dots-menu
×

Home  »  Specimens of American Poetry  »  Charles Sprague (1791–1875)

Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.

By The Winged Worshippers

Charles Sprague (1791–1875)

  • Two swallows, having flown into church during divine service, were apostrophized in the following stanzas.


  • GAY, guiltless pair,

    What seek ye from the fields of heaven?

    Ye have no need of prayer,

    Ye have no sins to be forgiven.

    Why perch ye here,

    Where mortals to their Maker bend?

    Can your pure spirits fear

    The God ye never could offend?

    Ye never knew

    The crimes for which we come to weep:

    Penance is not for you,

    Bless’d wanderers of the upper deep.

    To you ’t is given

    To wake sweet nature’s untaught lays;

    Beneath the arch of heaven

    To chirp away a life of praise.

    Then spread each wing,

    Far, far above, o’er lakes and lands,

    And join the choirs that sing

    In yon blue dome not rear’d with hands.

    Or if ye stay,

    To note the consecrated hour,

    Teach me the airy way,

    And let me try your envied power.

    Above the crowd,

    On upward wings could I but fly,

    I ’d bathe in you bright cloud,

    And seek the stars that gem the sky

    ’T were heaven indeed,

    Through fields of trackless light to soar,

    On nature’s charms to feed,

    And nature’s own great God adore.