Stedman and Hutchinson, comps. A Library of American Literature:
An Anthology in Eleven Volumes. 1891.
Vols. IX–XI: Literature of the Republic, Part IV., 1861–1889
The Organ
By Francis Hopkinson (17371791)F
The gilded organ rears its towering height.
And hark! Methinks I from its bosom hear
Soft issuing sounds that steal upon the ear
And float serenely on the liquid air.
Now by degrees more bold and broad they grow,
And riot loosely through the aisles below;
Till the full organ lifts its utmost voice,
And my heart shudders at the powerful noise!
Like the last trump, one note is heard to sound
That all the massy pillars tremble round;
The firm fixed building shivers on its base,
And vast vibration fills the astonished place;
The marble pavements seem to feel their doom,
And the bones rattle in each hollow tomb.
And tapers gently in a fine decay:
The melting sounds on higher pinions fly,
And seem to fall soft oozing from on high;
Like evening dew they gently spread around
And shed the sweetness of heart-thrilling sound;
Till grown too soft, too fine for mortal ear,
The dying strains dissolve in distant air.
Methought I heard a flight of angels rise,
Most sweetly chaunting as they gained the skies;
Methought I heard their lessening sound decay
And fade and melt and vanish quite away.