Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.
By WilliamWinter666 The Passing Bell at Stratford
S
In summer gloaming’s golden glow,
I hear and feel thy voice divine,
And all my soul responds to thine.
My Shakespeare heard thee long ago,
When lone by Avon’s pensive stream
He wandered, in his haunted dream:
Through spectral caverns of the dead,
And strove—and strove in vain—to pierce
The secret of the universe.
On that sad day when he was borne
Through the green aisle of honied limes,
To rest beneath the chambered chimes.
Another voice was in his ear,
And, freed from all the bonds of men,
He knew the awful secret then.
A sacred promise unto me
Of that great hour when I shall know
The path whereon his footsteps go.