A Vague and Starry Magic
Midnight
by James Russell Lowell
The moon shines white and silent 
  On the mist, which, like a tide 
Of some enchanted ocean, 
  O'er the wide marsh doth glide, 
Spreading its ghost-like billows 
  Silently far and wide. 
A vague and starry magic 
  Makes all things mysteries, 
And lures the earth's dumb spirit 
  Up to the longing skies,--
I seem to hear dim whispers, 
  And tremulous replies. 
The fireflies o'er the meadow
In pulses come and go; 
The elm-trees' heavy shadow
Weighs on the grass below; 
And faintly from the distance
The dreaming cock doth crow.
All things look strange and mystic,
  The very bushes swell 
And take wild shapes and motions, 
  As if beneath a spell; 
They seem not the same lilacs 
From childhood known so well.
The snow of deepest silence 
  O'er everything doth fall, 
So beautiful and quiet, 
  And yet so like a pall, 
As if all life were ended, 
  And rest were come to all. 
O wild and wondrous midnight, 
  There is a might in thee 
To make the charmed body 
  Almost like spirit be, 
And give it some faint glimpses 
  Of immortality!