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When The Firmament Quivers With Daylight'S Young Beam.

By William Cullen Bryant

Topics: classic

When the firmament quivers with daylight's young beam,     And the woodlands awaking burst into a hymn,     And the glow of the sky blazes back from the stream,     How the bright ones of heaven in the brightness grow dim.     Oh! 'tis sad, in that moment of glory and song,     To see, while the hill-tops are waiting the sun,     The glittering band that kept watch all night long     O'er Love and o'er Slumber, go out one by one:     Till the circle of ether, deep, ruddy, and vast,     Scarce glimmers with one of the train that were there;     And their leader the day-star, the brightest and last,     Twinkles faintly and fades in that desert of air.     Thus, Oblivion, from midst of whose shadow we came,     Steals o'er us again when life's twilight is gone;     And the crowd of bright names, in the heaven of fame,     Grow pale and are quenched as the years hasten on.     Let them fade, but we'll pray that the age, in whose flight,     Of ourselves and our friends the remembrance shall die     May rise o'er the world, with the gladness and light     Of the morning that withers the stars from the sky.

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Author:William Cullen Bryant

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

William Cullen Bryant

About William Cullen Bryant

William Cullen Bryant (1794–1878) was an American poet and journalist. His poem "Thanatopsis" (1817) was the first major American poem. He edited the New York Evening Post for 50 years and was a champion of American poetry.

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