Skip to content
← Back to poem

HYMN OF APOLLO.

Percy Bysshe Shelley

[Published by Mrs. Shelley, “Posthumous Poems”, 1824. There is a fair

draft amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian. See Mr. C.D.

Locock’s “Examination”, etc., 1903, page 25.]

 

1.

The sleepless Hours who watch me as I lie,

Curtained with star-inwoven tapestries

From the broad moonlight of the sky,

Fanning the busy dreams from my dim eyes,—

Waken me when their Mother, the gray Dawn, _5

Tells them that dreams and that the moon is gone.

 

2.

Then I arise, and climbing Heaven’s blue dome,

I walk over the mountains and the waves,

Leaving my robe upon the ocean foam;

My footsteps pave the clouds with fire; the caves _10

Are filled with my bright presence, and the air

Leaves the green Earth to my embraces bare.

 

3.

The sunbeams are my shafts, with which I kill

Deceit, that loves the night and fears the day;

All men who do or even imagine ill _15

Fly me, and from the glory of my ray

Good minds and open actions take new might,

Until diminished by the reign of Night.

 

4.

I feed the clouds, the rainbows and the flowers

With their aethereal colours; the moon’s globe _20

And the pure stars in their eternal bowers

Are cinctured with my power as with a robe;

Whatever lamps on Earth or Heaven may shine

Are portions of one power, which is mine.

 

5.

I stand at noon upon the peak of Heaven, _25

Then with unwilling steps I wander down

Into the clouds of the Atlantic even;

For grief that I depart they weep and frown:

What look is more delightful than the smile

With which I soothe them from the western isle? _30

 

6.

I am the eye with which the Universe

Beholds itself and knows itself divine;

All harmony of instrument or verse,

All prophecy, all medicine is mine,

All light of art or nature;—to my song _35

Victory and praise in its own right belong.

 

NOTES:

_32 itself divine]it is divine B.

_34 is B.; are 1824.

_36 its cj. Rossetti, 1870, B.; their 1824.

 

***