Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Poems. I. The Vesper HourJames Drummond Burns (18231864)
A
The ripple on the sea has died away
To a low murmur,—and the ships are sleeping
Each on its glassy shadow in the Bay:
The young moon’s golden shell over the hill
Trembles with lustre, and the trees are still.
The gentle Twilight hath about her cast,
And from her silver urn she sprinkles dew:
Silence and Sleep, twin sisters, follow fast
Her soundless sandals, and where’er she goes
Day-wearied Nature settles to repose.
Hath sounded,—and, or e’er its echoes die,
Another chime hath rung the vesper hour,—
A farther and a fainter makes reply;
Till far and near the soft appeal to prayer
With music fills the undulating air.
I may not breathe in prayer a creature’s name,
Yet on my heart more touching memories fall,
And ye remind me of a holier claim,—
His, whose undrooping eye alone can keep
Watch over His belovèd as they sleep.