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Voices Of Hope

Topics: classic

It is the hither side, O Hope,     And afternoon; our shadows slope     Backward along the mountain cope.     The early morning was so sweet,     We seemed to climb with winged feet,     Like moving vapors fine and fleet,     Not more elastic poised and swung     Harebell or yellow adder's tongue,     Nor blither any bird that sung.     Thy light foot bent not any stem     Of frailest plant, whose diadem     In passing kissed thy garment's hem.     O Hope! so near me and so bright,     Thy foot above me on the height,     I might not touch thy garments white.     Thy lifted face, so fair, so rapt,     Like sunshine rolled and overlapped     Cliff, slope, and tall peak thunder-capped.     Thy voice to me like silver brooks     Down dropped from secret mountain nooks,     Still drew me, like thy radiant looks.     Nor scorching sun, nor beating rain,     Nor soil, nor grime, nor travel-stain,     With thee, were weariness or pain.     But now--it is the afternoon     Behind, the mountain summit's gloom:     Before, night's shadows gather soon.     O Hope! where art thou?--rough and steep     The way has grown; I faint and weep,     Beside me torrents toss and leap,     And far below, unseen for tears,     The river where life disappears,     Uplifts its thunder to my ears.     Canst thou, with thy serener eyes,     Over the flood God's paradise,     Behold in awful beauty rise?     Far off I seem to see thee stand,     Shading rapt eyes with radiant hand,     To scan that unknown glorious land.     The glory of that unseen place,     Gathers and brightens o'er thy face,     And fills thy looks with tender grace.     O, Hope divine '--I would behold     Those shining spires, those streets of gold:     But ah! the waves are deadly cold!     I hear the thunder and the sweep     Of waves; deep calleth unto deep;     The pathway ends, abrupt and steep.     Yet, soft beside that solemn shore,     I hear thy voice above its roar:     "Life is a dream-and it is o'er;     "The night is past--behold the day,     O new-born soul--O child of clay,     O bird uncaged and still astray;     "Take through the universe thy road;     All paths lead up to His abode,     Converging at the Mount of God!"

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"It is the hither side, O Hope,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Kate Seymour Maclean delivers a powerful performance in "Voices Of Hope"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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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"

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