл)

The Voice of a Bird

 "He shall rise up at the voice of a bird." — ECCLESIASTES

Who then is "he"?
            Dante, Keats, Shakespeare, Milton, Shelley; all
Rose in their greatness at the shrill decree,
            The little rousing inarticulate call.

            For they stood up
At the bird-voice, of lark, of nightingale,
Drank poems from that throat as from a cup.
Over the great world's notes did these prevail.

            And not alone
The signal poets woke. In listening man,
Woman, and child a poet stirs unknown,
Throughout the Mays of birds since Mays began.

            He rose, he heard—
Our father, our St. Peter, in his tears—
The crowing, twice, of the prophetic bird,
The saddest cock-crow of our human years.

Alice Meynell’s other poems:

  1. The Young Neophyte
  2. To O——, of Her Dark Eyes
  3. The Wind Is Blind
  4. “The Return to Nature”
  5. In Early Spring




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