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Home  »  An American Anthology, 1787–1900  »  40 The Chanting Cherubs

Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.

By Richard HenryDana

40 The Chanting Cherubs

WHENCE come ye, Cherubs? from the moon?

Or from a shining star?

Ye sure are sent, a blessed boon,

From kinder worlds afar;

For, while I look, my heart is all delight:

Earth has no creatures half so pure and bright.

From moon nor star we hither flew;

The moon doth wane away,—

The stars they pale at morning dew;

We ’re children of the day;

Nor change, nor night, was ever ours to bear;

Eternal light, and love, and joy, we share.

Then, sons of light, from Heaven above

Some blessed news ye bring.

Come ye to chant eternal love

And tell how angels sing,

And in your breathing, conscious forms to show

How purer forms above live, breathe, and glow?

Our parent is a human mind;

His winged thoughts are we;

To sun nor stars are we confined:

We pierce the deepest sea.

Moved by a brother’s call, our Father bade

Us light on earth, and here our flight is stayed.