The
Temple of the Ages
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mountains sleep, white winter's mantle round them,
The thunder's voice no
longer breaks their rest;
From bluest heights the sun beholds with rapture
The noble poise of each
gigantic crest.
The
generations of the clouds have vanished |
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Which
lingered idly here through autumn days;
The leaves have gone, the voices of the tempest
No longer roll to heaven
their hymn of praise.
Deep
hid in snow, the streams with muffled murmurs
Pour down dark caverns
to the infinite sea; |
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This
awful peace has vexed their restless childhood;
They hurry from its dread
solemnity.
Even
the climbing woods are mute and spellbound,
And, halting midway on
the steep ascent,
The patient spruces hold their breath for wonder, |
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Nor
shake the snow with which their boughs are bent.
Now
as the sun goes down with all his shining,
Huge shadows creep among
these mighty walls,
And on the haunting ghosts of by-gone ages
The dreamy splendour of
the starlight falls. [Page 2] |
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Not Nineveh, not Babylon nor Egypt,
In all their treasures
'neath the hungry sand,
Can show a sight so awful and majestic
As this waste temple in
this newer land.
The
king that reared these mighty courts was Chaos,
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His
servants, fire and elemental war;
The Titan hands of Earthquake and of Ocean
These granite slabs and
pillars laid in store.
And,
lauding here the vast and living Father,
The ages one by one have
knelt and prayed, |
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Until
the ghostly echoes of their worship
Come back and make man's
puny heart afraid. [Page 3] |
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