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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Maurice Browne

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

Silence of the Night

Maurice Browne

I
THE SILENCE of the night is full of voices,

Voices like the trumpets of angels

Blown across the stars from the ramparts of heaven,

Voices like the stillness

Of one newly dead.

The silence of the night,

Empty of cry of bird or beast,

Empty of stir of leaf or branch,

Empty of all human utterance,

Is filled with voices.

In the silence of the night

I stood by the garden pool in the darkness

And I heard a voice crying,

Wake!

For the feet of Him who comes are on the threshold of the worlds.

Wake!

For He holds the worlds in His hands.

In the silence of the night

In the shadows by the pool in the darkness

I heard a voice answer:

Sleep:

For the hour of waking will come, will come.

Sleep, and dream not. Sleep, and be at rest.

Sleep,

While ye may.

In the silence of the night

I heard a voice

Like the trumpet of an angel;

In the silence of the night

I heard a voice

Like a soul passing:

Where the trees brood over the pool

In the darkness of my garden.

II
Then

In the silence of the night

Suddenly

I heard a woman weeping,

And I heard a girl singing:

By the pool

In the darkness of my garden

In the stillness of the night.

O singing girl, singing girl, singing girl,

Singing through the night,

Singing, singing, under the trees,

Singing, singing, singing, beside the pool in the darkness,

“Come away,” singing, “Come away, O my lover,”

“Love! Love! Love!” singing like a bird among the branches,

Golden-throated singer, young for ever, undying,

Singing of love all night among the shadows under the silence,

Under the silence of the stars,

Under the silence of the night,

Under the eternal silence:

Sing! sing! sing!

Sing for ever, for ever through the darkness,

Sing through the silence, sing through the everlasting silence,

Sing! shattering the silence

You also

For ever.

In the silence of the night

I heard a girl singing,

And I heard a woman

Weeping in the darkness.

O singing girl, singing girl,

Singing all night long,

Singing of love, of love, to my heart in the darkness of the garden,

“Love! Love! Love! Love!” singing full-throated, triumphal,

Virginal, golden-hearted, magical in the stillness:

Sing for ever, for ever.

In the silence of the night

I heard a girl singing,

And I heard a woman weeping:

A woman weeping,

Weeping in the darkness.

Singing girl, O singing girl,

Sing for me again in the darkness,

Sing for me, sing for me, in the darkness,

Sing again, sing again for me in the darkness:

O singing girl, singing girl,

Sing for me again.

By the pool

In the silence of the night

I heard a woman weeping,

A woman weeping in the darkness,

Quietly, ceaselessly

Weeping in the darkness

Through the long night,

Through the night that will not end,

Through the eternal night.

O singing girl, my singing girl

Rain, rain, rain.

Rain among the leaves and on the branches,

Rain on the branches in the darkness:

Rain.

Lost, lost, lost.

O lost, O lonely, O forsaken!

O my lover, O lonely, O my lover!

Lost.

Never, never, never.

Nevermore his feet upon the threshold:

O the trumpet that pealed upon the threshold!

Nevermore, never, never.

Thereafter,

By the pool, listening,

I heard silence enfold the night:

Where the wet trees

Make a darkness of my garden.

III
And again, a third time,

The silence of the night was filled with voices:

Antiphonal voices like the trumpets of the sons of God

Pealing from star to star across the ramparts of heaven;

Answering voices hushed like the stillness

Of one dead who will not awaken.

The silence after the song had ceased,

The silence that followed after

The tears of another,

Were aflame and terrible with voices.

What is the silence of the night to us?

Or the tears of a woman?

Or the singing of a girl in the darkness?

Or the silence after the singing?

What to us are silence and song?

Then

Over and under and about the silence

And through the silence

And filling the silence,

While dawn

Moving over the darkness

Touched like a lover the pool in my garden,

The voices of the night met and mingled

And were one:

Make an end of tears in the night:

Make an end of singing in the darkness:

Sing in the dawn, the dawn!

In the dawn make a song of your tears:

Let your tears be a song for ever

In the great silence.

In the hush of dawn

Between the night and the day

I heard this voice,

A voice like the stillness of God.

1916