AND HERE THE HERMIT SAT, AND TOLD HIS BEADS

And here thr hermit sat, and told his baeds,
And stroked his flowing locks, red as the fire,
Sunmmed up his tale of moon and sun and star:
'How blest are we', he deemed, 'who so compprise
The essence of the whole, and of ourselves,
As in a Venice flask of luncent shape,
Ornate of gilt Arabic, and inscribed
With Suras from Time's Koran, live and pray,
More than half grateful for the glittering prize,
Human existence! If I note my powers,
So poor and frail a toy, the insect's prey,
Itched by a berry, fastered by a plum,
The very air infecting my thin frame
With is malarial trick, whom every day
Rushes upon and hustles to the grave,
Yet raised, by the great love that broods o'er all
Responsive, to a height beyond all thought.

He ended, as the nightly prayer and fast
Summoned him inward. But I sat and heard,
Till midnight o'er the warm, dry, dewless rocks:
And saw the blazing dog-star droop his fire,
And the low comet, trailing to the south,
Bend his reverted gaze, and leave us free.

   William Ellery Channing
                                                  (1818-1901)

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