Ella Wheeler Wilcox (Элла Уилкокс)

Song of the Spirit (Too sweet and too subtle for pen or for tongue)

Too sweet and too subtle for pen or for tongue
In phrases unwritten and measures unsung, 
As deep and as strange as the sounds of the sea, 
Is the song that my spirit is singing to me.

In the midnight and tempest when forest trees shiver, 
In the roar of the surf, and the rush of the river, 
In the rustle of leaves and the fall of the rain, 
And on the low breezes I catch the refrain.

From the vapours that frame and envelop the earth, 
And beyond, from the realms where my spirit had birth, 
From the mists of the land and the fogs of the sea, 
For ever and ever the songs come to me.

I know not its wording - its import I know -
For the rhythm is broken, the measure runs low, 
When vexed or allured by the things of this life
My soul is merged into its pleasures or strife.

When up to the hill tops of beauty and light
My soul like a lark in the ether takes flight, 
And the white gates of heaven shine brighter and nearer, 
The song of the spirit grows sweeter and clearer.

Up, up to the realms where no mortal has trod -
Into space and infinity near to my God -
With whiteness, and silence, and beautiful things, 
I am bourne when the voice of eternity sings.

When once in the winds or the dropp of the rain
Thy spirit shall listen and hear the refrain, 
Thy soul shall soar up like a bird on the breeze, 
And the things that have pleased thee will never more please.

Ella Wheeler Wilcox’s other poems:

  1. The Phantom Ball
  2. The Giddy Girl
  3. The Awakening (I love the tropics, where sun and rain)
  4. The Bed
  5. The Plow of God

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