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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10750 ***
+
+THE MIRACLE
+
+AND OTHER POEMS
+
+BY VIRNA SHEARD
+
+1913
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MY DEAR BROTHER
+
+ELDRIDGE STANTON (JUNIOR)
+
+WHO DIED BRAVELY AT NIAGARA, ON THE AFTERNOON OF
+SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4TH, 1912.
+
+No tears for thee, no tears, or sighs,
+Or breaking heart--
+But smiles, that thou so well that bitter hour
+Didst play thy part!
+
+VIRNA SHEARD.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+THE MIRACLE
+THE CROW
+WHEN APRIL COMES
+KISMET
+A SONG OF SUMMER DAYS
+AT THE PLAY
+CHRISTMAS
+THE HEART COURAGEOUS
+A SONG
+THE CALL
+THE KNIGHT-ERRANT
+A SOUTHERN LULLABY
+THE FAIRY CLOCK
+THE SLUMBER ANGEL
+THE LONELY ROAD
+SEA-BORN
+THE ANGEL
+WHEN CHRISTMAS COMES
+THE OPAL MONTH
+NOCTURNE
+A SONG OF LOVE
+THE UNKNOWING
+THE PETITION
+HALLOWE'EN
+THE GLEANER
+THE ROVER
+IN SOLITUDE
+THE ROBIN
+A SONG OF ROSES
+PRAIRIE
+THE CLIMBER
+THE DAISY
+THE VISION
+SAINTS
+AT MIDNIGHT
+NOVEMBER
+THE LILY-POND
+LILACS
+APRIL
+PAEANS
+THE HARP
+GULLS
+THE SHEPHERD WIND
+THE TEMPLE
+REQUEST
+A SONG
+THE TOAST
+THE SEA-SHELL
+AT DAWN
+THE WHISTLER
+COMMON-WEALTH
+DON CUPID
+HEAVEN
+SIR HENRY IRVING
+JEAN DE BREBOEUF
+IN EGYPT
+A SONG OF POPPIES
+A PAGAN PRAYER
+A LOVE SONG
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRACLE AND OTHER POEMS
+
+
+THE MIRACLE
+
+Up from the templed city of the Jews,
+ The road ran straight and white
+To Jericho, the City of the Palms,
+ The City of Delight.
+
+Down that still road from far Judean hills
+ The shepherds drove their sheep
+At silver dawn--at stirring of the birds--
+ When men were all asleep.
+
+Full many went that weary way at noon,
+ Or rested by the trees,
+Romans and slaves, Gentiles and bearded priests,
+ Sinners and Pharisees.
+
+But when the pink clouds drifted far and high,
+ Like rose leaves blowing past,
+When in the west where one star blessed the sky
+ The gates of day shut fast.
+
+All travellers journeyed home, and the moonlight
+ Washed the road fresh and sweet,
+Until it seemed a gleaming ivory path,
+ Waiting for royal feet.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Now it was noon, and life at its full tide
+ Rolled ever to and fro,
+A restless sea, between Jerusalem
+ And white-walled Jericho.
+
+Blind Bartimeus, by the highway side,
+ Sat begging 'neath the trees,
+And heard the world go by, Gentiles and Jews,
+ Sinners and Pharisees.
+
+Blind Bartimeus of the mask-like face,
+ And patient, outstretched hand--
+He upon whom his God had set a mark
+ No man might understand;
+
+Blind Bartimeus of the lonely dark,
+ Who knew no thing called fear,
+But dreamt his dreams, and heard the little sounds
+ No man but he could hear.
+
+He heard the beating of the bird's soft wings
+ Uprising through the air;
+He heard the camel's footfall in the dust,
+ And knew who travelled there.
+
+He heard the lizard when it moved at noon
+ On the grey, sunlit wall;
+He heard the far-off temple bells, what time
+ He felt the shadows fall.
+
+Now, in the golden hour, he stooped to hear
+ A muffled sound and low,
+The tramping of a myriad sandalled feet
+ That came from Jericho.
+
+Then on the road a little lad he knew
+ Ran past, with eager cry,
+"Ho, Bartimeus! Give thine heart good cheer,
+ For David's Son comes by!
+
+"He comes! He comes! And, sad one, who can say
+ What He may do for thee?
+He makes the lame to walk! He heals the sick!
+ He makes the blind to see!"
+
+"He makes the blind to see! Oh, God of Hosts,
+ Beyond the sky called blue,
+What if Messiah cometh to His own!
+ What if the words be true!"
+
+On his swift way the little herald sped,
+ Like bird upon the wing,
+And left the lean, brown beggar--world-forgot--
+ Waiting for Israel's King.
+
+But when the dust came whirling to his feet--
+ When the mad throng drew near--
+Blind Bartimeus rose, and from his lips
+ A cry rang loud and clear--
+
+The cry of all the ages, of each soul
+ In sad captivity;
+The endless cry from depths of bitter woe--
+ "Have mercy upon me!"
+
+What though the wild oncoming multitude
+ Jested and bade him cease;
+What though the Scribes and mighty Pharisees
+ Told him to keep his peace;
+
+What though his heart grew faint, and all the strength
+ Slipped from each trembling limb--
+The One of all the earth his soul desired
+ Stood still--and spoke to him.
+
+Then silence fell, while the upheaving throng,
+ As sea-waves backward curled,
+Left a great path, and down the path there shone
+ The Light of all the world.
+
+The Light from whose mysterious golden depths
+ The Sun rose in his might--
+The light from whose white, hidden fires were lit
+ The torches of the night;
+
+The Light that shining on a thing of clay
+ Giveth it Life and Will:
+The Light that with an unknown power can blast
+ And bid all life be still;
+
+The Light that calls a ray of its own light
+ A man's undying soul--
+The Light that lifts the broken lives of earth,
+ Touches and makes them whole.
+
+Up towards the Radiance Bartimeus went,
+ Alone, and poor, and blind--
+Feeling his way, if haply it led on
+ To One he fain would find.
+
+Then spoke the Voice again. Oh, mystic words
+ Of a compelling grace:
+The curtain rose from off his darkened sight--
+ He saw the King's own face.
+
+So strangely beautiful--so strangely near--
+ He worshipped with his eyes,
+Unheeding that for him at last there shone
+ The sunlit noonday skies.
+
+What though the clamouring crowd echoed his name
+ Unto its utmost rim,
+He only saw the Christ--and in the light
+ He rose and followed Him.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Oh, Bartimeus of the mask-like face,
+ And patient, outstretched hand,
+Was it for this God set on thee the mark
+ No man might understand?
+
+
+
+
+THE CROW
+
+ Hail, little herald!--Art thou then returning
+From summer lands, this wild and wind-torn day?
+ Hast brought the word for which our hearts are yearning,
+ That spring is on the way?
+ Hark! Now there comes a clear, insistent calling,
+
+From hill tops crested with untarnished snow;
+ The trumpet notes are drifting--floating--falling--
+ Whene'er the breezes blow!
+
+ "Winter is over, and the spring is coming!"
+ Glad is thy message, little page in black--
+ "Winter is over, and the spring is coming--
+ The spring is coming back!"
+
+ Tell me, 0 prophet, bird of sombre feather,
+Who taught thee all the mysteries of spring?--
+ Didst note each passing mood of wind and weather,
+While flying to the North on buoyant wing?
+
+ Or didst thou rest upon the bare brown branches
+And hear the sap go singing through the trees?--
+ Didst watch with keen, far-seeing downward glances,
+ The leaves unlock their cells with fairy keys?
+
+What though thy voice hath not a trace of sweetness
+ It thrills one through and through,
+With promises of Joy in all completeness
+ What time the skies are blue.
+When robins from the apple-trees are flinging
+ Out on the air their silver shower of song,--
+In lilac days, when children run a-singing,
+ No single thought shall do thy memory wrong.
+
+ "Winter is over and the spring is coming!"
+ Sweet are thy tidings, little page in black--
+ "Winter is over and the spring is coming--
+ The spring is coming back!"
+
+
+
+
+WHEN APRIL COMES!
+
+When April comes with softly shining eyes,
+ And daffodils bound in her wind-blown hair,
+Oh, she will coax all clouds from out the skies,
+And every day will bring some sweet surprise,--
+ The swallows will come swinging through the air
+ When April comes!
+
+When April comes with tender smile and tear,
+ Dear dandelions will gild the common ways,
+And at the break of morning we will hear
+The piping of the robins crystal clear--
+ While bobolinks will whistle through the days,
+ When April comes!
+
+When April comes, the world so wise and old,
+ Will half forget that it is worn and grey;
+Winter will seem but as a tale long told--
+Its bitter winds with all its frost and cold
+ Will be the by-gone things of yesterday,
+ When April comes!
+
+
+
+
+KISMET
+
+Love came to her unsought,
+ Love served her many ways,
+And patiently Love followed her
+ Throughout the nights and days.
+
+Love spent his life for her
+ And hid his tears and sighs;
+He bartered all his soul for her,
+ With tender pleading eyes.
+
+Her scarlet mouth that smiled,
+ Mocked lightly at his woe,
+And while she would not bid him stay
+ She did not bid him go.
+
+But hope within him failed
+ Until he pled no more--
+And cold and still he turned his face
+ Away from her heart's door.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Long were the days she watched
+ For one who never came;--
+Through sleepless nights her white lips bore
+ The burden of a name.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF SUMMER DAYS
+
+As pearls slip off a silken string and fall into the sea,
+These rounded summer days fall back into eternity.
+
+Into the deep from whence they came; into the mystery--
+At set of sun each one slips back as pearls into the sea.
+
+They are so sweet--so warm and sweet--Love fain would hold them fast:
+He weeps when through his finger tips they slip away at last.
+
+
+
+
+AT THE PLAY
+
+Just above the boxes and where the high lights fall
+Looketh down a carven face from out the gilded wall.
+
+Van Dyke beard and broidered ruff silently confess
+That he lived--and loved perchance--in days of Good Queen Bess.
+(Laces fine and linen sheer, curled and perfumed hair
+Well became those gentlemen of gay, insouciant air.)
+
+See! He gazeth evermore at the stage below;
+Noteth well the players as they quickly come and go;
+Queens and kings and maidens fair, motley fools and friars,
+Lords and ladies, stately dames, mounted knights and squires.
+
+Well he knoweth all of them, all the grave and gay,
+These are they he dreamt of in the far and far away;
+Saints and sinners, see they come down the bygone years,
+And the world still shares with them its laughter and its tears.
+
+Still we haunt the greenwood for love of Rosalind,
+Still we hear the Jester's bells ajingle on the wind,
+Still the frenzied Moor we fear--Ah! and even yet
+Breathless wait before the tomb of all the Capulet.
+
+Though the slow years pass away, yet on land and sea,
+Follow we the Danish Prince in sad soliloquy;
+And I fancy sometimes when the round moon saileth high
+Yet in Venice meet the Jew--as he goeth by.
+
+(Just above the boxes and where the high lights fall
+Looketh down a carven face from out the gilded wall.)
+
+
+
+
+CHRISTMAS
+
+With all the little children, far and near,
+God wot! to-day we'll sing a song of cheer!
+To rosy lips and eyes, that know not guile,
+We one and all will give back smile for smile;
+And for the sake of all the small and gay
+We will be children also for to-day.
+
+Holly we'll hang, with mistletoe above!
+God wot! to-day we'll sing a song of love!
+And we will trip on merry heel and toe
+With all the fair who lightly come and go;
+We will deny the years that lie behind
+And say that age is only in the mind.
+
+And to the needy, in whatever place,
+God wot! to-day we'll lend a hand of grace;
+For where is he who hath not need himself,
+Although he dine on silver or on delf?
+And we who pass and nod this Christmas Day
+May never meet again on life's highway.
+
+But when the lights are lit, and day has flown--
+God wot! there will be some who sit alone;
+Who sit and gaze into the embers' glow,
+And watch strange things that flitter to and fro--
+The ghosts of dreams; and faces--long unseen;
+Shadows of shadows--things that once have been.
+
+
+
+
+THE HEART COURAGEOUS
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Will fight with right good cheer;
+For well may he his foes out-face
+ Who owns no foe called Fear!
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Will fight as knight of old
+For that which he doth count his own--
+ Against the world to hold.
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Will fight both night and day,
+Against the Host Invisible--
+ That holds his soul at bay,
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Rests with tranquillity,
+For Time he counts not as his foe,
+ Nor Death his enemy.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG
+
+Love maketh its own summer time,
+ 'Tis June, Love, when we are together,
+And little I care for the frost in the air,
+ For the heart makes its own summer weather.
+
+Love maketh its own winter time,
+ And though the hills blossom with heather,
+If you are not near, 'tis December, my dear,
+ For the heart makes its own winter weather.
+
+
+
+
+THE CALL
+
+Across the dusty, foot-worn street
+ Unblessed of flower or tree,
+Faint and far-off--there ever sounds
+ The calling of the sea.
+
+From out the quiet of the hills,
+ Where purple shadows lie,
+The pine trees murmur, "Come and rest
+ And let the world go by."
+
+The west wind whispers all night long
+ "Oh, journey forth afar
+To the green and pleasant places
+ Where little rivers are!"
+
+And the soft and silken rustling
+ Of bending yellow wheat
+Says, "See the harvest moon--that dims
+ The arc-lights of the street."
+
+Though the city holds thee captive
+ By trick, and wile, and lure,
+Out yonder lies the loveliness
+ Of things that shall endure.
+
+The river road is wide and fair,
+ The prairie-path is free,
+And still the old earth waits to give
+ Her strength and joy to thee.
+
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT-ERRANT
+
+Keen in his blood ran the old mad desire
+ To right the world's wrongs and champion truth;
+Deep in his eyes shone a heaven-lit fire,
+ And royal and radiant day-dreams of youth!
+
+Gracious was he to both beggar and stranger,
+ And for a rose tossed from fair finger-tips
+He would have ridden hard-pressed through all danger,
+ The rose on his heart and a song on his lips!
+
+All the king's foes he counted his foemen;
+ His not to say that a cause could be lost;
+Spirits like his faced the enemies' bowmen
+ On long vanished fields--nor counted the cost.
+
+Wide was his out-look and far was his vision;
+ Soul-fretting trifles he sent down the wind;
+Small griefs gained only his cheerful derision,--
+ God's weather always was fair to his mind.
+
+But he would comfort a child who was crying,
+ Knightly his deed to all such in distress;
+Never a beast by the road-side lay dying
+ He did not stoop to with gentle caress.
+
+And by the old, and the sad, and the broken,
+ Often he lingered, a well-beloved guest;
+Dear was his voice, whatever the word spoken,
+ Sweetening their day with a song or a jest.
+
+In the far times of brave ballad and story,
+ Men of his make kept the gates of the sea,
+Wrought mighty deeds of power and glory,
+ Scattered their tyrants, and set the land free!
+
+* * * * *
+
+In the far times when perchance hearts were stronger,
+ When for a faith men could face death alone,
+And it would seem that love lasted longer,
+ Such a white soul would have come to its own.
+
+Down in the city the people but noted
+ One who was silent when things went awry,
+Toiled at dull tasks, and was strangely devoted
+ To small deeds of kindness that others passed by.
+
+Down in the city the people but noted
+ One who thought little of wealth and its ways;
+One whose true words were full often misquoted,
+ One who laughed lightly at blame or at praise.
+
+
+
+
+A SOUTHERN LULLABY
+
+Little honey baby, shet yo' eyes up tight;--
+ (Shadow-man is comin' from de moon!)--
+You's as sweet as roses if dey is so pink an white;
+ (Shadow-man '11 get here mighty soon.)
+
+Little honey baby, keep yo' footses still!--
+ (Rocky-bye, oh, rocky, rocky-bye!)
+Hush yo' now, an listen to dat lonesome whippo'-will;
+ Don't yo' fix yo' lip an start to cry.
+
+Little honey baby, stop dat winkin' quick!;
+ (Hear de hoot-owl in de cotton-wood!)
+Yess--I sees yo' eyes adoin' dat dere triflin' trick--
+ (He gets chillun if dey isn't good.)
+
+Little honey baby, what yo' think yo' see?--
+ (Sister keep on climbin' to de sky--)
+Dat's a June bug--it aint got no stinger, lak a bee--
+ (Reach de glory city by an by.)
+
+Little honey baby, what yo' skeery at?--
+ (Go down, Moses--down to Phar-e-oh,)--
+No--dat isn't nuffin but a furry fly-round bat;--
+ (Say, he'd betta let dose people go.)
+
+Little honey baby, yo' is all ma own,--
+ Deed yo' is.--Yes,--dat's a fia-fly;--
+If I didn't hab yo'--reckon I'd be all alone;
+ (Rocky-bye--oh, rocky, rocky-bye.)
+
+Little honey baby, shet yo' eyes up tight;--
+ (Shadow man is comin' from de moon,)
+You's as sweet as roses, if dey is so pink and white;
+ (Shadow-man '11 get here mighty soon.)
+
+
+ The lines in brackets are supposed to be sung or chanted.
+ The Southern "Mammy" seldom sang a song through, but
+ interladed it with comments.--V.S.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRY CLOCK
+
+Silver clock! O silver clock! tell to me the time o' day!
+Is there yet a little hour left for us to work and play?
+Tell me when the sun will set--tiny globe of silver-grey.
+
+It has been so glad a world since the coming of the morn,
+Oft I wondered when I met any souls who seemed forlorn--
+And I scarce gave heed to those who were old or travel worn.
+
+Mayhap I have loved too well the merry fleeting things;
+Run too lightly with the wind--chased too many shining wings;
+Thought too seldom of the night, and the silence that it brings.
+
+Well I fear me I have been but an idler in the sun--
+All unfinished are the tasks long and long ago begun--
+In the dark perchance they weep, who have left their work undone.
+
+And I know each black-frocked friar preacheth sermons that, alas!
+Fain would halt the dancing feet of those careless ones who pass
+Down a sweet and primrose path, through the ribbons of the grass.
+
+Silver-clock! O Silver-clock! It was only yesterday
+Dandelions flecked the field, starry bright, and gold and gay;
+You are but the ghost of one--little globe of silver-grey!
+
+Tell me--tell me of the hour--for there is so much to do!
+Is it early? Is it late? Fairy clock! 0 tell me true,
+As I blow you down the wind, out upon a road of blue.
+
+
+
+
+THE SLUMBER ANGEL
+
+When day is ended, and grey twilight flies
+ On silent wings across the tired land,
+The slumber angel cometh from the skies--
+The slumber angel of the peaceful eyes,
+ And with the scarlet poppies in his hand.
+
+His robes are dappled like the moonlit seas,
+ His hair in waves of silver floats afar;
+He weareth lotus-bloom and sweet heartsease,
+With tassels of the rustling green fir trees,
+ As down the dusk he steps from star to star.
+
+Above the world he swings his curfew bell,
+ And sleep falls soft on golden heads and white;
+The daisies curl their leaves beneath his spell,
+The prisoner who wearies in his cell
+ Forgets awhile, and dreams throughout the night.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Even so, in peace, comes that great Lord of rest
+ Who crowneth men with amaranthine flowers;
+Who telleth them the truths they have but guessed,
+Who giveth them the things they love the best,
+ Beyond this restless, rocking world of ours.
+
+
+
+
+THE LONELY ROAD
+
+We used to fear the lonely road
+ That twisted round the hill;
+It dipped down to the river-way,
+ And passed the haunted mill,
+And then crept on, until it reached
+ The churchyard, green and still.
+
+No pipers ever took that road,
+ No gipsies, brown and gay;
+No shepherds with their gentle flocks,
+ No loads of scented hay;
+No market-waggons jingled by
+ On any Saturday.
+
+The dog-wood there flung wide its stars,
+ In April, silvery sweet;
+The squirrels crossed that path all day
+ On tiny flying feet;
+The wild, brown rabbits knew each turn,
+ Each shadowy safe retreat.
+
+And there the golden-belted bee
+ Sang his sweet summer song,
+The crickets chirped there to the moon
+ With steady note and strong;
+Till cold and silence wrapped them round
+ When autumn nights grew long.
+
+But, oh! they brought the lonely dead
+ Along that quiet way,
+With strange procession, dark and slow,
+ On sunny days and grey;
+We used to watch them, wonder-eyed,
+ Nor care again to play.
+
+And we forgot each merry jest;
+ The birds on bush and tree
+Silenced the song within their throats
+ And with us watched to see,
+The soft, slow passing out of sight
+ Of that dark mystery.
+
+* * * * *
+
+We fear no more the lonely road
+ That winds around the hill;
+Far from the busy world's highway
+ And the gods' slow-grinding mill;
+It only seems a peaceful path,
+ Pleasant, and green, and still.
+
+
+
+
+SEA-BORN
+
+Afar in the turbulent city,
+ In a hive where men make gold,
+He stood at his loom from dawn to dark,
+ While the passing years were told.
+
+And when he knew it was summer-time
+ By the grey dust on the street,
+By the lingering hours of daylight,
+ And the sultry noon-tide heat--
+
+Oh! he longed as a captive sea-bird
+ To leave his cage and be free,
+For his heart like a shell kept singing
+ The old, old song of the sea.
+
+And amid the noise and confusion
+ Of wheels that were never still,
+He heard the wind through the scented pines
+ On a rough, storm-beaten hill;
+
+While, beyond a maze of painted threads,
+ Where his tireless shuttle flew,
+In fancy he saw the sunlit waves
+ Beckon him out to the blue.
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGEL
+
+Down the white ward with slow, unswerving tread
+ He came ere break of day--
+A cowl was drawn about his down-bent head,
+ His misty robes were grey.
+
+And no man even knew that he went by,
+ None saw or heard him pass;
+Softly he moved as clouds drift down the sky,
+ Or shadows cross the grass.
+
+Close to a little bed where one lay low,
+ At last he took his stand,
+And touched the head that tossed in restless woe
+ With gentle, outstretched hand.
+
+"When bitterness," he said, "is at an end,
+ And joy grows far and dim,
+I am the angel whom the Lord doth send
+ To lead men on to Him.
+
+"Past the innumerable stars, my friend,
+ Past all the winds that blow,
+We, too, must travel to our journey's end.
+ Arise! And let us go!"
+
+"Stay! Stay!" the other cried. "I know thy face!
+ Death is thy dreaded name!"
+"Nay--I am known as 'Love' in that far place,"
+ He said, "from whence I came."
+
+But still the other cried, with moan and tear,
+ "I fear the dark--and thee!"
+"There is no dark," the angel said, "nor fear,
+ For those who go with me.
+
+"There is no loneliness, and nevermore
+ The shadow-haunted night,
+When we pass out beyond Life's swinging door
+ The road," he said, "is bright."
+
+Then backward slipped the cowl from off his head,
+ Downward the robe of grey;
+A radiant presence by the lowly bed
+ Greeted the breaking day.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Within the long white ward one lay alone,
+ None watched by him awhile,
+But some who passed him said, in whispered tone,
+ "See--on his lips--the smile!"
+
+
+
+
+WHEN CHRISTMAS COMES
+
+For thee, my small one--trinkets and new toys,
+The wine of life and all its keenest joys,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For me, the broken playthings of the past
+That in my folded hands I still hold fast,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+For thee, fair hopes of all that yet may be,
+And tender dreams of sweetest mystery,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For thee, the future in a golden haze,
+For me, the memory of some bygone days,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+For thee, the things that lightly come and go,
+For thee, the holly and the mistletoe,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For me, the smiles that are akin to tears,
+For me, the frost and snows of many years,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+For thee, the twinkling candles bright and gay,
+For me, the purple shadows and the grey,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For thee, the friends that greet thee at the door,
+For me, the faces I shall see no more,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+But ah, for both of us the mystic star
+That leadeth back to Bethlehem afar,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For both of us the child they saw of old,
+That evermore his mother's arms enfold,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+
+
+
+THE OPAL MONTH
+
+Now cometh October--a nut-brown maid,
+Who in robes of crimson and gold arrayed
+ Hath taken the king's highway!
+On the world she smiles--but to me it seems
+Her eyes are misty with mid-summer dreams,
+ Or memories of the May.
+
+Opals agleam in the dusk of her hair
+Flash their hearts of fire and colours rare
+ As she dances gaily by--
+Yet she sighs for each empty swinging nest,
+And she tenderly holds against her breast
+ A belated butterfly.
+
+The crickets sing no more to the stars--
+The spiders no more put up silver bars
+ To entangle silken wings;
+But the quail pipes low in the rusted corn,
+And here and there--both at night and at morn--
+ A lonely robin still sings.
+
+A spice-laden breeze of the south is blent
+With perfumed winds from the Orient
+ And they weave o'er her a spell,
+For nun-like she goeth now, still and sweet--
+And while mists like incense curl at her feet,
+ She lingers her beads to tell.
+
+
+
+
+NOCTURNE
+
+Infold us with thy peace, dear moon-lit night,
+ And let thy silver silence wrap us round
+Till we forget the city's dazzling light,
+ The city's ceaseless sound.
+
+Here where the sand lies white upon the shore,
+ And little velvet-fingered breezes blow,
+Dear sea, thy world-old wonder-song once more
+ Sing to us e'er we go.
+
+Give us thy garnered sweets, short summer hour:
+ Perfume of rose, and balm of sun-steeped pine;
+Scent from the lily's cup and horned flower,
+ Where bees have drained the wine.
+
+Come, small musicians in the rough sea grass,
+ Pipe us the serenade we love the best;
+And winds of midnight, chant for us a mass,
+ Our hearts would be at rest.
+
+God of all beauty, though the world is thine,
+ Our faith grows often faint, oft hope is spent;
+Show us Thyself in all things fair and fine,
+ Teach us the stars' content.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF LOVE
+
+Love reckons not by time--its May days of delight
+Are swifter than the falling stars that pass beyond our sight.
+
+Love reckons not by time--its moments of despair
+Are years that march like prisoners, who drag the chains they wear.
+
+Love counts not by the sun--it hath no night or day--
+'Tis only light when love is near--'tis dark with love away.
+
+Love hath no measurements of height, or depth, or space,
+But yet within a little grave it oft hath found a place.
+
+Love is its own best law--its wrongs seek no redress;
+Love is forgiveness--and it only knoweth how to bless.
+
+
+
+
+THE UNKNOWING
+
+If the bird knew how through the wintry weather
+An empty nest would swing by day and night,
+It would not weave the strands so close together
+ Or sing for such delight.
+
+And if the rosebud dreamed e'er its awaking
+How soon its perfumed leaves would drift apart,
+Perchance 'twould fold them close to still the aching
+ Within its golden heart.
+
+If the brown brook that hurries through the grasses
+Knew of drowned sailors--and of storms to be--
+Methinks 'twould wait a little e'er it passes
+ To meet the old grey sea.
+
+If youth could understand the tears and sorrow,
+The sombre days that age and knowledge bring,
+It would not be so eager for the morrow
+ Or spendthrift of the spring.
+
+If love but learned how soon life treads its measure,
+How short and swift its hours when all is told,
+Each kiss and tender word 'twould count and treasure,
+ As misers count their gold.
+
+
+
+
+THE PETITION
+
+Sweet April! from out of the hidden place
+ Where you keep your green and gold,
+We pray thee to bring us a gift of grace,
+ When the little leaves unfold.
+
+Oh! make us glad with the things that are young;
+ Give our hearts the quickened thrills
+That used to answer each robin that sung
+ In the days of daffodils.
+
+For what is the worth of all that we gain,
+ If we lose the old delight,
+That came in the time of sun and rain,
+ When the whole round world seemed right?
+
+It was then we gave, as we went along,
+ The faith that to-day we keep;
+And those April days were for mirth and song,
+ While the nights were made for sleep.
+
+Yet, though we follow with steps that are slow
+ The feet that dance and that run;
+We would still be friends with the winds that blow,
+ And companions to the sun!
+
+
+
+
+HALLOWE'EN
+
+There is an old Italian legend which says that on the eve of
+the beloved festival of All Saints (Hallowe'en) the souls of the
+dead return to earth for a little while and go by on the wind.
+The feast of All Saints is followed by the feast of the dead, when
+for a day only the sound of the _Miserere_ is heard throughout the
+cities of Italy.
+
+
+Hark! Hark to the wind! 'Tis the night, they say,
+When all souls come back from the far away--
+The dead, forgotten this many a day!
+
+And the dead remembered--ay! long and well--
+And the little children whose spirits dwell
+In God's green garden of asphodel.
+
+Have you reached the country of all content,
+0 souls we know, since the day you went
+From this time-worn world, where your years were spent?
+
+Would you come back to the sun and the rain,
+The sweetness, the strife, the thing we call pain,
+And then unravel life's tangle again?
+
+I lean to the dark--Hush!--was it a sigh?
+Or the painted vine-leaves that rustled by?
+Or only a night-bird's echoing cry?
+
+
+
+
+THE GLEANER
+
+As children gather daisies down green ways
+ Mid butterflies and bees,
+To-day across the meadows of past days
+ I gathered memories.
+
+I stored my heart with harvest of lost hours--
+ With blossoms of spent years;
+Leaves that had known the sun of joy, and hours
+ Drenched with the rain of tears.
+
+And perfumes that were long ago distilled
+ From April's pink and white,
+Again with all their old enchantment, filled
+ My spirit with delight.
+
+From out the limbo where lost roses go
+ The place we may not see,
+With all its petals sweet and half-ablow,
+ One rose returned to me.
+
+Where falls the sunlight chequered by the shade
+ On meadows of the past,
+I gathered blossoms that no sun can fade
+ No winter wind can blast.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROVER
+
+Though I follow a trail to north or south,
+ Though I travel east or west,
+There's a little house on a quiet road
+ That my hidden heart loves best;
+And when my journeys are over and done,
+ 'Tis there I will go to rest.
+
+The snows have bleached it this many a year;
+ The sun has painted it grey;
+The vines hold it close in their clinging arms;
+ The shadows creep there to stay;
+And the wind goes calling through empty rooms
+ For those who have gone away.
+
+But the roses against the window-pane
+ Are the roses I used to know;
+And the rain on the roof still sings the song
+ It sang in the long ago,
+When I lay me down to sleep in a bed
+ Little and white and low.
+
+It is long since I bid it all good-bye,
+ With young light-hearted disdain;
+I remember who stood at the door that day;
+ Her tears fell fast as the rain;
+And I whistled a tune and waved my hand,
+ But never went back again.
+
+Toll I have paid at the gates of the world,
+ The sand I know and the sea;
+I have taken the wide and open road,
+ With steps unhindered and free;
+Yet, like a bell ringing down in my heart,
+ My home is calling to me.
+
+
+
+
+IN SOLITUDE
+
+He is not desolate whose ship is sailing
+ Over the mystery of an unknown sea,
+For some great love with faithfulness unfailing
+ Will light the stars to bear him company.
+
+Out in the silence of the mountain passes,
+ The heart makes peace and liberty its own--
+The wind that blows across the scented grasses
+ Bringing the balm of sleep--comes not alone.
+
+Beneath the vast illimitable spaces
+ Where God has set His jewels in array,
+A man may pitch his tent in desert places
+ Yet know that heaven is not so far away.
+
+But in the city--in the lighted city--
+ Where gilded spires point toward the sky,
+And fluttering rags and hunger ask for pity,
+ Grey Loneliness in cloth-of-gold, goes by.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROBIN
+
+Little brown brother, up in the apple tree,
+ High on its blossom-rimmed branches aswing,
+Here where I listen earth-bound, it seems to me
+ You are the voice of the spring.
+
+Herald of Hope to the sad and faint-hearted,
+ Piper the gold of the world cannot pay,
+Up from the limbo of things long departed
+ Memories you bring me to-day.
+
+You are the echo of songs that are over,
+ You are the promise of songs that will come,
+You know the music, oh, light-winged rover,
+ Sealed in the souls of the dumb.
+
+All of the past that we wearily sigh for,
+ All of the future for which our hearts long,
+All Love would live for, and all Love would die for
+ Wordless, you weave in a song.
+
+Little brown brother, up in the apple tree,
+ My spirit answers each note that you sing,
+And while I listen--earth-bound--it seems to me
+ You are the voice of the spring.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF ROSES
+
+'Tis time to sing of roses: of roses all ablow,
+ To every vagrant passing breeze they dip a courtesy low,
+'Tis time to sing of roses! for June is here, you know.
+
+One song for true love's roses of sweetest deepest red,
+ Some heart will wear you faithfully when life itself hath fled,
+And for the white rose sing a song--the white rose for the dead.
+
+And ah! the yellow roses, of brightest, lightest gold,
+ King Midas must have touched their leaves in mystic days of old,
+Or they were made of sunshine, and gilded, fold by fold.
+
+And the roadside rose, sweet-briar, we would remember thee
+ And the cinnamon rose that evermore enthralls each passing bee,
+You old, old-fashioned roses, a-growing wild and free.
+
+'Tis time to sing of roses! of roses all ablow!
+ They come again, as sweet, my dear, as those of long ago.
+'Tis time to sing of roses! for June is here you know.
+
+
+
+
+PRAIRIE
+
+Where yesterday rolled long waves of gold
+ Beneath the burnished blue of the sky,
+A silver-white sea lies still and cold,
+ And a bitter wind blows by.
+
+But nothing passes the door all day,
+ Though my watching eyes grow worn and dim,
+Save a lean, grey wolf that swings away
+ To the far horizon rim.
+
+Then, one by one, the stars glisten out
+ Like frozen tears on a purple pall--
+The darkness folds my cabin about
+ And the snow begins to fall.
+
+I will make a hearth-fire red and bright
+ And set a light by the window pane
+For one who follows the trail to-night
+ That will bring him home again.
+
+Love will ride with him my heart to bless--
+ Joy will out-step him across the floor--
+What matters the great white loneliness
+ When we bar the cabin door?
+
+
+
+
+THE CLIMBER
+
+He stood alone on Fame's high mountain top,
+ His hands at rest, his forehead bound with bay;
+And yet he watched with eyes unsatisfied
+ The downward winding way.
+
+The great procession of the stars went by
+ Far overhead, beyond the mountain's rim,
+But the unconquered worlds of time and space,
+ As nothing were to him.
+
+There from his vantage ground, so still and high,
+ He watched the storm clouds when they rolled below,
+And felt the wind mount up to where he stood
+ Amid eternal snow.
+
+And sometimes in the valleys and the plains
+ He saw the little children at their play;
+In cottage homes he saw the candle-light
+ Gleam out at close of day.
+
+But he and loneliness kept feast and fast,
+ The while with weary eyes, by night and day;
+They watched the path that led to common things--
+ The downward winding way.
+
+"'Twas there," he said, "that gladness passed me by,
+ In yonder valley, where I sought the truth;
+And there, a few leagues up the rocky slope,
+ I said good-bye to Youth.
+
+"There, where the pine trees catch the sun's last gold,
+ Love reached its hands to me and bade me stop;
+Oh, madness of the ones who climb," he said,
+ "Up to the mountain top!"
+
+
+
+
+THE DAISY
+
+An angel found a daisy where it lay
+ On Heaven's highroad of transparent gold,
+And, turning to one near, he said, "I pray,
+ Tell me what manner of strange bloom I hold.
+You came a long, long way--perchance you know
+In what far country such fair flowers blow?"
+
+Then spoke the other: "Turn thy radiant face
+And gaze with me down purple depth of space.
+See, where the stars lie spilled upon the night,
+Like amber beads that hold a yellow light.
+Note one that burns with faint yet steady glow;
+It is the Earth--and there these blossoms grow.
+Some little child from that dear, distant land
+Hath borne this hither in his dimpled hand."
+
+Still gazed he down. "Ah, friend," he said, "I, too,
+Oft crossed the fields at home where daisies grew."
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION
+
+Long had she knelt at the Madonna's shrine,
+ With the empty chapel, cold and grey,
+Telling her beads, while grief with marring line
+ And bitter tear stole all her youth away.
+
+Outcast was she from what Life holdeth dear;
+ Banished from joy that other souls might win;
+And from the dark beyond she turned with fear,
+ Being so branded by the mark of sin.
+
+Yet when at last she raised her troubled face,
+ Haunted by sorrow, whitened by alarms,
+Mary leaned down from out the pictured place,
+ And laid the little Christ within her arms.
+
+Rosy and warm she held Him to her heart,
+ She--the abandoned one--the thing apart.
+
+
+
+
+SAINTS
+
+The Saints of Thy great Church, 0 Christ,
+ How vast their numbers be--
+On holy page and ancient scroll
+ Their blessed names we see,
+And from the painted window panes
+ They smile eternally.
+
+Rope-girdled monk, and pallid maid,
+ And men who for Thy cross
+Fought with the Saracen of old,
+ Counting their lives no loss--
+Martyrs who rose through golden flames,
+ Free of the body's dross.
+
+Yet there be Saints uncanonised,
+ Unrecognised, unknown--
+Here on the common roads of earth,
+ Oft times they walk alone;
+Saints whom no soul hath ever praised,
+ Saints whom no Church doth own.
+
+Men who against their souls' grim foes
+ Wage an unyielding fight;
+Men of new creeds, and men of old,
+ Men of dark hue, and white,
+Each pressing hard towards some far gleam
+ Of Thy celestial light.
+
+Dwellers in places waste and lone,
+ Toilers upon the seas--
+Mayhap they seldom pray high heaven.
+ Softly--on bended knees--
+Yet in the roll-call of Thy Saints,
+ Dear Christ--remember these.
+
+
+
+
+AT MIDNIGHT
+
+Turn Thou the key upon our thoughts, dear Lord,
+ And let us sleep;
+Give us our portion of forgetfulness,
+ Silent and deep.
+
+Lay Thou Thy quiet hand upon our eyes
+ To close their sight;
+Shut out the shining of the moon and stars
+ And candle-light.
+
+Keep back the phantoms and the visions sad,
+ The shades of grey,
+The fancies that so haunt the little hours
+ Before the day.
+
+Quiet the time-worn questions that are all
+ Unanswered yet,
+Take from the spent and troubled souls of us
+ Their vain regret;
+
+And lead us far into Thy silent land,
+ That we may go
+Like children out across the field o' dreams
+ Where poppies blow.
+
+So all Thy saints--and all Thy sinners too--
+ Wilt Thou not keep,
+Since not alone unto Thy well-beloved
+ Thou givest sleep?
+
+
+
+
+NOVEMBER
+
+How like a hooded friar, bent and grey,
+Whose pensive lips speak only when they pray
+Doth sad November pass upon his way.
+
+Through forest aisles while the wind chanteth low--
+In God's cathedral where the great trees grow,
+Now all day long he paceth to and fro.
+
+When shadows gather and the night-mists rise,
+Up to the hills he lifts his sombre eyes
+To where the last red rose of sunset lies.
+
+A little smile he weareth, wise and cold,
+The smile of one to whom all things are old,
+And life is weary, as a tale twice told.
+
+"Come see," he seems to say--"where joy has fled--
+The leaves that burned but yesterday so red
+Have turned to ashes--and the flowers are dead.
+
+"The summer's green and gold hath taken flight,
+October days have gone. Now bleached and white
+Winter doth come with many a lonely night.
+
+"And though the people will not heed or stay,
+But pass with careless laughter on their way,
+Even I, with rain of tears, will wait and pray."
+
+
+
+
+THE LILY-POND
+
+On this little pool where the sunbeams lie,
+This tawny gold ring where the shadows die,
+God doth enamel the blue of His sky.
+
+Through the scented dark when the night wind sighs,
+He mirrors His stars where the ripples rise,
+Till they glitter like prisoned fireflies.
+
+'Tis here that the beryl-green leaves uncurl,
+And here the lilies uplift and unfurl
+Their golden-lined goblets of carven pearl.
+
+When the grey of the eastern sky turns pink,
+Through the silver sedge at the pond's low brink
+The little lone field-mouse creeps down to drink.
+
+And creatures to whom only God is kind,
+The loveless small things, the slow, and the blind,
+Soft steal through the rushes, and comfort find.
+
+Oh, restless the river, restless the sea!
+Where the great ships go, and the dead men be;
+The lily-pond giveth but peace to me.
+
+
+
+
+LILACS
+
+In lonely gardens deserted--unseen--
+ Oh! lovely lilacs of purple and white,
+You are dipping down through a mist of green;
+ For the morning sun's delight.
+And the velvet bee, all belted with black,
+ Drinks deep of the wine which your flagons hold,
+Clings close to your plumes while he fills his pack
+ With a load of burnished gold.
+
+You hide the fences with blossoms of snow,
+ And sweeten the shade of castle towers;
+Over low, grey gables you brightly blow,
+ Like amethysts turned to flowers.
+The tramp on the highway--ragged and bold--
+ Wears you close to his heart with jaunty air;
+You rest in my lady's girdle of gold,
+ And are held against her hair.
+
+In God's own acre your tender flowers,
+ Bend down to the grasses and seem to sigh
+For those who count time no more by hours--
+ Whose summers have all passed by--
+But at eventide the south wind will sing,
+ Like a gentle priest who chanteth a prayer;
+And thy purple censers he'll set a-swing,
+ To perfume the twilight air.
+
+
+
+
+APRIL
+
+ April! April! April!
+ With a mist of green on the trees--
+And a scent of the warm brown broken earth
+ On every wandering breeze;
+What, though thou be changeful,
+ Though thy gold turns to grey again,
+There's a robin out yonder singing,
+ Singing in the rain.
+
+ April! April! April!
+ 'Tis the Northland hath longed for thee,
+She hath gazed toward the South with aching eyes
+ Full long and patiently.
+Come now--tell us, sweeting,
+ Thou laggard so lovely and late,
+Dost know there's no joy like the joy that comes
+ When hearts have learned to wait?
+
+
+
+
+PAEANS
+
+Oh! I will hold fast to Joy!
+ I will not let him depart--
+He shall close his beautiful rainbow wings
+ And sing his song in my heart.
+
+And I will live with Delight!
+ I will know what the children know
+When they dance along with the April wind
+ To find where the catkins grow!
+
+I will dream the old, old dreams,
+ And look for pixie and fay
+In shadowy woods--and out on the hills--
+ As we did but yesterday.
+
+Love I will keep in my soul--
+ Ay! even by lock and key!
+There is nothing to fear in all of the world
+ If Love will but stay with me.
+
+No, I will not let Faith go!
+ I will say with my latest breath--
+I know there's a new and radiant road
+ On the other side of Death.
+
+
+
+
+THE HARP
+
+Across the wind-swept spaces of the sky
+The harp of all the world is hung on high,
+And through its shining strings the swallows fly.
+
+The little silver fingers of the rain
+Oft touch it softly to a low refrain,
+That all day long comes o'er and o'er again.
+
+And when the storms of God above it roll,
+The mighty wind awakes its sleeping soul
+To songs of wild delight or bitter dole.
+
+And through the quiet night, as faint and far
+As melody down-drifted from a star,
+Trembles strange music where those harp-strings are.
+
+But only flying words of joy and woe,
+Caught from the restless earth-bound souls below,
+Over the vibrant wires ebb and flow.
+
+And in the cities that men call their own,
+And in the unnamed places, waste and lone,
+This harp forever sounds Life's undertone.
+
+
+
+
+GULLS
+
+When the mist drives past and the wind blows high,
+ And the harbour lights are dim--
+See where they circle, and dip and fly,
+The grey free-lances of wind and sky,
+ To the water's distant rim!
+
+Like spirits possessed of a fierce delight,
+ A courage that cannot fail,
+They face the breakers--they face the night--
+The mad storm-horses are silvery white,
+ They ride through the bitter gale!
+
+They seem like the souls of the long, long lost,
+ Who breasted the ocean-main--
+Vikings whose vessels were tempest-tossed,
+Voyagers who sailed, whatever the cost,
+ And never came home again.
+
+Or stranger and wilder fancy--it seems
+ As I hear their wind-torn cry,
+No birds fly there through the sun's last gleams,
+But the wraiths of hopes--the ghosts of dreams
+ That the old sea-gods saw die.
+
+When the mist drives past and the wind blows high,
+ And the harbour lights are dim--
+See where they circle, and dip and fly,
+The grey free-lances of wind and sky,
+ To the far horizon's rim.
+
+
+
+
+THE SHEPHERD WIND
+
+When hills and plains are powdered white,
+ And bitter cold the north wind blows,
+Upon my window in the night
+ A fairy-garden grows.
+
+Here poppies that no hand hath sown
+ Bloom white as foam upon the sea,
+And elfin bells to earth unknown
+ Hold frost-bound melody.
+
+And here are blossoms like to stars
+ Tangled in nets of silver lace--
+My very breath their beauty mars,
+ Or stirs them from their place.
+
+Perchance the echoes of old songs
+ Found here a resting place at last
+With drifting perfume that belongs
+ To roses of the past.
+
+Or all the moonbeams that were lost
+ On summer nights the world forgets
+May here be prisoned by the frost
+ With souls of violets.
+
+The wind doth shepherd many things--
+ And when the nights are long and cold,
+Who knows how strange a flock he brings
+ All safely to the fold.
+
+
+
+
+THE TEMPLE
+
+Enter the temple beautiful! The house not made with hands!
+Rain-washed and green, wind-swept and clean,
+ Beneath the blue it stands,
+And no cathedral anywhere
+Seemeth so holy or so fair.
+
+It hath no heavy gabled roof, no door with lock and key,
+No window-bars shut out the stars,
+ The aisles are wide and free--
+Here through the night each altar-light
+Is but a moon-beam, silver-white.
+
+Silently as the temple grew at Solomon's command,
+Still as things seem within a dream
+ This rose from out the land:
+And all the pillars, grey and high,
+Lifted their arches to the sky.
+
+Here is the perfume of the leaves, the incense of the pines--
+The magic scent that hath been pent
+ Within the tangled vines:
+No censor filled with spices rare
+E'er swung such sweetness on the air.
+
+And all the golden gloom of it holdeth no haunting fear,
+For it is blessed, and giveth rest
+ To those who enter here--
+Here in the evening--who can know
+But God Himself walks to and fro!
+
+And music past all mastering within the chancel rings;
+None could desire a sweeter choir
+ Than this--that soars and sings,
+Till far the scented shadows creep--
+And quiet darkness bringeth sleep.
+
+
+
+
+REQUEST
+
+(To E. M.)
+
+Sing me a song--a song to ease old sorrows,
+ And dull the edge of care--
+A song of Hope to ring through all the morrows
+ That be my share.
+
+Unlock the doors where joy hath been in hiding,
+ Though barred they be and strong,
+And send black grief far down the wind a-riding--
+ Sing me a song.
+
+Sing thou thy sky-lark song of sweetest daring,
+ And April ecstasy,
+That I may follow it and go a-faring
+ To Arcady.
+
+Charm sleep from out the shadows with thy singing,
+ And when the light turns grey,
+Leave me bright dreams until the dawn comes bringing
+ The rose-edged day.
+
+The wind of March taught thee his springtime madness,
+ And then in undertone
+Whispered the wonder-secret of his gladness
+ To thee alone.
+
+And thou hast learned from little brook and river
+ Their tender melody--
+The notes that set the thrush's throat a-quiver
+ Are known to thee.
+
+Sing me a song--a song to ease old sorrows,
+ And dull the edge of care--
+A song of Hope, to ring through all the morrows
+ That be my share.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG
+
+0 heart of mine--if I were but a swallow--
+ A thing so fearless, swift of flight, and free--
+On wings unwearied I would find and follow
+ Some path that led to thee!
+
+Were I a rose out in the garden growing
+ My sweetness I would give the vagrant breeze
+For he, perchance, might meet thee all unknowing--
+ Yet bring thee memories.
+
+
+
+
+THE TOAST
+
+A toast to thee, 0 dear old year,
+ While the last moments fly,
+A toast to thy sweet memory--
+ We'll lift the glasses high,
+And bid to thee a fond farewell
+ As thou art passing by!
+
+A toast to those who reaped success
+ In this good year of grace;
+A toast to every one of them--
+ Come! Give the victors place!
+Come, wish them well with right good will--
+ The winners in the race!
+
+And one toast more! To those who failed
+ Wherever they may be;--
+With faces white they fought the fight,
+ But missed the victory;
+So here's to them--the ones who strove--
+ On land and on the sea!
+
+Fair dreams to thee, 0 grey old year,
+ Thy working time is done,
+And gone for thee the silver moon,
+ And golden noon-day sun;
+Yet sad old year--and glad old year--
+ We'll know no better one.
+
+
+
+
+THE SEA-SHELL
+
+Oh, fairy palace of pink and pearl
+Frescoed with filigree silver-white,
+ Down in the silence beneath the sea
+ God by Himself must have fashioned thee
+Just for His own delight!
+
+But no!--For a dumb and shapeless thing
+Stirring in darkness its little hour,
+ Thy walls were built with infinite care,
+ Thou sea-scented home, so fine and fair,
+Perfect--and like a flower!
+
+
+
+
+AT DAWN
+
+Turn to thy window in the silver hour
+ That day comes stepping down the hills of night,
+Infolded as the leaves infold a flower
+ By all her rose-leaf robes of misty light.
+
+Then, like a joy born out of blackest sorrow,
+ The miracle of morning seems to say,
+"There is no night without its dear to-morrow,
+ No lonely dark that does not find the day."
+
+
+
+
+THE WHISTLER
+
+Throughout the sunny day he whistled on his way--
+ Oh high and low, and gay and sweet,
+ The melody rang down the street,
+Till all the weary, old, and grey,
+Smiled at their work, or stopped to say,
+ "Now God be thanked that youth is fair,
+ And light of heart, and free from care."
+
+What time the wind blew high, he whistled and went by--
+ Then clarion clear on every side
+ The song was scattered far and wide;
+Like birds above a storm that fly
+The silver notes soared to the sky,
+ "O soul, whose courage does not fail
+ But with a song can meet the gale."
+
+And when the rain fell fast, he whistled as he passed--
+ A little tune the whole world knew,
+ A song of love, of love most true;
+On through the mist it came at last
+To one by sorrow overcast,
+ "Dear Christ," she said, "by night and day
+ They serve who praise, as well as pray."
+
+Though the great world was white, he whistled in the night--
+ The sky was spangled all with gold,
+ The bitter wind was keen and cold,
+Yet, gay musician, out of sight,
+You still put wintry thoughts to flight,
+ For summer follows where you fare,
+ 0 Whistler, so debonair.
+
+And when the fog hung grey, he whistled on his way--
+ The little children in his train
+ With rosy lips caught up the strain.
+Then I, to hear what he might say,
+Followed with them, that sombre day.
+ "Is it for joy of life," quoth I,
+ "Good sir, you go awhistling by?"
+He smiled, and sighed, and shook his head,
+ "I cheer my own sad heart," he said.
+
+
+
+
+COMMON-WEALTH
+
+Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free!
+The blue of the sky, the shade of a tree,
+And the unowned leagues of the shining sea.
+
+Be grateful, my heart, for everyman's gold;
+By road-way and river and hill unfold
+Sun-coloured blossoms that never are sold.
+
+For the little joys sometimes say a grace;
+The scent of a rose, the frost's fairy lace,
+Or the sound of the rain in a quiet place.
+
+Be glad of what cannot be bought or beguiled;
+The trust of the tameless, the fearless, the wild,
+The song of a bird and the faith of a child.
+
+For prairie and mountain, windswept and high,
+For betiding beauty of earth and sky--
+Say a benediction e'er you pass by.
+
+Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free!
+The joy of life and the spring's ecstasy,
+The dreams that have been and the dreams that will be.
+
+
+
+
+DON CUPID
+
+Oh! little pink and white god of love,
+ With your tender smiling mouth,
+And eyes as blue as the blue above,
+ Afar in the sunny south.
+
+No army e'er laid so many low
+ Or wounded so many hearts,
+No mighty gunner e'er wrought such woe
+ As you with your feathered darts.
+
+
+
+
+HEAVEN
+
+Not with the haloed saints would Heaven be
+ For such as I;
+Who have not reached to their serenity
+ So sweet and high.
+
+Not with the martyrs washed by holy flame
+ Could I find place,
+For they are victors who through glory came
+ To see God's face.
+
+Not with the perfect souls that enter there
+ Could mine abide,
+For clouded eyes from eyes all cloudless fair
+ 'Twere best to hide.
+
+And not for me the wondrous streets of gold
+ Or crystal sea--
+I only know the brown earth, worn and old,
+ Where sinners be.
+
+Unless I found those who to me belong,
+ My dear and own,
+I, in the vastness of that shining throng,
+ Would be alone.
+
+God guide us to some sun-blessed little star,
+ We ask not where,
+Nor whether it be near or it be far,
+ So Love is there.
+
+
+
+
+SIR HENRY IRVING
+
+ "Thou trumpet made for Shakespeare's lips to blow!"
+
+
+No more for thee the music and the lights,
+ Thy magic may no more win smile nor frown;
+For thee, 0 dear interpreter of dreams,
+ The curtain hath rung down.
+
+No more the sea of faces, turned to thine,
+ Swayed by impassioned word and breathless pause;
+No more the triumph of thine art--no more
+ The thunder of applause.
+
+No more for thee the maddening, mystic bells,
+ The haunting horror--and the falling snow;
+No more of Shylock's fury, and no more
+ The Prince of Denmark's woe.
+
+Not once again the fret of heart and soul,
+ The loneliness and passion of King Lear;
+No more bewilderment and broken words
+ Of wild despair and fear.
+
+And never wilt thou conjure from the past
+ The dread and bitter field of Waterloo;
+Thy trembling hands will never pluck again
+ Its roses or its rue.
+
+Thou art no longer player to the court;
+ No longer red-robed cardinal or king;
+To-day thou art thyself--the Well-Beloved--
+ Bereft of crown and ring.
+
+Thy feet have found the path that Shakespeare found,
+ Life's lonely exit of such far renown;
+For thee, 0 dear interpreter of dreams,
+ The curtain hath rung down.
+
+ October, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+JEAN DE BREBOEUF
+
+Jean de Breboeuf, a priest of the Jesuit Order, came to Canada
+as a missionary to the Indians about the year 1625. He belonged
+to an old and honourable French family that had given many sons
+to the army, and was a man of great physical strength, one who
+possessed an iron will, that was yet combined with sweetness
+and gentleness of temper.
+
+He lived with the Indians for many years, and spoke the dialects
+of different tribes, though his mission was chiefly to the Hurons.
+By them he was much beloved.
+
+At the time of the uprising of the Iroquois in 1649, there was a
+massacre of the Hurons at the little mission village of St. Louis
+upon the shores of Georgian Bay. There Jean de Breboeuf, refusing
+to leave his people, met death by torture at the hands of the
+conquering Iroquois. Lalement, his friend, a priest of the same
+order, was also martyred by these Indians upon the same day,
+March 16th, 1649.
+
+
+As Jean de Breboeuf told his rosary
+ At sundown in his cell, there came a call!--
+Clear as a bell rung on a ship at sea,
+ Breaking the beauty of tranquillity--
+Down from the heart of Heaven it seemed to fall:
+
+"Hail, Jean de Breboeuf! Lift thee to thy feet!
+ Not, for thy sins, by prayer shalt thou atone;
+Thou wert not made for peace so deeply sweet,
+ Thine be the midnight cold, the noonday heat,
+The journey through the wilderness, alone.
+
+"Too well thou lovest France--her very air
+ Is wine against thy lips--and all her weeds
+Are in thine eyes as flowers. She is fair
+ In all her moods to thee--and even there,
+See! thou dost dream of her above thy beads.
+
+"Rouse thee from out thy dreams! Awake! Awake!
+ Thou priest who cometh of a martial line!--
+Thou hast its strength, thy will no man can break:
+ Go forth unarmed, the law of love to take
+Into a lonely land, that yet is Mine."
+
+Then straightway fell the monk upon his face
+ Trembling with awe throughout his mighty frame.
+"I hear Thee, Lord!" he cried. "Give me Thy grace,
+ That I may follow thee to any place,
+And speak to any people--in Thy name."
+
+The vine-leaf shadows darkened in the cell--
+ And barefoot friars passed the close-shut door;
+At vespers rang the monastery bell,
+ Yet still he lay, unheeding, where he fell,
+Cross of black outstretched upon the floor.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Northward into the silence, night and day,
+ Through the unknown, with faith that did not fail,
+Into the lands beneath the redman's sway,
+ The priest called Jean de Breboeuf took his way,
+Led by the Polestar and the far-blazed trail.
+
+He bore the sacred wine cups, and a bell
+ Of beaten bronze, whose tongue should warn or bless;
+As had been done in France, so he as well
+ Would ring a marriage chime or funeral knell
+For his lone flock, out in the wilderness.
+
+And like a phantom ever at his side
+ Pointing each hour to paths he scarce could see,
+By wood and waterway, went one still guide,
+ Who drifted with the shades, when daylight died,
+Into the deep of night, and mystery.
+
+But when they reached the place of many pines,
+ God's country, that no white man yet had named--
+They beached their birch canoe 'neath swinging vines,
+ For here, the Indian read by many signs,
+Lay the wild land the tribe of Huron claimed.
+
+Then like down-dropping pearls the rounded years,
+ One after one, slipped off the thread of Time,
+And Jean de Breboeuf laboured--oft with fears
+ Safe-hidden, oftener still with smiles and tears,
+Among the people of this northern clime.
+
+The forest children had become a part
+ Of his own life--always he spoke their tongue,
+He dwelt within their tents--with all his heart
+ He learned their ancient woodcraft, and each art
+Their race had practised when the world was young.
+
+He gave a simple truth and faithfulness
+ To men of silence and of subtle ways;
+He shared with them long hunger and distress--
+ When they had little, he himself had less,
+Through all the dark and lonely winter days.
+
+High in the vast cathedral of the trees
+ He hung the bell of bronze; there in God's name
+He taught the law of Love; there on his knees
+ In the sun-dappled gloom, midst birds and bees,
+He lifted up the cross, with words of name.
+
+But evil days were come. The arrowhead
+ Was dipped in poison, and de Breboeuf saw
+The painted faces and the swift-slain dead,--
+ The deep, unhealing wound--the rent of red
+Made by the weapon of the Iroquois.
+
+Closed in the village with its palisade,
+ Guarded by many a mighty Huron brave,
+The women and the little children stayed,
+ Lest forest fire or sweeping midnight raid
+Make all their hunting ground a common grave.
+
+It was at daybreak that they heard the cry:
+ "The Iroquois!--The Iroquois! They come!
+Fly to the hidden forest places! Fly!--
+ To linger in the village is to die--
+Steal through the river grasses--and be dumb!"
+
+Swiftly the women and the children fled,
+ But with the braves de Breboeuf stayed behind.
+"Go!" cried the chief, "good father--we be dead!"
+ Yet soft he answered as he shook his head:
+"I stay with thee--and with thy old and blind."
+
+When the red sun came creeping up the sky
+ Grey death had reaped the harvest hate had sown;
+The Jesuit heard no longer curse or sigh--
+ His prayers were said for those about to die--
+He faced the living Iroquois alone.
+
+They bound him fast beneath the forest green,
+ And when was come the shadowy edge of night--
+Nay--ask not what the horned owl hath seen,
+ Nor what the moon doth know--white and serene
+The soul of Jean de Breboeuf took its flight.
+
+
+
+
+IN EGYPT
+
+ It was the Angel Azrael the Lord God sent below
+ At midnight, into every house in Egypt, long ago--
+ 0 long, and long ago.
+
+
+All day the wife of Pharaoh had paced the palace hall
+ Or the long white pillared court that was open to the sky;
+A passion of wild restlessness ensnared her in its thrall
+ While she fought a fear within her--a thing that would not die.
+
+She had sent away her maidens--their weeping vexed her ears--
+ Their pallid faces filled her with impatient pitying scorn;--
+But she kept one time-worn woman, who long had outgrown fears,
+ The old brown nurse who held her son the day that he was born.
+
+The mighty gods had failed her--the river-gods and the sun,
+ And the little gods of brass and stone--who stared but made no sign,
+So she pled with them no longer, her prayers were said and done,
+ And now she neither bowed her head, or knelt at any shrine.
+
+Her hair was blown upon the wind like wreathes of golden flame,
+ And the sea-blue of her eyes cast blue shadows on her face,
+For she was not of Egypt--but unto the king she came
+ A captive--yet a princess--from a northern sea-bound place.
+
+She watched the fiery wheel roll down behind the level land,
+ One small hand curled above her eyes, and one above her heart,
+But when the ruby afterglow crept up and stained the sand
+ She turned and gazed toward Goshen, where Israel dwelt apart.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Nine plagues had wasted Egypt with their tortures grim and slow;
+ The earth was desolated, and scarred by hail and fire;
+Still even yet her Lord refused to let his bondsmen go
+ To worship in the wilderness, the God of their desire.
+
+The yellow Nile had turned to blood before her watching eyes--
+ It was branded into memory--a haunting death-strewn sight;--
+The very dust upon the street the rod had made to rise
+ In a living moving horror, of atoms, leprous-white.
+
+The frogs had come as things bewitched; an army without fear
+ They had broken through the rushes their upward way to take;
+And each one followed steadily a voice no man could hear--
+ While poisoned wind and pestilence came swiftly in their wake.
+
+Then oh, the little flies that swarmed from out the earth and air!
+ And the murrain of the camels, and cattle in the field!
+She prayed the king for love of her to hear the people's prayer
+ And send the slaves far hither;--but for love he would not yield.
+
+His face was like the carven face upon the basalt door;--
+ Her beauty could not charm him, her voice had lost its power;
+So she wrapped a veil about her and entreated him no more
+ But sat alone and watched, from out her window in the tower.
+
+She saw the Hebrew leader with uncovered silvery hair
+ Come with the priest at daybreak to the outer palace gate,
+And the rod of woe and wonder they carried with them there,--
+ Yet Pharaoh bid them enter--for he dared not bid them wait.
+
+But naught prevailed, for sore disease had scourged the low and high,
+ And the hail of God had fallen and crushed the growing grain,
+And a fire no hand had kindled in searing wrath swept by--
+ Such fire as none had seen before--as none would see again.
+
+Then came the pirate locusts, with a sea-song free and bold;--
+ The spent and broken people lacked the strength to force them back,
+But watched them take the last green blades that never would be gold--
+ And shut their doors against the foe that turned the meadows black.
+
+Then Pharaoh wavered--more--he called the Hebrews in his haste
+ Imploring respite--pleading his repentance bitterly--
+For there was death on every side, and all the land was waste;--
+ So the western wind of God blew the locusts out to sea.
+
+Yet not enough. Once more the king denied his given word;
+ He dared the wrath of Heaven, and he made his heart as steel;
+Then all the lights of God went out, and no man even stirred--
+ But stayed companioned by his fear, in darkness he could feel.
+
+So had each dreadful day gone by, each slow departing night,
+ And the queen stood now at sunset alone with grief and shame,
+When one came running towards her through the failing crimson light,
+ A little lad, with Egypt's eyes--but hair like golden flame.
+
+"Thou has been long, Beloved!" she cried, and frowned all tenderly,
+ "Indeed I have not seen thee since the burning noon took wing."
+"Mother of mine," he answered, "I have been where I should be
+ These burdened times of Egypt--beside my Lord the King.
+
+"'Twill take the country many days to gain its old time peace,
+ But thou shalt suffer nothing;--I, myself, will care for thee
+And see that naught doth harm thee--until all these troubles cease;--
+ These sad and magic doings that no man can solve," said he.
+
+"Ay! That thou wilt," she said. "But tell me, how doth fare the king?
+ Doth he relent? Or is his face forbidding--dark and cold?--
+Or hath he sent thee hither but some word of me to bring
+ As he cannot leave the council, and now the day grows old?"
+
+He shook his head. "I came because I longed to see thee so;--
+ And Pharaoh reads the chart of stars while time goes creeping by,
+Or he sits in weary silence--or paceth to and fro.
+ Since he banished the magicians, all fear him--all save I.
+
+"Put on thy golden girdle with the mighty emerald clasp
+ And thy lotus broidered robe. Braid thy hair all cunningly,
+And wear the winged head-dress with the turquois jewelled asp--
+ Then come and coax him from his gloom.--Thou only canst," said he.
+
+"Wise counsellor!" she smiled; "Nay, but too wise for thy short years,
+ I will unto the king;--and such great issues are at stake
+This time I dare not fail. I must go queenly--without tears
+ Or humble supplications--but as one no woe can break.
+
+"Stay thou with thy old nurse, Beloved--she sitteth in the hall--
+ And she will tell thee wondrous tales, to win from thee a smile,
+Then take thy supper by her side, and when deep night doth fall,
+ Go to the tower, whence I'll come, but in a little while."
+
+Arrayed in her most lovely robes she took her stately way
+ By courtiers unattended, through the palace vast and still.
+Her beauty was a thing to hold all bitterness at bay,
+ To move the hearts of men, and bend their spirits to her will!
+
+She passed beneath the rose red lights that hung from roof and door,
+ And by unseeing gods, where curled an incense, blue and sweet;
+As one who walks in sleep she crossed the cool mosaic floor,
+ That echoed to the music of her little sandalled feet.
+
+She reached the council chamber and there entered silently;--
+ But though the bowing wise men had been reeds the wind could sway
+Would have noted them as little. She only seemed to see
+ One face, inscrutable and dark, toward which she took her way.
+
+The king sat still as Fate. "Most High," she said, "I come for truth
+ Of this new threat of vengeance. There is horror in the air;--
+The Ethiopian runner hath brought word to me in sooth
+ Blood is sprinkled on the door-posts of the Hebrews everywhere!"
+
+"There are rumours--so he sayeth--of an Angel who will slay
+ The first-born sons of Egypt--should these bondsmen not depart.
+Thy people weep in anguish--I myself must hear thee say--
+ The Hebrew leader threatens no such danger to my heart--
+
+"He is my heart--my inner heart;--0 straight he is and strong!
+ To me he meaneth Egypt--Egypt meaneth but my son--
+So I would take him swiftly toward the land where I belong
+ To return to thee in safety when these troubles all are done."
+
+"The streets are filled with mourners;--every day more tears are shed;
+ The embalmers have grown weary--they will not work for gold--
+And everywhere the eye doth see processions of the dead,
+ Till they seem but mocking phantoms, we watch unmoved and cold."
+
+"Thou wilt not let the Hebrews go--I read it in thine eyes--
+ There are no gods in Egypt--there is nothing but thy Will--
+That sets itself against some force that yet in Strength will rise
+ But to silence all thine answers and bid thy voice be still."
+
+Then Pharaoh leaned down toward her: "0 most beautiful!" he said,
+ "There is not a man who liveth dare say so to my face;
+And truly were there such a one 'twere better he were dead,
+ For dead men suffer nothing.--Yet I pray thee of thy grace
+
+"Have patience now to hear me. 'Tis as the Ethiope heard.
+ They threatened all the first-born;--but the tower is brass and stone;
+There my son shall stay to-night, guarded well, I give thee word.--
+ Where armies could not enter--can one angel pass alone?
+
+"Thinkst thou that I am one to be affrighted by the dark?
+ A weakling to be played upon--a coward or a fool?
+Nay!--I defy the Israelites!--Their weapons miss their mark,
+ They have roused my utmost anger: it taketh long to cool.
+
+"But thou!" he said; "but thou! Methinks had they but threatened thee
+ I should perchance have known the very quality of fear;--
+Thou thing of perfect loveliness! Content mine eyes will be
+ Though in the land of Egypt is no blossom for a year.
+
+"But thou art queen, and thou art free;--free now to go or stay,
+ I would not bind thee to my side--not by one golden hair.--
+Leave thou this land of peril e'er the breaking of the day,
+ Or give thy life to my dark life--and bear what it doth bear."
+
+Then blanched her face to whiteness of the lilies on her gown,
+ And low she bowed as lilies bow in drift of wind and rain;
+"My Lord," she said, "I have no will except to lay it down
+ At thy desire. As I have done, so will I do again.
+
+"Thou art my king; my son is thine. It is not mine to say
+ That I will bear him hence.--Yet gropes my soul unto a light;
+The quarrel is 'twixt Heaven and thee alone--so I will stay
+ With him I love within the tower throughout this fateful night."
+
+"And if the Angel cometh through the walls of stone and brass--
+ And if he toucheth Egypt's son, to seal his gentle breath,
+Then will we know that God is God, He who hath right to pass
+ Our little doors, for He Himself is Lord of Life and Death."
+
+O when the desert blossomed like a mystic silver rose,
+ And the moon shone on the palace, deep guarded to the gate,
+And softly touched the lowly homes fast barred against their foes,
+ And lit the faces hewn of stone, that seemed to watch and wait--
+
+There came a cry--a rending cry--upon the quivering air,
+ The sudden wild lamenting of a nation in its pain,
+For the first-born sons of Egypt, the young, the strong, the fair--
+ Had fallen into dreamless sleep--and would not wake again.
+
+And within the palace tower the little prince slept well,
+ His head upon his mother's heart, that knew no more alarms;
+For at the midnight hour--0 most sweet and strange to tell--
+ She too slept deeply as the child close folded in her arms.
+
+Hard through the city rode the king, unarmed, unhelmeted,
+ Toward the land he loaned his bondsmen, the country kept in peace;
+He swayed upon his saddle, and he looked as looked the dead--
+ The people stared and wondered though their weeping did not cease.
+
+On did he ride to Goshen, and he called "Arise! Arise!
+ Thou leader of the Israelites, 'tis I who bid you go!
+Take thou these people hence, before the sun hath lit the skies;--
+ Get thee beyond the border of this land of death and woe!"
+
+Across the plains of Egypt through the shadows of the night
+ Came the sound as of an army moving onward steadily,
+And their leader read his way by the stars' eternal light
+ While all the legions followed on their journey to the sea.
+
+The moon that shineth overhead once saw these mysteries--
+ And then the world was young, that hath these many years been old;
+If Egypt drank her bitter cup down even to the lees
+ Who careth now? 'Tis but an ancient tale that hath been told.
+
+
+ Yet still we hear the footsteps--as he goeth to and fro--
+ Of Azrael, the Angel, that the Lord God sent below,
+ To Egypt--long ago.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF POPPIES
+
+I love red poppies! Imperial red poppies!
+ Sun-worshippers are they;
+Gladly as trees live through a hundred summers
+ They live one little day.
+
+I love red poppies! Impassioned scarlet poppies!
+ Ever their strange perfume
+Seems like an essence brewed by fairy people
+ From an immortal bloom.
+
+I love red poppies! Red, silken, swaying poppies!
+ Deep in their hearts they keep
+A magic cure for woe--a draught of Lethe--
+ A lotus-gift of sleep.
+
+I love red poppies! Soft silver-stemmed, red poppies,
+ That from the rain and sun
+Gather a balm to heal some earth-born sorrow,
+ When their glad day is done.
+
+
+
+
+A PAGAN PRAYER
+
+Lord of all Life! When my hours are done,
+ Take me and make me anew--
+And give me back to the earth and the sun,
+ And the sky's unlimited blue.
+
+The nightingale sings in an ecstasy
+ To the moonlit April night,
+But my songs are locked in the heart of me,
+ Like birds that may not take flight.
+
+The little purple-winged swallows that fly
+ Through waves of the upper air,
+Have a sweeter liberty, Lord, than I,
+ Who may not follow them there.
+
+Pavilions of sunshine--tents of the rain,
+ For these, the wild and the free;
+And for us walled garden and window-pane,
+ And bolt and staple and key.
+
+We are worn with wisdom that never brings
+ Peace to the world and its woe--
+For a space with Thy joyous lesser things,
+ Teach me the faith I would know.
+
+
+
+
+A LOVE SONG
+
+Oh haste, my Sweet! Impatient now I wait,
+The crescent moon swings low, it groweth late,
+A night bird sings, of Life, and Love, and Fate!
+
+Oh haste, my Sweet! Youth and its gladness goes,
+Joy hath one summer time, like to the rose,
+Love only lives through all the winter snows.
+
+Then haste, my Sweet! These hours are all our own,
+And see! A rose leaf on the night breeze blown!
+For thee I wait--for thee I wait alone!
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10750 ***
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #10750 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10750)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Miracle and Other Poems, by Virna Sheard
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Miracle and Other Poems
+
+Author: Virna Sheard
+
+Release Date: January 19, 2004 [eBook #10750]
+[Last updated: August 27, 2011]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRACLE AND OTHER POEMS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines, Victoria, B.C., Canada, January 2004
+
+
+
+THE MIRACLE
+
+AND OTHER POEMS
+
+BY VIRNA SHEARD
+
+1913
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MY DEAR BROTHER
+
+ELDRIDGE STANTON (JUNIOR)
+
+WHO DIED BRAVELY AT NIAGARA, ON THE AFTERNOON OF
+SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4TH, 1912.
+
+No tears for thee, no tears, or sighs,
+Or breaking heart--
+But smiles, that thou so well that bitter hour
+Didst play thy part!
+
+VIRNA SHEARD.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+THE MIRACLE
+THE CROW
+WHEN APRIL COMES
+KISMET
+A SONG OF SUMMER DAYS
+AT THE PLAY
+CHRISTMAS
+THE HEART COURAGEOUS
+A SONG
+THE CALL
+THE KNIGHT-ERRANT
+A SOUTHERN LULLABY
+THE FAIRY CLOCK
+THE SLUMBER ANGEL
+THE LONELY ROAD
+SEA-BORN
+THE ANGEL
+WHEN CHRISTMAS COMES
+THE OPAL MONTH
+NOCTURNE
+A SONG OF LOVE
+THE UNKNOWING
+THE PETITION
+HALLOWE'EN
+THE GLEANER
+THE ROVER
+IN SOLITUDE
+THE ROBIN
+A SONG OF ROSES
+PRAIRIE
+THE CLIMBER
+THE DAISY
+THE VISION
+SAINTS
+AT MIDNIGHT
+NOVEMBER
+THE LILY-POND
+LILACS
+APRIL
+PAEANS
+THE HARP
+GULLS
+THE SHEPHERD WIND
+THE TEMPLE
+REQUEST
+A SONG
+THE TOAST
+THE SEA-SHELL
+AT DAWN
+THE WHISTLER
+COMMON-WEALTH
+DON CUPID
+HEAVEN
+SIR HENRY IRVING
+JEAN DE BREBOEUF
+IN EGYPT
+A SONG OF POPPIES
+A PAGAN PRAYER
+A LOVE SONG
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRACLE AND OTHER POEMS
+
+
+THE MIRACLE
+
+Up from the templed city of the Jews,
+ The road ran straight and white
+To Jericho, the City of the Palms,
+ The City of Delight.
+
+Down that still road from far Judean hills
+ The shepherds drove their sheep
+At silver dawn--at stirring of the birds--
+ When men were all asleep.
+
+Full many went that weary way at noon,
+ Or rested by the trees,
+Romans and slaves, Gentiles and bearded priests,
+ Sinners and Pharisees.
+
+But when the pink clouds drifted far and high,
+ Like rose leaves blowing past,
+When in the west where one star blessed the sky
+ The gates of day shut fast.
+
+All travellers journeyed home, and the moonlight
+ Washed the road fresh and sweet,
+Until it seemed a gleaming ivory path,
+ Waiting for royal feet.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Now it was noon, and life at its full tide
+ Rolled ever to and fro,
+A restless sea, between Jerusalem
+ And white-walled Jericho.
+
+Blind Bartimeus, by the highway side,
+ Sat begging 'neath the trees,
+And heard the world go by, Gentiles and Jews,
+ Sinners and Pharisees.
+
+Blind Bartimeus of the mask-like face,
+ And patient, outstretched hand--
+He upon whom his God had set a mark
+ No man might understand;
+
+Blind Bartimeus of the lonely dark,
+ Who knew no thing called fear,
+But dreamt his dreams, and heard the little sounds
+ No man but he could hear.
+
+He heard the beating of the bird's soft wings
+ Uprising through the air;
+He heard the camel's footfall in the dust,
+ And knew who travelled there.
+
+He heard the lizard when it moved at noon
+ On the grey, sunlit wall;
+He heard the far-off temple bells, what time
+ He felt the shadows fall.
+
+Now, in the golden hour, he stooped to hear
+ A muffled sound and low,
+The tramping of a myriad sandalled feet
+ That came from Jericho.
+
+Then on the road a little lad he knew
+ Ran past, with eager cry,
+"Ho, Bartimeus! Give thine heart good cheer,
+ For David's Son comes by!
+
+"He comes! He comes! And, sad one, who can say
+ What He may do for thee?
+He makes the lame to walk! He heals the sick!
+ He makes the blind to see!"
+
+"He makes the blind to see! Oh, God of Hosts,
+ Beyond the sky called blue,
+What if Messiah cometh to His own!
+ What if the words be true!"
+
+On his swift way the little herald sped,
+ Like bird upon the wing,
+And left the lean, brown beggar--world-forgot--
+ Waiting for Israel's King.
+
+But when the dust came whirling to his feet--
+ When the mad throng drew near--
+Blind Bartimeus rose, and from his lips
+ A cry rang loud and clear--
+
+The cry of all the ages, of each soul
+ In sad captivity;
+The endless cry from depths of bitter woe--
+ "Have mercy upon me!"
+
+What though the wild oncoming multitude
+ Jested and bade him cease;
+What though the Scribes and mighty Pharisees
+ Told him to keep his peace;
+
+What though his heart grew faint, and all the strength
+ Slipped from each trembling limb--
+The One of all the earth his soul desired
+ Stood still--and spoke to him.
+
+Then silence fell, while the upheaving throng,
+ As sea-waves backward curled,
+Left a great path, and down the path there shone
+ The Light of all the world.
+
+The Light from whose mysterious golden depths
+ The Sun rose in his might--
+The light from whose white, hidden fires were lit
+ The torches of the night;
+
+The Light that shining on a thing of clay
+ Giveth it Life and Will:
+The Light that with an unknown power can blast
+ And bid all life be still;
+
+The Light that calls a ray of its own light
+ A man's undying soul--
+The Light that lifts the broken lives of earth,
+ Touches and makes them whole.
+
+Up towards the Radiance Bartimeus went,
+ Alone, and poor, and blind--
+Feeling his way, if haply it led on
+ To One he fain would find.
+
+Then spoke the Voice again. Oh, mystic words
+ Of a compelling grace:
+The curtain rose from off his darkened sight--
+ He saw the King's own face.
+
+So strangely beautiful--so strangely near--
+ He worshipped with his eyes,
+Unheeding that for him at last there shone
+ The sunlit noonday skies.
+
+What though the clamouring crowd echoed his name
+ Unto its utmost rim,
+He only saw the Christ--and in the light
+ He rose and followed Him.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Oh, Bartimeus of the mask-like face,
+ And patient, outstretched hand,
+Was it for this God set on thee the mark
+ No man might understand?
+
+
+
+
+THE CROW
+
+ Hail, little herald!--Art thou then returning
+From summer lands, this wild and wind-torn day?
+ Hast brought the word for which our hearts are yearning,
+ That spring is on the way?
+ Hark! Now there comes a clear, insistent calling,
+
+From hill tops crested with untarnished snow;
+ The trumpet notes are drifting--floating--falling--
+ Whene'er the breezes blow!
+
+ "Winter is over, and the spring is coming!"
+ Glad is thy message, little page in black--
+ "Winter is over, and the spring is coming--
+ The spring is coming back!"
+
+ Tell me, 0 prophet, bird of sombre feather,
+Who taught thee all the mysteries of spring?--
+ Didst note each passing mood of wind and weather,
+While flying to the North on buoyant wing?
+
+ Or didst thou rest upon the bare brown branches
+And hear the sap go singing through the trees?--
+ Didst watch with keen, far-seeing downward glances,
+ The leaves unlock their cells with fairy keys?
+
+What though thy voice hath not a trace of sweetness
+ It thrills one through and through,
+With promises of Joy in all completeness
+ What time the skies are blue.
+When robins from the apple-trees are flinging
+ Out on the air their silver shower of song,--
+In lilac days, when children run a-singing,
+ No single thought shall do thy memory wrong.
+
+ "Winter is over and the spring is coming!"
+ Sweet are thy tidings, little page in black--
+ "Winter is over and the spring is coming--
+ The spring is coming back!"
+
+
+
+
+WHEN APRIL COMES!
+
+When April comes with softly shining eyes,
+ And daffodils bound in her wind-blown hair,
+Oh, she will coax all clouds from out the skies,
+And every day will bring some sweet surprise,--
+ The swallows will come swinging through the air
+ When April comes!
+
+When April comes with tender smile and tear,
+ Dear dandelions will gild the common ways,
+And at the break of morning we will hear
+The piping of the robins crystal clear--
+ While bobolinks will whistle through the days,
+ When April comes!
+
+When April comes, the world so wise and old,
+ Will half forget that it is worn and grey;
+Winter will seem but as a tale long told--
+Its bitter winds with all its frost and cold
+ Will be the by-gone things of yesterday,
+ When April comes!
+
+
+
+
+KISMET
+
+Love came to her unsought,
+ Love served her many ways,
+And patiently Love followed her
+ Throughout the nights and days.
+
+Love spent his life for her
+ And hid his tears and sighs;
+He bartered all his soul for her,
+ With tender pleading eyes.
+
+Her scarlet mouth that smiled,
+ Mocked lightly at his woe,
+And while she would not bid him stay
+ She did not bid him go.
+
+But hope within him failed
+ Until he pled no more--
+And cold and still he turned his face
+ Away from her heart's door.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Long were the days she watched
+ For one who never came;--
+Through sleepless nights her white lips bore
+ The burden of a name.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF SUMMER DAYS
+
+As pearls slip off a silken string and fall into the sea,
+These rounded summer days fall back into eternity.
+
+Into the deep from whence they came; into the mystery--
+At set of sun each one slips back as pearls into the sea.
+
+They are so sweet--so warm and sweet--Love fain would hold them fast:
+He weeps when through his finger tips they slip away at last.
+
+
+
+
+AT THE PLAY
+
+Just above the boxes and where the high lights fall
+Looketh down a carven face from out the gilded wall.
+
+Van Dyke beard and broidered ruff silently confess
+That he lived--and loved perchance--in days of Good Queen Bess.
+(Laces fine and linen sheer, curled and perfumed hair
+Well became those gentlemen of gay, insouciant air.)
+
+See! He gazeth evermore at the stage below;
+Noteth well the players as they quickly come and go;
+Queens and kings and maidens fair, motley fools and friars,
+Lords and ladies, stately dames, mounted knights and squires.
+
+Well he knoweth all of them, all the grave and gay,
+These are they he dreamt of in the far and far away;
+Saints and sinners, see they come down the bygone years,
+And the world still shares with them its laughter and its tears.
+
+Still we haunt the greenwood for love of Rosalind,
+Still we hear the Jester's bells ajingle on the wind,
+Still the frenzied Moor we fear--Ah! and even yet
+Breathless wait before the tomb of all the Capulet.
+
+Though the slow years pass away, yet on land and sea,
+Follow we the Danish Prince in sad soliloquy;
+And I fancy sometimes when the round moon saileth high
+Yet in Venice meet the Jew--as he goeth by.
+
+(Just above the boxes and where the high lights fall
+Looketh down a carven face from out the gilded wall.)
+
+
+
+
+CHRISTMAS
+
+With all the little children, far and near,
+God wot! to-day we'll sing a song of cheer!
+To rosy lips and eyes, that know not guile,
+We one and all will give back smile for smile;
+And for the sake of all the small and gay
+We will be children also for to-day.
+
+Holly we'll hang, with mistletoe above!
+God wot! to-day we'll sing a song of love!
+And we will trip on merry heel and toe
+With all the fair who lightly come and go;
+We will deny the years that lie behind
+And say that age is only in the mind.
+
+And to the needy, in whatever place,
+God wot! to-day we'll lend a hand of grace;
+For where is he who hath not need himself,
+Although he dine on silver or on delf?
+And we who pass and nod this Christmas Day
+May never meet again on life's highway.
+
+But when the lights are lit, and day has flown--
+God wot! there will be some who sit alone;
+Who sit and gaze into the embers' glow,
+And watch strange things that flitter to and fro--
+The ghosts of dreams; and faces--long unseen;
+Shadows of shadows--things that once have been.
+
+
+
+
+THE HEART COURAGEOUS
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Will fight with right good cheer;
+For well may he his foes out-face
+ Who owns no foe called Fear!
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Will fight as knight of old
+For that which he doth count his own--
+ Against the world to hold.
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Will fight both night and day,
+Against the Host Invisible--
+ That holds his soul at bay,
+
+Who hath a heart courageous
+ Rests with tranquillity,
+For Time he counts not as his foe,
+ Nor Death his enemy.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG
+
+Love maketh its own summer time,
+ 'Tis June, Love, when we are together,
+And little I care for the frost in the air,
+ For the heart makes its own summer weather.
+
+Love maketh its own winter time,
+ And though the hills blossom with heather,
+If you are not near, 'tis December, my dear,
+ For the heart makes its own winter weather.
+
+
+
+
+THE CALL
+
+Across the dusty, foot-worn street
+ Unblessed of flower or tree,
+Faint and far-off--there ever sounds
+ The calling of the sea.
+
+From out the quiet of the hills,
+ Where purple shadows lie,
+The pine trees murmur, "Come and rest
+ And let the world go by."
+
+The west wind whispers all night long
+ "Oh, journey forth afar
+To the green and pleasant places
+ Where little rivers are!"
+
+And the soft and silken rustling
+ Of bending yellow wheat
+Says, "See the harvest moon--that dims
+ The arc-lights of the street."
+
+Though the city holds thee captive
+ By trick, and wile, and lure,
+Out yonder lies the loveliness
+ Of things that shall endure.
+
+The river road is wide and fair,
+ The prairie-path is free,
+And still the old earth waits to give
+ Her strength and joy to thee.
+
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT-ERRANT
+
+Keen in his blood ran the old mad desire
+ To right the world's wrongs and champion truth;
+Deep in his eyes shone a heaven-lit fire,
+ And royal and radiant day-dreams of youth!
+
+Gracious was he to both beggar and stranger,
+ And for a rose tossed from fair finger-tips
+He would have ridden hard-pressed through all danger,
+ The rose on his heart and a song on his lips!
+
+All the king's foes he counted his foemen;
+ His not to say that a cause could be lost;
+Spirits like his faced the enemies' bowmen
+ On long vanished fields--nor counted the cost.
+
+Wide was his out-look and far was his vision;
+ Soul-fretting trifles he sent down the wind;
+Small griefs gained only his cheerful derision,--
+ God's weather always was fair to his mind.
+
+But he would comfort a child who was crying,
+ Knightly his deed to all such in distress;
+Never a beast by the road-side lay dying
+ He did not stoop to with gentle caress.
+
+And by the old, and the sad, and the broken,
+ Often he lingered, a well-beloved guest;
+Dear was his voice, whatever the word spoken,
+ Sweetening their day with a song or a jest.
+
+In the far times of brave ballad and story,
+ Men of his make kept the gates of the sea,
+Wrought mighty deeds of power and glory,
+ Scattered their tyrants, and set the land free!
+
+* * * * *
+
+In the far times when perchance hearts were stronger,
+ When for a faith men could face death alone,
+And it would seem that love lasted longer,
+ Such a white soul would have come to its own.
+
+Down in the city the people but noted
+ One who was silent when things went awry,
+Toiled at dull tasks, and was strangely devoted
+ To small deeds of kindness that others passed by.
+
+Down in the city the people but noted
+ One who thought little of wealth and its ways;
+One whose true words were full often misquoted,
+ One who laughed lightly at blame or at praise.
+
+
+
+
+A SOUTHERN LULLABY
+
+Little honey baby, shet yo' eyes up tight;--
+ (Shadow-man is comin' from de moon!)--
+You's as sweet as roses if dey is so pink an white;
+ (Shadow-man '11 get here mighty soon.)
+
+Little honey baby, keep yo' footses still!--
+ (Rocky-bye, oh, rocky, rocky-bye!)
+Hush yo' now, an listen to dat lonesome whippo'-will;
+ Don't yo' fix yo' lip an start to cry.
+
+Little honey baby, stop dat winkin' quick!;
+ (Hear de hoot-owl in de cotton-wood!)
+Yess--I sees yo' eyes adoin' dat dere triflin' trick--
+ (He gets chillun if dey isn't good.)
+
+Little honey baby, what yo' think yo' see?--
+ (Sister keep on climbin' to de sky--)
+Dat's a June bug--it aint got no stinger, lak a bee--
+ (Reach de glory city by an by.)
+
+Little honey baby, what yo' skeery at?--
+ (Go down, Moses--down to Phar-e-oh,)--
+No--dat isn't nuffin but a furry fly-round bat;--
+ (Say, he'd betta let dose people go.)
+
+Little honey baby, yo' is all ma own,--
+ Deed yo' is.--Yes,--dat's a fia-fly;--
+If I didn't hab yo'--reckon I'd be all alone;
+ (Rocky-bye--oh, rocky, rocky-bye.)
+
+Little honey baby, shet yo' eyes up tight;--
+ (Shadow man is comin' from de moon,)
+You's as sweet as roses, if dey is so pink and white;
+ (Shadow-man '11 get here mighty soon.)
+
+
+ The lines in brackets are supposed to be sung or chanted.
+ The Southern "Mammy" seldom sang a song through, but
+ interladed it with comments.--V.S.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRY CLOCK
+
+Silver clock! O silver clock! tell to me the time o' day!
+Is there yet a little hour left for us to work and play?
+Tell me when the sun will set--tiny globe of silver-grey.
+
+It has been so glad a world since the coming of the morn,
+Oft I wondered when I met any souls who seemed forlorn--
+And I scarce gave heed to those who were old or travel worn.
+
+Mayhap I have loved too well the merry fleeting things;
+Run too lightly with the wind--chased too many shining wings;
+Thought too seldom of the night, and the silence that it brings.
+
+Well I fear me I have been but an idler in the sun--
+All unfinished are the tasks long and long ago begun--
+In the dark perchance they weep, who have left their work undone.
+
+And I know each black-frocked friar preacheth sermons that, alas!
+Fain would halt the dancing feet of those careless ones who pass
+Down a sweet and primrose path, through the ribbons of the grass.
+
+Silver-clock! O Silver-clock! It was only yesterday
+Dandelions flecked the field, starry bright, and gold and gay;
+You are but the ghost of one--little globe of silver-grey!
+
+Tell me--tell me of the hour--for there is so much to do!
+Is it early? Is it late? Fairy clock! 0 tell me true,
+As I blow you down the wind, out upon a road of blue.
+
+
+
+
+THE SLUMBER ANGEL
+
+When day is ended, and grey twilight flies
+ On silent wings across the tired land,
+The slumber angel cometh from the skies--
+The slumber angel of the peaceful eyes,
+ And with the scarlet poppies in his hand.
+
+His robes are dappled like the moonlit seas,
+ His hair in waves of silver floats afar;
+He weareth lotus-bloom and sweet heartsease,
+With tassels of the rustling green fir trees,
+ As down the dusk he steps from star to star.
+
+Above the world he swings his curfew bell,
+ And sleep falls soft on golden heads and white;
+The daisies curl their leaves beneath his spell,
+The prisoner who wearies in his cell
+ Forgets awhile, and dreams throughout the night.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Even so, in peace, comes that great Lord of rest
+ Who crowneth men with amaranthine flowers;
+Who telleth them the truths they have but guessed,
+Who giveth them the things they love the best,
+ Beyond this restless, rocking world of ours.
+
+
+
+
+THE LONELY ROAD
+
+We used to fear the lonely road
+ That twisted round the hill;
+It dipped down to the river-way,
+ And passed the haunted mill,
+And then crept on, until it reached
+ The churchyard, green and still.
+
+No pipers ever took that road,
+ No gipsies, brown and gay;
+No shepherds with their gentle flocks,
+ No loads of scented hay;
+No market-waggons jingled by
+ On any Saturday.
+
+The dog-wood there flung wide its stars,
+ In April, silvery sweet;
+The squirrels crossed that path all day
+ On tiny flying feet;
+The wild, brown rabbits knew each turn,
+ Each shadowy safe retreat.
+
+And there the golden-belted bee
+ Sang his sweet summer song,
+The crickets chirped there to the moon
+ With steady note and strong;
+Till cold and silence wrapped them round
+ When autumn nights grew long.
+
+But, oh! they brought the lonely dead
+ Along that quiet way,
+With strange procession, dark and slow,
+ On sunny days and grey;
+We used to watch them, wonder-eyed,
+ Nor care again to play.
+
+And we forgot each merry jest;
+ The birds on bush and tree
+Silenced the song within their throats
+ And with us watched to see,
+The soft, slow passing out of sight
+ Of that dark mystery.
+
+* * * * *
+
+We fear no more the lonely road
+ That winds around the hill;
+Far from the busy world's highway
+ And the gods' slow-grinding mill;
+It only seems a peaceful path,
+ Pleasant, and green, and still.
+
+
+
+
+SEA-BORN
+
+Afar in the turbulent city,
+ In a hive where men make gold,
+He stood at his loom from dawn to dark,
+ While the passing years were told.
+
+And when he knew it was summer-time
+ By the grey dust on the street,
+By the lingering hours of daylight,
+ And the sultry noon-tide heat--
+
+Oh! he longed as a captive sea-bird
+ To leave his cage and be free,
+For his heart like a shell kept singing
+ The old, old song of the sea.
+
+And amid the noise and confusion
+ Of wheels that were never still,
+He heard the wind through the scented pines
+ On a rough, storm-beaten hill;
+
+While, beyond a maze of painted threads,
+ Where his tireless shuttle flew,
+In fancy he saw the sunlit waves
+ Beckon him out to the blue.
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGEL
+
+Down the white ward with slow, unswerving tread
+ He came ere break of day--
+A cowl was drawn about his down-bent head,
+ His misty robes were grey.
+
+And no man even knew that he went by,
+ None saw or heard him pass;
+Softly he moved as clouds drift down the sky,
+ Or shadows cross the grass.
+
+Close to a little bed where one lay low,
+ At last he took his stand,
+And touched the head that tossed in restless woe
+ With gentle, outstretched hand.
+
+"When bitterness," he said, "is at an end,
+ And joy grows far and dim,
+I am the angel whom the Lord doth send
+ To lead men on to Him.
+
+"Past the innumerable stars, my friend,
+ Past all the winds that blow,
+We, too, must travel to our journey's end.
+ Arise! And let us go!"
+
+"Stay! Stay!" the other cried. "I know thy face!
+ Death is thy dreaded name!"
+"Nay--I am known as 'Love' in that far place,"
+ He said, "from whence I came."
+
+But still the other cried, with moan and tear,
+ "I fear the dark--and thee!"
+"There is no dark," the angel said, "nor fear,
+ For those who go with me.
+
+"There is no loneliness, and nevermore
+ The shadow-haunted night,
+When we pass out beyond Life's swinging door
+ The road," he said, "is bright."
+
+Then backward slipped the cowl from off his head,
+ Downward the robe of grey;
+A radiant presence by the lowly bed
+ Greeted the breaking day.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Within the long white ward one lay alone,
+ None watched by him awhile,
+But some who passed him said, in whispered tone,
+ "See--on his lips--the smile!"
+
+
+
+
+WHEN CHRISTMAS COMES
+
+For thee, my small one--trinkets and new toys,
+The wine of life and all its keenest joys,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For me, the broken playthings of the past
+That in my folded hands I still hold fast,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+For thee, fair hopes of all that yet may be,
+And tender dreams of sweetest mystery,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For thee, the future in a golden haze,
+For me, the memory of some bygone days,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+For thee, the things that lightly come and go,
+For thee, the holly and the mistletoe,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For me, the smiles that are akin to tears,
+For me, the frost and snows of many years,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+For thee, the twinkling candles bright and gay,
+For me, the purple shadows and the grey,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For thee, the friends that greet thee at the door,
+For me, the faces I shall see no more,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+But ah, for both of us the mystic star
+That leadeth back to Bethlehem afar,
+ When Christmas comes.
+For both of us the child they saw of old,
+That evermore his mother's arms enfold,
+ When Christmas comes.
+
+
+
+
+THE OPAL MONTH
+
+Now cometh October--a nut-brown maid,
+Who in robes of crimson and gold arrayed
+ Hath taken the king's highway!
+On the world she smiles--but to me it seems
+Her eyes are misty with mid-summer dreams,
+ Or memories of the May.
+
+Opals agleam in the dusk of her hair
+Flash their hearts of fire and colours rare
+ As she dances gaily by--
+Yet she sighs for each empty swinging nest,
+And she tenderly holds against her breast
+ A belated butterfly.
+
+The crickets sing no more to the stars--
+The spiders no more put up silver bars
+ To entangle silken wings;
+But the quail pipes low in the rusted corn,
+And here and there--both at night and at morn--
+ A lonely robin still sings.
+
+A spice-laden breeze of the south is blent
+With perfumed winds from the Orient
+ And they weave o'er her a spell,
+For nun-like she goeth now, still and sweet--
+And while mists like incense curl at her feet,
+ She lingers her beads to tell.
+
+
+
+
+NOCTURNE
+
+Infold us with thy peace, dear moon-lit night,
+ And let thy silver silence wrap us round
+Till we forget the city's dazzling light,
+ The city's ceaseless sound.
+
+Here where the sand lies white upon the shore,
+ And little velvet-fingered breezes blow,
+Dear sea, thy world-old wonder-song once more
+ Sing to us e'er we go.
+
+Give us thy garnered sweets, short summer hour:
+ Perfume of rose, and balm of sun-steeped pine;
+Scent from the lily's cup and horned flower,
+ Where bees have drained the wine.
+
+Come, small musicians in the rough sea grass,
+ Pipe us the serenade we love the best;
+And winds of midnight, chant for us a mass,
+ Our hearts would be at rest.
+
+God of all beauty, though the world is thine,
+ Our faith grows often faint, oft hope is spent;
+Show us Thyself in all things fair and fine,
+ Teach us the stars' content.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF LOVE
+
+Love reckons not by time--its May days of delight
+Are swifter than the falling stars that pass beyond our sight.
+
+Love reckons not by time--its moments of despair
+Are years that march like prisoners, who drag the chains they wear.
+
+Love counts not by the sun--it hath no night or day--
+'Tis only light when love is near--'tis dark with love away.
+
+Love hath no measurements of height, or depth, or space,
+But yet within a little grave it oft hath found a place.
+
+Love is its own best law--its wrongs seek no redress;
+Love is forgiveness--and it only knoweth how to bless.
+
+
+
+
+THE UNKNOWING
+
+If the bird knew how through the wintry weather
+An empty nest would swing by day and night,
+It would not weave the strands so close together
+ Or sing for such delight.
+
+And if the rosebud dreamed e'er its awaking
+How soon its perfumed leaves would drift apart,
+Perchance 'twould fold them close to still the aching
+ Within its golden heart.
+
+If the brown brook that hurries through the grasses
+Knew of drowned sailors--and of storms to be--
+Methinks 'twould wait a little e'er it passes
+ To meet the old grey sea.
+
+If youth could understand the tears and sorrow,
+The sombre days that age and knowledge bring,
+It would not be so eager for the morrow
+ Or spendthrift of the spring.
+
+If love but learned how soon life treads its measure,
+How short and swift its hours when all is told,
+Each kiss and tender word 'twould count and treasure,
+ As misers count their gold.
+
+
+
+
+THE PETITION
+
+Sweet April! from out of the hidden place
+ Where you keep your green and gold,
+We pray thee to bring us a gift of grace,
+ When the little leaves unfold.
+
+Oh! make us glad with the things that are young;
+ Give our hearts the quickened thrills
+That used to answer each robin that sung
+ In the days of daffodils.
+
+For what is the worth of all that we gain,
+ If we lose the old delight,
+That came in the time of sun and rain,
+ When the whole round world seemed right?
+
+It was then we gave, as we went along,
+ The faith that to-day we keep;
+And those April days were for mirth and song,
+ While the nights were made for sleep.
+
+Yet, though we follow with steps that are slow
+ The feet that dance and that run;
+We would still be friends with the winds that blow,
+ And companions to the sun!
+
+
+
+
+HALLOWE'EN
+
+There is an old Italian legend which says that on the eve of
+the beloved festival of All Saints (Hallowe'en) the souls of the
+dead return to earth for a little while and go by on the wind.
+The feast of All Saints is followed by the feast of the dead, when
+for a day only the sound of the _Miserere_ is heard throughout the
+cities of Italy.
+
+
+Hark! Hark to the wind! 'Tis the night, they say,
+When all souls come back from the far away--
+The dead, forgotten this many a day!
+
+And the dead remembered--ay! long and well--
+And the little children whose spirits dwell
+In God's green garden of asphodel.
+
+Have you reached the country of all content,
+0 souls we know, since the day you went
+From this time-worn world, where your years were spent?
+
+Would you come back to the sun and the rain,
+The sweetness, the strife, the thing we call pain,
+And then unravel life's tangle again?
+
+I lean to the dark--Hush!--was it a sigh?
+Or the painted vine-leaves that rustled by?
+Or only a night-bird's echoing cry?
+
+
+
+
+THE GLEANER
+
+As children gather daisies down green ways
+ Mid butterflies and bees,
+To-day across the meadows of past days
+ I gathered memories.
+
+I stored my heart with harvest of lost hours--
+ With blossoms of spent years;
+Leaves that had known the sun of joy, and hours
+ Drenched with the rain of tears.
+
+And perfumes that were long ago distilled
+ From April's pink and white,
+Again with all their old enchantment, filled
+ My spirit with delight.
+
+From out the limbo where lost roses go
+ The place we may not see,
+With all its petals sweet and half-ablow,
+ One rose returned to me.
+
+Where falls the sunlight chequered by the shade
+ On meadows of the past,
+I gathered blossoms that no sun can fade
+ No winter wind can blast.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROVER
+
+Though I follow a trail to north or south,
+ Though I travel east or west,
+There's a little house on a quiet road
+ That my hidden heart loves best;
+And when my journeys are over and done,
+ 'Tis there I will go to rest.
+
+The snows have bleached it this many a year;
+ The sun has painted it grey;
+The vines hold it close in their clinging arms;
+ The shadows creep there to stay;
+And the wind goes calling through empty rooms
+ For those who have gone away.
+
+But the roses against the window-pane
+ Are the roses I used to know;
+And the rain on the roof still sings the song
+ It sang in the long ago,
+When I lay me down to sleep in a bed
+ Little and white and low.
+
+It is long since I bid it all good-bye,
+ With young light-hearted disdain;
+I remember who stood at the door that day;
+ Her tears fell fast as the rain;
+And I whistled a tune and waved my hand,
+ But never went back again.
+
+Toll I have paid at the gates of the world,
+ The sand I know and the sea;
+I have taken the wide and open road,
+ With steps unhindered and free;
+Yet, like a bell ringing down in my heart,
+ My home is calling to me.
+
+
+
+
+IN SOLITUDE
+
+He is not desolate whose ship is sailing
+ Over the mystery of an unknown sea,
+For some great love with faithfulness unfailing
+ Will light the stars to bear him company.
+
+Out in the silence of the mountain passes,
+ The heart makes peace and liberty its own--
+The wind that blows across the scented grasses
+ Bringing the balm of sleep--comes not alone.
+
+Beneath the vast illimitable spaces
+ Where God has set His jewels in array,
+A man may pitch his tent in desert places
+ Yet know that heaven is not so far away.
+
+But in the city--in the lighted city--
+ Where gilded spires point toward the sky,
+And fluttering rags and hunger ask for pity,
+ Grey Loneliness in cloth-of-gold, goes by.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROBIN
+
+Little brown brother, up in the apple tree,
+ High on its blossom-rimmed branches aswing,
+Here where I listen earth-bound, it seems to me
+ You are the voice of the spring.
+
+Herald of Hope to the sad and faint-hearted,
+ Piper the gold of the world cannot pay,
+Up from the limbo of things long departed
+ Memories you bring me to-day.
+
+You are the echo of songs that are over,
+ You are the promise of songs that will come,
+You know the music, oh, light-winged rover,
+ Sealed in the souls of the dumb.
+
+All of the past that we wearily sigh for,
+ All of the future for which our hearts long,
+All Love would live for, and all Love would die for
+ Wordless, you weave in a song.
+
+Little brown brother, up in the apple tree,
+ My spirit answers each note that you sing,
+And while I listen--earth-bound--it seems to me
+ You are the voice of the spring.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF ROSES
+
+'Tis time to sing of roses: of roses all ablow,
+ To every vagrant passing breeze they dip a courtesy low,
+'Tis time to sing of roses! for June is here, you know.
+
+One song for true love's roses of sweetest deepest red,
+ Some heart will wear you faithfully when life itself hath fled,
+And for the white rose sing a song--the white rose for the dead.
+
+And ah! the yellow roses, of brightest, lightest gold,
+ King Midas must have touched their leaves in mystic days of old,
+Or they were made of sunshine, and gilded, fold by fold.
+
+And the roadside rose, sweet-briar, we would remember thee
+ And the cinnamon rose that evermore enthralls each passing bee,
+You old, old-fashioned roses, a-growing wild and free.
+
+'Tis time to sing of roses! of roses all ablow!
+ They come again, as sweet, my dear, as those of long ago.
+'Tis time to sing of roses! for June is here you know.
+
+
+
+
+PRAIRIE
+
+Where yesterday rolled long waves of gold
+ Beneath the burnished blue of the sky,
+A silver-white sea lies still and cold,
+ And a bitter wind blows by.
+
+But nothing passes the door all day,
+ Though my watching eyes grow worn and dim,
+Save a lean, grey wolf that swings away
+ To the far horizon rim.
+
+Then, one by one, the stars glisten out
+ Like frozen tears on a purple pall--
+The darkness folds my cabin about
+ And the snow begins to fall.
+
+I will make a hearth-fire red and bright
+ And set a light by the window pane
+For one who follows the trail to-night
+ That will bring him home again.
+
+Love will ride with him my heart to bless--
+ Joy will out-step him across the floor--
+What matters the great white loneliness
+ When we bar the cabin door?
+
+
+
+
+THE CLIMBER
+
+He stood alone on Fame's high mountain top,
+ His hands at rest, his forehead bound with bay;
+And yet he watched with eyes unsatisfied
+ The downward winding way.
+
+The great procession of the stars went by
+ Far overhead, beyond the mountain's rim,
+But the unconquered worlds of time and space,
+ As nothing were to him.
+
+There from his vantage ground, so still and high,
+ He watched the storm clouds when they rolled below,
+And felt the wind mount up to where he stood
+ Amid eternal snow.
+
+And sometimes in the valleys and the plains
+ He saw the little children at their play;
+In cottage homes he saw the candle-light
+ Gleam out at close of day.
+
+But he and loneliness kept feast and fast,
+ The while with weary eyes, by night and day;
+They watched the path that led to common things--
+ The downward winding way.
+
+"'Twas there," he said, "that gladness passed me by,
+ In yonder valley, where I sought the truth;
+And there, a few leagues up the rocky slope,
+ I said good-bye to Youth.
+
+"There, where the pine trees catch the sun's last gold,
+ Love reached its hands to me and bade me stop;
+Oh, madness of the ones who climb," he said,
+ "Up to the mountain top!"
+
+
+
+
+THE DAISY
+
+An angel found a daisy where it lay
+ On Heaven's highroad of transparent gold,
+And, turning to one near, he said, "I pray,
+ Tell me what manner of strange bloom I hold.
+You came a long, long way--perchance you know
+In what far country such fair flowers blow?"
+
+Then spoke the other: "Turn thy radiant face
+And gaze with me down purple depth of space.
+See, where the stars lie spilled upon the night,
+Like amber beads that hold a yellow light.
+Note one that burns with faint yet steady glow;
+It is the Earth--and there these blossoms grow.
+Some little child from that dear, distant land
+Hath borne this hither in his dimpled hand."
+
+Still gazed he down. "Ah, friend," he said, "I, too,
+Oft crossed the fields at home where daisies grew."
+
+
+
+
+THE VISION
+
+Long had she knelt at the Madonna's shrine,
+ With the empty chapel, cold and grey,
+Telling her beads, while grief with marring line
+ And bitter tear stole all her youth away.
+
+Outcast was she from what Life holdeth dear;
+ Banished from joy that other souls might win;
+And from the dark beyond she turned with fear,
+ Being so branded by the mark of sin.
+
+Yet when at last she raised her troubled face,
+ Haunted by sorrow, whitened by alarms,
+Mary leaned down from out the pictured place,
+ And laid the little Christ within her arms.
+
+Rosy and warm she held Him to her heart,
+ She--the abandoned one--the thing apart.
+
+
+
+
+SAINTS
+
+The Saints of Thy great Church, 0 Christ,
+ How vast their numbers be--
+On holy page and ancient scroll
+ Their blessed names we see,
+And from the painted window panes
+ They smile eternally.
+
+Rope-girdled monk, and pallid maid,
+ And men who for Thy cross
+Fought with the Saracen of old,
+ Counting their lives no loss--
+Martyrs who rose through golden flames,
+ Free of the body's dross.
+
+Yet there be Saints uncanonised,
+ Unrecognised, unknown--
+Here on the common roads of earth,
+ Oft times they walk alone;
+Saints whom no soul hath ever praised,
+ Saints whom no Church doth own.
+
+Men who against their souls' grim foes
+ Wage an unyielding fight;
+Men of new creeds, and men of old,
+ Men of dark hue, and white,
+Each pressing hard towards some far gleam
+ Of Thy celestial light.
+
+Dwellers in places waste and lone,
+ Toilers upon the seas--
+Mayhap they seldom pray high heaven.
+ Softly--on bended knees--
+Yet in the roll-call of Thy Saints,
+ Dear Christ--remember these.
+
+
+
+
+AT MIDNIGHT
+
+Turn Thou the key upon our thoughts, dear Lord,
+ And let us sleep;
+Give us our portion of forgetfulness,
+ Silent and deep.
+
+Lay Thou Thy quiet hand upon our eyes
+ To close their sight;
+Shut out the shining of the moon and stars
+ And candle-light.
+
+Keep back the phantoms and the visions sad,
+ The shades of grey,
+The fancies that so haunt the little hours
+ Before the day.
+
+Quiet the time-worn questions that are all
+ Unanswered yet,
+Take from the spent and troubled souls of us
+ Their vain regret;
+
+And lead us far into Thy silent land,
+ That we may go
+Like children out across the field o' dreams
+ Where poppies blow.
+
+So all Thy saints--and all Thy sinners too--
+ Wilt Thou not keep,
+Since not alone unto Thy well-beloved
+ Thou givest sleep?
+
+
+
+
+NOVEMBER
+
+How like a hooded friar, bent and grey,
+Whose pensive lips speak only when they pray
+Doth sad November pass upon his way.
+
+Through forest aisles while the wind chanteth low--
+In God's cathedral where the great trees grow,
+Now all day long he paceth to and fro.
+
+When shadows gather and the night-mists rise,
+Up to the hills he lifts his sombre eyes
+To where the last red rose of sunset lies.
+
+A little smile he weareth, wise and cold,
+The smile of one to whom all things are old,
+And life is weary, as a tale twice told.
+
+"Come see," he seems to say--"where joy has fled--
+The leaves that burned but yesterday so red
+Have turned to ashes--and the flowers are dead.
+
+"The summer's green and gold hath taken flight,
+October days have gone. Now bleached and white
+Winter doth come with many a lonely night.
+
+"And though the people will not heed or stay,
+But pass with careless laughter on their way,
+Even I, with rain of tears, will wait and pray."
+
+
+
+
+THE LILY-POND
+
+On this little pool where the sunbeams lie,
+This tawny gold ring where the shadows die,
+God doth enamel the blue of His sky.
+
+Through the scented dark when the night wind sighs,
+He mirrors His stars where the ripples rise,
+Till they glitter like prisoned fireflies.
+
+'Tis here that the beryl-green leaves uncurl,
+And here the lilies uplift and unfurl
+Their golden-lined goblets of carven pearl.
+
+When the grey of the eastern sky turns pink,
+Through the silver sedge at the pond's low brink
+The little lone field-mouse creeps down to drink.
+
+And creatures to whom only God is kind,
+The loveless small things, the slow, and the blind,
+Soft steal through the rushes, and comfort find.
+
+Oh, restless the river, restless the sea!
+Where the great ships go, and the dead men be;
+The lily-pond giveth but peace to me.
+
+
+
+
+LILACS
+
+In lonely gardens deserted--unseen--
+ Oh! lovely lilacs of purple and white,
+You are dipping down through a mist of green;
+ For the morning sun's delight.
+And the velvet bee, all belted with black,
+ Drinks deep of the wine which your flagons hold,
+Clings close to your plumes while he fills his pack
+ With a load of burnished gold.
+
+You hide the fences with blossoms of snow,
+ And sweeten the shade of castle towers;
+Over low, grey gables you brightly blow,
+ Like amethysts turned to flowers.
+The tramp on the highway--ragged and bold--
+ Wears you close to his heart with jaunty air;
+You rest in my lady's girdle of gold,
+ And are held against her hair.
+
+In God's own acre your tender flowers,
+ Bend down to the grasses and seem to sigh
+For those who count time no more by hours--
+ Whose summers have all passed by--
+But at eventide the south wind will sing,
+ Like a gentle priest who chanteth a prayer;
+And thy purple censers he'll set a-swing,
+ To perfume the twilight air.
+
+
+
+
+APRIL
+
+ April! April! April!
+ With a mist of green on the trees--
+And a scent of the warm brown broken earth
+ On every wandering breeze;
+What, though thou be changeful,
+ Though thy gold turns to grey again,
+There's a robin out yonder singing,
+ Singing in the rain.
+
+ April! April! April!
+ 'Tis the Northland hath longed for thee,
+She hath gazed toward the South with aching eyes
+ Full long and patiently.
+Come now--tell us, sweeting,
+ Thou laggard so lovely and late,
+Dost know there's no joy like the joy that comes
+ When hearts have learned to wait?
+
+
+
+
+PAEANS
+
+Oh! I will hold fast to Joy!
+ I will not let him depart--
+He shall close his beautiful rainbow wings
+ And sing his song in my heart.
+
+And I will live with Delight!
+ I will know what the children know
+When they dance along with the April wind
+ To find where the catkins grow!
+
+I will dream the old, old dreams,
+ And look for pixie and fay
+In shadowy woods--and out on the hills--
+ As we did but yesterday.
+
+Love I will keep in my soul--
+ Ay! even by lock and key!
+There is nothing to fear in all of the world
+ If Love will but stay with me.
+
+No, I will not let Faith go!
+ I will say with my latest breath--
+I know there's a new and radiant road
+ On the other side of Death.
+
+
+
+
+THE HARP
+
+Across the wind-swept spaces of the sky
+The harp of all the world is hung on high,
+And through its shining strings the swallows fly.
+
+The little silver fingers of the rain
+Oft touch it softly to a low refrain,
+That all day long comes o'er and o'er again.
+
+And when the storms of God above it roll,
+The mighty wind awakes its sleeping soul
+To songs of wild delight or bitter dole.
+
+And through the quiet night, as faint and far
+As melody down-drifted from a star,
+Trembles strange music where those harp-strings are.
+
+But only flying words of joy and woe,
+Caught from the restless earth-bound souls below,
+Over the vibrant wires ebb and flow.
+
+And in the cities that men call their own,
+And in the unnamed places, waste and lone,
+This harp forever sounds Life's undertone.
+
+
+
+
+GULLS
+
+When the mist drives past and the wind blows high,
+ And the harbour lights are dim--
+See where they circle, and dip and fly,
+The grey free-lances of wind and sky,
+ To the water's distant rim!
+
+Like spirits possessed of a fierce delight,
+ A courage that cannot fail,
+They face the breakers--they face the night--
+The mad storm-horses are silvery white,
+ They ride through the bitter gale!
+
+They seem like the souls of the long, long lost,
+ Who breasted the ocean-main--
+Vikings whose vessels were tempest-tossed,
+Voyagers who sailed, whatever the cost,
+ And never came home again.
+
+Or stranger and wilder fancy--it seems
+ As I hear their wind-torn cry,
+No birds fly there through the sun's last gleams,
+But the wraiths of hopes--the ghosts of dreams
+ That the old sea-gods saw die.
+
+When the mist drives past and the wind blows high,
+ And the harbour lights are dim--
+See where they circle, and dip and fly,
+The grey free-lances of wind and sky,
+ To the far horizon's rim.
+
+
+
+
+THE SHEPHERD WIND
+
+When hills and plains are powdered white,
+ And bitter cold the north wind blows,
+Upon my window in the night
+ A fairy-garden grows.
+
+Here poppies that no hand hath sown
+ Bloom white as foam upon the sea,
+And elfin bells to earth unknown
+ Hold frost-bound melody.
+
+And here are blossoms like to stars
+ Tangled in nets of silver lace--
+My very breath their beauty mars,
+ Or stirs them from their place.
+
+Perchance the echoes of old songs
+ Found here a resting place at last
+With drifting perfume that belongs
+ To roses of the past.
+
+Or all the moonbeams that were lost
+ On summer nights the world forgets
+May here be prisoned by the frost
+ With souls of violets.
+
+The wind doth shepherd many things--
+ And when the nights are long and cold,
+Who knows how strange a flock he brings
+ All safely to the fold.
+
+
+
+
+THE TEMPLE
+
+Enter the temple beautiful! The house not made with hands!
+Rain-washed and green, wind-swept and clean,
+ Beneath the blue it stands,
+And no cathedral anywhere
+Seemeth so holy or so fair.
+
+It hath no heavy gabled roof, no door with lock and key,
+No window-bars shut out the stars,
+ The aisles are wide and free--
+Here through the night each altar-light
+Is but a moon-beam, silver-white.
+
+Silently as the temple grew at Solomon's command,
+Still as things seem within a dream
+ This rose from out the land:
+And all the pillars, grey and high,
+Lifted their arches to the sky.
+
+Here is the perfume of the leaves, the incense of the pines--
+The magic scent that hath been pent
+ Within the tangled vines:
+No censor filled with spices rare
+E'er swung such sweetness on the air.
+
+And all the golden gloom of it holdeth no haunting fear,
+For it is blessed, and giveth rest
+ To those who enter here--
+Here in the evening--who can know
+But God Himself walks to and fro!
+
+And music past all mastering within the chancel rings;
+None could desire a sweeter choir
+ Than this--that soars and sings,
+Till far the scented shadows creep--
+And quiet darkness bringeth sleep.
+
+
+
+
+REQUEST
+
+(To E. M.)
+
+Sing me a song--a song to ease old sorrows,
+ And dull the edge of care--
+A song of Hope to ring through all the morrows
+ That be my share.
+
+Unlock the doors where joy hath been in hiding,
+ Though barred they be and strong,
+And send black grief far down the wind a-riding--
+ Sing me a song.
+
+Sing thou thy sky-lark song of sweetest daring,
+ And April ecstasy,
+That I may follow it and go a-faring
+ To Arcady.
+
+Charm sleep from out the shadows with thy singing,
+ And when the light turns grey,
+Leave me bright dreams until the dawn comes bringing
+ The rose-edged day.
+
+The wind of March taught thee his springtime madness,
+ And then in undertone
+Whispered the wonder-secret of his gladness
+ To thee alone.
+
+And thou hast learned from little brook and river
+ Their tender melody--
+The notes that set the thrush's throat a-quiver
+ Are known to thee.
+
+Sing me a song--a song to ease old sorrows,
+ And dull the edge of care--
+A song of Hope, to ring through all the morrows
+ That be my share.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG
+
+0 heart of mine--if I were but a swallow--
+ A thing so fearless, swift of flight, and free--
+On wings unwearied I would find and follow
+ Some path that led to thee!
+
+Were I a rose out in the garden growing
+ My sweetness I would give the vagrant breeze
+For he, perchance, might meet thee all unknowing--
+ Yet bring thee memories.
+
+
+
+
+THE TOAST
+
+A toast to thee, 0 dear old year,
+ While the last moments fly,
+A toast to thy sweet memory--
+ We'll lift the glasses high,
+And bid to thee a fond farewell
+ As thou art passing by!
+
+A toast to those who reaped success
+ In this good year of grace;
+A toast to every one of them--
+ Come! Give the victors place!
+Come, wish them well with right good will--
+ The winners in the race!
+
+And one toast more! To those who failed
+ Wherever they may be;--
+With faces white they fought the fight,
+ But missed the victory;
+So here's to them--the ones who strove--
+ On land and on the sea!
+
+Fair dreams to thee, 0 grey old year,
+ Thy working time is done,
+And gone for thee the silver moon,
+ And golden noon-day sun;
+Yet sad old year--and glad old year--
+ We'll know no better one.
+
+
+
+
+THE SEA-SHELL
+
+Oh, fairy palace of pink and pearl
+Frescoed with filigree silver-white,
+ Down in the silence beneath the sea
+ God by Himself must have fashioned thee
+Just for His own delight!
+
+But no!--For a dumb and shapeless thing
+Stirring in darkness its little hour,
+ Thy walls were built with infinite care,
+ Thou sea-scented home, so fine and fair,
+Perfect--and like a flower!
+
+
+
+
+AT DAWN
+
+Turn to thy window in the silver hour
+ That day comes stepping down the hills of night,
+Infolded as the leaves infold a flower
+ By all her rose-leaf robes of misty light.
+
+Then, like a joy born out of blackest sorrow,
+ The miracle of morning seems to say,
+"There is no night without its dear to-morrow,
+ No lonely dark that does not find the day."
+
+
+
+
+THE WHISTLER
+
+Throughout the sunny day he whistled on his way--
+ Oh high and low, and gay and sweet,
+ The melody rang down the street,
+Till all the weary, old, and grey,
+Smiled at their work, or stopped to say,
+ "Now God be thanked that youth is fair,
+ And light of heart, and free from care."
+
+What time the wind blew high, he whistled and went by--
+ Then clarion clear on every side
+ The song was scattered far and wide;
+Like birds above a storm that fly
+The silver notes soared to the sky,
+ "O soul, whose courage does not fail
+ But with a song can meet the gale."
+
+And when the rain fell fast, he whistled as he passed--
+ A little tune the whole world knew,
+ A song of love, of love most true;
+On through the mist it came at last
+To one by sorrow overcast,
+ "Dear Christ," she said, "by night and day
+ They serve who praise, as well as pray."
+
+Though the great world was white, he whistled in the night--
+ The sky was spangled all with gold,
+ The bitter wind was keen and cold,
+Yet, gay musician, out of sight,
+You still put wintry thoughts to flight,
+ For summer follows where you fare,
+ 0 Whistler, so debonair.
+
+And when the fog hung grey, he whistled on his way--
+ The little children in his train
+ With rosy lips caught up the strain.
+Then I, to hear what he might say,
+Followed with them, that sombre day.
+ "Is it for joy of life," quoth I,
+ "Good sir, you go awhistling by?"
+He smiled, and sighed, and shook his head,
+ "I cheer my own sad heart," he said.
+
+
+
+
+COMMON-WEALTH
+
+Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free!
+The blue of the sky, the shade of a tree,
+And the unowned leagues of the shining sea.
+
+Be grateful, my heart, for everyman's gold;
+By road-way and river and hill unfold
+Sun-coloured blossoms that never are sold.
+
+For the little joys sometimes say a grace;
+The scent of a rose, the frost's fairy lace,
+Or the sound of the rain in a quiet place.
+
+Be glad of what cannot be bought or beguiled;
+The trust of the tameless, the fearless, the wild,
+The song of a bird and the faith of a child.
+
+For prairie and mountain, windswept and high,
+For betiding beauty of earth and sky--
+Say a benediction e'er you pass by.
+
+Give thanks, my soul, for the things that are free!
+The joy of life and the spring's ecstasy,
+The dreams that have been and the dreams that will be.
+
+
+
+
+DON CUPID
+
+Oh! little pink and white god of love,
+ With your tender smiling mouth,
+And eyes as blue as the blue above,
+ Afar in the sunny south.
+
+No army e'er laid so many low
+ Or wounded so many hearts,
+No mighty gunner e'er wrought such woe
+ As you with your feathered darts.
+
+
+
+
+HEAVEN
+
+Not with the haloed saints would Heaven be
+ For such as I;
+Who have not reached to their serenity
+ So sweet and high.
+
+Not with the martyrs washed by holy flame
+ Could I find place,
+For they are victors who through glory came
+ To see God's face.
+
+Not with the perfect souls that enter there
+ Could mine abide,
+For clouded eyes from eyes all cloudless fair
+ 'Twere best to hide.
+
+And not for me the wondrous streets of gold
+ Or crystal sea--
+I only know the brown earth, worn and old,
+ Where sinners be.
+
+Unless I found those who to me belong,
+ My dear and own,
+I, in the vastness of that shining throng,
+ Would be alone.
+
+God guide us to some sun-blessed little star,
+ We ask not where,
+Nor whether it be near or it be far,
+ So Love is there.
+
+
+
+
+SIR HENRY IRVING
+
+ "Thou trumpet made for Shakespeare's lips to blow!"
+
+
+No more for thee the music and the lights,
+ Thy magic may no more win smile nor frown;
+For thee, 0 dear interpreter of dreams,
+ The curtain hath rung down.
+
+No more the sea of faces, turned to thine,
+ Swayed by impassioned word and breathless pause;
+No more the triumph of thine art--no more
+ The thunder of applause.
+
+No more for thee the maddening, mystic bells,
+ The haunting horror--and the falling snow;
+No more of Shylock's fury, and no more
+ The Prince of Denmark's woe.
+
+Not once again the fret of heart and soul,
+ The loneliness and passion of King Lear;
+No more bewilderment and broken words
+ Of wild despair and fear.
+
+And never wilt thou conjure from the past
+ The dread and bitter field of Waterloo;
+Thy trembling hands will never pluck again
+ Its roses or its rue.
+
+Thou art no longer player to the court;
+ No longer red-robed cardinal or king;
+To-day thou art thyself--the Well-Beloved--
+ Bereft of crown and ring.
+
+Thy feet have found the path that Shakespeare found,
+ Life's lonely exit of such far renown;
+For thee, 0 dear interpreter of dreams,
+ The curtain hath rung down.
+
+ October, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+JEAN DE BREBOEUF
+
+Jean de Breboeuf, a priest of the Jesuit Order, came to Canada
+as a missionary to the Indians about the year 1625. He belonged
+to an old and honourable French family that had given many sons
+to the army, and was a man of great physical strength, one who
+possessed an iron will, that was yet combined with sweetness
+and gentleness of temper.
+
+He lived with the Indians for many years, and spoke the dialects
+of different tribes, though his mission was chiefly to the Hurons.
+By them he was much beloved.
+
+At the time of the uprising of the Iroquois in 1649, there was a
+massacre of the Hurons at the little mission village of St. Louis
+upon the shores of Georgian Bay. There Jean de Breboeuf, refusing
+to leave his people, met death by torture at the hands of the
+conquering Iroquois. Lalement, his friend, a priest of the same
+order, was also martyred by these Indians upon the same day,
+March 16th, 1649.
+
+
+As Jean de Breboeuf told his rosary
+ At sundown in his cell, there came a call!--
+Clear as a bell rung on a ship at sea,
+ Breaking the beauty of tranquillity--
+Down from the heart of Heaven it seemed to fall:
+
+"Hail, Jean de Breboeuf! Lift thee to thy feet!
+ Not, for thy sins, by prayer shalt thou atone;
+Thou wert not made for peace so deeply sweet,
+ Thine be the midnight cold, the noonday heat,
+The journey through the wilderness, alone.
+
+"Too well thou lovest France--her very air
+ Is wine against thy lips--and all her weeds
+Are in thine eyes as flowers. She is fair
+ In all her moods to thee--and even there,
+See! thou dost dream of her above thy beads.
+
+"Rouse thee from out thy dreams! Awake! Awake!
+ Thou priest who cometh of a martial line!--
+Thou hast its strength, thy will no man can break:
+ Go forth unarmed, the law of love to take
+Into a lonely land, that yet is Mine."
+
+Then straightway fell the monk upon his face
+ Trembling with awe throughout his mighty frame.
+"I hear Thee, Lord!" he cried. "Give me Thy grace,
+ That I may follow thee to any place,
+And speak to any people--in Thy name."
+
+The vine-leaf shadows darkened in the cell--
+ And barefoot friars passed the close-shut door;
+At vespers rang the monastery bell,
+ Yet still he lay, unheeding, where he fell,
+Cross of black outstretched upon the floor.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Northward into the silence, night and day,
+ Through the unknown, with faith that did not fail,
+Into the lands beneath the redman's sway,
+ The priest called Jean de Breboeuf took his way,
+Led by the Polestar and the far-blazed trail.
+
+He bore the sacred wine cups, and a bell
+ Of beaten bronze, whose tongue should warn or bless;
+As had been done in France, so he as well
+ Would ring a marriage chime or funeral knell
+For his lone flock, out in the wilderness.
+
+And like a phantom ever at his side
+ Pointing each hour to paths he scarce could see,
+By wood and waterway, went one still guide,
+ Who drifted with the shades, when daylight died,
+Into the deep of night, and mystery.
+
+But when they reached the place of many pines,
+ God's country, that no white man yet had named--
+They beached their birch canoe 'neath swinging vines,
+ For here, the Indian read by many signs,
+Lay the wild land the tribe of Huron claimed.
+
+Then like down-dropping pearls the rounded years,
+ One after one, slipped off the thread of Time,
+And Jean de Breboeuf laboured--oft with fears
+ Safe-hidden, oftener still with smiles and tears,
+Among the people of this northern clime.
+
+The forest children had become a part
+ Of his own life--always he spoke their tongue,
+He dwelt within their tents--with all his heart
+ He learned their ancient woodcraft, and each art
+Their race had practised when the world was young.
+
+He gave a simple truth and faithfulness
+ To men of silence and of subtle ways;
+He shared with them long hunger and distress--
+ When they had little, he himself had less,
+Through all the dark and lonely winter days.
+
+High in the vast cathedral of the trees
+ He hung the bell of bronze; there in God's name
+He taught the law of Love; there on his knees
+ In the sun-dappled gloom, midst birds and bees,
+He lifted up the cross, with words of name.
+
+But evil days were come. The arrowhead
+ Was dipped in poison, and de Breboeuf saw
+The painted faces and the swift-slain dead,--
+ The deep, unhealing wound--the rent of red
+Made by the weapon of the Iroquois.
+
+Closed in the village with its palisade,
+ Guarded by many a mighty Huron brave,
+The women and the little children stayed,
+ Lest forest fire or sweeping midnight raid
+Make all their hunting ground a common grave.
+
+It was at daybreak that they heard the cry:
+ "The Iroquois!--The Iroquois! They come!
+Fly to the hidden forest places! Fly!--
+ To linger in the village is to die--
+Steal through the river grasses--and be dumb!"
+
+Swiftly the women and the children fled,
+ But with the braves de Breboeuf stayed behind.
+"Go!" cried the chief, "good father--we be dead!"
+ Yet soft he answered as he shook his head:
+"I stay with thee--and with thy old and blind."
+
+When the red sun came creeping up the sky
+ Grey death had reaped the harvest hate had sown;
+The Jesuit heard no longer curse or sigh--
+ His prayers were said for those about to die--
+He faced the living Iroquois alone.
+
+They bound him fast beneath the forest green,
+ And when was come the shadowy edge of night--
+Nay--ask not what the horned owl hath seen,
+ Nor what the moon doth know--white and serene
+The soul of Jean de Breboeuf took its flight.
+
+
+
+
+IN EGYPT
+
+ It was the Angel Azrael the Lord God sent below
+ At midnight, into every house in Egypt, long ago--
+ 0 long, and long ago.
+
+
+All day the wife of Pharaoh had paced the palace hall
+ Or the long white pillared court that was open to the sky;
+A passion of wild restlessness ensnared her in its thrall
+ While she fought a fear within her--a thing that would not die.
+
+She had sent away her maidens--their weeping vexed her ears--
+ Their pallid faces filled her with impatient pitying scorn;--
+But she kept one time-worn woman, who long had outgrown fears,
+ The old brown nurse who held her son the day that he was born.
+
+The mighty gods had failed her--the river-gods and the sun,
+ And the little gods of brass and stone--who stared but made no sign,
+So she pled with them no longer, her prayers were said and done,
+ And now she neither bowed her head, or knelt at any shrine.
+
+Her hair was blown upon the wind like wreathes of golden flame,
+ And the sea-blue of her eyes cast blue shadows on her face,
+For she was not of Egypt--but unto the king she came
+ A captive--yet a princess--from a northern sea-bound place.
+
+She watched the fiery wheel roll down behind the level land,
+ One small hand curled above her eyes, and one above her heart,
+But when the ruby afterglow crept up and stained the sand
+ She turned and gazed toward Goshen, where Israel dwelt apart.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Nine plagues had wasted Egypt with their tortures grim and slow;
+ The earth was desolated, and scarred by hail and fire;
+Still even yet her Lord refused to let his bondsmen go
+ To worship in the wilderness, the God of their desire.
+
+The yellow Nile had turned to blood before her watching eyes--
+ It was branded into memory--a haunting death-strewn sight;--
+The very dust upon the street the rod had made to rise
+ In a living moving horror, of atoms, leprous-white.
+
+The frogs had come as things bewitched; an army without fear
+ They had broken through the rushes their upward way to take;
+And each one followed steadily a voice no man could hear--
+ While poisoned wind and pestilence came swiftly in their wake.
+
+Then oh, the little flies that swarmed from out the earth and air!
+ And the murrain of the camels, and cattle in the field!
+She prayed the king for love of her to hear the people's prayer
+ And send the slaves far hither;--but for love he would not yield.
+
+His face was like the carven face upon the basalt door;--
+ Her beauty could not charm him, her voice had lost its power;
+So she wrapped a veil about her and entreated him no more
+ But sat alone and watched, from out her window in the tower.
+
+She saw the Hebrew leader with uncovered silvery hair
+ Come with the priest at daybreak to the outer palace gate,
+And the rod of woe and wonder they carried with them there,--
+ Yet Pharaoh bid them enter--for he dared not bid them wait.
+
+But naught prevailed, for sore disease had scourged the low and high,
+ And the hail of God had fallen and crushed the growing grain,
+And a fire no hand had kindled in searing wrath swept by--
+ Such fire as none had seen before--as none would see again.
+
+Then came the pirate locusts, with a sea-song free and bold;--
+ The spent and broken people lacked the strength to force them back,
+But watched them take the last green blades that never would be gold--
+ And shut their doors against the foe that turned the meadows black.
+
+Then Pharaoh wavered--more--he called the Hebrews in his haste
+ Imploring respite--pleading his repentance bitterly--
+For there was death on every side, and all the land was waste;--
+ So the western wind of God blew the locusts out to sea.
+
+Yet not enough. Once more the king denied his given word;
+ He dared the wrath of Heaven, and he made his heart as steel;
+Then all the lights of God went out, and no man even stirred--
+ But stayed companioned by his fear, in darkness he could feel.
+
+So had each dreadful day gone by, each slow departing night,
+ And the queen stood now at sunset alone with grief and shame,
+When one came running towards her through the failing crimson light,
+ A little lad, with Egypt's eyes--but hair like golden flame.
+
+"Thou has been long, Beloved!" she cried, and frowned all tenderly,
+ "Indeed I have not seen thee since the burning noon took wing."
+"Mother of mine," he answered, "I have been where I should be
+ These burdened times of Egypt--beside my Lord the King.
+
+"'Twill take the country many days to gain its old time peace,
+ But thou shalt suffer nothing;--I, myself, will care for thee
+And see that naught doth harm thee--until all these troubles cease;--
+ These sad and magic doings that no man can solve," said he.
+
+"Ay! That thou wilt," she said. "But tell me, how doth fare the king?
+ Doth he relent? Or is his face forbidding--dark and cold?--
+Or hath he sent thee hither but some word of me to bring
+ As he cannot leave the council, and now the day grows old?"
+
+He shook his head. "I came because I longed to see thee so;--
+ And Pharaoh reads the chart of stars while time goes creeping by,
+Or he sits in weary silence--or paceth to and fro.
+ Since he banished the magicians, all fear him--all save I.
+
+"Put on thy golden girdle with the mighty emerald clasp
+ And thy lotus broidered robe. Braid thy hair all cunningly,
+And wear the winged head-dress with the turquois jewelled asp--
+ Then come and coax him from his gloom.--Thou only canst," said he.
+
+"Wise counsellor!" she smiled; "Nay, but too wise for thy short years,
+ I will unto the king;--and such great issues are at stake
+This time I dare not fail. I must go queenly--without tears
+ Or humble supplications--but as one no woe can break.
+
+"Stay thou with thy old nurse, Beloved--she sitteth in the hall--
+ And she will tell thee wondrous tales, to win from thee a smile,
+Then take thy supper by her side, and when deep night doth fall,
+ Go to the tower, whence I'll come, but in a little while."
+
+Arrayed in her most lovely robes she took her stately way
+ By courtiers unattended, through the palace vast and still.
+Her beauty was a thing to hold all bitterness at bay,
+ To move the hearts of men, and bend their spirits to her will!
+
+She passed beneath the rose red lights that hung from roof and door,
+ And by unseeing gods, where curled an incense, blue and sweet;
+As one who walks in sleep she crossed the cool mosaic floor,
+ That echoed to the music of her little sandalled feet.
+
+She reached the council chamber and there entered silently;--
+ But though the bowing wise men had been reeds the wind could sway
+Would have noted them as little. She only seemed to see
+ One face, inscrutable and dark, toward which she took her way.
+
+The king sat still as Fate. "Most High," she said, "I come for truth
+ Of this new threat of vengeance. There is horror in the air;--
+The Ethiopian runner hath brought word to me in sooth
+ Blood is sprinkled on the door-posts of the Hebrews everywhere!"
+
+"There are rumours--so he sayeth--of an Angel who will slay
+ The first-born sons of Egypt--should these bondsmen not depart.
+Thy people weep in anguish--I myself must hear thee say--
+ The Hebrew leader threatens no such danger to my heart--
+
+"He is my heart--my inner heart;--0 straight he is and strong!
+ To me he meaneth Egypt--Egypt meaneth but my son--
+So I would take him swiftly toward the land where I belong
+ To return to thee in safety when these troubles all are done."
+
+"The streets are filled with mourners;--every day more tears are shed;
+ The embalmers have grown weary--they will not work for gold--
+And everywhere the eye doth see processions of the dead,
+ Till they seem but mocking phantoms, we watch unmoved and cold."
+
+"Thou wilt not let the Hebrews go--I read it in thine eyes--
+ There are no gods in Egypt--there is nothing but thy Will--
+That sets itself against some force that yet in Strength will rise
+ But to silence all thine answers and bid thy voice be still."
+
+Then Pharaoh leaned down toward her: "0 most beautiful!" he said,
+ "There is not a man who liveth dare say so to my face;
+And truly were there such a one 'twere better he were dead,
+ For dead men suffer nothing.--Yet I pray thee of thy grace
+
+"Have patience now to hear me. 'Tis as the Ethiope heard.
+ They threatened all the first-born;--but the tower is brass and stone;
+There my son shall stay to-night, guarded well, I give thee word.--
+ Where armies could not enter--can one angel pass alone?
+
+"Thinkst thou that I am one to be affrighted by the dark?
+ A weakling to be played upon--a coward or a fool?
+Nay!--I defy the Israelites!--Their weapons miss their mark,
+ They have roused my utmost anger: it taketh long to cool.
+
+"But thou!" he said; "but thou! Methinks had they but threatened thee
+ I should perchance have known the very quality of fear;--
+Thou thing of perfect loveliness! Content mine eyes will be
+ Though in the land of Egypt is no blossom for a year.
+
+"But thou art queen, and thou art free;--free now to go or stay,
+ I would not bind thee to my side--not by one golden hair.--
+Leave thou this land of peril e'er the breaking of the day,
+ Or give thy life to my dark life--and bear what it doth bear."
+
+Then blanched her face to whiteness of the lilies on her gown,
+ And low she bowed as lilies bow in drift of wind and rain;
+"My Lord," she said, "I have no will except to lay it down
+ At thy desire. As I have done, so will I do again.
+
+"Thou art my king; my son is thine. It is not mine to say
+ That I will bear him hence.--Yet gropes my soul unto a light;
+The quarrel is 'twixt Heaven and thee alone--so I will stay
+ With him I love within the tower throughout this fateful night."
+
+"And if the Angel cometh through the walls of stone and brass--
+ And if he toucheth Egypt's son, to seal his gentle breath,
+Then will we know that God is God, He who hath right to pass
+ Our little doors, for He Himself is Lord of Life and Death."
+
+O when the desert blossomed like a mystic silver rose,
+ And the moon shone on the palace, deep guarded to the gate,
+And softly touched the lowly homes fast barred against their foes,
+ And lit the faces hewn of stone, that seemed to watch and wait--
+
+There came a cry--a rending cry--upon the quivering air,
+ The sudden wild lamenting of a nation in its pain,
+For the first-born sons of Egypt, the young, the strong, the fair--
+ Had fallen into dreamless sleep--and would not wake again.
+
+And within the palace tower the little prince slept well,
+ His head upon his mother's heart, that knew no more alarms;
+For at the midnight hour--0 most sweet and strange to tell--
+ She too slept deeply as the child close folded in her arms.
+
+Hard through the city rode the king, unarmed, unhelmeted,
+ Toward the land he loaned his bondsmen, the country kept in peace;
+He swayed upon his saddle, and he looked as looked the dead--
+ The people stared and wondered though their weeping did not cease.
+
+On did he ride to Goshen, and he called "Arise! Arise!
+ Thou leader of the Israelites, 'tis I who bid you go!
+Take thou these people hence, before the sun hath lit the skies;--
+ Get thee beyond the border of this land of death and woe!"
+
+Across the plains of Egypt through the shadows of the night
+ Came the sound as of an army moving onward steadily,
+And their leader read his way by the stars' eternal light
+ While all the legions followed on their journey to the sea.
+
+The moon that shineth overhead once saw these mysteries--
+ And then the world was young, that hath these many years been old;
+If Egypt drank her bitter cup down even to the lees
+ Who careth now? 'Tis but an ancient tale that hath been told.
+
+
+ Yet still we hear the footsteps--as he goeth to and fro--
+ Of Azrael, the Angel, that the Lord God sent below,
+ To Egypt--long ago.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF POPPIES
+
+I love red poppies! Imperial red poppies!
+ Sun-worshippers are they;
+Gladly as trees live through a hundred summers
+ They live one little day.
+
+I love red poppies! Impassioned scarlet poppies!
+ Ever their strange perfume
+Seems like an essence brewed by fairy people
+ From an immortal bloom.
+
+I love red poppies! Red, silken, swaying poppies!
+ Deep in their hearts they keep
+A magic cure for woe--a draught of Lethe--
+ A lotus-gift of sleep.
+
+I love red poppies! Soft silver-stemmed, red poppies,
+ That from the rain and sun
+Gather a balm to heal some earth-born sorrow,
+ When their glad day is done.
+
+
+
+
+A PAGAN PRAYER
+
+Lord of all Life! When my hours are done,
+ Take me and make me anew--
+And give me back to the earth and the sun,
+ And the sky's unlimited blue.
+
+The nightingale sings in an ecstasy
+ To the moonlit April night,
+But my songs are locked in the heart of me,
+ Like birds that may not take flight.
+
+The little purple-winged swallows that fly
+ Through waves of the upper air,
+Have a sweeter liberty, Lord, than I,
+ Who may not follow them there.
+
+Pavilions of sunshine--tents of the rain,
+ For these, the wild and the free;
+And for us walled garden and window-pane,
+ And bolt and staple and key.
+
+We are worn with wisdom that never brings
+ Peace to the world and its woe--
+For a space with Thy joyous lesser things,
+ Teach me the faith I would know.
+
+
+
+
+A LOVE SONG
+
+Oh haste, my Sweet! Impatient now I wait,
+The crescent moon swings low, it groweth late,
+A night bird sings, of Life, and Love, and Fate!
+
+Oh haste, my Sweet! Youth and its gladness goes,
+Joy hath one summer time, like to the rose,
+Love only lives through all the winter snows.
+
+Then haste, my Sweet! These hours are all our own,
+And see! A rose leaf on the night breeze blown!
+For thee I wait--for thee I wait alone!
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRACLE AND OTHER POEMS***
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