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Home  »  American Sonnets  »  Washington Allston (1779–1843)

Higginson and Bigelow, comps. American Sonnets. 1891.

On a Falling Group in the Last Judgment of Michael Angelo

Washington Allston (1779–1843)

HOW vast, how dread, o’erwhelming, is the thought

Of space interminable! to the soul

A circling weight that crushes into naught

Her mighty faculties! a wondrous whole,

Without or parts, beginning, or an end!

How fearful, then, on desperate wings to send

The fancy e’en amid the waste profound!

Yet, born as if all daring to astound,

Thy giant hand, O Angelo, hath hurled

E’en human forms, with all their mortal weight,

Down the dread void,—fall endless as their fate!

Already now they seem from world to world

For ages thrown; yet doomed, another past,

Another still to reach, nor e’er to reach the last!