A Walk By Moonlight

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Last night - it was a lovely night, 
  And I was very blest - 
Shall it not be for Memory 
  A happy spot to rest?

Yes; there are in the backward past 
  Soft hours to which we turn - 
Hours which, at distance, mildly shine, 
  Shine on, but never burn.

And some of these but yesternight 
  Across my path were thrown, 
Which made my heart so very light, 
  I think it could have flown.

I had been out to see a friend 
  With whom I others saw: 
Like minds to like minds ever tend - 
  An universal law.

And when we were returning home, 
  "Come who will walk with me, 
A little way", I said, and lo! 
  I straight was joined by three:

Three whom I loved - two had high thoughts 
  And were, in age, my peers; 
And one was young, but oh! endeared 
  As much as youth endears.

The moon stood silent in the sky, 
  And looked upon our earth: 
The clouds divided, passing by, 
  In homage to her worth.

There was a dance among the leaves 
  Rejoicing at her power, 
Who robes for them of silver weaves 
  Within one mystic hour.

There was a song among the winds, 
  Hymning her influence - 
That low-breathed minstrelsy which binds 
  The soul to thought intense.

And there was something in the night 
  That with its magic wound us; 
For we - oh! we not only saw, 
  But felt the moonlight around us.

How vague are all the mysteries 
  Which bind us to our earth; 
How far they send into the heart 
  Their tones of holy mirth;

How lovely are the phantoms dim 
  Which bless that better sight, 
That man enjoys when proud he stands 
  In his own spirit's light;

When, like a thing that is not ours. 
  This earthliness goes by, 
And we behold the spiritualness 
  Of all that cannot die.

'Tis then we understand the voice 
  Which in the night-wind sings, 
And feel the mystic melody 
  Played on the forest's strings.

The silken language of the stars 
  Becomes the tongue we speak, 
And then we read the sympathy 
  That pales the young moon's cheek.

The inward eye is open then
  To glories, which in dreams 
Visit the sleeper's couch, in robes 
  Woven of the rainbow's beams.

I bless my nature that I am
  Allied to all the bliss, 
Which other worlds we're told afford, 
  But which I find in this.

My heart is bettered when I feel 
  That even this human heart 
To all around is gently bound, 
  And forms of all a part;

That, cold and lifeless as they seem, 
  The flowers, the stars, the sky 
Have more than common minds may deem 
  To stir our sympathy.

Oh! in such moments can I crush 
  The grass beneath my feet? 
Ah no; the grass has then a voice, 
  Its heart - I hear it beat.

© Henry Louis Vivian Derozio