Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Uriel by Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Uriel

    By Ralph Waldo Emerson



    It fell in the ancient periods
    Which the brooding soul surveys,
    Or ever the wild Time coined itself
    Into calendar months and days.

    This was the lapse of Uriel,
    Which in Paradise befell.
    Once, among the Pleiads walking,
    Seyd overheard the young gods talking;
    And the treason, too long pent,
    To his ears was evident.
    The young deities discussed
    Laws of form, and metre just,
    Orb, quintessence, and sunbeams,
    What subsisteth, and what seems.
    One, with low tones that decide,
    And doubt and reverend use defied,
    With a look that solved the sphere,
    And stirred the devils everywhere,
    Gave his sentiment divine
    Against the being of a line.
    'Line in nature is not found;
    Unit and universe are round;
    In vain produced, all rays return;
    Evil will bless, and ice will burn.'
    As Uriel spoke with piercing eye,
    A shudder ran around the sky;
    The stern old war-gods shook their heads,
    The seraphs frowned from myrtle-beds;
    Seemed to the holy festival
    The rash word boded ill to all;
    The balance-beam of Fate was bent;
    The bounds of good and ill were rent;
    Strong Hades could not keep his own,
    But all slid to confusion.

    A sad self-knowledge, withering, fell
    On the beauty of Uriel;
    In heaven once eminent, the god
    Withdrew, that hour, into his cloud;
    Whether doomed to long gyration
    In the sea of generation,
    Or by knowledge grown too bright
    To hit the nerve of feebler sight.
    Straightway, a forgetting wind
    Stole over the celestial kind,
    And their lips the secret kept,
    If in ashes the fire-seed slept.
    But now and then, truth-speaking things
    Shamed the angels' veiling wings;
    And, shrilling from the solar course,
    Or from fruit of chemic force,
    Procession of a soul in matter,
    Or the speeding change of water,
    Or out of the good of evil born,
    Came Uriel's voice of cherub scorn,
    And a blush tinged the upper sky,
    And the gods shook, they knew not why.



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