The Grand Canyon

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The Grand Canyon

Daybreak

What makes the lingering Night so cling to thee?

Thou vast, profound, primeval hiding-place

Of ancient secrets⁠—gray and ghostly gulf

Cleft in the green of this high forest land,

And crowded in the dark with giant forms!

Art thou a grave, a prison, or a shrine?

A stillness deeper than the dearth of sound

Broods over thee: a living silence breathes

Perpetual incense from thy dim abyss.

The morning-stars that sang above the bower

Of Eden, passing over thee, are dumb

With trembling bright amazement; and the Dawn

Steals through the glimmering pines with naked feet,

Her hand upon her lips, to look on thee!

She peers into thy depths with silent prayer

For light, more light, to part thy purple veil.

O Earth, swift-rolling Earth, reveal, reveal⁠—

Turn to the East, and show upon thy breast

The mightiest marvel in the realm of Time!

’Tis done⁠—the morning miracle of light⁠—

The resurrection of the world of hues

That die with dark, and daily rise again

With every rising of the splendid Sun!

Be still, my heart! Now Nature holds her breath

To see the solar flood of radiance leap

Across the chasm, and crown the western rim

Of alabaster with a far-away

Rampart of pearl, and flowing down by walls

Of changeful opal, deepen into gold

Of topaz, rosy gold of tourmaline,

Crimson of garnet, green and gray of jade,

Purple of amethyst, and ruby red,

Beryl, and sard, and royal porphyry;

Until the cataract of colour breaks

Upon the blackness of the granite floor.

How far below! And all between is cleft

And carved into a hundred curving miles

Of unimagined architecture! Tombs,

Temples, and colonnades are neighboured there

By fortresses that Titans might defend,

And amphitheatres where Gods might strive.

Cathedrals, buttressed with unnumbered tiers

Of ruddy rock, lift to the sapphire sky

A single spire of marble pure as snow;

And huge aerial palaces arise

Like mountains built of unconsuming flame.

Along the weathered walls, or standing deep

In riven valleys where no foot may tread,

Are lonely pillars, and tall monuments

Of perished æons and forgotten things.

My sight is baffled by the wide array

Of countless forms: my vision reels and swims

Above them, like a bird in whirling winds.

Yet no confusion fills the awful chasm;

But spacious order and a sense of peace

Brood over all. For every shape that looms

Majestic in the throng, is set apart

From all the others by its far-flung shade,

Blue, blue, as if a mountain-lake were there.

How still it is! Dear God, I hardly dare

To breathe, for fear the fathomless abyss

Will draw me down into eternal sleep.

What force has formed this masterpiece of awe?

What hands have wrought these wonders in the waste?

O river, gleaming in the narrow rift

Of gloom that cleaves the valley’s nether deep⁠—

Fierce Colorado, prisoned by thy toil,

And blindly toiling still to reach the sea⁠—

Thy waters, gathered from the snows and springs

Amid the Utah hills, have carved this road

Of glory to the Californian Gulf.

But now, O sunken stream, thy splendour lost,

’Twixt iron walls thou rollest turbid waves,

Too far away to make their fury heard!

At sight of thee, thou sullen labouring slave

Of gravitation⁠—yellow torrent poured

From distant mountains by no will of thine,

Through thrice a hundred centuries of slow

Fallings and liftings of the crust of Earth⁠—

At sight of thee my spirit sinks and fails.

Art thou alone the Maker? Is the blind

Unconscious power that drew thee dumbly down

To cut this gash across the layered globe,

The sole creative cause of all I see?

Are force and matter all? The rest a dream?

Then is thy gorge a canyon of despair,

A prison for the soul of man, a grave

Of all his dearest daring hopes! The world

Wherein we live and move is meaningless,

No spirit here to answer to our own!

The stars without a guide: The chance-born Earth

Adrift in space, no Captain on the ship:

Nothing in all the universe to prove

Eternal wisdom and eternal love!

And man, the latest accident of Time⁠—

Who thinks he loves, and longs to understand,

Who vainly suffers, and in vain is brave,

Who dupes his heart with immortality⁠—

Man is a living lie⁠—a bitter jest

Upon himself⁠—a conscious grain of sand

Lost in a desert of unconsciousness,

Thirsting for God and mocked by his own thirst.

Spirit of Beauty, mother of delight,

Thou fairest offspring of Omnipotence

Inhabiting this lofty lone abode,

Speak to my heart again and set me free

From all these doubts that darken earth and heaven!

Who sent thee forth into the wilderness

To bless and comfort all who see thy face?

Who clad thee in this more than royal robe

Of rainbows? Who designed these jewelled thrones

For thee, and wrought these glittering palaces?

Who gave thee power upon the soul of man

To lift him up through wonder into joy?

God! let the radiant cliffs bear witness, God!

Let all the shining pillars signal, God!

He only, on the mystic loom of light.

Hath woven webs of loveliness to clothe

His most majestic works: and He alone

Hath delicately wrought the cactus-flower

To star the desert floor with rosy bloom.

O Beauty, handiwork of the Most High,

Where’er thou art He tells his Love to man,

And lo, the day breaks, and the shadows flee!

Now, far beyond all language and all art

In thy wild splendour, Canyon marvellous,

The secret of thy stillness lies unveiled

In wordless worship! This is holy ground;

Thou art no grave, no prison, but a shrine.

Garden of Temples filled with Silent Praise,

If God were blind thy Beauty could not be!