I.
The poet oped his bolted door
 The midnight sky to view;
A spirit-feel was in the air
Which seemed to touch his spirit bare
 Whenever his breath he drew;
And the stars a liquid softness had,
As alone their holiness forbade
 Their falling with the dew.
II.
They shine upon the steadfast hills,
 Upon the swinging tide,
Upon the narrow track of beach
 And the murmuring pebbles pied:
They shine on every lovely place,
They shine upon the corpse's face,
 As it were fair beside.
III.
It lay before him, humanlike,
 Yet so unlike a thing!
More awful in its shrouded pomp
 Than any crownèd king:
All calm and cold, as it did hold
 Some secret, glorying.
IV.
A heavier weight than of its clay
 Clung to his heart and knee:
As if those folded palms could strike
 He staggered groaningly,
And then o'erhung, without a groan,
The meek close mouth that smiled alone,
 Whose speech the scroll must be.