TO THE NIGHTINGALE.
Gale of the night our fathers call’d thee, bird!
Surely not rude were they who call’d thee so,
Whether mid spring-tide mirth thy song they heard
Or whether its soft gurgle melted woe.
They knew not, heeded not, that every clime
Hath been attemper’d by thy minstrelsy;
They knew not, heeded not, from earliest time
How every poet’s nest was warm’d by thee.
In Paradise’s unpolluted bowers
Did Milton listen to thy freshest strain;
In his own night didst thou assuage the hours
When Crime and Tyranny were crown’d again.
Melodious Shelley caught thy softest song,
And they who heard his music heard not thine;
Gentle and joyous, delicate and strong,
From the far tomb his voice shall silence mine.