Night Rhapsody

written by


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  How beautiful it is to wake at night,
  When over all there reigns the ultimate spell
  Of complete silence, darkness absolute,
  To feel the world, tilted on axle-tree,
  In slow gyration, with no sensible sound,
  Unless to ears of unimagined beings,
  Resident incorporeal or stretched
  In vigilance of ecstasy among
  Ethereal paths and the celestial maze.
  The rumour of our onward course now brings
  A steady rustle, as of some strange ship
  Darkling with soundless sail all set and amply filled
  By volume of an ever-constant air,
  At fullest night, through seas for ever calm,
  Swept lovely and unknown for ever on.

  How beautiful it is to wake at night,
  Embalmed in darkness watchful, sweet, and still,
  As is the brain's mood flattered by the swim
  Of currents circumvolvent in the void,
  To lie quite still and to become aware
  Of the dim light cast by nocturnal skies
  On a dim earth beyond the window-ledge,
  So, isolate from the friendly company
  Of the huge universe which turns without,
  To brood apart in calm and joy awhile
  Until the spirit sinks and scarcely knows
  Whether self is, or if self only is,
  For ever....

  How beautiful to wake at night,
  Within the room grown strange, and still, and sweet,
  And live a century while in the dark
  The dripping wheel of silence slowly turns;
  To watch the window open on the night,
  A dewy silent deep where nothing stirs,
  And, lying thus, to feel dilate within
  The press, the conflict, and the heavy pulse
  Of incommunicable sad ecstasy,
  Growing until the body seems outstretched
  In perfect crucifixion on the arms
  Of a cross pointing from last void to void,
  While the heart dies to a mere midway spark.

  All happiness thou holdest, happy night,
  For such as lie awake and feel dissolved
  The peaceful spice of darkness and the cool
  Breath hither blown from the ethereal flowers
  That mist thy fields! O happy, happy wounds,
  Conditioned by existence in humanity,
  That have such powers to heal them! slow sweet sighs
  Torn from the bosom, silent wails, the birth
  Of such long-treasured tears as pain his eyes,
  Who, waking, hears the divine solicitudes
  Of midnight with ineffable purport charged.

  How beautiful it is to wake at night,
  Another night, in darkness yet more still,
  Save when the myriad leaves on full-fledged boughs,
  Filled rather by the perfume's wandering flood
  Than by dispansion of the still sweet air,
  Shall from the furthest utter silences
  In glimmering secrecy have gathered up
  An host of whisperings and scattered sighs,
  To loose at last a sound as of the plunge
  And lapsing seethe of some Pacific wave,
  Which, risen from the star-thronged outer troughs,
  Rolls in to wreathe with circling foam away
  The flutter of the golden moths that haunt
  The star's one glimmer daggered on wet sands.

  So beautiful it is to wake at night!
  Imagination, loudening with the surf
  Of the midsummer wind among the boughs,
  Gathers my spirit from the haunts remote
  Of faintest silence and the shades of sleep,
  To bear me on the summit of her wave
  Beyond known shores, beyond the mortal edge
  Of thought terrestrial, to hold me poised
  Above the frontiers of infinity,
  To which in the full reflux of the wave
  Come soon I must, bubble of solving foam,
  Borne to those other shores — now never mine
  Save for a hovering instant, short as this
  Which now sustains me ere I be drawn back —
  To learn again, and wholly learn, I trust,
  How beautiful it is to wake at night.

© Robert Nichols