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Easter Eve.

Topics: classic

Hear me, Brother, gently met;     Just a little, turn not yet,     Thou shalt laugh, and soon forget:     Now the midnight draweth near.     I have little more to tell;     Soon with hollow stroke and knell,     Thou shalt count the palace bell,     Calling that the hour is here.     Burdens black and strange to bear,     I must tell, and thou must share,     Listening with that stony stare,     Even as many a man before.     Years have lightly come and gone     In their jocund unison.     But the tides of life roll on -    -     They remember now no more.     Once upon a night of glee,     In an hour of revelry,     As I wandered restlessly,     I beheld with burning eye,     How a pale procession rolled     Through a quarter quaint and old,     With its banners and its gold,     And the crucifix went by.     Well I knew that body brave     That was pierced and hung to save,     But my flesh was now a grave     For the soul that gnashed within.     He that they were bearing by,     With their banners white and high,     He was pure, and foul was I,     And his whiteness mocked my sin.     Ah, meseemed that even he,     Would not wait to look on me,     In my years and misery,     Things that he alone could heal.     In mine eyes I felt the flame     Of a rage that nought could tame,     And I cried and cursed his name,     Till my brain began to reel.     In a moment I was 'ware,     How that many watching there,     Fearfully with blanch and stare,     Crossed themselves, and shrank away;     Then upon my reeling mind,     Like a sharp blow from behind,     Fell the truth, and left me blind,     Hopeless now, and all astray.     O'er the city wandering wide,     Seeking but some place to hide,     Where the sounds of mirth had died,     Through the shaken night I stole;     From the ever-eddying stream     Of the crowds that did but seem     Like processions in a dream     To my empty echoing soul.     Till I came at last alone     To a hidden street of stone,     Where the city's monotone     On the silence fell no more.     Then I saw how one in white     With a footstep mute and light,     Through the shadow of the night     Like a spirit paced before.     And a sudden stillness came     Through my spirit and my frame,     And a spell without a name     Held me in his mystic track.     Though his presence seemed so mild,     Yet he led me like a child,     With a yearning strange and wild,     That I dared not turn me back.     Oh, I could not see his face,     Nor behold his utmost grace,     Yet I might not change my pace     Fastened by a strange belief;     For his steps were sad and slow,     And his hands hung straight below,     And his head was bowed, as though     Pressed by some immortal grief.     So I followed, yet not I     Held alone that company:     Every silent passer-by     Paled and turned and joined with me;     So we followed still and fleet,     While the city street by street,     Fell behind our rustling feet     Like a deadened memory.     Where the sound of sin and riot     Broke upon the night's dim quiet,     And the solemn bells hung nigh it     Echoed from their looming towers;     Where the mourners wept alway,     Watching for the morning grey;     Where the weary toiler lay,     Husbanding the niggard hours;     By the gates where all night long     Guests in many a joyous throng,     With the sound of dance and song,     Dreamed in golden palaces;     Still he passed, and door by door     Opened with a pale outpour,     And the revel rose no more     Hushed in deeper phantasies.     As we passed, the talk and stir     Of the quiet wayfarer     And the noisy banqueter     Died upon the midnight dim.     They that reeled in drunken glee     Shrank upon the trembling knee,     And their jests died pallidly,     As they rose and followed him.     From the street and from the hall,     From the flare of festival     None that saw him stayed, but all     Followed where his wonder would:     And our feet at first so few     Gathered as those white feet drew,     Till at last our number grew     To a pallid multitude;     And the hushed and awful beat     Of our pale unnumbered feet     Made a murmur strange and sweet,     As we followed evermore.     Now the night was almost passed,     And the dawn was overcast,     When the stranger stayed at last     At a great cathedral door.     Never word the stranger said,     But he slowly raised his head,     And the vast doors opend     By an unseen hand withdrawn;     And in silence wave on wave,     Like an army from the grave,     Up the aisles and up the nave,     All that spectral crowd rolled on.     As I followed close behind,     Knowledge like an awful wind     Seemed to blow my naked mind     Into darkness black and bare;     Yet with longing wild and dim,     And a terror vast and grim,     Nearer still I pressed to him,     Till I almost touched his hair.     From the gloom so strange and eery,     From the organ low and dreary,     Rose the wailing miserere,     By mysterious voices sung;     And a dim light shone, none knew,     How it came, or whence it grew,     From the dusky roof and through     All the solemn spaces flung.     But the stranger still passed on,     Till he reached the altar stone,     And with body white and prone     Sunk his forehead to the floor;     And I saw in my despair,     Standing like a spirit there,     How his head was bruised and bare,     And his hands were clenched before,     How his hair was fouled and knit     With the blood that clotted it,     Where the prickled thorns had bit     In his crownd agony;     In his hands so wan and blue,     Leaning out, I saw the two     Marks of where the nails pierced through,     Once on gloomy Calvary.     Then with trembling throat I owned     All my dark sin unatoned,     Telling it with lips that moaned,     And methought an echo came     From the bended crowd below,     Each one breathing faint and low,     Sins that none but he might know:     "Master I did curse thy name."     And I saw him slowly rise     With his sad unearthly eyes,     Meeting mine with meek surprise,     And a voice came solemnly.     "Never more on mortal ground     For thy soul shall rest be found,     But when bells at midnight sound     Thou must rise and come with me."     Then my forehead smote the floor,     Swooning, and I knew no more,     Till I heard the chancel door     Open for the choristers:     But the stranger's form was gone,     And the church was dim and lone:     Through the silence, one by one     Stole the early worshippers.     I am ageing now I know;     That was many years ago,     Yet or I shall rest below     In the grave where none intrude,     Night by night I roam the street,     And that awful form I meet,     And I follow pale and fleet,     With a ghostly multitude.     Every night I see his face,     With its sad and burdened grace,     And the torn and bloody trace,     That in hands and feet he has.     Once my life was dark and bad;     Now its days are strange and sad,     And the people call me mad:     See, they whisper as they pass.     Even now the echoes roll     From the swinging bells that toll;     It is midnight, now my soul     Hasten; for he glideth by.     Stranger, 'tis no phantasie:     Look! my master waits for me     Mutely, but thou canst not see     With thy mortal blinded eye.

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"Hear me, Brother, gently met;..."

Archibald Lampman's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Easter Eve."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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