Epigraph, Ch. 1 : Mount Shasta; this appears as "To Mount Shasta" in In Classic Shades, and Other Poems (1890), p. 126
Variant: I saw the lightning's gleaming rod
Reach forth and write upon the sky
The awful autograph of God.
This variant was cited as being in The Ship in the Desert in the 10th edition of Familiar Quotations (1919) by John Bartlett, but this appears to be an incorrect citation of a misquotation first found in The Japanese Letters of Lafcadio Hearn (1910), edited by Elizabeth Bislande, p. 161.
Shadows of Shasta (1881)
Context: Where storm-born shadows hide and hunt
I knew thee, in thy glorious youth,
And loved thy vast face, white as truth;
I stood where thunderbolts were wont
To smite thy Titan-fashioned front,
And heard dark mountains rock and roll;
I saw the lightning's gleaming rod
Reach forth and write on heaven's scroll
The awful autograph of God!
“Twice and thrice had I loved thee,
Before I knew thy face or name.”
Air and Angels, stanza 1
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John Donne 115
English poet 1572–1631Related quotes
On the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake. Compare: "She was good as she was fair, None—none on earth above her! As pure in thought as angels are: To know her was to love her, Samuel Rogers, Jacqueline, Stanza 1.
Used in "Great Souls at Prayer", Edited by Mary W. Tileson, Pubished by J. Bowden, London 1898
Prayers
By Still Waters (1906)
"The Stranger", in Poems (1894) http://www.archive.org/details/poemsjohntabb00tabbrich
Ode. Imagination before Content.
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
" To Anthea, st. 1 http://www.bartleby.com/106/96.html".
Hesperides (1648)
Shir Hakovod, trans. from the Hebrew by Israel Zangwill
Spiritual Canticle of The Soul and The Bridegroom