THERE are songs yet unsung, that, though silent, we feel,
As over the soul their faint melodies steal;
Like the spell of enchantment which fairies would weave,
To fetter the victim they mean to deceive.
II.
’Tis vain to resist them: by day and by night
They impart to the soul a deep, quiet delight,
And we feel that their language the sense overpowers,
As the air when oppressed with the perfume of flowers.
III.
When sorrow’s dark shadows come like a death pall,
And the dead leaves of hope by adversity fall,
They come o’er the desert that looms in the heart,
And a newness, a freshness, a verdure impart.
IV.
In the blue purpling waves of the sun-tinted sky,
In the moonbeam, the sunbeam, the vesper’s low sigh,
In the still quiet eve, and the night-wind’s low moan,
Unembodied in words, yet to thought are they known.
V.
In the low languid zephyr that steals through the dell,
With a sweetness and sadness like lovers’ farewell;
In each flower and meadow, each leaflet and brook,
They each add a page to that mystical book.