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Poems:
Old and New
by
Frederick George Scott
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SHAKESPEARE.
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UNSEEN
in the great minster dome of time,
Whose shafts are centuries, its spangled roof
The vaulted universe, our master sits,
And organ-voices like a far-off chime
Roll thro’ the aisles of thought. The sunlight
flits
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From
arch to arch, and, as he sits aloof,
Kings, heroes, priests, in concourse vast, sublime,
Glances of love and cries from battle-field,
His wizard power breathes on the living air.
Warm faces gleam and pass, child, woman, man,
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In
the long multitude; but he, concealed,
Our bard eludes us. Vainly each face we scan,
It is not he; his features are not there;
But, being thus
hid, his greatness is revealed. [Page 144]
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