Page:Poems Dorr.djvu/135

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VERMONT
115
       What laurel can we bring
        That ages have not hung
   A thousand times above their glorious dead?
       What crown to crown the living
       Is left us for our giving,
       That is not shaped to other brows
        That wore it long ago?
       Our very vows but echo vows
        Breathed centuries ago!
       Earth has no choral strain,
       No sweet or sad refrain,
   No lofty pæan swelling loud and clear,
       That Virgil did not know,
       Or Danté, wandering slow
   In mystic trances, did not pause to hear!
    When gods from high Olympus came
    To touch old Homer's lips with flame,
    The/morning stars together sung
    To teach their raptures to his tongue.
    For him the lonely ocean moaned;
    For him the mighty winds intoned
    Their deep-voiced chantings, and for him
    Sweet flower-bells pealed in forests dim.
    From earth and sea and sky he caught
    The spell of their divinest thought,
    While yet it blossomed fresh and new
    As Eden's rosebuds wet with dew!
    Oh! to have lived when earth was young,
    With all its melodies unsung!
    The dome of heaven bent nearer then
    When gods and angels talked with men—
    When Song itself was newly born,
    The Incarnation of the Morn!
    But now, alas! all thought is old,
    All life is but a story told,