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Poem by Richard Henry Stoddard


Adsum


THE ANGEL came by night
  (Such angels still come down),
And like a winter cloud
  Passed over London town;
Along its lonesome streets,        
  Where Want had ceased to weep,
Until it reached a house
  Where a great man lay asleep;
The man of all his time
  Who knew the most of men,        
The soundest head and heart,
  The sharpest, kindest pen.
It paused beside his bed,
  And whispered in his ear;
He never turned his head,        
  But answered, “I am here.”

Into the night they went.
  At morning, side by side,
They gained the sacred Place
  Where the greatest Dead abide.        
Where grand old Homer sits
  In godlike state benign;
Where broods in endless thought
  The awful Florentine;
Where sweet Cervantes walks,        
  A smile on his grave face;
Where gossips quaint Montaigne,
  The wisest of his race;
Where Goethe looks through all
  With that calm eye of his;        
Where—little seen but Light—
  The only Shakespeare is!
When the new Spirit came,
  They asked him, drawing near,
“Art thou become like us?”        
  He answered, “I am here.”



Richard Henry Stoddard


Richard Henry Stoddard's other poems:
  1. Twilight on Sumter
  2. Lincoln's Birthday
  3. The Witch’s Whelp
  4. The Flight of the Arrow
  5. Silent Songs


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