Song Of The Mystic, forever allied to Confederate America, Abram Joseph Ryan was born in 1838 in Maryland and went onto become an influential priest and one of the most recognizable poetic voices of the southern states of America in the 19th Century. His parents had emigrated from Ireland and he was their first sibling to have been actually born in their new adopted country.
Song Of The Mystic by Abram Joseph Ryan
Down the dim, voiceless valley — alone!
And I hear not the fall of a footstep
Around me, save God’s and my own;
Whose music my heart could not win;
Long ago was I weary of noises
That fretted my soul with their din;
Where I met but the human — and sin.I walked in the world with the worldly;
And I said: “In the world each Ideal,
That shines like a star on life’s wave,
And still found the False with the True;
I sought ‘mid the Human for Heaven,
But caught a mere glimpse of its Blue:
And I moaned ‘mid the mazes of men,
Till I knelt, long ago, at an altar
I walk down the Valley of Silence
That lies far beyond mortal ken.Do you ask what I found in the Valley?
‘Tis my Trysting Place with the Divine.
And above me a voice said: “Be mine.”
And there arose from the depths of my spirit
An echo — “My heart shall be Thine.”Do you ask how I live in the Valley?
I weep — and I dream — and I pray.
That fall on the roses in May;
And my prayer, like a perfume from censers,
Ascendeth to God night and day.In the hush of the Valley of Silence
I dream all the songs that I sing;
Till each finds a word for a wing,
That to hearts, like the Dove of the Deluge,
A message of Peace they may bring.
But far on the deep there are billows
That never shall break on the beach;
And I have heard songs in the Silence
That never shall float into speech;
And I have had dreams in the Valley,
Too lofty for language to reach.
And I have seen Thoughts in the Valley —
Ah! me, how my spirit was stirred!
And they wear holy veils on their faces,
Their footsteps can scarcely be heard:
They pass through the Valley like Virgins,
Too pure for the touch of a word!
Do you ask me the place of the Valley,
Ye hearts that are harrowed by Care?
It lieth afar between mountains,
And God and His angels are there:
And one is the dark mount of Sorrow,
And one the bright mountain of Prayer!