The Evening Star.

Bright as young joy it seems to stir,1
                        
                        And gain upon our mortal view,2
                        
                        As if it were a messenger3
                        
                        Rejoicing while descending through4
                        
                        The dewy depths of twilight’s blue,5
                        
                        And travelling to this world below6
                        
                        With tidings glad for human woe.7
                        Enlarging still, intensely bright,8
                        
                        As if it borrowed all its light9
                        
                        From hope and beauty, life and love,10
                        
                        And shone upon our mortal sight,11
                        
                        To lure us to the heaven above.12
                        And would, O would that sometimes we13
                        
                        From this woe-shadowed world could see14
                        
                        Descending from their heaven afar,15
                        
                        Exulting like that lustrous star,16
                        
                        The spirits of the once adored,17
                        
                        The loved, the lost ones, not restored18
                        
                        Wan as they were with death’s alarms,19
                        
                        But, starlike, in those evening skies,20
                        
                        If not to our extended arms,21
                        
                        Yet once more to our tearful eyes !22