C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
The Choirs
By Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock (17241803)
D
Thou beamy form, more fair than orient day,
Float back, and hover yet
Before my swimming sight!
To realize the heavenly portraiture?
Shall marble hearse them all,
Ere the bright change be wrought?
For thee shall bloom the never-fading song,
Who bidd’st it be,—to thee
Religion’s honors rise.
For once would inspiration string the lyre,—
The streaming tide of joy,
My pledge for loftier verse.
What ’tis to melt in bliss, who never felt
Devotion’s raptures rise
On sacred Music’s wing;
Mingle their hallowed songs of solemn praise,
And at each awful pause
The unseen choirs above.
I hear a Christian people hymn their God,
And thousands kneel at once,
Jehovah, Lord, to thee!
Their simple song according with the heart,
Yet lofty, such as lifts
The aspiring soul from earth.
The young tear quivers; for they view the goal,
Where shines the golden crown,
Where angels wave the palm.
Music, as if poured artless from the breast;
For so the Master willed
To lead its channeled course.
Scorning what knows not to call down the tear,
Or shroud the soul in gloom
Or steep in holy awe.
Descends. Alternate voices sweep the dome,
Then blend their choral force,—
The theme, Impending Doom;
While all the host of heaven o’er Sion’s hill
Hovered, and praising saw
Ascend the Lord of Life.
But soon joins in the ever fuller choir.
The people quake. They feel
A glow of heavenly fire.
The organ’s thunder,—now more loud and more,—
And to the shout of all
The temple trembles too.
Before the altar,—bows the front to earth;
They taste the hallowed cup,
Devoutly, deeply, still.
Where thus assembled worshipers adore,
The conscious grave shall heave,
Its flowerets sweeter bloom;
When panting Praise pursues his way,
I’ll hear—He rose again
Vibrating through the tomb.