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1819–1891

MIDNIGHT

James Russell Lowell

The moon shines white and silent On the mist, which, like a tide Of some enchanted ocean, O'er the wide marsh doth glide,

Spreading its ghost-like billows Silently far and wide. A vague and starry magic Makes all things mysteries,

And lures the earth's dumb spirit Up to the longing skies: I seem to hear dim whispers, And tremulous replies.

The fireflies o'er the meadow In pulses come and go; The elm-trees’ heavy shadow Weighs on the grass below;

And faintly from the distance The dreaming cock doth crow. All things look strange and mystic, The very bushes swell

And take wild shapes and motions, As if beneath a spell; They seem not the same lilacs From childhood known so well.

The snow of deepest silence O'er everything doth fall, So beautiful and quiet, And yet so like a pall;

As if all life were ended, And rest were come to all. O wild and wondrous midnight, There is a might in thee

To make the charmèd body Almost like spirit be, And give it some faint glimpses Of immortality!

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MIDNIGHT · James Russell Lowell · Poetry Cove