summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:40:39 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:40:39 -0700
commit5ec009da22411047e00d6203a62ec858b25bb915 (patch)
tree096374053f13fa404e671a3d1947e31468ed5022
initial commit of ebook 12759HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--12759-0.txt16175
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/12759-8.txt16563
-rw-r--r--old/12759-8.zipbin0 -> 209796 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/12759.txt16563
-rw-r--r--old/12759.zipbin0 -> 209673 bytes
8 files changed, 49317 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/12759-0.txt b/12759-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..adbf330
--- /dev/null
+++ b/12759-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,16175 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12759 ***
+
+_THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY_
+
+ _I Home: Friendship
+ II Love
+ III Sorrow and Consolation
+ IV The Higher Life
+ V Nature
+ VI Fancy Sentiment
+ VII Descriptive: Narrative
+ VIII National Spirit
+ IX Tragedy: Humor
+ X Poetical Quotations_
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY
+
+IN TEN VOLUMES, ILLUSTRATED
+
+
+Editor-in-Chief
+
+BLISS CARMAN
+
+
+Associate Editors
+
+John Vance Cheney
+Charles G.D. Roberts
+Charles F. Richardson
+Francis H. Stoddard
+
+
+Managing Editor
+
+John R. Howard
+
+
+1904
+
+
+
+
+The World's Best Poetry
+
+Vol. IV
+
+
+THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+RELIGION AND POETRY
+By
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN
+
+
+
+
+NOTICE OF COPYRIGHTS.
+
+I.
+
+
+American poems in this volume within the legal protection of copyright
+are used by the courteous permission of the owners,--either the
+publishers named in the following list or the authors or their
+representatives in the subsequent one,--who reserve all their rights.
+So far as practicable, permission has been secured also for poems out
+of copyright.
+
+
+PUBLISHERS OF THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY. 1904.
+
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & CO., New York.--_W.G. Bryant_: "The Future
+Life."
+
+The ROBERT CLARKE COMPANY, Cincinnati.--_W.D. Gallagher_: "The
+Laborer."
+
+Messrs. T.Y. CROWELL & CO., New York.--_S.K. Bolton_: "Her Creed."
+
+Messrs. E.P. DUTTON & CO., New York.--_Ph. Brooks_: "O Little Town of
+Bethlehem;" _E. Sears_: "The Angel's Song."
+
+Messrs. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston.--_Alice Cary_: "My Creed;"
+_Phoebe Cary_: "Nearer Home;" _J.F. Clarke_: "The Caliph and Satan,"
+"Cana;" _R.W. Emerson_: "Brahma," "Good-bye," "The Problem;" _Louise
+I. Guiney_: "Tryste Noël;" _J. Hay_: "Religion and Doctrine;" _C.W.
+Holmes_: "The Living Temple;" _H.W. Longfellow_: "King Robert of
+Sicily," "Ladder of St. Augustine," "Psalm of Life," "Santa Filomena,"
+"Sifting of Peter," "Song of the Silent Land," "To-morrow;" _S.
+Longfellow_: "Vesper Hymn;" _J.R. Lowell_: "Vision of Sir Launfal;"
+_Frances P.L. Mace_: "Only Waiting;" _Caroline A.B. Mason_: "The
+Voyage;" _T. Parker_: "The Higher Good," "The Way, the Truth, and
+the Life;" _Eliza Scudder_: "The Love of God," "Vesper Hymn;" _E.C.
+Stedman_: "The Undiscovered Country;" _Harriet B. Stowe_: "Knocking,
+Ever Knocking," "The Other World;" _J. Very_: "Life," "The Spirit
+Land;" _J.G. Whittier_: "The Eternal Goodness," "The Meeting," "The
+Two Angels," "The Two Rabbis;" _Sarah C. Woolsey_: "When."
+
+The J.B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, Philadelphia.--_Margaret J. Preston_:
+"Myrrh-Bearers."
+
+Messrs. LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Boston.--_J.W. Chadwick_: "The Rise of
+Man;" _Emily Dickinson_: "Found Wanting," "Heaven."
+
+The LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY, Boston.--_P.H. Hayne_: "Patience."
+
+Messrs. L.C. PAGE & CO., Boston.--_C.G.D. Roberts_: "The Aim,"
+"Ascription."
+
+Messrs. SCOTT, FORESMAN & CO., Chicago.--_C.P. Taylor_: "The Old
+Village Choir."
+
+Messrs. HERBERT S. STONE & CO., Chicago.--_G. Santayana_: "Faith."
+
+The YOUNG CHURCHMAN COMPANY, Milwaukee.--_A.C. Coxe_: "The Chimes of
+England."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+
+American poems in this volume by the authors whose names are given
+below are the copyrighted property of the authors, or of their
+representatives named in parenthesis, and may not be reprinted without
+their permission, which for the present work has been courteously
+granted.
+
+PUBLISHERS OF THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY. 1904.
+
+_A. Coles_ (A. Coles, Jr., M.D.); _J.A. Dix_ (Rev. Morgan Dix, D.D.);
+_P.L. Dunbar; W.C. Gannett; W. Gladden; S.P. McL. Pratt; O. Huckel;
+Ray Palmer_ (Dr. Charles R. Palmer); _A.D.F. Randolph_ (Arthur D.F.
+Randolph).
+
+
+
+
+RELIGION AND POETRY
+
+BY WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+The time is not long past when the copulative in that title might have
+suggested to some minds an antithesis,--as acid and alkali, or heat
+and cold. That religion could have affiliation with anything
+so worldly as poetry would have seemed to some pious people a
+questionable proposition. There were the Psalms, in the Old Testament,
+to be sure; and the minister had been heard to allude to them as
+poetry: might not that indicate some heretical taint in him, caught,
+perchance, from the "German neologists" whose influence we were
+beginning to dread? It did not seem quite orthodox to describe the
+Psalms as poems; and when, a little later, some one ventured to speak
+of the Book of Job as a _dramatic_ poem, there were many who were
+simply horrified. Indeed, it was difficult for many good people
+to consider the Biblical writings as in any sense literature; they
+belonged in a category by themselves, and the application to them
+of the terms by which we describe similar writings in other books
+appeared to many good men and women a kind of profanation. This was
+not, of course, the attitude of educated men and women, but something
+akin to it affected large numbers of excellent people.
+
+We are well past that period, and the relations of religion and
+poetry may now be discussed with no fear of misunderstandings. These
+relations are close and vital. Poetry is indebted to religion for its
+largest and loftiest inspirations, and religion is indebted to poetry
+for its subtlest and most luminous interpretations.
+
+Religion is related to poetry as life is related to art. Religion is
+life, the life of God in the soul of man--the response of man's spirit
+to the attractions of the divine Spirit. Poetry is an interpretation
+of life. Religious poetry endeavors to express, in beautiful
+forms, the facts of the religious life. There is poetry that is not
+religious; poetry which deals only with that which is purely sensuous,
+poetry which does not hint at spiritual facts, or divine relations;
+and there is religion which has but little to do with poetry: but the
+highest religious thoughts and feelings are greatly served by putting
+them into poetic forms; and the greatest poetry is always that which
+sets forth the facts of the religious life. "Without love to man and
+love to God," says Dr. Strong, "the greatest poetry is impossible.
+Mere human love to God is not enough to stir the deepest chords either
+in the poet or in his readers. It is the connection of human love with
+the divine love that gives it permanence and security."[A]
+
+If, then, religion is the supreme experience of the human spirit, and
+that experience finds its most perfect literary expression in poetry,
+the present volume ought to contain a precious collection of the best
+literature. And any one who wished to give to a friend a volume which
+would convey to him the essential elements of religion would probably
+be safe to choose this volume rather than any prose treatise upon
+theology ever printed. He who reads this book through will get
+a clearer and truer idea of what the religious life is than any
+philosophical discussion could give him. For this poetry is an attempt
+to express life, not to explain it. It offers pictures or reports
+rather than analyses of religious experience. It gives utterance
+to the real life of religion in the individual soul, and is not a
+generalization of religious thoughts and feelings.
+
+The sources from which this collection has been drawn are abundant
+and varied. The psalmody and hymnology of the church furnish a vast
+preserve, the exploration of which would be a large undertaking. It
+must be confessed that the pious people who had in their hands some
+of the ancient hymn-books were justified in feeling that religion and
+poetry were not closely related, for many of the hymns they were
+wont to sing were guiltless of any poetic character. It was too often
+evident that the hymn-writer had been more intent on giving metrical
+form to proper theological concepts than on giving utterance to his
+own religious life. But the feeling has been growing that in hymns, at
+any rate, life is more than dogma; and we have now some collections of
+hymns that come pretty near being books of poetry. The improvement in
+this department of literature within the past twenty-five years has
+been marked. There is still, indeed, in many hymnals, and especially
+in hymnals for Sunday schools and social meetings, much doggerel; but
+large recent contributions of hymns which are true poetry, many of the
+best of them from American sources, have made it possible to furnish
+our congregations with admirable manuals of praise.
+
+The indebtedness of religion to poetry which is thus expressed in
+the hymnology of the church is very large. Probably many of us
+are indebted for definite and permanent religious conceptions and
+impressions quite as much to felicitous phrases of hymns as to
+any words of sermon or catechism. Our most positive convictions of
+religious truth are apt to come to us in some line or stanza that
+tells the whole story. The rhythm and the rhyme have helped to fix it
+and hold it in the memory.
+
+This is true not only of the hymns of the church but of many poems
+that are not suitable for singing. English poetry is especially rich
+in meditative and devotional elements, and of no period has this
+been more true than of the nineteenth century. Cowper, Wordsworth,
+Coleridge, the Brownings, Tennyson and Matthew Arnold, on the other
+side of the sea, with Bryant, Longfellow, Emerson, Whittier,
+Lowell, Holmes, Lanier, Sill and Gilder on this side--these and many
+others--have made most precious additions to our store of religious
+poetry. The century has been one of great perturbations in religious
+thought; the advent of the evolutionary philosophy threatened all the
+theological foundations, and there was need of a thorough revision
+of the dogmas which were based on a mechanical theology, and of a
+reinterpretation of the life of the Spirit. In all this the poets have
+given us the strongest help. The great poet cannot be oblivious of
+these deepest themes. He need not be a dogmatician, indeed he cannot
+be, for his business is insight, not ratiocination; but the problems
+which theology is trying to solve must always be before his mind, and
+he must have something to say about them, if he hopes to command the
+attention of thoughtful men. Yet while we need not depreciate
+the service that has been rendered by preachers and professional
+theologians who have sought to put the facts of the religious
+life into the forms of the new philosophy, we must own our deeper
+obligation to the poets, by whose vision the spiritual realities have
+been most clearly discerned.
+
+It was Wordsworth, perhaps, who gave us the first great contribution
+to the new religious thought by bringing home to us the fact that God
+is in his world; revealing himself now as clearly as in any of the
+past ages. The truth of the Divine immanence, which is the foundation
+of all the more positive religious thinking of to-day, and which
+is destined, when once its import has been fully grasped, to
+revolutionize our religious life, is made familiar to our thought
+in Wordsworth's poetry. To him it was simply an experience; in quite
+another sense than that in which it was true of Spinoza, it might have
+been said of him that he was a "God-intoxicated man"; and although his
+clear English sense permitted no pantheistic merging of the human in
+the divine, but kept the individual consciousness clear for choice
+and duty, the realization of the presence of God made nature in his
+thought supernatural, and life sublime. To him, as Dr. Strong has
+said, it was plain that "imagination in man enables him to enter into
+the thought of God--the creative element in us is the medium through
+which we perceive the meaning of the Creator in his creation. The
+world without answers to the world within, because God is the soul of
+both."
+
+ "Such minds are truly from the Deity,
+ For they are Powers; and hence the highest bliss
+ That flesh can know is theirs,--the consciousness
+ Of whom they are, habitually infused
+ Through every image and through every thought,
+ And all affections by communion raised
+ From earth to heaven, from human to divine."
+
+The mystical faith by which man is united to God can have no clearer
+confession. And in the great poem of "Tintern Abbey" this truth
+received an expression which has become classical;--it must be counted
+one of the greatest words of that continuing revelation by which the
+truths of religion are given permanent form:
+
+ "For I have learned
+ To look on nature, not as in the hour
+ Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes
+ The still, sad music of humanity,
+ Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power
+ To chasten and subdue. And I have felt
+ A presence that disturbs me with the joy
+ Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
+ Of something far more deeply interfused,
+ Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
+ And the round ocean, and the living air,
+ And the blue sky, and in the mind of man:
+ A motion and a spirit, that impels
+ All thinking things, all objects of all thought,
+ And rolls through all things."
+
+We can hardly imagine that the religious experience of mankind will
+ever suffer these words to drop into forgetfulness; and it would seem
+that every passing generation must deepen their significance.
+
+The same great testimony to the divine Presence in our lives is borne
+by many other witnesses in memorable words. Lowell's voice is clear:
+
+ "No man can think, nor in himself perceive,
+ Sometimes at waking, in the street sometimes,
+ Or on the hillside, always unforwarned,
+ A grace of being finer than himself,
+ That beckons and is gone,--a larger life
+ Upon his own impinging, with swift glimpse
+ Of spacious circles, luminous with mind,
+ To which the ethereal substance of his own
+ Seems but gross cloud to make that visible,
+ Touched to a sudden glory round the edge."
+
+If to this central truth of religion,--the reality of the communion of
+the human spirit with the divine--the poets have borne such impressive
+testimony, not less positively have they asserted many other of the
+great things of the spirit. Sometimes they have helped us to believe,
+by identifying themselves with us in our struggles with the doubts
+that loosen our hold on the great realities. No man of the last
+century has done more for Christian belief than Alfred Tennyson,
+albeit he has been a confessed doubter. But what he said of Arthur
+Hallam is quite as true of himself:
+
+ "He fought his doubts, and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them; thus he came at length,
+
+ To find a stronger faith his own,
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone."
+
+Those words of his, so often quoted, are often sadly misused:
+
+ "There lives more faith in honest doubt,
+ Believe me, than in half the creeds."
+
+When men make these words an excuse for an attitude of habitual
+negation and denial, assuming that it is better to doubt everything
+than to believe anything, they grossly pervert the poet's meaning. It
+is the _faith_ that lives in honest doubt that his heart applauds. He
+is thinking of the fact that it is real faith in God which leads men
+to doubt the dogmas which misrepresent God. But conscious as he is of
+the shadow that lies upon our field of vision, he is always insisting
+that it is in the light and not in the shadow that we must walk.
+Therefore, although demonstration is impossible, faith is rational. So
+do those great words of "The Ancient Sage" admonish us:
+
+ "Thou canst not prove that thou art body alone,
+ Nor canst thou prove that thou art spirit alone,
+ Nor canst thou prove that thou art both in one.
+ Thou canst not prove thou art immortal, no,
+ Nor yet that thou art mortal--nay, my son.
+ Thou canst not prove that I who speak with thee,
+ Am not thyself in converse with thyself,
+ For nothing worthy proving can be proven
+ Nor yet disproven. Wherefore be thou wise,
+ Cleave ever to the sunnier side of doubt,
+ And cling to Faith beyond the forms of Faith!
+ She reels not in the storm of warring words,
+ She brightens at the clash of 'Yes' and 'No,'
+ She sees the best that glimmers through the worst,
+ She feels the sun is hid but for a night,
+ She spies the summer through the winter bud,
+ She tastes the fruit before the blossom falls,
+ She hears the lark within the songless egg,
+ She finds the fountain where they wailed 'Mirage!'"
+
+This illustrates Tennyson's mental attitude. If all who plume
+themselves upon their doubts would put themselves into this posture of
+mind, they would find themselves in possession of a very substantial
+faith.
+
+Tennyson has touched with light more than one problem of the soul. The
+little stanza beginning
+
+ "Flower in the crannied wall"
+
+has shown us how the mysteries of being are shared by the commonest
+lives; the short lyric "Wages" condenses into a few lines the
+strongest proof of the life to come; and "Crossing the Bar" has borne
+many a spirit in peace out to the boundless sea.
+
+Robert Browning's robust faith helps us in a different way. His daring
+and triumphant optimism makes us ashamed of doubt. In "Abt Vogler," in
+"Rabbi Ben Ezra," in "Pompilia," in "Christmas Eve," we are caught up
+and carried onward by an unflinching and overcoming faith. Perhaps the
+most convincing arguments for religious reality in Browning's poems
+are those of "An Epistle" and of "Cleon," where the cry of the human
+soul for the assurance which the Christian faith supplies is given
+such a penetrating voice. And there is no reasoning about the
+Incarnation, in any theological book that I have ever read, which
+seems to me so cogent as that great passage in "Saul," where David
+cries:
+
+ "Could I wrestle to raise him from sorrow, grow poor to enrich,
+ To fill up his life, starve my own out. I would--knowing which,
+ I know that my service is perfect. Oh, speak through me now!
+ Would I suffer for him that I love? So wouldst thou--so wilt thou!"
+
+But, after all, Browning's great hymns of faith are those in which he
+faces the future, like "Prospice," and the prologue of "La Saisiaz,"
+and the epilogue of "Asolando,"--triumphant songs, in which one of the
+healthiest-minded of human beings showed himself:
+
+ "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
+ Never doubted clouds would break,
+ Never dreamed though right were worsted wrong would triumph,
+ Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better, sleep to wake!"
+
+It would be a grateful task to make extended record of the service
+rendered to religion by the great choir of singers whose names appear
+upon the pages of this book. To Elizabeth Barrett Browning our debt is
+large, though her note is oftenest plaintive and the faith which she
+illustrates is that by which suffering is turned to strength. Our own
+New England psalmist, also, has been to great multitudes a revealer
+and a comforter; few in any age have seen the central truths of
+Christianity more clearly, or felt them more deeply, or uttered them
+more convincingly. In such poems as "My Soul and I," "My Psalm," "Our
+Master," "The Eternal Goodness," "The Brewing of Soma," and "Andrew
+Ryckman's Prayer," Whittier has made the whole religious world his
+debtor.
+
+How many more there are--of those whom the world reckons as the
+greater bards, and of those whom it assigns to lower places--to whom
+we have found ourselves indebted for the clearing of our vision or the
+quickening of our pulses, in our studies or our meditations upon the
+deepest questions of life! How many there are, whose faces we
+never saw, but who by some luminous word, some strain vibrant with
+tenderness, some flash of insight, have endeared themselves to us
+forever! They are the friends of our spirits, ministers to us of the
+holiest things. They have clothed for us the highest truth in forms of
+beauty; they have made it winsome and real and dear and memorable. Is
+there anything better than this, that one man can do for another?
+
+Washington Gladden
+
+[Footnote A: "The Great Poets and their Theology."]
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+ INTRODUCTORY ESSAY:
+ "RELIGION AND POETRY."
+ By _Washington Gladden_
+
+ POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE:
+ THE DIVINE ELEMENT--(God, Christ, the Holy Spirit)
+ PRAYER AND ASPIRATION
+ FAITH: HOPE: LOVE: SERVICE
+ SABBATH: WORSHIP: CREED
+ SELECTIONS FROM "PARADISE LOST"
+ HUMAN EXPERIENCE
+ DEATH: IMMORTALITY: HEAVEN
+ SELECTIONS FROM "THE DIVINE COMEDY"
+
+ INDEX: AUTHORS AND TITLES
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ JOHN MILTON
+ _Photogravure from an engraving_.
+
+ THE CHILD JESUS IN THE TEMPLE
+ _One of Heinrich Hoffmann's wonderful scenes in the life of
+ Christ: the earnest, wise-faced Boy, and the eager or doubtful
+ but thoughtful Scribes and Doctors of the Law, are graphically
+ depicted._
+
+ ISAAC WATTS
+ _From a contemporary engraving_.
+
+ THE HOLY NIGHT
+ "It was the winter wild
+ While the heaven-born Child
+ All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies."
+
+ _From photogravure after a painting by Martin Feuerstein._
+
+ CHARLES WESLEY
+ _From a contemporary engraving_.
+
+ THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD
+ "Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ Who is there?
+ 'Tis a pilgrim, strange and kingly,
+ Never such was seen before."
+
+ _From photo-carbon print after the painting by Holman Hunt_.
+
+ SIR GALAHAD
+ "My strength is as the strength of ten,
+ Because my heart is pure."
+
+ _From photogravure after the painting by George Frederick Watts_.
+
+ RALPH WALDO EMERSON
+ _From a photogravure after life-photograph._
+
+ DINA M. MULOCK CRAIK
+ _From a life-photograph by Elliott and Fry, London._
+
+ THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN
+ "Two went to pray? O, rather say,
+ One went to brag, the other to pray;
+ One nearer to God's altar trod,
+ The other to the altar's God."
+
+ _From engraving by Brend'amour, after a design by Alexander Bida_.
+
+ DANTE ALIGHIERI
+ _After a photograph from the fresco by His friend Giotto, discovered
+ under the whitewash on a watt of the Bargello palace; now in the Museo
+ Nazionale, Florence, Italy_.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+
+
+
+POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+I.
+
+THE DIVINE ELEMENT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SONG.
+
+FROM "PIPPA PASSES."
+
+
+ The year's at the spring,
+ And day's at the morn;
+ Morning's at seven;
+ The hill-side's dew-pearled;
+ The lark's on the wing;
+ The snail's on the thorn;
+ God's in His heaven--
+ All's right with the world.
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PASSAGE IN THE LIFE OF SAINT AUGUSTINE.
+
+
+ Long pored Saint Austin o'er the sacred page,
+ And doubt and darkness overspread his mind;
+ On God's mysterious being thought the Sage,
+ The Triple Person in one Godhead joined.
+ The more he thought, the harder did he find
+ To solve the various doubts which fast arose;
+ And as a ship, caught by imperious wind,
+ Tosses where chance its shattered body throws,
+ So tossed his troubled soul, and nowhere found repose.
+
+ Heated and feverish, then he closed his tome,
+ And went to wander by the ocean-side,
+ Where the cool breeze at evening loved to come,
+ Murmuring responsive to the murmuring tide;
+ And as Augustine o'er its margent wide
+ Strayed, deeply pondering the puzzling theme,
+ A little child before him he espied:
+ In earnest labor did the urchin seem,
+ Working with heart intent close by the sounding stream.
+
+ He looked, and saw the child a hole had scooped,
+ Shallow and narrow in the shining sand,
+ O'er which at work the laboring infant stooped,
+ Still pouring water in with busy hand.
+ The saint addressed the child in accents bland:
+ "Fair boy," quoth he, "I pray what toil is thine?
+ Let me its end and purpose understand."
+ The boy replied: "An easy task is mine,
+ To sweep into this hole all the wide ocean's brine."
+
+ "O foolish boy!" the saint exclaimed, "to hope
+ That the broad ocean in that hole should lie!"
+ "O foolish saint!" exclaimed the boy; "thy scope
+ Is still more hopeless than the toil I ply,
+ Who think'st to comprehend God's nature high
+ In the small compass of thine human wit!
+ Sooner, Augustine, sooner far, shall I
+ Confine the ocean in this tiny pit,
+ Than finite minds conceive God's nature infinite!"
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEDITATIONS OF A HINDU PRINCE.
+
+
+ All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have trod,
+ Are the people eternally seeking for the signs and steps of a God?
+ Westward across the ocean, and Northward across the snow,
+ Do they all stand gazing, as ever, and what do the wisest know?
+
+ Here, in this mystical India, the deities hover and swarm
+ Like the wild bees heard in the tree-tops, or the gusts of a gathering storm;
+ In the air men hear their voices, their feet on the rocks are seen,
+ Yet we all say, "Whence is the message, and what may the wonders mean?"
+
+ A million shrines stand open, and ever the censer swings,
+ As they bow to a mystic symbol, or the figures of ancient kings;
+ And the incense rises ever, and rises the endless cry
+ Of those who are heavy laden, and of cowards loth to die.
+
+ For the Destiny drives us together, like deer in a pass of the hills;
+ Above is the sky and around us the sound of the shot that kills;
+ Pushed by a power we see not, and struck by a hand unknown,
+ We pray to the trees for shelter, and press our lips to a stone.
+
+ The trees wave a shadowy answer, and the rock frowns hollow and grim,
+ And the form and the nod of the demon are caught in the twilight dim;
+ And we look to the sunlight falling afar on the mountain crest,--
+ Is there never a path runs upward to a refuge there and a rest?
+
+ The path, ah! who has shown it, and which is the faithful guide?
+ The haven, ah! who has known it? for steep is the mountain side,
+ Forever the shot strikes surely, and ever the wasted breath
+ Of the praying multitude rises, whose answer is only death.
+
+ Here are the tombs of my kinsfolk, the fruit of an ancient name,
+ Chiefs who were slain on the war-field, and women who died in flame;
+ They are gods, these kings of the foretime, they are spirits who guard our race:
+ Ever I watch and worship; they sit with a marble face.
+
+ And the myriad idols round me, and the legion of muttering priests,
+ The revels and rites unholy, the dark unspeakable feasts!
+ What have they rung from the Silence? Hath even a whisper come
+ Of the secret, Whence and Whither? Alas! for the gods are dumb.
+
+ Shall I list to the word of the English, who come from the uttermost sea?
+ "The Secret, hath it been told you, and what is your message to me?"
+ It is naught but the wide-world story how the earth and the heavens began,
+ How the gods are glad and angry, and a Deity once was man.
+
+ I had thought, "Perchance in the cities where the rulers of India dwell,
+ Whose orders flash from the far land, who girdle the earth with a spell,
+ They have fathomed the depths we float on, or measured the unknown main--"
+ Sadly they turn from the venture, and say that the quest is vain.
+
+ Is life, then, a dream and delusion, and where shall the dreamer awake?
+ Is the world seen like shadows on water, and what if the mirror break?
+ Shall it pass as a camp that is struck, as a tent that is gathered and gone
+ From the sands that were lamp-lit at eve, and at morning are level and lone?
+
+ Is there naught in the heaven above, whence the hail and the levin are hurled,
+ But the wind that is swept around us by the rush of the rolling world?
+ The wind that shall scatter my ashes, and bear me to silence and sleep
+ With the dirge, and the sounds of lamenting, and voices of women who weep.
+
+SIR ALFRED COMYNS LYALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRAHMA.
+
+
+ If the red slayer think he slays,
+ Or if the slain think he is slain,
+ They know not well the subtle ways
+ I keep, and pass, and turn again.
+
+ Far or forgot to me is near;
+ Shadow and sunlight are the same;
+ The vanished gods to me appear;
+ And one to me are shame and fame.
+
+ They reckon ill who leave me out;
+ When me they fly, I am the wings;
+ I am the doubter and the doubt,
+ And I the hymn the Brahmin sings.
+
+ The strong gods pine for my abode,
+ And pine in vain the sacred Seven;
+ But thou, meek lover of the good!
+ Find me, and turn thy back on heaven.
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HYMN TO ZEUS.
+
+
+ Most glorious of all the Undying, many-named, girt round with awe!
+ Jove, author of Nature, applying to all things the rudder of law--
+ Hail! Hail! for it justly rejoices the races whose life is a span
+ To lift unto thee their voices--the Author and Framer of man.
+ For we are thy sons; thou didst give us the symbols of speech at our birth,
+ Alone of the things that live, and mortal move upon earth.
+ Wherefore thou shalt find me extolling and ever singing thy praise;
+ Since thee the great Universe, rolling on its path round the world, obeys:--
+ Obeys thee, wherever thou guidest, and gladly is bound in thy bands,
+ So great is the power thou confidest, with strong, invincible hands,
+ To thy mighty ministering servant, the bolt of the thunder, that flies,
+ Two-edged like a sword, and fervent, that is living and never dies.
+ All nature, in fear and dismay, doth quake in the path of its stroke,
+ What time thou preparest the way for the one Word thy lips have spoke,
+ Which blends with lights smaller and greater, which pervadeth and thrilleth all things,
+ So great is thy power and thy nature--in the Universe Highest of Kings!
+ On earth, of all deeds that are done, O God! there is none without thee;
+ In the holy ether not one, nor one on the face of the sea,
+ Save the deeds that evil men, driven by their own blind folly, have planned;
+ But things that have grown uneven are made even again by thy hand;
+ And things unseemly grow seemly, the unfriendly are friendly to thee;
+ For no good and evil supremely thou hast blended in one by decree.
+ For all thy decree is one ever--a Word that endureth for aye,
+ Which mortals, rebellious, endeavor to flee from and shun to obey--
+ Ill-fated, that, worn with proneness for the lord-ship of goodly things,
+ Neither hear nor behold, in its oneness, the law that divinity brings;
+ Which men with reason obeying, might attain unto glorious life,
+ No longer aimlessly straying in the paths of ignoble strife.
+ There are men with a zeal unblest, that are wearied with following of fame,
+ And men with a baser quest, that are turned to lucre and shame.
+ There are men too that pamper and pleasure the flesh with delicate stings:
+ All these desire beyond measure to be other than all these things.
+ Great Jove, all-giver, dark-clouded, great Lord of the thunderbolt's breath!
+ Deliver the men that are shrouded in ignorance dismal as death.
+ O Father! dispel from their souls the darkness, and grant them the light
+ Of reason, thy stay, when the whole wide world thou rulest with might,
+ That we, being honored, may honor thy name with the music of hymns,
+ Extolling the deeds of the Donor, unceasing, as rightly beseems
+ Mankind; for no worthier trust is awarded to God or to man
+ Than forever to glory with justice in the law that endures and is One.
+
+From the Greek of CLEANTHES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TE DEUM LAUDAMUS.
+
+
+ We praise thee, O God; we acknowledge thee to be the Lord.
+ All the earth doth worship thee, the Father everlasting.
+ To thee all Angels cry aloud; the Heavens, and all the powers therein.
+ To thee Cherubim and Seraphim continually do cry,
+ Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth;
+ Heaven and earth are full of the Majesty of thy Glory.
+ The glorious company of the Apostles praise thee.
+ The goodly fellowship of the Prophets praise thee.
+ The noble army of Martyrs praise thee.
+ The holy Church throughout all the world doth acknowledge thee;
+ The Father of an infinite Majesty;
+ Thine adorable, true, and only Son;
+ Also the Holy Ghost, the Comforter.
+ Thou art the King of Glory, O Christ.
+ Thou art the everlasting Son of the Father.
+ When thou tookest upon thee to deliver man, thou didst humble thyself to be born of a Virgin.
+ When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death, thou didst open the Kingdom of Heaven to all believers.
+ Thou sittest at the right hand of God, in the Glory of the Father.
+ We believe that thou shalt come to be our Judge.
+ We therefore pray thee, help thy servants, whom thou hast redeemed with thy precious blood.
+ Make them to be numbered with thy Saints, in glory everlasting.
+ O Lord, save thy people, and bless thine heritage.
+ Govern them, and lift them up for ever.
+ Day by day we magnify thee;
+ And we worship thy Name ever, world without end.
+ Vouchsafe, O Lord, to keep us this day without sin.
+ O Lord, have mercy upon us, have mercy upon us.
+ O Lord, let thy mercy be upon us, as our trust is in thee.
+ O Lord, in thee have I trusted; let me never be confounded.[A]
+
+Version of the
+
+AMERICAN EPISCOPAL CHURCH PRAYER-BOOK.
+
+[Footnote A: This venerable hymn, familiar as a part of the morning
+service in the Roman Catholic and Protestant Episcopal Churches, and
+on special occasions in many Protestant Churches, has usually been
+ascribed to the great St. Ambrose of Milan and St. Augustine, his
+greater convert, in the year 387 A.D. But, like other productions of
+mighty influence, it was doubtless a growth. Portions of it appear
+in the writings of St. Cyprian (252 A.D.) and others in still earlier
+liturgical forms of the Greek Church in Alexandria during the century
+previous. It is thus probably the earliest, as it is certainly the
+most universal and famous, of Christian hymns. It was translated from
+the Latin into English in 1549 for the Anglican Book of Common Prayer,
+which assumed its present form in 1660--during that wonderful era
+which gave us the English Bible, with its unapproached majesty and
+music of language.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNIVERSAL PRAYER.
+
+
+ Father of all! in every age,
+ In every clime adored,
+ By saint, by savage, and by sage,
+ Jehovah, Jove, or Lord!
+
+ Thou great First Cause, least understood,
+ Who all my sense confined
+ To know but this, that thou art good,
+ And that myself am blind;
+
+ Yet gave me, in this dark estate,
+ To see the good from ill;
+ And, binding nature fast in fate,
+ Left free the human will:
+
+ What conscience dictates to be done,
+ Or warns me not to do,
+ This, teach me more than hell to shun,
+ That, more than heaven pursue.
+
+ What blessings thy free bounty gives
+ Let me not cast away;
+ For God is paid when man receives,
+ To enjoy is to obey.
+
+ Yet not to earth's contracted span
+ Thy goodness let me bound,
+ Or think thee Lord alone of man,
+ When thousand worlds are round:
+
+ Let not this weak, unknowing hand
+ Presume thy bolts to throw,
+ And deal damnation round the land
+ On each I judge thy foe.
+
+ If I am right thy grace impart
+ Still in the right to stay;
+ If I am wrong, O, teach my heart
+ To find that better way!
+
+ Save me alike from foolish pride
+ And impious discontent
+ At aught thy wisdom has dented,
+ Or aught thy goodness lent.
+
+ Teach me to feel another's woe,
+ To hide the fault I see;
+ That mercy I to others show,
+ That mercy show to me.
+
+ Mean though I am, not wholly so,
+ Since quickened by thy breath;
+ O, lead me wheresoe'er I go,
+ Through this day's life or death!
+
+ This day be bread and peace my lot;
+ All else beneath the sun,
+ Thou knowest if best bestowed or not,
+ And let thy will be done.
+
+ To thee, whose temple is all space,
+ Whose altar, earth, sea, skies,
+ One chorus let all Being raise,
+ All Nature incense rise!
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE.
+
+FROM "THE SPECTATOR."
+
+
+ The spacious firmament on high,
+ With all the blue ethereal sky,
+ And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
+ Their great Original proclaim;
+ The unwearied sun, from day to day,
+ Does his Creator's power display,
+ And publishes to every land
+ The work of an Almighty hand.
+
+ Soon as the evening shades prevail,
+ The moon takes up the wondrous tale,
+ And nightly to the listening earth
+ Repeats the story of her birth;
+ While all the stars that round her burn,
+ And all the planets in their turn,
+ Confirm the tidings as they roll,
+ And spread the truth from pole to pole.
+
+ What though, in solemn silence, all
+ Move round the dark terrestrial ball?
+ What though no real voice or sound
+ Amid their radiant orbs be found?
+ In Reason's ear they all rejoice,
+ And utter forth a glorious voice,
+ Forever singing, as they shine,
+ "The hand that made us is divine!"
+
+JOSEPH ADDISON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LORD! WHEN THOSE GLORIOUS LIGHTS I SEE.
+
+ HYMN AND PRAYER FOR THE USE OF BELIEVERS.
+
+
+ Lord! when those glorious lights I see
+ With which thou hast adorned the skies,
+ Observing how they moved be,
+ And how their splendor fills mine eyes,
+ Methinks it is too large a grace,
+ But that thy love ordained it so,--
+ That creatures in so high a place
+ Should servants be to man below.
+
+ The meanest lamp now shining there
+ In size and lustre doth exceed
+ The noblest of thy creatures here,
+ And of our friendship hath no need.
+ Yet these upon mankind attend
+ For secret aid or public light;
+ And from the world's extremest end
+ Repair unto us every night.
+
+ O, had that stamp been undefaced
+ Which first on us thy hand had set,
+ How highly should we have been graced,
+ Since we are so much honored yet!
+ Good God, for what but for the sake
+ Of thy beloved and only Son,
+ Who did on him our nature take,
+ Were these exceeding favors done?
+
+ As we by him have honored been,
+ Let us to him due honors give;
+ Let us uprightness hide our sin,
+ And let us worth from him receive.
+ Yea, so let us by grace improve
+ What thou by nature doth bestow,
+ That to thy dwelling-place above
+ We may be raised from below.
+
+GEORGE WITHER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HYMN
+
+ BEFORE SUNRISE, IN THE VALE OF CHAMOUNI.
+
+
+ Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star
+ In his steep course? So long he seems to pause
+ On thy bald, awful head, O sovran Blanc!
+ The Arve and Arveiron at thy base
+ Rave ceaselessly; but thou, most awful Form,
+ Risest from forth thy silent sea of pines
+ How silently! Around thee and above,
+ Deep is the air and dark, substantial, black--
+ An ebon mass. Methinks thou piercest it,
+ As with a wedge! But when I look again,
+ It is thine own calm home, thy crystal shrine,
+ Thy habitation from eternity!
+ O dread and silent Mount! I gazed upon thee,
+ Till thou, still present to the bodily sense,
+ Didst vanish from my thought. Entranced in prayer
+ I worshipped the Invisible alone.
+
+ Yet, like some sweet beguiling melody,
+ So sweet we know not we are listening to it,
+ Thou, the mean while, wast blending with my thought,--
+ Yea, with my life and life's own secret joy,--
+ Till the dilating soul, enrapt, transfused,
+ Into the mighty vision passing, there,
+ As in her natural form, swelled vast to Heaven!
+
+ Awake, my soul! not only passive praise
+ Thou owest! not alone these swelling tears,
+ Mute thanks, and secret ecstasy! Awake,
+ Voice of sweet song! Awake, my heart, awake!
+ Green vales and icy cliffs, all join my hymn.
+
+ Thou first and chief, sole sovereign of the vale!
+ O, struggling with the darkness all the night,
+ And visited all night by troops of stars,
+ Or when they climb the sky, or when they sink,
+ Companion of the morning-star at dawn,
+ Thyself Earth's rosy star, and of the dawn
+ Co-herald,--wake, O, wake, and utter praise!
+ Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth?
+ Who filled thy countenance with rosy light?
+ Who made thee parent of perpetual streams?
+
+ And you, ye five wild torrents fiercely glad!
+ Who called you forth from night and utter death,
+ From dark and icy caverns called you forth,
+ Down those precipitous, black, jagged rocks,
+ Forever shattered and the same forever?
+ Who gave you your invulnerable life,
+ Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy,
+ Unceasing thunder and eternal foam?
+ And who commanded (and the silence came),
+ Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?
+
+ Ye ice-falls! ye that from the mountain's brow
+ Adown enormous ravines slope amain,--
+ Torrents, methinks, that heard a mighty voice,
+ And stopped at once amid their maddest plunge!
+ Motionless torrents! silent cataracts!
+ Who made you glorious as the gates of Heaven
+ Beneath the keen full moon? Who bade the sun
+ Clothe you with rainbows? Who, with living flowers
+ Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet?
+ God!--let the torrents, like a shout of nations,
+ Answer! and let the ice-plains echo, God!
+ God! sing, ye meadow-streams, with gladsome voice!
+ Ye pine-groves, with your soft and soul-like sounds!
+ And they too have a voice, yon piles of snow,
+ And in their perilous fall shall thunder, God!
+
+ Ye living flowers that skirt the eternal frost!
+ Ye wild goats sporting round the eagle's nest!
+ Ye eagles, playmates of the mountain-storm!
+ Ye lightnings, the dread arrows of the clouds!
+ Ye signs and wonders of the elements!
+ Utter forth God, and fill the hills with praise!
+
+ Thou, too, hoar Mount! with thy sky-pointing peaks,
+ Oft from whose feet the avalanche, unheard,
+ Shoots downward, glittering through the pure serene,
+ Into the depth of clouds that veil thy breast,--
+ Thou too again, stupendous Mountain! thou
+ That, as I raise my head, awhile bowed low
+ In adoration, upward from thy base
+ Slow travelling with dim eyes suffused with tears,
+ Solemnly seemest, like a vapory cloud,
+ To rise before me,--Rise, O, ever rise!
+ Rise, like a cloud of incense from the Earth!
+ Thou kingly Spirit throned among the hills,
+ Thou dread ambassador from Earth to Heaven,
+ Great Hierarch! tell thou the silent sky,
+ And tell the stars, and tell yon rising sun,
+ Earth with her thousand voices, praises God.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HILLS OF THE LORD.
+
+
+ God ploughed one day with an earthquake,
+ And drove his furrows deep!
+ The huddling plains upstarted.
+ The hills were all a-leap!
+
+ But that is the mountains' secret,
+ Age-hidden in their breast;
+ "God's peace is everlasting,"
+ Are the dream-words of their rest.
+
+ He hath made them the haunt of beauty,
+ The home elect of his grace;
+ He spreadeth his mornings on them,
+ His sunsets light their face.
+
+ His thunders tread in music
+ Of footfalls echoing long,
+ And carry majestic greeting
+ Around the silent throng.
+
+ His winds bring messages to them,
+ Wild storm-news from the main;
+ They sing it down to the valleys
+ In the love-song of the rain.
+
+ Green tribes from far come trooping,
+ And over the uplands flock;
+ He weaveth the zones together
+ In robes for his risen rock.
+
+ They are nurseries for young rivers;
+ Nests for his flying cloud;
+ Homesteads for new-born races,
+ Masterful, free, and proud.
+
+ The people of tired cities
+ Come up to their shrines and pray;
+ God freshens again within them,
+ As he passes by all day.
+
+ And lo, I have caught their secret,
+ The beauty deeper than all.
+ This faith--that life's hard moments,
+ When the jarring sorrows befall,
+
+ Are but God ploughing his mountains;
+ And the mountains yet shall be
+ The source of his grace and freshness
+ And his peace everlasting to me.
+
+WILLIAM CHANNING GANNETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUNRISE.
+
+
+ As on my bed at dawn I mused and prayed,
+ I saw my lattice prankt upon the wall,
+ The flaunting leaves and flitting birds withal--
+ A sunny phantom interlaced with shade;
+ "Thanks be to Heaven," in happy mood I said,
+ "What sweeter aid my matins could befall
+ Than this fair glory from the east hath made?
+ What holy sleights hath God, the Lord of all,
+ To bid us feel and see! We are not free
+ To say we see not, for the glory comes
+ Nightly and daily, like the flowing sea;
+ His lustre pierces through the midnight glooms,
+ And at prime hours, behold! he follows me
+ With golden shadows to my secret rooms."
+
+CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD AND MAN.
+
+ FROM THE "ESSAY ON MAN," EPISTLES I AND IV.
+
+
+ Lo, the poor Indian! whose untutored mind
+ Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind:
+ His soul, proud science never taught to stray
+ Far as the solar walk or Milky Way:
+ Yet simple Nature to his hope has given,
+ Behind the cloud-topt hill, an humbler heaven;
+ Some safer world in depth of woods embraced,
+ Some happier island in the watery waste,
+ Where slaves once more their native land behold,
+ No fiends torment, no Christians thirst for gold.
+ To Be, contents his natural desire;
+ He asks no angel's wing, no seraph's fire;
+ But thinks, admitted to that equal sky,
+ His faithful dog shall bear him company.
+ Go, wiser thou! and in thy scale of sense,
+ Weigh thy opinion against Providence:
+ Call imperfection what thou fancy'st such,--
+ Say, here he gives too little, there too much;
+ Destroy all creatures for thy sport or gust,
+ Yet cry, If man's unhappy, God's unjust,--
+ If man alone engross not Heaven's high care,
+ Alone made perfect here, immortal there;
+ Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod,
+ Re-judge his justice, be the god of God.
+ In pride, in reasoning pride, our error lies;
+ All quit their sphere, and rush into the skies.
+ Pride still is aiming at the blest abodes:
+ Men would be angels, angels would be gods.
+ Aspiring to be gods, if angels fell,
+ Aspiring to be angels, men rebel;
+ And who but wishes to invert the laws
+ Of Order, sins against the Eternal Cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All are but parts of one stupendous whole,
+ Whose body Nature is, and God the soul:
+ That, changed through all, and yet in all the same;
+ Great in the earth as in the ethereal frame;
+ Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze,
+ Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees,
+ Lives through all life, extends through all extent,
+ Spreads undivided, operates unspent:
+ Breathes in our soul, informs our mortal part,
+ As full, as perfect, in a hair as heart;
+ As full, as perfect, in vile man that mourns,
+ As the rapt seraph that adores and burns:
+ To him no high, no low, no great, no small;
+ He fills, he bounds, connects, and equals all.
+ Cease then, nor order imperfection name:
+ Our proper bliss depends on what we blame.
+ Know thy own point: This kind, this due degree
+ Of blindness, weakness, Heaven bestows on thee.
+ Submit.--In this or any other sphere,
+ Secure to be as blest as thou canst bear;
+ Safe in the hand of one disposing Power,
+ Or in the natal or the mortal hour.
+ All nature is but art unknown to thee;
+ All chance, direction which thou canst not see;
+ All discord, harmony not understood;
+ All partial evil, universal good:
+ And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite,
+ One truth is clear--Whatever is, is right.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Order is Heaven's first law: and, this confest,
+ Some are and must be greater than the rest,
+ More rich, more wise; but who infers from hence
+ That such are happier, shocks all common-sense.
+ Heaven to mankind impartial we confess,
+ If all are equal in their happiness:
+ But mutual wants this happiness increase;
+ All nature's difference keeps all nature's peace.
+ Condition, circumstance, is not the thing:
+ Bliss is the same in subject or in king,
+ In who obtain defence or who defend,
+ In him who is or him who finds a friend;
+ Heaven breathes through every member of the whole
+ One common blessing, as one common soul.
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIGHT SHINING OUT OF DARKNESS.
+
+
+ God moves in a mysterious way
+ His wonders to perform;
+ He plants His footsteps in the sea,
+ And rides upon the storm.
+
+ Deep in unfathomable mines
+ Of never-failing skill,
+ He treasures up His bright designs,
+ And works His sovereign will.
+
+ Ye fearful, fresh courage take!
+ The clouds ye so much dread
+ Are big with mercy, and shall break
+ In blessings on your head.
+
+ Judge not the Lord by feeble sense.
+ But trust Him for His grace:
+ Behind a frowning providence
+ He hides a smiling face.
+
+ His purposes will ripen fast,
+ Unfolding every hour;
+ The bud may have a bitter taste.
+ But sweet will be the flower.
+
+ Blind unbelief is sure to err,
+ And scan His work in vain:
+ God is His own interpreter,
+ And He will make it plain.
+
+WILLIAM COWPER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD.
+
+
+ O thou eternal One! whose presence bright
+ All space doth occupy, all motion guide.
+ Unchanged through time's all-devastating flight!
+ Thou only God--there is no God beside!
+ Being above all beings! Mighty One,
+ Whom none can comprehend and none explore!
+ Who fill'st existence with Thyself alone--
+ Embracing all, supporting, ruling o'er,
+ Being whom we call God, and know no more!
+
+ In its sublime research, philosophy
+ May measure out the ocean-deep--may count
+ The sands or the sun's rays--but, God! for Thee
+ There is no weight nor measure; none can mount
+ Up to Thy mysteries; Reason's brightest spark,
+ Though kindled by Thy light, in vain would try
+ To trace Thy counsels, infinite and dark;
+ And thought is lost ere thought can soar so high,
+ Even like past moments in eternity.
+
+ Thou from primeval nothingness didst call
+ First chaos, then existence--Lord! in Thee
+ Eternity had its foundation; all
+ Sprung forth from Thee--of light, joy, harmony,
+ Sole Origin--all life, all beauty Thine;
+ Thy word created all, and doth create;
+ Thy splendor fills all space with rays divine;
+ Thou art, and wert, and shall be! Glorious! Great!
+ Light-giving, life-sustaining potentate!
+
+ Thy chains the unmeasured universe surround--
+ Upheld by Thee, by Thee inspired with breath!
+ Thou the beginning with the end hast bound,
+ And beautifully mingled life and death!
+ As sparks mount upwards from the fiery blaze;
+ So suns are born, so worlds spring forth from Thee;
+ And as the spangles in the sunny rays
+ Shine round the silver snow, the pageantry
+ Of heaven's bright army glitters in Thy praise.
+
+ A million torches lighted by Thy hand
+ Wander unwearied through the blue abyss--
+ They own Thy power, accomplish Thy command,
+ All gay with life, all eloquent with bliss.
+ What shall we call them? Piles of crystal light--
+ A glorious company of golden streams--
+ Lamps of celestial ether burning bright--
+ Suns lighting systems with their joyous beams?
+ But Thou to these art as the noon to night.
+
+ Yes! as a drop of water in the sea,
+ All this magnificence in Thee is lost:--
+ What are ten thousand worlds compared to Thee?
+ And what am I then?--Heaven's unnumbered host,
+ Though multiplied by myriads, and arrayed
+ In all the glory of sublimest thought,
+ Is but an atom in the balance, weighed
+ Against Thy greatness--is a cipher brought
+ Against infinity! What am I then? Naught!
+
+ Naught! But the effluence of Thy light divine,
+ Pervading worlds, hath reached my bosom too;
+ Yes! in my spirit doth Thy spirit shine,
+ As shines the sunbeam in a drop of dew.
+ Naught! but I live, and on hope's pinions fly
+ Eager towards Thy presence--for in Thee
+ I live, and breathe, and dwell, aspiring high,
+ Even to the throne of Thy divinity;
+ I am, O God! and surely Thou must be!
+
+ Thou art!--directing, guiding all--Thou art!
+ Direct my understanding then to Thee;
+ Control my spirit, guide my wandering heart;
+ Though but an atom midst immensity,
+ Still I am something fashioned by Thy hand!
+ I hold a middle rank 'twixt heaven and earth--
+ On the last verge of mortal being stand,
+ Close to the realms where angels have their birth,
+ Just on the boundaries of the spirit land!
+
+ The chain of being is complete in me--
+ In me is matter's last gradation lost,
+ And the next step is spirit--Deity!
+ I can command the lightning and am dust!
+ A monarch and a slave--a worm, a god!
+ Whence came I here, and how? so marvellously
+ Constructed and conceived? unknown! this clod
+ Lives surely through some higher energy;
+ For from itself alone it could not be!
+
+ Creator, yes! Thy wisdom and Thy word
+ Created me! Thou source of life and good!
+ Thou spirit of my spirit, and my Lord!
+ Thy light, Thy love, in their bright plenitude
+ Filled me with an immortal soul, to spring
+ Over the abyss of death; and bade it wear
+ The garments of eternal day, and wing
+ Its heavenly flight beyond this little sphere,
+ Even to its source, to Thee, its author there.
+
+ Oh thoughts ineffable! oh visions blest!
+ Though worthless our conceptions all of Thee.
+ Yet shall Thy shadowed image fill our breast,
+ And waft its homage to Thy deity.
+ God! thus alone my lowly thoughts can soar,
+ Thus seek Thy presence--Being wise and good!
+ Midst Thy vast works admire, obey, adore;
+ And when the tongue is eloquent no more,
+ The soul shall speak in tears of gratitude.
+
+From the Russian of GAVRIÍL ROMÁNOVITCH DERSHÁVIN.
+
+Translation of SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD IS EVERYWHERE.
+
+
+ A trodden daisy, from the sward,
+ With tearful eye I took,
+ And on its ruined glories I,
+ With moving heart, did look;
+ For, crushed and broken though it was,
+ That little flower was fair;
+ And oh! I loved the dying bud,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I stood upon the sea-beat shore,
+ The waves came rushing on;
+ The tempest raged in giant wrath,
+ The light of day was gone.
+ The sailor from his drowning bark
+ Sent up his dying prayer;
+ I looked amid the ruthless storm,
+ And God was there!
+
+ I sought a lonely, woody dell,
+ Where all things soft and sweet,
+ Birds, flowers, and trees, and running streams,
+ Mid bright sunshine did meet:
+ I stood beneath an old oak's shade,
+ And summer round was fair;
+ I gazed upon the peaceful scene,
+ And God was there!
+
+ I saw a home--a happy home--
+ Upon a bridal day,
+ And youthful hearts were blithesome there,
+ And aged hearts were gay:
+ I sat amid the smiling band
+ Where all so blissful were--
+ Among the bridal maidens sweet--
+ And God was there!
+
+ I stood beside an infant's couch,
+ When light had left its eye--
+ I saw the mother's bitter tears,
+ I heard her woful cry--
+ I saw her kiss its fair pale face,
+ And smooth its yellow hair;
+ And oh, I loved the mourner's home,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I sought a cheerless wilderness--
+ A desert, pathless wild--
+ Where verdure grew not by the streams,
+ Where beauty never smiled;
+ Where desolation brooded o'er
+ A muirland lone and bare,
+ And awe upon my spirit crept,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I looked upon the lowly flower,
+ And on each blade of grass;
+ Upon the forests, wide and deep,
+ I saw the tempests pass:
+ I gazed on all created things
+ In earth, in sea, and air;
+ Then bent the knee--for God, in love,
+ Was everywhere!
+
+ROBERT NICOLL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ROCKED IN THE CRADLE OF THE DEEP.
+
+
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep
+ I lay me down in peace to sleep;
+ Secure I rest upon the wave,
+ For thou, O Lord! hast power to save.
+ I know thou wilt not slight my call,
+ For thou dost mark the sparrow's fall;
+ And calm and peaceful shall I sleep,
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep.
+
+ When in the dead of night I lie
+ And gaze upon the trackless sky,
+ The star-bespangled heavenly scroll,
+ The boundless waters as they roll,--
+ I feel thy wondrous power to save
+ From perils of the stormy wave:
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep,
+ I calmly rest and soundly sleep.
+
+ And such the trust that still were mine,
+ Though stormy winds swept o'er the brine,
+ Or though the tempest's fiery breath
+ Roused me from sleep to wreck and death.
+ In ocean cave, still safe with Thee
+ The germ of immortality!
+ And calm and peaceful shall I sleep,
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep.
+
+EMMA HART WILLARD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOOD-BYE.
+
+
+ Good-bye, proud world, I'm going home:
+ Thou art not my friend, and I'm not thine.
+ Long through thy weary crowds I roam;
+ A river-ark on the ocean brine,
+ Long I've been tossed like the driven foam,
+ But now, proud world, I'm going home.
+
+ Good-bye to Flattery's fawning face;
+ To Grandeur with his wise grimace;
+ To upstart Wealth's averted eye;
+ To supple Office, low and high;
+ To crowded halls, to court and street;
+ To frozen hearts and hasting feet;
+ To those who go, and those who come;
+ Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home.
+
+ I'm going to my own hearth-stone,
+ Bosomed in yon green hills alone,--
+ A secret nook in a pleasant land,
+ Whose groves the frolic fairies planned;
+ Where arches green, the livelong day,
+ Echo the blackbird's roundelay,
+ And vulgar feet have never trod
+ A spot that is sacred to thought and God.
+
+ O, when I am safe in my sylvan home,
+ I tread on the pride of Greece and Rome;
+ And when I am stretched beneath the pines,
+ Where the evening star so holy shines,
+ I laugh at the lore and the pride of man,
+ At the sophist schools, and the learned clan;
+ For what are they all in their high conceit,
+ When man in the bush with God may meet?
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR GOD, OUR HELP IN AGES PAST.
+
+
+ Our God, our help in ages past,
+ Our hope for years to come,
+ Our shelter from the stormy blast,
+ And our eternal home,--
+
+ Under the shadow of thy throne
+ Thy saints have dwelt secure;
+ Sufficient is thine arm alone,
+ And our defence is sure.
+
+ Before the hills in order stood,
+ Or earth received her frame,
+ From everlasting thou art God,
+ To endless years the same.
+
+ A thousand ages in thy sight
+ Are like an evening gone;
+ Short as the watch that ends the night
+ Before the rising sun.
+
+ Time like an ever-rolling stream
+ Bears all its sons away;
+ They fly, forgotten, as a dream
+ Dies at the opening day.
+
+ Our God, our help in ages past,
+ Our hope for years to come,
+ Be thou our guard while troubles last,
+ And our eternal home.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD.
+
+ "EIN' FESTE BURG IST UNSER GOTT."
+
+
+ A mighty fortress is our God,
+ A bulwark never failing;
+ Our helper he amid the flood
+ Of mortal ills prevailing.
+ For still our ancient foe
+ Doth seek to work us woe;
+ His craft and power are great,
+ And, armed with equal hate,
+ On earth is not his equal.
+
+ Did we in our own strength confide,
+ Our striving would be losing;
+ Were not the right man on our side,
+ The man of God's own choosing.
+ Dost ask who that may be?
+ Christ Jesus, it is he,
+ Lord Sabaoth his name,
+ From age to age the same,
+ And he must win the battle.
+
+From the German of MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+Translation of FREDERIC HENRY HEDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DELIGHT IN GOD.
+
+
+ I love, and have some cause to love, the earth,--
+ She is my Maker's creature, therefore good;
+ She is my mother, for she gave me birth;
+ She is my tender nurse, she gives me food:
+ But what's a creature, Lord, compared with thee?
+ Or what's my mother or my nurse to me?
+
+ I love the air,--her dainty sweets refresh
+ My drooping soul, and to new sweets invite me;
+ Her shrill-mouthed choir sustain me with their flesh,
+ And with their polyphonian notes delight me:
+ But what's the air, or all the sweets that she
+ Can bless my soul withal, compared to thee?
+
+ I love the sea,--she is my fellow-creature,
+ My careful purveyor; she provides me store;
+ She walls me round; she makes my diet greater;
+ She wafts my treasure from a foreign shore:
+ But, Lord of oceans, when compared with thee,
+ What is the ocean or her wealth to me?
+
+ To heaven's high city I direct my journey,
+ Whose spangled suburbs entertain mine eye;
+ Mine eye, by contemplation's great attorney,
+ Transcends the crystal pavement of the sky:
+ But what is heaven, great God, compared to thee?
+ Without thy presence, heaven's no heaven to me.
+
+ Without thy presence, earth gives no refection;
+ Without thy presence, sea affords no treasure;
+ Without thy presence, air's a rank infection;
+ Without thy presence, heaven's itself no pleasure:
+ If not possessed, if not enjoyed in thee,
+ What's earth, or sea, or air, or heaven to me?
+
+ The highest honors that the world can boast
+ Are subjects far too low for my desire;
+ The brightest beams of glory are, at most,
+ But dying sparkles of thy living fire;
+ The loudest flames that earth can kindle be
+ But nightly glow-worms, if compared to thee.
+
+ Without thy presence, wealth is bags of cares;
+ Wisdom but folly; joy, disquiet--sadness;
+ Friendship is treason, and delights are snares;
+ Pleasures but pain, and mirth but pleasing madness;
+ Without thee, Lord, things be not what they be,
+ Nor have their being, when compared with thee.
+
+ In having all things, and not thee, what have I?
+ Not having thee, what have my labors got?
+ Let me enjoy but thee, what further crave I?
+ And having thee alone, what have I not?
+ I wish nor sea nor land; nor would I be
+ Possessed of heaven, heaven unpossessed of thee!
+
+FRANCIS QUARLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WILL OF GOD.
+
+
+ I worship thee, sweet will of God!
+ And all thy ways adore;
+ And every day I live, I seem
+ To love thee more and more.
+
+ Thou wert the end, the blessèd rule
+ Of our Saviour's toils and tears;
+ Thou wert the passion of his heart
+ Those three and thirty years.
+
+ And he hath breathed into my soul
+ A special love of thee,
+ A love to lose my will in his,
+ And by that loss be free.
+
+ I love to see thee bring to naught
+ The plans of wily men;
+ When simple hearts outwit the wise,
+ Oh, thou art loveliest then.
+
+ The headstrong world it presses hard
+ Upon the church full oft,
+ And then how easily thou turn'st
+ The hard ways into soft.
+
+ I love to kiss each print where thou
+ Hast set thine unseen feet;
+ I cannot fear thee, blessèd will!
+ Thine empire is so sweet.
+
+ When obstacles and trials seem
+ Like prison walls to be,
+ I do the little I can do,
+ And leave the rest to thee.
+
+ I know not what it is to doubt,
+ My heart is ever gay;
+ I run no risk, for, come what will,
+ Thou always hast thy way.
+
+ I have no cares, O blessèd will!
+ For all my cares are thine:
+ I live in triumph, Lord! for thou
+ Hast made thy triumphs mine.
+
+ And when it seems no chance or change
+ From grief can set me free,
+ Hope finds its strength in helplessness,
+ And gayly waits on thee.
+
+ Man's weakness, waiting upon God,
+ Its end can never miss,
+ For men on earth no work can do
+ More angel-like than this.
+
+ Ride on, ride on, triumphantly,
+ Thou glorious will, ride on!
+ Faith's pilgrim sons behind thee take
+ The road that thou hast gone.
+
+ He always wins who sides with God,
+ To him no chance is lost;
+ God's will is sweetest to him, when
+ It triumphs at his cost.
+
+ Ill that he blesses is our good,
+ And unblessed good is ill;
+ And all is right that seems most wrong.
+ If it be his sweet will.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VOYAGE.
+
+
+ Whichever way the wind doth blow,
+ Some heart is glad to have it so;
+ Then blow it east or blow it west,
+ The wind that blows, that wind is best.
+
+ My little craft sails not alone:
+ A thousand fleets from every zone
+ Are out upon a thousand seas;
+ And what for me were favoring breeze
+ Might dash another, with the shock
+ Of doom, upon some hidden rock.
+
+ And so I do not dare to pray
+ For winds to waft me on my way,
+ But leave it to a Higher Will
+ To stay or speed me; trusting still
+ That all is well, and sure that He
+ Who launched my bark will sail with me
+ Through storm and calm, and will not fail,
+ Whatever breezes may prevail,
+ To land me, every peril past,
+ Within his sheltering heaven at last.
+
+ Then, whatsoever wind doth blow,
+ My heart is glad to have it so;
+ And blow it east or blow it west,
+ The wind that blows, that wind is best.
+
+CAROLINE ATHERTON MASON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOVE OF GOD.
+
+
+ Thou Grace Divine, encircling all,
+ A soundless, shoreless sea!
+ Wherein at last our souls must fall,
+ O Love of God most free!
+
+ When over dizzy heights we go,
+ One soft hand blinds our eyes,
+ The other leads us, safe and slow,
+ O Love of God most wise!
+
+ And though we turn us from thy face,
+ And wander wide and long,
+ Thou hold'st us still in thine embrace,
+ O Love of God most strong!
+
+ The saddened heart, the restless soul,
+ The toil-worn frame and mind,
+ Alike confess thy sweet control,
+ O Love of God most kind!
+
+ But not alone thy care we claim,
+ Our wayward steps to win;
+ We know thee by a dearer name,
+ O Love of God within!
+
+ And, filled and quickened by thy breath,
+ Our souls are strong and free
+ To rise o'er sin and fear and death,
+ O Love of God, to thee!
+
+ELIZA SCUDDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE TO GOD.
+
+
+ Praise to God, immortal praise,
+ For the love that crowns our days--
+ Bounteous source of every joy,
+ Let Thy praise our tongues employ!
+
+ For the blessings of the field,
+ For the stores the gardens yield,
+ For the vine's exalted juice,
+ For the generous olive's use;
+
+ Flocks that, whiten all the plain,
+ Yellow sheaves of ripened grain,
+ Clouds that drop their fattening dews,
+ Suns that temperate warmth diffuse--
+
+ All that Spring, with bounteous hand,
+ Scatters o'er the smiling land;
+ All that liberal Autumn pours
+ From her rich o'erflowing stores:
+
+ These to Thee, my God, we owe--
+ Source whence all our blessings flow!
+ And for these my soul shall raise
+ Grateful vows and solemn praise.
+
+ Yet should rising whirlwinds tear
+ From its stem the ripening ear--
+ Should the fig-tree's blasted shoot
+ Drop her green untimely fruit--
+
+ Should the vine put forth no more,
+ Nor the olive yield her store--
+ Though the sickening flocks should fall,
+ And the herds desert the stall--
+
+ Should Thine altered hand restrain
+ The early and the latter rain,
+ Blast each opening bud of joy,
+ And the rising year destroy;
+
+ Yet to Thee my soul should raise
+ Grateful vows and solemn praise,
+ And when every blessing's flown,
+ Love Thee--for Thyself alone.
+
+ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT.
+
+
+ Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
+ Lead thou me on!
+ The night is dark, and I am far from home,--
+ Lead thou me on!
+ Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
+ The distant scene,--one step enough for me.
+
+ I was not ever thus, nor prayed that thou
+ Shouldst lead me on:
+ I loved to choose and see my path, but now
+ Lead thou me on!
+ I loved the garish days, and, spite of fears,
+ Pride ruled my will: remember not past years.
+
+ So long thy power hath blessed me, sure it still
+ Will lead me on;
+ O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
+ The night is gone;
+ And with the morn those angel faces smile
+ Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.
+
+JOHN HENRY NEWMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ETERNAL GOODNESS.
+
+
+ O friends! with whom my feet have trod
+ The quiet aisles of prayer,
+ Glad witness to your zeal for God
+ And love of man I bear.
+
+ I trace your lines of argument;
+ Your logic linked and strong
+ I weigh as one who dreads dissent,
+ And fears a doubt as wrong.
+
+ But still my human hands are weak
+ To hold your iron creeds:
+ Against the words ye bid me speak
+ My heart within me pleads.
+
+ Who fathoms the Eternal Thought?
+ Who talks of scheme and plan?
+ The Lord is God! He needeth not
+ The poor device of man.
+
+ I walk with bare, hushed feet the ground
+ Ye tread with boldness shod;
+ I dare not fix with mete and bound
+ The love and power of God.
+
+ Ye praise His justice; even such
+ His pitying love I deem:
+ Ye seek a king; I fain would touch
+ The robe that hath no seam.
+
+ Ye see the curse which overbroods
+ A world of pain and loss:
+ I hear our Lord's beatitudes
+ And prayer upon the cross.
+
+ More than your schoolmen teach, within
+ Myself, alas! I know:
+ Too dark ye cannot paint the sin,
+ Too small the merit show.
+
+ I bow my forehead to the dust,
+ I veil mine eyes for shame,
+ And urge, in trembling self-distrust,
+ A prayer without a claim.
+
+ I see the wrong that round me lies,
+ I feel the guilt within;
+ I hear, with groan and travail-cries,
+ The world confess its sin.
+
+ Yet, in the maddening maze of things,
+ And tossed by storm and flood,
+ To one fixed trust my spirit clings;
+ I know that God is good!
+
+ Not mine to look where cherubim
+ And seraphs may not see,
+ But nothing can be good in Him
+ Which evil is in me.
+
+ The wrong that pains my soul below
+ I dare not throne above,
+ I know not of His hate,--I know
+ His goodness and His love.
+
+ I dimly guess from blessings known
+ Of greater out of sight,
+ And, with the chastened Psalmist, own
+ His judgments too are right.
+
+ I long for household voices gone,
+ For vanished smiles I long,
+ But God hath led my dear ones on,
+ And He can do no wrong.
+
+ I know not what the future hath
+ Of marvel or surprise.
+ Assured alone that life and death
+ His mercy underlies.
+
+ And if my heart and flesh are weak
+ To bear an untried pain,
+ The bruisèd reed He will not break,
+ But strengthen and sustain.
+
+ No offering of my own I have.
+ Nor works my faith to prove;
+ I can but give the gifts He gave,
+ And plead His love for love.
+
+ And so beside the Silent Sea
+ I wait the muffled oar;
+ No harm from Him can come to me
+ On ocean or on shore.
+
+ I know not where His islands lift
+ Their fronded palms in air;
+ I only know I cannot drift
+ Beyond His love and care.
+
+ O brothers! if my faith is vain,
+ If hopes like these betray,
+ Pray for me that my feet may gain
+ The sure and safer way.
+
+ And Thou, O Lord! by whom are seen
+ Thy creatures as they be,
+ Forgive me if too close I lean
+ My human heart on Thee!
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STRONG SON OF GOD, IMMORTAL LOVE.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+ Strong Son of God, immortal Love,
+ Whom we, that have not seen thy face,
+ By faith, and faith alone, embrace,
+ Believing where we cannot prove;
+
+ Thine are these orbs of light and shade;
+ Thou madest Life in man and brute;
+ Thou madest Death; and lo, thy foot
+ Is on the skull which thou hast made.
+
+ Thou wilt not leave us in the dust:
+ Thou madest man, he knows not why;
+ He thinks he was not made to die;
+ And thou hast made him: thou art just.
+
+ Thou seemest human and divine,
+ The highest, holiest manhood, thou:
+ Our wills are ours, we know not how;
+ Our wills are ours, to make them thine.
+
+ Our little systems have their day;
+ They have their day and cease to be:
+ They are but broken lights of thee,
+ And thou, O Lord, art more than they.
+
+ We have but faith: we cannot know;
+ For knowledge is of things we see;
+ And yet we trust it comes from thee,
+ A beam in darkness: let it grow.
+
+ Let knowledge grow from more to more,
+ But more of reverence in us dwell;
+ That mind and soul, according well,
+ May make one music as before,
+
+ But vaster. We are fools and slight;
+ We mock thee when we do not fear:
+ But help thy foolish ones to bear;
+ Help thy vain worlds to bear thy light.
+
+ Forgive what seemed my sin in me;
+ What seemed my worth since I began;
+ For merit lives from man to man,
+ And not from man, O Lord, to thee.
+
+ Forgive my grief for one removed,
+ Thy creature, whom I found so fair.
+ I trust he lives in thee, and there
+ I find him worthier to be loved.
+
+ Forgive these wild and wandering cries,
+ Confusions of a wasted youth;
+ Forgive them where they fail in truth,
+ And in thy wisdom make me wise.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM.
+
+
+ O little town of Bethlehem,
+ How still we see thee lie!
+ Above thy deep and dreamless sleep
+ The silent stars go by;
+ Yet in thy dark streets shineth
+ The everlasting Light;
+ The hopes and fears of all the years
+ Are met in thee to-night.
+
+ For Christ is born of Mary,
+ And, gathered all above.
+ While mortals sleep, the angels keep
+ Their watch of wondering love.
+ O morning stars, together
+ Proclaim the holy birth!
+ And praises sing to God the King,
+ And peace to men on earth.
+
+ How silently, how silently,
+ The wondrous gift is given!
+ So God imparts to human hearts
+ The blessings of His heaven.
+ No ear may hear His coming,
+ But in this world of sin,
+ Where meek souls will receive Him still,
+ The dear Christ enters in.
+
+ O holy Child of Bethlehem!
+ Descend to us, we pray;
+ Cast out our sin, and enter in,
+ Be born in us to-day.
+ We hear the Christmas angels
+ The great glad tidings tell;
+ Oh come to us, abide with us,
+ Our Lord Emmanuel!
+
+PHILLIPS BROOKS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ANGELS' SONG.
+
+
+ It came upon the midnight clear,
+ That glorious song of old,
+ From angels bending near the earth
+ To touch their harps of gold:
+ "Peace to the earth, good-will to men
+ From heaven's all-gracious King!"
+ The world in solemn stillness lay
+ To hear the angels sing.
+
+ Still through the cloven skies they come,
+ With peaceful wings unfurled;
+ And still their heavenly music floats
+ O'er all the weary world:
+ Above its sad and lowly plains
+ They bend on heavenly wing,
+ And ever o'er its Babel sounds
+ The blessèd angels sing.
+
+ Yet with the woes of sin and strife
+ The world has suffered long;
+ Beneath the angel-strain have rolled
+ Two thousand years of wrong;
+ And man, at war with man, hears not
+ The love-song which they bring:
+ O, hush the noise, ye men of strife,
+ And hear the angels sing!
+
+ And ye, beneath life's crushing load
+ Whose forms are bending low;
+ Who toil along the climbing way
+ With painful steps and slow,--
+ Look now! for glad and golden hours
+ Come swiftly on the wing;
+ O, rest beside the weary road,
+ And hear the angels sing.
+
+ For lo! the days are hastening on,
+ By prophet-bards foretold,
+ When with the ever-circling years
+ Comes round the age of gold;
+ When Peace shall over all the earth
+ Its ancient splendors fling,
+ And the whole world send back the song
+ Which now the angels sing.
+
+EDMUND HAMILTON SEARS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EPIPHANY.
+
+ "We have seen his star in the east."
+ --MATTHEW ii. 2.
+
+
+ Brightest and best of the sons of the morning,
+ Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid;
+ Star of the East, the horizon adorning,
+ Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid.
+
+ Cold on his cradle the dew-drops are shining,
+ Low lies his head with the beasts of the stall;
+ Angels adore him in slumber reclining,
+ Maker and Monarch and Saviour of all.
+
+ Say, shall we yield him, in costly devotion,
+ Odors of Edom, and offerings divine?
+ Gems of the mountain, and pearls of the ocean,
+ Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine?
+
+ Vainly we offer each ample oblation,
+ Vainly with gifts would his favor secure;
+ Richer by far is the heart's adoration,
+ Dearer to God are the prayers of the poor.
+
+ Brightest and best of the sons of the morning,
+ Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid:
+ Star of the East, the horizon adorning,
+ Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid.
+
+REGINALD HEBER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY.
+
+
+ This is the month, and this the happy morn,
+ Wherein the Son of heaven's eternal king,
+ Of wedded maid and virgin mother born,
+ Our great redemption from above did bring--
+ For so the holy sages once did sing--
+ That He our deadly forfeit should release,
+ And with His Father work us a perpetual peace.
+
+ That glorious form, that light unsufferable,
+ And that far-beaming blaze of majesty
+ Wherewith He wont at heaven's high council-table
+ To sit the midst of Trinal Unity,
+ He laid aside; and here with us to be,
+ Forsook the courts of everlasting day,
+ And chose with us a darksome house of mortal clay.
+
+ Say, heavenly muse, shall not thy sacred vein
+ Afford a present to the infant God?
+ Hast thou no verse, no hymn, or solemn strain,
+ To welcome Him to this His new abode--
+ Now while the heaven, by the sun's team untrod,
+ Hath took no print of the approaching light,
+ And all the spangled host keep watch in squadrons bright?
+
+ See how from far upon the eastern road
+ The star-led wizards haste with odors sweet!
+ Oh! run, prevent them with thy humble ode,
+ And lay it lowly at His blessed feet;
+ Have thou the honor first thy Lord to greet,
+ And join thy voice unto the angel choir,
+ From out His secret altar touched with hallowed fire.
+
+
+ THE HYMN.
+
+ It was the winter wild
+ While the heaven-born child
+ All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies--
+ Nature, in awe to Him,
+ Had doffed her gaudy trim,
+ With her great Master so to sympathize;
+ It was no season then for her
+ To wanton with the sun, her lusty paramour.
+
+ Only with speeches fair
+ She woos the gentle air
+ To hide her guilty front with innocent snow,
+ And on her naked shame.
+ Pollute with sinful blame,
+ The saintly veil of maiden white to throw--
+ Confounded that her maker's eyes
+ Should look so near upon her foul deformities.
+
+ But He, her fears to cease,
+ Sent down the meek-eyed Peace;
+ She, crowned with olive green, came softly sliding
+ Down through the turning sphere,
+ His ready harbinger,
+ With turtle wing the amorous clouds dividing;
+ And waving wide her myrtle wand,
+ She strikes a universal peace through sea and land.
+
+ Nor war, or battle's sound,
+ Was heard the world around--
+ The idle spear and shield were high up hung;
+ The hookèd chariot stood
+ Unstained with hostile blood;
+ The trumpet spake not to the armed throng;
+ And kings sat still with awful eye,
+ As if they surely knew their sovereign Lord was by.
+
+ But peaceful was the night
+ Wherein the prince of light
+ His reign of peace upon the earth began;
+ The winds, with wonder whist,
+ Smoothly the waters kissed,
+ Whispering new joys to the mild ocean,
+ Who now hath quite forgot to rave,
+ While birds of calm sit brooding on the charmed wave.
+
+ The stars with deep amaze
+ Stand fixed in steadfast gaze,
+ Bending one way their precious influence;
+ And will not take their flight
+ For all the morning light,
+ Or Lucifer that often warned them thence;
+ But in their glimmering orbs did glow
+ Until their Lord himself bespake, and bid them go.
+
+ And though the shady gloom
+ Had given day her room,
+ The sun himself withheld his wonted speed,
+ And hid his head for shame,
+ As his inferior flame
+ The new-enlightened world no more should need;
+ He saw a greater sun appear
+ Than his bright throne or burning axle-tree could bear.
+
+ The shepherds on the lawn,
+ Or e'er the point of dawn,
+ Sat simply chatting in a rustic row;
+ Full little thought they then
+ That the mighty Pan
+ Was kindly come to live with them below;
+ Perhaps their loves, or else their sheep,
+ Was all that did their silly thoughts so busy keep.
+
+ When such music sweet
+ Their hearts and ears did greet
+ As never was by mortal finger strook--
+ Divinely-warbled voice
+ Answering the stringed noise,
+ As all their souls in blissful rapture took;
+ The air, such pleasure loath to lose,
+ With thousand echoes still prolongs each heavenly close.
+
+ Nature, that heard such sound
+ Beneath the hollow round
+ Of Cynthia's seat the airy region thrilling,
+ Now was almost won
+ To think her part was done.
+ And that her reign had here its last fulfilling;
+ She knew such harmony alone
+ Could hold all heaven and earth in happier union.
+
+ At last surrounds their sight
+ A globe of circular light,
+ That with long beams the shamefaced night arrayed;
+ The helmèd cherubim
+ And sworded seraphim
+ Are seen in glittering ranks with wings displayed,
+ Harping in loud and solemn choir,
+ With unexpressive notes, to heaven's new-born heir--
+
+ Such music as ('tis said)
+ Before was never made,
+ But when of old the sons of morning sung,
+ While the Creator great
+ His constellations set,
+ And the well-balanced world on hinges hung,
+ And cast the dark foundations deep,
+ And bid the weltering waves their oozy channel keep.
+
+ Ring out, ye crystal spheres!
+ Once bless our human ears,
+ If ye have power to touch our senses so;
+ And let your silver chime
+ Move in melodious time,
+ And let the bass of heaven's deep organ blow;
+ And with your ninefold harmony
+ Make up full consort to the angelic symphony.
+
+ For if such holy song
+ Inwrap our fancy long,
+ Time will run back, and fetch the age of gold;
+ And speckled vanity
+ Will sicken soon and die,
+ And leprous sin will melt from earthly mould;
+ And hell itself will pass away.
+ And leave her dolorous mansions to the peering day.
+
+ Yea, truth and justice then
+ Will down return to men,
+ Orbed in a rainbow; and, like glories wearing,
+ Mercy will sit between,
+ Throned in celestial sheen,
+ With radiant feet the tissued clouds down steering;
+ And heaven, as at some festival,
+ Will open wide the gates of her high palace hall.
+
+ But wisest fate says No--
+ This must not yet be so;
+ The babe yet lies in smiling infancy
+ That on the bitter cross
+ Must redeem our loss.
+ So both Himself and us to glorify.
+ Yet first to those ye chained in sleep
+ The wakeful trump of doom must thunder through the deep,
+
+ With such a horrid clang
+ As on Mount Sinai rang,
+ While the red fire and smould'ring clouds out-brake;
+ The aged earth, aghast
+ With terror of that blast,
+ Shall from the surface to the centre shake--
+ When, at the world's last session,
+ The dreadful judge in middle air shall spread his throne.
+
+ And then at last our bliss
+ Full and perfect is--
+ But now begins: for from this happy day
+ The old dragon, under ground
+ In straiter limits bound,
+ Not half so far casts his usurpèd sway,
+ And, wroth to see his kingdom fail,
+ Swinges the scaly horror of his folded tail.
+
+ The oracles are dumb:
+ No voice or hideous hum
+ Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving;
+ Apollo from his shrine
+ Can no more divine,
+ With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving;
+ No nightly trance, or breathèd spell,
+ Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the prophetic cell.
+
+ The lonely mountains o'er,
+ And the resounding shore,
+ A voice of weeping heard and loud lament;
+ From haunted spring, and dale
+ Edged with poplar pale,
+ The parting genius is with sighing sent;
+ With flower-inwoven tresses torn
+ The nymphs in twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn.
+
+ In consecrated earth,
+ And on the holy hearth,
+ The lares and lemures moan with midnight plaint;
+ In urns and altars round
+ A drear and dying sound
+ Affrights the flamens at their service quaint;
+ And the chill marble seems to sweat,
+ While each peculiar power forgoes his wonted seat.
+
+ Peor and Baälim
+ Forsake their temples dim,
+ With that twice-battered god of Palestine;
+ And moonèd Ashtaroth,
+ Heaven's queen and mother both.
+ Now sits not girt with tapers' holy shine;
+ The Lybic Hammon shrinks his horn--
+ In vain the Tyrian maids their wounded Thammuz mourn.
+
+ And sullen Moloch fled,
+ Hath left in shadows dread
+ His burning idol all of blackest hue;
+ In vain, with cymbal's ring,
+ They call the grisly king,
+ In dismal dance about the furnace blue;
+ The brutish gods of Nile as fast--
+ Isis and Orus, and the dog Anubis--haste.
+
+ Nor is Osiris seen
+ In Memphian grove or green,
+ Trampling the unshowered grass with lowings loud,
+ Nor can he be at rest
+ Within his sacred chest--
+ Naught but profoundest hell can be his shroud;
+ In vain, with timbrelled anthems dark.
+ The sable-stoled sorcerers bear his worshipped ark.
+
+ He feels from Juda's land
+ The dreaded infant's hand--
+ The rays of Bethlehem blind his dusky eyne;
+ Nor all the gods beside
+ Longer dare abide--
+ Not Typhon huge, ending in snaky twine;
+ Our babe, to show His God-head true,
+ Can in His swaddling-bands control the damnèd crew.
+
+ So, when the sun in bed,
+ Curtained with cloudy red,
+ Pillows his chin upon an orient wave,
+ The flocking shadows pale
+ Troop to the infernal jail--
+ Each fettered ghost slips to his several grave;
+ And the yellow-skirted fays
+ Fly after the night-steeds, leaving their moon-loved maze.
+
+ But see the virgin blest
+ Hath laid her babe to rest--
+ Time is our tedious song should here have ending;
+ Heaven's youngest teemèd star
+ Hath fixed her polished car,
+ Her sleeping Lord with handmaid lamp attending;
+ And all about the courtly stable
+ Bright-harnessed angels sit in order serviceable.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CHRISTMAS HYMN.
+
+
+ It was the calm and silent night!
+ Seven hundred years and fifty-three
+ Had Rome been growing up to might,
+ And now was queen of land and sea.
+ No sound was heard of clashing wars;
+ Peace brooded o'er the hushed domain:
+ Apollo, Pallas, Jove, and Mars
+ Held undisturbed their ancient reign,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago.
+
+ 'Twas in the calm and silent night!
+ The senator of haughty Rome,
+ Impatient, urged his chariot's flight,
+ From lordly revel rolling home;
+ Triumphal arches, gleaming, swell
+ His breast with thoughts of boundless sway;
+ What recked the Roman what befell
+ A paltry province far away,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago?
+
+ Within that province far away
+ Went plodding home a weary boor;
+ A streak of light before him lay,
+ Fallen through a half-shut stable-door
+ Across his path. He passed--for naught
+ Told what was going on within;
+ How keen the stars, his only thought;
+ The air how calm and cold and thin,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ Oh, strange indifference! low and high
+ Drowsed over common joys and cares;
+ The earth was still--but knew not why;
+ The world was listening, unawares.
+ How calm a moment may precede
+ One that shall thrill the world forever!
+ To that still moment none would heed,
+ Man's doom was linked no more to sever--
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ It is the calm and solemn night!
+ A thousand bells ring out, and throw
+ Their joyous peals abroad, and smite
+ The darkness--charmed and holy now!
+ The night that erst no name had worn,
+ To it a happy name is given;
+ For in that stable lay new-born,
+ The peaceful Prince of Earth and Heaven,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ALFRED DOMETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TRYSTE NOËL.
+
+
+ The Ox he openeth wide the Doore
+ And from the Snowe he calls her inne,
+ And he hath seen her smile therefore,
+ Our Ladye without Sinne.
+ Now soone from Sleepe
+ A Starre shall leap,
+ And soone arrive both King and Hinde;
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ But oh, the place co'd I but finde!
+
+ The Ox hath husht his voyce and bent
+ Trewe eyes of Pitty ore the Mow,
+ And on his lovelie Neck, forspent,
+ The Blessed lays her Browe.
+ Around her feet
+ Full Warme and Sweete
+ His bowerie Breath doth meeklie dwell;
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ But sore am I with Vaine Travèl!
+
+ The Ox is host in Juda's stall,
+ And Host of more than onelie one.
+ For close she gathereth withal
+ Our Lorde her littel Sonne.
+ Glad Hinde and King
+ Their Gyfte may bring,
+ But wo'd to-night my Teares were there,
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ Between her Bosom and His hayre!
+
+LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT.
+
+ A BALLAD.
+
+
+ There's a legend that's told of a gypsy who dwelt
+ In the lands where the pyramids be;
+ And her robe was embroidered with stars, and her belt
+ With devices right wondrous to see;
+ And she lived in the days when our Lord was a child
+ On his mother's immaculate breast;
+ When he fled from his foes,--when to Egypt exiled,
+ He went down with Saint Joseph the blest.
+
+ This Egyptian held converse with magic, methinks,
+ And the future was given to her gaze;
+ For an obelisk marked her abode, and a sphinx
+ On her threshold kept vigil always.
+ She was pensive and ever alone, nor was seen
+ In the haunts of the dissolute crowd;
+ But communed with the ghosts of the Pharaohs, I ween,
+ Or with visitors wrapped in a shroud.
+
+ And there came an old man from the desert one day,
+ With a maid on a mule by that road;
+ And a child on her bosom reclined, and the way
+ Let them straight to the gypsy's abode;
+ And they seemed to have travelled a wearisome path,
+ From thence many, many a league,--
+ From a tyrant's pursuit, from an enemy's wrath,
+ Spent with toil and o'ercome with fatigue.
+
+ And the gypsy came forth from her dwelling, and prayed
+ That the pilgrims would rest them awhile;
+ And she offered her couch to that delicate maid,
+ Who had come many, many a mile.
+ And she fondled the babe with affection's caress,
+ And she begged the old man would repose;
+ "Here the stranger," she said, "ever finds free access,
+ And the wanderer balm for his woes."
+
+ Then her guests from the glare of the noonday she led
+ To a seat in her grotto so cool;
+ Where she spread them a banquet of fruits, and a shed,
+ With a manger, was found for the mule;
+ With the wine of the palm-tree, with dates newly culled,
+ All the toil of the day she beguiled;
+ And with song in a language mysterious she lulled
+ On her bosom the wayfaring child.
+
+ When the gypsy anon in her Ethiop hand
+ Took the infant's diminutive palm,
+ O, 'twas fearful to see how the features she scanned
+ Of the babe in his slumbers so calm!
+ Well she noted each mark and each furrow that crossed
+ O'er the tracings of destiny's line:
+ "WHENCE CAME YE?" she cried, in astonishment lost,
+ "FOR THIS CHILD IS OF LINEAGE DIVINE!"
+
+ "From the village of Nazareth," Joseph replied,
+ "Where we dwelt in the land of the Jew,
+ We have fled from a tyrant whose garment is dyed
+ In the gore of the children he slew:
+ We were told to remain till an angel's command
+ Should appoint us the hour to return;
+ But till then we inhabit the foreigners' land,
+ And in Egypt we make our sojourn."
+
+ "Then ye tarry with me," cried the gypsy in joy,
+ "And ye make of my dwelling your home;
+ Many years have I prayed that the Israelite boy
+ (Blessèd hope of the Gentiles!) would come."
+ And she kissed both the feet of the infant and knelt,
+ And adored him at once; then a smile
+ Lit the face of his mother, who cheerfully dwelt
+ With her host on the bank of the Nile.
+
+FRANCIS MAHONY (_Father Prout_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CANA.
+
+
+ Dear Friend! whose presence in the house,
+ Whose gracious word benign,
+ Could once, at Cana's wedding feast,
+ Change water into wine;
+
+ Come, visit us! and when dull work
+ Grows weary, line on line,
+ Revive our souls, and let us see
+ Life's water turned to wine.
+
+ Gay mirth shall deepen into joy,
+ Earth's hopes grow half divine,
+ When Jesus visits us, to make
+ Life's water glow as wine.
+
+ The social talk, the evening fire,
+ The homely household shrine,
+ Grow bright with angel visits, when
+ The Lord pours out the wine.
+
+ For when self-seeking turns to love,
+ Not knowing mine nor thine,
+ The miracle again is wrought,
+ And water turned to wine.
+JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOST SHEEP.
+
+ ("THE NINETY AND NINE.")
+
+
+ There were ninety and nine that safely lay
+ In the shelter of the fold;
+ But one was out on the hills away,
+ Far off from the gates of gold,
+ Away on the mountain wild and bare,
+ Away from the tender Shepherd's care.
+
+ "Lord, thou hast here thy ninety and nine:
+ Are they not enough for thee?"
+ But the Shepherd made answer: "'T is of mine
+ Has wandered away from me;
+ And although the road be rough and steep
+ I go to the desert to find my sheep."
+
+ But none of the ransomed ever knew
+ How deep were the waters crossed,
+ Nor how dark was the night that the Lord passed through
+ Ere he found his sheep that was lost.
+ Out in the desert he heard its cry--
+ Sick and helpless, and ready to die.
+
+ "Lord, whence are those blood-drops all the way,
+ That mark out the mountain track?"
+ "They were shed for one who had gone astray
+ Ere the Shepherd could bring him back."
+ "Lord, whence are thy hands so rent and torn?"
+ "They are piercèd to-night by many a thorn."
+
+ But all through the mountains, thunder-riven,
+ And up from the rocky steep,
+ There rose a cry to the gate of heaven,
+ "Rejoice! I have found my sheep!"
+ And the angels echoed around the throne,
+ "Rejoice, for the Lord brings back his own!"
+
+ELIZABETH CECILIA CLEPHANE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DE SHEEPFOL'.
+
+
+ De massa ob de sheepfol',
+ Dat guards de sheepfol' bin,
+ Look out in de gloomerin' meadows,
+ Wha'r de long night rain begin--
+ So he call to de hirelin' shepa'd,
+ "Is my sheep, is dey all come in?"
+ Oh den, says de hirelin' shepa'd:
+ "Dey's some, dey's black and thin,
+ And some, dey's po' ol' wedda's;
+ But de res', dey's all brung in.
+ But de res', dey's all brung in."
+
+ Den de massa ob de sheepfol',
+ Dat guards de sheepfol' bin,
+ Goes down in the gloomerin' meadows,
+ Wha'r de long night rain begin--
+ So he le' down de ba's ob de sheepfol',
+ Callin' sof', "Come in. Come in."
+ Callin' sof', "Come in. Come in."
+
+ Den up t'ro' de gloomerin' meadows,
+ T'ro' de col' night rain and win',
+ And up t'ro' de gloomerin' rain-paf',
+ Wha'r de sleet fa' pie'cin' thin,
+ De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol',
+ Dey all comes gadderin' in.
+ De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol',
+ Dey all comes gadderin' in.
+
+SARAH PRATT M'LEAN GREENE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GOOD SHEPHERD WITH THE KID.
+
+
+ _He saves the sheep, the goats he doth not save._
+ So rang Tertullian's sentence, on the side
+ Of that unpitying Phrygian Sect which cried:
+ "Him can no fount of fresh forgiveness lave,
+
+ Who sins, once washed by the baptismal wave."--
+ So spake the fierce Tertullian. But she sighed,
+ The infant Church! of love she felt the tide
+ Stream on her from her Lord's yet recent grave.
+
+ And then she smiled; and in the Catacombs,
+ With eye suffused but heart inspired true,
+ On those walls subterranean, where she hid
+
+ Her head in ignominy, death, and tombs,
+ She her good Shepherd's hasty image drew--
+ And on his shoulders, not a lamb, a kid.
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO SAYINGS.
+
+
+ Two sayings of the Holy Scriptures beat
+ Like pulses in the Church's brow and breast;
+ And by them we find rest in our unrest,
+ And heart-deep in salt tears, do yet entreat
+ God's fellowship, as if on heavenly seat.
+ The first is _Jesus wept_, whereon is prest
+ Full many a sobbing face that drops its best
+ And sweetest waters on the record sweet:
+ And one is, where the Christ denied and scorned
+ _Looked upon Peter_. Oh, to render plain,
+ By help of having loved a little and mourned,
+ That look of sovran love and sovran pain
+ Which he who could not sin yet suffered, turned
+ On him who could reject but not sustain!
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BALLAD OF TREES AND THE MASTER.
+
+
+ Into the woods my Master went,
+ Clean forspent, forspent.
+ Into the woods my Master came,
+ Forspent with love and shame.
+ But the olives they were not blind to Him;
+ The little gray leaves were kind to Him;
+ The thorn-tree had a mind to Him
+ When into the woods He came.
+
+ Out of the woods my Master went,
+ And He was well content.
+ Out of the woods my Master came,
+ Content with death and shame.
+ When Death and Shame would woo Him last,
+ From under the trees they drew Him last:
+ 'Twas on a tree they slew Him--last,
+ When out of the woods He came.
+
+SIDNEY LANIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STABAT MATER DOLOROSA.
+
+
+ Stood the afflicted mother weeping,
+ Near the cross her station keeping
+ Whereon hung her Son and Lord;
+ Through whose spirit sympathizing,
+ Sorrowing and agonizing,
+ Also passed the cruel sword.
+
+ Oh! how mournful and distressèd
+ Was that favored and most blessèd
+ Mother of the only Son,
+ Trembling, grieving, bosom heaving,
+ While perceiving, scarce believing,
+ Pains of that Illustrious One!
+
+ Who the man, who, called a brother.
+ Would not weep, saw he Christ's mother
+ In such deep distress and wild?
+ Who could not sad tribute render
+ Witnessing that mother tender
+ Agonizing with her child?
+
+ For his people's sins atoning,
+ Him she saw in torments groaning,
+ Given to the scourger's rod;
+ Saw her darling offspring dying,
+ Desolate, forsaken, crying.
+ Yield his spirit up to God.
+
+ Make me feel thy sorrow's power,
+ That with thee I tears may shower,
+ Tender mother, fount of love!
+ Make my heart with love unceasing
+ Burn toward Christ the Lord, that pleasing
+ I may be to him above.
+
+ Holy mother, this be granted,
+ That the slain one's wounds be planted
+ Firmly in my heart to bide.
+ Of him wounded, all astounded--
+ Depths unbounded for me sounded--
+ All the pangs with me divide.
+
+ Make me weep with thee in union;
+ With the Crucified, communion
+ In his grief and suffering give;
+ Near the cross, with tears unfailing,
+ I would join thee in thy wailing
+ Here as long as I shall live.
+
+ Maid of maidens, all excelling!
+ Be not bitter, me repelling;
+ Make thou me a mourner too;
+ Make me bear about Christ's dying,
+ Share his passion, shame defying;
+ All his wounds in me renew.
+
+ Wound for wound be there created;
+ With the cross intoxicated
+ For thy Son's dear sake, I pray--
+ May I, fired with pure affection,
+ Virgin, have through thee protection
+ In the solemn Judgment Day.
+
+ Let me by the cross be warded,
+ By the death of Christ be guarded,
+ Nourished by divine supplies.
+ When the body death hath riven,
+ Grant that to the soul be given
+ Glories bright of Paradise.
+
+From the Latin of FRA JACOPONE.
+
+Translation of ABRAHAM COLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MYRRH-BEARERS.[A]
+
+
+ Three women crept at break of day
+ A-grope along the shadowy way
+ Where Joseph's tomb and garden lay.
+
+ With blanch of woe each face was white,
+ As the gray Orient's waxing light
+ Brought back upon their awe-struck sight
+
+ The sixth-day scene of anguish. Fast
+ The starkly standing cross they passed,
+ And, breathless, neared the gate at last.
+
+ Each on her throbbing bosom bore
+ A burden of such fragrant store
+ As never there had lain before.
+
+ Spices, the purest, richest, best,
+ That e'er the musky East possessed,
+ From Ind to Araby-the-Blest,
+
+ Had they with sorrow-riven hearts
+ Searched all Jerusalem's costliest marts
+ In quest of,--nards whose pungent arts
+
+ Should the dead sepulchre imbue
+ With vital odors through and through:
+ 'T was all their love had leave to do!
+
+ Christ did not need their gifts; and yet
+ Did either Mary once regret
+ Her offering? Did Salome fret
+
+ Over the unused aloes? Nay!
+ They counted not as waste, that day,
+ What they had brought their Lord. The way
+
+ Home seemed the path to heaven. They bare,
+ Thenceforth, about the robes they ware
+ The clinging perfume everywhere.
+
+ So, ministering as erst did these,
+ Go women forth by twos and threes
+ (Unmindful of their morning ease),
+
+ Through tragic darkness, murk and dim,
+ Where'er they see the faintest rim,
+ Of promise,--all for sake of him
+
+ Who rose from Joseph's tomb. They hold
+ It just such joy as those of old,
+ To tell the tale the Marys told.
+
+ Myrrh-bearers still,--at home, abroad,
+ What paths have holy women trod,
+ Burdened with votive gifts for God,--
+
+ Rare gifts whose chiefest worth was priced
+ By this one thought, that all sufficed:
+ Their spices had been bruised for Christ!
+
+MARGARET JUNKIN PRESTON.
+
+[Footnote A: _Myrophores_, a name given to the Marys, in Greek
+Christian art.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LITANY.
+
+
+ Saviour, when in dust to Thee
+ Low we bend the adoring knee;
+ When, repentant, to the skies
+ Scarce we lift our weeping eyes,--
+ O, by all Thy pains and woe
+ Suffered once for man below,
+ Bending from Thy throne on high,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thy helpless infant years;
+ By Thy life of want and tears;
+ By Thy days of sore distress
+ In the savage wilderness;
+ By the dread mysterious hour
+ Of the insulting tempter's power,--
+ Turn, O, turn a favoring eye,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By the sacred griefs that wept
+ O'er the grave where Lazarus slept;
+ By the boding tears that flowed
+ Over Salem's loved abode;
+ By the anguished sigh that told
+ Treachery lurked within Thy fold,--
+ From Thy seat above the sky
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thine hour of dire despair;
+ By Thine agony of prayer;
+ By the cross, the nail, the thorn,
+ Piercing spear, and torturing scorn;
+ By the gloom that veiled the skies
+ O'er the dreadful sacrifice,--
+ Listen to our humble cry,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thy deep expiring groan;
+ By the sad sepulchral stone;
+ By the vault whose dark abode
+ Held in vain the rising God;
+ O, from earth to heaven restored,
+ Mighty, reascended Lord,--
+ Listen, listen to the cry
+ Of our solemn litany!
+
+SIR ROBERT GRANT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHRIST.
+
+
+ He might have reared a palace at a word,
+ Who sometimes had not where to lay His head.
+ Time was when He who nourished crowds with bread,
+ Would not one meal unto Himself afford.
+ He healed another's scratch, His own side bled;
+ Side, hands and feet with cruel piercings gored.
+ Twelve legions girded with angelic sword
+ Stood at His beck, the scorned and buffeted.
+ Oh, wonderful the wonders left undone!
+ Yet not more wonderful than those He wrought!
+ Oh, self-restraint, surpassing human thought!
+ To have all power, yet be as having none!
+ Oh, self-denying love, that thought alone
+ For needs of others, never for its own!
+
+RICHARD CHENEVIX TRENCH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ABIDE WITH ME.
+
+
+ Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide;
+ The darkness deepens: Lord, with me abide!
+ When other helpers fail, and comforts flee,
+ Help of the helpless, O abide with me!
+
+ Swift to its close ebbs out life's little day;
+ Earth's joys grow dim; its glories pass away:
+ Change and decay in all around I see;
+ O thou, who changest not, abide with me!
+
+ Not a brief glance I beg, a passing word.
+ But as thou dwelt with thy disciples, Lord,
+ Familiar, condescending, patient, free,--
+ Come, not to sojourn, but abide, with me!
+
+ Come not in terrors, as the King of kings;
+ But kind and good, with healing in thy wings:
+ Tears for all woes, a heart for every plea;
+ Come, Friend of sinners, and thus bide with me!
+
+ Thou on my head in early youth didst smile,
+ And, though rebellious and perverse meanwhile,
+ Thou hast not left me, oft as I left thee:
+ On to the close, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+ I need thy presence every passing hour.
+ What but thy grace can foil the Tempter's power?
+ Who like thyself my guide and stay can be?
+ Through cloud and sunshine, O abide with me!
+
+ I fear no foe with thee at hand to bless:
+ Ills have no weight, and tears no bitterness.
+ Where is death's sting, where, grave, thy victory?
+ I triumph still, if thou abide with me.
+
+ Hold thou thy cross before my closing eyes;
+ Shine through the gloom, and point me to the skies:
+ Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows flee:
+ In life and death, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+HENRY FRANCIS LYTE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DISCIPLES AFTER THE ASCENSION.
+
+
+ He is gone! beyond the skies,
+ A cloud receives him from our eyes:
+ Gone beyond the highest height
+ Of mortal gaze or angel's flight:
+ Through the veils of time and space,
+ Passed into the holiest place:
+ All the toil, the sorrow done,
+ All the battle fought and won.
+
+ He is gone; and we return,
+ And our hearts within us burn;
+ Olivet no more shall greet
+ With welcome shout his coming feet:
+ Never shall we track him more
+ On Gennesareth's glistening shore:
+ Never in that look or voice
+ Shall Zion's walls again rejoice.
+
+ He is gone; and we remain
+ In this world of sin and pain:
+ In the void which he has left,
+ On this earth of him bereft,
+ We have still his work to do,
+ We can still his path pursue:
+ Seek him both in friend and foe,
+ In ourselves his image show.
+
+ He is gone; we heard him say,
+ "Good that I should go away";
+ Gone is that dear form and face,
+ But not gone his present grace;
+ Though himself no more we see,
+ Comfortless we cannot be;
+ No! his Spirit still is ours,
+ Quickening, freshening all our powers.
+
+ He is gone; towards their goal
+ World and church must onward roll;
+ Far behind we leave the past,
+ Forward are our glances cast;
+ Still his words before us range
+ Through the ages, as they change:
+ Wheresoe'er the truth shall lead,
+ He will give whate'er we need.
+
+ He is gone; but we once more
+ Shall behold him as before,
+ In the heaven of heavens the same
+ As on earth he went and came.
+ In the many mansions there
+ Place for us he will prepare:
+ In that world, unseen, unknown,
+ He and we may yet be one.
+
+ He is gone; but not in vain,--
+ Wait until he comes again:
+ He is risen, he is not here;
+ Far above this earthly sphere:
+ Evermore in heart and mind,
+ Where our peace in him we find,
+ To our own eternal Friend,
+ Thitherward let us ascend.
+
+ARTHUR PENRHYN STANLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WRESTLING JACOB.
+
+
+ FIRST PART.
+
+ Come, O thou Traveller unknown,
+ Whom still I hold, but cannot see;
+ My company before is gone,
+ And I am left alone with thee;
+ With thee all night I mean to stay,
+ And wrestle till the break of day.
+
+ I need not tell thee who I am;
+ My sin and misery declare;
+ Thyself hast called me by my name;
+ Look on thy hands, and read it there;
+ But who, I ask thee, who art thou?
+ Tell me thy name, and tell me now.
+
+ In vain thou strugglest to get free;
+ I never will unloose my hold:
+ Art thou the Man that died for me?
+ The secret of thy love unfold;
+ Wrestling, I will not let thee go
+ Till I thy name, thy nature know.
+
+ Wilt thou not yet to me reveal
+ Thy new, unutterable name?
+ Tell me, I still beseech thee, tell;
+ To know it now resolved I am;
+ Wrestling, I will not let thee go
+ Till I thy name, thy nature know.
+
+ What though my shrinking flesh complain
+ And murmur to contend so long?
+ I rise superior to my pain;
+ When I am weak, then am I strong!
+ And when my all of strength shall fail,
+ I shall with the God-man prevail.
+
+
+ SECOND PART.
+
+ Yield to me now, for I am weak,
+ But confident in self-despair;
+ Speak to my heart, in blessings speak;
+ Be conquered by my instant prayer;
+ Speak, or thou never hence shalt move,
+ And tell me if thy name be Love.
+
+ 'T is Love! 't is Love! Thou diedst for me;
+ I hear thy whisper in my heart;
+ The morning breaks, the shadows flee;
+ Pure, universal Love thou art;
+ To me, to all, thy bowels move;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ My prayer hath power with God; the grace
+ Unspeakable I now receive;
+ Through faith I see thee face to face;
+ I see thee face to face and live!
+ In vain I have not wept and strove;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ I know thee, Saviour, who thou art,
+ Jesus, the feeble sinner's friend;
+ Nor wilt thou with the night depart,
+ But stay and love me to the end;
+ Thy mercies never shall remove;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ The Sun of Righteousness on me
+ Hath risen, with healing in his wings;
+ Withered my nature's strength; from thee
+ My soul its life and succor brings;
+ My help is all laid up above;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ Contented now upon my thigh
+ I halt till life's short journey end;
+ All helplessness, all weakness, I
+ On thee alone for strength depend;
+ Nor have I power from thee to move;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ Lame as I am, I take the prey;
+ Hell, earth, and sin with ease o'ercome;
+ I leap for joy, pursue my way,
+ And, as a bounding hart, fly home;
+ Through all eternity to prove
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+CHARLES WESLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CONVERSION OF SAINT PAUL.
+
+
+ The midday sun, with fiercest glare,
+ Broods over the hazy, twinkling air;
+ Along the level sand
+ The palm-tree's shade unwavering lies,
+ Just as thy towers, Damascus, rise
+ To greet yon wearied band.
+
+ The leader of that martial crew
+ Seems bent some mighty deed to do,
+ So steadily he speeds,
+ With lips firm closed and fixed eye,
+ Like warrior when the fight is nigh,
+ Nor talk nor landscape heeds.
+
+ What sudden blaze is round him poured,
+ As though all Heaven's refulgent hoard
+ In one rich glory shone?
+ One moment,--and to earth he falls:
+ What voice his inmost heart appalls?--
+ Voice heard by him alone.
+
+ For to the rest both words and form
+ Seem lost in lightning and in storm,
+ While Saul, in wakeful trance,
+ Sees deep within that dazzling field
+ His persecuted Lord revealed
+ With keen yet pitying glance:
+
+ And hears the meek upbraiding call
+ As gently on his spirit fall,
+ As if the Almighty Son
+ Were prisoner yet in this dark earth,
+ Nor had proclaimed his royal birth,
+ Nor his great power begun.
+
+ "Ah! wherefore persecut'st thou me?"
+ He heard and saw, and sought to free
+ His strained eye from the sight:
+ But Heaven's high magic bound it there,
+ Still gazing, though untaught to bear
+ The insufferable light.
+
+ "Who art thou, Lord?" he falters forth:--
+ So shall Sin ask of heaven and earth
+ At the last awful day
+ "When did we see thee suffering nigh,
+ And passed thee with unheeding eye?
+ Great God of judgment, say!"
+
+ Ah! little dream our listless eyes
+ What glorious presence they despise
+ While, in our noon of life,
+ To power or fame we rudely press.--
+ Christ is at hand, to scorn or bless,
+ Christ suffers in our strife.
+
+ And though heaven's gates long since have closed,
+ And our dear Lord in bliss reposed,
+ High above mortal ken,
+ To every ear in every land
+ (Though meek ears only understand)
+ He speaks as he did then.
+
+ "Ah! wherefore persecute ye me?
+ 'T is hard, ye so in love should be
+ With your own endless woe.
+ Know, though at God's right hand I live,
+ I feel each wound ye reckless give
+ To the least saint below.
+
+ "I in your care my brethren left,
+ Not willing ye should be bereft
+ Of waiting on your Lord.
+ The meanest offering ye can make--
+ A drop of water--for love's sake,
+ In heaven, be sure, is stored."
+
+ Oh, by those gentle tones and dear,
+ When thou hast stayed our wild career,
+ Thou only hope of souls,
+ Ne'er let us cast one look behind,
+ But in the thought of Jesus find
+ What every thought controls.
+
+ As to thy last Apostle's heart
+ Thy lightning glance did then impart
+ Zeal's never-dying fire,
+ So teach us on thy shrine to lay
+ Our hearts, and let them day by day
+ Intenser blaze and higher.
+
+ And as each mild and winning note
+ (Like pulses that round harp-strings float
+ When the full strain is o'er)
+ Left lingering on his inward ear
+ Music, that taught, as death drew near,
+ Love's lesson more and more:
+
+ So, as we walk our earthly round,
+ Still may the echo of that sound
+ Be in our memory stored:
+ "Christians, behold your happy state;
+ Christ is in these who round you wait;
+ Make much of your dear Lord!"
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ROCK OF AGES."
+
+ "Such hymns are never forgotten. They cling to us through our
+ whole life. We carry them with us upon our journey. We sing
+ them in the forest. The workman follows the plough with sacred
+ songs. Children catch them, and singing only for the joy it
+ gives them now, are yet laying up for all their life food of
+ the sweetest joy."--HENRY WARD BEECHER.
+
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ Thoughtlessly the maiden sung.
+ Fell the words unconsciously
+ From her girlish, gleeful tongue;
+ Sang as little children sing;
+ Sang as sing the birds in June;
+ Fell the words like light leaves down
+ On the current of the tune,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee:"
+ Felt her soul no need to hide,--
+ Sweet the song as song could be,
+ And she had no thought beside;
+ All the words unheedingly
+ Fell from lips untouched by care,
+ Dreaming not that they might be
+ On some other lips a prayer,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ 'T was a woman sung them now,
+ Pleadingly and prayerfully;
+ Every word her heart did know.
+ Rose the song as storm-tossed bird
+ Beats with weary wing the air,
+ Every note with sorrow stirred,
+ Every syllable a prayer,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"--
+ Lips grown agèd sung the hymn
+ Trustingly and tenderly,
+ Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim,--
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee."
+ Trembling though the voice and low,
+ Rose the sweet strain peacefully
+ Like a river in its flow;
+ Sung as only they can sing
+ Who life's thorny path have passed;
+ Sung as only they can sing
+ Who behold the promised rest,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ Sung above a coffin lid;
+ Underneath, all restfully,
+ All life's joys and sorrows hid.
+ Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul!
+ Nevermore from wind or tide,
+ Nevermore from billow's roll,
+ Wilt thou need thyself to hide.
+ Could the sightless, sunken eyes,
+ Closed beneath the soft gray hair,
+ Could the mute and stiffened lips
+ Move again in pleading prayer,
+ Still, aye still, the words would be,--
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+EDWARD H. RICH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ART THOU WEARY?
+
+
+ Art thou weary, art thou languid,
+ Art thou sore distressed?
+ "Come to Me," saith One, "and coming,
+ Be at rest."
+
+ Hath He marks to lead me to Him,
+ If He be my Guide?
+ "In His feet and hands are wound-prints,
+ And His side."
+
+ Is there diadem, as Monarch,
+ That His brow adorns?
+ "Yea, a crown, in very surety,
+ But of thorns."
+
+ If I find Him, if I follow,
+ What His guerdon here?
+ "Many a sorrow, many a labor,
+ Many a tear."
+
+ If I still hold closely to Him,
+ What hath He at last?
+ "Sorrow vanquished, labor ended,
+ Jordan passed."
+
+ If I ask Him to receive me,
+ Will He say me nay?
+ "Not till earth, and not till heaven
+ Pass away."
+
+ Finding, following, keeping, struggling,
+ Is He sure to bless?
+ "Saints, apostles, prophets, martyrs,
+ Answer, Yes."
+
+From the Latin of SAINT STEPHEN THE SABAITE.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW.
+
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view,
+ And days are dark, and friends are few,
+ On Him I lean, who, not in vain,
+ Experienced every human pain;
+ He sees my wants, allays my fears.
+ And counts and treasures up my tears.
+ If aught should tempt my soul to stray
+ From heavenly wisdom's narrow way,
+ To fly the good I would pursue,
+ Or do the sin I would not do,--
+ Still He who felt temptation's power
+ Shall guard me in that dangerous hour.
+
+ If wounded love my bosom swell,
+ Deceived by those I prized too well,
+ He shall His pitying aid bestow
+ Who felt on earth severer woe,
+ At once betrayed, denied, or fled,
+ By those who shared His daily bread.
+
+ If vexing thoughts within me rise,
+ And sore dismayed my spirit dies,
+ Still He who once vouchsafed to bear
+ The sickening anguish of despair
+ Shall sweetly soothe, shall gently dry,
+ The throbbing heart, the streaming eye.
+
+ When sorrowing o'er some stone I bend,
+ Which covers what was once a friend,
+ And from his voice, his hand, his smile,
+ Divides me for a little while;
+ Thou, Saviour, mark'st the tears I shed,
+ For Thou didst weep o'er Lazarus dead.
+
+ And oh, when I have safely past
+ Through every conflict but the last,
+ Still, still unchanging, watch beside
+ My painful bed, for Thou hast died;
+ Then point to realms of cloudless day,
+ And wipe the latest tear away.
+
+SIR ROBERT GRANT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM.
+
+
+ When, marshalled on the nightly plain,
+ The glittering host bestud the sky,
+ One star alone, of all the train,
+ Can fix the sinner's wandering eye.
+
+ Hark! hark! to God the chorus breaks,
+ From every host, from every gem:
+ But one alone the Saviour speaks,
+ It is the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ Once on the raging seas I rode,
+ The storm was loud, the night was dark,
+ The ocean yawned, and rudely blowed
+ The wind that tossed my foundering bark.
+
+ Deep horror then my vitals froze,
+ Death-struck, I ceased the tide to stem;
+ When suddenly a star arose,--
+ It was the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ It was my guide, my light, my all,
+ It bade my dark forebodings cease;
+ And through the storm and dangers' thrall
+ It led me to the port of peace.
+
+ Now safely moored, my perils o'er,
+ I'll sing, first in night's diadem,
+ Forever and forevermore,
+ The Star!--the Star of Bethlehem!
+
+HENRY KIRKE WHITE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE TO CHRIST.
+
+ FROM "AN HYMNE OF HEAVENLY LOVE."
+
+
+ With all thy hart, with all thy soule and mind,
+ Thou must him love, and his beheasts embrace;
+ All other loves, with which the world doth blind
+ Weake fancies, and stirre up affections base,
+ Thou must renounce and utterly displace,
+ And give thy selfe unto him full and free,
+ That full and freely gave himselfe to thee.
+
+ Then shalt thou feele thy spirit so possest,
+ And ravisht with devouring great desire
+ Of his deare selfe, that shall thy feeble brest
+ Inflame with love, and set thee all on fire
+ With burning zeale, through every part entire,
+ That in no earthly thing thou shalt delight,
+ But in his sweet and amiable sight.
+
+ Thenceforth all worlds desire will in thee dye,
+ And all earthes glorie, on which men do gaze,
+ Seeme durt and drosse in thy pure-sighted eye,
+ Compared to that celestiall beauties blaze,
+ Whose glorious beames all fleshly sense doth daze
+ With admiration of their passing light,
+ Blinding the eyes, and lumining the spright.
+
+ Then shall thy ravisht soule inspired bee
+ With heavenly thoughts farre above humane skil,
+ And thy bright radiant eyes shall plainely see
+ The idee of his pure glorie present still
+ Before thy face, that all thy spirits shall fill
+ With sweet enragement of celestiall love,
+ Kindled through sight of those faire things above.
+
+EDMUND SPENSER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE.
+
+
+ O thou great Friend to all the sons of men,
+ Who once appeared in humblest guise below,
+ Sin to rebuke, to break the captive's chain,
+ And call thy brethren forth from want and woe,--
+
+ We look to thee! thy truth is still the Light
+ Which guides the nations, groping on their way,
+ Stumbling and falling in disastrous night,
+ Yet hoping ever for the perfect day.
+
+ Yes; thou art still the Life, thou art the Way
+ The holiest know; Light, Life, the Way of heaven!
+
+ And they who dearest hope and deepest pray,
+ Toil by the Light, Life, Way, which thou hast given.
+
+THEODORE PARKER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+KNOCKING, EVER KNOCKING.
+
+ "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock."
+ --REVELATIONS iii. 20.
+
+
+ Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ Who is there?
+ 'T is a pilgrim, strange and kingly,
+ Never such was seen before;--
+ Ah, sweet soul, for such a wonder,
+ Undo the door.
+ No,--that door is hard to open;
+ Hinges rusty, latch is broken;
+ Bid Him go.
+ Wherefore with that knocking dreary
+ Scare the sleep from one so weary?
+ Say Him, no.
+
+ Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ What! Still there?
+ O sweet soul, but once behold Him,
+ With the glory-crownèd hair;
+ And those eyes, so strange and tender,
+ Waiting there;
+ Open! Open! Once behold Him,
+ Him so fair.
+
+ Ah, that door! Why wilt thou vex me,
+ Coming ever to perplex me?
+ For the key is stiffly rusty,
+ And the bolt is clogged and dusty;
+ Many-fingered ivy vine
+ Seals it fast with twist and twine;
+ Weeds of years and years before
+ Choke the passage of that door.
+
+ Knocking! knocking! What? Still knocking?
+ He still there?
+ What's the hour? The night is waning--
+ In my heart a drear complaining,
+ And a chilly, sad unrest.
+ Ah, this knocking! It disturbs me!
+ Scares my sleep with dreams unblest!
+ Give me rest,
+ Rest--ah, rest!
+
+ Rest, dear soul, He longs to give thee;
+ Thou hast only dreamed of pleasure,
+ Dreamed of gifts and golden treasure,
+ Dreamed of jewels in thy keeping,
+ Waked to weariness of weeping;--
+ Open to thy soul's one Lover,
+ And thy night of dreams is over,--
+ The true gifts He brings have seeming
+ More than all thy faded dreaming!
+
+ Did she open? Doth she? Will she?
+ So, as wondering we behold,
+ Grows the picture to a sign.
+ Pressed upon your soul and mine;
+ For in every breast that liveth
+ Is that strange, mysterious door;--
+ The forsaken and betangled,
+ Ivy-gnarled and weed-bejangled,
+ Dusty, rusty, and forgotten;--
+ There the piercèd hand still knocketh,
+ And with ever patient watching,
+ With the sad eyes true and tender,
+ With the glory-crownèd hair,--
+ Still a God is waiting there.
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO-MORROW.
+
+
+ Lord, what am I, that, with unceasing care,
+ Thou didst seek after me,--that Thou didst wait,
+ Wet with unhealthy dews, before my gate,
+ And pass the gloomy nights of winter there?
+ O, strange delusion, that I did not greet
+ Thy blest approach! and, O, to heaven how lost,
+ If my ingratitude's unkindly frost
+ Has chilled the bleeding wounds upon Thy feet!
+ How oft my guardian angel gently cried,
+ "Soul, from thy casement look, and thou shalt see
+ How He persists to knock and wait for thee!"
+ And, O, how often to that voice of sorrow,
+ "To-morrow we will open." I replied!
+ And when the morrow came, I answered still, "To-morrow."
+
+From the Spanish of LOPE DE VEGA.
+
+Translation of H.W. LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE.
+
+
+ I gave my life for thee,
+ My precious blood I shed
+ That thou mightst ransomed be,
+ And quickened from the dead.
+ I gave my life for thee;
+ What hast thou given for me?
+
+ I spent long years for thee
+ In weariness and woe,
+ That an eternity
+ Of joy thou mightest know.
+ I spent long years for thee;
+ Hast thou spent one for me?
+
+ My Father's home of light,
+ My rainbow-circled throne,
+ I left, for earthly night,
+ For wanderings sad and lone.
+ I left it all for thee;
+ Hast thou left aught for me?
+
+ I suffered much for thee,
+ More than thy tongue may tell
+ Of bitterest agony,
+ To rescue thee from hell.
+ I suffered much for thee;
+ What canst thou bear for me?
+
+ And I have brought to thee,
+ Down from my home above,
+ Salvation full and free,
+ My pardon and my love.
+ Great gifts I brought to thee;
+ What hast thou brought to me?
+
+ Oh, let thy life be given,
+ Thy years for him be spent,
+ World-fetters all be riven,
+ And joy with suffering blent;
+ I gave myself for thee:
+ Give thou thyself to me!
+
+FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JESUS SHALL REIGN.
+
+
+ Jesus shall reign where'er the sun
+ Does his successive journeys run,--
+ His kingdom spread from shore to shore,
+ Till moons shall wax and wane no more.
+
+ From north to south the princes meet
+ To pay their homage at His feet,
+ While western empires own their Lord,
+ And savage tribes attend His word.
+
+ To Him shall endless prayer be made,
+ And endless praises crown His head;
+ His name like sweet perfume shall rise
+ With every morning sacrifice.
+
+ People and realms of every tongue
+ Dwell on His love with sweetest song,
+ And infant voices shall proclaim
+ Their early blessings on His name.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MESSIAH.
+
+ A SACRED ECLOGUE, IN IMITATION OF VIRGIL'S POLLIO.
+
+
+ Ye nymphs of Solyma! begin the song:
+ To heavenly themes sublimer strains belong.
+ The mossy fountains and the sylvan shades,
+ The dreams of Pindus and th' Aonian maids,
+ Delight no more--O thou my voice inspire
+ Who touched Isaiah's hallowed lips with fire!
+ Rapt into future times, the bard begun:
+ A Virgin shall conceive, a Virgin bear a Son!
+ From Jesse's root behold a branch arise,
+ Whose sacred flower with fragrance fills the skies:
+ Th' ethereal spirit o'er its leaves shall move,
+ And on its top descends the mystic Dove.
+ Ye Heavens! from high the dewy nectar pour,
+ And in soft silence shed the kindly shower!
+ The sick and weak the healing plant shall aid,
+ From storm a shelter, and from heat a shade.
+ All crimes shall cease, and ancient frauds shall fail;
+ Returning Justice lift aloft her scale;
+ Peace o'er the world her olive wand extend,
+ And white-robed Innocence from Heaven descend.
+ Swift fly the years, and rise th' expected morn!
+ Oh spring to light, auspicious Babe, be born!
+ See, Nature hastes her earliest wreaths to bring,
+ With all the incense of the breathing spring:
+ See lofty Lebanon his head advance,
+ See nodding forests on the mountains dance:
+ See spicy clouds from lowly Saron rise,
+ And Carmel's flowery top perfumes the skies!
+ Hark! a glad voice the lonely desert cheers:
+ Prepare the way! a God, a God appears!
+ A God, a God! the vocal hills reply,
+ The rocks proclaim th' approaching Deity.
+ Lo, Earth receives him from the bending skies!
+ Sink down, ye mountains! and ye valleys, rise!
+ With heads declined, ye cedars, homage pay!
+ Be smooth, ye rocks! ye rapid floods, give way!
+ The Saviour comes! by ancient bards foretold:
+ Hear him, ye deaf! and all ye blind, behold!
+ He from thick films shall purge the visual ray,
+ And on the sightless eyeball pour the day:
+ 'Tis he th' obstructed paths of sound shall clear
+ And bid new music charm th' unfolding ear:
+ The dumb shall sing, the lame his crutch forego,
+ And leap exulting like the bounding roe.
+ No sigh, no murmur, the wide world shall hear.
+ From every face he wipes off every tear.
+ In adamantine chains shall Death be bound.
+ And Hell's grim tyrant feel th' eternal wound.
+ As the good shepherd tends his fleecy care,
+ Seeks freshest pasture, and the purest air,
+ Explores the lost, the wandering sheep directs,
+ By day o'ersees them, and by night protects;
+ The tender lambs he raises in his arms,
+ Feeds from his hand, and in his bosom warms:
+ Thus shall mankind his guardian care engage,
+ The promised Father of the future age.
+ No more shall nation against nation rise,
+ Nor ardent warriors meet with hateful eyes,
+ Nor fields with gleaming steel be covered o'er,
+ The brazen trumpets kindle rage no more;
+ But useless lances into scythes shall bend,
+ And the broad falchion in a ploughshare end.
+ Then palaces shall rise; the joyful son
+ Shall finish what his short-lived sire begun;
+ Their vines a shadow to their race shall yield.
+ And the same hand that sowed, shall reap the field.
+ The swain in barren deserts with surprise
+ Sees lilies spring, and sudden verdure rise;
+ And starts, amidst the thirsty wilds, to hear
+ New falls of water murmuring in his ear.
+ On rifted rocks, the dragon's late abodes,
+ The green reed trembles, and the bulrush nods.
+ Waste sandy valleys, once perplexed with thorn,
+ The spiry fir and shapely box adorn:
+ To leafless shrubs the flowery palms succeed,
+ And odorous myrtle to the noisome weed.
+ The lambs with wolves shall graze the verdant mead
+ And boys in flowery bands the tiger lead:
+ The steer and lion at one crib shall meet,
+ And harmless serpents lick the pilgrim's feet.
+ The smiling infant in his hand shall take
+ The crested basilisk and speckled snake,
+ Pleased, the green lustre of the scales survey,
+ And with their forky tongue shall innocently play.
+ Rise, crowned with light, imperial Salem, rise!
+ Exalt thy towery head, and lift thy eyes!
+ See a long race thy spacious courts adorn:
+ See future sons and daughters yet unborn,
+ In crowding ranks on every side arise,
+ Demanding life, impatient for the skies!
+ See barbarous nations at thy gates attend,
+ Walk in thy light, and in thy temple bend!
+ See thy bright altars thronged with prostrate kings,
+ And heaped with products of Sabean springs!
+ For thee Idumè's spicy forests blow,
+ And seeds of gold in Ophir's mountains glow.
+ See Heaven his sparkling portals wide display,
+ And break upon thee in a flood of day!
+ No more the rising Sun shall gild the morn,
+ Nor evening Cynthia fill her silver horn;
+ But lost, dissolved in thy superior rays,
+ One tide of glory, one unclouded blaze
+ O'erflow thy courts: the Light himself shall shine
+ Revealed, and God's eternal day be thine!
+ The seas shall waste, the skies in smoke decay,
+ Rocks fall to dust, and mountains melt away!
+ But fixed his word, his saving power remains;
+ Thy realm for ever lasts, thy own Messiah reigns!
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIES IRAE.
+
+ "That day, a day of wrath, a day of trouble and distress,
+ a day of wasteness and desolation, a day of darkness and
+ gloominess, a day of clouds and thick darkness, a day of the
+ trumpet and alarm against the fenced cities, and against the
+ high towers!"--ZEPHANIAH i. 15, 16.
+
+
+ Day of vengeance, without morrow!
+ Earth shall end in flame and sorrow,
+ As from Saint and Seer we borrow.
+
+ Ah! what terror is impending,
+ When the Judge is seen descending,
+ And each secret veil is rending!
+
+ To the throne, the trumpet sounding,
+ Through the sepulchres resounding,
+ Summons all, with voice astounding.
+
+ Death and Nature, mazed, are quaking,
+ When, the grave's long slumber breaking,
+ Man to judgment is awaking.
+
+ On the written Volume's pages,
+ Life is shown in all its stages--
+ Judgment-record of past ages.
+
+ Sits the Judge, the raised arraigning,
+ Darkest mysteries explaining,
+ Nothing unavenged remaining.
+
+ What shall I then say, unfriended,
+ By no advocate attended,
+ When the just are scarce defended?
+
+ King of majesty tremendous,
+ By thy saving grace defend us,
+ Fount of pity, safety send us!
+
+ Holy Jesus, meek, forbearing,
+ For my sins the death-crown wearing,
+ Save me, in that day, despairing!
+
+ Worn and weary, thou hast sought me;
+ By thy cross and passion bought me--
+ Spare the hope thy labors brought me!
+
+ Righteous Judge of retribution,
+ Give, O give me absolution
+ Ere the day of dissolution!
+
+ As a guilty culprit groaning,
+ Flushed my face, my errors owning,
+ Hear. O God, Thy suppliant moaning!
+
+ Thou to Mary gav'st remission,
+ Heard'st the dying thief's petition,
+ Bad'st me hope in my contrition.
+
+ In my prayers no worth discerning,
+ Yet on me Thy favor turning,
+ Save me from that endless burning!
+
+ Give me, when Thy sheep confiding
+ Thou art from the goals dividing.
+ On Thy right a place abiding!
+
+ When the wicked are rejected,
+ And by bitter flames subjected,
+ Call me forth with Thine elected!
+
+ Low in supplication bending.
+ Heart as though with ashes blending;
+ Cure for me when all is ending.
+
+ When on that dread day of weeping
+ Guilty man in ashes sleeping
+ Wakes to his adjudication,
+ Save him, God! from condemnation!
+
+From the Latin of THOMAS À CELANO.
+
+Translation of JOHN A. DIX. [A]
+
+[Footnote A: General Dix's first translation of the "Dies Irae" was
+made in 1863; the revised version (given above) appeared in 1875.
+Bayard Taylor wrote of the earlier one: "I have ... heretofore sought
+in vain to find an adequate translation. Those which reproduced the
+spirit neglected the form, and _vice versa_. There can be no higher
+praise for yours than to say that it preserves both."]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY GOD, I LOVE THEE.
+
+
+ My God, I love thee! not because
+ I hope for heaven thereby;
+ Nor because those who love thee not
+ Must burn eternally.
+
+ Thou, O my Jesus, thou didst me
+ Upon the cross embrace!
+ For me didst bear the nails and spear,
+ And manifold disgrace,
+
+ And griefs and torments numberless,
+ And sweat of agony,
+ Yea, death itself,--and all for one
+ That was thine enemy.
+
+ Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ,
+ Should I not love thee well?
+ Not for the hope of winning heaven,
+ Nor of escaping hell;
+
+ Not with the hope of gaining aught,
+ Not seeking a reward;
+ But as thyself hast loved me,
+ O everlasting Lord!
+
+ E'en so I love thee, and will love,
+ And in thy praise will sing,--
+ Solely because thou art my God,
+ And my eternal King.
+
+From the Latin of ST. FRANCIS XAVIER.
+
+Translation of EDWARD CASWALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VENT CREATOR SPIRITUS.
+
+ [Sometimes attributed to the Emperor Charlemagne. The better
+ opinion, however, inclines to Pope Gregory I., called the
+ Great, as the author, and fixes its origin somewhere in the
+ sixth century.]
+
+
+ Creator Spirit, by whose aid
+ The world's foundations first were laid,
+ Come visit every pious mind.
+ Come pour thy joys on human kind;
+ From sin and sorrow set us free,
+ And make thy temples worthy thee.
+
+ O source of uncreated light.
+ The Father's promised Paraclete!
+ Thrice holy fount, thrice holy fire.
+ Our hearts with heavenly love inspire;
+ Come, and thy sacred unction bring,
+ To sanctify us while we sing.
+
+ Plenteous of grace, descend from high,
+ Rich in thy seven-fold energy!
+ Thou strength of his almighty hand.
+ Whose power does heaven and earth command!
+ Proceeding Spirit, our defence,
+ Who dost the gifts of tongues dispense,
+ And crown'st thy gift with eloquence!
+
+ Refine and purge our earthly parts;
+ But, O, inflame and fire our hearts!
+ Our frailties help, our vice control,
+ Submit the senses to the soul;
+ And when rebellious they are grown,
+ Then lay thy hand and hold 'em down.
+
+ Chase from our minds the infernal foe,
+ And peace, the fruit of love, bestow;
+ And, lest our feet should step astray,
+ Protect and guide us on the way.
+
+ Make us eternal truths receive,
+ And practise all that we believe;
+ Give us thyself, that we may see
+ The Father and the Son by thee.
+
+ Immortal honor, endless fame,
+ Attend the Almighty Father's name;
+ The Saviour Son be glorified,
+ Who for lost man's redemption died;
+ And equal adoration be,
+ Eternal Paraclete, to thee.
+
+From the Latin of ST. GREGORY.
+
+Translation of JOHN DRYDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VENI SANCTE SPIRITUS.
+
+ [Written in the tenth century by Robert II., the gentle son
+ of Hugh Capet. It is often mentioned as second in rank to the
+ _Dies Irae_.]
+
+
+ Come, Holy Ghost! thou fire divine!
+ From highest heaven on us down shine!
+ Comforter, be thy comfort mine!
+
+ Come, Father of the poor, to earth;
+ Come, with thy gifts of precious worth;
+ Come Light of all of mortal birth!
+
+ Thou rich in comfort! Ever blest
+ The heart where thou art constant guest,
+ Who giv'st the heavy-laden rest.
+
+ Come, thou in whom our toil is sweet,
+ Our shadow in the noonday heat,
+ Before whom mourning flieth fleet.
+
+ Bright Sun of Grace! thy sunshine dart
+ On all who cry to thee apart,
+ And fill with gladness every heart.
+
+ Whate'er without thy aid is wrought,
+ Or skilful deed, or wisest thought,
+ God counts it vain and merely naught.
+
+ O cleanse us that we sin no more.
+ O'er parched souls thy waters pour;
+ Heal the sad heart that acheth sore.
+
+ Thy will be ours in all our ways;
+ O melt the frozen with thy rays;
+ Call home the lost in error's maze.
+
+ And grant us, Lord, who cry to thee,
+ And hold the Faith in unity,
+ Thy precious gifts of charity;
+
+ That we may live in holiness,
+ And find in death our happiness,
+ And dwell with thee in lasting bliss!
+
+From the Latin of KING ROBERT II. OF FRANCE.
+
+Translation of CATHARINE WINKWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O FIRE OF GOD, THE COMFORTER.
+
+ "O IGNIS SPIRITUS PARACLITI."
+
+
+ O fire of God, the Comforter, O life of all that live,
+ Holy art thou to quicken us, and holy, strength to give:
+ To heal the broken-hearted ones, their sorest wounds to bind,
+ O Spirit of all holiness, O Lover of mankind!
+ O sweetest taste within the breast, O grace upon us poured,
+ That saintly hearts may give again their perfume to the Lord.
+ O purest fountain! we can see, clear mirrored in thy streams,
+ That God brings home the wanderers, that God the lost redeems.
+ O breastplate strong to guard our life, O bond of unity,
+ O dwelling-place of righteousness, save all who trust in thee:
+ Defend those who in dungeon dark are prisoned by the foe,
+ And, for thy will is aye to save, let thou the captives go.
+ O surest way, that through the height and through the lowest deep
+ And through the earth dost pass, and all in firmest union keep;
+ From thee the clouds and ether move, from thee the moisture flows,
+ From thee the waters draw their rills, and earth with verdure glows,
+ And thou dost ever teach the wise, and freely on them pour
+ The inspiration of thy gifts, the gladness of thy lore.
+ All praise to thee, O joy of life, O hope and strength, we raise,
+ Who givest us the prize of light, who art thyself all praise.
+
+From the Latin of ST. HILDEGARDE.
+
+Translation of R.F. LITTLEDALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HOLY SPIRIT.
+
+
+ In the hour of my distress,
+ When temptations me oppress,
+ And when I my sins confess,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When I lie within my bed,
+ Sick at heart, and sick in head,
+ And with doubts discomforted,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the house doth sigh and weep,
+ And the world is drowned in sleep,
+ Yet mine eyes the watch do keep,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the artless doctor sees
+ No one hope but of his fees,
+ And his skill runs on the lees,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When his potion and his pill
+ Has or none or little skill,
+ Meet for nothing but to kill,--
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the passing-bell doth toll,
+ And the Furies, in a shoal,
+ Come to fright a parting soul,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the tapers now burn blue,
+ And the comforters are few,
+ And that number more than true,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the priest his last hath prayed,
+ And I nod to what is said
+ 'Cause my speech is now decayed,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When, God knows, I'm tost about
+ Either with despair or doubt,
+ Yet before the glass be out,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the tempter me pursu'th
+ With the sins of all my youth,
+ And half damns me with untruth,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the dames and hellish cries
+ Fright mine ears, and fright mine eyes,
+ And all terrors me surprise,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the judgment is revealed,
+ And that opened which was sealed,--
+ When to thee I have appealed,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPE OF THE HUMAN HEART.
+
+ FROM "ANIMA MUNDI."
+
+
+ God is good.
+ And flight is destined for the callow wing,
+ And the high appetite implies the food,
+ And souls most reach the level whence they spring;
+ O Life of very life! set free our powers,
+ Hasten the travail of the yearning hours.
+
+ Thou, to whom old Philosophy bent low,
+ To the wise few mysteriously revealed;
+ Thou, whom each humble Christian worships now,
+ In the poor hamlet and the open field:
+ Once an idea, now Comforter and Friend,
+ Hope of the human heart, descend, descend!
+
+RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES. (LORD HOUGHTON.)
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+PRAYER AND ASPIRATION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT IS PRAYER?
+
+
+ Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
+ Uttered or unexpressed--
+ The motion of a hidden fire
+ That trembles in the breast.
+
+ Prayer is the burthen of a sigh,
+ The falling of a tear--
+ The upward glancing of an eye,
+ When none but God is near.
+
+ Prayer is the simplest form of speech
+ That infant lips can try--
+ Prayer the sublimest strains that reach
+ The majesty on high.
+
+ Prayer is the contrite sinner's voice
+ Returning from his ways,
+ While angels in their songs rejoice,
+ And cry, "Behold he prays!"
+
+ Prayer is the Christian's vital breath--
+ The Christian's native air--
+ His watchword at the gates of death--
+ He enters heaven with prayer.
+
+ The saints in prayer appear as one
+ In word, and deed, and mind,
+ While with the Father and the Son
+ Sweet fellowship they find.
+
+ Nor prayer is made by man alone--
+ The Holy Spirit pleads--
+ And Jesus, on the eternal throne,
+ For shiners intercedes.
+
+ O Thou by whom we come to God--
+ The life, the truth, the way!
+ The path of prayer Thyself hast trod;
+ Lord, teach us how to pray!
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TIME FOR PRAYER.
+
+
+ When is the time for prayer?
+ With the first beams that light the morning's sky,
+ Ere for the toils of day thou dost prepare,
+ Lift up thy thoughts on high;
+ Commend the loved ones to his watchful care:
+ Morn is the time for prayer!
+
+ And in the noontide hour,
+ If worn by toil, or by sad cares oppressed,
+ Then unto God thy spirit's sorrow pour,
+ And he will give thee rest:--
+ Thy voice shall reach him through the fields of air:
+ Noon is the time for prayer!
+
+ When the bright sun hath set,--
+ Whilst yet eve's glowing colors deck the skies;--
+ When the loved, at home, again thou 'st met,
+ Then let the prayer arise
+ For those who in thy joys and sorrow share:
+ Eve is the time for prayer!
+
+ And when the stars come forth,--
+ When to the trusting heart sweet hopes are given,
+ And the deep stillness of the hour gives birth
+ To pure, bright dreams of heaven,--
+ Kneel to thy God--ask strength, life's ills to bear:
+ Night is the time for prayer!
+
+ When is the time for prayer?
+ In every hour, while life is spared to thee--
+ In crowds or solitudes--in joy or care--
+ Thy thoughts should heavenward flee.
+ At home--at morn and eve--with loved ones there,
+ Bend thou the knee in prayer!
+
+G. BENNETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SEASONS OF PRAYER.
+
+
+ To prayer, to prayer;--for the morning breaks,
+ And earth in her Maker's smile awakes.
+ His light is on all below and above,--
+ The light of gladness, and life, and love.
+ Oh, then, on the breath of this early air
+ Send upward the incense of grateful prayer.
+
+ To prayer;--for the glorious sun is gone,
+ And the gathering darkness of night comes on;
+ Like a curtain from God's kind hand it flows,
+ To shade the couch where his children impose.
+ Then kneel, while the watching stars are bright,
+ And give your last thoughts to the Guardian of night.
+
+ To prayer;--for the day that God has blest
+ Comes tranquilly on with its welcome rest.
+ It speaks of creation's early bloom;
+ It speaks of the Prince who burst the tomb.
+ Then summon the spirit's exalted powers,
+ And devote to Heaven the hallowed hours.
+
+ There are smiles and tears in the mother's eyes,
+ For her new-born infant beside her lies.
+ Oh, hour of bliss! when the heart o'erflows
+ With rapture a mother only knows.
+ Let it gush forth in words of fervent prayer;
+ Let it swell up to Heaven for her precious care.
+
+ There are smiles and tears in that gathering band,
+ Where the heart is pledged with the trembling hand:
+ What trying thoughts in her bosom swell,
+ As the bride bids parents and home farewell!
+ Kneel down by the side of the tearful pair,
+ And strengthen the perilous hour with prayer.
+
+ Kneel down by the dying sinner's side,
+ And pray for his soul through Him who died.
+ Large drops of anguish are thick on his brow;
+ Oh, what are earth and its pleasures now!
+ And what shall assuage his dark despair,
+ But the penitent cry of humble prayer?
+
+ Kneel down by the couch of departing faith,
+ And hear the last words the believer saith.
+ He has bidden adieu to his earthly friends;
+ There is peace in his eye that upward bends;
+ There is peace in his calm, confiding air;
+ For his last thoughts are God's, his last words prayer.
+
+ The voice of prayer at the sable bier!
+ A voice to sustain, to soothe, and to cheer.
+ It commends the spirit to God who gave;
+ It lifts the thoughts from the cold, dark grave;
+ It points to the glory where he shall reign,
+ Who whispered, "Thy brother shall rise again."
+
+ The voice of prayer in the world of bliss!
+ But gladder, purer, than rose from this.
+ The ransomed shout to their glorious King,
+ Where no sorrow shades the soul as they sing;
+ But a sinless and joyous song they raise,
+ And their voice of prayer is eternal praise.
+
+ Awake, awake! and gird up thy strength,
+ To join that holy band at length!
+ To Him who unceasing love displays,
+ Whom the powers of nature unceasingly praise,--
+ To Him thy heart and thy hours be given;
+ For a life of prayer is the life of Heaven.
+
+HENRY WARE, JR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXHORTATION TO PRAYER.
+
+
+ Not on a prayerless bed, not on a prayerless bed
+ Compose thy weary limbs to rest;
+ For they alone are blessed
+ With balmy sleep
+ Whom angels keep;
+ Nor, though by care oppressed,
+ Or anxious sorrow,
+ Or thought in many a coil perplexed
+ For coming morrow,
+ Lay not thy head
+ On prayerless bed.
+
+ For who can tell, when sleep thine eyes shall close,
+ That earthly cares and woes
+ To thee may e'er return?
+ Arouse, my soul!
+ Slumber control,
+ And let thy lamp burn brightly;
+ So shall thine eyes discern
+ Things pure and sightly;
+ Taught by the Spirit, learn
+ Never on a prayerless bed
+ To lay thine unblest head.
+
+ Hast thou no pining want, or wish, or care,
+ That calls for holy prayer?
+ Has thy day been so bright
+ That in its flight
+ There is no trace of sorrow?
+ And thou art sure to-morrow
+ Will be like this, and more
+ Abundant? Dost thou yet lay up thy store
+ And still make plans for more?
+ Thou fool! this very night
+ Thy soul may wing its flight.
+
+ Hast thou no being than thyself more dear,
+ That ploughs the ocean deep,
+ And when storms sweep
+ The wintry, lowering sky,
+ For whom thou wak'st and weepest?
+ Oh, when thy pangs are deepest,
+ Seek then the covenant ark of prayer;
+ For He that slumbereth not is there--
+ His ear is open to thy cry.
+ Oh, then, on prayerless bed
+ Lay not thy thoughtless head.
+
+ Arouse thee, weary soul, nor yield to slumber,
+ Till in communion blest
+ With the elect ye rest--
+ Those souls of countless numbers;
+ And with them raise
+ The note of praise,
+ Reaching from earth to heaven--
+ Chosen, redeemed, forgiven;
+ So lay thy happy head,
+ Prayer-crowned, on blessed bed.
+
+MARGARET MERCER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER AND REPENTANCE.
+
+ FROM "HAMLET," ACT III. SC. 3.
+
+
+ _The King_. O, my offence is rank, it smells to heaven;
+ It hath the primal eldest curse upon 't,
+ A brother's murder. Pray can I not,
+ Though inclination be as sharp as will:
+ My stronger guilt defeats my strong intent;
+ And, like a man to double business bound,
+ I stand in pause where I shall first begin,
+ And both neglect. What if this cursèd hand
+ Were thicker than itself with brother's blood,
+ Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens
+ To wash it white as snow? Whereto serves mercy
+ But to confront the visage of offence?
+ And what's in prayer but this twofold force,
+ To be forestalled ere we come to fall,
+ Or pardoned being down? Then I'll look up;
+ My fault is past. But, O, what form of prayer
+ Can serve my turn? "Forgive me my foul murder?"
+ That cannot be: since I am still possessed
+ Of those effects for which I did the murder,
+ My crown, mine own ambition and my queen.
+ May one be pardoned and retain the offence?
+ In the corrupted currents of this world
+ Offence's gilded hand may shove by justice.
+ And oft 't is seen the wicked prize itself
+ Buys out the law: but 't is not so above;
+ There is no shuffling, there the action lies
+ In his true nature; and we ourselves compelled,
+ Even to the teeth and forehead of our faults,
+ To give in evidence. What then? what rests?
+ Try what repentance can: what can it not?
+ Yet what can it when one cannot repent?
+ O wretched state! O bosom black as death!
+ O limèd soul, that, struggling to be free,
+ Art more engaged! Help, angels! Make assay!
+ Bow, stubborn knees; and heart with strings of steel,
+ Be soft as sinews of the new-born babe!
+ All may be well. [_Retires and kneels_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _King (rising)._ My words fly up, my thoughts remain below;
+ Words without thoughts never to heaven go.
+
+SHAKESPEARE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CALIPH AND SATAN.
+
+ VERSIFIED FROM THOLUCK'S TRANSLATION OUT OF THE PERSIAN.
+
+
+ In heavy sleep the Caliph lay,
+ When some one called, "Arise, and pray!"
+
+ The angry Caliph cried, "Who dare
+ Rebuke his king for slighting prayer?"
+
+ Then, from the corner of the room,
+ A voice cut sharply through the gloom:
+
+ "My name is Satan, Rise! obey
+ Mohammed's law; awake, and pray!"
+
+ "Thy _words_ are good," the Caliph said,
+ "But their intent I somewhat dread.
+
+ For matters cannot well be worse
+ Than when the thief says, 'Guard your purse!'
+
+ I cannot trust your counsel, friend,
+ It surely hides some wicked end."
+
+ Said Satan, "Near the throne of God,
+ In ages past, we devils trod;
+
+ Angels of light, to us 't was given
+ To guide each wandering foot to heaven.
+
+ Not wholly lost is that first love.
+ Nor those pure tastes we knew above.
+
+ Roaming across a continent.
+ The Tartar moves his shifting tent,
+
+ But never quite forgets the day
+ When in his father's arms he lay;
+
+ So we, once bathed in love divine.
+ Recall the taste of that rich wine.
+
+ God's finger rested on my brow,--
+ That magic touch, I feel it now!
+
+ I fell, 't is true--O, ask not why.
+ For still to God I turn my eye.
+
+ It was a chance by which I fell,
+ Another takes me back from hell.
+
+ 'T was but my envy of mankind,
+ The envy of a loving mind.
+
+ Jealous of men, I could not bear
+ God's love with this new race to share.
+
+ But yet God's tables open stand,
+ His guests flock in from every land;
+
+ Some kind act towards the race of men
+ May toss us into heaven again.
+
+ A game of chess is all we see,--
+ And God the player, pieces we.
+
+ White, black--queen, pawn,--'t is all the same,
+ For on both sides he plays the game.
+
+ Moved to and fro, from good to ill,
+ We rise and fall as suits his will."
+
+ The Caliph said, "If this be so,
+ I know not, but thy guile I know;
+
+ For how can I thy words believe,
+ When even God thou didst deceive?
+
+ A sea of lies art thou,--our sin
+ Only a drop that sea within."
+
+ "Not so," said Satan, "I serve God,
+ His angel now, and now his rod.
+
+ In tempting I both bless and curse,
+ Make good men better, bad men worse.
+
+ Good coin is mixed with bad, my brother,
+ I but distinguish one from the other."
+
+ "Granted," the Caliph said, "but still
+ You never tempt to good, but ill.
+
+ Tell then the truth, for well I know
+ You come as my most deadly foe."
+
+ Loud laughed the fiend. "You know me well,
+ Therefore my purpose I will tell.
+
+ If you had missed your prayer, I knew
+ A swift repentance would ensue;
+
+ And such repentance would have been
+ A good, outweighing far the sin.
+
+ I chose this humbleness divine,
+ Borne out of fault, should not be thine,
+
+ Preferring prayers elate with pride
+ To sin with penitence allied."
+
+JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DARKNESS IS THINNING.
+
+
+ Darkness is thinning; shadows are retreating;
+ Morning and light are coming in their beauty;
+ Suppliant seek we, with an earnest outcry.
+ God the Almighty!
+
+ So that our Master, having mercy on us.
+ May repel languor, may bestow salvation.
+ Granting us, Father, of thy loving-kindness
+ Glory hereafter!
+
+ This, of his mercy, ever blessèd Godhead,
+ Father, and Son, and Holy Spirit, give us,--
+ Whom through the wide world celebrate forever
+ Blessing and glory!
+
+From the Latin of ST. GREGORY THE GREAT.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE.
+
+
+ To write a verse or two is all the praise
+ That I can raise;
+ Mend my estate in any wayes,
+ Thou shalt have more.
+
+ I go to church; help me to wings, and I
+ Will thither flie;
+ Or, if I mount unto the skie,
+ I will do more.
+
+ Man is all weaknesse: there is no such thing
+ As Prince or King:
+ His arm is short; yet with a sling
+ He may do more.
+
+ A herb destilled, and drunk, may dwell next doore,
+ On the same floore,
+ To a brave soul: Exalt the poore,
+ They can do more.
+
+ O, raise me then! poore bees, that work all day,
+ Sting my delay,
+ Who have a work, as well as they,
+ And much, much more.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER.
+
+
+ O God! though sorrow be my fate,
+ And the world's hate
+ For my heart's faith pursue me.
+ My peace they cannot take away;
+ Prom day to day
+ Thou dost anew imbue me;
+ Thou art not far; a little while
+ Thou hid'st thy face, with brighter smile
+ Thy father-love to show me.
+
+ Lord, not my will, but thine, be done;
+ If I sink down
+ When men to terrors leave me,
+ Thy father-love still warms my breast;
+ All's for the best;
+ Shall men have power to grieve me,
+ When bliss eternal is my goal.
+ And thou the keeper of my soul,
+ Who never will deceive me?
+
+ Thou art my shield, as saith the Word.
+ Christ Jesus, Lord,
+ Thou standest pitying by me,
+ And lookest on each grief of mine
+ And if 't were thine:
+ What, then, though foes may try me.
+ Though thorns be in my path concealed?
+ World, do thy worst! God is my shield!
+ And will be ever nigh me.
+
+Translated from MARY, QUEEN OF HUNGARY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DESIRE.
+
+
+ Thou, who dost dwell alone;
+ Thou, who dost know thine own;
+ Thou, to whom all are known,
+ From the cradle to the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From the world's temptations;
+ From tribulations;
+ From that fierce anguish
+ Wherein we languish;
+ From that torpor deep
+ Wherein we lie asleep,
+ Heavy as death, cold as the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ When the soul, growing clearer,
+ Sees God no nearer;
+ When the soul, mounting higher,
+ To God comes no nigher;
+ But the arch-fiend Pride
+ Mounts at her side,
+ Foiling her high emprize,
+ Sealing her eagle eyes,
+ And, when she fain would soar,
+ Make idols to adore;
+ Changing the pure emotion
+ Of her high devotion,
+ To a skin-deep sense
+ Of her own eloquence;
+ Strong to deceive, strong to enslave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From the ingrained fashion
+ Of this earthly nature
+ That mars thy creature;
+ From grief, that is but passion;
+ From mirth, that is but feigning;
+ From tears, that bring no healing;
+ From wild and weak complaining;--
+ Thine old strength revealing,
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From doubt, where all is doable,
+ Where wise men are not strong;
+ Where comfort turns to trouble;
+ Where just men suffer wrong;
+ Where sorrow treads on joy;
+ Where sweet things soonest cloy;
+ Where faiths are built on dust;
+ Where love is half mistrust,
+ Hungry, and barren, and sharp as the sea;
+ O, set us free!
+
+ O, let the false dream fly
+ Where our sick souls do lie,
+ Tossing continually.
+ O, where thy voice doth come,
+ Let all doubts be dumb;
+ Let all words be mild;
+ All strife be reconciled;
+ All pains beguiled.
+ Light brings no blindness;
+ Love no unkindness;
+ Knowledge no ruin;
+ Fear no undoing,
+ From the cradle to the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHY THUS LONGING?
+
+
+ Why thus longing, thus forever sighing
+ For the far off, unattained, and dim,
+ While the beautiful, all round thee lying,
+ Offers up its low perpetual hymn?
+
+ Wouldst thou listen to its gentle teaching,
+ All thy restless yearnings it would still;
+ Leaf and flower and laden bee are preaching
+ Thine own sphere, though humble, first to fill.
+
+ Poor indeed thou must be, if around thee
+ Thou no ray of light and joy canst throw,--
+ If no silken cord of love hath bound thee
+ To some little world through weal and woe;
+
+ If no dear eyes thy fond love can brighten,--
+ No fond voices answer to thine own;
+ If no brother's sorrow thou canst lighten
+ By daily sympathy and gentle tone.
+
+ Not by deeds that win the crowd's applauses,
+ Not by works that gain thee world-renown,
+ Not by martyrdom or vaunted crosses,
+ Canst thou win and wear the immortal crown.
+
+ Daily struggling, though unloved and lonely,
+ Every day a rich reward will give;
+ Thou wilt find, by hearty striving only,
+ And truly loving, thou canst truly live.
+
+ Dost thou revel in the rosy morning,
+ When all nature hails the Lord of light,
+ And his smile, the mountain-tops adorning,
+ Robes yon fragrant fields in radiance bright?
+
+ Other hands may grasp the field and forest,
+ Proud proprietors in pomp may shine;
+ But with fervent love if thou adorest,
+ Thou art wealthier,--all the world is thine.
+
+ Yet if through earth's wide domains thou rovest,
+ Sighing that they are not thine alone.
+ Not those fair fields, but thyself thou lovest,
+ And their beauty and thy wealth are gone.
+
+ Nature wears the color of the spirit;
+ Sweetly to her worshipper she sings;
+ All the glow, the grace she doth inherit,
+ Round her trusting child she fondly flings.
+
+HARRIET WINSLOW SEWALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER AND ANSWER.
+
+
+ O God, I cannot walk the Way,--
+ The thorns, the thirst, the darkness,
+ And bleeding feet and aching heart!
+ I hear the songs and revels of the throng,--
+ They sneer upon my downcast face with scorn,--
+ Yet, O my God, I _must_ and shall walk with Thee!
+
+ O God, I cannot take the Truth!
+ Far easier honeyed hopes and falsehoods fair,
+ But Truth,--the Truth is stern and strong and awful.
+ It ploughs my soul with ploughshares flaming hot--
+ Yet give me Truth. I must have Truth, O God!
+
+ O God, I cannot live the Life,--
+ The flinging all to death that life may come;
+ The surging of Thy Spirit in my heart
+ In fire and flame will all consume me,--
+ Yet, O my God, I cannot live without Thee!
+
+ And as I agonized in dust and shame
+ With tears and sighs in all the bitter prayer,
+ I felt, as 't were, an arm that stole around me,
+ And raised me to my feet.
+ And at the touch, hope blossomed in my heart,
+ And new-found strength in flood-tides thrilled and throbbed
+
+ Through soul and limbs. I looked to see....
+ O tender lordly Face!
+ It was Himself,--_the Way, the Truth, the Life_!
+
+OLIVER HUCKEL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE AIM.
+
+
+ O thou who lovest not alone
+ The swift success, the instant goal,
+ But hast a lenient eye to mark
+ The failures of th' inconstant soul,
+
+ Consider not my little worth,--
+ The mean achievement, scamped in act,
+ The high resolve and low result,
+ The dream that durst not face the fact.
+
+ But count the reach of my desire.
+ Let this be something in Thy sight:--
+ I have not, in the slothful dark,
+ Forgot the Vision and the Height.
+
+ Neither my body nor my soul
+ To earth's low ease will yield consent.
+ I praise Thee for my will to strive.
+ I bless Thy goad of discontent.
+
+CHARLES G.D. ROBERTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOVE OF GOD SUPREME.
+
+
+ Thou hidden love of God, whose height,
+ Whose depth unfathomed no man knows,
+ I see from far thy beauteous light,
+ Inly I sigh for thy repose.
+ My heart is pained, nor can it be
+ At rest till it finds rest in thee.
+
+ Thy secret voice invites me still
+ The sweetness of thy yoke to prove,
+ And fain I would; but though my will
+ Be fixed, yet wide my passions rove.
+ Yet hindrances strew all the way;
+ I aim at thee, yet from thee stray.
+
+ 'T is mercy all that thou hast brought
+ My mind to seek her peace in thee.
+ Yet while I seek but find thee not
+ No peace my wand'ring soul shall see.
+ Oh! when shall all my wand'rings end,
+ And all my steps to-thee-ward tend?
+
+ Is there a thing beneath the sun
+ That strives with thee my heart to share?
+ Ah! tear it thence and reign alone,
+ The Lord of every motion there.
+ Then shall my heart from earth be free,
+ When it has found repose in thee.
+
+ Oh! hide this self from me, that I
+ No more, but Christ in me, may live.
+ My vile affections crucify,
+ Nor let one darling lust survive.
+ In all things nothing may I see,
+ Nothing desire or seek but thee.
+
+ O Love, thy sovereign aid impart,
+ To save me from low-thoughted care;
+ Chase this self-will through all my heart,
+ Through all its latent mazes there.
+ Make me thy duteous child, that I
+ Ceaseless may Abba, Father, cry.
+
+ Ah! no; ne'er will I backward turn:
+ Thine wholly, thine alone I am.
+ Thrice happy he who views with scorn
+ Earth's toys, for thee his constant flame.
+ Oh! help, that I may never move
+ From the blest footsteps of thy love.
+
+ Each moment draw from earth away
+ My heart, that lowly waits thy call.
+ Speak to my inmost soul, and say,
+ "I am thy Love, thy God, thy All."
+ To feel thy power, to hear thy voice,
+ To taste thy love is all my choice.
+
+From the German of GERHARD TERSTEEGEN.
+
+Translation of JOHN WESLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IN A LECTURE-ROOM.
+
+
+ Away, haunt thou not me,
+ Thou vain Philosophy!
+ Little hast thou bestead,
+ Save to perplex the head,
+ And leave the spirit dead.
+ Unto thy broken cisterns wherefore go.
+ While from the secret treasure-depths below,
+ Fed by the skyey shower,
+ And clouds that sink and rest on hill-tops high,
+ Wisdom at once, and Power,
+ Are welling, bubbling forth, unseen, incessantly?
+ Why labor at the dull mechanic oar,
+ When the fresh breeze is blowing,
+ And the strong current flowing,
+ Right onward to the Eternal Shore?
+
+ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM THE RECESSES OF A LOWLY SPIRIT.
+
+
+ From the recesses of a lowly spirit,
+ Our humble prayer ascends; O Father! hear it.
+ Upsoaring on the wings of awe and meekness,
+ Forgive its weakness!
+
+ We see thy hand,--it leads us, it supports us;
+ We hear thy voice,--it counsels and it courts us;
+ And then we turn away; and still thy kindness
+ Forgives our blindness.
+
+ O, how long-suffering, Lord! but thou delightest
+ To win with love the wandering: thou invited,
+ By smiles of mercy, not by frowns or terrors,
+ Man from his errors.
+
+ Father and Saviour! plant within each bosom
+ The seeds of holiness, and bid them blossom
+ In fragrance and in beauty bright and vernal,
+ And spring eternal.
+
+SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HIGHER GOOD.
+
+
+ Father, I will not ask for wealth or fame,
+ Though once they would have joyed my carnal sense:
+ I shudder not to bear a hated name,
+ Wanting all wealth, myself my sole defence.
+ But give me, Lord, eyes to behold the truth;
+ A seeing sense that knows the eternal right;
+ A heart with pity filled, and gentlest ruth;
+ A manly faith that makes all darkness light:
+ Give me the power to labor for mankind;
+ Make me the mouth of such as cannot speak;
+ Eyes let me be to groping men, and blind;
+ A conscience to the base; and to the weak
+ Let me be hands and feet; and to the foolish, mind;
+ And lead still further on such as thy kingdom seek.
+
+THEODORE PARKER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASCRIPTION.
+
+
+ O thou who hast beneath Thy hand
+ The dark foundations of the land,--
+ The motion of whose ordered thought
+ An instant universe hath wrought,--
+
+ Who hast within Thine equal heed
+ The rolling sun, the ripening seed,
+ The azure of the speedwell's eye.
+ The vast solemnities of sky,--
+
+ Who hear'st no less the feeble note
+ Of one small bird's awakening throat,
+ Than that unnamed, tremendous chord
+ Arcturus sounds before his Lord,--
+
+ More sweet to Thee than all acclaim
+ Of storm and ocean, stars and flame,
+ In favor more before Thy face
+ Than pageantry of time and space.
+
+ The worship and the service be
+ Of him Thou madest most like Thee,--
+ Who in his nostrils hath Thy breath,
+ Whose spirit is the lord of death!
+
+CHARLES G.D. ROBERTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O MASTER, LET ME WALK WITH THEE.
+
+
+ O Master, let me walk with thee
+ In lowly paths of service free;
+ Tell me thy secret; help me bear
+ The strain of toil, the fret of care;
+ Help me the slow of heart to move
+ By some clear winning word of love;
+ Teach me the wayward feet to stay,
+ And guide them in the homeward way.
+
+ O Master, let me walk with thee
+ Before the taunting Pharisee;
+ Help me to bear the sting of spite,
+ The hate of men who hide thy light,
+ The sore distrust of souls sincere
+ Who cannot read thy judgments clear,
+ The dulness of the multitude
+ Who dimly guess that thou art good.
+
+ Teach me thy patience; still with thee
+ In closer, dearer company,
+ In work that keeps faith sweet and strong,
+ In trust that triumphs over wrong,
+ In hope that sends a shining ray
+ Far down the future's broadening way,
+ In peace that only thou canst give,
+ With thee, O Master, let me live!
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+FAITH: HOPE: LOVE: SERVICE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FAITH.
+
+
+ O world, thou choosest not the better part!
+ It is not wisdom to be only wise,
+ And on the inward vision close the eyes,
+ But it is wisdom to believe the heart.
+ Columbus found a world, and had no chart,
+ Save one that faith deciphered in the skies;
+ To trust the soul's invincible surmise
+ Was all his science and his only art.
+ Our knowledge is a torch of smoky pine
+ That lights the pathway but one step ahead
+ Across a void of mystery and dread.
+ Bid, then, the tender light of faith to shine
+ By which alone the mortal heart is led
+ Unto the thinking of the thought divine.
+
+GEORGE SANTAYANA.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FIGHT OF FAITH.
+
+ [The author of this poem, one of the victims of the
+ persecuting Henry VIII., was burnt to death at Smithfield
+ in 1546. It was made and sung by her while a prisoner in
+ Newgate.]
+
+
+ Like as the armèd Knighte,
+ Appointed to the fielde.
+ With this world wil I fight,
+ And faith shal be my shilde.
+
+ Faith is that weapon stronge,
+ Which wil not faile at nede;
+ My foes therefore amonge,
+ Therewith wil I precede.
+
+ As it is had in strengthe,
+ And forces of Christes waye,
+ It wil prevaile at lengthe,
+ Though all the devils saye _naye_.
+
+ Faithe of the fathers olde
+ Obtainèd right witness,
+ Which makes me verye bolde
+ To fear no worldes distress.
+
+ I now rejoice in harte,
+ And hope bides me do so;
+ For Christ wil take my part,
+ And ease me of my we.
+
+ Thou sayst, Lord, whoso knocke,
+ To them wilt thou attende;
+ Undo, therefore, the locke,
+ And thy stronge power sende.
+
+ More enemies now I have
+ Than heeres upon my head;
+ Let them not me deprave,
+ But fight thou in my steade.
+
+ On thee my care I cast,
+ For all their cruell spight;
+ I set not by their hast,
+ For thou art my delight.
+
+ I am not she that list
+ My anker to let fall
+ For every drislinge mist;
+ My shippe's substancial.
+
+ Not oft I use to wright
+ In prose, nor yet in ryme;
+ Yet wil I shewe one sight,
+ That I sawe in my time:
+
+ I sawe a royall throne,
+ Where Justice shulde have sitte;
+ But in her steade was One
+ Of moody cruell witte.
+
+ Absorpt was rightwisness,
+ As by the raginge floude;
+ Sathan, in his excess,
+ Sucte up the guiltlesse bloude.
+
+ Then thought I,--Jesus, Lorde,
+ When thou shalt judge us all,
+ Harde is it to recorde
+ On these men what will fall.
+
+ Yet, Lorde, I thee desire,
+ For that they doe to me,
+ Let them not taste the hire
+ Of their iniquitie.
+
+ANNE ASKEWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOUBT AND FAITH.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," XCV.
+
+
+ You say, but with no touch of scorn,
+ Sweet-hearted, you, whose light-blue eyes
+ Are tender over drowning flies,
+ You tell me, doubt is Devil-born.
+
+ I know not: one indeed I knew
+ In many a subtle question versed,
+ Who touched a jarring lyre at first,
+ But ever strove to make it true:
+
+ Perplext in faith, but pure in deeds,
+ At last he beat his music out.
+ There lives more faith in honest doubt,
+ Believe me, than in half the creeds.
+
+ He fought his doubts and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them: thus he came at length
+
+ To find a stronger faith his own;
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone,
+
+ But in the darkness and the cloud,
+ As over Sinai's peaks of old,
+ While Israel made their gods of gold,
+ Although the trumpet blew so loud.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY TIMES ARE IN THY HAND.
+
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ I know not what a day
+ Or e'en an hour may bring to me,
+ But I am safe while trusting thee,
+ Though all things fade away.
+ All weakness, I
+ On him rely
+ Who fixed the earth and spread the starry sky.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Pale poverty or wealth.
+ Corroding care or calm repose.
+ Spring's balmy breath or winter's snows.
+ Sickness or buoyant health,--
+ Whate'er betide,
+ If God provide,
+ 'T is for the best; I wish no lot beside.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Should friendship pure illume
+ And strew my path with fairest flowers,
+ Or should I spend life's dreary hours
+ In solitude's dark gloom,
+ Thou art a friend.
+ Till time shall end
+ Unchangeably the same; in thee all beauties blend.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Many or few, my days
+ I leave with thee,--this only pray,
+ That by thy grace, I, every day
+ Devoting to thy praise,
+ May ready be
+ To welcome thee
+ Whene'er thou com'st to set my spirit free.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Howe'er those times may end,
+ Sudden or slow my soul's release,
+ Midst anguish, frenzy, or in peace,
+ I'm safe with Christ my friend.
+ If he is nigh,
+ Howe'er I die,
+ 'T will be the dawn of heavenly ecstasy.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ To thee I can intrust
+ My slumbering clay, till thy command
+ Bids all the dead before thee stand,
+ Awaking from the dust.
+ Beholding thee,
+ What bliss 't will be
+ With all thy saints to spend eternity!
+
+ To spend eternity
+ In heaven's unclouded light!
+ From sorrow, sin, and frailty free,
+ Beholding and resembling thee,--
+ O too transporting sight!
+ Prospect too fair
+ For flesh to bear!
+ Haste! haste! my Lord, and soon transport me there!
+
+CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN HALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MYSTICAL ECSTASY.
+
+
+ E'en like two little bank-dividing brooks,
+ That wash the pebbles with their wanton streams,
+ And having ranged and searched a thousand nooks,
+ Meet both at length in silver-breasted Thames,
+ Where in a greater current they conjoin:
+ So I my Best-Belovèd's am; so He is mine.
+
+ E'en so we met; and after long pursuit,
+ E'en so we joined; we both became entire;
+ No need for either to renew a suit,
+ For I was flax and he was flames of fire:
+ Our firm-united souls did more than twine:
+ So I my Best-Belovèd's am; so He is mine.
+
+ If all those glittering Monarchs that command
+ The servile quarters of this earthly ball,
+ Should tender, in exchange, their shares of land,
+ I would not change my fortunes for them all:
+ Their wealth is but a counter to my coin:
+ The world's but theirs; but my Belovèd's mine.
+
+FRANCIS QUARLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MYSTIC'S VISION
+
+
+ Ah! I shall kill myself with dreams!
+ These dreams that softly lap me round
+ Through trance-like hours in which meseems
+ That I am swallowed up and drowned;
+ Drowned in your love, which flows o'er me
+ As o'er the seaweed flows the sea.
+
+ In watches of the middle night,
+ 'Twixt vesper and 'twist matin bell,
+ With rigid arms and straining sight,
+ I wait within my narrow cell;
+ With muttered prayers, suspended will,
+ I wait your advent--statue-still.
+
+ Across the convent garden walls
+ The wind blows from the silver seas;
+ Black shadow of the cypress falls
+ Between the moon-meshed olive-trees;
+ Sleep-walking from their golden bowers,
+ Flit disembodied orange flowers.
+
+ And in God's consecrated house,
+ All motionless from head to feet,
+ My heart awaits her heavenly Spouse,
+ As white I lie on my white sheet;
+ With body lulled and soul awake,
+ I watch in anguish for your sake.
+
+ And suddenly, across the gloom,
+ The naked moonlight sharply swings;
+ A Presence stirs within the room,
+ A breath of flowers and hovering wings:--
+ Your presence without form and void,
+ Beyond all earthly joys enjoyed.
+
+ My heart is hushed, my tongue is mute,
+ My life is centred in your will;
+ You play upon me like a lute
+ Which answers to its master's skill,
+ Till passionately vibrating,
+ Each nerve becomes a throbbing string.
+
+ Oh, incommunicably sweet!
+ No longer aching and apart,
+ As rain upon the tender wheat,
+ You pour upon my thirsty heart;
+ As scent is bound up in the rose,
+ Your love within my bosom glows.
+
+MATHILDE BLIND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CALL.
+
+
+ Come, my way, my truth, my life--
+ Such a way as gives us breath;
+ Such a truth as ends all strife;
+ Such a life as killeth death.
+
+ Come my light, my feast, my strength--
+ Such a light as shows a feast;
+ Such a feast as mends in length;
+ Such a strength as makes His guest.
+
+ Come my joy, my love, my heart!
+ Such a joy as none can move;
+ Such a love as none can part;
+ Such a heart as joys in love.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPE.
+
+ FROM "THE PLEASURES OF HOPE."[A]
+
+
+ Unfading Hope! when life's last embers burn,
+ When soul to soul, and dust to dust return!
+ Heaven to thy charge resigns the awful hour!
+ O, then thy kingdom comes! Immortal Power!
+ What though each spark of earth-born rapture fly
+ The quivering lip, pale cheek, and closing eye!
+ Bright to the soul thy seraph hands convey
+ The morning dream of life's eternal day,--
+ Then, then, the triumph and the trance begin,
+ And all the phoenix spirit burns within!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Daughter of Faith, awake, arise, illume
+ The dread unknown, the chaos of the tomb;
+ Melt, and dispel, ye spectre-doubts, that roll
+ Cimmerian darkness o'er the parting soul!
+ Fly, like the moon-eyed herald of Dismay,
+ Chased on his night-steed by the star of day!
+ The strife is o'er,--the pangs of Nature close,
+ And life's last rapture triumphs o'er her woes.
+ Hark! as the spirit eyes, with eagle gaze,
+ The noon of Heaven undazzled by the blaze,
+ On heavenly winds that waft her to the sky,
+ Float the sweet tones of star-born melody;
+ Wild as that hallowed anthem sent to hail
+ Bethlehem's shepherds in the lonely vale,
+ When Jordan hushed his waves, and midnight still
+ Watched on the holy towers of Zion hill!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Eternal Hope! when yonder spheres sublime
+ Pealed their first notes to sound the march of Time,
+ Thy joyous youth began,--but not to fade.
+ When all the sister planets have decayed;
+ When wrapt in fire the realms of ether glow,
+ And Heaven's last thunder shakes the world below;
+ Thou, undismayed, shalt o'er the ruins smile,
+ And light thy torch at Nature's funeral pile.
+
+THOMAS CAMPBELL.
+
+[Footnote A: This poem was written when the author was but twenty-one
+years of age.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A QUERY.
+
+
+ Oh the wonder of our life,
+ Pain and pleasure, rest and strife,
+ Mystery of mysteries,
+ Set twixt two eternities!
+
+ Lo, the moments come and go,
+ E'en as sparks, and vanish so;
+ Flash from darkness into light,
+ Quick as thought are quenched in night.
+
+ With an import grand and strange
+ Are they fraught in ceaseless change
+ As they post away; each one
+ Stands eternally alone.
+
+ The scene more fair than words can say,
+ I gaze upon and go my way;
+ I turn, another glance to claim--
+ Something is changed, 't is not the same.
+
+ The purple flush on yonder fell,
+ The tinkle of that cattle-bell,
+ Came, and have never come before,
+ Go, and are gone forevermore.
+
+ Our life is held as with a vice,
+ We cannot do the same thing twice;
+ Once we may, but not again;
+ Only memories remain.
+
+ What if memories vanish too,
+ And the past be lost to view;
+ Is it all for nought that I
+ Heard and saw and hurried by?
+
+ Where are childhood's merry hours,
+ Bright with sunshine, crossed with showers?
+ Are they dead, and can they never
+ Come again to life forever?
+
+ No--'t is false, I surely trow;
+ Though awhile they vanish now;
+ Every passion, deed, and thought
+ Was not born to come to nought!
+
+ Will the past then come again,
+ Rest and pleasure, strife and pain,
+ All the heaven and all the hell?
+ Ah, we know not: God can tell.
+
+_GOOD WORDS_.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HUMILITY.
+
+
+ The bird that soars on highest wing
+ Builds on the ground her lowly nest;
+ And she that doth most sweetly sing
+ Sings in the shade, where all things rest;
+ In lark and nightingale we see
+ What honor hath humility.
+
+ When Mary chose "the better part,"
+ She meekly sat at Jesus' feet;
+ And Lydia's gently opened heart
+ Was made for God's own temple meet:
+ Fairest and best adorned is she
+ Whose clothing is humility.
+
+ The saint that wears heaven's brightest crown,
+ In deepest adoration bends:
+ The weight of glory bows him down
+ Then most, when most his soul ascends:
+ Nearest the throne itself must be
+ The footstool of humility.
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+KING ROBERT OF SICILY.
+
+
+ Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane
+ And Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Apparelled in magnificent attire,
+ With retinue of many a knight and squire,
+ On Saint John's eve, at vespers, proudly sat
+ And heard the priests chant the Magnificat.
+ And as he listened o'er and o'er again
+ Repeated, like a burden or refrain,
+ He caught the words, "_Deposuit potentes
+ De sede, et exaltavit humiles;"_
+ And slowly lifting up his kingly head,
+ He to a learned clerk beside him said,
+ "What mean these words?" The clerk made answer meet,
+ "He has put down the mighty from their seat,
+ And has exalted them of low degree."
+ Thereat King Robert muttered scornfully,
+ "'T is well that such seditious words are sung
+ Only by priests and in the Latin tongue;
+ For unto priests and people be it known,
+ There is no power can push me from my throne!"
+ And leaning back, he yawned and fell asleep,
+ Lulled by the chant monotonous and deep.
+
+ When he awoke, it was already night;
+ The church was empty, and there was no light,
+ Save where the lamps that glimmered, few and faint,
+ Lighted a little space before some saint.
+ He started from his seat and gazed around,
+ But saw no living thing and heard no sound.
+ He gropèd towards the door, but it was locked;
+ He cried aloud, and listened, and then knocked,
+ And uttered awful threatenings and complaints,
+ And imprecations upon men and saints.
+ The sounds reëchoed from the roof and walls
+ As if dead priests were laughing in their stalls.
+
+ At length the sexton, hearing from without
+ The tumult of the knocking and the shout,
+ And thinking thieves were in the house of prayer,
+ Came with his lantern, asking, "Who is there?"
+ Half choked with rage, King Robert fiercely said,
+ "Open: 'tis I, the king! Art thou afraid?"
+ The frightened sexton, muttering, with a curse,
+ "This is some drunken vagabond, or worse!"
+ Turned the great key and flung the portal wide;
+ A man rushed by him at a single stride,
+ Haggard, half naked, without hat or cloak,
+ Who neither turned, nor looked at him, nor spoke.
+ But leaped into the blackness of the night,
+ And vanished like a spectre from his sight.
+
+ Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane
+ And Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Despoiled of his magnificent attire,
+ Bare-headed, breathless, and besprent with mire,
+ With sense of wrong and outrage desperate,
+ Strode on and thundered at the palace gate:
+ Bushed through the court-yard, thrusting in his rage
+ To right and left each seneschal and page,
+ And hurried up the broad and sounding stair,
+ His white face ghastly in the torches' glare.
+ From hall to hall he passed with breathless speed:
+ Voices and cries he heard, but did not heed,
+ Until at last he reached the banquet-room,
+ Blazing with light, and breathing with perfume.
+ There on the dais sat another king,
+ Wearing his rotes, his crown, his signet-ring.
+ King Robert's self in features, form, and height,
+ But all transfigured with angelic light!
+ It was an angel; and his presence there
+ With a divine effulgence filled the air,
+ An exaltation, piercing the disguise,
+ Though none the hidden angel recognize.
+
+ A moment speechless, motionless, amazed,
+ The throneless monarch on the angel gazed,
+ Who met his looks of anger and surprise
+ With the divine compassion of his eyes;
+ Then said, "Who art thou? and why com'st thou here?"
+ To which King Robert answered with a sneer,
+ "I am the king, and come to claim my own
+ From an impostor, who usurps my throne!"
+ And suddenly, at these audacious words,
+ Up sprang the angry guests, and drew their swords;
+ The angel answered with unruffled brow,
+ "Nay, not the king, but the king's jester; thou
+ Henceforth shalt wear the bells and scalloped cape,
+ And for thy counsellor shalt lead an ape:
+ Thou shalt obey my servants when they call,
+ And wait upon my henchmen in the hall!"
+
+ Deaf to King Robert's threats and cries and prayers,
+ They thrust him from the hall and down the stairs;
+ A group of tittering pages ran before,
+ And as they opened wide the folding-door,
+ His heart failed, for he heard, with strange alarms,
+ The boisterous laughter of the men-at-arms,
+ And all the vaulted chamber roar and ring
+ With the mock plaudits of "Long live the king!"
+ Next morning, waking with the day's first beam,
+ He said within himself, "It was a dream!"
+ But the straw rustled as he turned his head,
+ There were the cap and bells beside his bed;
+ Around him rose the bare, discolored walls.
+ Close by, the steeds were champing in their stalls,
+ And in the corner, a revolting shape,
+ Shivering and chattering, sat the wretched ape.
+ It was no dream; the world he loved so much
+ Had turned to dust and ashes at his touch!
+
+ Days came and went; and now returned again
+ To Sicily the old Saturnian reign;
+ Under the angel's governance benign
+ The happy island danced with corn and wine,
+ And deep within the mountain's burning breast
+ Enceladus, the giant, was at rest.
+ Meanwhile King Robert yielded to his fate,
+ Sullen and silent and disconsolate.
+ Dressed in the motley garb that jesters wear,
+ With looks bewildered and a vacant stare,
+ Close shaven above the ears, as monks are shorn,
+ By courtiers mocked, by pages laughed to scorn,
+ His only friend the ape, his only food
+ What others left,--he still was unsubdued.
+ And when the angel met him on his way,
+ And half in earnest, half in jest, would say,
+ Sternly, though tenderly, that he might feel
+ The velvet scabbard held a sword of steel,
+ "Art thou the king?" the passion of his woe
+ Burst from him in resistless overflow,
+ And lifting high his forehead, he would fling
+ The haughty answer back, "I am, I am the king!"
+
+ Almost three years were ended; when there came
+ Ambassadors of great repute and name
+ From Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Unto King Robert, saying that Pope Urbane
+ By letter summoned them forthwith to come
+ On Holy Thursday to his city of Rome.
+ The angel with great joy received his guests,
+ And gave them presents of embroidered vests,
+ And velvet mantles with rich ermine lined,
+ And rings and jewels of the rarest kind.
+ Then he departed with them o'er the sea
+ Into the lovely land of Italy,
+ Whose loveliness was more resplendent made
+ By the mere passing of that cavalcade,
+ With plumes, and cloaks, and housings, and the stir
+ Of jewelled bridle and of golden spur.
+
+ And lo! among the menials, in mock state,
+ Upon a piebald steed, with shambling gait,
+ His cloak of fox-tails flapping in the wind,
+ The solemn ape demurely perched behind,
+ King Robert rode, making huge merriment
+ In all the country towns through which they went.
+
+ The pope received them with great pomp, and blare
+ Of bannered trumpets, on Saint Peter's square,
+ Giving his benediction and embrace,
+ Fervent, and full of apostolic grace.
+ While with congratulations and with prayers
+ He entertained the angel unawares,
+ Robert, the jester, bursting through the crowd,
+ Into their presence rushed, and cried aloud:
+ "I am the king! Look and behold in me
+ Robert, your brother, king of Sicily!
+ This man, who wears my semblance to your eyes,
+ Is an impostor in a king's disguise.
+ Do you not know me? does no voice within
+ Answer my cry, and say we are akin?"
+ The pope in silence, but with troubled mien.
+ Gazed at the angel's countenance serene;
+ The emperor, laughing, said, "It is strange sport
+ To keep a madman for thy fool at court!"
+ And the poor, baffled jester in disgrace
+ Was hustled back among the populace.
+
+ In solemn state the holy week went by,
+ And Easter Sunday gleamed upon the sky;
+ The presence of an angel, with its light,
+ Before the sun rose, made the city bright,
+ And with new fervor filled the hearts of men,
+ Who felt that Christ indeed had risen again.
+ Even the Jester, on his bed of straw,
+ With haggard eyes the unwonted splendor saw;
+ He felt within a power unfelt before,
+ And, kneeling humbly on his chamber floor,
+ He heard the rustling garments of the Lord
+ Sweep through the silent air, ascending heavenward.
+
+ And now the visit ending, and once more
+ Valmond returning to the Danube's shore,
+ Homeward the angel journeyed, and again
+ The land was made resplendent with his train,
+ Flashing along the towns of Italy
+ Unto Salerno, and from there by sea.
+ And when once more within Palermo's wall,
+ And, seated on his throne in his great hall,
+ He heard the Angelus from convent towers,
+ As if the better world conversed with ours,
+ He beckoned to King Robert to draw nigher,
+ And with a gesture bade the rest retire;
+ And when they were alone, the angel said,
+ "Art thou the king?" Then bowing down his head,
+ King Robert crossed both hands upon his breast,
+ And meekly answered him: "Thou knowest best!
+ My sins as scarlet are; let me go hence,
+ And in some cloister's school of penitence,
+ Across those stones that pave the way to heaven
+ Walk barefoot till my guilty soul is shriven!"
+ The angel smiled, and from his radiant face
+ A holy light illumined all the place,
+ And through the open window, loud and clear,
+ They heard the monks chant in the chapel near,
+ Above the stir and tumult of the street:
+ "He has put down the mighty from their seat,
+ And has exalted them of low degree!"
+ And through the chant a second melody
+ Rose like the throbbing of a single string:
+ "I am an angel, and thou art the king!"
+
+ King Robert, who was standing near the throne,
+ Lifted his eyes, and lo! he was alone!
+ But all apparelled as in days of old,
+ With ermined mantle and with cloth of gold;
+ And when his courtiers came they found him there
+ Kneeling upon the floor, absorbed in silent prayer.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SERVICE.
+
+ FROM "PIPPA PASSES."
+
+
+ All service ranks the same with God:
+ If now, as formerly he trod
+ Paradise, his presence fills
+ Our earth, each only as God wills
+ Can work--God's puppets, best and worst,
+ Are we; there is no last nor first.
+
+ Say not "a small event"! Why "small"?
+ Costs it more pain than this, ye call
+ A "great event," should come to pass,
+ Than that? Untwine me from the mass
+ Of deeds which make up life, one deed
+ Power shall fall short in or exceed!
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO ANGELS.
+
+
+ God called the nearest angels who dwell with Him above:
+ The tenderest one was Pity, the dearest one was Love.
+
+ "Arise," He said, "my angels! a wail of woe and sin
+ Steals through the gates of heaven, and saddens all within.
+
+ "My harps take up the mournful strain that from a lost world swells,
+ The smoke of torment clouds the light and blights the asphodels.
+
+ "Fly downward to that under world, and on its souls of pain,
+ Let Love drop smiles like sunshine, and Pity tears like rain!"
+
+ Two faces bowed before the Throne, veiled in their golden hair;
+ Four white wings lessened swiftly down the dark abyss of air.
+
+ The way was strange, the flight was long; at last the angels came
+ Where swung the lost and nether world, red-wrapped in rayless flame.
+
+ There Pity, shuddering, wept; but Love, with faith too strong for fear,
+ Took heart from God's almightiness and smiled a smile of cheer.
+
+ And lo! that tear of Pity quenched the flame whereon it fell,
+ And, with the sunshine of that smile, hope entered into hell!
+
+ Two unveiled faces full of joy looked upward to the Throne,
+ Four white wings folded at the feet of Him who sat thereon!
+
+ And deeper than the sound of seas, more soft than falling flake,
+ Amidst the hush of wing and song the Voice Eternal spake:
+
+ "Welcome, my angels! ye have brought a holier joy to heaven;
+ Henceforth its sweetest song shall be the song of sin forgiven!"
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SELF-EXILED.
+
+
+ There came a soul to the gate of Heaven
+ Gliding slow--
+ A soul that was ransomed and forgiven,
+ And white as snow:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ A mystic light beamed from the face
+ Of the radiant maid,
+ But there also lay on its tender grace
+ A mystic shade:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ As sunlit clouds by a zephyr borne
+ Seem not to stir,
+ So to the golden gates of morn
+ They carried her:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Now open the gate, and let her in,
+ And fling It wide,
+ For she has been cleansed from stain of sin,"
+ Saint Peter cried:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Though I am cleansed from stain of sin,"
+ She answered low,
+ "I came not hither to enter in,
+ Nor may I go:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come," she said, "to the pearly door,
+ To see the Throne
+ Where sits the Lamb on the Sapphire Floor,
+ With God alone:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come to hear the new song they sing
+ To Him that died,
+ And note where the healing waters spring
+ From His piercèd side:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "But I may not enter there," she said,
+ "For I must go
+ Across the gulf where the guilty dead
+ Lie in their woe:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "If I enter heaven I may not pass
+ To where they be,
+ Though the wail of their bitter pain, alas!
+ Tormenteth me:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "If I enter heaven I may not speak
+ My soul's desire
+ For them that are lying distraught and weak
+ In flaming fire:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I had a brother, and also another
+ Whom I loved well;
+ What if, in anguish, they curse each other
+ In the depths of hell?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "How could I touch the golden harps,
+ When all my praise
+ Would be so wrought with grief-full warps
+ Of their sad days?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "How love the loved who are sorrowing,
+ And yet be glad?
+ How sing the songs ye are fain to sing,
+ While I am sad?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Oh, clear as glass in the golden street
+ Of the city fair,
+ And the tree of life it maketh sweet
+ The lightsome air:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "And the white-robed saints with their crowns and palms
+ Are good to see,
+ And oh, so grand are the sounding psalms!
+ But not for me:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come where there is no night," she said,
+ "To go away,
+ And help, if I yet may help, the dead
+ That have no day."
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ Saint Peter he turned the keys about,
+ And answered grim:
+ "Can you love the Lord and abide without,
+ Afar from Him?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Can you love the Lord who died for you,
+ And leave the place
+ Where His glory is all disclosed to view,
+ And tender grace?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "They go not out who come in here;
+ It were not meet:
+ Nothing they lack, for He is here,
+ And bliss complete."
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be nearer Christ," she said,
+ "By pitying less
+ The sinful living or woful dead
+ In their helplessness?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be liker Christ were I
+ To love no more
+ The loved, who in their anguish lie
+ Outside the door?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Did He not hang on the cursèd tree,
+ And bear its shame,
+ And clasp to His heart, for love of me,
+ My guilt and blame?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be liker, nearer Him,
+ Forgetting this,
+ Singing all day with the Seraphim,
+ In selfish bliss?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ The Lord Himself stood by the gate,
+ And heard her speak
+ Those tender words compassionate,
+ Gentle and meek:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ Now, pity is the touch of God
+ In human hearts,
+ And from that way He ever trod
+ He ne'er departs:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ And He said, "Now will I go with you,
+ Dear child of love,
+ I am weary of all this glory, too,
+ In heaven above:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "We will go seek and save the lost,
+ If they will hear,
+ They who are worst but need me most,
+ And all are dear:"
+ And the angels were not silent.
+
+WALTER C. SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SYMPATHY.
+
+ FROM "ION," ACT I. SC. 2.
+
+
+ 'T is a little thing
+ To give a cup of water; yet its draught
+ Of cool refreshment, drained by fevered lips,
+ May give a shock of pleasure to the frame
+ More exquisite than when nectarean juice
+ Renews the life of joy in happier hours.
+ It is a little thing to speak a phrase
+ Of common comfort which by daily use
+ Has almost lost its sense, yet on the ear
+ Of him who thought to die unmourned 't will fall
+ Like choicest music, fill the glazing eye
+ With gentle tears, relax the knotted hand
+ To know the bonds of fellowship again;
+ And shed on the departing soul a sense,
+ More precious than the benison of friends
+ About the honored death-bed of the rich,
+ To him who else were lonely, that another
+ Of the great family is near and feels.
+
+SIR THOMAS NOON TALFOURD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SIR GALAHAD.
+
+
+ My good blade carves the casques of men,
+ My tough lance thrusteth sure,
+ My strength is as the strength of ten,
+ Because my heart is pure.
+ The shattering trumpet shrilleth high,
+ The hard brands shiver on the steel,
+ The splintered spear-shafts crack and fly,
+ The horse and rider reel:
+ They reel, they roll in clanging lists,
+ And when the tide of combat stands,
+ Perfume and flowers fall in showers,
+ That lightly rain from ladies' hands.
+
+ How sweet are looks that ladies bend
+ On whom their favors fall!
+ For them I battle till the end,
+ To save from shame and thrall:
+ But all my heart is drawn above,
+ My knees are bowed in crypt and shrine:
+ I never felt the kiss of love,
+ Nor maiden's hand in mine.
+ More bounteous aspects on me beam,
+ Me mightier transports move and thrill;
+ So keep I fair thro' faith and prayer
+ A virgin heart in work and will.
+
+ When down the stormy crescent goes,
+ A light before me swims.
+ Between dark stems the forest glows,
+ I hear a noise of hymns:
+ Then by some secret shrine I ride;
+ I hear a voice, but none are there;
+ The stalls are void, the doors are wide,
+ The tapers burning fair.
+ Fair gleams the snowy altar-cloth,
+ The silver vessels sparkle clean,
+ The shrill bell rings, the censer swings,
+ And solemn chaunts resound between.
+
+ Sometimes on lonely mountain-meres
+ I find a magic bark;
+ I leap on board: no helmsman steers:
+ I float till all is dark.
+ A gentle sound, an awful light!
+ Three angels bear the holy Grail:
+ With folded feet, in stoles of white,
+ On sleeping wings they sail.
+ Ah, blessèd vision! blood of God!
+ My spirit beats her mortal bars,
+ As down dark tides the glory slides,
+ And star-like mingles with the stars.
+
+ When on my goodly charger borne
+ Thro' dreaming towns I go,
+ The cock crows ere the Christmas morn,
+ The streets are dumb with snow.
+ The tempest crackles on the leads,
+ And, ringing, springs from brand and mail;
+ But o'er the dark a glory spreads,
+ And gilds the driving hail.
+ I leave the plain, I climb the height;
+ No branchy thicket shelter yields;
+ But blessèd forms in whistling storms
+ Fly o'er waste fens and windy fields.
+
+ A maiden knight--to me is given
+ Such hope, I know not fear;
+ I yearn to breathe the airs of heaven
+ That often meet me here.
+ I muse on joy that will not cease,
+ Pure spaces clothed in living beams,
+ Pure lilies of eternal peace,
+ Whose odors haunt my dreams;
+ And, stricken by an angel's hand,
+ This mortal armor that I wear.
+ This weight and size, this heart and eyes,
+ Are touched, and turned to finest air.
+
+ The clouds are broken in the sky,
+ And thro' the mountain-walls
+ A rolling organ-harmony
+ Swells up, and shakes and falls.
+ Then move the trees, the copses nod,
+ Wings flutter, voices hover clear:
+ "O just and faithful knight of God!
+ Ride on! the prize is near."
+ So pass I hostel, hall, and grange;
+ By bridge and ford, by park and pale,
+ All-armed I ride, whate'er betide,
+ Until I find the holy Grail.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FLOWERS WITHOUT FRUIT.
+
+
+ Prune thou thy words; the thoughts control
+ That o'er thee swell and throng;--
+ They will condense within thy soul,
+ And change to purpose strong.
+
+ But he who lets his feelings run
+ In soft luxurious flow,
+ Shrinks when hard service must be done,
+ And faints at every woe.
+
+ Faith's meanest deed more favor bears,
+ Where hearts and wills are weighed,
+ Than brightest transports, choicest prayers,
+ Which bloom their hour, and fade.
+
+JOHN HENRY NEWMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SANTA FILOMENA.
+
+ [FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.]
+
+
+ Whene'er a noble deed is wrought,
+ Whene'er is spoken a noble thought,
+ Our hearts, in glad surprise,
+ To higher levels rise.
+
+ The tidal wave of deeper souls
+ Into our inmost being rolls,
+ And lifts us unawares
+ Out of all meaner cares.
+
+ Honor to those whose words or deeds
+ Thus help us in our daily needs,
+ And by their overflow
+ Raise us from what is low!
+
+ Thus thought I, as by night I read
+ Of the great army of the dead,
+ The trenches cold and damp,
+ The starved and frozen camp,
+
+ The wounded from the battle-plain,
+ In dreary hospitals of pain,
+ The cheerless corridors,
+ The cold and stony floors.
+
+ Lo! in that house of misery
+ A lady with a lamp I see
+ Pass through the glimmering gloom,
+ And flit from room to room.
+
+ And slow, as in a dream of bliss,
+ The speechless sufferer turns to kiss
+ Her shadow, as it falls
+ Upon the darkening walls.
+
+ As if a door in heaven should be
+ Opened and then closed suddenly,
+ The vision came and went,
+ The light shone and was spent.
+
+ On England's annals, through the long
+ Hereafter of her speech and song,
+ That light its rays shall cast
+ From portals of the past.
+
+ A Lady with a Lamp shall stand
+ In the great history of the land,
+ A noble type of good,
+ Heroic womanhood.
+
+ Nor even shall be wanting here
+ The palm, the lily, and the spear,
+ The symbols that of yore
+ Saint Filomena bore.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DEED AND A WORD.
+
+
+ A little stream had lost its way
+ Amid the grass and fern;
+ A passing stranger scooped a well,
+ Where weary men might turn;
+ He walled it in and hung with care
+ A ladle at the brink;
+ He thought not of the deed he did,
+ But judged that all might drink.
+ He passed again, and lo! the well,
+ By summer never dried,
+ Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues,
+ And saved a life beside.
+
+ A nameless man, amid a crowd
+ That thronged the daily mart,
+ Let fall a word of hope and love,
+ Unstudied, from the heart;
+ A whisper on the tumult thrown,
+ A transitory breath--
+ It raised a brother from the dust,
+ It saved a soul from death.
+ O germ! O fount! O word of love!
+ O thought at random cast!
+ Ye were but little at the first,
+ But mighty at the last.
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOGGARTH AROON.
+
+
+ Am I the slave they say,
+ Soggarth aroon?[A]
+ Since you did show the way,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Their slave no more to be,
+ While they would work with me
+ Old Ireland's slavery,
+ Soggarth aroon.
+
+ Why not her poorest man,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Try and do all he can,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Her commands to fulfil
+ Of his own heart and will,
+ Side by side with you still,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Loyal and brave to you,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Yet be not slave to you,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Nor, out of fear to you,
+ Stand up so near to you--
+ Och! out of fear to _you_,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+
+ Who, in the winter's night,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ When the cold blasts did bite,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Came to my cabin-door,
+ And on my earthen-floor
+ Knelt by me, sick and poor,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Who, on the marriage day,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Made the poor cabin gay,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ And did both laugh and sing,
+ Making our hearts to ring
+ At the poor christening,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Who, as friends only met,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Never did flout me yet,
+ Soggarth aroon;
+ And when my heart was dim,
+ Gave, while his eye did brim,
+ What I should give to him,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Och! you, and only you,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+ And for this I was true to you,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+ Our love they'll never shake,
+ When for ould Ireland's sake
+ We a true part did take,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+
+JOHN BANIM.
+
+[Footnote A: Priest, dear.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL.
+
+
+ PRELUDE TO PART FIRST.
+
+ Over his keys the musing organist,
+ Beginning doubtfully and far away,
+ First lets his fingers wander as they list,
+ And builds a bridge from Dreamland for his lay;
+ Then, as the touch of his loved instrument
+ Gives hope and fervor, nearer draws his theme,
+ First guessed by faint auroral flushes sent
+ Along the wavering vista of his dream.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Not only around our infancy
+ Doth heaven with all its splendors lie;
+ Daily, with souls that cringe and plot,
+ We Sinais climb and know it not.
+
+ Over our manhood bend the skies;
+ Against our fallen and traitor lives
+ The great winds utter prophecies;
+ With our faint hearts the mountain strives;
+ Its arms outstretched, the druid wood
+ Waits with its Benedicite;
+ And to our age's drowsy blood
+ Still shouts the inspiring sea.
+
+ Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us:
+ The beggar is taxed for a corner to die in.
+ The priest hath his fee who comes and shrives us,
+ We bargain for the graves we lie in;
+ At the devil's booth are all things sold,
+ Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of gold;
+
+ For a cap and bells our lives we pay,
+ Bubbles we buy with a whole soul's tasking:
+ 'Tis heaven alone that is given away,
+ 'Tis only God may be had for the asking;
+ No price is set on the lavish summer;
+ June may be had by the poorest comer.
+
+ And what is so rare as a day in June?
+ Then, if ever, come perfect days;
+ Then Heaven tries earth if it be in tune,
+ And over it softly her warm ear lays;
+ Whether we look, or whether we listen,
+ We hear life murmur, or see it glisten;
+ Every clod feels a stir of might,
+ An instinct within it that reaches and towers,
+ And groping blindly above it for light,
+ Climbs to a soul in grass and flowers;
+ The flush of life may well be seen
+ Thrilling back over hills and valleys;
+ The cowslip startles in meadows green,
+ The buttercup catches the sun in its chalice,
+ And there's never a leaf nor a blade too mean
+ To be some happy creature's palace;
+ The little bird sits at his door in the sun,
+ Atilt like a blossom among the leaves,
+ And lets his illumined being o'errun
+ With the deluge of summer it receives;
+ His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings,
+ And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings;
+ He sings to the wide world, and she to her nest,--
+ In the nice ear of Nature which song is the best?
+
+ Now is the high tide of the year,
+ And whatever of life hath ebbed away
+ Comes flooding back with a ripply cheer,
+ Into every bare inlet and creek and bay;
+ Now the heart is so full that a drop overfills it;
+ We are happy now because God wills it;
+ No matter how barren the past may have been,
+ 'T is enough for us now that the leaves are green;
+ We sit in the warm shade and feel right well
+ How the sap creeps up and the blossoms swell;
+ We may shut our eyes, but we cannot help knowing
+ That skies are clear and grass is growing;
+ The breeze comes whispering in our ear
+ That dandelions are blossoming near,
+ That maize has sprouted, that streams are flowing.
+ That the river is bluer than the sky,
+ That the robin is plastering his house hard by:
+ And if the breeze kept the good news back,
+ For other couriers we should not lack;
+ We could guess it all by yon heifer's lowing,--
+ And hark! how clear bold chanticleer,
+ Warmed with the new wine of the year,
+ Tells all in his lusty crowing!
+
+ Joy comes, grief goes, we know not how;
+ Everything is happy now,
+ Everything is upward striving;
+ 'T is as easy now for the heart to be true
+ As for grass to be green or skies to be blue,--
+ 'Tis the natural way of living:
+ Who knows whither the clouds have fled?
+ In the unscarred heaven they leave no wake;
+ And the eyes forget the tears they have shed,
+ The heart forgets its sorrow and ache;
+ The soul partakes the season's youth,
+ And the sulphurous rifts of passion and woe
+ Lie deep 'neath a silence pure and smooth,
+ Like burnt-out craters healed with snow.
+ What wonder if Sir Launfal now
+ Remember the keeping of his vow?
+
+
+ PART FIRST.
+
+ "My golden spurs now bring to me,
+ And bring to me my richest mail,
+ For to-morrow I go over land and sea
+ In search of the Holy Grail:
+ Shall never a bed for me be spread,
+ Nor shall a pillow be under my head,
+ Till I begin my vow to keep;
+ Here on the rushes will I sleep,
+ And perchance there may come a vision true
+ Ere day create the world anew."
+ Slowly Sir Launfal's eyes grew dim;
+ Slumber fell like a cloud on him,
+ And into his soul the vision flew.
+
+ The crows flapped over by twos and threes,
+ In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees,
+ The little birds sang as if it were
+ The one day of summer in all the year,
+ And the very leaves seemed to sing on the trees:
+ The castle alone in the landscape lay
+ Like an outpost of winter, dull and gray;
+ 'T was the proudest hall in the North Countree,
+ And never its gates might opened be,
+ Save to lord or lady of high degree;
+ Summer besieged it on every side,
+ But the churlish stone her assaults defied;
+ She could not scale the chilly wall,
+ Though around it for leagues her pavilions tall
+ Stretched left and right.
+ Over the hills and out of sight;
+ Green and broad was every tent,
+ And out of each a murmur went
+ Till the breeze fell off at night.
+
+ The drawbridge dropped with a surly clang,
+ And through the dark arch a charger sprang,
+ Bearing Sir Launfal, the maiden knight,
+ In his gilded mail, that flamed so bright
+ It seemed the dark castle had gathered all
+ Those shafts the fierce sun had shot over its wall
+ In his siege of three hundred summers long,
+ And binding them all in one blazing sheaf,
+ Had cast them forth; so, young and strong,
+ And lightsome as a locust leaf,
+ Sir Launfal flashed forth in his maiden mail,
+ To seek in all climes for the Holy Grail.
+
+ It was morning on hill and stream and tree,
+ And morning in the young knight's heart;
+ Only the castle moodily
+ Rebuffed the gifts of the sunshine free,
+ And gloomed by itself apart;
+ The season brimmed all other things up
+ Full as the rain fills the pitcher-plant's cup.
+
+ As Sir Launfal made morn through the darksome gate,
+ He was 'ware of a leper, crouched by the same,
+ Who begged with his hand and moaned as he sate;
+ And a loathing over Sir Launfal came;
+ The sunshine went out of his soul with a thrill,
+ The flesh 'neath his armor 'gan shrink and crawl,
+ And midway its leap his heart stood still
+ Like a frozen waterfall;
+ For this man, so foul and bent of stature,
+ Rasped harshly against his dainty nature,
+ And seemed the one blot on the summer morn,--
+ So he tossed him a piece of gold in scorn.
+
+ The leper raised not the gold from the dust:--
+ "Better to me the poor man's crust,
+ Better the blessing of the poor,
+ Though I turn me empty from his door:
+ That is no true alms which the hand can hold;
+ He gives only the worthless gold
+ Who gives from a sense of duty:
+ But he who gives but a slender mite,
+ And gives to that which is out of sight,--
+ That thread of the all-sustaining Beauty
+ Which runs through all and doth all unite,--
+ The hand cannot clasp the whole of his alms,
+ The heart outstretches its eager palms;
+ For a god goes with it and makes it store
+ To the soul that was starving in darkness before."
+
+
+ PRELUDE TO PART SECOND.
+
+ Down swept the chill wind from the mountain peak,
+ From the snow five thousand summers old;
+ On open wold and hilltop bleak
+ It had gathered all the cold,
+ And whirled it like sleet on the wanderer's cheek;
+ It carried a shiver everywhere
+ From the unleafed boughs and pastures bare;
+ The little brook heard it, and built a roof
+ 'Neath which he could house him winter-proof;
+ All night by the white stars' frosty gleams
+ He groined his arches and matched his beams;
+ Slender and clear were his crystal spars
+ As the lashes of light that trim the stars;
+ He sculptured every summer delight
+ In his halls and chambers out of sight;
+ Sometimes his tinkling waters slipt
+ Down through a frost-leaved forest crypt.
+ Long, sparkling aisles of steel stemmed trees
+ Mending to counterfeit a breeze;
+ Sometimes the roof no fretwork knew
+ But silvery mosses that downward grew;
+ Sometimes it was carved in sharp relief
+ With quaint arabesques of ice-fern leaf;
+ Sometimes it was simply smooth and clear
+ For the gladness of heaven to shine through, and here
+ He had caught the nodding bulrush tops
+ And hung them thickly with diamond drops.
+ That crystalled the beams of moon and sun,
+ And made a star of every one:
+ No mortal builder's most rare device
+ Could match this winter palace of ice;
+ 'T was as if every image that mirrored lay
+ In his depths serene through the summer day,
+ Each fleeting shadow of earth and sky,
+ Lest the happy model should be lost.
+ Sad been mimicked in fairy masonry
+ By the elfin builders of the frost.
+
+ Within the hall are song and laughter;
+ The cheeks of Christmas glow red and jolly,
+ And sprouting is every corbel and rafter
+ With lightsome green of ivy and holly;
+ Through the deep gulf of the chimney wide
+ Wallows the Yule-log's roaring tide;
+ The broad flame pennons droop and flap
+ And belly and tug as a flag in the wind;
+ Like a locust shrills the imprisoned sap,
+ Hunted to death in its galleries blind;
+ And swift little troops of silent sparks,
+ Now pausing, now scattering away as in fear,
+ Go threading the soot forest's tangled darks
+ Like herds of startled deer.
+
+ But the wind without was eager and sharp;
+ Of Sir Launfal's gray hair it makes a harp,
+ And rattles and wrings
+ The icy strings,
+ Singing in dreary monotone
+ A Christmas carol of its own,
+ Whose burden still, as he might guess,
+ Was "Shelterless, shelterless, shelterless!"
+
+ The voice of the seneschal flared like a torch
+ As he shouted the wanderer away from the porch,
+ And he sat in the gateway and saw all night
+ The great hall fire, so cheery and bold,
+ Through the window slits of the castle old,
+ Build out its piers of ruddy light
+ Against the drift of the cold.
+
+
+ PART SECOND.
+
+ There was never a leaf on bush or tree,
+ The bare boughs rattled shudderingly;
+ The river was dumb and could not speak,
+ For the weaver Winter its shroud had spun;
+ A single crow on the tree-top bleak
+ From his shining feathers shed off the cold sun;
+ Again it was morning, but shrunk and cold,
+ As if her veins were sapless and old,
+ And she rose up decrepitly
+ For a last dim look at earth and sea.
+
+ Sir Launfal turned from his own hard gale,
+ For another heir in his earldom sate:
+ An old, bent man, worn out and frail,
+ He came back from seeking the Holy Grail.
+ Little he recked of his earldom's loss,
+ No more on his surcoat was blazoned the cross;
+ But deep in his soul the sigh he wore,
+ The badge of the suffering and the poor.
+
+ Sir Launfal's raiment thin and spare
+ Was idle mail 'gainst the barbèd air,
+ For it was just at the Christmas-time;
+ So he mused, as he sat, of a sunnier clime,
+ And sought for a shelter from cold and snow
+ In the light and warmth of long ago.
+ He sees the snake-like caravan crawl
+ O'er the edge of the desert, black and small,
+ Then nearer and nearer, till, one by one,
+ He can count the camels in the sun,
+ As over the red-hot sands they pass
+ To where, in its slender necklace of grass,
+ The little spring laughed and leapt in the shade.
+ And with its own self like an infant played,
+ And waved its signal of palms.
+
+ "For Christ's sweet sake, I beg an alms:"--
+ The happy camels may reach the spring,
+ But Sir Launfal sees only the grewsome thing,
+ The leper, lank as the rain-blanched bone,
+ That cowers beside him, a thing as lone
+ And white as the ice-isles of Northern seas
+ In the desolate horror of his disease.
+
+ And Sir Launfal said,--"I behold in thee
+ An image of Him who died on the tree;
+ Thou also hast had thy crown of thorns,--
+ Thou also hast had the world's buffets and scorns,--
+
+ And to thy life were not denied
+ The wounds in the hands and feet and side:
+ Mild Mary's Son, acknowledge me;
+ Behold, through him, I give to thee!"
+
+ Then the soul of the leper stood up in his eyes
+ And looked at Sir Launfal, and straightway he
+ Remembered in what a haughtier guise
+ He had flung an alms to leprosie,
+ When he girt his young life up in gilded mail
+ And set forth in search of the Holy Grail.
+ The heart within him was ashes and dust:
+ He parted in twain his single crust,
+ He broke the ice on the streamlet's brink,
+ And gave the leper to eat and drink;
+ 'T was a mouldy crust of coarse brown bread
+ 'T was water out of a wooden bowl,--
+ Yet with fine wheaten bread was the leper fed,
+ And 't was red wine he drank with his thirsty soul
+
+ As Sir Launfal mused with a downcast face,
+ A light shone round about the place;
+ The leper no longer crouched at his side,
+ But stood before him glorified,
+ Shining and tall and fair and straight
+ As the pillar that stood by the Beautiful Gate,--
+ Himself the Gate whereby men can
+ Enter the temple of God in Man.
+
+ His words were shed softer than leaves from the pine,
+ And they fell on Sir Launfal as snows on the brine,
+ That mingle their softness and quiet in one
+ With the shaggy unrest they float down upon;
+ And the voice that was softer than silence said:--
+ Lo, it is I, be not afraid!
+ In many climes, without avail,
+ Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail:
+ Behold, it is here,--this cup which thou
+ Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now;
+ This crust is my body broken for thee,
+ This water His blood that died on the tree;
+ The Holy Supper is kept indeed
+ In whatso we share with another's need.
+ Not, what we give, but what we share,--
+ For the gift without the giver is bare:
+ Who gives himself with his alms feeds three.--
+ Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me."
+
+ Sir Launfal awoke as from a swound:--
+ "The Grail in my castle here is found!
+ Hang my idle armor up on the wall,
+ Let it be the spider's banquet-hall;
+ He must be fenced with stronger mail
+ Who would seek and find the Holy Grail."
+
+ The castle gate stands open now,
+ And the wanderer is welcome to the hall
+ As the hang-bird is to the elm-tree bough;
+ No longer scowl the turrets tall.
+ The summer's long siege at last is o'er:
+ When the first poor outcast went in at the door,
+ She entered with him in disguise,
+ And mastered the fortress by surprise;
+ There is no spot she loves so well on ground;
+ She lingers and smiles there the whole year round;
+ The meanest serf on Sir Launfal's land
+ Has hall and bower at his command;
+ And there's no poor man in the North Countree
+ But is lord of the earldom as much as he.
+
+JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SISTER OF CHARITY.
+
+
+ She once was a lady of honor and wealth;
+ Bright glowed in her features the roses of health;
+ Her vesture was blended of silk and of gold,
+ And her motion shook perfume from every fold:
+ Joy revelled around her, love shone at her side,
+ And gay was her smile as the glance of a bride;
+ And light was her step in the mirth-sounding hall,
+ When she heard of the daughters of Vincent de Paul.
+
+ She felt in her spirit the summons of grace,
+ That called her to live for her suffering race;
+ And, heedless of pleasure, of comfort, of home,
+ Rose quickly, like Mary, and answered, "I come."
+ She put from her person the trappings of pride,
+ And passed from her home with the joy of a bride,
+ Nor wept at the threshold as onward she moved,--
+ For her heart was on fire in the cause it approved.
+
+ Lost ever to fashion, to vanity lost,
+ That beauty that once was the song and the toast,
+ No more in the ball-room that figure we meet,
+ But gliding at dusk to the wretch's retreat.
+ Forgot in the halls is that high-sounding name,
+ For the Sister of Charity blushes at fame:
+ Forgot are the claims of her riches and birth,
+ For she barters for heaven the glory of earth.
+
+ Those feet, that to music could gracefully move,
+ Now bear her alone on the mission of love;
+ Those hands, that once dangled the perfume and gem,
+ Are tending the helpless, or lifted for them;
+ That voice, that once echoed the song of the vain.
+ Now whispers relief to the bosom of pain;
+ And the hair that was shining with diamond and pearl,
+ Is wet with the tears of the penitent girl.
+
+ Her down-bed, a pallet--her trinkets, a bead;
+ Her lustre--one taper, that serves her to read;
+ Her sculpture--the crucifix nailed by her bed;
+ Her paintings--one print of the thorn-crownèd head;
+ Her cushion--the pavement that wearies her knees;
+ Her music--the psalm, or the sigh of disease:
+ The delicate lady lives mortified there,
+ And the feast is forsaken for fasting and prayer.
+
+ Yet not to the service of heart and of mind
+ Are the cares of that heaven-minded virgin confined:
+ Like Him whom she loves, to the mansions of grief
+ She hastes with the tidings of joy and relief.
+ She strengthens the weary, she comforts the weak,
+ And soft is her voice in the ear of the sick;
+ Where want and affliction on mortals attend,
+ The Sister of Charity there is a friend.
+
+ Unshrinking where pestilence scatters his breath,
+ Like an angel she moves, mid the vapors of death;
+ Where rings the loud musket, and flashes the sword,
+ Unfearing she walks, for she follows her Lord.
+ How sweetly she bends o'er each plague-tainted face,
+ With looks that are lighted with holiest grace;
+ How kindly she dresses each suffering limb,
+ For she sees in the wounded the image of Him.
+
+ Behold her, ye worldly! behold her, ye vain!
+ Who shrink from the pathway of virtue and pain!
+ Who yield up to pleasure your nights and your days,
+ Forgetful of service, forgetful of praise.
+ Ye lazy philosophers, self-seeking men;
+ Ye fireside philanthropists, great at the pen;
+ How stands in the balance your eloquence weighed
+ With the life and the deeds of that high-born maid?
+
+GERALD JOSEPH GRIFFEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT I LIVE FOR.
+
+
+ I live for those who love me,
+ Whose hearts are kind and true,
+ For heaven that smiles above me,
+ And waits my spirit, too;
+ For all the ties that bind me,
+ For all the tasks assigned me.
+ And bright hopes left behind me,
+ And good that I can do.
+
+ I live to learn their story
+ Who've suffered for my sake,
+ To emulate their glory,
+ And follow in their wake;
+ Bards, patriots, martyrs, sages,
+ The noble of all ages,
+ Whose deeds crown history's pages,
+ And Time's great volume make.
+
+ I live to hold communion
+ With all that is divine,
+ To feel there is a union
+ 'Twixt Nature's heart and mine;
+ To profit by affliction,
+ Reap truths from fields of fiction,
+ And, wiser from conviction,
+ Fulfil each grand design.
+
+ I live to hail that season,
+ By gifted minds foretold,
+ When men shall rule by reason,
+ And not alone by gold;
+ When man to man united,
+ And every wrong thing righted,
+ The whole world shall be lighted
+ As Eden was of old.
+
+ I live for those who love me,
+ Whose hearts are kind and true,
+ For heaven that smiles above me,
+ And waits my spirit too;
+ For the cause that lacks assistance,
+ For the wrong that needs resistance,
+ For the future in the distance,
+ And the good that I can do.
+
+GEORGE LINNAEUS BANKS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IF WE HAD BUT A DAY.
+
+
+ We should fill the hours with the sweetest things,
+ If we had but a day;
+ We should drink alone at the purest springs
+ In our upward way;
+ We should love with a lifetime's love in an hour,
+ If the hours were few;
+ We should rest, not for dreams, but for fresher power
+ To be and to do.
+
+ We should guide our wayward or wearied wills
+ By the clearest light;
+ We should keep our eyes on the heavenly hills,
+ If they lay in sight;
+ We should trample the pride and the discontent
+ Beneath our feet;
+ We should take whatever a good God sent,
+ With a trust complete.
+
+ We should waste no moments in weak regret,
+ If the day were but one;
+ If what we remember and what we forget
+ Went out with the sun;
+ We should be from our clamorous selves set free,
+ To work or to pray,
+ And to be what the Father would have us be.
+ If we had but a day.
+
+MARY LOWE DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ABOU BEN ADHEM.
+
+
+ Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase!)
+ Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
+ And saw within the moonlight in his room,
+ Making it rich and like a lily in bloom.
+ An angel writing in a book of gold:
+ Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
+ And to the presence in the room he said,
+ "What writest thou?" The vision raised its head,
+ And, with a look made of all sweet accord,
+ Answered, "The names of those who love the Lord."
+ "And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so."
+ Replied the angel. Abou spoke more low,
+ But cheerly still; and said, "I pray thee, then,
+ Write me as one that loves his fellow-men."
+ The angel wrote, and vanished. The next night
+ It came again with a great wakening light,
+ And showed the names whom love of God had blessed,--
+ And lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest!
+
+LEIGH HUNT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE.
+
+
+ If suddenly upon the street
+ My gracious Saviour I should meet,
+ And he should say, "As I love thee,
+ What love hast thou to offer me?"
+ Then what could this poor heart of mine
+ Dare offer to that heart divine?
+
+ His eye would pierce my outward show,
+ His thought my inmost thought would know;
+ And if I said, "I love thee, Lord,"
+ He would not heed my spoken word,
+ Because my daily life would tell
+ If verily I loved him well.
+
+ If on the day or in the place
+ Wherein he met me face to face,
+ My life could show some kindness done,
+ Some purpose formed, some work begun
+ For his dear sake, then it were meet
+ Love's gift to lay at Jesus' feet.
+
+CHARLES FRANCIS RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+SABBATH: WORSHIP: CREED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUNDAY MORNING BELLS.
+
+
+ From the near city comes the clang of bells:
+ Their hundred jarring diverse tones combine
+ In one faint misty harmony, as fine
+ As the soft note yon winter robin swells.
+ What if to Thee in thine infinity
+ These multiform and many-colored creeds
+ Seem but the robe man wraps as masquers' weeds
+ Round the one living truth them givest him--Thee?
+ What if these varied forms that worship prove,
+ Being heart-worship, reach thy perfect ear
+ But as a monotone, complete and clear,
+ Of which the music is, through Christ's name, love?
+ Forever rising in sublime increase
+ To "Glory in the highest,--on earth peace"?
+
+DINAH M. MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SABBATH HYMN ON THE MOUNTAINS.
+
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not in the temple of shapeliest mould,
+ Polished with marble and gleaming with gold,
+ Piled upon pillars of slenderest grace,
+ But here in the blue sky's luminous face,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the organ's melodious wave
+ Dies 'neath the rafters that narrow the nave,
+ But here with the free wind's wandering sweep,
+ Here with the billow that booms from the deep,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the pale-faced multitude meet
+ In the sweltering lane and the dun-visaged street,
+ But here where bright ocean, thick sown with green isles,
+ Feeds the glad eye with a harvest of smiles,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Here where the strength of the old granite Ben
+ Towers o'er the greenswarded grace of the glen,
+ Where the birch flings its fragrance abroad on the hill,
+ And the bee of the heather-bloom wanders at will,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Here where the loch, the dark mountain's fair daughter,
+ Down the red scaur flings the white-streaming water,
+ Leaping and tossing and swirling forever,
+ Down to the bed of the smooth-rolling river,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the voice of a preacher instructs you,
+ Not where the hand of a mortal conducts you,
+ But where the bright welkin in scripture of glory
+ Blazons creation's miraculous story.
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ The wind and the welkin, the sun and the river,
+ Weaving a tissue of wonders forever;
+ The mead and the mountain, the flower and the tree,
+ What is their pomp, but a vision of thee,
+ Wonderful Lord?
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not in the square-hewn, many-tiered pile,
+ Not in the long-drawn, dim-shadowed aisle,
+ But where the bright world, with age never hoary,
+ Flashes her brightness and thunders his glory,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+JOHN STUART BLACKIE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SABBATH MORNING.
+
+
+ With silent awe I hail the sacred morn,
+ That slowly wakes while all the fields are still!
+ A soothing calm on every breeze is borne;
+ A graver murmur gurgles from the rill;
+ And echo answers softer from the hill;
+ And sweeter sings the linnet from the thorn:
+ The skylark warbles in a tone less shrill.
+ Hail, light serene! hail, sacred Sabbath morn!
+ The rooks float silent by in airy drove;
+ The sun a placid yellow lustre throws;
+ The gales that lately sighed along the grove
+ Have hushed their downy wings in dead repose
+ The hovering rack of clouds forgets to move,--
+ So smiled that day when the first morn arose!
+
+JOHN LEYDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POOR MAN'S DAY.
+
+ FROM "THE SABBATH."
+
+
+ How still the morning of the hallowed day!
+ Mute is the voice of rural labor, hushed
+ The ploughboy's whistle and the milkmaid's song.
+ The scythe lies glittering in the dewy wreath
+ Of tedded grass, mingled with faded flowers,
+ That yestermorn bloomed waving in the breeze;
+ Sounds the most faint attract the ear,--the hum
+ Of early bee, the trickling of the dew,
+ The distant bleating, midway up the hill.
+ Calmness sits throned on yon unmoving cloud.
+ To him who wanders o'er the upland leas
+ The blackbird's note comes mellower from the dale;
+ And sweeter from the sky the gladsome lark
+ Warbles his heaven-tuned song; the lulling brook
+ Murmurs more gently down the deep-worn glen;
+ While from yon lowly roof, whose circling smoke
+ O'ermounts the mist, is heard at intervals
+ The voice of psalms, the simple song of praise.
+ With dovelike wings Peace o'er yon village broods;
+ The dizzying mill-wheel rests; the anvil's din
+ Hath ceased; all, all around is quietness.
+ Less fearful on this day, the limping hare
+ Stops, and looks back, and stops, and looks on man,
+ Her deadliest foe. The toil-worn horse, set free,
+ Unheedful of the pasture, roams at large;
+ And as his stiff, unwieldy bulk he rolls,
+ His iron-armed hoofs gleam in the morning ray.
+ But chiefly man the day of rest enjoys.
+ Hail, Sabbath! thee I hail, the poor man's day.
+ On other days the man of toil is doomed
+ To eat his joyless bread, lonely; the ground
+ Both seat and board; screened from the winter's cold
+ And summer's heat by neighboring hedge or tree;
+ But on this day, imbosomed in his home,
+ He shares the frugal meal with those he loves;
+ With those he loves he shares the heartfelt joy
+ Of giving thanks to God--not thanks of form,
+ A word and a grimace, but reverently,
+ With covered face and upward earnest eye.
+ Hail, Sabbath! thee I hail, the poor man's day.
+ The pale mechanic now has leave to breathe
+ The morning air, pure from the city's smoke;
+ While, wandering slowly up the river-side,
+ He meditates on Him, whose power he marks
+ In each green tree that proudly spreads the bough
+ As in the tiny dew-bent flowers that bloom
+ Around its roots; and while he thus surveys,
+ With elevated joy, each rural charm,
+ He hopes, yet fears presumption in the hope,
+ That heaven may be one Sabbath without end.
+
+JAMES GRAHAME.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SABBATH OF THE SOUL.
+
+
+ Sleep, sleep to-day, tormenting cares,
+ Of earth and folly born;
+ Ye shall not dim the light that streams
+ From this celestial morn.
+
+ To-morrow will be time enough
+ To feel your harsh control;
+ Ye shall not violate, this day,
+ The Sabbath of my soul.
+
+ Sleep, sleep forever, guilty thoughts;
+ Let fires of vengeance die;
+ And, purged from sin, may I behold
+ A God of purity!
+
+ANNA LÆTITIA BARBAULD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VESPER HYMN.
+
+
+ Now, on sea and land descending,
+ Brings the night its peace profound:
+ Let our vesper hymn be blending
+ With the holy calm around.
+ Soon as dies the sunset glory,
+ Stars of heaven shine out above,
+ Telling still the ancient story--
+ Their Creator's changeless love.
+
+ Now, our wants and burdens leaving
+ To his care who cares for all,
+ Cease we fearing, cease we grieving;
+ At his touch our burdens fall.
+ As the darkness deepens o'er us,
+ Lo! eternal stars arise;
+ Hope and Faith and Love rise glorious,
+ Shining in the Spirit's skies.
+
+SAMUEL LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VESPER HYMN.
+
+
+ The day is done; the weary day of thought and toil is past,
+ Soft falls the twilight cool and gray on the tired earth at last:
+ By wisest teachers wearied, by gentlest friends oppressed,
+ In thee alone, the soul, outworn, refreshment finds, and rest.
+
+ Bend, Gracious Spirit, from above, like these o'erarching skies,
+ And to thy firmament of love lift up these longing eyes;
+ And, folded by thy sheltering hand, in refuge still and deep,
+ Let blessed thoughts from thee descend, as drop the dews of sleep.
+
+ And when refreshed the soul once more puts on new life and power;
+ Oh, let thine image. Lord, alone, gild the first waking hour!
+ Let that dear Presence dawn and glow, fairer than morn's first ray,
+ And thy pure radiance overflow the splendor of the day.
+
+ So in the hastening even, so in the coming morn,
+ When deeper slumber shall be given, and fresher life be born.
+ Shine out, true Light! to guide my way amid that deepening gloom,
+ And rise, O Morning Star, the first that dayspring to illume!
+
+ I cannot dread the darkness where thou wilt watch o'er me,
+ Nor smile to greet the sunrise unless thy smile I see;
+ Creator, Saviour, Comforter! on thee my soul is cast;
+ At morn, at night, in earth, in heaven, be thou my First and Last!
+
+ELIZA SCUDDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMAZING, BEAUTEOUS CHANGE!
+
+
+ Amazing, beauteous change!
+ A world created new!
+ My thoughts with transport range,
+ The lovely scene to view;
+ In all I trace,
+ Saviour divine,
+ The word is thine,--
+ Be thine the praise!
+
+ See crystal fountains play
+ Amidst the burning sands;
+ The river's winding way
+ Shines through the thirsty lands;
+ New grass is seen,
+ And o'er the meads
+ Its carpet spreads
+ Of living green.
+
+ Where pointed brambles grew,
+ Intwined with horrid thorn,
+ Gay flowers, forever new,
+ The painted fields adorn,--
+ The blushing rose
+ And lily there,
+ In union fair,
+ Their sweets disclose.
+
+ Where the bleak mountain stood
+ All bare and disarrayed,
+ See the wide-branching wood
+ Diffuse its grateful shade;
+ Tall cedars nod,
+ And oaks and pines,
+ And elms and vines
+ Confess thee God.
+
+ The tyrants of the plain
+ Their savage chase give o'er,--
+ No more they rend the slain,
+ And thirst for blood no more;
+ But infant hands
+ Fierce tigers stroke,
+ And lions yoke
+ In flowery bands.
+
+ O, when, Almighty Lord!
+ Shall these glad things arise,
+ To verify thy word,
+ And bless our wandering eyes?
+ That earth may raise,
+ With all its tongues,
+ United songs
+ Of ardent praise.
+
+PHILIP DODDRIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WORD.
+
+
+ O Word of God incarnate,
+ O Wisdom from on high,
+ O Truth unchanged, unchanging,
+ O Light of our dark sky;
+ We praise thee for the radiance
+ That from the hallowed page,
+ A lantern to our footsteps,
+ Shines on from age to age.
+
+ The Church from thee, her Master,
+ Received the gift divine;
+ And still that light she lifteth
+ O'er all the earth to shine.
+ It is the golden casket
+ Where gems of truth are stored;
+ It is the heaven-drawn picture
+ Of, thee, the living Word.
+
+ It floateth like a banner
+ Before God's host unfurled;
+ It shineth like a beacon
+ Above the darkling world;
+ It is the chart and compass
+ That o'er life's surging sea,
+ Mid mists and rocks and quicksands,
+ Still guide, O Christ, to thee.
+
+ Oh, make thy Church, dear Saviour,
+ A lamp of burnished gold,
+ To bear before the nations
+ Thy true light, as of old.
+ Oh, teach thy wandering pilgrims
+ By this their path to trace,
+ Till, clouds and darkness ended,
+ They see thee face to face.
+
+WILLIAM WALSHAM HOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHIMES OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+ The chimes, the chimes of Motherland,
+ Of England green and old.
+ That out from fane and ivied tower
+ A thousand years have tolled;
+ How glorious must their music be
+ As breaks the hallowed day,
+ And calleth with a seraph's voice
+ A nation up to pray!
+
+ Those chimes that tell a thousand tales,
+ Sweet tales of olden time;
+ And ring a thousand memories
+ At vesper, and at prime!
+ At bridal and at burial,
+ For cottager and king,
+ Those chimes, those glorious Christian chimes,
+ How blessedly they ring!
+
+ Those chimes, those chimes of Motherland,
+ Upon a Christmas morn.
+ Outbreaking as the angels did,
+ For a Redeemer born!
+ How merrily they call afar,
+ To cot and baron's hall,
+ With holly decked and mistletoe,
+ To keep the festival!
+
+ The chimes of England, how they peal
+ From tower and Gothic pile,
+ Where hymn and swelling anthem fill
+ The dim cathedral aisle;
+ Where windows bathe the holy light
+ On priestly heads that falls,
+ And stains the florid tracery
+ Of banner-dighted walls!
+
+ And then, those Easter bells, in spring,
+ Those glorious Easter chimes!
+ How loyally they hail thee round,
+ Old Queen of holy times!
+ From hill to hill like sentinels,
+ Responsively they cry,
+ And sing the rising of the Lord,
+ From vale to mountain high.
+
+ I love ye, chimes of Motherland,
+ With all this soul of mine,
+ And bless the Lord that I am sprung
+ Of good old English line:
+ And like a son I sing the lay
+ That England's glory tells;
+ For she is lovely to the Lord,
+ For you, ye Christian bells!
+
+ And heir of her historic fame,
+ Though far away my birth,
+ Thee, too, I love, my Forest-land,
+ The joy of all the earth;
+ For thine thy mother's voice shall be,
+ And here, where God is king,
+ With English chimes, from Christian spires,
+ The wilderness shall ring.
+
+ARTHUR CLEVELAND COXE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OLD VILLAGE CHOIR.
+
+
+ I have fancied, sometimes, the Bethel-bent beam,
+ That trembled to earth in the patriarch's dream,
+ Was a ladder of song in that wilderness rest,
+ From the pillar of stone to the blue of the blest.
+ And the angels descending to dwell with us here,
+ "Old Hundred," and "Corinth," and "China," and "Mear."
+
+ "Let us sing to God's praise," the minister said.
+ All the psalm-books at once fluttered open at "York";
+ Sunned their long dotted wings in the words that he read,
+ While the leader leaped into the tune just ahead,
+ And politely picked up the key-note with a fork;
+ And the vicious old viol went growling along
+ At the heels of the girls, in the rear of the song.
+
+ All the hearts are not dead, not under the sod,
+ That those breaths can blow open to heaven and God!
+ Ah, "Silver Street" flows by a bright shining road,--
+ Oh, not to the hymns that in harmony flowed,--
+ But the sweet human psalms of the old-fashioned choir,
+ To the girl that sang alto--the girl that sang air!
+
+ Oh, I need not a wing--bid no genii come
+ With a wonderful web from Arabian loom,
+ To bear me again up the river of Time,
+ When the world was in rhythm, and life was its rhyme--
+ Where the streams of the years flowed so noiseless and narrow,
+ That across it there floated the song of the sparrow--
+
+ For a sprig of green caraway carries me there.
+ To the old village church, and the old village choir,
+ Where clear of the floor my feet slowly swung,
+ And timed the sweet pulse of the praise that they sung,
+ Till the glory aslant from the afternoon sun
+ Seemed the rafters of gold in God's temple begun!
+
+ You may smile at the nasals of old Deacon Brown,
+ Who followed by scent, till he ran the tune down;
+ And dear Sister Green, with more goodness than grace,
+ Rose and fell on the tunes as she stood in her place,
+ And where "Coronation" exultingly flows,
+ Tried to reach the high notes on the tips of her toes!
+
+ To the land of the leal they have gone with their song,
+ Where the choir and the chorus together belong,
+ Oh be lifted, ye gates! Let me hear them again--
+ Blessèd song, blessèd singers! forever, Amen!
+
+BENJAMIN F. TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A LANCASHIRE DOXOLOGY.
+
+ "Some cotton has lately been imported into Farringdon, where
+ the mills have been closed for a considerable time. The
+ people, who were previously in the deepest distress, went out
+ to meet the cotton: the women wept over the bales and kissed
+ them, and finally sang the Doxology over them."--_Spectator_
+ of May 14, 1803.
+
+
+ "Praise God from whom all blessings flow,"
+ Praise him who sendeth joy and woe.
+ The Lord who takes, the Lord who gives,
+ O, praise him, all that dies, and lives.
+
+ He opens and he shuts his hand,
+ But why we cannot understand:
+ Pours and dries up his mercies' flood,
+ And yet is still All-perfect Good.
+
+ We fathom not the mighty plan,
+ The mystery of God and man;
+ We women, when afflictions come,
+ We only suffer and are dumb.
+
+ And when, the tempest passing by,
+ He gleams out, sunlike through our sky,
+ We look up, and through black clouds riven
+ We recognize the smile of Heaven.
+
+ Ours is no wisdom of the wise,
+ We have no deep philosophies;
+ Childlike we take both kiss and rod,
+ For he who loveth knoweth God.
+
+DINAH M. MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REBECCA'S HYMN.
+
+ FROM "IVANHOE."
+
+
+ When Israel, of the Lord beloved,
+ Out from the land of bondage came,
+ Her fathers' God before her moved,
+ An awful guide, in smoke and flame.
+ By day, along the astonished lands,
+ The cloudy pillar glided slow:
+ By night, Arabia's crimsoned sands
+ Returned the fiery column's glow.
+
+ There rose the choral hymn of praise,
+ And trump and timbrel answered keen,
+ And Zion's daughters poured their lays,
+ With priest's and warrior's voice between.
+ No portents now our foes amaze,
+ Forsaken Israel wanders lone:
+ Our fathers would not know Thy ways,
+ And Thou hast left them to their own.
+
+ But, present still, though now unseen!
+ When brightly shines the prosperous day,
+ Be thoughts of Thee a cloudy screen
+ To temper the deceitful ray.
+ And O, when stoops on Judah's path
+ In shade and storm the frequent night,
+ Be Thou, long-suffering, slow to wrath,
+ A burning and a shining light!
+
+ Our harps we left by Babel's streams,
+ The tyrant's jest, the Gentile's scorn;
+ No censer round our altar beams,
+ And mute are timbrel, harp, and horn.
+ But Thou hast said, "The blood of goat,
+ The flesh of rams, I will not prize;
+ A contrite heart, a humble thought,
+ Are mine accepted sacrifice."
+
+SIR WALTER SCOTT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOOK OF GOD.
+
+
+ Thy thoughts are here, my God,
+ Expressed in words divine,
+ The utterance of heavenly lips
+ In every sacred line.
+
+ Across the ages they
+ Have reached us from afar,
+ Than the bright gold more golden they,
+ Purer than purest star.
+
+ More durable they stand
+ Than the eternal hills;
+ Far sweeter and more musical
+ Than music of earth's rills.
+
+ Fairer in their fair hues
+ Than the fresh flowers of earth,
+ More fragrant than the fragrant climes
+ Where odors have their birth.
+
+ Each word of thine a gem
+ From the celestial mines,
+ A sunbeam from that holy heaven
+ Where holy sunlight shines.
+
+ Thine, thine, this book, though given
+ In man's poor human speech,
+ Telling of things unseen, unheard,
+ Beyond all human reach.
+
+ No strength it craves or needs
+ From this world's wisdom vain;
+ No filling up from human wells,
+ Or sublunary rain.
+
+ No light from sons of time,
+ Nor brilliance from its gold;
+ It sparkles with its own glad light,
+ As in the ages old.
+
+ A thousand hammers keen,
+ With fiery force and strain,
+ Brought down on it in rage and hate,
+ Have struck this gem in vain.
+
+ Against this sea-swept rock
+ Ten thousand storms their will
+ Of foam and rage have wildly spent;
+ It lifts its calm face still.
+
+ It standeth and will stand,
+ Without or change or age,
+ The word of majesty and light,
+ The church's heritage.
+
+HORATIUS BONAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MEETING.
+
+
+ The elder folk shook hands at last,
+ Down seat by seat the signal passed.
+ To simple ways like ours unused,
+ Half solemnized and half amused,
+ With long-drawn breath and shrug, my guest
+ His sense of glad relief expressed.
+ Outside, the hills lay warm in sun;
+ The cattle in the meadow-run
+ Stood half-leg deep; a single bird
+ The green repose above us stirred.
+ "What part or lot have you," he said,
+ "In these dull rites of drowsy-head?
+ Is silence worship? Seek it where
+ It soothes with dreams the summer air;
+ Not in this close and rude-benched hall,
+ But where soft lights and shadows fall,
+ And all the slow, sleep-walking hours
+ Glide soundless over grass and flowers!
+ From time and place and form apart,
+ Its holy ground the human heart,
+ Nor ritual-bound nor templeward
+ Walks the free spirit of the Lord!
+ Our common Master did not pen
+ His followers up from other men;
+ His service liberty indeed,
+ He built no church, he framed no creed;
+ But while the saintly Pharisee
+ Made broader his phylactery,
+ As from the synagogue was seen
+ The dusty-sandalled Nazarene
+ Through ripening cornfields lead the way
+ Upon the awful Sabbath day,
+ His sermons were the healthful talk
+ That shorter made the mountain-walk,
+ His wayside texts were flowers and birds,
+ Where mingled with his gracious words
+ The rustle of the tamarisk-tree
+ And ripple-wash of Galilee."
+
+ "Thy words are well, O friend," I said;
+ "Unmeasured and unlimited,
+ With noiseless slide of stone to stone,
+ The mystic Church of God has grown.
+ Invisible and silent stands
+ The temple never made with hands,
+ Unheard the voices still and small
+ Of its unseen confessional.
+ He needs no special place of prayer
+ Whose hearing ear is everywhere;
+ He brings not back the childish days
+ That ringed the earth with stones of praise,
+ Roofed Karnak's hall of gods, and laid
+ The plinths of Philae's colonnade.
+ Still less he owns the selfish good
+ And sickly growth of solitude,--
+ The worthless grace that, out of sight,
+ Flowers in the desert anchorite;
+ Dissevered from the suffering whole,
+ Love hath no power to save a soul.
+ Not out of Self, the origin
+ And native air and soil of sin,
+ The living waters spring and flow,
+ The trees with leaves of healing grow.
+
+ "Dream not, O friend, because I seek
+ This quiet shelter twice a week,
+ I better deem its pine-laid floor
+ Than breezy hill or sea-sung shore;
+ But nature is not solitude;
+ She crowds us with her thronging wood;
+ Her many hands reach out to us,
+ Her many tongues are garrulous;
+ Perpetual riddles of surprise
+ She offers to our ears and eyes;
+ She will not leave our senses still,
+ But drags them captive at her will;
+ And, making earth too great for heaven,
+ She hides the Giver in the given.
+
+ "And so I find it well to come
+ For deeper rest to this still room,
+ For here the habit of the soul
+ Feels less the outer world's control;
+ The strength of mutual purpose pleads
+ More earnestly our common needs;
+ And from the silence multiplied
+ By these still forms on either side,
+ The world that time and sense have known
+ Falls off and leaves us God alone.
+
+ "Yet rarely through the charmed repose
+ Unmixed the stream of motive flows,
+ A flavor of its many springs,
+ The tints of earth and sky it brings;
+ In the still waters needs must be
+ Some shade of human sympathy;
+ And here, in its accustomed place,
+ I look on memory's dearest face;
+ The blind by-sitter guesseth not
+ What shadow haunts that vacant spot;
+ No eyes save mine alone can see
+ The love wherewith it welcomes me!
+ And still, with those alone my kin,
+ In doubt and weakness, want and sin,
+ I bow my head, my heart I bare
+ As when that face was living there,
+ And strive (too oft, alas! in vain)
+ The peace of simple trust to gain,
+ Fold fancy's restless wings, and lay
+ The idols of my heart away.
+
+ "Welcome the silence all unbroken,
+ Nor less the words of fitness spoken,--
+ Such golden words as hers for whom
+ Our autumn flowers have just made room;
+ Whose hopeful utterance through and through
+ The freshness of the morning blew;
+ Who loved not less the earth that light
+ Fell on it from the heavens in sight,
+ But saw in all fair forms more fair
+ The Eternal beauty mirrored there.
+ Whose eighty years but added grace
+ And saintlier meaning to her face,--
+ The look of one who bore away
+ Glad tidings from the hills of day,
+ While all our hearts went forth to meet
+ The coming of her beautiful feet!
+ Or haply hers whose pilgrim tread
+ Is in the paths where Jesus led;
+ Who dreams her childhood's Sabbath dream
+ By Jordan's willow-shaded stream,
+ And, of the hymns of hope and faith,
+ Sang by the monks of Nazareth,
+ Hears pious echoes, in the call
+ To prayer, from Moslem minarets fall,
+ Repeating where His works were wrought
+ The lesson that her Master taught,
+ Of whom an elder Sibyl gave,
+ The prophecies of Cumae's cave!
+
+ "I ask no organ's soulless breath
+ To drone the themes of life and death,
+ No altar candle-lit by day,
+ No ornate wordsman's rhetoric-play,
+ No cool philosophy to teach
+ Its bland audacities of speech
+ To double-tasked idolaters,
+ Themselves their gods and worshippers,
+ No pulpit hammered by the fist
+ Of loud-asserting dogmatist,
+ Who borrows for the hand of love
+ The smoking thunderbolts of Jove.
+ I know how well the fathers taught,
+ What work the later schoolmen wrought;
+ I reverence old-time faith and men,
+ But God is near us now as then;
+ His force of love is still unspent,
+ His hate of sin as imminent;
+ And still the measure of our needs
+ Outgrows the cramping bounds of creeds;
+ The manna gathered yesterday
+ Already savors of decay;
+ Doubts to the world's child-heart unknown
+ Question us now from star and stone;
+ Too little or too much we know,
+ And sight is swift and faith is slow;
+ The power is lost to self-deceive
+ With shallow forms of make-believe.
+ We walk at high noon, and the bells
+ Call to a thousand oracles,
+ But the sound deafens, and the light
+ Is stronger than our dazzled sight;
+ The letters of the sacred Book
+ Glimmer and swim beneath our look;
+ Still struggles in the Age's breast
+ With deepening agony of quest
+ The old entreaty: 'Art thou He,
+ Or look we for the Christ to be?'
+
+ "God should be most where man is least;
+ So, where is neither church nor priest,
+ And never rag of form or creed
+ To clothe the nakedness of need,--
+ Where farmer-folk in silence meet,--
+ I turn my bell-unsummoned feet;
+ I lay the critic's glass aside,
+ I tread upon my lettered pride,
+ And, lowest-seated, testify
+ To the oneness of humanity;
+ Confess the universal want,
+ And share whatever Heaven may grant.
+ He findeth not who seeks his own,
+ The soul is lost that's saved alone.
+ Not on one favored forehead fell
+ Of old the fire-tongued miracle,
+ But flamed o'er all the thronging host
+ The baptism of the Holy Ghost;
+ Heart answers heart: in one desire
+ The blending lines of prayer aspire;
+ 'Where, in my name, meet two or three,'
+ Our Lord hath said, 'I there will be!'
+
+ "So sometimes comes to soul and sense
+ The feeling which is evidence
+ That very near about us lies
+ The realm of spiritual mysteries.
+ The sphere of the supernal powers
+ Impinges on this world of ours.
+ The low and dark horizon lifts,
+ To light the scenic terror shifts;
+ The breath of a diviner air
+ Blows down the answer of a prayer:--
+ That all our sorrow, pain, and doubt
+ A great compassion clasps about,
+ And law and goodness, love and force,
+ Are wedded fast beyond divorce.
+ Then duty leaves to love its task,
+ The beggar Self forgets to ask;
+ With smile of trust and folded hands,
+ The passive soul in waiting stands
+ To feel, as flowers the sun and dew,
+ The One true Life its own renew.
+
+ "So, to the calmly gathered thought
+ The innermost of truth is taught,
+ The mystery dimly understood,
+ That love of God is love of good,
+ And, chiefly, its divinest trace
+ In Him of Nazareth's holy face;
+ That to be saved is only this,--
+ Salvation from our selfishness,
+ From more than elemental fire,
+ The soul's unsanctified desire,
+ From sin itself, and not the pain
+ That warns us of its chafing chain;
+ That worship's deeper meaning lies
+ In mercy, and not sacrifice,
+ Not proud humilities of sense
+ And posturing of penitence,
+ But love's unforced obedience;
+ That Book and Church and Day are given
+ For man, not God,--for earth, not heaven,--
+ The blessed means to holiest ends,
+ Not masters, but benignant friends;
+ That the dear Christ dwells not afar,
+ The king of some remoter star,
+ Listening, at times, with flattered ear,
+ To homage wrung from selfish fear,
+ But here, amidst the poor and blind,
+ The bound and suffering of our kind,
+ In works we do, in prayers we pray,
+ Life of our life, He lives to-day."
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LIVING TEMPLE.
+
+
+ Nor in the world of light alone,
+ Where God has built his blazing throne,
+ Nor yet alone in earth below,
+ With belted seas that come and go,
+ And endless isles of sunlit green,
+ Is all thy Maker's glory seen:
+ Look in upon thy wondrous frame,--
+ Eternal wisdom still the same!
+
+ The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves
+ Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,
+ Whose streams of brightening purple rush,
+ Fired with a new and livelier blush,
+ While all their burden of decay
+ The ebbing current steals away,
+ And red with Nature's flame they start
+ From the warm fountains of the heart.
+
+ No rest that throbbing slave may ask,
+ Forever quivering o'er his task,
+ While far and wide a crimson jet
+ Leaps forth to fill the woven net
+ Which in unnumbered crossing tides
+ The flood of burning life divides,
+ Then, kindling each decaying part,
+ Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.
+
+ But warmed with that unchanging flame
+ Behold the outward moving frame,
+ Its living marbles jointed strong
+ With glistening band and silvery thong,
+ And linked to reason's guiding reins
+ By myriad rings in trembling chains,
+ Each graven with the threaded zone
+ Which claims it as the Master's own.
+
+ See how yon beam of seeming white
+ Is braided out of seven-hued light,
+ Yet in those lucid globes no ray
+ By any chance shall break astray.
+ Hark, how the rolling surge of sound,
+ Arches and spirals circling round,
+ Wakes the hushed spirit through thine ear
+ With music it is heaven to hear.
+
+ Then mark the cloven sphere that holds
+ All thought in its mysterious folds,
+ That feels sensation's faintest thrill,
+ And flashes forth the sovereign will;
+ Think on the stormy world that dwells
+ Locked in its dim and clustering cells!
+ The lightning gleams of power it sheds
+ Along its hollow glassy threads!
+
+ O Father! grant thy love divine
+ To make these mystic temples thine!
+ When wasting age and wearying strife
+ Have sapped the leaning walls of life,
+ When darkness gathers over all,
+ And the last tottering pillars-fall,
+ Take the poor dust thy mercy warms,
+ And mould it into heavenly forms!
+
+OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OF HYM THAT TOGYDER WYLL SERVE TWO MAYSTERS.
+
+
+ A Fole he is and voyde of reason
+ Whiche with one hounde tendyth to take
+ Two harys in one instant and season;
+ Rightso is he that wolde undertake
+ Hym to two lordes a servaunt to make;
+ For whether that he be lefe or lothe,
+ The one he shall displease, or els bothe.
+
+ A fole also he is withouten doute,
+ And in his porpose sothly blyndyd sore,
+ Which doth entende labour or go aboute
+ To serve god, and also his wretchyd store
+ Of worldly ryches: for as I sayde before,
+ He that togyder will two maysters serve
+ Shall one displease and nat his love deserve.
+
+ For be that with one hounde wol take also
+ Two harys togyther in one instant
+ For the moste parte doth the both two forgo,
+ And if he one have: harde it is and skant
+ And that blynd fole mad and ignorant
+ That draweth thre boltis atons[A] in one bowe
+ At one marke shall shote to[o] high or to[o] lowe.
+ He that his mynde settyth god truly to serve
+ And his sayntes: this worlde settynge at nought
+ Shall for rewarde everlastynge joy deserve,
+ But in this worlde he that settyth his thought
+ All men to please, and in favour to be brought,
+ Must lout and lurke, flater, laude, and lye:
+ And cloke in knavys counseyll, though it fals be.
+
+ Wherfore I may prove by these examples playne
+ That it is better more godly and plesant
+ To leve this mondayne casualte and payne
+ And to thy maker one god to be servaunt.
+ Which whyle thou lyvest shall nat let the want
+ That thou desyrest justly, for thy syrvyce,
+ And than after gyve the, the joyes of Paradyse.
+
+From the German of SEBASTIAN BRANDT.
+
+Translation of ALEXANDER BARCLAY.
+
+[Footnote A: At once.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RELIGION AND DOCTRINE.
+
+
+ He stood before the Sanhedrim;
+ The scowling rabbis gazed at him;
+ He recked not of their praise or blame;
+ There was no fear, there was no shame
+ For one upon whose dazzled eyes
+ The whole world poured its vast surprise.
+ The open heaven was far too near,
+ His first day's light too sweet and clear,
+ To let him waste his new-gained ken
+ On the hate-clouded face of men.
+
+ But still they questioned, Who art thou?
+ What hast thou been? What art thou now?
+ Thou art not he who yesterday
+ Sat here and begged beside the way,
+ For he was blind.
+ _And I am he;
+ For I was blind, but now I see_.
+
+ He told the story o'er and o'er;
+ It was his full heart's only lore;
+ A prophet on the Sabbath day
+ Had touched his sightless eyes with clay,
+ And made him see, who had been blind.
+ Their words passed by him like the wind
+ Which raves and howls, but cannot shock
+ The hundred-fathom-rooted rock.
+
+ Their threats and fury all went wide;
+ They could not touch his Hebrew pride;
+ Their sneers at Jesus and his band,
+ Nameless and homeless in the land,
+ Their boasts of Moses and his Lord,
+ All could not change him by one word.
+
+ _I know not that this man may be,
+ Sinner or saint; but as for me,
+ One thing I know, that I am he
+ Who once was blind, and now I see_.
+
+ They were all doctors of renown,
+ The great men of a famous town,
+ With deep brows, wrinkled, broad, and wise,
+ Beneath their wide phylacteries;
+ The wisdom of the East was theirs,
+ And honor crowned their silver hairs;
+ The man they jeered and laughed to scorn
+ Was unlearned, poor, and humbly born;
+ But he knew better far than they
+ What came to him that Sabbath day;
+ And what the Christ had done for him,
+ He knew, and not the Sanhedrim.
+
+JOHN HAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RABBI BEN EZRA.
+
+
+ Grow old along with me!
+ The best is yet to be,
+ The last of life, for which the first I was made:
+ Our times are in his hand
+ Who saith "A whole I planned
+ Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be afraid!"
+
+ Not that, amassing flowers,
+ Youth sighed, "Which rose make ours,
+ Which lily leave and then as best recall?"
+ Not that, admiring stars,
+ It yearned, "Nor Jove, nor Mars;
+ Mine be some figured flame which blends, transcends them all!"
+
+ Not for such hopes and fears,
+ Annulling youth's brief years,
+ Do I remonstrate--folly wide the mark!
+ Rather I prize the doubt
+ Low kinds exist without,
+ Finished and finite clods, untroubled by a spark.
+
+ Poor vaunt of life indeed,
+ Were man but formed to feed
+ On joy, to solely seek and find and feast:
+ Such feasting ended, then
+ As sure an end to men;
+ Irks care the crop-full bird? Frets doubt the maw-crammed beast?
+
+ Rejoice we are allied
+ To That which doth provide
+ And not partake, effect and not receive!
+ A spark disturbs our clod;
+ Nearer we hold of God
+ Who gives, than of His tribes that take, I must believe.
+
+ Then, welcome each rebuff
+ That turns earth's smoothness rough,
+ Each sting that bids nor sit nor stand, but go!
+ Be our joys three parts pain!
+ Strive, and hold cheap the strain;
+ Learn, nor account the pang; dare, never grudge the throe!
+
+ For thence--a paradox
+ Which comforts while it mocks--
+ Shall life succeed in that it seems to fail:
+ What I aspired to be,
+ And was not, comforts me:
+ A brute I might have been, but would not sink i' the scale.
+
+ What is he but a brute
+ Whose flesh hath soul to suit,
+ Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play?
+ To man, propose this test--
+ Thy body at its best,
+ How far can that project thy soul on its lone way?
+
+ Yet gifts should prove their use:
+ I own the Past profuse
+ Of power each side, perfection every turn:
+ Eyes, ears took in their dole,
+ Brain treasured up the whole;
+ Should not the heart beat once, "How good to live and learn?"
+
+ Not once beat "Praise be Thine!
+ I see the whole design,
+ I, who saw Power, shall see Love perfect too:
+ Perfect I call Thy plan:
+ Thanks that I was a man!
+ Maker, remake, complete--I trust what Thou shalt do!"
+
+ For pleasant is this flesh;
+ Our soul, in its rose-mesh
+ Pulled ever to the earth, still yearns for rest:
+ Would we some prize might hold
+ To match those manifold
+ Possessions of the brute--gain most, as we did best!
+
+ Let us not always say,
+ "Spite of this flesh to-day.
+ I strove, made head, gained ground upon the whole!"
+ As the bird wings and sings,
+ Let us cry, "All good things
+ Are ours, nor soul helps flesh more, now, than flesh helps soul!"
+
+ Therefore I summon age
+ To grant youth's heritage,
+ Life's struggle having so far reached its term:
+ Thence shall I pass, approved
+ A man, for aye removed
+ From the developed brute; a God though in the germ.
+
+ And I shall thereupon
+ Take rest, ere I be gone
+ Once more on my adventure brave and new:
+ Fearless and unperplexed,
+ When I wage battle next,
+ What weapons to select, what armor to indue.
+
+ Youth ended, I shall try
+ My gain or loss thereby;
+ Be the fire ashes, what survives is gold:
+ And I shall weigh the same.
+ Give life its praise or blame:
+ Young, all lay in dispute; I shall know, being old.
+
+ For note, when evening shuts,
+ A certain moment cuts
+ The deed off, calls the glory from the gray:
+ A whisper from the west
+ Shoots--"Add this to the rest,
+ Take it and try its worth: here dies another day."
+
+ So, still within this life,
+ Though lifted o'er its strife,
+ Let me discern, compare, pronounce at last,
+ "This rage was right i' the main,
+ That acquiescence vain:
+ The Future I may face now I have proved the Past."
+
+ For more is not reserved
+ To man, with soul just nerved
+ To act to-morrow what he learns to-day:
+ Here, work enough to watch
+ The Master work, and catch
+ Hints of the proper craft, tricks of the tool's true play.
+ As it was better, youth
+ Should strive, through acts uncouth,
+ Toward making, than repose on aught found made;
+ So, better, age, exempt
+ From strife, should know, than tempt
+ Further. Thou waitedst age; wait death nor be afraid!
+
+ Enough now, if the Right
+ And Good and Infinite
+ Be named here, as thou callest thy hand thine own,
+ With knowledge absolute,
+ Subject to no dispute
+ From fools that crowded youth, nor let thee feel alone.
+
+ Be there, for once and all,
+ Severed great minds from small,
+ Announced to each his station in the Past!
+ Was I, the world arraigned,
+ Were they, my soul disdained,
+ Right? Let age speak the truth and give us peace at last!
+
+ Now, who shall arbitrate?
+ Ten men love what I hate,
+ Shun what I follow, slight what I receive:
+ Ten, who in ears and eyes
+ Match me: we all surmise,
+ They, this thing, and I, that: whom shall my soul believe?
+
+ Not on the vulgar mass
+ Called "work," must sentence pass,
+ Things done, that took the eye and had the price;
+ O'er which, from level stand,
+ The low world laid its hand,
+ Found straightway to its mind, could value in a trice:
+
+ But all, the world's coarse thumb
+ And finger failed to plumb,
+ So passed in making up the main account;
+ All instincts immature,
+ All purposes unsure,
+ That weighed not as his work, yet swelled the man's amount:
+
+ Thoughts hardly to be packed
+ Into a narrow act,
+ Fancies that broke through language and escaped;
+ All I could never be,
+ All, men ignored in me,
+ This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped.
+
+ Ay, note that Potter's wheel,
+ That metaphor! and feel
+ Why time spins fast; why passive lies our clay,--
+ Thou, to whom fools propound,
+ When the wine makes its round,
+ "Since life fleets, all is change; the Past gone, seize to-day!"
+
+ Fool! All that is, at all,
+ Lasts ever, past recall;
+ Earth changes, but thy soul and God stand sure:
+ What entered into thee,
+ _That_ was, is, and shall be:
+ Time's wheel runs back or stops; Potter and clay endure.
+
+ He fixed thee 'mid this dance
+ Of plastic circumstance,
+ This Present, thou, forsooth, wouldst fain arrest:
+ Machinery just meant
+ To give thy soul its bent,
+ Try thee and turn thee forth, sufficiently impressed.
+
+ What though the earlier grooves
+ Which ran the laughing loves
+ Around thy base, no longer pause and press?
+ What though, about thy rim,
+ Scull-things in order grim
+ Grow out, in graver mood, obey the sterner stress?
+
+ Look not thou down, but up!
+ To uses of a cup,
+ The festal board, lamp's flash, and trumpet's peal,
+ The new wine's foaming flow,
+ The Master's lips aglow!
+ Thou, heaven's consummate cup, what needst thou with earth's wheel?
+
+ But I need, now as then,
+ Thee, God, who mouldest men;
+ And since, not even while the whirl was worst,
+ Did I--to the wheel of life
+ With shapes and colors rife,
+ Bound dizzily--mistake my end, to slake Thy thirst:
+
+ So, take and use Thy work!
+ Amend what flaws may lurk,
+ What strain o' the stuff, what warpings past the aim!
+ My times be in _Thy_ hand!
+ Perfect the cup as planned!
+ Let age approve of youth, and death complete the same!
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RELIGION OF HUDIBRAS.
+
+ FROM "HUDIBRAS," PART I.
+
+
+ He was of that stubborn crew
+ Of errant saints, whom all men grant
+ To be the true church militant;
+ Such as do build their faith upon
+ The holy text of pike and gun;
+ Decide all controversies by
+ Infallible artillery,
+ And prove their doctrine orthodox
+ By apostolic blows and knocks;
+ Call fire, and sword, and desolation
+ A godly, thorough Reformation,
+ Which always must be carried on
+ And still be doing, never done;
+ As if religion were intended
+ For nothing else but to be mended.
+ A sect whose chief devotion lies
+ In odd perverse antipathies;
+ In falling out with that or this,
+ And finding somewhat still amiss;
+ More peevish, cross, and splenetic,
+ Than dog distract, or monkey sick;
+ That with more care keep holiday
+ The wrong than others the right way;
+ Compound for sins they are inclined to,
+ By damning those they have no mind to;
+ Still so perverse and opposite,
+ As if they worshipped God for spite;
+ The self-same thing they will abhor
+ One way, and long another for.
+
+SAMUEL BUTLER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROBLEM.
+
+
+ I like a church; I like a cowl;
+ I love a prophet of the soul;
+ And on my heart monastic aisles
+ Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles;
+ Yet not for all his faith can see
+ Would I that cowled churchman be.
+ Why should the vest on him allure,
+ Which I could not on me endure?
+
+ Not from a vain or shallow thought
+ His awful Jove young Phidias brought;
+ Never from lips of cunning fell
+ The thrilling Delphic oracle:
+ Out from the heart of nature rolled
+ The burdens of the Bible old;
+ The litanies of nations came,
+ Like the volcano's tongue of flame,
+ Up from the burning core below,--
+ The canticles of love and woe.
+ The hand that rounded Peters dome,
+ And groined the aisles of Christian Rome,
+ Wrought in a sad sincerity;
+ Himself from God he could not free;
+ He builded better than he knew;--
+ The conscious stone to beauty grew.
+
+ Knowest thou what wove yon woodbird's nest
+ Of leaves, and feathers from her breast?
+ Or how the fish outbuilt her shell.
+ Painting with morn each annual cell?
+ Or how the sacred pine-tree adds
+ To her old leaves new myriads?
+ Such and so grew these holy piles,
+ Whilst love and terror laid the tiles.
+ Earth proudly wears the Parthenon,
+ As the best gem upon her zone;
+ And Morning opes with haste her lids,
+ To gaze upon the Pyramids;
+ O'er England's abbeys bends the sky,
+ As on its friends, with kindred eye;
+ For, out of Thought's interior sphere,
+ These wonders rose to upper air;
+ And Nature gladly gave them place,
+ Adopted them into her race,
+ And granted them an equal date
+ With Andes and with Ararat.
+
+ These temples grew as grows the grass;
+ Art might obey, but not surpass.
+ The passive Master lent his hand
+ To the vast Soul that o'er him planned;
+ And the same power that reared the shrine
+ Bestrode the tribes that knelt within.
+ Ever the fiery Pentecost
+ Girds with one flame the countless host,
+ Trances the heart through chanting choirs,
+ And through the priest the mind inspires.
+ The word unto the prophet spoken
+ Was writ on tables yet unbroken;
+ The word by seers or sibyls told,
+ In groves of oak, or fanes of gold,
+ Still floats upon the morning wind,
+ Still whispers to the willing mind.
+ One accent of the Holy Ghost
+ The heedless world hath never lost.
+ I know what say the fathers wise,--
+ The Book itself before me lies,--
+ Old Chrysostom, best Augustine,
+ And he who blent both in his line,
+ The younger Golden Lips or mines,
+ Taylor, the Shakespeare of divines.
+ His words are music in my ear,
+ I see his cowled portrait dear;
+ And yet, for all his faith could see,
+ I would not the good bishop be.
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON AN INFANT
+
+ WHICH DIED BEFORE BAPTISM.
+
+
+ "Be, rather than be called, a child of God,"
+ Death whispered!--with assenting nod,
+ Its head upon its mother's breast,
+ The baby bowed, without demur--
+ Of the kingdom of the Blest
+ Possessor, not inheritor.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT WAS HIS CREED?
+
+ "Religion relates to life, and the life of religion is to do
+ good."--SWEDENBORG.
+
+
+ He left a load of anthracite
+ In front of a poor woman's door.
+ When the deep snow, frozen and white,
+ Wrapped street and square, mountain and moor.
+ That was his deed.
+ He did it well.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I cannot tell.
+
+ Blessed "in his basket and his store,"
+ In sitting down and rising up;
+ When more he got, he gave the more,
+ Withholding not the crust and cup.
+ He took the lead
+ In each good task.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I did not ask.
+
+ His charity was like the snow,
+ Soft, white, and silent in its fall;
+ Not like the noisy winds that blow
+ From shivering trees the leaves,--a pall
+ For flowers and weed,
+ Drooping below.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ The poor may know.
+
+ He had great faith in loaves of bread
+ For hungry people, young and old,
+ Hope he inspired; kind words he said
+ To those he sheltered from the cold.
+ For we should feed
+ As well as pray.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I cannot say.
+
+ In words he did not put his trust;
+ His faith in words he never writ;
+ He loved to share his cup and crust
+ With all mankind who needed it.
+ In time of need
+ A friend was he.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ He told not me.
+
+ He put his trust in heaven, and he
+ Worked well with hand and head;
+ And what he gave in charity
+ Sweetened his sleep and daily bread.
+ Let us take heed,
+ For life is brief.
+ What was his creed--What
+ his belief?
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PHILOSOPHER TOAD.
+
+
+ Down deep in the hollow, so damp and so cold,
+ Where oaks are by ivy o'ergrown,
+ The gray moss and lichen creep over the mould,
+ Lying loose on a ponderous stone.
+ Now within this huge stone, like a king on his throne,
+ A toad has been sitting more years than is known;
+ And, strange as it seems, yet he constantly deems
+ The world standing still while he's dreaming his dreams,--
+ Does this wonderful toad in his cheerful abode
+ In the innermost heart of that flinty old stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in the hollow, from morning till night,
+ Dun shadows glide over the ground,
+ Where a watercourse once, as it sparkled with light,
+ Turned a ruined old mill-wheel around:
+ Long years have passed by since its bed became dry,
+ And the trees grow so close, scarce a glimpse of the sky
+ Is seen in the hollow, so dark and so damp,
+ Where the glow-worm at noonday is trimming his lamp,
+ And hardly a sound from the thicket around,
+ Where the rabbit and squirrel leap over the ground,
+ Is heard by the toad in his spacious abode
+ In the innermost heart of that ponderous stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in that hollow the bees never come,
+ The shade is too black for a flower;
+ And jewel-winged birds with their musical hum,
+ Never flash in the night of that bower;
+ But the cold-blooded snake, in the edge of the brake,
+ Lies amid the rank grass, half asleep, half awake;
+ And the ashen-white snail, with the slime in, its trail,
+ Moves wearily on like a life's tedious tale,
+ Yet disturbs not the toad in his spacious abode,
+ In the innermost heart of that flinty old stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in a hollow some wiseacres sit,
+ Like a toad in his cell in the stone;
+ Around them in daylight the blind owlets flit,
+ And their creeds are with ivy o'ergrown;--
+ Their stream may go dry, and the wheels cease to ply,
+ And their glimpses be few of the sun and the sky,
+ Still they hug to their breast every time-honored guest.
+ And slumber and doze in inglorious rest;
+ For no progress they find in the wide sphere of mind,
+ And the world's standing still with all of their kind;
+ Contented to dwell deep down in the well,
+ Or move like a snail in the crust of his shell,
+ Or live like the toad in his narrow abode,
+ With their souls closely wedged in a thick wall of stone,
+ By the gray weeds of prejudice rankly o'ergrown.
+
+REBECCA S. NICHOLS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HER CREED.
+
+
+ She stood before a chosen few,
+ With modest air and eyes of blue;
+ A gentle creature, in whose face
+ Were mingled tenderness and grace.
+
+ "You wish to join our fold," they said:
+ "Do you believe in all that's read
+ From ritual and written creed,
+ Essential to our human need?"
+
+ A troubled look was in her eyes;
+ She answered, as in vague surprise.
+ As though the sense to her were dim,
+ "I only strive to follow Him."
+
+ They knew her life; how, oft she stood,
+ Sweet in her guileless maidenhood,
+ By dying bed, in hovel lone,
+ Whose sorrow she had made her own.
+
+ Oft had her voice in prayer been heard,
+ Sweet as the voice of singing bird;
+ Her hand been open in distress;
+ Her joy to brighten and to bless.
+
+ Yet still she answered, when they sought
+ To know her inmost earnest thought,
+ With look as of the seraphim,
+ "I only strive to follow Him."
+
+ Creeds change as ages come and go;
+ We see by faith, but little know:
+ Perchance the sense was not so dim
+ To her who "strove to follow Him."
+
+SARAH KNOWLES BOLTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY CREED.
+
+
+ I hold that Christian grace abounds
+ Where charity is seen; that when
+ We climb to heaven, 't is on the rounds
+ Of love to men.
+
+ I hold all else, named piety,
+ A selfish scheme, a vain pretence;
+ Where centre is not--can there be
+ Circumference?
+
+ This I moreover hold, and dare
+ Affirm where'er my rhyme may go,--
+ Whatever things be sweet or fair,
+ Love makes them so.
+
+ Whether it be the lullabies
+ That charm to rest the nursling bird,
+ Or the sweet confidence of sighs
+ And blushes, made without a word.
+
+ Whether the dazzling and the flush
+ Of softly sumptuous garden bowers,
+ Or by some cabin door, a bush
+ Of ragged flowers.
+
+ 'Tis not the wide phylactery,
+ Nor stubborn fast, nor stated prayers,
+ That make us saints: we judge the tree
+ By what it bears.
+
+ And when a man can live apart
+ From works, on theologic trust,
+ I know the blood about his heart
+ Is dry as dust.
+
+ALICE CAREY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GIVE ME THY HEART.
+
+
+ With echoing steps the worshippers
+ Departed one by one;
+ The organ's pealing voice was stilled,
+ The vesper hymn was done;
+ The shadow fell from roof and arch,
+ Dim was the incensed air,
+ One lamp alone, with trembling ray,
+ Told of the Presence there!
+
+ In the dark church she knelt alone;
+ Her tears were falling fast;
+ "Help, Lord," she cried, "the shades of death
+ Upon my soul are cast!
+ Have I not shunned the path of sin,
+ And chose the better part? "--
+ What voice came through the sacred air?--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have not I laid before thy shrine
+ My wealth, O Lord?" she cried;
+ "Have I kept aught of gems or gold,
+ To minister to pride?
+ Have I not bade youth's joys retire,
+ And vain delights depart?"--
+ But sad and tender was the voice,--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have I not, Lord, gone day by day
+ Where thy poor children dwell;
+ And carried help, and gold, and food?
+ O Lord, thou know'st it well!
+ From many a house, from many a soul,
+ My hand bids care depart":--
+ More sad, more tender was the voice,--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have I not worn my strength away
+ With fast and penance sore?
+ Have I not watched and wept?" she cried;
+ "Did thy dear saints do more?
+ Have I not gained thy grace, O Lord,
+ And won in heaven my part?"--
+ It echoed louder in her soul,--
+ "_My child, give me thy heart_!
+
+ "For I have loved thee with a love
+ No mortal heart can show;
+ A love so deep my saints in heaven
+ Its depths can never know:
+ When pierced and wounded on the cross,
+ Man's sin and doom were mine,
+ I loved thee with undying love,
+ Immortal and divine!
+
+ "I loved thee ere the skies were spread;
+ My soul bears all thy pains;
+ To gain thy love my sacred heart
+ In earthly shrines remains:
+ Vain are thy offerings, vain thy sighs,
+ Without one gift divine;
+ Give it, my child, thy heart to me,
+ And it shall rest in mine!"
+
+ In awe she listened, as the shade
+ Passed from her soul away;
+ In low and trembling voice she cried,--
+ "Lord, help me to obey!
+ Break thou the chains of earth, O Lord,
+ That bind and hold my heart;
+ Let it be thine and thine alone,
+ Let none with thee have part.
+
+ "Send down, O Lord, thy sacred fire!
+ Consume and cleanse the sin
+ That lingers still within its depths:
+ Let heavenly love begin.
+ That sacred flame thy saints have known,
+ Kindle, O Lord, in me,
+ Thou above all the rest forever,
+ And all the rest in thee."
+
+ The blessing fell upon her soul;
+ Her angel by her side
+ Knew that the hour of peace was come;
+ Her soul was purified;
+ The shadows fell from roof and arch,
+ Dim was the incensed air,--
+ But peace went with her as she left
+ The sacred Presence there!
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O, MAY I JOIN THE CHOIR INVISIBLE!
+
+
+ O, may I join the choir invisible
+ Of those immortal dead who live again
+ In minds made better by their presence; live
+ In pulses stirred to generosity,
+ In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn
+ Of miserable aims that end with self,
+ In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars,
+ And with their mild persistence urge men's minds
+ To vaster issues.
+ So to live is heaven:
+ To make undying music in the world,
+ Breathing a beauteous order that controls
+ With growing sway the growing life of man.
+ So we inherit that sweet purity
+ For which we struggled, failed, and agonized
+ With widening retrospect that bred despair.
+ Rebellious flesh that would not be subdued,
+ A vicious parent shaming still its child,
+ Poor anxious penitence, is quick dissolved;
+ Its discords quenched by meeting harmonies,
+ Die in the large and charitable air.
+ And all our rarer, better, truer self,
+ That sobbed religiously in yearning song,
+ That watched to ease the burden of the world,
+ Laboriously tracing what must be,
+ And what may yet be better,--saw within
+ A worthier image for the sanctuary,
+ And shaped it forth before the multitude,
+ Divinely human, raising worship so
+ To higher reverence more mixed with love,
+ That better self shall live till human Time
+ Shall fold its eyelids, and the human sky
+ Be gathered like a scroll within the tomb,
+ Unread forever.
+ This is life to come,
+ Which martyred men have made more glorious
+ For us, who strive to follow.
+ May I reach
+ That purest heaven,--be to other souls
+ The cup of strength in some great agony,
+ Enkindle generous ardor, feed pure love,
+ Beget the smiles that have no cruelty,
+ Be the sweet presence of a good diffused,
+ And in diffusion ever more intense!
+ So shall I join the choir invisible,
+ Whose music is the gladness of the world.
+
+MARIAN EVANS LEWES CROSS (_George Eliot_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O YET WE TRUST THAT SOMEHOW GOOD.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," LIII.
+
+
+ O yet we trust that somehow good
+ Will be the final goal of ill,
+ To pangs of nature, sins of will,
+ Defects of doubt, and taints of blood;
+
+ That nothing walks with aimless feet;
+ That not one life shall be destroyed,
+ Or cast as rubbish to the void,
+ When God hath made the pile complete;
+
+ That not a worm is cloven in vain;
+ That not a moth with vain desire
+ Is shrivelled in a fruitless fire,
+ Or but subserves another's gain.
+
+ Behold, we know not anything;
+ I can but trust that good shall fall
+ At last--far off--at last, to all,
+ And every winter change to spring.
+
+ So runs my dream: but what am I?
+ An infant crying in the night:
+ An infant crying for the light:
+ And with no language but a cry.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DAY BREAKS.
+
+
+ What dost thou see, lone watcher on the tower.
+ Is the day breaking? Comes the wished-for hour?
+ Tell us the signs, and stretch abroad thy hand,
+ If the bright morning dawns upon the land.
+
+ "The stars are clear above me; scarcely one
+ Has dimmed its rays in reverence to the sun;
+ But I yet see on the horizon's verge
+ Some fair, faint streaks, as if the light would surge."
+
+ Look forth again, O watcher on the tower,--
+ The people wake and languish for the hour;
+ Long have they dwelt in darkness, and they pine
+ For the full daylight that they know must shine.
+
+ "I see not well,--the moon is cloudy still,--
+ There is a radiance on the distant hill;
+ Even as I watch the glory seems to grow;
+ But the stars blink, and the night breezes blow."
+
+ And is that all, O watcher on the tower?
+ Look forth again; it must be near the hour;
+ Dost thou not see the snowy mountain copes,
+ And the green woods beneath them on the slopes?
+
+ "A mist envelops them; I cannot trace
+ Their outline; but the day comes on apace:
+ The clouds roll up in gold and amber flakes,
+ And all the stars grow dim; the morning breaks."
+
+ We thank thee, lonely watcher on the tower:
+ But look again, and tell us, hour by hour,
+ All thou beholdest: many of us die
+ Ere the day comes; oh, give them a reply!
+
+ "I see the hill-tops now, and chanticleer
+ Crows his prophetic carol on mine ear;
+ I see the distant woods and fields of corn,
+ And ocean gleaming in the light of morn."
+
+ Again, again, O watcher on the tower!
+ We thirst for daylight, and we bide the hour,
+ Patient, but longing. Tell us, shall it be
+ A bright, calm, glorious daylight for the free?
+
+ "I hope, but cannot tell; I hear a song,
+ Vivid as day itself, and clear and strong,
+ As of a lark--young prophet of the noon--
+ Pouring in sunlight his seraphic tune."
+
+ What doth he say, O watcher on the tower?
+ Is he a prophet? does the dawning hour
+ Inspire his music? Is his chant sublime,
+ Filled with the glories of the future time?
+
+ "He prophesies,--his heart is full; his lay
+ Tells of the brightness of a peaceful day;
+ A day not cloudless, nor devoid of storm,
+ But sunny for the most, and clear and warm."
+
+ We thank thee, watcher on the lonely tower,
+ For all thou tellest. Sings he of an hour
+ When error shall decay, and truth grow strong,
+ And light shall rule supreme and conquer wrong?
+
+ "He sings of brotherhood and joy and peace,
+ Of days when jealousies and hate shall cease;
+ When war shall cease, and man's progressive mind
+ Soar as unfettered as its God designed."
+
+ Well done, thou watcher on the lonely tower!
+ Is the day breaking? Dawns the happy hour?
+ We pine to see it; tell us yet again
+ If the broad daylight breaks upon the plain?
+
+ "It breaks! it comes! the misty shadows fly:
+ A rosy radiance gleams upon the sky;
+ The mountain-tops reflect it calm and clear,
+ The plain is yet in shade, but day is near."
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY HOME.
+
+ A THANKSGIVING TO GOD FOR A HOUSE IN THE GREEN PARISH OF
+ DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+ Lord, thou hast given me a cell
+ Wherein to dwell,
+ A little house, whose humble roof
+ Is weather proof;
+ Under the sparres of which I lie,
+ Both soft and drie;
+ Where thou, my chamber for to ward,
+ Hast set a guard
+ Of harmlesse thoughts, to watch and keep
+ Me while I sleep.
+ Low is my porch, as is my fate;
+ Both void of state;
+ And yet the threshold of my doore
+ Is worn by the poore,
+ Who hither come and freely get
+ Good words or meat.
+ Like as my parlour, so my hall
+ And kitchen's small;
+ A little butterie, and therein
+ A little byn,
+ Which keeps my little loafe of bread
+ Unchipt, unflead.
+ Some sticks of thorn or briar
+ Make me a fire,
+ Close by whose loving coals I sit,
+ And glow like it.
+ Lord, I confesse too, when I dine,
+ The pulse is thine,
+ And all those other bits that bee
+ There placed by thee;
+ The worts, the purslain, and the messe
+ Of water-cresse,
+ Which of thy kindness thou hast sent;
+ And my content
+ Makes those and my beloved beet
+ More sweet.
+ 'Tis thou that crown'st my glittering hearth
+ With guiltlesse mirth,
+ And giv'st me wassaile bowles to drink,
+ Spiced to the brink.
+ Lord, 'tis thy plenty-dropping hand
+ That soiles my land,
+ And gives me for my bushel sowne,
+ Twice ten for one.
+ Thou mak'st my teeming hen to lay
+ Her egg each day,
+ Besides my healthful ewes to bear
+ Me twins each yeare;
+ The while the conduits of my kine
+ Run creame for wine.
+ All these and better thou dost send
+ Me to this end,
+ That I should render, for my part,
+ _A thankfulle heart,_
+ Which, fired with incense, I resigne
+ As wholly thine;
+ But the acceptance, that must be,
+ MY CHRIST, by thee.
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell? I humbly crave.
+ Let me once know.
+ I sought thee in a secret cave;
+ And asked if Peace were there.
+ A hollow wind did seem to answer, "No!
+ Go, seek elsewhere."
+
+ I did; and, going, did a rainbow note:
+ "Surely," thought I,
+ "This is the lace of Peace's coat.
+ I will search out the matter."
+ But, while I looked, the clouds immediately
+ Did break and scatter.
+
+ Then went I to a garden, and did spy
+ A gallant flower,--
+ The crown-imperial. "Sure," said I,
+ "Peace at the root must dwell."
+ But, when I digged, I saw a worm devour
+ What showed so well.
+
+ At length I met a reverend, good old man;
+ Whom when for Peace
+ I did demand, he thus began:
+ "There was a prince of old
+ At Salem dwelt, who lived with good increase
+ Of flock and fold.
+
+ "He sweetly lived; yet sweetness did not save
+ His life from foes.
+ But, after death, out of his grave
+ There sprang twelve stalks of wheat;
+ Which many wondering at, got some of those
+ To plant and set.
+
+ "It prospered strangely, and did soon disperse
+ Through all the earth.
+ For they that taste it do rehearse,
+ That virtue lies therein,--
+ A secret virtue, bringing peace and mirth,
+ By flight of sin.
+
+ "Take of this grain, which in my garden grows,
+ And grows for you:
+ Make bread of it; and that repose
+ And peace which everywhere
+ With so much earnestness you do pursue,
+ Is only there."
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ Is this the peace of God, this strange sweet calm?
+ The weary day is at its zenith still,
+ Yet 't is as if beside some cool, clear rill,
+ Through shadowy stillness rose an evening psalm.
+ And all the noise of life were hushed away,
+ And tranquil gladness reigned with gently soothing sway.
+
+ It was not so just now. I turned aside
+ With aching head, and heart most sorely bowed;
+ Around me cares and griefs in crushing crowd.
+ While inly rose the sense, in swelling tide,
+ Of weakness, insufficiency, and sin,
+ And fear, and gloom, and doubt in mighty flood rolled in.
+
+ That rushing flood I had no power to meet,
+ Nor power to flee: my present, future, past,
+ Myself, my sorrow, and my sin I cast
+ In utter helplessness at Jesu's feet:
+ Then bent me to the storm, if such his will.
+ He saw the winds and waves, and whispered.
+ "Peace, be still!"
+
+ And there was calm! O Saviour, I have proved
+ That thou to help and save art really near:
+ How else this quiet rest from grief and fear
+ And all distress? The cross is not removed,
+ I must go forth to bear it as before,
+ But, leaning on thine arm, I dread its weight no more.
+
+ Is it indeed thy peace? I have not tried
+ To analyze my faith, dissect my trust,
+ Or measure if belief be full and just,
+ And therefore claim thy peace. But thou hast died,
+ I know that this is true for me,
+ And, knowing it, I come, and cast my all on thee.
+
+ It is not that I feel less weak, but thou
+ Wilt be my strength; it is not that I see
+ Less sin, but more of pardoning love with thee,
+ And all-sufficient grace. Enough! and now
+ All fluttering thought is stilled, I only rest,
+ And feel that thou art near, and know that I am blest.
+
+FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIVING WATERS.
+
+
+ There are some hearts like wells, green-mossed and deep
+ As ever Summer saw;
+ And cool their water is,--yea, cool and sweet;--
+ But you must come to draw.
+ They hoard not, yet they rest in calm content,
+ And not unsought will give;
+ They can be quiet with their wealth unspent,
+ So self-contained they live.
+
+ And there are some like springs, that bubbling burst
+ To follow dusty ways,
+ And run with offered cup to quench his thirst
+ Where the tired traveller strays;
+ That never ask the meadows if they want
+ What is their joy to give;--
+ Unasked, their lives to other life they grant,
+ So self-bestowed they live!
+
+ And One is like the ocean, deep and wide,
+ Wherein all waters fall;
+ That girdles the broad earth, and draws the tide,
+ Feeding and bearing all;
+ That broods the mists, that sends the clouds abroad,
+ That takes, again to give;--
+ Even the great and loving heart of God.
+ Whereby all love doth live.
+
+CAROLINE S. SPENCER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DEVOTION.
+
+
+ The immortal gods
+ Accept the meanest altars, that are raised
+ By pure devotion; and sometimes prefer
+ An ounce of frankincense, honey, or milk,
+ Before whole hecatombs, or Sabæan gems,
+ Offered in ostentation.
+
+PHILIP MASSINGER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SEASIDE WELL.
+
+ "Waters flowed over mine head; then I said, I am cut
+ off."--LAMENTATIONS iii. 54.
+
+
+ One day I wandered where the salt sea-tide
+ Backward had drawn its wave,
+ And found a spring as sweet as e'er hillside
+ To wild-flowers gave.
+ Freshly it sparkled in the sun's bright look,
+ And mid its pebbles strayed,
+ As if it thought to join a happy brook
+ In some green glade.
+
+ But soon the heavy sea's resistless swell
+ Came rolling in once more,
+ Spreading its bitter o'er the clear sweet well
+ And pebbled shore.
+ Like a fair star thick buried in a cloud,
+ Or life in the grave's gloom,
+ The well, enwrapped in a deep watery shroud,
+ Sunk to its tomb.
+
+ As one who by the beach roams far and wide,
+ Remnant of wreck to save,
+ Again I wandered when the salt sea-tide
+ Withdrew its wave;
+ And there, unchanged, no taint in all its sweet,
+ No anger in its tone,
+ Still as it thought some happy brook to meet,
+ The spring flowed on.
+
+ While waves of bitterness rolled o'er its head,
+ Its heart had folded deep
+ Within itself, and quiet fancies led,
+ As in a sleep;
+ Till, when the ocean loosed his heavy chain,
+ And gave it back to day,
+ Calmly it turned to its own life again
+ And gentle way.
+
+ Happy, I thought, that which can draw its life
+ Deep from the nether springs,
+ Safe 'neath the pressure, tranquil mid the strife,
+ Of surface things.
+ Safe--for the sources of the nether springs
+ Up in the far hills lie;
+ Calm--for the life its power and freshness brings
+ Down from the sky.
+
+ So, should temptations threaten, and should sin
+ Roll in its whelming flood,
+ Make strong the fountain of thy grace within
+ My soul, O God!
+ If bitter scorn, and looks, once kind, grown strange,
+ With crushing chillness fall,
+ From secret wells let sweetness rise, nor change
+ My heart to gall!
+
+ When sore thy hand doth press, and waves of thine
+ Afflict me like a sea,--
+ Deep calling deep,--infuse from source divine
+ Thy peace in me!
+ And when death's tide, as with a brimful cup,
+ Over my soul doth pour,
+ Let hope survive,--a well that springeth up
+ Forevermore!
+
+ Above my head the waves may come and go,
+ Long brood the deluge dire,
+ But life lies hidden in the depths below
+ Till waves retire,--
+ Till death, that reigns with overflowing flood,
+ At length withdraw its sway,
+ And life rise sparkling in the sight of God
+ An endless day.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ULTIMA VERITAS.
+
+
+ In the bitter waves of woe,
+ Beaten and tossed about
+ By the sullen winds that blow
+ From the desolate shores of doubt,--
+
+ When the anchors that faith had cast
+ Are dragging in the gale,
+ I am quietly holding fast
+ To the things that cannot fail:
+
+ I know that right is right;
+ That it is not good to lie;
+ That love is better than spite,
+ And a neighbor than a spy;
+
+ I know that passion needs
+ The leash of a sober mind;
+ I know that generous deeds
+ Some sure reward will find;
+
+ That the rulers must obey;
+ That the givers shall increase;
+ That Duty lights the way
+ For the beautiful feet of Peace;--
+
+ In the darkest night of the year,
+ When the stars have all gone out,
+ That courage is better than fear,
+ That faith is truer than doubt;
+
+ And fierce though the fiends may fight,
+ And long though the angels hide,
+ I know that Truth and Eight
+ Have the universe on their side;
+
+ And that somewhere, beyond the stars,
+ Is a Love that is better than fate;
+ When the night unlocks her bars
+ I shall see Him, and I will wait.
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE END OF THE PLAY.
+
+
+ The play is done,--the curtain drops,
+ Slow falling to the prompter's bell;
+ A moment yet the actor stops,
+ And looks around, to say farewell.
+ It is an irksome word and task;
+ And, when he's laughed and said his say,
+ He shows, as he removes the mask,
+ A face that's anything but gay.
+
+ One word, ere yet the evening ends,--
+ Let's close it with a parting rhyme;
+ And pledge a hand to all young friends,
+ As flits the merry Christmas time;
+ On life's wide scene you, too, have parts
+ That fate erelong shall bid you play;
+ Good night!--with honest, gentle hearts
+ A kindly greeting go alway!
+
+ Good night!--I'd say the griefs, the joys,
+ Just hinted in this mimic page,
+ The triumphs and defeats of boys,
+ Are but repeated in our age;
+ I'd say your woes were not less-keen,
+ Your hopes more vain, than those of men,--
+ Your pangs or pleasures of fifteen
+ At forty-five played o'er again.
+
+ I'd say we suffer and we strive
+ Not less nor more as men than boys,--
+ With grizzled beards at forty-five,
+ As erst at twelve in corduroys;
+ And if, in time of sacred youth,
+ We learned at home to love and pray,
+ Pray Heaven that early love and truth
+ May never wholly pass away.
+
+ And in the world, as in the school,
+ I'd say how fate may change and shift,--
+ The prize be sometimes with the fool,
+ The race not always to the swift:
+ The strong may yield, the good may fall,
+ The great man be a vulgar clown,
+ The knave be lifted over all,
+ The kind cast pitilessly down.
+
+ Who knows the inscrutable design?
+ Blessed be Be who took and gave!
+ Why should your mother, Charles, not mine,
+ Be weeping at her darling's grave?
+ We bow to Heaven that willed it so,
+ That darkly rules the fate of all,
+ That sends the respite or the blow,
+ That's free to give or to recall.
+
+ This crowns his feast with wine and wit,--
+ Who brought him to that mirth and state?
+ His betters, see, below him sit,
+ Or hunger hopeless at the gate.
+ Who bade the mud from Dives' wheel
+ To spurn the rags of Lazarus?
+ Come, brother, in that dust we'll kneel,
+ Confessing Heaven that ruled it thus.
+
+ So each shall mourn, in life's advance,
+ Dear hopes, dear friends, untimely killed;
+ Shall grieve for many a forfeit chance
+ And longing passion unfulfilled.
+ Amen!--whatever fate be sent,
+ Pray God the heart may kindly glow,
+ Although the head with cares be bent,
+ And whitened with the winter snow.
+
+ Come wealth or want, come good or ill,
+ Let young and old accept their part,
+ And bow before the awful will,
+ And bear it with an honest heart.
+ Who misses, or who wins the prize,--
+ Go, lose or conquer as you can;
+ But if you fail, or if you rise,
+ Be each, pray God, a gentleman.
+
+ A gentleman, or old or young!
+ (Bear kindly with my humble lays;)
+ The sacred chorus first was sung
+ Upon the first of Christmas days;
+ The shepherds heard it overhead,--
+ The joyful angels raised it then:
+ Glory to Heaven on high, it said,
+ And peace on earth to gentle men!
+
+ My song, save this, is little worth;
+ I lay the weary pen aside,
+ And wish you health and love and mirth,
+ As fits the solemn Christmas-tide.
+ As fits the holy Christmas birth,
+ Be this, good friends, our carol still,--
+ Be peace on earth, be peace on earth,
+ To men of gentle will.
+
+WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW YEAR.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," CV.
+
+
+ Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
+ The flying cloud, the frosty light:
+ The year is dying in the night--
+ Ring out, wild bells, and let him die.
+
+ Ring out the old, ring in the new--,
+ Ring happy bells, across the snow:
+ The year is going, let him go;
+ Ring out the false, ring in the true.
+
+ Ring out the grief that saps the mind,
+ For those that here we see no more;
+ Ring out the feud of rich and poor,
+ Ring in redress to all mankind.
+
+ Ring out a slowly dying cause,
+ And ancient forms of party strife;
+ Ring in the nobler modes of life,
+ With sweeter manners, purer laws.
+
+ Ring out the want, the care, the sin,
+ The faithless coldness of the times;
+ Ring out, ring out my mournful rhymes,
+ But ring the fuller minstrel in.
+
+ Ring out false pride in place and blood,
+ The civic slander and the spite;
+ Ring in the love of truth and right,
+ Ring in the common love of good.
+
+ Ring out old shapes of foul disease,
+ Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
+ Ring out the thousand wars of old,
+ Ring in the thousand years of peace.
+
+ Ring in the valiant man and free,
+ The larger heart, the kindlier hand;
+ Ring out the darkness of the land--
+ Ring in the Christ that is to be.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIFE.
+
+
+ It is not life upon thy gifts to live,
+ But to grow fixed with deeper roots in Thee;
+ And when the sun and showers their bounties give,
+ To send out thick-leaved limbs; a fruitful tree
+ Whose green head meets the eye for many a mile,
+ Whose spreading boughs a friendly shelter rear,
+ And full-faced fruits their blushing welcome smile
+ As to its goodly shade our feet draw near.
+ Who tastes its gifts shall never hunger more,
+ For 't is the Father spreads the pure repast,
+ Who, while we eat, renews the ready store,
+ Which at his bounteous board must ever last;
+ And, as the more we to his children lend,
+ The more to us doth of his bounty send.
+
+JONES VERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELECTIONS FROM PARADISE LOST.
+
+
+ BOOK I.
+
+ THE POET'S THEME.
+
+ Of man's first disobedience and the fruit
+ Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
+ Brought death into the world and all our woe,
+ With loss of Eden, till one greater Man
+ Restore us and regain the blissful seat,
+ Sing, heavenly Muse, that on the secret top
+ Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire
+ That shepherd, who first taught the chosen seed,
+ In the beginning how the heavens and earth
+ Rose out of Chaos; or if Sion hill
+ Delight thee more, and Siloa's brook that flowed
+ Fast by the oracle of God; I thence
+ Invoke thy aid to my adventurous song.
+ That with no middle flight intends to soar
+ Above the Aonian mount, while it pursues
+ Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme.
+
+ And chiefly thou, O Spirit, that dost prefer
+ Before all temples the upright heart and pure,
+ Instruct me, for thou know'st; thou from the first
+ Wast present, and with mighty wings outspread
+ Dove-like sat'st brooding on the vast abyss,
+ And mad'st it pregnant: what in me is dark
+ Illumine, what is low raise and support;
+ That to the height of this great argument
+ I may assert eternal Providence,
+ And justify the ways of God to men.
+
+
+ BOOK IX.
+
+ THE TEMPTATION.
+
+ The Sun was sunk, and after him the star
+ Of Hesperus, whose office is to bring
+ Twilight upon the Earth, short arbiter
+ 'Twixt day and night, and now from end to end
+ Night's hemisphere had veiled the horizon round:
+ When Satan, who late fled before the threats
+ Of Gabriel out of Eden, now improved
+ In meditated fraud and malice, bent
+ On Man's destruction, maugre what might hap
+ Of heavier on himself, fearless returned.
+ By night he fled, and at midnight returned
+ From compassing the Earth;
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The orb he roamed
+ With narrow search; and with inspection deep
+ Considered every creature, which of all
+ Most opportune might serve his wiles; and found
+ The serpent subtlest beast of all the field.
+ Him, after long debate, irresolute
+ Of thoughts revolved, his final sentence chose
+ Fit vessel, fittest imp of fraud, in whom
+ To enter, and his dark suggestions hide
+ From sharpest sight: for, in the wily snake
+ Whatever sleights, none would suspicious mark,
+ As from his wit and native subtlety
+ Proceeding; which, in other beasts observed.
+ Doubt might beget of diabolic power
+ Active within, beyond the sense of brute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ For now, and since first break of dawn, the fiend.
+ Mere serpent in appearance, forth was come;
+ And on his quest, where likeliest he might find
+ The only two of mankind, but in them
+ The whole included race, his purposed prey.
+ In bower and field he sought where any tuft
+ Of grove or garden-plot more pleasant lay,
+ Their tendance, or plantation for delight;
+ By fountain or by shady rivulet
+ He sought them both, but wished his hap might find
+ Eve separate; he wished, but not with hope
+ Of what so seldom chanced; when to his wish,
+ Beyond his hope, Eve separate he spies,
+ Veiled in a cloud of fragrance, where she stood,
+ Half spied, so thick the roses blushing round
+ About her glowed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "She fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods.
+ Not terrible, though terror be in love
+ And beauty, not approached by stronger hate.
+ Hate stronger, under show of love well feigned;
+ The way which to her ruin now I tend."
+ So spake the enemy of mankind, inclosed
+ In serpent, inmate bad! and toward Eve
+ Addressed his way: not with indented wave,
+ Prone on the ground, as since; but on his rear,
+ Circular base of rising folds, that towered
+ Fold above fold, a surging maze! his head
+ Crested aloft, and carbuncle his eyes;
+ With burnished neck of verdant gold, erect.
+ Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass
+ Floated redundant: pleasing was his shape
+ And lovely; never since of serpent-kind
+ Lovelier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So varied he, and of his tortuous train
+ Curled many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve,
+ To lure her eye; she, busied, heard the sound
+ Of rustling leaves, but minded not, as used
+ To such disport before her through the field,
+ From every beast; more duteous at her call,
+ Than at Circean call the herd disguised.
+ He, bolder now, uncalled before her stood,
+ But as in gaze admiring: oft he bowed
+ His turret crest, and sleek enamelled neck,
+ Fawning; and licked the ground whereon she trod.
+ His gentle dumb expression turned at length
+ The eye of Eve, to mark his play; he, glad
+ Of her attention gained, with serpent-tongue
+ Organic, or impulse of vocal air,
+ His fraudulent temptation thus began.
+ "Wonder not, sovran mistress, if perhaps
+ Thou canst who art sole wonder! much less arm
+ Thy looks, the Heaven of mildness, with disdain,
+ Displeased that I approach thee thus, and gaze
+ Insatiate; I thus single; nor have feared
+ Thy awful brow, more awful thus retired.
+ Fairest resemblance of thy Maker fair,
+ Thee all things living gaze on all things thine
+ By gift, and thy celestial beauty adore
+ With ravishment beheld! there beat beheld,
+ Where universally admired; but here
+ In this inclosure wild, these beasts among,
+ Beholders rude, and shallow to discern
+ Half what in thee is fair, one man except,
+ Who sees thee? (and what is one?) who should be seen
+ A goddess among gods, adored and served
+ By angels numberless, thy daily train."
+ So glozed the tempter, and his proem tuned:
+ Into the heart of Eve his words made way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ [_After some discourse, the Tempter praises the Tree of Knowledge._]
+
+ So standing, moving, or to height up grown,
+ The tempter, all impassioned, thus began.
+ "O sacred, wise, and wisdom-giving plant,
+ Mother of science! now I feel thy power
+ Within me clear; not only to discern
+ Things in their causes, but to trace the ways
+ Of highest agents, deemed however wise.
+ Queen of this universe! do not believe
+ Those rigid threats of death: ye shall not die:
+ How should you? by the fruit? it gives you life
+ To knowledge; by the threatener? look on me.
+ Me, who have touched and tasted; yet both live,
+ And life more perfect have attained than Fate
+ Meant me, by venturing higher than my lot.
+ Shall that be shut to man, which to the beast
+ Is open? or will God incense his ire
+ For such a petty trespass? and not praise
+ Rather your dauntless virtue, whom the pain
+ Of death denounced, whatever thing death be,
+ Deterred not from achieving what might lead
+ To happier life, knowledge of good and evil;
+ Of good, how just? of evil, if what is evil
+ Be real, why not known, since easier shunned?
+ God therefore cannot hurt ye, and be just;
+ Not just, not God: not feared then, nor obeyed:
+ Your fear itself of death removes the fear.
+ Why then was this forbid? Why, but to awe;
+ Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant,
+ His worshippers? He knows that in the day
+ Ye eat thereof, your eyes, that seem so clear,
+ Yet are but dim, shall perfectly be then
+ Opened and cleared, and ye shall be as gods,
+ Knowing both good and evil, as they know.
+ That ye shall be as gods, since I as Man,
+ Internal Man, is but proportion meet;
+ I, of brute, human; ye, of human, gods.
+ So ye shall die, perhaps, by putting off
+ Human, to put on gods; death to be wished,
+ Though threatened, which no worse than this can bring.
+ And what are gods, that man may not become
+ As they, participating godlike food?
+ The gods are first, and that advantage use
+ On our belief, that all from them proceeds:
+ I question it; for this fair Earth I see,
+ Warmed by the Sun, producing every kind;
+ Them, nothing: if they all things, who inclosed
+ Knowledge of good and evil in this tree,
+ That whoso eats thereof forthwith attains
+ Wisdom without their leave? and wherein lies
+ The offence, that man should thus attain to know?
+ What can your knowledge hurt him, or this tree
+ Impart against his will, if all be his?
+ Or is it envy? and can envy dwell
+ In heavenly breasts?--These, these, and many more
+ Causes import your need of this fair fruit.
+ Goddess humane, reach then, and freely taste."
+
+
+ THE FALL.
+
+ He ended, and his words replete with guile
+ Into her heart too easy entrance won:
+ Fixed on the fruit she gazed, which to behold
+ Might tempt alone, and in her ears the sound
+ Yet rung of persuasive words, impregned
+ With reason, to her seeming, and with truth:
+ Meanwhile the hour of noon drew on, and waked
+ An eager appetite, raised by the smell
+ So savory of that fruit, which with desire,
+ Inclinable now grown to touch or taste,
+ Solicited her longing eye; yet first
+ Pausing awhile, thus to herself she mused.
+ "Great are thy virtues, doubtless, best of fruits,
+ Though kept from man, and worthy to be admired,
+ Whose taste, too long forborne, at first assay
+ Gave elocution to the mute, and taught
+ The tongue not made for speech to speak thy praise:
+ Thy praise he also who forbids thy use
+ Conceals not from us, naming thee the Tree
+ Of Knowledge, knowledge both of good and evil;
+ Forbids us then to taste! but his forbidding
+ Commends thee more, while it infers the good
+ By thee communicated, and our want:
+ For good unknown sure is not had, or had
+ And yet unknown is as not had at all.
+ In plain then, what forbids he but to know,
+ Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise?
+ Such prohibitions bind not. But if death
+ Bind us with after-bands, what profits then
+ Our inward freedom? In the day we eat
+ Of this fair fruit, our doom is, we shall die.
+ How dies the serpent? he hath eaten and lives,
+ And knows, and speaks, and reasons, and discerns,
+ Irrational till then. For us alone
+ Was death invented? or to us denied
+ This intellectual food, for beasts reserved?
+ For beasts it seems: yet that one beast which first
+ Hath tasted envies not, but brings with joy
+ The good befallen him, author unsuspect,
+ Friendly to man, far from deceit or guile.
+ What fear I then? rather what know to fear
+ Under this ignorance of good and evil,
+ Of God or death, of law or penalty?
+ Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,
+ Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,
+ Of virtue to make wise: what hinders then
+ To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?"
+ So saying, her rash hand in evil hour
+ Forth reaching to the fruit, she plucked, she eat:
+ Earth felt the wound, and Nature from her seat
+ Sighing through all her works gave signs of woe,
+ That all was lost. Back to the thicket slunk
+ The guilty serpent, and well might, for Eve
+ Intent now wholly on her taste nought else
+ Regarded, such delight till then, as seemed,
+ In fruit she never tasted, whether true
+ Or fancied so, through expectation high
+ Of knowledge: nor was Godhead from her thought.
+ Greedily she ingorged without restraint,
+ And knew not eating death.
+
+
+ BOOK XI.
+
+ INTERCESSION AND REDEMPTION.
+
+ Thus they, in lowliest plight, repentant stood
+ Praying; for from the mercy-seat above
+ Prevenient grace descending had removed
+ The stony from their hearts, and made new flesh
+ Regenerate grow instead; that sighs now breathed
+ Unutterable; which the spirit of prayer
+ Inspired, and winged for Heaven with speedier flight
+ Than loudest oratory: yet their port
+ Not of mean suitors; nor important less
+ Seemed their petition, than when the ancient pair
+ In fables old, less ancient yet than these,
+ Deucalion and chaste Pyrrha, to restore
+ The race of mankind drowned, before the shrine
+ Of Themis stood devout. To Heaven their prayers
+ Flew up, nor missed the way, by envious winds
+ Blown vagabond or frustrate: in they passed
+ Dimensionless through heavenly doors; then clad
+ With incense, where the golden altar fumed,
+ By their great Intercessor, came in sight
+ Before the Father's throne: them the glad Son
+ Presenting, thus to intercede began.
+ "See, Father, what first-fruits on Earth are sprung
+ From thy implanted grace in Man; these sighs
+ And prayers, which in this golden censer, mixed
+ With incense, I thy priest before thee bring;
+ Fruits of more pleasing savor, from thy seed
+ Sown with contrition in his heart, than those
+ Which, his own hand manuring, all the trees
+ Of Paradise could have produced ere fallen
+ From innocence. Now, therefore, bend thine ear
+ To supplication; hear his sighs, though mute;
+ Unskilful with what words to pray, let me
+ Interpret for him; me, his advocate
+ And propitiation; all his works on me,
+ Good, or not good, ingraft; my merit those
+ Shall perfect, and for these my death shall pay.
+ Accept me; and, in me, from these receive
+ The smell of peace toward mankind: let him live
+ Before thee reconciled, at least his days
+ Numbered though sad; till death his doom (which I
+ To mitigate thus plead, not to reverse,)
+ To better life shall yield him: where with me
+ All my redeemed may dwell in joy and bliss;
+ Made one with me, as I with thee am one."
+ To whom the Father, without cloud, serene.
+ "All thy request for Man, accepted Son,
+ Obtain; all thy request was my decree:
+ But, longer in that Paradise to dwell,
+ The law I gave to Nature him forbids:
+ Those pure immortal elements, that know
+ No gross, no unharmonious mixture foul,
+ Eject him, tainted now; and purge him off,
+ As a distemper, gross, to air as gross,
+ And mortal food; as may dispose him best
+ For dissolution wrought by sin, that first
+ Distempered all things, and of incorrupt
+ Corrupted. I, at first, with two fair gifts
+ Created him endowed; with happiness,
+ And immortality: that fondly lost.
+ This other served but to eternize woe;
+ Till I provided death: so death becomes
+ His final remedy; and, after life,
+ Tried in sharp tribulation, and refined
+ By faith and faithful works, to second life,
+ Waked in the renovation of the just,
+ Resigns him up with Heaven and Earth renewed."
+
+
+ EVE'S LAMENT.
+
+ O unexpected stroke, worse than of death!
+ Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? thus leave
+ Thee, native soil! these happy walks and shades,
+ Fit haunt of gods; where I had hope to spend,
+ Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day
+ That must be mortal to us both? O flowers,
+ That never will in other climate grow,
+ My early visitation, and my last
+ At even, which I bred up with tender hand
+ From the first opening bud, and gave ye names!
+ Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank
+ Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount?
+ Thee, lastly, nuptial bower! by me adorned
+ With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee
+ How shall I part, and whither wander down
+ Into a lower world, to this obscure
+ And wild? how shall we breathe in other air
+ Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits?
+
+
+ EVE TO ADAM.
+
+ With sorrow and heart's distress
+ Wearied, I fell asleep. But now lead on;
+ In me is no delay; with thee to go,
+ Is to stay here; without thee here to stay,
+ Is to go hence unwilling; thou to me
+ Art all things under heaven, all places thou,
+ Who for my wilful crime art banished hence.
+ This further consolation, yet secure,
+ I carry hence; though all by me is lost,
+ Such favor I unworthy am vouchsafed,
+ By me the promised Seed shall all restore.
+
+
+ BOOK XII.
+
+ THE DEPARTURE FROM PARADISE.
+
+ In either hand the hastening angel caught
+ Our lingering parents, and to the eastern gate
+ Led them direct, and down the cliff as fast
+ To the subjected plain; then disappeared.
+ They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld
+ Of Paradise, so late their happy seat,
+ Waved over by that naming brand; the gate
+ With dreadful faces thronged and fiery arms.
+ Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon;
+ The world was all before them, where to choose
+ Their place of rest, and Providence their guide.
+ They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,
+ Through Eden took their solitary way.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+HUMAN EXPERIENCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PSALM OF LIFE.
+
+
+ Tell me not, in mournful numbers,
+ Life is but an empty dream!
+ For the soul is dead that slumbers,
+ And things are not what they seem.
+
+ Life is real! Life is earnest!
+ And the grave is not its goal;
+ Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
+ Was not spoken of the soul.
+
+ Not enjoyment, and not sorrow,
+ Is our destined end or way;
+ But to act, that each to-morrow
+ Find us farther than to-day.
+
+ Art is long, and Time is fleeting,
+ And our hearts, though stout and brave,
+ Still, like muffled drums, are beating
+ Funeral marches to the grave.
+
+ In the world's broad field of battle,
+ In the bivouac of Life,
+ Be not like dumb, driven cattle!
+ Be a hero in the strife!
+
+ Trust no Future, howe'er pleasant!
+ Let the dead Past bury its dead!
+ Act,--act in the living Present!
+ Heart within, and God o'erhead!
+
+ Lives of great men all remind us
+ We can make our lives sublime.
+ And, departing, leave behind us
+ Footprints on the sands of time;--
+
+ Footprints, that perhaps another,
+ Sailing o'er life's solemn main,
+ A forlorn and shipwrecked brother,
+ Seeing, shall take heart again.
+
+ Let us, then, be up and doing,
+ With a heart for any fate;
+ Still achieving, still pursuing,
+ Learn to labor and to wait.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GIFTS OF GOD.
+
+
+ When God at first made man,
+ Having a glass of blessings standing by,
+ Let us (said he) pour on him all we can:
+ Let the world's riches, which dispersed lie,
+ Contract into a span.
+
+ So strength first made a way;
+ Then beauty flowed, then wisdom, honor, pleasure:
+ When almost all was out, God made a stay,
+ Perceiving that, alone, of all his treasure,
+ Rest in the bottom lay.
+
+ For if I should (said he)
+ Bestow this jewel also on my creature,
+ He would adore my gifts instead of me,
+ And rest in Nature, not the God of Nature:
+ So both should losers be.
+
+ Yet let him keep the rest,
+ But keep them with repining restlessness:
+ Let him be rich and weary, that, at least,
+ If goodness lead him not, yet weariness
+ May toss him to my breast.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DUTY.
+
+
+ I slept and dreamed that life was Beauty:
+ I woke and found that life was Duty:
+ Was then thy dream a shadowy lie?
+ Toil on, sad heart, courageously,
+ And thou shalt find thy dream to be
+ A noonday light and truth to thee.
+
+ELLEN STURGIS HOOPER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE TO DUTY.
+
+
+ Stern daughter of the voice of God!
+ O Duty! if that name thou love
+ Who art a light to guide, a rod
+ To check the erring, and reprove--
+ Thou, who art victory and law
+ When empty terrors overawe;
+ From vain temptations dost set free,
+ And calm'st the weary strife of frail humanity!
+
+ There are who ask not if thine eye
+ Be on them; who, in love and truth
+ Where no misgiving is, rely
+ Upon the genial sense of youth:
+ Glad hearts! without reproach or blot,
+ Who do thy work, and know it not;
+ Long may the kindly impulse last!
+ But thou, if they should totter, teach them to stand fast!
+
+ Serene will be our days and bright,
+ And happy will our nature be,
+ When love is an unerring light.
+ And joy its own security.
+ And they a blissful course may hold
+ Even now, who, not unwisely bold.
+ Live in the spirit of this creed;
+ Yet find that other strength, according to their need.
+
+ I, loving freedom, and untried,
+ No sport of every random gust,
+ Yet being to myself a guide,
+ Too blindly have reposed my trust;
+ And oft, when in my heart was heard
+ Thy timely mandate, I deferred
+ The task, in smoother walks to stray;
+ But thee I now would serve more strictly, if I may.
+
+ Through no disturbance of my soul,
+ Or strong compunction in me wrought,
+ I supplicate for thy control,
+ But in the quietness of thought;
+ Me this unchartered freedom tires;
+ I feel the weight of chance desires,
+ My hopes no more must change their name,
+ I long for a repose that ever is the same.
+
+ Stern lawgiver! yet thou dost wear
+ The Godhead's most benignant grace;
+ Nor know we any thing so fair
+ As is the smile upon thy face;
+ Flowers laugh before thee on their beds,
+ And fragrance in thy footing treads;
+ Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong;
+ And the most ancient heavens, through thee, are fresh and strong.
+
+ To humbler functions, awful power!
+ I call thee: I myself commend
+ Unto thy guidance from this hour;
+ Oh, let my weakness have an end!
+ Give unto me, made lowly wise,
+ The spirit of self-sacrifice;
+ The confidence of reason give;
+ And in the light of truth thy bondman let me live!
+
+WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELF-INQUIRY.
+
+
+ Let not soft slumber close my eyes,
+ Before I've recollected thrice
+ The train of action through the day!
+ Where have my feet chose out their way?
+ What have I learnt, where'er I've been,
+ From all I have heard, from all I've seen?
+ What know I more that's worth the knowing?
+ What have I done that's worth the doing?
+ What have I sought that I should shun?
+ What duty have I left undone?
+ Or into what new follies run?
+ These self-inquiries are the road
+ That leads to virtue and to God.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE THREE ENEMIES.
+
+
+ THE FLESH.
+
+ "Sweet, thou art pale."
+ "More pale to see,
+ Christ hung upon the cruel tree
+ And bore his Father's wrath for me."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art sad."
+ "Beneath a rod
+ More heavy Christ for my sake trod
+ The wine-press of the wrath of God."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art weary."
+ "Not so Christ:
+ Whose mighty love of me sufficed
+ For strength, salvation, eucharist."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art footsore."
+ "If I bleed,
+ His feet have bled: yea, in my need
+ His heart once bled for mine indeed."
+
+
+ THE WORLD.
+
+ "Sweet, thou art young."
+ "So he was young
+ Who for my sake in silence hung
+ Upon the cross with passion wrung."
+
+ "Look, thou art fair."
+ "He was more fair
+ Than men, who deigned for me to wear
+ A visage marred beyond compare."
+
+ "And thou hast riches."
+ "Daily bread:
+ All else is his; who living, dead,
+ For me lacked where to lay his head."
+
+ "And life is sweet."
+ "It was not so
+ To him, whose cup did overflow
+ With mine unutterable woe."
+
+
+ THE DEVIL.
+
+ "Thou drinkest deep."
+ "When Christ would sup
+ He drained the dregs from out my cup;
+ So how should I be lifted up?"
+
+ "Thou shalt win glory."
+ "In the skies,
+ Lord Jesus, cover up mine eyes.
+ Lest they should look on vanities."
+
+ "Thou shalt have knowledge."
+ "Helpless dust,
+ In thee, O Lord, I put my trust:
+ Answer thou for me, Wise and Just."
+
+CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAID I NOT SO?
+
+
+ Said I not so,--that I would sin no more?
+ Witness, my God, I did;
+ Yet I am run again upon the score:
+ My faults cannot be hid.
+
+ What shall I do?--make vows and break them still?
+ 'Twill be but labor lost;
+ My good cannot prevail against mine ill:
+ The business will be crost.
+
+ O, say not so; thou canst not tell what strength
+ Thy God may give thee at the length.
+ Renew thy vows, and if thou keep the last,
+ Thy God will pardon all that's past.
+ Vow while thou canst; while thou canst vow, thou may'st
+ Perhaps perform it when thou thinkest least.
+
+ Thy God hath not denied thee all,
+ Whilst he permits thee but to call.
+ Call to thy God for grace to keep
+ Thy vows; and if thou break them, weep.
+ Weep for thy broken vows, and vow again:
+ Vows made with tears cannot be still in vain.
+ Then once again
+ I vow to mend my ways;
+ Lord, say Amen,
+ And thine be all the praise.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTHING BUT LEAVES.
+
+
+ Nothing but leaves; the spirit grieves
+ Over a wasted life;
+ Sin committed while conscience slept,
+ Promises made, but never kept,
+ Hatred, battle, and strife;
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ Nothing but leaves; no garnered sheaves
+ Of life's fair, ripened grain;
+ Words, idle words, for earnest deeds;
+ We sow our seeds,--lo! tares and weeds:
+ We reap, with toil and pain,
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ Nothing but leaves; memory weaves
+ No veil to screen the past:
+ As we retrace our weary way,
+ Counting each lost and misspent day,
+ We find, sadly, at last,
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ And shall we meet the Master so,
+ Bearing our withered leaves?
+ The Saviour looks for perfect fruit,
+ We stand before him, humbled, mute;
+ Waiting the words he breathes,--
+ "_Nothing but leaves_?"
+
+LUCY E. AKERMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WORLD.
+
+ "And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of
+ righteousness, and of judgment."--JOHN xvi. 8.
+
+
+ The world is wise, for the world is old;
+ Five thousand years their tale have told;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is kind if we ask not too much;
+ It is sweet to the taste, and smooth to the touch;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is strong, with an awful strength,
+ And full of life in its breadth and length;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is so beautiful one may fear
+ Its borrowed beauty might make it too dear,
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is good in its own poor way,
+ There is rest by night and high spirits by day;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The cross shines fair, and the church-bell rings,
+ And the earth is peopled with holy things;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ What lackest thou, world? for God made thee of old;
+ Why,--thy faith hath gone out, and thy love grown cold;
+ Thou art not happy, as thou mightest be,
+ For the want of Christ's simplicity.
+
+ It is blood that thou lackest, thou poor old world!
+ Who shall make thy love hot for thee, frozen old world?
+ Thou art not happy, as thou mightest be,
+ For the love of dear Jesus is little in thee.
+
+ Poor world! if thou cravest a better day,
+ Remember that Christ must have his own way;
+ I mourn thou art not as thou mightest be,
+ But the love of God would do all for thee.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CRY OF THE HUMAN.
+
+
+ "There is no God," the foolish saith,
+ But none, "There is no sorrow";
+ And nature oft the cry of faith
+ In bitter need will borrow:
+ Eyes which the preacher could not school,
+ By wayside graves are raised;
+ And lips say, "God be pitiful,"
+ Who ne'er said, "God be praised."
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The tempest stretches from the steep
+ The shadow of its coming;
+ The beasts grow tame, and near us creep,
+ As help were in the human:
+ Yet while the cloud-wheels roll and grind
+ We spirits tremble under!--
+ The hills have echoes; but we find
+ No answer for the thunder.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The battle hurtles on the plains--
+ Earth feels new scythes upon her:
+ We reap our brothers for the wains,
+ And call the harvest, honor,--
+ Draw face to face, front line to line,
+ One image all inherit,--
+ Then kill, curse on, by that same sign,
+ Clay, clay,--and spirit, spirit.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The plague runs festering through the town,
+ And never a bell is tolling:
+ And corpses jostled 'neath the moon,
+ Nod to the dead-cart's rolling.
+ The young child calleth for the cup--
+ The strong man brings it weeping;
+ The mother from her babe looks up,
+ And shrieks away its sleeping.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The plague of gold strides far and near,
+ And deep and strong it enters:
+ This purple chimar which we wear,
+ Makes madder than the centaur's.
+ Our thoughts grow blank, our words grow strange;
+ We cheer the pale gold-diggers--
+ Each soul is worth so much on 'Change,
+ And marked, like sheep, with figures.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The curse of gold upon the land,
+ The lack of bread enforces--
+ The rail-cars snort from strand to strand,
+ Like more of Death's White Horses:
+ The rich preach "rights" and future days,
+ And hear no angel scoffing:
+ The poor die mute--with starving gaze
+ On corn-ships in the offing.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We meet together at the feast--
+ To private mirth betake us--
+ We stare down in the winecup lest
+ Some vacant chair should shake us!
+ We name delight, and pledge it round--
+ "It shall be ours to-morrow!"
+ God's seraphs, do your voices sound
+ As sad in naming sorrow?
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We sit together, with the skies,
+ The steadfast skies, above us:
+ We look into each other's eyes,
+ "And how long will you love us?"
+ The eyes grow dim with prophecy,
+ The voice is low and breathless--
+ "Till death us part!"--O words, to be
+ Our _best_ for love the deathless!
+ Be pitiful, dear God!
+
+ We tremble by the harmless bed
+ Of one loved and departed--
+ Our tears drop on the lids that said
+ Last night, "Be stronger hearted!"
+ O God,--to clasp those fingers close,
+ And yet to feel so lonely!--
+ To see a light upon such brows,
+ Which is the daylight only!
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The happy children come to us,
+ And look up in our faces:
+ They ask us--Was it thus, and thus,
+ When we were in their places?
+ We cannot speak:--we see anew
+ The hills we used to live in;
+ And feel our mother's smile press through
+ The kisses she is giving.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We pray together at the kirk,
+ For mercy, mercy, solely--
+ Hands weary with the evil work,
+ We lift them to the Holy!
+ The corpse is calm below our knee--
+ Its spirit bright before thee--
+ Between them, worse than either, we--
+ Without the rest of glory!
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We leave the communing of men,
+ The murmur of the passions;
+ And live alone, to live again
+ With endless generations.
+ Are we so brave?--The sea and sky
+ In silence lift their mirrors;
+ And, glassed therein, our spirits high
+ Recoil from their own terrors.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We sit on hills our childhood wist,
+ Woods, hamlets, streams, beholding:
+ The sun strikes through the farthest mist,
+ The city's spire to golden.
+ The city's golden spire it was,
+ When hope and health were strong;
+ But now it is the churchyard grass,
+ We look upon the longest.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ And soon all vision waxeth dull--
+ Men whisper, "He is dying":
+ We cry no more, "Be pitiful!"--
+ We have no strength for crying:
+ No strength, no need! Then, Soul of mine,
+ Look up and triumph rather--
+ Lo! in the depth of God's Divine,
+ The Son adjures the Father--
+ BE PITIFUL, O GOD.
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SIFTING OF PETER.
+
+ A FOLK-SONG.
+
+ "Behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you
+ as wheat."--LUKE xxii. 31.
+
+
+ In Saint Luke's Gospel we are told
+ How Peter in the days of old
+ Was sifted;
+ And now, though ages intervene,
+ Sin is the same, while time and scene
+ Are shifted.
+
+ Satan desires us, great and small,
+ As wheat, to sift us, and we all
+ Are tempted;
+ Not one, however rich or great,
+ Is by his station or estate
+ Exempted.
+
+ No house so safely guarded is
+ But he, by some device of his,
+ Can enter;
+ No heart hath armor so complete
+ But he can pierce with arrows fleet
+ Its centre.
+
+ For all at last the cock will crow
+ Who hear the warning voice, but go
+ Unheeding,
+ Till thrice and more they have denied
+ The Man of Sorrows, crucified
+ And bleeding.
+
+ One look of that pale suffering face
+ Will make us feel the deep disgrace
+ Of weakness;
+ We shall be sifted till the strength
+ Of self-conceit be changed at length
+ To meekness.
+
+ Wounds of the soul, though healed, will ache;
+ The reddening scars remain, and make
+ Confession;
+ Lost innocence returns no more;
+ We are not what we were before
+ Transgression.
+
+ But noble souls, through dust and heat,
+ Rise from disaster and defeat
+ The stronger.
+ And conscious still of the divine
+ Within them, lie on earth supine
+ No longer.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VANITY.
+
+
+ The sun comes up and the sun goes down,
+ And day and night are the same as one;
+ The year grows green, and the year grows brown.
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ Grains of sombre or shining sand,
+ Gliding into and out of the hand.
+
+ And men go down in ships to the seas,
+ And a hundred ships are the same as one;
+ And backward and forward blows the breeze,
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ A tide with never a shore in sight
+ Getting steadily on to the night.
+
+ The fisher droppeth his net in the stream,
+ And a hundred streams are the same as one;
+ And the maiden dreameth her love-lit dream,
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ The net of the fisher the burden breaks,
+ And alway the dreaming the dreamer wakes.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIFFERENT MINDS.
+
+
+ Some murmur when their sky is clear
+ And wholly bright to view,
+ If one small speck of dark appear
+ In their great heaven of blue;
+ And some with thankful love are filled
+ If but one streak of light,
+ One ray of God's good mercy, gild
+ The darkness of their night.
+
+ In palaces are hearts that ask,
+ In discontent and pride,
+ Why life is such a dreary task,
+ And all good things denied;
+ And hearts in poorest huts admire
+ How Love has in their aid
+ (Love that not ever seems to tire)
+ Such rich provision made.
+
+RICHARD CHENEVIX TRENCH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY RECOVERY.
+
+
+ Recovery,--daughter of Creation too,
+ Though not for immortality designed,--
+ The Lord of life and death
+ Sent thee from heaven to me!
+ Had I not heard thy gentle tread approach,
+ Not heard the whisper of thy welcome voice,
+ Death had with iron foot
+ My chilly forehead pressed.
+ 'Tis true, I then had wandered where the earths
+ Roll around suns; had strayed along the paths
+ Where the maned comet soars
+ Beyond the armèd eye;
+ And with the rapturous, eager greet had hailed
+ The inmates of those earths and of those suns;
+ Had hailed the countless host
+ That throng the comet's disc;
+ Had asked the novice questions, and obtained
+ Such answers as a sage vouchsafes to youth;
+ Had learned in hours far more
+ Than ages here unfold!
+ But I had then not ended here below
+ What, in the enterprising bloom of life,
+ Fate with no light behest
+ Required me to begin.
+ Recovery,--daughter of Creation too,
+ Though not for immortality designed,--
+ The Lord of life and death
+ Sent thee from heaven to me!
+
+From the German of FRIEDRICH GOTTLIEB KLOPSTOCK.
+
+Translation of W. TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LADDER OF SAINT AUGUSTINE.
+
+
+ Saint Augustine! well hast thou said,
+ That of our vices we can frame
+ A ladder, if we will but tread
+ Beneath our feet each deed of shame!
+
+ All common things, each day's events,
+ That with the hour begin and end,
+ Our pleasures and our discontents,
+ Are rounds by which we may ascend.
+
+ The low desire, the base design,
+ That makes another's virtues less;
+ The revel of the ruddy wine,
+ And all occasions of excess;
+
+ The longing for ignoble things;
+ The strife for triumph more than truth;
+ The hardening of the heart, that brings
+ Irreverence for the dreams of youth;
+
+ All thoughts of ill; all evil deeds,
+ That have their root in thoughts of ill;
+ Whatever hinders or impedes
+ The action of the nobler will:--
+
+ All these must first be trampled down
+ Beneath our feet, if we would gain
+ In the bright fields of fair renown
+ The right of eminent domain.
+
+ We have not wings, we cannot soar;
+ But we have feet to scale and climb
+ By slow degrees, by more and more,
+ The cloudy summits of our time.
+
+ The mighty pyramids of stone
+ That wedge-like cleave the desert airs,
+ When nearer seen, and better known,
+ Are but gigantic flights of stairs.
+
+ The distant mountains, that uprear
+ Their solid bastions to the skies,
+ Are crossed by pathways, that appear
+ As we to higher levels rise.
+
+ The heights by great men reached and kept
+ Were not attained by sudden flight,
+ But they, while their companions slept,
+ Were toiling upward in the night.
+
+ Standing on what too long we bore
+ With shoulders bent and downcast eyes,
+ We may discern--unseen before--
+ A path to higher destinies.
+
+ Nor deem the irrevocable Past
+ As wholly wasted, wholly vain,
+ If, rising on its wrecks, at last
+ To something nobler we attain.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT CHRISTOPHER.
+
+
+ "Carry me across!"
+ The Syrian heard, rose up, and braced
+ His huge limbs to the accustomed toil:
+ "My child, see how the waters boil?
+ The night-black heavens look angry-faced;
+ But life is little loss.
+
+ "I'll carry thee with joy,
+ If needs be, safe as nestling dove:
+ For o'er this stream I pilgrims bring
+ In service to one Christ, a King
+ Whom I have never seen, yet love."
+ "I thank thee," said the boy.
+
+ Cheerful, Arprobus took
+ The burden on his shoulders great,
+ And stepped into the waves once more;
+ When lo! they leaping rise and roar,
+ And 'neath the little child's light weight
+ The tottering giant shook.
+
+ "Who art thou?" cried he wild,
+ Struggling in middle of the ford:
+ "Boy as thou look'st, it seems to me
+ The whole world's load I bear in thee,
+ Yet--" "For the sake of Christ, thy Lord,
+ Carry me," said the child.
+
+ No more Arprobus swerved,
+ But gained the farther bank, and then
+ A voice cried, "Hence _Christopheros_ be!
+ For carrying thou hast carried Me,
+ The King of angels and of men,
+ The Master thou hast served."
+
+ And in the moonlight blue
+ The saint saw,--not the wandering boy,
+ But him who walked upon the sea
+ And o'er the plains of Galilee,
+ Till, filled with mystic, awful joy,
+ His dear Lord Christ he knew.
+
+ Oh, little is all loss,
+ And brief the space 'twixt shore and shore,
+ If thou, Lord Jesus, on us lay,
+ Through the deep waters of our way,
+ The burden that Christopheros bore,--
+ To carry thee across.
+
+DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SCORN NOT THE LEAST.
+
+
+ When words are weak and foes encountering strong,
+ Where mightier do assault than do defend,
+ The feebler part puts up enforced wrong,
+ And silent sees that speech could not amend.
+ Yet higher powers most think though they repine,--
+ When sun is set, the little stars will shine.
+
+ While pike doth range, the silly tench doth fly,
+ And crouch in privy creeks with smaller fish;
+ Yet pikes are caught when little fish go by;
+ These fleet afloat while those do fill the dish.
+ There is a time even for the worms to creep.
+ And suck the dew while all their foes do sleep.
+
+ The merlin cannot ever soar on high,
+ Nor greedy greyhound still pursue the chase;
+ The tender lark will find a time to fly.
+ And fearful hare to run a quiet race.
+ He that high-growth on cedars did bestow,
+ Gave also lowly mushrooms leave to grow.
+
+ In Haman's pomp poor Mardocheus wept,
+ Yet God did turn his fate upon his foe;
+ The Lazar pined while Dives' feast was kept,
+ Yet he to heaven, to hell did Dives go.
+ We trample grass, and prize the flowers of May,
+ Yet grass is green when flowers do fade away.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RIGHT MUST WIN.
+
+
+ O, it is hard to work for God,
+ To rise and take his part
+ Upon this battle-field of earth,
+ And not sometimes lose heart!
+
+ He hides himself so wondrously,
+ As though there were no God;
+ He is least seen when all the powers
+ Of ill are most abroad.
+
+ Or he deserts us at the hour
+ The fight is all but lost;
+ And seems to leave us to ourselves
+ Just when we need him most.
+
+ Ill masters good, good seems to change
+ To ill with greater ease;
+ And, worst of all, the good with good
+ Is at cross-purposes.
+
+ Ah! God is other than we think;
+ His ways are far above,
+ Far beyond reason's height, and reached
+ Only by childlike love.
+
+ Workman of God! O, lose not heart,
+ But learn what God is like;
+ And in the darkest battle-field
+ Thou shalt know where to strike.
+
+ Thrice blest is he to whom is given
+ The instinct that can tell
+ That God is on the field when he
+ Is most invisible.
+
+ Blest, is he who can divine
+ Where the real right doth lie,
+ And dares to take the side that seems
+ Wrong to man's blindfold eye.
+
+ For right is right, since God is God;
+ And right the day must win;
+ To doubt would be disloyalty,
+ To falter would be sin!
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE COST OF WORTH.
+
+ FROM "BITTER SWEET."
+
+
+ Thus is it all over the earth!
+ That which we call the fairest.
+ And prize for its surpassing worth,
+ Is always rarest.
+
+ Iron is heaped in mountain piles,
+ And gluts the laggard forges;
+ But gold-flakes gleam in dim defiles
+ And lonely gorges.
+
+ The snowy marble flecks the land
+ With heaped and rounded ledges,
+ But diamonds hide within the sand
+ Their starry edges.
+
+ The finny armies clog the twine
+ That sweeps the lazy river,
+ But pearls come singly from the brine
+ With the pale diver.
+
+ God gives no value unto men
+ Unmatched by meed of labor;
+ And Cost of Worth has ever been
+ The closest neighbor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All common good has common price;
+ Exceeding good, exceeding;
+ Christ bought the keys of Paradise
+ By cruel bleeding;
+
+ And every soul that wins a place
+ Upon its hills of pleasure,
+ Must give it all, and beg for grace
+ To fill the measure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Up the broad stairs that Value rears
+ Stand motives beck'ning earthward,
+ To summon men to nobler spheres,
+ And lead them worthward.
+
+JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LABORER.
+
+
+ Stand up--erect! Thou hast the form
+ And likeness of thy God!--Who more?
+ A soul as dauntless 'mid the storm
+ Of daily life, a heart as warm
+ And pure, as breast e'er wore.
+
+ What then?--Thou art as true a man
+ As moves the human mass among;
+ As much a part of the great plan
+ That with creation's dawn began,
+ As any of the throng.
+
+ Who is thine enemy? The high
+ In station, or in wealth the chief?
+ The great, who coldly pass thee by,
+ With proud step and averted eye?
+ Nay! nurse not such belief.
+
+ If true unto thyself thou wast,
+ What were the proud one's scorn to thee?
+ A feather which thou mightest cast
+ Aside, as idly as the blast
+ The light leaf from the tree.
+
+ No: uncurbed passions, low desires,
+ Absence of noble self-respect.
+ Death, in the breast's consuming fires,
+ To that high nature which aspires
+ Forever, till thus checked;--
+
+ These are thine enemies--thy worst:
+ They chain thee to thy lowly lot;
+ Thy labor and thy life accursed.
+ O, stand erect, and from them burst,
+ And longer suffer not.
+
+ Thou art thyself thine enemy:
+ The great!--what better they than thou?
+ As theirs is not thy will as free?
+ Has God with equal favors thee
+ Neglected to endow?
+
+ True, wealth thou hast not--'tis but dust;
+ Nor place--uncertain as the wind;
+ But that thou hast, which, with thy crust
+ And water, may despise the lust
+ Of both--a noble mind.
+
+ With this, and passions under ban,
+ True faith, and holy trust in God,
+ Thou art the peer of any man.
+ Look up then; that thy little span
+ Of life may be well trod.
+
+WILLIAM D. GALLAGHER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A TRUE LENT.
+
+
+ Is this a fast,--to keep
+ The larder lean,
+ And clean
+ From fat of veals and sheep?
+
+ Is it to quit the dish
+ Of flesh, yet still
+ To fill
+ The platter high with fish?
+
+ Is it to fast an hour.
+ Or ragg'd to go,
+ Or show
+ A downcast look, and sour?
+
+ No! 't is a fast to dole
+ Thy sheaf of wheat,
+ And meat,
+ Unto the hungry soul.
+
+ It is to fast from strife,
+ From old debate
+ And hate,--
+ To circumcise thy life.
+
+ To show a heart grief-rent;
+ To starve thy sin,
+ Not bin,--
+ And that's to keep thy Lent.
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM "THE CHURCH PORCH."
+
+
+ Thou whose sweet youth and early hopes enhance
+ Thy rate and price, and mark thee for a treasure.
+ Hearken unto a Verser, who may chance
+ Rhyme thee to good, and make a bait of pleasure:
+ A verse may find him who a sermon flies
+ And turn delight into a sacrifice.
+
+ When thou dost purpose aught (within thy power),
+ Be sure to doe it, though it be but small;
+ Constancie knits the bones, and make us stowre,
+ When wanton pleasures beckon us to thrall.
+ Who breaks his own bond, forfeiteth himself:
+ What nature made a ship, he makes a shelf.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By all means use sometimes to be alone.
+ Salute thyself: see what thy soul doth wear.
+ Dare to look in thy chest; for 't is thine own;
+ And tumble up and down what thou find'st there.
+ Who cannot rest till he good fellows finde,
+ He breaks up house, turns out of doores his minde.
+
+ In clothes, cheap handsomenesse doth bear the bell.
+ Wisdome's a trimmer thing than shop e'er gave.
+ Say not then, This with that lace will do well;
+ But, This with my discretion will be brave.
+ Much curiousnesse is a perpetual wooing;
+ Nothing, with labor; folly, long a doing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When once thy foot enters the church, be bare.
+ God is more there than thou; for thou art there
+ Only by his permission. Then beware,
+ And make thyself all reverence and fear.
+ Kneeling ne'er spoiled silk stockings; quit thy state;
+ All equal are within the church's gate.
+
+ Resort to sermons, but to prayers most:
+ Praying's the end of preaching. O, be drest!
+ Stay not for th' other pin: why thou hast lost
+ A joy for it worth worlds. Thus hell doth jest
+ Away thy blessings, and extremely flout thee,
+ Thy clothes being fast, but thy soul loose about thee.
+
+ Judge not the preacher; for he is thy judge:
+ If thou mislike him, thou conceiv'st him not.
+ God calleth preaching folly. Do not grudge
+ To pick out treasures from an earthen pot.
+ The worst speak something good: if _all_ want sense,
+ God takes a text, and preacheth Pa-ti-ence.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRIEFS.
+
+
+ WATER TURNED INTO WINE.
+
+ The conscious water saw its God and blushed.
+
+
+ THE WIDOW'S MITES.
+
+ Two mites, two drops, yet all her house and land,
+ Fall from a steady heart, though trembling hand:
+ The other's wanton wealth foams high, and brave;
+ The other cast away, she only gave.
+
+
+ "TWO WENT UP TO THE TEMPLE TO PRAY."
+
+ Two went to pray? O, rather say,
+ One went to brag, the other to pray;
+
+ One stands up close and treads on high,
+ Where the other dares not lend his eye;
+
+ One nearer to God's altar trod,
+ The other to the altar's God.
+
+RICHARD CRASHAW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JEWISH HYMN IN BABYLON.
+
+
+ God of the thunder! from whose cloudy seat
+ The fiery winds of Desolation flow;
+ Father of vengeance, that with purple feet
+ Like a full wine-press tread'st the world below;
+ The embattled armies wait thy sign to slay,
+ Nor springs the beast of havoc on his prey,
+ Nor withering Famine walks his blasted way,
+ Till thou hast marked the guilty land for woe.
+
+ God of the rainbow! at whose gracious sign
+ The billows of the proud their rage suppress;
+ Father of mercies! at one word of thine
+ An Eden blooms in the waste wilderness,
+ And fountains sparkle in the arid sands,
+ And timbrels ring in maidens' glancing hands,
+ And marble cities crown the laughing lands,
+ And pillared temples rise thy name to bless.
+
+ O'er Judah's land thy thunders broke, O Lord!
+ The chariots rattled o'er her sunken gate,
+ Her sons were wasted by the Assyrian's sword,
+ Even her foes wept to see her fallen state;
+ And heaps her ivory palaces became,
+ Her princes wore the captive's garb of shame,
+ Her temples sank amid the smouldering flame,
+ For thou didst ride the tempest cloud of fate.
+
+ O'er Judah's land thy rainbow, Lord, shall beam,
+ And the sad City lift her crownless head,
+ And songs shall wake and dancing footsteps gleam
+ In streets where broods the silence of the dead.
+ The sun shall shine on Salem's gilded towers,
+ On Carmel's side our maidens cull the flowers
+ To deck at blushing eye their bridal bowers,
+ And angel feet the glittering Sion tread.
+
+ Thy vengeance gave us to the stranger's hand,
+ And Abraham's children were led forth for slaves.
+ With fettered steps we left our pleasant land,
+ Envying our fathers in their peaceful graves.
+ The strangers' bread with bitter tears we steep,
+ And when our weary eyes should sink to sleep,
+ In the mute midnight we steal forth to weep.
+ Where the pale willows shade Euphrates' waves.
+
+ The born in sorrow shall bring forth in joy;
+ Thy mercy, Lord, shall lead thy children home;
+ He that went forth a tender prattling boy
+ Yet, ere he die, to Salem's streets shall come;
+ And Canaan's vines for us their fruit shall bear,
+ And Hermon's bees their honeyed stores prepare,
+ And we shall kneel again in thankful prayer,
+ Where o'er the cherub seated God full blazed the irradiate dome.
+
+HENRY HART MILMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXAMPLE.
+
+
+ We scatter seeds with careless hand,
+ And dream we ne'er shall see them more;
+ But for a thousand years
+ Their fruit appears,
+ In weeds that mar the land,
+ Or healthful store.
+
+ The deeds we do, the words we say,--
+ Into still air they seem to fleet,
+ We count them ever past;
+ But they shall last,--
+ In the dread judgment they
+ And we shall meet.
+
+ I charge thee by the years gone by,
+ For the love's sake of brethren dear,
+ Keep thou the one true way,
+ In work and play,
+ Lest in that world their cry
+ Of woe thou hear.
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SMALL BEGINNINGS.
+
+
+ A traveller through a dusty road strewed acorns on the lea;
+ And one took root and sprouted up, and grew into a tree.
+ Love sought its shade, at evening time, to breath its early vows;
+ And age was pleased, in heats of noon, to bask beneath its boughs;
+ The dormouse loved its dangling twigs, the birds sweet music bore;
+ It stood a glory in its place, a blessing evermore.
+
+ A little spring had lost its way amid the grass and fern,
+ A passing stranger scooped a well, where weary men might turn;
+ He walled it in, and hung with care a ladle at the brink;
+ He thought not of the deed he did, but judged that toil might drink.
+ He passed again, and lo! the well, by summers never dried,
+ Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues, and saved a life besides.
+
+ A dreamer dropped a random thought; 't was old, and yet 't was new;
+ A simple fancy of the brain, but strong in being true.
+ It shone upon a genial mind, and lo! its light became
+ A lamp of life, a beacon ray, a monitory flame.
+ The thought was small; its issue great; a watch-fire on the hill,
+ It shed its radiance far adown, and cheers the valley still!
+
+ A nameless man, amid the crowd that thronged the daily mart,
+ Let fall a word of Hope and Love, unstudied, from the heart;
+ A whisper on the tumult thrown,--a transitory breath,--
+ It raised a brother from the dust; it saved a soul from death.
+ O germ! O fount! O word of love! O thought at random cast!
+ Ye were but little at the first, but mighty at the last.
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RISE OF MAN.
+
+
+ Thou for whose birth the whole creation yearned
+ Through countless ages of the morning world,
+ Who, first in fiery vapors dimly hurled,
+ Next to the senseless crystal slowly turned,
+ Then to the plant which grew to something more,--
+ Humblest of creatures that draw breath of life,--
+ Wherefrom through infinites of patient pain
+ Came conscious man to reason and adore:
+ Shall we be shamed because such things have been,
+ Or bate one jot of our ancestral pride?
+ Nay, in thyself art thou not deified
+ That from such depths thou couldst such summits win?
+ While the long way behind is prophecy
+ Of those perfections which are yet to be.
+
+JOHN WHITE CHADWICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I WOULD I WERE AN EXCELLENT DIVINE.
+
+
+ I would I were an excellent divine.
+ That had the Bible at my fingers' ends;
+ That men might hear out of this mouth of mine
+ How God doth make his enemies his friends;
+ Rather than with a thundering and long prayer
+ Be led into presumption, or despair.
+
+ This would I be, and would none other be,
+ But a religious servant of my God;
+ And know there is none other God but he.
+ And willingly to suffer mercy's rod,--
+ Joy in his grace, and live but in his love,
+ And seek my bliss but in the world above.
+
+ And I would frame a kind of faithful prayer,
+ For all estates within the state of grace,
+ That careful love might never know despair.
+ Nor servile fear might faithful love deface;
+ And this would I both day and night devise
+ To make my humble spirit's exercise.
+
+ And I would read the rules of sacred life;
+ Persuade the troubled soul to patience;
+ The husband care, and comfort to the wife,
+ To child and servant due obedience;
+ Faith to the friend, and to the neighbor peace,
+ That love might live, and quarrels all might cease.
+
+ Prayer for the health of all that are diseased,
+ Confession unto all that are convicted,
+ And patience unto all that are displeased,
+ And comfort unto all that are afflicted,
+ And mercy unto all that have offended,
+ And grace to all, that all may be amended.
+
+NICHOLAS BRETON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PASTOR'S REVERIE.
+
+
+ The pastor sits in his easy-chair,
+ With the Bible upon his knee.
+ From gold to purple the clouds in the west
+ Are changing momently;
+ The shadows lie in the valleys below,
+ And hide in the curtain's fold;
+ And the page grows dim whereon he reads,
+ "I remember the days of old."
+
+ "Not clear nor dark," as the Scripture saith,
+ The pastor's memories are;
+ No day that is gone was shadowless,
+ No night was without its star;
+ But mingled bitter and sweet hath been
+ The portion of his cup:
+ "The hand that in love hath smitten," he saith,
+ "In love hath bound us up."
+
+ Fleet flies his thoughts over many a field
+ Of stubble and snow and bloom,
+ And now it trips through a festival,
+ And now it halts at a tomb;
+ Young faces smile in his reverie,
+ Of those that are young no more,
+ And voices are heard that only come
+ With the winds from a far-off shore.
+
+ He thinks of the day when first, with fear
+ And faltering lips, he stood
+ To speak in the sacred place the Word
+ To the waiting multitude;
+ He walks again to the house of God
+ With the voice of joy and praise,
+ With many whose feet long time have pressed
+ Heaven's safe and blessèd ways.
+
+ He enters again the homes of toil,
+ And joins in the homely chat;
+ He stands in the shop of the artisan;
+ He sits, where the Master sat,
+ At the poor man's fire and the rich man's feast.
+ But who to-day are the poor,
+ And who are the rich? Ask him who keeps
+ The treasures that ever endure.
+
+ Once more the green and the grove resound
+ With the merry children's din;
+ He hears their shout at the Christmas tide,
+ When Santa Claus stalks in.
+ Once more he lists while the camp-fire roars
+ On the distant mountain-side,
+ Or, proving apostleship, plies the brook
+ Where the fierce young troutlings hide.
+
+ And now he beholds the wedding train
+ To the altar slowly move,
+ And the solemn words are said that seal
+ The sacrament of love.
+ Anon at the font he meets once more
+ The tremulous youthful pair,
+ With a white-robed cherub crowing response
+ To the consecrating prayer.
+
+ By the couch of pain he kneels again;
+ Again, the thin hand lies
+ Cold in his palm, while the last far look
+ Steals into the steadfast eyes;
+ And now the burden of hearts that break
+ Lies heavy upon his own--
+ The widow's woe and the orphan's cry
+ And the desolate mother's moan.
+
+ So blithe and glad, so heavy and sad,
+ Are the days that are no more,
+ So mournfully sweet are the sounds that float
+ With the winds from a far-off shore.
+ For the pastor has learned what meaneth the word
+ That is given him to keep,--
+ "Rejoice with them that do rejoice,
+ And weep with them that weep."
+
+ It is not in vain that he has trod
+ This lonely and toilsome way.
+ It is not in vain that he has wrought
+ In the vineyard all the day;
+ For the soul that gives is the soul that lives,
+ And bearing another's load
+ Doth lighten your own and shorten the way,
+ And brighten the homeward road.
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO RABBIS.
+
+
+ The Rabbi Nathan, twoscore years and ten,
+ Walked blameless through the evil world, and then
+ Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+ Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+ And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+ Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+ No more among the elders, but went out
+ From the great congregation girt about
+ With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+ Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+ Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+ Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+ Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+ Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+ Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+ And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+ Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+ Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+ Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+ In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+ Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+ Bow with their weight. I will arise and lay
+ My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+ Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+ But even as one who, followed unawares,
+ Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+ Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+ By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+ Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+ So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+ The wail of David's penitential woe,
+ Before him still the old temptation came,
+ And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+ Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+ Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+ To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+ Smote with his staff the blackness round about.
+
+ At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+ The towers of Ecbatana far away
+ Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+ And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+ The faith of Islam reared a domèd tomb,
+ Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+ He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+ Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+ The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+ Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+ Wept, praising him whose gracious providence
+ Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+ Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+ Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+ Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+ Foul from my sins to tell thee all my shame.
+ Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+ May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+ Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+ Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+ Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+ The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+ "I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+ "In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+ 'Better the eye should see than that desire
+ Should wander'? Burning with a hidden fire
+ That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+ For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+ Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+ "Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+ In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+ They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+ Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+ Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+ Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+ His prayers were answered in another's name;
+ And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+ Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+ Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+ Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+ In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+ "Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+ Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+ Thou canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+ Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+ Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!"
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUDGE NOT.
+
+
+ Judge not; the workings of his brain
+ And of his heart thou canst not see;
+ What looks to thy dim eyes a stain,
+ In God's pure light may only be
+ A scar, brought from some well-won field,
+ Where thou wouldst only faint and yield.
+
+ The look, the air, that frets thy sight
+ May be a token that below
+ The soul has closed in deadly fight
+ With some infernal fiery foe,
+ Whose glance would scorch thy smiling grace
+ And cast thee shuddering on thy face!
+
+ The fall thou darest to despise,--
+ May be the angel's slackened hand
+ Has suffered it, that he may rise
+ And take a firmer, surer stand;
+ Or, trusting less to earthly things,
+ May henceforth learn to use his wings.
+
+ And judge none lost; but wait and see,
+ With hopeful pity, not disdain;
+ The depth of the abyss may be
+ The measure of the height of pain
+ And love and glory that may raise
+ This soul to God in after days!
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO THE UNCO GUID.
+
+
+ "My son, these maxims make a rule
+ And lump them aye thegither:
+ The Rigid Righteous is a fool,
+ The Rigid Wise anither:
+ The cleanest corn that e'er was dight
+ May hae some pyles o' caff in;
+ Sae ne'er a fellow-creature slight
+ For random fits o' daffin."
+
+ --SOLOMON, _Ecclesiastes_ vii. 16.
+
+
+ O ye wha are sae guid yoursel',
+ Sae pious and sae holy,
+ Ye've nought to do but mark and tell
+ Your neebor's fauts and folly:--
+ Whase life is like a weel-gaun mill,
+ Supplied wi' store o' water.
+ The heapèt happer's ebbing still,
+ And still the clap plays clatter.
+
+ Hear me, ye venerable core,
+ As counsel for poor mortals,
+ That frequent pass douce Wisdom's door,
+ For glaikit Folly's portals!
+ I, for their thoughtless, careless sakes,
+ Would here propone defences,
+ Their donsie tricks, their black mistakes,
+ Their failings and mischances.
+
+ Ye see your state wi' theirs compared,
+ And shudder at the niffer;
+ But cast a moment's fair regard,
+ What makes the mighty differ?
+ Discount what scant occasion gave
+ That purity ye pride in,
+ And (what's aft mair than a' the lave)
+ Your better art o' hidin'.
+
+ Think, when your castigated pulse
+ Gies now and then a wallop,
+ What ragings must his veins convulse,
+ That still eternal gallop:
+ Wi' wind and tide fair i' your tail,
+ Right on ye scud your sea-way;
+ But in the teeth o' baith to sail,
+ It makes an unco leeway.
+
+ See Social life and Glee sit down,
+ All joyous and unthinking,
+ Till, quite transmugrified, they're grown
+ Debauchery and Drinking:
+ O, would they stay to calculate
+ The eternal consequences;
+ Or your mortal dreaded hell to state,
+ Damnation of expenses!
+
+ Ye high, exalted, virtuous dames,
+ Tied up in godly laces,
+ Before ye gie poor Frailty names,
+ Suppose a change o' cases;
+ A dear-loved lad, convenience snug,
+ A treacherous inclination,--
+ But, let me whisper i' your lug,
+ Ye 're aiblins nae temptation.
+
+ Then gently scan your brother man,
+ Still gentler sister woman;
+ Though they may gang a kennin' wrang,
+ To step aside is human.
+ One point must still be greatly dark,
+ The moving why they do it;
+ And just as lamely can ye mark
+ How far perhaps they rue it.
+
+ Who made the heart, 't is He alone
+ Decidedly can try us;
+ He knows each chord,--its various tone,
+ Each spring,--its various bias:
+ Then at the balance let's be mute,
+ We never can adjust it;
+ What's done we partly may compute,
+ But know not what's resisted.
+
+ROBERT BURNS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STONE THE WOMAN, LET THE MAN GO FREE.
+
+
+ Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free!
+ Draw back your skirts, lest they perchance may touch
+ Her garment as she passes; but to him
+ Put forth a willing hand to clasp with his
+ That led her to destruction and disgrace.
+ Shut up from her the sacred ways of toil,
+ That she no more may win an honest meal;
+ But ope to him all honorable paths
+ Where he may win distinction; give to him
+ Fair, pressed-down measures of life's sweetest joys.
+ Pass her, O maiden, with a pure, proud face,
+ If she puts out a poor, polluted palm;
+ But lay thy hand in his on bridal day,
+ And swear to cling to him with wifely love
+ And tender reverence. Trust him who led
+ A sister woman to a fearful fate.
+
+ Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free!
+ Let one soul suffer for the guilt of two--
+ It is the doctrine of a hurried world,
+ Too out of breath for holding balances
+ Where nice distinctions and injustices
+ Are calmly weighed. But ah, how will it be
+ On that strange day of fire and flame,
+ When men shall wither with a mystic fear,
+ And all shall stand before the one true Judge?
+ Shall sex make _then_ a difference in sin?
+ Shall He, the Searcher of the hidden heart,
+ In His eternal and divine decree
+ Condemn the woman and forgive the man?
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IN PRISON.
+
+
+ God pity the wretched prisoners,
+ In their lonely cells to-day!
+ Whatever the sins that tripped them,
+ God pity them! still I say.
+
+ Only a strip of sunshine,
+ Cleft by rusty bars;
+ Only a patch of azure,
+ Only a cluster of stars;
+
+ Only a barren future,
+ To starve their hope upon;
+ Only stinging memories
+ Of a past that's better gone;
+
+ Only scorn from women.
+ Only hate from men,
+ Only remorse to whisper
+ Of a life that might have been.
+
+ Once they were little children.
+ And perhaps their unstained feet
+ Were led by a gentle mother
+ Toward the golden street;
+
+ Therefore, if in life's forest
+ They since have lost their way,
+ For the sake of her who loved them,
+ God pity them! still I say.
+
+ O mothers gone to heaven!
+ With earnest heart I ask
+ That your eyes may not look earthward
+ On the failure of your task.
+
+ For even in those mansions
+ The choking tears would rise,
+ Though the fairest hand in heaven
+ Would wipe them from your eyes!
+
+ And you, who judge so harshly,
+ Are you sure the stumbling-stone
+ That tripped the feet of others
+ Might not have bruised your own?
+
+ Are you sure the sad-faced angel
+ Who writes our errors down
+ Will ascribe to you more honor
+ Than him on whom you frown?
+
+ Or, if a steadier purpose
+ Unto your life is given;
+ A stronger will to conquer,
+ A smoother path to heaven;
+
+ If, when temptations meet you,
+ You crush them with a smile;
+ If you can chain pale passion
+ And keep your lips from guile;
+
+ Then bless the hand that crowned you,
+ Remembering, as you go,
+ 'T was not your own endeavor
+ That shaped your nature so;
+
+ And sneer not at the weakness
+ Which made a brother fall,
+ For the hand that lifts the fallen,
+ God loves the best of all!
+
+ And pray for the wretched prisoners
+ All over the land to-day,
+ That a holy hand in pity
+ May wipe their guilt away.
+
+MAY RILEY SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONSCIENCE AND REMORSE.
+
+
+ "Good-bye," I said to my Conscience--
+ "Good-bye for aye and aye;"
+ And I put her hands off harshly,
+ And turned my face away:
+ And Conscience, smitten sorely,
+ Returned not from that day.
+
+ But a time came when my spirit
+ Grew weary of its pace:
+ And I cried, "Come back, my Conscience,
+ I long to see thy face;"
+ But Conscience cried, "I cannot,--
+ Remorse sits in my place."
+
+PAUL LAWRENCE DUNBAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOUND WANTING.
+
+
+ Belshazzar had a letter,--
+ He never had but one;
+ Belshazzar's correspondent
+ Concluded and begun
+ In that immortal copy
+ The conscience of us all
+ Can read without its glasses
+ On revelation's wall.
+
+EMILY DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DALLYING WITH TEMPTATION.
+
+ FROM THE FIRST PART OF "WALLENSTEIN," ACT III. SC. 4.
+
+
+ Wallenstein _(in soliloquy_). Is it possible?
+ Is't so? I _can_ no longer what I _would_!
+ No longer draw back at my liking! I
+ Must _do_ the deed, because I _thought_ of it,
+ And fed this heart here with a dream! Because
+ I did not scowl temptation from my presence,
+ Dallied with thought of possible fulfilment,
+ Commenced no movement, left all time uncertain,
+ And only kept the road, the access open!
+ By the great God of Heaven! It was not
+ My serious meaning, it was ne'er resolve.
+ I but amused myself with thinking of it.
+ The free-will tempted me, the power to do
+ Or not to do it.--Was it criminal
+ To make the fancy minister to hope,
+ To fill the air with pretty toys of air,
+ And clutch fantastic sceptres moving t'ward me?
+ Was not the will kept free? Beheld I not
+ The road of duty clear beside me--but
+ One little step and once more I was in it!
+ Where am I? Whither have I been transported?
+ No road, no track behind one, but a wall,
+ Impenetrable, insurmountable,
+ Rises obedient to the spells I muttered
+ And meant not--my own doings tower behind me.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EASY TO DRIFT.
+
+
+ Easy to drift to the open sea,
+ The tides are eager and swift and strong,
+ And whistling and free are the rushing winds,--
+ But O, to get back is hard and long.
+
+ Easy as told in Arabian tale,
+ To free from his jar the evil sprite
+ Till he rises like smoke to stupendous size,--
+ But O, nevermore can we prison him tight.
+
+ Easy as told in an English tale,
+ To fashion a Frankenstein, body and soul,
+ And breathe in his bosom a breath of life,--
+ But O, we create what we cannot control.
+
+ Easy to drift to the sea of doubt,
+ Easy to hurt what we cannot heal,
+ Easy to rouse what we cannot soothe,
+ Easy to speak what we do not feel,
+ Easy to show what we ought to conceal,
+ Easy to think that fancy is fate,--
+ And O, the wisdom that comes too late!
+
+OLIVER HUCKEL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRANKFORD'S SOLILOQUY.
+
+ FROM "A WOMAN KILLED WITH KINDNESS"
+
+
+ O God! O God! that it were possible
+ To undo things done; to call back yesterday!
+ That time could turn up his swift sandy glass,
+ To untell the days, and to redeem these hours!
+ Or that the sun
+ Could, rising from the West, draw his coach backward,--
+ Take from the account of time so many minutes.
+ Till he had all these seasons called again,
+ These minutes and these actions done in them.
+
+THOMAS HEYWOOD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONSCIENCE.
+
+ FROM SATIRE XIII.
+
+
+ The Spartan rogue who, boldly bent on fraud,
+ Dared ask the god to sanction and applaud,
+ And sought for counsel at the Pythian shrine,
+ Received for answer from the lips divine,--
+ "That he who doubted to restore his trust,
+ And reasoned much, reluctant to be just,
+ Should for those doubts and that reluctance prove
+ The deepest vengeance of the powers above."
+ The tale declares that not pronounced in vain
+ Came forth the warning from the sacred fane:
+ Ere long no branch of that devoted race
+ Could mortal man on soil of Sparta trace!
+ Thus but intended mischief, stayed in time,
+ Had all the mortal guilt of finished crime.
+ If such his fate who yet but darkly dares,
+ Whose guilty purpose yet no act declares,
+ What were it, done! Ah! now farewell to peace!
+ Ne'er on this earth his soul's alarms shall cease!
+ Held in the mouth that languid fever burns,
+ His tasteless food he indolently turns;
+ On Alba's oldest stock his soul shall pine!
+ Forth from his lips he spits the joyless wine!
+ Nor all the nectar of the hills shall now
+ Or glad the heart, or smooth the wrinkled brow!
+ While o'er the couch his aching limbs are cast,
+ If care permit the brief repose at last,
+ Lo! there the altar and the fane abused!
+ Or darkly shadowed forth in dream confused,
+ While the damp brow betrays the inward storm,
+ Before him flits thy aggravated form!
+ Then as new fears o'er all his senses press,
+ Unwilling words the guilty truth confess!
+ These, these be they whom secret terrors try.
+ When muttered thunders shake the lurid sky;
+ Whose deadly paleness now the gloom conceals
+ And now the vivid flash anew reveals.
+ No storm as Nature's casualty they hold.
+ They deem without an aim no thunders rolled;
+ Where'er the lightning strikes, the flash is thought
+ Judicial fire, with Heaven's high vengeance fraught.
+ Passes this by, with yet more anxious ear
+ And greater dread, each future storm they fear;
+ In burning vigil, deadliest foe to sleep,
+ In their distempered frame if fever keep,
+ Or the pained side their wonted rest prevent,
+ Behold some incensed god his bow has bent!
+ All pains, all aches, are stones and arrows hurled
+ At bold offenders in this nether world!
+ From them no crested cock acceptance meets!
+ Their lamb before the altar vainly bleats!
+ Can pardoning Heaven on guilty sickness smile?
+ Or is there victim than itself more vile?
+ Where steadfast virtue dwells not in the breast,
+ Man is a wavering creature at the best!
+
+From the Latin of JUVENAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FOOLISH VIRGINS.
+
+
+ The Queen looked up, and said,
+ "O maiden, if indeed you list to sing,
+ Sing, and unbind my heart, that I may weep."
+ Whereat full willingly sang the little maid:
+
+ "Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill!
+ Late, late, so late! but we can enter still.
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "No light had we: for that we do repent;
+ And learning this, the bridegroom will relent.
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "No light; so late! and dark and chill the night!
+ O, let us in, that we may find the light!
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "Have we not heard the bridegroom is so sweet?
+ O, let us in, though late, to kiss his feet!
+ No, no, too late! Ye cannot enter now."
+
+ So sang the novice, while full passionately,
+ Her head upon her hands, wept the sad Queen.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UP HILL.
+
+
+ Does the road wind up hill all the way?
+ _Yes, to the very end._
+ Will the day's journey take the whole long day?
+ _From morn to night, my friend_.
+
+ But is there for the night a resting-place?
+ _A roof for when the slow dark hours begin._
+ May not the darkness hide it from my face?
+ _You cannot miss that inn_.
+
+ Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?
+ _Those who have gone before._
+ Then must I knock, or call when just in sight?
+ _They will not keep you standing at that door_.
+
+ Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak?
+ _Of labor you shall find the sum._
+ Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
+ _Yea, beds for all who come_.
+
+CHRISTINA G. ROSSETTI.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PER PACEM AD LUCEM.
+
+
+ I do not ask, O Lord, that life may be
+ A pleasant road;
+ I do not ask that Thou wouldst take from me
+ Aught of its load;
+
+ I do not ask that flowers should always spring
+ Beneath my feet;
+ I know too well the poison and the sting
+ Of things too sweet.
+
+ For one thing only, Lord, dear Lord, I plead,
+ Lead me aright--
+ Though strength should falter, and though heart should bleed--
+ Through Peace to Light.
+
+ I do not ask, O Lord, that thou shouldst shed
+ Full radiance here;
+ Give but a ray of peace, that I may tread
+ Without a fear.
+
+ I do not ask my cross to understand,
+ My way to see;
+ Better in darkness just to feel Thy hand
+ And follow Thee.
+
+ Joy is like restless day; but peace divine
+ Like quiet night:
+ Lead me, O Lord,--till perfect Day shall shine,
+ Through Peace to Light.
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON HIS BLINDNESS.
+
+
+ When I consider how my light is spent
+ Ere half my days, in this dark world and wide,
+ And that one talent, which is death to hide,
+ Lodged with me useless, though my soul more bent
+ To serve therewith my Maker, and present
+ My true account, lest he returning chide;
+ "Doth God exact day-labor, light denied?"
+ I fondly ask. But Patience, to prevent
+ That murmur, soon replies, "God doth not need
+ Either man's work or his own gifts; who best
+ Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best: his state
+ Is kingly; thousands at his bidding speed,
+ And post o'er land and ocean without rest;
+ They also serve who only stand and wait."
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MARTYRS' HYMN.
+
+
+ Flung to the heedless winds,
+ Or on the waters cast,
+ The martyrs' ashes, watched,
+ Shall gathered be at last;
+ And from that scattered dust,
+ Around us and abroad,
+ Shall spring a plenteous seed
+ Of witnesses for God.
+
+ The Father hath received
+ Their latest living breath;
+ And vain is Satan's boast
+ Of victory in their death;
+ Still, still, though dead, they speak,
+ And, trumpet-tongued, proclaim
+ To many a wakening land
+ The one availing name.
+
+From the German of MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+Translation of W.J. FOX.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PILGRIMAGE.
+
+
+ Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,
+ My staff of faith to walk upon,
+ My scrip of joy, immortal diet,
+ My bottle of salvation,
+ My gown of glory, hope's true gauge;
+ And thus I'll take my pilgrimage!
+
+ Blood must be my body's balmer,
+ No other balm will there be given;
+ Whilst my soul, like quiet palmer,
+ Travelleth towards the land of Heaven,
+ Over the silver mountains
+ Where spring the nectar fountains:
+ There will I kiss
+ The bowl of bliss,
+ And drink mine everlasting fill
+ Upon every milken hill.
+ My soul will be a-dry before,
+ But after, it will thirst no more.
+
+ Then by that happy, blissful day,
+ More peaceful pilgrims I shall see,
+ That have cast off their rags of clay,
+ And walk apparelled fresh like me.
+ I'll take them first
+ To quench their thirst,
+ And taste of nectar's suckets
+ At those clear wells
+ Where sweetness dwells
+ Drawn up by saints in crystal buckets.
+
+ And when our bottles and all we
+ Are filled with immortality,
+ Then the blest paths we'll travel,
+ Strewed with rubies thick as gravel,--
+ Ceilings of diamonds, sapphire floors.
+ High walls of coral, and pearly bowers.
+ From thence to Heaven's bribeless hall,
+ Where no corrupted voices brawl;
+ No conscience molten into gold,
+ No forged accuser, bought or sold,
+ No cause deferred, no vain-spent journey,
+ For there Christ is the King's Attorney;
+ Who pleads for all without degrees,
+ And he hath angels, but no fees;
+ And when the grand twelve-million jury
+ Of our sins, with direful fury,
+ 'Gainst our souls black verdicts give,
+ Christ pleads his death, and then we live.
+ Be thou my speaker, taintless pleader,
+ Unblotted lawyer, true proceeder!
+ Thou giv'st salvation even for alms,--
+ Not with a bribed lawyer's palms.
+ And this is mine eternal plea
+ To Him that made heaven, earth, and sea',
+ That, since my flesh must die so soon,
+ And want a head to dine next noon,
+ Just at the stroke when my veins start and spread.
+ Set on my soul an everlasting head:
+ Then am I, like a palmer, fit
+ To tread those blest paths which before I writ.
+
+ Of death and judgment, heaven and hell,
+ Who oft doth think, must needs die well.
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MASTER'S TOUCH.
+
+
+ In the still air the music lies unheard;
+ In the rough marble beauty hides unseen:
+ To make the music and the beauty, needs
+ The master's touch, the sculptor's chisel keen.
+
+ Great Master, touch us with thy skilful hand;
+ Let not the music that is in us die!
+ Great Sculptor, hew and polish us; nor let,
+ Hidden and lost, thy form within us lie!
+
+ Spare not the stroke! do with us as thou wilt!
+ Let there be naught unfinished, broken, marred;
+ Complete thy purpose, that we may become
+ Thy perfect image, thou our God and Lord!
+
+HORATIUS BONAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FAITHFUL ANGEL.
+
+ FROM "PARADISE LOST," BOOK V.
+
+
+ The seraph Abdiel, faithful found
+ Among the faithless, faithful only he;
+ Among innumerable false, unmoved,
+ Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified,
+ His loyalty he kept, his love, his zeal;
+ Nor number, nor example with him wrought
+ To swerve from truth, or change his constant mind,
+ Though single. From amidst them forth he passed,
+ Long way through hostile scorn, which he sustained
+ Superior, nor of violence feared aught;
+ And with retorted scorn his back he turned
+ On those proud towers to swift destruction doomed.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOW SPIRITS.
+
+
+ Fever and fret and aimless stir
+ And disappointed strife,
+ All chafing, unsuccessful things,
+ Make up the sum of life.
+
+ Love adds anxiety to toil,
+ And sameness doubles cares.
+ While one unbroken chain of work
+ The flagging temper wears.
+
+ The light and air are dulled with smoke:
+ The streets resound with noise;
+ And the soul sinks to see its peers
+ Chasing their joyless joys.
+
+ Voices are round me; smiles are near;
+ Kind welcomes to be had;
+ And yet my spirit is alone,
+ Fretful, outworn, and sad.
+
+ A weary actor, I would fain
+ Be quit of my long part;
+ The burden of unquiet life
+ Lies heavy on my heart.
+
+ Sweet thought of God! now do thy work
+ As thou hast done before;
+ Wake up, and tears will wake with thee,
+ And the dull mood be o'er.
+
+ The very thinking of the thought
+ Without or praise or prayer,
+ Gives light to know, and life to do,
+ And marvellous strength to bear.
+
+ Oh, there is music in that thought,
+ Unto a heart unstrung,
+ Like sweet bells at the evening time,
+ Most musically rung.
+
+ 'Tis not his justice or his power,
+ Beauty or blest abode,
+ But the mere unexpanded thought
+ Of the eternal God.
+
+ It is not of his wondrous works,
+ Not even that he is;
+ Words fail it, but it is a thought
+ Which by itself is bliss.
+
+ Sweet thought, lie closer to my heart!
+ That I may feel thee near,
+ As one who for his weapon feels
+ In some nocturnal fear.
+
+ Mostly in hours of gloom thou com'st,
+ When sadness makes us lowly,
+ As though thou wert the echo sweet
+ Of humble melancholy.
+
+ I bless thee. Lord, for this kind check
+ To spirits over free!
+ More helpless need of thee!
+ And for all things that make me feel
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I SAW THEE.
+
+ "When thou wast under the fig-tree, I saw thee."
+
+
+ I Saw thee when, as twilight fell,
+ And evening lit her fairest star,
+ Thy footsteps sought yon quiet dell,
+ The world's confusion left afar.
+
+ I saw thee when thou stood'st alone,
+ Where drooping branches thick o'erhung,
+ Thy still retreat to all unknown,
+ Hid in deep shadows darkly flung.
+
+ I saw thee when, as died each sound
+ Of bleating flock or woodland bird,
+ Kneeling, as if on holy ground,
+ Thy voice the listening silence heard.
+
+ I saw thy calm, uplifted eyes,
+ And marked the heaving of thy breast,
+ When rose to heaven thy heartfelt sighs
+ For purer life, for perfect rest.
+
+ I saw the light that o'er thy face
+ Stole with a soft, suffusing glow,
+ As if, within, celestial grace
+ Breathed the same bliss that angels know.
+
+ I saw--what thou didst not--above
+ Thy lowly head an open heaven;
+ And tokens of thy Father's love
+ With smiles to thy rapt spirit given.
+
+ I saw thee from that sacred spot
+ With firm and peaceful soul depart;
+ I, Jesus, saw thee,--doubt it not,--
+ And read the secrets of thy heart!
+
+RAY PALMER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOSSE IN DELAYES.
+
+
+ Shun delayes, they breed remorse,
+ Take thy time while time doth serve thee,
+ Creeping snayles have weakest force,
+ Flie their fault, lest thou repent thee.
+ Good is best when soonest wrought,
+ Lingering labours come to nought.
+
+ Hoyse up sayle while gale doth last,
+ Tide and winde stay no man's pleasure;
+ Seek not time when time is past,
+ Sober speede is wisdome's leasure.
+ After-wits are dearely bought,
+ Let thy fore-wit guide thy thought.
+
+ Time weares all his locks before,
+ Take thou hold upon his forehead;
+ When he flies, he turnes no more,
+ And behind his scalpe is naked.
+ Workes adjourned have many stayes,
+ Long demurres breed new delayes.
+
+ Seeke thy salve while sore is greene,
+ Festered wounds aske deeper launcing;
+ After-cures are seldome seene,
+ Often sought, scarce ever chancing.
+ Time and place gives best advice.
+ Out of season, out of price.
+
+ Crush the serpent in the head,
+ Breake ill eggs ere they be hatched:
+ Kill bad chickens in the tread;
+ Fledged, they hardly can be catched:
+ In the rising stifle ill,
+ Lest it grow against thy will.
+
+ Drops do pierce the stubborn flint,
+ Not by force, but often falling;
+ Custome kills with feeble dint.
+ More by use than strength prevailing:
+ Single sands have little weight,
+ Many make a drowning freight.
+
+ Tender twigs are bent with ease,
+ Aged trees do breake with bending;
+ Young desires make little prease,
+ Growth doth make them past amending.
+ Happie man that soon doth knocke,
+ Babel's babes against the rocke.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SEED GROWING SECRETLY.
+
+
+ Dear, secret greenness! nurst below
+ Tempests and winds and winter nights!
+ Vex not, that but One sees thee grow;
+ That One made all these lesser lights.
+
+ What needs a conscience calm and bright
+ Within itself, an outward test?
+ Who breaks his glass, to take more light,
+ Makes way for storms into his rest.
+
+ Then bless thy secret growth, nor catch
+ At noise, but thrive unseen and dumb;
+ Keep clean, bear fruit, earn life, and watch
+ Till the white-winged reapers come!
+
+HENRY VAUGHAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATIENCE.
+
+
+ She hath no beauty in her face
+ Unless the chastened sweetness there,
+ And meek long-suffering, yield a grace
+ To make her mournful features fair:--
+
+ Shunned by the gay, the proud, the young,
+ She roams through dim, unsheltered ways;
+ Nor lover's vow, nor flatterer's tongue
+ Brings music to her sombre days:--
+
+ At best her skies are clouded o'er,
+ And oft she fronts the stinging sleet,
+ Or feels on some tempestuous shore
+ The storm-waves lash her naked feet.
+
+ Where'er she strays, or musing stands
+ By lonesome beach, by turbulent mart,
+ We see her pale, half-tremulous hands
+ Crossed humbly o'er her aching heart!
+
+ Within, a secret pain she bears,--
+ pain too deep to feel the balm
+ An April spirit finds in tears;
+ Alas! all cureless griefs are calm!
+
+ Yet in her passionate strength supreme,
+ Despair beyond her pathway flies,
+ Awed by the softly steadfast beam
+ Of sad, but heaven-enamored eyes!
+
+ Who pause to greet her, vaguely seem
+ Touched by fine wafts of holier air;
+ As those who in some mystic dream
+ Talk with the angels unaware!
+
+PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOMETIME.
+
+
+ Sometime, when all life's lessons have been learned,
+ And sun and stars forevermore have set,
+ The things o'er which our weak judgments here have spurned,
+ The things o'er which we grieved with lashes wet,
+ Will flash before us, out of life's dark night,
+ As stars shine most in deeper tints of blue;
+ And we shall see how all God's plans are right,
+ And how what seems reproof was love most true.
+
+ And we shall see how, while we frown and sigh,
+ God's plans go on as best for you and me;
+ How, when we called, he heeded not our cry,
+ Because his wisdom to the end could see.
+ And e'en as prudent parents disallow
+ Too much of sweet to craving babyhood,
+ So God, perhaps, is keeping from us now
+ Life's sweetest things, because it seemeth good.
+
+ And if sometimes, commingled with life's wine,
+ We find the wormwood, and rebel and shrink,
+ Be sure a wiser hand than yours or mine
+ Pours out this potion for our lips to drink.
+ And if some friend we love is lying low,
+ Where human kisses cannot reach his face,
+ Oh, do not blame the loving Father so,
+ But wear your sorrow with obedient grace!
+
+ And you shall shortly know that lengthened breath
+ Is not the sweetest gift God sends his friend,
+ And that, sometimes, the sable pall of death
+ Conceals the fairest bloom his love can send.
+ If we could push ajar the gates of life,
+ And stand within, and all God's workings see,
+ We could interpret all this doubt and strife,
+ And for each mystery could find a key.
+
+ But not to-day. Then be content, poor heart!
+ God's plans like lilies pure and white unfold.
+ We must not tear the close-shut leaves apart,
+ Time will reveal the calyxes of gold.
+ And if, through patient toil, we reach the land
+ Where tired feet, with sandals loosed, may rest,
+ When we shall clearly know and understand,
+ I think that we will say, "God knew the best!"
+
+MAY RILEY SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATHER, THY WILL BE DONE!
+
+
+ He sendeth sun, he sendeth shower,
+ Alike they're needful for the flower;
+ And joys and tears alike are sent
+ To give the soul fit nourishment:
+ As comes to me or cloud or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+ Can loving children e'er reprove
+ With murmurs whom they trust and love?
+ Creator, I would ever be
+ A trusting, loving child to thee:
+ As comes to me or cloud or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+ Oh, ne'er will I at life repine;
+ Enough that thou hast made it mine;
+ When falls the shadow cold of death,
+ I yet will sing with parting breath:
+ As comes to me or shade or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+SARAH FLOWER ADAMS.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+DEATH: IMMORTALITY: HEAVEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROSPECT.
+
+
+ Methinks we do as fretful children do,
+ Leaning their faces on the window-pane
+ To sigh the glass dim with their own breath's stain,
+ And shut the sky and landscape from their view;
+ And, thus, alas! since God the maker drew
+ A mystic separation 'twixt those twain,--
+ The life beyond us and our souls in pain,--
+ We miss the prospect which we are called unto
+ By grief we are fools to use. Be still and strong,
+ O man, my brother! hold thy sobbing breath,
+ And keep thy soul's large windows pure from wrong;
+ That so, as life's appointment issueth,
+ Thy vision may be clear to watch along
+ The sunset consummation-lights of death.
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOST PLEIAD.
+
+
+ Not in the sky,
+ Where it was seen,
+ Nor on the white tops of the glistening wave,
+ Nor in the mansions of the hidden deep,--
+ Though green,
+ And beautiful, its caves of mystery;--
+ Shall the bright watcher have
+ A place, and as of old high station keep.
+
+ Gone, gone!
+ Oh, never more to cheer
+ The mariner who holds his course alone
+ On the Atlantic, through the weary night,
+ When the stars turn to watchers, and do sleep,
+ Shall it appear,
+ With the sweet fixedness of certain light,
+ Down-shining on the shut eyes of the deep.
+
+ Vain, vain!
+ Hopeless most idly then, shall he look forth,
+ That mariner from his bark.
+ Howe'er the north
+ Does raise his certain lamp, when tempests lower--
+ He sees no more that perished light again!
+ And gloomier grows the hour
+ Which may not, through the thick and crowding dark,
+ Restore that lost and loved one to her tower.
+
+ He looks,--the shepherd of Chaldea's hills
+ Tending his flocks,--
+ And wonders the rich beacon does not blaze,
+ Gladdening his gaze;--
+ And from his dreary watch along the rocks,
+ Guiding him safely home through perilous ways!
+ Still wondering as the drowsy silence fills
+ The sorrowful scene, and every hour distils
+ Its leaden dews.--How chafes he at the night,
+ Still slow to bring the expected and sweet light,
+ So natural to his sight!
+
+ And lone,
+ Where its first splendors shone,
+ Shall be that pleasant company of stars:
+ How should they know that death
+ Such perfect beauty mars?
+ And like the earth, its crimson bloom and breath;
+ Fallen from on high,
+ Their lights grow blasted by its touch, and die!--
+ All their concerted springs of harmony
+ Snapped rudely, and the generous music gone.
+
+ A strain--a mellow strain--
+ A wailing sweetness filled the sky;
+ The stars, lamenting in unborrowed pain,
+ That one of their selectest ones must die!
+ Must vanish, when most lovely, from the rest!
+ Alas! 'tis evermore our destiny,
+ The hope, heart-cherished, is the soonest lost;
+ The flower first budden, soonest feels the frost:
+ Are not the shortest-lived still loveliest?
+ And, like the pale star shooting down the sky,
+ Look they not ever brightest when they fly
+ The desolate home they blessed?
+
+WILLIAM GILMORE SIMMS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PASSING AWAY.
+
+
+ Was it the chime of a tiny bell
+ That came so sweet to my dreaming ear,
+ Like the silvery tones of a fairy's shell
+ That he winds, on the beach, so mellow and clear,
+ When the winds and the waves lie together asleep,
+ And the Moon and the Fairy are watching the deep,
+ She dispensing her silvery light.
+ And he his notes as silvery quite.
+ While the boatman listens and ships his oar,
+ To catch the music that comes from the shore?
+ Hark! the notes on my ear that play
+ Are set to words; as they float, they say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ But no; it was not a fairy's shell.
+ Blown on the beach, so mellow and clear;
+ Nor was it the tongue of a silver bell,
+ Striking the hour, that filled my ear,
+ As I lay in my dream; yet was it a chime
+ That told of the flow of the stream of time.
+ For a beautiful clock from the ceiling hung,
+ And a plump little girl, for a pendulum, swung
+ (As you've sometimes seen, in a little ring
+ That hangs in his cage, a canary-bird swing);
+ And she held to her bosom a budding bouquet,
+ And, as she enjoyed it, she seemed to say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ Oh, how bright were the wheels, that told
+ Of the lapse of time, as they moved round slow;
+ And the hands, as they swept o'er the dial of gold,
+ Seemed to point to the girl below.
+ And lo! she had changed: in a few short hours
+ Her bouquet had become a garland of flowers,
+ That she held in her outstretched hands, and flung
+ This way and that, as she, dancing, swung
+ In the fulness of grace and of womanly pride,
+ That told me she soon was to be a bride;
+ Yet then, when expecting her happiest day,
+ In the same sweet voice I heard her say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ While I gazed at that fair one's cheek, a shade
+ Of thought or care stole softly over,
+ Like that by a cloud in a summer's day made,
+ Looking down on a field of blossoming clover.
+ The rose yet lay on her cheek, but its flush
+ Had something lost of its brilliant blush;
+ And the light in her eye, and the light on the wheels,
+ That marched so calmly round above her,
+ Was a little dimmed,--as when evening steals
+ Upon noon's hot face. Yet one couldn't but love her,
+ For she looked like a mother whose first babe lay
+ Rocked on her breast, as she swung all day;
+ And she seemed, in the same silver tone, to say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ While yet I looked, what a change there came!
+ Her eye was quenched, and her cheek was wan;
+ Stooping and staffed was her withered frame,
+ Yet just as busily swung she on;
+ The garland beneath her had fallen to dust;
+ The wheels above her were eaten with rust:
+ The hands, that over the dial swept,
+ Grew crooked and tarnished, but on they kept
+ And still there came that silver tone
+ From the shrivelled lips of the toothless crone
+ (Let me never forget till my dying day
+ The tone or the burden of her lay),
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+JOHN PIERPONT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LINES
+
+ FOUND IN HIS BIBLE IN THE GATE-HOUSE AT WESTMINSTER.
+
+
+ E'en such is time; that takes in trust
+ Our youth, our joys, our all we have,
+ And pays us but with earth and dust;
+ Who in the dark and silent grave,
+ When we have wandered all our ways,
+ Shuts up the story of our days:
+ But from this earth, this grave, this dust,
+ My God shall raise me up, I trust.
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY AIN COUNTREE.
+
+ "But now they desire a better country, that is, an
+ heavenly."--HEBREWS xi. 16.
+
+
+ I'm far frae my hame, an' I'm weary aftenwhiles,
+ For the langed-for hame-bringing, an' my Father's welcome smiles;
+ I'll never be fu' content, until mine een do see
+ The shining gates o' heaven an' my ain countree.
+
+ The earth is flecked wi' flowers, mony-tinted, fresh, an' gay,
+ The birdies warble blithely, for my Father made them sae;
+ But these sights an' these soun's will as naething be to me,
+ When I hear the angels singing in my ain countree.
+
+ I've his gude word of promise that some gladsome day, the King
+ To his ain royal palace his banished hame will bring:
+ Wi' een an' wi' hearts runnin' owre, we shall see
+ The King in his beauty in our ain countree.
+
+ My sins hae been mony, an' my sorrows hae been sair,
+ But there they'll never vex me, nor be remembered mair;
+ His bluid has made me white, his hand shall dry mine e'e,
+ When he brings me hame at last, to my ain countree.
+
+ Like a bairn to its mither, a wee birdie to its nest,
+ I wad fain be ganging noo, unto my Saviour's breast;
+ For he gathers in his bosom, witless, worthless lambs like me,
+ And carries them himse' to his ain countree.
+
+ He's faithfu' that hath promised, he'll surely come again,
+ He'll keep his tryst wi' me, at what hour I dinna ken;
+ But he bids me still to wait, an' ready aye to be,
+ To gang at ony moment to my ain countree.
+
+ So I'm watching aye, an' singin' o' my hame as I wait,
+ For the soun'ing o' his footfa' this side the shining gate;
+ God gie his grace to ilk ane wha listens noo to me,
+ That we a' may gang in gladness to our ain countree.
+
+MARY LEE DEMAREST.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COMING.
+
+ "At even, or at midnight, or at the cock-crowing, or in the
+ morning."--Mark xiii. 35.
+
+
+ "It may be in the evening,
+ When the work of the day is done,
+ And you have time to sit in the twilight
+ And watch the sinking sun,
+ While the long bright day dies slowly
+ Over the sea,
+ And the hour grows quiet and holy
+ With thoughts of me;
+ While you hear the village children
+ Passing along the street,
+ Among those thronging footsteps
+ May come the sound of _my_ feet.
+ Therefore I tell you: Watch.
+ By the light of the evening star,
+ When the room is growing dusky
+ As the clouds afar;
+ Let the door be on the latch
+ In your home,
+ For it may be through the gloaming
+ I will come.
+
+ "It may be when the midnight
+ Is heavy upon the land,
+ And the black waves lying dumbly
+ Along the sand;
+ When the moonless night draws close,
+ And the lights are out in the house;
+ When the fires burn low and red,
+ And the watch is ticking loudly
+ Beside the bed:
+ Though you sleep, tired out, on your couch,
+ Still your heart must wake and watch
+ In the dark room,
+ For it may be that at midnight
+ I will come.
+
+ "It may be at the cock-crow,
+ When the night is dying slowly
+ In the sky,
+ And the sea looks calm and holy,
+ Waiting for the dawn
+ Of the golden sun
+ Which draweth nigh;
+ When the mists are on the valleys, shading
+ The rivers chill,
+ And my morning-star is fading, fading
+ Over the hill:
+ Behold I say unto you: Watch;
+ Let the door be on the latch
+ In your home;
+ In the chill before the dawning,
+ Between the night and morning,
+ I may come.
+
+ "It may be in the morning,
+ When the sun is bright and strong,
+ And the dew is glittering sharply
+ Over the little lawn;
+ When the waves are laughing loudly
+ Along the shore,
+ And the little birds are singing sweetly
+ About the door;
+ With the long day's work before you,
+ You rise up with the sun,
+ And the neighbors come in to talk a little
+ Of all that must be done.
+ But remember that _I_ may be the next
+ To come in at the door,
+ To call you from all your busy work
+ Forevermore:
+ As you work your heart must watch,
+ For the door is on the latch
+ In your room,
+ And it may be in the morning
+ I will come."
+
+ So He passed down my cottage garden,
+ By the path that leads to the sea,
+ Till he came to the turn of the little road
+ Where the birch and laburnum tree
+ Lean over and arch the way;
+ There I saw him a moment stay,
+ And turn once more to me,
+ As I wept at the cottage door,
+ And lift up his hands in blessing--
+ Then I saw his face no more.
+
+ And I stood still in the doorway,
+ Leaning against the wall,
+ Not heeding the fair white roses,
+ Though I crushed them and let them fall.
+ Only looking down the pathway,
+ And looking toward the sea,
+ And wondering, and wondering
+ When he would come back for me;
+ Till I was aware of an angel
+ Who was going swiftly by,
+ With the gladness of one who goeth
+ In the light of God Most High.
+
+ He passed the end of the cottage
+ Toward the garden gate;
+ (I suppose he was come down
+ At the setting of the sun
+ To comfort some one in the village
+ Whose dwelling was desolate)
+ And he paused before the door
+ Beside my place,
+ And the likeness of a smile
+ Was on his face.
+ "Weep not," he said, "for unto you is given
+ To watch for the coming of his feet
+ Who is the glory of our blessed heaven;
+ The work and watching will be very sweet,
+ Even in an earthly home;
+ And in such an hour as you think not
+ He will come."
+
+ So I am watching quietly
+ Every day.
+ Whenever the sun shines brightly,
+ I rise and say:
+ "Surely it is the shining of his face!"
+ And look unto the gates of his high place
+ Beyond the sea;
+ For I know he is coming shortly
+ To summon me.
+ And when a shadow falls across the window
+ Of my room,
+ Where I am working my appointed task,
+ I lift my head to watch the door, and ask
+ If he is come;
+ And the angel answers sweetly
+ In my home:
+ "Only a few more shadows,
+ And he will come."
+
+BARBARA MILLER MACANDREW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EUTHANASIA.
+
+
+ Methinks, when on the languid eye
+ Life's autumn scenes grow dim;
+ When evening's shadows veil the sky;
+ And pleasure's siren hymn
+ Grows fainter on the tuneless ear,
+ Like echoes from another sphere,
+ Or dreams of seraphim--
+ It were not sad to cast away
+ This dull and cumbrous load of clay.
+
+ It were not sad to feel the heart
+ Grow passionless and cold;
+ To feel those longings to depart
+ That cheered the good of old;
+ To clasp the faith which looks on high,
+ Which fires the Christian's dying eye,
+ And makes the curtain-fold
+ That falls upon his wasting breast,
+ The door that leads to endless rest.
+
+ It seems not lonely thus to lie
+ On that triumphant bed,
+ Till the pure spirit mounts on high
+ By white-winged seraphs led:
+ Where glories, earth may never know,
+ O'er "many mansions" lingering glow,
+ In peerless lustre shed.
+ It were not lonely thus to soar
+ Where sin and grief can sting no more.
+
+ And though the way to such a goal
+ Lies through the clouded tomb,
+ If on the free, unfettered soul
+ There rest no stains of gloom,
+ How should its aspirations rise
+ Far through the blue unpillared skies,
+ Up to its final home,
+ Beyond the journeyings of the sun,
+ Where streams of living waters run!
+
+WILLIS GAYLORD CLARK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LAST MAN.
+
+
+ All worldly shapes shall melt in gloom,
+ The Sun himself must die,
+ Before this mortal shall assume
+ Its immortality!
+ I saw a vision in my sleep,
+ That gave my spirit strength to sweep
+ Adown the gulf of time!
+ I saw the last of human mould
+ That shall creation's death behold,
+ As Adam saw her prime!
+
+ The sun's eye had a sickly glare,
+ The skeletons of nations were
+ Around that lonely man!
+ Some had expired in fight,--the brands
+ Still rusted in their bony hands,
+ In plague and famine some!
+ Earth's cities had no sound nor tread;
+ And ships were drifting with the dead
+ To shores where all was dumb!
+
+ Yet, prophet-like, that lone one stood,
+ With dauntless words and high,
+ That shook the sear leaves from the wood,
+ As if a storm passed by,
+ Saying, We are twins in death, proud Sun!
+ Thy face is cold, thy race is run,
+ 'Tis Mercy bids thee go;
+ For thou ten thousand thousand years
+ Hast seen the tide of human tears,
+ That shall no longer flow.
+
+ What though beneath thee man put forth
+ His pomp, his pride, his skill;
+ And arts that made fire, flood, and earth
+ The vassals of his will?
+ Yet mourn I not thy parted sway,
+ Thou dim, discrowned king of day;
+ For all those trophied arts
+ And triumphs that beneath thee sprang,
+ Healed not a passion or a pang
+ Entailed on human hearts.
+
+ Go, let oblivion's curtain fall
+ Upon the stage of men.
+ Nor with thy rising beams recall
+ Life's tragedy again:
+ Its piteous pageants bring not back,
+ Nor waken flesh, upon the rack
+ Of pain anew to writhe;
+ Stretched in disease's shapes abhorred,
+ Or mown in battle by the sword,
+ Like grass beneath the scythe.
+
+ Even I am weary in yon skies
+ To watch thy fading fire;
+ Test of all sumless agonies,
+ Behold not me expire.
+ My lips, that speak thy dirge of death,--
+ Their rounded gasp and gurgling breath
+ To see thou shalt not boast.
+ The eclipse of Nature spreads my pall,
+ The majesty of darkness shall
+ Receive my parting ghost!
+
+ This spirit shall return to Him
+ Who gave its heavenly spark;
+ Yet think not, Sun, it shall be dim
+ When thou thyself art dark!
+ No! it shall live again, and shine
+ In bliss unknown to beams of thine,
+ By Him recalled to breath,
+ Who captive led captivity,
+ Who robbed the grave of victory,
+ And took the sting from death!
+
+ Go, Sun, while mercy holds me up
+ On Nature's awful waste
+ To drink this last and bitter cup
+ Of grief that man shall taste,--
+ Go, tell the night that hides thy face,
+ Thou saw'st the last of Adam's race,
+ On earth's sepulchral clod,
+ The darkening universe defy
+ To quench his immortality,
+ Or shake his trust in God!
+
+THOMAS CAMPBELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHEN.
+
+
+ If I were told that I must die to-morrow,
+ That the next sun
+ Which sinks should bear me past all fear and sorrow
+ For any one,
+ All the fight fought, all the short journey through.
+ What should I do?
+
+ I do not think that I should shrink or falter,
+ But just go on,
+ Doing my work, nor change nor seek to alter
+ Aught that is gone;
+ But rise and move and love and smile and pray
+ For one more day.
+
+ And, lying down at night for a last sleeping,
+ Say in that ear
+ Which hearkens ever: "Lord, within thy keeping
+ How should I fear?
+ And when to-morrow brings thee nearer still,
+ Do thou thy will."
+
+ I might not sleep for awe; but peaceful, tender,
+ My soul would lie
+ All the night long; and when the morning splendor
+ Flushed o'er the sky,
+ I think that I could smile--could calmly say,
+ "It is his day."
+
+ But if a wondrous hand from the blue yonder
+ Held out a scroll,
+ On which my life was writ, and I with wonder
+ Beheld unroll
+ To a long century's end its mystic clew,
+ What should I do?'
+
+ What _could_ I do, O blessed Guide and Master,
+ Other than this;
+ Still to go on as now, not slower, faster,
+ Nor fear to miss
+ The road, although so very long it be,
+ While led by thee?
+
+ Step after step, feeling thee close beside me,
+ Although unseen,
+ Through thorns, through flowers, whether the tempest hide thee,
+ Or heavens serene,
+ Assured thy faithfulness cannot betray,
+ Thy love decay.
+
+ I may not know; my God, no hand revealeth
+ Thy counsels wise;
+ Along the path a deepening shadow stealeth,
+ No voice replies
+ To all my questioning thought, the time to tell;
+ And it is well.
+
+ Let me keep on, abiding and unfearing
+ Thy will always,
+ Through a long century's ripening fruition
+ Or a short day's;
+ Thou canst not come too soon; and I can wait
+ If thou come late.
+
+SARAH WOOLSEY (_Susan Coolidge_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BURIAL OF MOSES.
+
+ "And he buried him in a valley in the land of Moab, over
+ against Beth-peor: but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto
+ this day."--DEUTERONOMY xxxiv. 6.
+
+
+ By Nebo's lonely mountain,
+ On this side Jordan's wave,
+ In a vale in the land of Moab,
+ There lies a lonely grave;
+ But no man built that sepulchre,
+ And no man saw it e'er;
+ For the angels of God upturned the sod,
+ And laid the dead man there.
+
+ That was the grandest funeral
+ That ever passed on earth;
+ Yet no man heard the trampling,
+ Or saw the train go forth:
+ Noiselessly as daylight
+ Comes back when night is done,
+ And the crimson streak on ocean's cheek
+ Grows into the great sun;
+
+ Noiselessly as the spring-time
+ Her crown of verdure weaves,
+ And all the trees on all the hills
+ Unfold their thousand leaves:
+ So without sound of music
+ Or voice of them that wept,
+ Silently down from the mountain's crown
+ The great procession swept.
+
+ Perchance the bald old eagle
+ On gray Beth-peor's height
+ Out of his rocky eyry
+ Looked on the wondrous sight;
+ Perchance the lion stalking
+ Still shuns that hallowed spot;
+ For beast and bird have seen and heard
+ That which man knoweth not.
+
+ But, when the warrior dieth.
+ His comrades of the war.
+ With arms reversed and muffled drums,
+ Follow the funeral car:
+ They show the banners taken;
+ They tell his battles won;
+ And after him lead his masterless steed,
+ While peals the minute-gun.
+
+ Amid the noblest of the land
+ Men lay the sage to rest,
+ And give the bard an honored place,
+ With costly marbles drest,
+ In the great minster transept
+ Where lights like glories fall,
+ And the sweet choir sings, and the organ rings
+ Along the emblazoned hall.
+
+ This was the bravest warrior
+ That ever buckled sword;
+ This the most gifted poet
+ That ever breathed a word;
+ And never earth's philosopher
+ Traced with his glorious pen
+ On the deathless page truths half so sage
+ As he wrote down for men.
+
+ And had he not high honor?--
+ The hillside for a pall!
+ To lie in state while angels wait,
+ With stars for tapers tall!
+ And the dark rock-pines, like tossing plumes,
+ Over his bier to wave,
+ And God's own hand, in that lonely land,
+ To lay him in his grave!--
+
+ In that strange grave without a name,
+ Whence his uncoffined clay
+ Shall break again--O wondrous thought!--
+ Before the judgment day,
+ And stand, with glory wrapped around
+ On the hills he never trod,
+ And speak of the strife that won our life
+ With the incarnate Son of God.
+
+ O lonely tomb in Moab's land!
+ O dark Beth-peor's hill!
+ Speak to these curious hearts of ours,
+ And teach them to be still:
+ God hath his mysteries of grace,
+ Ways that we cannot tell,
+ He hides them deep, like the secret sleep
+ Of him he loved so well.
+
+CECIL FRANCES ALEXANDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RESIGNATION.
+
+
+ O God, whose thunder shakes the sky,
+ Whose eye this atom globe surveys,
+ To thee, my only rock, I fly,
+ Thy mercy in thy justice praise.
+
+ The mystic mazes of thy will,
+ The shadows of celestial light,
+ Are past the power of human skill;
+ But what the Eternal acts is right.
+
+ Oh, teach me in the trying hour,
+ When anguish swells the dewy tear,
+ To still my sorrows, own my power,
+ Thy goodness love, thy Justice fear.
+
+ If in this bosom aught but thee
+ Encroaching sought a boundless sway,
+ Omniscience could the danger see,
+ And Mercy look the cause away.
+
+ Then why, my soul, dost thou complain,
+ Why drooping seek the dark recess?
+ Shake off the melancholy chain,
+ For God created all to bless.
+
+ But ah! my breast is human still;
+ The rising sigh, the falling tear,
+ My languid vitals' feeble rill,
+ The sickness of my soul declare.
+
+ But yet, with fortitude resigned,
+ I'll thank the inflicter of the blow;
+ Forbid the sigh, compose my mind,
+ Nor let the gush of misery flow.
+
+ The gloomy mantle of the night,
+ Which on my sinking spirit steals,
+ Will vanish at the morning light,
+ Which God, my east, my sun, reveals.
+
+THOMAS CHATTERTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ONLY WAITING."
+
+ [A very aged man in an almshouse was asked what he was doing
+ now. He replied, "Only waiting."]
+
+
+ Only waiting till the shadows
+ Are a little longer grown,
+ Only waiting till the glimmer
+ Of the day's last beam is flown;
+ Till the night of earth is faded
+ From the heart, once full of day;
+ Till the stars of heaven are breaking
+ Through the twilight soft and gray.
+
+ Only waiting till the reapers
+ Have the last sheaf gathered home,
+ For the summer time is faded,
+ And the autumn winds have come.
+ Quickly, reapers! gather quickly
+ The last ripe hours of my heart,
+ For the bloom of life is withered,
+ And I hasten to depart.
+
+ Only waiting till the angels
+ Open wide the mystic gate,
+ At whose feet I long have lingered,
+ Weary, poor, and desolate.
+ Even now I hear the footsteps,
+ And their voices far away;
+ If they call me, I am waiting,
+ Only waiting to obey.
+
+ Only waiting till the shadows
+ Are a little longer grown,
+ Only waiting till the glimmer
+ Of the day's last beam is flown.
+ Then from out the gathered darkness,
+ Holy, deathless stars shall rise,
+ By whose light my soul shall gladly
+ Tread its pathway to the skies.
+
+FRANCES LAUGHTON MACE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPEFULLY WAITING.
+
+ "Blessed are they who are homesick, for they shall come at
+ last to their Father's house."--HEINRICH STILLING.
+
+
+ Not as you meant, O learned man, and good!
+ Do I accept thy words of truth and rest;
+ God, knowing all, knows what for me is best,
+ And gives me what I need, not what he could,
+ Nor always as I would!
+ I shall go to the Father's house, and see
+ Him and the Elder Brother face to face,--
+ What day or hour I know not. Let me be
+ Steadfast in work, and earnest in the race,
+ Not as a homesick child who all day long
+ Whines at its play, and seldom speaks in song.
+
+ If for a time some loved one goes away,
+ And leaves us our appointed work to do,
+ Can we to him or to ourselves be true
+ In mourning his departure day by day,
+ And so our work delay?
+ Nay, if we love and honor, we shall make
+ The absence brief by doing well our task,--
+ Not for ourselves, but for the dear One's sake.
+ And at his coming only of him ask
+ Approval of the work, which most was done,
+ Not for ourselves, but our Beloved One.
+
+ Our Father's house, I know, is broad and grand;
+ In it how many, many mansions are!
+ And, far beyond the light of sun or star,
+ Four little ones of mine through that fair land
+ Are walking hand in hand!
+ Think you I love not, or that I forget
+ These of my loins? Still this world is fair,
+ And I am singing while my eyes are wet
+ With weeping in this balmy summer air:
+ Yet I'm not homesick, and the children _here_
+ Have need of me, and so my way is clear.
+
+ I would be joyful as my days go by,
+ Counting God's mercies to rue. He who bore
+ Life's heaviest cross is mine forever-more,
+ And I who wait his coming, shall not I
+ On his sure word rely?
+ And if sometimes the way be rough and steep,
+ Be heavy for the grief he sends to me,
+ Or at my waking I would only weep,
+ Let me remember these are things to be,
+ To work his blessed will until he comes
+ To take my hand, and lead me safely home.
+
+ANSON D.F. RANDOLPH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SIT DOWN, SAD SOUL.
+
+
+ Sit down, sad soul, and count
+ The moments flying;
+ Come, tell the sweet amount
+ That's lost by sighing!
+ How many smiles?--a score?
+ Then laugh, and count no more;
+ For day is dying!
+
+ Lie down, sad soul, and sleep,
+ And no more measure
+ The flight of time, nor weep
+ The loss of leisure;
+ But here, by this lone stream,
+ Lie down with us, and dream
+ Of starry treasure!
+
+ We dream: do thou the same;
+ We love,--forever;
+ We laugh, yet few we shame,--
+ The gentle never.
+ Stay, then, till sorrow dies;
+ Then--hope and happy skies
+ Are thine forever!
+
+BRYAN WALLER PROCTER. (_Barry Cornwall_.)
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IT KINDLES ALL MY SOUL.
+
+ "Urit me Patriae decor."
+
+
+ It kindles all my soul,
+ My country's loveliness! Those starry choirs
+ That watch around the pole,
+ And the moon's tender light, and heavenly fires
+ Through golden halls that roll.
+ O chorus of the night! O planets, sworn
+ The music of the spheres
+ To follow! Lovely watchers, that think scorn
+ To rest till day appears!
+ Me, for celestial homes of glory born,
+ Why here, O, why so long,
+ Do ye behold an exile from on high?
+ Here, O ye shining throng,
+ With lilies spread the mound where I shall lie:
+ Here let me drop my chain,
+ And dust to dust returning, cast away
+ The trammels that remain;
+ The rest of me shall spring to endless day!
+
+From the Latin of CASIMIR OF POLAND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+ At the midnight in the silence of the sleep-time.
+ When you set your fancies free,
+ Will they pass to where--by death, fools think, imprisoned--
+ Low he lies who once so loved you, whom you loved so,
+ --Pity me?
+
+ Oh to love so, be so loved, yet so mistaken!
+ What had I on earth to do
+ With the slothful, with the mawkish, the unmanly?
+ Like the aimless, helpless, hopeless did I drivel
+ --Being--who?
+
+ One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
+ Never doubted clouds would break,
+ Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph,
+ Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,
+ Sleep to wake.
+
+ No, at noonday in the bustle of man's work-time
+ Greet the unseen with a cheer!
+ Bid him forward, breast and back as either should be,
+ "Strive and thrive!" cry "Speed,--fight on, fare ever
+ There as here!"
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CROSSING THE BAR.
+
+
+ Sunset and evening star,
+ And one clear call for me!
+ And may there be no moaning of the bar,
+ When I put out to sea,
+
+ But such a tide as moving seems asleep,
+ Too full for sound and foam,
+ When that which drew from out the boundless deep
+ Turns again home.
+
+ Twilight and evening bell,
+ And after that the dark!
+ And may there be no sadness of farewell,
+ When I embark;
+
+ For tho' from out our bourne of Time and Place
+ The flood may bear me far,
+ I hope to see my Pilot face to face
+ When I have crossed the bar.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DYING CHRISTIAN TO HIS SOUL.
+
+
+ Vital spark of heavenly flame!
+ Quit, O quit this mortal frame!
+ Trembling, hoping, lingering, flying,
+ O, the pain, the bliss of dying!
+ Cease, fond nature, cease thy strife,
+ And let me languish into life!
+
+ Hark! they whisper; angels say,
+ Sister spirit, come away!
+ What is this absorbs me quite?
+ Steals my senses, shuts my sight,
+ Drowns my spirits, draws my breath?
+ Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
+
+ The world recedes; it disappears!
+ Heaven opens on my eyes! my ears
+ With sounds seraphic ring:
+ Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!
+ O Grave! where is thy victory?
+ O Death! where is thy sting?
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE.
+
+ INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY FROM RECOLLECTIONS OF EARLY
+ CHILDHOOD.
+
+ I.
+
+ There was a time when meadow, grove and stream,
+ The earth, and every common sight,
+ To me did seem
+ Apparelled in celestial light,--
+ The glory and the freshness of the dream.
+ It is not now as it hath been of yore:
+ Turn wheresoe'er I may,
+ By night or day,
+ The things which I have seen I now can see no more.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ The rainbow comes and goes,
+ And lovely is the rose;
+ The moon doth with delight
+ Look round her when the heavens are bare;
+ Waters on a starry night
+ Are beautiful and fair;
+ The sunshine is a glorious birth;
+ But yet I know, where'er I go,
+ That there hath passed away a glory from the earth.
+
+
+ III.
+
+ Now, while the birds thus sing a joyous song,
+ And while the young lambs bound
+ As to the tabor's sound,
+ To me alone there came a thought of grief;
+ A timely utterance gave that thought relief,
+ And I again am strong.
+ The cataracts blow their trumpets from the steep,--
+ No more shall grief of mine the season wrong.
+ I hear the echoes through the mountains throng;
+ The winds come to me from the fields of sleep,
+ And all the earth is gay;
+ Land and sea
+ Give themselves up to jollity;
+ And with the heart of May
+ Doth every beast keep holiday;--
+ Thou child of joy,
+ Shout round me, let me hear thy shouts, thou happy shepherd boy!
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ Ye blessed creatures! I have heard the call
+ Ye to each other make; I see
+ The heavens laugh with you in your jubilee;
+ My heart is at your festival.
+ My head hath its coronal,--
+ The fulness of your bliss, I feel, I feel it all.
+ O evil day! if I were sullen
+ While Earth herself is adorning,
+ This sweet May morning,
+ And the children are culling,
+ On every side,
+ In a thousand valleys far and wide,
+ Fresh flowers; while the sun shines warm,
+ And the babe leaps up on his mother's arm;--
+ I hear, I hear, with joy I hear!--
+ But there's a tree, of many, one,
+ A single field which I have looked upon,--
+ Both of them speak of something that is gone;
+ The pansy at my feet
+ Doth the same tale repeat.
+ Whither is fled the visionary gleam?
+ Where is it now, the glory and the dream?
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting;
+ The soul that rises with us, our life's star,
+ Hath had elsewhere its setting,
+ And cometh from afar:
+ Not in entire forgetfulness,
+ And not in utter nakedness,
+ But trailing clouds of glory, do we come
+ From God, who is our home:
+ Heaven lies about us in our infancy!
+ Shades of the prison-house begin to close
+ Upon the growing Boy;
+ But he beholds the light, and whence it flows--
+ He sees it in his joy;
+ The Youth, who daily farther from the east
+ Must travel, still is nature's priest
+ And by the vision splendid
+ Is on his way attended:
+ At length the Man perceives it die away,
+ And fade into the light of common day.
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own;
+ Yearnings she hath in her own natural kind,
+ And even with something of a mother's mind,
+ And no unworthy aim,
+ The homely nurse doth all she can
+ To make her foster-child, her inmate man,
+ Forget the glories he hath known,
+ And that imperial palace whence he came.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Behold the child among his new-born blisses,--
+ A six years' darling of a pygmy size!
+ See, where mid work of his own hand he lies,
+ Fretted by sallies of his mother's kisses,
+ With light upon him from his father's eyes!
+ See, at his feet, some little plan or chart,
+ Some fragment from his dream of human life,
+ Shaped by himself with newly learned art,--
+ A wedding or a festival,
+ A mourning or a funeral;--
+ And this hath now his heart,
+ And unto this he frames his song:
+ Then will he fit his tongue
+ To dialogues of business, love, or strife;
+ But it will not be long
+ Ere this be thrown aside,
+ And with new joy and pride
+ The little actor cons another part,--
+ Filling from time to time his "humorous stage"
+ With all the persons, down to palsied age,
+ That Life brings with her in her equipage;
+ As if his whole vocation
+ Were endless imitation.
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ Thou, whose exterior semblance doth belie
+ Thy soul's immensity!
+ Thou best philosopher, who yet dost keep
+ Thy heritage! thou eye among the blind,
+ That, deaf and silent, read'st the eternal deep,
+ Haunted forever by the eternal mind!--
+ Mighty prophet! Seer blest!
+ On whom those truths do rest
+ Which we are toiling all our lives to find,
+ In darkness lost, the darkness of the grave;
+ Thou over whom thy immortality
+ Broods like the day, a master o'er a slave,
+ A presence which is not to be put by;
+ Thou little child, yet glorious in the might
+ Of heaven-born freedom on thy being's height,
+ Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke
+ The years to bring the inevitable yoke,
+ Thus blindly with thy blessedness at strife?
+ Full soon thy soul shall have her earthly freight,
+ And custom lie upon thee with a weight
+ Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life!
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ O joy! that in our embers
+ Is something that doth live;
+ That Nature yet remembers
+ What was so fugitive!
+
+ The thought of our past years in me doth breed
+ Perpetual benediction: not, indeed,
+ For that which is most worthy to be blest,--
+ Delight and liberty, the simple creed
+ Of childhood, whether busy or at rest,
+ With new-fledged hope still fluttering in his breast:--
+ Not for these I raise
+ The song of thanks and praise;
+ But for those obstinate questionings
+ Of sense and outward things,
+ Fallings from us, vanishings;
+ Blank misgivings of a creature
+ Moving about in worlds not realized,
+ High instincts, before which our mortal nature
+ Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised:
+ But for those first affections,
+ Those shadowy recollections,
+ Which, be they what they may,
+ Are yet the fountain-light of all our day,
+ Are yet a master light of all our seeing;
+ Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make
+ Our noisy years seem moments in the being
+ Of the eternal silence: truths that wake,
+ To perish never;
+ Which neither listlessness, nor mad endeavor,
+ Nor man nor boy,
+ Nor all that is at enmity with joy,
+ Can utterly abolish or destroy!
+ Hence, in a season of calm weather.
+ Though inland far we be,
+ Our souls have sight of that immortal sea
+ Which brought us hither,--
+ Can in a moment travel thither,
+ And see the children sport upon the shore,
+ And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore.
+
+
+ X.
+
+ Then sing, ye birds, sing, sing a joyous song!
+ And let the young lambs bound
+ As to the tabor's sound!
+ We in thought will join your throng,
+ Ye that pipe and ye that play,
+ Ye that through your hearts to-day
+ Feel the gladness of the May!
+ What though the radiance which was once so
+ bright
+ Be now forever taken from my sight,
+ Though nothing can bring back the hour
+ Of splendor in the grass, of glory in the flower;
+ We will grieve not, rather find
+ Strength in what remains behind;
+ In the primal sympathy
+ Which, having been, must ever be;
+ In the soothing thoughts that spring
+ Out of human suffering;
+ In the faith that looks through death,
+ In years that bring the philosophic mind.
+
+
+ XI
+
+ And O ye fountains, meadows, hills, and groves,
+ Forebode not any severing of our loves!
+ Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might;
+ I only have relinquished one delight
+ To live beneath your more habitual sway.
+ I love the brooks which down their channels fret,
+ Even more than when I tripped lightly as they;
+ The innocent brightness of a new-born day
+ Is lovely yet;
+ The clouds that gather round the setting sun
+ Do take a sober coloring from an eye
+ That hath kept watch o'er man's mortality;
+ Another race hath been, and other palms are won.
+ Thanks to the human heart by which we live,
+ Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, and fears,--
+ To me the meanest flower that blows can give
+ Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.
+
+WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOLILOQUY: ON IMMORTALITY.
+
+ FROM "CATO," ACT V. SC. I.
+
+ SCENE.--CATO, _sitting in a thoughtful posture, with book on
+ the Immortality of the Soul in his hand, and a drawn sword on
+ the table by him_.
+
+
+ It must be so--Plato, thou reasonest well!--
+ Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire.
+ This longing after immortality?
+ Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror,
+ Of falling into naught? Why shrinks the soul
+ Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
+ 'Tis the divinity that stirs within us;
+ 'Tis Heaven itself, that points out a hereafter,
+ And intimates eternity to man.
+ Eternity!--thou pleasing, dreadful thought!
+ Through what variety of untried being,
+ Through what new scenes and changes, must we pass!
+ The wide, the unbounded prospect lies before me;
+ But shadows, clouds, and darkness rest upon it.
+ Here will I hold. If there's a Power above us
+ (And that there is, all Nature cries aloud
+ Through all her works), he must delight in virtue;
+ And that which he delights in must be happy.
+ But when? or where? This world was made for Cæsar.
+ I'm weary of conjectures,--this must end 'em.
+
+ _(Laying his hand on his sword.)_
+
+ Thus am I doubly armed: my death and life,
+ My bane and antidote, are both before me:
+ This in a moment brings me to an end;
+ But this informs me I shall never die.
+ The soul, secured in her existence, smiles
+ At the drawn dagger, and defies its point.
+ The stars shall fade away, the sun himself
+ Grow dim with age, and Nature sink in years;
+ But thou shalt flourish in immortal youth,
+ Unhurt amid the war of elements,
+ The wrecks of matter, and the crush of worlds!
+
+JOSEPH ADDISON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EDWIN AND PAULINUS:
+
+ THE CONVERSION OF NORTHUMBRIA.
+
+
+ The black-haired gaunt Paulinus
+ By ruddy Edwin stood:--
+ "Bow down, O king of Deira,
+ Before the blessed Rood!
+ Cast out thy heathen idols.
+ And worship Christ our Lord."
+ --But Edwin looked and pondered,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Again the gaunt Paulinus
+ To ruddy Edwin spake:
+ "God offers life immortal
+ For his dear Son's own sake!
+ Wilt thou not hear his message,
+ Who bears the keys and sword?"
+ --But Edwin looked and pondered,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Rose then a sage old warrior
+ Was fivescore winters old;
+ Whose beard from chin to girdle
+ Like one long snow-wreath rolled:
+ "At Yule-time in our chamber
+ We sit in warmth and light,
+ While cold and howling round us
+ Lies the black land of Night.
+
+ "Athwart the room a sparrow
+ Darts from the open door:
+ Within the happy hearth-light
+ One red flash,--and no more!
+ We see it come from darkness,
+ And into darkness go:--
+ So is our life. King Edwin!
+ Alas, that it is so!
+
+ "But if this pale Paulinus
+ Have somewhat more to tell;
+ Some news of Whence and Whither,
+ And where the soul will dwell;--
+ If on that outer darkness
+ The sun of hope may shine;--
+ He makes life worth the living!
+ I take his God for mine!"
+
+ So spake the wise old warrior;
+ And all about him cried,
+ "Paulinus' God hath conquered!
+ And he shall be our guide:--
+ For he makes life worth living
+ Who brings this message plain,
+ When our brief days are over,
+ That we shall live again."
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY.
+
+
+ Could we but know
+ The land that ends our dark, uncertain travel,
+ Where lie those happier hills and meadows low;
+ Ah! if beyond the spirit's inmost cavil
+ Aught of that country could we surely know,
+ Who would not go?
+
+ Might we but hear
+ The hovering angels' high imagined chorus,
+ Or catch, betimes, with wakeful eyes and clear
+ One radiant vista of the realm before us,--
+ With one rapt moment given to see and hear,
+ Ah, who would fear?
+
+ Were we quite sure
+ To find the peerless friend who left us lonely,
+ Or there, by some celestial stream as pure,
+ To gaze in eyes that here were lovelit only,--
+ This weary mortal coil, were we quite sure,
+ Who would endure?
+
+EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SONG OF THE SILENT LAND.
+
+ "Das stille Land."
+
+
+ Into the Silent Land!
+ Ah, who shall lead us thither?
+ Clouds in the evening sky more darkly gather,
+ And shattered wrecks lie thicker on the strand.
+ Who leads us with a gentle hand
+ Thither, oh, thither,
+ Into the Silent Land?
+
+ Into the Silent Land!
+ To you, ye boundless regions
+ Of all perfection! Tender morning-visions
+ Of beauteous souls! The future's pledge and band!
+ Who in life's battle firm doth stand
+ Shall bear hope's tender blossoms
+ Into the Silent Land!
+
+ O Land! O Land!
+ For all the broken-hearted
+ The mildest herald by our fate allotted
+ Beckons, and with inverted torch doth stand
+ To lead us with a gentle hand
+ Into the land of the great departed,
+ Into the Silent Land!
+
+JOHANN GAUDENZ VON SALIS.
+
+Translation of H.W. LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OTHER WORLD.
+
+
+ It lies around us like a cloud,--
+ A world we do not see;
+ Yet the sweet closing of an eye
+ May bring us there to be.
+
+ Its gentle breezes fan our cheek;
+ Amid our worldly cares
+ Its gentle voices whisper love,
+ And mingle with our prayers.
+
+ Sweet hearts around us throb and beat,
+ Sweet helping hands are stirred,
+ And palpitates the veil between
+ With breathings almost heard.
+
+ The silence--awful, sweet, and calm--
+ They have no power to break;
+ For mortal words are not for them
+ To utter or partake.
+
+ So thin, so soft, so sweet they glide,
+ So near to press they seem,--
+ They seem to lull us to our rest,
+ And melt into our dream.
+
+ And in the bush of rest they bring
+ 'Tis easy now to see
+ How lovely and how sweet a pass
+ The hour of death may be.
+
+ To close the eye, and close the ear,
+ Rapt in a trance of bliss,
+ And gently dream in loving arms
+ To swoon to that--from this.
+
+ Scarce knowing if we wake or sleep,
+ Scarce asking where we are,
+ To feel all evil sink away,
+ All sorrow and all care.
+
+ Sweet souls around us! watch us still,
+ Press nearer to our side,
+ Into our thoughts, into our prayers,
+ With gentle helpings glide.
+
+ Let death between us be as naught,
+ A dried and vanished stream;
+ Your joy be the reality.
+ Our suffering life the dream.
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ I never saw a moor,
+ I never saw the sea;
+ Yet know I how the heather looks,
+ And what a wave must be.
+
+ I never spake with God,
+ Nor visited in heaven;
+ Yet certain am I of the spot
+ As if the chart were given.
+
+EMILY DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THOUGHTS OF HEAVEN.
+
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They come and go,
+ Like the soft breathings of a listening maiden,
+ While round me flow
+ The winds, from woods and fields with gladness laden:
+ When the corn's rustle on the ear doth come--
+ When the eve's beetle sounds its drowsy hum--
+ When the stars, dew-drops of the summer sky,
+ Watch over all with soft and loving eye--
+ While the leaves quiver
+ By the lone river,
+ And the quiet heart
+ From depths doth call
+ And garners all--
+ Earth grows a shadow
+ Forgotten whole,
+ And heaven lives
+ In the blessed soul!
+
+ High thoughts
+ They are with me
+ When, deep within the bosom of the forest,
+ Thy mourning melody
+ Abroad into the sky, thou, throstle! pourest.
+ When the young sunbeams glance among the trees--
+ When on the ear comes the soft song of bees--
+ When every branch has its own favorite bird
+ And songs of summer from each thicket heard!--
+ Where the owl flitteth,
+ Where the roe sitteth,
+ And holiness
+ Seems sleeping there;
+ While nature's prayer
+ Goes up to heaven
+ In purity,
+ Till all is glory
+ And joy to me!
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They are my own
+ When I am resting on a mountain's bosom,
+ And see below me strown
+ The huts and homes where humble virtues blossom;
+ When I can trace each streamlet through the meadow,
+ When I can follow every fitful shadow--
+ When I can watch the winds among the corn,
+ And see the waves along the forest borne;
+ Where blue-bell and heather
+ Are blooming together,
+ And far doth come
+ The Sabbath bell,
+ O'er wood and fell;
+ I hear the beating
+ Of nature's heart:
+ Heaven is before me--
+ God! thou art.
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They visit us
+ In moments when the soul is dim and darkened;
+ They come to bless,
+ After the vanities to which we hearkened:
+ When weariness hath come upon the spirit--
+ (Those hours of darkness which we all inherit)--
+ Bursts there not through a glint of warm sunshine,
+ A wingèd thought which bids us not repine?
+ In joy and gladness,
+ In mirth and sadness,
+ Come signs and tokens;
+ Life's angel brings,
+ Upon its wings,
+ Those bright communings
+ The soul doth keep--
+ Those thoughts of heaven
+ So pure and deep!
+
+ROBERT NICOLL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEARER HOME.
+
+
+ One sweetly solemn thought
+ Comes to me o'er and o'er;
+ I am nearer home to-day
+ That I ever have been before;
+
+ Nearer my Father's house,
+ Where the many mansions be;
+ Nearer the great white throne,
+ Nearer the crystal sea;
+
+ Nearer the bound of life,
+ Where we lay our burdens down;
+ Nearer leaving the cross,
+ Nearer gaining the crown!
+
+ But lying darkly between,
+ Winding down through the night,
+ Is the silent, unknown stream.
+ That leads at last to the light.
+
+ Closer and closer my steps
+ Come to the dread abysm:
+ Closer Death to my lips
+ Presses the awful chrism.
+
+ Oh, if my mortal feet
+ Have almost gained the brink;
+ If it be I am nearer home
+ Even to-day than I think;
+
+ Father, perfect my trust;
+ Let my spirit feel in death,
+ That her feet are firmly set
+ On the rock of a living faith!
+
+PHOEBE CARY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEETING ABOVE.
+
+
+ If yon bright stars which gem the night
+ Be each a blissful dwelling-sphere
+ Where kindred spirits reunite
+ Whom death hath torn asunder here,--
+ How sweet it were at once to die,
+ To leave this blighted orb afar!
+ Mixt soul and soul to cleave the sky,
+ And soar away from star to star.
+
+ But oh, how dark, how drear, how lone,
+ Would seem the brightest world of bliss,
+ If, wandering through each radiant one,
+ We failed to meet the loved of this!
+ If there no more the ties shall twine
+ Which death's cold hand alone could sever,
+ Ah, would those stars in mockery shine,
+ More joyless, as they shine forever!
+
+ It cannot be,--each hope, each fear
+ That lights the eye or clouds the brow,
+ Proclaims there is a happier sphere
+ Than this bleak world that holds us now.
+ There, Lord, thy wayworn saints shall find
+ The bliss for which they longed before;
+ And holiest sympathies shall bind
+ Thine own to thee forevermore.
+
+ O Jesus, bring us to that rest,
+ Where all the ransomed shall be found,
+ In thine eternal fulness blest,
+ While ages roll their cycles round.
+
+WILLIAM LEGGETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY DAYS AMONG THE DEAD.
+
+
+ My days among the dead are passed;
+ Around me I behold,
+ Where'er these casual eyes are cast,
+ The mighty minds of old;
+ My never-failing friends are they,
+ With whom I converse day by day.
+
+ With them I take delight in weal,
+ And seek relief in woe;
+ And while I understand and feel
+ How much to them I owe,
+ My cheeks have often been bedewed
+ With tears of thoughtful gratitude.
+
+ My thoughts are with the dead; with them
+ I live in long-past years;
+ Their virtues love, their faults condemn,
+ Partake their hopes and fears,
+ And from their lessons seek and find
+ Instruction with an humble mind.
+
+ My hopes are with the dead; anon
+ My place with them will be.
+ And I with them shall travel on
+ Through all futurity:
+ Yet leaving here a name, I trust,
+ That will not perish in the dust.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FUTURE LIFE.
+
+
+ How shall I know thee in the sphere which keeps
+ The disembodied spirits of the dead,
+ When all of thee that time could wither sleeps
+ And perishes among the dust we tread?
+
+ For I shall feel the sting of ceaseless pain
+ If there I meet thy gentle presence not;
+ Nor hear the voice I love, nor read again
+ In thy serenest eyes the tender thought.
+
+ Will not thy own meek heart demand me there?
+ That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given;
+ My name on earth was ever in thy prayer,
+ And wilt thou never utter it in heaven?
+
+ In meadows fanned by heaven's life-breathing wind,
+ In the resplendence of that glorious sphere,
+ And larger movements of the unfettered mind,
+ Wilt thou forget the love that joined us here?
+
+ The love that lived through all the stormy past,
+ And meekly with my harsher nature bore,
+ And deeper grew, and tenderer to the last.
+ Shall it expire with life, and be no more?
+
+ A happier lot than mine, and larger light,
+ Await thee there; for thou hast bowed thy will
+ In cheerful homage to the rule of right,
+ And lovest all, and renderest good for ill.
+
+ For me, the sordid cares in which I dwell,
+ Shrink and consume my heart, as heat the scroll;
+ And wrath has left its scar--that fire of hell
+ Has left its frightful scar upon my soul.
+
+ Yet though thou wear'st the glory of the sky,
+ Wilt thou not keep the same belovèd name,
+ The same fair thoughtful brow, and gentle eye,
+ Lovelier in heaven's sweet climate, yet the same?
+
+ Shalt thou not teach me, in that calmer home,
+ The wisdom that I learned so ill in this--
+ The wisdom which is love--till I become
+ Thy fit companion in that land of bliss?
+
+WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ That clime is not like this dull clime of ours;
+ All, all is brightness there;
+ A sweeter influence breathes around its flowers,
+ And a benigner air.
+ No calm below is like that calm above,
+ No region here is like that realm of love;
+ Earth's softest spring ne'er shed so soft a light,
+ Earth's brightest summer never shone so bright.
+
+ That sky is not like this sad sky of ours,
+ Tinged with earth's change and care;
+ No shadow dims it, and no rain-cloud lowers;
+ No broken sunshine there:
+ One everlasting stretch of azure pours
+ Its stainless splendor o'er those sinless shores;
+ For there Jehovah shines with heavenly ray,
+ And Jesus reigns, dispensing endless day.
+
+ The dwellers there are not like those of earth,--
+ No mortal stain they bear,--
+ And yet they seem of kindred blood and birth;
+ Whence and how came they there?
+ Earth was their native soil; from sin and shame,
+ Through tribulation, they to glory came;
+ Bond-slaves delivered from sin's crushing load,
+ Brands plucked from burning by the hand of God.
+
+ Yon robes of theirs are not like those below;
+ No angel's half so bright;
+ Whence came that beauty, whence that living glow,
+ And whence that radiant white?
+ Washed in the blood of the atoning Lamb,
+ Fair as the light these robes of theirs became;
+ And now, all tears wiped off from every eye,
+ They wander where the freshest pastures lie,
+ Through all the nightless day of that unfading sky!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO WORLDS.
+
+
+ Two worlds there are. To one our eyes we strain,
+ Whose magic joys we shall not see again;
+ Bright haze of morning veils its glimmering shore.
+ Ah, truly breathed we there
+ Intoxicating air--
+ Glad were our hearts in that sweet realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ The lover there drank her delicious breath
+ Whose love has yielded since to change or death;
+ The mother kissed her child, whose days are o'er.
+ Alas! too soon have fled
+ The irreclaimable dead:
+ We see them--visions strange--amid the
+ Nevermore.
+
+ The merrysome maiden used to sing--
+ The brown, brown hair that once was wont to cling
+ To temples long clay-cold: to the very core
+ They strike our weary hearts,
+ As some vexed memory starts
+ From that long faded land--the realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ It is perpetual summer there. But here
+ Sadly may we remember rivers clear,
+ And harebells quivering on the meadow-floor.
+ For brighter bells and bluer,
+ For tenderer hearts and truer
+ People that happy land--the realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ Upon the frontier of this shadowy land
+ We pilgrims of eternal sorrow stand:
+ What realm lies forward, with its happier store
+ Of forests green and deep,
+ Of valleys hushed in sleep,
+ And lakes most peaceful? 'Tis the land of
+ Evermore.
+
+ Very far off its marble cities seem--
+ Very far off--beyond our sensual dream--
+ Its woods, unruffled by the wild wind's roar;
+ Yet does the turbulent surge
+ Howl on its very verge.
+ One moment--and we breathe within the
+ Evermore.
+
+ They whom we loved and lost so long ago
+ Dwell in those cities, far from mortal woe--
+ Haunt those fresh woodlands, whence sweet carollings soar.
+ Eternal peace have they;
+ God wipes their tears away:
+ They drink that river of life which flows from
+ Evermore.
+
+ Thither we hasten through these regions dim,
+ But, lo, the wide wings of the Seraphim
+ Shine in the sunset! On that joyous shore
+ Our lightened hearts shall know
+ The life of long ago:
+ The sorrow-burdened past shall fade for
+ Evermore.
+
+MORTIMER COLLINS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ANSWER.
+
+
+ "Who would not go"
+ With buoyant steps, to gain that blessed portal,
+ Which opens to the land we long to know?
+ Where shall be satisfied the soul's immortal,
+ Where we shall drop the wearying and the woe
+ In resting so?
+
+ "Ah, who would fear?"
+ Since, sometimes through the distant pearly portal,
+ Unclosing to some happy soul a-near,
+ We catch a gleam of glorious light immortal,
+ And strains of heavenly music faintly hear,
+ Breathing good cheer!
+
+ "Who would endure"
+ To walk in doubt and darkness with misgiving,
+ When he whose tender promises are sure--
+ The Crucified, the Lord, the Ever-living--
+ Keeps us those "mansions" evermore secure
+ By waters pure?
+
+ Oh, wondrous land!
+ Fairer than all our spirit's fairest dreaming:
+ "Eye hath not seen," no heart can understand
+ The things prepared, the cloudless radiance streaming.
+ How longingly we wait our Lord's command--
+ His opening hand!
+
+ O dear ones there!
+ Whose voices, hushed, have left our pathway lonely,
+ We come, erelong, your blessèd home to share;
+ We take the guiding hand, we trust it only--
+ Seeing, by faith, beyond this clouded air,
+ That land so fair!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOREVER WITH THE LORD.
+
+
+ Forever with the Lord!
+ Amen! so let it be!
+ Life from the dead is in that word,
+ And immortality.
+
+ Here in the body pent,
+ Absent from him I roam,
+ Yet nightly pitch my moving tent
+ A day's march nearer home.
+
+ My Father's house on high,
+ Home of my soul! how near,
+ At times, to faith's foreseeing eye
+ Thy golden gates appear!
+
+ Ah! then my spirit faints
+ To reach the land I love,
+ The bright inheritance of saints,
+ Jerusalem above!
+
+ Yet clouds will intervene,
+ And all my prospect flies;
+ Like Noah's dove, I flit between
+ Rough seas and stormy skies.
+
+ Anon the clouds depart,
+ The winds and waters cease;
+ While sweetly o'er my gladdened heart
+ Expands the bow of peace!
+
+ Beneath its glowing arch,
+ Along the hallowed ground,
+ I see cherubic armies march,
+ A camp of fire around.
+
+ I hear at morn and even,
+ At noon and midnight hour,
+ The choral harmonies of heaven
+ Earth's Babel tongues o'erpower.
+
+ Then, then I feel that he,
+ Remembered or forgot,
+ The Lord, is never far from me,
+ Though I perceive him not.
+
+ In darkness as in light,
+ Hidden alike from view,
+ I sleep, I wake, as in his sight
+ Who looks all nature through.
+
+ All that I am, have been,
+ All that I yet may be,
+ He sees at once, as he hath seen,
+ And shall forever see.
+
+ "Forever with the Lord;"
+ Father, if 'tis thy will,
+ The promise of that faithful word
+ Unto thy child fulfil!
+
+ So, when my latest breath
+ Shall rend the veil in twain,
+ By death I shall escape from death,
+ And life eternal gain.
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO HEAVEN APPROACHED A SUFI SAINT.
+
+
+ To heaven approached a Sufi Saint,
+ From groping in the darkness late,
+ And, tapping timidly and faint,
+ Besought admission at God's gate.
+
+ Said God, "Who seeks to enter here?"
+ "'Tis I, dear Friend," the Saint replied,
+ And trembling much with hope and fear.
+ "If it be _thou_, without abide."
+
+ Sadly to earth the poor Saint turned,
+ To bear the scourging of life's rods;
+ But aye his heart within him yearned
+ To mix and lose its love in God's.
+
+ He roamed alone through weary years,
+ By cruel men still scorned and mocked,
+ Until from faith's pure fires and tears
+ Again he rose, and modest knocked.
+
+ Asked God, "Who now is at the door?"
+ "It is thyself, belovèd Lord,"
+ Answered the Saint, in doubt no more,
+ But clasped and rapt in his reward.
+
+From the Persian of JALLAL-AD-DIN RUMI.
+
+Translation of WILLIAM R. ALGER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MATTER AND MAN IMMORTAL.
+
+ FROM "NIGHT THOUGHTS," NIGHT VI.
+
+
+ As in a wheel, all sinks, to reascend:
+ Emblems of man, who passes, not expires.
+ With this minute distinction, emblems just,
+ Nature revolves, but man advances; both
+ Eternal, that a circle, this a line.
+ That gravitates, this soars. Th' aspiring soul,
+ Ardent, and tremulous, like flame, ascends,
+ Zeal and humility her wings, to Heaven.
+ The world of matter, with its various forms,
+ All dies into new life. Life born from death
+ Rolls the vast mass, and shall for ever roll.
+ No single atom, once in being, lost,
+ With change of counsel charges the Most High.
+ What hence infers Lorenzo? Can it be?
+ Matter immortal? And shall spirit die?
+ Above the nobler, shall less noble rise?
+ Shall man alone, for whom all else revives,
+ No resurrection know? Shall man alone,
+ Imperial man! be sown in barren ground,
+ Less privileged than grain, on which he feeds?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Look Nature through, 'tis neat gradation all.
+ By what minute degrees her scale ascends!
+ Each middle nature joined at each extreme,
+ To that above is joined, to that beneath;
+ Parts, into parts reciprocally shot,
+ Abhor divorce: what love of union reigns!
+ Here, dormant matter waits a call to life;
+ Half-life, half-death, joined there; here life and sense;
+ There, sense from reason steals a glimmering ray;
+ Reason shines out in man. But how preserved
+ The chain unbroken upward, to the realms
+ Of incorporeal life? those realms of bliss
+ Where death hath no dominion? Grant a make
+ Half-mortal, half-immortal; earthy, part,
+ And part ethereal; grant the soul of man
+ Eternal; or in man the series ends.
+ Wide yawns the gap; connection is no more;
+ Checked Reason halts; her next step wants support;
+ Striving to climb, she tumbles from her scheme.
+
+DR. EDWARD YOUNG.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIFE.
+
+ FROM "FESTUS," SCENE "A COUNTRY TOWN."
+
+
+ FESTUS.-- Oh! there is
+ A life to come, or all's a dream.
+
+ LUCIFER.-- And all
+ May be a dream. Thou seest in thine, men, deeds,
+ Clear, moving, full of speech and order; then
+ Why may not all this world be but a dream
+ Of God's? Fear not! Some morning God may waken.
+
+ FESTUS.--I would it were. This life's a mystery.
+ The value of a thought cannot be told;
+ But it is clearly worth a thousand lives
+ Like many men's. And yet men love to live
+ As if mere life were worth their living for.
+ What but perdition will it be to most?
+ Life's more than breath and the quick round of blood;
+ It is a great spirit and a busy heart.
+ The coward and the small in soul scarce do live.
+ One generous feeling--one great thought--one deed
+ Of good, ere night, would make life longer seem
+ Than if each year might number a thousand days,
+ Spent as is this by nations of mankind.
+ We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths;
+ In feelings, not in figures on a dial.
+ We should count time by heart-throbs. He most lives
+ Who thinks most--feels the noblest--acts the best.
+ Life's but a means unto an end--that end
+ Beginning, mean, and end to all things--God.
+
+PHILIP JAMES BAILEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ O beauteous God! uncircumscribèd treasure
+ Of an eternal pleasure!
+ Thy throne is seated far
+ Above the highest star,
+ Where thou preparest a glorious place,
+ Within the brightness of thy face,
+ For every spirit
+ To inherit
+ That builds his hopes upon thy merit,
+ And loves thee with a holy charity.
+ What ravished heart, seraphic tongue, or eyes
+ Clear as the morning rise,
+ Can speak, or think, or see
+ That bright eternity,
+ Where the great King's transparent throne
+ Is of an entire jasper stone?
+ There the eye
+ O' the chrysolite,
+ And a sky
+ Of diamonds, rubies, chrysoprase,--
+ And above all thy holy face,--
+ Makes an eternal charity.
+ When thou thy jewels up dost bind, that day
+ Remember us, we pray,--
+ That where the beryl lies,
+ And the crystal 'bove the skies,
+ There thou mayest appoint us place
+ Within the brightness of thy face,--
+ And our soul
+ In the scroll
+ Of life and blissfulness enroll,
+ That we may praise thee to eternity. Allelujah!
+
+JEREMY TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SPIRIT-LAND.
+
+
+ Father! thy wonders do not singly stand,
+ Nor far removed where feet have seldom strayed;
+ Around us ever lies the enchanted land,
+ In marvels rich to thine own sons displayed.
+ In finding thee are all things round us found;
+ In losing thee are all things lost beside;
+ Ears have we, but in vain strange voices sound;
+ And to our eyes the vision is denied.
+ We wander in the country far remote,
+ Mid tombs and ruined piles in death to dwell;
+ Or on the records of past greatness dote,
+ And for a buried soul the living sell;
+ While on our path bewildered falls the night
+ That ne'er returns us to the fields of light.
+
+JONES VERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ Beyond these chilling winds and gloomy skies,
+ Beyond death's cloudy portal,
+ There is a land where beauty never dies,
+ Where love becomes immortal;
+
+ A land whose life is never dimmed by shade,
+ Whose fields are ever vernal;
+ Where nothing beautiful can ever fade,
+ But blooms for aye eternal.
+
+ We may know how sweet its balmy air,
+ How bright and fair its flowers;
+ We may not hear the songs that echo there,
+ Through those enchanted bowers.
+
+ The city's shining towers we may not see
+ With our dim earthly vision,
+ For Death, the silent warder, keeps the key
+ That opes the gates elysian.
+
+ But sometimes, when adown the western sky
+ A fiery sunset lingers,
+ Its golden gates swing inward noiselessly,
+ Unlocked by unseen fingers.
+
+ And while they stand a moment half ajar,
+ Gleams from the inner glory
+ Stream brightly through the azure vault afar,
+ And half reveal the story.
+
+ O land unknown! O land of love divine!
+ Father, all-wise, eternal!
+ O, guide these wandering, wayworn feet of mine
+ Into those pastures vernal!
+
+NANCY AMELIA WOODBURY PRIEST.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TELL ME, YE WINGÈD WINDS.
+
+
+ Tell me, ye wingèd winds,
+ That round my pathway roar,
+ Do ye not know some spot
+ Where mortals weep no more?
+ Some lone and pleasant dell,
+ Some valley in the west,
+ Where, free from toil and pain,
+ The weary soul may rest?
+ The loud wind dwindled to a whisper low,
+ And sighed for pity as it answered,--"No."
+
+ Tell me, thou mighty deep.
+ Whose billows round me play,
+ Know'st thou some favored spot,
+ Some island far away,
+ Where weary man may find
+ The bliss for which he sighs,--
+ Where sorrow never lives,
+ And friendship never dies?
+ The loud waves, rolling in perpetual flow,
+ Stopped for awhile, and sighed to answer,--"No."
+
+ And thou, serenest moon,
+ That, with such lovely face,
+ Dost look upon the earth,
+ Asleep in night's embrace;
+ Tell me, in all thy round
+ Hast thou not seen some spot
+ Where miserable man
+ May find a happier lot?
+ Behind a cloud the moon withdrew in woe,
+ And a voice, sweet but sad, responded,--"No."
+
+ Tell me, my secret soul,
+ O, tell me, Hope and Faith,
+ Is there no resting-place
+ From sorrow, sin, and death?
+ Is there no happy spot
+ Where mortals may be blest,
+ Where grief may find a balm,
+ And weariness a rest?
+ Faith, Hope, and Love, best boons to mortals given,
+ Waved their bright wings, and whispered,--"Yes, in heaven!"
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ There is a land of pure delight,
+ Where saints immortal reign;
+ Infinite day excludes the night,
+ And pleasures banish pain.
+
+ There everlasting spring abides,
+ And never-withering flowers;
+ Death, like a narrow sea, divides
+ This heavenly land from ours.
+
+ Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood
+ Stand dressed in living green;
+ So to the Jews old Canaan stood,
+ While Jordan rolled between.
+
+ But timorous mortals start and shrink
+ To cross this narrow sea,
+ And linger shivering on the brink,
+ And fear to launch away.
+
+ Oh! could we make our doubts remove,
+ Those gloomy doubts that rise,
+ And see the Canaan that we love
+ With unbeclouded eyes--
+
+ Could we but climb where Moses stood,
+ And view the landscape o'er,
+ Not Jordan's stream, nor death's cold flood
+ Should fright us from the shore.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ My soul, there is a country
+ Afar beyond the stars,
+ Where stands a wingèd sentry,
+ All skilful in the wars.
+
+ There, above noise and danger,
+ Sweet peace sits crowned with smiles,
+ And One born in a manger
+ Commands the beauteous files.
+
+ He is thy gracious friend,
+ And (O my soul awake!)
+ Did in pure love descend,
+ To die here for thy sake.
+
+ If thou canst get but thither,
+ There grows the flower of peace--
+ The rose that cannot wither--
+ Thy fortress, and thy ease.
+
+ Leave, then, thy foolish ranges;
+ For none can thee secure,
+ But one who never changes--
+ Thy God, thy life, thy cure.
+
+HENRY VAUGHAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STAR-MIST.
+
+ FROM "STARS."
+
+
+ More and more stars! behold yon hazy arch
+ Spanning the vault on high,
+ By planets traversed in majestic march,
+ Seeming to earth's dull eye
+ A breath of gleaming air: but take thou wing
+ Of Faith and upward spring:--
+ Into a thousand stars the misty light
+ Will part; each star a world with its own day and night.
+
+ Not otherwise of yonder Saintly host
+ Upon the glorious shore
+ Deem thou. He marks them all, not one is lost;
+ By name He counts them o'er.
+ Full many a soul, to man's dim praise unknown,
+ May on its glory throne
+ As brightly shine, and prove as strong in prayer
+ As theirs, whose separate beams shoot keenest thro' this air.
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MINISTRY OF ANGELS.
+
+ FROM "THE FAËRIE QUEENE," BOOK II. CANTO 8.
+
+
+ And is there care in heaven? And is there love
+ In heavenly spirits to these creatures base,
+ That may compassion of their evils move?
+ There is:--else much more wretched were the case
+ Of men than beasts: but O the exceeding grace
+ Of Highest God! that loves his creatures so,
+ And all his workes with mercy doth embrace,
+ That blessèd angels he sends to and fro,
+ To serve to wicked man, to serve his wicked foe!
+
+ How oft do they their silver bowers leave,
+ To come to succour us that succour want!
+ How oft do they with golden pinions cleave
+ The flitting skyes, like flying pursuivant,
+ Against fowle feendes to ayd us militant!
+ They for us fight, they watch, and dewly ward,
+ And their bright squadrons round about us plant;
+ And all for love, and nothing for reward;
+ O, why should heavenly God to men have such regard!
+
+EDMUND SPENSER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT AGNES.
+
+
+ Deep on the convent-roof the snows
+ Are sparkling to the moon:
+ My breath to heaven like vapor goes:
+ May my soul follow soon!
+ The shadows of the convent-towers
+ Slant down the snowy sward,
+ Still creeping with the creeping hours
+ That lead me to my Lord:
+ Make Thou my spirit pure and clear
+ As are the frosty skies,
+ Or this first snow-drop of the year
+ That in my bosom lies.
+
+ As these white robes are soiled and dark,
+ To yonder shining ground;
+ As this pale taper's earthly spark,
+ To yonder argent round;
+ So shows my soul before the Lamb,
+ My spirit before Thee;
+ So in mine earthly house I am,
+ To that I hope to be.
+ Break up the heavens, O Lord! and far,
+ Through all yon starlight keen,
+ Draw me, thy bride, a glittering star,
+ In raiment white and clean.
+
+ He lifts me to the golden doors;
+ The flashes come and go;
+ All heaven bursts her starry floors,
+ And strows her lights below,
+ And deepens on and up! the gates
+ Roll backhand far within
+ For me the Heavenly Bridegroom waits,
+ To make me pure of sin.
+ The sabbath of Eternity,
+ One sabbath deep and wide--
+ A light upon the shining sea--
+ The Bridegroom with his bride!
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE OF THE CELESTIAL COUNTRY.
+
+ [The poem _De Contemptu Mundi_ was written by Bernard de
+ Morlaix, Monk of Cluni. The translation following is of a
+ portion of the poem distinguished by the sub-title "Laus
+ Patriae Coelestis."]
+
+
+ The world is very evil,
+ The times are waxing late;
+ Be sober and keep vigil,
+ The Judge is at the gate,--
+ The Judge that comes in mercy,
+ The Judge that comes with might,
+ To terminate the evil,
+ To diadem the right.
+ When the just and gentle Monarch
+ Shall summon from the tomb,
+ Let man, the guilty, tremble,
+ For Man, the God, shall doom!
+
+ Arise, arise, good Christian,
+ Let right to wrong succeed;
+ Let penitential sorrow
+ To heavenly gladness lead,--
+ To the light that hath no evening,
+ That knows nor moon nor sun,
+ The light so new and golden,
+ The light that is but one.
+
+ And when the Sole-Begotten
+ Shall render up once more
+ The kingdom to the Father,
+ Whose own it was before,
+ Then glory yet unheard of
+ Shall shed abroad its ray,
+ Resolving all enigmas,
+ An endless Sabbath-day.
+
+ For thee, O dear, dear Country!
+ Mine eyes their vigils keep;
+ For very love, beholding
+ Thy happy name, they weep.
+ The mention of thy glory
+ Is unction to the breast,
+ And medicine in sickness,
+ And love, and life, and rest.
+
+ O one, O only Mansion!
+ O Paradise of Joy,
+ Where tears are ever banished,
+ And smiles have no alloy!
+ Beside thy living waters
+ All plants are, great and small,
+ The cedar of the forest,
+ The hyssop of the wall;
+ With jaspers glow thy bulwarks,
+ Thy streets with emeralds blaze,
+ The sardius and the topaz
+ Unite in thee their rays;
+ Thine ageless walls are bonded
+ With amethyst unpriced;
+ Thy Saints build up its fabric,
+ And the corner-stone is Christ.
+
+ The Cross is all thy splendor,
+ The Crucified thy praise;
+ His laud and benediction
+ Thy ransomed people raise:
+ "Jesus, the gem of Beauty,
+ True God and Man," they sing,
+ "The never-failing Garden,
+ The ever-golden Ring;
+ The Door, the Pledge, the Husband,
+ The Guardian of his Court;
+ The Day-star of Salvation,
+ The Porter and the Port!"
+
+ Thou hast no shore, fair ocean!
+ Thou hast no time, bright day!
+ Dear fountain of refreshment
+ To pilgrims far away!
+ Upon the Rock of Ages
+ They raise thy holy tower;
+ Thine is the victor's laurel,
+ And thine the golden dower!
+
+ Thou feel'st in mystic rapture,
+ O Bride that know'st no guile,
+ The Prince's sweetest kisses,
+ The Prince's loveliest smile;
+ Unfading lilies, bracelets
+ Of living pearl thine own;
+ The Lamb is ever near thee,
+ The Bridegroom thine alone.
+ The Crown is he to guerdon,
+ The Buckler to protect,
+ And he himself the Mansion,
+ And he the Architect.
+
+ The only art thou needest--
+ Thanksgiving for thy lot;
+ The only joy thou seekest--
+ The Life where Death is not.
+ And all thine endless leisure,
+ In sweetest accents, sings
+ The ill that was thy merit,
+ The wealth that is thy King's!
+
+ Jerusalem the golden,
+ With milk and honey blest,
+ Beneath thy contemplation
+ Sink heart and voice oppressed.
+ I know not, O I know not,
+ What social joys are there!
+ What radiancy of glory,
+ What light beyond compare!
+
+ And when I fain would sing them,
+ My spirit fails and faints;
+ And vainly would it image
+ The assembly of the Saints.
+
+ They stand, those halls of Zion,
+ Conjubilant with song,
+ And bright with many an angel,
+ And all the martyr throng;
+ The Prince is ever in them,
+ The daylight is serene;
+ The pastures of the Blessèd
+ Are decked in glorious sheen.
+
+ There is the Throne of David,
+ And there, from care released,
+ The song of them that triumph,
+ The shout of them that feast;
+ And they who, with their Leader,
+ Have conquered in the fight,
+ Forever and forever
+ Are clad in robes of white!
+
+ O holy, placid harp-notes
+ Of that eternal hymn!
+ O sacred, sweet reflection,
+ And peace of Seraphim!
+ O thirst, forever ardent,
+ Yet evermore content!
+ O true peculiar vision
+ Of God cunctipotent!
+ Ye know the many mansions
+ For many a glorious name,
+ And divers retributions
+ That divers merits claim;
+ For midst the constellations
+ That deck our earthly sky,
+ This star than that is brighter--
+ And so it is on high.
+
+ Jerusalem the glorious!
+ The glory of the Elect!
+ O dear and future vision
+ That eager hearts expect!
+ Even now by faith I see thee,
+ Even here thy walls discern;
+ To thee my thoughts are kindled,
+ And strive, and pant, and yearn.
+
+ Jerusalem the only,
+ That look'st from heaven below,
+ In thee is all my glory,
+ In me is all my woe;
+ And though my body may not,
+ My spirit seeks thee fain,
+ Till flesh and earth return me
+ To earth and flesh again.
+
+ O none can tell thy bulwarks,
+ How gloriously they rise!
+ O none can tell thy capitals
+ Of beautiful device!
+ Thy loveliness oppresses
+ All human thought and heart;
+ And none, O peace, O Zion,
+ Can sing thee as thou art!
+
+ New mansion of new people,
+ Whom God's own love and light
+ Promote, increase, make holy,
+ Identify, unite!
+ Thou City of the Angels!
+ Thou City of the Lord!
+ Whose everlasting music
+ Is the glorious decachord!
+
+ And there the band of Prophets
+ United praise ascribes,
+ And there the twelvefold chorus
+ Of Israel's ransomed tribes.
+ The lily-beds of virgins,
+ The roses' martyr-glow,
+ The cohort of the Fathers
+ Who kept the faith below.
+
+ And there the Sole-Begotten
+ Is Lord in regal state,--
+ He, Judah's mystic Lion,
+ He, Lamb Immaculate.
+ O fields that know no sorrow!
+ O state that fears no strife!
+ O princely bowers! O land of flowers!
+ O realm and home of Life!
+
+ Jerusalem, exulting
+ On that securest shore,
+ I hope thee, wish thee, sing thee,
+ And love thee evermore!
+ I ask not for my merit,
+ I seek not to deny
+ My merit is destruction,
+ A child of wrath am I;
+ But yet with faith I venture
+ And hope upon my way;
+ For those perennial guerdons
+ I labor night and day.
+
+ The best and dearest Father,
+ Who made me and who saved,
+ Bore with me in defilement,
+ And from defilement laved,
+ When in his strength I struggle,
+ For very joy I leap,
+ When in my sin I totter,
+ I weep, or try to weep:
+ Then grace, sweet grace celestial,
+ Shall all its love display,
+ And David's Royal Fountain
+ Purge every sin away.
+
+ O mine, my golden Zion!
+ O lovelier far than gold,
+ With laurel-girt battalions,
+ And safe victorious fold!
+ O sweet and blessèd Country,
+ Shall I ever see thy face?
+ O sweet and blessèd Country,
+ Shall I ever win thy grace?
+ I have the hope within me
+ To comfort and to bless!
+ Shall I ever win the prize itself?
+ O tell me, tell me, Yes!
+
+ Exult! O dust and ashes!
+ The Lord shall be thy part;
+ His only, his forever,
+ Thou shalt be, and thou art!
+ Exult, O dust and ashes!
+ The Lord shall be thy part;
+ His only, his forever,
+ Thou shalt be, and thou art!
+
+From the Latin of BERNARD DE MORLAIX.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW JERUSALEM;
+
+ OR, THE SOUL'S BREATHING AFTER THE HEAVENLY COUNTRY.
+
+ "Since Christ's fair truth needs no man's art,
+ Take this rude song in better part."
+
+
+ O mother dear, Jerusalem,
+ When shall I come to thee?
+ When shall my sorrows have an end--
+ Thy joys when shall I see?
+ O happy harbor of God's saints!
+ O sweet and pleasant soil!
+ In thee no sorrows can be found--
+ No grief, no care, no toil.
+
+ In thee no sickness is at all,
+ No hurt, nor any sore;
+ There is no death nor ugly night,
+ But life for evermore.
+ No dimming cloud o'ershadows thee,
+ No cloud nor darksome night,
+ But every soul shines as the sun--
+ For God himself gives light.
+
+ There lust and lucre cannot dwell,
+ There envy bears no sway;
+ There is no hunger, thirst, nor heat.
+ But pleasures every way.
+ Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
+ Would God I were in thee!
+ Oh! that my sorrows had an end,
+ Thy joys that I might see!
+
+ No pains, no pangs, no grieving griefs,
+ No woful night is there;
+ No sigh, no sob, no cry is heard--
+ No well-away, no fear.
+ Jerusalem the city is
+ Of God our king alone;
+ The Lamb of God, the light thereof,
+ Sits there upon His throne.
+
+ O God! that I Jerusalem
+ With speed may go behold!
+ For why? the pleasures there abound
+ Which here cannot be told.
+ Thy turrets and thy pinnacles
+ With carbuncles do shine--
+ With jasper, pearl, and chrysolite,
+ Surpassing pure and fine.
+
+ Thy houses are of ivory,
+ Thy windows crystal clear,
+ Thy streets are laid with beaten gold--
+ There angels do appear.
+ Thy walls are made of precious stone,
+ Thy bulwarks diamond square,
+ Thy gates are made of orient pearl--
+ O God! if I were there!
+
+ Within thy gates no thing can come
+ That is not passing clean;
+ No spider's web, no dirt, nor dust,
+ No filth may there be seen.
+ Jehovah, Lord, now come away,
+ And end my griefs and plaints--
+ Take me to Thy Jerusalem,
+ And place me with Thy saints!
+
+ Who there are crowned with glory great,
+ And see God face to face,
+ They triumph still, and aye rejoice--
+ Most happy is their case.
+ But we that are in banishment,
+ Continually do moan;
+ We sigh, we mourn, we sob, we weep--
+ Perpetually we groan.
+
+ Our sweetness mixèd is with gall,
+ Our pleasures are but pain,
+ Our joys not worth the looking on--
+ Our sorrows aye remain.
+ But there they live in such delight,
+ Such pleasure and such play,
+ That unto them a thousand years
+ Seems but as yesterday.
+
+ O my sweet home, Jerusalem!
+ Thy joys when shall I see--
+ The King sitting upon His throne,
+ And thy felicity?
+ Thy vineyards, and thy orchards,
+ So wonderfully rare,
+ Are furnished with all kinds of fruit,
+ Most beautifully fair.
+
+ Thy gardens and thy goodly walks
+ Continually are green;
+ There grow such sweet and pleasant flowers
+ As nowhere else are seen.
+ There cinnamon and sugar grow,
+ There nard and balm abound;
+ No tongue can tell, no heart can think,
+ The pleasures there are found.
+
+ There nectar and ambrosia spring--
+ There music's ever sweet;
+ There many a fair and dainty thing
+ Are trod down under feet.
+ Quite through the streets, with pleasant sound,
+ The flood of life doth flow;
+ Upon the banks, on every side,
+ The trees of life do grow.
+
+ These trees each month yield ripened fruit--
+ For evermore they spring;
+ And all the nations of the world
+ To thee their honors bring.
+ Jerusalem, God's dwelling-place,
+ Full sore I long to see;
+ Oh! that my sorrows had an end,
+ That I might dwell in thee!
+
+ There David stands, with harp in hand,
+ As master of the choir;
+ A thousand times that man were blest
+ That might his music hear.
+ There Mary sings "Magnificat,"
+ With tunes surpassing sweet;
+ And all the virgins bear their part,
+ Singing around her feet.
+
+ "Te Deum," doth Saint Ambrose sing,
+ Saint Austin doth the like;
+ Old Simeon and Zacharie
+ Have not their songs to seek.
+ There Magdalene hath left her moan,
+ And cheerfully doth sing,
+ With all blest saints whose harmony
+ Through every street doth ring.
+
+ Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
+ Thy joys fain would I see;
+ Come quickly, Lord, and end my grief,
+ And take me home to Thee;
+ Oh! paint Thy name on my forehead,
+ And take me hence away,
+ That I may dwell with Thee in bliss,
+ And sing Thy praises aye.
+
+ Jerusalem, the happy home--
+ Jehovah's throne on high!
+ O sacred city, queen, and wife
+ Of Christ eternally!
+ O comely queen with glory clad,
+ With honor and degree,
+ All fair thou art, exceeding bright--
+ No spot there is in thee!
+
+ I long to see Jerusalem,
+ The comfort of us all;
+ For thou art fair and beautiful--
+ None ill can thee befall.
+ In thee, Jerusalem, I say,
+ No darkness dare appear--
+ No night, no shade, no winter foul--
+ No time doth alter there.
+
+ No candle needs, no moon to shine,
+ No glittering star to light;
+ For Christ, the king of righteousness,
+ For ever shineth bright.
+ A lamb unspotted, white and pure,
+ To thee doth stand in lieu
+ Of light--so great the glory is
+ Thine heavenly king to view.
+
+ He is the King of kings beset
+ In midst His servants' sight:
+ And they, His happy household all,
+ Do serve Him day and night.
+ There, there the choir of angels sing--
+ There the supernal sort
+ Of citizens, which hence are rid
+ From dangers deep, do sport.
+
+ There be the prudent prophets all,
+ The apostles six and six,
+ The glorious martyrs in a row,
+ And confessors betwixt.
+ There doth the crew of righteous men
+ And matrons all consist--
+ Young men and maids that here on earth
+ Their pleasures did resist.
+
+ The sheep and lambs, that hardly 'scaped
+ The snare of death and hell,
+ Triumph in joy eternally,
+ Whereof no tongue can tell;
+ And though the glory of each one
+ Doth differ in degree,
+ Yet is the joy of all alike
+ And common, as we see.
+
+ There love and charity do reign,
+ And Christ is all in all,
+ Whom they most perfectly behold
+ In joy celestial.
+ They love, they praise--they praise, they love;
+ They "Holy, holy," cry;
+ They neither toil, nor faint, nor end,
+ But laud continually.
+
+ Oh! happy thousand times were I,
+ If, after wretched days,
+ I might with listening ears conceive
+ Those heavenly songs of praise,
+ Which to the eternal king are sung
+ By happy wights above--
+ By savèd souls and angels sweet,
+ Who love the God of love.
+
+ Oh! passing happy were my state,
+ Might I be worthy found
+ To wait upon my God and king,
+ His praises there to sound;
+ And to enjoy my Christ above,
+ His favor and His grace,
+ According to His promise made,
+ Which here I interlace:
+
+ "O Father dear," quoth He, "let them
+ Which Thou hast put of old
+ To me, be there where lo! I am--
+ Thy glory to behold;
+ Which I with Thee, before the world
+ Was made in perfect wise,
+ Have had--from whence the fountain great
+ Of glory doth arise."
+
+ Again: "If any man will serve
+ Thee, let him follow me;
+ For where I am, he there, right sure,
+ Then shall my servant be."
+ And still: "If any man loves me,
+ Him loves my Father dear,
+ Whom I do love--to him myself
+ In glory will appear."
+
+ Lord, take away my misery,
+ That then I may be bold
+ With Thee, in Thy Jerusalem,
+ Thy glory to behold;
+ And so in Zion see my king,
+ My love, my Lord, my all--
+ Where now as in a glass I see,
+ There face to face I shall.
+
+ Oh! blessèd are the pure in heart--
+ Their sovereign they shall see;
+ O ye most happy, heavenly wights,
+ Which of God's household be!
+ O Lord, with speed dissolve my bands,
+ These gins and fetters strong;
+ For I have dwelt within the tents
+ Of Kedar over long.
+
+ Yet search me, Lord, and find me out!
+ Fetch me Thy fold unto,
+ That all Thy angels may rejoice,
+ While all Thy will I do.
+ O mother dear! Jerusalem!
+ When shall I come to thee?
+ When shall my sorrows have an end,
+ Thy joys when shall I see?
+
+ Yet once again I pray Thee, Lord,
+ To quit me from all strife,
+ That to Thy hill I may attain,
+ And dwell there all my life--
+ With cherubim and seraphim
+ And holy souls of men,
+ To sing Thy praise, O God of hosts!
+ Forever and amen!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PARADISE.
+
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ Who doth not crave for rest,
+ Who would not seek the happy land
+ Where they that loved are blest?
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ The world is growing old;
+ Who would not be at rest and free
+ Where love is never cold?
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ Wherefore doth death delay?--
+ Bright death, that is the welcome dawn
+ Of our eternal day;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ 'Tis weary waiting here;
+ I long to be where Jesus is,
+ To feel, to see him near;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I want to sin no more,
+ I want to be as pure on earth
+ As on thy spotless shore;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I greatly long to see
+ The special place my dearest Lord
+ Is destining for me;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I feel 'twill not be long;
+ Patience! I almost think I hear
+ Faint fragments of thy song;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+
+
+FROM "THE DIVINE COMEDY."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HELL.
+
+ INSCRIPTION OVER THE GATE.
+
+ CANTO III.
+
+
+ "Through me you pass into the city of woe:
+ Through me you pass into eternal pain:
+ Through me among the people lost for aye.
+ Justice the founder of my fabric moved:
+ To rear me was the task of power divine,
+ Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.
+ Before me things create were none, save things
+ Eternal, and eternal I endure.
+ All hope abandon, ye who enter here."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PURGATORY.
+
+ PRAYER.
+
+ CANTO VI.
+
+
+ When I was freed
+ From all those spirits, who prayed for others' prayers
+ To hasten on their state of blessedness;
+ Straight I began: "O thou, my luminary!
+ It seems expressly in thy text denied,
+ That Heaven's supreme decree can ever bend
+ To supplication; yet with this design
+ Do these entreat. Can then their hope be vain?
+ Or is thy saying not to be revealed?"
+ He thus to me: "Both what I write is plain,
+ And these deceived not in their hope; if well
+ Thy mind consider, that the sacred height
+ Of judgment doth not stoop, because love's flame
+ In a short moment all fulfils, which he,
+ Who sojourns here, in right should satisfy.
+ Besides, when I this point concluded thus,
+ By praying no defect could be supplied:
+ Because the prayer had none access to God.
+ Yet in this deep suspicion rest thou not
+ Contented, unless she assure thee so,
+ Who betwixt truth and mind infuses light:
+ I know not if thou take me right; I mean
+ Beatrice. Her thou shalt behold above,
+ Upon this mountain's crown, fair seat of joy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PRAYER OF PENITENTS.
+
+ CANTO XI.
+
+ "O thou Almighty Father! who dost make
+ The heavens thy dwelling, not in bounds confined,
+ But that, with love intenser, there thou view'st
+ Thy primal effluence; hallowed be thy name:
+ Join, each created being, to extol
+ Thy might; for worthy humblest thanks and praise
+ Is thy blest Spirit. May thy kingdom's peace
+ Come unto us; for we, unless it come,
+ With all our striving, thither tend in vain.
+ As, of their will, the angels unto thee
+ Tender meet sacrifice, circling thy throne
+ With loud hosannas; so of theirs be done
+ By saintly men on earth. Grant us, this day,
+ Our daily manna, without which he roams
+ Through this rough desert retrograde, who most
+ Toils to advance his steps. As we to each
+ Pardon the evil done us, pardon thou
+ Benign, and of our merit take no count.
+ 'Gainst the old adversary, prove thou not
+ Our virtue, easily subdued; but free
+ From his incitements, and defeat his wiles.
+ This last petition, dearest Lord! is made
+ Not for ourselves; since that were needless now;
+ But for their sakes who after us remain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MAN'S FREE-WILL.
+
+ CANTO XVI.
+
+ "Ye, who live,
+ Do so each cause refer to heaven above,
+ E'en as its motion, of necessity,
+ Drew with it all that moves. If this were so,
+ Free choice in you were none; nor justice would
+ There should be joy for virtue, woe for ill.
+ Your movements have their primal bent from heaven;
+ Not all: yet said I all; what then ensues?
+ Light have ye still to follow evil or good,
+ And of the will free power, which, if it stand
+ Firm and unwearied in Heaven's first assay,
+ Conquers at last, so it be cherished well,
+ Triumphant over all. To mightier force,
+ To better nature subject, ye abide
+ Free, not constrained by that which forms in you
+ The reasoning mind uninfluenced of the stars.
+ If then the present race of mankind err,
+ Seek in yourselves the cause, and find it there."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FIRE OF PURIFICATION.
+
+ CANTO XXVII.
+
+ Now was the sun so stationed, as when first
+ His early radiance quivers on the heights,
+ Where streamed his Maker's blood; while Libra hangs
+ Above Hesperian Ebro; and new fires,
+ Meridian, flash on Ganges' yellow tide.
+ So day was sinking, when the angel of God
+ Appeared before us. Joy was in his mien.
+ Forth of the flame he stood upon the brink;
+ And with a voice, whose lively clearness far
+ Surpassed our human, "Blessed are the pure
+ In heart," he sang: then near him as we came,
+ "Go ye not further, holy spirits!" he cried,
+ "Ere the fire pierce you: enter in; and list
+ Attentive to the song ye hear from thence."
+ I, when I heard his saying, was as one
+ Laid in the grave. My hands together clasped,
+ And upward stretching, on the fire I looked;
+ And busy fancy conjured up the forms
+ Erewhile beheld alive consumed in flames.
+ The escorting spirits turned with gentle looks
+ Toward me; and the Mantuan spake: "My son,
+ Here torment thou may'st feel, but canst not death.
+ Remember thee, remember thee, if I
+ Safe e'en on Geryon brought thee; now I come
+ More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now?
+ Of this be sure; though in its womb that flame
+ A thousand years contained thee, from thy head
+ No hair should perish. If thou doubt my truth,
+ Approach; and with thy hands thy vesture's hem
+ Stretch forth, and for thyself confirm belief.
+ Lay now all fear, oh! lay all fear aside.
+ Turn hither, and come onward undismayed."
+ I still, though conscience urged, no step advanced.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Into the fire before me then he walked:
+ And Statius, who erewhile no little space
+ Had parted us, he prayed to come behind.
+ I would have cast me into molten glass
+ To cool me, when I entered; so intense
+ Raged the conflagrant mass. The sire beloved,
+ To comfort me, as he proceeded, still
+ Of Beatrice talked. "Her eyes," saith he,
+ "E'en now I seem to view." From the other side
+ A voice, that sang, did guide us; and the voice
+ Following, with heedful ear, we issued forth,
+ There where the path led upward. "Come," we heard,
+ "Come, blessèd of my Father." Such the sounds,
+ That hailed us from within a light, which shone
+ So radiant, I could not endure the view.
+ "The sun," it added, "hastes: and evening comes.
+ Delay not: ere the western sky is hung
+ With blackness, strive ye for the pass." Our way
+ Upright within the rock arose, and faced
+ Such part of heaven, that from before my steps
+ The beams were shrouded of the sinking sun.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PARADISE.
+
+ SIN AND REDEMPTION.
+
+ CANTO VII.
+
+ What I have heard,
+ Is plain, thou say'st: but wherefore God this way
+ For our redemption chose, eludes my search.
+ "Brother! no eye of man not perfected,
+ Nor fully ripened in the flame of love,
+ May fathom this decree. It is a mark,
+ In sooth, much aimed at, and but little kenned:
+ And I will therefore show thee why such way
+ Was worthiest. The celestial love, that spurns
+ All envying in its bounty, in itself
+ With such effulgence blazeth, as sends forth
+ All beauteous things eternal. What distils
+ Immediate thence, no end of being knows;
+ Bearing its seal immutably imprest.
+ Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,
+ Free wholly, uncontrollable by power
+ Of each thing new: by such conformity
+ More grateful to its author, whose bright beams,
+ Though all partake their shining, yet in those
+ Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.
+ These tokens of pre-eminence on man
+ Largely bestowed, if any of them fail,
+ He needs must forfeit his nobility,
+ No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,
+ Which doth disfranchise him, and make unlike
+ To the chief good; for that its light in him
+ Is darkened. And to dignity thus lost
+ Is no return; unless, where guilt makes void,
+ He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.
+ Your nature, which entirely in its seed
+ Transgressed, from these distinctions fell, no less
+ Than from its state in Paradise; nor means
+ Found on recovery (search all methods out
+ As strictly as thou may) save one of these,
+ The only fords were left through which to wade:
+ Either, that God had of his courtesy
+ Released him merely; or else, man himself
+ For his own folly by himself atoned.
+ "Fix now thine eye, intently as thou canst,
+ On the everlasting counsel; and explore,
+ Instructed by my words, the dread abyss.
+ "Man in himself had ever lacked the means
+ Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop
+ Obeying, in humility so low,
+ As high, he, disobeying, thought to soar:
+ And, for this reason, he had vainly tried,
+ Out of his own sufficiency, to pay
+ The rigid satisfaction. Then behoved
+ That God should by his own ways lead him back
+ Unto the life, from whence he fell, restored:
+ By both his ways, I mean, or one alone.
+ But since the deed is ever prized the more.
+ The more the doer's good intent appears;
+ Goodness celestial, whose broad signature
+ Is on the universe, of all its ways
+ To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none.
+ Nor aught so vast or so magnificent,
+ Either for him who gave or who received,
+ Between the last night and the primal day,
+ Was or can be. For God more bounty showed,
+ Giving himself to make man capable
+ Of his return to life, than had the terms
+ Been mere and unconditional release.
+ And for his justice, every method else
+ Were all too scant, had not the Son of God
+ Humbled himself to put on mortal flesh."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE TRIUMPH OF CHRIST.
+
+ CANTO XIV.
+
+ And lo! forthwith there rose up round about
+ A lustre, over that already there;
+ Of equal clearness, like the brightening up
+ Of the horizon. As at evening hour
+ Of twilight, new appearances through heaven
+ Peer with faint glimmer, doubtfully descried;
+ So, there, new substances methought, began
+ To rise in view beyond the other twain,
+ And wheeling, sweep their ampler circuit wide.
+ O genuine glitter of eternal Beam!
+ With what a sudden whiteness did it flow,
+ O'erpowering vision in me. But so fair,
+ So passing lovely, Beatrice showed,
+ Mind cannot follow it, nor words express
+ Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes regained
+ Power to look up; and I beheld myself,
+ Sole with my lady, to more lofty bliss
+ Translated: for the star, with warmer smile
+ Impurpled, well denoted our ascent.
+ With all the heart, and with that tongue which speaks
+ The same in all, an holocaust I made
+ To God befitting the new grace vouchsafed.
+ And from my bosom had not yet upsteamed
+ The fuming of that incense, when I knew
+ The rite accepted. With such mighty sheen
+ And mantling crimson, in two listed rays
+ The splendors shot before me, that I cried,
+ "God of Sabaoth! that dost prank them thus!"
+ As leads the galaxy from pole to pole,
+ Distinguished into greater lights and less,
+ Its pathway, which the wisest fail to spell;
+ So thickly studded, in the depth of Mars,
+ Those rays described the venerable sign,
+ That quadrants in the round conjoining frame.
+ Here memory mocks the toil of genius. Christ
+ Beamed on that cross; and pattern fails me now.
+ But whoso takes his cross, and follows Christ,
+ Will pardon me for that I leave untold,
+ When in the fleckered dawning he shall spy
+ The glitterance of Christ. From horn to horn,
+ And 'tween the summit and the base, did move
+ Lights, scintillating, as they met and passed.
+ Thus oft are seen with ever-changeful glance,
+ Straight or athwart, now rapid and now slow,
+ The atomies of bodies, long or short,
+ To move along the sunbeam, whose slant line
+ Checkers the shadow interposed by art
+ Against the noontide heat. And as the chime
+ Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and harp
+ With many strings, a pleasant dinning makes
+ To him, who heareth not distinct the note;
+ So from the lights, which there appeared to me,
+ Gathered along the cross a melody,
+ That, indistinctly heard, with ravishment
+ Possessed me. Yet I marked it was a hymn
+ Of lofty praises; for there came to me
+ "Arise," and "Conquer," as to one who hears
+ And comprehends not. Me such ecstasy
+ O'ercame, that never, till that hour, was thing
+ That held me in so sweet imprisonment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SAINTS IN GLORY.
+
+ CANTO XXXI.
+
+ In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then
+ Before my view the saintly multitude,
+ Which is his own blood Christ espoused. Meanwhile,
+ That other host, that soar aloft to gaze
+ And celebrate his glory, whom they love,
+ Hovered around; and, like a troop of bees,
+ Amid the vernal sweets alighting now,
+ Now, clustering, where their fragrant labor glows,
+ Flew downward to the mighty flower, or rose
+ From the redundant petals, streaming back
+ Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.
+ Faces had they of flame, and wings of gold:
+ The rest was whiter than the driven snow;
+ And, as they flitted down into the flower,
+ From range to range, fanning their plumy loins,
+ Whispered the peace and ardor, which they won
+ From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast
+ Interposition of such numerous flight
+ Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view
+ Obstructed aught. For, through the universe,
+ Wherever merited, celestial light
+ Glides freely, and no obstacle prevents.
+ All there, who reign in safety and in bliss,
+ Ages long past or new, on one sole mark
+ Their love and vision fixed. O trinal beam
+ Of individual star, that charm'st them thus!
+ Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm below.
+ If the grim brood, from Arctic shores that roamed
+ (Where Helice forever, as she wheels,
+ Sparkles a mother's fondness on her son),
+ Stood in mute wonder mid the works of Rome,
+ When to their view the Lateran arose
+ In greatness more than earthly; I, who then
+ From human to divine had passed, from time
+ Unto eternity, and out of Florence
+ To justice and to truth, how might I chuse
+ But marvel too? 'Twixt gladness and amaze,
+ In sooth, no will had I to utter aught,
+ Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests
+ Within the temple of his vow, looks round
+ In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell
+ Of all its goodly state; e'en so mine eyes
+ Coursed up and down along the living light,
+ Now low, and now aloft, and now around,
+ Visiting every step. Looks I beheld,
+ Where charity in soft persuasion sat;
+ Smiles from within, and radiance from above;
+ And, in each gesture, grace and honor high.
+ So roved my ken, and in its general form
+ All Paradise surveyed.
+
+DANTE.
+
+Translation of HENRY FRANCIS CARY.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The World's Best Poetry Volume IV., by Bliss Carman
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12759 ***
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b1c86e7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12759 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12759)
diff --git a/old/12759-8.txt b/old/12759-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7f68108
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12759-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,16563 @@
+Project Gutenberg's The World's Best Poetry Volume IV., by Bliss Carman
+
+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 World's Best Poetry Volume IV.
+
+Author: Bliss Carman
+
+Release Date: June 28, 2004 [EBook #12759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY VOLUME IV. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Leah Moser and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+_THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY_
+
+ _I Home: Friendship
+ II Love
+ III Sorrow and Consolation
+ IV The Higher Life
+ V Nature
+ VI Fancy Sentiment
+ VII Descriptive: Narrative
+ VIII National Spirit
+ IX Tragedy: Humor
+ X Poetical Quotations_
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY
+
+IN TEN VOLUMES, ILLUSTRATED
+
+
+Editor-in-Chief
+
+BLISS CARMAN
+
+
+Associate Editors
+
+John Vance Cheney
+Charles G.D. Roberts
+Charles F. Richardson
+Francis H. Stoddard
+
+
+Managing Editor
+
+John R. Howard
+
+
+1904
+
+
+
+
+The World's Best Poetry
+
+Vol. IV
+
+
+THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+RELIGION AND POETRY
+By
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN
+
+
+
+
+NOTICE OF COPYRIGHTS.
+
+I.
+
+
+American poems in this volume within the legal protection of copyright
+are used by the courteous permission of the owners,--either the
+publishers named in the following list or the authors or their
+representatives in the subsequent one,--who reserve all their rights.
+So far as practicable, permission has been secured also for poems out
+of copyright.
+
+
+PUBLISHERS OF THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY. 1904.
+
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & CO., New York.--_W.G. Bryant_: "The Future
+Life."
+
+The ROBERT CLARKE COMPANY, Cincinnati.--_W.D. Gallagher_: "The
+Laborer."
+
+Messrs. T.Y. CROWELL & CO., New York.--_S.K. Bolton_: "Her Creed."
+
+Messrs. E.P. DUTTON & CO., New York.--_Ph. Brooks_: "O Little Town of
+Bethlehem;" _E. Sears_: "The Angel's Song."
+
+Messrs. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston.--_Alice Cary_: "My Creed;"
+_Phoebe Cary_: "Nearer Home;" _J.F. Clarke_: "The Caliph and Satan,"
+"Cana;" _R.W. Emerson_: "Brahma," "Good-bye," "The Problem;" _Louise
+I. Guiney_: "Tryste Nol;" _J. Hay_: "Religion and Doctrine;" _C.W.
+Holmes_: "The Living Temple;" _H.W. Longfellow_: "King Robert of
+Sicily," "Ladder of St. Augustine," "Psalm of Life," "Santa Filomena,"
+"Sifting of Peter," "Song of the Silent Land," "To-morrow;" _S.
+Longfellow_: "Vesper Hymn;" _J.R. Lowell_: "Vision of Sir Launfal;"
+_Frances P.L. Mace_: "Only Waiting;" _Caroline A.B. Mason_: "The
+Voyage;" _T. Parker_: "The Higher Good," "The Way, the Truth, and
+the Life;" _Eliza Scudder_: "The Love of God," "Vesper Hymn;" _E.C.
+Stedman_: "The Undiscovered Country;" _Harriet B. Stowe_: "Knocking,
+Ever Knocking," "The Other World;" _J. Very_: "Life," "The Spirit
+Land;" _J.G. Whittier_: "The Eternal Goodness," "The Meeting," "The
+Two Angels," "The Two Rabbis;" _Sarah C. Woolsey_: "When."
+
+The J.B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, Philadelphia.--_Margaret J. Preston_:
+"Myrrh-Bearers."
+
+Messrs. LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Boston.--_J.W. Chadwick_: "The Rise of
+Man;" _Emily Dickinson_: "Found Wanting," "Heaven."
+
+The LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY, Boston.--_P.H. Hayne_: "Patience."
+
+Messrs. L.C. PAGE & CO., Boston.--_C.G.D. Roberts_: "The Aim,"
+"Ascription."
+
+Messrs. SCOTT, FORESMAN & CO., Chicago.--_C.P. Taylor_: "The Old
+Village Choir."
+
+Messrs. HERBERT S. STONE & CO., Chicago.--_G. Santayana_: "Faith."
+
+The YOUNG CHURCHMAN COMPANY, Milwaukee.--_A.C. Coxe_: "The Chimes of
+England."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+
+American poems in this volume by the authors whose names are given
+below are the copyrighted property of the authors, or of their
+representatives named in parenthesis, and may not be reprinted without
+their permission, which for the present work has been courteously
+granted.
+
+PUBLISHERS OF THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY. 1904.
+
+_A. Coles_ (A. Coles, Jr., M.D.); _J.A. Dix_ (Rev. Morgan Dix, D.D.);
+_P.L. Dunbar; W.C. Gannett; W. Gladden; S.P. McL. Pratt; O. Huckel;
+Ray Palmer_ (Dr. Charles R. Palmer); _A.D.F. Randolph_ (Arthur D.F.
+Randolph).
+
+
+
+
+RELIGION AND POETRY
+
+BY WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+The time is not long past when the copulative in that title might have
+suggested to some minds an antithesis,--as acid and alkali, or heat
+and cold. That religion could have affiliation with anything
+so worldly as poetry would have seemed to some pious people a
+questionable proposition. There were the Psalms, in the Old Testament,
+to be sure; and the minister had been heard to allude to them as
+poetry: might not that indicate some heretical taint in him, caught,
+perchance, from the "German neologists" whose influence we were
+beginning to dread? It did not seem quite orthodox to describe the
+Psalms as poems; and when, a little later, some one ventured to speak
+of the Book of Job as a _dramatic_ poem, there were many who were
+simply horrified. Indeed, it was difficult for many good people
+to consider the Biblical writings as in any sense literature; they
+belonged in a category by themselves, and the application to them
+of the terms by which we describe similar writings in other books
+appeared to many good men and women a kind of profanation. This was
+not, of course, the attitude of educated men and women, but something
+akin to it affected large numbers of excellent people.
+
+We are well past that period, and the relations of religion and
+poetry may now be discussed with no fear of misunderstandings. These
+relations are close and vital. Poetry is indebted to religion for its
+largest and loftiest inspirations, and religion is indebted to poetry
+for its subtlest and most luminous interpretations.
+
+Religion is related to poetry as life is related to art. Religion is
+life, the life of God in the soul of man--the response of man's spirit
+to the attractions of the divine Spirit. Poetry is an interpretation
+of life. Religious poetry endeavors to express, in beautiful
+forms, the facts of the religious life. There is poetry that is not
+religious; poetry which deals only with that which is purely sensuous,
+poetry which does not hint at spiritual facts, or divine relations;
+and there is religion which has but little to do with poetry: but the
+highest religious thoughts and feelings are greatly served by putting
+them into poetic forms; and the greatest poetry is always that which
+sets forth the facts of the religious life. "Without love to man and
+love to God," says Dr. Strong, "the greatest poetry is impossible.
+Mere human love to God is not enough to stir the deepest chords either
+in the poet or in his readers. It is the connection of human love with
+the divine love that gives it permanence and security."[A]
+
+If, then, religion is the supreme experience of the human spirit, and
+that experience finds its most perfect literary expression in poetry,
+the present volume ought to contain a precious collection of the best
+literature. And any one who wished to give to a friend a volume which
+would convey to him the essential elements of religion would probably
+be safe to choose this volume rather than any prose treatise upon
+theology ever printed. He who reads this book through will get
+a clearer and truer idea of what the religious life is than any
+philosophical discussion could give him. For this poetry is an attempt
+to express life, not to explain it. It offers pictures or reports
+rather than analyses of religious experience. It gives utterance
+to the real life of religion in the individual soul, and is not a
+generalization of religious thoughts and feelings.
+
+The sources from which this collection has been drawn are abundant
+and varied. The psalmody and hymnology of the church furnish a vast
+preserve, the exploration of which would be a large undertaking. It
+must be confessed that the pious people who had in their hands some
+of the ancient hymn-books were justified in feeling that religion and
+poetry were not closely related, for many of the hymns they were
+wont to sing were guiltless of any poetic character. It was too often
+evident that the hymn-writer had been more intent on giving metrical
+form to proper theological concepts than on giving utterance to his
+own religious life. But the feeling has been growing that in hymns, at
+any rate, life is more than dogma; and we have now some collections of
+hymns that come pretty near being books of poetry. The improvement in
+this department of literature within the past twenty-five years has
+been marked. There is still, indeed, in many hymnals, and especially
+in hymnals for Sunday schools and social meetings, much doggerel; but
+large recent contributions of hymns which are true poetry, many of the
+best of them from American sources, have made it possible to furnish
+our congregations with admirable manuals of praise.
+
+The indebtedness of religion to poetry which is thus expressed in
+the hymnology of the church is very large. Probably many of us
+are indebted for definite and permanent religious conceptions and
+impressions quite as much to felicitous phrases of hymns as to
+any words of sermon or catechism. Our most positive convictions of
+religious truth are apt to come to us in some line or stanza that
+tells the whole story. The rhythm and the rhyme have helped to fix it
+and hold it in the memory.
+
+This is true not only of the hymns of the church but of many poems
+that are not suitable for singing. English poetry is especially rich
+in meditative and devotional elements, and of no period has this
+been more true than of the nineteenth century. Cowper, Wordsworth,
+Coleridge, the Brownings, Tennyson and Matthew Arnold, on the other
+side of the sea, with Bryant, Longfellow, Emerson, Whittier,
+Lowell, Holmes, Lanier, Sill and Gilder on this side--these and many
+others--have made most precious additions to our store of religious
+poetry. The century has been one of great perturbations in religious
+thought; the advent of the evolutionary philosophy threatened all the
+theological foundations, and there was need of a thorough revision
+of the dogmas which were based on a mechanical theology, and of a
+reinterpretation of the life of the Spirit. In all this the poets have
+given us the strongest help. The great poet cannot be oblivious of
+these deepest themes. He need not be a dogmatician, indeed he cannot
+be, for his business is insight, not ratiocination; but the problems
+which theology is trying to solve must always be before his mind, and
+he must have something to say about them, if he hopes to command the
+attention of thoughtful men. Yet while we need not depreciate
+the service that has been rendered by preachers and professional
+theologians who have sought to put the facts of the religious
+life into the forms of the new philosophy, we must own our deeper
+obligation to the poets, by whose vision the spiritual realities have
+been most clearly discerned.
+
+It was Wordsworth, perhaps, who gave us the first great contribution
+to the new religious thought by bringing home to us the fact that God
+is in his world; revealing himself now as clearly as in any of the
+past ages. The truth of the Divine immanence, which is the foundation
+of all the more positive religious thinking of to-day, and which
+is destined, when once its import has been fully grasped, to
+revolutionize our religious life, is made familiar to our thought
+in Wordsworth's poetry. To him it was simply an experience; in quite
+another sense than that in which it was true of Spinoza, it might have
+been said of him that he was a "God-intoxicated man"; and although his
+clear English sense permitted no pantheistic merging of the human in
+the divine, but kept the individual consciousness clear for choice
+and duty, the realization of the presence of God made nature in his
+thought supernatural, and life sublime. To him, as Dr. Strong has
+said, it was plain that "imagination in man enables him to enter into
+the thought of God--the creative element in us is the medium through
+which we perceive the meaning of the Creator in his creation. The
+world without answers to the world within, because God is the soul of
+both."
+
+ "Such minds are truly from the Deity,
+ For they are Powers; and hence the highest bliss
+ That flesh can know is theirs,--the consciousness
+ Of whom they are, habitually infused
+ Through every image and through every thought,
+ And all affections by communion raised
+ From earth to heaven, from human to divine."
+
+The mystical faith by which man is united to God can have no clearer
+confession. And in the great poem of "Tintern Abbey" this truth
+received an expression which has become classical;--it must be counted
+one of the greatest words of that continuing revelation by which the
+truths of religion are given permanent form:
+
+ "For I have learned
+ To look on nature, not as in the hour
+ Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes
+ The still, sad music of humanity,
+ Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power
+ To chasten and subdue. And I have felt
+ A presence that disturbs me with the joy
+ Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
+ Of something far more deeply interfused,
+ Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
+ And the round ocean, and the living air,
+ And the blue sky, and in the mind of man:
+ A motion and a spirit, that impels
+ All thinking things, all objects of all thought,
+ And rolls through all things."
+
+We can hardly imagine that the religious experience of mankind will
+ever suffer these words to drop into forgetfulness; and it would seem
+that every passing generation must deepen their significance.
+
+The same great testimony to the divine Presence in our lives is borne
+by many other witnesses in memorable words. Lowell's voice is clear:
+
+ "No man can think, nor in himself perceive,
+ Sometimes at waking, in the street sometimes,
+ Or on the hillside, always unforwarned,
+ A grace of being finer than himself,
+ That beckons and is gone,--a larger life
+ Upon his own impinging, with swift glimpse
+ Of spacious circles, luminous with mind,
+ To which the ethereal substance of his own
+ Seems but gross cloud to make that visible,
+ Touched to a sudden glory round the edge."
+
+If to this central truth of religion,--the reality of the communion of
+the human spirit with the divine--the poets have borne such impressive
+testimony, not less positively have they asserted many other of the
+great things of the spirit. Sometimes they have helped us to believe,
+by identifying themselves with us in our struggles with the doubts
+that loosen our hold on the great realities. No man of the last
+century has done more for Christian belief than Alfred Tennyson,
+albeit he has been a confessed doubter. But what he said of Arthur
+Hallam is quite as true of himself:
+
+ "He fought his doubts, and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them; thus he came at length,
+
+ To find a stronger faith his own,
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone."
+
+Those words of his, so often quoted, are often sadly misused:
+
+ "There lives more faith in honest doubt,
+ Believe me, than in half the creeds."
+
+When men make these words an excuse for an attitude of habitual
+negation and denial, assuming that it is better to doubt everything
+than to believe anything, they grossly pervert the poet's meaning. It
+is the _faith_ that lives in honest doubt that his heart applauds. He
+is thinking of the fact that it is real faith in God which leads men
+to doubt the dogmas which misrepresent God. But conscious as he is of
+the shadow that lies upon our field of vision, he is always insisting
+that it is in the light and not in the shadow that we must walk.
+Therefore, although demonstration is impossible, faith is rational. So
+do those great words of "The Ancient Sage" admonish us:
+
+ "Thou canst not prove that thou art body alone,
+ Nor canst thou prove that thou art spirit alone,
+ Nor canst thou prove that thou art both in one.
+ Thou canst not prove thou art immortal, no,
+ Nor yet that thou art mortal--nay, my son.
+ Thou canst not prove that I who speak with thee,
+ Am not thyself in converse with thyself,
+ For nothing worthy proving can be proven
+ Nor yet disproven. Wherefore be thou wise,
+ Cleave ever to the sunnier side of doubt,
+ And cling to Faith beyond the forms of Faith!
+ She reels not in the storm of warring words,
+ She brightens at the clash of 'Yes' and 'No,'
+ She sees the best that glimmers through the worst,
+ She feels the sun is hid but for a night,
+ She spies the summer through the winter bud,
+ She tastes the fruit before the blossom falls,
+ She hears the lark within the songless egg,
+ She finds the fountain where they wailed 'Mirage!'"
+
+This illustrates Tennyson's mental attitude. If all who plume
+themselves upon their doubts would put themselves into this posture of
+mind, they would find themselves in possession of a very substantial
+faith.
+
+Tennyson has touched with light more than one problem of the soul. The
+little stanza beginning
+
+ "Flower in the crannied wall"
+
+has shown us how the mysteries of being are shared by the commonest
+lives; the short lyric "Wages" condenses into a few lines the
+strongest proof of the life to come; and "Crossing the Bar" has borne
+many a spirit in peace out to the boundless sea.
+
+Robert Browning's robust faith helps us in a different way. His daring
+and triumphant optimism makes us ashamed of doubt. In "Abt Vogler," in
+"Rabbi Ben Ezra," in "Pompilia," in "Christmas Eve," we are caught up
+and carried onward by an unflinching and overcoming faith. Perhaps the
+most convincing arguments for religious reality in Browning's poems
+are those of "An Epistle" and of "Cleon," where the cry of the human
+soul for the assurance which the Christian faith supplies is given
+such a penetrating voice. And there is no reasoning about the
+Incarnation, in any theological book that I have ever read, which
+seems to me so cogent as that great passage in "Saul," where David
+cries:
+
+ "Could I wrestle to raise him from sorrow, grow poor to enrich,
+ To fill up his life, starve my own out. I would--knowing which,
+ I know that my service is perfect. Oh, speak through me now!
+ Would I suffer for him that I love? So wouldst thou--so wilt thou!"
+
+But, after all, Browning's great hymns of faith are those in which he
+faces the future, like "Prospice," and the prologue of "La Saisiaz,"
+and the epilogue of "Asolando,"--triumphant songs, in which one of the
+healthiest-minded of human beings showed himself:
+
+ "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
+ Never doubted clouds would break,
+ Never dreamed though right were worsted wrong would triumph,
+ Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better, sleep to wake!"
+
+It would be a grateful task to make extended record of the service
+rendered to religion by the great choir of singers whose names appear
+upon the pages of this book. To Elizabeth Barrett Browning our debt is
+large, though her note is oftenest plaintive and the faith which she
+illustrates is that by which suffering is turned to strength. Our own
+New England psalmist, also, has been to great multitudes a revealer
+and a comforter; few in any age have seen the central truths of
+Christianity more clearly, or felt them more deeply, or uttered them
+more convincingly. In such poems as "My Soul and I," "My Psalm," "Our
+Master," "The Eternal Goodness," "The Brewing of Soma," and "Andrew
+Ryckman's Prayer," Whittier has made the whole religious world his
+debtor.
+
+How many more there are--of those whom the world reckons as the
+greater bards, and of those whom it assigns to lower places--to whom
+we have found ourselves indebted for the clearing of our vision or the
+quickening of our pulses, in our studies or our meditations upon the
+deepest questions of life! How many there are, whose faces we
+never saw, but who by some luminous word, some strain vibrant with
+tenderness, some flash of insight, have endeared themselves to us
+forever! They are the friends of our spirits, ministers to us of the
+holiest things. They have clothed for us the highest truth in forms of
+beauty; they have made it winsome and real and dear and memorable. Is
+there anything better than this, that one man can do for another?
+
+Washington Gladden
+
+[Footnote A: "The Great Poets and their Theology."]
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+ INTRODUCTORY ESSAY:
+ "RELIGION AND POETRY."
+ By _Washington Gladden_
+
+ POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE:
+ THE DIVINE ELEMENT--(God, Christ, the Holy Spirit)
+ PRAYER AND ASPIRATION
+ FAITH: HOPE: LOVE: SERVICE
+ SABBATH: WORSHIP: CREED
+ SELECTIONS FROM "PARADISE LOST"
+ HUMAN EXPERIENCE
+ DEATH: IMMORTALITY: HEAVEN
+ SELECTIONS FROM "THE DIVINE COMEDY"
+
+ INDEX: AUTHORS AND TITLES
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ JOHN MILTON
+ _Photogravure from an engraving_.
+
+ THE CHILD JESUS IN THE TEMPLE
+ _One of Heinrich Hoffmann's wonderful scenes in the life of
+ Christ: the earnest, wise-faced Boy, and the eager or doubtful
+ but thoughtful Scribes and Doctors of the Law, are graphically
+ depicted._
+
+ ISAAC WATTS
+ _From a contemporary engraving_.
+
+ THE HOLY NIGHT
+ "It was the winter wild
+ While the heaven-born Child
+ All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies."
+
+ _From photogravure after a painting by Martin Feuerstein._
+
+ CHARLES WESLEY
+ _From a contemporary engraving_.
+
+ THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD
+ "Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ Who is there?
+ 'Tis a pilgrim, strange and kingly,
+ Never such was seen before."
+
+ _From photo-carbon print after the painting by Holman Hunt_.
+
+ SIR GALAHAD
+ "My strength is as the strength of ten,
+ Because my heart is pure."
+
+ _From photogravure after the painting by George Frederick Watts_.
+
+ RALPH WALDO EMERSON
+ _From a photogravure after life-photograph._
+
+ DINA M. MULOCK CRAIK
+ _From a life-photograph by Elliott and Fry, London._
+
+ THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN
+ "Two went to pray? O, rather say,
+ One went to brag, the other to pray;
+ One nearer to God's altar trod,
+ The other to the altar's God."
+
+ _From engraving by Brend'amour, after a design by Alexander Bida_.
+
+ DANTE ALIGHIERI
+ _After a photograph from the fresco by His friend Giotto, discovered
+ under the whitewash on a watt of the Bargello palace; now in the Museo
+ Nazionale, Florence, Italy_.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+
+
+
+POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+I.
+
+THE DIVINE ELEMENT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SONG.
+
+FROM "PIPPA PASSES."
+
+
+ The year's at the spring,
+ And day's at the morn;
+ Morning's at seven;
+ The hill-side's dew-pearled;
+ The lark's on the wing;
+ The snail's on the thorn;
+ God's in His heaven--
+ All's right with the world.
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PASSAGE IN THE LIFE OF SAINT AUGUSTINE.
+
+
+ Long pored Saint Austin o'er the sacred page,
+ And doubt and darkness overspread his mind;
+ On God's mysterious being thought the Sage,
+ The Triple Person in one Godhead joined.
+ The more he thought, the harder did he find
+ To solve the various doubts which fast arose;
+ And as a ship, caught by imperious wind,
+ Tosses where chance its shattered body throws,
+ So tossed his troubled soul, and nowhere found repose.
+
+ Heated and feverish, then he closed his tome,
+ And went to wander by the ocean-side,
+ Where the cool breeze at evening loved to come,
+ Murmuring responsive to the murmuring tide;
+ And as Augustine o'er its margent wide
+ Strayed, deeply pondering the puzzling theme,
+ A little child before him he espied:
+ In earnest labor did the urchin seem,
+ Working with heart intent close by the sounding stream.
+
+ He looked, and saw the child a hole had scooped,
+ Shallow and narrow in the shining sand,
+ O'er which at work the laboring infant stooped,
+ Still pouring water in with busy hand.
+ The saint addressed the child in accents bland:
+ "Fair boy," quoth he, "I pray what toil is thine?
+ Let me its end and purpose understand."
+ The boy replied: "An easy task is mine,
+ To sweep into this hole all the wide ocean's brine."
+
+ "O foolish boy!" the saint exclaimed, "to hope
+ That the broad ocean in that hole should lie!"
+ "O foolish saint!" exclaimed the boy; "thy scope
+ Is still more hopeless than the toil I ply,
+ Who think'st to comprehend God's nature high
+ In the small compass of thine human wit!
+ Sooner, Augustine, sooner far, shall I
+ Confine the ocean in this tiny pit,
+ Than finite minds conceive God's nature infinite!"
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEDITATIONS OF A HINDU PRINCE.
+
+
+ All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have trod,
+ Are the people eternally seeking for the signs and steps of a God?
+ Westward across the ocean, and Northward across the snow,
+ Do they all stand gazing, as ever, and what do the wisest know?
+
+ Here, in this mystical India, the deities hover and swarm
+ Like the wild bees heard in the tree-tops, or the gusts of a gathering storm;
+ In the air men hear their voices, their feet on the rocks are seen,
+ Yet we all say, "Whence is the message, and what may the wonders mean?"
+
+ A million shrines stand open, and ever the censer swings,
+ As they bow to a mystic symbol, or the figures of ancient kings;
+ And the incense rises ever, and rises the endless cry
+ Of those who are heavy laden, and of cowards loth to die.
+
+ For the Destiny drives us together, like deer in a pass of the hills;
+ Above is the sky and around us the sound of the shot that kills;
+ Pushed by a power we see not, and struck by a hand unknown,
+ We pray to the trees for shelter, and press our lips to a stone.
+
+ The trees wave a shadowy answer, and the rock frowns hollow and grim,
+ And the form and the nod of the demon are caught in the twilight dim;
+ And we look to the sunlight falling afar on the mountain crest,--
+ Is there never a path runs upward to a refuge there and a rest?
+
+ The path, ah! who has shown it, and which is the faithful guide?
+ The haven, ah! who has known it? for steep is the mountain side,
+ Forever the shot strikes surely, and ever the wasted breath
+ Of the praying multitude rises, whose answer is only death.
+
+ Here are the tombs of my kinsfolk, the fruit of an ancient name,
+ Chiefs who were slain on the war-field, and women who died in flame;
+ They are gods, these kings of the foretime, they are spirits who guard our race:
+ Ever I watch and worship; they sit with a marble face.
+
+ And the myriad idols round me, and the legion of muttering priests,
+ The revels and rites unholy, the dark unspeakable feasts!
+ What have they rung from the Silence? Hath even a whisper come
+ Of the secret, Whence and Whither? Alas! for the gods are dumb.
+
+ Shall I list to the word of the English, who come from the uttermost sea?
+ "The Secret, hath it been told you, and what is your message to me?"
+ It is naught but the wide-world story how the earth and the heavens began,
+ How the gods are glad and angry, and a Deity once was man.
+
+ I had thought, "Perchance in the cities where the rulers of India dwell,
+ Whose orders flash from the far land, who girdle the earth with a spell,
+ They have fathomed the depths we float on, or measured the unknown main--"
+ Sadly they turn from the venture, and say that the quest is vain.
+
+ Is life, then, a dream and delusion, and where shall the dreamer awake?
+ Is the world seen like shadows on water, and what if the mirror break?
+ Shall it pass as a camp that is struck, as a tent that is gathered and gone
+ From the sands that were lamp-lit at eve, and at morning are level and lone?
+
+ Is there naught in the heaven above, whence the hail and the levin are hurled,
+ But the wind that is swept around us by the rush of the rolling world?
+ The wind that shall scatter my ashes, and bear me to silence and sleep
+ With the dirge, and the sounds of lamenting, and voices of women who weep.
+
+SIR ALFRED COMYNS LYALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRAHMA.
+
+
+ If the red slayer think he slays,
+ Or if the slain think he is slain,
+ They know not well the subtle ways
+ I keep, and pass, and turn again.
+
+ Far or forgot to me is near;
+ Shadow and sunlight are the same;
+ The vanished gods to me appear;
+ And one to me are shame and fame.
+
+ They reckon ill who leave me out;
+ When me they fly, I am the wings;
+ I am the doubter and the doubt,
+ And I the hymn the Brahmin sings.
+
+ The strong gods pine for my abode,
+ And pine in vain the sacred Seven;
+ But thou, meek lover of the good!
+ Find me, and turn thy back on heaven.
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HYMN TO ZEUS.
+
+
+ Most glorious of all the Undying, many-named, girt round with awe!
+ Jove, author of Nature, applying to all things the rudder of law--
+ Hail! Hail! for it justly rejoices the races whose life is a span
+ To lift unto thee their voices--the Author and Framer of man.
+ For we are thy sons; thou didst give us the symbols of speech at our birth,
+ Alone of the things that live, and mortal move upon earth.
+ Wherefore thou shalt find me extolling and ever singing thy praise;
+ Since thee the great Universe, rolling on its path round the world, obeys:--
+ Obeys thee, wherever thou guidest, and gladly is bound in thy bands,
+ So great is the power thou confidest, with strong, invincible hands,
+ To thy mighty ministering servant, the bolt of the thunder, that flies,
+ Two-edged like a sword, and fervent, that is living and never dies.
+ All nature, in fear and dismay, doth quake in the path of its stroke,
+ What time thou preparest the way for the one Word thy lips have spoke,
+ Which blends with lights smaller and greater, which pervadeth and thrilleth all things,
+ So great is thy power and thy nature--in the Universe Highest of Kings!
+ On earth, of all deeds that are done, O God! there is none without thee;
+ In the holy ether not one, nor one on the face of the sea,
+ Save the deeds that evil men, driven by their own blind folly, have planned;
+ But things that have grown uneven are made even again by thy hand;
+ And things unseemly grow seemly, the unfriendly are friendly to thee;
+ For no good and evil supremely thou hast blended in one by decree.
+ For all thy decree is one ever--a Word that endureth for aye,
+ Which mortals, rebellious, endeavor to flee from and shun to obey--
+ Ill-fated, that, worn with proneness for the lord-ship of goodly things,
+ Neither hear nor behold, in its oneness, the law that divinity brings;
+ Which men with reason obeying, might attain unto glorious life,
+ No longer aimlessly straying in the paths of ignoble strife.
+ There are men with a zeal unblest, that are wearied with following of fame,
+ And men with a baser quest, that are turned to lucre and shame.
+ There are men too that pamper and pleasure the flesh with delicate stings:
+ All these desire beyond measure to be other than all these things.
+ Great Jove, all-giver, dark-clouded, great Lord of the thunderbolt's breath!
+ Deliver the men that are shrouded in ignorance dismal as death.
+ O Father! dispel from their souls the darkness, and grant them the light
+ Of reason, thy stay, when the whole wide world thou rulest with might,
+ That we, being honored, may honor thy name with the music of hymns,
+ Extolling the deeds of the Donor, unceasing, as rightly beseems
+ Mankind; for no worthier trust is awarded to God or to man
+ Than forever to glory with justice in the law that endures and is One.
+
+From the Greek of CLEANTHES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TE DEUM LAUDAMUS.
+
+
+ We praise thee, O God; we acknowledge thee to be the Lord.
+ All the earth doth worship thee, the Father everlasting.
+ To thee all Angels cry aloud; the Heavens, and all the powers therein.
+ To thee Cherubim and Seraphim continually do cry,
+ Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth;
+ Heaven and earth are full of the Majesty of thy Glory.
+ The glorious company of the Apostles praise thee.
+ The goodly fellowship of the Prophets praise thee.
+ The noble army of Martyrs praise thee.
+ The holy Church throughout all the world doth acknowledge thee;
+ The Father of an infinite Majesty;
+ Thine adorable, true, and only Son;
+ Also the Holy Ghost, the Comforter.
+ Thou art the King of Glory, O Christ.
+ Thou art the everlasting Son of the Father.
+ When thou tookest upon thee to deliver man, thou didst humble thyself to be born of a Virgin.
+ When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death, thou didst open the Kingdom of Heaven to all believers.
+ Thou sittest at the right hand of God, in the Glory of the Father.
+ We believe that thou shalt come to be our Judge.
+ We therefore pray thee, help thy servants, whom thou hast redeemed with thy precious blood.
+ Make them to be numbered with thy Saints, in glory everlasting.
+ O Lord, save thy people, and bless thine heritage.
+ Govern them, and lift them up for ever.
+ Day by day we magnify thee;
+ And we worship thy Name ever, world without end.
+ Vouchsafe, O Lord, to keep us this day without sin.
+ O Lord, have mercy upon us, have mercy upon us.
+ O Lord, let thy mercy be upon us, as our trust is in thee.
+ O Lord, in thee have I trusted; let me never be confounded.[A]
+
+Version of the
+
+AMERICAN EPISCOPAL CHURCH PRAYER-BOOK.
+
+[Footnote A: This venerable hymn, familiar as a part of the morning
+service in the Roman Catholic and Protestant Episcopal Churches, and
+on special occasions in many Protestant Churches, has usually been
+ascribed to the great St. Ambrose of Milan and St. Augustine, his
+greater convert, in the year 387 A.D. But, like other productions of
+mighty influence, it was doubtless a growth. Portions of it appear
+in the writings of St. Cyprian (252 A.D.) and others in still earlier
+liturgical forms of the Greek Church in Alexandria during the century
+previous. It is thus probably the earliest, as it is certainly the
+most universal and famous, of Christian hymns. It was translated from
+the Latin into English in 1549 for the Anglican Book of Common Prayer,
+which assumed its present form in 1660--during that wonderful era
+which gave us the English Bible, with its unapproached majesty and
+music of language.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNIVERSAL PRAYER.
+
+
+ Father of all! in every age,
+ In every clime adored,
+ By saint, by savage, and by sage,
+ Jehovah, Jove, or Lord!
+
+ Thou great First Cause, least understood,
+ Who all my sense confined
+ To know but this, that thou art good,
+ And that myself am blind;
+
+ Yet gave me, in this dark estate,
+ To see the good from ill;
+ And, binding nature fast in fate,
+ Left free the human will:
+
+ What conscience dictates to be done,
+ Or warns me not to do,
+ This, teach me more than hell to shun,
+ That, more than heaven pursue.
+
+ What blessings thy free bounty gives
+ Let me not cast away;
+ For God is paid when man receives,
+ To enjoy is to obey.
+
+ Yet not to earth's contracted span
+ Thy goodness let me bound,
+ Or think thee Lord alone of man,
+ When thousand worlds are round:
+
+ Let not this weak, unknowing hand
+ Presume thy bolts to throw,
+ And deal damnation round the land
+ On each I judge thy foe.
+
+ If I am right thy grace impart
+ Still in the right to stay;
+ If I am wrong, O, teach my heart
+ To find that better way!
+
+ Save me alike from foolish pride
+ And impious discontent
+ At aught thy wisdom has dented,
+ Or aught thy goodness lent.
+
+ Teach me to feel another's woe,
+ To hide the fault I see;
+ That mercy I to others show,
+ That mercy show to me.
+
+ Mean though I am, not wholly so,
+ Since quickened by thy breath;
+ O, lead me wheresoe'er I go,
+ Through this day's life or death!
+
+ This day be bread and peace my lot;
+ All else beneath the sun,
+ Thou knowest if best bestowed or not,
+ And let thy will be done.
+
+ To thee, whose temple is all space,
+ Whose altar, earth, sea, skies,
+ One chorus let all Being raise,
+ All Nature incense rise!
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE.
+
+FROM "THE SPECTATOR."
+
+
+ The spacious firmament on high,
+ With all the blue ethereal sky,
+ And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
+ Their great Original proclaim;
+ The unwearied sun, from day to day,
+ Does his Creator's power display,
+ And publishes to every land
+ The work of an Almighty hand.
+
+ Soon as the evening shades prevail,
+ The moon takes up the wondrous tale,
+ And nightly to the listening earth
+ Repeats the story of her birth;
+ While all the stars that round her burn,
+ And all the planets in their turn,
+ Confirm the tidings as they roll,
+ And spread the truth from pole to pole.
+
+ What though, in solemn silence, all
+ Move round the dark terrestrial ball?
+ What though no real voice or sound
+ Amid their radiant orbs be found?
+ In Reason's ear they all rejoice,
+ And utter forth a glorious voice,
+ Forever singing, as they shine,
+ "The hand that made us is divine!"
+
+JOSEPH ADDISON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LORD! WHEN THOSE GLORIOUS LIGHTS I SEE.
+
+ HYMN AND PRAYER FOR THE USE OF BELIEVERS.
+
+
+ Lord! when those glorious lights I see
+ With which thou hast adorned the skies,
+ Observing how they moved be,
+ And how their splendor fills mine eyes,
+ Methinks it is too large a grace,
+ But that thy love ordained it so,--
+ That creatures in so high a place
+ Should servants be to man below.
+
+ The meanest lamp now shining there
+ In size and lustre doth exceed
+ The noblest of thy creatures here,
+ And of our friendship hath no need.
+ Yet these upon mankind attend
+ For secret aid or public light;
+ And from the world's extremest end
+ Repair unto us every night.
+
+ O, had that stamp been undefaced
+ Which first on us thy hand had set,
+ How highly should we have been graced,
+ Since we are so much honored yet!
+ Good God, for what but for the sake
+ Of thy beloved and only Son,
+ Who did on him our nature take,
+ Were these exceeding favors done?
+
+ As we by him have honored been,
+ Let us to him due honors give;
+ Let us uprightness hide our sin,
+ And let us worth from him receive.
+ Yea, so let us by grace improve
+ What thou by nature doth bestow,
+ That to thy dwelling-place above
+ We may be raised from below.
+
+GEORGE WITHER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HYMN
+
+ BEFORE SUNRISE, IN THE VALE OF CHAMOUNI.
+
+
+ Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star
+ In his steep course? So long he seems to pause
+ On thy bald, awful head, O sovran Blanc!
+ The Arve and Arveiron at thy base
+ Rave ceaselessly; but thou, most awful Form,
+ Risest from forth thy silent sea of pines
+ How silently! Around thee and above,
+ Deep is the air and dark, substantial, black--
+ An ebon mass. Methinks thou piercest it,
+ As with a wedge! But when I look again,
+ It is thine own calm home, thy crystal shrine,
+ Thy habitation from eternity!
+ O dread and silent Mount! I gazed upon thee,
+ Till thou, still present to the bodily sense,
+ Didst vanish from my thought. Entranced in prayer
+ I worshipped the Invisible alone.
+
+ Yet, like some sweet beguiling melody,
+ So sweet we know not we are listening to it,
+ Thou, the mean while, wast blending with my thought,--
+ Yea, with my life and life's own secret joy,--
+ Till the dilating soul, enrapt, transfused,
+ Into the mighty vision passing, there,
+ As in her natural form, swelled vast to Heaven!
+
+ Awake, my soul! not only passive praise
+ Thou owest! not alone these swelling tears,
+ Mute thanks, and secret ecstasy! Awake,
+ Voice of sweet song! Awake, my heart, awake!
+ Green vales and icy cliffs, all join my hymn.
+
+ Thou first and chief, sole sovereign of the vale!
+ O, struggling with the darkness all the night,
+ And visited all night by troops of stars,
+ Or when they climb the sky, or when they sink,
+ Companion of the morning-star at dawn,
+ Thyself Earth's rosy star, and of the dawn
+ Co-herald,--wake, O, wake, and utter praise!
+ Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth?
+ Who filled thy countenance with rosy light?
+ Who made thee parent of perpetual streams?
+
+ And you, ye five wild torrents fiercely glad!
+ Who called you forth from night and utter death,
+ From dark and icy caverns called you forth,
+ Down those precipitous, black, jagged rocks,
+ Forever shattered and the same forever?
+ Who gave you your invulnerable life,
+ Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy,
+ Unceasing thunder and eternal foam?
+ And who commanded (and the silence came),
+ Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?
+
+ Ye ice-falls! ye that from the mountain's brow
+ Adown enormous ravines slope amain,--
+ Torrents, methinks, that heard a mighty voice,
+ And stopped at once amid their maddest plunge!
+ Motionless torrents! silent cataracts!
+ Who made you glorious as the gates of Heaven
+ Beneath the keen full moon? Who bade the sun
+ Clothe you with rainbows? Who, with living flowers
+ Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet?
+ God!--let the torrents, like a shout of nations,
+ Answer! and let the ice-plains echo, God!
+ God! sing, ye meadow-streams, with gladsome voice!
+ Ye pine-groves, with your soft and soul-like sounds!
+ And they too have a voice, yon piles of snow,
+ And in their perilous fall shall thunder, God!
+
+ Ye living flowers that skirt the eternal frost!
+ Ye wild goats sporting round the eagle's nest!
+ Ye eagles, playmates of the mountain-storm!
+ Ye lightnings, the dread arrows of the clouds!
+ Ye signs and wonders of the elements!
+ Utter forth God, and fill the hills with praise!
+
+ Thou, too, hoar Mount! with thy sky-pointing peaks,
+ Oft from whose feet the avalanche, unheard,
+ Shoots downward, glittering through the pure serene,
+ Into the depth of clouds that veil thy breast,--
+ Thou too again, stupendous Mountain! thou
+ That, as I raise my head, awhile bowed low
+ In adoration, upward from thy base
+ Slow travelling with dim eyes suffused with tears,
+ Solemnly seemest, like a vapory cloud,
+ To rise before me,--Rise, O, ever rise!
+ Rise, like a cloud of incense from the Earth!
+ Thou kingly Spirit throned among the hills,
+ Thou dread ambassador from Earth to Heaven,
+ Great Hierarch! tell thou the silent sky,
+ And tell the stars, and tell yon rising sun,
+ Earth with her thousand voices, praises God.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HILLS OF THE LORD.
+
+
+ God ploughed one day with an earthquake,
+ And drove his furrows deep!
+ The huddling plains upstarted.
+ The hills were all a-leap!
+
+ But that is the mountains' secret,
+ Age-hidden in their breast;
+ "God's peace is everlasting,"
+ Are the dream-words of their rest.
+
+ He hath made them the haunt of beauty,
+ The home elect of his grace;
+ He spreadeth his mornings on them,
+ His sunsets light their face.
+
+ His thunders tread in music
+ Of footfalls echoing long,
+ And carry majestic greeting
+ Around the silent throng.
+
+ His winds bring messages to them,
+ Wild storm-news from the main;
+ They sing it down to the valleys
+ In the love-song of the rain.
+
+ Green tribes from far come trooping,
+ And over the uplands flock;
+ He weaveth the zones together
+ In robes for his risen rock.
+
+ They are nurseries for young rivers;
+ Nests for his flying cloud;
+ Homesteads for new-born races,
+ Masterful, free, and proud.
+
+ The people of tired cities
+ Come up to their shrines and pray;
+ God freshens again within them,
+ As he passes by all day.
+
+ And lo, I have caught their secret,
+ The beauty deeper than all.
+ This faith--that life's hard moments,
+ When the jarring sorrows befall,
+
+ Are but God ploughing his mountains;
+ And the mountains yet shall be
+ The source of his grace and freshness
+ And his peace everlasting to me.
+
+WILLIAM CHANNING GANNETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUNRISE.
+
+
+ As on my bed at dawn I mused and prayed,
+ I saw my lattice prankt upon the wall,
+ The flaunting leaves and flitting birds withal--
+ A sunny phantom interlaced with shade;
+ "Thanks be to Heaven," in happy mood I said,
+ "What sweeter aid my matins could befall
+ Than this fair glory from the east hath made?
+ What holy sleights hath God, the Lord of all,
+ To bid us feel and see! We are not free
+ To say we see not, for the glory comes
+ Nightly and daily, like the flowing sea;
+ His lustre pierces through the midnight glooms,
+ And at prime hours, behold! he follows me
+ With golden shadows to my secret rooms."
+
+CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD AND MAN.
+
+ FROM THE "ESSAY ON MAN," EPISTLES I AND IV.
+
+
+ Lo, the poor Indian! whose untutored mind
+ Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind:
+ His soul, proud science never taught to stray
+ Far as the solar walk or Milky Way:
+ Yet simple Nature to his hope has given,
+ Behind the cloud-topt hill, an humbler heaven;
+ Some safer world in depth of woods embraced,
+ Some happier island in the watery waste,
+ Where slaves once more their native land behold,
+ No fiends torment, no Christians thirst for gold.
+ To Be, contents his natural desire;
+ He asks no angel's wing, no seraph's fire;
+ But thinks, admitted to that equal sky,
+ His faithful dog shall bear him company.
+ Go, wiser thou! and in thy scale of sense,
+ Weigh thy opinion against Providence:
+ Call imperfection what thou fancy'st such,--
+ Say, here he gives too little, there too much;
+ Destroy all creatures for thy sport or gust,
+ Yet cry, If man's unhappy, God's unjust,--
+ If man alone engross not Heaven's high care,
+ Alone made perfect here, immortal there;
+ Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod,
+ Re-judge his justice, be the god of God.
+ In pride, in reasoning pride, our error lies;
+ All quit their sphere, and rush into the skies.
+ Pride still is aiming at the blest abodes:
+ Men would be angels, angels would be gods.
+ Aspiring to be gods, if angels fell,
+ Aspiring to be angels, men rebel;
+ And who but wishes to invert the laws
+ Of Order, sins against the Eternal Cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All are but parts of one stupendous whole,
+ Whose body Nature is, and God the soul:
+ That, changed through all, and yet in all the same;
+ Great in the earth as in the ethereal frame;
+ Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze,
+ Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees,
+ Lives through all life, extends through all extent,
+ Spreads undivided, operates unspent:
+ Breathes in our soul, informs our mortal part,
+ As full, as perfect, in a hair as heart;
+ As full, as perfect, in vile man that mourns,
+ As the rapt seraph that adores and burns:
+ To him no high, no low, no great, no small;
+ He fills, he bounds, connects, and equals all.
+ Cease then, nor order imperfection name:
+ Our proper bliss depends on what we blame.
+ Know thy own point: This kind, this due degree
+ Of blindness, weakness, Heaven bestows on thee.
+ Submit.--In this or any other sphere,
+ Secure to be as blest as thou canst bear;
+ Safe in the hand of one disposing Power,
+ Or in the natal or the mortal hour.
+ All nature is but art unknown to thee;
+ All chance, direction which thou canst not see;
+ All discord, harmony not understood;
+ All partial evil, universal good:
+ And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite,
+ One truth is clear--Whatever is, is right.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Order is Heaven's first law: and, this confest,
+ Some are and must be greater than the rest,
+ More rich, more wise; but who infers from hence
+ That such are happier, shocks all common-sense.
+ Heaven to mankind impartial we confess,
+ If all are equal in their happiness:
+ But mutual wants this happiness increase;
+ All nature's difference keeps all nature's peace.
+ Condition, circumstance, is not the thing:
+ Bliss is the same in subject or in king,
+ In who obtain defence or who defend,
+ In him who is or him who finds a friend;
+ Heaven breathes through every member of the whole
+ One common blessing, as one common soul.
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIGHT SHINING OUT OF DARKNESS.
+
+
+ God moves in a mysterious way
+ His wonders to perform;
+ He plants His footsteps in the sea,
+ And rides upon the storm.
+
+ Deep in unfathomable mines
+ Of never-failing skill,
+ He treasures up His bright designs,
+ And works His sovereign will.
+
+ Ye fearful, fresh courage take!
+ The clouds ye so much dread
+ Are big with mercy, and shall break
+ In blessings on your head.
+
+ Judge not the Lord by feeble sense.
+ But trust Him for His grace:
+ Behind a frowning providence
+ He hides a smiling face.
+
+ His purposes will ripen fast,
+ Unfolding every hour;
+ The bud may have a bitter taste.
+ But sweet will be the flower.
+
+ Blind unbelief is sure to err,
+ And scan His work in vain:
+ God is His own interpreter,
+ And He will make it plain.
+
+WILLIAM COWPER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD.
+
+
+ O thou eternal One! whose presence bright
+ All space doth occupy, all motion guide.
+ Unchanged through time's all-devastating flight!
+ Thou only God--there is no God beside!
+ Being above all beings! Mighty One,
+ Whom none can comprehend and none explore!
+ Who fill'st existence with Thyself alone--
+ Embracing all, supporting, ruling o'er,
+ Being whom we call God, and know no more!
+
+ In its sublime research, philosophy
+ May measure out the ocean-deep--may count
+ The sands or the sun's rays--but, God! for Thee
+ There is no weight nor measure; none can mount
+ Up to Thy mysteries; Reason's brightest spark,
+ Though kindled by Thy light, in vain would try
+ To trace Thy counsels, infinite and dark;
+ And thought is lost ere thought can soar so high,
+ Even like past moments in eternity.
+
+ Thou from primeval nothingness didst call
+ First chaos, then existence--Lord! in Thee
+ Eternity had its foundation; all
+ Sprung forth from Thee--of light, joy, harmony,
+ Sole Origin--all life, all beauty Thine;
+ Thy word created all, and doth create;
+ Thy splendor fills all space with rays divine;
+ Thou art, and wert, and shall be! Glorious! Great!
+ Light-giving, life-sustaining potentate!
+
+ Thy chains the unmeasured universe surround--
+ Upheld by Thee, by Thee inspired with breath!
+ Thou the beginning with the end hast bound,
+ And beautifully mingled life and death!
+ As sparks mount upwards from the fiery blaze;
+ So suns are born, so worlds spring forth from Thee;
+ And as the spangles in the sunny rays
+ Shine round the silver snow, the pageantry
+ Of heaven's bright army glitters in Thy praise.
+
+ A million torches lighted by Thy hand
+ Wander unwearied through the blue abyss--
+ They own Thy power, accomplish Thy command,
+ All gay with life, all eloquent with bliss.
+ What shall we call them? Piles of crystal light--
+ A glorious company of golden streams--
+ Lamps of celestial ether burning bright--
+ Suns lighting systems with their joyous beams?
+ But Thou to these art as the noon to night.
+
+ Yes! as a drop of water in the sea,
+ All this magnificence in Thee is lost:--
+ What are ten thousand worlds compared to Thee?
+ And what am I then?--Heaven's unnumbered host,
+ Though multiplied by myriads, and arrayed
+ In all the glory of sublimest thought,
+ Is but an atom in the balance, weighed
+ Against Thy greatness--is a cipher brought
+ Against infinity! What am I then? Naught!
+
+ Naught! But the effluence of Thy light divine,
+ Pervading worlds, hath reached my bosom too;
+ Yes! in my spirit doth Thy spirit shine,
+ As shines the sunbeam in a drop of dew.
+ Naught! but I live, and on hope's pinions fly
+ Eager towards Thy presence--for in Thee
+ I live, and breathe, and dwell, aspiring high,
+ Even to the throne of Thy divinity;
+ I am, O God! and surely Thou must be!
+
+ Thou art!--directing, guiding all--Thou art!
+ Direct my understanding then to Thee;
+ Control my spirit, guide my wandering heart;
+ Though but an atom midst immensity,
+ Still I am something fashioned by Thy hand!
+ I hold a middle rank 'twixt heaven and earth--
+ On the last verge of mortal being stand,
+ Close to the realms where angels have their birth,
+ Just on the boundaries of the spirit land!
+
+ The chain of being is complete in me--
+ In me is matter's last gradation lost,
+ And the next step is spirit--Deity!
+ I can command the lightning and am dust!
+ A monarch and a slave--a worm, a god!
+ Whence came I here, and how? so marvellously
+ Constructed and conceived? unknown! this clod
+ Lives surely through some higher energy;
+ For from itself alone it could not be!
+
+ Creator, yes! Thy wisdom and Thy word
+ Created me! Thou source of life and good!
+ Thou spirit of my spirit, and my Lord!
+ Thy light, Thy love, in their bright plenitude
+ Filled me with an immortal soul, to spring
+ Over the abyss of death; and bade it wear
+ The garments of eternal day, and wing
+ Its heavenly flight beyond this little sphere,
+ Even to its source, to Thee, its author there.
+
+ Oh thoughts ineffable! oh visions blest!
+ Though worthless our conceptions all of Thee.
+ Yet shall Thy shadowed image fill our breast,
+ And waft its homage to Thy deity.
+ God! thus alone my lowly thoughts can soar,
+ Thus seek Thy presence--Being wise and good!
+ Midst Thy vast works admire, obey, adore;
+ And when the tongue is eloquent no more,
+ The soul shall speak in tears of gratitude.
+
+From the Russian of GAVRIL ROMNOVITCH DERSHVIN.
+
+Translation of SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD IS EVERYWHERE.
+
+
+ A trodden daisy, from the sward,
+ With tearful eye I took,
+ And on its ruined glories I,
+ With moving heart, did look;
+ For, crushed and broken though it was,
+ That little flower was fair;
+ And oh! I loved the dying bud,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I stood upon the sea-beat shore,
+ The waves came rushing on;
+ The tempest raged in giant wrath,
+ The light of day was gone.
+ The sailor from his drowning bark
+ Sent up his dying prayer;
+ I looked amid the ruthless storm,
+ And God was there!
+
+ I sought a lonely, woody dell,
+ Where all things soft and sweet,
+ Birds, flowers, and trees, and running streams,
+ Mid bright sunshine did meet:
+ I stood beneath an old oak's shade,
+ And summer round was fair;
+ I gazed upon the peaceful scene,
+ And God was there!
+
+ I saw a home--a happy home--
+ Upon a bridal day,
+ And youthful hearts were blithesome there,
+ And aged hearts were gay:
+ I sat amid the smiling band
+ Where all so blissful were--
+ Among the bridal maidens sweet--
+ And God was there!
+
+ I stood beside an infant's couch,
+ When light had left its eye--
+ I saw the mother's bitter tears,
+ I heard her woful cry--
+ I saw her kiss its fair pale face,
+ And smooth its yellow hair;
+ And oh, I loved the mourner's home,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I sought a cheerless wilderness--
+ A desert, pathless wild--
+ Where verdure grew not by the streams,
+ Where beauty never smiled;
+ Where desolation brooded o'er
+ A muirland lone and bare,
+ And awe upon my spirit crept,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I looked upon the lowly flower,
+ And on each blade of grass;
+ Upon the forests, wide and deep,
+ I saw the tempests pass:
+ I gazed on all created things
+ In earth, in sea, and air;
+ Then bent the knee--for God, in love,
+ Was everywhere!
+
+ROBERT NICOLL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ROCKED IN THE CRADLE OF THE DEEP.
+
+
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep
+ I lay me down in peace to sleep;
+ Secure I rest upon the wave,
+ For thou, O Lord! hast power to save.
+ I know thou wilt not slight my call,
+ For thou dost mark the sparrow's fall;
+ And calm and peaceful shall I sleep,
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep.
+
+ When in the dead of night I lie
+ And gaze upon the trackless sky,
+ The star-bespangled heavenly scroll,
+ The boundless waters as they roll,--
+ I feel thy wondrous power to save
+ From perils of the stormy wave:
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep,
+ I calmly rest and soundly sleep.
+
+ And such the trust that still were mine,
+ Though stormy winds swept o'er the brine,
+ Or though the tempest's fiery breath
+ Roused me from sleep to wreck and death.
+ In ocean cave, still safe with Thee
+ The germ of immortality!
+ And calm and peaceful shall I sleep,
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep.
+
+EMMA HART WILLARD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOOD-BYE.
+
+
+ Good-bye, proud world, I'm going home:
+ Thou art not my friend, and I'm not thine.
+ Long through thy weary crowds I roam;
+ A river-ark on the ocean brine,
+ Long I've been tossed like the driven foam,
+ But now, proud world, I'm going home.
+
+ Good-bye to Flattery's fawning face;
+ To Grandeur with his wise grimace;
+ To upstart Wealth's averted eye;
+ To supple Office, low and high;
+ To crowded halls, to court and street;
+ To frozen hearts and hasting feet;
+ To those who go, and those who come;
+ Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home.
+
+ I'm going to my own hearth-stone,
+ Bosomed in yon green hills alone,--
+ A secret nook in a pleasant land,
+ Whose groves the frolic fairies planned;
+ Where arches green, the livelong day,
+ Echo the blackbird's roundelay,
+ And vulgar feet have never trod
+ A spot that is sacred to thought and God.
+
+ O, when I am safe in my sylvan home,
+ I tread on the pride of Greece and Rome;
+ And when I am stretched beneath the pines,
+ Where the evening star so holy shines,
+ I laugh at the lore and the pride of man,
+ At the sophist schools, and the learned clan;
+ For what are they all in their high conceit,
+ When man in the bush with God may meet?
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR GOD, OUR HELP IN AGES PAST.
+
+
+ Our God, our help in ages past,
+ Our hope for years to come,
+ Our shelter from the stormy blast,
+ And our eternal home,--
+
+ Under the shadow of thy throne
+ Thy saints have dwelt secure;
+ Sufficient is thine arm alone,
+ And our defence is sure.
+
+ Before the hills in order stood,
+ Or earth received her frame,
+ From everlasting thou art God,
+ To endless years the same.
+
+ A thousand ages in thy sight
+ Are like an evening gone;
+ Short as the watch that ends the night
+ Before the rising sun.
+
+ Time like an ever-rolling stream
+ Bears all its sons away;
+ They fly, forgotten, as a dream
+ Dies at the opening day.
+
+ Our God, our help in ages past,
+ Our hope for years to come,
+ Be thou our guard while troubles last,
+ And our eternal home.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD.
+
+ "EIN' FESTE BURG IST UNSER GOTT."
+
+
+ A mighty fortress is our God,
+ A bulwark never failing;
+ Our helper he amid the flood
+ Of mortal ills prevailing.
+ For still our ancient foe
+ Doth seek to work us woe;
+ His craft and power are great,
+ And, armed with equal hate,
+ On earth is not his equal.
+
+ Did we in our own strength confide,
+ Our striving would be losing;
+ Were not the right man on our side,
+ The man of God's own choosing.
+ Dost ask who that may be?
+ Christ Jesus, it is he,
+ Lord Sabaoth his name,
+ From age to age the same,
+ And he must win the battle.
+
+From the German of MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+Translation of FREDERIC HENRY HEDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DELIGHT IN GOD.
+
+
+ I love, and have some cause to love, the earth,--
+ She is my Maker's creature, therefore good;
+ She is my mother, for she gave me birth;
+ She is my tender nurse, she gives me food:
+ But what's a creature, Lord, compared with thee?
+ Or what's my mother or my nurse to me?
+
+ I love the air,--her dainty sweets refresh
+ My drooping soul, and to new sweets invite me;
+ Her shrill-mouthed choir sustain me with their flesh,
+ And with their polyphonian notes delight me:
+ But what's the air, or all the sweets that she
+ Can bless my soul withal, compared to thee?
+
+ I love the sea,--she is my fellow-creature,
+ My careful purveyor; she provides me store;
+ She walls me round; she makes my diet greater;
+ She wafts my treasure from a foreign shore:
+ But, Lord of oceans, when compared with thee,
+ What is the ocean or her wealth to me?
+
+ To heaven's high city I direct my journey,
+ Whose spangled suburbs entertain mine eye;
+ Mine eye, by contemplation's great attorney,
+ Transcends the crystal pavement of the sky:
+ But what is heaven, great God, compared to thee?
+ Without thy presence, heaven's no heaven to me.
+
+ Without thy presence, earth gives no refection;
+ Without thy presence, sea affords no treasure;
+ Without thy presence, air's a rank infection;
+ Without thy presence, heaven's itself no pleasure:
+ If not possessed, if not enjoyed in thee,
+ What's earth, or sea, or air, or heaven to me?
+
+ The highest honors that the world can boast
+ Are subjects far too low for my desire;
+ The brightest beams of glory are, at most,
+ But dying sparkles of thy living fire;
+ The loudest flames that earth can kindle be
+ But nightly glow-worms, if compared to thee.
+
+ Without thy presence, wealth is bags of cares;
+ Wisdom but folly; joy, disquiet--sadness;
+ Friendship is treason, and delights are snares;
+ Pleasures but pain, and mirth but pleasing madness;
+ Without thee, Lord, things be not what they be,
+ Nor have their being, when compared with thee.
+
+ In having all things, and not thee, what have I?
+ Not having thee, what have my labors got?
+ Let me enjoy but thee, what further crave I?
+ And having thee alone, what have I not?
+ I wish nor sea nor land; nor would I be
+ Possessed of heaven, heaven unpossessed of thee!
+
+FRANCIS QUARLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WILL OF GOD.
+
+
+ I worship thee, sweet will of God!
+ And all thy ways adore;
+ And every day I live, I seem
+ To love thee more and more.
+
+ Thou wert the end, the blessd rule
+ Of our Saviour's toils and tears;
+ Thou wert the passion of his heart
+ Those three and thirty years.
+
+ And he hath breathed into my soul
+ A special love of thee,
+ A love to lose my will in his,
+ And by that loss be free.
+
+ I love to see thee bring to naught
+ The plans of wily men;
+ When simple hearts outwit the wise,
+ Oh, thou art loveliest then.
+
+ The headstrong world it presses hard
+ Upon the church full oft,
+ And then how easily thou turn'st
+ The hard ways into soft.
+
+ I love to kiss each print where thou
+ Hast set thine unseen feet;
+ I cannot fear thee, blessd will!
+ Thine empire is so sweet.
+
+ When obstacles and trials seem
+ Like prison walls to be,
+ I do the little I can do,
+ And leave the rest to thee.
+
+ I know not what it is to doubt,
+ My heart is ever gay;
+ I run no risk, for, come what will,
+ Thou always hast thy way.
+
+ I have no cares, O blessd will!
+ For all my cares are thine:
+ I live in triumph, Lord! for thou
+ Hast made thy triumphs mine.
+
+ And when it seems no chance or change
+ From grief can set me free,
+ Hope finds its strength in helplessness,
+ And gayly waits on thee.
+
+ Man's weakness, waiting upon God,
+ Its end can never miss,
+ For men on earth no work can do
+ More angel-like than this.
+
+ Ride on, ride on, triumphantly,
+ Thou glorious will, ride on!
+ Faith's pilgrim sons behind thee take
+ The road that thou hast gone.
+
+ He always wins who sides with God,
+ To him no chance is lost;
+ God's will is sweetest to him, when
+ It triumphs at his cost.
+
+ Ill that he blesses is our good,
+ And unblessed good is ill;
+ And all is right that seems most wrong.
+ If it be his sweet will.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VOYAGE.
+
+
+ Whichever way the wind doth blow,
+ Some heart is glad to have it so;
+ Then blow it east or blow it west,
+ The wind that blows, that wind is best.
+
+ My little craft sails not alone:
+ A thousand fleets from every zone
+ Are out upon a thousand seas;
+ And what for me were favoring breeze
+ Might dash another, with the shock
+ Of doom, upon some hidden rock.
+
+ And so I do not dare to pray
+ For winds to waft me on my way,
+ But leave it to a Higher Will
+ To stay or speed me; trusting still
+ That all is well, and sure that He
+ Who launched my bark will sail with me
+ Through storm and calm, and will not fail,
+ Whatever breezes may prevail,
+ To land me, every peril past,
+ Within his sheltering heaven at last.
+
+ Then, whatsoever wind doth blow,
+ My heart is glad to have it so;
+ And blow it east or blow it west,
+ The wind that blows, that wind is best.
+
+CAROLINE ATHERTON MASON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOVE OF GOD.
+
+
+ Thou Grace Divine, encircling all,
+ A soundless, shoreless sea!
+ Wherein at last our souls must fall,
+ O Love of God most free!
+
+ When over dizzy heights we go,
+ One soft hand blinds our eyes,
+ The other leads us, safe and slow,
+ O Love of God most wise!
+
+ And though we turn us from thy face,
+ And wander wide and long,
+ Thou hold'st us still in thine embrace,
+ O Love of God most strong!
+
+ The saddened heart, the restless soul,
+ The toil-worn frame and mind,
+ Alike confess thy sweet control,
+ O Love of God most kind!
+
+ But not alone thy care we claim,
+ Our wayward steps to win;
+ We know thee by a dearer name,
+ O Love of God within!
+
+ And, filled and quickened by thy breath,
+ Our souls are strong and free
+ To rise o'er sin and fear and death,
+ O Love of God, to thee!
+
+ELIZA SCUDDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE TO GOD.
+
+
+ Praise to God, immortal praise,
+ For the love that crowns our days--
+ Bounteous source of every joy,
+ Let Thy praise our tongues employ!
+
+ For the blessings of the field,
+ For the stores the gardens yield,
+ For the vine's exalted juice,
+ For the generous olive's use;
+
+ Flocks that, whiten all the plain,
+ Yellow sheaves of ripened grain,
+ Clouds that drop their fattening dews,
+ Suns that temperate warmth diffuse--
+
+ All that Spring, with bounteous hand,
+ Scatters o'er the smiling land;
+ All that liberal Autumn pours
+ From her rich o'erflowing stores:
+
+ These to Thee, my God, we owe--
+ Source whence all our blessings flow!
+ And for these my soul shall raise
+ Grateful vows and solemn praise.
+
+ Yet should rising whirlwinds tear
+ From its stem the ripening ear--
+ Should the fig-tree's blasted shoot
+ Drop her green untimely fruit--
+
+ Should the vine put forth no more,
+ Nor the olive yield her store--
+ Though the sickening flocks should fall,
+ And the herds desert the stall--
+
+ Should Thine altered hand restrain
+ The early and the latter rain,
+ Blast each opening bud of joy,
+ And the rising year destroy;
+
+ Yet to Thee my soul should raise
+ Grateful vows and solemn praise,
+ And when every blessing's flown,
+ Love Thee--for Thyself alone.
+
+ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT.
+
+
+ Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
+ Lead thou me on!
+ The night is dark, and I am far from home,--
+ Lead thou me on!
+ Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
+ The distant scene,--one step enough for me.
+
+ I was not ever thus, nor prayed that thou
+ Shouldst lead me on:
+ I loved to choose and see my path, but now
+ Lead thou me on!
+ I loved the garish days, and, spite of fears,
+ Pride ruled my will: remember not past years.
+
+ So long thy power hath blessed me, sure it still
+ Will lead me on;
+ O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
+ The night is gone;
+ And with the morn those angel faces smile
+ Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.
+
+JOHN HENRY NEWMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ETERNAL GOODNESS.
+
+
+ O friends! with whom my feet have trod
+ The quiet aisles of prayer,
+ Glad witness to your zeal for God
+ And love of man I bear.
+
+ I trace your lines of argument;
+ Your logic linked and strong
+ I weigh as one who dreads dissent,
+ And fears a doubt as wrong.
+
+ But still my human hands are weak
+ To hold your iron creeds:
+ Against the words ye bid me speak
+ My heart within me pleads.
+
+ Who fathoms the Eternal Thought?
+ Who talks of scheme and plan?
+ The Lord is God! He needeth not
+ The poor device of man.
+
+ I walk with bare, hushed feet the ground
+ Ye tread with boldness shod;
+ I dare not fix with mete and bound
+ The love and power of God.
+
+ Ye praise His justice; even such
+ His pitying love I deem:
+ Ye seek a king; I fain would touch
+ The robe that hath no seam.
+
+ Ye see the curse which overbroods
+ A world of pain and loss:
+ I hear our Lord's beatitudes
+ And prayer upon the cross.
+
+ More than your schoolmen teach, within
+ Myself, alas! I know:
+ Too dark ye cannot paint the sin,
+ Too small the merit show.
+
+ I bow my forehead to the dust,
+ I veil mine eyes for shame,
+ And urge, in trembling self-distrust,
+ A prayer without a claim.
+
+ I see the wrong that round me lies,
+ I feel the guilt within;
+ I hear, with groan and travail-cries,
+ The world confess its sin.
+
+ Yet, in the maddening maze of things,
+ And tossed by storm and flood,
+ To one fixed trust my spirit clings;
+ I know that God is good!
+
+ Not mine to look where cherubim
+ And seraphs may not see,
+ But nothing can be good in Him
+ Which evil is in me.
+
+ The wrong that pains my soul below
+ I dare not throne above,
+ I know not of His hate,--I know
+ His goodness and His love.
+
+ I dimly guess from blessings known
+ Of greater out of sight,
+ And, with the chastened Psalmist, own
+ His judgments too are right.
+
+ I long for household voices gone,
+ For vanished smiles I long,
+ But God hath led my dear ones on,
+ And He can do no wrong.
+
+ I know not what the future hath
+ Of marvel or surprise.
+ Assured alone that life and death
+ His mercy underlies.
+
+ And if my heart and flesh are weak
+ To bear an untried pain,
+ The bruisd reed He will not break,
+ But strengthen and sustain.
+
+ No offering of my own I have.
+ Nor works my faith to prove;
+ I can but give the gifts He gave,
+ And plead His love for love.
+
+ And so beside the Silent Sea
+ I wait the muffled oar;
+ No harm from Him can come to me
+ On ocean or on shore.
+
+ I know not where His islands lift
+ Their fronded palms in air;
+ I only know I cannot drift
+ Beyond His love and care.
+
+ O brothers! if my faith is vain,
+ If hopes like these betray,
+ Pray for me that my feet may gain
+ The sure and safer way.
+
+ And Thou, O Lord! by whom are seen
+ Thy creatures as they be,
+ Forgive me if too close I lean
+ My human heart on Thee!
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STRONG SON OF GOD, IMMORTAL LOVE.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+ Strong Son of God, immortal Love,
+ Whom we, that have not seen thy face,
+ By faith, and faith alone, embrace,
+ Believing where we cannot prove;
+
+ Thine are these orbs of light and shade;
+ Thou madest Life in man and brute;
+ Thou madest Death; and lo, thy foot
+ Is on the skull which thou hast made.
+
+ Thou wilt not leave us in the dust:
+ Thou madest man, he knows not why;
+ He thinks he was not made to die;
+ And thou hast made him: thou art just.
+
+ Thou seemest human and divine,
+ The highest, holiest manhood, thou:
+ Our wills are ours, we know not how;
+ Our wills are ours, to make them thine.
+
+ Our little systems have their day;
+ They have their day and cease to be:
+ They are but broken lights of thee,
+ And thou, O Lord, art more than they.
+
+ We have but faith: we cannot know;
+ For knowledge is of things we see;
+ And yet we trust it comes from thee,
+ A beam in darkness: let it grow.
+
+ Let knowledge grow from more to more,
+ But more of reverence in us dwell;
+ That mind and soul, according well,
+ May make one music as before,
+
+ But vaster. We are fools and slight;
+ We mock thee when we do not fear:
+ But help thy foolish ones to bear;
+ Help thy vain worlds to bear thy light.
+
+ Forgive what seemed my sin in me;
+ What seemed my worth since I began;
+ For merit lives from man to man,
+ And not from man, O Lord, to thee.
+
+ Forgive my grief for one removed,
+ Thy creature, whom I found so fair.
+ I trust he lives in thee, and there
+ I find him worthier to be loved.
+
+ Forgive these wild and wandering cries,
+ Confusions of a wasted youth;
+ Forgive them where they fail in truth,
+ And in thy wisdom make me wise.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM.
+
+
+ O little town of Bethlehem,
+ How still we see thee lie!
+ Above thy deep and dreamless sleep
+ The silent stars go by;
+ Yet in thy dark streets shineth
+ The everlasting Light;
+ The hopes and fears of all the years
+ Are met in thee to-night.
+
+ For Christ is born of Mary,
+ And, gathered all above.
+ While mortals sleep, the angels keep
+ Their watch of wondering love.
+ O morning stars, together
+ Proclaim the holy birth!
+ And praises sing to God the King,
+ And peace to men on earth.
+
+ How silently, how silently,
+ The wondrous gift is given!
+ So God imparts to human hearts
+ The blessings of His heaven.
+ No ear may hear His coming,
+ But in this world of sin,
+ Where meek souls will receive Him still,
+ The dear Christ enters in.
+
+ O holy Child of Bethlehem!
+ Descend to us, we pray;
+ Cast out our sin, and enter in,
+ Be born in us to-day.
+ We hear the Christmas angels
+ The great glad tidings tell;
+ Oh come to us, abide with us,
+ Our Lord Emmanuel!
+
+PHILLIPS BROOKS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ANGELS' SONG.
+
+
+ It came upon the midnight clear,
+ That glorious song of old,
+ From angels bending near the earth
+ To touch their harps of gold:
+ "Peace to the earth, good-will to men
+ From heaven's all-gracious King!"
+ The world in solemn stillness lay
+ To hear the angels sing.
+
+ Still through the cloven skies they come,
+ With peaceful wings unfurled;
+ And still their heavenly music floats
+ O'er all the weary world:
+ Above its sad and lowly plains
+ They bend on heavenly wing,
+ And ever o'er its Babel sounds
+ The blessd angels sing.
+
+ Yet with the woes of sin and strife
+ The world has suffered long;
+ Beneath the angel-strain have rolled
+ Two thousand years of wrong;
+ And man, at war with man, hears not
+ The love-song which they bring:
+ O, hush the noise, ye men of strife,
+ And hear the angels sing!
+
+ And ye, beneath life's crushing load
+ Whose forms are bending low;
+ Who toil along the climbing way
+ With painful steps and slow,--
+ Look now! for glad and golden hours
+ Come swiftly on the wing;
+ O, rest beside the weary road,
+ And hear the angels sing.
+
+ For lo! the days are hastening on,
+ By prophet-bards foretold,
+ When with the ever-circling years
+ Comes round the age of gold;
+ When Peace shall over all the earth
+ Its ancient splendors fling,
+ And the whole world send back the song
+ Which now the angels sing.
+
+EDMUND HAMILTON SEARS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EPIPHANY.
+
+ "We have seen his star in the east."
+ --MATTHEW ii. 2.
+
+
+ Brightest and best of the sons of the morning,
+ Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid;
+ Star of the East, the horizon adorning,
+ Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid.
+
+ Cold on his cradle the dew-drops are shining,
+ Low lies his head with the beasts of the stall;
+ Angels adore him in slumber reclining,
+ Maker and Monarch and Saviour of all.
+
+ Say, shall we yield him, in costly devotion,
+ Odors of Edom, and offerings divine?
+ Gems of the mountain, and pearls of the ocean,
+ Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine?
+
+ Vainly we offer each ample oblation,
+ Vainly with gifts would his favor secure;
+ Richer by far is the heart's adoration,
+ Dearer to God are the prayers of the poor.
+
+ Brightest and best of the sons of the morning,
+ Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid:
+ Star of the East, the horizon adorning,
+ Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid.
+
+REGINALD HEBER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY.
+
+
+ This is the month, and this the happy morn,
+ Wherein the Son of heaven's eternal king,
+ Of wedded maid and virgin mother born,
+ Our great redemption from above did bring--
+ For so the holy sages once did sing--
+ That He our deadly forfeit should release,
+ And with His Father work us a perpetual peace.
+
+ That glorious form, that light unsufferable,
+ And that far-beaming blaze of majesty
+ Wherewith He wont at heaven's high council-table
+ To sit the midst of Trinal Unity,
+ He laid aside; and here with us to be,
+ Forsook the courts of everlasting day,
+ And chose with us a darksome house of mortal clay.
+
+ Say, heavenly muse, shall not thy sacred vein
+ Afford a present to the infant God?
+ Hast thou no verse, no hymn, or solemn strain,
+ To welcome Him to this His new abode--
+ Now while the heaven, by the sun's team untrod,
+ Hath took no print of the approaching light,
+ And all the spangled host keep watch in squadrons bright?
+
+ See how from far upon the eastern road
+ The star-led wizards haste with odors sweet!
+ Oh! run, prevent them with thy humble ode,
+ And lay it lowly at His blessed feet;
+ Have thou the honor first thy Lord to greet,
+ And join thy voice unto the angel choir,
+ From out His secret altar touched with hallowed fire.
+
+
+ THE HYMN.
+
+ It was the winter wild
+ While the heaven-born child
+ All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies--
+ Nature, in awe to Him,
+ Had doffed her gaudy trim,
+ With her great Master so to sympathize;
+ It was no season then for her
+ To wanton with the sun, her lusty paramour.
+
+ Only with speeches fair
+ She woos the gentle air
+ To hide her guilty front with innocent snow,
+ And on her naked shame.
+ Pollute with sinful blame,
+ The saintly veil of maiden white to throw--
+ Confounded that her maker's eyes
+ Should look so near upon her foul deformities.
+
+ But He, her fears to cease,
+ Sent down the meek-eyed Peace;
+ She, crowned with olive green, came softly sliding
+ Down through the turning sphere,
+ His ready harbinger,
+ With turtle wing the amorous clouds dividing;
+ And waving wide her myrtle wand,
+ She strikes a universal peace through sea and land.
+
+ Nor war, or battle's sound,
+ Was heard the world around--
+ The idle spear and shield were high up hung;
+ The hookd chariot stood
+ Unstained with hostile blood;
+ The trumpet spake not to the armed throng;
+ And kings sat still with awful eye,
+ As if they surely knew their sovereign Lord was by.
+
+ But peaceful was the night
+ Wherein the prince of light
+ His reign of peace upon the earth began;
+ The winds, with wonder whist,
+ Smoothly the waters kissed,
+ Whispering new joys to the mild ocean,
+ Who now hath quite forgot to rave,
+ While birds of calm sit brooding on the charmed wave.
+
+ The stars with deep amaze
+ Stand fixed in steadfast gaze,
+ Bending one way their precious influence;
+ And will not take their flight
+ For all the morning light,
+ Or Lucifer that often warned them thence;
+ But in their glimmering orbs did glow
+ Until their Lord himself bespake, and bid them go.
+
+ And though the shady gloom
+ Had given day her room,
+ The sun himself withheld his wonted speed,
+ And hid his head for shame,
+ As his inferior flame
+ The new-enlightened world no more should need;
+ He saw a greater sun appear
+ Than his bright throne or burning axle-tree could bear.
+
+ The shepherds on the lawn,
+ Or e'er the point of dawn,
+ Sat simply chatting in a rustic row;
+ Full little thought they then
+ That the mighty Pan
+ Was kindly come to live with them below;
+ Perhaps their loves, or else their sheep,
+ Was all that did their silly thoughts so busy keep.
+
+ When such music sweet
+ Their hearts and ears did greet
+ As never was by mortal finger strook--
+ Divinely-warbled voice
+ Answering the stringed noise,
+ As all their souls in blissful rapture took;
+ The air, such pleasure loath to lose,
+ With thousand echoes still prolongs each heavenly close.
+
+ Nature, that heard such sound
+ Beneath the hollow round
+ Of Cynthia's seat the airy region thrilling,
+ Now was almost won
+ To think her part was done.
+ And that her reign had here its last fulfilling;
+ She knew such harmony alone
+ Could hold all heaven and earth in happier union.
+
+ At last surrounds their sight
+ A globe of circular light,
+ That with long beams the shamefaced night arrayed;
+ The helmd cherubim
+ And sworded seraphim
+ Are seen in glittering ranks with wings displayed,
+ Harping in loud and solemn choir,
+ With unexpressive notes, to heaven's new-born heir--
+
+ Such music as ('tis said)
+ Before was never made,
+ But when of old the sons of morning sung,
+ While the Creator great
+ His constellations set,
+ And the well-balanced world on hinges hung,
+ And cast the dark foundations deep,
+ And bid the weltering waves their oozy channel keep.
+
+ Ring out, ye crystal spheres!
+ Once bless our human ears,
+ If ye have power to touch our senses so;
+ And let your silver chime
+ Move in melodious time,
+ And let the bass of heaven's deep organ blow;
+ And with your ninefold harmony
+ Make up full consort to the angelic symphony.
+
+ For if such holy song
+ Inwrap our fancy long,
+ Time will run back, and fetch the age of gold;
+ And speckled vanity
+ Will sicken soon and die,
+ And leprous sin will melt from earthly mould;
+ And hell itself will pass away.
+ And leave her dolorous mansions to the peering day.
+
+ Yea, truth and justice then
+ Will down return to men,
+ Orbed in a rainbow; and, like glories wearing,
+ Mercy will sit between,
+ Throned in celestial sheen,
+ With radiant feet the tissued clouds down steering;
+ And heaven, as at some festival,
+ Will open wide the gates of her high palace hall.
+
+ But wisest fate says No--
+ This must not yet be so;
+ The babe yet lies in smiling infancy
+ That on the bitter cross
+ Must redeem our loss.
+ So both Himself and us to glorify.
+ Yet first to those ye chained in sleep
+ The wakeful trump of doom must thunder through the deep,
+
+ With such a horrid clang
+ As on Mount Sinai rang,
+ While the red fire and smould'ring clouds out-brake;
+ The aged earth, aghast
+ With terror of that blast,
+ Shall from the surface to the centre shake--
+ When, at the world's last session,
+ The dreadful judge in middle air shall spread his throne.
+
+ And then at last our bliss
+ Full and perfect is--
+ But now begins: for from this happy day
+ The old dragon, under ground
+ In straiter limits bound,
+ Not half so far casts his usurpd sway,
+ And, wroth to see his kingdom fail,
+ Swinges the scaly horror of his folded tail.
+
+ The oracles are dumb:
+ No voice or hideous hum
+ Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving;
+ Apollo from his shrine
+ Can no more divine,
+ With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving;
+ No nightly trance, or breathd spell,
+ Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the prophetic cell.
+
+ The lonely mountains o'er,
+ And the resounding shore,
+ A voice of weeping heard and loud lament;
+ From haunted spring, and dale
+ Edged with poplar pale,
+ The parting genius is with sighing sent;
+ With flower-inwoven tresses torn
+ The nymphs in twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn.
+
+ In consecrated earth,
+ And on the holy hearth,
+ The lares and lemures moan with midnight plaint;
+ In urns and altars round
+ A drear and dying sound
+ Affrights the flamens at their service quaint;
+ And the chill marble seems to sweat,
+ While each peculiar power forgoes his wonted seat.
+
+ Peor and Balim
+ Forsake their temples dim,
+ With that twice-battered god of Palestine;
+ And moond Ashtaroth,
+ Heaven's queen and mother both.
+ Now sits not girt with tapers' holy shine;
+ The Lybic Hammon shrinks his horn--
+ In vain the Tyrian maids their wounded Thammuz mourn.
+
+ And sullen Moloch fled,
+ Hath left in shadows dread
+ His burning idol all of blackest hue;
+ In vain, with cymbal's ring,
+ They call the grisly king,
+ In dismal dance about the furnace blue;
+ The brutish gods of Nile as fast--
+ Isis and Orus, and the dog Anubis--haste.
+
+ Nor is Osiris seen
+ In Memphian grove or green,
+ Trampling the unshowered grass with lowings loud,
+ Nor can he be at rest
+ Within his sacred chest--
+ Naught but profoundest hell can be his shroud;
+ In vain, with timbrelled anthems dark.
+ The sable-stoled sorcerers bear his worshipped ark.
+
+ He feels from Juda's land
+ The dreaded infant's hand--
+ The rays of Bethlehem blind his dusky eyne;
+ Nor all the gods beside
+ Longer dare abide--
+ Not Typhon huge, ending in snaky twine;
+ Our babe, to show His God-head true,
+ Can in His swaddling-bands control the damnd crew.
+
+ So, when the sun in bed,
+ Curtained with cloudy red,
+ Pillows his chin upon an orient wave,
+ The flocking shadows pale
+ Troop to the infernal jail--
+ Each fettered ghost slips to his several grave;
+ And the yellow-skirted fays
+ Fly after the night-steeds, leaving their moon-loved maze.
+
+ But see the virgin blest
+ Hath laid her babe to rest--
+ Time is our tedious song should here have ending;
+ Heaven's youngest teemd star
+ Hath fixed her polished car,
+ Her sleeping Lord with handmaid lamp attending;
+ And all about the courtly stable
+ Bright-harnessed angels sit in order serviceable.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CHRISTMAS HYMN.
+
+
+ It was the calm and silent night!
+ Seven hundred years and fifty-three
+ Had Rome been growing up to might,
+ And now was queen of land and sea.
+ No sound was heard of clashing wars;
+ Peace brooded o'er the hushed domain:
+ Apollo, Pallas, Jove, and Mars
+ Held undisturbed their ancient reign,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago.
+
+ 'Twas in the calm and silent night!
+ The senator of haughty Rome,
+ Impatient, urged his chariot's flight,
+ From lordly revel rolling home;
+ Triumphal arches, gleaming, swell
+ His breast with thoughts of boundless sway;
+ What recked the Roman what befell
+ A paltry province far away,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago?
+
+ Within that province far away
+ Went plodding home a weary boor;
+ A streak of light before him lay,
+ Fallen through a half-shut stable-door
+ Across his path. He passed--for naught
+ Told what was going on within;
+ How keen the stars, his only thought;
+ The air how calm and cold and thin,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ Oh, strange indifference! low and high
+ Drowsed over common joys and cares;
+ The earth was still--but knew not why;
+ The world was listening, unawares.
+ How calm a moment may precede
+ One that shall thrill the world forever!
+ To that still moment none would heed,
+ Man's doom was linked no more to sever--
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ It is the calm and solemn night!
+ A thousand bells ring out, and throw
+ Their joyous peals abroad, and smite
+ The darkness--charmed and holy now!
+ The night that erst no name had worn,
+ To it a happy name is given;
+ For in that stable lay new-born,
+ The peaceful Prince of Earth and Heaven,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ALFRED DOMETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TRYSTE NOL.
+
+
+ The Ox he openeth wide the Doore
+ And from the Snowe he calls her inne,
+ And he hath seen her smile therefore,
+ Our Ladye without Sinne.
+ Now soone from Sleepe
+ A Starre shall leap,
+ And soone arrive both King and Hinde;
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ But oh, the place co'd I but finde!
+
+ The Ox hath husht his voyce and bent
+ Trewe eyes of Pitty ore the Mow,
+ And on his lovelie Neck, forspent,
+ The Blessed lays her Browe.
+ Around her feet
+ Full Warme and Sweete
+ His bowerie Breath doth meeklie dwell;
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ But sore am I with Vaine Travl!
+
+ The Ox is host in Juda's stall,
+ And Host of more than onelie one.
+ For close she gathereth withal
+ Our Lorde her littel Sonne.
+ Glad Hinde and King
+ Their Gyfte may bring,
+ But wo'd to-night my Teares were there,
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ Between her Bosom and His hayre!
+
+LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT.
+
+ A BALLAD.
+
+
+ There's a legend that's told of a gypsy who dwelt
+ In the lands where the pyramids be;
+ And her robe was embroidered with stars, and her belt
+ With devices right wondrous to see;
+ And she lived in the days when our Lord was a child
+ On his mother's immaculate breast;
+ When he fled from his foes,--when to Egypt exiled,
+ He went down with Saint Joseph the blest.
+
+ This Egyptian held converse with magic, methinks,
+ And the future was given to her gaze;
+ For an obelisk marked her abode, and a sphinx
+ On her threshold kept vigil always.
+ She was pensive and ever alone, nor was seen
+ In the haunts of the dissolute crowd;
+ But communed with the ghosts of the Pharaohs, I ween,
+ Or with visitors wrapped in a shroud.
+
+ And there came an old man from the desert one day,
+ With a maid on a mule by that road;
+ And a child on her bosom reclined, and the way
+ Let them straight to the gypsy's abode;
+ And they seemed to have travelled a wearisome path,
+ From thence many, many a league,--
+ From a tyrant's pursuit, from an enemy's wrath,
+ Spent with toil and o'ercome with fatigue.
+
+ And the gypsy came forth from her dwelling, and prayed
+ That the pilgrims would rest them awhile;
+ And she offered her couch to that delicate maid,
+ Who had come many, many a mile.
+ And she fondled the babe with affection's caress,
+ And she begged the old man would repose;
+ "Here the stranger," she said, "ever finds free access,
+ And the wanderer balm for his woes."
+
+ Then her guests from the glare of the noonday she led
+ To a seat in her grotto so cool;
+ Where she spread them a banquet of fruits, and a shed,
+ With a manger, was found for the mule;
+ With the wine of the palm-tree, with dates newly culled,
+ All the toil of the day she beguiled;
+ And with song in a language mysterious she lulled
+ On her bosom the wayfaring child.
+
+ When the gypsy anon in her Ethiop hand
+ Took the infant's diminutive palm,
+ O, 'twas fearful to see how the features she scanned
+ Of the babe in his slumbers so calm!
+ Well she noted each mark and each furrow that crossed
+ O'er the tracings of destiny's line:
+ "WHENCE CAME YE?" she cried, in astonishment lost,
+ "FOR THIS CHILD IS OF LINEAGE DIVINE!"
+
+ "From the village of Nazareth," Joseph replied,
+ "Where we dwelt in the land of the Jew,
+ We have fled from a tyrant whose garment is dyed
+ In the gore of the children he slew:
+ We were told to remain till an angel's command
+ Should appoint us the hour to return;
+ But till then we inhabit the foreigners' land,
+ And in Egypt we make our sojourn."
+
+ "Then ye tarry with me," cried the gypsy in joy,
+ "And ye make of my dwelling your home;
+ Many years have I prayed that the Israelite boy
+ (Blessd hope of the Gentiles!) would come."
+ And she kissed both the feet of the infant and knelt,
+ And adored him at once; then a smile
+ Lit the face of his mother, who cheerfully dwelt
+ With her host on the bank of the Nile.
+
+FRANCIS MAHONY (_Father Prout_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CANA.
+
+
+ Dear Friend! whose presence in the house,
+ Whose gracious word benign,
+ Could once, at Cana's wedding feast,
+ Change water into wine;
+
+ Come, visit us! and when dull work
+ Grows weary, line on line,
+ Revive our souls, and let us see
+ Life's water turned to wine.
+
+ Gay mirth shall deepen into joy,
+ Earth's hopes grow half divine,
+ When Jesus visits us, to make
+ Life's water glow as wine.
+
+ The social talk, the evening fire,
+ The homely household shrine,
+ Grow bright with angel visits, when
+ The Lord pours out the wine.
+
+ For when self-seeking turns to love,
+ Not knowing mine nor thine,
+ The miracle again is wrought,
+ And water turned to wine.
+JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOST SHEEP.
+
+ ("THE NINETY AND NINE.")
+
+
+ There were ninety and nine that safely lay
+ In the shelter of the fold;
+ But one was out on the hills away,
+ Far off from the gates of gold,
+ Away on the mountain wild and bare,
+ Away from the tender Shepherd's care.
+
+ "Lord, thou hast here thy ninety and nine:
+ Are they not enough for thee?"
+ But the Shepherd made answer: "'T is of mine
+ Has wandered away from me;
+ And although the road be rough and steep
+ I go to the desert to find my sheep."
+
+ But none of the ransomed ever knew
+ How deep were the waters crossed,
+ Nor how dark was the night that the Lord passed through
+ Ere he found his sheep that was lost.
+ Out in the desert he heard its cry--
+ Sick and helpless, and ready to die.
+
+ "Lord, whence are those blood-drops all the way,
+ That mark out the mountain track?"
+ "They were shed for one who had gone astray
+ Ere the Shepherd could bring him back."
+ "Lord, whence are thy hands so rent and torn?"
+ "They are piercd to-night by many a thorn."
+
+ But all through the mountains, thunder-riven,
+ And up from the rocky steep,
+ There rose a cry to the gate of heaven,
+ "Rejoice! I have found my sheep!"
+ And the angels echoed around the throne,
+ "Rejoice, for the Lord brings back his own!"
+
+ELIZABETH CECILIA CLEPHANE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DE SHEEPFOL'.
+
+
+ De massa ob de sheepfol',
+ Dat guards de sheepfol' bin,
+ Look out in de gloomerin' meadows,
+ Wha'r de long night rain begin--
+ So he call to de hirelin' shepa'd,
+ "Is my sheep, is dey all come in?"
+ Oh den, says de hirelin' shepa'd:
+ "Dey's some, dey's black and thin,
+ And some, dey's po' ol' wedda's;
+ But de res', dey's all brung in.
+ But de res', dey's all brung in."
+
+ Den de massa ob de sheepfol',
+ Dat guards de sheepfol' bin,
+ Goes down in the gloomerin' meadows,
+ Wha'r de long night rain begin--
+ So he le' down de ba's ob de sheepfol',
+ Callin' sof', "Come in. Come in."
+ Callin' sof', "Come in. Come in."
+
+ Den up t'ro' de gloomerin' meadows,
+ T'ro' de col' night rain and win',
+ And up t'ro' de gloomerin' rain-paf',
+ Wha'r de sleet fa' pie'cin' thin,
+ De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol',
+ Dey all comes gadderin' in.
+ De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol',
+ Dey all comes gadderin' in.
+
+SARAH PRATT M'LEAN GREENE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GOOD SHEPHERD WITH THE KID.
+
+
+ _He saves the sheep, the goats he doth not save._
+ So rang Tertullian's sentence, on the side
+ Of that unpitying Phrygian Sect which cried:
+ "Him can no fount of fresh forgiveness lave,
+
+ Who sins, once washed by the baptismal wave."--
+ So spake the fierce Tertullian. But she sighed,
+ The infant Church! of love she felt the tide
+ Stream on her from her Lord's yet recent grave.
+
+ And then she smiled; and in the Catacombs,
+ With eye suffused but heart inspired true,
+ On those walls subterranean, where she hid
+
+ Her head in ignominy, death, and tombs,
+ She her good Shepherd's hasty image drew--
+ And on his shoulders, not a lamb, a kid.
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO SAYINGS.
+
+
+ Two sayings of the Holy Scriptures beat
+ Like pulses in the Church's brow and breast;
+ And by them we find rest in our unrest,
+ And heart-deep in salt tears, do yet entreat
+ God's fellowship, as if on heavenly seat.
+ The first is _Jesus wept_, whereon is prest
+ Full many a sobbing face that drops its best
+ And sweetest waters on the record sweet:
+ And one is, where the Christ denied and scorned
+ _Looked upon Peter_. Oh, to render plain,
+ By help of having loved a little and mourned,
+ That look of sovran love and sovran pain
+ Which he who could not sin yet suffered, turned
+ On him who could reject but not sustain!
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BALLAD OF TREES AND THE MASTER.
+
+
+ Into the woods my Master went,
+ Clean forspent, forspent.
+ Into the woods my Master came,
+ Forspent with love and shame.
+ But the olives they were not blind to Him;
+ The little gray leaves were kind to Him;
+ The thorn-tree had a mind to Him
+ When into the woods He came.
+
+ Out of the woods my Master went,
+ And He was well content.
+ Out of the woods my Master came,
+ Content with death and shame.
+ When Death and Shame would woo Him last,
+ From under the trees they drew Him last:
+ 'Twas on a tree they slew Him--last,
+ When out of the woods He came.
+
+SIDNEY LANIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STABAT MATER DOLOROSA.
+
+
+ Stood the afflicted mother weeping,
+ Near the cross her station keeping
+ Whereon hung her Son and Lord;
+ Through whose spirit sympathizing,
+ Sorrowing and agonizing,
+ Also passed the cruel sword.
+
+ Oh! how mournful and distressd
+ Was that favored and most blessd
+ Mother of the only Son,
+ Trembling, grieving, bosom heaving,
+ While perceiving, scarce believing,
+ Pains of that Illustrious One!
+
+ Who the man, who, called a brother.
+ Would not weep, saw he Christ's mother
+ In such deep distress and wild?
+ Who could not sad tribute render
+ Witnessing that mother tender
+ Agonizing with her child?
+
+ For his people's sins atoning,
+ Him she saw in torments groaning,
+ Given to the scourger's rod;
+ Saw her darling offspring dying,
+ Desolate, forsaken, crying.
+ Yield his spirit up to God.
+
+ Make me feel thy sorrow's power,
+ That with thee I tears may shower,
+ Tender mother, fount of love!
+ Make my heart with love unceasing
+ Burn toward Christ the Lord, that pleasing
+ I may be to him above.
+
+ Holy mother, this be granted,
+ That the slain one's wounds be planted
+ Firmly in my heart to bide.
+ Of him wounded, all astounded--
+ Depths unbounded for me sounded--
+ All the pangs with me divide.
+
+ Make me weep with thee in union;
+ With the Crucified, communion
+ In his grief and suffering give;
+ Near the cross, with tears unfailing,
+ I would join thee in thy wailing
+ Here as long as I shall live.
+
+ Maid of maidens, all excelling!
+ Be not bitter, me repelling;
+ Make thou me a mourner too;
+ Make me bear about Christ's dying,
+ Share his passion, shame defying;
+ All his wounds in me renew.
+
+ Wound for wound be there created;
+ With the cross intoxicated
+ For thy Son's dear sake, I pray--
+ May I, fired with pure affection,
+ Virgin, have through thee protection
+ In the solemn Judgment Day.
+
+ Let me by the cross be warded,
+ By the death of Christ be guarded,
+ Nourished by divine supplies.
+ When the body death hath riven,
+ Grant that to the soul be given
+ Glories bright of Paradise.
+
+From the Latin of FRA JACOPONE.
+
+Translation of ABRAHAM COLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MYRRH-BEARERS.[A]
+
+
+ Three women crept at break of day
+ A-grope along the shadowy way
+ Where Joseph's tomb and garden lay.
+
+ With blanch of woe each face was white,
+ As the gray Orient's waxing light
+ Brought back upon their awe-struck sight
+
+ The sixth-day scene of anguish. Fast
+ The starkly standing cross they passed,
+ And, breathless, neared the gate at last.
+
+ Each on her throbbing bosom bore
+ A burden of such fragrant store
+ As never there had lain before.
+
+ Spices, the purest, richest, best,
+ That e'er the musky East possessed,
+ From Ind to Araby-the-Blest,
+
+ Had they with sorrow-riven hearts
+ Searched all Jerusalem's costliest marts
+ In quest of,--nards whose pungent arts
+
+ Should the dead sepulchre imbue
+ With vital odors through and through:
+ 'T was all their love had leave to do!
+
+ Christ did not need their gifts; and yet
+ Did either Mary once regret
+ Her offering? Did Salome fret
+
+ Over the unused aloes? Nay!
+ They counted not as waste, that day,
+ What they had brought their Lord. The way
+
+ Home seemed the path to heaven. They bare,
+ Thenceforth, about the robes they ware
+ The clinging perfume everywhere.
+
+ So, ministering as erst did these,
+ Go women forth by twos and threes
+ (Unmindful of their morning ease),
+
+ Through tragic darkness, murk and dim,
+ Where'er they see the faintest rim,
+ Of promise,--all for sake of him
+
+ Who rose from Joseph's tomb. They hold
+ It just such joy as those of old,
+ To tell the tale the Marys told.
+
+ Myrrh-bearers still,--at home, abroad,
+ What paths have holy women trod,
+ Burdened with votive gifts for God,--
+
+ Rare gifts whose chiefest worth was priced
+ By this one thought, that all sufficed:
+ Their spices had been bruised for Christ!
+
+MARGARET JUNKIN PRESTON.
+
+[Footnote A: _Myrophores_, a name given to the Marys, in Greek
+Christian art.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LITANY.
+
+
+ Saviour, when in dust to Thee
+ Low we bend the adoring knee;
+ When, repentant, to the skies
+ Scarce we lift our weeping eyes,--
+ O, by all Thy pains and woe
+ Suffered once for man below,
+ Bending from Thy throne on high,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thy helpless infant years;
+ By Thy life of want and tears;
+ By Thy days of sore distress
+ In the savage wilderness;
+ By the dread mysterious hour
+ Of the insulting tempter's power,--
+ Turn, O, turn a favoring eye,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By the sacred griefs that wept
+ O'er the grave where Lazarus slept;
+ By the boding tears that flowed
+ Over Salem's loved abode;
+ By the anguished sigh that told
+ Treachery lurked within Thy fold,--
+ From Thy seat above the sky
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thine hour of dire despair;
+ By Thine agony of prayer;
+ By the cross, the nail, the thorn,
+ Piercing spear, and torturing scorn;
+ By the gloom that veiled the skies
+ O'er the dreadful sacrifice,--
+ Listen to our humble cry,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thy deep expiring groan;
+ By the sad sepulchral stone;
+ By the vault whose dark abode
+ Held in vain the rising God;
+ O, from earth to heaven restored,
+ Mighty, reascended Lord,--
+ Listen, listen to the cry
+ Of our solemn litany!
+
+SIR ROBERT GRANT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHRIST.
+
+
+ He might have reared a palace at a word,
+ Who sometimes had not where to lay His head.
+ Time was when He who nourished crowds with bread,
+ Would not one meal unto Himself afford.
+ He healed another's scratch, His own side bled;
+ Side, hands and feet with cruel piercings gored.
+ Twelve legions girded with angelic sword
+ Stood at His beck, the scorned and buffeted.
+ Oh, wonderful the wonders left undone!
+ Yet not more wonderful than those He wrought!
+ Oh, self-restraint, surpassing human thought!
+ To have all power, yet be as having none!
+ Oh, self-denying love, that thought alone
+ For needs of others, never for its own!
+
+RICHARD CHENEVIX TRENCH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ABIDE WITH ME.
+
+
+ Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide;
+ The darkness deepens: Lord, with me abide!
+ When other helpers fail, and comforts flee,
+ Help of the helpless, O abide with me!
+
+ Swift to its close ebbs out life's little day;
+ Earth's joys grow dim; its glories pass away:
+ Change and decay in all around I see;
+ O thou, who changest not, abide with me!
+
+ Not a brief glance I beg, a passing word.
+ But as thou dwelt with thy disciples, Lord,
+ Familiar, condescending, patient, free,--
+ Come, not to sojourn, but abide, with me!
+
+ Come not in terrors, as the King of kings;
+ But kind and good, with healing in thy wings:
+ Tears for all woes, a heart for every plea;
+ Come, Friend of sinners, and thus bide with me!
+
+ Thou on my head in early youth didst smile,
+ And, though rebellious and perverse meanwhile,
+ Thou hast not left me, oft as I left thee:
+ On to the close, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+ I need thy presence every passing hour.
+ What but thy grace can foil the Tempter's power?
+ Who like thyself my guide and stay can be?
+ Through cloud and sunshine, O abide with me!
+
+ I fear no foe with thee at hand to bless:
+ Ills have no weight, and tears no bitterness.
+ Where is death's sting, where, grave, thy victory?
+ I triumph still, if thou abide with me.
+
+ Hold thou thy cross before my closing eyes;
+ Shine through the gloom, and point me to the skies:
+ Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows flee:
+ In life and death, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+HENRY FRANCIS LYTE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DISCIPLES AFTER THE ASCENSION.
+
+
+ He is gone! beyond the skies,
+ A cloud receives him from our eyes:
+ Gone beyond the highest height
+ Of mortal gaze or angel's flight:
+ Through the veils of time and space,
+ Passed into the holiest place:
+ All the toil, the sorrow done,
+ All the battle fought and won.
+
+ He is gone; and we return,
+ And our hearts within us burn;
+ Olivet no more shall greet
+ With welcome shout his coming feet:
+ Never shall we track him more
+ On Gennesareth's glistening shore:
+ Never in that look or voice
+ Shall Zion's walls again rejoice.
+
+ He is gone; and we remain
+ In this world of sin and pain:
+ In the void which he has left,
+ On this earth of him bereft,
+ We have still his work to do,
+ We can still his path pursue:
+ Seek him both in friend and foe,
+ In ourselves his image show.
+
+ He is gone; we heard him say,
+ "Good that I should go away";
+ Gone is that dear form and face,
+ But not gone his present grace;
+ Though himself no more we see,
+ Comfortless we cannot be;
+ No! his Spirit still is ours,
+ Quickening, freshening all our powers.
+
+ He is gone; towards their goal
+ World and church must onward roll;
+ Far behind we leave the past,
+ Forward are our glances cast;
+ Still his words before us range
+ Through the ages, as they change:
+ Wheresoe'er the truth shall lead,
+ He will give whate'er we need.
+
+ He is gone; but we once more
+ Shall behold him as before,
+ In the heaven of heavens the same
+ As on earth he went and came.
+ In the many mansions there
+ Place for us he will prepare:
+ In that world, unseen, unknown,
+ He and we may yet be one.
+
+ He is gone; but not in vain,--
+ Wait until he comes again:
+ He is risen, he is not here;
+ Far above this earthly sphere:
+ Evermore in heart and mind,
+ Where our peace in him we find,
+ To our own eternal Friend,
+ Thitherward let us ascend.
+
+ARTHUR PENRHYN STANLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WRESTLING JACOB.
+
+
+ FIRST PART.
+
+ Come, O thou Traveller unknown,
+ Whom still I hold, but cannot see;
+ My company before is gone,
+ And I am left alone with thee;
+ With thee all night I mean to stay,
+ And wrestle till the break of day.
+
+ I need not tell thee who I am;
+ My sin and misery declare;
+ Thyself hast called me by my name;
+ Look on thy hands, and read it there;
+ But who, I ask thee, who art thou?
+ Tell me thy name, and tell me now.
+
+ In vain thou strugglest to get free;
+ I never will unloose my hold:
+ Art thou the Man that died for me?
+ The secret of thy love unfold;
+ Wrestling, I will not let thee go
+ Till I thy name, thy nature know.
+
+ Wilt thou not yet to me reveal
+ Thy new, unutterable name?
+ Tell me, I still beseech thee, tell;
+ To know it now resolved I am;
+ Wrestling, I will not let thee go
+ Till I thy name, thy nature know.
+
+ What though my shrinking flesh complain
+ And murmur to contend so long?
+ I rise superior to my pain;
+ When I am weak, then am I strong!
+ And when my all of strength shall fail,
+ I shall with the God-man prevail.
+
+
+ SECOND PART.
+
+ Yield to me now, for I am weak,
+ But confident in self-despair;
+ Speak to my heart, in blessings speak;
+ Be conquered by my instant prayer;
+ Speak, or thou never hence shalt move,
+ And tell me if thy name be Love.
+
+ 'T is Love! 't is Love! Thou diedst for me;
+ I hear thy whisper in my heart;
+ The morning breaks, the shadows flee;
+ Pure, universal Love thou art;
+ To me, to all, thy bowels move;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ My prayer hath power with God; the grace
+ Unspeakable I now receive;
+ Through faith I see thee face to face;
+ I see thee face to face and live!
+ In vain I have not wept and strove;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ I know thee, Saviour, who thou art,
+ Jesus, the feeble sinner's friend;
+ Nor wilt thou with the night depart,
+ But stay and love me to the end;
+ Thy mercies never shall remove;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ The Sun of Righteousness on me
+ Hath risen, with healing in his wings;
+ Withered my nature's strength; from thee
+ My soul its life and succor brings;
+ My help is all laid up above;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ Contented now upon my thigh
+ I halt till life's short journey end;
+ All helplessness, all weakness, I
+ On thee alone for strength depend;
+ Nor have I power from thee to move;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ Lame as I am, I take the prey;
+ Hell, earth, and sin with ease o'ercome;
+ I leap for joy, pursue my way,
+ And, as a bounding hart, fly home;
+ Through all eternity to prove
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+CHARLES WESLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CONVERSION OF SAINT PAUL.
+
+
+ The midday sun, with fiercest glare,
+ Broods over the hazy, twinkling air;
+ Along the level sand
+ The palm-tree's shade unwavering lies,
+ Just as thy towers, Damascus, rise
+ To greet yon wearied band.
+
+ The leader of that martial crew
+ Seems bent some mighty deed to do,
+ So steadily he speeds,
+ With lips firm closed and fixed eye,
+ Like warrior when the fight is nigh,
+ Nor talk nor landscape heeds.
+
+ What sudden blaze is round him poured,
+ As though all Heaven's refulgent hoard
+ In one rich glory shone?
+ One moment,--and to earth he falls:
+ What voice his inmost heart appalls?--
+ Voice heard by him alone.
+
+ For to the rest both words and form
+ Seem lost in lightning and in storm,
+ While Saul, in wakeful trance,
+ Sees deep within that dazzling field
+ His persecuted Lord revealed
+ With keen yet pitying glance:
+
+ And hears the meek upbraiding call
+ As gently on his spirit fall,
+ As if the Almighty Son
+ Were prisoner yet in this dark earth,
+ Nor had proclaimed his royal birth,
+ Nor his great power begun.
+
+ "Ah! wherefore persecut'st thou me?"
+ He heard and saw, and sought to free
+ His strained eye from the sight:
+ But Heaven's high magic bound it there,
+ Still gazing, though untaught to bear
+ The insufferable light.
+
+ "Who art thou, Lord?" he falters forth:--
+ So shall Sin ask of heaven and earth
+ At the last awful day
+ "When did we see thee suffering nigh,
+ And passed thee with unheeding eye?
+ Great God of judgment, say!"
+
+ Ah! little dream our listless eyes
+ What glorious presence they despise
+ While, in our noon of life,
+ To power or fame we rudely press.--
+ Christ is at hand, to scorn or bless,
+ Christ suffers in our strife.
+
+ And though heaven's gates long since have closed,
+ And our dear Lord in bliss reposed,
+ High above mortal ken,
+ To every ear in every land
+ (Though meek ears only understand)
+ He speaks as he did then.
+
+ "Ah! wherefore persecute ye me?
+ 'T is hard, ye so in love should be
+ With your own endless woe.
+ Know, though at God's right hand I live,
+ I feel each wound ye reckless give
+ To the least saint below.
+
+ "I in your care my brethren left,
+ Not willing ye should be bereft
+ Of waiting on your Lord.
+ The meanest offering ye can make--
+ A drop of water--for love's sake,
+ In heaven, be sure, is stored."
+
+ Oh, by those gentle tones and dear,
+ When thou hast stayed our wild career,
+ Thou only hope of souls,
+ Ne'er let us cast one look behind,
+ But in the thought of Jesus find
+ What every thought controls.
+
+ As to thy last Apostle's heart
+ Thy lightning glance did then impart
+ Zeal's never-dying fire,
+ So teach us on thy shrine to lay
+ Our hearts, and let them day by day
+ Intenser blaze and higher.
+
+ And as each mild and winning note
+ (Like pulses that round harp-strings float
+ When the full strain is o'er)
+ Left lingering on his inward ear
+ Music, that taught, as death drew near,
+ Love's lesson more and more:
+
+ So, as we walk our earthly round,
+ Still may the echo of that sound
+ Be in our memory stored:
+ "Christians, behold your happy state;
+ Christ is in these who round you wait;
+ Make much of your dear Lord!"
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ROCK OF AGES."
+
+ "Such hymns are never forgotten. They cling to us through our
+ whole life. We carry them with us upon our journey. We sing
+ them in the forest. The workman follows the plough with sacred
+ songs. Children catch them, and singing only for the joy it
+ gives them now, are yet laying up for all their life food of
+ the sweetest joy."--HENRY WARD BEECHER.
+
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ Thoughtlessly the maiden sung.
+ Fell the words unconsciously
+ From her girlish, gleeful tongue;
+ Sang as little children sing;
+ Sang as sing the birds in June;
+ Fell the words like light leaves down
+ On the current of the tune,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee:"
+ Felt her soul no need to hide,--
+ Sweet the song as song could be,
+ And she had no thought beside;
+ All the words unheedingly
+ Fell from lips untouched by care,
+ Dreaming not that they might be
+ On some other lips a prayer,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ 'T was a woman sung them now,
+ Pleadingly and prayerfully;
+ Every word her heart did know.
+ Rose the song as storm-tossed bird
+ Beats with weary wing the air,
+ Every note with sorrow stirred,
+ Every syllable a prayer,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"--
+ Lips grown agd sung the hymn
+ Trustingly and tenderly,
+ Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim,--
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee."
+ Trembling though the voice and low,
+ Rose the sweet strain peacefully
+ Like a river in its flow;
+ Sung as only they can sing
+ Who life's thorny path have passed;
+ Sung as only they can sing
+ Who behold the promised rest,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ Sung above a coffin lid;
+ Underneath, all restfully,
+ All life's joys and sorrows hid.
+ Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul!
+ Nevermore from wind or tide,
+ Nevermore from billow's roll,
+ Wilt thou need thyself to hide.
+ Could the sightless, sunken eyes,
+ Closed beneath the soft gray hair,
+ Could the mute and stiffened lips
+ Move again in pleading prayer,
+ Still, aye still, the words would be,--
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+EDWARD H. RICH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ART THOU WEARY?
+
+
+ Art thou weary, art thou languid,
+ Art thou sore distressed?
+ "Come to Me," saith One, "and coming,
+ Be at rest."
+
+ Hath He marks to lead me to Him,
+ If He be my Guide?
+ "In His feet and hands are wound-prints,
+ And His side."
+
+ Is there diadem, as Monarch,
+ That His brow adorns?
+ "Yea, a crown, in very surety,
+ But of thorns."
+
+ If I find Him, if I follow,
+ What His guerdon here?
+ "Many a sorrow, many a labor,
+ Many a tear."
+
+ If I still hold closely to Him,
+ What hath He at last?
+ "Sorrow vanquished, labor ended,
+ Jordan passed."
+
+ If I ask Him to receive me,
+ Will He say me nay?
+ "Not till earth, and not till heaven
+ Pass away."
+
+ Finding, following, keeping, struggling,
+ Is He sure to bless?
+ "Saints, apostles, prophets, martyrs,
+ Answer, Yes."
+
+From the Latin of SAINT STEPHEN THE SABAITE.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW.
+
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view,
+ And days are dark, and friends are few,
+ On Him I lean, who, not in vain,
+ Experienced every human pain;
+ He sees my wants, allays my fears.
+ And counts and treasures up my tears.
+ If aught should tempt my soul to stray
+ From heavenly wisdom's narrow way,
+ To fly the good I would pursue,
+ Or do the sin I would not do,--
+ Still He who felt temptation's power
+ Shall guard me in that dangerous hour.
+
+ If wounded love my bosom swell,
+ Deceived by those I prized too well,
+ He shall His pitying aid bestow
+ Who felt on earth severer woe,
+ At once betrayed, denied, or fled,
+ By those who shared His daily bread.
+
+ If vexing thoughts within me rise,
+ And sore dismayed my spirit dies,
+ Still He who once vouchsafed to bear
+ The sickening anguish of despair
+ Shall sweetly soothe, shall gently dry,
+ The throbbing heart, the streaming eye.
+
+ When sorrowing o'er some stone I bend,
+ Which covers what was once a friend,
+ And from his voice, his hand, his smile,
+ Divides me for a little while;
+ Thou, Saviour, mark'st the tears I shed,
+ For Thou didst weep o'er Lazarus dead.
+
+ And oh, when I have safely past
+ Through every conflict but the last,
+ Still, still unchanging, watch beside
+ My painful bed, for Thou hast died;
+ Then point to realms of cloudless day,
+ And wipe the latest tear away.
+
+SIR ROBERT GRANT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM.
+
+
+ When, marshalled on the nightly plain,
+ The glittering host bestud the sky,
+ One star alone, of all the train,
+ Can fix the sinner's wandering eye.
+
+ Hark! hark! to God the chorus breaks,
+ From every host, from every gem:
+ But one alone the Saviour speaks,
+ It is the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ Once on the raging seas I rode,
+ The storm was loud, the night was dark,
+ The ocean yawned, and rudely blowed
+ The wind that tossed my foundering bark.
+
+ Deep horror then my vitals froze,
+ Death-struck, I ceased the tide to stem;
+ When suddenly a star arose,--
+ It was the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ It was my guide, my light, my all,
+ It bade my dark forebodings cease;
+ And through the storm and dangers' thrall
+ It led me to the port of peace.
+
+ Now safely moored, my perils o'er,
+ I'll sing, first in night's diadem,
+ Forever and forevermore,
+ The Star!--the Star of Bethlehem!
+
+HENRY KIRKE WHITE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE TO CHRIST.
+
+ FROM "AN HYMNE OF HEAVENLY LOVE."
+
+
+ With all thy hart, with all thy soule and mind,
+ Thou must him love, and his beheasts embrace;
+ All other loves, with which the world doth blind
+ Weake fancies, and stirre up affections base,
+ Thou must renounce and utterly displace,
+ And give thy selfe unto him full and free,
+ That full and freely gave himselfe to thee.
+
+ Then shalt thou feele thy spirit so possest,
+ And ravisht with devouring great desire
+ Of his deare selfe, that shall thy feeble brest
+ Inflame with love, and set thee all on fire
+ With burning zeale, through every part entire,
+ That in no earthly thing thou shalt delight,
+ But in his sweet and amiable sight.
+
+ Thenceforth all worlds desire will in thee dye,
+ And all earthes glorie, on which men do gaze,
+ Seeme durt and drosse in thy pure-sighted eye,
+ Compared to that celestiall beauties blaze,
+ Whose glorious beames all fleshly sense doth daze
+ With admiration of their passing light,
+ Blinding the eyes, and lumining the spright.
+
+ Then shall thy ravisht soule inspired bee
+ With heavenly thoughts farre above humane skil,
+ And thy bright radiant eyes shall plainely see
+ The idee of his pure glorie present still
+ Before thy face, that all thy spirits shall fill
+ With sweet enragement of celestiall love,
+ Kindled through sight of those faire things above.
+
+EDMUND SPENSER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE.
+
+
+ O thou great Friend to all the sons of men,
+ Who once appeared in humblest guise below,
+ Sin to rebuke, to break the captive's chain,
+ And call thy brethren forth from want and woe,--
+
+ We look to thee! thy truth is still the Light
+ Which guides the nations, groping on their way,
+ Stumbling and falling in disastrous night,
+ Yet hoping ever for the perfect day.
+
+ Yes; thou art still the Life, thou art the Way
+ The holiest know; Light, Life, the Way of heaven!
+
+ And they who dearest hope and deepest pray,
+ Toil by the Light, Life, Way, which thou hast given.
+
+THEODORE PARKER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+KNOCKING, EVER KNOCKING.
+
+ "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock."
+ --REVELATIONS iii. 20.
+
+
+ Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ Who is there?
+ 'T is a pilgrim, strange and kingly,
+ Never such was seen before;--
+ Ah, sweet soul, for such a wonder,
+ Undo the door.
+ No,--that door is hard to open;
+ Hinges rusty, latch is broken;
+ Bid Him go.
+ Wherefore with that knocking dreary
+ Scare the sleep from one so weary?
+ Say Him, no.
+
+ Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ What! Still there?
+ O sweet soul, but once behold Him,
+ With the glory-crownd hair;
+ And those eyes, so strange and tender,
+ Waiting there;
+ Open! Open! Once behold Him,
+ Him so fair.
+
+ Ah, that door! Why wilt thou vex me,
+ Coming ever to perplex me?
+ For the key is stiffly rusty,
+ And the bolt is clogged and dusty;
+ Many-fingered ivy vine
+ Seals it fast with twist and twine;
+ Weeds of years and years before
+ Choke the passage of that door.
+
+ Knocking! knocking! What? Still knocking?
+ He still there?
+ What's the hour? The night is waning--
+ In my heart a drear complaining,
+ And a chilly, sad unrest.
+ Ah, this knocking! It disturbs me!
+ Scares my sleep with dreams unblest!
+ Give me rest,
+ Rest--ah, rest!
+
+ Rest, dear soul, He longs to give thee;
+ Thou hast only dreamed of pleasure,
+ Dreamed of gifts and golden treasure,
+ Dreamed of jewels in thy keeping,
+ Waked to weariness of weeping;--
+ Open to thy soul's one Lover,
+ And thy night of dreams is over,--
+ The true gifts He brings have seeming
+ More than all thy faded dreaming!
+
+ Did she open? Doth she? Will she?
+ So, as wondering we behold,
+ Grows the picture to a sign.
+ Pressed upon your soul and mine;
+ For in every breast that liveth
+ Is that strange, mysterious door;--
+ The forsaken and betangled,
+ Ivy-gnarled and weed-bejangled,
+ Dusty, rusty, and forgotten;--
+ There the piercd hand still knocketh,
+ And with ever patient watching,
+ With the sad eyes true and tender,
+ With the glory-crownd hair,--
+ Still a God is waiting there.
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO-MORROW.
+
+
+ Lord, what am I, that, with unceasing care,
+ Thou didst seek after me,--that Thou didst wait,
+ Wet with unhealthy dews, before my gate,
+ And pass the gloomy nights of winter there?
+ O, strange delusion, that I did not greet
+ Thy blest approach! and, O, to heaven how lost,
+ If my ingratitude's unkindly frost
+ Has chilled the bleeding wounds upon Thy feet!
+ How oft my guardian angel gently cried,
+ "Soul, from thy casement look, and thou shalt see
+ How He persists to knock and wait for thee!"
+ And, O, how often to that voice of sorrow,
+ "To-morrow we will open." I replied!
+ And when the morrow came, I answered still, "To-morrow."
+
+From the Spanish of LOPE DE VEGA.
+
+Translation of H.W. LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE.
+
+
+ I gave my life for thee,
+ My precious blood I shed
+ That thou mightst ransomed be,
+ And quickened from the dead.
+ I gave my life for thee;
+ What hast thou given for me?
+
+ I spent long years for thee
+ In weariness and woe,
+ That an eternity
+ Of joy thou mightest know.
+ I spent long years for thee;
+ Hast thou spent one for me?
+
+ My Father's home of light,
+ My rainbow-circled throne,
+ I left, for earthly night,
+ For wanderings sad and lone.
+ I left it all for thee;
+ Hast thou left aught for me?
+
+ I suffered much for thee,
+ More than thy tongue may tell
+ Of bitterest agony,
+ To rescue thee from hell.
+ I suffered much for thee;
+ What canst thou bear for me?
+
+ And I have brought to thee,
+ Down from my home above,
+ Salvation full and free,
+ My pardon and my love.
+ Great gifts I brought to thee;
+ What hast thou brought to me?
+
+ Oh, let thy life be given,
+ Thy years for him be spent,
+ World-fetters all be riven,
+ And joy with suffering blent;
+ I gave myself for thee:
+ Give thou thyself to me!
+
+FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JESUS SHALL REIGN.
+
+
+ Jesus shall reign where'er the sun
+ Does his successive journeys run,--
+ His kingdom spread from shore to shore,
+ Till moons shall wax and wane no more.
+
+ From north to south the princes meet
+ To pay their homage at His feet,
+ While western empires own their Lord,
+ And savage tribes attend His word.
+
+ To Him shall endless prayer be made,
+ And endless praises crown His head;
+ His name like sweet perfume shall rise
+ With every morning sacrifice.
+
+ People and realms of every tongue
+ Dwell on His love with sweetest song,
+ And infant voices shall proclaim
+ Their early blessings on His name.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MESSIAH.
+
+ A SACRED ECLOGUE, IN IMITATION OF VIRGIL'S POLLIO.
+
+
+ Ye nymphs of Solyma! begin the song:
+ To heavenly themes sublimer strains belong.
+ The mossy fountains and the sylvan shades,
+ The dreams of Pindus and th' Aonian maids,
+ Delight no more--O thou my voice inspire
+ Who touched Isaiah's hallowed lips with fire!
+ Rapt into future times, the bard begun:
+ A Virgin shall conceive, a Virgin bear a Son!
+ From Jesse's root behold a branch arise,
+ Whose sacred flower with fragrance fills the skies:
+ Th' ethereal spirit o'er its leaves shall move,
+ And on its top descends the mystic Dove.
+ Ye Heavens! from high the dewy nectar pour,
+ And in soft silence shed the kindly shower!
+ The sick and weak the healing plant shall aid,
+ From storm a shelter, and from heat a shade.
+ All crimes shall cease, and ancient frauds shall fail;
+ Returning Justice lift aloft her scale;
+ Peace o'er the world her olive wand extend,
+ And white-robed Innocence from Heaven descend.
+ Swift fly the years, and rise th' expected morn!
+ Oh spring to light, auspicious Babe, be born!
+ See, Nature hastes her earliest wreaths to bring,
+ With all the incense of the breathing spring:
+ See lofty Lebanon his head advance,
+ See nodding forests on the mountains dance:
+ See spicy clouds from lowly Saron rise,
+ And Carmel's flowery top perfumes the skies!
+ Hark! a glad voice the lonely desert cheers:
+ Prepare the way! a God, a God appears!
+ A God, a God! the vocal hills reply,
+ The rocks proclaim th' approaching Deity.
+ Lo, Earth receives him from the bending skies!
+ Sink down, ye mountains! and ye valleys, rise!
+ With heads declined, ye cedars, homage pay!
+ Be smooth, ye rocks! ye rapid floods, give way!
+ The Saviour comes! by ancient bards foretold:
+ Hear him, ye deaf! and all ye blind, behold!
+ He from thick films shall purge the visual ray,
+ And on the sightless eyeball pour the day:
+ 'Tis he th' obstructed paths of sound shall clear
+ And bid new music charm th' unfolding ear:
+ The dumb shall sing, the lame his crutch forego,
+ And leap exulting like the bounding roe.
+ No sigh, no murmur, the wide world shall hear.
+ From every face he wipes off every tear.
+ In adamantine chains shall Death be bound.
+ And Hell's grim tyrant feel th' eternal wound.
+ As the good shepherd tends his fleecy care,
+ Seeks freshest pasture, and the purest air,
+ Explores the lost, the wandering sheep directs,
+ By day o'ersees them, and by night protects;
+ The tender lambs he raises in his arms,
+ Feeds from his hand, and in his bosom warms:
+ Thus shall mankind his guardian care engage,
+ The promised Father of the future age.
+ No more shall nation against nation rise,
+ Nor ardent warriors meet with hateful eyes,
+ Nor fields with gleaming steel be covered o'er,
+ The brazen trumpets kindle rage no more;
+ But useless lances into scythes shall bend,
+ And the broad falchion in a ploughshare end.
+ Then palaces shall rise; the joyful son
+ Shall finish what his short-lived sire begun;
+ Their vines a shadow to their race shall yield.
+ And the same hand that sowed, shall reap the field.
+ The swain in barren deserts with surprise
+ Sees lilies spring, and sudden verdure rise;
+ And starts, amidst the thirsty wilds, to hear
+ New falls of water murmuring in his ear.
+ On rifted rocks, the dragon's late abodes,
+ The green reed trembles, and the bulrush nods.
+ Waste sandy valleys, once perplexed with thorn,
+ The spiry fir and shapely box adorn:
+ To leafless shrubs the flowery palms succeed,
+ And odorous myrtle to the noisome weed.
+ The lambs with wolves shall graze the verdant mead
+ And boys in flowery bands the tiger lead:
+ The steer and lion at one crib shall meet,
+ And harmless serpents lick the pilgrim's feet.
+ The smiling infant in his hand shall take
+ The crested basilisk and speckled snake,
+ Pleased, the green lustre of the scales survey,
+ And with their forky tongue shall innocently play.
+ Rise, crowned with light, imperial Salem, rise!
+ Exalt thy towery head, and lift thy eyes!
+ See a long race thy spacious courts adorn:
+ See future sons and daughters yet unborn,
+ In crowding ranks on every side arise,
+ Demanding life, impatient for the skies!
+ See barbarous nations at thy gates attend,
+ Walk in thy light, and in thy temple bend!
+ See thy bright altars thronged with prostrate kings,
+ And heaped with products of Sabean springs!
+ For thee Idum's spicy forests blow,
+ And seeds of gold in Ophir's mountains glow.
+ See Heaven his sparkling portals wide display,
+ And break upon thee in a flood of day!
+ No more the rising Sun shall gild the morn,
+ Nor evening Cynthia fill her silver horn;
+ But lost, dissolved in thy superior rays,
+ One tide of glory, one unclouded blaze
+ O'erflow thy courts: the Light himself shall shine
+ Revealed, and God's eternal day be thine!
+ The seas shall waste, the skies in smoke decay,
+ Rocks fall to dust, and mountains melt away!
+ But fixed his word, his saving power remains;
+ Thy realm for ever lasts, thy own Messiah reigns!
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIES IRAE.
+
+ "That day, a day of wrath, a day of trouble and distress,
+ a day of wasteness and desolation, a day of darkness and
+ gloominess, a day of clouds and thick darkness, a day of the
+ trumpet and alarm against the fenced cities, and against the
+ high towers!"--ZEPHANIAH i. 15, 16.
+
+
+ Day of vengeance, without morrow!
+ Earth shall end in flame and sorrow,
+ As from Saint and Seer we borrow.
+
+ Ah! what terror is impending,
+ When the Judge is seen descending,
+ And each secret veil is rending!
+
+ To the throne, the trumpet sounding,
+ Through the sepulchres resounding,
+ Summons all, with voice astounding.
+
+ Death and Nature, mazed, are quaking,
+ When, the grave's long slumber breaking,
+ Man to judgment is awaking.
+
+ On the written Volume's pages,
+ Life is shown in all its stages--
+ Judgment-record of past ages.
+
+ Sits the Judge, the raised arraigning,
+ Darkest mysteries explaining,
+ Nothing unavenged remaining.
+
+ What shall I then say, unfriended,
+ By no advocate attended,
+ When the just are scarce defended?
+
+ King of majesty tremendous,
+ By thy saving grace defend us,
+ Fount of pity, safety send us!
+
+ Holy Jesus, meek, forbearing,
+ For my sins the death-crown wearing,
+ Save me, in that day, despairing!
+
+ Worn and weary, thou hast sought me;
+ By thy cross and passion bought me--
+ Spare the hope thy labors brought me!
+
+ Righteous Judge of retribution,
+ Give, O give me absolution
+ Ere the day of dissolution!
+
+ As a guilty culprit groaning,
+ Flushed my face, my errors owning,
+ Hear. O God, Thy suppliant moaning!
+
+ Thou to Mary gav'st remission,
+ Heard'st the dying thief's petition,
+ Bad'st me hope in my contrition.
+
+ In my prayers no worth discerning,
+ Yet on me Thy favor turning,
+ Save me from that endless burning!
+
+ Give me, when Thy sheep confiding
+ Thou art from the goals dividing.
+ On Thy right a place abiding!
+
+ When the wicked are rejected,
+ And by bitter flames subjected,
+ Call me forth with Thine elected!
+
+ Low in supplication bending.
+ Heart as though with ashes blending;
+ Cure for me when all is ending.
+
+ When on that dread day of weeping
+ Guilty man in ashes sleeping
+ Wakes to his adjudication,
+ Save him, God! from condemnation!
+
+From the Latin of THOMAS CELANO.
+
+Translation of JOHN A. DIX. [A]
+
+[Footnote A: General Dix's first translation of the "Dies Irae" was
+made in 1863; the revised version (given above) appeared in 1875.
+Bayard Taylor wrote of the earlier one: "I have ... heretofore sought
+in vain to find an adequate translation. Those which reproduced the
+spirit neglected the form, and _vice versa_. There can be no higher
+praise for yours than to say that it preserves both."]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY GOD, I LOVE THEE.
+
+
+ My God, I love thee! not because
+ I hope for heaven thereby;
+ Nor because those who love thee not
+ Must burn eternally.
+
+ Thou, O my Jesus, thou didst me
+ Upon the cross embrace!
+ For me didst bear the nails and spear,
+ And manifold disgrace,
+
+ And griefs and torments numberless,
+ And sweat of agony,
+ Yea, death itself,--and all for one
+ That was thine enemy.
+
+ Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ,
+ Should I not love thee well?
+ Not for the hope of winning heaven,
+ Nor of escaping hell;
+
+ Not with the hope of gaining aught,
+ Not seeking a reward;
+ But as thyself hast loved me,
+ O everlasting Lord!
+
+ E'en so I love thee, and will love,
+ And in thy praise will sing,--
+ Solely because thou art my God,
+ And my eternal King.
+
+From the Latin of ST. FRANCIS XAVIER.
+
+Translation of EDWARD CASWALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VENT CREATOR SPIRITUS.
+
+ [Sometimes attributed to the Emperor Charlemagne. The better
+ opinion, however, inclines to Pope Gregory I., called the
+ Great, as the author, and fixes its origin somewhere in the
+ sixth century.]
+
+
+ Creator Spirit, by whose aid
+ The world's foundations first were laid,
+ Come visit every pious mind.
+ Come pour thy joys on human kind;
+ From sin and sorrow set us free,
+ And make thy temples worthy thee.
+
+ O source of uncreated light.
+ The Father's promised Paraclete!
+ Thrice holy fount, thrice holy fire.
+ Our hearts with heavenly love inspire;
+ Come, and thy sacred unction bring,
+ To sanctify us while we sing.
+
+ Plenteous of grace, descend from high,
+ Rich in thy seven-fold energy!
+ Thou strength of his almighty hand.
+ Whose power does heaven and earth command!
+ Proceeding Spirit, our defence,
+ Who dost the gifts of tongues dispense,
+ And crown'st thy gift with eloquence!
+
+ Refine and purge our earthly parts;
+ But, O, inflame and fire our hearts!
+ Our frailties help, our vice control,
+ Submit the senses to the soul;
+ And when rebellious they are grown,
+ Then lay thy hand and hold 'em down.
+
+ Chase from our minds the infernal foe,
+ And peace, the fruit of love, bestow;
+ And, lest our feet should step astray,
+ Protect and guide us on the way.
+
+ Make us eternal truths receive,
+ And practise all that we believe;
+ Give us thyself, that we may see
+ The Father and the Son by thee.
+
+ Immortal honor, endless fame,
+ Attend the Almighty Father's name;
+ The Saviour Son be glorified,
+ Who for lost man's redemption died;
+ And equal adoration be,
+ Eternal Paraclete, to thee.
+
+From the Latin of ST. GREGORY.
+
+Translation of JOHN DRYDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VENI SANCTE SPIRITUS.
+
+ [Written in the tenth century by Robert II., the gentle son
+ of Hugh Capet. It is often mentioned as second in rank to the
+ _Dies Irae_.]
+
+
+ Come, Holy Ghost! thou fire divine!
+ From highest heaven on us down shine!
+ Comforter, be thy comfort mine!
+
+ Come, Father of the poor, to earth;
+ Come, with thy gifts of precious worth;
+ Come Light of all of mortal birth!
+
+ Thou rich in comfort! Ever blest
+ The heart where thou art constant guest,
+ Who giv'st the heavy-laden rest.
+
+ Come, thou in whom our toil is sweet,
+ Our shadow in the noonday heat,
+ Before whom mourning flieth fleet.
+
+ Bright Sun of Grace! thy sunshine dart
+ On all who cry to thee apart,
+ And fill with gladness every heart.
+
+ Whate'er without thy aid is wrought,
+ Or skilful deed, or wisest thought,
+ God counts it vain and merely naught.
+
+ O cleanse us that we sin no more.
+ O'er parched souls thy waters pour;
+ Heal the sad heart that acheth sore.
+
+ Thy will be ours in all our ways;
+ O melt the frozen with thy rays;
+ Call home the lost in error's maze.
+
+ And grant us, Lord, who cry to thee,
+ And hold the Faith in unity,
+ Thy precious gifts of charity;
+
+ That we may live in holiness,
+ And find in death our happiness,
+ And dwell with thee in lasting bliss!
+
+From the Latin of KING ROBERT II. OF FRANCE.
+
+Translation of CATHARINE WINKWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O FIRE OF GOD, THE COMFORTER.
+
+ "O IGNIS SPIRITUS PARACLITI."
+
+
+ O fire of God, the Comforter, O life of all that live,
+ Holy art thou to quicken us, and holy, strength to give:
+ To heal the broken-hearted ones, their sorest wounds to bind,
+ O Spirit of all holiness, O Lover of mankind!
+ O sweetest taste within the breast, O grace upon us poured,
+ That saintly hearts may give again their perfume to the Lord.
+ O purest fountain! we can see, clear mirrored in thy streams,
+ That God brings home the wanderers, that God the lost redeems.
+ O breastplate strong to guard our life, O bond of unity,
+ O dwelling-place of righteousness, save all who trust in thee:
+ Defend those who in dungeon dark are prisoned by the foe,
+ And, for thy will is aye to save, let thou the captives go.
+ O surest way, that through the height and through the lowest deep
+ And through the earth dost pass, and all in firmest union keep;
+ From thee the clouds and ether move, from thee the moisture flows,
+ From thee the waters draw their rills, and earth with verdure glows,
+ And thou dost ever teach the wise, and freely on them pour
+ The inspiration of thy gifts, the gladness of thy lore.
+ All praise to thee, O joy of life, O hope and strength, we raise,
+ Who givest us the prize of light, who art thyself all praise.
+
+From the Latin of ST. HILDEGARDE.
+
+Translation of R.F. LITTLEDALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HOLY SPIRIT.
+
+
+ In the hour of my distress,
+ When temptations me oppress,
+ And when I my sins confess,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When I lie within my bed,
+ Sick at heart, and sick in head,
+ And with doubts discomforted,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the house doth sigh and weep,
+ And the world is drowned in sleep,
+ Yet mine eyes the watch do keep,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the artless doctor sees
+ No one hope but of his fees,
+ And his skill runs on the lees,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When his potion and his pill
+ Has or none or little skill,
+ Meet for nothing but to kill,--
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the passing-bell doth toll,
+ And the Furies, in a shoal,
+ Come to fright a parting soul,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the tapers now burn blue,
+ And the comforters are few,
+ And that number more than true,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the priest his last hath prayed,
+ And I nod to what is said
+ 'Cause my speech is now decayed,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When, God knows, I'm tost about
+ Either with despair or doubt,
+ Yet before the glass be out,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the tempter me pursu'th
+ With the sins of all my youth,
+ And half damns me with untruth,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the dames and hellish cries
+ Fright mine ears, and fright mine eyes,
+ And all terrors me surprise,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the judgment is revealed,
+ And that opened which was sealed,--
+ When to thee I have appealed,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPE OF THE HUMAN HEART.
+
+ FROM "ANIMA MUNDI."
+
+
+ God is good.
+ And flight is destined for the callow wing,
+ And the high appetite implies the food,
+ And souls most reach the level whence they spring;
+ O Life of very life! set free our powers,
+ Hasten the travail of the yearning hours.
+
+ Thou, to whom old Philosophy bent low,
+ To the wise few mysteriously revealed;
+ Thou, whom each humble Christian worships now,
+ In the poor hamlet and the open field:
+ Once an idea, now Comforter and Friend,
+ Hope of the human heart, descend, descend!
+
+RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES. (LORD HOUGHTON.)
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+PRAYER AND ASPIRATION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT IS PRAYER?
+
+
+ Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
+ Uttered or unexpressed--
+ The motion of a hidden fire
+ That trembles in the breast.
+
+ Prayer is the burthen of a sigh,
+ The falling of a tear--
+ The upward glancing of an eye,
+ When none but God is near.
+
+ Prayer is the simplest form of speech
+ That infant lips can try--
+ Prayer the sublimest strains that reach
+ The majesty on high.
+
+ Prayer is the contrite sinner's voice
+ Returning from his ways,
+ While angels in their songs rejoice,
+ And cry, "Behold he prays!"
+
+ Prayer is the Christian's vital breath--
+ The Christian's native air--
+ His watchword at the gates of death--
+ He enters heaven with prayer.
+
+ The saints in prayer appear as one
+ In word, and deed, and mind,
+ While with the Father and the Son
+ Sweet fellowship they find.
+
+ Nor prayer is made by man alone--
+ The Holy Spirit pleads--
+ And Jesus, on the eternal throne,
+ For shiners intercedes.
+
+ O Thou by whom we come to God--
+ The life, the truth, the way!
+ The path of prayer Thyself hast trod;
+ Lord, teach us how to pray!
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TIME FOR PRAYER.
+
+
+ When is the time for prayer?
+ With the first beams that light the morning's sky,
+ Ere for the toils of day thou dost prepare,
+ Lift up thy thoughts on high;
+ Commend the loved ones to his watchful care:
+ Morn is the time for prayer!
+
+ And in the noontide hour,
+ If worn by toil, or by sad cares oppressed,
+ Then unto God thy spirit's sorrow pour,
+ And he will give thee rest:--
+ Thy voice shall reach him through the fields of air:
+ Noon is the time for prayer!
+
+ When the bright sun hath set,--
+ Whilst yet eve's glowing colors deck the skies;--
+ When the loved, at home, again thou 'st met,
+ Then let the prayer arise
+ For those who in thy joys and sorrow share:
+ Eve is the time for prayer!
+
+ And when the stars come forth,--
+ When to the trusting heart sweet hopes are given,
+ And the deep stillness of the hour gives birth
+ To pure, bright dreams of heaven,--
+ Kneel to thy God--ask strength, life's ills to bear:
+ Night is the time for prayer!
+
+ When is the time for prayer?
+ In every hour, while life is spared to thee--
+ In crowds or solitudes--in joy or care--
+ Thy thoughts should heavenward flee.
+ At home--at morn and eve--with loved ones there,
+ Bend thou the knee in prayer!
+
+G. BENNETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SEASONS OF PRAYER.
+
+
+ To prayer, to prayer;--for the morning breaks,
+ And earth in her Maker's smile awakes.
+ His light is on all below and above,--
+ The light of gladness, and life, and love.
+ Oh, then, on the breath of this early air
+ Send upward the incense of grateful prayer.
+
+ To prayer;--for the glorious sun is gone,
+ And the gathering darkness of night comes on;
+ Like a curtain from God's kind hand it flows,
+ To shade the couch where his children impose.
+ Then kneel, while the watching stars are bright,
+ And give your last thoughts to the Guardian of night.
+
+ To prayer;--for the day that God has blest
+ Comes tranquilly on with its welcome rest.
+ It speaks of creation's early bloom;
+ It speaks of the Prince who burst the tomb.
+ Then summon the spirit's exalted powers,
+ And devote to Heaven the hallowed hours.
+
+ There are smiles and tears in the mother's eyes,
+ For her new-born infant beside her lies.
+ Oh, hour of bliss! when the heart o'erflows
+ With rapture a mother only knows.
+ Let it gush forth in words of fervent prayer;
+ Let it swell up to Heaven for her precious care.
+
+ There are smiles and tears in that gathering band,
+ Where the heart is pledged with the trembling hand:
+ What trying thoughts in her bosom swell,
+ As the bride bids parents and home farewell!
+ Kneel down by the side of the tearful pair,
+ And strengthen the perilous hour with prayer.
+
+ Kneel down by the dying sinner's side,
+ And pray for his soul through Him who died.
+ Large drops of anguish are thick on his brow;
+ Oh, what are earth and its pleasures now!
+ And what shall assuage his dark despair,
+ But the penitent cry of humble prayer?
+
+ Kneel down by the couch of departing faith,
+ And hear the last words the believer saith.
+ He has bidden adieu to his earthly friends;
+ There is peace in his eye that upward bends;
+ There is peace in his calm, confiding air;
+ For his last thoughts are God's, his last words prayer.
+
+ The voice of prayer at the sable bier!
+ A voice to sustain, to soothe, and to cheer.
+ It commends the spirit to God who gave;
+ It lifts the thoughts from the cold, dark grave;
+ It points to the glory where he shall reign,
+ Who whispered, "Thy brother shall rise again."
+
+ The voice of prayer in the world of bliss!
+ But gladder, purer, than rose from this.
+ The ransomed shout to their glorious King,
+ Where no sorrow shades the soul as they sing;
+ But a sinless and joyous song they raise,
+ And their voice of prayer is eternal praise.
+
+ Awake, awake! and gird up thy strength,
+ To join that holy band at length!
+ To Him who unceasing love displays,
+ Whom the powers of nature unceasingly praise,--
+ To Him thy heart and thy hours be given;
+ For a life of prayer is the life of Heaven.
+
+HENRY WARE, JR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXHORTATION TO PRAYER.
+
+
+ Not on a prayerless bed, not on a prayerless bed
+ Compose thy weary limbs to rest;
+ For they alone are blessed
+ With balmy sleep
+ Whom angels keep;
+ Nor, though by care oppressed,
+ Or anxious sorrow,
+ Or thought in many a coil perplexed
+ For coming morrow,
+ Lay not thy head
+ On prayerless bed.
+
+ For who can tell, when sleep thine eyes shall close,
+ That earthly cares and woes
+ To thee may e'er return?
+ Arouse, my soul!
+ Slumber control,
+ And let thy lamp burn brightly;
+ So shall thine eyes discern
+ Things pure and sightly;
+ Taught by the Spirit, learn
+ Never on a prayerless bed
+ To lay thine unblest head.
+
+ Hast thou no pining want, or wish, or care,
+ That calls for holy prayer?
+ Has thy day been so bright
+ That in its flight
+ There is no trace of sorrow?
+ And thou art sure to-morrow
+ Will be like this, and more
+ Abundant? Dost thou yet lay up thy store
+ And still make plans for more?
+ Thou fool! this very night
+ Thy soul may wing its flight.
+
+ Hast thou no being than thyself more dear,
+ That ploughs the ocean deep,
+ And when storms sweep
+ The wintry, lowering sky,
+ For whom thou wak'st and weepest?
+ Oh, when thy pangs are deepest,
+ Seek then the covenant ark of prayer;
+ For He that slumbereth not is there--
+ His ear is open to thy cry.
+ Oh, then, on prayerless bed
+ Lay not thy thoughtless head.
+
+ Arouse thee, weary soul, nor yield to slumber,
+ Till in communion blest
+ With the elect ye rest--
+ Those souls of countless numbers;
+ And with them raise
+ The note of praise,
+ Reaching from earth to heaven--
+ Chosen, redeemed, forgiven;
+ So lay thy happy head,
+ Prayer-crowned, on blessed bed.
+
+MARGARET MERCER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER AND REPENTANCE.
+
+ FROM "HAMLET," ACT III. SC. 3.
+
+
+ _The King_. O, my offence is rank, it smells to heaven;
+ It hath the primal eldest curse upon 't,
+ A brother's murder. Pray can I not,
+ Though inclination be as sharp as will:
+ My stronger guilt defeats my strong intent;
+ And, like a man to double business bound,
+ I stand in pause where I shall first begin,
+ And both neglect. What if this cursd hand
+ Were thicker than itself with brother's blood,
+ Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens
+ To wash it white as snow? Whereto serves mercy
+ But to confront the visage of offence?
+ And what's in prayer but this twofold force,
+ To be forestalled ere we come to fall,
+ Or pardoned being down? Then I'll look up;
+ My fault is past. But, O, what form of prayer
+ Can serve my turn? "Forgive me my foul murder?"
+ That cannot be: since I am still possessed
+ Of those effects for which I did the murder,
+ My crown, mine own ambition and my queen.
+ May one be pardoned and retain the offence?
+ In the corrupted currents of this world
+ Offence's gilded hand may shove by justice.
+ And oft 't is seen the wicked prize itself
+ Buys out the law: but 't is not so above;
+ There is no shuffling, there the action lies
+ In his true nature; and we ourselves compelled,
+ Even to the teeth and forehead of our faults,
+ To give in evidence. What then? what rests?
+ Try what repentance can: what can it not?
+ Yet what can it when one cannot repent?
+ O wretched state! O bosom black as death!
+ O limd soul, that, struggling to be free,
+ Art more engaged! Help, angels! Make assay!
+ Bow, stubborn knees; and heart with strings of steel,
+ Be soft as sinews of the new-born babe!
+ All may be well. [_Retires and kneels_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _King (rising)._ My words fly up, my thoughts remain below;
+ Words without thoughts never to heaven go.
+
+SHAKESPEARE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CALIPH AND SATAN.
+
+ VERSIFIED FROM THOLUCK'S TRANSLATION OUT OF THE PERSIAN.
+
+
+ In heavy sleep the Caliph lay,
+ When some one called, "Arise, and pray!"
+
+ The angry Caliph cried, "Who dare
+ Rebuke his king for slighting prayer?"
+
+ Then, from the corner of the room,
+ A voice cut sharply through the gloom:
+
+ "My name is Satan, Rise! obey
+ Mohammed's law; awake, and pray!"
+
+ "Thy _words_ are good," the Caliph said,
+ "But their intent I somewhat dread.
+
+ For matters cannot well be worse
+ Than when the thief says, 'Guard your purse!'
+
+ I cannot trust your counsel, friend,
+ It surely hides some wicked end."
+
+ Said Satan, "Near the throne of God,
+ In ages past, we devils trod;
+
+ Angels of light, to us 't was given
+ To guide each wandering foot to heaven.
+
+ Not wholly lost is that first love.
+ Nor those pure tastes we knew above.
+
+ Roaming across a continent.
+ The Tartar moves his shifting tent,
+
+ But never quite forgets the day
+ When in his father's arms he lay;
+
+ So we, once bathed in love divine.
+ Recall the taste of that rich wine.
+
+ God's finger rested on my brow,--
+ That magic touch, I feel it now!
+
+ I fell, 't is true--O, ask not why.
+ For still to God I turn my eye.
+
+ It was a chance by which I fell,
+ Another takes me back from hell.
+
+ 'T was but my envy of mankind,
+ The envy of a loving mind.
+
+ Jealous of men, I could not bear
+ God's love with this new race to share.
+
+ But yet God's tables open stand,
+ His guests flock in from every land;
+
+ Some kind act towards the race of men
+ May toss us into heaven again.
+
+ A game of chess is all we see,--
+ And God the player, pieces we.
+
+ White, black--queen, pawn,--'t is all the same,
+ For on both sides he plays the game.
+
+ Moved to and fro, from good to ill,
+ We rise and fall as suits his will."
+
+ The Caliph said, "If this be so,
+ I know not, but thy guile I know;
+
+ For how can I thy words believe,
+ When even God thou didst deceive?
+
+ A sea of lies art thou,--our sin
+ Only a drop that sea within."
+
+ "Not so," said Satan, "I serve God,
+ His angel now, and now his rod.
+
+ In tempting I both bless and curse,
+ Make good men better, bad men worse.
+
+ Good coin is mixed with bad, my brother,
+ I but distinguish one from the other."
+
+ "Granted," the Caliph said, "but still
+ You never tempt to good, but ill.
+
+ Tell then the truth, for well I know
+ You come as my most deadly foe."
+
+ Loud laughed the fiend. "You know me well,
+ Therefore my purpose I will tell.
+
+ If you had missed your prayer, I knew
+ A swift repentance would ensue;
+
+ And such repentance would have been
+ A good, outweighing far the sin.
+
+ I chose this humbleness divine,
+ Borne out of fault, should not be thine,
+
+ Preferring prayers elate with pride
+ To sin with penitence allied."
+
+JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DARKNESS IS THINNING.
+
+
+ Darkness is thinning; shadows are retreating;
+ Morning and light are coming in their beauty;
+ Suppliant seek we, with an earnest outcry.
+ God the Almighty!
+
+ So that our Master, having mercy on us.
+ May repel languor, may bestow salvation.
+ Granting us, Father, of thy loving-kindness
+ Glory hereafter!
+
+ This, of his mercy, ever blessd Godhead,
+ Father, and Son, and Holy Spirit, give us,--
+ Whom through the wide world celebrate forever
+ Blessing and glory!
+
+From the Latin of ST. GREGORY THE GREAT.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE.
+
+
+ To write a verse or two is all the praise
+ That I can raise;
+ Mend my estate in any wayes,
+ Thou shalt have more.
+
+ I go to church; help me to wings, and I
+ Will thither flie;
+ Or, if I mount unto the skie,
+ I will do more.
+
+ Man is all weaknesse: there is no such thing
+ As Prince or King:
+ His arm is short; yet with a sling
+ He may do more.
+
+ A herb destilled, and drunk, may dwell next doore,
+ On the same floore,
+ To a brave soul: Exalt the poore,
+ They can do more.
+
+ O, raise me then! poore bees, that work all day,
+ Sting my delay,
+ Who have a work, as well as they,
+ And much, much more.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER.
+
+
+ O God! though sorrow be my fate,
+ And the world's hate
+ For my heart's faith pursue me.
+ My peace they cannot take away;
+ Prom day to day
+ Thou dost anew imbue me;
+ Thou art not far; a little while
+ Thou hid'st thy face, with brighter smile
+ Thy father-love to show me.
+
+ Lord, not my will, but thine, be done;
+ If I sink down
+ When men to terrors leave me,
+ Thy father-love still warms my breast;
+ All's for the best;
+ Shall men have power to grieve me,
+ When bliss eternal is my goal.
+ And thou the keeper of my soul,
+ Who never will deceive me?
+
+ Thou art my shield, as saith the Word.
+ Christ Jesus, Lord,
+ Thou standest pitying by me,
+ And lookest on each grief of mine
+ And if 't were thine:
+ What, then, though foes may try me.
+ Though thorns be in my path concealed?
+ World, do thy worst! God is my shield!
+ And will be ever nigh me.
+
+Translated from MARY, QUEEN OF HUNGARY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DESIRE.
+
+
+ Thou, who dost dwell alone;
+ Thou, who dost know thine own;
+ Thou, to whom all are known,
+ From the cradle to the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From the world's temptations;
+ From tribulations;
+ From that fierce anguish
+ Wherein we languish;
+ From that torpor deep
+ Wherein we lie asleep,
+ Heavy as death, cold as the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ When the soul, growing clearer,
+ Sees God no nearer;
+ When the soul, mounting higher,
+ To God comes no nigher;
+ But the arch-fiend Pride
+ Mounts at her side,
+ Foiling her high emprize,
+ Sealing her eagle eyes,
+ And, when she fain would soar,
+ Make idols to adore;
+ Changing the pure emotion
+ Of her high devotion,
+ To a skin-deep sense
+ Of her own eloquence;
+ Strong to deceive, strong to enslave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From the ingrained fashion
+ Of this earthly nature
+ That mars thy creature;
+ From grief, that is but passion;
+ From mirth, that is but feigning;
+ From tears, that bring no healing;
+ From wild and weak complaining;--
+ Thine old strength revealing,
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From doubt, where all is doable,
+ Where wise men are not strong;
+ Where comfort turns to trouble;
+ Where just men suffer wrong;
+ Where sorrow treads on joy;
+ Where sweet things soonest cloy;
+ Where faiths are built on dust;
+ Where love is half mistrust,
+ Hungry, and barren, and sharp as the sea;
+ O, set us free!
+
+ O, let the false dream fly
+ Where our sick souls do lie,
+ Tossing continually.
+ O, where thy voice doth come,
+ Let all doubts be dumb;
+ Let all words be mild;
+ All strife be reconciled;
+ All pains beguiled.
+ Light brings no blindness;
+ Love no unkindness;
+ Knowledge no ruin;
+ Fear no undoing,
+ From the cradle to the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHY THUS LONGING?
+
+
+ Why thus longing, thus forever sighing
+ For the far off, unattained, and dim,
+ While the beautiful, all round thee lying,
+ Offers up its low perpetual hymn?
+
+ Wouldst thou listen to its gentle teaching,
+ All thy restless yearnings it would still;
+ Leaf and flower and laden bee are preaching
+ Thine own sphere, though humble, first to fill.
+
+ Poor indeed thou must be, if around thee
+ Thou no ray of light and joy canst throw,--
+ If no silken cord of love hath bound thee
+ To some little world through weal and woe;
+
+ If no dear eyes thy fond love can brighten,--
+ No fond voices answer to thine own;
+ If no brother's sorrow thou canst lighten
+ By daily sympathy and gentle tone.
+
+ Not by deeds that win the crowd's applauses,
+ Not by works that gain thee world-renown,
+ Not by martyrdom or vaunted crosses,
+ Canst thou win and wear the immortal crown.
+
+ Daily struggling, though unloved and lonely,
+ Every day a rich reward will give;
+ Thou wilt find, by hearty striving only,
+ And truly loving, thou canst truly live.
+
+ Dost thou revel in the rosy morning,
+ When all nature hails the Lord of light,
+ And his smile, the mountain-tops adorning,
+ Robes yon fragrant fields in radiance bright?
+
+ Other hands may grasp the field and forest,
+ Proud proprietors in pomp may shine;
+ But with fervent love if thou adorest,
+ Thou art wealthier,--all the world is thine.
+
+ Yet if through earth's wide domains thou rovest,
+ Sighing that they are not thine alone.
+ Not those fair fields, but thyself thou lovest,
+ And their beauty and thy wealth are gone.
+
+ Nature wears the color of the spirit;
+ Sweetly to her worshipper she sings;
+ All the glow, the grace she doth inherit,
+ Round her trusting child she fondly flings.
+
+HARRIET WINSLOW SEWALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER AND ANSWER.
+
+
+ O God, I cannot walk the Way,--
+ The thorns, the thirst, the darkness,
+ And bleeding feet and aching heart!
+ I hear the songs and revels of the throng,--
+ They sneer upon my downcast face with scorn,--
+ Yet, O my God, I _must_ and shall walk with Thee!
+
+ O God, I cannot take the Truth!
+ Far easier honeyed hopes and falsehoods fair,
+ But Truth,--the Truth is stern and strong and awful.
+ It ploughs my soul with ploughshares flaming hot--
+ Yet give me Truth. I must have Truth, O God!
+
+ O God, I cannot live the Life,--
+ The flinging all to death that life may come;
+ The surging of Thy Spirit in my heart
+ In fire and flame will all consume me,--
+ Yet, O my God, I cannot live without Thee!
+
+ And as I agonized in dust and shame
+ With tears and sighs in all the bitter prayer,
+ I felt, as 't were, an arm that stole around me,
+ And raised me to my feet.
+ And at the touch, hope blossomed in my heart,
+ And new-found strength in flood-tides thrilled and throbbed
+
+ Through soul and limbs. I looked to see....
+ O tender lordly Face!
+ It was Himself,--_the Way, the Truth, the Life_!
+
+OLIVER HUCKEL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE AIM.
+
+
+ O thou who lovest not alone
+ The swift success, the instant goal,
+ But hast a lenient eye to mark
+ The failures of th' inconstant soul,
+
+ Consider not my little worth,--
+ The mean achievement, scamped in act,
+ The high resolve and low result,
+ The dream that durst not face the fact.
+
+ But count the reach of my desire.
+ Let this be something in Thy sight:--
+ I have not, in the slothful dark,
+ Forgot the Vision and the Height.
+
+ Neither my body nor my soul
+ To earth's low ease will yield consent.
+ I praise Thee for my will to strive.
+ I bless Thy goad of discontent.
+
+CHARLES G.D. ROBERTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOVE OF GOD SUPREME.
+
+
+ Thou hidden love of God, whose height,
+ Whose depth unfathomed no man knows,
+ I see from far thy beauteous light,
+ Inly I sigh for thy repose.
+ My heart is pained, nor can it be
+ At rest till it finds rest in thee.
+
+ Thy secret voice invites me still
+ The sweetness of thy yoke to prove,
+ And fain I would; but though my will
+ Be fixed, yet wide my passions rove.
+ Yet hindrances strew all the way;
+ I aim at thee, yet from thee stray.
+
+ 'T is mercy all that thou hast brought
+ My mind to seek her peace in thee.
+ Yet while I seek but find thee not
+ No peace my wand'ring soul shall see.
+ Oh! when shall all my wand'rings end,
+ And all my steps to-thee-ward tend?
+
+ Is there a thing beneath the sun
+ That strives with thee my heart to share?
+ Ah! tear it thence and reign alone,
+ The Lord of every motion there.
+ Then shall my heart from earth be free,
+ When it has found repose in thee.
+
+ Oh! hide this self from me, that I
+ No more, but Christ in me, may live.
+ My vile affections crucify,
+ Nor let one darling lust survive.
+ In all things nothing may I see,
+ Nothing desire or seek but thee.
+
+ O Love, thy sovereign aid impart,
+ To save me from low-thoughted care;
+ Chase this self-will through all my heart,
+ Through all its latent mazes there.
+ Make me thy duteous child, that I
+ Ceaseless may Abba, Father, cry.
+
+ Ah! no; ne'er will I backward turn:
+ Thine wholly, thine alone I am.
+ Thrice happy he who views with scorn
+ Earth's toys, for thee his constant flame.
+ Oh! help, that I may never move
+ From the blest footsteps of thy love.
+
+ Each moment draw from earth away
+ My heart, that lowly waits thy call.
+ Speak to my inmost soul, and say,
+ "I am thy Love, thy God, thy All."
+ To feel thy power, to hear thy voice,
+ To taste thy love is all my choice.
+
+From the German of GERHARD TERSTEEGEN.
+
+Translation of JOHN WESLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IN A LECTURE-ROOM.
+
+
+ Away, haunt thou not me,
+ Thou vain Philosophy!
+ Little hast thou bestead,
+ Save to perplex the head,
+ And leave the spirit dead.
+ Unto thy broken cisterns wherefore go.
+ While from the secret treasure-depths below,
+ Fed by the skyey shower,
+ And clouds that sink and rest on hill-tops high,
+ Wisdom at once, and Power,
+ Are welling, bubbling forth, unseen, incessantly?
+ Why labor at the dull mechanic oar,
+ When the fresh breeze is blowing,
+ And the strong current flowing,
+ Right onward to the Eternal Shore?
+
+ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM THE RECESSES OF A LOWLY SPIRIT.
+
+
+ From the recesses of a lowly spirit,
+ Our humble prayer ascends; O Father! hear it.
+ Upsoaring on the wings of awe and meekness,
+ Forgive its weakness!
+
+ We see thy hand,--it leads us, it supports us;
+ We hear thy voice,--it counsels and it courts us;
+ And then we turn away; and still thy kindness
+ Forgives our blindness.
+
+ O, how long-suffering, Lord! but thou delightest
+ To win with love the wandering: thou invited,
+ By smiles of mercy, not by frowns or terrors,
+ Man from his errors.
+
+ Father and Saviour! plant within each bosom
+ The seeds of holiness, and bid them blossom
+ In fragrance and in beauty bright and vernal,
+ And spring eternal.
+
+SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HIGHER GOOD.
+
+
+ Father, I will not ask for wealth or fame,
+ Though once they would have joyed my carnal sense:
+ I shudder not to bear a hated name,
+ Wanting all wealth, myself my sole defence.
+ But give me, Lord, eyes to behold the truth;
+ A seeing sense that knows the eternal right;
+ A heart with pity filled, and gentlest ruth;
+ A manly faith that makes all darkness light:
+ Give me the power to labor for mankind;
+ Make me the mouth of such as cannot speak;
+ Eyes let me be to groping men, and blind;
+ A conscience to the base; and to the weak
+ Let me be hands and feet; and to the foolish, mind;
+ And lead still further on such as thy kingdom seek.
+
+THEODORE PARKER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASCRIPTION.
+
+
+ O thou who hast beneath Thy hand
+ The dark foundations of the land,--
+ The motion of whose ordered thought
+ An instant universe hath wrought,--
+
+ Who hast within Thine equal heed
+ The rolling sun, the ripening seed,
+ The azure of the speedwell's eye.
+ The vast solemnities of sky,--
+
+ Who hear'st no less the feeble note
+ Of one small bird's awakening throat,
+ Than that unnamed, tremendous chord
+ Arcturus sounds before his Lord,--
+
+ More sweet to Thee than all acclaim
+ Of storm and ocean, stars and flame,
+ In favor more before Thy face
+ Than pageantry of time and space.
+
+ The worship and the service be
+ Of him Thou madest most like Thee,--
+ Who in his nostrils hath Thy breath,
+ Whose spirit is the lord of death!
+
+CHARLES G.D. ROBERTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O MASTER, LET ME WALK WITH THEE.
+
+
+ O Master, let me walk with thee
+ In lowly paths of service free;
+ Tell me thy secret; help me bear
+ The strain of toil, the fret of care;
+ Help me the slow of heart to move
+ By some clear winning word of love;
+ Teach me the wayward feet to stay,
+ And guide them in the homeward way.
+
+ O Master, let me walk with thee
+ Before the taunting Pharisee;
+ Help me to bear the sting of spite,
+ The hate of men who hide thy light,
+ The sore distrust of souls sincere
+ Who cannot read thy judgments clear,
+ The dulness of the multitude
+ Who dimly guess that thou art good.
+
+ Teach me thy patience; still with thee
+ In closer, dearer company,
+ In work that keeps faith sweet and strong,
+ In trust that triumphs over wrong,
+ In hope that sends a shining ray
+ Far down the future's broadening way,
+ In peace that only thou canst give,
+ With thee, O Master, let me live!
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+FAITH: HOPE: LOVE: SERVICE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FAITH.
+
+
+ O world, thou choosest not the better part!
+ It is not wisdom to be only wise,
+ And on the inward vision close the eyes,
+ But it is wisdom to believe the heart.
+ Columbus found a world, and had no chart,
+ Save one that faith deciphered in the skies;
+ To trust the soul's invincible surmise
+ Was all his science and his only art.
+ Our knowledge is a torch of smoky pine
+ That lights the pathway but one step ahead
+ Across a void of mystery and dread.
+ Bid, then, the tender light of faith to shine
+ By which alone the mortal heart is led
+ Unto the thinking of the thought divine.
+
+GEORGE SANTAYANA.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FIGHT OF FAITH.
+
+ [The author of this poem, one of the victims of the
+ persecuting Henry VIII., was burnt to death at Smithfield
+ in 1546. It was made and sung by her while a prisoner in
+ Newgate.]
+
+
+ Like as the armd Knighte,
+ Appointed to the fielde.
+ With this world wil I fight,
+ And faith shal be my shilde.
+
+ Faith is that weapon stronge,
+ Which wil not faile at nede;
+ My foes therefore amonge,
+ Therewith wil I precede.
+
+ As it is had in strengthe,
+ And forces of Christes waye,
+ It wil prevaile at lengthe,
+ Though all the devils saye _naye_.
+
+ Faithe of the fathers olde
+ Obtaind right witness,
+ Which makes me verye bolde
+ To fear no worldes distress.
+
+ I now rejoice in harte,
+ And hope bides me do so;
+ For Christ wil take my part,
+ And ease me of my we.
+
+ Thou sayst, Lord, whoso knocke,
+ To them wilt thou attende;
+ Undo, therefore, the locke,
+ And thy stronge power sende.
+
+ More enemies now I have
+ Than heeres upon my head;
+ Let them not me deprave,
+ But fight thou in my steade.
+
+ On thee my care I cast,
+ For all their cruell spight;
+ I set not by their hast,
+ For thou art my delight.
+
+ I am not she that list
+ My anker to let fall
+ For every drislinge mist;
+ My shippe's substancial.
+
+ Not oft I use to wright
+ In prose, nor yet in ryme;
+ Yet wil I shewe one sight,
+ That I sawe in my time:
+
+ I sawe a royall throne,
+ Where Justice shulde have sitte;
+ But in her steade was One
+ Of moody cruell witte.
+
+ Absorpt was rightwisness,
+ As by the raginge floude;
+ Sathan, in his excess,
+ Sucte up the guiltlesse bloude.
+
+ Then thought I,--Jesus, Lorde,
+ When thou shalt judge us all,
+ Harde is it to recorde
+ On these men what will fall.
+
+ Yet, Lorde, I thee desire,
+ For that they doe to me,
+ Let them not taste the hire
+ Of their iniquitie.
+
+ANNE ASKEWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOUBT AND FAITH.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," XCV.
+
+
+ You say, but with no touch of scorn,
+ Sweet-hearted, you, whose light-blue eyes
+ Are tender over drowning flies,
+ You tell me, doubt is Devil-born.
+
+ I know not: one indeed I knew
+ In many a subtle question versed,
+ Who touched a jarring lyre at first,
+ But ever strove to make it true:
+
+ Perplext in faith, but pure in deeds,
+ At last he beat his music out.
+ There lives more faith in honest doubt,
+ Believe me, than in half the creeds.
+
+ He fought his doubts and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them: thus he came at length
+
+ To find a stronger faith his own;
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone,
+
+ But in the darkness and the cloud,
+ As over Sinai's peaks of old,
+ While Israel made their gods of gold,
+ Although the trumpet blew so loud.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY TIMES ARE IN THY HAND.
+
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ I know not what a day
+ Or e'en an hour may bring to me,
+ But I am safe while trusting thee,
+ Though all things fade away.
+ All weakness, I
+ On him rely
+ Who fixed the earth and spread the starry sky.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Pale poverty or wealth.
+ Corroding care or calm repose.
+ Spring's balmy breath or winter's snows.
+ Sickness or buoyant health,--
+ Whate'er betide,
+ If God provide,
+ 'T is for the best; I wish no lot beside.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Should friendship pure illume
+ And strew my path with fairest flowers,
+ Or should I spend life's dreary hours
+ In solitude's dark gloom,
+ Thou art a friend.
+ Till time shall end
+ Unchangeably the same; in thee all beauties blend.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Many or few, my days
+ I leave with thee,--this only pray,
+ That by thy grace, I, every day
+ Devoting to thy praise,
+ May ready be
+ To welcome thee
+ Whene'er thou com'st to set my spirit free.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Howe'er those times may end,
+ Sudden or slow my soul's release,
+ Midst anguish, frenzy, or in peace,
+ I'm safe with Christ my friend.
+ If he is nigh,
+ Howe'er I die,
+ 'T will be the dawn of heavenly ecstasy.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ To thee I can intrust
+ My slumbering clay, till thy command
+ Bids all the dead before thee stand,
+ Awaking from the dust.
+ Beholding thee,
+ What bliss 't will be
+ With all thy saints to spend eternity!
+
+ To spend eternity
+ In heaven's unclouded light!
+ From sorrow, sin, and frailty free,
+ Beholding and resembling thee,--
+ O too transporting sight!
+ Prospect too fair
+ For flesh to bear!
+ Haste! haste! my Lord, and soon transport me there!
+
+CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN HALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MYSTICAL ECSTASY.
+
+
+ E'en like two little bank-dividing brooks,
+ That wash the pebbles with their wanton streams,
+ And having ranged and searched a thousand nooks,
+ Meet both at length in silver-breasted Thames,
+ Where in a greater current they conjoin:
+ So I my Best-Belovd's am; so He is mine.
+
+ E'en so we met; and after long pursuit,
+ E'en so we joined; we both became entire;
+ No need for either to renew a suit,
+ For I was flax and he was flames of fire:
+ Our firm-united souls did more than twine:
+ So I my Best-Belovd's am; so He is mine.
+
+ If all those glittering Monarchs that command
+ The servile quarters of this earthly ball,
+ Should tender, in exchange, their shares of land,
+ I would not change my fortunes for them all:
+ Their wealth is but a counter to my coin:
+ The world's but theirs; but my Belovd's mine.
+
+FRANCIS QUARLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MYSTIC'S VISION
+
+
+ Ah! I shall kill myself with dreams!
+ These dreams that softly lap me round
+ Through trance-like hours in which meseems
+ That I am swallowed up and drowned;
+ Drowned in your love, which flows o'er me
+ As o'er the seaweed flows the sea.
+
+ In watches of the middle night,
+ 'Twixt vesper and 'twist matin bell,
+ With rigid arms and straining sight,
+ I wait within my narrow cell;
+ With muttered prayers, suspended will,
+ I wait your advent--statue-still.
+
+ Across the convent garden walls
+ The wind blows from the silver seas;
+ Black shadow of the cypress falls
+ Between the moon-meshed olive-trees;
+ Sleep-walking from their golden bowers,
+ Flit disembodied orange flowers.
+
+ And in God's consecrated house,
+ All motionless from head to feet,
+ My heart awaits her heavenly Spouse,
+ As white I lie on my white sheet;
+ With body lulled and soul awake,
+ I watch in anguish for your sake.
+
+ And suddenly, across the gloom,
+ The naked moonlight sharply swings;
+ A Presence stirs within the room,
+ A breath of flowers and hovering wings:--
+ Your presence without form and void,
+ Beyond all earthly joys enjoyed.
+
+ My heart is hushed, my tongue is mute,
+ My life is centred in your will;
+ You play upon me like a lute
+ Which answers to its master's skill,
+ Till passionately vibrating,
+ Each nerve becomes a throbbing string.
+
+ Oh, incommunicably sweet!
+ No longer aching and apart,
+ As rain upon the tender wheat,
+ You pour upon my thirsty heart;
+ As scent is bound up in the rose,
+ Your love within my bosom glows.
+
+MATHILDE BLIND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CALL.
+
+
+ Come, my way, my truth, my life--
+ Such a way as gives us breath;
+ Such a truth as ends all strife;
+ Such a life as killeth death.
+
+ Come my light, my feast, my strength--
+ Such a light as shows a feast;
+ Such a feast as mends in length;
+ Such a strength as makes His guest.
+
+ Come my joy, my love, my heart!
+ Such a joy as none can move;
+ Such a love as none can part;
+ Such a heart as joys in love.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPE.
+
+ FROM "THE PLEASURES OF HOPE."[A]
+
+
+ Unfading Hope! when life's last embers burn,
+ When soul to soul, and dust to dust return!
+ Heaven to thy charge resigns the awful hour!
+ O, then thy kingdom comes! Immortal Power!
+ What though each spark of earth-born rapture fly
+ The quivering lip, pale cheek, and closing eye!
+ Bright to the soul thy seraph hands convey
+ The morning dream of life's eternal day,--
+ Then, then, the triumph and the trance begin,
+ And all the phoenix spirit burns within!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Daughter of Faith, awake, arise, illume
+ The dread unknown, the chaos of the tomb;
+ Melt, and dispel, ye spectre-doubts, that roll
+ Cimmerian darkness o'er the parting soul!
+ Fly, like the moon-eyed herald of Dismay,
+ Chased on his night-steed by the star of day!
+ The strife is o'er,--the pangs of Nature close,
+ And life's last rapture triumphs o'er her woes.
+ Hark! as the spirit eyes, with eagle gaze,
+ The noon of Heaven undazzled by the blaze,
+ On heavenly winds that waft her to the sky,
+ Float the sweet tones of star-born melody;
+ Wild as that hallowed anthem sent to hail
+ Bethlehem's shepherds in the lonely vale,
+ When Jordan hushed his waves, and midnight still
+ Watched on the holy towers of Zion hill!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Eternal Hope! when yonder spheres sublime
+ Pealed their first notes to sound the march of Time,
+ Thy joyous youth began,--but not to fade.
+ When all the sister planets have decayed;
+ When wrapt in fire the realms of ether glow,
+ And Heaven's last thunder shakes the world below;
+ Thou, undismayed, shalt o'er the ruins smile,
+ And light thy torch at Nature's funeral pile.
+
+THOMAS CAMPBELL.
+
+[Footnote A: This poem was written when the author was but twenty-one
+years of age.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A QUERY.
+
+
+ Oh the wonder of our life,
+ Pain and pleasure, rest and strife,
+ Mystery of mysteries,
+ Set twixt two eternities!
+
+ Lo, the moments come and go,
+ E'en as sparks, and vanish so;
+ Flash from darkness into light,
+ Quick as thought are quenched in night.
+
+ With an import grand and strange
+ Are they fraught in ceaseless change
+ As they post away; each one
+ Stands eternally alone.
+
+ The scene more fair than words can say,
+ I gaze upon and go my way;
+ I turn, another glance to claim--
+ Something is changed, 't is not the same.
+
+ The purple flush on yonder fell,
+ The tinkle of that cattle-bell,
+ Came, and have never come before,
+ Go, and are gone forevermore.
+
+ Our life is held as with a vice,
+ We cannot do the same thing twice;
+ Once we may, but not again;
+ Only memories remain.
+
+ What if memories vanish too,
+ And the past be lost to view;
+ Is it all for nought that I
+ Heard and saw and hurried by?
+
+ Where are childhood's merry hours,
+ Bright with sunshine, crossed with showers?
+ Are they dead, and can they never
+ Come again to life forever?
+
+ No--'t is false, I surely trow;
+ Though awhile they vanish now;
+ Every passion, deed, and thought
+ Was not born to come to nought!
+
+ Will the past then come again,
+ Rest and pleasure, strife and pain,
+ All the heaven and all the hell?
+ Ah, we know not: God can tell.
+
+_GOOD WORDS_.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HUMILITY.
+
+
+ The bird that soars on highest wing
+ Builds on the ground her lowly nest;
+ And she that doth most sweetly sing
+ Sings in the shade, where all things rest;
+ In lark and nightingale we see
+ What honor hath humility.
+
+ When Mary chose "the better part,"
+ She meekly sat at Jesus' feet;
+ And Lydia's gently opened heart
+ Was made for God's own temple meet:
+ Fairest and best adorned is she
+ Whose clothing is humility.
+
+ The saint that wears heaven's brightest crown,
+ In deepest adoration bends:
+ The weight of glory bows him down
+ Then most, when most his soul ascends:
+ Nearest the throne itself must be
+ The footstool of humility.
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+KING ROBERT OF SICILY.
+
+
+ Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane
+ And Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Apparelled in magnificent attire,
+ With retinue of many a knight and squire,
+ On Saint John's eve, at vespers, proudly sat
+ And heard the priests chant the Magnificat.
+ And as he listened o'er and o'er again
+ Repeated, like a burden or refrain,
+ He caught the words, "_Deposuit potentes
+ De sede, et exaltavit humiles;"_
+ And slowly lifting up his kingly head,
+ He to a learned clerk beside him said,
+ "What mean these words?" The clerk made answer meet,
+ "He has put down the mighty from their seat,
+ And has exalted them of low degree."
+ Thereat King Robert muttered scornfully,
+ "'T is well that such seditious words are sung
+ Only by priests and in the Latin tongue;
+ For unto priests and people be it known,
+ There is no power can push me from my throne!"
+ And leaning back, he yawned and fell asleep,
+ Lulled by the chant monotonous and deep.
+
+ When he awoke, it was already night;
+ The church was empty, and there was no light,
+ Save where the lamps that glimmered, few and faint,
+ Lighted a little space before some saint.
+ He started from his seat and gazed around,
+ But saw no living thing and heard no sound.
+ He gropd towards the door, but it was locked;
+ He cried aloud, and listened, and then knocked,
+ And uttered awful threatenings and complaints,
+ And imprecations upon men and saints.
+ The sounds rechoed from the roof and walls
+ As if dead priests were laughing in their stalls.
+
+ At length the sexton, hearing from without
+ The tumult of the knocking and the shout,
+ And thinking thieves were in the house of prayer,
+ Came with his lantern, asking, "Who is there?"
+ Half choked with rage, King Robert fiercely said,
+ "Open: 'tis I, the king! Art thou afraid?"
+ The frightened sexton, muttering, with a curse,
+ "This is some drunken vagabond, or worse!"
+ Turned the great key and flung the portal wide;
+ A man rushed by him at a single stride,
+ Haggard, half naked, without hat or cloak,
+ Who neither turned, nor looked at him, nor spoke.
+ But leaped into the blackness of the night,
+ And vanished like a spectre from his sight.
+
+ Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane
+ And Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Despoiled of his magnificent attire,
+ Bare-headed, breathless, and besprent with mire,
+ With sense of wrong and outrage desperate,
+ Strode on and thundered at the palace gate:
+ Bushed through the court-yard, thrusting in his rage
+ To right and left each seneschal and page,
+ And hurried up the broad and sounding stair,
+ His white face ghastly in the torches' glare.
+ From hall to hall he passed with breathless speed:
+ Voices and cries he heard, but did not heed,
+ Until at last he reached the banquet-room,
+ Blazing with light, and breathing with perfume.
+ There on the dais sat another king,
+ Wearing his rotes, his crown, his signet-ring.
+ King Robert's self in features, form, and height,
+ But all transfigured with angelic light!
+ It was an angel; and his presence there
+ With a divine effulgence filled the air,
+ An exaltation, piercing the disguise,
+ Though none the hidden angel recognize.
+
+ A moment speechless, motionless, amazed,
+ The throneless monarch on the angel gazed,
+ Who met his looks of anger and surprise
+ With the divine compassion of his eyes;
+ Then said, "Who art thou? and why com'st thou here?"
+ To which King Robert answered with a sneer,
+ "I am the king, and come to claim my own
+ From an impostor, who usurps my throne!"
+ And suddenly, at these audacious words,
+ Up sprang the angry guests, and drew their swords;
+ The angel answered with unruffled brow,
+ "Nay, not the king, but the king's jester; thou
+ Henceforth shalt wear the bells and scalloped cape,
+ And for thy counsellor shalt lead an ape:
+ Thou shalt obey my servants when they call,
+ And wait upon my henchmen in the hall!"
+
+ Deaf to King Robert's threats and cries and prayers,
+ They thrust him from the hall and down the stairs;
+ A group of tittering pages ran before,
+ And as they opened wide the folding-door,
+ His heart failed, for he heard, with strange alarms,
+ The boisterous laughter of the men-at-arms,
+ And all the vaulted chamber roar and ring
+ With the mock plaudits of "Long live the king!"
+ Next morning, waking with the day's first beam,
+ He said within himself, "It was a dream!"
+ But the straw rustled as he turned his head,
+ There were the cap and bells beside his bed;
+ Around him rose the bare, discolored walls.
+ Close by, the steeds were champing in their stalls,
+ And in the corner, a revolting shape,
+ Shivering and chattering, sat the wretched ape.
+ It was no dream; the world he loved so much
+ Had turned to dust and ashes at his touch!
+
+ Days came and went; and now returned again
+ To Sicily the old Saturnian reign;
+ Under the angel's governance benign
+ The happy island danced with corn and wine,
+ And deep within the mountain's burning breast
+ Enceladus, the giant, was at rest.
+ Meanwhile King Robert yielded to his fate,
+ Sullen and silent and disconsolate.
+ Dressed in the motley garb that jesters wear,
+ With looks bewildered and a vacant stare,
+ Close shaven above the ears, as monks are shorn,
+ By courtiers mocked, by pages laughed to scorn,
+ His only friend the ape, his only food
+ What others left,--he still was unsubdued.
+ And when the angel met him on his way,
+ And half in earnest, half in jest, would say,
+ Sternly, though tenderly, that he might feel
+ The velvet scabbard held a sword of steel,
+ "Art thou the king?" the passion of his woe
+ Burst from him in resistless overflow,
+ And lifting high his forehead, he would fling
+ The haughty answer back, "I am, I am the king!"
+
+ Almost three years were ended; when there came
+ Ambassadors of great repute and name
+ From Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Unto King Robert, saying that Pope Urbane
+ By letter summoned them forthwith to come
+ On Holy Thursday to his city of Rome.
+ The angel with great joy received his guests,
+ And gave them presents of embroidered vests,
+ And velvet mantles with rich ermine lined,
+ And rings and jewels of the rarest kind.
+ Then he departed with them o'er the sea
+ Into the lovely land of Italy,
+ Whose loveliness was more resplendent made
+ By the mere passing of that cavalcade,
+ With plumes, and cloaks, and housings, and the stir
+ Of jewelled bridle and of golden spur.
+
+ And lo! among the menials, in mock state,
+ Upon a piebald steed, with shambling gait,
+ His cloak of fox-tails flapping in the wind,
+ The solemn ape demurely perched behind,
+ King Robert rode, making huge merriment
+ In all the country towns through which they went.
+
+ The pope received them with great pomp, and blare
+ Of bannered trumpets, on Saint Peter's square,
+ Giving his benediction and embrace,
+ Fervent, and full of apostolic grace.
+ While with congratulations and with prayers
+ He entertained the angel unawares,
+ Robert, the jester, bursting through the crowd,
+ Into their presence rushed, and cried aloud:
+ "I am the king! Look and behold in me
+ Robert, your brother, king of Sicily!
+ This man, who wears my semblance to your eyes,
+ Is an impostor in a king's disguise.
+ Do you not know me? does no voice within
+ Answer my cry, and say we are akin?"
+ The pope in silence, but with troubled mien.
+ Gazed at the angel's countenance serene;
+ The emperor, laughing, said, "It is strange sport
+ To keep a madman for thy fool at court!"
+ And the poor, baffled jester in disgrace
+ Was hustled back among the populace.
+
+ In solemn state the holy week went by,
+ And Easter Sunday gleamed upon the sky;
+ The presence of an angel, with its light,
+ Before the sun rose, made the city bright,
+ And with new fervor filled the hearts of men,
+ Who felt that Christ indeed had risen again.
+ Even the Jester, on his bed of straw,
+ With haggard eyes the unwonted splendor saw;
+ He felt within a power unfelt before,
+ And, kneeling humbly on his chamber floor,
+ He heard the rustling garments of the Lord
+ Sweep through the silent air, ascending heavenward.
+
+ And now the visit ending, and once more
+ Valmond returning to the Danube's shore,
+ Homeward the angel journeyed, and again
+ The land was made resplendent with his train,
+ Flashing along the towns of Italy
+ Unto Salerno, and from there by sea.
+ And when once more within Palermo's wall,
+ And, seated on his throne in his great hall,
+ He heard the Angelus from convent towers,
+ As if the better world conversed with ours,
+ He beckoned to King Robert to draw nigher,
+ And with a gesture bade the rest retire;
+ And when they were alone, the angel said,
+ "Art thou the king?" Then bowing down his head,
+ King Robert crossed both hands upon his breast,
+ And meekly answered him: "Thou knowest best!
+ My sins as scarlet are; let me go hence,
+ And in some cloister's school of penitence,
+ Across those stones that pave the way to heaven
+ Walk barefoot till my guilty soul is shriven!"
+ The angel smiled, and from his radiant face
+ A holy light illumined all the place,
+ And through the open window, loud and clear,
+ They heard the monks chant in the chapel near,
+ Above the stir and tumult of the street:
+ "He has put down the mighty from their seat,
+ And has exalted them of low degree!"
+ And through the chant a second melody
+ Rose like the throbbing of a single string:
+ "I am an angel, and thou art the king!"
+
+ King Robert, who was standing near the throne,
+ Lifted his eyes, and lo! he was alone!
+ But all apparelled as in days of old,
+ With ermined mantle and with cloth of gold;
+ And when his courtiers came they found him there
+ Kneeling upon the floor, absorbed in silent prayer.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SERVICE.
+
+ FROM "PIPPA PASSES."
+
+
+ All service ranks the same with God:
+ If now, as formerly he trod
+ Paradise, his presence fills
+ Our earth, each only as God wills
+ Can work--God's puppets, best and worst,
+ Are we; there is no last nor first.
+
+ Say not "a small event"! Why "small"?
+ Costs it more pain than this, ye call
+ A "great event," should come to pass,
+ Than that? Untwine me from the mass
+ Of deeds which make up life, one deed
+ Power shall fall short in or exceed!
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO ANGELS.
+
+
+ God called the nearest angels who dwell with Him above:
+ The tenderest one was Pity, the dearest one was Love.
+
+ "Arise," He said, "my angels! a wail of woe and sin
+ Steals through the gates of heaven, and saddens all within.
+
+ "My harps take up the mournful strain that from a lost world swells,
+ The smoke of torment clouds the light and blights the asphodels.
+
+ "Fly downward to that under world, and on its souls of pain,
+ Let Love drop smiles like sunshine, and Pity tears like rain!"
+
+ Two faces bowed before the Throne, veiled in their golden hair;
+ Four white wings lessened swiftly down the dark abyss of air.
+
+ The way was strange, the flight was long; at last the angels came
+ Where swung the lost and nether world, red-wrapped in rayless flame.
+
+ There Pity, shuddering, wept; but Love, with faith too strong for fear,
+ Took heart from God's almightiness and smiled a smile of cheer.
+
+ And lo! that tear of Pity quenched the flame whereon it fell,
+ And, with the sunshine of that smile, hope entered into hell!
+
+ Two unveiled faces full of joy looked upward to the Throne,
+ Four white wings folded at the feet of Him who sat thereon!
+
+ And deeper than the sound of seas, more soft than falling flake,
+ Amidst the hush of wing and song the Voice Eternal spake:
+
+ "Welcome, my angels! ye have brought a holier joy to heaven;
+ Henceforth its sweetest song shall be the song of sin forgiven!"
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SELF-EXILED.
+
+
+ There came a soul to the gate of Heaven
+ Gliding slow--
+ A soul that was ransomed and forgiven,
+ And white as snow:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ A mystic light beamed from the face
+ Of the radiant maid,
+ But there also lay on its tender grace
+ A mystic shade:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ As sunlit clouds by a zephyr borne
+ Seem not to stir,
+ So to the golden gates of morn
+ They carried her:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Now open the gate, and let her in,
+ And fling It wide,
+ For she has been cleansed from stain of sin,"
+ Saint Peter cried:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Though I am cleansed from stain of sin,"
+ She answered low,
+ "I came not hither to enter in,
+ Nor may I go:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come," she said, "to the pearly door,
+ To see the Throne
+ Where sits the Lamb on the Sapphire Floor,
+ With God alone:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come to hear the new song they sing
+ To Him that died,
+ And note where the healing waters spring
+ From His piercd side:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "But I may not enter there," she said,
+ "For I must go
+ Across the gulf where the guilty dead
+ Lie in their woe:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "If I enter heaven I may not pass
+ To where they be,
+ Though the wail of their bitter pain, alas!
+ Tormenteth me:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "If I enter heaven I may not speak
+ My soul's desire
+ For them that are lying distraught and weak
+ In flaming fire:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I had a brother, and also another
+ Whom I loved well;
+ What if, in anguish, they curse each other
+ In the depths of hell?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "How could I touch the golden harps,
+ When all my praise
+ Would be so wrought with grief-full warps
+ Of their sad days?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "How love the loved who are sorrowing,
+ And yet be glad?
+ How sing the songs ye are fain to sing,
+ While I am sad?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Oh, clear as glass in the golden street
+ Of the city fair,
+ And the tree of life it maketh sweet
+ The lightsome air:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "And the white-robed saints with their crowns and palms
+ Are good to see,
+ And oh, so grand are the sounding psalms!
+ But not for me:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come where there is no night," she said,
+ "To go away,
+ And help, if I yet may help, the dead
+ That have no day."
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ Saint Peter he turned the keys about,
+ And answered grim:
+ "Can you love the Lord and abide without,
+ Afar from Him?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Can you love the Lord who died for you,
+ And leave the place
+ Where His glory is all disclosed to view,
+ And tender grace?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "They go not out who come in here;
+ It were not meet:
+ Nothing they lack, for He is here,
+ And bliss complete."
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be nearer Christ," she said,
+ "By pitying less
+ The sinful living or woful dead
+ In their helplessness?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be liker Christ were I
+ To love no more
+ The loved, who in their anguish lie
+ Outside the door?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Did He not hang on the cursd tree,
+ And bear its shame,
+ And clasp to His heart, for love of me,
+ My guilt and blame?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be liker, nearer Him,
+ Forgetting this,
+ Singing all day with the Seraphim,
+ In selfish bliss?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ The Lord Himself stood by the gate,
+ And heard her speak
+ Those tender words compassionate,
+ Gentle and meek:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ Now, pity is the touch of God
+ In human hearts,
+ And from that way He ever trod
+ He ne'er departs:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ And He said, "Now will I go with you,
+ Dear child of love,
+ I am weary of all this glory, too,
+ In heaven above:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "We will go seek and save the lost,
+ If they will hear,
+ They who are worst but need me most,
+ And all are dear:"
+ And the angels were not silent.
+
+WALTER C. SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SYMPATHY.
+
+ FROM "ION," ACT I. SC. 2.
+
+
+ 'T is a little thing
+ To give a cup of water; yet its draught
+ Of cool refreshment, drained by fevered lips,
+ May give a shock of pleasure to the frame
+ More exquisite than when nectarean juice
+ Renews the life of joy in happier hours.
+ It is a little thing to speak a phrase
+ Of common comfort which by daily use
+ Has almost lost its sense, yet on the ear
+ Of him who thought to die unmourned 't will fall
+ Like choicest music, fill the glazing eye
+ With gentle tears, relax the knotted hand
+ To know the bonds of fellowship again;
+ And shed on the departing soul a sense,
+ More precious than the benison of friends
+ About the honored death-bed of the rich,
+ To him who else were lonely, that another
+ Of the great family is near and feels.
+
+SIR THOMAS NOON TALFOURD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SIR GALAHAD.
+
+
+ My good blade carves the casques of men,
+ My tough lance thrusteth sure,
+ My strength is as the strength of ten,
+ Because my heart is pure.
+ The shattering trumpet shrilleth high,
+ The hard brands shiver on the steel,
+ The splintered spear-shafts crack and fly,
+ The horse and rider reel:
+ They reel, they roll in clanging lists,
+ And when the tide of combat stands,
+ Perfume and flowers fall in showers,
+ That lightly rain from ladies' hands.
+
+ How sweet are looks that ladies bend
+ On whom their favors fall!
+ For them I battle till the end,
+ To save from shame and thrall:
+ But all my heart is drawn above,
+ My knees are bowed in crypt and shrine:
+ I never felt the kiss of love,
+ Nor maiden's hand in mine.
+ More bounteous aspects on me beam,
+ Me mightier transports move and thrill;
+ So keep I fair thro' faith and prayer
+ A virgin heart in work and will.
+
+ When down the stormy crescent goes,
+ A light before me swims.
+ Between dark stems the forest glows,
+ I hear a noise of hymns:
+ Then by some secret shrine I ride;
+ I hear a voice, but none are there;
+ The stalls are void, the doors are wide,
+ The tapers burning fair.
+ Fair gleams the snowy altar-cloth,
+ The silver vessels sparkle clean,
+ The shrill bell rings, the censer swings,
+ And solemn chaunts resound between.
+
+ Sometimes on lonely mountain-meres
+ I find a magic bark;
+ I leap on board: no helmsman steers:
+ I float till all is dark.
+ A gentle sound, an awful light!
+ Three angels bear the holy Grail:
+ With folded feet, in stoles of white,
+ On sleeping wings they sail.
+ Ah, blessd vision! blood of God!
+ My spirit beats her mortal bars,
+ As down dark tides the glory slides,
+ And star-like mingles with the stars.
+
+ When on my goodly charger borne
+ Thro' dreaming towns I go,
+ The cock crows ere the Christmas morn,
+ The streets are dumb with snow.
+ The tempest crackles on the leads,
+ And, ringing, springs from brand and mail;
+ But o'er the dark a glory spreads,
+ And gilds the driving hail.
+ I leave the plain, I climb the height;
+ No branchy thicket shelter yields;
+ But blessd forms in whistling storms
+ Fly o'er waste fens and windy fields.
+
+ A maiden knight--to me is given
+ Such hope, I know not fear;
+ I yearn to breathe the airs of heaven
+ That often meet me here.
+ I muse on joy that will not cease,
+ Pure spaces clothed in living beams,
+ Pure lilies of eternal peace,
+ Whose odors haunt my dreams;
+ And, stricken by an angel's hand,
+ This mortal armor that I wear.
+ This weight and size, this heart and eyes,
+ Are touched, and turned to finest air.
+
+ The clouds are broken in the sky,
+ And thro' the mountain-walls
+ A rolling organ-harmony
+ Swells up, and shakes and falls.
+ Then move the trees, the copses nod,
+ Wings flutter, voices hover clear:
+ "O just and faithful knight of God!
+ Ride on! the prize is near."
+ So pass I hostel, hall, and grange;
+ By bridge and ford, by park and pale,
+ All-armed I ride, whate'er betide,
+ Until I find the holy Grail.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FLOWERS WITHOUT FRUIT.
+
+
+ Prune thou thy words; the thoughts control
+ That o'er thee swell and throng;--
+ They will condense within thy soul,
+ And change to purpose strong.
+
+ But he who lets his feelings run
+ In soft luxurious flow,
+ Shrinks when hard service must be done,
+ And faints at every woe.
+
+ Faith's meanest deed more favor bears,
+ Where hearts and wills are weighed,
+ Than brightest transports, choicest prayers,
+ Which bloom their hour, and fade.
+
+JOHN HENRY NEWMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SANTA FILOMENA.
+
+ [FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.]
+
+
+ Whene'er a noble deed is wrought,
+ Whene'er is spoken a noble thought,
+ Our hearts, in glad surprise,
+ To higher levels rise.
+
+ The tidal wave of deeper souls
+ Into our inmost being rolls,
+ And lifts us unawares
+ Out of all meaner cares.
+
+ Honor to those whose words or deeds
+ Thus help us in our daily needs,
+ And by their overflow
+ Raise us from what is low!
+
+ Thus thought I, as by night I read
+ Of the great army of the dead,
+ The trenches cold and damp,
+ The starved and frozen camp,
+
+ The wounded from the battle-plain,
+ In dreary hospitals of pain,
+ The cheerless corridors,
+ The cold and stony floors.
+
+ Lo! in that house of misery
+ A lady with a lamp I see
+ Pass through the glimmering gloom,
+ And flit from room to room.
+
+ And slow, as in a dream of bliss,
+ The speechless sufferer turns to kiss
+ Her shadow, as it falls
+ Upon the darkening walls.
+
+ As if a door in heaven should be
+ Opened and then closed suddenly,
+ The vision came and went,
+ The light shone and was spent.
+
+ On England's annals, through the long
+ Hereafter of her speech and song,
+ That light its rays shall cast
+ From portals of the past.
+
+ A Lady with a Lamp shall stand
+ In the great history of the land,
+ A noble type of good,
+ Heroic womanhood.
+
+ Nor even shall be wanting here
+ The palm, the lily, and the spear,
+ The symbols that of yore
+ Saint Filomena bore.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DEED AND A WORD.
+
+
+ A little stream had lost its way
+ Amid the grass and fern;
+ A passing stranger scooped a well,
+ Where weary men might turn;
+ He walled it in and hung with care
+ A ladle at the brink;
+ He thought not of the deed he did,
+ But judged that all might drink.
+ He passed again, and lo! the well,
+ By summer never dried,
+ Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues,
+ And saved a life beside.
+
+ A nameless man, amid a crowd
+ That thronged the daily mart,
+ Let fall a word of hope and love,
+ Unstudied, from the heart;
+ A whisper on the tumult thrown,
+ A transitory breath--
+ It raised a brother from the dust,
+ It saved a soul from death.
+ O germ! O fount! O word of love!
+ O thought at random cast!
+ Ye were but little at the first,
+ But mighty at the last.
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOGGARTH AROON.
+
+
+ Am I the slave they say,
+ Soggarth aroon?[A]
+ Since you did show the way,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Their slave no more to be,
+ While they would work with me
+ Old Ireland's slavery,
+ Soggarth aroon.
+
+ Why not her poorest man,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Try and do all he can,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Her commands to fulfil
+ Of his own heart and will,
+ Side by side with you still,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Loyal and brave to you,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Yet be not slave to you,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Nor, out of fear to you,
+ Stand up so near to you--
+ Och! out of fear to _you_,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+
+ Who, in the winter's night,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ When the cold blasts did bite,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Came to my cabin-door,
+ And on my earthen-floor
+ Knelt by me, sick and poor,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Who, on the marriage day,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Made the poor cabin gay,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ And did both laugh and sing,
+ Making our hearts to ring
+ At the poor christening,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Who, as friends only met,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Never did flout me yet,
+ Soggarth aroon;
+ And when my heart was dim,
+ Gave, while his eye did brim,
+ What I should give to him,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Och! you, and only you,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+ And for this I was true to you,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+ Our love they'll never shake,
+ When for ould Ireland's sake
+ We a true part did take,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+
+JOHN BANIM.
+
+[Footnote A: Priest, dear.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL.
+
+
+ PRELUDE TO PART FIRST.
+
+ Over his keys the musing organist,
+ Beginning doubtfully and far away,
+ First lets his fingers wander as they list,
+ And builds a bridge from Dreamland for his lay;
+ Then, as the touch of his loved instrument
+ Gives hope and fervor, nearer draws his theme,
+ First guessed by faint auroral flushes sent
+ Along the wavering vista of his dream.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Not only around our infancy
+ Doth heaven with all its splendors lie;
+ Daily, with souls that cringe and plot,
+ We Sinais climb and know it not.
+
+ Over our manhood bend the skies;
+ Against our fallen and traitor lives
+ The great winds utter prophecies;
+ With our faint hearts the mountain strives;
+ Its arms outstretched, the druid wood
+ Waits with its Benedicite;
+ And to our age's drowsy blood
+ Still shouts the inspiring sea.
+
+ Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us:
+ The beggar is taxed for a corner to die in.
+ The priest hath his fee who comes and shrives us,
+ We bargain for the graves we lie in;
+ At the devil's booth are all things sold,
+ Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of gold;
+
+ For a cap and bells our lives we pay,
+ Bubbles we buy with a whole soul's tasking:
+ 'Tis heaven alone that is given away,
+ 'Tis only God may be had for the asking;
+ No price is set on the lavish summer;
+ June may be had by the poorest comer.
+
+ And what is so rare as a day in June?
+ Then, if ever, come perfect days;
+ Then Heaven tries earth if it be in tune,
+ And over it softly her warm ear lays;
+ Whether we look, or whether we listen,
+ We hear life murmur, or see it glisten;
+ Every clod feels a stir of might,
+ An instinct within it that reaches and towers,
+ And groping blindly above it for light,
+ Climbs to a soul in grass and flowers;
+ The flush of life may well be seen
+ Thrilling back over hills and valleys;
+ The cowslip startles in meadows green,
+ The buttercup catches the sun in its chalice,
+ And there's never a leaf nor a blade too mean
+ To be some happy creature's palace;
+ The little bird sits at his door in the sun,
+ Atilt like a blossom among the leaves,
+ And lets his illumined being o'errun
+ With the deluge of summer it receives;
+ His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings,
+ And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings;
+ He sings to the wide world, and she to her nest,--
+ In the nice ear of Nature which song is the best?
+
+ Now is the high tide of the year,
+ And whatever of life hath ebbed away
+ Comes flooding back with a ripply cheer,
+ Into every bare inlet and creek and bay;
+ Now the heart is so full that a drop overfills it;
+ We are happy now because God wills it;
+ No matter how barren the past may have been,
+ 'T is enough for us now that the leaves are green;
+ We sit in the warm shade and feel right well
+ How the sap creeps up and the blossoms swell;
+ We may shut our eyes, but we cannot help knowing
+ That skies are clear and grass is growing;
+ The breeze comes whispering in our ear
+ That dandelions are blossoming near,
+ That maize has sprouted, that streams are flowing.
+ That the river is bluer than the sky,
+ That the robin is plastering his house hard by:
+ And if the breeze kept the good news back,
+ For other couriers we should not lack;
+ We could guess it all by yon heifer's lowing,--
+ And hark! how clear bold chanticleer,
+ Warmed with the new wine of the year,
+ Tells all in his lusty crowing!
+
+ Joy comes, grief goes, we know not how;
+ Everything is happy now,
+ Everything is upward striving;
+ 'T is as easy now for the heart to be true
+ As for grass to be green or skies to be blue,--
+ 'Tis the natural way of living:
+ Who knows whither the clouds have fled?
+ In the unscarred heaven they leave no wake;
+ And the eyes forget the tears they have shed,
+ The heart forgets its sorrow and ache;
+ The soul partakes the season's youth,
+ And the sulphurous rifts of passion and woe
+ Lie deep 'neath a silence pure and smooth,
+ Like burnt-out craters healed with snow.
+ What wonder if Sir Launfal now
+ Remember the keeping of his vow?
+
+
+ PART FIRST.
+
+ "My golden spurs now bring to me,
+ And bring to me my richest mail,
+ For to-morrow I go over land and sea
+ In search of the Holy Grail:
+ Shall never a bed for me be spread,
+ Nor shall a pillow be under my head,
+ Till I begin my vow to keep;
+ Here on the rushes will I sleep,
+ And perchance there may come a vision true
+ Ere day create the world anew."
+ Slowly Sir Launfal's eyes grew dim;
+ Slumber fell like a cloud on him,
+ And into his soul the vision flew.
+
+ The crows flapped over by twos and threes,
+ In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees,
+ The little birds sang as if it were
+ The one day of summer in all the year,
+ And the very leaves seemed to sing on the trees:
+ The castle alone in the landscape lay
+ Like an outpost of winter, dull and gray;
+ 'T was the proudest hall in the North Countree,
+ And never its gates might opened be,
+ Save to lord or lady of high degree;
+ Summer besieged it on every side,
+ But the churlish stone her assaults defied;
+ She could not scale the chilly wall,
+ Though around it for leagues her pavilions tall
+ Stretched left and right.
+ Over the hills and out of sight;
+ Green and broad was every tent,
+ And out of each a murmur went
+ Till the breeze fell off at night.
+
+ The drawbridge dropped with a surly clang,
+ And through the dark arch a charger sprang,
+ Bearing Sir Launfal, the maiden knight,
+ In his gilded mail, that flamed so bright
+ It seemed the dark castle had gathered all
+ Those shafts the fierce sun had shot over its wall
+ In his siege of three hundred summers long,
+ And binding them all in one blazing sheaf,
+ Had cast them forth; so, young and strong,
+ And lightsome as a locust leaf,
+ Sir Launfal flashed forth in his maiden mail,
+ To seek in all climes for the Holy Grail.
+
+ It was morning on hill and stream and tree,
+ And morning in the young knight's heart;
+ Only the castle moodily
+ Rebuffed the gifts of the sunshine free,
+ And gloomed by itself apart;
+ The season brimmed all other things up
+ Full as the rain fills the pitcher-plant's cup.
+
+ As Sir Launfal made morn through the darksome gate,
+ He was 'ware of a leper, crouched by the same,
+ Who begged with his hand and moaned as he sate;
+ And a loathing over Sir Launfal came;
+ The sunshine went out of his soul with a thrill,
+ The flesh 'neath his armor 'gan shrink and crawl,
+ And midway its leap his heart stood still
+ Like a frozen waterfall;
+ For this man, so foul and bent of stature,
+ Rasped harshly against his dainty nature,
+ And seemed the one blot on the summer morn,--
+ So he tossed him a piece of gold in scorn.
+
+ The leper raised not the gold from the dust:--
+ "Better to me the poor man's crust,
+ Better the blessing of the poor,
+ Though I turn me empty from his door:
+ That is no true alms which the hand can hold;
+ He gives only the worthless gold
+ Who gives from a sense of duty:
+ But he who gives but a slender mite,
+ And gives to that which is out of sight,--
+ That thread of the all-sustaining Beauty
+ Which runs through all and doth all unite,--
+ The hand cannot clasp the whole of his alms,
+ The heart outstretches its eager palms;
+ For a god goes with it and makes it store
+ To the soul that was starving in darkness before."
+
+
+ PRELUDE TO PART SECOND.
+
+ Down swept the chill wind from the mountain peak,
+ From the snow five thousand summers old;
+ On open wold and hilltop bleak
+ It had gathered all the cold,
+ And whirled it like sleet on the wanderer's cheek;
+ It carried a shiver everywhere
+ From the unleafed boughs and pastures bare;
+ The little brook heard it, and built a roof
+ 'Neath which he could house him winter-proof;
+ All night by the white stars' frosty gleams
+ He groined his arches and matched his beams;
+ Slender and clear were his crystal spars
+ As the lashes of light that trim the stars;
+ He sculptured every summer delight
+ In his halls and chambers out of sight;
+ Sometimes his tinkling waters slipt
+ Down through a frost-leaved forest crypt.
+ Long, sparkling aisles of steel stemmed trees
+ Mending to counterfeit a breeze;
+ Sometimes the roof no fretwork knew
+ But silvery mosses that downward grew;
+ Sometimes it was carved in sharp relief
+ With quaint arabesques of ice-fern leaf;
+ Sometimes it was simply smooth and clear
+ For the gladness of heaven to shine through, and here
+ He had caught the nodding bulrush tops
+ And hung them thickly with diamond drops.
+ That crystalled the beams of moon and sun,
+ And made a star of every one:
+ No mortal builder's most rare device
+ Could match this winter palace of ice;
+ 'T was as if every image that mirrored lay
+ In his depths serene through the summer day,
+ Each fleeting shadow of earth and sky,
+ Lest the happy model should be lost.
+ Sad been mimicked in fairy masonry
+ By the elfin builders of the frost.
+
+ Within the hall are song and laughter;
+ The cheeks of Christmas glow red and jolly,
+ And sprouting is every corbel and rafter
+ With lightsome green of ivy and holly;
+ Through the deep gulf of the chimney wide
+ Wallows the Yule-log's roaring tide;
+ The broad flame pennons droop and flap
+ And belly and tug as a flag in the wind;
+ Like a locust shrills the imprisoned sap,
+ Hunted to death in its galleries blind;
+ And swift little troops of silent sparks,
+ Now pausing, now scattering away as in fear,
+ Go threading the soot forest's tangled darks
+ Like herds of startled deer.
+
+ But the wind without was eager and sharp;
+ Of Sir Launfal's gray hair it makes a harp,
+ And rattles and wrings
+ The icy strings,
+ Singing in dreary monotone
+ A Christmas carol of its own,
+ Whose burden still, as he might guess,
+ Was "Shelterless, shelterless, shelterless!"
+
+ The voice of the seneschal flared like a torch
+ As he shouted the wanderer away from the porch,
+ And he sat in the gateway and saw all night
+ The great hall fire, so cheery and bold,
+ Through the window slits of the castle old,
+ Build out its piers of ruddy light
+ Against the drift of the cold.
+
+
+ PART SECOND.
+
+ There was never a leaf on bush or tree,
+ The bare boughs rattled shudderingly;
+ The river was dumb and could not speak,
+ For the weaver Winter its shroud had spun;
+ A single crow on the tree-top bleak
+ From his shining feathers shed off the cold sun;
+ Again it was morning, but shrunk and cold,
+ As if her veins were sapless and old,
+ And she rose up decrepitly
+ For a last dim look at earth and sea.
+
+ Sir Launfal turned from his own hard gale,
+ For another heir in his earldom sate:
+ An old, bent man, worn out and frail,
+ He came back from seeking the Holy Grail.
+ Little he recked of his earldom's loss,
+ No more on his surcoat was blazoned the cross;
+ But deep in his soul the sigh he wore,
+ The badge of the suffering and the poor.
+
+ Sir Launfal's raiment thin and spare
+ Was idle mail 'gainst the barbd air,
+ For it was just at the Christmas-time;
+ So he mused, as he sat, of a sunnier clime,
+ And sought for a shelter from cold and snow
+ In the light and warmth of long ago.
+ He sees the snake-like caravan crawl
+ O'er the edge of the desert, black and small,
+ Then nearer and nearer, till, one by one,
+ He can count the camels in the sun,
+ As over the red-hot sands they pass
+ To where, in its slender necklace of grass,
+ The little spring laughed and leapt in the shade.
+ And with its own self like an infant played,
+ And waved its signal of palms.
+
+ "For Christ's sweet sake, I beg an alms:"--
+ The happy camels may reach the spring,
+ But Sir Launfal sees only the grewsome thing,
+ The leper, lank as the rain-blanched bone,
+ That cowers beside him, a thing as lone
+ And white as the ice-isles of Northern seas
+ In the desolate horror of his disease.
+
+ And Sir Launfal said,--"I behold in thee
+ An image of Him who died on the tree;
+ Thou also hast had thy crown of thorns,--
+ Thou also hast had the world's buffets and scorns,--
+
+ And to thy life were not denied
+ The wounds in the hands and feet and side:
+ Mild Mary's Son, acknowledge me;
+ Behold, through him, I give to thee!"
+
+ Then the soul of the leper stood up in his eyes
+ And looked at Sir Launfal, and straightway he
+ Remembered in what a haughtier guise
+ He had flung an alms to leprosie,
+ When he girt his young life up in gilded mail
+ And set forth in search of the Holy Grail.
+ The heart within him was ashes and dust:
+ He parted in twain his single crust,
+ He broke the ice on the streamlet's brink,
+ And gave the leper to eat and drink;
+ 'T was a mouldy crust of coarse brown bread
+ 'T was water out of a wooden bowl,--
+ Yet with fine wheaten bread was the leper fed,
+ And 't was red wine he drank with his thirsty soul
+
+ As Sir Launfal mused with a downcast face,
+ A light shone round about the place;
+ The leper no longer crouched at his side,
+ But stood before him glorified,
+ Shining and tall and fair and straight
+ As the pillar that stood by the Beautiful Gate,--
+ Himself the Gate whereby men can
+ Enter the temple of God in Man.
+
+ His words were shed softer than leaves from the pine,
+ And they fell on Sir Launfal as snows on the brine,
+ That mingle their softness and quiet in one
+ With the shaggy unrest they float down upon;
+ And the voice that was softer than silence said:--
+ Lo, it is I, be not afraid!
+ In many climes, without avail,
+ Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail:
+ Behold, it is here,--this cup which thou
+ Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now;
+ This crust is my body broken for thee,
+ This water His blood that died on the tree;
+ The Holy Supper is kept indeed
+ In whatso we share with another's need.
+ Not, what we give, but what we share,--
+ For the gift without the giver is bare:
+ Who gives himself with his alms feeds three.--
+ Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me."
+
+ Sir Launfal awoke as from a swound:--
+ "The Grail in my castle here is found!
+ Hang my idle armor up on the wall,
+ Let it be the spider's banquet-hall;
+ He must be fenced with stronger mail
+ Who would seek and find the Holy Grail."
+
+ The castle gate stands open now,
+ And the wanderer is welcome to the hall
+ As the hang-bird is to the elm-tree bough;
+ No longer scowl the turrets tall.
+ The summer's long siege at last is o'er:
+ When the first poor outcast went in at the door,
+ She entered with him in disguise,
+ And mastered the fortress by surprise;
+ There is no spot she loves so well on ground;
+ She lingers and smiles there the whole year round;
+ The meanest serf on Sir Launfal's land
+ Has hall and bower at his command;
+ And there's no poor man in the North Countree
+ But is lord of the earldom as much as he.
+
+JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SISTER OF CHARITY.
+
+
+ She once was a lady of honor and wealth;
+ Bright glowed in her features the roses of health;
+ Her vesture was blended of silk and of gold,
+ And her motion shook perfume from every fold:
+ Joy revelled around her, love shone at her side,
+ And gay was her smile as the glance of a bride;
+ And light was her step in the mirth-sounding hall,
+ When she heard of the daughters of Vincent de Paul.
+
+ She felt in her spirit the summons of grace,
+ That called her to live for her suffering race;
+ And, heedless of pleasure, of comfort, of home,
+ Rose quickly, like Mary, and answered, "I come."
+ She put from her person the trappings of pride,
+ And passed from her home with the joy of a bride,
+ Nor wept at the threshold as onward she moved,--
+ For her heart was on fire in the cause it approved.
+
+ Lost ever to fashion, to vanity lost,
+ That beauty that once was the song and the toast,
+ No more in the ball-room that figure we meet,
+ But gliding at dusk to the wretch's retreat.
+ Forgot in the halls is that high-sounding name,
+ For the Sister of Charity blushes at fame:
+ Forgot are the claims of her riches and birth,
+ For she barters for heaven the glory of earth.
+
+ Those feet, that to music could gracefully move,
+ Now bear her alone on the mission of love;
+ Those hands, that once dangled the perfume and gem,
+ Are tending the helpless, or lifted for them;
+ That voice, that once echoed the song of the vain.
+ Now whispers relief to the bosom of pain;
+ And the hair that was shining with diamond and pearl,
+ Is wet with the tears of the penitent girl.
+
+ Her down-bed, a pallet--her trinkets, a bead;
+ Her lustre--one taper, that serves her to read;
+ Her sculpture--the crucifix nailed by her bed;
+ Her paintings--one print of the thorn-crownd head;
+ Her cushion--the pavement that wearies her knees;
+ Her music--the psalm, or the sigh of disease:
+ The delicate lady lives mortified there,
+ And the feast is forsaken for fasting and prayer.
+
+ Yet not to the service of heart and of mind
+ Are the cares of that heaven-minded virgin confined:
+ Like Him whom she loves, to the mansions of grief
+ She hastes with the tidings of joy and relief.
+ She strengthens the weary, she comforts the weak,
+ And soft is her voice in the ear of the sick;
+ Where want and affliction on mortals attend,
+ The Sister of Charity there is a friend.
+
+ Unshrinking where pestilence scatters his breath,
+ Like an angel she moves, mid the vapors of death;
+ Where rings the loud musket, and flashes the sword,
+ Unfearing she walks, for she follows her Lord.
+ How sweetly she bends o'er each plague-tainted face,
+ With looks that are lighted with holiest grace;
+ How kindly she dresses each suffering limb,
+ For she sees in the wounded the image of Him.
+
+ Behold her, ye worldly! behold her, ye vain!
+ Who shrink from the pathway of virtue and pain!
+ Who yield up to pleasure your nights and your days,
+ Forgetful of service, forgetful of praise.
+ Ye lazy philosophers, self-seeking men;
+ Ye fireside philanthropists, great at the pen;
+ How stands in the balance your eloquence weighed
+ With the life and the deeds of that high-born maid?
+
+GERALD JOSEPH GRIFFEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT I LIVE FOR.
+
+
+ I live for those who love me,
+ Whose hearts are kind and true,
+ For heaven that smiles above me,
+ And waits my spirit, too;
+ For all the ties that bind me,
+ For all the tasks assigned me.
+ And bright hopes left behind me,
+ And good that I can do.
+
+ I live to learn their story
+ Who've suffered for my sake,
+ To emulate their glory,
+ And follow in their wake;
+ Bards, patriots, martyrs, sages,
+ The noble of all ages,
+ Whose deeds crown history's pages,
+ And Time's great volume make.
+
+ I live to hold communion
+ With all that is divine,
+ To feel there is a union
+ 'Twixt Nature's heart and mine;
+ To profit by affliction,
+ Reap truths from fields of fiction,
+ And, wiser from conviction,
+ Fulfil each grand design.
+
+ I live to hail that season,
+ By gifted minds foretold,
+ When men shall rule by reason,
+ And not alone by gold;
+ When man to man united,
+ And every wrong thing righted,
+ The whole world shall be lighted
+ As Eden was of old.
+
+ I live for those who love me,
+ Whose hearts are kind and true,
+ For heaven that smiles above me,
+ And waits my spirit too;
+ For the cause that lacks assistance,
+ For the wrong that needs resistance,
+ For the future in the distance,
+ And the good that I can do.
+
+GEORGE LINNAEUS BANKS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IF WE HAD BUT A DAY.
+
+
+ We should fill the hours with the sweetest things,
+ If we had but a day;
+ We should drink alone at the purest springs
+ In our upward way;
+ We should love with a lifetime's love in an hour,
+ If the hours were few;
+ We should rest, not for dreams, but for fresher power
+ To be and to do.
+
+ We should guide our wayward or wearied wills
+ By the clearest light;
+ We should keep our eyes on the heavenly hills,
+ If they lay in sight;
+ We should trample the pride and the discontent
+ Beneath our feet;
+ We should take whatever a good God sent,
+ With a trust complete.
+
+ We should waste no moments in weak regret,
+ If the day were but one;
+ If what we remember and what we forget
+ Went out with the sun;
+ We should be from our clamorous selves set free,
+ To work or to pray,
+ And to be what the Father would have us be.
+ If we had but a day.
+
+MARY LOWE DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ABOU BEN ADHEM.
+
+
+ Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase!)
+ Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
+ And saw within the moonlight in his room,
+ Making it rich and like a lily in bloom.
+ An angel writing in a book of gold:
+ Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
+ And to the presence in the room he said,
+ "What writest thou?" The vision raised its head,
+ And, with a look made of all sweet accord,
+ Answered, "The names of those who love the Lord."
+ "And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so."
+ Replied the angel. Abou spoke more low,
+ But cheerly still; and said, "I pray thee, then,
+ Write me as one that loves his fellow-men."
+ The angel wrote, and vanished. The next night
+ It came again with a great wakening light,
+ And showed the names whom love of God had blessed,--
+ And lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest!
+
+LEIGH HUNT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE.
+
+
+ If suddenly upon the street
+ My gracious Saviour I should meet,
+ And he should say, "As I love thee,
+ What love hast thou to offer me?"
+ Then what could this poor heart of mine
+ Dare offer to that heart divine?
+
+ His eye would pierce my outward show,
+ His thought my inmost thought would know;
+ And if I said, "I love thee, Lord,"
+ He would not heed my spoken word,
+ Because my daily life would tell
+ If verily I loved him well.
+
+ If on the day or in the place
+ Wherein he met me face to face,
+ My life could show some kindness done,
+ Some purpose formed, some work begun
+ For his dear sake, then it were meet
+ Love's gift to lay at Jesus' feet.
+
+CHARLES FRANCIS RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+SABBATH: WORSHIP: CREED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUNDAY MORNING BELLS.
+
+
+ From the near city comes the clang of bells:
+ Their hundred jarring diverse tones combine
+ In one faint misty harmony, as fine
+ As the soft note yon winter robin swells.
+ What if to Thee in thine infinity
+ These multiform and many-colored creeds
+ Seem but the robe man wraps as masquers' weeds
+ Round the one living truth them givest him--Thee?
+ What if these varied forms that worship prove,
+ Being heart-worship, reach thy perfect ear
+ But as a monotone, complete and clear,
+ Of which the music is, through Christ's name, love?
+ Forever rising in sublime increase
+ To "Glory in the highest,--on earth peace"?
+
+DINAH M. MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SABBATH HYMN ON THE MOUNTAINS.
+
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not in the temple of shapeliest mould,
+ Polished with marble and gleaming with gold,
+ Piled upon pillars of slenderest grace,
+ But here in the blue sky's luminous face,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the organ's melodious wave
+ Dies 'neath the rafters that narrow the nave,
+ But here with the free wind's wandering sweep,
+ Here with the billow that booms from the deep,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the pale-faced multitude meet
+ In the sweltering lane and the dun-visaged street,
+ But here where bright ocean, thick sown with green isles,
+ Feeds the glad eye with a harvest of smiles,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Here where the strength of the old granite Ben
+ Towers o'er the greenswarded grace of the glen,
+ Where the birch flings its fragrance abroad on the hill,
+ And the bee of the heather-bloom wanders at will,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Here where the loch, the dark mountain's fair daughter,
+ Down the red scaur flings the white-streaming water,
+ Leaping and tossing and swirling forever,
+ Down to the bed of the smooth-rolling river,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the voice of a preacher instructs you,
+ Not where the hand of a mortal conducts you,
+ But where the bright welkin in scripture of glory
+ Blazons creation's miraculous story.
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ The wind and the welkin, the sun and the river,
+ Weaving a tissue of wonders forever;
+ The mead and the mountain, the flower and the tree,
+ What is their pomp, but a vision of thee,
+ Wonderful Lord?
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not in the square-hewn, many-tiered pile,
+ Not in the long-drawn, dim-shadowed aisle,
+ But where the bright world, with age never hoary,
+ Flashes her brightness and thunders his glory,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+JOHN STUART BLACKIE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SABBATH MORNING.
+
+
+ With silent awe I hail the sacred morn,
+ That slowly wakes while all the fields are still!
+ A soothing calm on every breeze is borne;
+ A graver murmur gurgles from the rill;
+ And echo answers softer from the hill;
+ And sweeter sings the linnet from the thorn:
+ The skylark warbles in a tone less shrill.
+ Hail, light serene! hail, sacred Sabbath morn!
+ The rooks float silent by in airy drove;
+ The sun a placid yellow lustre throws;
+ The gales that lately sighed along the grove
+ Have hushed their downy wings in dead repose
+ The hovering rack of clouds forgets to move,--
+ So smiled that day when the first morn arose!
+
+JOHN LEYDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POOR MAN'S DAY.
+
+ FROM "THE SABBATH."
+
+
+ How still the morning of the hallowed day!
+ Mute is the voice of rural labor, hushed
+ The ploughboy's whistle and the milkmaid's song.
+ The scythe lies glittering in the dewy wreath
+ Of tedded grass, mingled with faded flowers,
+ That yestermorn bloomed waving in the breeze;
+ Sounds the most faint attract the ear,--the hum
+ Of early bee, the trickling of the dew,
+ The distant bleating, midway up the hill.
+ Calmness sits throned on yon unmoving cloud.
+ To him who wanders o'er the upland leas
+ The blackbird's note comes mellower from the dale;
+ And sweeter from the sky the gladsome lark
+ Warbles his heaven-tuned song; the lulling brook
+ Murmurs more gently down the deep-worn glen;
+ While from yon lowly roof, whose circling smoke
+ O'ermounts the mist, is heard at intervals
+ The voice of psalms, the simple song of praise.
+ With dovelike wings Peace o'er yon village broods;
+ The dizzying mill-wheel rests; the anvil's din
+ Hath ceased; all, all around is quietness.
+ Less fearful on this day, the limping hare
+ Stops, and looks back, and stops, and looks on man,
+ Her deadliest foe. The toil-worn horse, set free,
+ Unheedful of the pasture, roams at large;
+ And as his stiff, unwieldy bulk he rolls,
+ His iron-armed hoofs gleam in the morning ray.
+ But chiefly man the day of rest enjoys.
+ Hail, Sabbath! thee I hail, the poor man's day.
+ On other days the man of toil is doomed
+ To eat his joyless bread, lonely; the ground
+ Both seat and board; screened from the winter's cold
+ And summer's heat by neighboring hedge or tree;
+ But on this day, imbosomed in his home,
+ He shares the frugal meal with those he loves;
+ With those he loves he shares the heartfelt joy
+ Of giving thanks to God--not thanks of form,
+ A word and a grimace, but reverently,
+ With covered face and upward earnest eye.
+ Hail, Sabbath! thee I hail, the poor man's day.
+ The pale mechanic now has leave to breathe
+ The morning air, pure from the city's smoke;
+ While, wandering slowly up the river-side,
+ He meditates on Him, whose power he marks
+ In each green tree that proudly spreads the bough
+ As in the tiny dew-bent flowers that bloom
+ Around its roots; and while he thus surveys,
+ With elevated joy, each rural charm,
+ He hopes, yet fears presumption in the hope,
+ That heaven may be one Sabbath without end.
+
+JAMES GRAHAME.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SABBATH OF THE SOUL.
+
+
+ Sleep, sleep to-day, tormenting cares,
+ Of earth and folly born;
+ Ye shall not dim the light that streams
+ From this celestial morn.
+
+ To-morrow will be time enough
+ To feel your harsh control;
+ Ye shall not violate, this day,
+ The Sabbath of my soul.
+
+ Sleep, sleep forever, guilty thoughts;
+ Let fires of vengeance die;
+ And, purged from sin, may I behold
+ A God of purity!
+
+ANNA LTITIA BARBAULD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VESPER HYMN.
+
+
+ Now, on sea and land descending,
+ Brings the night its peace profound:
+ Let our vesper hymn be blending
+ With the holy calm around.
+ Soon as dies the sunset glory,
+ Stars of heaven shine out above,
+ Telling still the ancient story--
+ Their Creator's changeless love.
+
+ Now, our wants and burdens leaving
+ To his care who cares for all,
+ Cease we fearing, cease we grieving;
+ At his touch our burdens fall.
+ As the darkness deepens o'er us,
+ Lo! eternal stars arise;
+ Hope and Faith and Love rise glorious,
+ Shining in the Spirit's skies.
+
+SAMUEL LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VESPER HYMN.
+
+
+ The day is done; the weary day of thought and toil is past,
+ Soft falls the twilight cool and gray on the tired earth at last:
+ By wisest teachers wearied, by gentlest friends oppressed,
+ In thee alone, the soul, outworn, refreshment finds, and rest.
+
+ Bend, Gracious Spirit, from above, like these o'erarching skies,
+ And to thy firmament of love lift up these longing eyes;
+ And, folded by thy sheltering hand, in refuge still and deep,
+ Let blessed thoughts from thee descend, as drop the dews of sleep.
+
+ And when refreshed the soul once more puts on new life and power;
+ Oh, let thine image. Lord, alone, gild the first waking hour!
+ Let that dear Presence dawn and glow, fairer than morn's first ray,
+ And thy pure radiance overflow the splendor of the day.
+
+ So in the hastening even, so in the coming morn,
+ When deeper slumber shall be given, and fresher life be born.
+ Shine out, true Light! to guide my way amid that deepening gloom,
+ And rise, O Morning Star, the first that dayspring to illume!
+
+ I cannot dread the darkness where thou wilt watch o'er me,
+ Nor smile to greet the sunrise unless thy smile I see;
+ Creator, Saviour, Comforter! on thee my soul is cast;
+ At morn, at night, in earth, in heaven, be thou my First and Last!
+
+ELIZA SCUDDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMAZING, BEAUTEOUS CHANGE!
+
+
+ Amazing, beauteous change!
+ A world created new!
+ My thoughts with transport range,
+ The lovely scene to view;
+ In all I trace,
+ Saviour divine,
+ The word is thine,--
+ Be thine the praise!
+
+ See crystal fountains play
+ Amidst the burning sands;
+ The river's winding way
+ Shines through the thirsty lands;
+ New grass is seen,
+ And o'er the meads
+ Its carpet spreads
+ Of living green.
+
+ Where pointed brambles grew,
+ Intwined with horrid thorn,
+ Gay flowers, forever new,
+ The painted fields adorn,--
+ The blushing rose
+ And lily there,
+ In union fair,
+ Their sweets disclose.
+
+ Where the bleak mountain stood
+ All bare and disarrayed,
+ See the wide-branching wood
+ Diffuse its grateful shade;
+ Tall cedars nod,
+ And oaks and pines,
+ And elms and vines
+ Confess thee God.
+
+ The tyrants of the plain
+ Their savage chase give o'er,--
+ No more they rend the slain,
+ And thirst for blood no more;
+ But infant hands
+ Fierce tigers stroke,
+ And lions yoke
+ In flowery bands.
+
+ O, when, Almighty Lord!
+ Shall these glad things arise,
+ To verify thy word,
+ And bless our wandering eyes?
+ That earth may raise,
+ With all its tongues,
+ United songs
+ Of ardent praise.
+
+PHILIP DODDRIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WORD.
+
+
+ O Word of God incarnate,
+ O Wisdom from on high,
+ O Truth unchanged, unchanging,
+ O Light of our dark sky;
+ We praise thee for the radiance
+ That from the hallowed page,
+ A lantern to our footsteps,
+ Shines on from age to age.
+
+ The Church from thee, her Master,
+ Received the gift divine;
+ And still that light she lifteth
+ O'er all the earth to shine.
+ It is the golden casket
+ Where gems of truth are stored;
+ It is the heaven-drawn picture
+ Of, thee, the living Word.
+
+ It floateth like a banner
+ Before God's host unfurled;
+ It shineth like a beacon
+ Above the darkling world;
+ It is the chart and compass
+ That o'er life's surging sea,
+ Mid mists and rocks and quicksands,
+ Still guide, O Christ, to thee.
+
+ Oh, make thy Church, dear Saviour,
+ A lamp of burnished gold,
+ To bear before the nations
+ Thy true light, as of old.
+ Oh, teach thy wandering pilgrims
+ By this their path to trace,
+ Till, clouds and darkness ended,
+ They see thee face to face.
+
+WILLIAM WALSHAM HOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHIMES OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+ The chimes, the chimes of Motherland,
+ Of England green and old.
+ That out from fane and ivied tower
+ A thousand years have tolled;
+ How glorious must their music be
+ As breaks the hallowed day,
+ And calleth with a seraph's voice
+ A nation up to pray!
+
+ Those chimes that tell a thousand tales,
+ Sweet tales of olden time;
+ And ring a thousand memories
+ At vesper, and at prime!
+ At bridal and at burial,
+ For cottager and king,
+ Those chimes, those glorious Christian chimes,
+ How blessedly they ring!
+
+ Those chimes, those chimes of Motherland,
+ Upon a Christmas morn.
+ Outbreaking as the angels did,
+ For a Redeemer born!
+ How merrily they call afar,
+ To cot and baron's hall,
+ With holly decked and mistletoe,
+ To keep the festival!
+
+ The chimes of England, how they peal
+ From tower and Gothic pile,
+ Where hymn and swelling anthem fill
+ The dim cathedral aisle;
+ Where windows bathe the holy light
+ On priestly heads that falls,
+ And stains the florid tracery
+ Of banner-dighted walls!
+
+ And then, those Easter bells, in spring,
+ Those glorious Easter chimes!
+ How loyally they hail thee round,
+ Old Queen of holy times!
+ From hill to hill like sentinels,
+ Responsively they cry,
+ And sing the rising of the Lord,
+ From vale to mountain high.
+
+ I love ye, chimes of Motherland,
+ With all this soul of mine,
+ And bless the Lord that I am sprung
+ Of good old English line:
+ And like a son I sing the lay
+ That England's glory tells;
+ For she is lovely to the Lord,
+ For you, ye Christian bells!
+
+ And heir of her historic fame,
+ Though far away my birth,
+ Thee, too, I love, my Forest-land,
+ The joy of all the earth;
+ For thine thy mother's voice shall be,
+ And here, where God is king,
+ With English chimes, from Christian spires,
+ The wilderness shall ring.
+
+ARTHUR CLEVELAND COXE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OLD VILLAGE CHOIR.
+
+
+ I have fancied, sometimes, the Bethel-bent beam,
+ That trembled to earth in the patriarch's dream,
+ Was a ladder of song in that wilderness rest,
+ From the pillar of stone to the blue of the blest.
+ And the angels descending to dwell with us here,
+ "Old Hundred," and "Corinth," and "China," and "Mear."
+
+ "Let us sing to God's praise," the minister said.
+ All the psalm-books at once fluttered open at "York";
+ Sunned their long dotted wings in the words that he read,
+ While the leader leaped into the tune just ahead,
+ And politely picked up the key-note with a fork;
+ And the vicious old viol went growling along
+ At the heels of the girls, in the rear of the song.
+
+ All the hearts are not dead, not under the sod,
+ That those breaths can blow open to heaven and God!
+ Ah, "Silver Street" flows by a bright shining road,--
+ Oh, not to the hymns that in harmony flowed,--
+ But the sweet human psalms of the old-fashioned choir,
+ To the girl that sang alto--the girl that sang air!
+
+ Oh, I need not a wing--bid no genii come
+ With a wonderful web from Arabian loom,
+ To bear me again up the river of Time,
+ When the world was in rhythm, and life was its rhyme--
+ Where the streams of the years flowed so noiseless and narrow,
+ That across it there floated the song of the sparrow--
+
+ For a sprig of green caraway carries me there.
+ To the old village church, and the old village choir,
+ Where clear of the floor my feet slowly swung,
+ And timed the sweet pulse of the praise that they sung,
+ Till the glory aslant from the afternoon sun
+ Seemed the rafters of gold in God's temple begun!
+
+ You may smile at the nasals of old Deacon Brown,
+ Who followed by scent, till he ran the tune down;
+ And dear Sister Green, with more goodness than grace,
+ Rose and fell on the tunes as she stood in her place,
+ And where "Coronation" exultingly flows,
+ Tried to reach the high notes on the tips of her toes!
+
+ To the land of the leal they have gone with their song,
+ Where the choir and the chorus together belong,
+ Oh be lifted, ye gates! Let me hear them again--
+ Blessd song, blessd singers! forever, Amen!
+
+BENJAMIN F. TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A LANCASHIRE DOXOLOGY.
+
+ "Some cotton has lately been imported into Farringdon, where
+ the mills have been closed for a considerable time. The
+ people, who were previously in the deepest distress, went out
+ to meet the cotton: the women wept over the bales and kissed
+ them, and finally sang the Doxology over them."--_Spectator_
+ of May 14, 1803.
+
+
+ "Praise God from whom all blessings flow,"
+ Praise him who sendeth joy and woe.
+ The Lord who takes, the Lord who gives,
+ O, praise him, all that dies, and lives.
+
+ He opens and he shuts his hand,
+ But why we cannot understand:
+ Pours and dries up his mercies' flood,
+ And yet is still All-perfect Good.
+
+ We fathom not the mighty plan,
+ The mystery of God and man;
+ We women, when afflictions come,
+ We only suffer and are dumb.
+
+ And when, the tempest passing by,
+ He gleams out, sunlike through our sky,
+ We look up, and through black clouds riven
+ We recognize the smile of Heaven.
+
+ Ours is no wisdom of the wise,
+ We have no deep philosophies;
+ Childlike we take both kiss and rod,
+ For he who loveth knoweth God.
+
+DINAH M. MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REBECCA'S HYMN.
+
+ FROM "IVANHOE."
+
+
+ When Israel, of the Lord beloved,
+ Out from the land of bondage came,
+ Her fathers' God before her moved,
+ An awful guide, in smoke and flame.
+ By day, along the astonished lands,
+ The cloudy pillar glided slow:
+ By night, Arabia's crimsoned sands
+ Returned the fiery column's glow.
+
+ There rose the choral hymn of praise,
+ And trump and timbrel answered keen,
+ And Zion's daughters poured their lays,
+ With priest's and warrior's voice between.
+ No portents now our foes amaze,
+ Forsaken Israel wanders lone:
+ Our fathers would not know Thy ways,
+ And Thou hast left them to their own.
+
+ But, present still, though now unseen!
+ When brightly shines the prosperous day,
+ Be thoughts of Thee a cloudy screen
+ To temper the deceitful ray.
+ And O, when stoops on Judah's path
+ In shade and storm the frequent night,
+ Be Thou, long-suffering, slow to wrath,
+ A burning and a shining light!
+
+ Our harps we left by Babel's streams,
+ The tyrant's jest, the Gentile's scorn;
+ No censer round our altar beams,
+ And mute are timbrel, harp, and horn.
+ But Thou hast said, "The blood of goat,
+ The flesh of rams, I will not prize;
+ A contrite heart, a humble thought,
+ Are mine accepted sacrifice."
+
+SIR WALTER SCOTT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOOK OF GOD.
+
+
+ Thy thoughts are here, my God,
+ Expressed in words divine,
+ The utterance of heavenly lips
+ In every sacred line.
+
+ Across the ages they
+ Have reached us from afar,
+ Than the bright gold more golden they,
+ Purer than purest star.
+
+ More durable they stand
+ Than the eternal hills;
+ Far sweeter and more musical
+ Than music of earth's rills.
+
+ Fairer in their fair hues
+ Than the fresh flowers of earth,
+ More fragrant than the fragrant climes
+ Where odors have their birth.
+
+ Each word of thine a gem
+ From the celestial mines,
+ A sunbeam from that holy heaven
+ Where holy sunlight shines.
+
+ Thine, thine, this book, though given
+ In man's poor human speech,
+ Telling of things unseen, unheard,
+ Beyond all human reach.
+
+ No strength it craves or needs
+ From this world's wisdom vain;
+ No filling up from human wells,
+ Or sublunary rain.
+
+ No light from sons of time,
+ Nor brilliance from its gold;
+ It sparkles with its own glad light,
+ As in the ages old.
+
+ A thousand hammers keen,
+ With fiery force and strain,
+ Brought down on it in rage and hate,
+ Have struck this gem in vain.
+
+ Against this sea-swept rock
+ Ten thousand storms their will
+ Of foam and rage have wildly spent;
+ It lifts its calm face still.
+
+ It standeth and will stand,
+ Without or change or age,
+ The word of majesty and light,
+ The church's heritage.
+
+HORATIUS BONAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MEETING.
+
+
+ The elder folk shook hands at last,
+ Down seat by seat the signal passed.
+ To simple ways like ours unused,
+ Half solemnized and half amused,
+ With long-drawn breath and shrug, my guest
+ His sense of glad relief expressed.
+ Outside, the hills lay warm in sun;
+ The cattle in the meadow-run
+ Stood half-leg deep; a single bird
+ The green repose above us stirred.
+ "What part or lot have you," he said,
+ "In these dull rites of drowsy-head?
+ Is silence worship? Seek it where
+ It soothes with dreams the summer air;
+ Not in this close and rude-benched hall,
+ But where soft lights and shadows fall,
+ And all the slow, sleep-walking hours
+ Glide soundless over grass and flowers!
+ From time and place and form apart,
+ Its holy ground the human heart,
+ Nor ritual-bound nor templeward
+ Walks the free spirit of the Lord!
+ Our common Master did not pen
+ His followers up from other men;
+ His service liberty indeed,
+ He built no church, he framed no creed;
+ But while the saintly Pharisee
+ Made broader his phylactery,
+ As from the synagogue was seen
+ The dusty-sandalled Nazarene
+ Through ripening cornfields lead the way
+ Upon the awful Sabbath day,
+ His sermons were the healthful talk
+ That shorter made the mountain-walk,
+ His wayside texts were flowers and birds,
+ Where mingled with his gracious words
+ The rustle of the tamarisk-tree
+ And ripple-wash of Galilee."
+
+ "Thy words are well, O friend," I said;
+ "Unmeasured and unlimited,
+ With noiseless slide of stone to stone,
+ The mystic Church of God has grown.
+ Invisible and silent stands
+ The temple never made with hands,
+ Unheard the voices still and small
+ Of its unseen confessional.
+ He needs no special place of prayer
+ Whose hearing ear is everywhere;
+ He brings not back the childish days
+ That ringed the earth with stones of praise,
+ Roofed Karnak's hall of gods, and laid
+ The plinths of Philae's colonnade.
+ Still less he owns the selfish good
+ And sickly growth of solitude,--
+ The worthless grace that, out of sight,
+ Flowers in the desert anchorite;
+ Dissevered from the suffering whole,
+ Love hath no power to save a soul.
+ Not out of Self, the origin
+ And native air and soil of sin,
+ The living waters spring and flow,
+ The trees with leaves of healing grow.
+
+ "Dream not, O friend, because I seek
+ This quiet shelter twice a week,
+ I better deem its pine-laid floor
+ Than breezy hill or sea-sung shore;
+ But nature is not solitude;
+ She crowds us with her thronging wood;
+ Her many hands reach out to us,
+ Her many tongues are garrulous;
+ Perpetual riddles of surprise
+ She offers to our ears and eyes;
+ She will not leave our senses still,
+ But drags them captive at her will;
+ And, making earth too great for heaven,
+ She hides the Giver in the given.
+
+ "And so I find it well to come
+ For deeper rest to this still room,
+ For here the habit of the soul
+ Feels less the outer world's control;
+ The strength of mutual purpose pleads
+ More earnestly our common needs;
+ And from the silence multiplied
+ By these still forms on either side,
+ The world that time and sense have known
+ Falls off and leaves us God alone.
+
+ "Yet rarely through the charmed repose
+ Unmixed the stream of motive flows,
+ A flavor of its many springs,
+ The tints of earth and sky it brings;
+ In the still waters needs must be
+ Some shade of human sympathy;
+ And here, in its accustomed place,
+ I look on memory's dearest face;
+ The blind by-sitter guesseth not
+ What shadow haunts that vacant spot;
+ No eyes save mine alone can see
+ The love wherewith it welcomes me!
+ And still, with those alone my kin,
+ In doubt and weakness, want and sin,
+ I bow my head, my heart I bare
+ As when that face was living there,
+ And strive (too oft, alas! in vain)
+ The peace of simple trust to gain,
+ Fold fancy's restless wings, and lay
+ The idols of my heart away.
+
+ "Welcome the silence all unbroken,
+ Nor less the words of fitness spoken,--
+ Such golden words as hers for whom
+ Our autumn flowers have just made room;
+ Whose hopeful utterance through and through
+ The freshness of the morning blew;
+ Who loved not less the earth that light
+ Fell on it from the heavens in sight,
+ But saw in all fair forms more fair
+ The Eternal beauty mirrored there.
+ Whose eighty years but added grace
+ And saintlier meaning to her face,--
+ The look of one who bore away
+ Glad tidings from the hills of day,
+ While all our hearts went forth to meet
+ The coming of her beautiful feet!
+ Or haply hers whose pilgrim tread
+ Is in the paths where Jesus led;
+ Who dreams her childhood's Sabbath dream
+ By Jordan's willow-shaded stream,
+ And, of the hymns of hope and faith,
+ Sang by the monks of Nazareth,
+ Hears pious echoes, in the call
+ To prayer, from Moslem minarets fall,
+ Repeating where His works were wrought
+ The lesson that her Master taught,
+ Of whom an elder Sibyl gave,
+ The prophecies of Cumae's cave!
+
+ "I ask no organ's soulless breath
+ To drone the themes of life and death,
+ No altar candle-lit by day,
+ No ornate wordsman's rhetoric-play,
+ No cool philosophy to teach
+ Its bland audacities of speech
+ To double-tasked idolaters,
+ Themselves their gods and worshippers,
+ No pulpit hammered by the fist
+ Of loud-asserting dogmatist,
+ Who borrows for the hand of love
+ The smoking thunderbolts of Jove.
+ I know how well the fathers taught,
+ What work the later schoolmen wrought;
+ I reverence old-time faith and men,
+ But God is near us now as then;
+ His force of love is still unspent,
+ His hate of sin as imminent;
+ And still the measure of our needs
+ Outgrows the cramping bounds of creeds;
+ The manna gathered yesterday
+ Already savors of decay;
+ Doubts to the world's child-heart unknown
+ Question us now from star and stone;
+ Too little or too much we know,
+ And sight is swift and faith is slow;
+ The power is lost to self-deceive
+ With shallow forms of make-believe.
+ We walk at high noon, and the bells
+ Call to a thousand oracles,
+ But the sound deafens, and the light
+ Is stronger than our dazzled sight;
+ The letters of the sacred Book
+ Glimmer and swim beneath our look;
+ Still struggles in the Age's breast
+ With deepening agony of quest
+ The old entreaty: 'Art thou He,
+ Or look we for the Christ to be?'
+
+ "God should be most where man is least;
+ So, where is neither church nor priest,
+ And never rag of form or creed
+ To clothe the nakedness of need,--
+ Where farmer-folk in silence meet,--
+ I turn my bell-unsummoned feet;
+ I lay the critic's glass aside,
+ I tread upon my lettered pride,
+ And, lowest-seated, testify
+ To the oneness of humanity;
+ Confess the universal want,
+ And share whatever Heaven may grant.
+ He findeth not who seeks his own,
+ The soul is lost that's saved alone.
+ Not on one favored forehead fell
+ Of old the fire-tongued miracle,
+ But flamed o'er all the thronging host
+ The baptism of the Holy Ghost;
+ Heart answers heart: in one desire
+ The blending lines of prayer aspire;
+ 'Where, in my name, meet two or three,'
+ Our Lord hath said, 'I there will be!'
+
+ "So sometimes comes to soul and sense
+ The feeling which is evidence
+ That very near about us lies
+ The realm of spiritual mysteries.
+ The sphere of the supernal powers
+ Impinges on this world of ours.
+ The low and dark horizon lifts,
+ To light the scenic terror shifts;
+ The breath of a diviner air
+ Blows down the answer of a prayer:--
+ That all our sorrow, pain, and doubt
+ A great compassion clasps about,
+ And law and goodness, love and force,
+ Are wedded fast beyond divorce.
+ Then duty leaves to love its task,
+ The beggar Self forgets to ask;
+ With smile of trust and folded hands,
+ The passive soul in waiting stands
+ To feel, as flowers the sun and dew,
+ The One true Life its own renew.
+
+ "So, to the calmly gathered thought
+ The innermost of truth is taught,
+ The mystery dimly understood,
+ That love of God is love of good,
+ And, chiefly, its divinest trace
+ In Him of Nazareth's holy face;
+ That to be saved is only this,--
+ Salvation from our selfishness,
+ From more than elemental fire,
+ The soul's unsanctified desire,
+ From sin itself, and not the pain
+ That warns us of its chafing chain;
+ That worship's deeper meaning lies
+ In mercy, and not sacrifice,
+ Not proud humilities of sense
+ And posturing of penitence,
+ But love's unforced obedience;
+ That Book and Church and Day are given
+ For man, not God,--for earth, not heaven,--
+ The blessed means to holiest ends,
+ Not masters, but benignant friends;
+ That the dear Christ dwells not afar,
+ The king of some remoter star,
+ Listening, at times, with flattered ear,
+ To homage wrung from selfish fear,
+ But here, amidst the poor and blind,
+ The bound and suffering of our kind,
+ In works we do, in prayers we pray,
+ Life of our life, He lives to-day."
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LIVING TEMPLE.
+
+
+ Nor in the world of light alone,
+ Where God has built his blazing throne,
+ Nor yet alone in earth below,
+ With belted seas that come and go,
+ And endless isles of sunlit green,
+ Is all thy Maker's glory seen:
+ Look in upon thy wondrous frame,--
+ Eternal wisdom still the same!
+
+ The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves
+ Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,
+ Whose streams of brightening purple rush,
+ Fired with a new and livelier blush,
+ While all their burden of decay
+ The ebbing current steals away,
+ And red with Nature's flame they start
+ From the warm fountains of the heart.
+
+ No rest that throbbing slave may ask,
+ Forever quivering o'er his task,
+ While far and wide a crimson jet
+ Leaps forth to fill the woven net
+ Which in unnumbered crossing tides
+ The flood of burning life divides,
+ Then, kindling each decaying part,
+ Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.
+
+ But warmed with that unchanging flame
+ Behold the outward moving frame,
+ Its living marbles jointed strong
+ With glistening band and silvery thong,
+ And linked to reason's guiding reins
+ By myriad rings in trembling chains,
+ Each graven with the threaded zone
+ Which claims it as the Master's own.
+
+ See how yon beam of seeming white
+ Is braided out of seven-hued light,
+ Yet in those lucid globes no ray
+ By any chance shall break astray.
+ Hark, how the rolling surge of sound,
+ Arches and spirals circling round,
+ Wakes the hushed spirit through thine ear
+ With music it is heaven to hear.
+
+ Then mark the cloven sphere that holds
+ All thought in its mysterious folds,
+ That feels sensation's faintest thrill,
+ And flashes forth the sovereign will;
+ Think on the stormy world that dwells
+ Locked in its dim and clustering cells!
+ The lightning gleams of power it sheds
+ Along its hollow glassy threads!
+
+ O Father! grant thy love divine
+ To make these mystic temples thine!
+ When wasting age and wearying strife
+ Have sapped the leaning walls of life,
+ When darkness gathers over all,
+ And the last tottering pillars-fall,
+ Take the poor dust thy mercy warms,
+ And mould it into heavenly forms!
+
+OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OF HYM THAT TOGYDER WYLL SERVE TWO MAYSTERS.
+
+
+ A Fole he is and voyde of reason
+ Whiche with one hounde tendyth to take
+ Two harys in one instant and season;
+ Rightso is he that wolde undertake
+ Hym to two lordes a servaunt to make;
+ For whether that he be lefe or lothe,
+ The one he shall displease, or els bothe.
+
+ A fole also he is withouten doute,
+ And in his porpose sothly blyndyd sore,
+ Which doth entende labour or go aboute
+ To serve god, and also his wretchyd store
+ Of worldly ryches: for as I sayde before,
+ He that togyder will two maysters serve
+ Shall one displease and nat his love deserve.
+
+ For be that with one hounde wol take also
+ Two harys togyther in one instant
+ For the moste parte doth the both two forgo,
+ And if he one have: harde it is and skant
+ And that blynd fole mad and ignorant
+ That draweth thre boltis atons[A] in one bowe
+ At one marke shall shote to[o] high or to[o] lowe.
+ He that his mynde settyth god truly to serve
+ And his sayntes: this worlde settynge at nought
+ Shall for rewarde everlastynge joy deserve,
+ But in this worlde he that settyth his thought
+ All men to please, and in favour to be brought,
+ Must lout and lurke, flater, laude, and lye:
+ And cloke in knavys counseyll, though it fals be.
+
+ Wherfore I may prove by these examples playne
+ That it is better more godly and plesant
+ To leve this mondayne casualte and payne
+ And to thy maker one god to be servaunt.
+ Which whyle thou lyvest shall nat let the want
+ That thou desyrest justly, for thy syrvyce,
+ And than after gyve the, the joyes of Paradyse.
+
+From the German of SEBASTIAN BRANDT.
+
+Translation of ALEXANDER BARCLAY.
+
+[Footnote A: At once.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RELIGION AND DOCTRINE.
+
+
+ He stood before the Sanhedrim;
+ The scowling rabbis gazed at him;
+ He recked not of their praise or blame;
+ There was no fear, there was no shame
+ For one upon whose dazzled eyes
+ The whole world poured its vast surprise.
+ The open heaven was far too near,
+ His first day's light too sweet and clear,
+ To let him waste his new-gained ken
+ On the hate-clouded face of men.
+
+ But still they questioned, Who art thou?
+ What hast thou been? What art thou now?
+ Thou art not he who yesterday
+ Sat here and begged beside the way,
+ For he was blind.
+ _And I am he;
+ For I was blind, but now I see_.
+
+ He told the story o'er and o'er;
+ It was his full heart's only lore;
+ A prophet on the Sabbath day
+ Had touched his sightless eyes with clay,
+ And made him see, who had been blind.
+ Their words passed by him like the wind
+ Which raves and howls, but cannot shock
+ The hundred-fathom-rooted rock.
+
+ Their threats and fury all went wide;
+ They could not touch his Hebrew pride;
+ Their sneers at Jesus and his band,
+ Nameless and homeless in the land,
+ Their boasts of Moses and his Lord,
+ All could not change him by one word.
+
+ _I know not that this man may be,
+ Sinner or saint; but as for me,
+ One thing I know, that I am he
+ Who once was blind, and now I see_.
+
+ They were all doctors of renown,
+ The great men of a famous town,
+ With deep brows, wrinkled, broad, and wise,
+ Beneath their wide phylacteries;
+ The wisdom of the East was theirs,
+ And honor crowned their silver hairs;
+ The man they jeered and laughed to scorn
+ Was unlearned, poor, and humbly born;
+ But he knew better far than they
+ What came to him that Sabbath day;
+ And what the Christ had done for him,
+ He knew, and not the Sanhedrim.
+
+JOHN HAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RABBI BEN EZRA.
+
+
+ Grow old along with me!
+ The best is yet to be,
+ The last of life, for which the first I was made:
+ Our times are in his hand
+ Who saith "A whole I planned
+ Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be afraid!"
+
+ Not that, amassing flowers,
+ Youth sighed, "Which rose make ours,
+ Which lily leave and then as best recall?"
+ Not that, admiring stars,
+ It yearned, "Nor Jove, nor Mars;
+ Mine be some figured flame which blends, transcends them all!"
+
+ Not for such hopes and fears,
+ Annulling youth's brief years,
+ Do I remonstrate--folly wide the mark!
+ Rather I prize the doubt
+ Low kinds exist without,
+ Finished and finite clods, untroubled by a spark.
+
+ Poor vaunt of life indeed,
+ Were man but formed to feed
+ On joy, to solely seek and find and feast:
+ Such feasting ended, then
+ As sure an end to men;
+ Irks care the crop-full bird? Frets doubt the maw-crammed beast?
+
+ Rejoice we are allied
+ To That which doth provide
+ And not partake, effect and not receive!
+ A spark disturbs our clod;
+ Nearer we hold of God
+ Who gives, than of His tribes that take, I must believe.
+
+ Then, welcome each rebuff
+ That turns earth's smoothness rough,
+ Each sting that bids nor sit nor stand, but go!
+ Be our joys three parts pain!
+ Strive, and hold cheap the strain;
+ Learn, nor account the pang; dare, never grudge the throe!
+
+ For thence--a paradox
+ Which comforts while it mocks--
+ Shall life succeed in that it seems to fail:
+ What I aspired to be,
+ And was not, comforts me:
+ A brute I might have been, but would not sink i' the scale.
+
+ What is he but a brute
+ Whose flesh hath soul to suit,
+ Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play?
+ To man, propose this test--
+ Thy body at its best,
+ How far can that project thy soul on its lone way?
+
+ Yet gifts should prove their use:
+ I own the Past profuse
+ Of power each side, perfection every turn:
+ Eyes, ears took in their dole,
+ Brain treasured up the whole;
+ Should not the heart beat once, "How good to live and learn?"
+
+ Not once beat "Praise be Thine!
+ I see the whole design,
+ I, who saw Power, shall see Love perfect too:
+ Perfect I call Thy plan:
+ Thanks that I was a man!
+ Maker, remake, complete--I trust what Thou shalt do!"
+
+ For pleasant is this flesh;
+ Our soul, in its rose-mesh
+ Pulled ever to the earth, still yearns for rest:
+ Would we some prize might hold
+ To match those manifold
+ Possessions of the brute--gain most, as we did best!
+
+ Let us not always say,
+ "Spite of this flesh to-day.
+ I strove, made head, gained ground upon the whole!"
+ As the bird wings and sings,
+ Let us cry, "All good things
+ Are ours, nor soul helps flesh more, now, than flesh helps soul!"
+
+ Therefore I summon age
+ To grant youth's heritage,
+ Life's struggle having so far reached its term:
+ Thence shall I pass, approved
+ A man, for aye removed
+ From the developed brute; a God though in the germ.
+
+ And I shall thereupon
+ Take rest, ere I be gone
+ Once more on my adventure brave and new:
+ Fearless and unperplexed,
+ When I wage battle next,
+ What weapons to select, what armor to indue.
+
+ Youth ended, I shall try
+ My gain or loss thereby;
+ Be the fire ashes, what survives is gold:
+ And I shall weigh the same.
+ Give life its praise or blame:
+ Young, all lay in dispute; I shall know, being old.
+
+ For note, when evening shuts,
+ A certain moment cuts
+ The deed off, calls the glory from the gray:
+ A whisper from the west
+ Shoots--"Add this to the rest,
+ Take it and try its worth: here dies another day."
+
+ So, still within this life,
+ Though lifted o'er its strife,
+ Let me discern, compare, pronounce at last,
+ "This rage was right i' the main,
+ That acquiescence vain:
+ The Future I may face now I have proved the Past."
+
+ For more is not reserved
+ To man, with soul just nerved
+ To act to-morrow what he learns to-day:
+ Here, work enough to watch
+ The Master work, and catch
+ Hints of the proper craft, tricks of the tool's true play.
+ As it was better, youth
+ Should strive, through acts uncouth,
+ Toward making, than repose on aught found made;
+ So, better, age, exempt
+ From strife, should know, than tempt
+ Further. Thou waitedst age; wait death nor be afraid!
+
+ Enough now, if the Right
+ And Good and Infinite
+ Be named here, as thou callest thy hand thine own,
+ With knowledge absolute,
+ Subject to no dispute
+ From fools that crowded youth, nor let thee feel alone.
+
+ Be there, for once and all,
+ Severed great minds from small,
+ Announced to each his station in the Past!
+ Was I, the world arraigned,
+ Were they, my soul disdained,
+ Right? Let age speak the truth and give us peace at last!
+
+ Now, who shall arbitrate?
+ Ten men love what I hate,
+ Shun what I follow, slight what I receive:
+ Ten, who in ears and eyes
+ Match me: we all surmise,
+ They, this thing, and I, that: whom shall my soul believe?
+
+ Not on the vulgar mass
+ Called "work," must sentence pass,
+ Things done, that took the eye and had the price;
+ O'er which, from level stand,
+ The low world laid its hand,
+ Found straightway to its mind, could value in a trice:
+
+ But all, the world's coarse thumb
+ And finger failed to plumb,
+ So passed in making up the main account;
+ All instincts immature,
+ All purposes unsure,
+ That weighed not as his work, yet swelled the man's amount:
+
+ Thoughts hardly to be packed
+ Into a narrow act,
+ Fancies that broke through language and escaped;
+ All I could never be,
+ All, men ignored in me,
+ This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped.
+
+ Ay, note that Potter's wheel,
+ That metaphor! and feel
+ Why time spins fast; why passive lies our clay,--
+ Thou, to whom fools propound,
+ When the wine makes its round,
+ "Since life fleets, all is change; the Past gone, seize to-day!"
+
+ Fool! All that is, at all,
+ Lasts ever, past recall;
+ Earth changes, but thy soul and God stand sure:
+ What entered into thee,
+ _That_ was, is, and shall be:
+ Time's wheel runs back or stops; Potter and clay endure.
+
+ He fixed thee 'mid this dance
+ Of plastic circumstance,
+ This Present, thou, forsooth, wouldst fain arrest:
+ Machinery just meant
+ To give thy soul its bent,
+ Try thee and turn thee forth, sufficiently impressed.
+
+ What though the earlier grooves
+ Which ran the laughing loves
+ Around thy base, no longer pause and press?
+ What though, about thy rim,
+ Scull-things in order grim
+ Grow out, in graver mood, obey the sterner stress?
+
+ Look not thou down, but up!
+ To uses of a cup,
+ The festal board, lamp's flash, and trumpet's peal,
+ The new wine's foaming flow,
+ The Master's lips aglow!
+ Thou, heaven's consummate cup, what needst thou with earth's wheel?
+
+ But I need, now as then,
+ Thee, God, who mouldest men;
+ And since, not even while the whirl was worst,
+ Did I--to the wheel of life
+ With shapes and colors rife,
+ Bound dizzily--mistake my end, to slake Thy thirst:
+
+ So, take and use Thy work!
+ Amend what flaws may lurk,
+ What strain o' the stuff, what warpings past the aim!
+ My times be in _Thy_ hand!
+ Perfect the cup as planned!
+ Let age approve of youth, and death complete the same!
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RELIGION OF HUDIBRAS.
+
+ FROM "HUDIBRAS," PART I.
+
+
+ He was of that stubborn crew
+ Of errant saints, whom all men grant
+ To be the true church militant;
+ Such as do build their faith upon
+ The holy text of pike and gun;
+ Decide all controversies by
+ Infallible artillery,
+ And prove their doctrine orthodox
+ By apostolic blows and knocks;
+ Call fire, and sword, and desolation
+ A godly, thorough Reformation,
+ Which always must be carried on
+ And still be doing, never done;
+ As if religion were intended
+ For nothing else but to be mended.
+ A sect whose chief devotion lies
+ In odd perverse antipathies;
+ In falling out with that or this,
+ And finding somewhat still amiss;
+ More peevish, cross, and splenetic,
+ Than dog distract, or monkey sick;
+ That with more care keep holiday
+ The wrong than others the right way;
+ Compound for sins they are inclined to,
+ By damning those they have no mind to;
+ Still so perverse and opposite,
+ As if they worshipped God for spite;
+ The self-same thing they will abhor
+ One way, and long another for.
+
+SAMUEL BUTLER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROBLEM.
+
+
+ I like a church; I like a cowl;
+ I love a prophet of the soul;
+ And on my heart monastic aisles
+ Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles;
+ Yet not for all his faith can see
+ Would I that cowled churchman be.
+ Why should the vest on him allure,
+ Which I could not on me endure?
+
+ Not from a vain or shallow thought
+ His awful Jove young Phidias brought;
+ Never from lips of cunning fell
+ The thrilling Delphic oracle:
+ Out from the heart of nature rolled
+ The burdens of the Bible old;
+ The litanies of nations came,
+ Like the volcano's tongue of flame,
+ Up from the burning core below,--
+ The canticles of love and woe.
+ The hand that rounded Peters dome,
+ And groined the aisles of Christian Rome,
+ Wrought in a sad sincerity;
+ Himself from God he could not free;
+ He builded better than he knew;--
+ The conscious stone to beauty grew.
+
+ Knowest thou what wove yon woodbird's nest
+ Of leaves, and feathers from her breast?
+ Or how the fish outbuilt her shell.
+ Painting with morn each annual cell?
+ Or how the sacred pine-tree adds
+ To her old leaves new myriads?
+ Such and so grew these holy piles,
+ Whilst love and terror laid the tiles.
+ Earth proudly wears the Parthenon,
+ As the best gem upon her zone;
+ And Morning opes with haste her lids,
+ To gaze upon the Pyramids;
+ O'er England's abbeys bends the sky,
+ As on its friends, with kindred eye;
+ For, out of Thought's interior sphere,
+ These wonders rose to upper air;
+ And Nature gladly gave them place,
+ Adopted them into her race,
+ And granted them an equal date
+ With Andes and with Ararat.
+
+ These temples grew as grows the grass;
+ Art might obey, but not surpass.
+ The passive Master lent his hand
+ To the vast Soul that o'er him planned;
+ And the same power that reared the shrine
+ Bestrode the tribes that knelt within.
+ Ever the fiery Pentecost
+ Girds with one flame the countless host,
+ Trances the heart through chanting choirs,
+ And through the priest the mind inspires.
+ The word unto the prophet spoken
+ Was writ on tables yet unbroken;
+ The word by seers or sibyls told,
+ In groves of oak, or fanes of gold,
+ Still floats upon the morning wind,
+ Still whispers to the willing mind.
+ One accent of the Holy Ghost
+ The heedless world hath never lost.
+ I know what say the fathers wise,--
+ The Book itself before me lies,--
+ Old Chrysostom, best Augustine,
+ And he who blent both in his line,
+ The younger Golden Lips or mines,
+ Taylor, the Shakespeare of divines.
+ His words are music in my ear,
+ I see his cowled portrait dear;
+ And yet, for all his faith could see,
+ I would not the good bishop be.
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON AN INFANT
+
+ WHICH DIED BEFORE BAPTISM.
+
+
+ "Be, rather than be called, a child of God,"
+ Death whispered!--with assenting nod,
+ Its head upon its mother's breast,
+ The baby bowed, without demur--
+ Of the kingdom of the Blest
+ Possessor, not inheritor.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT WAS HIS CREED?
+
+ "Religion relates to life, and the life of religion is to do
+ good."--SWEDENBORG.
+
+
+ He left a load of anthracite
+ In front of a poor woman's door.
+ When the deep snow, frozen and white,
+ Wrapped street and square, mountain and moor.
+ That was his deed.
+ He did it well.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I cannot tell.
+
+ Blessed "in his basket and his store,"
+ In sitting down and rising up;
+ When more he got, he gave the more,
+ Withholding not the crust and cup.
+ He took the lead
+ In each good task.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I did not ask.
+
+ His charity was like the snow,
+ Soft, white, and silent in its fall;
+ Not like the noisy winds that blow
+ From shivering trees the leaves,--a pall
+ For flowers and weed,
+ Drooping below.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ The poor may know.
+
+ He had great faith in loaves of bread
+ For hungry people, young and old,
+ Hope he inspired; kind words he said
+ To those he sheltered from the cold.
+ For we should feed
+ As well as pray.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I cannot say.
+
+ In words he did not put his trust;
+ His faith in words he never writ;
+ He loved to share his cup and crust
+ With all mankind who needed it.
+ In time of need
+ A friend was he.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ He told not me.
+
+ He put his trust in heaven, and he
+ Worked well with hand and head;
+ And what he gave in charity
+ Sweetened his sleep and daily bread.
+ Let us take heed,
+ For life is brief.
+ What was his creed--What
+ his belief?
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PHILOSOPHER TOAD.
+
+
+ Down deep in the hollow, so damp and so cold,
+ Where oaks are by ivy o'ergrown,
+ The gray moss and lichen creep over the mould,
+ Lying loose on a ponderous stone.
+ Now within this huge stone, like a king on his throne,
+ A toad has been sitting more years than is known;
+ And, strange as it seems, yet he constantly deems
+ The world standing still while he's dreaming his dreams,--
+ Does this wonderful toad in his cheerful abode
+ In the innermost heart of that flinty old stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in the hollow, from morning till night,
+ Dun shadows glide over the ground,
+ Where a watercourse once, as it sparkled with light,
+ Turned a ruined old mill-wheel around:
+ Long years have passed by since its bed became dry,
+ And the trees grow so close, scarce a glimpse of the sky
+ Is seen in the hollow, so dark and so damp,
+ Where the glow-worm at noonday is trimming his lamp,
+ And hardly a sound from the thicket around,
+ Where the rabbit and squirrel leap over the ground,
+ Is heard by the toad in his spacious abode
+ In the innermost heart of that ponderous stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in that hollow the bees never come,
+ The shade is too black for a flower;
+ And jewel-winged birds with their musical hum,
+ Never flash in the night of that bower;
+ But the cold-blooded snake, in the edge of the brake,
+ Lies amid the rank grass, half asleep, half awake;
+ And the ashen-white snail, with the slime in, its trail,
+ Moves wearily on like a life's tedious tale,
+ Yet disturbs not the toad in his spacious abode,
+ In the innermost heart of that flinty old stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in a hollow some wiseacres sit,
+ Like a toad in his cell in the stone;
+ Around them in daylight the blind owlets flit,
+ And their creeds are with ivy o'ergrown;--
+ Their stream may go dry, and the wheels cease to ply,
+ And their glimpses be few of the sun and the sky,
+ Still they hug to their breast every time-honored guest.
+ And slumber and doze in inglorious rest;
+ For no progress they find in the wide sphere of mind,
+ And the world's standing still with all of their kind;
+ Contented to dwell deep down in the well,
+ Or move like a snail in the crust of his shell,
+ Or live like the toad in his narrow abode,
+ With their souls closely wedged in a thick wall of stone,
+ By the gray weeds of prejudice rankly o'ergrown.
+
+REBECCA S. NICHOLS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HER CREED.
+
+
+ She stood before a chosen few,
+ With modest air and eyes of blue;
+ A gentle creature, in whose face
+ Were mingled tenderness and grace.
+
+ "You wish to join our fold," they said:
+ "Do you believe in all that's read
+ From ritual and written creed,
+ Essential to our human need?"
+
+ A troubled look was in her eyes;
+ She answered, as in vague surprise.
+ As though the sense to her were dim,
+ "I only strive to follow Him."
+
+ They knew her life; how, oft she stood,
+ Sweet in her guileless maidenhood,
+ By dying bed, in hovel lone,
+ Whose sorrow she had made her own.
+
+ Oft had her voice in prayer been heard,
+ Sweet as the voice of singing bird;
+ Her hand been open in distress;
+ Her joy to brighten and to bless.
+
+ Yet still she answered, when they sought
+ To know her inmost earnest thought,
+ With look as of the seraphim,
+ "I only strive to follow Him."
+
+ Creeds change as ages come and go;
+ We see by faith, but little know:
+ Perchance the sense was not so dim
+ To her who "strove to follow Him."
+
+SARAH KNOWLES BOLTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY CREED.
+
+
+ I hold that Christian grace abounds
+ Where charity is seen; that when
+ We climb to heaven, 't is on the rounds
+ Of love to men.
+
+ I hold all else, named piety,
+ A selfish scheme, a vain pretence;
+ Where centre is not--can there be
+ Circumference?
+
+ This I moreover hold, and dare
+ Affirm where'er my rhyme may go,--
+ Whatever things be sweet or fair,
+ Love makes them so.
+
+ Whether it be the lullabies
+ That charm to rest the nursling bird,
+ Or the sweet confidence of sighs
+ And blushes, made without a word.
+
+ Whether the dazzling and the flush
+ Of softly sumptuous garden bowers,
+ Or by some cabin door, a bush
+ Of ragged flowers.
+
+ 'Tis not the wide phylactery,
+ Nor stubborn fast, nor stated prayers,
+ That make us saints: we judge the tree
+ By what it bears.
+
+ And when a man can live apart
+ From works, on theologic trust,
+ I know the blood about his heart
+ Is dry as dust.
+
+ALICE CAREY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GIVE ME THY HEART.
+
+
+ With echoing steps the worshippers
+ Departed one by one;
+ The organ's pealing voice was stilled,
+ The vesper hymn was done;
+ The shadow fell from roof and arch,
+ Dim was the incensed air,
+ One lamp alone, with trembling ray,
+ Told of the Presence there!
+
+ In the dark church she knelt alone;
+ Her tears were falling fast;
+ "Help, Lord," she cried, "the shades of death
+ Upon my soul are cast!
+ Have I not shunned the path of sin,
+ And chose the better part? "--
+ What voice came through the sacred air?--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have not I laid before thy shrine
+ My wealth, O Lord?" she cried;
+ "Have I kept aught of gems or gold,
+ To minister to pride?
+ Have I not bade youth's joys retire,
+ And vain delights depart?"--
+ But sad and tender was the voice,--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have I not, Lord, gone day by day
+ Where thy poor children dwell;
+ And carried help, and gold, and food?
+ O Lord, thou know'st it well!
+ From many a house, from many a soul,
+ My hand bids care depart":--
+ More sad, more tender was the voice,--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have I not worn my strength away
+ With fast and penance sore?
+ Have I not watched and wept?" she cried;
+ "Did thy dear saints do more?
+ Have I not gained thy grace, O Lord,
+ And won in heaven my part?"--
+ It echoed louder in her soul,--
+ "_My child, give me thy heart_!
+
+ "For I have loved thee with a love
+ No mortal heart can show;
+ A love so deep my saints in heaven
+ Its depths can never know:
+ When pierced and wounded on the cross,
+ Man's sin and doom were mine,
+ I loved thee with undying love,
+ Immortal and divine!
+
+ "I loved thee ere the skies were spread;
+ My soul bears all thy pains;
+ To gain thy love my sacred heart
+ In earthly shrines remains:
+ Vain are thy offerings, vain thy sighs,
+ Without one gift divine;
+ Give it, my child, thy heart to me,
+ And it shall rest in mine!"
+
+ In awe she listened, as the shade
+ Passed from her soul away;
+ In low and trembling voice she cried,--
+ "Lord, help me to obey!
+ Break thou the chains of earth, O Lord,
+ That bind and hold my heart;
+ Let it be thine and thine alone,
+ Let none with thee have part.
+
+ "Send down, O Lord, thy sacred fire!
+ Consume and cleanse the sin
+ That lingers still within its depths:
+ Let heavenly love begin.
+ That sacred flame thy saints have known,
+ Kindle, O Lord, in me,
+ Thou above all the rest forever,
+ And all the rest in thee."
+
+ The blessing fell upon her soul;
+ Her angel by her side
+ Knew that the hour of peace was come;
+ Her soul was purified;
+ The shadows fell from roof and arch,
+ Dim was the incensed air,--
+ But peace went with her as she left
+ The sacred Presence there!
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O, MAY I JOIN THE CHOIR INVISIBLE!
+
+
+ O, may I join the choir invisible
+ Of those immortal dead who live again
+ In minds made better by their presence; live
+ In pulses stirred to generosity,
+ In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn
+ Of miserable aims that end with self,
+ In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars,
+ And with their mild persistence urge men's minds
+ To vaster issues.
+ So to live is heaven:
+ To make undying music in the world,
+ Breathing a beauteous order that controls
+ With growing sway the growing life of man.
+ So we inherit that sweet purity
+ For which we struggled, failed, and agonized
+ With widening retrospect that bred despair.
+ Rebellious flesh that would not be subdued,
+ A vicious parent shaming still its child,
+ Poor anxious penitence, is quick dissolved;
+ Its discords quenched by meeting harmonies,
+ Die in the large and charitable air.
+ And all our rarer, better, truer self,
+ That sobbed religiously in yearning song,
+ That watched to ease the burden of the world,
+ Laboriously tracing what must be,
+ And what may yet be better,--saw within
+ A worthier image for the sanctuary,
+ And shaped it forth before the multitude,
+ Divinely human, raising worship so
+ To higher reverence more mixed with love,
+ That better self shall live till human Time
+ Shall fold its eyelids, and the human sky
+ Be gathered like a scroll within the tomb,
+ Unread forever.
+ This is life to come,
+ Which martyred men have made more glorious
+ For us, who strive to follow.
+ May I reach
+ That purest heaven,--be to other souls
+ The cup of strength in some great agony,
+ Enkindle generous ardor, feed pure love,
+ Beget the smiles that have no cruelty,
+ Be the sweet presence of a good diffused,
+ And in diffusion ever more intense!
+ So shall I join the choir invisible,
+ Whose music is the gladness of the world.
+
+MARIAN EVANS LEWES CROSS (_George Eliot_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O YET WE TRUST THAT SOMEHOW GOOD.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," LIII.
+
+
+ O yet we trust that somehow good
+ Will be the final goal of ill,
+ To pangs of nature, sins of will,
+ Defects of doubt, and taints of blood;
+
+ That nothing walks with aimless feet;
+ That not one life shall be destroyed,
+ Or cast as rubbish to the void,
+ When God hath made the pile complete;
+
+ That not a worm is cloven in vain;
+ That not a moth with vain desire
+ Is shrivelled in a fruitless fire,
+ Or but subserves another's gain.
+
+ Behold, we know not anything;
+ I can but trust that good shall fall
+ At last--far off--at last, to all,
+ And every winter change to spring.
+
+ So runs my dream: but what am I?
+ An infant crying in the night:
+ An infant crying for the light:
+ And with no language but a cry.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DAY BREAKS.
+
+
+ What dost thou see, lone watcher on the tower.
+ Is the day breaking? Comes the wished-for hour?
+ Tell us the signs, and stretch abroad thy hand,
+ If the bright morning dawns upon the land.
+
+ "The stars are clear above me; scarcely one
+ Has dimmed its rays in reverence to the sun;
+ But I yet see on the horizon's verge
+ Some fair, faint streaks, as if the light would surge."
+
+ Look forth again, O watcher on the tower,--
+ The people wake and languish for the hour;
+ Long have they dwelt in darkness, and they pine
+ For the full daylight that they know must shine.
+
+ "I see not well,--the moon is cloudy still,--
+ There is a radiance on the distant hill;
+ Even as I watch the glory seems to grow;
+ But the stars blink, and the night breezes blow."
+
+ And is that all, O watcher on the tower?
+ Look forth again; it must be near the hour;
+ Dost thou not see the snowy mountain copes,
+ And the green woods beneath them on the slopes?
+
+ "A mist envelops them; I cannot trace
+ Their outline; but the day comes on apace:
+ The clouds roll up in gold and amber flakes,
+ And all the stars grow dim; the morning breaks."
+
+ We thank thee, lonely watcher on the tower:
+ But look again, and tell us, hour by hour,
+ All thou beholdest: many of us die
+ Ere the day comes; oh, give them a reply!
+
+ "I see the hill-tops now, and chanticleer
+ Crows his prophetic carol on mine ear;
+ I see the distant woods and fields of corn,
+ And ocean gleaming in the light of morn."
+
+ Again, again, O watcher on the tower!
+ We thirst for daylight, and we bide the hour,
+ Patient, but longing. Tell us, shall it be
+ A bright, calm, glorious daylight for the free?
+
+ "I hope, but cannot tell; I hear a song,
+ Vivid as day itself, and clear and strong,
+ As of a lark--young prophet of the noon--
+ Pouring in sunlight his seraphic tune."
+
+ What doth he say, O watcher on the tower?
+ Is he a prophet? does the dawning hour
+ Inspire his music? Is his chant sublime,
+ Filled with the glories of the future time?
+
+ "He prophesies,--his heart is full; his lay
+ Tells of the brightness of a peaceful day;
+ A day not cloudless, nor devoid of storm,
+ But sunny for the most, and clear and warm."
+
+ We thank thee, watcher on the lonely tower,
+ For all thou tellest. Sings he of an hour
+ When error shall decay, and truth grow strong,
+ And light shall rule supreme and conquer wrong?
+
+ "He sings of brotherhood and joy and peace,
+ Of days when jealousies and hate shall cease;
+ When war shall cease, and man's progressive mind
+ Soar as unfettered as its God designed."
+
+ Well done, thou watcher on the lonely tower!
+ Is the day breaking? Dawns the happy hour?
+ We pine to see it; tell us yet again
+ If the broad daylight breaks upon the plain?
+
+ "It breaks! it comes! the misty shadows fly:
+ A rosy radiance gleams upon the sky;
+ The mountain-tops reflect it calm and clear,
+ The plain is yet in shade, but day is near."
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY HOME.
+
+ A THANKSGIVING TO GOD FOR A HOUSE IN THE GREEN PARISH OF
+ DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+ Lord, thou hast given me a cell
+ Wherein to dwell,
+ A little house, whose humble roof
+ Is weather proof;
+ Under the sparres of which I lie,
+ Both soft and drie;
+ Where thou, my chamber for to ward,
+ Hast set a guard
+ Of harmlesse thoughts, to watch and keep
+ Me while I sleep.
+ Low is my porch, as is my fate;
+ Both void of state;
+ And yet the threshold of my doore
+ Is worn by the poore,
+ Who hither come and freely get
+ Good words or meat.
+ Like as my parlour, so my hall
+ And kitchen's small;
+ A little butterie, and therein
+ A little byn,
+ Which keeps my little loafe of bread
+ Unchipt, unflead.
+ Some sticks of thorn or briar
+ Make me a fire,
+ Close by whose loving coals I sit,
+ And glow like it.
+ Lord, I confesse too, when I dine,
+ The pulse is thine,
+ And all those other bits that bee
+ There placed by thee;
+ The worts, the purslain, and the messe
+ Of water-cresse,
+ Which of thy kindness thou hast sent;
+ And my content
+ Makes those and my beloved beet
+ More sweet.
+ 'Tis thou that crown'st my glittering hearth
+ With guiltlesse mirth,
+ And giv'st me wassaile bowles to drink,
+ Spiced to the brink.
+ Lord, 'tis thy plenty-dropping hand
+ That soiles my land,
+ And gives me for my bushel sowne,
+ Twice ten for one.
+ Thou mak'st my teeming hen to lay
+ Her egg each day,
+ Besides my healthful ewes to bear
+ Me twins each yeare;
+ The while the conduits of my kine
+ Run creame for wine.
+ All these and better thou dost send
+ Me to this end,
+ That I should render, for my part,
+ _A thankfulle heart,_
+ Which, fired with incense, I resigne
+ As wholly thine;
+ But the acceptance, that must be,
+ MY CHRIST, by thee.
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell? I humbly crave.
+ Let me once know.
+ I sought thee in a secret cave;
+ And asked if Peace were there.
+ A hollow wind did seem to answer, "No!
+ Go, seek elsewhere."
+
+ I did; and, going, did a rainbow note:
+ "Surely," thought I,
+ "This is the lace of Peace's coat.
+ I will search out the matter."
+ But, while I looked, the clouds immediately
+ Did break and scatter.
+
+ Then went I to a garden, and did spy
+ A gallant flower,--
+ The crown-imperial. "Sure," said I,
+ "Peace at the root must dwell."
+ But, when I digged, I saw a worm devour
+ What showed so well.
+
+ At length I met a reverend, good old man;
+ Whom when for Peace
+ I did demand, he thus began:
+ "There was a prince of old
+ At Salem dwelt, who lived with good increase
+ Of flock and fold.
+
+ "He sweetly lived; yet sweetness did not save
+ His life from foes.
+ But, after death, out of his grave
+ There sprang twelve stalks of wheat;
+ Which many wondering at, got some of those
+ To plant and set.
+
+ "It prospered strangely, and did soon disperse
+ Through all the earth.
+ For they that taste it do rehearse,
+ That virtue lies therein,--
+ A secret virtue, bringing peace and mirth,
+ By flight of sin.
+
+ "Take of this grain, which in my garden grows,
+ And grows for you:
+ Make bread of it; and that repose
+ And peace which everywhere
+ With so much earnestness you do pursue,
+ Is only there."
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ Is this the peace of God, this strange sweet calm?
+ The weary day is at its zenith still,
+ Yet 't is as if beside some cool, clear rill,
+ Through shadowy stillness rose an evening psalm.
+ And all the noise of life were hushed away,
+ And tranquil gladness reigned with gently soothing sway.
+
+ It was not so just now. I turned aside
+ With aching head, and heart most sorely bowed;
+ Around me cares and griefs in crushing crowd.
+ While inly rose the sense, in swelling tide,
+ Of weakness, insufficiency, and sin,
+ And fear, and gloom, and doubt in mighty flood rolled in.
+
+ That rushing flood I had no power to meet,
+ Nor power to flee: my present, future, past,
+ Myself, my sorrow, and my sin I cast
+ In utter helplessness at Jesu's feet:
+ Then bent me to the storm, if such his will.
+ He saw the winds and waves, and whispered.
+ "Peace, be still!"
+
+ And there was calm! O Saviour, I have proved
+ That thou to help and save art really near:
+ How else this quiet rest from grief and fear
+ And all distress? The cross is not removed,
+ I must go forth to bear it as before,
+ But, leaning on thine arm, I dread its weight no more.
+
+ Is it indeed thy peace? I have not tried
+ To analyze my faith, dissect my trust,
+ Or measure if belief be full and just,
+ And therefore claim thy peace. But thou hast died,
+ I know that this is true for me,
+ And, knowing it, I come, and cast my all on thee.
+
+ It is not that I feel less weak, but thou
+ Wilt be my strength; it is not that I see
+ Less sin, but more of pardoning love with thee,
+ And all-sufficient grace. Enough! and now
+ All fluttering thought is stilled, I only rest,
+ And feel that thou art near, and know that I am blest.
+
+FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIVING WATERS.
+
+
+ There are some hearts like wells, green-mossed and deep
+ As ever Summer saw;
+ And cool their water is,--yea, cool and sweet;--
+ But you must come to draw.
+ They hoard not, yet they rest in calm content,
+ And not unsought will give;
+ They can be quiet with their wealth unspent,
+ So self-contained they live.
+
+ And there are some like springs, that bubbling burst
+ To follow dusty ways,
+ And run with offered cup to quench his thirst
+ Where the tired traveller strays;
+ That never ask the meadows if they want
+ What is their joy to give;--
+ Unasked, their lives to other life they grant,
+ So self-bestowed they live!
+
+ And One is like the ocean, deep and wide,
+ Wherein all waters fall;
+ That girdles the broad earth, and draws the tide,
+ Feeding and bearing all;
+ That broods the mists, that sends the clouds abroad,
+ That takes, again to give;--
+ Even the great and loving heart of God.
+ Whereby all love doth live.
+
+CAROLINE S. SPENCER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DEVOTION.
+
+
+ The immortal gods
+ Accept the meanest altars, that are raised
+ By pure devotion; and sometimes prefer
+ An ounce of frankincense, honey, or milk,
+ Before whole hecatombs, or Saban gems,
+ Offered in ostentation.
+
+PHILIP MASSINGER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SEASIDE WELL.
+
+ "Waters flowed over mine head; then I said, I am cut
+ off."--LAMENTATIONS iii. 54.
+
+
+ One day I wandered where the salt sea-tide
+ Backward had drawn its wave,
+ And found a spring as sweet as e'er hillside
+ To wild-flowers gave.
+ Freshly it sparkled in the sun's bright look,
+ And mid its pebbles strayed,
+ As if it thought to join a happy brook
+ In some green glade.
+
+ But soon the heavy sea's resistless swell
+ Came rolling in once more,
+ Spreading its bitter o'er the clear sweet well
+ And pebbled shore.
+ Like a fair star thick buried in a cloud,
+ Or life in the grave's gloom,
+ The well, enwrapped in a deep watery shroud,
+ Sunk to its tomb.
+
+ As one who by the beach roams far and wide,
+ Remnant of wreck to save,
+ Again I wandered when the salt sea-tide
+ Withdrew its wave;
+ And there, unchanged, no taint in all its sweet,
+ No anger in its tone,
+ Still as it thought some happy brook to meet,
+ The spring flowed on.
+
+ While waves of bitterness rolled o'er its head,
+ Its heart had folded deep
+ Within itself, and quiet fancies led,
+ As in a sleep;
+ Till, when the ocean loosed his heavy chain,
+ And gave it back to day,
+ Calmly it turned to its own life again
+ And gentle way.
+
+ Happy, I thought, that which can draw its life
+ Deep from the nether springs,
+ Safe 'neath the pressure, tranquil mid the strife,
+ Of surface things.
+ Safe--for the sources of the nether springs
+ Up in the far hills lie;
+ Calm--for the life its power and freshness brings
+ Down from the sky.
+
+ So, should temptations threaten, and should sin
+ Roll in its whelming flood,
+ Make strong the fountain of thy grace within
+ My soul, O God!
+ If bitter scorn, and looks, once kind, grown strange,
+ With crushing chillness fall,
+ From secret wells let sweetness rise, nor change
+ My heart to gall!
+
+ When sore thy hand doth press, and waves of thine
+ Afflict me like a sea,--
+ Deep calling deep,--infuse from source divine
+ Thy peace in me!
+ And when death's tide, as with a brimful cup,
+ Over my soul doth pour,
+ Let hope survive,--a well that springeth up
+ Forevermore!
+
+ Above my head the waves may come and go,
+ Long brood the deluge dire,
+ But life lies hidden in the depths below
+ Till waves retire,--
+ Till death, that reigns with overflowing flood,
+ At length withdraw its sway,
+ And life rise sparkling in the sight of God
+ An endless day.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ULTIMA VERITAS.
+
+
+ In the bitter waves of woe,
+ Beaten and tossed about
+ By the sullen winds that blow
+ From the desolate shores of doubt,--
+
+ When the anchors that faith had cast
+ Are dragging in the gale,
+ I am quietly holding fast
+ To the things that cannot fail:
+
+ I know that right is right;
+ That it is not good to lie;
+ That love is better than spite,
+ And a neighbor than a spy;
+
+ I know that passion needs
+ The leash of a sober mind;
+ I know that generous deeds
+ Some sure reward will find;
+
+ That the rulers must obey;
+ That the givers shall increase;
+ That Duty lights the way
+ For the beautiful feet of Peace;--
+
+ In the darkest night of the year,
+ When the stars have all gone out,
+ That courage is better than fear,
+ That faith is truer than doubt;
+
+ And fierce though the fiends may fight,
+ And long though the angels hide,
+ I know that Truth and Eight
+ Have the universe on their side;
+
+ And that somewhere, beyond the stars,
+ Is a Love that is better than fate;
+ When the night unlocks her bars
+ I shall see Him, and I will wait.
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE END OF THE PLAY.
+
+
+ The play is done,--the curtain drops,
+ Slow falling to the prompter's bell;
+ A moment yet the actor stops,
+ And looks around, to say farewell.
+ It is an irksome word and task;
+ And, when he's laughed and said his say,
+ He shows, as he removes the mask,
+ A face that's anything but gay.
+
+ One word, ere yet the evening ends,--
+ Let's close it with a parting rhyme;
+ And pledge a hand to all young friends,
+ As flits the merry Christmas time;
+ On life's wide scene you, too, have parts
+ That fate erelong shall bid you play;
+ Good night!--with honest, gentle hearts
+ A kindly greeting go alway!
+
+ Good night!--I'd say the griefs, the joys,
+ Just hinted in this mimic page,
+ The triumphs and defeats of boys,
+ Are but repeated in our age;
+ I'd say your woes were not less-keen,
+ Your hopes more vain, than those of men,--
+ Your pangs or pleasures of fifteen
+ At forty-five played o'er again.
+
+ I'd say we suffer and we strive
+ Not less nor more as men than boys,--
+ With grizzled beards at forty-five,
+ As erst at twelve in corduroys;
+ And if, in time of sacred youth,
+ We learned at home to love and pray,
+ Pray Heaven that early love and truth
+ May never wholly pass away.
+
+ And in the world, as in the school,
+ I'd say how fate may change and shift,--
+ The prize be sometimes with the fool,
+ The race not always to the swift:
+ The strong may yield, the good may fall,
+ The great man be a vulgar clown,
+ The knave be lifted over all,
+ The kind cast pitilessly down.
+
+ Who knows the inscrutable design?
+ Blessed be Be who took and gave!
+ Why should your mother, Charles, not mine,
+ Be weeping at her darling's grave?
+ We bow to Heaven that willed it so,
+ That darkly rules the fate of all,
+ That sends the respite or the blow,
+ That's free to give or to recall.
+
+ This crowns his feast with wine and wit,--
+ Who brought him to that mirth and state?
+ His betters, see, below him sit,
+ Or hunger hopeless at the gate.
+ Who bade the mud from Dives' wheel
+ To spurn the rags of Lazarus?
+ Come, brother, in that dust we'll kneel,
+ Confessing Heaven that ruled it thus.
+
+ So each shall mourn, in life's advance,
+ Dear hopes, dear friends, untimely killed;
+ Shall grieve for many a forfeit chance
+ And longing passion unfulfilled.
+ Amen!--whatever fate be sent,
+ Pray God the heart may kindly glow,
+ Although the head with cares be bent,
+ And whitened with the winter snow.
+
+ Come wealth or want, come good or ill,
+ Let young and old accept their part,
+ And bow before the awful will,
+ And bear it with an honest heart.
+ Who misses, or who wins the prize,--
+ Go, lose or conquer as you can;
+ But if you fail, or if you rise,
+ Be each, pray God, a gentleman.
+
+ A gentleman, or old or young!
+ (Bear kindly with my humble lays;)
+ The sacred chorus first was sung
+ Upon the first of Christmas days;
+ The shepherds heard it overhead,--
+ The joyful angels raised it then:
+ Glory to Heaven on high, it said,
+ And peace on earth to gentle men!
+
+ My song, save this, is little worth;
+ I lay the weary pen aside,
+ And wish you health and love and mirth,
+ As fits the solemn Christmas-tide.
+ As fits the holy Christmas birth,
+ Be this, good friends, our carol still,--
+ Be peace on earth, be peace on earth,
+ To men of gentle will.
+
+WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW YEAR.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," CV.
+
+
+ Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
+ The flying cloud, the frosty light:
+ The year is dying in the night--
+ Ring out, wild bells, and let him die.
+
+ Ring out the old, ring in the new--,
+ Ring happy bells, across the snow:
+ The year is going, let him go;
+ Ring out the false, ring in the true.
+
+ Ring out the grief that saps the mind,
+ For those that here we see no more;
+ Ring out the feud of rich and poor,
+ Ring in redress to all mankind.
+
+ Ring out a slowly dying cause,
+ And ancient forms of party strife;
+ Ring in the nobler modes of life,
+ With sweeter manners, purer laws.
+
+ Ring out the want, the care, the sin,
+ The faithless coldness of the times;
+ Ring out, ring out my mournful rhymes,
+ But ring the fuller minstrel in.
+
+ Ring out false pride in place and blood,
+ The civic slander and the spite;
+ Ring in the love of truth and right,
+ Ring in the common love of good.
+
+ Ring out old shapes of foul disease,
+ Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
+ Ring out the thousand wars of old,
+ Ring in the thousand years of peace.
+
+ Ring in the valiant man and free,
+ The larger heart, the kindlier hand;
+ Ring out the darkness of the land--
+ Ring in the Christ that is to be.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIFE.
+
+
+ It is not life upon thy gifts to live,
+ But to grow fixed with deeper roots in Thee;
+ And when the sun and showers their bounties give,
+ To send out thick-leaved limbs; a fruitful tree
+ Whose green head meets the eye for many a mile,
+ Whose spreading boughs a friendly shelter rear,
+ And full-faced fruits their blushing welcome smile
+ As to its goodly shade our feet draw near.
+ Who tastes its gifts shall never hunger more,
+ For 't is the Father spreads the pure repast,
+ Who, while we eat, renews the ready store,
+ Which at his bounteous board must ever last;
+ And, as the more we to his children lend,
+ The more to us doth of his bounty send.
+
+JONES VERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELECTIONS FROM PARADISE LOST.
+
+
+ BOOK I.
+
+ THE POET'S THEME.
+
+ Of man's first disobedience and the fruit
+ Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
+ Brought death into the world and all our woe,
+ With loss of Eden, till one greater Man
+ Restore us and regain the blissful seat,
+ Sing, heavenly Muse, that on the secret top
+ Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire
+ That shepherd, who first taught the chosen seed,
+ In the beginning how the heavens and earth
+ Rose out of Chaos; or if Sion hill
+ Delight thee more, and Siloa's brook that flowed
+ Fast by the oracle of God; I thence
+ Invoke thy aid to my adventurous song.
+ That with no middle flight intends to soar
+ Above the Aonian mount, while it pursues
+ Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme.
+
+ And chiefly thou, O Spirit, that dost prefer
+ Before all temples the upright heart and pure,
+ Instruct me, for thou know'st; thou from the first
+ Wast present, and with mighty wings outspread
+ Dove-like sat'st brooding on the vast abyss,
+ And mad'st it pregnant: what in me is dark
+ Illumine, what is low raise and support;
+ That to the height of this great argument
+ I may assert eternal Providence,
+ And justify the ways of God to men.
+
+
+ BOOK IX.
+
+ THE TEMPTATION.
+
+ The Sun was sunk, and after him the star
+ Of Hesperus, whose office is to bring
+ Twilight upon the Earth, short arbiter
+ 'Twixt day and night, and now from end to end
+ Night's hemisphere had veiled the horizon round:
+ When Satan, who late fled before the threats
+ Of Gabriel out of Eden, now improved
+ In meditated fraud and malice, bent
+ On Man's destruction, maugre what might hap
+ Of heavier on himself, fearless returned.
+ By night he fled, and at midnight returned
+ From compassing the Earth;
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The orb he roamed
+ With narrow search; and with inspection deep
+ Considered every creature, which of all
+ Most opportune might serve his wiles; and found
+ The serpent subtlest beast of all the field.
+ Him, after long debate, irresolute
+ Of thoughts revolved, his final sentence chose
+ Fit vessel, fittest imp of fraud, in whom
+ To enter, and his dark suggestions hide
+ From sharpest sight: for, in the wily snake
+ Whatever sleights, none would suspicious mark,
+ As from his wit and native subtlety
+ Proceeding; which, in other beasts observed.
+ Doubt might beget of diabolic power
+ Active within, beyond the sense of brute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ For now, and since first break of dawn, the fiend.
+ Mere serpent in appearance, forth was come;
+ And on his quest, where likeliest he might find
+ The only two of mankind, but in them
+ The whole included race, his purposed prey.
+ In bower and field he sought where any tuft
+ Of grove or garden-plot more pleasant lay,
+ Their tendance, or plantation for delight;
+ By fountain or by shady rivulet
+ He sought them both, but wished his hap might find
+ Eve separate; he wished, but not with hope
+ Of what so seldom chanced; when to his wish,
+ Beyond his hope, Eve separate he spies,
+ Veiled in a cloud of fragrance, where she stood,
+ Half spied, so thick the roses blushing round
+ About her glowed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "She fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods.
+ Not terrible, though terror be in love
+ And beauty, not approached by stronger hate.
+ Hate stronger, under show of love well feigned;
+ The way which to her ruin now I tend."
+ So spake the enemy of mankind, inclosed
+ In serpent, inmate bad! and toward Eve
+ Addressed his way: not with indented wave,
+ Prone on the ground, as since; but on his rear,
+ Circular base of rising folds, that towered
+ Fold above fold, a surging maze! his head
+ Crested aloft, and carbuncle his eyes;
+ With burnished neck of verdant gold, erect.
+ Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass
+ Floated redundant: pleasing was his shape
+ And lovely; never since of serpent-kind
+ Lovelier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So varied he, and of his tortuous train
+ Curled many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve,
+ To lure her eye; she, busied, heard the sound
+ Of rustling leaves, but minded not, as used
+ To such disport before her through the field,
+ From every beast; more duteous at her call,
+ Than at Circean call the herd disguised.
+ He, bolder now, uncalled before her stood,
+ But as in gaze admiring: oft he bowed
+ His turret crest, and sleek enamelled neck,
+ Fawning; and licked the ground whereon she trod.
+ His gentle dumb expression turned at length
+ The eye of Eve, to mark his play; he, glad
+ Of her attention gained, with serpent-tongue
+ Organic, or impulse of vocal air,
+ His fraudulent temptation thus began.
+ "Wonder not, sovran mistress, if perhaps
+ Thou canst who art sole wonder! much less arm
+ Thy looks, the Heaven of mildness, with disdain,
+ Displeased that I approach thee thus, and gaze
+ Insatiate; I thus single; nor have feared
+ Thy awful brow, more awful thus retired.
+ Fairest resemblance of thy Maker fair,
+ Thee all things living gaze on all things thine
+ By gift, and thy celestial beauty adore
+ With ravishment beheld! there beat beheld,
+ Where universally admired; but here
+ In this inclosure wild, these beasts among,
+ Beholders rude, and shallow to discern
+ Half what in thee is fair, one man except,
+ Who sees thee? (and what is one?) who should be seen
+ A goddess among gods, adored and served
+ By angels numberless, thy daily train."
+ So glozed the tempter, and his proem tuned:
+ Into the heart of Eve his words made way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ [_After some discourse, the Tempter praises the Tree of Knowledge._]
+
+ So standing, moving, or to height up grown,
+ The tempter, all impassioned, thus began.
+ "O sacred, wise, and wisdom-giving plant,
+ Mother of science! now I feel thy power
+ Within me clear; not only to discern
+ Things in their causes, but to trace the ways
+ Of highest agents, deemed however wise.
+ Queen of this universe! do not believe
+ Those rigid threats of death: ye shall not die:
+ How should you? by the fruit? it gives you life
+ To knowledge; by the threatener? look on me.
+ Me, who have touched and tasted; yet both live,
+ And life more perfect have attained than Fate
+ Meant me, by venturing higher than my lot.
+ Shall that be shut to man, which to the beast
+ Is open? or will God incense his ire
+ For such a petty trespass? and not praise
+ Rather your dauntless virtue, whom the pain
+ Of death denounced, whatever thing death be,
+ Deterred not from achieving what might lead
+ To happier life, knowledge of good and evil;
+ Of good, how just? of evil, if what is evil
+ Be real, why not known, since easier shunned?
+ God therefore cannot hurt ye, and be just;
+ Not just, not God: not feared then, nor obeyed:
+ Your fear itself of death removes the fear.
+ Why then was this forbid? Why, but to awe;
+ Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant,
+ His worshippers? He knows that in the day
+ Ye eat thereof, your eyes, that seem so clear,
+ Yet are but dim, shall perfectly be then
+ Opened and cleared, and ye shall be as gods,
+ Knowing both good and evil, as they know.
+ That ye shall be as gods, since I as Man,
+ Internal Man, is but proportion meet;
+ I, of brute, human; ye, of human, gods.
+ So ye shall die, perhaps, by putting off
+ Human, to put on gods; death to be wished,
+ Though threatened, which no worse than this can bring.
+ And what are gods, that man may not become
+ As they, participating godlike food?
+ The gods are first, and that advantage use
+ On our belief, that all from them proceeds:
+ I question it; for this fair Earth I see,
+ Warmed by the Sun, producing every kind;
+ Them, nothing: if they all things, who inclosed
+ Knowledge of good and evil in this tree,
+ That whoso eats thereof forthwith attains
+ Wisdom without their leave? and wherein lies
+ The offence, that man should thus attain to know?
+ What can your knowledge hurt him, or this tree
+ Impart against his will, if all be his?
+ Or is it envy? and can envy dwell
+ In heavenly breasts?--These, these, and many more
+ Causes import your need of this fair fruit.
+ Goddess humane, reach then, and freely taste."
+
+
+ THE FALL.
+
+ He ended, and his words replete with guile
+ Into her heart too easy entrance won:
+ Fixed on the fruit she gazed, which to behold
+ Might tempt alone, and in her ears the sound
+ Yet rung of persuasive words, impregned
+ With reason, to her seeming, and with truth:
+ Meanwhile the hour of noon drew on, and waked
+ An eager appetite, raised by the smell
+ So savory of that fruit, which with desire,
+ Inclinable now grown to touch or taste,
+ Solicited her longing eye; yet first
+ Pausing awhile, thus to herself she mused.
+ "Great are thy virtues, doubtless, best of fruits,
+ Though kept from man, and worthy to be admired,
+ Whose taste, too long forborne, at first assay
+ Gave elocution to the mute, and taught
+ The tongue not made for speech to speak thy praise:
+ Thy praise he also who forbids thy use
+ Conceals not from us, naming thee the Tree
+ Of Knowledge, knowledge both of good and evil;
+ Forbids us then to taste! but his forbidding
+ Commends thee more, while it infers the good
+ By thee communicated, and our want:
+ For good unknown sure is not had, or had
+ And yet unknown is as not had at all.
+ In plain then, what forbids he but to know,
+ Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise?
+ Such prohibitions bind not. But if death
+ Bind us with after-bands, what profits then
+ Our inward freedom? In the day we eat
+ Of this fair fruit, our doom is, we shall die.
+ How dies the serpent? he hath eaten and lives,
+ And knows, and speaks, and reasons, and discerns,
+ Irrational till then. For us alone
+ Was death invented? or to us denied
+ This intellectual food, for beasts reserved?
+ For beasts it seems: yet that one beast which first
+ Hath tasted envies not, but brings with joy
+ The good befallen him, author unsuspect,
+ Friendly to man, far from deceit or guile.
+ What fear I then? rather what know to fear
+ Under this ignorance of good and evil,
+ Of God or death, of law or penalty?
+ Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,
+ Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,
+ Of virtue to make wise: what hinders then
+ To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?"
+ So saying, her rash hand in evil hour
+ Forth reaching to the fruit, she plucked, she eat:
+ Earth felt the wound, and Nature from her seat
+ Sighing through all her works gave signs of woe,
+ That all was lost. Back to the thicket slunk
+ The guilty serpent, and well might, for Eve
+ Intent now wholly on her taste nought else
+ Regarded, such delight till then, as seemed,
+ In fruit she never tasted, whether true
+ Or fancied so, through expectation high
+ Of knowledge: nor was Godhead from her thought.
+ Greedily she ingorged without restraint,
+ And knew not eating death.
+
+
+ BOOK XI.
+
+ INTERCESSION AND REDEMPTION.
+
+ Thus they, in lowliest plight, repentant stood
+ Praying; for from the mercy-seat above
+ Prevenient grace descending had removed
+ The stony from their hearts, and made new flesh
+ Regenerate grow instead; that sighs now breathed
+ Unutterable; which the spirit of prayer
+ Inspired, and winged for Heaven with speedier flight
+ Than loudest oratory: yet their port
+ Not of mean suitors; nor important less
+ Seemed their petition, than when the ancient pair
+ In fables old, less ancient yet than these,
+ Deucalion and chaste Pyrrha, to restore
+ The race of mankind drowned, before the shrine
+ Of Themis stood devout. To Heaven their prayers
+ Flew up, nor missed the way, by envious winds
+ Blown vagabond or frustrate: in they passed
+ Dimensionless through heavenly doors; then clad
+ With incense, where the golden altar fumed,
+ By their great Intercessor, came in sight
+ Before the Father's throne: them the glad Son
+ Presenting, thus to intercede began.
+ "See, Father, what first-fruits on Earth are sprung
+ From thy implanted grace in Man; these sighs
+ And prayers, which in this golden censer, mixed
+ With incense, I thy priest before thee bring;
+ Fruits of more pleasing savor, from thy seed
+ Sown with contrition in his heart, than those
+ Which, his own hand manuring, all the trees
+ Of Paradise could have produced ere fallen
+ From innocence. Now, therefore, bend thine ear
+ To supplication; hear his sighs, though mute;
+ Unskilful with what words to pray, let me
+ Interpret for him; me, his advocate
+ And propitiation; all his works on me,
+ Good, or not good, ingraft; my merit those
+ Shall perfect, and for these my death shall pay.
+ Accept me; and, in me, from these receive
+ The smell of peace toward mankind: let him live
+ Before thee reconciled, at least his days
+ Numbered though sad; till death his doom (which I
+ To mitigate thus plead, not to reverse,)
+ To better life shall yield him: where with me
+ All my redeemed may dwell in joy and bliss;
+ Made one with me, as I with thee am one."
+ To whom the Father, without cloud, serene.
+ "All thy request for Man, accepted Son,
+ Obtain; all thy request was my decree:
+ But, longer in that Paradise to dwell,
+ The law I gave to Nature him forbids:
+ Those pure immortal elements, that know
+ No gross, no unharmonious mixture foul,
+ Eject him, tainted now; and purge him off,
+ As a distemper, gross, to air as gross,
+ And mortal food; as may dispose him best
+ For dissolution wrought by sin, that first
+ Distempered all things, and of incorrupt
+ Corrupted. I, at first, with two fair gifts
+ Created him endowed; with happiness,
+ And immortality: that fondly lost.
+ This other served but to eternize woe;
+ Till I provided death: so death becomes
+ His final remedy; and, after life,
+ Tried in sharp tribulation, and refined
+ By faith and faithful works, to second life,
+ Waked in the renovation of the just,
+ Resigns him up with Heaven and Earth renewed."
+
+
+ EVE'S LAMENT.
+
+ O unexpected stroke, worse than of death!
+ Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? thus leave
+ Thee, native soil! these happy walks and shades,
+ Fit haunt of gods; where I had hope to spend,
+ Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day
+ That must be mortal to us both? O flowers,
+ That never will in other climate grow,
+ My early visitation, and my last
+ At even, which I bred up with tender hand
+ From the first opening bud, and gave ye names!
+ Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank
+ Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount?
+ Thee, lastly, nuptial bower! by me adorned
+ With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee
+ How shall I part, and whither wander down
+ Into a lower world, to this obscure
+ And wild? how shall we breathe in other air
+ Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits?
+
+
+ EVE TO ADAM.
+
+ With sorrow and heart's distress
+ Wearied, I fell asleep. But now lead on;
+ In me is no delay; with thee to go,
+ Is to stay here; without thee here to stay,
+ Is to go hence unwilling; thou to me
+ Art all things under heaven, all places thou,
+ Who for my wilful crime art banished hence.
+ This further consolation, yet secure,
+ I carry hence; though all by me is lost,
+ Such favor I unworthy am vouchsafed,
+ By me the promised Seed shall all restore.
+
+
+ BOOK XII.
+
+ THE DEPARTURE FROM PARADISE.
+
+ In either hand the hastening angel caught
+ Our lingering parents, and to the eastern gate
+ Led them direct, and down the cliff as fast
+ To the subjected plain; then disappeared.
+ They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld
+ Of Paradise, so late their happy seat,
+ Waved over by that naming brand; the gate
+ With dreadful faces thronged and fiery arms.
+ Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon;
+ The world was all before them, where to choose
+ Their place of rest, and Providence their guide.
+ They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,
+ Through Eden took their solitary way.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+HUMAN EXPERIENCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PSALM OF LIFE.
+
+
+ Tell me not, in mournful numbers,
+ Life is but an empty dream!
+ For the soul is dead that slumbers,
+ And things are not what they seem.
+
+ Life is real! Life is earnest!
+ And the grave is not its goal;
+ Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
+ Was not spoken of the soul.
+
+ Not enjoyment, and not sorrow,
+ Is our destined end or way;
+ But to act, that each to-morrow
+ Find us farther than to-day.
+
+ Art is long, and Time is fleeting,
+ And our hearts, though stout and brave,
+ Still, like muffled drums, are beating
+ Funeral marches to the grave.
+
+ In the world's broad field of battle,
+ In the bivouac of Life,
+ Be not like dumb, driven cattle!
+ Be a hero in the strife!
+
+ Trust no Future, howe'er pleasant!
+ Let the dead Past bury its dead!
+ Act,--act in the living Present!
+ Heart within, and God o'erhead!
+
+ Lives of great men all remind us
+ We can make our lives sublime.
+ And, departing, leave behind us
+ Footprints on the sands of time;--
+
+ Footprints, that perhaps another,
+ Sailing o'er life's solemn main,
+ A forlorn and shipwrecked brother,
+ Seeing, shall take heart again.
+
+ Let us, then, be up and doing,
+ With a heart for any fate;
+ Still achieving, still pursuing,
+ Learn to labor and to wait.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GIFTS OF GOD.
+
+
+ When God at first made man,
+ Having a glass of blessings standing by,
+ Let us (said he) pour on him all we can:
+ Let the world's riches, which dispersed lie,
+ Contract into a span.
+
+ So strength first made a way;
+ Then beauty flowed, then wisdom, honor, pleasure:
+ When almost all was out, God made a stay,
+ Perceiving that, alone, of all his treasure,
+ Rest in the bottom lay.
+
+ For if I should (said he)
+ Bestow this jewel also on my creature,
+ He would adore my gifts instead of me,
+ And rest in Nature, not the God of Nature:
+ So both should losers be.
+
+ Yet let him keep the rest,
+ But keep them with repining restlessness:
+ Let him be rich and weary, that, at least,
+ If goodness lead him not, yet weariness
+ May toss him to my breast.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DUTY.
+
+
+ I slept and dreamed that life was Beauty:
+ I woke and found that life was Duty:
+ Was then thy dream a shadowy lie?
+ Toil on, sad heart, courageously,
+ And thou shalt find thy dream to be
+ A noonday light and truth to thee.
+
+ELLEN STURGIS HOOPER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE TO DUTY.
+
+
+ Stern daughter of the voice of God!
+ O Duty! if that name thou love
+ Who art a light to guide, a rod
+ To check the erring, and reprove--
+ Thou, who art victory and law
+ When empty terrors overawe;
+ From vain temptations dost set free,
+ And calm'st the weary strife of frail humanity!
+
+ There are who ask not if thine eye
+ Be on them; who, in love and truth
+ Where no misgiving is, rely
+ Upon the genial sense of youth:
+ Glad hearts! without reproach or blot,
+ Who do thy work, and know it not;
+ Long may the kindly impulse last!
+ But thou, if they should totter, teach them to stand fast!
+
+ Serene will be our days and bright,
+ And happy will our nature be,
+ When love is an unerring light.
+ And joy its own security.
+ And they a blissful course may hold
+ Even now, who, not unwisely bold.
+ Live in the spirit of this creed;
+ Yet find that other strength, according to their need.
+
+ I, loving freedom, and untried,
+ No sport of every random gust,
+ Yet being to myself a guide,
+ Too blindly have reposed my trust;
+ And oft, when in my heart was heard
+ Thy timely mandate, I deferred
+ The task, in smoother walks to stray;
+ But thee I now would serve more strictly, if I may.
+
+ Through no disturbance of my soul,
+ Or strong compunction in me wrought,
+ I supplicate for thy control,
+ But in the quietness of thought;
+ Me this unchartered freedom tires;
+ I feel the weight of chance desires,
+ My hopes no more must change their name,
+ I long for a repose that ever is the same.
+
+ Stern lawgiver! yet thou dost wear
+ The Godhead's most benignant grace;
+ Nor know we any thing so fair
+ As is the smile upon thy face;
+ Flowers laugh before thee on their beds,
+ And fragrance in thy footing treads;
+ Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong;
+ And the most ancient heavens, through thee, are fresh and strong.
+
+ To humbler functions, awful power!
+ I call thee: I myself commend
+ Unto thy guidance from this hour;
+ Oh, let my weakness have an end!
+ Give unto me, made lowly wise,
+ The spirit of self-sacrifice;
+ The confidence of reason give;
+ And in the light of truth thy bondman let me live!
+
+WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELF-INQUIRY.
+
+
+ Let not soft slumber close my eyes,
+ Before I've recollected thrice
+ The train of action through the day!
+ Where have my feet chose out their way?
+ What have I learnt, where'er I've been,
+ From all I have heard, from all I've seen?
+ What know I more that's worth the knowing?
+ What have I done that's worth the doing?
+ What have I sought that I should shun?
+ What duty have I left undone?
+ Or into what new follies run?
+ These self-inquiries are the road
+ That leads to virtue and to God.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE THREE ENEMIES.
+
+
+ THE FLESH.
+
+ "Sweet, thou art pale."
+ "More pale to see,
+ Christ hung upon the cruel tree
+ And bore his Father's wrath for me."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art sad."
+ "Beneath a rod
+ More heavy Christ for my sake trod
+ The wine-press of the wrath of God."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art weary."
+ "Not so Christ:
+ Whose mighty love of me sufficed
+ For strength, salvation, eucharist."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art footsore."
+ "If I bleed,
+ His feet have bled: yea, in my need
+ His heart once bled for mine indeed."
+
+
+ THE WORLD.
+
+ "Sweet, thou art young."
+ "So he was young
+ Who for my sake in silence hung
+ Upon the cross with passion wrung."
+
+ "Look, thou art fair."
+ "He was more fair
+ Than men, who deigned for me to wear
+ A visage marred beyond compare."
+
+ "And thou hast riches."
+ "Daily bread:
+ All else is his; who living, dead,
+ For me lacked where to lay his head."
+
+ "And life is sweet."
+ "It was not so
+ To him, whose cup did overflow
+ With mine unutterable woe."
+
+
+ THE DEVIL.
+
+ "Thou drinkest deep."
+ "When Christ would sup
+ He drained the dregs from out my cup;
+ So how should I be lifted up?"
+
+ "Thou shalt win glory."
+ "In the skies,
+ Lord Jesus, cover up mine eyes.
+ Lest they should look on vanities."
+
+ "Thou shalt have knowledge."
+ "Helpless dust,
+ In thee, O Lord, I put my trust:
+ Answer thou for me, Wise and Just."
+
+CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAID I NOT SO?
+
+
+ Said I not so,--that I would sin no more?
+ Witness, my God, I did;
+ Yet I am run again upon the score:
+ My faults cannot be hid.
+
+ What shall I do?--make vows and break them still?
+ 'Twill be but labor lost;
+ My good cannot prevail against mine ill:
+ The business will be crost.
+
+ O, say not so; thou canst not tell what strength
+ Thy God may give thee at the length.
+ Renew thy vows, and if thou keep the last,
+ Thy God will pardon all that's past.
+ Vow while thou canst; while thou canst vow, thou may'st
+ Perhaps perform it when thou thinkest least.
+
+ Thy God hath not denied thee all,
+ Whilst he permits thee but to call.
+ Call to thy God for grace to keep
+ Thy vows; and if thou break them, weep.
+ Weep for thy broken vows, and vow again:
+ Vows made with tears cannot be still in vain.
+ Then once again
+ I vow to mend my ways;
+ Lord, say Amen,
+ And thine be all the praise.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTHING BUT LEAVES.
+
+
+ Nothing but leaves; the spirit grieves
+ Over a wasted life;
+ Sin committed while conscience slept,
+ Promises made, but never kept,
+ Hatred, battle, and strife;
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ Nothing but leaves; no garnered sheaves
+ Of life's fair, ripened grain;
+ Words, idle words, for earnest deeds;
+ We sow our seeds,--lo! tares and weeds:
+ We reap, with toil and pain,
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ Nothing but leaves; memory weaves
+ No veil to screen the past:
+ As we retrace our weary way,
+ Counting each lost and misspent day,
+ We find, sadly, at last,
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ And shall we meet the Master so,
+ Bearing our withered leaves?
+ The Saviour looks for perfect fruit,
+ We stand before him, humbled, mute;
+ Waiting the words he breathes,--
+ "_Nothing but leaves_?"
+
+LUCY E. AKERMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WORLD.
+
+ "And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of
+ righteousness, and of judgment."--JOHN xvi. 8.
+
+
+ The world is wise, for the world is old;
+ Five thousand years their tale have told;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is kind if we ask not too much;
+ It is sweet to the taste, and smooth to the touch;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is strong, with an awful strength,
+ And full of life in its breadth and length;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is so beautiful one may fear
+ Its borrowed beauty might make it too dear,
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is good in its own poor way,
+ There is rest by night and high spirits by day;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The cross shines fair, and the church-bell rings,
+ And the earth is peopled with holy things;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ What lackest thou, world? for God made thee of old;
+ Why,--thy faith hath gone out, and thy love grown cold;
+ Thou art not happy, as thou mightest be,
+ For the want of Christ's simplicity.
+
+ It is blood that thou lackest, thou poor old world!
+ Who shall make thy love hot for thee, frozen old world?
+ Thou art not happy, as thou mightest be,
+ For the love of dear Jesus is little in thee.
+
+ Poor world! if thou cravest a better day,
+ Remember that Christ must have his own way;
+ I mourn thou art not as thou mightest be,
+ But the love of God would do all for thee.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CRY OF THE HUMAN.
+
+
+ "There is no God," the foolish saith,
+ But none, "There is no sorrow";
+ And nature oft the cry of faith
+ In bitter need will borrow:
+ Eyes which the preacher could not school,
+ By wayside graves are raised;
+ And lips say, "God be pitiful,"
+ Who ne'er said, "God be praised."
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The tempest stretches from the steep
+ The shadow of its coming;
+ The beasts grow tame, and near us creep,
+ As help were in the human:
+ Yet while the cloud-wheels roll and grind
+ We spirits tremble under!--
+ The hills have echoes; but we find
+ No answer for the thunder.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The battle hurtles on the plains--
+ Earth feels new scythes upon her:
+ We reap our brothers for the wains,
+ And call the harvest, honor,--
+ Draw face to face, front line to line,
+ One image all inherit,--
+ Then kill, curse on, by that same sign,
+ Clay, clay,--and spirit, spirit.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The plague runs festering through the town,
+ And never a bell is tolling:
+ And corpses jostled 'neath the moon,
+ Nod to the dead-cart's rolling.
+ The young child calleth for the cup--
+ The strong man brings it weeping;
+ The mother from her babe looks up,
+ And shrieks away its sleeping.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The plague of gold strides far and near,
+ And deep and strong it enters:
+ This purple chimar which we wear,
+ Makes madder than the centaur's.
+ Our thoughts grow blank, our words grow strange;
+ We cheer the pale gold-diggers--
+ Each soul is worth so much on 'Change,
+ And marked, like sheep, with figures.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The curse of gold upon the land,
+ The lack of bread enforces--
+ The rail-cars snort from strand to strand,
+ Like more of Death's White Horses:
+ The rich preach "rights" and future days,
+ And hear no angel scoffing:
+ The poor die mute--with starving gaze
+ On corn-ships in the offing.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We meet together at the feast--
+ To private mirth betake us--
+ We stare down in the winecup lest
+ Some vacant chair should shake us!
+ We name delight, and pledge it round--
+ "It shall be ours to-morrow!"
+ God's seraphs, do your voices sound
+ As sad in naming sorrow?
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We sit together, with the skies,
+ The steadfast skies, above us:
+ We look into each other's eyes,
+ "And how long will you love us?"
+ The eyes grow dim with prophecy,
+ The voice is low and breathless--
+ "Till death us part!"--O words, to be
+ Our _best_ for love the deathless!
+ Be pitiful, dear God!
+
+ We tremble by the harmless bed
+ Of one loved and departed--
+ Our tears drop on the lids that said
+ Last night, "Be stronger hearted!"
+ O God,--to clasp those fingers close,
+ And yet to feel so lonely!--
+ To see a light upon such brows,
+ Which is the daylight only!
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The happy children come to us,
+ And look up in our faces:
+ They ask us--Was it thus, and thus,
+ When we were in their places?
+ We cannot speak:--we see anew
+ The hills we used to live in;
+ And feel our mother's smile press through
+ The kisses she is giving.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We pray together at the kirk,
+ For mercy, mercy, solely--
+ Hands weary with the evil work,
+ We lift them to the Holy!
+ The corpse is calm below our knee--
+ Its spirit bright before thee--
+ Between them, worse than either, we--
+ Without the rest of glory!
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We leave the communing of men,
+ The murmur of the passions;
+ And live alone, to live again
+ With endless generations.
+ Are we so brave?--The sea and sky
+ In silence lift their mirrors;
+ And, glassed therein, our spirits high
+ Recoil from their own terrors.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We sit on hills our childhood wist,
+ Woods, hamlets, streams, beholding:
+ The sun strikes through the farthest mist,
+ The city's spire to golden.
+ The city's golden spire it was,
+ When hope and health were strong;
+ But now it is the churchyard grass,
+ We look upon the longest.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ And soon all vision waxeth dull--
+ Men whisper, "He is dying":
+ We cry no more, "Be pitiful!"--
+ We have no strength for crying:
+ No strength, no need! Then, Soul of mine,
+ Look up and triumph rather--
+ Lo! in the depth of God's Divine,
+ The Son adjures the Father--
+ BE PITIFUL, O GOD.
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SIFTING OF PETER.
+
+ A FOLK-SONG.
+
+ "Behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you
+ as wheat."--LUKE xxii. 31.
+
+
+ In Saint Luke's Gospel we are told
+ How Peter in the days of old
+ Was sifted;
+ And now, though ages intervene,
+ Sin is the same, while time and scene
+ Are shifted.
+
+ Satan desires us, great and small,
+ As wheat, to sift us, and we all
+ Are tempted;
+ Not one, however rich or great,
+ Is by his station or estate
+ Exempted.
+
+ No house so safely guarded is
+ But he, by some device of his,
+ Can enter;
+ No heart hath armor so complete
+ But he can pierce with arrows fleet
+ Its centre.
+
+ For all at last the cock will crow
+ Who hear the warning voice, but go
+ Unheeding,
+ Till thrice and more they have denied
+ The Man of Sorrows, crucified
+ And bleeding.
+
+ One look of that pale suffering face
+ Will make us feel the deep disgrace
+ Of weakness;
+ We shall be sifted till the strength
+ Of self-conceit be changed at length
+ To meekness.
+
+ Wounds of the soul, though healed, will ache;
+ The reddening scars remain, and make
+ Confession;
+ Lost innocence returns no more;
+ We are not what we were before
+ Transgression.
+
+ But noble souls, through dust and heat,
+ Rise from disaster and defeat
+ The stronger.
+ And conscious still of the divine
+ Within them, lie on earth supine
+ No longer.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VANITY.
+
+
+ The sun comes up and the sun goes down,
+ And day and night are the same as one;
+ The year grows green, and the year grows brown.
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ Grains of sombre or shining sand,
+ Gliding into and out of the hand.
+
+ And men go down in ships to the seas,
+ And a hundred ships are the same as one;
+ And backward and forward blows the breeze,
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ A tide with never a shore in sight
+ Getting steadily on to the night.
+
+ The fisher droppeth his net in the stream,
+ And a hundred streams are the same as one;
+ And the maiden dreameth her love-lit dream,
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ The net of the fisher the burden breaks,
+ And alway the dreaming the dreamer wakes.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIFFERENT MINDS.
+
+
+ Some murmur when their sky is clear
+ And wholly bright to view,
+ If one small speck of dark appear
+ In their great heaven of blue;
+ And some with thankful love are filled
+ If but one streak of light,
+ One ray of God's good mercy, gild
+ The darkness of their night.
+
+ In palaces are hearts that ask,
+ In discontent and pride,
+ Why life is such a dreary task,
+ And all good things denied;
+ And hearts in poorest huts admire
+ How Love has in their aid
+ (Love that not ever seems to tire)
+ Such rich provision made.
+
+RICHARD CHENEVIX TRENCH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY RECOVERY.
+
+
+ Recovery,--daughter of Creation too,
+ Though not for immortality designed,--
+ The Lord of life and death
+ Sent thee from heaven to me!
+ Had I not heard thy gentle tread approach,
+ Not heard the whisper of thy welcome voice,
+ Death had with iron foot
+ My chilly forehead pressed.
+ 'Tis true, I then had wandered where the earths
+ Roll around suns; had strayed along the paths
+ Where the maned comet soars
+ Beyond the armd eye;
+ And with the rapturous, eager greet had hailed
+ The inmates of those earths and of those suns;
+ Had hailed the countless host
+ That throng the comet's disc;
+ Had asked the novice questions, and obtained
+ Such answers as a sage vouchsafes to youth;
+ Had learned in hours far more
+ Than ages here unfold!
+ But I had then not ended here below
+ What, in the enterprising bloom of life,
+ Fate with no light behest
+ Required me to begin.
+ Recovery,--daughter of Creation too,
+ Though not for immortality designed,--
+ The Lord of life and death
+ Sent thee from heaven to me!
+
+From the German of FRIEDRICH GOTTLIEB KLOPSTOCK.
+
+Translation of W. TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LADDER OF SAINT AUGUSTINE.
+
+
+ Saint Augustine! well hast thou said,
+ That of our vices we can frame
+ A ladder, if we will but tread
+ Beneath our feet each deed of shame!
+
+ All common things, each day's events,
+ That with the hour begin and end,
+ Our pleasures and our discontents,
+ Are rounds by which we may ascend.
+
+ The low desire, the base design,
+ That makes another's virtues less;
+ The revel of the ruddy wine,
+ And all occasions of excess;
+
+ The longing for ignoble things;
+ The strife for triumph more than truth;
+ The hardening of the heart, that brings
+ Irreverence for the dreams of youth;
+
+ All thoughts of ill; all evil deeds,
+ That have their root in thoughts of ill;
+ Whatever hinders or impedes
+ The action of the nobler will:--
+
+ All these must first be trampled down
+ Beneath our feet, if we would gain
+ In the bright fields of fair renown
+ The right of eminent domain.
+
+ We have not wings, we cannot soar;
+ But we have feet to scale and climb
+ By slow degrees, by more and more,
+ The cloudy summits of our time.
+
+ The mighty pyramids of stone
+ That wedge-like cleave the desert airs,
+ When nearer seen, and better known,
+ Are but gigantic flights of stairs.
+
+ The distant mountains, that uprear
+ Their solid bastions to the skies,
+ Are crossed by pathways, that appear
+ As we to higher levels rise.
+
+ The heights by great men reached and kept
+ Were not attained by sudden flight,
+ But they, while their companions slept,
+ Were toiling upward in the night.
+
+ Standing on what too long we bore
+ With shoulders bent and downcast eyes,
+ We may discern--unseen before--
+ A path to higher destinies.
+
+ Nor deem the irrevocable Past
+ As wholly wasted, wholly vain,
+ If, rising on its wrecks, at last
+ To something nobler we attain.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT CHRISTOPHER.
+
+
+ "Carry me across!"
+ The Syrian heard, rose up, and braced
+ His huge limbs to the accustomed toil:
+ "My child, see how the waters boil?
+ The night-black heavens look angry-faced;
+ But life is little loss.
+
+ "I'll carry thee with joy,
+ If needs be, safe as nestling dove:
+ For o'er this stream I pilgrims bring
+ In service to one Christ, a King
+ Whom I have never seen, yet love."
+ "I thank thee," said the boy.
+
+ Cheerful, Arprobus took
+ The burden on his shoulders great,
+ And stepped into the waves once more;
+ When lo! they leaping rise and roar,
+ And 'neath the little child's light weight
+ The tottering giant shook.
+
+ "Who art thou?" cried he wild,
+ Struggling in middle of the ford:
+ "Boy as thou look'st, it seems to me
+ The whole world's load I bear in thee,
+ Yet--" "For the sake of Christ, thy Lord,
+ Carry me," said the child.
+
+ No more Arprobus swerved,
+ But gained the farther bank, and then
+ A voice cried, "Hence _Christopheros_ be!
+ For carrying thou hast carried Me,
+ The King of angels and of men,
+ The Master thou hast served."
+
+ And in the moonlight blue
+ The saint saw,--not the wandering boy,
+ But him who walked upon the sea
+ And o'er the plains of Galilee,
+ Till, filled with mystic, awful joy,
+ His dear Lord Christ he knew.
+
+ Oh, little is all loss,
+ And brief the space 'twixt shore and shore,
+ If thou, Lord Jesus, on us lay,
+ Through the deep waters of our way,
+ The burden that Christopheros bore,--
+ To carry thee across.
+
+DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SCORN NOT THE LEAST.
+
+
+ When words are weak and foes encountering strong,
+ Where mightier do assault than do defend,
+ The feebler part puts up enforced wrong,
+ And silent sees that speech could not amend.
+ Yet higher powers most think though they repine,--
+ When sun is set, the little stars will shine.
+
+ While pike doth range, the silly tench doth fly,
+ And crouch in privy creeks with smaller fish;
+ Yet pikes are caught when little fish go by;
+ These fleet afloat while those do fill the dish.
+ There is a time even for the worms to creep.
+ And suck the dew while all their foes do sleep.
+
+ The merlin cannot ever soar on high,
+ Nor greedy greyhound still pursue the chase;
+ The tender lark will find a time to fly.
+ And fearful hare to run a quiet race.
+ He that high-growth on cedars did bestow,
+ Gave also lowly mushrooms leave to grow.
+
+ In Haman's pomp poor Mardocheus wept,
+ Yet God did turn his fate upon his foe;
+ The Lazar pined while Dives' feast was kept,
+ Yet he to heaven, to hell did Dives go.
+ We trample grass, and prize the flowers of May,
+ Yet grass is green when flowers do fade away.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RIGHT MUST WIN.
+
+
+ O, it is hard to work for God,
+ To rise and take his part
+ Upon this battle-field of earth,
+ And not sometimes lose heart!
+
+ He hides himself so wondrously,
+ As though there were no God;
+ He is least seen when all the powers
+ Of ill are most abroad.
+
+ Or he deserts us at the hour
+ The fight is all but lost;
+ And seems to leave us to ourselves
+ Just when we need him most.
+
+ Ill masters good, good seems to change
+ To ill with greater ease;
+ And, worst of all, the good with good
+ Is at cross-purposes.
+
+ Ah! God is other than we think;
+ His ways are far above,
+ Far beyond reason's height, and reached
+ Only by childlike love.
+
+ Workman of God! O, lose not heart,
+ But learn what God is like;
+ And in the darkest battle-field
+ Thou shalt know where to strike.
+
+ Thrice blest is he to whom is given
+ The instinct that can tell
+ That God is on the field when he
+ Is most invisible.
+
+ Blest, is he who can divine
+ Where the real right doth lie,
+ And dares to take the side that seems
+ Wrong to man's blindfold eye.
+
+ For right is right, since God is God;
+ And right the day must win;
+ To doubt would be disloyalty,
+ To falter would be sin!
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE COST OF WORTH.
+
+ FROM "BITTER SWEET."
+
+
+ Thus is it all over the earth!
+ That which we call the fairest.
+ And prize for its surpassing worth,
+ Is always rarest.
+
+ Iron is heaped in mountain piles,
+ And gluts the laggard forges;
+ But gold-flakes gleam in dim defiles
+ And lonely gorges.
+
+ The snowy marble flecks the land
+ With heaped and rounded ledges,
+ But diamonds hide within the sand
+ Their starry edges.
+
+ The finny armies clog the twine
+ That sweeps the lazy river,
+ But pearls come singly from the brine
+ With the pale diver.
+
+ God gives no value unto men
+ Unmatched by meed of labor;
+ And Cost of Worth has ever been
+ The closest neighbor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All common good has common price;
+ Exceeding good, exceeding;
+ Christ bought the keys of Paradise
+ By cruel bleeding;
+
+ And every soul that wins a place
+ Upon its hills of pleasure,
+ Must give it all, and beg for grace
+ To fill the measure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Up the broad stairs that Value rears
+ Stand motives beck'ning earthward,
+ To summon men to nobler spheres,
+ And lead them worthward.
+
+JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LABORER.
+
+
+ Stand up--erect! Thou hast the form
+ And likeness of thy God!--Who more?
+ A soul as dauntless 'mid the storm
+ Of daily life, a heart as warm
+ And pure, as breast e'er wore.
+
+ What then?--Thou art as true a man
+ As moves the human mass among;
+ As much a part of the great plan
+ That with creation's dawn began,
+ As any of the throng.
+
+ Who is thine enemy? The high
+ In station, or in wealth the chief?
+ The great, who coldly pass thee by,
+ With proud step and averted eye?
+ Nay! nurse not such belief.
+
+ If true unto thyself thou wast,
+ What were the proud one's scorn to thee?
+ A feather which thou mightest cast
+ Aside, as idly as the blast
+ The light leaf from the tree.
+
+ No: uncurbed passions, low desires,
+ Absence of noble self-respect.
+ Death, in the breast's consuming fires,
+ To that high nature which aspires
+ Forever, till thus checked;--
+
+ These are thine enemies--thy worst:
+ They chain thee to thy lowly lot;
+ Thy labor and thy life accursed.
+ O, stand erect, and from them burst,
+ And longer suffer not.
+
+ Thou art thyself thine enemy:
+ The great!--what better they than thou?
+ As theirs is not thy will as free?
+ Has God with equal favors thee
+ Neglected to endow?
+
+ True, wealth thou hast not--'tis but dust;
+ Nor place--uncertain as the wind;
+ But that thou hast, which, with thy crust
+ And water, may despise the lust
+ Of both--a noble mind.
+
+ With this, and passions under ban,
+ True faith, and holy trust in God,
+ Thou art the peer of any man.
+ Look up then; that thy little span
+ Of life may be well trod.
+
+WILLIAM D. GALLAGHER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A TRUE LENT.
+
+
+ Is this a fast,--to keep
+ The larder lean,
+ And clean
+ From fat of veals and sheep?
+
+ Is it to quit the dish
+ Of flesh, yet still
+ To fill
+ The platter high with fish?
+
+ Is it to fast an hour.
+ Or ragg'd to go,
+ Or show
+ A downcast look, and sour?
+
+ No! 't is a fast to dole
+ Thy sheaf of wheat,
+ And meat,
+ Unto the hungry soul.
+
+ It is to fast from strife,
+ From old debate
+ And hate,--
+ To circumcise thy life.
+
+ To show a heart grief-rent;
+ To starve thy sin,
+ Not bin,--
+ And that's to keep thy Lent.
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM "THE CHURCH PORCH."
+
+
+ Thou whose sweet youth and early hopes enhance
+ Thy rate and price, and mark thee for a treasure.
+ Hearken unto a Verser, who may chance
+ Rhyme thee to good, and make a bait of pleasure:
+ A verse may find him who a sermon flies
+ And turn delight into a sacrifice.
+
+ When thou dost purpose aught (within thy power),
+ Be sure to doe it, though it be but small;
+ Constancie knits the bones, and make us stowre,
+ When wanton pleasures beckon us to thrall.
+ Who breaks his own bond, forfeiteth himself:
+ What nature made a ship, he makes a shelf.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By all means use sometimes to be alone.
+ Salute thyself: see what thy soul doth wear.
+ Dare to look in thy chest; for 't is thine own;
+ And tumble up and down what thou find'st there.
+ Who cannot rest till he good fellows finde,
+ He breaks up house, turns out of doores his minde.
+
+ In clothes, cheap handsomenesse doth bear the bell.
+ Wisdome's a trimmer thing than shop e'er gave.
+ Say not then, This with that lace will do well;
+ But, This with my discretion will be brave.
+ Much curiousnesse is a perpetual wooing;
+ Nothing, with labor; folly, long a doing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When once thy foot enters the church, be bare.
+ God is more there than thou; for thou art there
+ Only by his permission. Then beware,
+ And make thyself all reverence and fear.
+ Kneeling ne'er spoiled silk stockings; quit thy state;
+ All equal are within the church's gate.
+
+ Resort to sermons, but to prayers most:
+ Praying's the end of preaching. O, be drest!
+ Stay not for th' other pin: why thou hast lost
+ A joy for it worth worlds. Thus hell doth jest
+ Away thy blessings, and extremely flout thee,
+ Thy clothes being fast, but thy soul loose about thee.
+
+ Judge not the preacher; for he is thy judge:
+ If thou mislike him, thou conceiv'st him not.
+ God calleth preaching folly. Do not grudge
+ To pick out treasures from an earthen pot.
+ The worst speak something good: if _all_ want sense,
+ God takes a text, and preacheth Pa-ti-ence.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRIEFS.
+
+
+ WATER TURNED INTO WINE.
+
+ The conscious water saw its God and blushed.
+
+
+ THE WIDOW'S MITES.
+
+ Two mites, two drops, yet all her house and land,
+ Fall from a steady heart, though trembling hand:
+ The other's wanton wealth foams high, and brave;
+ The other cast away, she only gave.
+
+
+ "TWO WENT UP TO THE TEMPLE TO PRAY."
+
+ Two went to pray? O, rather say,
+ One went to brag, the other to pray;
+
+ One stands up close and treads on high,
+ Where the other dares not lend his eye;
+
+ One nearer to God's altar trod,
+ The other to the altar's God.
+
+RICHARD CRASHAW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JEWISH HYMN IN BABYLON.
+
+
+ God of the thunder! from whose cloudy seat
+ The fiery winds of Desolation flow;
+ Father of vengeance, that with purple feet
+ Like a full wine-press tread'st the world below;
+ The embattled armies wait thy sign to slay,
+ Nor springs the beast of havoc on his prey,
+ Nor withering Famine walks his blasted way,
+ Till thou hast marked the guilty land for woe.
+
+ God of the rainbow! at whose gracious sign
+ The billows of the proud their rage suppress;
+ Father of mercies! at one word of thine
+ An Eden blooms in the waste wilderness,
+ And fountains sparkle in the arid sands,
+ And timbrels ring in maidens' glancing hands,
+ And marble cities crown the laughing lands,
+ And pillared temples rise thy name to bless.
+
+ O'er Judah's land thy thunders broke, O Lord!
+ The chariots rattled o'er her sunken gate,
+ Her sons were wasted by the Assyrian's sword,
+ Even her foes wept to see her fallen state;
+ And heaps her ivory palaces became,
+ Her princes wore the captive's garb of shame,
+ Her temples sank amid the smouldering flame,
+ For thou didst ride the tempest cloud of fate.
+
+ O'er Judah's land thy rainbow, Lord, shall beam,
+ And the sad City lift her crownless head,
+ And songs shall wake and dancing footsteps gleam
+ In streets where broods the silence of the dead.
+ The sun shall shine on Salem's gilded towers,
+ On Carmel's side our maidens cull the flowers
+ To deck at blushing eye their bridal bowers,
+ And angel feet the glittering Sion tread.
+
+ Thy vengeance gave us to the stranger's hand,
+ And Abraham's children were led forth for slaves.
+ With fettered steps we left our pleasant land,
+ Envying our fathers in their peaceful graves.
+ The strangers' bread with bitter tears we steep,
+ And when our weary eyes should sink to sleep,
+ In the mute midnight we steal forth to weep.
+ Where the pale willows shade Euphrates' waves.
+
+ The born in sorrow shall bring forth in joy;
+ Thy mercy, Lord, shall lead thy children home;
+ He that went forth a tender prattling boy
+ Yet, ere he die, to Salem's streets shall come;
+ And Canaan's vines for us their fruit shall bear,
+ And Hermon's bees their honeyed stores prepare,
+ And we shall kneel again in thankful prayer,
+ Where o'er the cherub seated God full blazed the irradiate dome.
+
+HENRY HART MILMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXAMPLE.
+
+
+ We scatter seeds with careless hand,
+ And dream we ne'er shall see them more;
+ But for a thousand years
+ Their fruit appears,
+ In weeds that mar the land,
+ Or healthful store.
+
+ The deeds we do, the words we say,--
+ Into still air they seem to fleet,
+ We count them ever past;
+ But they shall last,--
+ In the dread judgment they
+ And we shall meet.
+
+ I charge thee by the years gone by,
+ For the love's sake of brethren dear,
+ Keep thou the one true way,
+ In work and play,
+ Lest in that world their cry
+ Of woe thou hear.
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SMALL BEGINNINGS.
+
+
+ A traveller through a dusty road strewed acorns on the lea;
+ And one took root and sprouted up, and grew into a tree.
+ Love sought its shade, at evening time, to breath its early vows;
+ And age was pleased, in heats of noon, to bask beneath its boughs;
+ The dormouse loved its dangling twigs, the birds sweet music bore;
+ It stood a glory in its place, a blessing evermore.
+
+ A little spring had lost its way amid the grass and fern,
+ A passing stranger scooped a well, where weary men might turn;
+ He walled it in, and hung with care a ladle at the brink;
+ He thought not of the deed he did, but judged that toil might drink.
+ He passed again, and lo! the well, by summers never dried,
+ Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues, and saved a life besides.
+
+ A dreamer dropped a random thought; 't was old, and yet 't was new;
+ A simple fancy of the brain, but strong in being true.
+ It shone upon a genial mind, and lo! its light became
+ A lamp of life, a beacon ray, a monitory flame.
+ The thought was small; its issue great; a watch-fire on the hill,
+ It shed its radiance far adown, and cheers the valley still!
+
+ A nameless man, amid the crowd that thronged the daily mart,
+ Let fall a word of Hope and Love, unstudied, from the heart;
+ A whisper on the tumult thrown,--a transitory breath,--
+ It raised a brother from the dust; it saved a soul from death.
+ O germ! O fount! O word of love! O thought at random cast!
+ Ye were but little at the first, but mighty at the last.
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RISE OF MAN.
+
+
+ Thou for whose birth the whole creation yearned
+ Through countless ages of the morning world,
+ Who, first in fiery vapors dimly hurled,
+ Next to the senseless crystal slowly turned,
+ Then to the plant which grew to something more,--
+ Humblest of creatures that draw breath of life,--
+ Wherefrom through infinites of patient pain
+ Came conscious man to reason and adore:
+ Shall we be shamed because such things have been,
+ Or bate one jot of our ancestral pride?
+ Nay, in thyself art thou not deified
+ That from such depths thou couldst such summits win?
+ While the long way behind is prophecy
+ Of those perfections which are yet to be.
+
+JOHN WHITE CHADWICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I WOULD I WERE AN EXCELLENT DIVINE.
+
+
+ I would I were an excellent divine.
+ That had the Bible at my fingers' ends;
+ That men might hear out of this mouth of mine
+ How God doth make his enemies his friends;
+ Rather than with a thundering and long prayer
+ Be led into presumption, or despair.
+
+ This would I be, and would none other be,
+ But a religious servant of my God;
+ And know there is none other God but he.
+ And willingly to suffer mercy's rod,--
+ Joy in his grace, and live but in his love,
+ And seek my bliss but in the world above.
+
+ And I would frame a kind of faithful prayer,
+ For all estates within the state of grace,
+ That careful love might never know despair.
+ Nor servile fear might faithful love deface;
+ And this would I both day and night devise
+ To make my humble spirit's exercise.
+
+ And I would read the rules of sacred life;
+ Persuade the troubled soul to patience;
+ The husband care, and comfort to the wife,
+ To child and servant due obedience;
+ Faith to the friend, and to the neighbor peace,
+ That love might live, and quarrels all might cease.
+
+ Prayer for the health of all that are diseased,
+ Confession unto all that are convicted,
+ And patience unto all that are displeased,
+ And comfort unto all that are afflicted,
+ And mercy unto all that have offended,
+ And grace to all, that all may be amended.
+
+NICHOLAS BRETON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PASTOR'S REVERIE.
+
+
+ The pastor sits in his easy-chair,
+ With the Bible upon his knee.
+ From gold to purple the clouds in the west
+ Are changing momently;
+ The shadows lie in the valleys below,
+ And hide in the curtain's fold;
+ And the page grows dim whereon he reads,
+ "I remember the days of old."
+
+ "Not clear nor dark," as the Scripture saith,
+ The pastor's memories are;
+ No day that is gone was shadowless,
+ No night was without its star;
+ But mingled bitter and sweet hath been
+ The portion of his cup:
+ "The hand that in love hath smitten," he saith,
+ "In love hath bound us up."
+
+ Fleet flies his thoughts over many a field
+ Of stubble and snow and bloom,
+ And now it trips through a festival,
+ And now it halts at a tomb;
+ Young faces smile in his reverie,
+ Of those that are young no more,
+ And voices are heard that only come
+ With the winds from a far-off shore.
+
+ He thinks of the day when first, with fear
+ And faltering lips, he stood
+ To speak in the sacred place the Word
+ To the waiting multitude;
+ He walks again to the house of God
+ With the voice of joy and praise,
+ With many whose feet long time have pressed
+ Heaven's safe and blessd ways.
+
+ He enters again the homes of toil,
+ And joins in the homely chat;
+ He stands in the shop of the artisan;
+ He sits, where the Master sat,
+ At the poor man's fire and the rich man's feast.
+ But who to-day are the poor,
+ And who are the rich? Ask him who keeps
+ The treasures that ever endure.
+
+ Once more the green and the grove resound
+ With the merry children's din;
+ He hears their shout at the Christmas tide,
+ When Santa Claus stalks in.
+ Once more he lists while the camp-fire roars
+ On the distant mountain-side,
+ Or, proving apostleship, plies the brook
+ Where the fierce young troutlings hide.
+
+ And now he beholds the wedding train
+ To the altar slowly move,
+ And the solemn words are said that seal
+ The sacrament of love.
+ Anon at the font he meets once more
+ The tremulous youthful pair,
+ With a white-robed cherub crowing response
+ To the consecrating prayer.
+
+ By the couch of pain he kneels again;
+ Again, the thin hand lies
+ Cold in his palm, while the last far look
+ Steals into the steadfast eyes;
+ And now the burden of hearts that break
+ Lies heavy upon his own--
+ The widow's woe and the orphan's cry
+ And the desolate mother's moan.
+
+ So blithe and glad, so heavy and sad,
+ Are the days that are no more,
+ So mournfully sweet are the sounds that float
+ With the winds from a far-off shore.
+ For the pastor has learned what meaneth the word
+ That is given him to keep,--
+ "Rejoice with them that do rejoice,
+ And weep with them that weep."
+
+ It is not in vain that he has trod
+ This lonely and toilsome way.
+ It is not in vain that he has wrought
+ In the vineyard all the day;
+ For the soul that gives is the soul that lives,
+ And bearing another's load
+ Doth lighten your own and shorten the way,
+ And brighten the homeward road.
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO RABBIS.
+
+
+ The Rabbi Nathan, twoscore years and ten,
+ Walked blameless through the evil world, and then
+ Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+ Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+ And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+ Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+ No more among the elders, but went out
+ From the great congregation girt about
+ With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+ Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+ Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+ Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+ Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+ Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+ Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+ And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+ Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+ Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+ Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+ In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+ Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+ Bow with their weight. I will arise and lay
+ My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+ Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+ But even as one who, followed unawares,
+ Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+ Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+ By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+ Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+ So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+ The wail of David's penitential woe,
+ Before him still the old temptation came,
+ And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+ Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+ Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+ To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+ Smote with his staff the blackness round about.
+
+ At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+ The towers of Ecbatana far away
+ Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+ And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+ The faith of Islam reared a domd tomb,
+ Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+ He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+ Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+ The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+ Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+ Wept, praising him whose gracious providence
+ Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+ Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+ Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+ Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+ Foul from my sins to tell thee all my shame.
+ Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+ May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+ Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+ Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+ Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+ The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+ "I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+ "In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+ 'Better the eye should see than that desire
+ Should wander'? Burning with a hidden fire
+ That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+ For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+ Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+ "Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+ In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+ They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+ Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+ Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+ Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+ His prayers were answered in another's name;
+ And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+ Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+ Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+ Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+ In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+ "Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+ Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+ Thou canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+ Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+ Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!"
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUDGE NOT.
+
+
+ Judge not; the workings of his brain
+ And of his heart thou canst not see;
+ What looks to thy dim eyes a stain,
+ In God's pure light may only be
+ A scar, brought from some well-won field,
+ Where thou wouldst only faint and yield.
+
+ The look, the air, that frets thy sight
+ May be a token that below
+ The soul has closed in deadly fight
+ With some infernal fiery foe,
+ Whose glance would scorch thy smiling grace
+ And cast thee shuddering on thy face!
+
+ The fall thou darest to despise,--
+ May be the angel's slackened hand
+ Has suffered it, that he may rise
+ And take a firmer, surer stand;
+ Or, trusting less to earthly things,
+ May henceforth learn to use his wings.
+
+ And judge none lost; but wait and see,
+ With hopeful pity, not disdain;
+ The depth of the abyss may be
+ The measure of the height of pain
+ And love and glory that may raise
+ This soul to God in after days!
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO THE UNCO GUID.
+
+
+ "My son, these maxims make a rule
+ And lump them aye thegither:
+ The Rigid Righteous is a fool,
+ The Rigid Wise anither:
+ The cleanest corn that e'er was dight
+ May hae some pyles o' caff in;
+ Sae ne'er a fellow-creature slight
+ For random fits o' daffin."
+
+ --SOLOMON, _Ecclesiastes_ vii. 16.
+
+
+ O ye wha are sae guid yoursel',
+ Sae pious and sae holy,
+ Ye've nought to do but mark and tell
+ Your neebor's fauts and folly:--
+ Whase life is like a weel-gaun mill,
+ Supplied wi' store o' water.
+ The heapt happer's ebbing still,
+ And still the clap plays clatter.
+
+ Hear me, ye venerable core,
+ As counsel for poor mortals,
+ That frequent pass douce Wisdom's door,
+ For glaikit Folly's portals!
+ I, for their thoughtless, careless sakes,
+ Would here propone defences,
+ Their donsie tricks, their black mistakes,
+ Their failings and mischances.
+
+ Ye see your state wi' theirs compared,
+ And shudder at the niffer;
+ But cast a moment's fair regard,
+ What makes the mighty differ?
+ Discount what scant occasion gave
+ That purity ye pride in,
+ And (what's aft mair than a' the lave)
+ Your better art o' hidin'.
+
+ Think, when your castigated pulse
+ Gies now and then a wallop,
+ What ragings must his veins convulse,
+ That still eternal gallop:
+ Wi' wind and tide fair i' your tail,
+ Right on ye scud your sea-way;
+ But in the teeth o' baith to sail,
+ It makes an unco leeway.
+
+ See Social life and Glee sit down,
+ All joyous and unthinking,
+ Till, quite transmugrified, they're grown
+ Debauchery and Drinking:
+ O, would they stay to calculate
+ The eternal consequences;
+ Or your mortal dreaded hell to state,
+ Damnation of expenses!
+
+ Ye high, exalted, virtuous dames,
+ Tied up in godly laces,
+ Before ye gie poor Frailty names,
+ Suppose a change o' cases;
+ A dear-loved lad, convenience snug,
+ A treacherous inclination,--
+ But, let me whisper i' your lug,
+ Ye 're aiblins nae temptation.
+
+ Then gently scan your brother man,
+ Still gentler sister woman;
+ Though they may gang a kennin' wrang,
+ To step aside is human.
+ One point must still be greatly dark,
+ The moving why they do it;
+ And just as lamely can ye mark
+ How far perhaps they rue it.
+
+ Who made the heart, 't is He alone
+ Decidedly can try us;
+ He knows each chord,--its various tone,
+ Each spring,--its various bias:
+ Then at the balance let's be mute,
+ We never can adjust it;
+ What's done we partly may compute,
+ But know not what's resisted.
+
+ROBERT BURNS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STONE THE WOMAN, LET THE MAN GO FREE.
+
+
+ Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free!
+ Draw back your skirts, lest they perchance may touch
+ Her garment as she passes; but to him
+ Put forth a willing hand to clasp with his
+ That led her to destruction and disgrace.
+ Shut up from her the sacred ways of toil,
+ That she no more may win an honest meal;
+ But ope to him all honorable paths
+ Where he may win distinction; give to him
+ Fair, pressed-down measures of life's sweetest joys.
+ Pass her, O maiden, with a pure, proud face,
+ If she puts out a poor, polluted palm;
+ But lay thy hand in his on bridal day,
+ And swear to cling to him with wifely love
+ And tender reverence. Trust him who led
+ A sister woman to a fearful fate.
+
+ Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free!
+ Let one soul suffer for the guilt of two--
+ It is the doctrine of a hurried world,
+ Too out of breath for holding balances
+ Where nice distinctions and injustices
+ Are calmly weighed. But ah, how will it be
+ On that strange day of fire and flame,
+ When men shall wither with a mystic fear,
+ And all shall stand before the one true Judge?
+ Shall sex make _then_ a difference in sin?
+ Shall He, the Searcher of the hidden heart,
+ In His eternal and divine decree
+ Condemn the woman and forgive the man?
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IN PRISON.
+
+
+ God pity the wretched prisoners,
+ In their lonely cells to-day!
+ Whatever the sins that tripped them,
+ God pity them! still I say.
+
+ Only a strip of sunshine,
+ Cleft by rusty bars;
+ Only a patch of azure,
+ Only a cluster of stars;
+
+ Only a barren future,
+ To starve their hope upon;
+ Only stinging memories
+ Of a past that's better gone;
+
+ Only scorn from women.
+ Only hate from men,
+ Only remorse to whisper
+ Of a life that might have been.
+
+ Once they were little children.
+ And perhaps their unstained feet
+ Were led by a gentle mother
+ Toward the golden street;
+
+ Therefore, if in life's forest
+ They since have lost their way,
+ For the sake of her who loved them,
+ God pity them! still I say.
+
+ O mothers gone to heaven!
+ With earnest heart I ask
+ That your eyes may not look earthward
+ On the failure of your task.
+
+ For even in those mansions
+ The choking tears would rise,
+ Though the fairest hand in heaven
+ Would wipe them from your eyes!
+
+ And you, who judge so harshly,
+ Are you sure the stumbling-stone
+ That tripped the feet of others
+ Might not have bruised your own?
+
+ Are you sure the sad-faced angel
+ Who writes our errors down
+ Will ascribe to you more honor
+ Than him on whom you frown?
+
+ Or, if a steadier purpose
+ Unto your life is given;
+ A stronger will to conquer,
+ A smoother path to heaven;
+
+ If, when temptations meet you,
+ You crush them with a smile;
+ If you can chain pale passion
+ And keep your lips from guile;
+
+ Then bless the hand that crowned you,
+ Remembering, as you go,
+ 'T was not your own endeavor
+ That shaped your nature so;
+
+ And sneer not at the weakness
+ Which made a brother fall,
+ For the hand that lifts the fallen,
+ God loves the best of all!
+
+ And pray for the wretched prisoners
+ All over the land to-day,
+ That a holy hand in pity
+ May wipe their guilt away.
+
+MAY RILEY SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONSCIENCE AND REMORSE.
+
+
+ "Good-bye," I said to my Conscience--
+ "Good-bye for aye and aye;"
+ And I put her hands off harshly,
+ And turned my face away:
+ And Conscience, smitten sorely,
+ Returned not from that day.
+
+ But a time came when my spirit
+ Grew weary of its pace:
+ And I cried, "Come back, my Conscience,
+ I long to see thy face;"
+ But Conscience cried, "I cannot,--
+ Remorse sits in my place."
+
+PAUL LAWRENCE DUNBAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOUND WANTING.
+
+
+ Belshazzar had a letter,--
+ He never had but one;
+ Belshazzar's correspondent
+ Concluded and begun
+ In that immortal copy
+ The conscience of us all
+ Can read without its glasses
+ On revelation's wall.
+
+EMILY DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DALLYING WITH TEMPTATION.
+
+ FROM THE FIRST PART OF "WALLENSTEIN," ACT III. SC. 4.
+
+
+ Wallenstein _(in soliloquy_). Is it possible?
+ Is't so? I _can_ no longer what I _would_!
+ No longer draw back at my liking! I
+ Must _do_ the deed, because I _thought_ of it,
+ And fed this heart here with a dream! Because
+ I did not scowl temptation from my presence,
+ Dallied with thought of possible fulfilment,
+ Commenced no movement, left all time uncertain,
+ And only kept the road, the access open!
+ By the great God of Heaven! It was not
+ My serious meaning, it was ne'er resolve.
+ I but amused myself with thinking of it.
+ The free-will tempted me, the power to do
+ Or not to do it.--Was it criminal
+ To make the fancy minister to hope,
+ To fill the air with pretty toys of air,
+ And clutch fantastic sceptres moving t'ward me?
+ Was not the will kept free? Beheld I not
+ The road of duty clear beside me--but
+ One little step and once more I was in it!
+ Where am I? Whither have I been transported?
+ No road, no track behind one, but a wall,
+ Impenetrable, insurmountable,
+ Rises obedient to the spells I muttered
+ And meant not--my own doings tower behind me.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EASY TO DRIFT.
+
+
+ Easy to drift to the open sea,
+ The tides are eager and swift and strong,
+ And whistling and free are the rushing winds,--
+ But O, to get back is hard and long.
+
+ Easy as told in Arabian tale,
+ To free from his jar the evil sprite
+ Till he rises like smoke to stupendous size,--
+ But O, nevermore can we prison him tight.
+
+ Easy as told in an English tale,
+ To fashion a Frankenstein, body and soul,
+ And breathe in his bosom a breath of life,--
+ But O, we create what we cannot control.
+
+ Easy to drift to the sea of doubt,
+ Easy to hurt what we cannot heal,
+ Easy to rouse what we cannot soothe,
+ Easy to speak what we do not feel,
+ Easy to show what we ought to conceal,
+ Easy to think that fancy is fate,--
+ And O, the wisdom that comes too late!
+
+OLIVER HUCKEL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRANKFORD'S SOLILOQUY.
+
+ FROM "A WOMAN KILLED WITH KINDNESS"
+
+
+ O God! O God! that it were possible
+ To undo things done; to call back yesterday!
+ That time could turn up his swift sandy glass,
+ To untell the days, and to redeem these hours!
+ Or that the sun
+ Could, rising from the West, draw his coach backward,--
+ Take from the account of time so many minutes.
+ Till he had all these seasons called again,
+ These minutes and these actions done in them.
+
+THOMAS HEYWOOD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONSCIENCE.
+
+ FROM SATIRE XIII.
+
+
+ The Spartan rogue who, boldly bent on fraud,
+ Dared ask the god to sanction and applaud,
+ And sought for counsel at the Pythian shrine,
+ Received for answer from the lips divine,--
+ "That he who doubted to restore his trust,
+ And reasoned much, reluctant to be just,
+ Should for those doubts and that reluctance prove
+ The deepest vengeance of the powers above."
+ The tale declares that not pronounced in vain
+ Came forth the warning from the sacred fane:
+ Ere long no branch of that devoted race
+ Could mortal man on soil of Sparta trace!
+ Thus but intended mischief, stayed in time,
+ Had all the mortal guilt of finished crime.
+ If such his fate who yet but darkly dares,
+ Whose guilty purpose yet no act declares,
+ What were it, done! Ah! now farewell to peace!
+ Ne'er on this earth his soul's alarms shall cease!
+ Held in the mouth that languid fever burns,
+ His tasteless food he indolently turns;
+ On Alba's oldest stock his soul shall pine!
+ Forth from his lips he spits the joyless wine!
+ Nor all the nectar of the hills shall now
+ Or glad the heart, or smooth the wrinkled brow!
+ While o'er the couch his aching limbs are cast,
+ If care permit the brief repose at last,
+ Lo! there the altar and the fane abused!
+ Or darkly shadowed forth in dream confused,
+ While the damp brow betrays the inward storm,
+ Before him flits thy aggravated form!
+ Then as new fears o'er all his senses press,
+ Unwilling words the guilty truth confess!
+ These, these be they whom secret terrors try.
+ When muttered thunders shake the lurid sky;
+ Whose deadly paleness now the gloom conceals
+ And now the vivid flash anew reveals.
+ No storm as Nature's casualty they hold.
+ They deem without an aim no thunders rolled;
+ Where'er the lightning strikes, the flash is thought
+ Judicial fire, with Heaven's high vengeance fraught.
+ Passes this by, with yet more anxious ear
+ And greater dread, each future storm they fear;
+ In burning vigil, deadliest foe to sleep,
+ In their distempered frame if fever keep,
+ Or the pained side their wonted rest prevent,
+ Behold some incensed god his bow has bent!
+ All pains, all aches, are stones and arrows hurled
+ At bold offenders in this nether world!
+ From them no crested cock acceptance meets!
+ Their lamb before the altar vainly bleats!
+ Can pardoning Heaven on guilty sickness smile?
+ Or is there victim than itself more vile?
+ Where steadfast virtue dwells not in the breast,
+ Man is a wavering creature at the best!
+
+From the Latin of JUVENAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FOOLISH VIRGINS.
+
+
+ The Queen looked up, and said,
+ "O maiden, if indeed you list to sing,
+ Sing, and unbind my heart, that I may weep."
+ Whereat full willingly sang the little maid:
+
+ "Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill!
+ Late, late, so late! but we can enter still.
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "No light had we: for that we do repent;
+ And learning this, the bridegroom will relent.
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "No light; so late! and dark and chill the night!
+ O, let us in, that we may find the light!
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "Have we not heard the bridegroom is so sweet?
+ O, let us in, though late, to kiss his feet!
+ No, no, too late! Ye cannot enter now."
+
+ So sang the novice, while full passionately,
+ Her head upon her hands, wept the sad Queen.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UP HILL.
+
+
+ Does the road wind up hill all the way?
+ _Yes, to the very end._
+ Will the day's journey take the whole long day?
+ _From morn to night, my friend_.
+
+ But is there for the night a resting-place?
+ _A roof for when the slow dark hours begin._
+ May not the darkness hide it from my face?
+ _You cannot miss that inn_.
+
+ Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?
+ _Those who have gone before._
+ Then must I knock, or call when just in sight?
+ _They will not keep you standing at that door_.
+
+ Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak?
+ _Of labor you shall find the sum._
+ Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
+ _Yea, beds for all who come_.
+
+CHRISTINA G. ROSSETTI.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PER PACEM AD LUCEM.
+
+
+ I do not ask, O Lord, that life may be
+ A pleasant road;
+ I do not ask that Thou wouldst take from me
+ Aught of its load;
+
+ I do not ask that flowers should always spring
+ Beneath my feet;
+ I know too well the poison and the sting
+ Of things too sweet.
+
+ For one thing only, Lord, dear Lord, I plead,
+ Lead me aright--
+ Though strength should falter, and though heart should bleed--
+ Through Peace to Light.
+
+ I do not ask, O Lord, that thou shouldst shed
+ Full radiance here;
+ Give but a ray of peace, that I may tread
+ Without a fear.
+
+ I do not ask my cross to understand,
+ My way to see;
+ Better in darkness just to feel Thy hand
+ And follow Thee.
+
+ Joy is like restless day; but peace divine
+ Like quiet night:
+ Lead me, O Lord,--till perfect Day shall shine,
+ Through Peace to Light.
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON HIS BLINDNESS.
+
+
+ When I consider how my light is spent
+ Ere half my days, in this dark world and wide,
+ And that one talent, which is death to hide,
+ Lodged with me useless, though my soul more bent
+ To serve therewith my Maker, and present
+ My true account, lest he returning chide;
+ "Doth God exact day-labor, light denied?"
+ I fondly ask. But Patience, to prevent
+ That murmur, soon replies, "God doth not need
+ Either man's work or his own gifts; who best
+ Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best: his state
+ Is kingly; thousands at his bidding speed,
+ And post o'er land and ocean without rest;
+ They also serve who only stand and wait."
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MARTYRS' HYMN.
+
+
+ Flung to the heedless winds,
+ Or on the waters cast,
+ The martyrs' ashes, watched,
+ Shall gathered be at last;
+ And from that scattered dust,
+ Around us and abroad,
+ Shall spring a plenteous seed
+ Of witnesses for God.
+
+ The Father hath received
+ Their latest living breath;
+ And vain is Satan's boast
+ Of victory in their death;
+ Still, still, though dead, they speak,
+ And, trumpet-tongued, proclaim
+ To many a wakening land
+ The one availing name.
+
+From the German of MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+Translation of W.J. FOX.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PILGRIMAGE.
+
+
+ Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,
+ My staff of faith to walk upon,
+ My scrip of joy, immortal diet,
+ My bottle of salvation,
+ My gown of glory, hope's true gauge;
+ And thus I'll take my pilgrimage!
+
+ Blood must be my body's balmer,
+ No other balm will there be given;
+ Whilst my soul, like quiet palmer,
+ Travelleth towards the land of Heaven,
+ Over the silver mountains
+ Where spring the nectar fountains:
+ There will I kiss
+ The bowl of bliss,
+ And drink mine everlasting fill
+ Upon every milken hill.
+ My soul will be a-dry before,
+ But after, it will thirst no more.
+
+ Then by that happy, blissful day,
+ More peaceful pilgrims I shall see,
+ That have cast off their rags of clay,
+ And walk apparelled fresh like me.
+ I'll take them first
+ To quench their thirst,
+ And taste of nectar's suckets
+ At those clear wells
+ Where sweetness dwells
+ Drawn up by saints in crystal buckets.
+
+ And when our bottles and all we
+ Are filled with immortality,
+ Then the blest paths we'll travel,
+ Strewed with rubies thick as gravel,--
+ Ceilings of diamonds, sapphire floors.
+ High walls of coral, and pearly bowers.
+ From thence to Heaven's bribeless hall,
+ Where no corrupted voices brawl;
+ No conscience molten into gold,
+ No forged accuser, bought or sold,
+ No cause deferred, no vain-spent journey,
+ For there Christ is the King's Attorney;
+ Who pleads for all without degrees,
+ And he hath angels, but no fees;
+ And when the grand twelve-million jury
+ Of our sins, with direful fury,
+ 'Gainst our souls black verdicts give,
+ Christ pleads his death, and then we live.
+ Be thou my speaker, taintless pleader,
+ Unblotted lawyer, true proceeder!
+ Thou giv'st salvation even for alms,--
+ Not with a bribed lawyer's palms.
+ And this is mine eternal plea
+ To Him that made heaven, earth, and sea',
+ That, since my flesh must die so soon,
+ And want a head to dine next noon,
+ Just at the stroke when my veins start and spread.
+ Set on my soul an everlasting head:
+ Then am I, like a palmer, fit
+ To tread those blest paths which before I writ.
+
+ Of death and judgment, heaven and hell,
+ Who oft doth think, must needs die well.
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MASTER'S TOUCH.
+
+
+ In the still air the music lies unheard;
+ In the rough marble beauty hides unseen:
+ To make the music and the beauty, needs
+ The master's touch, the sculptor's chisel keen.
+
+ Great Master, touch us with thy skilful hand;
+ Let not the music that is in us die!
+ Great Sculptor, hew and polish us; nor let,
+ Hidden and lost, thy form within us lie!
+
+ Spare not the stroke! do with us as thou wilt!
+ Let there be naught unfinished, broken, marred;
+ Complete thy purpose, that we may become
+ Thy perfect image, thou our God and Lord!
+
+HORATIUS BONAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FAITHFUL ANGEL.
+
+ FROM "PARADISE LOST," BOOK V.
+
+
+ The seraph Abdiel, faithful found
+ Among the faithless, faithful only he;
+ Among innumerable false, unmoved,
+ Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified,
+ His loyalty he kept, his love, his zeal;
+ Nor number, nor example with him wrought
+ To swerve from truth, or change his constant mind,
+ Though single. From amidst them forth he passed,
+ Long way through hostile scorn, which he sustained
+ Superior, nor of violence feared aught;
+ And with retorted scorn his back he turned
+ On those proud towers to swift destruction doomed.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOW SPIRITS.
+
+
+ Fever and fret and aimless stir
+ And disappointed strife,
+ All chafing, unsuccessful things,
+ Make up the sum of life.
+
+ Love adds anxiety to toil,
+ And sameness doubles cares.
+ While one unbroken chain of work
+ The flagging temper wears.
+
+ The light and air are dulled with smoke:
+ The streets resound with noise;
+ And the soul sinks to see its peers
+ Chasing their joyless joys.
+
+ Voices are round me; smiles are near;
+ Kind welcomes to be had;
+ And yet my spirit is alone,
+ Fretful, outworn, and sad.
+
+ A weary actor, I would fain
+ Be quit of my long part;
+ The burden of unquiet life
+ Lies heavy on my heart.
+
+ Sweet thought of God! now do thy work
+ As thou hast done before;
+ Wake up, and tears will wake with thee,
+ And the dull mood be o'er.
+
+ The very thinking of the thought
+ Without or praise or prayer,
+ Gives light to know, and life to do,
+ And marvellous strength to bear.
+
+ Oh, there is music in that thought,
+ Unto a heart unstrung,
+ Like sweet bells at the evening time,
+ Most musically rung.
+
+ 'Tis not his justice or his power,
+ Beauty or blest abode,
+ But the mere unexpanded thought
+ Of the eternal God.
+
+ It is not of his wondrous works,
+ Not even that he is;
+ Words fail it, but it is a thought
+ Which by itself is bliss.
+
+ Sweet thought, lie closer to my heart!
+ That I may feel thee near,
+ As one who for his weapon feels
+ In some nocturnal fear.
+
+ Mostly in hours of gloom thou com'st,
+ When sadness makes us lowly,
+ As though thou wert the echo sweet
+ Of humble melancholy.
+
+ I bless thee. Lord, for this kind check
+ To spirits over free!
+ More helpless need of thee!
+ And for all things that make me feel
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I SAW THEE.
+
+ "When thou wast under the fig-tree, I saw thee."
+
+
+ I Saw thee when, as twilight fell,
+ And evening lit her fairest star,
+ Thy footsteps sought yon quiet dell,
+ The world's confusion left afar.
+
+ I saw thee when thou stood'st alone,
+ Where drooping branches thick o'erhung,
+ Thy still retreat to all unknown,
+ Hid in deep shadows darkly flung.
+
+ I saw thee when, as died each sound
+ Of bleating flock or woodland bird,
+ Kneeling, as if on holy ground,
+ Thy voice the listening silence heard.
+
+ I saw thy calm, uplifted eyes,
+ And marked the heaving of thy breast,
+ When rose to heaven thy heartfelt sighs
+ For purer life, for perfect rest.
+
+ I saw the light that o'er thy face
+ Stole with a soft, suffusing glow,
+ As if, within, celestial grace
+ Breathed the same bliss that angels know.
+
+ I saw--what thou didst not--above
+ Thy lowly head an open heaven;
+ And tokens of thy Father's love
+ With smiles to thy rapt spirit given.
+
+ I saw thee from that sacred spot
+ With firm and peaceful soul depart;
+ I, Jesus, saw thee,--doubt it not,--
+ And read the secrets of thy heart!
+
+RAY PALMER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOSSE IN DELAYES.
+
+
+ Shun delayes, they breed remorse,
+ Take thy time while time doth serve thee,
+ Creeping snayles have weakest force,
+ Flie their fault, lest thou repent thee.
+ Good is best when soonest wrought,
+ Lingering labours come to nought.
+
+ Hoyse up sayle while gale doth last,
+ Tide and winde stay no man's pleasure;
+ Seek not time when time is past,
+ Sober speede is wisdome's leasure.
+ After-wits are dearely bought,
+ Let thy fore-wit guide thy thought.
+
+ Time weares all his locks before,
+ Take thou hold upon his forehead;
+ When he flies, he turnes no more,
+ And behind his scalpe is naked.
+ Workes adjourned have many stayes,
+ Long demurres breed new delayes.
+
+ Seeke thy salve while sore is greene,
+ Festered wounds aske deeper launcing;
+ After-cures are seldome seene,
+ Often sought, scarce ever chancing.
+ Time and place gives best advice.
+ Out of season, out of price.
+
+ Crush the serpent in the head,
+ Breake ill eggs ere they be hatched:
+ Kill bad chickens in the tread;
+ Fledged, they hardly can be catched:
+ In the rising stifle ill,
+ Lest it grow against thy will.
+
+ Drops do pierce the stubborn flint,
+ Not by force, but often falling;
+ Custome kills with feeble dint.
+ More by use than strength prevailing:
+ Single sands have little weight,
+ Many make a drowning freight.
+
+ Tender twigs are bent with ease,
+ Aged trees do breake with bending;
+ Young desires make little prease,
+ Growth doth make them past amending.
+ Happie man that soon doth knocke,
+ Babel's babes against the rocke.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SEED GROWING SECRETLY.
+
+
+ Dear, secret greenness! nurst below
+ Tempests and winds and winter nights!
+ Vex not, that but One sees thee grow;
+ That One made all these lesser lights.
+
+ What needs a conscience calm and bright
+ Within itself, an outward test?
+ Who breaks his glass, to take more light,
+ Makes way for storms into his rest.
+
+ Then bless thy secret growth, nor catch
+ At noise, but thrive unseen and dumb;
+ Keep clean, bear fruit, earn life, and watch
+ Till the white-winged reapers come!
+
+HENRY VAUGHAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATIENCE.
+
+
+ She hath no beauty in her face
+ Unless the chastened sweetness there,
+ And meek long-suffering, yield a grace
+ To make her mournful features fair:--
+
+ Shunned by the gay, the proud, the young,
+ She roams through dim, unsheltered ways;
+ Nor lover's vow, nor flatterer's tongue
+ Brings music to her sombre days:--
+
+ At best her skies are clouded o'er,
+ And oft she fronts the stinging sleet,
+ Or feels on some tempestuous shore
+ The storm-waves lash her naked feet.
+
+ Where'er she strays, or musing stands
+ By lonesome beach, by turbulent mart,
+ We see her pale, half-tremulous hands
+ Crossed humbly o'er her aching heart!
+
+ Within, a secret pain she bears,--
+ pain too deep to feel the balm
+ An April spirit finds in tears;
+ Alas! all cureless griefs are calm!
+
+ Yet in her passionate strength supreme,
+ Despair beyond her pathway flies,
+ Awed by the softly steadfast beam
+ Of sad, but heaven-enamored eyes!
+
+ Who pause to greet her, vaguely seem
+ Touched by fine wafts of holier air;
+ As those who in some mystic dream
+ Talk with the angels unaware!
+
+PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOMETIME.
+
+
+ Sometime, when all life's lessons have been learned,
+ And sun and stars forevermore have set,
+ The things o'er which our weak judgments here have spurned,
+ The things o'er which we grieved with lashes wet,
+ Will flash before us, out of life's dark night,
+ As stars shine most in deeper tints of blue;
+ And we shall see how all God's plans are right,
+ And how what seems reproof was love most true.
+
+ And we shall see how, while we frown and sigh,
+ God's plans go on as best for you and me;
+ How, when we called, he heeded not our cry,
+ Because his wisdom to the end could see.
+ And e'en as prudent parents disallow
+ Too much of sweet to craving babyhood,
+ So God, perhaps, is keeping from us now
+ Life's sweetest things, because it seemeth good.
+
+ And if sometimes, commingled with life's wine,
+ We find the wormwood, and rebel and shrink,
+ Be sure a wiser hand than yours or mine
+ Pours out this potion for our lips to drink.
+ And if some friend we love is lying low,
+ Where human kisses cannot reach his face,
+ Oh, do not blame the loving Father so,
+ But wear your sorrow with obedient grace!
+
+ And you shall shortly know that lengthened breath
+ Is not the sweetest gift God sends his friend,
+ And that, sometimes, the sable pall of death
+ Conceals the fairest bloom his love can send.
+ If we could push ajar the gates of life,
+ And stand within, and all God's workings see,
+ We could interpret all this doubt and strife,
+ And for each mystery could find a key.
+
+ But not to-day. Then be content, poor heart!
+ God's plans like lilies pure and white unfold.
+ We must not tear the close-shut leaves apart,
+ Time will reveal the calyxes of gold.
+ And if, through patient toil, we reach the land
+ Where tired feet, with sandals loosed, may rest,
+ When we shall clearly know and understand,
+ I think that we will say, "God knew the best!"
+
+MAY RILEY SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATHER, THY WILL BE DONE!
+
+
+ He sendeth sun, he sendeth shower,
+ Alike they're needful for the flower;
+ And joys and tears alike are sent
+ To give the soul fit nourishment:
+ As comes to me or cloud or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+ Can loving children e'er reprove
+ With murmurs whom they trust and love?
+ Creator, I would ever be
+ A trusting, loving child to thee:
+ As comes to me or cloud or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+ Oh, ne'er will I at life repine;
+ Enough that thou hast made it mine;
+ When falls the shadow cold of death,
+ I yet will sing with parting breath:
+ As comes to me or shade or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+SARAH FLOWER ADAMS.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+DEATH: IMMORTALITY: HEAVEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROSPECT.
+
+
+ Methinks we do as fretful children do,
+ Leaning their faces on the window-pane
+ To sigh the glass dim with their own breath's stain,
+ And shut the sky and landscape from their view;
+ And, thus, alas! since God the maker drew
+ A mystic separation 'twixt those twain,--
+ The life beyond us and our souls in pain,--
+ We miss the prospect which we are called unto
+ By grief we are fools to use. Be still and strong,
+ O man, my brother! hold thy sobbing breath,
+ And keep thy soul's large windows pure from wrong;
+ That so, as life's appointment issueth,
+ Thy vision may be clear to watch along
+ The sunset consummation-lights of death.
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOST PLEIAD.
+
+
+ Not in the sky,
+ Where it was seen,
+ Nor on the white tops of the glistening wave,
+ Nor in the mansions of the hidden deep,--
+ Though green,
+ And beautiful, its caves of mystery;--
+ Shall the bright watcher have
+ A place, and as of old high station keep.
+
+ Gone, gone!
+ Oh, never more to cheer
+ The mariner who holds his course alone
+ On the Atlantic, through the weary night,
+ When the stars turn to watchers, and do sleep,
+ Shall it appear,
+ With the sweet fixedness of certain light,
+ Down-shining on the shut eyes of the deep.
+
+ Vain, vain!
+ Hopeless most idly then, shall he look forth,
+ That mariner from his bark.
+ Howe'er the north
+ Does raise his certain lamp, when tempests lower--
+ He sees no more that perished light again!
+ And gloomier grows the hour
+ Which may not, through the thick and crowding dark,
+ Restore that lost and loved one to her tower.
+
+ He looks,--the shepherd of Chaldea's hills
+ Tending his flocks,--
+ And wonders the rich beacon does not blaze,
+ Gladdening his gaze;--
+ And from his dreary watch along the rocks,
+ Guiding him safely home through perilous ways!
+ Still wondering as the drowsy silence fills
+ The sorrowful scene, and every hour distils
+ Its leaden dews.--How chafes he at the night,
+ Still slow to bring the expected and sweet light,
+ So natural to his sight!
+
+ And lone,
+ Where its first splendors shone,
+ Shall be that pleasant company of stars:
+ How should they know that death
+ Such perfect beauty mars?
+ And like the earth, its crimson bloom and breath;
+ Fallen from on high,
+ Their lights grow blasted by its touch, and die!--
+ All their concerted springs of harmony
+ Snapped rudely, and the generous music gone.
+
+ A strain--a mellow strain--
+ A wailing sweetness filled the sky;
+ The stars, lamenting in unborrowed pain,
+ That one of their selectest ones must die!
+ Must vanish, when most lovely, from the rest!
+ Alas! 'tis evermore our destiny,
+ The hope, heart-cherished, is the soonest lost;
+ The flower first budden, soonest feels the frost:
+ Are not the shortest-lived still loveliest?
+ And, like the pale star shooting down the sky,
+ Look they not ever brightest when they fly
+ The desolate home they blessed?
+
+WILLIAM GILMORE SIMMS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PASSING AWAY.
+
+
+ Was it the chime of a tiny bell
+ That came so sweet to my dreaming ear,
+ Like the silvery tones of a fairy's shell
+ That he winds, on the beach, so mellow and clear,
+ When the winds and the waves lie together asleep,
+ And the Moon and the Fairy are watching the deep,
+ She dispensing her silvery light.
+ And he his notes as silvery quite.
+ While the boatman listens and ships his oar,
+ To catch the music that comes from the shore?
+ Hark! the notes on my ear that play
+ Are set to words; as they float, they say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ But no; it was not a fairy's shell.
+ Blown on the beach, so mellow and clear;
+ Nor was it the tongue of a silver bell,
+ Striking the hour, that filled my ear,
+ As I lay in my dream; yet was it a chime
+ That told of the flow of the stream of time.
+ For a beautiful clock from the ceiling hung,
+ And a plump little girl, for a pendulum, swung
+ (As you've sometimes seen, in a little ring
+ That hangs in his cage, a canary-bird swing);
+ And she held to her bosom a budding bouquet,
+ And, as she enjoyed it, she seemed to say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ Oh, how bright were the wheels, that told
+ Of the lapse of time, as they moved round slow;
+ And the hands, as they swept o'er the dial of gold,
+ Seemed to point to the girl below.
+ And lo! she had changed: in a few short hours
+ Her bouquet had become a garland of flowers,
+ That she held in her outstretched hands, and flung
+ This way and that, as she, dancing, swung
+ In the fulness of grace and of womanly pride,
+ That told me she soon was to be a bride;
+ Yet then, when expecting her happiest day,
+ In the same sweet voice I heard her say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ While I gazed at that fair one's cheek, a shade
+ Of thought or care stole softly over,
+ Like that by a cloud in a summer's day made,
+ Looking down on a field of blossoming clover.
+ The rose yet lay on her cheek, but its flush
+ Had something lost of its brilliant blush;
+ And the light in her eye, and the light on the wheels,
+ That marched so calmly round above her,
+ Was a little dimmed,--as when evening steals
+ Upon noon's hot face. Yet one couldn't but love her,
+ For she looked like a mother whose first babe lay
+ Rocked on her breast, as she swung all day;
+ And she seemed, in the same silver tone, to say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ While yet I looked, what a change there came!
+ Her eye was quenched, and her cheek was wan;
+ Stooping and staffed was her withered frame,
+ Yet just as busily swung she on;
+ The garland beneath her had fallen to dust;
+ The wheels above her were eaten with rust:
+ The hands, that over the dial swept,
+ Grew crooked and tarnished, but on they kept
+ And still there came that silver tone
+ From the shrivelled lips of the toothless crone
+ (Let me never forget till my dying day
+ The tone or the burden of her lay),
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+JOHN PIERPONT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LINES
+
+ FOUND IN HIS BIBLE IN THE GATE-HOUSE AT WESTMINSTER.
+
+
+ E'en such is time; that takes in trust
+ Our youth, our joys, our all we have,
+ And pays us but with earth and dust;
+ Who in the dark and silent grave,
+ When we have wandered all our ways,
+ Shuts up the story of our days:
+ But from this earth, this grave, this dust,
+ My God shall raise me up, I trust.
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY AIN COUNTREE.
+
+ "But now they desire a better country, that is, an
+ heavenly."--HEBREWS xi. 16.
+
+
+ I'm far frae my hame, an' I'm weary aftenwhiles,
+ For the langed-for hame-bringing, an' my Father's welcome smiles;
+ I'll never be fu' content, until mine een do see
+ The shining gates o' heaven an' my ain countree.
+
+ The earth is flecked wi' flowers, mony-tinted, fresh, an' gay,
+ The birdies warble blithely, for my Father made them sae;
+ But these sights an' these soun's will as naething be to me,
+ When I hear the angels singing in my ain countree.
+
+ I've his gude word of promise that some gladsome day, the King
+ To his ain royal palace his banished hame will bring:
+ Wi' een an' wi' hearts runnin' owre, we shall see
+ The King in his beauty in our ain countree.
+
+ My sins hae been mony, an' my sorrows hae been sair,
+ But there they'll never vex me, nor be remembered mair;
+ His bluid has made me white, his hand shall dry mine e'e,
+ When he brings me hame at last, to my ain countree.
+
+ Like a bairn to its mither, a wee birdie to its nest,
+ I wad fain be ganging noo, unto my Saviour's breast;
+ For he gathers in his bosom, witless, worthless lambs like me,
+ And carries them himse' to his ain countree.
+
+ He's faithfu' that hath promised, he'll surely come again,
+ He'll keep his tryst wi' me, at what hour I dinna ken;
+ But he bids me still to wait, an' ready aye to be,
+ To gang at ony moment to my ain countree.
+
+ So I'm watching aye, an' singin' o' my hame as I wait,
+ For the soun'ing o' his footfa' this side the shining gate;
+ God gie his grace to ilk ane wha listens noo to me,
+ That we a' may gang in gladness to our ain countree.
+
+MARY LEE DEMAREST.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COMING.
+
+ "At even, or at midnight, or at the cock-crowing, or in the
+ morning."--Mark xiii. 35.
+
+
+ "It may be in the evening,
+ When the work of the day is done,
+ And you have time to sit in the twilight
+ And watch the sinking sun,
+ While the long bright day dies slowly
+ Over the sea,
+ And the hour grows quiet and holy
+ With thoughts of me;
+ While you hear the village children
+ Passing along the street,
+ Among those thronging footsteps
+ May come the sound of _my_ feet.
+ Therefore I tell you: Watch.
+ By the light of the evening star,
+ When the room is growing dusky
+ As the clouds afar;
+ Let the door be on the latch
+ In your home,
+ For it may be through the gloaming
+ I will come.
+
+ "It may be when the midnight
+ Is heavy upon the land,
+ And the black waves lying dumbly
+ Along the sand;
+ When the moonless night draws close,
+ And the lights are out in the house;
+ When the fires burn low and red,
+ And the watch is ticking loudly
+ Beside the bed:
+ Though you sleep, tired out, on your couch,
+ Still your heart must wake and watch
+ In the dark room,
+ For it may be that at midnight
+ I will come.
+
+ "It may be at the cock-crow,
+ When the night is dying slowly
+ In the sky,
+ And the sea looks calm and holy,
+ Waiting for the dawn
+ Of the golden sun
+ Which draweth nigh;
+ When the mists are on the valleys, shading
+ The rivers chill,
+ And my morning-star is fading, fading
+ Over the hill:
+ Behold I say unto you: Watch;
+ Let the door be on the latch
+ In your home;
+ In the chill before the dawning,
+ Between the night and morning,
+ I may come.
+
+ "It may be in the morning,
+ When the sun is bright and strong,
+ And the dew is glittering sharply
+ Over the little lawn;
+ When the waves are laughing loudly
+ Along the shore,
+ And the little birds are singing sweetly
+ About the door;
+ With the long day's work before you,
+ You rise up with the sun,
+ And the neighbors come in to talk a little
+ Of all that must be done.
+ But remember that _I_ may be the next
+ To come in at the door,
+ To call you from all your busy work
+ Forevermore:
+ As you work your heart must watch,
+ For the door is on the latch
+ In your room,
+ And it may be in the morning
+ I will come."
+
+ So He passed down my cottage garden,
+ By the path that leads to the sea,
+ Till he came to the turn of the little road
+ Where the birch and laburnum tree
+ Lean over and arch the way;
+ There I saw him a moment stay,
+ And turn once more to me,
+ As I wept at the cottage door,
+ And lift up his hands in blessing--
+ Then I saw his face no more.
+
+ And I stood still in the doorway,
+ Leaning against the wall,
+ Not heeding the fair white roses,
+ Though I crushed them and let them fall.
+ Only looking down the pathway,
+ And looking toward the sea,
+ And wondering, and wondering
+ When he would come back for me;
+ Till I was aware of an angel
+ Who was going swiftly by,
+ With the gladness of one who goeth
+ In the light of God Most High.
+
+ He passed the end of the cottage
+ Toward the garden gate;
+ (I suppose he was come down
+ At the setting of the sun
+ To comfort some one in the village
+ Whose dwelling was desolate)
+ And he paused before the door
+ Beside my place,
+ And the likeness of a smile
+ Was on his face.
+ "Weep not," he said, "for unto you is given
+ To watch for the coming of his feet
+ Who is the glory of our blessed heaven;
+ The work and watching will be very sweet,
+ Even in an earthly home;
+ And in such an hour as you think not
+ He will come."
+
+ So I am watching quietly
+ Every day.
+ Whenever the sun shines brightly,
+ I rise and say:
+ "Surely it is the shining of his face!"
+ And look unto the gates of his high place
+ Beyond the sea;
+ For I know he is coming shortly
+ To summon me.
+ And when a shadow falls across the window
+ Of my room,
+ Where I am working my appointed task,
+ I lift my head to watch the door, and ask
+ If he is come;
+ And the angel answers sweetly
+ In my home:
+ "Only a few more shadows,
+ And he will come."
+
+BARBARA MILLER MACANDREW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EUTHANASIA.
+
+
+ Methinks, when on the languid eye
+ Life's autumn scenes grow dim;
+ When evening's shadows veil the sky;
+ And pleasure's siren hymn
+ Grows fainter on the tuneless ear,
+ Like echoes from another sphere,
+ Or dreams of seraphim--
+ It were not sad to cast away
+ This dull and cumbrous load of clay.
+
+ It were not sad to feel the heart
+ Grow passionless and cold;
+ To feel those longings to depart
+ That cheered the good of old;
+ To clasp the faith which looks on high,
+ Which fires the Christian's dying eye,
+ And makes the curtain-fold
+ That falls upon his wasting breast,
+ The door that leads to endless rest.
+
+ It seems not lonely thus to lie
+ On that triumphant bed,
+ Till the pure spirit mounts on high
+ By white-winged seraphs led:
+ Where glories, earth may never know,
+ O'er "many mansions" lingering glow,
+ In peerless lustre shed.
+ It were not lonely thus to soar
+ Where sin and grief can sting no more.
+
+ And though the way to such a goal
+ Lies through the clouded tomb,
+ If on the free, unfettered soul
+ There rest no stains of gloom,
+ How should its aspirations rise
+ Far through the blue unpillared skies,
+ Up to its final home,
+ Beyond the journeyings of the sun,
+ Where streams of living waters run!
+
+WILLIS GAYLORD CLARK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LAST MAN.
+
+
+ All worldly shapes shall melt in gloom,
+ The Sun himself must die,
+ Before this mortal shall assume
+ Its immortality!
+ I saw a vision in my sleep,
+ That gave my spirit strength to sweep
+ Adown the gulf of time!
+ I saw the last of human mould
+ That shall creation's death behold,
+ As Adam saw her prime!
+
+ The sun's eye had a sickly glare,
+ The skeletons of nations were
+ Around that lonely man!
+ Some had expired in fight,--the brands
+ Still rusted in their bony hands,
+ In plague and famine some!
+ Earth's cities had no sound nor tread;
+ And ships were drifting with the dead
+ To shores where all was dumb!
+
+ Yet, prophet-like, that lone one stood,
+ With dauntless words and high,
+ That shook the sear leaves from the wood,
+ As if a storm passed by,
+ Saying, We are twins in death, proud Sun!
+ Thy face is cold, thy race is run,
+ 'Tis Mercy bids thee go;
+ For thou ten thousand thousand years
+ Hast seen the tide of human tears,
+ That shall no longer flow.
+
+ What though beneath thee man put forth
+ His pomp, his pride, his skill;
+ And arts that made fire, flood, and earth
+ The vassals of his will?
+ Yet mourn I not thy parted sway,
+ Thou dim, discrowned king of day;
+ For all those trophied arts
+ And triumphs that beneath thee sprang,
+ Healed not a passion or a pang
+ Entailed on human hearts.
+
+ Go, let oblivion's curtain fall
+ Upon the stage of men.
+ Nor with thy rising beams recall
+ Life's tragedy again:
+ Its piteous pageants bring not back,
+ Nor waken flesh, upon the rack
+ Of pain anew to writhe;
+ Stretched in disease's shapes abhorred,
+ Or mown in battle by the sword,
+ Like grass beneath the scythe.
+
+ Even I am weary in yon skies
+ To watch thy fading fire;
+ Test of all sumless agonies,
+ Behold not me expire.
+ My lips, that speak thy dirge of death,--
+ Their rounded gasp and gurgling breath
+ To see thou shalt not boast.
+ The eclipse of Nature spreads my pall,
+ The majesty of darkness shall
+ Receive my parting ghost!
+
+ This spirit shall return to Him
+ Who gave its heavenly spark;
+ Yet think not, Sun, it shall be dim
+ When thou thyself art dark!
+ No! it shall live again, and shine
+ In bliss unknown to beams of thine,
+ By Him recalled to breath,
+ Who captive led captivity,
+ Who robbed the grave of victory,
+ And took the sting from death!
+
+ Go, Sun, while mercy holds me up
+ On Nature's awful waste
+ To drink this last and bitter cup
+ Of grief that man shall taste,--
+ Go, tell the night that hides thy face,
+ Thou saw'st the last of Adam's race,
+ On earth's sepulchral clod,
+ The darkening universe defy
+ To quench his immortality,
+ Or shake his trust in God!
+
+THOMAS CAMPBELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHEN.
+
+
+ If I were told that I must die to-morrow,
+ That the next sun
+ Which sinks should bear me past all fear and sorrow
+ For any one,
+ All the fight fought, all the short journey through.
+ What should I do?
+
+ I do not think that I should shrink or falter,
+ But just go on,
+ Doing my work, nor change nor seek to alter
+ Aught that is gone;
+ But rise and move and love and smile and pray
+ For one more day.
+
+ And, lying down at night for a last sleeping,
+ Say in that ear
+ Which hearkens ever: "Lord, within thy keeping
+ How should I fear?
+ And when to-morrow brings thee nearer still,
+ Do thou thy will."
+
+ I might not sleep for awe; but peaceful, tender,
+ My soul would lie
+ All the night long; and when the morning splendor
+ Flushed o'er the sky,
+ I think that I could smile--could calmly say,
+ "It is his day."
+
+ But if a wondrous hand from the blue yonder
+ Held out a scroll,
+ On which my life was writ, and I with wonder
+ Beheld unroll
+ To a long century's end its mystic clew,
+ What should I do?'
+
+ What _could_ I do, O blessed Guide and Master,
+ Other than this;
+ Still to go on as now, not slower, faster,
+ Nor fear to miss
+ The road, although so very long it be,
+ While led by thee?
+
+ Step after step, feeling thee close beside me,
+ Although unseen,
+ Through thorns, through flowers, whether the tempest hide thee,
+ Or heavens serene,
+ Assured thy faithfulness cannot betray,
+ Thy love decay.
+
+ I may not know; my God, no hand revealeth
+ Thy counsels wise;
+ Along the path a deepening shadow stealeth,
+ No voice replies
+ To all my questioning thought, the time to tell;
+ And it is well.
+
+ Let me keep on, abiding and unfearing
+ Thy will always,
+ Through a long century's ripening fruition
+ Or a short day's;
+ Thou canst not come too soon; and I can wait
+ If thou come late.
+
+SARAH WOOLSEY (_Susan Coolidge_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BURIAL OF MOSES.
+
+ "And he buried him in a valley in the land of Moab, over
+ against Beth-peor: but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto
+ this day."--DEUTERONOMY xxxiv. 6.
+
+
+ By Nebo's lonely mountain,
+ On this side Jordan's wave,
+ In a vale in the land of Moab,
+ There lies a lonely grave;
+ But no man built that sepulchre,
+ And no man saw it e'er;
+ For the angels of God upturned the sod,
+ And laid the dead man there.
+
+ That was the grandest funeral
+ That ever passed on earth;
+ Yet no man heard the trampling,
+ Or saw the train go forth:
+ Noiselessly as daylight
+ Comes back when night is done,
+ And the crimson streak on ocean's cheek
+ Grows into the great sun;
+
+ Noiselessly as the spring-time
+ Her crown of verdure weaves,
+ And all the trees on all the hills
+ Unfold their thousand leaves:
+ So without sound of music
+ Or voice of them that wept,
+ Silently down from the mountain's crown
+ The great procession swept.
+
+ Perchance the bald old eagle
+ On gray Beth-peor's height
+ Out of his rocky eyry
+ Looked on the wondrous sight;
+ Perchance the lion stalking
+ Still shuns that hallowed spot;
+ For beast and bird have seen and heard
+ That which man knoweth not.
+
+ But, when the warrior dieth.
+ His comrades of the war.
+ With arms reversed and muffled drums,
+ Follow the funeral car:
+ They show the banners taken;
+ They tell his battles won;
+ And after him lead his masterless steed,
+ While peals the minute-gun.
+
+ Amid the noblest of the land
+ Men lay the sage to rest,
+ And give the bard an honored place,
+ With costly marbles drest,
+ In the great minster transept
+ Where lights like glories fall,
+ And the sweet choir sings, and the organ rings
+ Along the emblazoned hall.
+
+ This was the bravest warrior
+ That ever buckled sword;
+ This the most gifted poet
+ That ever breathed a word;
+ And never earth's philosopher
+ Traced with his glorious pen
+ On the deathless page truths half so sage
+ As he wrote down for men.
+
+ And had he not high honor?--
+ The hillside for a pall!
+ To lie in state while angels wait,
+ With stars for tapers tall!
+ And the dark rock-pines, like tossing plumes,
+ Over his bier to wave,
+ And God's own hand, in that lonely land,
+ To lay him in his grave!--
+
+ In that strange grave without a name,
+ Whence his uncoffined clay
+ Shall break again--O wondrous thought!--
+ Before the judgment day,
+ And stand, with glory wrapped around
+ On the hills he never trod,
+ And speak of the strife that won our life
+ With the incarnate Son of God.
+
+ O lonely tomb in Moab's land!
+ O dark Beth-peor's hill!
+ Speak to these curious hearts of ours,
+ And teach them to be still:
+ God hath his mysteries of grace,
+ Ways that we cannot tell,
+ He hides them deep, like the secret sleep
+ Of him he loved so well.
+
+CECIL FRANCES ALEXANDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RESIGNATION.
+
+
+ O God, whose thunder shakes the sky,
+ Whose eye this atom globe surveys,
+ To thee, my only rock, I fly,
+ Thy mercy in thy justice praise.
+
+ The mystic mazes of thy will,
+ The shadows of celestial light,
+ Are past the power of human skill;
+ But what the Eternal acts is right.
+
+ Oh, teach me in the trying hour,
+ When anguish swells the dewy tear,
+ To still my sorrows, own my power,
+ Thy goodness love, thy Justice fear.
+
+ If in this bosom aught but thee
+ Encroaching sought a boundless sway,
+ Omniscience could the danger see,
+ And Mercy look the cause away.
+
+ Then why, my soul, dost thou complain,
+ Why drooping seek the dark recess?
+ Shake off the melancholy chain,
+ For God created all to bless.
+
+ But ah! my breast is human still;
+ The rising sigh, the falling tear,
+ My languid vitals' feeble rill,
+ The sickness of my soul declare.
+
+ But yet, with fortitude resigned,
+ I'll thank the inflicter of the blow;
+ Forbid the sigh, compose my mind,
+ Nor let the gush of misery flow.
+
+ The gloomy mantle of the night,
+ Which on my sinking spirit steals,
+ Will vanish at the morning light,
+ Which God, my east, my sun, reveals.
+
+THOMAS CHATTERTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ONLY WAITING."
+
+ [A very aged man in an almshouse was asked what he was doing
+ now. He replied, "Only waiting."]
+
+
+ Only waiting till the shadows
+ Are a little longer grown,
+ Only waiting till the glimmer
+ Of the day's last beam is flown;
+ Till the night of earth is faded
+ From the heart, once full of day;
+ Till the stars of heaven are breaking
+ Through the twilight soft and gray.
+
+ Only waiting till the reapers
+ Have the last sheaf gathered home,
+ For the summer time is faded,
+ And the autumn winds have come.
+ Quickly, reapers! gather quickly
+ The last ripe hours of my heart,
+ For the bloom of life is withered,
+ And I hasten to depart.
+
+ Only waiting till the angels
+ Open wide the mystic gate,
+ At whose feet I long have lingered,
+ Weary, poor, and desolate.
+ Even now I hear the footsteps,
+ And their voices far away;
+ If they call me, I am waiting,
+ Only waiting to obey.
+
+ Only waiting till the shadows
+ Are a little longer grown,
+ Only waiting till the glimmer
+ Of the day's last beam is flown.
+ Then from out the gathered darkness,
+ Holy, deathless stars shall rise,
+ By whose light my soul shall gladly
+ Tread its pathway to the skies.
+
+FRANCES LAUGHTON MACE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPEFULLY WAITING.
+
+ "Blessed are they who are homesick, for they shall come at
+ last to their Father's house."--HEINRICH STILLING.
+
+
+ Not as you meant, O learned man, and good!
+ Do I accept thy words of truth and rest;
+ God, knowing all, knows what for me is best,
+ And gives me what I need, not what he could,
+ Nor always as I would!
+ I shall go to the Father's house, and see
+ Him and the Elder Brother face to face,--
+ What day or hour I know not. Let me be
+ Steadfast in work, and earnest in the race,
+ Not as a homesick child who all day long
+ Whines at its play, and seldom speaks in song.
+
+ If for a time some loved one goes away,
+ And leaves us our appointed work to do,
+ Can we to him or to ourselves be true
+ In mourning his departure day by day,
+ And so our work delay?
+ Nay, if we love and honor, we shall make
+ The absence brief by doing well our task,--
+ Not for ourselves, but for the dear One's sake.
+ And at his coming only of him ask
+ Approval of the work, which most was done,
+ Not for ourselves, but our Beloved One.
+
+ Our Father's house, I know, is broad and grand;
+ In it how many, many mansions are!
+ And, far beyond the light of sun or star,
+ Four little ones of mine through that fair land
+ Are walking hand in hand!
+ Think you I love not, or that I forget
+ These of my loins? Still this world is fair,
+ And I am singing while my eyes are wet
+ With weeping in this balmy summer air:
+ Yet I'm not homesick, and the children _here_
+ Have need of me, and so my way is clear.
+
+ I would be joyful as my days go by,
+ Counting God's mercies to rue. He who bore
+ Life's heaviest cross is mine forever-more,
+ And I who wait his coming, shall not I
+ On his sure word rely?
+ And if sometimes the way be rough and steep,
+ Be heavy for the grief he sends to me,
+ Or at my waking I would only weep,
+ Let me remember these are things to be,
+ To work his blessed will until he comes
+ To take my hand, and lead me safely home.
+
+ANSON D.F. RANDOLPH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SIT DOWN, SAD SOUL.
+
+
+ Sit down, sad soul, and count
+ The moments flying;
+ Come, tell the sweet amount
+ That's lost by sighing!
+ How many smiles?--a score?
+ Then laugh, and count no more;
+ For day is dying!
+
+ Lie down, sad soul, and sleep,
+ And no more measure
+ The flight of time, nor weep
+ The loss of leisure;
+ But here, by this lone stream,
+ Lie down with us, and dream
+ Of starry treasure!
+
+ We dream: do thou the same;
+ We love,--forever;
+ We laugh, yet few we shame,--
+ The gentle never.
+ Stay, then, till sorrow dies;
+ Then--hope and happy skies
+ Are thine forever!
+
+BRYAN WALLER PROCTER. (_Barry Cornwall_.)
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IT KINDLES ALL MY SOUL.
+
+ "Urit me Patriae decor."
+
+
+ It kindles all my soul,
+ My country's loveliness! Those starry choirs
+ That watch around the pole,
+ And the moon's tender light, and heavenly fires
+ Through golden halls that roll.
+ O chorus of the night! O planets, sworn
+ The music of the spheres
+ To follow! Lovely watchers, that think scorn
+ To rest till day appears!
+ Me, for celestial homes of glory born,
+ Why here, O, why so long,
+ Do ye behold an exile from on high?
+ Here, O ye shining throng,
+ With lilies spread the mound where I shall lie:
+ Here let me drop my chain,
+ And dust to dust returning, cast away
+ The trammels that remain;
+ The rest of me shall spring to endless day!
+
+From the Latin of CASIMIR OF POLAND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+ At the midnight in the silence of the sleep-time.
+ When you set your fancies free,
+ Will they pass to where--by death, fools think, imprisoned--
+ Low he lies who once so loved you, whom you loved so,
+ --Pity me?
+
+ Oh to love so, be so loved, yet so mistaken!
+ What had I on earth to do
+ With the slothful, with the mawkish, the unmanly?
+ Like the aimless, helpless, hopeless did I drivel
+ --Being--who?
+
+ One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
+ Never doubted clouds would break,
+ Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph,
+ Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,
+ Sleep to wake.
+
+ No, at noonday in the bustle of man's work-time
+ Greet the unseen with a cheer!
+ Bid him forward, breast and back as either should be,
+ "Strive and thrive!" cry "Speed,--fight on, fare ever
+ There as here!"
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CROSSING THE BAR.
+
+
+ Sunset and evening star,
+ And one clear call for me!
+ And may there be no moaning of the bar,
+ When I put out to sea,
+
+ But such a tide as moving seems asleep,
+ Too full for sound and foam,
+ When that which drew from out the boundless deep
+ Turns again home.
+
+ Twilight and evening bell,
+ And after that the dark!
+ And may there be no sadness of farewell,
+ When I embark;
+
+ For tho' from out our bourne of Time and Place
+ The flood may bear me far,
+ I hope to see my Pilot face to face
+ When I have crossed the bar.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DYING CHRISTIAN TO HIS SOUL.
+
+
+ Vital spark of heavenly flame!
+ Quit, O quit this mortal frame!
+ Trembling, hoping, lingering, flying,
+ O, the pain, the bliss of dying!
+ Cease, fond nature, cease thy strife,
+ And let me languish into life!
+
+ Hark! they whisper; angels say,
+ Sister spirit, come away!
+ What is this absorbs me quite?
+ Steals my senses, shuts my sight,
+ Drowns my spirits, draws my breath?
+ Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
+
+ The world recedes; it disappears!
+ Heaven opens on my eyes! my ears
+ With sounds seraphic ring:
+ Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!
+ O Grave! where is thy victory?
+ O Death! where is thy sting?
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE.
+
+ INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY FROM RECOLLECTIONS OF EARLY
+ CHILDHOOD.
+
+ I.
+
+ There was a time when meadow, grove and stream,
+ The earth, and every common sight,
+ To me did seem
+ Apparelled in celestial light,--
+ The glory and the freshness of the dream.
+ It is not now as it hath been of yore:
+ Turn wheresoe'er I may,
+ By night or day,
+ The things which I have seen I now can see no more.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ The rainbow comes and goes,
+ And lovely is the rose;
+ The moon doth with delight
+ Look round her when the heavens are bare;
+ Waters on a starry night
+ Are beautiful and fair;
+ The sunshine is a glorious birth;
+ But yet I know, where'er I go,
+ That there hath passed away a glory from the earth.
+
+
+ III.
+
+ Now, while the birds thus sing a joyous song,
+ And while the young lambs bound
+ As to the tabor's sound,
+ To me alone there came a thought of grief;
+ A timely utterance gave that thought relief,
+ And I again am strong.
+ The cataracts blow their trumpets from the steep,--
+ No more shall grief of mine the season wrong.
+ I hear the echoes through the mountains throng;
+ The winds come to me from the fields of sleep,
+ And all the earth is gay;
+ Land and sea
+ Give themselves up to jollity;
+ And with the heart of May
+ Doth every beast keep holiday;--
+ Thou child of joy,
+ Shout round me, let me hear thy shouts, thou happy shepherd boy!
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ Ye blessed creatures! I have heard the call
+ Ye to each other make; I see
+ The heavens laugh with you in your jubilee;
+ My heart is at your festival.
+ My head hath its coronal,--
+ The fulness of your bliss, I feel, I feel it all.
+ O evil day! if I were sullen
+ While Earth herself is adorning,
+ This sweet May morning,
+ And the children are culling,
+ On every side,
+ In a thousand valleys far and wide,
+ Fresh flowers; while the sun shines warm,
+ And the babe leaps up on his mother's arm;--
+ I hear, I hear, with joy I hear!--
+ But there's a tree, of many, one,
+ A single field which I have looked upon,--
+ Both of them speak of something that is gone;
+ The pansy at my feet
+ Doth the same tale repeat.
+ Whither is fled the visionary gleam?
+ Where is it now, the glory and the dream?
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting;
+ The soul that rises with us, our life's star,
+ Hath had elsewhere its setting,
+ And cometh from afar:
+ Not in entire forgetfulness,
+ And not in utter nakedness,
+ But trailing clouds of glory, do we come
+ From God, who is our home:
+ Heaven lies about us in our infancy!
+ Shades of the prison-house begin to close
+ Upon the growing Boy;
+ But he beholds the light, and whence it flows--
+ He sees it in his joy;
+ The Youth, who daily farther from the east
+ Must travel, still is nature's priest
+ And by the vision splendid
+ Is on his way attended:
+ At length the Man perceives it die away,
+ And fade into the light of common day.
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own;
+ Yearnings she hath in her own natural kind,
+ And even with something of a mother's mind,
+ And no unworthy aim,
+ The homely nurse doth all she can
+ To make her foster-child, her inmate man,
+ Forget the glories he hath known,
+ And that imperial palace whence he came.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Behold the child among his new-born blisses,--
+ A six years' darling of a pygmy size!
+ See, where mid work of his own hand he lies,
+ Fretted by sallies of his mother's kisses,
+ With light upon him from his father's eyes!
+ See, at his feet, some little plan or chart,
+ Some fragment from his dream of human life,
+ Shaped by himself with newly learned art,--
+ A wedding or a festival,
+ A mourning or a funeral;--
+ And this hath now his heart,
+ And unto this he frames his song:
+ Then will he fit his tongue
+ To dialogues of business, love, or strife;
+ But it will not be long
+ Ere this be thrown aside,
+ And with new joy and pride
+ The little actor cons another part,--
+ Filling from time to time his "humorous stage"
+ With all the persons, down to palsied age,
+ That Life brings with her in her equipage;
+ As if his whole vocation
+ Were endless imitation.
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ Thou, whose exterior semblance doth belie
+ Thy soul's immensity!
+ Thou best philosopher, who yet dost keep
+ Thy heritage! thou eye among the blind,
+ That, deaf and silent, read'st the eternal deep,
+ Haunted forever by the eternal mind!--
+ Mighty prophet! Seer blest!
+ On whom those truths do rest
+ Which we are toiling all our lives to find,
+ In darkness lost, the darkness of the grave;
+ Thou over whom thy immortality
+ Broods like the day, a master o'er a slave,
+ A presence which is not to be put by;
+ Thou little child, yet glorious in the might
+ Of heaven-born freedom on thy being's height,
+ Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke
+ The years to bring the inevitable yoke,
+ Thus blindly with thy blessedness at strife?
+ Full soon thy soul shall have her earthly freight,
+ And custom lie upon thee with a weight
+ Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life!
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ O joy! that in our embers
+ Is something that doth live;
+ That Nature yet remembers
+ What was so fugitive!
+
+ The thought of our past years in me doth breed
+ Perpetual benediction: not, indeed,
+ For that which is most worthy to be blest,--
+ Delight and liberty, the simple creed
+ Of childhood, whether busy or at rest,
+ With new-fledged hope still fluttering in his breast:--
+ Not for these I raise
+ The song of thanks and praise;
+ But for those obstinate questionings
+ Of sense and outward things,
+ Fallings from us, vanishings;
+ Blank misgivings of a creature
+ Moving about in worlds not realized,
+ High instincts, before which our mortal nature
+ Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised:
+ But for those first affections,
+ Those shadowy recollections,
+ Which, be they what they may,
+ Are yet the fountain-light of all our day,
+ Are yet a master light of all our seeing;
+ Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make
+ Our noisy years seem moments in the being
+ Of the eternal silence: truths that wake,
+ To perish never;
+ Which neither listlessness, nor mad endeavor,
+ Nor man nor boy,
+ Nor all that is at enmity with joy,
+ Can utterly abolish or destroy!
+ Hence, in a season of calm weather.
+ Though inland far we be,
+ Our souls have sight of that immortal sea
+ Which brought us hither,--
+ Can in a moment travel thither,
+ And see the children sport upon the shore,
+ And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore.
+
+
+ X.
+
+ Then sing, ye birds, sing, sing a joyous song!
+ And let the young lambs bound
+ As to the tabor's sound!
+ We in thought will join your throng,
+ Ye that pipe and ye that play,
+ Ye that through your hearts to-day
+ Feel the gladness of the May!
+ What though the radiance which was once so
+ bright
+ Be now forever taken from my sight,
+ Though nothing can bring back the hour
+ Of splendor in the grass, of glory in the flower;
+ We will grieve not, rather find
+ Strength in what remains behind;
+ In the primal sympathy
+ Which, having been, must ever be;
+ In the soothing thoughts that spring
+ Out of human suffering;
+ In the faith that looks through death,
+ In years that bring the philosophic mind.
+
+
+ XI
+
+ And O ye fountains, meadows, hills, and groves,
+ Forebode not any severing of our loves!
+ Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might;
+ I only have relinquished one delight
+ To live beneath your more habitual sway.
+ I love the brooks which down their channels fret,
+ Even more than when I tripped lightly as they;
+ The innocent brightness of a new-born day
+ Is lovely yet;
+ The clouds that gather round the setting sun
+ Do take a sober coloring from an eye
+ That hath kept watch o'er man's mortality;
+ Another race hath been, and other palms are won.
+ Thanks to the human heart by which we live,
+ Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, and fears,--
+ To me the meanest flower that blows can give
+ Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.
+
+WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOLILOQUY: ON IMMORTALITY.
+
+ FROM "CATO," ACT V. SC. I.
+
+ SCENE.--CATO, _sitting in a thoughtful posture, with book on
+ the Immortality of the Soul in his hand, and a drawn sword on
+ the table by him_.
+
+
+ It must be so--Plato, thou reasonest well!--
+ Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire.
+ This longing after immortality?
+ Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror,
+ Of falling into naught? Why shrinks the soul
+ Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
+ 'Tis the divinity that stirs within us;
+ 'Tis Heaven itself, that points out a hereafter,
+ And intimates eternity to man.
+ Eternity!--thou pleasing, dreadful thought!
+ Through what variety of untried being,
+ Through what new scenes and changes, must we pass!
+ The wide, the unbounded prospect lies before me;
+ But shadows, clouds, and darkness rest upon it.
+ Here will I hold. If there's a Power above us
+ (And that there is, all Nature cries aloud
+ Through all her works), he must delight in virtue;
+ And that which he delights in must be happy.
+ But when? or where? This world was made for Csar.
+ I'm weary of conjectures,--this must end 'em.
+
+ _(Laying his hand on his sword.)_
+
+ Thus am I doubly armed: my death and life,
+ My bane and antidote, are both before me:
+ This in a moment brings me to an end;
+ But this informs me I shall never die.
+ The soul, secured in her existence, smiles
+ At the drawn dagger, and defies its point.
+ The stars shall fade away, the sun himself
+ Grow dim with age, and Nature sink in years;
+ But thou shalt flourish in immortal youth,
+ Unhurt amid the war of elements,
+ The wrecks of matter, and the crush of worlds!
+
+JOSEPH ADDISON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EDWIN AND PAULINUS:
+
+ THE CONVERSION OF NORTHUMBRIA.
+
+
+ The black-haired gaunt Paulinus
+ By ruddy Edwin stood:--
+ "Bow down, O king of Deira,
+ Before the blessed Rood!
+ Cast out thy heathen idols.
+ And worship Christ our Lord."
+ --But Edwin looked and pondered,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Again the gaunt Paulinus
+ To ruddy Edwin spake:
+ "God offers life immortal
+ For his dear Son's own sake!
+ Wilt thou not hear his message,
+ Who bears the keys and sword?"
+ --But Edwin looked and pondered,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Rose then a sage old warrior
+ Was fivescore winters old;
+ Whose beard from chin to girdle
+ Like one long snow-wreath rolled:
+ "At Yule-time in our chamber
+ We sit in warmth and light,
+ While cold and howling round us
+ Lies the black land of Night.
+
+ "Athwart the room a sparrow
+ Darts from the open door:
+ Within the happy hearth-light
+ One red flash,--and no more!
+ We see it come from darkness,
+ And into darkness go:--
+ So is our life. King Edwin!
+ Alas, that it is so!
+
+ "But if this pale Paulinus
+ Have somewhat more to tell;
+ Some news of Whence and Whither,
+ And where the soul will dwell;--
+ If on that outer darkness
+ The sun of hope may shine;--
+ He makes life worth the living!
+ I take his God for mine!"
+
+ So spake the wise old warrior;
+ And all about him cried,
+ "Paulinus' God hath conquered!
+ And he shall be our guide:--
+ For he makes life worth living
+ Who brings this message plain,
+ When our brief days are over,
+ That we shall live again."
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY.
+
+
+ Could we but know
+ The land that ends our dark, uncertain travel,
+ Where lie those happier hills and meadows low;
+ Ah! if beyond the spirit's inmost cavil
+ Aught of that country could we surely know,
+ Who would not go?
+
+ Might we but hear
+ The hovering angels' high imagined chorus,
+ Or catch, betimes, with wakeful eyes and clear
+ One radiant vista of the realm before us,--
+ With one rapt moment given to see and hear,
+ Ah, who would fear?
+
+ Were we quite sure
+ To find the peerless friend who left us lonely,
+ Or there, by some celestial stream as pure,
+ To gaze in eyes that here were lovelit only,--
+ This weary mortal coil, were we quite sure,
+ Who would endure?
+
+EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SONG OF THE SILENT LAND.
+
+ "Das stille Land."
+
+
+ Into the Silent Land!
+ Ah, who shall lead us thither?
+ Clouds in the evening sky more darkly gather,
+ And shattered wrecks lie thicker on the strand.
+ Who leads us with a gentle hand
+ Thither, oh, thither,
+ Into the Silent Land?
+
+ Into the Silent Land!
+ To you, ye boundless regions
+ Of all perfection! Tender morning-visions
+ Of beauteous souls! The future's pledge and band!
+ Who in life's battle firm doth stand
+ Shall bear hope's tender blossoms
+ Into the Silent Land!
+
+ O Land! O Land!
+ For all the broken-hearted
+ The mildest herald by our fate allotted
+ Beckons, and with inverted torch doth stand
+ To lead us with a gentle hand
+ Into the land of the great departed,
+ Into the Silent Land!
+
+JOHANN GAUDENZ VON SALIS.
+
+Translation of H.W. LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OTHER WORLD.
+
+
+ It lies around us like a cloud,--
+ A world we do not see;
+ Yet the sweet closing of an eye
+ May bring us there to be.
+
+ Its gentle breezes fan our cheek;
+ Amid our worldly cares
+ Its gentle voices whisper love,
+ And mingle with our prayers.
+
+ Sweet hearts around us throb and beat,
+ Sweet helping hands are stirred,
+ And palpitates the veil between
+ With breathings almost heard.
+
+ The silence--awful, sweet, and calm--
+ They have no power to break;
+ For mortal words are not for them
+ To utter or partake.
+
+ So thin, so soft, so sweet they glide,
+ So near to press they seem,--
+ They seem to lull us to our rest,
+ And melt into our dream.
+
+ And in the bush of rest they bring
+ 'Tis easy now to see
+ How lovely and how sweet a pass
+ The hour of death may be.
+
+ To close the eye, and close the ear,
+ Rapt in a trance of bliss,
+ And gently dream in loving arms
+ To swoon to that--from this.
+
+ Scarce knowing if we wake or sleep,
+ Scarce asking where we are,
+ To feel all evil sink away,
+ All sorrow and all care.
+
+ Sweet souls around us! watch us still,
+ Press nearer to our side,
+ Into our thoughts, into our prayers,
+ With gentle helpings glide.
+
+ Let death between us be as naught,
+ A dried and vanished stream;
+ Your joy be the reality.
+ Our suffering life the dream.
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ I never saw a moor,
+ I never saw the sea;
+ Yet know I how the heather looks,
+ And what a wave must be.
+
+ I never spake with God,
+ Nor visited in heaven;
+ Yet certain am I of the spot
+ As if the chart were given.
+
+EMILY DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THOUGHTS OF HEAVEN.
+
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They come and go,
+ Like the soft breathings of a listening maiden,
+ While round me flow
+ The winds, from woods and fields with gladness laden:
+ When the corn's rustle on the ear doth come--
+ When the eve's beetle sounds its drowsy hum--
+ When the stars, dew-drops of the summer sky,
+ Watch over all with soft and loving eye--
+ While the leaves quiver
+ By the lone river,
+ And the quiet heart
+ From depths doth call
+ And garners all--
+ Earth grows a shadow
+ Forgotten whole,
+ And heaven lives
+ In the blessed soul!
+
+ High thoughts
+ They are with me
+ When, deep within the bosom of the forest,
+ Thy mourning melody
+ Abroad into the sky, thou, throstle! pourest.
+ When the young sunbeams glance among the trees--
+ When on the ear comes the soft song of bees--
+ When every branch has its own favorite bird
+ And songs of summer from each thicket heard!--
+ Where the owl flitteth,
+ Where the roe sitteth,
+ And holiness
+ Seems sleeping there;
+ While nature's prayer
+ Goes up to heaven
+ In purity,
+ Till all is glory
+ And joy to me!
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They are my own
+ When I am resting on a mountain's bosom,
+ And see below me strown
+ The huts and homes where humble virtues blossom;
+ When I can trace each streamlet through the meadow,
+ When I can follow every fitful shadow--
+ When I can watch the winds among the corn,
+ And see the waves along the forest borne;
+ Where blue-bell and heather
+ Are blooming together,
+ And far doth come
+ The Sabbath bell,
+ O'er wood and fell;
+ I hear the beating
+ Of nature's heart:
+ Heaven is before me--
+ God! thou art.
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They visit us
+ In moments when the soul is dim and darkened;
+ They come to bless,
+ After the vanities to which we hearkened:
+ When weariness hath come upon the spirit--
+ (Those hours of darkness which we all inherit)--
+ Bursts there not through a glint of warm sunshine,
+ A wingd thought which bids us not repine?
+ In joy and gladness,
+ In mirth and sadness,
+ Come signs and tokens;
+ Life's angel brings,
+ Upon its wings,
+ Those bright communings
+ The soul doth keep--
+ Those thoughts of heaven
+ So pure and deep!
+
+ROBERT NICOLL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEARER HOME.
+
+
+ One sweetly solemn thought
+ Comes to me o'er and o'er;
+ I am nearer home to-day
+ That I ever have been before;
+
+ Nearer my Father's house,
+ Where the many mansions be;
+ Nearer the great white throne,
+ Nearer the crystal sea;
+
+ Nearer the bound of life,
+ Where we lay our burdens down;
+ Nearer leaving the cross,
+ Nearer gaining the crown!
+
+ But lying darkly between,
+ Winding down through the night,
+ Is the silent, unknown stream.
+ That leads at last to the light.
+
+ Closer and closer my steps
+ Come to the dread abysm:
+ Closer Death to my lips
+ Presses the awful chrism.
+
+ Oh, if my mortal feet
+ Have almost gained the brink;
+ If it be I am nearer home
+ Even to-day than I think;
+
+ Father, perfect my trust;
+ Let my spirit feel in death,
+ That her feet are firmly set
+ On the rock of a living faith!
+
+PHOEBE CARY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEETING ABOVE.
+
+
+ If yon bright stars which gem the night
+ Be each a blissful dwelling-sphere
+ Where kindred spirits reunite
+ Whom death hath torn asunder here,--
+ How sweet it were at once to die,
+ To leave this blighted orb afar!
+ Mixt soul and soul to cleave the sky,
+ And soar away from star to star.
+
+ But oh, how dark, how drear, how lone,
+ Would seem the brightest world of bliss,
+ If, wandering through each radiant one,
+ We failed to meet the loved of this!
+ If there no more the ties shall twine
+ Which death's cold hand alone could sever,
+ Ah, would those stars in mockery shine,
+ More joyless, as they shine forever!
+
+ It cannot be,--each hope, each fear
+ That lights the eye or clouds the brow,
+ Proclaims there is a happier sphere
+ Than this bleak world that holds us now.
+ There, Lord, thy wayworn saints shall find
+ The bliss for which they longed before;
+ And holiest sympathies shall bind
+ Thine own to thee forevermore.
+
+ O Jesus, bring us to that rest,
+ Where all the ransomed shall be found,
+ In thine eternal fulness blest,
+ While ages roll their cycles round.
+
+WILLIAM LEGGETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY DAYS AMONG THE DEAD.
+
+
+ My days among the dead are passed;
+ Around me I behold,
+ Where'er these casual eyes are cast,
+ The mighty minds of old;
+ My never-failing friends are they,
+ With whom I converse day by day.
+
+ With them I take delight in weal,
+ And seek relief in woe;
+ And while I understand and feel
+ How much to them I owe,
+ My cheeks have often been bedewed
+ With tears of thoughtful gratitude.
+
+ My thoughts are with the dead; with them
+ I live in long-past years;
+ Their virtues love, their faults condemn,
+ Partake their hopes and fears,
+ And from their lessons seek and find
+ Instruction with an humble mind.
+
+ My hopes are with the dead; anon
+ My place with them will be.
+ And I with them shall travel on
+ Through all futurity:
+ Yet leaving here a name, I trust,
+ That will not perish in the dust.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FUTURE LIFE.
+
+
+ How shall I know thee in the sphere which keeps
+ The disembodied spirits of the dead,
+ When all of thee that time could wither sleeps
+ And perishes among the dust we tread?
+
+ For I shall feel the sting of ceaseless pain
+ If there I meet thy gentle presence not;
+ Nor hear the voice I love, nor read again
+ In thy serenest eyes the tender thought.
+
+ Will not thy own meek heart demand me there?
+ That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given;
+ My name on earth was ever in thy prayer,
+ And wilt thou never utter it in heaven?
+
+ In meadows fanned by heaven's life-breathing wind,
+ In the resplendence of that glorious sphere,
+ And larger movements of the unfettered mind,
+ Wilt thou forget the love that joined us here?
+
+ The love that lived through all the stormy past,
+ And meekly with my harsher nature bore,
+ And deeper grew, and tenderer to the last.
+ Shall it expire with life, and be no more?
+
+ A happier lot than mine, and larger light,
+ Await thee there; for thou hast bowed thy will
+ In cheerful homage to the rule of right,
+ And lovest all, and renderest good for ill.
+
+ For me, the sordid cares in which I dwell,
+ Shrink and consume my heart, as heat the scroll;
+ And wrath has left its scar--that fire of hell
+ Has left its frightful scar upon my soul.
+
+ Yet though thou wear'st the glory of the sky,
+ Wilt thou not keep the same belovd name,
+ The same fair thoughtful brow, and gentle eye,
+ Lovelier in heaven's sweet climate, yet the same?
+
+ Shalt thou not teach me, in that calmer home,
+ The wisdom that I learned so ill in this--
+ The wisdom which is love--till I become
+ Thy fit companion in that land of bliss?
+
+WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ That clime is not like this dull clime of ours;
+ All, all is brightness there;
+ A sweeter influence breathes around its flowers,
+ And a benigner air.
+ No calm below is like that calm above,
+ No region here is like that realm of love;
+ Earth's softest spring ne'er shed so soft a light,
+ Earth's brightest summer never shone so bright.
+
+ That sky is not like this sad sky of ours,
+ Tinged with earth's change and care;
+ No shadow dims it, and no rain-cloud lowers;
+ No broken sunshine there:
+ One everlasting stretch of azure pours
+ Its stainless splendor o'er those sinless shores;
+ For there Jehovah shines with heavenly ray,
+ And Jesus reigns, dispensing endless day.
+
+ The dwellers there are not like those of earth,--
+ No mortal stain they bear,--
+ And yet they seem of kindred blood and birth;
+ Whence and how came they there?
+ Earth was their native soil; from sin and shame,
+ Through tribulation, they to glory came;
+ Bond-slaves delivered from sin's crushing load,
+ Brands plucked from burning by the hand of God.
+
+ Yon robes of theirs are not like those below;
+ No angel's half so bright;
+ Whence came that beauty, whence that living glow,
+ And whence that radiant white?
+ Washed in the blood of the atoning Lamb,
+ Fair as the light these robes of theirs became;
+ And now, all tears wiped off from every eye,
+ They wander where the freshest pastures lie,
+ Through all the nightless day of that unfading sky!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO WORLDS.
+
+
+ Two worlds there are. To one our eyes we strain,
+ Whose magic joys we shall not see again;
+ Bright haze of morning veils its glimmering shore.
+ Ah, truly breathed we there
+ Intoxicating air--
+ Glad were our hearts in that sweet realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ The lover there drank her delicious breath
+ Whose love has yielded since to change or death;
+ The mother kissed her child, whose days are o'er.
+ Alas! too soon have fled
+ The irreclaimable dead:
+ We see them--visions strange--amid the
+ Nevermore.
+
+ The merrysome maiden used to sing--
+ The brown, brown hair that once was wont to cling
+ To temples long clay-cold: to the very core
+ They strike our weary hearts,
+ As some vexed memory starts
+ From that long faded land--the realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ It is perpetual summer there. But here
+ Sadly may we remember rivers clear,
+ And harebells quivering on the meadow-floor.
+ For brighter bells and bluer,
+ For tenderer hearts and truer
+ People that happy land--the realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ Upon the frontier of this shadowy land
+ We pilgrims of eternal sorrow stand:
+ What realm lies forward, with its happier store
+ Of forests green and deep,
+ Of valleys hushed in sleep,
+ And lakes most peaceful? 'Tis the land of
+ Evermore.
+
+ Very far off its marble cities seem--
+ Very far off--beyond our sensual dream--
+ Its woods, unruffled by the wild wind's roar;
+ Yet does the turbulent surge
+ Howl on its very verge.
+ One moment--and we breathe within the
+ Evermore.
+
+ They whom we loved and lost so long ago
+ Dwell in those cities, far from mortal woe--
+ Haunt those fresh woodlands, whence sweet carollings soar.
+ Eternal peace have they;
+ God wipes their tears away:
+ They drink that river of life which flows from
+ Evermore.
+
+ Thither we hasten through these regions dim,
+ But, lo, the wide wings of the Seraphim
+ Shine in the sunset! On that joyous shore
+ Our lightened hearts shall know
+ The life of long ago:
+ The sorrow-burdened past shall fade for
+ Evermore.
+
+MORTIMER COLLINS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ANSWER.
+
+
+ "Who would not go"
+ With buoyant steps, to gain that blessed portal,
+ Which opens to the land we long to know?
+ Where shall be satisfied the soul's immortal,
+ Where we shall drop the wearying and the woe
+ In resting so?
+
+ "Ah, who would fear?"
+ Since, sometimes through the distant pearly portal,
+ Unclosing to some happy soul a-near,
+ We catch a gleam of glorious light immortal,
+ And strains of heavenly music faintly hear,
+ Breathing good cheer!
+
+ "Who would endure"
+ To walk in doubt and darkness with misgiving,
+ When he whose tender promises are sure--
+ The Crucified, the Lord, the Ever-living--
+ Keeps us those "mansions" evermore secure
+ By waters pure?
+
+ Oh, wondrous land!
+ Fairer than all our spirit's fairest dreaming:
+ "Eye hath not seen," no heart can understand
+ The things prepared, the cloudless radiance streaming.
+ How longingly we wait our Lord's command--
+ His opening hand!
+
+ O dear ones there!
+ Whose voices, hushed, have left our pathway lonely,
+ We come, erelong, your blessd home to share;
+ We take the guiding hand, we trust it only--
+ Seeing, by faith, beyond this clouded air,
+ That land so fair!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOREVER WITH THE LORD.
+
+
+ Forever with the Lord!
+ Amen! so let it be!
+ Life from the dead is in that word,
+ And immortality.
+
+ Here in the body pent,
+ Absent from him I roam,
+ Yet nightly pitch my moving tent
+ A day's march nearer home.
+
+ My Father's house on high,
+ Home of my soul! how near,
+ At times, to faith's foreseeing eye
+ Thy golden gates appear!
+
+ Ah! then my spirit faints
+ To reach the land I love,
+ The bright inheritance of saints,
+ Jerusalem above!
+
+ Yet clouds will intervene,
+ And all my prospect flies;
+ Like Noah's dove, I flit between
+ Rough seas and stormy skies.
+
+ Anon the clouds depart,
+ The winds and waters cease;
+ While sweetly o'er my gladdened heart
+ Expands the bow of peace!
+
+ Beneath its glowing arch,
+ Along the hallowed ground,
+ I see cherubic armies march,
+ A camp of fire around.
+
+ I hear at morn and even,
+ At noon and midnight hour,
+ The choral harmonies of heaven
+ Earth's Babel tongues o'erpower.
+
+ Then, then I feel that he,
+ Remembered or forgot,
+ The Lord, is never far from me,
+ Though I perceive him not.
+
+ In darkness as in light,
+ Hidden alike from view,
+ I sleep, I wake, as in his sight
+ Who looks all nature through.
+
+ All that I am, have been,
+ All that I yet may be,
+ He sees at once, as he hath seen,
+ And shall forever see.
+
+ "Forever with the Lord;"
+ Father, if 'tis thy will,
+ The promise of that faithful word
+ Unto thy child fulfil!
+
+ So, when my latest breath
+ Shall rend the veil in twain,
+ By death I shall escape from death,
+ And life eternal gain.
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO HEAVEN APPROACHED A SUFI SAINT.
+
+
+ To heaven approached a Sufi Saint,
+ From groping in the darkness late,
+ And, tapping timidly and faint,
+ Besought admission at God's gate.
+
+ Said God, "Who seeks to enter here?"
+ "'Tis I, dear Friend," the Saint replied,
+ And trembling much with hope and fear.
+ "If it be _thou_, without abide."
+
+ Sadly to earth the poor Saint turned,
+ To bear the scourging of life's rods;
+ But aye his heart within him yearned
+ To mix and lose its love in God's.
+
+ He roamed alone through weary years,
+ By cruel men still scorned and mocked,
+ Until from faith's pure fires and tears
+ Again he rose, and modest knocked.
+
+ Asked God, "Who now is at the door?"
+ "It is thyself, belovd Lord,"
+ Answered the Saint, in doubt no more,
+ But clasped and rapt in his reward.
+
+From the Persian of JALLAL-AD-DIN RUMI.
+
+Translation of WILLIAM R. ALGER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MATTER AND MAN IMMORTAL.
+
+ FROM "NIGHT THOUGHTS," NIGHT VI.
+
+
+ As in a wheel, all sinks, to reascend:
+ Emblems of man, who passes, not expires.
+ With this minute distinction, emblems just,
+ Nature revolves, but man advances; both
+ Eternal, that a circle, this a line.
+ That gravitates, this soars. Th' aspiring soul,
+ Ardent, and tremulous, like flame, ascends,
+ Zeal and humility her wings, to Heaven.
+ The world of matter, with its various forms,
+ All dies into new life. Life born from death
+ Rolls the vast mass, and shall for ever roll.
+ No single atom, once in being, lost,
+ With change of counsel charges the Most High.
+ What hence infers Lorenzo? Can it be?
+ Matter immortal? And shall spirit die?
+ Above the nobler, shall less noble rise?
+ Shall man alone, for whom all else revives,
+ No resurrection know? Shall man alone,
+ Imperial man! be sown in barren ground,
+ Less privileged than grain, on which he feeds?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Look Nature through, 'tis neat gradation all.
+ By what minute degrees her scale ascends!
+ Each middle nature joined at each extreme,
+ To that above is joined, to that beneath;
+ Parts, into parts reciprocally shot,
+ Abhor divorce: what love of union reigns!
+ Here, dormant matter waits a call to life;
+ Half-life, half-death, joined there; here life and sense;
+ There, sense from reason steals a glimmering ray;
+ Reason shines out in man. But how preserved
+ The chain unbroken upward, to the realms
+ Of incorporeal life? those realms of bliss
+ Where death hath no dominion? Grant a make
+ Half-mortal, half-immortal; earthy, part,
+ And part ethereal; grant the soul of man
+ Eternal; or in man the series ends.
+ Wide yawns the gap; connection is no more;
+ Checked Reason halts; her next step wants support;
+ Striving to climb, she tumbles from her scheme.
+
+DR. EDWARD YOUNG.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIFE.
+
+ FROM "FESTUS," SCENE "A COUNTRY TOWN."
+
+
+ FESTUS.-- Oh! there is
+ A life to come, or all's a dream.
+
+ LUCIFER.-- And all
+ May be a dream. Thou seest in thine, men, deeds,
+ Clear, moving, full of speech and order; then
+ Why may not all this world be but a dream
+ Of God's? Fear not! Some morning God may waken.
+
+ FESTUS.--I would it were. This life's a mystery.
+ The value of a thought cannot be told;
+ But it is clearly worth a thousand lives
+ Like many men's. And yet men love to live
+ As if mere life were worth their living for.
+ What but perdition will it be to most?
+ Life's more than breath and the quick round of blood;
+ It is a great spirit and a busy heart.
+ The coward and the small in soul scarce do live.
+ One generous feeling--one great thought--one deed
+ Of good, ere night, would make life longer seem
+ Than if each year might number a thousand days,
+ Spent as is this by nations of mankind.
+ We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths;
+ In feelings, not in figures on a dial.
+ We should count time by heart-throbs. He most lives
+ Who thinks most--feels the noblest--acts the best.
+ Life's but a means unto an end--that end
+ Beginning, mean, and end to all things--God.
+
+PHILIP JAMES BAILEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ O beauteous God! uncircumscribd treasure
+ Of an eternal pleasure!
+ Thy throne is seated far
+ Above the highest star,
+ Where thou preparest a glorious place,
+ Within the brightness of thy face,
+ For every spirit
+ To inherit
+ That builds his hopes upon thy merit,
+ And loves thee with a holy charity.
+ What ravished heart, seraphic tongue, or eyes
+ Clear as the morning rise,
+ Can speak, or think, or see
+ That bright eternity,
+ Where the great King's transparent throne
+ Is of an entire jasper stone?
+ There the eye
+ O' the chrysolite,
+ And a sky
+ Of diamonds, rubies, chrysoprase,--
+ And above all thy holy face,--
+ Makes an eternal charity.
+ When thou thy jewels up dost bind, that day
+ Remember us, we pray,--
+ That where the beryl lies,
+ And the crystal 'bove the skies,
+ There thou mayest appoint us place
+ Within the brightness of thy face,--
+ And our soul
+ In the scroll
+ Of life and blissfulness enroll,
+ That we may praise thee to eternity. Allelujah!
+
+JEREMY TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SPIRIT-LAND.
+
+
+ Father! thy wonders do not singly stand,
+ Nor far removed where feet have seldom strayed;
+ Around us ever lies the enchanted land,
+ In marvels rich to thine own sons displayed.
+ In finding thee are all things round us found;
+ In losing thee are all things lost beside;
+ Ears have we, but in vain strange voices sound;
+ And to our eyes the vision is denied.
+ We wander in the country far remote,
+ Mid tombs and ruined piles in death to dwell;
+ Or on the records of past greatness dote,
+ And for a buried soul the living sell;
+ While on our path bewildered falls the night
+ That ne'er returns us to the fields of light.
+
+JONES VERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ Beyond these chilling winds and gloomy skies,
+ Beyond death's cloudy portal,
+ There is a land where beauty never dies,
+ Where love becomes immortal;
+
+ A land whose life is never dimmed by shade,
+ Whose fields are ever vernal;
+ Where nothing beautiful can ever fade,
+ But blooms for aye eternal.
+
+ We may know how sweet its balmy air,
+ How bright and fair its flowers;
+ We may not hear the songs that echo there,
+ Through those enchanted bowers.
+
+ The city's shining towers we may not see
+ With our dim earthly vision,
+ For Death, the silent warder, keeps the key
+ That opes the gates elysian.
+
+ But sometimes, when adown the western sky
+ A fiery sunset lingers,
+ Its golden gates swing inward noiselessly,
+ Unlocked by unseen fingers.
+
+ And while they stand a moment half ajar,
+ Gleams from the inner glory
+ Stream brightly through the azure vault afar,
+ And half reveal the story.
+
+ O land unknown! O land of love divine!
+ Father, all-wise, eternal!
+ O, guide these wandering, wayworn feet of mine
+ Into those pastures vernal!
+
+NANCY AMELIA WOODBURY PRIEST.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TELL ME, YE WINGD WINDS.
+
+
+ Tell me, ye wingd winds,
+ That round my pathway roar,
+ Do ye not know some spot
+ Where mortals weep no more?
+ Some lone and pleasant dell,
+ Some valley in the west,
+ Where, free from toil and pain,
+ The weary soul may rest?
+ The loud wind dwindled to a whisper low,
+ And sighed for pity as it answered,--"No."
+
+ Tell me, thou mighty deep.
+ Whose billows round me play,
+ Know'st thou some favored spot,
+ Some island far away,
+ Where weary man may find
+ The bliss for which he sighs,--
+ Where sorrow never lives,
+ And friendship never dies?
+ The loud waves, rolling in perpetual flow,
+ Stopped for awhile, and sighed to answer,--"No."
+
+ And thou, serenest moon,
+ That, with such lovely face,
+ Dost look upon the earth,
+ Asleep in night's embrace;
+ Tell me, in all thy round
+ Hast thou not seen some spot
+ Where miserable man
+ May find a happier lot?
+ Behind a cloud the moon withdrew in woe,
+ And a voice, sweet but sad, responded,--"No."
+
+ Tell me, my secret soul,
+ O, tell me, Hope and Faith,
+ Is there no resting-place
+ From sorrow, sin, and death?
+ Is there no happy spot
+ Where mortals may be blest,
+ Where grief may find a balm,
+ And weariness a rest?
+ Faith, Hope, and Love, best boons to mortals given,
+ Waved their bright wings, and whispered,--"Yes, in heaven!"
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ There is a land of pure delight,
+ Where saints immortal reign;
+ Infinite day excludes the night,
+ And pleasures banish pain.
+
+ There everlasting spring abides,
+ And never-withering flowers;
+ Death, like a narrow sea, divides
+ This heavenly land from ours.
+
+ Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood
+ Stand dressed in living green;
+ So to the Jews old Canaan stood,
+ While Jordan rolled between.
+
+ But timorous mortals start and shrink
+ To cross this narrow sea,
+ And linger shivering on the brink,
+ And fear to launch away.
+
+ Oh! could we make our doubts remove,
+ Those gloomy doubts that rise,
+ And see the Canaan that we love
+ With unbeclouded eyes--
+
+ Could we but climb where Moses stood,
+ And view the landscape o'er,
+ Not Jordan's stream, nor death's cold flood
+ Should fright us from the shore.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ My soul, there is a country
+ Afar beyond the stars,
+ Where stands a wingd sentry,
+ All skilful in the wars.
+
+ There, above noise and danger,
+ Sweet peace sits crowned with smiles,
+ And One born in a manger
+ Commands the beauteous files.
+
+ He is thy gracious friend,
+ And (O my soul awake!)
+ Did in pure love descend,
+ To die here for thy sake.
+
+ If thou canst get but thither,
+ There grows the flower of peace--
+ The rose that cannot wither--
+ Thy fortress, and thy ease.
+
+ Leave, then, thy foolish ranges;
+ For none can thee secure,
+ But one who never changes--
+ Thy God, thy life, thy cure.
+
+HENRY VAUGHAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STAR-MIST.
+
+ FROM "STARS."
+
+
+ More and more stars! behold yon hazy arch
+ Spanning the vault on high,
+ By planets traversed in majestic march,
+ Seeming to earth's dull eye
+ A breath of gleaming air: but take thou wing
+ Of Faith and upward spring:--
+ Into a thousand stars the misty light
+ Will part; each star a world with its own day and night.
+
+ Not otherwise of yonder Saintly host
+ Upon the glorious shore
+ Deem thou. He marks them all, not one is lost;
+ By name He counts them o'er.
+ Full many a soul, to man's dim praise unknown,
+ May on its glory throne
+ As brightly shine, and prove as strong in prayer
+ As theirs, whose separate beams shoot keenest thro' this air.
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MINISTRY OF ANGELS.
+
+ FROM "THE FARIE QUEENE," BOOK II. CANTO 8.
+
+
+ And is there care in heaven? And is there love
+ In heavenly spirits to these creatures base,
+ That may compassion of their evils move?
+ There is:--else much more wretched were the case
+ Of men than beasts: but O the exceeding grace
+ Of Highest God! that loves his creatures so,
+ And all his workes with mercy doth embrace,
+ That blessd angels he sends to and fro,
+ To serve to wicked man, to serve his wicked foe!
+
+ How oft do they their silver bowers leave,
+ To come to succour us that succour want!
+ How oft do they with golden pinions cleave
+ The flitting skyes, like flying pursuivant,
+ Against fowle feendes to ayd us militant!
+ They for us fight, they watch, and dewly ward,
+ And their bright squadrons round about us plant;
+ And all for love, and nothing for reward;
+ O, why should heavenly God to men have such regard!
+
+EDMUND SPENSER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT AGNES.
+
+
+ Deep on the convent-roof the snows
+ Are sparkling to the moon:
+ My breath to heaven like vapor goes:
+ May my soul follow soon!
+ The shadows of the convent-towers
+ Slant down the snowy sward,
+ Still creeping with the creeping hours
+ That lead me to my Lord:
+ Make Thou my spirit pure and clear
+ As are the frosty skies,
+ Or this first snow-drop of the year
+ That in my bosom lies.
+
+ As these white robes are soiled and dark,
+ To yonder shining ground;
+ As this pale taper's earthly spark,
+ To yonder argent round;
+ So shows my soul before the Lamb,
+ My spirit before Thee;
+ So in mine earthly house I am,
+ To that I hope to be.
+ Break up the heavens, O Lord! and far,
+ Through all yon starlight keen,
+ Draw me, thy bride, a glittering star,
+ In raiment white and clean.
+
+ He lifts me to the golden doors;
+ The flashes come and go;
+ All heaven bursts her starry floors,
+ And strows her lights below,
+ And deepens on and up! the gates
+ Roll backhand far within
+ For me the Heavenly Bridegroom waits,
+ To make me pure of sin.
+ The sabbath of Eternity,
+ One sabbath deep and wide--
+ A light upon the shining sea--
+ The Bridegroom with his bride!
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE OF THE CELESTIAL COUNTRY.
+
+ [The poem _De Contemptu Mundi_ was written by Bernard de
+ Morlaix, Monk of Cluni. The translation following is of a
+ portion of the poem distinguished by the sub-title "Laus
+ Patriae Coelestis."]
+
+
+ The world is very evil,
+ The times are waxing late;
+ Be sober and keep vigil,
+ The Judge is at the gate,--
+ The Judge that comes in mercy,
+ The Judge that comes with might,
+ To terminate the evil,
+ To diadem the right.
+ When the just and gentle Monarch
+ Shall summon from the tomb,
+ Let man, the guilty, tremble,
+ For Man, the God, shall doom!
+
+ Arise, arise, good Christian,
+ Let right to wrong succeed;
+ Let penitential sorrow
+ To heavenly gladness lead,--
+ To the light that hath no evening,
+ That knows nor moon nor sun,
+ The light so new and golden,
+ The light that is but one.
+
+ And when the Sole-Begotten
+ Shall render up once more
+ The kingdom to the Father,
+ Whose own it was before,
+ Then glory yet unheard of
+ Shall shed abroad its ray,
+ Resolving all enigmas,
+ An endless Sabbath-day.
+
+ For thee, O dear, dear Country!
+ Mine eyes their vigils keep;
+ For very love, beholding
+ Thy happy name, they weep.
+ The mention of thy glory
+ Is unction to the breast,
+ And medicine in sickness,
+ And love, and life, and rest.
+
+ O one, O only Mansion!
+ O Paradise of Joy,
+ Where tears are ever banished,
+ And smiles have no alloy!
+ Beside thy living waters
+ All plants are, great and small,
+ The cedar of the forest,
+ The hyssop of the wall;
+ With jaspers glow thy bulwarks,
+ Thy streets with emeralds blaze,
+ The sardius and the topaz
+ Unite in thee their rays;
+ Thine ageless walls are bonded
+ With amethyst unpriced;
+ Thy Saints build up its fabric,
+ And the corner-stone is Christ.
+
+ The Cross is all thy splendor,
+ The Crucified thy praise;
+ His laud and benediction
+ Thy ransomed people raise:
+ "Jesus, the gem of Beauty,
+ True God and Man," they sing,
+ "The never-failing Garden,
+ The ever-golden Ring;
+ The Door, the Pledge, the Husband,
+ The Guardian of his Court;
+ The Day-star of Salvation,
+ The Porter and the Port!"
+
+ Thou hast no shore, fair ocean!
+ Thou hast no time, bright day!
+ Dear fountain of refreshment
+ To pilgrims far away!
+ Upon the Rock of Ages
+ They raise thy holy tower;
+ Thine is the victor's laurel,
+ And thine the golden dower!
+
+ Thou feel'st in mystic rapture,
+ O Bride that know'st no guile,
+ The Prince's sweetest kisses,
+ The Prince's loveliest smile;
+ Unfading lilies, bracelets
+ Of living pearl thine own;
+ The Lamb is ever near thee,
+ The Bridegroom thine alone.
+ The Crown is he to guerdon,
+ The Buckler to protect,
+ And he himself the Mansion,
+ And he the Architect.
+
+ The only art thou needest--
+ Thanksgiving for thy lot;
+ The only joy thou seekest--
+ The Life where Death is not.
+ And all thine endless leisure,
+ In sweetest accents, sings
+ The ill that was thy merit,
+ The wealth that is thy King's!
+
+ Jerusalem the golden,
+ With milk and honey blest,
+ Beneath thy contemplation
+ Sink heart and voice oppressed.
+ I know not, O I know not,
+ What social joys are there!
+ What radiancy of glory,
+ What light beyond compare!
+
+ And when I fain would sing them,
+ My spirit fails and faints;
+ And vainly would it image
+ The assembly of the Saints.
+
+ They stand, those halls of Zion,
+ Conjubilant with song,
+ And bright with many an angel,
+ And all the martyr throng;
+ The Prince is ever in them,
+ The daylight is serene;
+ The pastures of the Blessd
+ Are decked in glorious sheen.
+
+ There is the Throne of David,
+ And there, from care released,
+ The song of them that triumph,
+ The shout of them that feast;
+ And they who, with their Leader,
+ Have conquered in the fight,
+ Forever and forever
+ Are clad in robes of white!
+
+ O holy, placid harp-notes
+ Of that eternal hymn!
+ O sacred, sweet reflection,
+ And peace of Seraphim!
+ O thirst, forever ardent,
+ Yet evermore content!
+ O true peculiar vision
+ Of God cunctipotent!
+ Ye know the many mansions
+ For many a glorious name,
+ And divers retributions
+ That divers merits claim;
+ For midst the constellations
+ That deck our earthly sky,
+ This star than that is brighter--
+ And so it is on high.
+
+ Jerusalem the glorious!
+ The glory of the Elect!
+ O dear and future vision
+ That eager hearts expect!
+ Even now by faith I see thee,
+ Even here thy walls discern;
+ To thee my thoughts are kindled,
+ And strive, and pant, and yearn.
+
+ Jerusalem the only,
+ That look'st from heaven below,
+ In thee is all my glory,
+ In me is all my woe;
+ And though my body may not,
+ My spirit seeks thee fain,
+ Till flesh and earth return me
+ To earth and flesh again.
+
+ O none can tell thy bulwarks,
+ How gloriously they rise!
+ O none can tell thy capitals
+ Of beautiful device!
+ Thy loveliness oppresses
+ All human thought and heart;
+ And none, O peace, O Zion,
+ Can sing thee as thou art!
+
+ New mansion of new people,
+ Whom God's own love and light
+ Promote, increase, make holy,
+ Identify, unite!
+ Thou City of the Angels!
+ Thou City of the Lord!
+ Whose everlasting music
+ Is the glorious decachord!
+
+ And there the band of Prophets
+ United praise ascribes,
+ And there the twelvefold chorus
+ Of Israel's ransomed tribes.
+ The lily-beds of virgins,
+ The roses' martyr-glow,
+ The cohort of the Fathers
+ Who kept the faith below.
+
+ And there the Sole-Begotten
+ Is Lord in regal state,--
+ He, Judah's mystic Lion,
+ He, Lamb Immaculate.
+ O fields that know no sorrow!
+ O state that fears no strife!
+ O princely bowers! O land of flowers!
+ O realm and home of Life!
+
+ Jerusalem, exulting
+ On that securest shore,
+ I hope thee, wish thee, sing thee,
+ And love thee evermore!
+ I ask not for my merit,
+ I seek not to deny
+ My merit is destruction,
+ A child of wrath am I;
+ But yet with faith I venture
+ And hope upon my way;
+ For those perennial guerdons
+ I labor night and day.
+
+ The best and dearest Father,
+ Who made me and who saved,
+ Bore with me in defilement,
+ And from defilement laved,
+ When in his strength I struggle,
+ For very joy I leap,
+ When in my sin I totter,
+ I weep, or try to weep:
+ Then grace, sweet grace celestial,
+ Shall all its love display,
+ And David's Royal Fountain
+ Purge every sin away.
+
+ O mine, my golden Zion!
+ O lovelier far than gold,
+ With laurel-girt battalions,
+ And safe victorious fold!
+ O sweet and blessd Country,
+ Shall I ever see thy face?
+ O sweet and blessd Country,
+ Shall I ever win thy grace?
+ I have the hope within me
+ To comfort and to bless!
+ Shall I ever win the prize itself?
+ O tell me, tell me, Yes!
+
+ Exult! O dust and ashes!
+ The Lord shall be thy part;
+ His only, his forever,
+ Thou shalt be, and thou art!
+ Exult, O dust and ashes!
+ The Lord shall be thy part;
+ His only, his forever,
+ Thou shalt be, and thou art!
+
+From the Latin of BERNARD DE MORLAIX.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW JERUSALEM;
+
+ OR, THE SOUL'S BREATHING AFTER THE HEAVENLY COUNTRY.
+
+ "Since Christ's fair truth needs no man's art,
+ Take this rude song in better part."
+
+
+ O mother dear, Jerusalem,
+ When shall I come to thee?
+ When shall my sorrows have an end--
+ Thy joys when shall I see?
+ O happy harbor of God's saints!
+ O sweet and pleasant soil!
+ In thee no sorrows can be found--
+ No grief, no care, no toil.
+
+ In thee no sickness is at all,
+ No hurt, nor any sore;
+ There is no death nor ugly night,
+ But life for evermore.
+ No dimming cloud o'ershadows thee,
+ No cloud nor darksome night,
+ But every soul shines as the sun--
+ For God himself gives light.
+
+ There lust and lucre cannot dwell,
+ There envy bears no sway;
+ There is no hunger, thirst, nor heat.
+ But pleasures every way.
+ Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
+ Would God I were in thee!
+ Oh! that my sorrows had an end,
+ Thy joys that I might see!
+
+ No pains, no pangs, no grieving griefs,
+ No woful night is there;
+ No sigh, no sob, no cry is heard--
+ No well-away, no fear.
+ Jerusalem the city is
+ Of God our king alone;
+ The Lamb of God, the light thereof,
+ Sits there upon His throne.
+
+ O God! that I Jerusalem
+ With speed may go behold!
+ For why? the pleasures there abound
+ Which here cannot be told.
+ Thy turrets and thy pinnacles
+ With carbuncles do shine--
+ With jasper, pearl, and chrysolite,
+ Surpassing pure and fine.
+
+ Thy houses are of ivory,
+ Thy windows crystal clear,
+ Thy streets are laid with beaten gold--
+ There angels do appear.
+ Thy walls are made of precious stone,
+ Thy bulwarks diamond square,
+ Thy gates are made of orient pearl--
+ O God! if I were there!
+
+ Within thy gates no thing can come
+ That is not passing clean;
+ No spider's web, no dirt, nor dust,
+ No filth may there be seen.
+ Jehovah, Lord, now come away,
+ And end my griefs and plaints--
+ Take me to Thy Jerusalem,
+ And place me with Thy saints!
+
+ Who there are crowned with glory great,
+ And see God face to face,
+ They triumph still, and aye rejoice--
+ Most happy is their case.
+ But we that are in banishment,
+ Continually do moan;
+ We sigh, we mourn, we sob, we weep--
+ Perpetually we groan.
+
+ Our sweetness mixd is with gall,
+ Our pleasures are but pain,
+ Our joys not worth the looking on--
+ Our sorrows aye remain.
+ But there they live in such delight,
+ Such pleasure and such play,
+ That unto them a thousand years
+ Seems but as yesterday.
+
+ O my sweet home, Jerusalem!
+ Thy joys when shall I see--
+ The King sitting upon His throne,
+ And thy felicity?
+ Thy vineyards, and thy orchards,
+ So wonderfully rare,
+ Are furnished with all kinds of fruit,
+ Most beautifully fair.
+
+ Thy gardens and thy goodly walks
+ Continually are green;
+ There grow such sweet and pleasant flowers
+ As nowhere else are seen.
+ There cinnamon and sugar grow,
+ There nard and balm abound;
+ No tongue can tell, no heart can think,
+ The pleasures there are found.
+
+ There nectar and ambrosia spring--
+ There music's ever sweet;
+ There many a fair and dainty thing
+ Are trod down under feet.
+ Quite through the streets, with pleasant sound,
+ The flood of life doth flow;
+ Upon the banks, on every side,
+ The trees of life do grow.
+
+ These trees each month yield ripened fruit--
+ For evermore they spring;
+ And all the nations of the world
+ To thee their honors bring.
+ Jerusalem, God's dwelling-place,
+ Full sore I long to see;
+ Oh! that my sorrows had an end,
+ That I might dwell in thee!
+
+ There David stands, with harp in hand,
+ As master of the choir;
+ A thousand times that man were blest
+ That might his music hear.
+ There Mary sings "Magnificat,"
+ With tunes surpassing sweet;
+ And all the virgins bear their part,
+ Singing around her feet.
+
+ "Te Deum," doth Saint Ambrose sing,
+ Saint Austin doth the like;
+ Old Simeon and Zacharie
+ Have not their songs to seek.
+ There Magdalene hath left her moan,
+ And cheerfully doth sing,
+ With all blest saints whose harmony
+ Through every street doth ring.
+
+ Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
+ Thy joys fain would I see;
+ Come quickly, Lord, and end my grief,
+ And take me home to Thee;
+ Oh! paint Thy name on my forehead,
+ And take me hence away,
+ That I may dwell with Thee in bliss,
+ And sing Thy praises aye.
+
+ Jerusalem, the happy home--
+ Jehovah's throne on high!
+ O sacred city, queen, and wife
+ Of Christ eternally!
+ O comely queen with glory clad,
+ With honor and degree,
+ All fair thou art, exceeding bright--
+ No spot there is in thee!
+
+ I long to see Jerusalem,
+ The comfort of us all;
+ For thou art fair and beautiful--
+ None ill can thee befall.
+ In thee, Jerusalem, I say,
+ No darkness dare appear--
+ No night, no shade, no winter foul--
+ No time doth alter there.
+
+ No candle needs, no moon to shine,
+ No glittering star to light;
+ For Christ, the king of righteousness,
+ For ever shineth bright.
+ A lamb unspotted, white and pure,
+ To thee doth stand in lieu
+ Of light--so great the glory is
+ Thine heavenly king to view.
+
+ He is the King of kings beset
+ In midst His servants' sight:
+ And they, His happy household all,
+ Do serve Him day and night.
+ There, there the choir of angels sing--
+ There the supernal sort
+ Of citizens, which hence are rid
+ From dangers deep, do sport.
+
+ There be the prudent prophets all,
+ The apostles six and six,
+ The glorious martyrs in a row,
+ And confessors betwixt.
+ There doth the crew of righteous men
+ And matrons all consist--
+ Young men and maids that here on earth
+ Their pleasures did resist.
+
+ The sheep and lambs, that hardly 'scaped
+ The snare of death and hell,
+ Triumph in joy eternally,
+ Whereof no tongue can tell;
+ And though the glory of each one
+ Doth differ in degree,
+ Yet is the joy of all alike
+ And common, as we see.
+
+ There love and charity do reign,
+ And Christ is all in all,
+ Whom they most perfectly behold
+ In joy celestial.
+ They love, they praise--they praise, they love;
+ They "Holy, holy," cry;
+ They neither toil, nor faint, nor end,
+ But laud continually.
+
+ Oh! happy thousand times were I,
+ If, after wretched days,
+ I might with listening ears conceive
+ Those heavenly songs of praise,
+ Which to the eternal king are sung
+ By happy wights above--
+ By savd souls and angels sweet,
+ Who love the God of love.
+
+ Oh! passing happy were my state,
+ Might I be worthy found
+ To wait upon my God and king,
+ His praises there to sound;
+ And to enjoy my Christ above,
+ His favor and His grace,
+ According to His promise made,
+ Which here I interlace:
+
+ "O Father dear," quoth He, "let them
+ Which Thou hast put of old
+ To me, be there where lo! I am--
+ Thy glory to behold;
+ Which I with Thee, before the world
+ Was made in perfect wise,
+ Have had--from whence the fountain great
+ Of glory doth arise."
+
+ Again: "If any man will serve
+ Thee, let him follow me;
+ For where I am, he there, right sure,
+ Then shall my servant be."
+ And still: "If any man loves me,
+ Him loves my Father dear,
+ Whom I do love--to him myself
+ In glory will appear."
+
+ Lord, take away my misery,
+ That then I may be bold
+ With Thee, in Thy Jerusalem,
+ Thy glory to behold;
+ And so in Zion see my king,
+ My love, my Lord, my all--
+ Where now as in a glass I see,
+ There face to face I shall.
+
+ Oh! blessd are the pure in heart--
+ Their sovereign they shall see;
+ O ye most happy, heavenly wights,
+ Which of God's household be!
+ O Lord, with speed dissolve my bands,
+ These gins and fetters strong;
+ For I have dwelt within the tents
+ Of Kedar over long.
+
+ Yet search me, Lord, and find me out!
+ Fetch me Thy fold unto,
+ That all Thy angels may rejoice,
+ While all Thy will I do.
+ O mother dear! Jerusalem!
+ When shall I come to thee?
+ When shall my sorrows have an end,
+ Thy joys when shall I see?
+
+ Yet once again I pray Thee, Lord,
+ To quit me from all strife,
+ That to Thy hill I may attain,
+ And dwell there all my life--
+ With cherubim and seraphim
+ And holy souls of men,
+ To sing Thy praise, O God of hosts!
+ Forever and amen!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PARADISE.
+
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ Who doth not crave for rest,
+ Who would not seek the happy land
+ Where they that loved are blest?
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ The world is growing old;
+ Who would not be at rest and free
+ Where love is never cold?
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ Wherefore doth death delay?--
+ Bright death, that is the welcome dawn
+ Of our eternal day;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ 'Tis weary waiting here;
+ I long to be where Jesus is,
+ To feel, to see him near;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I want to sin no more,
+ I want to be as pure on earth
+ As on thy spotless shore;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I greatly long to see
+ The special place my dearest Lord
+ Is destining for me;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I feel 'twill not be long;
+ Patience! I almost think I hear
+ Faint fragments of thy song;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+
+
+FROM "THE DIVINE COMEDY."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HELL.
+
+ INSCRIPTION OVER THE GATE.
+
+ CANTO III.
+
+
+ "Through me you pass into the city of woe:
+ Through me you pass into eternal pain:
+ Through me among the people lost for aye.
+ Justice the founder of my fabric moved:
+ To rear me was the task of power divine,
+ Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.
+ Before me things create were none, save things
+ Eternal, and eternal I endure.
+ All hope abandon, ye who enter here."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PURGATORY.
+
+ PRAYER.
+
+ CANTO VI.
+
+
+ When I was freed
+ From all those spirits, who prayed for others' prayers
+ To hasten on their state of blessedness;
+ Straight I began: "O thou, my luminary!
+ It seems expressly in thy text denied,
+ That Heaven's supreme decree can ever bend
+ To supplication; yet with this design
+ Do these entreat. Can then their hope be vain?
+ Or is thy saying not to be revealed?"
+ He thus to me: "Both what I write is plain,
+ And these deceived not in their hope; if well
+ Thy mind consider, that the sacred height
+ Of judgment doth not stoop, because love's flame
+ In a short moment all fulfils, which he,
+ Who sojourns here, in right should satisfy.
+ Besides, when I this point concluded thus,
+ By praying no defect could be supplied:
+ Because the prayer had none access to God.
+ Yet in this deep suspicion rest thou not
+ Contented, unless she assure thee so,
+ Who betwixt truth and mind infuses light:
+ I know not if thou take me right; I mean
+ Beatrice. Her thou shalt behold above,
+ Upon this mountain's crown, fair seat of joy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PRAYER OF PENITENTS.
+
+ CANTO XI.
+
+ "O thou Almighty Father! who dost make
+ The heavens thy dwelling, not in bounds confined,
+ But that, with love intenser, there thou view'st
+ Thy primal effluence; hallowed be thy name:
+ Join, each created being, to extol
+ Thy might; for worthy humblest thanks and praise
+ Is thy blest Spirit. May thy kingdom's peace
+ Come unto us; for we, unless it come,
+ With all our striving, thither tend in vain.
+ As, of their will, the angels unto thee
+ Tender meet sacrifice, circling thy throne
+ With loud hosannas; so of theirs be done
+ By saintly men on earth. Grant us, this day,
+ Our daily manna, without which he roams
+ Through this rough desert retrograde, who most
+ Toils to advance his steps. As we to each
+ Pardon the evil done us, pardon thou
+ Benign, and of our merit take no count.
+ 'Gainst the old adversary, prove thou not
+ Our virtue, easily subdued; but free
+ From his incitements, and defeat his wiles.
+ This last petition, dearest Lord! is made
+ Not for ourselves; since that were needless now;
+ But for their sakes who after us remain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MAN'S FREE-WILL.
+
+ CANTO XVI.
+
+ "Ye, who live,
+ Do so each cause refer to heaven above,
+ E'en as its motion, of necessity,
+ Drew with it all that moves. If this were so,
+ Free choice in you were none; nor justice would
+ There should be joy for virtue, woe for ill.
+ Your movements have their primal bent from heaven;
+ Not all: yet said I all; what then ensues?
+ Light have ye still to follow evil or good,
+ And of the will free power, which, if it stand
+ Firm and unwearied in Heaven's first assay,
+ Conquers at last, so it be cherished well,
+ Triumphant over all. To mightier force,
+ To better nature subject, ye abide
+ Free, not constrained by that which forms in you
+ The reasoning mind uninfluenced of the stars.
+ If then the present race of mankind err,
+ Seek in yourselves the cause, and find it there."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FIRE OF PURIFICATION.
+
+ CANTO XXVII.
+
+ Now was the sun so stationed, as when first
+ His early radiance quivers on the heights,
+ Where streamed his Maker's blood; while Libra hangs
+ Above Hesperian Ebro; and new fires,
+ Meridian, flash on Ganges' yellow tide.
+ So day was sinking, when the angel of God
+ Appeared before us. Joy was in his mien.
+ Forth of the flame he stood upon the brink;
+ And with a voice, whose lively clearness far
+ Surpassed our human, "Blessed are the pure
+ In heart," he sang: then near him as we came,
+ "Go ye not further, holy spirits!" he cried,
+ "Ere the fire pierce you: enter in; and list
+ Attentive to the song ye hear from thence."
+ I, when I heard his saying, was as one
+ Laid in the grave. My hands together clasped,
+ And upward stretching, on the fire I looked;
+ And busy fancy conjured up the forms
+ Erewhile beheld alive consumed in flames.
+ The escorting spirits turned with gentle looks
+ Toward me; and the Mantuan spake: "My son,
+ Here torment thou may'st feel, but canst not death.
+ Remember thee, remember thee, if I
+ Safe e'en on Geryon brought thee; now I come
+ More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now?
+ Of this be sure; though in its womb that flame
+ A thousand years contained thee, from thy head
+ No hair should perish. If thou doubt my truth,
+ Approach; and with thy hands thy vesture's hem
+ Stretch forth, and for thyself confirm belief.
+ Lay now all fear, oh! lay all fear aside.
+ Turn hither, and come onward undismayed."
+ I still, though conscience urged, no step advanced.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Into the fire before me then he walked:
+ And Statius, who erewhile no little space
+ Had parted us, he prayed to come behind.
+ I would have cast me into molten glass
+ To cool me, when I entered; so intense
+ Raged the conflagrant mass. The sire beloved,
+ To comfort me, as he proceeded, still
+ Of Beatrice talked. "Her eyes," saith he,
+ "E'en now I seem to view." From the other side
+ A voice, that sang, did guide us; and the voice
+ Following, with heedful ear, we issued forth,
+ There where the path led upward. "Come," we heard,
+ "Come, blessd of my Father." Such the sounds,
+ That hailed us from within a light, which shone
+ So radiant, I could not endure the view.
+ "The sun," it added, "hastes: and evening comes.
+ Delay not: ere the western sky is hung
+ With blackness, strive ye for the pass." Our way
+ Upright within the rock arose, and faced
+ Such part of heaven, that from before my steps
+ The beams were shrouded of the sinking sun.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PARADISE.
+
+ SIN AND REDEMPTION.
+
+ CANTO VII.
+
+ What I have heard,
+ Is plain, thou say'st: but wherefore God this way
+ For our redemption chose, eludes my search.
+ "Brother! no eye of man not perfected,
+ Nor fully ripened in the flame of love,
+ May fathom this decree. It is a mark,
+ In sooth, much aimed at, and but little kenned:
+ And I will therefore show thee why such way
+ Was worthiest. The celestial love, that spurns
+ All envying in its bounty, in itself
+ With such effulgence blazeth, as sends forth
+ All beauteous things eternal. What distils
+ Immediate thence, no end of being knows;
+ Bearing its seal immutably imprest.
+ Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,
+ Free wholly, uncontrollable by power
+ Of each thing new: by such conformity
+ More grateful to its author, whose bright beams,
+ Though all partake their shining, yet in those
+ Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.
+ These tokens of pre-eminence on man
+ Largely bestowed, if any of them fail,
+ He needs must forfeit his nobility,
+ No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,
+ Which doth disfranchise him, and make unlike
+ To the chief good; for that its light in him
+ Is darkened. And to dignity thus lost
+ Is no return; unless, where guilt makes void,
+ He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.
+ Your nature, which entirely in its seed
+ Transgressed, from these distinctions fell, no less
+ Than from its state in Paradise; nor means
+ Found on recovery (search all methods out
+ As strictly as thou may) save one of these,
+ The only fords were left through which to wade:
+ Either, that God had of his courtesy
+ Released him merely; or else, man himself
+ For his own folly by himself atoned.
+ "Fix now thine eye, intently as thou canst,
+ On the everlasting counsel; and explore,
+ Instructed by my words, the dread abyss.
+ "Man in himself had ever lacked the means
+ Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop
+ Obeying, in humility so low,
+ As high, he, disobeying, thought to soar:
+ And, for this reason, he had vainly tried,
+ Out of his own sufficiency, to pay
+ The rigid satisfaction. Then behoved
+ That God should by his own ways lead him back
+ Unto the life, from whence he fell, restored:
+ By both his ways, I mean, or one alone.
+ But since the deed is ever prized the more.
+ The more the doer's good intent appears;
+ Goodness celestial, whose broad signature
+ Is on the universe, of all its ways
+ To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none.
+ Nor aught so vast or so magnificent,
+ Either for him who gave or who received,
+ Between the last night and the primal day,
+ Was or can be. For God more bounty showed,
+ Giving himself to make man capable
+ Of his return to life, than had the terms
+ Been mere and unconditional release.
+ And for his justice, every method else
+ Were all too scant, had not the Son of God
+ Humbled himself to put on mortal flesh."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE TRIUMPH OF CHRIST.
+
+ CANTO XIV.
+
+ And lo! forthwith there rose up round about
+ A lustre, over that already there;
+ Of equal clearness, like the brightening up
+ Of the horizon. As at evening hour
+ Of twilight, new appearances through heaven
+ Peer with faint glimmer, doubtfully descried;
+ So, there, new substances methought, began
+ To rise in view beyond the other twain,
+ And wheeling, sweep their ampler circuit wide.
+ O genuine glitter of eternal Beam!
+ With what a sudden whiteness did it flow,
+ O'erpowering vision in me. But so fair,
+ So passing lovely, Beatrice showed,
+ Mind cannot follow it, nor words express
+ Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes regained
+ Power to look up; and I beheld myself,
+ Sole with my lady, to more lofty bliss
+ Translated: for the star, with warmer smile
+ Impurpled, well denoted our ascent.
+ With all the heart, and with that tongue which speaks
+ The same in all, an holocaust I made
+ To God befitting the new grace vouchsafed.
+ And from my bosom had not yet upsteamed
+ The fuming of that incense, when I knew
+ The rite accepted. With such mighty sheen
+ And mantling crimson, in two listed rays
+ The splendors shot before me, that I cried,
+ "God of Sabaoth! that dost prank them thus!"
+ As leads the galaxy from pole to pole,
+ Distinguished into greater lights and less,
+ Its pathway, which the wisest fail to spell;
+ So thickly studded, in the depth of Mars,
+ Those rays described the venerable sign,
+ That quadrants in the round conjoining frame.
+ Here memory mocks the toil of genius. Christ
+ Beamed on that cross; and pattern fails me now.
+ But whoso takes his cross, and follows Christ,
+ Will pardon me for that I leave untold,
+ When in the fleckered dawning he shall spy
+ The glitterance of Christ. From horn to horn,
+ And 'tween the summit and the base, did move
+ Lights, scintillating, as they met and passed.
+ Thus oft are seen with ever-changeful glance,
+ Straight or athwart, now rapid and now slow,
+ The atomies of bodies, long or short,
+ To move along the sunbeam, whose slant line
+ Checkers the shadow interposed by art
+ Against the noontide heat. And as the chime
+ Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and harp
+ With many strings, a pleasant dinning makes
+ To him, who heareth not distinct the note;
+ So from the lights, which there appeared to me,
+ Gathered along the cross a melody,
+ That, indistinctly heard, with ravishment
+ Possessed me. Yet I marked it was a hymn
+ Of lofty praises; for there came to me
+ "Arise," and "Conquer," as to one who hears
+ And comprehends not. Me such ecstasy
+ O'ercame, that never, till that hour, was thing
+ That held me in so sweet imprisonment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SAINTS IN GLORY.
+
+ CANTO XXXI.
+
+ In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then
+ Before my view the saintly multitude,
+ Which is his own blood Christ espoused. Meanwhile,
+ That other host, that soar aloft to gaze
+ And celebrate his glory, whom they love,
+ Hovered around; and, like a troop of bees,
+ Amid the vernal sweets alighting now,
+ Now, clustering, where their fragrant labor glows,
+ Flew downward to the mighty flower, or rose
+ From the redundant petals, streaming back
+ Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.
+ Faces had they of flame, and wings of gold:
+ The rest was whiter than the driven snow;
+ And, as they flitted down into the flower,
+ From range to range, fanning their plumy loins,
+ Whispered the peace and ardor, which they won
+ From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast
+ Interposition of such numerous flight
+ Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view
+ Obstructed aught. For, through the universe,
+ Wherever merited, celestial light
+ Glides freely, and no obstacle prevents.
+ All there, who reign in safety and in bliss,
+ Ages long past or new, on one sole mark
+ Their love and vision fixed. O trinal beam
+ Of individual star, that charm'st them thus!
+ Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm below.
+ If the grim brood, from Arctic shores that roamed
+ (Where Helice forever, as she wheels,
+ Sparkles a mother's fondness on her son),
+ Stood in mute wonder mid the works of Rome,
+ When to their view the Lateran arose
+ In greatness more than earthly; I, who then
+ From human to divine had passed, from time
+ Unto eternity, and out of Florence
+ To justice and to truth, how might I chuse
+ But marvel too? 'Twixt gladness and amaze,
+ In sooth, no will had I to utter aught,
+ Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests
+ Within the temple of his vow, looks round
+ In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell
+ Of all its goodly state; e'en so mine eyes
+ Coursed up and down along the living light,
+ Now low, and now aloft, and now around,
+ Visiting every step. Looks I beheld,
+ Where charity in soft persuasion sat;
+ Smiles from within, and radiance from above;
+ And, in each gesture, grace and honor high.
+ So roved my ken, and in its general form
+ All Paradise surveyed.
+
+DANTE.
+
+Translation of HENRY FRANCIS CARY.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The World's Best Poetry Volume IV., by Bliss Carman
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY VOLUME IV. ***
+
+***** This file should be named 12759-8.txt or 12759-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/2/7/5/12759/
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Leah Moser and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/12759-8.zip b/old/12759-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4be4c70
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12759-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/12759.txt b/old/12759.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..75c517a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12759.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,16563 @@
+Project Gutenberg's The World's Best Poetry Volume IV., by Bliss Carman
+
+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 World's Best Poetry Volume IV.
+
+Author: Bliss Carman
+
+Release Date: June 28, 2004 [EBook #12759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY VOLUME IV. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Leah Moser and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+_THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY_
+
+ _I Home: Friendship
+ II Love
+ III Sorrow and Consolation
+ IV The Higher Life
+ V Nature
+ VI Fancy Sentiment
+ VII Descriptive: Narrative
+ VIII National Spirit
+ IX Tragedy: Humor
+ X Poetical Quotations_
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY
+
+IN TEN VOLUMES, ILLUSTRATED
+
+
+Editor-in-Chief
+
+BLISS CARMAN
+
+
+Associate Editors
+
+John Vance Cheney
+Charles G.D. Roberts
+Charles F. Richardson
+Francis H. Stoddard
+
+
+Managing Editor
+
+John R. Howard
+
+
+1904
+
+
+
+
+The World's Best Poetry
+
+Vol. IV
+
+
+THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+RELIGION AND POETRY
+By
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN
+
+
+
+
+NOTICE OF COPYRIGHTS.
+
+I.
+
+
+American poems in this volume within the legal protection of copyright
+are used by the courteous permission of the owners,--either the
+publishers named in the following list or the authors or their
+representatives in the subsequent one,--who reserve all their rights.
+So far as practicable, permission has been secured also for poems out
+of copyright.
+
+
+PUBLISHERS OF THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY. 1904.
+
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & CO., New York.--_W.G. Bryant_: "The Future
+Life."
+
+The ROBERT CLARKE COMPANY, Cincinnati.--_W.D. Gallagher_: "The
+Laborer."
+
+Messrs. T.Y. CROWELL & CO., New York.--_S.K. Bolton_: "Her Creed."
+
+Messrs. E.P. DUTTON & CO., New York.--_Ph. Brooks_: "O Little Town of
+Bethlehem;" _E. Sears_: "The Angel's Song."
+
+Messrs. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston.--_Alice Cary_: "My Creed;"
+_Phoebe Cary_: "Nearer Home;" _J.F. Clarke_: "The Caliph and Satan,"
+"Cana;" _R.W. Emerson_: "Brahma," "Good-bye," "The Problem;" _Louise
+I. Guiney_: "Tryste Noel;" _J. Hay_: "Religion and Doctrine;" _C.W.
+Holmes_: "The Living Temple;" _H.W. Longfellow_: "King Robert of
+Sicily," "Ladder of St. Augustine," "Psalm of Life," "Santa Filomena,"
+"Sifting of Peter," "Song of the Silent Land," "To-morrow;" _S.
+Longfellow_: "Vesper Hymn;" _J.R. Lowell_: "Vision of Sir Launfal;"
+_Frances P.L. Mace_: "Only Waiting;" _Caroline A.B. Mason_: "The
+Voyage;" _T. Parker_: "The Higher Good," "The Way, the Truth, and
+the Life;" _Eliza Scudder_: "The Love of God," "Vesper Hymn;" _E.C.
+Stedman_: "The Undiscovered Country;" _Harriet B. Stowe_: "Knocking,
+Ever Knocking," "The Other World;" _J. Very_: "Life," "The Spirit
+Land;" _J.G. Whittier_: "The Eternal Goodness," "The Meeting," "The
+Two Angels," "The Two Rabbis;" _Sarah C. Woolsey_: "When."
+
+The J.B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, Philadelphia.--_Margaret J. Preston_:
+"Myrrh-Bearers."
+
+Messrs. LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Boston.--_J.W. Chadwick_: "The Rise of
+Man;" _Emily Dickinson_: "Found Wanting," "Heaven."
+
+The LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY, Boston.--_P.H. Hayne_: "Patience."
+
+Messrs. L.C. PAGE & CO., Boston.--_C.G.D. Roberts_: "The Aim,"
+"Ascription."
+
+Messrs. SCOTT, FORESMAN & CO., Chicago.--_C.P. Taylor_: "The Old
+Village Choir."
+
+Messrs. HERBERT S. STONE & CO., Chicago.--_G. Santayana_: "Faith."
+
+The YOUNG CHURCHMAN COMPANY, Milwaukee.--_A.C. Coxe_: "The Chimes of
+England."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+
+American poems in this volume by the authors whose names are given
+below are the copyrighted property of the authors, or of their
+representatives named in parenthesis, and may not be reprinted without
+their permission, which for the present work has been courteously
+granted.
+
+PUBLISHERS OF THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY. 1904.
+
+_A. Coles_ (A. Coles, Jr., M.D.); _J.A. Dix_ (Rev. Morgan Dix, D.D.);
+_P.L. Dunbar; W.C. Gannett; W. Gladden; S.P. McL. Pratt; O. Huckel;
+Ray Palmer_ (Dr. Charles R. Palmer); _A.D.F. Randolph_ (Arthur D.F.
+Randolph).
+
+
+
+
+RELIGION AND POETRY
+
+BY WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+The time is not long past when the copulative in that title might have
+suggested to some minds an antithesis,--as acid and alkali, or heat
+and cold. That religion could have affiliation with anything
+so worldly as poetry would have seemed to some pious people a
+questionable proposition. There were the Psalms, in the Old Testament,
+to be sure; and the minister had been heard to allude to them as
+poetry: might not that indicate some heretical taint in him, caught,
+perchance, from the "German neologists" whose influence we were
+beginning to dread? It did not seem quite orthodox to describe the
+Psalms as poems; and when, a little later, some one ventured to speak
+of the Book of Job as a _dramatic_ poem, there were many who were
+simply horrified. Indeed, it was difficult for many good people
+to consider the Biblical writings as in any sense literature; they
+belonged in a category by themselves, and the application to them
+of the terms by which we describe similar writings in other books
+appeared to many good men and women a kind of profanation. This was
+not, of course, the attitude of educated men and women, but something
+akin to it affected large numbers of excellent people.
+
+We are well past that period, and the relations of religion and
+poetry may now be discussed with no fear of misunderstandings. These
+relations are close and vital. Poetry is indebted to religion for its
+largest and loftiest inspirations, and religion is indebted to poetry
+for its subtlest and most luminous interpretations.
+
+Religion is related to poetry as life is related to art. Religion is
+life, the life of God in the soul of man--the response of man's spirit
+to the attractions of the divine Spirit. Poetry is an interpretation
+of life. Religious poetry endeavors to express, in beautiful
+forms, the facts of the religious life. There is poetry that is not
+religious; poetry which deals only with that which is purely sensuous,
+poetry which does not hint at spiritual facts, or divine relations;
+and there is religion which has but little to do with poetry: but the
+highest religious thoughts and feelings are greatly served by putting
+them into poetic forms; and the greatest poetry is always that which
+sets forth the facts of the religious life. "Without love to man and
+love to God," says Dr. Strong, "the greatest poetry is impossible.
+Mere human love to God is not enough to stir the deepest chords either
+in the poet or in his readers. It is the connection of human love with
+the divine love that gives it permanence and security."[A]
+
+If, then, religion is the supreme experience of the human spirit, and
+that experience finds its most perfect literary expression in poetry,
+the present volume ought to contain a precious collection of the best
+literature. And any one who wished to give to a friend a volume which
+would convey to him the essential elements of religion would probably
+be safe to choose this volume rather than any prose treatise upon
+theology ever printed. He who reads this book through will get
+a clearer and truer idea of what the religious life is than any
+philosophical discussion could give him. For this poetry is an attempt
+to express life, not to explain it. It offers pictures or reports
+rather than analyses of religious experience. It gives utterance
+to the real life of religion in the individual soul, and is not a
+generalization of religious thoughts and feelings.
+
+The sources from which this collection has been drawn are abundant
+and varied. The psalmody and hymnology of the church furnish a vast
+preserve, the exploration of which would be a large undertaking. It
+must be confessed that the pious people who had in their hands some
+of the ancient hymn-books were justified in feeling that religion and
+poetry were not closely related, for many of the hymns they were
+wont to sing were guiltless of any poetic character. It was too often
+evident that the hymn-writer had been more intent on giving metrical
+form to proper theological concepts than on giving utterance to his
+own religious life. But the feeling has been growing that in hymns, at
+any rate, life is more than dogma; and we have now some collections of
+hymns that come pretty near being books of poetry. The improvement in
+this department of literature within the past twenty-five years has
+been marked. There is still, indeed, in many hymnals, and especially
+in hymnals for Sunday schools and social meetings, much doggerel; but
+large recent contributions of hymns which are true poetry, many of the
+best of them from American sources, have made it possible to furnish
+our congregations with admirable manuals of praise.
+
+The indebtedness of religion to poetry which is thus expressed in
+the hymnology of the church is very large. Probably many of us
+are indebted for definite and permanent religious conceptions and
+impressions quite as much to felicitous phrases of hymns as to
+any words of sermon or catechism. Our most positive convictions of
+religious truth are apt to come to us in some line or stanza that
+tells the whole story. The rhythm and the rhyme have helped to fix it
+and hold it in the memory.
+
+This is true not only of the hymns of the church but of many poems
+that are not suitable for singing. English poetry is especially rich
+in meditative and devotional elements, and of no period has this
+been more true than of the nineteenth century. Cowper, Wordsworth,
+Coleridge, the Brownings, Tennyson and Matthew Arnold, on the other
+side of the sea, with Bryant, Longfellow, Emerson, Whittier,
+Lowell, Holmes, Lanier, Sill and Gilder on this side--these and many
+others--have made most precious additions to our store of religious
+poetry. The century has been one of great perturbations in religious
+thought; the advent of the evolutionary philosophy threatened all the
+theological foundations, and there was need of a thorough revision
+of the dogmas which were based on a mechanical theology, and of a
+reinterpretation of the life of the Spirit. In all this the poets have
+given us the strongest help. The great poet cannot be oblivious of
+these deepest themes. He need not be a dogmatician, indeed he cannot
+be, for his business is insight, not ratiocination; but the problems
+which theology is trying to solve must always be before his mind, and
+he must have something to say about them, if he hopes to command the
+attention of thoughtful men. Yet while we need not depreciate
+the service that has been rendered by preachers and professional
+theologians who have sought to put the facts of the religious
+life into the forms of the new philosophy, we must own our deeper
+obligation to the poets, by whose vision the spiritual realities have
+been most clearly discerned.
+
+It was Wordsworth, perhaps, who gave us the first great contribution
+to the new religious thought by bringing home to us the fact that God
+is in his world; revealing himself now as clearly as in any of the
+past ages. The truth of the Divine immanence, which is the foundation
+of all the more positive religious thinking of to-day, and which
+is destined, when once its import has been fully grasped, to
+revolutionize our religious life, is made familiar to our thought
+in Wordsworth's poetry. To him it was simply an experience; in quite
+another sense than that in which it was true of Spinoza, it might have
+been said of him that he was a "God-intoxicated man"; and although his
+clear English sense permitted no pantheistic merging of the human in
+the divine, but kept the individual consciousness clear for choice
+and duty, the realization of the presence of God made nature in his
+thought supernatural, and life sublime. To him, as Dr. Strong has
+said, it was plain that "imagination in man enables him to enter into
+the thought of God--the creative element in us is the medium through
+which we perceive the meaning of the Creator in his creation. The
+world without answers to the world within, because God is the soul of
+both."
+
+ "Such minds are truly from the Deity,
+ For they are Powers; and hence the highest bliss
+ That flesh can know is theirs,--the consciousness
+ Of whom they are, habitually infused
+ Through every image and through every thought,
+ And all affections by communion raised
+ From earth to heaven, from human to divine."
+
+The mystical faith by which man is united to God can have no clearer
+confession. And in the great poem of "Tintern Abbey" this truth
+received an expression which has become classical;--it must be counted
+one of the greatest words of that continuing revelation by which the
+truths of religion are given permanent form:
+
+ "For I have learned
+ To look on nature, not as in the hour
+ Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes
+ The still, sad music of humanity,
+ Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power
+ To chasten and subdue. And I have felt
+ A presence that disturbs me with the joy
+ Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
+ Of something far more deeply interfused,
+ Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
+ And the round ocean, and the living air,
+ And the blue sky, and in the mind of man:
+ A motion and a spirit, that impels
+ All thinking things, all objects of all thought,
+ And rolls through all things."
+
+We can hardly imagine that the religious experience of mankind will
+ever suffer these words to drop into forgetfulness; and it would seem
+that every passing generation must deepen their significance.
+
+The same great testimony to the divine Presence in our lives is borne
+by many other witnesses in memorable words. Lowell's voice is clear:
+
+ "No man can think, nor in himself perceive,
+ Sometimes at waking, in the street sometimes,
+ Or on the hillside, always unforwarned,
+ A grace of being finer than himself,
+ That beckons and is gone,--a larger life
+ Upon his own impinging, with swift glimpse
+ Of spacious circles, luminous with mind,
+ To which the ethereal substance of his own
+ Seems but gross cloud to make that visible,
+ Touched to a sudden glory round the edge."
+
+If to this central truth of religion,--the reality of the communion of
+the human spirit with the divine--the poets have borne such impressive
+testimony, not less positively have they asserted many other of the
+great things of the spirit. Sometimes they have helped us to believe,
+by identifying themselves with us in our struggles with the doubts
+that loosen our hold on the great realities. No man of the last
+century has done more for Christian belief than Alfred Tennyson,
+albeit he has been a confessed doubter. But what he said of Arthur
+Hallam is quite as true of himself:
+
+ "He fought his doubts, and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them; thus he came at length,
+
+ To find a stronger faith his own,
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone."
+
+Those words of his, so often quoted, are often sadly misused:
+
+ "There lives more faith in honest doubt,
+ Believe me, than in half the creeds."
+
+When men make these words an excuse for an attitude of habitual
+negation and denial, assuming that it is better to doubt everything
+than to believe anything, they grossly pervert the poet's meaning. It
+is the _faith_ that lives in honest doubt that his heart applauds. He
+is thinking of the fact that it is real faith in God which leads men
+to doubt the dogmas which misrepresent God. But conscious as he is of
+the shadow that lies upon our field of vision, he is always insisting
+that it is in the light and not in the shadow that we must walk.
+Therefore, although demonstration is impossible, faith is rational. So
+do those great words of "The Ancient Sage" admonish us:
+
+ "Thou canst not prove that thou art body alone,
+ Nor canst thou prove that thou art spirit alone,
+ Nor canst thou prove that thou art both in one.
+ Thou canst not prove thou art immortal, no,
+ Nor yet that thou art mortal--nay, my son.
+ Thou canst not prove that I who speak with thee,
+ Am not thyself in converse with thyself,
+ For nothing worthy proving can be proven
+ Nor yet disproven. Wherefore be thou wise,
+ Cleave ever to the sunnier side of doubt,
+ And cling to Faith beyond the forms of Faith!
+ She reels not in the storm of warring words,
+ She brightens at the clash of 'Yes' and 'No,'
+ She sees the best that glimmers through the worst,
+ She feels the sun is hid but for a night,
+ She spies the summer through the winter bud,
+ She tastes the fruit before the blossom falls,
+ She hears the lark within the songless egg,
+ She finds the fountain where they wailed 'Mirage!'"
+
+This illustrates Tennyson's mental attitude. If all who plume
+themselves upon their doubts would put themselves into this posture of
+mind, they would find themselves in possession of a very substantial
+faith.
+
+Tennyson has touched with light more than one problem of the soul. The
+little stanza beginning
+
+ "Flower in the crannied wall"
+
+has shown us how the mysteries of being are shared by the commonest
+lives; the short lyric "Wages" condenses into a few lines the
+strongest proof of the life to come; and "Crossing the Bar" has borne
+many a spirit in peace out to the boundless sea.
+
+Robert Browning's robust faith helps us in a different way. His daring
+and triumphant optimism makes us ashamed of doubt. In "Abt Vogler," in
+"Rabbi Ben Ezra," in "Pompilia," in "Christmas Eve," we are caught up
+and carried onward by an unflinching and overcoming faith. Perhaps the
+most convincing arguments for religious reality in Browning's poems
+are those of "An Epistle" and of "Cleon," where the cry of the human
+soul for the assurance which the Christian faith supplies is given
+such a penetrating voice. And there is no reasoning about the
+Incarnation, in any theological book that I have ever read, which
+seems to me so cogent as that great passage in "Saul," where David
+cries:
+
+ "Could I wrestle to raise him from sorrow, grow poor to enrich,
+ To fill up his life, starve my own out. I would--knowing which,
+ I know that my service is perfect. Oh, speak through me now!
+ Would I suffer for him that I love? So wouldst thou--so wilt thou!"
+
+But, after all, Browning's great hymns of faith are those in which he
+faces the future, like "Prospice," and the prologue of "La Saisiaz,"
+and the epilogue of "Asolando,"--triumphant songs, in which one of the
+healthiest-minded of human beings showed himself:
+
+ "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
+ Never doubted clouds would break,
+ Never dreamed though right were worsted wrong would triumph,
+ Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better, sleep to wake!"
+
+It would be a grateful task to make extended record of the service
+rendered to religion by the great choir of singers whose names appear
+upon the pages of this book. To Elizabeth Barrett Browning our debt is
+large, though her note is oftenest plaintive and the faith which she
+illustrates is that by which suffering is turned to strength. Our own
+New England psalmist, also, has been to great multitudes a revealer
+and a comforter; few in any age have seen the central truths of
+Christianity more clearly, or felt them more deeply, or uttered them
+more convincingly. In such poems as "My Soul and I," "My Psalm," "Our
+Master," "The Eternal Goodness," "The Brewing of Soma," and "Andrew
+Ryckman's Prayer," Whittier has made the whole religious world his
+debtor.
+
+How many more there are--of those whom the world reckons as the
+greater bards, and of those whom it assigns to lower places--to whom
+we have found ourselves indebted for the clearing of our vision or the
+quickening of our pulses, in our studies or our meditations upon the
+deepest questions of life! How many there are, whose faces we
+never saw, but who by some luminous word, some strain vibrant with
+tenderness, some flash of insight, have endeared themselves to us
+forever! They are the friends of our spirits, ministers to us of the
+holiest things. They have clothed for us the highest truth in forms of
+beauty; they have made it winsome and real and dear and memorable. Is
+there anything better than this, that one man can do for another?
+
+Washington Gladden
+
+[Footnote A: "The Great Poets and their Theology."]
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+ INTRODUCTORY ESSAY:
+ "RELIGION AND POETRY."
+ By _Washington Gladden_
+
+ POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE:
+ THE DIVINE ELEMENT--(God, Christ, the Holy Spirit)
+ PRAYER AND ASPIRATION
+ FAITH: HOPE: LOVE: SERVICE
+ SABBATH: WORSHIP: CREED
+ SELECTIONS FROM "PARADISE LOST"
+ HUMAN EXPERIENCE
+ DEATH: IMMORTALITY: HEAVEN
+ SELECTIONS FROM "THE DIVINE COMEDY"
+
+ INDEX: AUTHORS AND TITLES
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ JOHN MILTON
+ _Photogravure from an engraving_.
+
+ THE CHILD JESUS IN THE TEMPLE
+ _One of Heinrich Hoffmann's wonderful scenes in the life of
+ Christ: the earnest, wise-faced Boy, and the eager or doubtful
+ but thoughtful Scribes and Doctors of the Law, are graphically
+ depicted._
+
+ ISAAC WATTS
+ _From a contemporary engraving_.
+
+ THE HOLY NIGHT
+ "It was the winter wild
+ While the heaven-born Child
+ All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies."
+
+ _From photogravure after a painting by Martin Feuerstein._
+
+ CHARLES WESLEY
+ _From a contemporary engraving_.
+
+ THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD
+ "Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ Who is there?
+ 'Tis a pilgrim, strange and kingly,
+ Never such was seen before."
+
+ _From photo-carbon print after the painting by Holman Hunt_.
+
+ SIR GALAHAD
+ "My strength is as the strength of ten,
+ Because my heart is pure."
+
+ _From photogravure after the painting by George Frederick Watts_.
+
+ RALPH WALDO EMERSON
+ _From a photogravure after life-photograph._
+
+ DINA M. MULOCK CRAIK
+ _From a life-photograph by Elliott and Fry, London._
+
+ THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN
+ "Two went to pray? O, rather say,
+ One went to brag, the other to pray;
+ One nearer to God's altar trod,
+ The other to the altar's God."
+
+ _From engraving by Brend'amour, after a design by Alexander Bida_.
+
+ DANTE ALIGHIERI
+ _After a photograph from the fresco by His friend Giotto, discovered
+ under the whitewash on a watt of the Bargello palace; now in the Museo
+ Nazionale, Florence, Italy_.
+
+
+
+
+POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+
+
+
+POEMS OF THE HIGHER LIFE
+
+I.
+
+THE DIVINE ELEMENT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SONG.
+
+FROM "PIPPA PASSES."
+
+
+ The year's at the spring,
+ And day's at the morn;
+ Morning's at seven;
+ The hill-side's dew-pearled;
+ The lark's on the wing;
+ The snail's on the thorn;
+ God's in His heaven--
+ All's right with the world.
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PASSAGE IN THE LIFE OF SAINT AUGUSTINE.
+
+
+ Long pored Saint Austin o'er the sacred page,
+ And doubt and darkness overspread his mind;
+ On God's mysterious being thought the Sage,
+ The Triple Person in one Godhead joined.
+ The more he thought, the harder did he find
+ To solve the various doubts which fast arose;
+ And as a ship, caught by imperious wind,
+ Tosses where chance its shattered body throws,
+ So tossed his troubled soul, and nowhere found repose.
+
+ Heated and feverish, then he closed his tome,
+ And went to wander by the ocean-side,
+ Where the cool breeze at evening loved to come,
+ Murmuring responsive to the murmuring tide;
+ And as Augustine o'er its margent wide
+ Strayed, deeply pondering the puzzling theme,
+ A little child before him he espied:
+ In earnest labor did the urchin seem,
+ Working with heart intent close by the sounding stream.
+
+ He looked, and saw the child a hole had scooped,
+ Shallow and narrow in the shining sand,
+ O'er which at work the laboring infant stooped,
+ Still pouring water in with busy hand.
+ The saint addressed the child in accents bland:
+ "Fair boy," quoth he, "I pray what toil is thine?
+ Let me its end and purpose understand."
+ The boy replied: "An easy task is mine,
+ To sweep into this hole all the wide ocean's brine."
+
+ "O foolish boy!" the saint exclaimed, "to hope
+ That the broad ocean in that hole should lie!"
+ "O foolish saint!" exclaimed the boy; "thy scope
+ Is still more hopeless than the toil I ply,
+ Who think'st to comprehend God's nature high
+ In the small compass of thine human wit!
+ Sooner, Augustine, sooner far, shall I
+ Confine the ocean in this tiny pit,
+ Than finite minds conceive God's nature infinite!"
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEDITATIONS OF A HINDU PRINCE.
+
+
+ All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have trod,
+ Are the people eternally seeking for the signs and steps of a God?
+ Westward across the ocean, and Northward across the snow,
+ Do they all stand gazing, as ever, and what do the wisest know?
+
+ Here, in this mystical India, the deities hover and swarm
+ Like the wild bees heard in the tree-tops, or the gusts of a gathering storm;
+ In the air men hear their voices, their feet on the rocks are seen,
+ Yet we all say, "Whence is the message, and what may the wonders mean?"
+
+ A million shrines stand open, and ever the censer swings,
+ As they bow to a mystic symbol, or the figures of ancient kings;
+ And the incense rises ever, and rises the endless cry
+ Of those who are heavy laden, and of cowards loth to die.
+
+ For the Destiny drives us together, like deer in a pass of the hills;
+ Above is the sky and around us the sound of the shot that kills;
+ Pushed by a power we see not, and struck by a hand unknown,
+ We pray to the trees for shelter, and press our lips to a stone.
+
+ The trees wave a shadowy answer, and the rock frowns hollow and grim,
+ And the form and the nod of the demon are caught in the twilight dim;
+ And we look to the sunlight falling afar on the mountain crest,--
+ Is there never a path runs upward to a refuge there and a rest?
+
+ The path, ah! who has shown it, and which is the faithful guide?
+ The haven, ah! who has known it? for steep is the mountain side,
+ Forever the shot strikes surely, and ever the wasted breath
+ Of the praying multitude rises, whose answer is only death.
+
+ Here are the tombs of my kinsfolk, the fruit of an ancient name,
+ Chiefs who were slain on the war-field, and women who died in flame;
+ They are gods, these kings of the foretime, they are spirits who guard our race:
+ Ever I watch and worship; they sit with a marble face.
+
+ And the myriad idols round me, and the legion of muttering priests,
+ The revels and rites unholy, the dark unspeakable feasts!
+ What have they rung from the Silence? Hath even a whisper come
+ Of the secret, Whence and Whither? Alas! for the gods are dumb.
+
+ Shall I list to the word of the English, who come from the uttermost sea?
+ "The Secret, hath it been told you, and what is your message to me?"
+ It is naught but the wide-world story how the earth and the heavens began,
+ How the gods are glad and angry, and a Deity once was man.
+
+ I had thought, "Perchance in the cities where the rulers of India dwell,
+ Whose orders flash from the far land, who girdle the earth with a spell,
+ They have fathomed the depths we float on, or measured the unknown main--"
+ Sadly they turn from the venture, and say that the quest is vain.
+
+ Is life, then, a dream and delusion, and where shall the dreamer awake?
+ Is the world seen like shadows on water, and what if the mirror break?
+ Shall it pass as a camp that is struck, as a tent that is gathered and gone
+ From the sands that were lamp-lit at eve, and at morning are level and lone?
+
+ Is there naught in the heaven above, whence the hail and the levin are hurled,
+ But the wind that is swept around us by the rush of the rolling world?
+ The wind that shall scatter my ashes, and bear me to silence and sleep
+ With the dirge, and the sounds of lamenting, and voices of women who weep.
+
+SIR ALFRED COMYNS LYALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRAHMA.
+
+
+ If the red slayer think he slays,
+ Or if the slain think he is slain,
+ They know not well the subtle ways
+ I keep, and pass, and turn again.
+
+ Far or forgot to me is near;
+ Shadow and sunlight are the same;
+ The vanished gods to me appear;
+ And one to me are shame and fame.
+
+ They reckon ill who leave me out;
+ When me they fly, I am the wings;
+ I am the doubter and the doubt,
+ And I the hymn the Brahmin sings.
+
+ The strong gods pine for my abode,
+ And pine in vain the sacred Seven;
+ But thou, meek lover of the good!
+ Find me, and turn thy back on heaven.
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HYMN TO ZEUS.
+
+
+ Most glorious of all the Undying, many-named, girt round with awe!
+ Jove, author of Nature, applying to all things the rudder of law--
+ Hail! Hail! for it justly rejoices the races whose life is a span
+ To lift unto thee their voices--the Author and Framer of man.
+ For we are thy sons; thou didst give us the symbols of speech at our birth,
+ Alone of the things that live, and mortal move upon earth.
+ Wherefore thou shalt find me extolling and ever singing thy praise;
+ Since thee the great Universe, rolling on its path round the world, obeys:--
+ Obeys thee, wherever thou guidest, and gladly is bound in thy bands,
+ So great is the power thou confidest, with strong, invincible hands,
+ To thy mighty ministering servant, the bolt of the thunder, that flies,
+ Two-edged like a sword, and fervent, that is living and never dies.
+ All nature, in fear and dismay, doth quake in the path of its stroke,
+ What time thou preparest the way for the one Word thy lips have spoke,
+ Which blends with lights smaller and greater, which pervadeth and thrilleth all things,
+ So great is thy power and thy nature--in the Universe Highest of Kings!
+ On earth, of all deeds that are done, O God! there is none without thee;
+ In the holy ether not one, nor one on the face of the sea,
+ Save the deeds that evil men, driven by their own blind folly, have planned;
+ But things that have grown uneven are made even again by thy hand;
+ And things unseemly grow seemly, the unfriendly are friendly to thee;
+ For no good and evil supremely thou hast blended in one by decree.
+ For all thy decree is one ever--a Word that endureth for aye,
+ Which mortals, rebellious, endeavor to flee from and shun to obey--
+ Ill-fated, that, worn with proneness for the lord-ship of goodly things,
+ Neither hear nor behold, in its oneness, the law that divinity brings;
+ Which men with reason obeying, might attain unto glorious life,
+ No longer aimlessly straying in the paths of ignoble strife.
+ There are men with a zeal unblest, that are wearied with following of fame,
+ And men with a baser quest, that are turned to lucre and shame.
+ There are men too that pamper and pleasure the flesh with delicate stings:
+ All these desire beyond measure to be other than all these things.
+ Great Jove, all-giver, dark-clouded, great Lord of the thunderbolt's breath!
+ Deliver the men that are shrouded in ignorance dismal as death.
+ O Father! dispel from their souls the darkness, and grant them the light
+ Of reason, thy stay, when the whole wide world thou rulest with might,
+ That we, being honored, may honor thy name with the music of hymns,
+ Extolling the deeds of the Donor, unceasing, as rightly beseems
+ Mankind; for no worthier trust is awarded to God or to man
+ Than forever to glory with justice in the law that endures and is One.
+
+From the Greek of CLEANTHES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TE DEUM LAUDAMUS.
+
+
+ We praise thee, O God; we acknowledge thee to be the Lord.
+ All the earth doth worship thee, the Father everlasting.
+ To thee all Angels cry aloud; the Heavens, and all the powers therein.
+ To thee Cherubim and Seraphim continually do cry,
+ Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth;
+ Heaven and earth are full of the Majesty of thy Glory.
+ The glorious company of the Apostles praise thee.
+ The goodly fellowship of the Prophets praise thee.
+ The noble army of Martyrs praise thee.
+ The holy Church throughout all the world doth acknowledge thee;
+ The Father of an infinite Majesty;
+ Thine adorable, true, and only Son;
+ Also the Holy Ghost, the Comforter.
+ Thou art the King of Glory, O Christ.
+ Thou art the everlasting Son of the Father.
+ When thou tookest upon thee to deliver man, thou didst humble thyself to be born of a Virgin.
+ When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death, thou didst open the Kingdom of Heaven to all believers.
+ Thou sittest at the right hand of God, in the Glory of the Father.
+ We believe that thou shalt come to be our Judge.
+ We therefore pray thee, help thy servants, whom thou hast redeemed with thy precious blood.
+ Make them to be numbered with thy Saints, in glory everlasting.
+ O Lord, save thy people, and bless thine heritage.
+ Govern them, and lift them up for ever.
+ Day by day we magnify thee;
+ And we worship thy Name ever, world without end.
+ Vouchsafe, O Lord, to keep us this day without sin.
+ O Lord, have mercy upon us, have mercy upon us.
+ O Lord, let thy mercy be upon us, as our trust is in thee.
+ O Lord, in thee have I trusted; let me never be confounded.[A]
+
+Version of the
+
+AMERICAN EPISCOPAL CHURCH PRAYER-BOOK.
+
+[Footnote A: This venerable hymn, familiar as a part of the morning
+service in the Roman Catholic and Protestant Episcopal Churches, and
+on special occasions in many Protestant Churches, has usually been
+ascribed to the great St. Ambrose of Milan and St. Augustine, his
+greater convert, in the year 387 A.D. But, like other productions of
+mighty influence, it was doubtless a growth. Portions of it appear
+in the writings of St. Cyprian (252 A.D.) and others in still earlier
+liturgical forms of the Greek Church in Alexandria during the century
+previous. It is thus probably the earliest, as it is certainly the
+most universal and famous, of Christian hymns. It was translated from
+the Latin into English in 1549 for the Anglican Book of Common Prayer,
+which assumed its present form in 1660--during that wonderful era
+which gave us the English Bible, with its unapproached majesty and
+music of language.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNIVERSAL PRAYER.
+
+
+ Father of all! in every age,
+ In every clime adored,
+ By saint, by savage, and by sage,
+ Jehovah, Jove, or Lord!
+
+ Thou great First Cause, least understood,
+ Who all my sense confined
+ To know but this, that thou art good,
+ And that myself am blind;
+
+ Yet gave me, in this dark estate,
+ To see the good from ill;
+ And, binding nature fast in fate,
+ Left free the human will:
+
+ What conscience dictates to be done,
+ Or warns me not to do,
+ This, teach me more than hell to shun,
+ That, more than heaven pursue.
+
+ What blessings thy free bounty gives
+ Let me not cast away;
+ For God is paid when man receives,
+ To enjoy is to obey.
+
+ Yet not to earth's contracted span
+ Thy goodness let me bound,
+ Or think thee Lord alone of man,
+ When thousand worlds are round:
+
+ Let not this weak, unknowing hand
+ Presume thy bolts to throw,
+ And deal damnation round the land
+ On each I judge thy foe.
+
+ If I am right thy grace impart
+ Still in the right to stay;
+ If I am wrong, O, teach my heart
+ To find that better way!
+
+ Save me alike from foolish pride
+ And impious discontent
+ At aught thy wisdom has dented,
+ Or aught thy goodness lent.
+
+ Teach me to feel another's woe,
+ To hide the fault I see;
+ That mercy I to others show,
+ That mercy show to me.
+
+ Mean though I am, not wholly so,
+ Since quickened by thy breath;
+ O, lead me wheresoe'er I go,
+ Through this day's life or death!
+
+ This day be bread and peace my lot;
+ All else beneath the sun,
+ Thou knowest if best bestowed or not,
+ And let thy will be done.
+
+ To thee, whose temple is all space,
+ Whose altar, earth, sea, skies,
+ One chorus let all Being raise,
+ All Nature incense rise!
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE.
+
+FROM "THE SPECTATOR."
+
+
+ The spacious firmament on high,
+ With all the blue ethereal sky,
+ And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
+ Their great Original proclaim;
+ The unwearied sun, from day to day,
+ Does his Creator's power display,
+ And publishes to every land
+ The work of an Almighty hand.
+
+ Soon as the evening shades prevail,
+ The moon takes up the wondrous tale,
+ And nightly to the listening earth
+ Repeats the story of her birth;
+ While all the stars that round her burn,
+ And all the planets in their turn,
+ Confirm the tidings as they roll,
+ And spread the truth from pole to pole.
+
+ What though, in solemn silence, all
+ Move round the dark terrestrial ball?
+ What though no real voice or sound
+ Amid their radiant orbs be found?
+ In Reason's ear they all rejoice,
+ And utter forth a glorious voice,
+ Forever singing, as they shine,
+ "The hand that made us is divine!"
+
+JOSEPH ADDISON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LORD! WHEN THOSE GLORIOUS LIGHTS I SEE.
+
+ HYMN AND PRAYER FOR THE USE OF BELIEVERS.
+
+
+ Lord! when those glorious lights I see
+ With which thou hast adorned the skies,
+ Observing how they moved be,
+ And how their splendor fills mine eyes,
+ Methinks it is too large a grace,
+ But that thy love ordained it so,--
+ That creatures in so high a place
+ Should servants be to man below.
+
+ The meanest lamp now shining there
+ In size and lustre doth exceed
+ The noblest of thy creatures here,
+ And of our friendship hath no need.
+ Yet these upon mankind attend
+ For secret aid or public light;
+ And from the world's extremest end
+ Repair unto us every night.
+
+ O, had that stamp been undefaced
+ Which first on us thy hand had set,
+ How highly should we have been graced,
+ Since we are so much honored yet!
+ Good God, for what but for the sake
+ Of thy beloved and only Son,
+ Who did on him our nature take,
+ Were these exceeding favors done?
+
+ As we by him have honored been,
+ Let us to him due honors give;
+ Let us uprightness hide our sin,
+ And let us worth from him receive.
+ Yea, so let us by grace improve
+ What thou by nature doth bestow,
+ That to thy dwelling-place above
+ We may be raised from below.
+
+GEORGE WITHER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HYMN
+
+ BEFORE SUNRISE, IN THE VALE OF CHAMOUNI.
+
+
+ Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star
+ In his steep course? So long he seems to pause
+ On thy bald, awful head, O sovran Blanc!
+ The Arve and Arveiron at thy base
+ Rave ceaselessly; but thou, most awful Form,
+ Risest from forth thy silent sea of pines
+ How silently! Around thee and above,
+ Deep is the air and dark, substantial, black--
+ An ebon mass. Methinks thou piercest it,
+ As with a wedge! But when I look again,
+ It is thine own calm home, thy crystal shrine,
+ Thy habitation from eternity!
+ O dread and silent Mount! I gazed upon thee,
+ Till thou, still present to the bodily sense,
+ Didst vanish from my thought. Entranced in prayer
+ I worshipped the Invisible alone.
+
+ Yet, like some sweet beguiling melody,
+ So sweet we know not we are listening to it,
+ Thou, the mean while, wast blending with my thought,--
+ Yea, with my life and life's own secret joy,--
+ Till the dilating soul, enrapt, transfused,
+ Into the mighty vision passing, there,
+ As in her natural form, swelled vast to Heaven!
+
+ Awake, my soul! not only passive praise
+ Thou owest! not alone these swelling tears,
+ Mute thanks, and secret ecstasy! Awake,
+ Voice of sweet song! Awake, my heart, awake!
+ Green vales and icy cliffs, all join my hymn.
+
+ Thou first and chief, sole sovereign of the vale!
+ O, struggling with the darkness all the night,
+ And visited all night by troops of stars,
+ Or when they climb the sky, or when they sink,
+ Companion of the morning-star at dawn,
+ Thyself Earth's rosy star, and of the dawn
+ Co-herald,--wake, O, wake, and utter praise!
+ Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth?
+ Who filled thy countenance with rosy light?
+ Who made thee parent of perpetual streams?
+
+ And you, ye five wild torrents fiercely glad!
+ Who called you forth from night and utter death,
+ From dark and icy caverns called you forth,
+ Down those precipitous, black, jagged rocks,
+ Forever shattered and the same forever?
+ Who gave you your invulnerable life,
+ Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy,
+ Unceasing thunder and eternal foam?
+ And who commanded (and the silence came),
+ Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?
+
+ Ye ice-falls! ye that from the mountain's brow
+ Adown enormous ravines slope amain,--
+ Torrents, methinks, that heard a mighty voice,
+ And stopped at once amid their maddest plunge!
+ Motionless torrents! silent cataracts!
+ Who made you glorious as the gates of Heaven
+ Beneath the keen full moon? Who bade the sun
+ Clothe you with rainbows? Who, with living flowers
+ Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet?
+ God!--let the torrents, like a shout of nations,
+ Answer! and let the ice-plains echo, God!
+ God! sing, ye meadow-streams, with gladsome voice!
+ Ye pine-groves, with your soft and soul-like sounds!
+ And they too have a voice, yon piles of snow,
+ And in their perilous fall shall thunder, God!
+
+ Ye living flowers that skirt the eternal frost!
+ Ye wild goats sporting round the eagle's nest!
+ Ye eagles, playmates of the mountain-storm!
+ Ye lightnings, the dread arrows of the clouds!
+ Ye signs and wonders of the elements!
+ Utter forth God, and fill the hills with praise!
+
+ Thou, too, hoar Mount! with thy sky-pointing peaks,
+ Oft from whose feet the avalanche, unheard,
+ Shoots downward, glittering through the pure serene,
+ Into the depth of clouds that veil thy breast,--
+ Thou too again, stupendous Mountain! thou
+ That, as I raise my head, awhile bowed low
+ In adoration, upward from thy base
+ Slow travelling with dim eyes suffused with tears,
+ Solemnly seemest, like a vapory cloud,
+ To rise before me,--Rise, O, ever rise!
+ Rise, like a cloud of incense from the Earth!
+ Thou kingly Spirit throned among the hills,
+ Thou dread ambassador from Earth to Heaven,
+ Great Hierarch! tell thou the silent sky,
+ And tell the stars, and tell yon rising sun,
+ Earth with her thousand voices, praises God.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HILLS OF THE LORD.
+
+
+ God ploughed one day with an earthquake,
+ And drove his furrows deep!
+ The huddling plains upstarted.
+ The hills were all a-leap!
+
+ But that is the mountains' secret,
+ Age-hidden in their breast;
+ "God's peace is everlasting,"
+ Are the dream-words of their rest.
+
+ He hath made them the haunt of beauty,
+ The home elect of his grace;
+ He spreadeth his mornings on them,
+ His sunsets light their face.
+
+ His thunders tread in music
+ Of footfalls echoing long,
+ And carry majestic greeting
+ Around the silent throng.
+
+ His winds bring messages to them,
+ Wild storm-news from the main;
+ They sing it down to the valleys
+ In the love-song of the rain.
+
+ Green tribes from far come trooping,
+ And over the uplands flock;
+ He weaveth the zones together
+ In robes for his risen rock.
+
+ They are nurseries for young rivers;
+ Nests for his flying cloud;
+ Homesteads for new-born races,
+ Masterful, free, and proud.
+
+ The people of tired cities
+ Come up to their shrines and pray;
+ God freshens again within them,
+ As he passes by all day.
+
+ And lo, I have caught their secret,
+ The beauty deeper than all.
+ This faith--that life's hard moments,
+ When the jarring sorrows befall,
+
+ Are but God ploughing his mountains;
+ And the mountains yet shall be
+ The source of his grace and freshness
+ And his peace everlasting to me.
+
+WILLIAM CHANNING GANNETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUNRISE.
+
+
+ As on my bed at dawn I mused and prayed,
+ I saw my lattice prankt upon the wall,
+ The flaunting leaves and flitting birds withal--
+ A sunny phantom interlaced with shade;
+ "Thanks be to Heaven," in happy mood I said,
+ "What sweeter aid my matins could befall
+ Than this fair glory from the east hath made?
+ What holy sleights hath God, the Lord of all,
+ To bid us feel and see! We are not free
+ To say we see not, for the glory comes
+ Nightly and daily, like the flowing sea;
+ His lustre pierces through the midnight glooms,
+ And at prime hours, behold! he follows me
+ With golden shadows to my secret rooms."
+
+CHARLES TENNYSON TURNER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD AND MAN.
+
+ FROM THE "ESSAY ON MAN," EPISTLES I AND IV.
+
+
+ Lo, the poor Indian! whose untutored mind
+ Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind:
+ His soul, proud science never taught to stray
+ Far as the solar walk or Milky Way:
+ Yet simple Nature to his hope has given,
+ Behind the cloud-topt hill, an humbler heaven;
+ Some safer world in depth of woods embraced,
+ Some happier island in the watery waste,
+ Where slaves once more their native land behold,
+ No fiends torment, no Christians thirst for gold.
+ To Be, contents his natural desire;
+ He asks no angel's wing, no seraph's fire;
+ But thinks, admitted to that equal sky,
+ His faithful dog shall bear him company.
+ Go, wiser thou! and in thy scale of sense,
+ Weigh thy opinion against Providence:
+ Call imperfection what thou fancy'st such,--
+ Say, here he gives too little, there too much;
+ Destroy all creatures for thy sport or gust,
+ Yet cry, If man's unhappy, God's unjust,--
+ If man alone engross not Heaven's high care,
+ Alone made perfect here, immortal there;
+ Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod,
+ Re-judge his justice, be the god of God.
+ In pride, in reasoning pride, our error lies;
+ All quit their sphere, and rush into the skies.
+ Pride still is aiming at the blest abodes:
+ Men would be angels, angels would be gods.
+ Aspiring to be gods, if angels fell,
+ Aspiring to be angels, men rebel;
+ And who but wishes to invert the laws
+ Of Order, sins against the Eternal Cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All are but parts of one stupendous whole,
+ Whose body Nature is, and God the soul:
+ That, changed through all, and yet in all the same;
+ Great in the earth as in the ethereal frame;
+ Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze,
+ Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees,
+ Lives through all life, extends through all extent,
+ Spreads undivided, operates unspent:
+ Breathes in our soul, informs our mortal part,
+ As full, as perfect, in a hair as heart;
+ As full, as perfect, in vile man that mourns,
+ As the rapt seraph that adores and burns:
+ To him no high, no low, no great, no small;
+ He fills, he bounds, connects, and equals all.
+ Cease then, nor order imperfection name:
+ Our proper bliss depends on what we blame.
+ Know thy own point: This kind, this due degree
+ Of blindness, weakness, Heaven bestows on thee.
+ Submit.--In this or any other sphere,
+ Secure to be as blest as thou canst bear;
+ Safe in the hand of one disposing Power,
+ Or in the natal or the mortal hour.
+ All nature is but art unknown to thee;
+ All chance, direction which thou canst not see;
+ All discord, harmony not understood;
+ All partial evil, universal good:
+ And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite,
+ One truth is clear--Whatever is, is right.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Order is Heaven's first law: and, this confest,
+ Some are and must be greater than the rest,
+ More rich, more wise; but who infers from hence
+ That such are happier, shocks all common-sense.
+ Heaven to mankind impartial we confess,
+ If all are equal in their happiness:
+ But mutual wants this happiness increase;
+ All nature's difference keeps all nature's peace.
+ Condition, circumstance, is not the thing:
+ Bliss is the same in subject or in king,
+ In who obtain defence or who defend,
+ In him who is or him who finds a friend;
+ Heaven breathes through every member of the whole
+ One common blessing, as one common soul.
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIGHT SHINING OUT OF DARKNESS.
+
+
+ God moves in a mysterious way
+ His wonders to perform;
+ He plants His footsteps in the sea,
+ And rides upon the storm.
+
+ Deep in unfathomable mines
+ Of never-failing skill,
+ He treasures up His bright designs,
+ And works His sovereign will.
+
+ Ye fearful, fresh courage take!
+ The clouds ye so much dread
+ Are big with mercy, and shall break
+ In blessings on your head.
+
+ Judge not the Lord by feeble sense.
+ But trust Him for His grace:
+ Behind a frowning providence
+ He hides a smiling face.
+
+ His purposes will ripen fast,
+ Unfolding every hour;
+ The bud may have a bitter taste.
+ But sweet will be the flower.
+
+ Blind unbelief is sure to err,
+ And scan His work in vain:
+ God is His own interpreter,
+ And He will make it plain.
+
+WILLIAM COWPER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD.
+
+
+ O thou eternal One! whose presence bright
+ All space doth occupy, all motion guide.
+ Unchanged through time's all-devastating flight!
+ Thou only God--there is no God beside!
+ Being above all beings! Mighty One,
+ Whom none can comprehend and none explore!
+ Who fill'st existence with Thyself alone--
+ Embracing all, supporting, ruling o'er,
+ Being whom we call God, and know no more!
+
+ In its sublime research, philosophy
+ May measure out the ocean-deep--may count
+ The sands or the sun's rays--but, God! for Thee
+ There is no weight nor measure; none can mount
+ Up to Thy mysteries; Reason's brightest spark,
+ Though kindled by Thy light, in vain would try
+ To trace Thy counsels, infinite and dark;
+ And thought is lost ere thought can soar so high,
+ Even like past moments in eternity.
+
+ Thou from primeval nothingness didst call
+ First chaos, then existence--Lord! in Thee
+ Eternity had its foundation; all
+ Sprung forth from Thee--of light, joy, harmony,
+ Sole Origin--all life, all beauty Thine;
+ Thy word created all, and doth create;
+ Thy splendor fills all space with rays divine;
+ Thou art, and wert, and shall be! Glorious! Great!
+ Light-giving, life-sustaining potentate!
+
+ Thy chains the unmeasured universe surround--
+ Upheld by Thee, by Thee inspired with breath!
+ Thou the beginning with the end hast bound,
+ And beautifully mingled life and death!
+ As sparks mount upwards from the fiery blaze;
+ So suns are born, so worlds spring forth from Thee;
+ And as the spangles in the sunny rays
+ Shine round the silver snow, the pageantry
+ Of heaven's bright army glitters in Thy praise.
+
+ A million torches lighted by Thy hand
+ Wander unwearied through the blue abyss--
+ They own Thy power, accomplish Thy command,
+ All gay with life, all eloquent with bliss.
+ What shall we call them? Piles of crystal light--
+ A glorious company of golden streams--
+ Lamps of celestial ether burning bright--
+ Suns lighting systems with their joyous beams?
+ But Thou to these art as the noon to night.
+
+ Yes! as a drop of water in the sea,
+ All this magnificence in Thee is lost:--
+ What are ten thousand worlds compared to Thee?
+ And what am I then?--Heaven's unnumbered host,
+ Though multiplied by myriads, and arrayed
+ In all the glory of sublimest thought,
+ Is but an atom in the balance, weighed
+ Against Thy greatness--is a cipher brought
+ Against infinity! What am I then? Naught!
+
+ Naught! But the effluence of Thy light divine,
+ Pervading worlds, hath reached my bosom too;
+ Yes! in my spirit doth Thy spirit shine,
+ As shines the sunbeam in a drop of dew.
+ Naught! but I live, and on hope's pinions fly
+ Eager towards Thy presence--for in Thee
+ I live, and breathe, and dwell, aspiring high,
+ Even to the throne of Thy divinity;
+ I am, O God! and surely Thou must be!
+
+ Thou art!--directing, guiding all--Thou art!
+ Direct my understanding then to Thee;
+ Control my spirit, guide my wandering heart;
+ Though but an atom midst immensity,
+ Still I am something fashioned by Thy hand!
+ I hold a middle rank 'twixt heaven and earth--
+ On the last verge of mortal being stand,
+ Close to the realms where angels have their birth,
+ Just on the boundaries of the spirit land!
+
+ The chain of being is complete in me--
+ In me is matter's last gradation lost,
+ And the next step is spirit--Deity!
+ I can command the lightning and am dust!
+ A monarch and a slave--a worm, a god!
+ Whence came I here, and how? so marvellously
+ Constructed and conceived? unknown! this clod
+ Lives surely through some higher energy;
+ For from itself alone it could not be!
+
+ Creator, yes! Thy wisdom and Thy word
+ Created me! Thou source of life and good!
+ Thou spirit of my spirit, and my Lord!
+ Thy light, Thy love, in their bright plenitude
+ Filled me with an immortal soul, to spring
+ Over the abyss of death; and bade it wear
+ The garments of eternal day, and wing
+ Its heavenly flight beyond this little sphere,
+ Even to its source, to Thee, its author there.
+
+ Oh thoughts ineffable! oh visions blest!
+ Though worthless our conceptions all of Thee.
+ Yet shall Thy shadowed image fill our breast,
+ And waft its homage to Thy deity.
+ God! thus alone my lowly thoughts can soar,
+ Thus seek Thy presence--Being wise and good!
+ Midst Thy vast works admire, obey, adore;
+ And when the tongue is eloquent no more,
+ The soul shall speak in tears of gratitude.
+
+From the Russian of GAVRIIL ROMANOVITCH DERSHAVIN.
+
+Translation of SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOD IS EVERYWHERE.
+
+
+ A trodden daisy, from the sward,
+ With tearful eye I took,
+ And on its ruined glories I,
+ With moving heart, did look;
+ For, crushed and broken though it was,
+ That little flower was fair;
+ And oh! I loved the dying bud,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I stood upon the sea-beat shore,
+ The waves came rushing on;
+ The tempest raged in giant wrath,
+ The light of day was gone.
+ The sailor from his drowning bark
+ Sent up his dying prayer;
+ I looked amid the ruthless storm,
+ And God was there!
+
+ I sought a lonely, woody dell,
+ Where all things soft and sweet,
+ Birds, flowers, and trees, and running streams,
+ Mid bright sunshine did meet:
+ I stood beneath an old oak's shade,
+ And summer round was fair;
+ I gazed upon the peaceful scene,
+ And God was there!
+
+ I saw a home--a happy home--
+ Upon a bridal day,
+ And youthful hearts were blithesome there,
+ And aged hearts were gay:
+ I sat amid the smiling band
+ Where all so blissful were--
+ Among the bridal maidens sweet--
+ And God was there!
+
+ I stood beside an infant's couch,
+ When light had left its eye--
+ I saw the mother's bitter tears,
+ I heard her woful cry--
+ I saw her kiss its fair pale face,
+ And smooth its yellow hair;
+ And oh, I loved the mourner's home,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I sought a cheerless wilderness--
+ A desert, pathless wild--
+ Where verdure grew not by the streams,
+ Where beauty never smiled;
+ Where desolation brooded o'er
+ A muirland lone and bare,
+ And awe upon my spirit crept,
+ For God was there!
+
+ I looked upon the lowly flower,
+ And on each blade of grass;
+ Upon the forests, wide and deep,
+ I saw the tempests pass:
+ I gazed on all created things
+ In earth, in sea, and air;
+ Then bent the knee--for God, in love,
+ Was everywhere!
+
+ROBERT NICOLL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ROCKED IN THE CRADLE OF THE DEEP.
+
+
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep
+ I lay me down in peace to sleep;
+ Secure I rest upon the wave,
+ For thou, O Lord! hast power to save.
+ I know thou wilt not slight my call,
+ For thou dost mark the sparrow's fall;
+ And calm and peaceful shall I sleep,
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep.
+
+ When in the dead of night I lie
+ And gaze upon the trackless sky,
+ The star-bespangled heavenly scroll,
+ The boundless waters as they roll,--
+ I feel thy wondrous power to save
+ From perils of the stormy wave:
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep,
+ I calmly rest and soundly sleep.
+
+ And such the trust that still were mine,
+ Though stormy winds swept o'er the brine,
+ Or though the tempest's fiery breath
+ Roused me from sleep to wreck and death.
+ In ocean cave, still safe with Thee
+ The germ of immortality!
+ And calm and peaceful shall I sleep,
+ Rocked in the cradle of the deep.
+
+EMMA HART WILLARD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GOOD-BYE.
+
+
+ Good-bye, proud world, I'm going home:
+ Thou art not my friend, and I'm not thine.
+ Long through thy weary crowds I roam;
+ A river-ark on the ocean brine,
+ Long I've been tossed like the driven foam,
+ But now, proud world, I'm going home.
+
+ Good-bye to Flattery's fawning face;
+ To Grandeur with his wise grimace;
+ To upstart Wealth's averted eye;
+ To supple Office, low and high;
+ To crowded halls, to court and street;
+ To frozen hearts and hasting feet;
+ To those who go, and those who come;
+ Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home.
+
+ I'm going to my own hearth-stone,
+ Bosomed in yon green hills alone,--
+ A secret nook in a pleasant land,
+ Whose groves the frolic fairies planned;
+ Where arches green, the livelong day,
+ Echo the blackbird's roundelay,
+ And vulgar feet have never trod
+ A spot that is sacred to thought and God.
+
+ O, when I am safe in my sylvan home,
+ I tread on the pride of Greece and Rome;
+ And when I am stretched beneath the pines,
+ Where the evening star so holy shines,
+ I laugh at the lore and the pride of man,
+ At the sophist schools, and the learned clan;
+ For what are they all in their high conceit,
+ When man in the bush with God may meet?
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR GOD, OUR HELP IN AGES PAST.
+
+
+ Our God, our help in ages past,
+ Our hope for years to come,
+ Our shelter from the stormy blast,
+ And our eternal home,--
+
+ Under the shadow of thy throne
+ Thy saints have dwelt secure;
+ Sufficient is thine arm alone,
+ And our defence is sure.
+
+ Before the hills in order stood,
+ Or earth received her frame,
+ From everlasting thou art God,
+ To endless years the same.
+
+ A thousand ages in thy sight
+ Are like an evening gone;
+ Short as the watch that ends the night
+ Before the rising sun.
+
+ Time like an ever-rolling stream
+ Bears all its sons away;
+ They fly, forgotten, as a dream
+ Dies at the opening day.
+
+ Our God, our help in ages past,
+ Our hope for years to come,
+ Be thou our guard while troubles last,
+ And our eternal home.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD.
+
+ "EIN' FESTE BURG IST UNSER GOTT."
+
+
+ A mighty fortress is our God,
+ A bulwark never failing;
+ Our helper he amid the flood
+ Of mortal ills prevailing.
+ For still our ancient foe
+ Doth seek to work us woe;
+ His craft and power are great,
+ And, armed with equal hate,
+ On earth is not his equal.
+
+ Did we in our own strength confide,
+ Our striving would be losing;
+ Were not the right man on our side,
+ The man of God's own choosing.
+ Dost ask who that may be?
+ Christ Jesus, it is he,
+ Lord Sabaoth his name,
+ From age to age the same,
+ And he must win the battle.
+
+From the German of MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+Translation of FREDERIC HENRY HEDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DELIGHT IN GOD.
+
+
+ I love, and have some cause to love, the earth,--
+ She is my Maker's creature, therefore good;
+ She is my mother, for she gave me birth;
+ She is my tender nurse, she gives me food:
+ But what's a creature, Lord, compared with thee?
+ Or what's my mother or my nurse to me?
+
+ I love the air,--her dainty sweets refresh
+ My drooping soul, and to new sweets invite me;
+ Her shrill-mouthed choir sustain me with their flesh,
+ And with their polyphonian notes delight me:
+ But what's the air, or all the sweets that she
+ Can bless my soul withal, compared to thee?
+
+ I love the sea,--she is my fellow-creature,
+ My careful purveyor; she provides me store;
+ She walls me round; she makes my diet greater;
+ She wafts my treasure from a foreign shore:
+ But, Lord of oceans, when compared with thee,
+ What is the ocean or her wealth to me?
+
+ To heaven's high city I direct my journey,
+ Whose spangled suburbs entertain mine eye;
+ Mine eye, by contemplation's great attorney,
+ Transcends the crystal pavement of the sky:
+ But what is heaven, great God, compared to thee?
+ Without thy presence, heaven's no heaven to me.
+
+ Without thy presence, earth gives no refection;
+ Without thy presence, sea affords no treasure;
+ Without thy presence, air's a rank infection;
+ Without thy presence, heaven's itself no pleasure:
+ If not possessed, if not enjoyed in thee,
+ What's earth, or sea, or air, or heaven to me?
+
+ The highest honors that the world can boast
+ Are subjects far too low for my desire;
+ The brightest beams of glory are, at most,
+ But dying sparkles of thy living fire;
+ The loudest flames that earth can kindle be
+ But nightly glow-worms, if compared to thee.
+
+ Without thy presence, wealth is bags of cares;
+ Wisdom but folly; joy, disquiet--sadness;
+ Friendship is treason, and delights are snares;
+ Pleasures but pain, and mirth but pleasing madness;
+ Without thee, Lord, things be not what they be,
+ Nor have their being, when compared with thee.
+
+ In having all things, and not thee, what have I?
+ Not having thee, what have my labors got?
+ Let me enjoy but thee, what further crave I?
+ And having thee alone, what have I not?
+ I wish nor sea nor land; nor would I be
+ Possessed of heaven, heaven unpossessed of thee!
+
+FRANCIS QUARLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WILL OF GOD.
+
+
+ I worship thee, sweet will of God!
+ And all thy ways adore;
+ And every day I live, I seem
+ To love thee more and more.
+
+ Thou wert the end, the blessed rule
+ Of our Saviour's toils and tears;
+ Thou wert the passion of his heart
+ Those three and thirty years.
+
+ And he hath breathed into my soul
+ A special love of thee,
+ A love to lose my will in his,
+ And by that loss be free.
+
+ I love to see thee bring to naught
+ The plans of wily men;
+ When simple hearts outwit the wise,
+ Oh, thou art loveliest then.
+
+ The headstrong world it presses hard
+ Upon the church full oft,
+ And then how easily thou turn'st
+ The hard ways into soft.
+
+ I love to kiss each print where thou
+ Hast set thine unseen feet;
+ I cannot fear thee, blessed will!
+ Thine empire is so sweet.
+
+ When obstacles and trials seem
+ Like prison walls to be,
+ I do the little I can do,
+ And leave the rest to thee.
+
+ I know not what it is to doubt,
+ My heart is ever gay;
+ I run no risk, for, come what will,
+ Thou always hast thy way.
+
+ I have no cares, O blessed will!
+ For all my cares are thine:
+ I live in triumph, Lord! for thou
+ Hast made thy triumphs mine.
+
+ And when it seems no chance or change
+ From grief can set me free,
+ Hope finds its strength in helplessness,
+ And gayly waits on thee.
+
+ Man's weakness, waiting upon God,
+ Its end can never miss,
+ For men on earth no work can do
+ More angel-like than this.
+
+ Ride on, ride on, triumphantly,
+ Thou glorious will, ride on!
+ Faith's pilgrim sons behind thee take
+ The road that thou hast gone.
+
+ He always wins who sides with God,
+ To him no chance is lost;
+ God's will is sweetest to him, when
+ It triumphs at his cost.
+
+ Ill that he blesses is our good,
+ And unblessed good is ill;
+ And all is right that seems most wrong.
+ If it be his sweet will.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VOYAGE.
+
+
+ Whichever way the wind doth blow,
+ Some heart is glad to have it so;
+ Then blow it east or blow it west,
+ The wind that blows, that wind is best.
+
+ My little craft sails not alone:
+ A thousand fleets from every zone
+ Are out upon a thousand seas;
+ And what for me were favoring breeze
+ Might dash another, with the shock
+ Of doom, upon some hidden rock.
+
+ And so I do not dare to pray
+ For winds to waft me on my way,
+ But leave it to a Higher Will
+ To stay or speed me; trusting still
+ That all is well, and sure that He
+ Who launched my bark will sail with me
+ Through storm and calm, and will not fail,
+ Whatever breezes may prevail,
+ To land me, every peril past,
+ Within his sheltering heaven at last.
+
+ Then, whatsoever wind doth blow,
+ My heart is glad to have it so;
+ And blow it east or blow it west,
+ The wind that blows, that wind is best.
+
+CAROLINE ATHERTON MASON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOVE OF GOD.
+
+
+ Thou Grace Divine, encircling all,
+ A soundless, shoreless sea!
+ Wherein at last our souls must fall,
+ O Love of God most free!
+
+ When over dizzy heights we go,
+ One soft hand blinds our eyes,
+ The other leads us, safe and slow,
+ O Love of God most wise!
+
+ And though we turn us from thy face,
+ And wander wide and long,
+ Thou hold'st us still in thine embrace,
+ O Love of God most strong!
+
+ The saddened heart, the restless soul,
+ The toil-worn frame and mind,
+ Alike confess thy sweet control,
+ O Love of God most kind!
+
+ But not alone thy care we claim,
+ Our wayward steps to win;
+ We know thee by a dearer name,
+ O Love of God within!
+
+ And, filled and quickened by thy breath,
+ Our souls are strong and free
+ To rise o'er sin and fear and death,
+ O Love of God, to thee!
+
+ELIZA SCUDDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE TO GOD.
+
+
+ Praise to God, immortal praise,
+ For the love that crowns our days--
+ Bounteous source of every joy,
+ Let Thy praise our tongues employ!
+
+ For the blessings of the field,
+ For the stores the gardens yield,
+ For the vine's exalted juice,
+ For the generous olive's use;
+
+ Flocks that, whiten all the plain,
+ Yellow sheaves of ripened grain,
+ Clouds that drop their fattening dews,
+ Suns that temperate warmth diffuse--
+
+ All that Spring, with bounteous hand,
+ Scatters o'er the smiling land;
+ All that liberal Autumn pours
+ From her rich o'erflowing stores:
+
+ These to Thee, my God, we owe--
+ Source whence all our blessings flow!
+ And for these my soul shall raise
+ Grateful vows and solemn praise.
+
+ Yet should rising whirlwinds tear
+ From its stem the ripening ear--
+ Should the fig-tree's blasted shoot
+ Drop her green untimely fruit--
+
+ Should the vine put forth no more,
+ Nor the olive yield her store--
+ Though the sickening flocks should fall,
+ And the herds desert the stall--
+
+ Should Thine altered hand restrain
+ The early and the latter rain,
+ Blast each opening bud of joy,
+ And the rising year destroy;
+
+ Yet to Thee my soul should raise
+ Grateful vows and solemn praise,
+ And when every blessing's flown,
+ Love Thee--for Thyself alone.
+
+ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT.
+
+
+ Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
+ Lead thou me on!
+ The night is dark, and I am far from home,--
+ Lead thou me on!
+ Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
+ The distant scene,--one step enough for me.
+
+ I was not ever thus, nor prayed that thou
+ Shouldst lead me on:
+ I loved to choose and see my path, but now
+ Lead thou me on!
+ I loved the garish days, and, spite of fears,
+ Pride ruled my will: remember not past years.
+
+ So long thy power hath blessed me, sure it still
+ Will lead me on;
+ O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
+ The night is gone;
+ And with the morn those angel faces smile
+ Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.
+
+JOHN HENRY NEWMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ETERNAL GOODNESS.
+
+
+ O friends! with whom my feet have trod
+ The quiet aisles of prayer,
+ Glad witness to your zeal for God
+ And love of man I bear.
+
+ I trace your lines of argument;
+ Your logic linked and strong
+ I weigh as one who dreads dissent,
+ And fears a doubt as wrong.
+
+ But still my human hands are weak
+ To hold your iron creeds:
+ Against the words ye bid me speak
+ My heart within me pleads.
+
+ Who fathoms the Eternal Thought?
+ Who talks of scheme and plan?
+ The Lord is God! He needeth not
+ The poor device of man.
+
+ I walk with bare, hushed feet the ground
+ Ye tread with boldness shod;
+ I dare not fix with mete and bound
+ The love and power of God.
+
+ Ye praise His justice; even such
+ His pitying love I deem:
+ Ye seek a king; I fain would touch
+ The robe that hath no seam.
+
+ Ye see the curse which overbroods
+ A world of pain and loss:
+ I hear our Lord's beatitudes
+ And prayer upon the cross.
+
+ More than your schoolmen teach, within
+ Myself, alas! I know:
+ Too dark ye cannot paint the sin,
+ Too small the merit show.
+
+ I bow my forehead to the dust,
+ I veil mine eyes for shame,
+ And urge, in trembling self-distrust,
+ A prayer without a claim.
+
+ I see the wrong that round me lies,
+ I feel the guilt within;
+ I hear, with groan and travail-cries,
+ The world confess its sin.
+
+ Yet, in the maddening maze of things,
+ And tossed by storm and flood,
+ To one fixed trust my spirit clings;
+ I know that God is good!
+
+ Not mine to look where cherubim
+ And seraphs may not see,
+ But nothing can be good in Him
+ Which evil is in me.
+
+ The wrong that pains my soul below
+ I dare not throne above,
+ I know not of His hate,--I know
+ His goodness and His love.
+
+ I dimly guess from blessings known
+ Of greater out of sight,
+ And, with the chastened Psalmist, own
+ His judgments too are right.
+
+ I long for household voices gone,
+ For vanished smiles I long,
+ But God hath led my dear ones on,
+ And He can do no wrong.
+
+ I know not what the future hath
+ Of marvel or surprise.
+ Assured alone that life and death
+ His mercy underlies.
+
+ And if my heart and flesh are weak
+ To bear an untried pain,
+ The bruised reed He will not break,
+ But strengthen and sustain.
+
+ No offering of my own I have.
+ Nor works my faith to prove;
+ I can but give the gifts He gave,
+ And plead His love for love.
+
+ And so beside the Silent Sea
+ I wait the muffled oar;
+ No harm from Him can come to me
+ On ocean or on shore.
+
+ I know not where His islands lift
+ Their fronded palms in air;
+ I only know I cannot drift
+ Beyond His love and care.
+
+ O brothers! if my faith is vain,
+ If hopes like these betray,
+ Pray for me that my feet may gain
+ The sure and safer way.
+
+ And Thou, O Lord! by whom are seen
+ Thy creatures as they be,
+ Forgive me if too close I lean
+ My human heart on Thee!
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STRONG SON OF GOD, IMMORTAL LOVE.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+ Strong Son of God, immortal Love,
+ Whom we, that have not seen thy face,
+ By faith, and faith alone, embrace,
+ Believing where we cannot prove;
+
+ Thine are these orbs of light and shade;
+ Thou madest Life in man and brute;
+ Thou madest Death; and lo, thy foot
+ Is on the skull which thou hast made.
+
+ Thou wilt not leave us in the dust:
+ Thou madest man, he knows not why;
+ He thinks he was not made to die;
+ And thou hast made him: thou art just.
+
+ Thou seemest human and divine,
+ The highest, holiest manhood, thou:
+ Our wills are ours, we know not how;
+ Our wills are ours, to make them thine.
+
+ Our little systems have their day;
+ They have their day and cease to be:
+ They are but broken lights of thee,
+ And thou, O Lord, art more than they.
+
+ We have but faith: we cannot know;
+ For knowledge is of things we see;
+ And yet we trust it comes from thee,
+ A beam in darkness: let it grow.
+
+ Let knowledge grow from more to more,
+ But more of reverence in us dwell;
+ That mind and soul, according well,
+ May make one music as before,
+
+ But vaster. We are fools and slight;
+ We mock thee when we do not fear:
+ But help thy foolish ones to bear;
+ Help thy vain worlds to bear thy light.
+
+ Forgive what seemed my sin in me;
+ What seemed my worth since I began;
+ For merit lives from man to man,
+ And not from man, O Lord, to thee.
+
+ Forgive my grief for one removed,
+ Thy creature, whom I found so fair.
+ I trust he lives in thee, and there
+ I find him worthier to be loved.
+
+ Forgive these wild and wandering cries,
+ Confusions of a wasted youth;
+ Forgive them where they fail in truth,
+ And in thy wisdom make me wise.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM.
+
+
+ O little town of Bethlehem,
+ How still we see thee lie!
+ Above thy deep and dreamless sleep
+ The silent stars go by;
+ Yet in thy dark streets shineth
+ The everlasting Light;
+ The hopes and fears of all the years
+ Are met in thee to-night.
+
+ For Christ is born of Mary,
+ And, gathered all above.
+ While mortals sleep, the angels keep
+ Their watch of wondering love.
+ O morning stars, together
+ Proclaim the holy birth!
+ And praises sing to God the King,
+ And peace to men on earth.
+
+ How silently, how silently,
+ The wondrous gift is given!
+ So God imparts to human hearts
+ The blessings of His heaven.
+ No ear may hear His coming,
+ But in this world of sin,
+ Where meek souls will receive Him still,
+ The dear Christ enters in.
+
+ O holy Child of Bethlehem!
+ Descend to us, we pray;
+ Cast out our sin, and enter in,
+ Be born in us to-day.
+ We hear the Christmas angels
+ The great glad tidings tell;
+ Oh come to us, abide with us,
+ Our Lord Emmanuel!
+
+PHILLIPS BROOKS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ANGELS' SONG.
+
+
+ It came upon the midnight clear,
+ That glorious song of old,
+ From angels bending near the earth
+ To touch their harps of gold:
+ "Peace to the earth, good-will to men
+ From heaven's all-gracious King!"
+ The world in solemn stillness lay
+ To hear the angels sing.
+
+ Still through the cloven skies they come,
+ With peaceful wings unfurled;
+ And still their heavenly music floats
+ O'er all the weary world:
+ Above its sad and lowly plains
+ They bend on heavenly wing,
+ And ever o'er its Babel sounds
+ The blessed angels sing.
+
+ Yet with the woes of sin and strife
+ The world has suffered long;
+ Beneath the angel-strain have rolled
+ Two thousand years of wrong;
+ And man, at war with man, hears not
+ The love-song which they bring:
+ O, hush the noise, ye men of strife,
+ And hear the angels sing!
+
+ And ye, beneath life's crushing load
+ Whose forms are bending low;
+ Who toil along the climbing way
+ With painful steps and slow,--
+ Look now! for glad and golden hours
+ Come swiftly on the wing;
+ O, rest beside the weary road,
+ And hear the angels sing.
+
+ For lo! the days are hastening on,
+ By prophet-bards foretold,
+ When with the ever-circling years
+ Comes round the age of gold;
+ When Peace shall over all the earth
+ Its ancient splendors fling,
+ And the whole world send back the song
+ Which now the angels sing.
+
+EDMUND HAMILTON SEARS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EPIPHANY.
+
+ "We have seen his star in the east."
+ --MATTHEW ii. 2.
+
+
+ Brightest and best of the sons of the morning,
+ Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid;
+ Star of the East, the horizon adorning,
+ Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid.
+
+ Cold on his cradle the dew-drops are shining,
+ Low lies his head with the beasts of the stall;
+ Angels adore him in slumber reclining,
+ Maker and Monarch and Saviour of all.
+
+ Say, shall we yield him, in costly devotion,
+ Odors of Edom, and offerings divine?
+ Gems of the mountain, and pearls of the ocean,
+ Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine?
+
+ Vainly we offer each ample oblation,
+ Vainly with gifts would his favor secure;
+ Richer by far is the heart's adoration,
+ Dearer to God are the prayers of the poor.
+
+ Brightest and best of the sons of the morning,
+ Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid:
+ Star of the East, the horizon adorning,
+ Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid.
+
+REGINALD HEBER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY.
+
+
+ This is the month, and this the happy morn,
+ Wherein the Son of heaven's eternal king,
+ Of wedded maid and virgin mother born,
+ Our great redemption from above did bring--
+ For so the holy sages once did sing--
+ That He our deadly forfeit should release,
+ And with His Father work us a perpetual peace.
+
+ That glorious form, that light unsufferable,
+ And that far-beaming blaze of majesty
+ Wherewith He wont at heaven's high council-table
+ To sit the midst of Trinal Unity,
+ He laid aside; and here with us to be,
+ Forsook the courts of everlasting day,
+ And chose with us a darksome house of mortal clay.
+
+ Say, heavenly muse, shall not thy sacred vein
+ Afford a present to the infant God?
+ Hast thou no verse, no hymn, or solemn strain,
+ To welcome Him to this His new abode--
+ Now while the heaven, by the sun's team untrod,
+ Hath took no print of the approaching light,
+ And all the spangled host keep watch in squadrons bright?
+
+ See how from far upon the eastern road
+ The star-led wizards haste with odors sweet!
+ Oh! run, prevent them with thy humble ode,
+ And lay it lowly at His blessed feet;
+ Have thou the honor first thy Lord to greet,
+ And join thy voice unto the angel choir,
+ From out His secret altar touched with hallowed fire.
+
+
+ THE HYMN.
+
+ It was the winter wild
+ While the heaven-born child
+ All meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies--
+ Nature, in awe to Him,
+ Had doffed her gaudy trim,
+ With her great Master so to sympathize;
+ It was no season then for her
+ To wanton with the sun, her lusty paramour.
+
+ Only with speeches fair
+ She woos the gentle air
+ To hide her guilty front with innocent snow,
+ And on her naked shame.
+ Pollute with sinful blame,
+ The saintly veil of maiden white to throw--
+ Confounded that her maker's eyes
+ Should look so near upon her foul deformities.
+
+ But He, her fears to cease,
+ Sent down the meek-eyed Peace;
+ She, crowned with olive green, came softly sliding
+ Down through the turning sphere,
+ His ready harbinger,
+ With turtle wing the amorous clouds dividing;
+ And waving wide her myrtle wand,
+ She strikes a universal peace through sea and land.
+
+ Nor war, or battle's sound,
+ Was heard the world around--
+ The idle spear and shield were high up hung;
+ The hooked chariot stood
+ Unstained with hostile blood;
+ The trumpet spake not to the armed throng;
+ And kings sat still with awful eye,
+ As if they surely knew their sovereign Lord was by.
+
+ But peaceful was the night
+ Wherein the prince of light
+ His reign of peace upon the earth began;
+ The winds, with wonder whist,
+ Smoothly the waters kissed,
+ Whispering new joys to the mild ocean,
+ Who now hath quite forgot to rave,
+ While birds of calm sit brooding on the charmed wave.
+
+ The stars with deep amaze
+ Stand fixed in steadfast gaze,
+ Bending one way their precious influence;
+ And will not take their flight
+ For all the morning light,
+ Or Lucifer that often warned them thence;
+ But in their glimmering orbs did glow
+ Until their Lord himself bespake, and bid them go.
+
+ And though the shady gloom
+ Had given day her room,
+ The sun himself withheld his wonted speed,
+ And hid his head for shame,
+ As his inferior flame
+ The new-enlightened world no more should need;
+ He saw a greater sun appear
+ Than his bright throne or burning axle-tree could bear.
+
+ The shepherds on the lawn,
+ Or e'er the point of dawn,
+ Sat simply chatting in a rustic row;
+ Full little thought they then
+ That the mighty Pan
+ Was kindly come to live with them below;
+ Perhaps their loves, or else their sheep,
+ Was all that did their silly thoughts so busy keep.
+
+ When such music sweet
+ Their hearts and ears did greet
+ As never was by mortal finger strook--
+ Divinely-warbled voice
+ Answering the stringed noise,
+ As all their souls in blissful rapture took;
+ The air, such pleasure loath to lose,
+ With thousand echoes still prolongs each heavenly close.
+
+ Nature, that heard such sound
+ Beneath the hollow round
+ Of Cynthia's seat the airy region thrilling,
+ Now was almost won
+ To think her part was done.
+ And that her reign had here its last fulfilling;
+ She knew such harmony alone
+ Could hold all heaven and earth in happier union.
+
+ At last surrounds their sight
+ A globe of circular light,
+ That with long beams the shamefaced night arrayed;
+ The helmed cherubim
+ And sworded seraphim
+ Are seen in glittering ranks with wings displayed,
+ Harping in loud and solemn choir,
+ With unexpressive notes, to heaven's new-born heir--
+
+ Such music as ('tis said)
+ Before was never made,
+ But when of old the sons of morning sung,
+ While the Creator great
+ His constellations set,
+ And the well-balanced world on hinges hung,
+ And cast the dark foundations deep,
+ And bid the weltering waves their oozy channel keep.
+
+ Ring out, ye crystal spheres!
+ Once bless our human ears,
+ If ye have power to touch our senses so;
+ And let your silver chime
+ Move in melodious time,
+ And let the bass of heaven's deep organ blow;
+ And with your ninefold harmony
+ Make up full consort to the angelic symphony.
+
+ For if such holy song
+ Inwrap our fancy long,
+ Time will run back, and fetch the age of gold;
+ And speckled vanity
+ Will sicken soon and die,
+ And leprous sin will melt from earthly mould;
+ And hell itself will pass away.
+ And leave her dolorous mansions to the peering day.
+
+ Yea, truth and justice then
+ Will down return to men,
+ Orbed in a rainbow; and, like glories wearing,
+ Mercy will sit between,
+ Throned in celestial sheen,
+ With radiant feet the tissued clouds down steering;
+ And heaven, as at some festival,
+ Will open wide the gates of her high palace hall.
+
+ But wisest fate says No--
+ This must not yet be so;
+ The babe yet lies in smiling infancy
+ That on the bitter cross
+ Must redeem our loss.
+ So both Himself and us to glorify.
+ Yet first to those ye chained in sleep
+ The wakeful trump of doom must thunder through the deep,
+
+ With such a horrid clang
+ As on Mount Sinai rang,
+ While the red fire and smould'ring clouds out-brake;
+ The aged earth, aghast
+ With terror of that blast,
+ Shall from the surface to the centre shake--
+ When, at the world's last session,
+ The dreadful judge in middle air shall spread his throne.
+
+ And then at last our bliss
+ Full and perfect is--
+ But now begins: for from this happy day
+ The old dragon, under ground
+ In straiter limits bound,
+ Not half so far casts his usurped sway,
+ And, wroth to see his kingdom fail,
+ Swinges the scaly horror of his folded tail.
+
+ The oracles are dumb:
+ No voice or hideous hum
+ Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving;
+ Apollo from his shrine
+ Can no more divine,
+ With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving;
+ No nightly trance, or breathed spell,
+ Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the prophetic cell.
+
+ The lonely mountains o'er,
+ And the resounding shore,
+ A voice of weeping heard and loud lament;
+ From haunted spring, and dale
+ Edged with poplar pale,
+ The parting genius is with sighing sent;
+ With flower-inwoven tresses torn
+ The nymphs in twilight shade of tangled thickets mourn.
+
+ In consecrated earth,
+ And on the holy hearth,
+ The lares and lemures moan with midnight plaint;
+ In urns and altars round
+ A drear and dying sound
+ Affrights the flamens at their service quaint;
+ And the chill marble seems to sweat,
+ While each peculiar power forgoes his wonted seat.
+
+ Peor and Baaelim
+ Forsake their temples dim,
+ With that twice-battered god of Palestine;
+ And mooned Ashtaroth,
+ Heaven's queen and mother both.
+ Now sits not girt with tapers' holy shine;
+ The Lybic Hammon shrinks his horn--
+ In vain the Tyrian maids their wounded Thammuz mourn.
+
+ And sullen Moloch fled,
+ Hath left in shadows dread
+ His burning idol all of blackest hue;
+ In vain, with cymbal's ring,
+ They call the grisly king,
+ In dismal dance about the furnace blue;
+ The brutish gods of Nile as fast--
+ Isis and Orus, and the dog Anubis--haste.
+
+ Nor is Osiris seen
+ In Memphian grove or green,
+ Trampling the unshowered grass with lowings loud,
+ Nor can he be at rest
+ Within his sacred chest--
+ Naught but profoundest hell can be his shroud;
+ In vain, with timbrelled anthems dark.
+ The sable-stoled sorcerers bear his worshipped ark.
+
+ He feels from Juda's land
+ The dreaded infant's hand--
+ The rays of Bethlehem blind his dusky eyne;
+ Nor all the gods beside
+ Longer dare abide--
+ Not Typhon huge, ending in snaky twine;
+ Our babe, to show His God-head true,
+ Can in His swaddling-bands control the damned crew.
+
+ So, when the sun in bed,
+ Curtained with cloudy red,
+ Pillows his chin upon an orient wave,
+ The flocking shadows pale
+ Troop to the infernal jail--
+ Each fettered ghost slips to his several grave;
+ And the yellow-skirted fays
+ Fly after the night-steeds, leaving their moon-loved maze.
+
+ But see the virgin blest
+ Hath laid her babe to rest--
+ Time is our tedious song should here have ending;
+ Heaven's youngest teemed star
+ Hath fixed her polished car,
+ Her sleeping Lord with handmaid lamp attending;
+ And all about the courtly stable
+ Bright-harnessed angels sit in order serviceable.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CHRISTMAS HYMN.
+
+
+ It was the calm and silent night!
+ Seven hundred years and fifty-three
+ Had Rome been growing up to might,
+ And now was queen of land and sea.
+ No sound was heard of clashing wars;
+ Peace brooded o'er the hushed domain:
+ Apollo, Pallas, Jove, and Mars
+ Held undisturbed their ancient reign,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago.
+
+ 'Twas in the calm and silent night!
+ The senator of haughty Rome,
+ Impatient, urged his chariot's flight,
+ From lordly revel rolling home;
+ Triumphal arches, gleaming, swell
+ His breast with thoughts of boundless sway;
+ What recked the Roman what befell
+ A paltry province far away,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago?
+
+ Within that province far away
+ Went plodding home a weary boor;
+ A streak of light before him lay,
+ Fallen through a half-shut stable-door
+ Across his path. He passed--for naught
+ Told what was going on within;
+ How keen the stars, his only thought;
+ The air how calm and cold and thin,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ Oh, strange indifference! low and high
+ Drowsed over common joys and cares;
+ The earth was still--but knew not why;
+ The world was listening, unawares.
+ How calm a moment may precede
+ One that shall thrill the world forever!
+ To that still moment none would heed,
+ Man's doom was linked no more to sever--
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ It is the calm and solemn night!
+ A thousand bells ring out, and throw
+ Their joyous peals abroad, and smite
+ The darkness--charmed and holy now!
+ The night that erst no name had worn,
+ To it a happy name is given;
+ For in that stable lay new-born,
+ The peaceful Prince of Earth and Heaven,
+ In the solemn midnight,
+ Centuries ago!
+
+ALFRED DOMETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TRYSTE NOEL.
+
+
+ The Ox he openeth wide the Doore
+ And from the Snowe he calls her inne,
+ And he hath seen her smile therefore,
+ Our Ladye without Sinne.
+ Now soone from Sleepe
+ A Starre shall leap,
+ And soone arrive both King and Hinde;
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ But oh, the place co'd I but finde!
+
+ The Ox hath husht his voyce and bent
+ Trewe eyes of Pitty ore the Mow,
+ And on his lovelie Neck, forspent,
+ The Blessed lays her Browe.
+ Around her feet
+ Full Warme and Sweete
+ His bowerie Breath doth meeklie dwell;
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ But sore am I with Vaine Travel!
+
+ The Ox is host in Juda's stall,
+ And Host of more than onelie one.
+ For close she gathereth withal
+ Our Lorde her littel Sonne.
+ Glad Hinde and King
+ Their Gyfte may bring,
+ But wo'd to-night my Teares were there,
+ _Amen, Amen_:
+ Between her Bosom and His hayre!
+
+LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT.
+
+ A BALLAD.
+
+
+ There's a legend that's told of a gypsy who dwelt
+ In the lands where the pyramids be;
+ And her robe was embroidered with stars, and her belt
+ With devices right wondrous to see;
+ And she lived in the days when our Lord was a child
+ On his mother's immaculate breast;
+ When he fled from his foes,--when to Egypt exiled,
+ He went down with Saint Joseph the blest.
+
+ This Egyptian held converse with magic, methinks,
+ And the future was given to her gaze;
+ For an obelisk marked her abode, and a sphinx
+ On her threshold kept vigil always.
+ She was pensive and ever alone, nor was seen
+ In the haunts of the dissolute crowd;
+ But communed with the ghosts of the Pharaohs, I ween,
+ Or with visitors wrapped in a shroud.
+
+ And there came an old man from the desert one day,
+ With a maid on a mule by that road;
+ And a child on her bosom reclined, and the way
+ Let them straight to the gypsy's abode;
+ And they seemed to have travelled a wearisome path,
+ From thence many, many a league,--
+ From a tyrant's pursuit, from an enemy's wrath,
+ Spent with toil and o'ercome with fatigue.
+
+ And the gypsy came forth from her dwelling, and prayed
+ That the pilgrims would rest them awhile;
+ And she offered her couch to that delicate maid,
+ Who had come many, many a mile.
+ And she fondled the babe with affection's caress,
+ And she begged the old man would repose;
+ "Here the stranger," she said, "ever finds free access,
+ And the wanderer balm for his woes."
+
+ Then her guests from the glare of the noonday she led
+ To a seat in her grotto so cool;
+ Where she spread them a banquet of fruits, and a shed,
+ With a manger, was found for the mule;
+ With the wine of the palm-tree, with dates newly culled,
+ All the toil of the day she beguiled;
+ And with song in a language mysterious she lulled
+ On her bosom the wayfaring child.
+
+ When the gypsy anon in her Ethiop hand
+ Took the infant's diminutive palm,
+ O, 'twas fearful to see how the features she scanned
+ Of the babe in his slumbers so calm!
+ Well she noted each mark and each furrow that crossed
+ O'er the tracings of destiny's line:
+ "WHENCE CAME YE?" she cried, in astonishment lost,
+ "FOR THIS CHILD IS OF LINEAGE DIVINE!"
+
+ "From the village of Nazareth," Joseph replied,
+ "Where we dwelt in the land of the Jew,
+ We have fled from a tyrant whose garment is dyed
+ In the gore of the children he slew:
+ We were told to remain till an angel's command
+ Should appoint us the hour to return;
+ But till then we inhabit the foreigners' land,
+ And in Egypt we make our sojourn."
+
+ "Then ye tarry with me," cried the gypsy in joy,
+ "And ye make of my dwelling your home;
+ Many years have I prayed that the Israelite boy
+ (Blessed hope of the Gentiles!) would come."
+ And she kissed both the feet of the infant and knelt,
+ And adored him at once; then a smile
+ Lit the face of his mother, who cheerfully dwelt
+ With her host on the bank of the Nile.
+
+FRANCIS MAHONY (_Father Prout_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CANA.
+
+
+ Dear Friend! whose presence in the house,
+ Whose gracious word benign,
+ Could once, at Cana's wedding feast,
+ Change water into wine;
+
+ Come, visit us! and when dull work
+ Grows weary, line on line,
+ Revive our souls, and let us see
+ Life's water turned to wine.
+
+ Gay mirth shall deepen into joy,
+ Earth's hopes grow half divine,
+ When Jesus visits us, to make
+ Life's water glow as wine.
+
+ The social talk, the evening fire,
+ The homely household shrine,
+ Grow bright with angel visits, when
+ The Lord pours out the wine.
+
+ For when self-seeking turns to love,
+ Not knowing mine nor thine,
+ The miracle again is wrought,
+ And water turned to wine.
+JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOST SHEEP.
+
+ ("THE NINETY AND NINE.")
+
+
+ There were ninety and nine that safely lay
+ In the shelter of the fold;
+ But one was out on the hills away,
+ Far off from the gates of gold,
+ Away on the mountain wild and bare,
+ Away from the tender Shepherd's care.
+
+ "Lord, thou hast here thy ninety and nine:
+ Are they not enough for thee?"
+ But the Shepherd made answer: "'T is of mine
+ Has wandered away from me;
+ And although the road be rough and steep
+ I go to the desert to find my sheep."
+
+ But none of the ransomed ever knew
+ How deep were the waters crossed,
+ Nor how dark was the night that the Lord passed through
+ Ere he found his sheep that was lost.
+ Out in the desert he heard its cry--
+ Sick and helpless, and ready to die.
+
+ "Lord, whence are those blood-drops all the way,
+ That mark out the mountain track?"
+ "They were shed for one who had gone astray
+ Ere the Shepherd could bring him back."
+ "Lord, whence are thy hands so rent and torn?"
+ "They are pierced to-night by many a thorn."
+
+ But all through the mountains, thunder-riven,
+ And up from the rocky steep,
+ There rose a cry to the gate of heaven,
+ "Rejoice! I have found my sheep!"
+ And the angels echoed around the throne,
+ "Rejoice, for the Lord brings back his own!"
+
+ELIZABETH CECILIA CLEPHANE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DE SHEEPFOL'.
+
+
+ De massa ob de sheepfol',
+ Dat guards de sheepfol' bin,
+ Look out in de gloomerin' meadows,
+ Wha'r de long night rain begin--
+ So he call to de hirelin' shepa'd,
+ "Is my sheep, is dey all come in?"
+ Oh den, says de hirelin' shepa'd:
+ "Dey's some, dey's black and thin,
+ And some, dey's po' ol' wedda's;
+ But de res', dey's all brung in.
+ But de res', dey's all brung in."
+
+ Den de massa ob de sheepfol',
+ Dat guards de sheepfol' bin,
+ Goes down in the gloomerin' meadows,
+ Wha'r de long night rain begin--
+ So he le' down de ba's ob de sheepfol',
+ Callin' sof', "Come in. Come in."
+ Callin' sof', "Come in. Come in."
+
+ Den up t'ro' de gloomerin' meadows,
+ T'ro' de col' night rain and win',
+ And up t'ro' de gloomerin' rain-paf',
+ Wha'r de sleet fa' pie'cin' thin,
+ De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol',
+ Dey all comes gadderin' in.
+ De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol',
+ Dey all comes gadderin' in.
+
+SARAH PRATT M'LEAN GREENE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GOOD SHEPHERD WITH THE KID.
+
+
+ _He saves the sheep, the goats he doth not save._
+ So rang Tertullian's sentence, on the side
+ Of that unpitying Phrygian Sect which cried:
+ "Him can no fount of fresh forgiveness lave,
+
+ Who sins, once washed by the baptismal wave."--
+ So spake the fierce Tertullian. But she sighed,
+ The infant Church! of love she felt the tide
+ Stream on her from her Lord's yet recent grave.
+
+ And then she smiled; and in the Catacombs,
+ With eye suffused but heart inspired true,
+ On those walls subterranean, where she hid
+
+ Her head in ignominy, death, and tombs,
+ She her good Shepherd's hasty image drew--
+ And on his shoulders, not a lamb, a kid.
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO SAYINGS.
+
+
+ Two sayings of the Holy Scriptures beat
+ Like pulses in the Church's brow and breast;
+ And by them we find rest in our unrest,
+ And heart-deep in salt tears, do yet entreat
+ God's fellowship, as if on heavenly seat.
+ The first is _Jesus wept_, whereon is prest
+ Full many a sobbing face that drops its best
+ And sweetest waters on the record sweet:
+ And one is, where the Christ denied and scorned
+ _Looked upon Peter_. Oh, to render plain,
+ By help of having loved a little and mourned,
+ That look of sovran love and sovran pain
+ Which he who could not sin yet suffered, turned
+ On him who could reject but not sustain!
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BALLAD OF TREES AND THE MASTER.
+
+
+ Into the woods my Master went,
+ Clean forspent, forspent.
+ Into the woods my Master came,
+ Forspent with love and shame.
+ But the olives they were not blind to Him;
+ The little gray leaves were kind to Him;
+ The thorn-tree had a mind to Him
+ When into the woods He came.
+
+ Out of the woods my Master went,
+ And He was well content.
+ Out of the woods my Master came,
+ Content with death and shame.
+ When Death and Shame would woo Him last,
+ From under the trees they drew Him last:
+ 'Twas on a tree they slew Him--last,
+ When out of the woods He came.
+
+SIDNEY LANIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STABAT MATER DOLOROSA.
+
+
+ Stood the afflicted mother weeping,
+ Near the cross her station keeping
+ Whereon hung her Son and Lord;
+ Through whose spirit sympathizing,
+ Sorrowing and agonizing,
+ Also passed the cruel sword.
+
+ Oh! how mournful and distressed
+ Was that favored and most blessed
+ Mother of the only Son,
+ Trembling, grieving, bosom heaving,
+ While perceiving, scarce believing,
+ Pains of that Illustrious One!
+
+ Who the man, who, called a brother.
+ Would not weep, saw he Christ's mother
+ In such deep distress and wild?
+ Who could not sad tribute render
+ Witnessing that mother tender
+ Agonizing with her child?
+
+ For his people's sins atoning,
+ Him she saw in torments groaning,
+ Given to the scourger's rod;
+ Saw her darling offspring dying,
+ Desolate, forsaken, crying.
+ Yield his spirit up to God.
+
+ Make me feel thy sorrow's power,
+ That with thee I tears may shower,
+ Tender mother, fount of love!
+ Make my heart with love unceasing
+ Burn toward Christ the Lord, that pleasing
+ I may be to him above.
+
+ Holy mother, this be granted,
+ That the slain one's wounds be planted
+ Firmly in my heart to bide.
+ Of him wounded, all astounded--
+ Depths unbounded for me sounded--
+ All the pangs with me divide.
+
+ Make me weep with thee in union;
+ With the Crucified, communion
+ In his grief and suffering give;
+ Near the cross, with tears unfailing,
+ I would join thee in thy wailing
+ Here as long as I shall live.
+
+ Maid of maidens, all excelling!
+ Be not bitter, me repelling;
+ Make thou me a mourner too;
+ Make me bear about Christ's dying,
+ Share his passion, shame defying;
+ All his wounds in me renew.
+
+ Wound for wound be there created;
+ With the cross intoxicated
+ For thy Son's dear sake, I pray--
+ May I, fired with pure affection,
+ Virgin, have through thee protection
+ In the solemn Judgment Day.
+
+ Let me by the cross be warded,
+ By the death of Christ be guarded,
+ Nourished by divine supplies.
+ When the body death hath riven,
+ Grant that to the soul be given
+ Glories bright of Paradise.
+
+From the Latin of FRA JACOPONE.
+
+Translation of ABRAHAM COLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MYRRH-BEARERS.[A]
+
+
+ Three women crept at break of day
+ A-grope along the shadowy way
+ Where Joseph's tomb and garden lay.
+
+ With blanch of woe each face was white,
+ As the gray Orient's waxing light
+ Brought back upon their awe-struck sight
+
+ The sixth-day scene of anguish. Fast
+ The starkly standing cross they passed,
+ And, breathless, neared the gate at last.
+
+ Each on her throbbing bosom bore
+ A burden of such fragrant store
+ As never there had lain before.
+
+ Spices, the purest, richest, best,
+ That e'er the musky East possessed,
+ From Ind to Araby-the-Blest,
+
+ Had they with sorrow-riven hearts
+ Searched all Jerusalem's costliest marts
+ In quest of,--nards whose pungent arts
+
+ Should the dead sepulchre imbue
+ With vital odors through and through:
+ 'T was all their love had leave to do!
+
+ Christ did not need their gifts; and yet
+ Did either Mary once regret
+ Her offering? Did Salome fret
+
+ Over the unused aloes? Nay!
+ They counted not as waste, that day,
+ What they had brought their Lord. The way
+
+ Home seemed the path to heaven. They bare,
+ Thenceforth, about the robes they ware
+ The clinging perfume everywhere.
+
+ So, ministering as erst did these,
+ Go women forth by twos and threes
+ (Unmindful of their morning ease),
+
+ Through tragic darkness, murk and dim,
+ Where'er they see the faintest rim,
+ Of promise,--all for sake of him
+
+ Who rose from Joseph's tomb. They hold
+ It just such joy as those of old,
+ To tell the tale the Marys told.
+
+ Myrrh-bearers still,--at home, abroad,
+ What paths have holy women trod,
+ Burdened with votive gifts for God,--
+
+ Rare gifts whose chiefest worth was priced
+ By this one thought, that all sufficed:
+ Their spices had been bruised for Christ!
+
+MARGARET JUNKIN PRESTON.
+
+[Footnote A: _Myrophores_, a name given to the Marys, in Greek
+Christian art.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LITANY.
+
+
+ Saviour, when in dust to Thee
+ Low we bend the adoring knee;
+ When, repentant, to the skies
+ Scarce we lift our weeping eyes,--
+ O, by all Thy pains and woe
+ Suffered once for man below,
+ Bending from Thy throne on high,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thy helpless infant years;
+ By Thy life of want and tears;
+ By Thy days of sore distress
+ In the savage wilderness;
+ By the dread mysterious hour
+ Of the insulting tempter's power,--
+ Turn, O, turn a favoring eye,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By the sacred griefs that wept
+ O'er the grave where Lazarus slept;
+ By the boding tears that flowed
+ Over Salem's loved abode;
+ By the anguished sigh that told
+ Treachery lurked within Thy fold,--
+ From Thy seat above the sky
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thine hour of dire despair;
+ By Thine agony of prayer;
+ By the cross, the nail, the thorn,
+ Piercing spear, and torturing scorn;
+ By the gloom that veiled the skies
+ O'er the dreadful sacrifice,--
+ Listen to our humble cry,
+ Hear our solemn litany!
+
+ By Thy deep expiring groan;
+ By the sad sepulchral stone;
+ By the vault whose dark abode
+ Held in vain the rising God;
+ O, from earth to heaven restored,
+ Mighty, reascended Lord,--
+ Listen, listen to the cry
+ Of our solemn litany!
+
+SIR ROBERT GRANT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHRIST.
+
+
+ He might have reared a palace at a word,
+ Who sometimes had not where to lay His head.
+ Time was when He who nourished crowds with bread,
+ Would not one meal unto Himself afford.
+ He healed another's scratch, His own side bled;
+ Side, hands and feet with cruel piercings gored.
+ Twelve legions girded with angelic sword
+ Stood at His beck, the scorned and buffeted.
+ Oh, wonderful the wonders left undone!
+ Yet not more wonderful than those He wrought!
+ Oh, self-restraint, surpassing human thought!
+ To have all power, yet be as having none!
+ Oh, self-denying love, that thought alone
+ For needs of others, never for its own!
+
+RICHARD CHENEVIX TRENCH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ABIDE WITH ME.
+
+
+ Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide;
+ The darkness deepens: Lord, with me abide!
+ When other helpers fail, and comforts flee,
+ Help of the helpless, O abide with me!
+
+ Swift to its close ebbs out life's little day;
+ Earth's joys grow dim; its glories pass away:
+ Change and decay in all around I see;
+ O thou, who changest not, abide with me!
+
+ Not a brief glance I beg, a passing word.
+ But as thou dwelt with thy disciples, Lord,
+ Familiar, condescending, patient, free,--
+ Come, not to sojourn, but abide, with me!
+
+ Come not in terrors, as the King of kings;
+ But kind and good, with healing in thy wings:
+ Tears for all woes, a heart for every plea;
+ Come, Friend of sinners, and thus bide with me!
+
+ Thou on my head in early youth didst smile,
+ And, though rebellious and perverse meanwhile,
+ Thou hast not left me, oft as I left thee:
+ On to the close, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+ I need thy presence every passing hour.
+ What but thy grace can foil the Tempter's power?
+ Who like thyself my guide and stay can be?
+ Through cloud and sunshine, O abide with me!
+
+ I fear no foe with thee at hand to bless:
+ Ills have no weight, and tears no bitterness.
+ Where is death's sting, where, grave, thy victory?
+ I triumph still, if thou abide with me.
+
+ Hold thou thy cross before my closing eyes;
+ Shine through the gloom, and point me to the skies:
+ Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows flee:
+ In life and death, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+HENRY FRANCIS LYTE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DISCIPLES AFTER THE ASCENSION.
+
+
+ He is gone! beyond the skies,
+ A cloud receives him from our eyes:
+ Gone beyond the highest height
+ Of mortal gaze or angel's flight:
+ Through the veils of time and space,
+ Passed into the holiest place:
+ All the toil, the sorrow done,
+ All the battle fought and won.
+
+ He is gone; and we return,
+ And our hearts within us burn;
+ Olivet no more shall greet
+ With welcome shout his coming feet:
+ Never shall we track him more
+ On Gennesareth's glistening shore:
+ Never in that look or voice
+ Shall Zion's walls again rejoice.
+
+ He is gone; and we remain
+ In this world of sin and pain:
+ In the void which he has left,
+ On this earth of him bereft,
+ We have still his work to do,
+ We can still his path pursue:
+ Seek him both in friend and foe,
+ In ourselves his image show.
+
+ He is gone; we heard him say,
+ "Good that I should go away";
+ Gone is that dear form and face,
+ But not gone his present grace;
+ Though himself no more we see,
+ Comfortless we cannot be;
+ No! his Spirit still is ours,
+ Quickening, freshening all our powers.
+
+ He is gone; towards their goal
+ World and church must onward roll;
+ Far behind we leave the past,
+ Forward are our glances cast;
+ Still his words before us range
+ Through the ages, as they change:
+ Wheresoe'er the truth shall lead,
+ He will give whate'er we need.
+
+ He is gone; but we once more
+ Shall behold him as before,
+ In the heaven of heavens the same
+ As on earth he went and came.
+ In the many mansions there
+ Place for us he will prepare:
+ In that world, unseen, unknown,
+ He and we may yet be one.
+
+ He is gone; but not in vain,--
+ Wait until he comes again:
+ He is risen, he is not here;
+ Far above this earthly sphere:
+ Evermore in heart and mind,
+ Where our peace in him we find,
+ To our own eternal Friend,
+ Thitherward let us ascend.
+
+ARTHUR PENRHYN STANLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WRESTLING JACOB.
+
+
+ FIRST PART.
+
+ Come, O thou Traveller unknown,
+ Whom still I hold, but cannot see;
+ My company before is gone,
+ And I am left alone with thee;
+ With thee all night I mean to stay,
+ And wrestle till the break of day.
+
+ I need not tell thee who I am;
+ My sin and misery declare;
+ Thyself hast called me by my name;
+ Look on thy hands, and read it there;
+ But who, I ask thee, who art thou?
+ Tell me thy name, and tell me now.
+
+ In vain thou strugglest to get free;
+ I never will unloose my hold:
+ Art thou the Man that died for me?
+ The secret of thy love unfold;
+ Wrestling, I will not let thee go
+ Till I thy name, thy nature know.
+
+ Wilt thou not yet to me reveal
+ Thy new, unutterable name?
+ Tell me, I still beseech thee, tell;
+ To know it now resolved I am;
+ Wrestling, I will not let thee go
+ Till I thy name, thy nature know.
+
+ What though my shrinking flesh complain
+ And murmur to contend so long?
+ I rise superior to my pain;
+ When I am weak, then am I strong!
+ And when my all of strength shall fail,
+ I shall with the God-man prevail.
+
+
+ SECOND PART.
+
+ Yield to me now, for I am weak,
+ But confident in self-despair;
+ Speak to my heart, in blessings speak;
+ Be conquered by my instant prayer;
+ Speak, or thou never hence shalt move,
+ And tell me if thy name be Love.
+
+ 'T is Love! 't is Love! Thou diedst for me;
+ I hear thy whisper in my heart;
+ The morning breaks, the shadows flee;
+ Pure, universal Love thou art;
+ To me, to all, thy bowels move;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ My prayer hath power with God; the grace
+ Unspeakable I now receive;
+ Through faith I see thee face to face;
+ I see thee face to face and live!
+ In vain I have not wept and strove;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ I know thee, Saviour, who thou art,
+ Jesus, the feeble sinner's friend;
+ Nor wilt thou with the night depart,
+ But stay and love me to the end;
+ Thy mercies never shall remove;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ The Sun of Righteousness on me
+ Hath risen, with healing in his wings;
+ Withered my nature's strength; from thee
+ My soul its life and succor brings;
+ My help is all laid up above;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ Contented now upon my thigh
+ I halt till life's short journey end;
+ All helplessness, all weakness, I
+ On thee alone for strength depend;
+ Nor have I power from thee to move;
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+ Lame as I am, I take the prey;
+ Hell, earth, and sin with ease o'ercome;
+ I leap for joy, pursue my way,
+ And, as a bounding hart, fly home;
+ Through all eternity to prove
+ Thy nature and thy name is Love.
+
+CHARLES WESLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CONVERSION OF SAINT PAUL.
+
+
+ The midday sun, with fiercest glare,
+ Broods over the hazy, twinkling air;
+ Along the level sand
+ The palm-tree's shade unwavering lies,
+ Just as thy towers, Damascus, rise
+ To greet yon wearied band.
+
+ The leader of that martial crew
+ Seems bent some mighty deed to do,
+ So steadily he speeds,
+ With lips firm closed and fixed eye,
+ Like warrior when the fight is nigh,
+ Nor talk nor landscape heeds.
+
+ What sudden blaze is round him poured,
+ As though all Heaven's refulgent hoard
+ In one rich glory shone?
+ One moment,--and to earth he falls:
+ What voice his inmost heart appalls?--
+ Voice heard by him alone.
+
+ For to the rest both words and form
+ Seem lost in lightning and in storm,
+ While Saul, in wakeful trance,
+ Sees deep within that dazzling field
+ His persecuted Lord revealed
+ With keen yet pitying glance:
+
+ And hears the meek upbraiding call
+ As gently on his spirit fall,
+ As if the Almighty Son
+ Were prisoner yet in this dark earth,
+ Nor had proclaimed his royal birth,
+ Nor his great power begun.
+
+ "Ah! wherefore persecut'st thou me?"
+ He heard and saw, and sought to free
+ His strained eye from the sight:
+ But Heaven's high magic bound it there,
+ Still gazing, though untaught to bear
+ The insufferable light.
+
+ "Who art thou, Lord?" he falters forth:--
+ So shall Sin ask of heaven and earth
+ At the last awful day
+ "When did we see thee suffering nigh,
+ And passed thee with unheeding eye?
+ Great God of judgment, say!"
+
+ Ah! little dream our listless eyes
+ What glorious presence they despise
+ While, in our noon of life,
+ To power or fame we rudely press.--
+ Christ is at hand, to scorn or bless,
+ Christ suffers in our strife.
+
+ And though heaven's gates long since have closed,
+ And our dear Lord in bliss reposed,
+ High above mortal ken,
+ To every ear in every land
+ (Though meek ears only understand)
+ He speaks as he did then.
+
+ "Ah! wherefore persecute ye me?
+ 'T is hard, ye so in love should be
+ With your own endless woe.
+ Know, though at God's right hand I live,
+ I feel each wound ye reckless give
+ To the least saint below.
+
+ "I in your care my brethren left,
+ Not willing ye should be bereft
+ Of waiting on your Lord.
+ The meanest offering ye can make--
+ A drop of water--for love's sake,
+ In heaven, be sure, is stored."
+
+ Oh, by those gentle tones and dear,
+ When thou hast stayed our wild career,
+ Thou only hope of souls,
+ Ne'er let us cast one look behind,
+ But in the thought of Jesus find
+ What every thought controls.
+
+ As to thy last Apostle's heart
+ Thy lightning glance did then impart
+ Zeal's never-dying fire,
+ So teach us on thy shrine to lay
+ Our hearts, and let them day by day
+ Intenser blaze and higher.
+
+ And as each mild and winning note
+ (Like pulses that round harp-strings float
+ When the full strain is o'er)
+ Left lingering on his inward ear
+ Music, that taught, as death drew near,
+ Love's lesson more and more:
+
+ So, as we walk our earthly round,
+ Still may the echo of that sound
+ Be in our memory stored:
+ "Christians, behold your happy state;
+ Christ is in these who round you wait;
+ Make much of your dear Lord!"
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ROCK OF AGES."
+
+ "Such hymns are never forgotten. They cling to us through our
+ whole life. We carry them with us upon our journey. We sing
+ them in the forest. The workman follows the plough with sacred
+ songs. Children catch them, and singing only for the joy it
+ gives them now, are yet laying up for all their life food of
+ the sweetest joy."--HENRY WARD BEECHER.
+
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ Thoughtlessly the maiden sung.
+ Fell the words unconsciously
+ From her girlish, gleeful tongue;
+ Sang as little children sing;
+ Sang as sing the birds in June;
+ Fell the words like light leaves down
+ On the current of the tune,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee:"
+ Felt her soul no need to hide,--
+ Sweet the song as song could be,
+ And she had no thought beside;
+ All the words unheedingly
+ Fell from lips untouched by care,
+ Dreaming not that they might be
+ On some other lips a prayer,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ 'T was a woman sung them now,
+ Pleadingly and prayerfully;
+ Every word her heart did know.
+ Rose the song as storm-tossed bird
+ Beats with weary wing the air,
+ Every note with sorrow stirred,
+ Every syllable a prayer,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"--
+ Lips grown aged sung the hymn
+ Trustingly and tenderly,
+ Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim,--
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee."
+ Trembling though the voice and low,
+ Rose the sweet strain peacefully
+ Like a river in its flow;
+ Sung as only they can sing
+ Who life's thorny path have passed;
+ Sung as only they can sing
+ Who behold the promised rest,--
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+ "Rock of Ages, cleft for me,"
+ Sung above a coffin lid;
+ Underneath, all restfully,
+ All life's joys and sorrows hid.
+ Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul!
+ Nevermore from wind or tide,
+ Nevermore from billow's roll,
+ Wilt thou need thyself to hide.
+ Could the sightless, sunken eyes,
+ Closed beneath the soft gray hair,
+ Could the mute and stiffened lips
+ Move again in pleading prayer,
+ Still, aye still, the words would be,--
+ "Let me hide myself in Thee."
+
+EDWARD H. RICH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ART THOU WEARY?
+
+
+ Art thou weary, art thou languid,
+ Art thou sore distressed?
+ "Come to Me," saith One, "and coming,
+ Be at rest."
+
+ Hath He marks to lead me to Him,
+ If He be my Guide?
+ "In His feet and hands are wound-prints,
+ And His side."
+
+ Is there diadem, as Monarch,
+ That His brow adorns?
+ "Yea, a crown, in very surety,
+ But of thorns."
+
+ If I find Him, if I follow,
+ What His guerdon here?
+ "Many a sorrow, many a labor,
+ Many a tear."
+
+ If I still hold closely to Him,
+ What hath He at last?
+ "Sorrow vanquished, labor ended,
+ Jordan passed."
+
+ If I ask Him to receive me,
+ Will He say me nay?
+ "Not till earth, and not till heaven
+ Pass away."
+
+ Finding, following, keeping, struggling,
+ Is He sure to bless?
+ "Saints, apostles, prophets, martyrs,
+ Answer, Yes."
+
+From the Latin of SAINT STEPHEN THE SABAITE.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW.
+
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view,
+ And days are dark, and friends are few,
+ On Him I lean, who, not in vain,
+ Experienced every human pain;
+ He sees my wants, allays my fears.
+ And counts and treasures up my tears.
+ If aught should tempt my soul to stray
+ From heavenly wisdom's narrow way,
+ To fly the good I would pursue,
+ Or do the sin I would not do,--
+ Still He who felt temptation's power
+ Shall guard me in that dangerous hour.
+
+ If wounded love my bosom swell,
+ Deceived by those I prized too well,
+ He shall His pitying aid bestow
+ Who felt on earth severer woe,
+ At once betrayed, denied, or fled,
+ By those who shared His daily bread.
+
+ If vexing thoughts within me rise,
+ And sore dismayed my spirit dies,
+ Still He who once vouchsafed to bear
+ The sickening anguish of despair
+ Shall sweetly soothe, shall gently dry,
+ The throbbing heart, the streaming eye.
+
+ When sorrowing o'er some stone I bend,
+ Which covers what was once a friend,
+ And from his voice, his hand, his smile,
+ Divides me for a little while;
+ Thou, Saviour, mark'st the tears I shed,
+ For Thou didst weep o'er Lazarus dead.
+
+ And oh, when I have safely past
+ Through every conflict but the last,
+ Still, still unchanging, watch beside
+ My painful bed, for Thou hast died;
+ Then point to realms of cloudless day,
+ And wipe the latest tear away.
+
+SIR ROBERT GRANT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM.
+
+
+ When, marshalled on the nightly plain,
+ The glittering host bestud the sky,
+ One star alone, of all the train,
+ Can fix the sinner's wandering eye.
+
+ Hark! hark! to God the chorus breaks,
+ From every host, from every gem:
+ But one alone the Saviour speaks,
+ It is the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ Once on the raging seas I rode,
+ The storm was loud, the night was dark,
+ The ocean yawned, and rudely blowed
+ The wind that tossed my foundering bark.
+
+ Deep horror then my vitals froze,
+ Death-struck, I ceased the tide to stem;
+ When suddenly a star arose,--
+ It was the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ It was my guide, my light, my all,
+ It bade my dark forebodings cease;
+ And through the storm and dangers' thrall
+ It led me to the port of peace.
+
+ Now safely moored, my perils o'er,
+ I'll sing, first in night's diadem,
+ Forever and forevermore,
+ The Star!--the Star of Bethlehem!
+
+HENRY KIRKE WHITE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE TO CHRIST.
+
+ FROM "AN HYMNE OF HEAVENLY LOVE."
+
+
+ With all thy hart, with all thy soule and mind,
+ Thou must him love, and his beheasts embrace;
+ All other loves, with which the world doth blind
+ Weake fancies, and stirre up affections base,
+ Thou must renounce and utterly displace,
+ And give thy selfe unto him full and free,
+ That full and freely gave himselfe to thee.
+
+ Then shalt thou feele thy spirit so possest,
+ And ravisht with devouring great desire
+ Of his deare selfe, that shall thy feeble brest
+ Inflame with love, and set thee all on fire
+ With burning zeale, through every part entire,
+ That in no earthly thing thou shalt delight,
+ But in his sweet and amiable sight.
+
+ Thenceforth all worlds desire will in thee dye,
+ And all earthes glorie, on which men do gaze,
+ Seeme durt and drosse in thy pure-sighted eye,
+ Compared to that celestiall beauties blaze,
+ Whose glorious beames all fleshly sense doth daze
+ With admiration of their passing light,
+ Blinding the eyes, and lumining the spright.
+
+ Then shall thy ravisht soule inspired bee
+ With heavenly thoughts farre above humane skil,
+ And thy bright radiant eyes shall plainely see
+ The idee of his pure glorie present still
+ Before thy face, that all thy spirits shall fill
+ With sweet enragement of celestiall love,
+ Kindled through sight of those faire things above.
+
+EDMUND SPENSER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE.
+
+
+ O thou great Friend to all the sons of men,
+ Who once appeared in humblest guise below,
+ Sin to rebuke, to break the captive's chain,
+ And call thy brethren forth from want and woe,--
+
+ We look to thee! thy truth is still the Light
+ Which guides the nations, groping on their way,
+ Stumbling and falling in disastrous night,
+ Yet hoping ever for the perfect day.
+
+ Yes; thou art still the Life, thou art the Way
+ The holiest know; Light, Life, the Way of heaven!
+
+ And they who dearest hope and deepest pray,
+ Toil by the Light, Life, Way, which thou hast given.
+
+THEODORE PARKER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+KNOCKING, EVER KNOCKING.
+
+ "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock."
+ --REVELATIONS iii. 20.
+
+
+ Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ Who is there?
+ 'T is a pilgrim, strange and kingly,
+ Never such was seen before;--
+ Ah, sweet soul, for such a wonder,
+ Undo the door.
+ No,--that door is hard to open;
+ Hinges rusty, latch is broken;
+ Bid Him go.
+ Wherefore with that knocking dreary
+ Scare the sleep from one so weary?
+ Say Him, no.
+
+ Knocking, knocking, ever knocking?
+ What! Still there?
+ O sweet soul, but once behold Him,
+ With the glory-crowned hair;
+ And those eyes, so strange and tender,
+ Waiting there;
+ Open! Open! Once behold Him,
+ Him so fair.
+
+ Ah, that door! Why wilt thou vex me,
+ Coming ever to perplex me?
+ For the key is stiffly rusty,
+ And the bolt is clogged and dusty;
+ Many-fingered ivy vine
+ Seals it fast with twist and twine;
+ Weeds of years and years before
+ Choke the passage of that door.
+
+ Knocking! knocking! What? Still knocking?
+ He still there?
+ What's the hour? The night is waning--
+ In my heart a drear complaining,
+ And a chilly, sad unrest.
+ Ah, this knocking! It disturbs me!
+ Scares my sleep with dreams unblest!
+ Give me rest,
+ Rest--ah, rest!
+
+ Rest, dear soul, He longs to give thee;
+ Thou hast only dreamed of pleasure,
+ Dreamed of gifts and golden treasure,
+ Dreamed of jewels in thy keeping,
+ Waked to weariness of weeping;--
+ Open to thy soul's one Lover,
+ And thy night of dreams is over,--
+ The true gifts He brings have seeming
+ More than all thy faded dreaming!
+
+ Did she open? Doth she? Will she?
+ So, as wondering we behold,
+ Grows the picture to a sign.
+ Pressed upon your soul and mine;
+ For in every breast that liveth
+ Is that strange, mysterious door;--
+ The forsaken and betangled,
+ Ivy-gnarled and weed-bejangled,
+ Dusty, rusty, and forgotten;--
+ There the pierced hand still knocketh,
+ And with ever patient watching,
+ With the sad eyes true and tender,
+ With the glory-crowned hair,--
+ Still a God is waiting there.
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO-MORROW.
+
+
+ Lord, what am I, that, with unceasing care,
+ Thou didst seek after me,--that Thou didst wait,
+ Wet with unhealthy dews, before my gate,
+ And pass the gloomy nights of winter there?
+ O, strange delusion, that I did not greet
+ Thy blest approach! and, O, to heaven how lost,
+ If my ingratitude's unkindly frost
+ Has chilled the bleeding wounds upon Thy feet!
+ How oft my guardian angel gently cried,
+ "Soul, from thy casement look, and thou shalt see
+ How He persists to knock and wait for thee!"
+ And, O, how often to that voice of sorrow,
+ "To-morrow we will open." I replied!
+ And when the morrow came, I answered still, "To-morrow."
+
+From the Spanish of LOPE DE VEGA.
+
+Translation of H.W. LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE.
+
+
+ I gave my life for thee,
+ My precious blood I shed
+ That thou mightst ransomed be,
+ And quickened from the dead.
+ I gave my life for thee;
+ What hast thou given for me?
+
+ I spent long years for thee
+ In weariness and woe,
+ That an eternity
+ Of joy thou mightest know.
+ I spent long years for thee;
+ Hast thou spent one for me?
+
+ My Father's home of light,
+ My rainbow-circled throne,
+ I left, for earthly night,
+ For wanderings sad and lone.
+ I left it all for thee;
+ Hast thou left aught for me?
+
+ I suffered much for thee,
+ More than thy tongue may tell
+ Of bitterest agony,
+ To rescue thee from hell.
+ I suffered much for thee;
+ What canst thou bear for me?
+
+ And I have brought to thee,
+ Down from my home above,
+ Salvation full and free,
+ My pardon and my love.
+ Great gifts I brought to thee;
+ What hast thou brought to me?
+
+ Oh, let thy life be given,
+ Thy years for him be spent,
+ World-fetters all be riven,
+ And joy with suffering blent;
+ I gave myself for thee:
+ Give thou thyself to me!
+
+FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JESUS SHALL REIGN.
+
+
+ Jesus shall reign where'er the sun
+ Does his successive journeys run,--
+ His kingdom spread from shore to shore,
+ Till moons shall wax and wane no more.
+
+ From north to south the princes meet
+ To pay their homage at His feet,
+ While western empires own their Lord,
+ And savage tribes attend His word.
+
+ To Him shall endless prayer be made,
+ And endless praises crown His head;
+ His name like sweet perfume shall rise
+ With every morning sacrifice.
+
+ People and realms of every tongue
+ Dwell on His love with sweetest song,
+ And infant voices shall proclaim
+ Their early blessings on His name.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MESSIAH.
+
+ A SACRED ECLOGUE, IN IMITATION OF VIRGIL'S POLLIO.
+
+
+ Ye nymphs of Solyma! begin the song:
+ To heavenly themes sublimer strains belong.
+ The mossy fountains and the sylvan shades,
+ The dreams of Pindus and th' Aonian maids,
+ Delight no more--O thou my voice inspire
+ Who touched Isaiah's hallowed lips with fire!
+ Rapt into future times, the bard begun:
+ A Virgin shall conceive, a Virgin bear a Son!
+ From Jesse's root behold a branch arise,
+ Whose sacred flower with fragrance fills the skies:
+ Th' ethereal spirit o'er its leaves shall move,
+ And on its top descends the mystic Dove.
+ Ye Heavens! from high the dewy nectar pour,
+ And in soft silence shed the kindly shower!
+ The sick and weak the healing plant shall aid,
+ From storm a shelter, and from heat a shade.
+ All crimes shall cease, and ancient frauds shall fail;
+ Returning Justice lift aloft her scale;
+ Peace o'er the world her olive wand extend,
+ And white-robed Innocence from Heaven descend.
+ Swift fly the years, and rise th' expected morn!
+ Oh spring to light, auspicious Babe, be born!
+ See, Nature hastes her earliest wreaths to bring,
+ With all the incense of the breathing spring:
+ See lofty Lebanon his head advance,
+ See nodding forests on the mountains dance:
+ See spicy clouds from lowly Saron rise,
+ And Carmel's flowery top perfumes the skies!
+ Hark! a glad voice the lonely desert cheers:
+ Prepare the way! a God, a God appears!
+ A God, a God! the vocal hills reply,
+ The rocks proclaim th' approaching Deity.
+ Lo, Earth receives him from the bending skies!
+ Sink down, ye mountains! and ye valleys, rise!
+ With heads declined, ye cedars, homage pay!
+ Be smooth, ye rocks! ye rapid floods, give way!
+ The Saviour comes! by ancient bards foretold:
+ Hear him, ye deaf! and all ye blind, behold!
+ He from thick films shall purge the visual ray,
+ And on the sightless eyeball pour the day:
+ 'Tis he th' obstructed paths of sound shall clear
+ And bid new music charm th' unfolding ear:
+ The dumb shall sing, the lame his crutch forego,
+ And leap exulting like the bounding roe.
+ No sigh, no murmur, the wide world shall hear.
+ From every face he wipes off every tear.
+ In adamantine chains shall Death be bound.
+ And Hell's grim tyrant feel th' eternal wound.
+ As the good shepherd tends his fleecy care,
+ Seeks freshest pasture, and the purest air,
+ Explores the lost, the wandering sheep directs,
+ By day o'ersees them, and by night protects;
+ The tender lambs he raises in his arms,
+ Feeds from his hand, and in his bosom warms:
+ Thus shall mankind his guardian care engage,
+ The promised Father of the future age.
+ No more shall nation against nation rise,
+ Nor ardent warriors meet with hateful eyes,
+ Nor fields with gleaming steel be covered o'er,
+ The brazen trumpets kindle rage no more;
+ But useless lances into scythes shall bend,
+ And the broad falchion in a ploughshare end.
+ Then palaces shall rise; the joyful son
+ Shall finish what his short-lived sire begun;
+ Their vines a shadow to their race shall yield.
+ And the same hand that sowed, shall reap the field.
+ The swain in barren deserts with surprise
+ Sees lilies spring, and sudden verdure rise;
+ And starts, amidst the thirsty wilds, to hear
+ New falls of water murmuring in his ear.
+ On rifted rocks, the dragon's late abodes,
+ The green reed trembles, and the bulrush nods.
+ Waste sandy valleys, once perplexed with thorn,
+ The spiry fir and shapely box adorn:
+ To leafless shrubs the flowery palms succeed,
+ And odorous myrtle to the noisome weed.
+ The lambs with wolves shall graze the verdant mead
+ And boys in flowery bands the tiger lead:
+ The steer and lion at one crib shall meet,
+ And harmless serpents lick the pilgrim's feet.
+ The smiling infant in his hand shall take
+ The crested basilisk and speckled snake,
+ Pleased, the green lustre of the scales survey,
+ And with their forky tongue shall innocently play.
+ Rise, crowned with light, imperial Salem, rise!
+ Exalt thy towery head, and lift thy eyes!
+ See a long race thy spacious courts adorn:
+ See future sons and daughters yet unborn,
+ In crowding ranks on every side arise,
+ Demanding life, impatient for the skies!
+ See barbarous nations at thy gates attend,
+ Walk in thy light, and in thy temple bend!
+ See thy bright altars thronged with prostrate kings,
+ And heaped with products of Sabean springs!
+ For thee Idume's spicy forests blow,
+ And seeds of gold in Ophir's mountains glow.
+ See Heaven his sparkling portals wide display,
+ And break upon thee in a flood of day!
+ No more the rising Sun shall gild the morn,
+ Nor evening Cynthia fill her silver horn;
+ But lost, dissolved in thy superior rays,
+ One tide of glory, one unclouded blaze
+ O'erflow thy courts: the Light himself shall shine
+ Revealed, and God's eternal day be thine!
+ The seas shall waste, the skies in smoke decay,
+ Rocks fall to dust, and mountains melt away!
+ But fixed his word, his saving power remains;
+ Thy realm for ever lasts, thy own Messiah reigns!
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIES IRAE.
+
+ "That day, a day of wrath, a day of trouble and distress,
+ a day of wasteness and desolation, a day of darkness and
+ gloominess, a day of clouds and thick darkness, a day of the
+ trumpet and alarm against the fenced cities, and against the
+ high towers!"--ZEPHANIAH i. 15, 16.
+
+
+ Day of vengeance, without morrow!
+ Earth shall end in flame and sorrow,
+ As from Saint and Seer we borrow.
+
+ Ah! what terror is impending,
+ When the Judge is seen descending,
+ And each secret veil is rending!
+
+ To the throne, the trumpet sounding,
+ Through the sepulchres resounding,
+ Summons all, with voice astounding.
+
+ Death and Nature, mazed, are quaking,
+ When, the grave's long slumber breaking,
+ Man to judgment is awaking.
+
+ On the written Volume's pages,
+ Life is shown in all its stages--
+ Judgment-record of past ages.
+
+ Sits the Judge, the raised arraigning,
+ Darkest mysteries explaining,
+ Nothing unavenged remaining.
+
+ What shall I then say, unfriended,
+ By no advocate attended,
+ When the just are scarce defended?
+
+ King of majesty tremendous,
+ By thy saving grace defend us,
+ Fount of pity, safety send us!
+
+ Holy Jesus, meek, forbearing,
+ For my sins the death-crown wearing,
+ Save me, in that day, despairing!
+
+ Worn and weary, thou hast sought me;
+ By thy cross and passion bought me--
+ Spare the hope thy labors brought me!
+
+ Righteous Judge of retribution,
+ Give, O give me absolution
+ Ere the day of dissolution!
+
+ As a guilty culprit groaning,
+ Flushed my face, my errors owning,
+ Hear. O God, Thy suppliant moaning!
+
+ Thou to Mary gav'st remission,
+ Heard'st the dying thief's petition,
+ Bad'st me hope in my contrition.
+
+ In my prayers no worth discerning,
+ Yet on me Thy favor turning,
+ Save me from that endless burning!
+
+ Give me, when Thy sheep confiding
+ Thou art from the goals dividing.
+ On Thy right a place abiding!
+
+ When the wicked are rejected,
+ And by bitter flames subjected,
+ Call me forth with Thine elected!
+
+ Low in supplication bending.
+ Heart as though with ashes blending;
+ Cure for me when all is ending.
+
+ When on that dread day of weeping
+ Guilty man in ashes sleeping
+ Wakes to his adjudication,
+ Save him, God! from condemnation!
+
+From the Latin of THOMAS A CELANO.
+
+Translation of JOHN A. DIX. [A]
+
+[Footnote A: General Dix's first translation of the "Dies Irae" was
+made in 1863; the revised version (given above) appeared in 1875.
+Bayard Taylor wrote of the earlier one: "I have ... heretofore sought
+in vain to find an adequate translation. Those which reproduced the
+spirit neglected the form, and _vice versa_. There can be no higher
+praise for yours than to say that it preserves both."]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY GOD, I LOVE THEE.
+
+
+ My God, I love thee! not because
+ I hope for heaven thereby;
+ Nor because those who love thee not
+ Must burn eternally.
+
+ Thou, O my Jesus, thou didst me
+ Upon the cross embrace!
+ For me didst bear the nails and spear,
+ And manifold disgrace,
+
+ And griefs and torments numberless,
+ And sweat of agony,
+ Yea, death itself,--and all for one
+ That was thine enemy.
+
+ Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ,
+ Should I not love thee well?
+ Not for the hope of winning heaven,
+ Nor of escaping hell;
+
+ Not with the hope of gaining aught,
+ Not seeking a reward;
+ But as thyself hast loved me,
+ O everlasting Lord!
+
+ E'en so I love thee, and will love,
+ And in thy praise will sing,--
+ Solely because thou art my God,
+ And my eternal King.
+
+From the Latin of ST. FRANCIS XAVIER.
+
+Translation of EDWARD CASWALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VENT CREATOR SPIRITUS.
+
+ [Sometimes attributed to the Emperor Charlemagne. The better
+ opinion, however, inclines to Pope Gregory I., called the
+ Great, as the author, and fixes its origin somewhere in the
+ sixth century.]
+
+
+ Creator Spirit, by whose aid
+ The world's foundations first were laid,
+ Come visit every pious mind.
+ Come pour thy joys on human kind;
+ From sin and sorrow set us free,
+ And make thy temples worthy thee.
+
+ O source of uncreated light.
+ The Father's promised Paraclete!
+ Thrice holy fount, thrice holy fire.
+ Our hearts with heavenly love inspire;
+ Come, and thy sacred unction bring,
+ To sanctify us while we sing.
+
+ Plenteous of grace, descend from high,
+ Rich in thy seven-fold energy!
+ Thou strength of his almighty hand.
+ Whose power does heaven and earth command!
+ Proceeding Spirit, our defence,
+ Who dost the gifts of tongues dispense,
+ And crown'st thy gift with eloquence!
+
+ Refine and purge our earthly parts;
+ But, O, inflame and fire our hearts!
+ Our frailties help, our vice control,
+ Submit the senses to the soul;
+ And when rebellious they are grown,
+ Then lay thy hand and hold 'em down.
+
+ Chase from our minds the infernal foe,
+ And peace, the fruit of love, bestow;
+ And, lest our feet should step astray,
+ Protect and guide us on the way.
+
+ Make us eternal truths receive,
+ And practise all that we believe;
+ Give us thyself, that we may see
+ The Father and the Son by thee.
+
+ Immortal honor, endless fame,
+ Attend the Almighty Father's name;
+ The Saviour Son be glorified,
+ Who for lost man's redemption died;
+ And equal adoration be,
+ Eternal Paraclete, to thee.
+
+From the Latin of ST. GREGORY.
+
+Translation of JOHN DRYDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VENI SANCTE SPIRITUS.
+
+ [Written in the tenth century by Robert II., the gentle son
+ of Hugh Capet. It is often mentioned as second in rank to the
+ _Dies Irae_.]
+
+
+ Come, Holy Ghost! thou fire divine!
+ From highest heaven on us down shine!
+ Comforter, be thy comfort mine!
+
+ Come, Father of the poor, to earth;
+ Come, with thy gifts of precious worth;
+ Come Light of all of mortal birth!
+
+ Thou rich in comfort! Ever blest
+ The heart where thou art constant guest,
+ Who giv'st the heavy-laden rest.
+
+ Come, thou in whom our toil is sweet,
+ Our shadow in the noonday heat,
+ Before whom mourning flieth fleet.
+
+ Bright Sun of Grace! thy sunshine dart
+ On all who cry to thee apart,
+ And fill with gladness every heart.
+
+ Whate'er without thy aid is wrought,
+ Or skilful deed, or wisest thought,
+ God counts it vain and merely naught.
+
+ O cleanse us that we sin no more.
+ O'er parched souls thy waters pour;
+ Heal the sad heart that acheth sore.
+
+ Thy will be ours in all our ways;
+ O melt the frozen with thy rays;
+ Call home the lost in error's maze.
+
+ And grant us, Lord, who cry to thee,
+ And hold the Faith in unity,
+ Thy precious gifts of charity;
+
+ That we may live in holiness,
+ And find in death our happiness,
+ And dwell with thee in lasting bliss!
+
+From the Latin of KING ROBERT II. OF FRANCE.
+
+Translation of CATHARINE WINKWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O FIRE OF GOD, THE COMFORTER.
+
+ "O IGNIS SPIRITUS PARACLITI."
+
+
+ O fire of God, the Comforter, O life of all that live,
+ Holy art thou to quicken us, and holy, strength to give:
+ To heal the broken-hearted ones, their sorest wounds to bind,
+ O Spirit of all holiness, O Lover of mankind!
+ O sweetest taste within the breast, O grace upon us poured,
+ That saintly hearts may give again their perfume to the Lord.
+ O purest fountain! we can see, clear mirrored in thy streams,
+ That God brings home the wanderers, that God the lost redeems.
+ O breastplate strong to guard our life, O bond of unity,
+ O dwelling-place of righteousness, save all who trust in thee:
+ Defend those who in dungeon dark are prisoned by the foe,
+ And, for thy will is aye to save, let thou the captives go.
+ O surest way, that through the height and through the lowest deep
+ And through the earth dost pass, and all in firmest union keep;
+ From thee the clouds and ether move, from thee the moisture flows,
+ From thee the waters draw their rills, and earth with verdure glows,
+ And thou dost ever teach the wise, and freely on them pour
+ The inspiration of thy gifts, the gladness of thy lore.
+ All praise to thee, O joy of life, O hope and strength, we raise,
+ Who givest us the prize of light, who art thyself all praise.
+
+From the Latin of ST. HILDEGARDE.
+
+Translation of R.F. LITTLEDALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HOLY SPIRIT.
+
+
+ In the hour of my distress,
+ When temptations me oppress,
+ And when I my sins confess,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When I lie within my bed,
+ Sick at heart, and sick in head,
+ And with doubts discomforted,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the house doth sigh and weep,
+ And the world is drowned in sleep,
+ Yet mine eyes the watch do keep,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the artless doctor sees
+ No one hope but of his fees,
+ And his skill runs on the lees,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When his potion and his pill
+ Has or none or little skill,
+ Meet for nothing but to kill,--
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the passing-bell doth toll,
+ And the Furies, in a shoal,
+ Come to fright a parting soul,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the tapers now burn blue,
+ And the comforters are few,
+ And that number more than true,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the priest his last hath prayed,
+ And I nod to what is said
+ 'Cause my speech is now decayed,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When, God knows, I'm tost about
+ Either with despair or doubt,
+ Yet before the glass be out,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the tempter me pursu'th
+ With the sins of all my youth,
+ And half damns me with untruth,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the dames and hellish cries
+ Fright mine ears, and fright mine eyes,
+ And all terrors me surprise,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ When the judgment is revealed,
+ And that opened which was sealed,--
+ When to thee I have appealed,
+ Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPE OF THE HUMAN HEART.
+
+ FROM "ANIMA MUNDI."
+
+
+ God is good.
+ And flight is destined for the callow wing,
+ And the high appetite implies the food,
+ And souls most reach the level whence they spring;
+ O Life of very life! set free our powers,
+ Hasten the travail of the yearning hours.
+
+ Thou, to whom old Philosophy bent low,
+ To the wise few mysteriously revealed;
+ Thou, whom each humble Christian worships now,
+ In the poor hamlet and the open field:
+ Once an idea, now Comforter and Friend,
+ Hope of the human heart, descend, descend!
+
+RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES. (LORD HOUGHTON.)
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+PRAYER AND ASPIRATION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT IS PRAYER?
+
+
+ Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
+ Uttered or unexpressed--
+ The motion of a hidden fire
+ That trembles in the breast.
+
+ Prayer is the burthen of a sigh,
+ The falling of a tear--
+ The upward glancing of an eye,
+ When none but God is near.
+
+ Prayer is the simplest form of speech
+ That infant lips can try--
+ Prayer the sublimest strains that reach
+ The majesty on high.
+
+ Prayer is the contrite sinner's voice
+ Returning from his ways,
+ While angels in their songs rejoice,
+ And cry, "Behold he prays!"
+
+ Prayer is the Christian's vital breath--
+ The Christian's native air--
+ His watchword at the gates of death--
+ He enters heaven with prayer.
+
+ The saints in prayer appear as one
+ In word, and deed, and mind,
+ While with the Father and the Son
+ Sweet fellowship they find.
+
+ Nor prayer is made by man alone--
+ The Holy Spirit pleads--
+ And Jesus, on the eternal throne,
+ For shiners intercedes.
+
+ O Thou by whom we come to God--
+ The life, the truth, the way!
+ The path of prayer Thyself hast trod;
+ Lord, teach us how to pray!
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TIME FOR PRAYER.
+
+
+ When is the time for prayer?
+ With the first beams that light the morning's sky,
+ Ere for the toils of day thou dost prepare,
+ Lift up thy thoughts on high;
+ Commend the loved ones to his watchful care:
+ Morn is the time for prayer!
+
+ And in the noontide hour,
+ If worn by toil, or by sad cares oppressed,
+ Then unto God thy spirit's sorrow pour,
+ And he will give thee rest:--
+ Thy voice shall reach him through the fields of air:
+ Noon is the time for prayer!
+
+ When the bright sun hath set,--
+ Whilst yet eve's glowing colors deck the skies;--
+ When the loved, at home, again thou 'st met,
+ Then let the prayer arise
+ For those who in thy joys and sorrow share:
+ Eve is the time for prayer!
+
+ And when the stars come forth,--
+ When to the trusting heart sweet hopes are given,
+ And the deep stillness of the hour gives birth
+ To pure, bright dreams of heaven,--
+ Kneel to thy God--ask strength, life's ills to bear:
+ Night is the time for prayer!
+
+ When is the time for prayer?
+ In every hour, while life is spared to thee--
+ In crowds or solitudes--in joy or care--
+ Thy thoughts should heavenward flee.
+ At home--at morn and eve--with loved ones there,
+ Bend thou the knee in prayer!
+
+G. BENNETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SEASONS OF PRAYER.
+
+
+ To prayer, to prayer;--for the morning breaks,
+ And earth in her Maker's smile awakes.
+ His light is on all below and above,--
+ The light of gladness, and life, and love.
+ Oh, then, on the breath of this early air
+ Send upward the incense of grateful prayer.
+
+ To prayer;--for the glorious sun is gone,
+ And the gathering darkness of night comes on;
+ Like a curtain from God's kind hand it flows,
+ To shade the couch where his children impose.
+ Then kneel, while the watching stars are bright,
+ And give your last thoughts to the Guardian of night.
+
+ To prayer;--for the day that God has blest
+ Comes tranquilly on with its welcome rest.
+ It speaks of creation's early bloom;
+ It speaks of the Prince who burst the tomb.
+ Then summon the spirit's exalted powers,
+ And devote to Heaven the hallowed hours.
+
+ There are smiles and tears in the mother's eyes,
+ For her new-born infant beside her lies.
+ Oh, hour of bliss! when the heart o'erflows
+ With rapture a mother only knows.
+ Let it gush forth in words of fervent prayer;
+ Let it swell up to Heaven for her precious care.
+
+ There are smiles and tears in that gathering band,
+ Where the heart is pledged with the trembling hand:
+ What trying thoughts in her bosom swell,
+ As the bride bids parents and home farewell!
+ Kneel down by the side of the tearful pair,
+ And strengthen the perilous hour with prayer.
+
+ Kneel down by the dying sinner's side,
+ And pray for his soul through Him who died.
+ Large drops of anguish are thick on his brow;
+ Oh, what are earth and its pleasures now!
+ And what shall assuage his dark despair,
+ But the penitent cry of humble prayer?
+
+ Kneel down by the couch of departing faith,
+ And hear the last words the believer saith.
+ He has bidden adieu to his earthly friends;
+ There is peace in his eye that upward bends;
+ There is peace in his calm, confiding air;
+ For his last thoughts are God's, his last words prayer.
+
+ The voice of prayer at the sable bier!
+ A voice to sustain, to soothe, and to cheer.
+ It commends the spirit to God who gave;
+ It lifts the thoughts from the cold, dark grave;
+ It points to the glory where he shall reign,
+ Who whispered, "Thy brother shall rise again."
+
+ The voice of prayer in the world of bliss!
+ But gladder, purer, than rose from this.
+ The ransomed shout to their glorious King,
+ Where no sorrow shades the soul as they sing;
+ But a sinless and joyous song they raise,
+ And their voice of prayer is eternal praise.
+
+ Awake, awake! and gird up thy strength,
+ To join that holy band at length!
+ To Him who unceasing love displays,
+ Whom the powers of nature unceasingly praise,--
+ To Him thy heart and thy hours be given;
+ For a life of prayer is the life of Heaven.
+
+HENRY WARE, JR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXHORTATION TO PRAYER.
+
+
+ Not on a prayerless bed, not on a prayerless bed
+ Compose thy weary limbs to rest;
+ For they alone are blessed
+ With balmy sleep
+ Whom angels keep;
+ Nor, though by care oppressed,
+ Or anxious sorrow,
+ Or thought in many a coil perplexed
+ For coming morrow,
+ Lay not thy head
+ On prayerless bed.
+
+ For who can tell, when sleep thine eyes shall close,
+ That earthly cares and woes
+ To thee may e'er return?
+ Arouse, my soul!
+ Slumber control,
+ And let thy lamp burn brightly;
+ So shall thine eyes discern
+ Things pure and sightly;
+ Taught by the Spirit, learn
+ Never on a prayerless bed
+ To lay thine unblest head.
+
+ Hast thou no pining want, or wish, or care,
+ That calls for holy prayer?
+ Has thy day been so bright
+ That in its flight
+ There is no trace of sorrow?
+ And thou art sure to-morrow
+ Will be like this, and more
+ Abundant? Dost thou yet lay up thy store
+ And still make plans for more?
+ Thou fool! this very night
+ Thy soul may wing its flight.
+
+ Hast thou no being than thyself more dear,
+ That ploughs the ocean deep,
+ And when storms sweep
+ The wintry, lowering sky,
+ For whom thou wak'st and weepest?
+ Oh, when thy pangs are deepest,
+ Seek then the covenant ark of prayer;
+ For He that slumbereth not is there--
+ His ear is open to thy cry.
+ Oh, then, on prayerless bed
+ Lay not thy thoughtless head.
+
+ Arouse thee, weary soul, nor yield to slumber,
+ Till in communion blest
+ With the elect ye rest--
+ Those souls of countless numbers;
+ And with them raise
+ The note of praise,
+ Reaching from earth to heaven--
+ Chosen, redeemed, forgiven;
+ So lay thy happy head,
+ Prayer-crowned, on blessed bed.
+
+MARGARET MERCER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER AND REPENTANCE.
+
+ FROM "HAMLET," ACT III. SC. 3.
+
+
+ _The King_. O, my offence is rank, it smells to heaven;
+ It hath the primal eldest curse upon 't,
+ A brother's murder. Pray can I not,
+ Though inclination be as sharp as will:
+ My stronger guilt defeats my strong intent;
+ And, like a man to double business bound,
+ I stand in pause where I shall first begin,
+ And both neglect. What if this cursed hand
+ Were thicker than itself with brother's blood,
+ Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens
+ To wash it white as snow? Whereto serves mercy
+ But to confront the visage of offence?
+ And what's in prayer but this twofold force,
+ To be forestalled ere we come to fall,
+ Or pardoned being down? Then I'll look up;
+ My fault is past. But, O, what form of prayer
+ Can serve my turn? "Forgive me my foul murder?"
+ That cannot be: since I am still possessed
+ Of those effects for which I did the murder,
+ My crown, mine own ambition and my queen.
+ May one be pardoned and retain the offence?
+ In the corrupted currents of this world
+ Offence's gilded hand may shove by justice.
+ And oft 't is seen the wicked prize itself
+ Buys out the law: but 't is not so above;
+ There is no shuffling, there the action lies
+ In his true nature; and we ourselves compelled,
+ Even to the teeth and forehead of our faults,
+ To give in evidence. What then? what rests?
+ Try what repentance can: what can it not?
+ Yet what can it when one cannot repent?
+ O wretched state! O bosom black as death!
+ O limed soul, that, struggling to be free,
+ Art more engaged! Help, angels! Make assay!
+ Bow, stubborn knees; and heart with strings of steel,
+ Be soft as sinews of the new-born babe!
+ All may be well. [_Retires and kneels_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _King (rising)._ My words fly up, my thoughts remain below;
+ Words without thoughts never to heaven go.
+
+SHAKESPEARE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CALIPH AND SATAN.
+
+ VERSIFIED FROM THOLUCK'S TRANSLATION OUT OF THE PERSIAN.
+
+
+ In heavy sleep the Caliph lay,
+ When some one called, "Arise, and pray!"
+
+ The angry Caliph cried, "Who dare
+ Rebuke his king for slighting prayer?"
+
+ Then, from the corner of the room,
+ A voice cut sharply through the gloom:
+
+ "My name is Satan, Rise! obey
+ Mohammed's law; awake, and pray!"
+
+ "Thy _words_ are good," the Caliph said,
+ "But their intent I somewhat dread.
+
+ For matters cannot well be worse
+ Than when the thief says, 'Guard your purse!'
+
+ I cannot trust your counsel, friend,
+ It surely hides some wicked end."
+
+ Said Satan, "Near the throne of God,
+ In ages past, we devils trod;
+
+ Angels of light, to us 't was given
+ To guide each wandering foot to heaven.
+
+ Not wholly lost is that first love.
+ Nor those pure tastes we knew above.
+
+ Roaming across a continent.
+ The Tartar moves his shifting tent,
+
+ But never quite forgets the day
+ When in his father's arms he lay;
+
+ So we, once bathed in love divine.
+ Recall the taste of that rich wine.
+
+ God's finger rested on my brow,--
+ That magic touch, I feel it now!
+
+ I fell, 't is true--O, ask not why.
+ For still to God I turn my eye.
+
+ It was a chance by which I fell,
+ Another takes me back from hell.
+
+ 'T was but my envy of mankind,
+ The envy of a loving mind.
+
+ Jealous of men, I could not bear
+ God's love with this new race to share.
+
+ But yet God's tables open stand,
+ His guests flock in from every land;
+
+ Some kind act towards the race of men
+ May toss us into heaven again.
+
+ A game of chess is all we see,--
+ And God the player, pieces we.
+
+ White, black--queen, pawn,--'t is all the same,
+ For on both sides he plays the game.
+
+ Moved to and fro, from good to ill,
+ We rise and fall as suits his will."
+
+ The Caliph said, "If this be so,
+ I know not, but thy guile I know;
+
+ For how can I thy words believe,
+ When even God thou didst deceive?
+
+ A sea of lies art thou,--our sin
+ Only a drop that sea within."
+
+ "Not so," said Satan, "I serve God,
+ His angel now, and now his rod.
+
+ In tempting I both bless and curse,
+ Make good men better, bad men worse.
+
+ Good coin is mixed with bad, my brother,
+ I but distinguish one from the other."
+
+ "Granted," the Caliph said, "but still
+ You never tempt to good, but ill.
+
+ Tell then the truth, for well I know
+ You come as my most deadly foe."
+
+ Loud laughed the fiend. "You know me well,
+ Therefore my purpose I will tell.
+
+ If you had missed your prayer, I knew
+ A swift repentance would ensue;
+
+ And such repentance would have been
+ A good, outweighing far the sin.
+
+ I chose this humbleness divine,
+ Borne out of fault, should not be thine,
+
+ Preferring prayers elate with pride
+ To sin with penitence allied."
+
+JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DARKNESS IS THINNING.
+
+
+ Darkness is thinning; shadows are retreating;
+ Morning and light are coming in their beauty;
+ Suppliant seek we, with an earnest outcry.
+ God the Almighty!
+
+ So that our Master, having mercy on us.
+ May repel languor, may bestow salvation.
+ Granting us, Father, of thy loving-kindness
+ Glory hereafter!
+
+ This, of his mercy, ever blessed Godhead,
+ Father, and Son, and Holy Spirit, give us,--
+ Whom through the wide world celebrate forever
+ Blessing and glory!
+
+From the Latin of ST. GREGORY THE GREAT.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE.
+
+
+ To write a verse or two is all the praise
+ That I can raise;
+ Mend my estate in any wayes,
+ Thou shalt have more.
+
+ I go to church; help me to wings, and I
+ Will thither flie;
+ Or, if I mount unto the skie,
+ I will do more.
+
+ Man is all weaknesse: there is no such thing
+ As Prince or King:
+ His arm is short; yet with a sling
+ He may do more.
+
+ A herb destilled, and drunk, may dwell next doore,
+ On the same floore,
+ To a brave soul: Exalt the poore,
+ They can do more.
+
+ O, raise me then! poore bees, that work all day,
+ Sting my delay,
+ Who have a work, as well as they,
+ And much, much more.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER.
+
+
+ O God! though sorrow be my fate,
+ And the world's hate
+ For my heart's faith pursue me.
+ My peace they cannot take away;
+ Prom day to day
+ Thou dost anew imbue me;
+ Thou art not far; a little while
+ Thou hid'st thy face, with brighter smile
+ Thy father-love to show me.
+
+ Lord, not my will, but thine, be done;
+ If I sink down
+ When men to terrors leave me,
+ Thy father-love still warms my breast;
+ All's for the best;
+ Shall men have power to grieve me,
+ When bliss eternal is my goal.
+ And thou the keeper of my soul,
+ Who never will deceive me?
+
+ Thou art my shield, as saith the Word.
+ Christ Jesus, Lord,
+ Thou standest pitying by me,
+ And lookest on each grief of mine
+ And if 't were thine:
+ What, then, though foes may try me.
+ Though thorns be in my path concealed?
+ World, do thy worst! God is my shield!
+ And will be ever nigh me.
+
+Translated from MARY, QUEEN OF HUNGARY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DESIRE.
+
+
+ Thou, who dost dwell alone;
+ Thou, who dost know thine own;
+ Thou, to whom all are known,
+ From the cradle to the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From the world's temptations;
+ From tribulations;
+ From that fierce anguish
+ Wherein we languish;
+ From that torpor deep
+ Wherein we lie asleep,
+ Heavy as death, cold as the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ When the soul, growing clearer,
+ Sees God no nearer;
+ When the soul, mounting higher,
+ To God comes no nigher;
+ But the arch-fiend Pride
+ Mounts at her side,
+ Foiling her high emprize,
+ Sealing her eagle eyes,
+ And, when she fain would soar,
+ Make idols to adore;
+ Changing the pure emotion
+ Of her high devotion,
+ To a skin-deep sense
+ Of her own eloquence;
+ Strong to deceive, strong to enslave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From the ingrained fashion
+ Of this earthly nature
+ That mars thy creature;
+ From grief, that is but passion;
+ From mirth, that is but feigning;
+ From tears, that bring no healing;
+ From wild and weak complaining;--
+ Thine old strength revealing,
+ Save, O, save!
+
+ From doubt, where all is doable,
+ Where wise men are not strong;
+ Where comfort turns to trouble;
+ Where just men suffer wrong;
+ Where sorrow treads on joy;
+ Where sweet things soonest cloy;
+ Where faiths are built on dust;
+ Where love is half mistrust,
+ Hungry, and barren, and sharp as the sea;
+ O, set us free!
+
+ O, let the false dream fly
+ Where our sick souls do lie,
+ Tossing continually.
+ O, where thy voice doth come,
+ Let all doubts be dumb;
+ Let all words be mild;
+ All strife be reconciled;
+ All pains beguiled.
+ Light brings no blindness;
+ Love no unkindness;
+ Knowledge no ruin;
+ Fear no undoing,
+ From the cradle to the grave,--
+ Save, O, save!
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHY THUS LONGING?
+
+
+ Why thus longing, thus forever sighing
+ For the far off, unattained, and dim,
+ While the beautiful, all round thee lying,
+ Offers up its low perpetual hymn?
+
+ Wouldst thou listen to its gentle teaching,
+ All thy restless yearnings it would still;
+ Leaf and flower and laden bee are preaching
+ Thine own sphere, though humble, first to fill.
+
+ Poor indeed thou must be, if around thee
+ Thou no ray of light and joy canst throw,--
+ If no silken cord of love hath bound thee
+ To some little world through weal and woe;
+
+ If no dear eyes thy fond love can brighten,--
+ No fond voices answer to thine own;
+ If no brother's sorrow thou canst lighten
+ By daily sympathy and gentle tone.
+
+ Not by deeds that win the crowd's applauses,
+ Not by works that gain thee world-renown,
+ Not by martyrdom or vaunted crosses,
+ Canst thou win and wear the immortal crown.
+
+ Daily struggling, though unloved and lonely,
+ Every day a rich reward will give;
+ Thou wilt find, by hearty striving only,
+ And truly loving, thou canst truly live.
+
+ Dost thou revel in the rosy morning,
+ When all nature hails the Lord of light,
+ And his smile, the mountain-tops adorning,
+ Robes yon fragrant fields in radiance bright?
+
+ Other hands may grasp the field and forest,
+ Proud proprietors in pomp may shine;
+ But with fervent love if thou adorest,
+ Thou art wealthier,--all the world is thine.
+
+ Yet if through earth's wide domains thou rovest,
+ Sighing that they are not thine alone.
+ Not those fair fields, but thyself thou lovest,
+ And their beauty and thy wealth are gone.
+
+ Nature wears the color of the spirit;
+ Sweetly to her worshipper she sings;
+ All the glow, the grace she doth inherit,
+ Round her trusting child she fondly flings.
+
+HARRIET WINSLOW SEWALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAYER AND ANSWER.
+
+
+ O God, I cannot walk the Way,--
+ The thorns, the thirst, the darkness,
+ And bleeding feet and aching heart!
+ I hear the songs and revels of the throng,--
+ They sneer upon my downcast face with scorn,--
+ Yet, O my God, I _must_ and shall walk with Thee!
+
+ O God, I cannot take the Truth!
+ Far easier honeyed hopes and falsehoods fair,
+ But Truth,--the Truth is stern and strong and awful.
+ It ploughs my soul with ploughshares flaming hot--
+ Yet give me Truth. I must have Truth, O God!
+
+ O God, I cannot live the Life,--
+ The flinging all to death that life may come;
+ The surging of Thy Spirit in my heart
+ In fire and flame will all consume me,--
+ Yet, O my God, I cannot live without Thee!
+
+ And as I agonized in dust and shame
+ With tears and sighs in all the bitter prayer,
+ I felt, as 't were, an arm that stole around me,
+ And raised me to my feet.
+ And at the touch, hope blossomed in my heart,
+ And new-found strength in flood-tides thrilled and throbbed
+
+ Through soul and limbs. I looked to see....
+ O tender lordly Face!
+ It was Himself,--_the Way, the Truth, the Life_!
+
+OLIVER HUCKEL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE AIM.
+
+
+ O thou who lovest not alone
+ The swift success, the instant goal,
+ But hast a lenient eye to mark
+ The failures of th' inconstant soul,
+
+ Consider not my little worth,--
+ The mean achievement, scamped in act,
+ The high resolve and low result,
+ The dream that durst not face the fact.
+
+ But count the reach of my desire.
+ Let this be something in Thy sight:--
+ I have not, in the slothful dark,
+ Forgot the Vision and the Height.
+
+ Neither my body nor my soul
+ To earth's low ease will yield consent.
+ I praise Thee for my will to strive.
+ I bless Thy goad of discontent.
+
+CHARLES G.D. ROBERTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOVE OF GOD SUPREME.
+
+
+ Thou hidden love of God, whose height,
+ Whose depth unfathomed no man knows,
+ I see from far thy beauteous light,
+ Inly I sigh for thy repose.
+ My heart is pained, nor can it be
+ At rest till it finds rest in thee.
+
+ Thy secret voice invites me still
+ The sweetness of thy yoke to prove,
+ And fain I would; but though my will
+ Be fixed, yet wide my passions rove.
+ Yet hindrances strew all the way;
+ I aim at thee, yet from thee stray.
+
+ 'T is mercy all that thou hast brought
+ My mind to seek her peace in thee.
+ Yet while I seek but find thee not
+ No peace my wand'ring soul shall see.
+ Oh! when shall all my wand'rings end,
+ And all my steps to-thee-ward tend?
+
+ Is there a thing beneath the sun
+ That strives with thee my heart to share?
+ Ah! tear it thence and reign alone,
+ The Lord of every motion there.
+ Then shall my heart from earth be free,
+ When it has found repose in thee.
+
+ Oh! hide this self from me, that I
+ No more, but Christ in me, may live.
+ My vile affections crucify,
+ Nor let one darling lust survive.
+ In all things nothing may I see,
+ Nothing desire or seek but thee.
+
+ O Love, thy sovereign aid impart,
+ To save me from low-thoughted care;
+ Chase this self-will through all my heart,
+ Through all its latent mazes there.
+ Make me thy duteous child, that I
+ Ceaseless may Abba, Father, cry.
+
+ Ah! no; ne'er will I backward turn:
+ Thine wholly, thine alone I am.
+ Thrice happy he who views with scorn
+ Earth's toys, for thee his constant flame.
+ Oh! help, that I may never move
+ From the blest footsteps of thy love.
+
+ Each moment draw from earth away
+ My heart, that lowly waits thy call.
+ Speak to my inmost soul, and say,
+ "I am thy Love, thy God, thy All."
+ To feel thy power, to hear thy voice,
+ To taste thy love is all my choice.
+
+From the German of GERHARD TERSTEEGEN.
+
+Translation of JOHN WESLEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IN A LECTURE-ROOM.
+
+
+ Away, haunt thou not me,
+ Thou vain Philosophy!
+ Little hast thou bestead,
+ Save to perplex the head,
+ And leave the spirit dead.
+ Unto thy broken cisterns wherefore go.
+ While from the secret treasure-depths below,
+ Fed by the skyey shower,
+ And clouds that sink and rest on hill-tops high,
+ Wisdom at once, and Power,
+ Are welling, bubbling forth, unseen, incessantly?
+ Why labor at the dull mechanic oar,
+ When the fresh breeze is blowing,
+ And the strong current flowing,
+ Right onward to the Eternal Shore?
+
+ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM THE RECESSES OF A LOWLY SPIRIT.
+
+
+ From the recesses of a lowly spirit,
+ Our humble prayer ascends; O Father! hear it.
+ Upsoaring on the wings of awe and meekness,
+ Forgive its weakness!
+
+ We see thy hand,--it leads us, it supports us;
+ We hear thy voice,--it counsels and it courts us;
+ And then we turn away; and still thy kindness
+ Forgives our blindness.
+
+ O, how long-suffering, Lord! but thou delightest
+ To win with love the wandering: thou invited,
+ By smiles of mercy, not by frowns or terrors,
+ Man from his errors.
+
+ Father and Saviour! plant within each bosom
+ The seeds of holiness, and bid them blossom
+ In fragrance and in beauty bright and vernal,
+ And spring eternal.
+
+SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HIGHER GOOD.
+
+
+ Father, I will not ask for wealth or fame,
+ Though once they would have joyed my carnal sense:
+ I shudder not to bear a hated name,
+ Wanting all wealth, myself my sole defence.
+ But give me, Lord, eyes to behold the truth;
+ A seeing sense that knows the eternal right;
+ A heart with pity filled, and gentlest ruth;
+ A manly faith that makes all darkness light:
+ Give me the power to labor for mankind;
+ Make me the mouth of such as cannot speak;
+ Eyes let me be to groping men, and blind;
+ A conscience to the base; and to the weak
+ Let me be hands and feet; and to the foolish, mind;
+ And lead still further on such as thy kingdom seek.
+
+THEODORE PARKER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASCRIPTION.
+
+
+ O thou who hast beneath Thy hand
+ The dark foundations of the land,--
+ The motion of whose ordered thought
+ An instant universe hath wrought,--
+
+ Who hast within Thine equal heed
+ The rolling sun, the ripening seed,
+ The azure of the speedwell's eye.
+ The vast solemnities of sky,--
+
+ Who hear'st no less the feeble note
+ Of one small bird's awakening throat,
+ Than that unnamed, tremendous chord
+ Arcturus sounds before his Lord,--
+
+ More sweet to Thee than all acclaim
+ Of storm and ocean, stars and flame,
+ In favor more before Thy face
+ Than pageantry of time and space.
+
+ The worship and the service be
+ Of him Thou madest most like Thee,--
+ Who in his nostrils hath Thy breath,
+ Whose spirit is the lord of death!
+
+CHARLES G.D. ROBERTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O MASTER, LET ME WALK WITH THEE.
+
+
+ O Master, let me walk with thee
+ In lowly paths of service free;
+ Tell me thy secret; help me bear
+ The strain of toil, the fret of care;
+ Help me the slow of heart to move
+ By some clear winning word of love;
+ Teach me the wayward feet to stay,
+ And guide them in the homeward way.
+
+ O Master, let me walk with thee
+ Before the taunting Pharisee;
+ Help me to bear the sting of spite,
+ The hate of men who hide thy light,
+ The sore distrust of souls sincere
+ Who cannot read thy judgments clear,
+ The dulness of the multitude
+ Who dimly guess that thou art good.
+
+ Teach me thy patience; still with thee
+ In closer, dearer company,
+ In work that keeps faith sweet and strong,
+ In trust that triumphs over wrong,
+ In hope that sends a shining ray
+ Far down the future's broadening way,
+ In peace that only thou canst give,
+ With thee, O Master, let me live!
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+FAITH: HOPE: LOVE: SERVICE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FAITH.
+
+
+ O world, thou choosest not the better part!
+ It is not wisdom to be only wise,
+ And on the inward vision close the eyes,
+ But it is wisdom to believe the heart.
+ Columbus found a world, and had no chart,
+ Save one that faith deciphered in the skies;
+ To trust the soul's invincible surmise
+ Was all his science and his only art.
+ Our knowledge is a torch of smoky pine
+ That lights the pathway but one step ahead
+ Across a void of mystery and dread.
+ Bid, then, the tender light of faith to shine
+ By which alone the mortal heart is led
+ Unto the thinking of the thought divine.
+
+GEORGE SANTAYANA.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FIGHT OF FAITH.
+
+ [The author of this poem, one of the victims of the
+ persecuting Henry VIII., was burnt to death at Smithfield
+ in 1546. It was made and sung by her while a prisoner in
+ Newgate.]
+
+
+ Like as the armed Knighte,
+ Appointed to the fielde.
+ With this world wil I fight,
+ And faith shal be my shilde.
+
+ Faith is that weapon stronge,
+ Which wil not faile at nede;
+ My foes therefore amonge,
+ Therewith wil I precede.
+
+ As it is had in strengthe,
+ And forces of Christes waye,
+ It wil prevaile at lengthe,
+ Though all the devils saye _naye_.
+
+ Faithe of the fathers olde
+ Obtained right witness,
+ Which makes me verye bolde
+ To fear no worldes distress.
+
+ I now rejoice in harte,
+ And hope bides me do so;
+ For Christ wil take my part,
+ And ease me of my we.
+
+ Thou sayst, Lord, whoso knocke,
+ To them wilt thou attende;
+ Undo, therefore, the locke,
+ And thy stronge power sende.
+
+ More enemies now I have
+ Than heeres upon my head;
+ Let them not me deprave,
+ But fight thou in my steade.
+
+ On thee my care I cast,
+ For all their cruell spight;
+ I set not by their hast,
+ For thou art my delight.
+
+ I am not she that list
+ My anker to let fall
+ For every drislinge mist;
+ My shippe's substancial.
+
+ Not oft I use to wright
+ In prose, nor yet in ryme;
+ Yet wil I shewe one sight,
+ That I sawe in my time:
+
+ I sawe a royall throne,
+ Where Justice shulde have sitte;
+ But in her steade was One
+ Of moody cruell witte.
+
+ Absorpt was rightwisness,
+ As by the raginge floude;
+ Sathan, in his excess,
+ Sucte up the guiltlesse bloude.
+
+ Then thought I,--Jesus, Lorde,
+ When thou shalt judge us all,
+ Harde is it to recorde
+ On these men what will fall.
+
+ Yet, Lorde, I thee desire,
+ For that they doe to me,
+ Let them not taste the hire
+ Of their iniquitie.
+
+ANNE ASKEWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOUBT AND FAITH.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," XCV.
+
+
+ You say, but with no touch of scorn,
+ Sweet-hearted, you, whose light-blue eyes
+ Are tender over drowning flies,
+ You tell me, doubt is Devil-born.
+
+ I know not: one indeed I knew
+ In many a subtle question versed,
+ Who touched a jarring lyre at first,
+ But ever strove to make it true:
+
+ Perplext in faith, but pure in deeds,
+ At last he beat his music out.
+ There lives more faith in honest doubt,
+ Believe me, than in half the creeds.
+
+ He fought his doubts and gathered strength,
+ He would not make his judgment blind,
+ He faced the spectres of the mind
+ And laid them: thus he came at length
+
+ To find a stronger faith his own;
+ And Power was with him in the night,
+ Which makes the darkness and the light,
+ And dwells not in the light alone,
+
+ But in the darkness and the cloud,
+ As over Sinai's peaks of old,
+ While Israel made their gods of gold,
+ Although the trumpet blew so loud.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY TIMES ARE IN THY HAND.
+
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ I know not what a day
+ Or e'en an hour may bring to me,
+ But I am safe while trusting thee,
+ Though all things fade away.
+ All weakness, I
+ On him rely
+ Who fixed the earth and spread the starry sky.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Pale poverty or wealth.
+ Corroding care or calm repose.
+ Spring's balmy breath or winter's snows.
+ Sickness or buoyant health,--
+ Whate'er betide,
+ If God provide,
+ 'T is for the best; I wish no lot beside.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Should friendship pure illume
+ And strew my path with fairest flowers,
+ Or should I spend life's dreary hours
+ In solitude's dark gloom,
+ Thou art a friend.
+ Till time shall end
+ Unchangeably the same; in thee all beauties blend.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Many or few, my days
+ I leave with thee,--this only pray,
+ That by thy grace, I, every day
+ Devoting to thy praise,
+ May ready be
+ To welcome thee
+ Whene'er thou com'st to set my spirit free.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ Howe'er those times may end,
+ Sudden or slow my soul's release,
+ Midst anguish, frenzy, or in peace,
+ I'm safe with Christ my friend.
+ If he is nigh,
+ Howe'er I die,
+ 'T will be the dawn of heavenly ecstasy.
+
+ My times are in thy hand!
+ To thee I can intrust
+ My slumbering clay, till thy command
+ Bids all the dead before thee stand,
+ Awaking from the dust.
+ Beholding thee,
+ What bliss 't will be
+ With all thy saints to spend eternity!
+
+ To spend eternity
+ In heaven's unclouded light!
+ From sorrow, sin, and frailty free,
+ Beholding and resembling thee,--
+ O too transporting sight!
+ Prospect too fair
+ For flesh to bear!
+ Haste! haste! my Lord, and soon transport me there!
+
+CHRISTOPHER NEWMAN HALL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MYSTICAL ECSTASY.
+
+
+ E'en like two little bank-dividing brooks,
+ That wash the pebbles with their wanton streams,
+ And having ranged and searched a thousand nooks,
+ Meet both at length in silver-breasted Thames,
+ Where in a greater current they conjoin:
+ So I my Best-Beloved's am; so He is mine.
+
+ E'en so we met; and after long pursuit,
+ E'en so we joined; we both became entire;
+ No need for either to renew a suit,
+ For I was flax and he was flames of fire:
+ Our firm-united souls did more than twine:
+ So I my Best-Beloved's am; so He is mine.
+
+ If all those glittering Monarchs that command
+ The servile quarters of this earthly ball,
+ Should tender, in exchange, their shares of land,
+ I would not change my fortunes for them all:
+ Their wealth is but a counter to my coin:
+ The world's but theirs; but my Beloved's mine.
+
+FRANCIS QUARLES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MYSTIC'S VISION
+
+
+ Ah! I shall kill myself with dreams!
+ These dreams that softly lap me round
+ Through trance-like hours in which meseems
+ That I am swallowed up and drowned;
+ Drowned in your love, which flows o'er me
+ As o'er the seaweed flows the sea.
+
+ In watches of the middle night,
+ 'Twixt vesper and 'twist matin bell,
+ With rigid arms and straining sight,
+ I wait within my narrow cell;
+ With muttered prayers, suspended will,
+ I wait your advent--statue-still.
+
+ Across the convent garden walls
+ The wind blows from the silver seas;
+ Black shadow of the cypress falls
+ Between the moon-meshed olive-trees;
+ Sleep-walking from their golden bowers,
+ Flit disembodied orange flowers.
+
+ And in God's consecrated house,
+ All motionless from head to feet,
+ My heart awaits her heavenly Spouse,
+ As white I lie on my white sheet;
+ With body lulled and soul awake,
+ I watch in anguish for your sake.
+
+ And suddenly, across the gloom,
+ The naked moonlight sharply swings;
+ A Presence stirs within the room,
+ A breath of flowers and hovering wings:--
+ Your presence without form and void,
+ Beyond all earthly joys enjoyed.
+
+ My heart is hushed, my tongue is mute,
+ My life is centred in your will;
+ You play upon me like a lute
+ Which answers to its master's skill,
+ Till passionately vibrating,
+ Each nerve becomes a throbbing string.
+
+ Oh, incommunicably sweet!
+ No longer aching and apart,
+ As rain upon the tender wheat,
+ You pour upon my thirsty heart;
+ As scent is bound up in the rose,
+ Your love within my bosom glows.
+
+MATHILDE BLIND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CALL.
+
+
+ Come, my way, my truth, my life--
+ Such a way as gives us breath;
+ Such a truth as ends all strife;
+ Such a life as killeth death.
+
+ Come my light, my feast, my strength--
+ Such a light as shows a feast;
+ Such a feast as mends in length;
+ Such a strength as makes His guest.
+
+ Come my joy, my love, my heart!
+ Such a joy as none can move;
+ Such a love as none can part;
+ Such a heart as joys in love.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPE.
+
+ FROM "THE PLEASURES OF HOPE."[A]
+
+
+ Unfading Hope! when life's last embers burn,
+ When soul to soul, and dust to dust return!
+ Heaven to thy charge resigns the awful hour!
+ O, then thy kingdom comes! Immortal Power!
+ What though each spark of earth-born rapture fly
+ The quivering lip, pale cheek, and closing eye!
+ Bright to the soul thy seraph hands convey
+ The morning dream of life's eternal day,--
+ Then, then, the triumph and the trance begin,
+ And all the phoenix spirit burns within!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Daughter of Faith, awake, arise, illume
+ The dread unknown, the chaos of the tomb;
+ Melt, and dispel, ye spectre-doubts, that roll
+ Cimmerian darkness o'er the parting soul!
+ Fly, like the moon-eyed herald of Dismay,
+ Chased on his night-steed by the star of day!
+ The strife is o'er,--the pangs of Nature close,
+ And life's last rapture triumphs o'er her woes.
+ Hark! as the spirit eyes, with eagle gaze,
+ The noon of Heaven undazzled by the blaze,
+ On heavenly winds that waft her to the sky,
+ Float the sweet tones of star-born melody;
+ Wild as that hallowed anthem sent to hail
+ Bethlehem's shepherds in the lonely vale,
+ When Jordan hushed his waves, and midnight still
+ Watched on the holy towers of Zion hill!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Eternal Hope! when yonder spheres sublime
+ Pealed their first notes to sound the march of Time,
+ Thy joyous youth began,--but not to fade.
+ When all the sister planets have decayed;
+ When wrapt in fire the realms of ether glow,
+ And Heaven's last thunder shakes the world below;
+ Thou, undismayed, shalt o'er the ruins smile,
+ And light thy torch at Nature's funeral pile.
+
+THOMAS CAMPBELL.
+
+[Footnote A: This poem was written when the author was but twenty-one
+years of age.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A QUERY.
+
+
+ Oh the wonder of our life,
+ Pain and pleasure, rest and strife,
+ Mystery of mysteries,
+ Set twixt two eternities!
+
+ Lo, the moments come and go,
+ E'en as sparks, and vanish so;
+ Flash from darkness into light,
+ Quick as thought are quenched in night.
+
+ With an import grand and strange
+ Are they fraught in ceaseless change
+ As they post away; each one
+ Stands eternally alone.
+
+ The scene more fair than words can say,
+ I gaze upon and go my way;
+ I turn, another glance to claim--
+ Something is changed, 't is not the same.
+
+ The purple flush on yonder fell,
+ The tinkle of that cattle-bell,
+ Came, and have never come before,
+ Go, and are gone forevermore.
+
+ Our life is held as with a vice,
+ We cannot do the same thing twice;
+ Once we may, but not again;
+ Only memories remain.
+
+ What if memories vanish too,
+ And the past be lost to view;
+ Is it all for nought that I
+ Heard and saw and hurried by?
+
+ Where are childhood's merry hours,
+ Bright with sunshine, crossed with showers?
+ Are they dead, and can they never
+ Come again to life forever?
+
+ No--'t is false, I surely trow;
+ Though awhile they vanish now;
+ Every passion, deed, and thought
+ Was not born to come to nought!
+
+ Will the past then come again,
+ Rest and pleasure, strife and pain,
+ All the heaven and all the hell?
+ Ah, we know not: God can tell.
+
+_GOOD WORDS_.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HUMILITY.
+
+
+ The bird that soars on highest wing
+ Builds on the ground her lowly nest;
+ And she that doth most sweetly sing
+ Sings in the shade, where all things rest;
+ In lark and nightingale we see
+ What honor hath humility.
+
+ When Mary chose "the better part,"
+ She meekly sat at Jesus' feet;
+ And Lydia's gently opened heart
+ Was made for God's own temple meet:
+ Fairest and best adorned is she
+ Whose clothing is humility.
+
+ The saint that wears heaven's brightest crown,
+ In deepest adoration bends:
+ The weight of glory bows him down
+ Then most, when most his soul ascends:
+ Nearest the throne itself must be
+ The footstool of humility.
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+KING ROBERT OF SICILY.
+
+
+ Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane
+ And Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Apparelled in magnificent attire,
+ With retinue of many a knight and squire,
+ On Saint John's eve, at vespers, proudly sat
+ And heard the priests chant the Magnificat.
+ And as he listened o'er and o'er again
+ Repeated, like a burden or refrain,
+ He caught the words, "_Deposuit potentes
+ De sede, et exaltavit humiles;"_
+ And slowly lifting up his kingly head,
+ He to a learned clerk beside him said,
+ "What mean these words?" The clerk made answer meet,
+ "He has put down the mighty from their seat,
+ And has exalted them of low degree."
+ Thereat King Robert muttered scornfully,
+ "'T is well that such seditious words are sung
+ Only by priests and in the Latin tongue;
+ For unto priests and people be it known,
+ There is no power can push me from my throne!"
+ And leaning back, he yawned and fell asleep,
+ Lulled by the chant monotonous and deep.
+
+ When he awoke, it was already night;
+ The church was empty, and there was no light,
+ Save where the lamps that glimmered, few and faint,
+ Lighted a little space before some saint.
+ He started from his seat and gazed around,
+ But saw no living thing and heard no sound.
+ He groped towards the door, but it was locked;
+ He cried aloud, and listened, and then knocked,
+ And uttered awful threatenings and complaints,
+ And imprecations upon men and saints.
+ The sounds reechoed from the roof and walls
+ As if dead priests were laughing in their stalls.
+
+ At length the sexton, hearing from without
+ The tumult of the knocking and the shout,
+ And thinking thieves were in the house of prayer,
+ Came with his lantern, asking, "Who is there?"
+ Half choked with rage, King Robert fiercely said,
+ "Open: 'tis I, the king! Art thou afraid?"
+ The frightened sexton, muttering, with a curse,
+ "This is some drunken vagabond, or worse!"
+ Turned the great key and flung the portal wide;
+ A man rushed by him at a single stride,
+ Haggard, half naked, without hat or cloak,
+ Who neither turned, nor looked at him, nor spoke.
+ But leaped into the blackness of the night,
+ And vanished like a spectre from his sight.
+
+ Robert of Sicily, brother of Pope Urbane
+ And Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Despoiled of his magnificent attire,
+ Bare-headed, breathless, and besprent with mire,
+ With sense of wrong and outrage desperate,
+ Strode on and thundered at the palace gate:
+ Bushed through the court-yard, thrusting in his rage
+ To right and left each seneschal and page,
+ And hurried up the broad and sounding stair,
+ His white face ghastly in the torches' glare.
+ From hall to hall he passed with breathless speed:
+ Voices and cries he heard, but did not heed,
+ Until at last he reached the banquet-room,
+ Blazing with light, and breathing with perfume.
+ There on the dais sat another king,
+ Wearing his rotes, his crown, his signet-ring.
+ King Robert's self in features, form, and height,
+ But all transfigured with angelic light!
+ It was an angel; and his presence there
+ With a divine effulgence filled the air,
+ An exaltation, piercing the disguise,
+ Though none the hidden angel recognize.
+
+ A moment speechless, motionless, amazed,
+ The throneless monarch on the angel gazed,
+ Who met his looks of anger and surprise
+ With the divine compassion of his eyes;
+ Then said, "Who art thou? and why com'st thou here?"
+ To which King Robert answered with a sneer,
+ "I am the king, and come to claim my own
+ From an impostor, who usurps my throne!"
+ And suddenly, at these audacious words,
+ Up sprang the angry guests, and drew their swords;
+ The angel answered with unruffled brow,
+ "Nay, not the king, but the king's jester; thou
+ Henceforth shalt wear the bells and scalloped cape,
+ And for thy counsellor shalt lead an ape:
+ Thou shalt obey my servants when they call,
+ And wait upon my henchmen in the hall!"
+
+ Deaf to King Robert's threats and cries and prayers,
+ They thrust him from the hall and down the stairs;
+ A group of tittering pages ran before,
+ And as they opened wide the folding-door,
+ His heart failed, for he heard, with strange alarms,
+ The boisterous laughter of the men-at-arms,
+ And all the vaulted chamber roar and ring
+ With the mock plaudits of "Long live the king!"
+ Next morning, waking with the day's first beam,
+ He said within himself, "It was a dream!"
+ But the straw rustled as he turned his head,
+ There were the cap and bells beside his bed;
+ Around him rose the bare, discolored walls.
+ Close by, the steeds were champing in their stalls,
+ And in the corner, a revolting shape,
+ Shivering and chattering, sat the wretched ape.
+ It was no dream; the world he loved so much
+ Had turned to dust and ashes at his touch!
+
+ Days came and went; and now returned again
+ To Sicily the old Saturnian reign;
+ Under the angel's governance benign
+ The happy island danced with corn and wine,
+ And deep within the mountain's burning breast
+ Enceladus, the giant, was at rest.
+ Meanwhile King Robert yielded to his fate,
+ Sullen and silent and disconsolate.
+ Dressed in the motley garb that jesters wear,
+ With looks bewildered and a vacant stare,
+ Close shaven above the ears, as monks are shorn,
+ By courtiers mocked, by pages laughed to scorn,
+ His only friend the ape, his only food
+ What others left,--he still was unsubdued.
+ And when the angel met him on his way,
+ And half in earnest, half in jest, would say,
+ Sternly, though tenderly, that he might feel
+ The velvet scabbard held a sword of steel,
+ "Art thou the king?" the passion of his woe
+ Burst from him in resistless overflow,
+ And lifting high his forehead, he would fling
+ The haughty answer back, "I am, I am the king!"
+
+ Almost three years were ended; when there came
+ Ambassadors of great repute and name
+ From Valmond, emperor of Allemaine,
+ Unto King Robert, saying that Pope Urbane
+ By letter summoned them forthwith to come
+ On Holy Thursday to his city of Rome.
+ The angel with great joy received his guests,
+ And gave them presents of embroidered vests,
+ And velvet mantles with rich ermine lined,
+ And rings and jewels of the rarest kind.
+ Then he departed with them o'er the sea
+ Into the lovely land of Italy,
+ Whose loveliness was more resplendent made
+ By the mere passing of that cavalcade,
+ With plumes, and cloaks, and housings, and the stir
+ Of jewelled bridle and of golden spur.
+
+ And lo! among the menials, in mock state,
+ Upon a piebald steed, with shambling gait,
+ His cloak of fox-tails flapping in the wind,
+ The solemn ape demurely perched behind,
+ King Robert rode, making huge merriment
+ In all the country towns through which they went.
+
+ The pope received them with great pomp, and blare
+ Of bannered trumpets, on Saint Peter's square,
+ Giving his benediction and embrace,
+ Fervent, and full of apostolic grace.
+ While with congratulations and with prayers
+ He entertained the angel unawares,
+ Robert, the jester, bursting through the crowd,
+ Into their presence rushed, and cried aloud:
+ "I am the king! Look and behold in me
+ Robert, your brother, king of Sicily!
+ This man, who wears my semblance to your eyes,
+ Is an impostor in a king's disguise.
+ Do you not know me? does no voice within
+ Answer my cry, and say we are akin?"
+ The pope in silence, but with troubled mien.
+ Gazed at the angel's countenance serene;
+ The emperor, laughing, said, "It is strange sport
+ To keep a madman for thy fool at court!"
+ And the poor, baffled jester in disgrace
+ Was hustled back among the populace.
+
+ In solemn state the holy week went by,
+ And Easter Sunday gleamed upon the sky;
+ The presence of an angel, with its light,
+ Before the sun rose, made the city bright,
+ And with new fervor filled the hearts of men,
+ Who felt that Christ indeed had risen again.
+ Even the Jester, on his bed of straw,
+ With haggard eyes the unwonted splendor saw;
+ He felt within a power unfelt before,
+ And, kneeling humbly on his chamber floor,
+ He heard the rustling garments of the Lord
+ Sweep through the silent air, ascending heavenward.
+
+ And now the visit ending, and once more
+ Valmond returning to the Danube's shore,
+ Homeward the angel journeyed, and again
+ The land was made resplendent with his train,
+ Flashing along the towns of Italy
+ Unto Salerno, and from there by sea.
+ And when once more within Palermo's wall,
+ And, seated on his throne in his great hall,
+ He heard the Angelus from convent towers,
+ As if the better world conversed with ours,
+ He beckoned to King Robert to draw nigher,
+ And with a gesture bade the rest retire;
+ And when they were alone, the angel said,
+ "Art thou the king?" Then bowing down his head,
+ King Robert crossed both hands upon his breast,
+ And meekly answered him: "Thou knowest best!
+ My sins as scarlet are; let me go hence,
+ And in some cloister's school of penitence,
+ Across those stones that pave the way to heaven
+ Walk barefoot till my guilty soul is shriven!"
+ The angel smiled, and from his radiant face
+ A holy light illumined all the place,
+ And through the open window, loud and clear,
+ They heard the monks chant in the chapel near,
+ Above the stir and tumult of the street:
+ "He has put down the mighty from their seat,
+ And has exalted them of low degree!"
+ And through the chant a second melody
+ Rose like the throbbing of a single string:
+ "I am an angel, and thou art the king!"
+
+ King Robert, who was standing near the throne,
+ Lifted his eyes, and lo! he was alone!
+ But all apparelled as in days of old,
+ With ermined mantle and with cloth of gold;
+ And when his courtiers came they found him there
+ Kneeling upon the floor, absorbed in silent prayer.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SERVICE.
+
+ FROM "PIPPA PASSES."
+
+
+ All service ranks the same with God:
+ If now, as formerly he trod
+ Paradise, his presence fills
+ Our earth, each only as God wills
+ Can work--God's puppets, best and worst,
+ Are we; there is no last nor first.
+
+ Say not "a small event"! Why "small"?
+ Costs it more pain than this, ye call
+ A "great event," should come to pass,
+ Than that? Untwine me from the mass
+ Of deeds which make up life, one deed
+ Power shall fall short in or exceed!
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO ANGELS.
+
+
+ God called the nearest angels who dwell with Him above:
+ The tenderest one was Pity, the dearest one was Love.
+
+ "Arise," He said, "my angels! a wail of woe and sin
+ Steals through the gates of heaven, and saddens all within.
+
+ "My harps take up the mournful strain that from a lost world swells,
+ The smoke of torment clouds the light and blights the asphodels.
+
+ "Fly downward to that under world, and on its souls of pain,
+ Let Love drop smiles like sunshine, and Pity tears like rain!"
+
+ Two faces bowed before the Throne, veiled in their golden hair;
+ Four white wings lessened swiftly down the dark abyss of air.
+
+ The way was strange, the flight was long; at last the angels came
+ Where swung the lost and nether world, red-wrapped in rayless flame.
+
+ There Pity, shuddering, wept; but Love, with faith too strong for fear,
+ Took heart from God's almightiness and smiled a smile of cheer.
+
+ And lo! that tear of Pity quenched the flame whereon it fell,
+ And, with the sunshine of that smile, hope entered into hell!
+
+ Two unveiled faces full of joy looked upward to the Throne,
+ Four white wings folded at the feet of Him who sat thereon!
+
+ And deeper than the sound of seas, more soft than falling flake,
+ Amidst the hush of wing and song the Voice Eternal spake:
+
+ "Welcome, my angels! ye have brought a holier joy to heaven;
+ Henceforth its sweetest song shall be the song of sin forgiven!"
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SELF-EXILED.
+
+
+ There came a soul to the gate of Heaven
+ Gliding slow--
+ A soul that was ransomed and forgiven,
+ And white as snow:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ A mystic light beamed from the face
+ Of the radiant maid,
+ But there also lay on its tender grace
+ A mystic shade:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ As sunlit clouds by a zephyr borne
+ Seem not to stir,
+ So to the golden gates of morn
+ They carried her:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Now open the gate, and let her in,
+ And fling It wide,
+ For she has been cleansed from stain of sin,"
+ Saint Peter cried:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Though I am cleansed from stain of sin,"
+ She answered low,
+ "I came not hither to enter in,
+ Nor may I go:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come," she said, "to the pearly door,
+ To see the Throne
+ Where sits the Lamb on the Sapphire Floor,
+ With God alone:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come to hear the new song they sing
+ To Him that died,
+ And note where the healing waters spring
+ From His pierced side:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "But I may not enter there," she said,
+ "For I must go
+ Across the gulf where the guilty dead
+ Lie in their woe:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "If I enter heaven I may not pass
+ To where they be,
+ Though the wail of their bitter pain, alas!
+ Tormenteth me:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "If I enter heaven I may not speak
+ My soul's desire
+ For them that are lying distraught and weak
+ In flaming fire:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I had a brother, and also another
+ Whom I loved well;
+ What if, in anguish, they curse each other
+ In the depths of hell?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "How could I touch the golden harps,
+ When all my praise
+ Would be so wrought with grief-full warps
+ Of their sad days?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "How love the loved who are sorrowing,
+ And yet be glad?
+ How sing the songs ye are fain to sing,
+ While I am sad?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Oh, clear as glass in the golden street
+ Of the city fair,
+ And the tree of life it maketh sweet
+ The lightsome air:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "And the white-robed saints with their crowns and palms
+ Are good to see,
+ And oh, so grand are the sounding psalms!
+ But not for me:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "I come where there is no night," she said,
+ "To go away,
+ And help, if I yet may help, the dead
+ That have no day."
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ Saint Peter he turned the keys about,
+ And answered grim:
+ "Can you love the Lord and abide without,
+ Afar from Him?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Can you love the Lord who died for you,
+ And leave the place
+ Where His glory is all disclosed to view,
+ And tender grace?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "They go not out who come in here;
+ It were not meet:
+ Nothing they lack, for He is here,
+ And bliss complete."
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be nearer Christ," she said,
+ "By pitying less
+ The sinful living or woful dead
+ In their helplessness?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be liker Christ were I
+ To love no more
+ The loved, who in their anguish lie
+ Outside the door?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Did He not hang on the cursed tree,
+ And bear its shame,
+ And clasp to His heart, for love of me,
+ My guilt and blame?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "Should I be liker, nearer Him,
+ Forgetting this,
+ Singing all day with the Seraphim,
+ In selfish bliss?"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ The Lord Himself stood by the gate,
+ And heard her speak
+ Those tender words compassionate,
+ Gentle and meek:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ Now, pity is the touch of God
+ In human hearts,
+ And from that way He ever trod
+ He ne'er departs:
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ And He said, "Now will I go with you,
+ Dear child of love,
+ I am weary of all this glory, too,
+ In heaven above:"
+ And the angels all were silent.
+
+ "We will go seek and save the lost,
+ If they will hear,
+ They who are worst but need me most,
+ And all are dear:"
+ And the angels were not silent.
+
+WALTER C. SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SYMPATHY.
+
+ FROM "ION," ACT I. SC. 2.
+
+
+ 'T is a little thing
+ To give a cup of water; yet its draught
+ Of cool refreshment, drained by fevered lips,
+ May give a shock of pleasure to the frame
+ More exquisite than when nectarean juice
+ Renews the life of joy in happier hours.
+ It is a little thing to speak a phrase
+ Of common comfort which by daily use
+ Has almost lost its sense, yet on the ear
+ Of him who thought to die unmourned 't will fall
+ Like choicest music, fill the glazing eye
+ With gentle tears, relax the knotted hand
+ To know the bonds of fellowship again;
+ And shed on the departing soul a sense,
+ More precious than the benison of friends
+ About the honored death-bed of the rich,
+ To him who else were lonely, that another
+ Of the great family is near and feels.
+
+SIR THOMAS NOON TALFOURD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SIR GALAHAD.
+
+
+ My good blade carves the casques of men,
+ My tough lance thrusteth sure,
+ My strength is as the strength of ten,
+ Because my heart is pure.
+ The shattering trumpet shrilleth high,
+ The hard brands shiver on the steel,
+ The splintered spear-shafts crack and fly,
+ The horse and rider reel:
+ They reel, they roll in clanging lists,
+ And when the tide of combat stands,
+ Perfume and flowers fall in showers,
+ That lightly rain from ladies' hands.
+
+ How sweet are looks that ladies bend
+ On whom their favors fall!
+ For them I battle till the end,
+ To save from shame and thrall:
+ But all my heart is drawn above,
+ My knees are bowed in crypt and shrine:
+ I never felt the kiss of love,
+ Nor maiden's hand in mine.
+ More bounteous aspects on me beam,
+ Me mightier transports move and thrill;
+ So keep I fair thro' faith and prayer
+ A virgin heart in work and will.
+
+ When down the stormy crescent goes,
+ A light before me swims.
+ Between dark stems the forest glows,
+ I hear a noise of hymns:
+ Then by some secret shrine I ride;
+ I hear a voice, but none are there;
+ The stalls are void, the doors are wide,
+ The tapers burning fair.
+ Fair gleams the snowy altar-cloth,
+ The silver vessels sparkle clean,
+ The shrill bell rings, the censer swings,
+ And solemn chaunts resound between.
+
+ Sometimes on lonely mountain-meres
+ I find a magic bark;
+ I leap on board: no helmsman steers:
+ I float till all is dark.
+ A gentle sound, an awful light!
+ Three angels bear the holy Grail:
+ With folded feet, in stoles of white,
+ On sleeping wings they sail.
+ Ah, blessed vision! blood of God!
+ My spirit beats her mortal bars,
+ As down dark tides the glory slides,
+ And star-like mingles with the stars.
+
+ When on my goodly charger borne
+ Thro' dreaming towns I go,
+ The cock crows ere the Christmas morn,
+ The streets are dumb with snow.
+ The tempest crackles on the leads,
+ And, ringing, springs from brand and mail;
+ But o'er the dark a glory spreads,
+ And gilds the driving hail.
+ I leave the plain, I climb the height;
+ No branchy thicket shelter yields;
+ But blessed forms in whistling storms
+ Fly o'er waste fens and windy fields.
+
+ A maiden knight--to me is given
+ Such hope, I know not fear;
+ I yearn to breathe the airs of heaven
+ That often meet me here.
+ I muse on joy that will not cease,
+ Pure spaces clothed in living beams,
+ Pure lilies of eternal peace,
+ Whose odors haunt my dreams;
+ And, stricken by an angel's hand,
+ This mortal armor that I wear.
+ This weight and size, this heart and eyes,
+ Are touched, and turned to finest air.
+
+ The clouds are broken in the sky,
+ And thro' the mountain-walls
+ A rolling organ-harmony
+ Swells up, and shakes and falls.
+ Then move the trees, the copses nod,
+ Wings flutter, voices hover clear:
+ "O just and faithful knight of God!
+ Ride on! the prize is near."
+ So pass I hostel, hall, and grange;
+ By bridge and ford, by park and pale,
+ All-armed I ride, whate'er betide,
+ Until I find the holy Grail.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FLOWERS WITHOUT FRUIT.
+
+
+ Prune thou thy words; the thoughts control
+ That o'er thee swell and throng;--
+ They will condense within thy soul,
+ And change to purpose strong.
+
+ But he who lets his feelings run
+ In soft luxurious flow,
+ Shrinks when hard service must be done,
+ And faints at every woe.
+
+ Faith's meanest deed more favor bears,
+ Where hearts and wills are weighed,
+ Than brightest transports, choicest prayers,
+ Which bloom their hour, and fade.
+
+JOHN HENRY NEWMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SANTA FILOMENA.
+
+ [FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.]
+
+
+ Whene'er a noble deed is wrought,
+ Whene'er is spoken a noble thought,
+ Our hearts, in glad surprise,
+ To higher levels rise.
+
+ The tidal wave of deeper souls
+ Into our inmost being rolls,
+ And lifts us unawares
+ Out of all meaner cares.
+
+ Honor to those whose words or deeds
+ Thus help us in our daily needs,
+ And by their overflow
+ Raise us from what is low!
+
+ Thus thought I, as by night I read
+ Of the great army of the dead,
+ The trenches cold and damp,
+ The starved and frozen camp,
+
+ The wounded from the battle-plain,
+ In dreary hospitals of pain,
+ The cheerless corridors,
+ The cold and stony floors.
+
+ Lo! in that house of misery
+ A lady with a lamp I see
+ Pass through the glimmering gloom,
+ And flit from room to room.
+
+ And slow, as in a dream of bliss,
+ The speechless sufferer turns to kiss
+ Her shadow, as it falls
+ Upon the darkening walls.
+
+ As if a door in heaven should be
+ Opened and then closed suddenly,
+ The vision came and went,
+ The light shone and was spent.
+
+ On England's annals, through the long
+ Hereafter of her speech and song,
+ That light its rays shall cast
+ From portals of the past.
+
+ A Lady with a Lamp shall stand
+ In the great history of the land,
+ A noble type of good,
+ Heroic womanhood.
+
+ Nor even shall be wanting here
+ The palm, the lily, and the spear,
+ The symbols that of yore
+ Saint Filomena bore.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DEED AND A WORD.
+
+
+ A little stream had lost its way
+ Amid the grass and fern;
+ A passing stranger scooped a well,
+ Where weary men might turn;
+ He walled it in and hung with care
+ A ladle at the brink;
+ He thought not of the deed he did,
+ But judged that all might drink.
+ He passed again, and lo! the well,
+ By summer never dried,
+ Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues,
+ And saved a life beside.
+
+ A nameless man, amid a crowd
+ That thronged the daily mart,
+ Let fall a word of hope and love,
+ Unstudied, from the heart;
+ A whisper on the tumult thrown,
+ A transitory breath--
+ It raised a brother from the dust,
+ It saved a soul from death.
+ O germ! O fount! O word of love!
+ O thought at random cast!
+ Ye were but little at the first,
+ But mighty at the last.
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOGGARTH AROON.
+
+
+ Am I the slave they say,
+ Soggarth aroon?[A]
+ Since you did show the way,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Their slave no more to be,
+ While they would work with me
+ Old Ireland's slavery,
+ Soggarth aroon.
+
+ Why not her poorest man,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Try and do all he can,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Her commands to fulfil
+ Of his own heart and will,
+ Side by side with you still,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Loyal and brave to you,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Yet be not slave to you,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Nor, out of fear to you,
+ Stand up so near to you--
+ Och! out of fear to _you_,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+
+ Who, in the winter's night,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ When the cold blasts did bite,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Came to my cabin-door,
+ And on my earthen-floor
+ Knelt by me, sick and poor,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Who, on the marriage day,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Made the poor cabin gay,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ And did both laugh and sing,
+ Making our hearts to ring
+ At the poor christening,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Who, as friends only met,
+ Soggarth aroon,
+ Never did flout me yet,
+ Soggarth aroon;
+ And when my heart was dim,
+ Gave, while his eye did brim,
+ What I should give to him,
+ Soggarth aroon?
+
+ Och! you, and only you,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+ And for this I was true to you,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+ Our love they'll never shake,
+ When for ould Ireland's sake
+ We a true part did take,
+ Soggarth aroon!
+
+JOHN BANIM.
+
+[Footnote A: Priest, dear.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL.
+
+
+ PRELUDE TO PART FIRST.
+
+ Over his keys the musing organist,
+ Beginning doubtfully and far away,
+ First lets his fingers wander as they list,
+ And builds a bridge from Dreamland for his lay;
+ Then, as the touch of his loved instrument
+ Gives hope and fervor, nearer draws his theme,
+ First guessed by faint auroral flushes sent
+ Along the wavering vista of his dream.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Not only around our infancy
+ Doth heaven with all its splendors lie;
+ Daily, with souls that cringe and plot,
+ We Sinais climb and know it not.
+
+ Over our manhood bend the skies;
+ Against our fallen and traitor lives
+ The great winds utter prophecies;
+ With our faint hearts the mountain strives;
+ Its arms outstretched, the druid wood
+ Waits with its Benedicite;
+ And to our age's drowsy blood
+ Still shouts the inspiring sea.
+
+ Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us:
+ The beggar is taxed for a corner to die in.
+ The priest hath his fee who comes and shrives us,
+ We bargain for the graves we lie in;
+ At the devil's booth are all things sold,
+ Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of gold;
+
+ For a cap and bells our lives we pay,
+ Bubbles we buy with a whole soul's tasking:
+ 'Tis heaven alone that is given away,
+ 'Tis only God may be had for the asking;
+ No price is set on the lavish summer;
+ June may be had by the poorest comer.
+
+ And what is so rare as a day in June?
+ Then, if ever, come perfect days;
+ Then Heaven tries earth if it be in tune,
+ And over it softly her warm ear lays;
+ Whether we look, or whether we listen,
+ We hear life murmur, or see it glisten;
+ Every clod feels a stir of might,
+ An instinct within it that reaches and towers,
+ And groping blindly above it for light,
+ Climbs to a soul in grass and flowers;
+ The flush of life may well be seen
+ Thrilling back over hills and valleys;
+ The cowslip startles in meadows green,
+ The buttercup catches the sun in its chalice,
+ And there's never a leaf nor a blade too mean
+ To be some happy creature's palace;
+ The little bird sits at his door in the sun,
+ Atilt like a blossom among the leaves,
+ And lets his illumined being o'errun
+ With the deluge of summer it receives;
+ His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings,
+ And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings;
+ He sings to the wide world, and she to her nest,--
+ In the nice ear of Nature which song is the best?
+
+ Now is the high tide of the year,
+ And whatever of life hath ebbed away
+ Comes flooding back with a ripply cheer,
+ Into every bare inlet and creek and bay;
+ Now the heart is so full that a drop overfills it;
+ We are happy now because God wills it;
+ No matter how barren the past may have been,
+ 'T is enough for us now that the leaves are green;
+ We sit in the warm shade and feel right well
+ How the sap creeps up and the blossoms swell;
+ We may shut our eyes, but we cannot help knowing
+ That skies are clear and grass is growing;
+ The breeze comes whispering in our ear
+ That dandelions are blossoming near,
+ That maize has sprouted, that streams are flowing.
+ That the river is bluer than the sky,
+ That the robin is plastering his house hard by:
+ And if the breeze kept the good news back,
+ For other couriers we should not lack;
+ We could guess it all by yon heifer's lowing,--
+ And hark! how clear bold chanticleer,
+ Warmed with the new wine of the year,
+ Tells all in his lusty crowing!
+
+ Joy comes, grief goes, we know not how;
+ Everything is happy now,
+ Everything is upward striving;
+ 'T is as easy now for the heart to be true
+ As for grass to be green or skies to be blue,--
+ 'Tis the natural way of living:
+ Who knows whither the clouds have fled?
+ In the unscarred heaven they leave no wake;
+ And the eyes forget the tears they have shed,
+ The heart forgets its sorrow and ache;
+ The soul partakes the season's youth,
+ And the sulphurous rifts of passion and woe
+ Lie deep 'neath a silence pure and smooth,
+ Like burnt-out craters healed with snow.
+ What wonder if Sir Launfal now
+ Remember the keeping of his vow?
+
+
+ PART FIRST.
+
+ "My golden spurs now bring to me,
+ And bring to me my richest mail,
+ For to-morrow I go over land and sea
+ In search of the Holy Grail:
+ Shall never a bed for me be spread,
+ Nor shall a pillow be under my head,
+ Till I begin my vow to keep;
+ Here on the rushes will I sleep,
+ And perchance there may come a vision true
+ Ere day create the world anew."
+ Slowly Sir Launfal's eyes grew dim;
+ Slumber fell like a cloud on him,
+ And into his soul the vision flew.
+
+ The crows flapped over by twos and threes,
+ In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees,
+ The little birds sang as if it were
+ The one day of summer in all the year,
+ And the very leaves seemed to sing on the trees:
+ The castle alone in the landscape lay
+ Like an outpost of winter, dull and gray;
+ 'T was the proudest hall in the North Countree,
+ And never its gates might opened be,
+ Save to lord or lady of high degree;
+ Summer besieged it on every side,
+ But the churlish stone her assaults defied;
+ She could not scale the chilly wall,
+ Though around it for leagues her pavilions tall
+ Stretched left and right.
+ Over the hills and out of sight;
+ Green and broad was every tent,
+ And out of each a murmur went
+ Till the breeze fell off at night.
+
+ The drawbridge dropped with a surly clang,
+ And through the dark arch a charger sprang,
+ Bearing Sir Launfal, the maiden knight,
+ In his gilded mail, that flamed so bright
+ It seemed the dark castle had gathered all
+ Those shafts the fierce sun had shot over its wall
+ In his siege of three hundred summers long,
+ And binding them all in one blazing sheaf,
+ Had cast them forth; so, young and strong,
+ And lightsome as a locust leaf,
+ Sir Launfal flashed forth in his maiden mail,
+ To seek in all climes for the Holy Grail.
+
+ It was morning on hill and stream and tree,
+ And morning in the young knight's heart;
+ Only the castle moodily
+ Rebuffed the gifts of the sunshine free,
+ And gloomed by itself apart;
+ The season brimmed all other things up
+ Full as the rain fills the pitcher-plant's cup.
+
+ As Sir Launfal made morn through the darksome gate,
+ He was 'ware of a leper, crouched by the same,
+ Who begged with his hand and moaned as he sate;
+ And a loathing over Sir Launfal came;
+ The sunshine went out of his soul with a thrill,
+ The flesh 'neath his armor 'gan shrink and crawl,
+ And midway its leap his heart stood still
+ Like a frozen waterfall;
+ For this man, so foul and bent of stature,
+ Rasped harshly against his dainty nature,
+ And seemed the one blot on the summer morn,--
+ So he tossed him a piece of gold in scorn.
+
+ The leper raised not the gold from the dust:--
+ "Better to me the poor man's crust,
+ Better the blessing of the poor,
+ Though I turn me empty from his door:
+ That is no true alms which the hand can hold;
+ He gives only the worthless gold
+ Who gives from a sense of duty:
+ But he who gives but a slender mite,
+ And gives to that which is out of sight,--
+ That thread of the all-sustaining Beauty
+ Which runs through all and doth all unite,--
+ The hand cannot clasp the whole of his alms,
+ The heart outstretches its eager palms;
+ For a god goes with it and makes it store
+ To the soul that was starving in darkness before."
+
+
+ PRELUDE TO PART SECOND.
+
+ Down swept the chill wind from the mountain peak,
+ From the snow five thousand summers old;
+ On open wold and hilltop bleak
+ It had gathered all the cold,
+ And whirled it like sleet on the wanderer's cheek;
+ It carried a shiver everywhere
+ From the unleafed boughs and pastures bare;
+ The little brook heard it, and built a roof
+ 'Neath which he could house him winter-proof;
+ All night by the white stars' frosty gleams
+ He groined his arches and matched his beams;
+ Slender and clear were his crystal spars
+ As the lashes of light that trim the stars;
+ He sculptured every summer delight
+ In his halls and chambers out of sight;
+ Sometimes his tinkling waters slipt
+ Down through a frost-leaved forest crypt.
+ Long, sparkling aisles of steel stemmed trees
+ Mending to counterfeit a breeze;
+ Sometimes the roof no fretwork knew
+ But silvery mosses that downward grew;
+ Sometimes it was carved in sharp relief
+ With quaint arabesques of ice-fern leaf;
+ Sometimes it was simply smooth and clear
+ For the gladness of heaven to shine through, and here
+ He had caught the nodding bulrush tops
+ And hung them thickly with diamond drops.
+ That crystalled the beams of moon and sun,
+ And made a star of every one:
+ No mortal builder's most rare device
+ Could match this winter palace of ice;
+ 'T was as if every image that mirrored lay
+ In his depths serene through the summer day,
+ Each fleeting shadow of earth and sky,
+ Lest the happy model should be lost.
+ Sad been mimicked in fairy masonry
+ By the elfin builders of the frost.
+
+ Within the hall are song and laughter;
+ The cheeks of Christmas glow red and jolly,
+ And sprouting is every corbel and rafter
+ With lightsome green of ivy and holly;
+ Through the deep gulf of the chimney wide
+ Wallows the Yule-log's roaring tide;
+ The broad flame pennons droop and flap
+ And belly and tug as a flag in the wind;
+ Like a locust shrills the imprisoned sap,
+ Hunted to death in its galleries blind;
+ And swift little troops of silent sparks,
+ Now pausing, now scattering away as in fear,
+ Go threading the soot forest's tangled darks
+ Like herds of startled deer.
+
+ But the wind without was eager and sharp;
+ Of Sir Launfal's gray hair it makes a harp,
+ And rattles and wrings
+ The icy strings,
+ Singing in dreary monotone
+ A Christmas carol of its own,
+ Whose burden still, as he might guess,
+ Was "Shelterless, shelterless, shelterless!"
+
+ The voice of the seneschal flared like a torch
+ As he shouted the wanderer away from the porch,
+ And he sat in the gateway and saw all night
+ The great hall fire, so cheery and bold,
+ Through the window slits of the castle old,
+ Build out its piers of ruddy light
+ Against the drift of the cold.
+
+
+ PART SECOND.
+
+ There was never a leaf on bush or tree,
+ The bare boughs rattled shudderingly;
+ The river was dumb and could not speak,
+ For the weaver Winter its shroud had spun;
+ A single crow on the tree-top bleak
+ From his shining feathers shed off the cold sun;
+ Again it was morning, but shrunk and cold,
+ As if her veins were sapless and old,
+ And she rose up decrepitly
+ For a last dim look at earth and sea.
+
+ Sir Launfal turned from his own hard gale,
+ For another heir in his earldom sate:
+ An old, bent man, worn out and frail,
+ He came back from seeking the Holy Grail.
+ Little he recked of his earldom's loss,
+ No more on his surcoat was blazoned the cross;
+ But deep in his soul the sigh he wore,
+ The badge of the suffering and the poor.
+
+ Sir Launfal's raiment thin and spare
+ Was idle mail 'gainst the barbed air,
+ For it was just at the Christmas-time;
+ So he mused, as he sat, of a sunnier clime,
+ And sought for a shelter from cold and snow
+ In the light and warmth of long ago.
+ He sees the snake-like caravan crawl
+ O'er the edge of the desert, black and small,
+ Then nearer and nearer, till, one by one,
+ He can count the camels in the sun,
+ As over the red-hot sands they pass
+ To where, in its slender necklace of grass,
+ The little spring laughed and leapt in the shade.
+ And with its own self like an infant played,
+ And waved its signal of palms.
+
+ "For Christ's sweet sake, I beg an alms:"--
+ The happy camels may reach the spring,
+ But Sir Launfal sees only the grewsome thing,
+ The leper, lank as the rain-blanched bone,
+ That cowers beside him, a thing as lone
+ And white as the ice-isles of Northern seas
+ In the desolate horror of his disease.
+
+ And Sir Launfal said,--"I behold in thee
+ An image of Him who died on the tree;
+ Thou also hast had thy crown of thorns,--
+ Thou also hast had the world's buffets and scorns,--
+
+ And to thy life were not denied
+ The wounds in the hands and feet and side:
+ Mild Mary's Son, acknowledge me;
+ Behold, through him, I give to thee!"
+
+ Then the soul of the leper stood up in his eyes
+ And looked at Sir Launfal, and straightway he
+ Remembered in what a haughtier guise
+ He had flung an alms to leprosie,
+ When he girt his young life up in gilded mail
+ And set forth in search of the Holy Grail.
+ The heart within him was ashes and dust:
+ He parted in twain his single crust,
+ He broke the ice on the streamlet's brink,
+ And gave the leper to eat and drink;
+ 'T was a mouldy crust of coarse brown bread
+ 'T was water out of a wooden bowl,--
+ Yet with fine wheaten bread was the leper fed,
+ And 't was red wine he drank with his thirsty soul
+
+ As Sir Launfal mused with a downcast face,
+ A light shone round about the place;
+ The leper no longer crouched at his side,
+ But stood before him glorified,
+ Shining and tall and fair and straight
+ As the pillar that stood by the Beautiful Gate,--
+ Himself the Gate whereby men can
+ Enter the temple of God in Man.
+
+ His words were shed softer than leaves from the pine,
+ And they fell on Sir Launfal as snows on the brine,
+ That mingle their softness and quiet in one
+ With the shaggy unrest they float down upon;
+ And the voice that was softer than silence said:--
+ Lo, it is I, be not afraid!
+ In many climes, without avail,
+ Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail:
+ Behold, it is here,--this cup which thou
+ Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now;
+ This crust is my body broken for thee,
+ This water His blood that died on the tree;
+ The Holy Supper is kept indeed
+ In whatso we share with another's need.
+ Not, what we give, but what we share,--
+ For the gift without the giver is bare:
+ Who gives himself with his alms feeds three.--
+ Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me."
+
+ Sir Launfal awoke as from a swound:--
+ "The Grail in my castle here is found!
+ Hang my idle armor up on the wall,
+ Let it be the spider's banquet-hall;
+ He must be fenced with stronger mail
+ Who would seek and find the Holy Grail."
+
+ The castle gate stands open now,
+ And the wanderer is welcome to the hall
+ As the hang-bird is to the elm-tree bough;
+ No longer scowl the turrets tall.
+ The summer's long siege at last is o'er:
+ When the first poor outcast went in at the door,
+ She entered with him in disguise,
+ And mastered the fortress by surprise;
+ There is no spot she loves so well on ground;
+ She lingers and smiles there the whole year round;
+ The meanest serf on Sir Launfal's land
+ Has hall and bower at his command;
+ And there's no poor man in the North Countree
+ But is lord of the earldom as much as he.
+
+JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SISTER OF CHARITY.
+
+
+ She once was a lady of honor and wealth;
+ Bright glowed in her features the roses of health;
+ Her vesture was blended of silk and of gold,
+ And her motion shook perfume from every fold:
+ Joy revelled around her, love shone at her side,
+ And gay was her smile as the glance of a bride;
+ And light was her step in the mirth-sounding hall,
+ When she heard of the daughters of Vincent de Paul.
+
+ She felt in her spirit the summons of grace,
+ That called her to live for her suffering race;
+ And, heedless of pleasure, of comfort, of home,
+ Rose quickly, like Mary, and answered, "I come."
+ She put from her person the trappings of pride,
+ And passed from her home with the joy of a bride,
+ Nor wept at the threshold as onward she moved,--
+ For her heart was on fire in the cause it approved.
+
+ Lost ever to fashion, to vanity lost,
+ That beauty that once was the song and the toast,
+ No more in the ball-room that figure we meet,
+ But gliding at dusk to the wretch's retreat.
+ Forgot in the halls is that high-sounding name,
+ For the Sister of Charity blushes at fame:
+ Forgot are the claims of her riches and birth,
+ For she barters for heaven the glory of earth.
+
+ Those feet, that to music could gracefully move,
+ Now bear her alone on the mission of love;
+ Those hands, that once dangled the perfume and gem,
+ Are tending the helpless, or lifted for them;
+ That voice, that once echoed the song of the vain.
+ Now whispers relief to the bosom of pain;
+ And the hair that was shining with diamond and pearl,
+ Is wet with the tears of the penitent girl.
+
+ Her down-bed, a pallet--her trinkets, a bead;
+ Her lustre--one taper, that serves her to read;
+ Her sculpture--the crucifix nailed by her bed;
+ Her paintings--one print of the thorn-crowned head;
+ Her cushion--the pavement that wearies her knees;
+ Her music--the psalm, or the sigh of disease:
+ The delicate lady lives mortified there,
+ And the feast is forsaken for fasting and prayer.
+
+ Yet not to the service of heart and of mind
+ Are the cares of that heaven-minded virgin confined:
+ Like Him whom she loves, to the mansions of grief
+ She hastes with the tidings of joy and relief.
+ She strengthens the weary, she comforts the weak,
+ And soft is her voice in the ear of the sick;
+ Where want and affliction on mortals attend,
+ The Sister of Charity there is a friend.
+
+ Unshrinking where pestilence scatters his breath,
+ Like an angel she moves, mid the vapors of death;
+ Where rings the loud musket, and flashes the sword,
+ Unfearing she walks, for she follows her Lord.
+ How sweetly she bends o'er each plague-tainted face,
+ With looks that are lighted with holiest grace;
+ How kindly she dresses each suffering limb,
+ For she sees in the wounded the image of Him.
+
+ Behold her, ye worldly! behold her, ye vain!
+ Who shrink from the pathway of virtue and pain!
+ Who yield up to pleasure your nights and your days,
+ Forgetful of service, forgetful of praise.
+ Ye lazy philosophers, self-seeking men;
+ Ye fireside philanthropists, great at the pen;
+ How stands in the balance your eloquence weighed
+ With the life and the deeds of that high-born maid?
+
+GERALD JOSEPH GRIFFEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT I LIVE FOR.
+
+
+ I live for those who love me,
+ Whose hearts are kind and true,
+ For heaven that smiles above me,
+ And waits my spirit, too;
+ For all the ties that bind me,
+ For all the tasks assigned me.
+ And bright hopes left behind me,
+ And good that I can do.
+
+ I live to learn their story
+ Who've suffered for my sake,
+ To emulate their glory,
+ And follow in their wake;
+ Bards, patriots, martyrs, sages,
+ The noble of all ages,
+ Whose deeds crown history's pages,
+ And Time's great volume make.
+
+ I live to hold communion
+ With all that is divine,
+ To feel there is a union
+ 'Twixt Nature's heart and mine;
+ To profit by affliction,
+ Reap truths from fields of fiction,
+ And, wiser from conviction,
+ Fulfil each grand design.
+
+ I live to hail that season,
+ By gifted minds foretold,
+ When men shall rule by reason,
+ And not alone by gold;
+ When man to man united,
+ And every wrong thing righted,
+ The whole world shall be lighted
+ As Eden was of old.
+
+ I live for those who love me,
+ Whose hearts are kind and true,
+ For heaven that smiles above me,
+ And waits my spirit too;
+ For the cause that lacks assistance,
+ For the wrong that needs resistance,
+ For the future in the distance,
+ And the good that I can do.
+
+GEORGE LINNAEUS BANKS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IF WE HAD BUT A DAY.
+
+
+ We should fill the hours with the sweetest things,
+ If we had but a day;
+ We should drink alone at the purest springs
+ In our upward way;
+ We should love with a lifetime's love in an hour,
+ If the hours were few;
+ We should rest, not for dreams, but for fresher power
+ To be and to do.
+
+ We should guide our wayward or wearied wills
+ By the clearest light;
+ We should keep our eyes on the heavenly hills,
+ If they lay in sight;
+ We should trample the pride and the discontent
+ Beneath our feet;
+ We should take whatever a good God sent,
+ With a trust complete.
+
+ We should waste no moments in weak regret,
+ If the day were but one;
+ If what we remember and what we forget
+ Went out with the sun;
+ We should be from our clamorous selves set free,
+ To work or to pray,
+ And to be what the Father would have us be.
+ If we had but a day.
+
+MARY LOWE DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ABOU BEN ADHEM.
+
+
+ Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase!)
+ Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
+ And saw within the moonlight in his room,
+ Making it rich and like a lily in bloom.
+ An angel writing in a book of gold:
+ Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
+ And to the presence in the room he said,
+ "What writest thou?" The vision raised its head,
+ And, with a look made of all sweet accord,
+ Answered, "The names of those who love the Lord."
+ "And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so."
+ Replied the angel. Abou spoke more low,
+ But cheerly still; and said, "I pray thee, then,
+ Write me as one that loves his fellow-men."
+ The angel wrote, and vanished. The next night
+ It came again with a great wakening light,
+ And showed the names whom love of God had blessed,--
+ And lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest!
+
+LEIGH HUNT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE.
+
+
+ If suddenly upon the street
+ My gracious Saviour I should meet,
+ And he should say, "As I love thee,
+ What love hast thou to offer me?"
+ Then what could this poor heart of mine
+ Dare offer to that heart divine?
+
+ His eye would pierce my outward show,
+ His thought my inmost thought would know;
+ And if I said, "I love thee, Lord,"
+ He would not heed my spoken word,
+ Because my daily life would tell
+ If verily I loved him well.
+
+ If on the day or in the place
+ Wherein he met me face to face,
+ My life could show some kindness done,
+ Some purpose formed, some work begun
+ For his dear sake, then it were meet
+ Love's gift to lay at Jesus' feet.
+
+CHARLES FRANCIS RICHARDSON.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+SABBATH: WORSHIP: CREED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUNDAY MORNING BELLS.
+
+
+ From the near city comes the clang of bells:
+ Their hundred jarring diverse tones combine
+ In one faint misty harmony, as fine
+ As the soft note yon winter robin swells.
+ What if to Thee in thine infinity
+ These multiform and many-colored creeds
+ Seem but the robe man wraps as masquers' weeds
+ Round the one living truth them givest him--Thee?
+ What if these varied forms that worship prove,
+ Being heart-worship, reach thy perfect ear
+ But as a monotone, complete and clear,
+ Of which the music is, through Christ's name, love?
+ Forever rising in sublime increase
+ To "Glory in the highest,--on earth peace"?
+
+DINAH M. MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SABBATH HYMN ON THE MOUNTAINS.
+
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not in the temple of shapeliest mould,
+ Polished with marble and gleaming with gold,
+ Piled upon pillars of slenderest grace,
+ But here in the blue sky's luminous face,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the organ's melodious wave
+ Dies 'neath the rafters that narrow the nave,
+ But here with the free wind's wandering sweep,
+ Here with the billow that booms from the deep,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the pale-faced multitude meet
+ In the sweltering lane and the dun-visaged street,
+ But here where bright ocean, thick sown with green isles,
+ Feeds the glad eye with a harvest of smiles,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Here where the strength of the old granite Ben
+ Towers o'er the greenswarded grace of the glen,
+ Where the birch flings its fragrance abroad on the hill,
+ And the bee of the heather-bloom wanders at will,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Here where the loch, the dark mountain's fair daughter,
+ Down the red scaur flings the white-streaming water,
+ Leaping and tossing and swirling forever,
+ Down to the bed of the smooth-rolling river,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not where the voice of a preacher instructs you,
+ Not where the hand of a mortal conducts you,
+ But where the bright welkin in scripture of glory
+ Blazons creation's miraculous story.
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ The wind and the welkin, the sun and the river,
+ Weaving a tissue of wonders forever;
+ The mead and the mountain, the flower and the tree,
+ What is their pomp, but a vision of thee,
+ Wonderful Lord?
+
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+ Not in the square-hewn, many-tiered pile,
+ Not in the long-drawn, dim-shadowed aisle,
+ But where the bright world, with age never hoary,
+ Flashes her brightness and thunders his glory,
+ Praise ye the Lord!
+
+JOHN STUART BLACKIE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SABBATH MORNING.
+
+
+ With silent awe I hail the sacred morn,
+ That slowly wakes while all the fields are still!
+ A soothing calm on every breeze is borne;
+ A graver murmur gurgles from the rill;
+ And echo answers softer from the hill;
+ And sweeter sings the linnet from the thorn:
+ The skylark warbles in a tone less shrill.
+ Hail, light serene! hail, sacred Sabbath morn!
+ The rooks float silent by in airy drove;
+ The sun a placid yellow lustre throws;
+ The gales that lately sighed along the grove
+ Have hushed their downy wings in dead repose
+ The hovering rack of clouds forgets to move,--
+ So smiled that day when the first morn arose!
+
+JOHN LEYDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POOR MAN'S DAY.
+
+ FROM "THE SABBATH."
+
+
+ How still the morning of the hallowed day!
+ Mute is the voice of rural labor, hushed
+ The ploughboy's whistle and the milkmaid's song.
+ The scythe lies glittering in the dewy wreath
+ Of tedded grass, mingled with faded flowers,
+ That yestermorn bloomed waving in the breeze;
+ Sounds the most faint attract the ear,--the hum
+ Of early bee, the trickling of the dew,
+ The distant bleating, midway up the hill.
+ Calmness sits throned on yon unmoving cloud.
+ To him who wanders o'er the upland leas
+ The blackbird's note comes mellower from the dale;
+ And sweeter from the sky the gladsome lark
+ Warbles his heaven-tuned song; the lulling brook
+ Murmurs more gently down the deep-worn glen;
+ While from yon lowly roof, whose circling smoke
+ O'ermounts the mist, is heard at intervals
+ The voice of psalms, the simple song of praise.
+ With dovelike wings Peace o'er yon village broods;
+ The dizzying mill-wheel rests; the anvil's din
+ Hath ceased; all, all around is quietness.
+ Less fearful on this day, the limping hare
+ Stops, and looks back, and stops, and looks on man,
+ Her deadliest foe. The toil-worn horse, set free,
+ Unheedful of the pasture, roams at large;
+ And as his stiff, unwieldy bulk he rolls,
+ His iron-armed hoofs gleam in the morning ray.
+ But chiefly man the day of rest enjoys.
+ Hail, Sabbath! thee I hail, the poor man's day.
+ On other days the man of toil is doomed
+ To eat his joyless bread, lonely; the ground
+ Both seat and board; screened from the winter's cold
+ And summer's heat by neighboring hedge or tree;
+ But on this day, imbosomed in his home,
+ He shares the frugal meal with those he loves;
+ With those he loves he shares the heartfelt joy
+ Of giving thanks to God--not thanks of form,
+ A word and a grimace, but reverently,
+ With covered face and upward earnest eye.
+ Hail, Sabbath! thee I hail, the poor man's day.
+ The pale mechanic now has leave to breathe
+ The morning air, pure from the city's smoke;
+ While, wandering slowly up the river-side,
+ He meditates on Him, whose power he marks
+ In each green tree that proudly spreads the bough
+ As in the tiny dew-bent flowers that bloom
+ Around its roots; and while he thus surveys,
+ With elevated joy, each rural charm,
+ He hopes, yet fears presumption in the hope,
+ That heaven may be one Sabbath without end.
+
+JAMES GRAHAME.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SABBATH OF THE SOUL.
+
+
+ Sleep, sleep to-day, tormenting cares,
+ Of earth and folly born;
+ Ye shall not dim the light that streams
+ From this celestial morn.
+
+ To-morrow will be time enough
+ To feel your harsh control;
+ Ye shall not violate, this day,
+ The Sabbath of my soul.
+
+ Sleep, sleep forever, guilty thoughts;
+ Let fires of vengeance die;
+ And, purged from sin, may I behold
+ A God of purity!
+
+ANNA LAETITIA BARBAULD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VESPER HYMN.
+
+
+ Now, on sea and land descending,
+ Brings the night its peace profound:
+ Let our vesper hymn be blending
+ With the holy calm around.
+ Soon as dies the sunset glory,
+ Stars of heaven shine out above,
+ Telling still the ancient story--
+ Their Creator's changeless love.
+
+ Now, our wants and burdens leaving
+ To his care who cares for all,
+ Cease we fearing, cease we grieving;
+ At his touch our burdens fall.
+ As the darkness deepens o'er us,
+ Lo! eternal stars arise;
+ Hope and Faith and Love rise glorious,
+ Shining in the Spirit's skies.
+
+SAMUEL LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VESPER HYMN.
+
+
+ The day is done; the weary day of thought and toil is past,
+ Soft falls the twilight cool and gray on the tired earth at last:
+ By wisest teachers wearied, by gentlest friends oppressed,
+ In thee alone, the soul, outworn, refreshment finds, and rest.
+
+ Bend, Gracious Spirit, from above, like these o'erarching skies,
+ And to thy firmament of love lift up these longing eyes;
+ And, folded by thy sheltering hand, in refuge still and deep,
+ Let blessed thoughts from thee descend, as drop the dews of sleep.
+
+ And when refreshed the soul once more puts on new life and power;
+ Oh, let thine image. Lord, alone, gild the first waking hour!
+ Let that dear Presence dawn and glow, fairer than morn's first ray,
+ And thy pure radiance overflow the splendor of the day.
+
+ So in the hastening even, so in the coming morn,
+ When deeper slumber shall be given, and fresher life be born.
+ Shine out, true Light! to guide my way amid that deepening gloom,
+ And rise, O Morning Star, the first that dayspring to illume!
+
+ I cannot dread the darkness where thou wilt watch o'er me,
+ Nor smile to greet the sunrise unless thy smile I see;
+ Creator, Saviour, Comforter! on thee my soul is cast;
+ At morn, at night, in earth, in heaven, be thou my First and Last!
+
+ELIZA SCUDDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMAZING, BEAUTEOUS CHANGE!
+
+
+ Amazing, beauteous change!
+ A world created new!
+ My thoughts with transport range,
+ The lovely scene to view;
+ In all I trace,
+ Saviour divine,
+ The word is thine,--
+ Be thine the praise!
+
+ See crystal fountains play
+ Amidst the burning sands;
+ The river's winding way
+ Shines through the thirsty lands;
+ New grass is seen,
+ And o'er the meads
+ Its carpet spreads
+ Of living green.
+
+ Where pointed brambles grew,
+ Intwined with horrid thorn,
+ Gay flowers, forever new,
+ The painted fields adorn,--
+ The blushing rose
+ And lily there,
+ In union fair,
+ Their sweets disclose.
+
+ Where the bleak mountain stood
+ All bare and disarrayed,
+ See the wide-branching wood
+ Diffuse its grateful shade;
+ Tall cedars nod,
+ And oaks and pines,
+ And elms and vines
+ Confess thee God.
+
+ The tyrants of the plain
+ Their savage chase give o'er,--
+ No more they rend the slain,
+ And thirst for blood no more;
+ But infant hands
+ Fierce tigers stroke,
+ And lions yoke
+ In flowery bands.
+
+ O, when, Almighty Lord!
+ Shall these glad things arise,
+ To verify thy word,
+ And bless our wandering eyes?
+ That earth may raise,
+ With all its tongues,
+ United songs
+ Of ardent praise.
+
+PHILIP DODDRIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WORD.
+
+
+ O Word of God incarnate,
+ O Wisdom from on high,
+ O Truth unchanged, unchanging,
+ O Light of our dark sky;
+ We praise thee for the radiance
+ That from the hallowed page,
+ A lantern to our footsteps,
+ Shines on from age to age.
+
+ The Church from thee, her Master,
+ Received the gift divine;
+ And still that light she lifteth
+ O'er all the earth to shine.
+ It is the golden casket
+ Where gems of truth are stored;
+ It is the heaven-drawn picture
+ Of, thee, the living Word.
+
+ It floateth like a banner
+ Before God's host unfurled;
+ It shineth like a beacon
+ Above the darkling world;
+ It is the chart and compass
+ That o'er life's surging sea,
+ Mid mists and rocks and quicksands,
+ Still guide, O Christ, to thee.
+
+ Oh, make thy Church, dear Saviour,
+ A lamp of burnished gold,
+ To bear before the nations
+ Thy true light, as of old.
+ Oh, teach thy wandering pilgrims
+ By this their path to trace,
+ Till, clouds and darkness ended,
+ They see thee face to face.
+
+WILLIAM WALSHAM HOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CHIMES OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+ The chimes, the chimes of Motherland,
+ Of England green and old.
+ That out from fane and ivied tower
+ A thousand years have tolled;
+ How glorious must their music be
+ As breaks the hallowed day,
+ And calleth with a seraph's voice
+ A nation up to pray!
+
+ Those chimes that tell a thousand tales,
+ Sweet tales of olden time;
+ And ring a thousand memories
+ At vesper, and at prime!
+ At bridal and at burial,
+ For cottager and king,
+ Those chimes, those glorious Christian chimes,
+ How blessedly they ring!
+
+ Those chimes, those chimes of Motherland,
+ Upon a Christmas morn.
+ Outbreaking as the angels did,
+ For a Redeemer born!
+ How merrily they call afar,
+ To cot and baron's hall,
+ With holly decked and mistletoe,
+ To keep the festival!
+
+ The chimes of England, how they peal
+ From tower and Gothic pile,
+ Where hymn and swelling anthem fill
+ The dim cathedral aisle;
+ Where windows bathe the holy light
+ On priestly heads that falls,
+ And stains the florid tracery
+ Of banner-dighted walls!
+
+ And then, those Easter bells, in spring,
+ Those glorious Easter chimes!
+ How loyally they hail thee round,
+ Old Queen of holy times!
+ From hill to hill like sentinels,
+ Responsively they cry,
+ And sing the rising of the Lord,
+ From vale to mountain high.
+
+ I love ye, chimes of Motherland,
+ With all this soul of mine,
+ And bless the Lord that I am sprung
+ Of good old English line:
+ And like a son I sing the lay
+ That England's glory tells;
+ For she is lovely to the Lord,
+ For you, ye Christian bells!
+
+ And heir of her historic fame,
+ Though far away my birth,
+ Thee, too, I love, my Forest-land,
+ The joy of all the earth;
+ For thine thy mother's voice shall be,
+ And here, where God is king,
+ With English chimes, from Christian spires,
+ The wilderness shall ring.
+
+ARTHUR CLEVELAND COXE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OLD VILLAGE CHOIR.
+
+
+ I have fancied, sometimes, the Bethel-bent beam,
+ That trembled to earth in the patriarch's dream,
+ Was a ladder of song in that wilderness rest,
+ From the pillar of stone to the blue of the blest.
+ And the angels descending to dwell with us here,
+ "Old Hundred," and "Corinth," and "China," and "Mear."
+
+ "Let us sing to God's praise," the minister said.
+ All the psalm-books at once fluttered open at "York";
+ Sunned their long dotted wings in the words that he read,
+ While the leader leaped into the tune just ahead,
+ And politely picked up the key-note with a fork;
+ And the vicious old viol went growling along
+ At the heels of the girls, in the rear of the song.
+
+ All the hearts are not dead, not under the sod,
+ That those breaths can blow open to heaven and God!
+ Ah, "Silver Street" flows by a bright shining road,--
+ Oh, not to the hymns that in harmony flowed,--
+ But the sweet human psalms of the old-fashioned choir,
+ To the girl that sang alto--the girl that sang air!
+
+ Oh, I need not a wing--bid no genii come
+ With a wonderful web from Arabian loom,
+ To bear me again up the river of Time,
+ When the world was in rhythm, and life was its rhyme--
+ Where the streams of the years flowed so noiseless and narrow,
+ That across it there floated the song of the sparrow--
+
+ For a sprig of green caraway carries me there.
+ To the old village church, and the old village choir,
+ Where clear of the floor my feet slowly swung,
+ And timed the sweet pulse of the praise that they sung,
+ Till the glory aslant from the afternoon sun
+ Seemed the rafters of gold in God's temple begun!
+
+ You may smile at the nasals of old Deacon Brown,
+ Who followed by scent, till he ran the tune down;
+ And dear Sister Green, with more goodness than grace,
+ Rose and fell on the tunes as she stood in her place,
+ And where "Coronation" exultingly flows,
+ Tried to reach the high notes on the tips of her toes!
+
+ To the land of the leal they have gone with their song,
+ Where the choir and the chorus together belong,
+ Oh be lifted, ye gates! Let me hear them again--
+ Blessed song, blessed singers! forever, Amen!
+
+BENJAMIN F. TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A LANCASHIRE DOXOLOGY.
+
+ "Some cotton has lately been imported into Farringdon, where
+ the mills have been closed for a considerable time. The
+ people, who were previously in the deepest distress, went out
+ to meet the cotton: the women wept over the bales and kissed
+ them, and finally sang the Doxology over them."--_Spectator_
+ of May 14, 1803.
+
+
+ "Praise God from whom all blessings flow,"
+ Praise him who sendeth joy and woe.
+ The Lord who takes, the Lord who gives,
+ O, praise him, all that dies, and lives.
+
+ He opens and he shuts his hand,
+ But why we cannot understand:
+ Pours and dries up his mercies' flood,
+ And yet is still All-perfect Good.
+
+ We fathom not the mighty plan,
+ The mystery of God and man;
+ We women, when afflictions come,
+ We only suffer and are dumb.
+
+ And when, the tempest passing by,
+ He gleams out, sunlike through our sky,
+ We look up, and through black clouds riven
+ We recognize the smile of Heaven.
+
+ Ours is no wisdom of the wise,
+ We have no deep philosophies;
+ Childlike we take both kiss and rod,
+ For he who loveth knoweth God.
+
+DINAH M. MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REBECCA'S HYMN.
+
+ FROM "IVANHOE."
+
+
+ When Israel, of the Lord beloved,
+ Out from the land of bondage came,
+ Her fathers' God before her moved,
+ An awful guide, in smoke and flame.
+ By day, along the astonished lands,
+ The cloudy pillar glided slow:
+ By night, Arabia's crimsoned sands
+ Returned the fiery column's glow.
+
+ There rose the choral hymn of praise,
+ And trump and timbrel answered keen,
+ And Zion's daughters poured their lays,
+ With priest's and warrior's voice between.
+ No portents now our foes amaze,
+ Forsaken Israel wanders lone:
+ Our fathers would not know Thy ways,
+ And Thou hast left them to their own.
+
+ But, present still, though now unseen!
+ When brightly shines the prosperous day,
+ Be thoughts of Thee a cloudy screen
+ To temper the deceitful ray.
+ And O, when stoops on Judah's path
+ In shade and storm the frequent night,
+ Be Thou, long-suffering, slow to wrath,
+ A burning and a shining light!
+
+ Our harps we left by Babel's streams,
+ The tyrant's jest, the Gentile's scorn;
+ No censer round our altar beams,
+ And mute are timbrel, harp, and horn.
+ But Thou hast said, "The blood of goat,
+ The flesh of rams, I will not prize;
+ A contrite heart, a humble thought,
+ Are mine accepted sacrifice."
+
+SIR WALTER SCOTT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOOK OF GOD.
+
+
+ Thy thoughts are here, my God,
+ Expressed in words divine,
+ The utterance of heavenly lips
+ In every sacred line.
+
+ Across the ages they
+ Have reached us from afar,
+ Than the bright gold more golden they,
+ Purer than purest star.
+
+ More durable they stand
+ Than the eternal hills;
+ Far sweeter and more musical
+ Than music of earth's rills.
+
+ Fairer in their fair hues
+ Than the fresh flowers of earth,
+ More fragrant than the fragrant climes
+ Where odors have their birth.
+
+ Each word of thine a gem
+ From the celestial mines,
+ A sunbeam from that holy heaven
+ Where holy sunlight shines.
+
+ Thine, thine, this book, though given
+ In man's poor human speech,
+ Telling of things unseen, unheard,
+ Beyond all human reach.
+
+ No strength it craves or needs
+ From this world's wisdom vain;
+ No filling up from human wells,
+ Or sublunary rain.
+
+ No light from sons of time,
+ Nor brilliance from its gold;
+ It sparkles with its own glad light,
+ As in the ages old.
+
+ A thousand hammers keen,
+ With fiery force and strain,
+ Brought down on it in rage and hate,
+ Have struck this gem in vain.
+
+ Against this sea-swept rock
+ Ten thousand storms their will
+ Of foam and rage have wildly spent;
+ It lifts its calm face still.
+
+ It standeth and will stand,
+ Without or change or age,
+ The word of majesty and light,
+ The church's heritage.
+
+HORATIUS BONAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MEETING.
+
+
+ The elder folk shook hands at last,
+ Down seat by seat the signal passed.
+ To simple ways like ours unused,
+ Half solemnized and half amused,
+ With long-drawn breath and shrug, my guest
+ His sense of glad relief expressed.
+ Outside, the hills lay warm in sun;
+ The cattle in the meadow-run
+ Stood half-leg deep; a single bird
+ The green repose above us stirred.
+ "What part or lot have you," he said,
+ "In these dull rites of drowsy-head?
+ Is silence worship? Seek it where
+ It soothes with dreams the summer air;
+ Not in this close and rude-benched hall,
+ But where soft lights and shadows fall,
+ And all the slow, sleep-walking hours
+ Glide soundless over grass and flowers!
+ From time and place and form apart,
+ Its holy ground the human heart,
+ Nor ritual-bound nor templeward
+ Walks the free spirit of the Lord!
+ Our common Master did not pen
+ His followers up from other men;
+ His service liberty indeed,
+ He built no church, he framed no creed;
+ But while the saintly Pharisee
+ Made broader his phylactery,
+ As from the synagogue was seen
+ The dusty-sandalled Nazarene
+ Through ripening cornfields lead the way
+ Upon the awful Sabbath day,
+ His sermons were the healthful talk
+ That shorter made the mountain-walk,
+ His wayside texts were flowers and birds,
+ Where mingled with his gracious words
+ The rustle of the tamarisk-tree
+ And ripple-wash of Galilee."
+
+ "Thy words are well, O friend," I said;
+ "Unmeasured and unlimited,
+ With noiseless slide of stone to stone,
+ The mystic Church of God has grown.
+ Invisible and silent stands
+ The temple never made with hands,
+ Unheard the voices still and small
+ Of its unseen confessional.
+ He needs no special place of prayer
+ Whose hearing ear is everywhere;
+ He brings not back the childish days
+ That ringed the earth with stones of praise,
+ Roofed Karnak's hall of gods, and laid
+ The plinths of Philae's colonnade.
+ Still less he owns the selfish good
+ And sickly growth of solitude,--
+ The worthless grace that, out of sight,
+ Flowers in the desert anchorite;
+ Dissevered from the suffering whole,
+ Love hath no power to save a soul.
+ Not out of Self, the origin
+ And native air and soil of sin,
+ The living waters spring and flow,
+ The trees with leaves of healing grow.
+
+ "Dream not, O friend, because I seek
+ This quiet shelter twice a week,
+ I better deem its pine-laid floor
+ Than breezy hill or sea-sung shore;
+ But nature is not solitude;
+ She crowds us with her thronging wood;
+ Her many hands reach out to us,
+ Her many tongues are garrulous;
+ Perpetual riddles of surprise
+ She offers to our ears and eyes;
+ She will not leave our senses still,
+ But drags them captive at her will;
+ And, making earth too great for heaven,
+ She hides the Giver in the given.
+
+ "And so I find it well to come
+ For deeper rest to this still room,
+ For here the habit of the soul
+ Feels less the outer world's control;
+ The strength of mutual purpose pleads
+ More earnestly our common needs;
+ And from the silence multiplied
+ By these still forms on either side,
+ The world that time and sense have known
+ Falls off and leaves us God alone.
+
+ "Yet rarely through the charmed repose
+ Unmixed the stream of motive flows,
+ A flavor of its many springs,
+ The tints of earth and sky it brings;
+ In the still waters needs must be
+ Some shade of human sympathy;
+ And here, in its accustomed place,
+ I look on memory's dearest face;
+ The blind by-sitter guesseth not
+ What shadow haunts that vacant spot;
+ No eyes save mine alone can see
+ The love wherewith it welcomes me!
+ And still, with those alone my kin,
+ In doubt and weakness, want and sin,
+ I bow my head, my heart I bare
+ As when that face was living there,
+ And strive (too oft, alas! in vain)
+ The peace of simple trust to gain,
+ Fold fancy's restless wings, and lay
+ The idols of my heart away.
+
+ "Welcome the silence all unbroken,
+ Nor less the words of fitness spoken,--
+ Such golden words as hers for whom
+ Our autumn flowers have just made room;
+ Whose hopeful utterance through and through
+ The freshness of the morning blew;
+ Who loved not less the earth that light
+ Fell on it from the heavens in sight,
+ But saw in all fair forms more fair
+ The Eternal beauty mirrored there.
+ Whose eighty years but added grace
+ And saintlier meaning to her face,--
+ The look of one who bore away
+ Glad tidings from the hills of day,
+ While all our hearts went forth to meet
+ The coming of her beautiful feet!
+ Or haply hers whose pilgrim tread
+ Is in the paths where Jesus led;
+ Who dreams her childhood's Sabbath dream
+ By Jordan's willow-shaded stream,
+ And, of the hymns of hope and faith,
+ Sang by the monks of Nazareth,
+ Hears pious echoes, in the call
+ To prayer, from Moslem minarets fall,
+ Repeating where His works were wrought
+ The lesson that her Master taught,
+ Of whom an elder Sibyl gave,
+ The prophecies of Cumae's cave!
+
+ "I ask no organ's soulless breath
+ To drone the themes of life and death,
+ No altar candle-lit by day,
+ No ornate wordsman's rhetoric-play,
+ No cool philosophy to teach
+ Its bland audacities of speech
+ To double-tasked idolaters,
+ Themselves their gods and worshippers,
+ No pulpit hammered by the fist
+ Of loud-asserting dogmatist,
+ Who borrows for the hand of love
+ The smoking thunderbolts of Jove.
+ I know how well the fathers taught,
+ What work the later schoolmen wrought;
+ I reverence old-time faith and men,
+ But God is near us now as then;
+ His force of love is still unspent,
+ His hate of sin as imminent;
+ And still the measure of our needs
+ Outgrows the cramping bounds of creeds;
+ The manna gathered yesterday
+ Already savors of decay;
+ Doubts to the world's child-heart unknown
+ Question us now from star and stone;
+ Too little or too much we know,
+ And sight is swift and faith is slow;
+ The power is lost to self-deceive
+ With shallow forms of make-believe.
+ We walk at high noon, and the bells
+ Call to a thousand oracles,
+ But the sound deafens, and the light
+ Is stronger than our dazzled sight;
+ The letters of the sacred Book
+ Glimmer and swim beneath our look;
+ Still struggles in the Age's breast
+ With deepening agony of quest
+ The old entreaty: 'Art thou He,
+ Or look we for the Christ to be?'
+
+ "God should be most where man is least;
+ So, where is neither church nor priest,
+ And never rag of form or creed
+ To clothe the nakedness of need,--
+ Where farmer-folk in silence meet,--
+ I turn my bell-unsummoned feet;
+ I lay the critic's glass aside,
+ I tread upon my lettered pride,
+ And, lowest-seated, testify
+ To the oneness of humanity;
+ Confess the universal want,
+ And share whatever Heaven may grant.
+ He findeth not who seeks his own,
+ The soul is lost that's saved alone.
+ Not on one favored forehead fell
+ Of old the fire-tongued miracle,
+ But flamed o'er all the thronging host
+ The baptism of the Holy Ghost;
+ Heart answers heart: in one desire
+ The blending lines of prayer aspire;
+ 'Where, in my name, meet two or three,'
+ Our Lord hath said, 'I there will be!'
+
+ "So sometimes comes to soul and sense
+ The feeling which is evidence
+ That very near about us lies
+ The realm of spiritual mysteries.
+ The sphere of the supernal powers
+ Impinges on this world of ours.
+ The low and dark horizon lifts,
+ To light the scenic terror shifts;
+ The breath of a diviner air
+ Blows down the answer of a prayer:--
+ That all our sorrow, pain, and doubt
+ A great compassion clasps about,
+ And law and goodness, love and force,
+ Are wedded fast beyond divorce.
+ Then duty leaves to love its task,
+ The beggar Self forgets to ask;
+ With smile of trust and folded hands,
+ The passive soul in waiting stands
+ To feel, as flowers the sun and dew,
+ The One true Life its own renew.
+
+ "So, to the calmly gathered thought
+ The innermost of truth is taught,
+ The mystery dimly understood,
+ That love of God is love of good,
+ And, chiefly, its divinest trace
+ In Him of Nazareth's holy face;
+ That to be saved is only this,--
+ Salvation from our selfishness,
+ From more than elemental fire,
+ The soul's unsanctified desire,
+ From sin itself, and not the pain
+ That warns us of its chafing chain;
+ That worship's deeper meaning lies
+ In mercy, and not sacrifice,
+ Not proud humilities of sense
+ And posturing of penitence,
+ But love's unforced obedience;
+ That Book and Church and Day are given
+ For man, not God,--for earth, not heaven,--
+ The blessed means to holiest ends,
+ Not masters, but benignant friends;
+ That the dear Christ dwells not afar,
+ The king of some remoter star,
+ Listening, at times, with flattered ear,
+ To homage wrung from selfish fear,
+ But here, amidst the poor and blind,
+ The bound and suffering of our kind,
+ In works we do, in prayers we pray,
+ Life of our life, He lives to-day."
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LIVING TEMPLE.
+
+
+ Nor in the world of light alone,
+ Where God has built his blazing throne,
+ Nor yet alone in earth below,
+ With belted seas that come and go,
+ And endless isles of sunlit green,
+ Is all thy Maker's glory seen:
+ Look in upon thy wondrous frame,--
+ Eternal wisdom still the same!
+
+ The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves
+ Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,
+ Whose streams of brightening purple rush,
+ Fired with a new and livelier blush,
+ While all their burden of decay
+ The ebbing current steals away,
+ And red with Nature's flame they start
+ From the warm fountains of the heart.
+
+ No rest that throbbing slave may ask,
+ Forever quivering o'er his task,
+ While far and wide a crimson jet
+ Leaps forth to fill the woven net
+ Which in unnumbered crossing tides
+ The flood of burning life divides,
+ Then, kindling each decaying part,
+ Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.
+
+ But warmed with that unchanging flame
+ Behold the outward moving frame,
+ Its living marbles jointed strong
+ With glistening band and silvery thong,
+ And linked to reason's guiding reins
+ By myriad rings in trembling chains,
+ Each graven with the threaded zone
+ Which claims it as the Master's own.
+
+ See how yon beam of seeming white
+ Is braided out of seven-hued light,
+ Yet in those lucid globes no ray
+ By any chance shall break astray.
+ Hark, how the rolling surge of sound,
+ Arches and spirals circling round,
+ Wakes the hushed spirit through thine ear
+ With music it is heaven to hear.
+
+ Then mark the cloven sphere that holds
+ All thought in its mysterious folds,
+ That feels sensation's faintest thrill,
+ And flashes forth the sovereign will;
+ Think on the stormy world that dwells
+ Locked in its dim and clustering cells!
+ The lightning gleams of power it sheds
+ Along its hollow glassy threads!
+
+ O Father! grant thy love divine
+ To make these mystic temples thine!
+ When wasting age and wearying strife
+ Have sapped the leaning walls of life,
+ When darkness gathers over all,
+ And the last tottering pillars-fall,
+ Take the poor dust thy mercy warms,
+ And mould it into heavenly forms!
+
+OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OF HYM THAT TOGYDER WYLL SERVE TWO MAYSTERS.
+
+
+ A Fole he is and voyde of reason
+ Whiche with one hounde tendyth to take
+ Two harys in one instant and season;
+ Rightso is he that wolde undertake
+ Hym to two lordes a servaunt to make;
+ For whether that he be lefe or lothe,
+ The one he shall displease, or els bothe.
+
+ A fole also he is withouten doute,
+ And in his porpose sothly blyndyd sore,
+ Which doth entende labour or go aboute
+ To serve god, and also his wretchyd store
+ Of worldly ryches: for as I sayde before,
+ He that togyder will two maysters serve
+ Shall one displease and nat his love deserve.
+
+ For be that with one hounde wol take also
+ Two harys togyther in one instant
+ For the moste parte doth the both two forgo,
+ And if he one have: harde it is and skant
+ And that blynd fole mad and ignorant
+ That draweth thre boltis atons[A] in one bowe
+ At one marke shall shote to[o] high or to[o] lowe.
+ He that his mynde settyth god truly to serve
+ And his sayntes: this worlde settynge at nought
+ Shall for rewarde everlastynge joy deserve,
+ But in this worlde he that settyth his thought
+ All men to please, and in favour to be brought,
+ Must lout and lurke, flater, laude, and lye:
+ And cloke in knavys counseyll, though it fals be.
+
+ Wherfore I may prove by these examples playne
+ That it is better more godly and plesant
+ To leve this mondayne casualte and payne
+ And to thy maker one god to be servaunt.
+ Which whyle thou lyvest shall nat let the want
+ That thou desyrest justly, for thy syrvyce,
+ And than after gyve the, the joyes of Paradyse.
+
+From the German of SEBASTIAN BRANDT.
+
+Translation of ALEXANDER BARCLAY.
+
+[Footnote A: At once.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RELIGION AND DOCTRINE.
+
+
+ He stood before the Sanhedrim;
+ The scowling rabbis gazed at him;
+ He recked not of their praise or blame;
+ There was no fear, there was no shame
+ For one upon whose dazzled eyes
+ The whole world poured its vast surprise.
+ The open heaven was far too near,
+ His first day's light too sweet and clear,
+ To let him waste his new-gained ken
+ On the hate-clouded face of men.
+
+ But still they questioned, Who art thou?
+ What hast thou been? What art thou now?
+ Thou art not he who yesterday
+ Sat here and begged beside the way,
+ For he was blind.
+ _And I am he;
+ For I was blind, but now I see_.
+
+ He told the story o'er and o'er;
+ It was his full heart's only lore;
+ A prophet on the Sabbath day
+ Had touched his sightless eyes with clay,
+ And made him see, who had been blind.
+ Their words passed by him like the wind
+ Which raves and howls, but cannot shock
+ The hundred-fathom-rooted rock.
+
+ Their threats and fury all went wide;
+ They could not touch his Hebrew pride;
+ Their sneers at Jesus and his band,
+ Nameless and homeless in the land,
+ Their boasts of Moses and his Lord,
+ All could not change him by one word.
+
+ _I know not that this man may be,
+ Sinner or saint; but as for me,
+ One thing I know, that I am he
+ Who once was blind, and now I see_.
+
+ They were all doctors of renown,
+ The great men of a famous town,
+ With deep brows, wrinkled, broad, and wise,
+ Beneath their wide phylacteries;
+ The wisdom of the East was theirs,
+ And honor crowned their silver hairs;
+ The man they jeered and laughed to scorn
+ Was unlearned, poor, and humbly born;
+ But he knew better far than they
+ What came to him that Sabbath day;
+ And what the Christ had done for him,
+ He knew, and not the Sanhedrim.
+
+JOHN HAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RABBI BEN EZRA.
+
+
+ Grow old along with me!
+ The best is yet to be,
+ The last of life, for which the first I was made:
+ Our times are in his hand
+ Who saith "A whole I planned
+ Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be afraid!"
+
+ Not that, amassing flowers,
+ Youth sighed, "Which rose make ours,
+ Which lily leave and then as best recall?"
+ Not that, admiring stars,
+ It yearned, "Nor Jove, nor Mars;
+ Mine be some figured flame which blends, transcends them all!"
+
+ Not for such hopes and fears,
+ Annulling youth's brief years,
+ Do I remonstrate--folly wide the mark!
+ Rather I prize the doubt
+ Low kinds exist without,
+ Finished and finite clods, untroubled by a spark.
+
+ Poor vaunt of life indeed,
+ Were man but formed to feed
+ On joy, to solely seek and find and feast:
+ Such feasting ended, then
+ As sure an end to men;
+ Irks care the crop-full bird? Frets doubt the maw-crammed beast?
+
+ Rejoice we are allied
+ To That which doth provide
+ And not partake, effect and not receive!
+ A spark disturbs our clod;
+ Nearer we hold of God
+ Who gives, than of His tribes that take, I must believe.
+
+ Then, welcome each rebuff
+ That turns earth's smoothness rough,
+ Each sting that bids nor sit nor stand, but go!
+ Be our joys three parts pain!
+ Strive, and hold cheap the strain;
+ Learn, nor account the pang; dare, never grudge the throe!
+
+ For thence--a paradox
+ Which comforts while it mocks--
+ Shall life succeed in that it seems to fail:
+ What I aspired to be,
+ And was not, comforts me:
+ A brute I might have been, but would not sink i' the scale.
+
+ What is he but a brute
+ Whose flesh hath soul to suit,
+ Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play?
+ To man, propose this test--
+ Thy body at its best,
+ How far can that project thy soul on its lone way?
+
+ Yet gifts should prove their use:
+ I own the Past profuse
+ Of power each side, perfection every turn:
+ Eyes, ears took in their dole,
+ Brain treasured up the whole;
+ Should not the heart beat once, "How good to live and learn?"
+
+ Not once beat "Praise be Thine!
+ I see the whole design,
+ I, who saw Power, shall see Love perfect too:
+ Perfect I call Thy plan:
+ Thanks that I was a man!
+ Maker, remake, complete--I trust what Thou shalt do!"
+
+ For pleasant is this flesh;
+ Our soul, in its rose-mesh
+ Pulled ever to the earth, still yearns for rest:
+ Would we some prize might hold
+ To match those manifold
+ Possessions of the brute--gain most, as we did best!
+
+ Let us not always say,
+ "Spite of this flesh to-day.
+ I strove, made head, gained ground upon the whole!"
+ As the bird wings and sings,
+ Let us cry, "All good things
+ Are ours, nor soul helps flesh more, now, than flesh helps soul!"
+
+ Therefore I summon age
+ To grant youth's heritage,
+ Life's struggle having so far reached its term:
+ Thence shall I pass, approved
+ A man, for aye removed
+ From the developed brute; a God though in the germ.
+
+ And I shall thereupon
+ Take rest, ere I be gone
+ Once more on my adventure brave and new:
+ Fearless and unperplexed,
+ When I wage battle next,
+ What weapons to select, what armor to indue.
+
+ Youth ended, I shall try
+ My gain or loss thereby;
+ Be the fire ashes, what survives is gold:
+ And I shall weigh the same.
+ Give life its praise or blame:
+ Young, all lay in dispute; I shall know, being old.
+
+ For note, when evening shuts,
+ A certain moment cuts
+ The deed off, calls the glory from the gray:
+ A whisper from the west
+ Shoots--"Add this to the rest,
+ Take it and try its worth: here dies another day."
+
+ So, still within this life,
+ Though lifted o'er its strife,
+ Let me discern, compare, pronounce at last,
+ "This rage was right i' the main,
+ That acquiescence vain:
+ The Future I may face now I have proved the Past."
+
+ For more is not reserved
+ To man, with soul just nerved
+ To act to-morrow what he learns to-day:
+ Here, work enough to watch
+ The Master work, and catch
+ Hints of the proper craft, tricks of the tool's true play.
+ As it was better, youth
+ Should strive, through acts uncouth,
+ Toward making, than repose on aught found made;
+ So, better, age, exempt
+ From strife, should know, than tempt
+ Further. Thou waitedst age; wait death nor be afraid!
+
+ Enough now, if the Right
+ And Good and Infinite
+ Be named here, as thou callest thy hand thine own,
+ With knowledge absolute,
+ Subject to no dispute
+ From fools that crowded youth, nor let thee feel alone.
+
+ Be there, for once and all,
+ Severed great minds from small,
+ Announced to each his station in the Past!
+ Was I, the world arraigned,
+ Were they, my soul disdained,
+ Right? Let age speak the truth and give us peace at last!
+
+ Now, who shall arbitrate?
+ Ten men love what I hate,
+ Shun what I follow, slight what I receive:
+ Ten, who in ears and eyes
+ Match me: we all surmise,
+ They, this thing, and I, that: whom shall my soul believe?
+
+ Not on the vulgar mass
+ Called "work," must sentence pass,
+ Things done, that took the eye and had the price;
+ O'er which, from level stand,
+ The low world laid its hand,
+ Found straightway to its mind, could value in a trice:
+
+ But all, the world's coarse thumb
+ And finger failed to plumb,
+ So passed in making up the main account;
+ All instincts immature,
+ All purposes unsure,
+ That weighed not as his work, yet swelled the man's amount:
+
+ Thoughts hardly to be packed
+ Into a narrow act,
+ Fancies that broke through language and escaped;
+ All I could never be,
+ All, men ignored in me,
+ This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped.
+
+ Ay, note that Potter's wheel,
+ That metaphor! and feel
+ Why time spins fast; why passive lies our clay,--
+ Thou, to whom fools propound,
+ When the wine makes its round,
+ "Since life fleets, all is change; the Past gone, seize to-day!"
+
+ Fool! All that is, at all,
+ Lasts ever, past recall;
+ Earth changes, but thy soul and God stand sure:
+ What entered into thee,
+ _That_ was, is, and shall be:
+ Time's wheel runs back or stops; Potter and clay endure.
+
+ He fixed thee 'mid this dance
+ Of plastic circumstance,
+ This Present, thou, forsooth, wouldst fain arrest:
+ Machinery just meant
+ To give thy soul its bent,
+ Try thee and turn thee forth, sufficiently impressed.
+
+ What though the earlier grooves
+ Which ran the laughing loves
+ Around thy base, no longer pause and press?
+ What though, about thy rim,
+ Scull-things in order grim
+ Grow out, in graver mood, obey the sterner stress?
+
+ Look not thou down, but up!
+ To uses of a cup,
+ The festal board, lamp's flash, and trumpet's peal,
+ The new wine's foaming flow,
+ The Master's lips aglow!
+ Thou, heaven's consummate cup, what needst thou with earth's wheel?
+
+ But I need, now as then,
+ Thee, God, who mouldest men;
+ And since, not even while the whirl was worst,
+ Did I--to the wheel of life
+ With shapes and colors rife,
+ Bound dizzily--mistake my end, to slake Thy thirst:
+
+ So, take and use Thy work!
+ Amend what flaws may lurk,
+ What strain o' the stuff, what warpings past the aim!
+ My times be in _Thy_ hand!
+ Perfect the cup as planned!
+ Let age approve of youth, and death complete the same!
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RELIGION OF HUDIBRAS.
+
+ FROM "HUDIBRAS," PART I.
+
+
+ He was of that stubborn crew
+ Of errant saints, whom all men grant
+ To be the true church militant;
+ Such as do build their faith upon
+ The holy text of pike and gun;
+ Decide all controversies by
+ Infallible artillery,
+ And prove their doctrine orthodox
+ By apostolic blows and knocks;
+ Call fire, and sword, and desolation
+ A godly, thorough Reformation,
+ Which always must be carried on
+ And still be doing, never done;
+ As if religion were intended
+ For nothing else but to be mended.
+ A sect whose chief devotion lies
+ In odd perverse antipathies;
+ In falling out with that or this,
+ And finding somewhat still amiss;
+ More peevish, cross, and splenetic,
+ Than dog distract, or monkey sick;
+ That with more care keep holiday
+ The wrong than others the right way;
+ Compound for sins they are inclined to,
+ By damning those they have no mind to;
+ Still so perverse and opposite,
+ As if they worshipped God for spite;
+ The self-same thing they will abhor
+ One way, and long another for.
+
+SAMUEL BUTLER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROBLEM.
+
+
+ I like a church; I like a cowl;
+ I love a prophet of the soul;
+ And on my heart monastic aisles
+ Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles;
+ Yet not for all his faith can see
+ Would I that cowled churchman be.
+ Why should the vest on him allure,
+ Which I could not on me endure?
+
+ Not from a vain or shallow thought
+ His awful Jove young Phidias brought;
+ Never from lips of cunning fell
+ The thrilling Delphic oracle:
+ Out from the heart of nature rolled
+ The burdens of the Bible old;
+ The litanies of nations came,
+ Like the volcano's tongue of flame,
+ Up from the burning core below,--
+ The canticles of love and woe.
+ The hand that rounded Peters dome,
+ And groined the aisles of Christian Rome,
+ Wrought in a sad sincerity;
+ Himself from God he could not free;
+ He builded better than he knew;--
+ The conscious stone to beauty grew.
+
+ Knowest thou what wove yon woodbird's nest
+ Of leaves, and feathers from her breast?
+ Or how the fish outbuilt her shell.
+ Painting with morn each annual cell?
+ Or how the sacred pine-tree adds
+ To her old leaves new myriads?
+ Such and so grew these holy piles,
+ Whilst love and terror laid the tiles.
+ Earth proudly wears the Parthenon,
+ As the best gem upon her zone;
+ And Morning opes with haste her lids,
+ To gaze upon the Pyramids;
+ O'er England's abbeys bends the sky,
+ As on its friends, with kindred eye;
+ For, out of Thought's interior sphere,
+ These wonders rose to upper air;
+ And Nature gladly gave them place,
+ Adopted them into her race,
+ And granted them an equal date
+ With Andes and with Ararat.
+
+ These temples grew as grows the grass;
+ Art might obey, but not surpass.
+ The passive Master lent his hand
+ To the vast Soul that o'er him planned;
+ And the same power that reared the shrine
+ Bestrode the tribes that knelt within.
+ Ever the fiery Pentecost
+ Girds with one flame the countless host,
+ Trances the heart through chanting choirs,
+ And through the priest the mind inspires.
+ The word unto the prophet spoken
+ Was writ on tables yet unbroken;
+ The word by seers or sibyls told,
+ In groves of oak, or fanes of gold,
+ Still floats upon the morning wind,
+ Still whispers to the willing mind.
+ One accent of the Holy Ghost
+ The heedless world hath never lost.
+ I know what say the fathers wise,--
+ The Book itself before me lies,--
+ Old Chrysostom, best Augustine,
+ And he who blent both in his line,
+ The younger Golden Lips or mines,
+ Taylor, the Shakespeare of divines.
+ His words are music in my ear,
+ I see his cowled portrait dear;
+ And yet, for all his faith could see,
+ I would not the good bishop be.
+
+RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON AN INFANT
+
+ WHICH DIED BEFORE BAPTISM.
+
+
+ "Be, rather than be called, a child of God,"
+ Death whispered!--with assenting nod,
+ Its head upon its mother's breast,
+ The baby bowed, without demur--
+ Of the kingdom of the Blest
+ Possessor, not inheritor.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT WAS HIS CREED?
+
+ "Religion relates to life, and the life of religion is to do
+ good."--SWEDENBORG.
+
+
+ He left a load of anthracite
+ In front of a poor woman's door.
+ When the deep snow, frozen and white,
+ Wrapped street and square, mountain and moor.
+ That was his deed.
+ He did it well.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I cannot tell.
+
+ Blessed "in his basket and his store,"
+ In sitting down and rising up;
+ When more he got, he gave the more,
+ Withholding not the crust and cup.
+ He took the lead
+ In each good task.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I did not ask.
+
+ His charity was like the snow,
+ Soft, white, and silent in its fall;
+ Not like the noisy winds that blow
+ From shivering trees the leaves,--a pall
+ For flowers and weed,
+ Drooping below.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ The poor may know.
+
+ He had great faith in loaves of bread
+ For hungry people, young and old,
+ Hope he inspired; kind words he said
+ To those he sheltered from the cold.
+ For we should feed
+ As well as pray.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ I cannot say.
+
+ In words he did not put his trust;
+ His faith in words he never writ;
+ He loved to share his cup and crust
+ With all mankind who needed it.
+ In time of need
+ A friend was he.
+ "What was his creed?"
+ He told not me.
+
+ He put his trust in heaven, and he
+ Worked well with hand and head;
+ And what he gave in charity
+ Sweetened his sleep and daily bread.
+ Let us take heed,
+ For life is brief.
+ What was his creed--What
+ his belief?
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PHILOSOPHER TOAD.
+
+
+ Down deep in the hollow, so damp and so cold,
+ Where oaks are by ivy o'ergrown,
+ The gray moss and lichen creep over the mould,
+ Lying loose on a ponderous stone.
+ Now within this huge stone, like a king on his throne,
+ A toad has been sitting more years than is known;
+ And, strange as it seems, yet he constantly deems
+ The world standing still while he's dreaming his dreams,--
+ Does this wonderful toad in his cheerful abode
+ In the innermost heart of that flinty old stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in the hollow, from morning till night,
+ Dun shadows glide over the ground,
+ Where a watercourse once, as it sparkled with light,
+ Turned a ruined old mill-wheel around:
+ Long years have passed by since its bed became dry,
+ And the trees grow so close, scarce a glimpse of the sky
+ Is seen in the hollow, so dark and so damp,
+ Where the glow-worm at noonday is trimming his lamp,
+ And hardly a sound from the thicket around,
+ Where the rabbit and squirrel leap over the ground,
+ Is heard by the toad in his spacious abode
+ In the innermost heart of that ponderous stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in that hollow the bees never come,
+ The shade is too black for a flower;
+ And jewel-winged birds with their musical hum,
+ Never flash in the night of that bower;
+ But the cold-blooded snake, in the edge of the brake,
+ Lies amid the rank grass, half asleep, half awake;
+ And the ashen-white snail, with the slime in, its trail,
+ Moves wearily on like a life's tedious tale,
+ Yet disturbs not the toad in his spacious abode,
+ In the innermost heart of that flinty old stone,
+ By the gray-haired moss and the lichen o'ergrown.
+
+ Down deep in a hollow some wiseacres sit,
+ Like a toad in his cell in the stone;
+ Around them in daylight the blind owlets flit,
+ And their creeds are with ivy o'ergrown;--
+ Their stream may go dry, and the wheels cease to ply,
+ And their glimpses be few of the sun and the sky,
+ Still they hug to their breast every time-honored guest.
+ And slumber and doze in inglorious rest;
+ For no progress they find in the wide sphere of mind,
+ And the world's standing still with all of their kind;
+ Contented to dwell deep down in the well,
+ Or move like a snail in the crust of his shell,
+ Or live like the toad in his narrow abode,
+ With their souls closely wedged in a thick wall of stone,
+ By the gray weeds of prejudice rankly o'ergrown.
+
+REBECCA S. NICHOLS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HER CREED.
+
+
+ She stood before a chosen few,
+ With modest air and eyes of blue;
+ A gentle creature, in whose face
+ Were mingled tenderness and grace.
+
+ "You wish to join our fold," they said:
+ "Do you believe in all that's read
+ From ritual and written creed,
+ Essential to our human need?"
+
+ A troubled look was in her eyes;
+ She answered, as in vague surprise.
+ As though the sense to her were dim,
+ "I only strive to follow Him."
+
+ They knew her life; how, oft she stood,
+ Sweet in her guileless maidenhood,
+ By dying bed, in hovel lone,
+ Whose sorrow she had made her own.
+
+ Oft had her voice in prayer been heard,
+ Sweet as the voice of singing bird;
+ Her hand been open in distress;
+ Her joy to brighten and to bless.
+
+ Yet still she answered, when they sought
+ To know her inmost earnest thought,
+ With look as of the seraphim,
+ "I only strive to follow Him."
+
+ Creeds change as ages come and go;
+ We see by faith, but little know:
+ Perchance the sense was not so dim
+ To her who "strove to follow Him."
+
+SARAH KNOWLES BOLTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY CREED.
+
+
+ I hold that Christian grace abounds
+ Where charity is seen; that when
+ We climb to heaven, 't is on the rounds
+ Of love to men.
+
+ I hold all else, named piety,
+ A selfish scheme, a vain pretence;
+ Where centre is not--can there be
+ Circumference?
+
+ This I moreover hold, and dare
+ Affirm where'er my rhyme may go,--
+ Whatever things be sweet or fair,
+ Love makes them so.
+
+ Whether it be the lullabies
+ That charm to rest the nursling bird,
+ Or the sweet confidence of sighs
+ And blushes, made without a word.
+
+ Whether the dazzling and the flush
+ Of softly sumptuous garden bowers,
+ Or by some cabin door, a bush
+ Of ragged flowers.
+
+ 'Tis not the wide phylactery,
+ Nor stubborn fast, nor stated prayers,
+ That make us saints: we judge the tree
+ By what it bears.
+
+ And when a man can live apart
+ From works, on theologic trust,
+ I know the blood about his heart
+ Is dry as dust.
+
+ALICE CAREY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GIVE ME THY HEART.
+
+
+ With echoing steps the worshippers
+ Departed one by one;
+ The organ's pealing voice was stilled,
+ The vesper hymn was done;
+ The shadow fell from roof and arch,
+ Dim was the incensed air,
+ One lamp alone, with trembling ray,
+ Told of the Presence there!
+
+ In the dark church she knelt alone;
+ Her tears were falling fast;
+ "Help, Lord," she cried, "the shades of death
+ Upon my soul are cast!
+ Have I not shunned the path of sin,
+ And chose the better part? "--
+ What voice came through the sacred air?--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have not I laid before thy shrine
+ My wealth, O Lord?" she cried;
+ "Have I kept aught of gems or gold,
+ To minister to pride?
+ Have I not bade youth's joys retire,
+ And vain delights depart?"--
+ But sad and tender was the voice,--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have I not, Lord, gone day by day
+ Where thy poor children dwell;
+ And carried help, and gold, and food?
+ O Lord, thou know'st it well!
+ From many a house, from many a soul,
+ My hand bids care depart":--
+ More sad, more tender was the voice,--
+ _"My child, give me thy heart!"_
+
+ "Have I not worn my strength away
+ With fast and penance sore?
+ Have I not watched and wept?" she cried;
+ "Did thy dear saints do more?
+ Have I not gained thy grace, O Lord,
+ And won in heaven my part?"--
+ It echoed louder in her soul,--
+ "_My child, give me thy heart_!
+
+ "For I have loved thee with a love
+ No mortal heart can show;
+ A love so deep my saints in heaven
+ Its depths can never know:
+ When pierced and wounded on the cross,
+ Man's sin and doom were mine,
+ I loved thee with undying love,
+ Immortal and divine!
+
+ "I loved thee ere the skies were spread;
+ My soul bears all thy pains;
+ To gain thy love my sacred heart
+ In earthly shrines remains:
+ Vain are thy offerings, vain thy sighs,
+ Without one gift divine;
+ Give it, my child, thy heart to me,
+ And it shall rest in mine!"
+
+ In awe she listened, as the shade
+ Passed from her soul away;
+ In low and trembling voice she cried,--
+ "Lord, help me to obey!
+ Break thou the chains of earth, O Lord,
+ That bind and hold my heart;
+ Let it be thine and thine alone,
+ Let none with thee have part.
+
+ "Send down, O Lord, thy sacred fire!
+ Consume and cleanse the sin
+ That lingers still within its depths:
+ Let heavenly love begin.
+ That sacred flame thy saints have known,
+ Kindle, O Lord, in me,
+ Thou above all the rest forever,
+ And all the rest in thee."
+
+ The blessing fell upon her soul;
+ Her angel by her side
+ Knew that the hour of peace was come;
+ Her soul was purified;
+ The shadows fell from roof and arch,
+ Dim was the incensed air,--
+ But peace went with her as she left
+ The sacred Presence there!
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O, MAY I JOIN THE CHOIR INVISIBLE!
+
+
+ O, may I join the choir invisible
+ Of those immortal dead who live again
+ In minds made better by their presence; live
+ In pulses stirred to generosity,
+ In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn
+ Of miserable aims that end with self,
+ In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars,
+ And with their mild persistence urge men's minds
+ To vaster issues.
+ So to live is heaven:
+ To make undying music in the world,
+ Breathing a beauteous order that controls
+ With growing sway the growing life of man.
+ So we inherit that sweet purity
+ For which we struggled, failed, and agonized
+ With widening retrospect that bred despair.
+ Rebellious flesh that would not be subdued,
+ A vicious parent shaming still its child,
+ Poor anxious penitence, is quick dissolved;
+ Its discords quenched by meeting harmonies,
+ Die in the large and charitable air.
+ And all our rarer, better, truer self,
+ That sobbed religiously in yearning song,
+ That watched to ease the burden of the world,
+ Laboriously tracing what must be,
+ And what may yet be better,--saw within
+ A worthier image for the sanctuary,
+ And shaped it forth before the multitude,
+ Divinely human, raising worship so
+ To higher reverence more mixed with love,
+ That better self shall live till human Time
+ Shall fold its eyelids, and the human sky
+ Be gathered like a scroll within the tomb,
+ Unread forever.
+ This is life to come,
+ Which martyred men have made more glorious
+ For us, who strive to follow.
+ May I reach
+ That purest heaven,--be to other souls
+ The cup of strength in some great agony,
+ Enkindle generous ardor, feed pure love,
+ Beget the smiles that have no cruelty,
+ Be the sweet presence of a good diffused,
+ And in diffusion ever more intense!
+ So shall I join the choir invisible,
+ Whose music is the gladness of the world.
+
+MARIAN EVANS LEWES CROSS (_George Eliot_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O YET WE TRUST THAT SOMEHOW GOOD.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," LIII.
+
+
+ O yet we trust that somehow good
+ Will be the final goal of ill,
+ To pangs of nature, sins of will,
+ Defects of doubt, and taints of blood;
+
+ That nothing walks with aimless feet;
+ That not one life shall be destroyed,
+ Or cast as rubbish to the void,
+ When God hath made the pile complete;
+
+ That not a worm is cloven in vain;
+ That not a moth with vain desire
+ Is shrivelled in a fruitless fire,
+ Or but subserves another's gain.
+
+ Behold, we know not anything;
+ I can but trust that good shall fall
+ At last--far off--at last, to all,
+ And every winter change to spring.
+
+ So runs my dream: but what am I?
+ An infant crying in the night:
+ An infant crying for the light:
+ And with no language but a cry.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DAY BREAKS.
+
+
+ What dost thou see, lone watcher on the tower.
+ Is the day breaking? Comes the wished-for hour?
+ Tell us the signs, and stretch abroad thy hand,
+ If the bright morning dawns upon the land.
+
+ "The stars are clear above me; scarcely one
+ Has dimmed its rays in reverence to the sun;
+ But I yet see on the horizon's verge
+ Some fair, faint streaks, as if the light would surge."
+
+ Look forth again, O watcher on the tower,--
+ The people wake and languish for the hour;
+ Long have they dwelt in darkness, and they pine
+ For the full daylight that they know must shine.
+
+ "I see not well,--the moon is cloudy still,--
+ There is a radiance on the distant hill;
+ Even as I watch the glory seems to grow;
+ But the stars blink, and the night breezes blow."
+
+ And is that all, O watcher on the tower?
+ Look forth again; it must be near the hour;
+ Dost thou not see the snowy mountain copes,
+ And the green woods beneath them on the slopes?
+
+ "A mist envelops them; I cannot trace
+ Their outline; but the day comes on apace:
+ The clouds roll up in gold and amber flakes,
+ And all the stars grow dim; the morning breaks."
+
+ We thank thee, lonely watcher on the tower:
+ But look again, and tell us, hour by hour,
+ All thou beholdest: many of us die
+ Ere the day comes; oh, give them a reply!
+
+ "I see the hill-tops now, and chanticleer
+ Crows his prophetic carol on mine ear;
+ I see the distant woods and fields of corn,
+ And ocean gleaming in the light of morn."
+
+ Again, again, O watcher on the tower!
+ We thirst for daylight, and we bide the hour,
+ Patient, but longing. Tell us, shall it be
+ A bright, calm, glorious daylight for the free?
+
+ "I hope, but cannot tell; I hear a song,
+ Vivid as day itself, and clear and strong,
+ As of a lark--young prophet of the noon--
+ Pouring in sunlight his seraphic tune."
+
+ What doth he say, O watcher on the tower?
+ Is he a prophet? does the dawning hour
+ Inspire his music? Is his chant sublime,
+ Filled with the glories of the future time?
+
+ "He prophesies,--his heart is full; his lay
+ Tells of the brightness of a peaceful day;
+ A day not cloudless, nor devoid of storm,
+ But sunny for the most, and clear and warm."
+
+ We thank thee, watcher on the lonely tower,
+ For all thou tellest. Sings he of an hour
+ When error shall decay, and truth grow strong,
+ And light shall rule supreme and conquer wrong?
+
+ "He sings of brotherhood and joy and peace,
+ Of days when jealousies and hate shall cease;
+ When war shall cease, and man's progressive mind
+ Soar as unfettered as its God designed."
+
+ Well done, thou watcher on the lonely tower!
+ Is the day breaking? Dawns the happy hour?
+ We pine to see it; tell us yet again
+ If the broad daylight breaks upon the plain?
+
+ "It breaks! it comes! the misty shadows fly:
+ A rosy radiance gleams upon the sky;
+ The mountain-tops reflect it calm and clear,
+ The plain is yet in shade, but day is near."
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY HOME.
+
+ A THANKSGIVING TO GOD FOR A HOUSE IN THE GREEN PARISH OF
+ DEVONSHIRE.
+
+
+ Lord, thou hast given me a cell
+ Wherein to dwell,
+ A little house, whose humble roof
+ Is weather proof;
+ Under the sparres of which I lie,
+ Both soft and drie;
+ Where thou, my chamber for to ward,
+ Hast set a guard
+ Of harmlesse thoughts, to watch and keep
+ Me while I sleep.
+ Low is my porch, as is my fate;
+ Both void of state;
+ And yet the threshold of my doore
+ Is worn by the poore,
+ Who hither come and freely get
+ Good words or meat.
+ Like as my parlour, so my hall
+ And kitchen's small;
+ A little butterie, and therein
+ A little byn,
+ Which keeps my little loafe of bread
+ Unchipt, unflead.
+ Some sticks of thorn or briar
+ Make me a fire,
+ Close by whose loving coals I sit,
+ And glow like it.
+ Lord, I confesse too, when I dine,
+ The pulse is thine,
+ And all those other bits that bee
+ There placed by thee;
+ The worts, the purslain, and the messe
+ Of water-cresse,
+ Which of thy kindness thou hast sent;
+ And my content
+ Makes those and my beloved beet
+ More sweet.
+ 'Tis thou that crown'st my glittering hearth
+ With guiltlesse mirth,
+ And giv'st me wassaile bowles to drink,
+ Spiced to the brink.
+ Lord, 'tis thy plenty-dropping hand
+ That soiles my land,
+ And gives me for my bushel sowne,
+ Twice ten for one.
+ Thou mak'st my teeming hen to lay
+ Her egg each day,
+ Besides my healthful ewes to bear
+ Me twins each yeare;
+ The while the conduits of my kine
+ Run creame for wine.
+ All these and better thou dost send
+ Me to this end,
+ That I should render, for my part,
+ _A thankfulle heart,_
+ Which, fired with incense, I resigne
+ As wholly thine;
+ But the acceptance, that must be,
+ MY CHRIST, by thee.
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell? I humbly crave.
+ Let me once know.
+ I sought thee in a secret cave;
+ And asked if Peace were there.
+ A hollow wind did seem to answer, "No!
+ Go, seek elsewhere."
+
+ I did; and, going, did a rainbow note:
+ "Surely," thought I,
+ "This is the lace of Peace's coat.
+ I will search out the matter."
+ But, while I looked, the clouds immediately
+ Did break and scatter.
+
+ Then went I to a garden, and did spy
+ A gallant flower,--
+ The crown-imperial. "Sure," said I,
+ "Peace at the root must dwell."
+ But, when I digged, I saw a worm devour
+ What showed so well.
+
+ At length I met a reverend, good old man;
+ Whom when for Peace
+ I did demand, he thus began:
+ "There was a prince of old
+ At Salem dwelt, who lived with good increase
+ Of flock and fold.
+
+ "He sweetly lived; yet sweetness did not save
+ His life from foes.
+ But, after death, out of his grave
+ There sprang twelve stalks of wheat;
+ Which many wondering at, got some of those
+ To plant and set.
+
+ "It prospered strangely, and did soon disperse
+ Through all the earth.
+ For they that taste it do rehearse,
+ That virtue lies therein,--
+ A secret virtue, bringing peace and mirth,
+ By flight of sin.
+
+ "Take of this grain, which in my garden grows,
+ And grows for you:
+ Make bread of it; and that repose
+ And peace which everywhere
+ With so much earnestness you do pursue,
+ Is only there."
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ Is this the peace of God, this strange sweet calm?
+ The weary day is at its zenith still,
+ Yet 't is as if beside some cool, clear rill,
+ Through shadowy stillness rose an evening psalm.
+ And all the noise of life were hushed away,
+ And tranquil gladness reigned with gently soothing sway.
+
+ It was not so just now. I turned aside
+ With aching head, and heart most sorely bowed;
+ Around me cares and griefs in crushing crowd.
+ While inly rose the sense, in swelling tide,
+ Of weakness, insufficiency, and sin,
+ And fear, and gloom, and doubt in mighty flood rolled in.
+
+ That rushing flood I had no power to meet,
+ Nor power to flee: my present, future, past,
+ Myself, my sorrow, and my sin I cast
+ In utter helplessness at Jesu's feet:
+ Then bent me to the storm, if such his will.
+ He saw the winds and waves, and whispered.
+ "Peace, be still!"
+
+ And there was calm! O Saviour, I have proved
+ That thou to help and save art really near:
+ How else this quiet rest from grief and fear
+ And all distress? The cross is not removed,
+ I must go forth to bear it as before,
+ But, leaning on thine arm, I dread its weight no more.
+
+ Is it indeed thy peace? I have not tried
+ To analyze my faith, dissect my trust,
+ Or measure if belief be full and just,
+ And therefore claim thy peace. But thou hast died,
+ I know that this is true for me,
+ And, knowing it, I come, and cast my all on thee.
+
+ It is not that I feel less weak, but thou
+ Wilt be my strength; it is not that I see
+ Less sin, but more of pardoning love with thee,
+ And all-sufficient grace. Enough! and now
+ All fluttering thought is stilled, I only rest,
+ And feel that thou art near, and know that I am blest.
+
+FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIVING WATERS.
+
+
+ There are some hearts like wells, green-mossed and deep
+ As ever Summer saw;
+ And cool their water is,--yea, cool and sweet;--
+ But you must come to draw.
+ They hoard not, yet they rest in calm content,
+ And not unsought will give;
+ They can be quiet with their wealth unspent,
+ So self-contained they live.
+
+ And there are some like springs, that bubbling burst
+ To follow dusty ways,
+ And run with offered cup to quench his thirst
+ Where the tired traveller strays;
+ That never ask the meadows if they want
+ What is their joy to give;--
+ Unasked, their lives to other life they grant,
+ So self-bestowed they live!
+
+ And One is like the ocean, deep and wide,
+ Wherein all waters fall;
+ That girdles the broad earth, and draws the tide,
+ Feeding and bearing all;
+ That broods the mists, that sends the clouds abroad,
+ That takes, again to give;--
+ Even the great and loving heart of God.
+ Whereby all love doth live.
+
+CAROLINE S. SPENCER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DEVOTION.
+
+
+ The immortal gods
+ Accept the meanest altars, that are raised
+ By pure devotion; and sometimes prefer
+ An ounce of frankincense, honey, or milk,
+ Before whole hecatombs, or Sabaean gems,
+ Offered in ostentation.
+
+PHILIP MASSINGER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SEASIDE WELL.
+
+ "Waters flowed over mine head; then I said, I am cut
+ off."--LAMENTATIONS iii. 54.
+
+
+ One day I wandered where the salt sea-tide
+ Backward had drawn its wave,
+ And found a spring as sweet as e'er hillside
+ To wild-flowers gave.
+ Freshly it sparkled in the sun's bright look,
+ And mid its pebbles strayed,
+ As if it thought to join a happy brook
+ In some green glade.
+
+ But soon the heavy sea's resistless swell
+ Came rolling in once more,
+ Spreading its bitter o'er the clear sweet well
+ And pebbled shore.
+ Like a fair star thick buried in a cloud,
+ Or life in the grave's gloom,
+ The well, enwrapped in a deep watery shroud,
+ Sunk to its tomb.
+
+ As one who by the beach roams far and wide,
+ Remnant of wreck to save,
+ Again I wandered when the salt sea-tide
+ Withdrew its wave;
+ And there, unchanged, no taint in all its sweet,
+ No anger in its tone,
+ Still as it thought some happy brook to meet,
+ The spring flowed on.
+
+ While waves of bitterness rolled o'er its head,
+ Its heart had folded deep
+ Within itself, and quiet fancies led,
+ As in a sleep;
+ Till, when the ocean loosed his heavy chain,
+ And gave it back to day,
+ Calmly it turned to its own life again
+ And gentle way.
+
+ Happy, I thought, that which can draw its life
+ Deep from the nether springs,
+ Safe 'neath the pressure, tranquil mid the strife,
+ Of surface things.
+ Safe--for the sources of the nether springs
+ Up in the far hills lie;
+ Calm--for the life its power and freshness brings
+ Down from the sky.
+
+ So, should temptations threaten, and should sin
+ Roll in its whelming flood,
+ Make strong the fountain of thy grace within
+ My soul, O God!
+ If bitter scorn, and looks, once kind, grown strange,
+ With crushing chillness fall,
+ From secret wells let sweetness rise, nor change
+ My heart to gall!
+
+ When sore thy hand doth press, and waves of thine
+ Afflict me like a sea,--
+ Deep calling deep,--infuse from source divine
+ Thy peace in me!
+ And when death's tide, as with a brimful cup,
+ Over my soul doth pour,
+ Let hope survive,--a well that springeth up
+ Forevermore!
+
+ Above my head the waves may come and go,
+ Long brood the deluge dire,
+ But life lies hidden in the depths below
+ Till waves retire,--
+ Till death, that reigns with overflowing flood,
+ At length withdraw its sway,
+ And life rise sparkling in the sight of God
+ An endless day.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ULTIMA VERITAS.
+
+
+ In the bitter waves of woe,
+ Beaten and tossed about
+ By the sullen winds that blow
+ From the desolate shores of doubt,--
+
+ When the anchors that faith had cast
+ Are dragging in the gale,
+ I am quietly holding fast
+ To the things that cannot fail:
+
+ I know that right is right;
+ That it is not good to lie;
+ That love is better than spite,
+ And a neighbor than a spy;
+
+ I know that passion needs
+ The leash of a sober mind;
+ I know that generous deeds
+ Some sure reward will find;
+
+ That the rulers must obey;
+ That the givers shall increase;
+ That Duty lights the way
+ For the beautiful feet of Peace;--
+
+ In the darkest night of the year,
+ When the stars have all gone out,
+ That courage is better than fear,
+ That faith is truer than doubt;
+
+ And fierce though the fiends may fight,
+ And long though the angels hide,
+ I know that Truth and Eight
+ Have the universe on their side;
+
+ And that somewhere, beyond the stars,
+ Is a Love that is better than fate;
+ When the night unlocks her bars
+ I shall see Him, and I will wait.
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE END OF THE PLAY.
+
+
+ The play is done,--the curtain drops,
+ Slow falling to the prompter's bell;
+ A moment yet the actor stops,
+ And looks around, to say farewell.
+ It is an irksome word and task;
+ And, when he's laughed and said his say,
+ He shows, as he removes the mask,
+ A face that's anything but gay.
+
+ One word, ere yet the evening ends,--
+ Let's close it with a parting rhyme;
+ And pledge a hand to all young friends,
+ As flits the merry Christmas time;
+ On life's wide scene you, too, have parts
+ That fate erelong shall bid you play;
+ Good night!--with honest, gentle hearts
+ A kindly greeting go alway!
+
+ Good night!--I'd say the griefs, the joys,
+ Just hinted in this mimic page,
+ The triumphs and defeats of boys,
+ Are but repeated in our age;
+ I'd say your woes were not less-keen,
+ Your hopes more vain, than those of men,--
+ Your pangs or pleasures of fifteen
+ At forty-five played o'er again.
+
+ I'd say we suffer and we strive
+ Not less nor more as men than boys,--
+ With grizzled beards at forty-five,
+ As erst at twelve in corduroys;
+ And if, in time of sacred youth,
+ We learned at home to love and pray,
+ Pray Heaven that early love and truth
+ May never wholly pass away.
+
+ And in the world, as in the school,
+ I'd say how fate may change and shift,--
+ The prize be sometimes with the fool,
+ The race not always to the swift:
+ The strong may yield, the good may fall,
+ The great man be a vulgar clown,
+ The knave be lifted over all,
+ The kind cast pitilessly down.
+
+ Who knows the inscrutable design?
+ Blessed be Be who took and gave!
+ Why should your mother, Charles, not mine,
+ Be weeping at her darling's grave?
+ We bow to Heaven that willed it so,
+ That darkly rules the fate of all,
+ That sends the respite or the blow,
+ That's free to give or to recall.
+
+ This crowns his feast with wine and wit,--
+ Who brought him to that mirth and state?
+ His betters, see, below him sit,
+ Or hunger hopeless at the gate.
+ Who bade the mud from Dives' wheel
+ To spurn the rags of Lazarus?
+ Come, brother, in that dust we'll kneel,
+ Confessing Heaven that ruled it thus.
+
+ So each shall mourn, in life's advance,
+ Dear hopes, dear friends, untimely killed;
+ Shall grieve for many a forfeit chance
+ And longing passion unfulfilled.
+ Amen!--whatever fate be sent,
+ Pray God the heart may kindly glow,
+ Although the head with cares be bent,
+ And whitened with the winter snow.
+
+ Come wealth or want, come good or ill,
+ Let young and old accept their part,
+ And bow before the awful will,
+ And bear it with an honest heart.
+ Who misses, or who wins the prize,--
+ Go, lose or conquer as you can;
+ But if you fail, or if you rise,
+ Be each, pray God, a gentleman.
+
+ A gentleman, or old or young!
+ (Bear kindly with my humble lays;)
+ The sacred chorus first was sung
+ Upon the first of Christmas days;
+ The shepherds heard it overhead,--
+ The joyful angels raised it then:
+ Glory to Heaven on high, it said,
+ And peace on earth to gentle men!
+
+ My song, save this, is little worth;
+ I lay the weary pen aside,
+ And wish you health and love and mirth,
+ As fits the solemn Christmas-tide.
+ As fits the holy Christmas birth,
+ Be this, good friends, our carol still,--
+ Be peace on earth, be peace on earth,
+ To men of gentle will.
+
+WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW YEAR.
+
+ FROM "IN MEMORIAM," CV.
+
+
+ Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
+ The flying cloud, the frosty light:
+ The year is dying in the night--
+ Ring out, wild bells, and let him die.
+
+ Ring out the old, ring in the new--,
+ Ring happy bells, across the snow:
+ The year is going, let him go;
+ Ring out the false, ring in the true.
+
+ Ring out the grief that saps the mind,
+ For those that here we see no more;
+ Ring out the feud of rich and poor,
+ Ring in redress to all mankind.
+
+ Ring out a slowly dying cause,
+ And ancient forms of party strife;
+ Ring in the nobler modes of life,
+ With sweeter manners, purer laws.
+
+ Ring out the want, the care, the sin,
+ The faithless coldness of the times;
+ Ring out, ring out my mournful rhymes,
+ But ring the fuller minstrel in.
+
+ Ring out false pride in place and blood,
+ The civic slander and the spite;
+ Ring in the love of truth and right,
+ Ring in the common love of good.
+
+ Ring out old shapes of foul disease,
+ Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
+ Ring out the thousand wars of old,
+ Ring in the thousand years of peace.
+
+ Ring in the valiant man and free,
+ The larger heart, the kindlier hand;
+ Ring out the darkness of the land--
+ Ring in the Christ that is to be.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIFE.
+
+
+ It is not life upon thy gifts to live,
+ But to grow fixed with deeper roots in Thee;
+ And when the sun and showers their bounties give,
+ To send out thick-leaved limbs; a fruitful tree
+ Whose green head meets the eye for many a mile,
+ Whose spreading boughs a friendly shelter rear,
+ And full-faced fruits their blushing welcome smile
+ As to its goodly shade our feet draw near.
+ Who tastes its gifts shall never hunger more,
+ For 't is the Father spreads the pure repast,
+ Who, while we eat, renews the ready store,
+ Which at his bounteous board must ever last;
+ And, as the more we to his children lend,
+ The more to us doth of his bounty send.
+
+JONES VERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELECTIONS FROM PARADISE LOST.
+
+
+ BOOK I.
+
+ THE POET'S THEME.
+
+ Of man's first disobedience and the fruit
+ Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
+ Brought death into the world and all our woe,
+ With loss of Eden, till one greater Man
+ Restore us and regain the blissful seat,
+ Sing, heavenly Muse, that on the secret top
+ Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire
+ That shepherd, who first taught the chosen seed,
+ In the beginning how the heavens and earth
+ Rose out of Chaos; or if Sion hill
+ Delight thee more, and Siloa's brook that flowed
+ Fast by the oracle of God; I thence
+ Invoke thy aid to my adventurous song.
+ That with no middle flight intends to soar
+ Above the Aonian mount, while it pursues
+ Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme.
+
+ And chiefly thou, O Spirit, that dost prefer
+ Before all temples the upright heart and pure,
+ Instruct me, for thou know'st; thou from the first
+ Wast present, and with mighty wings outspread
+ Dove-like sat'st brooding on the vast abyss,
+ And mad'st it pregnant: what in me is dark
+ Illumine, what is low raise and support;
+ That to the height of this great argument
+ I may assert eternal Providence,
+ And justify the ways of God to men.
+
+
+ BOOK IX.
+
+ THE TEMPTATION.
+
+ The Sun was sunk, and after him the star
+ Of Hesperus, whose office is to bring
+ Twilight upon the Earth, short arbiter
+ 'Twixt day and night, and now from end to end
+ Night's hemisphere had veiled the horizon round:
+ When Satan, who late fled before the threats
+ Of Gabriel out of Eden, now improved
+ In meditated fraud and malice, bent
+ On Man's destruction, maugre what might hap
+ Of heavier on himself, fearless returned.
+ By night he fled, and at midnight returned
+ From compassing the Earth;
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The orb he roamed
+ With narrow search; and with inspection deep
+ Considered every creature, which of all
+ Most opportune might serve his wiles; and found
+ The serpent subtlest beast of all the field.
+ Him, after long debate, irresolute
+ Of thoughts revolved, his final sentence chose
+ Fit vessel, fittest imp of fraud, in whom
+ To enter, and his dark suggestions hide
+ From sharpest sight: for, in the wily snake
+ Whatever sleights, none would suspicious mark,
+ As from his wit and native subtlety
+ Proceeding; which, in other beasts observed.
+ Doubt might beget of diabolic power
+ Active within, beyond the sense of brute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ For now, and since first break of dawn, the fiend.
+ Mere serpent in appearance, forth was come;
+ And on his quest, where likeliest he might find
+ The only two of mankind, but in them
+ The whole included race, his purposed prey.
+ In bower and field he sought where any tuft
+ Of grove or garden-plot more pleasant lay,
+ Their tendance, or plantation for delight;
+ By fountain or by shady rivulet
+ He sought them both, but wished his hap might find
+ Eve separate; he wished, but not with hope
+ Of what so seldom chanced; when to his wish,
+ Beyond his hope, Eve separate he spies,
+ Veiled in a cloud of fragrance, where she stood,
+ Half spied, so thick the roses blushing round
+ About her glowed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "She fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods.
+ Not terrible, though terror be in love
+ And beauty, not approached by stronger hate.
+ Hate stronger, under show of love well feigned;
+ The way which to her ruin now I tend."
+ So spake the enemy of mankind, inclosed
+ In serpent, inmate bad! and toward Eve
+ Addressed his way: not with indented wave,
+ Prone on the ground, as since; but on his rear,
+ Circular base of rising folds, that towered
+ Fold above fold, a surging maze! his head
+ Crested aloft, and carbuncle his eyes;
+ With burnished neck of verdant gold, erect.
+ Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass
+ Floated redundant: pleasing was his shape
+ And lovely; never since of serpent-kind
+ Lovelier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So varied he, and of his tortuous train
+ Curled many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve,
+ To lure her eye; she, busied, heard the sound
+ Of rustling leaves, but minded not, as used
+ To such disport before her through the field,
+ From every beast; more duteous at her call,
+ Than at Circean call the herd disguised.
+ He, bolder now, uncalled before her stood,
+ But as in gaze admiring: oft he bowed
+ His turret crest, and sleek enamelled neck,
+ Fawning; and licked the ground whereon she trod.
+ His gentle dumb expression turned at length
+ The eye of Eve, to mark his play; he, glad
+ Of her attention gained, with serpent-tongue
+ Organic, or impulse of vocal air,
+ His fraudulent temptation thus began.
+ "Wonder not, sovran mistress, if perhaps
+ Thou canst who art sole wonder! much less arm
+ Thy looks, the Heaven of mildness, with disdain,
+ Displeased that I approach thee thus, and gaze
+ Insatiate; I thus single; nor have feared
+ Thy awful brow, more awful thus retired.
+ Fairest resemblance of thy Maker fair,
+ Thee all things living gaze on all things thine
+ By gift, and thy celestial beauty adore
+ With ravishment beheld! there beat beheld,
+ Where universally admired; but here
+ In this inclosure wild, these beasts among,
+ Beholders rude, and shallow to discern
+ Half what in thee is fair, one man except,
+ Who sees thee? (and what is one?) who should be seen
+ A goddess among gods, adored and served
+ By angels numberless, thy daily train."
+ So glozed the tempter, and his proem tuned:
+ Into the heart of Eve his words made way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ [_After some discourse, the Tempter praises the Tree of Knowledge._]
+
+ So standing, moving, or to height up grown,
+ The tempter, all impassioned, thus began.
+ "O sacred, wise, and wisdom-giving plant,
+ Mother of science! now I feel thy power
+ Within me clear; not only to discern
+ Things in their causes, but to trace the ways
+ Of highest agents, deemed however wise.
+ Queen of this universe! do not believe
+ Those rigid threats of death: ye shall not die:
+ How should you? by the fruit? it gives you life
+ To knowledge; by the threatener? look on me.
+ Me, who have touched and tasted; yet both live,
+ And life more perfect have attained than Fate
+ Meant me, by venturing higher than my lot.
+ Shall that be shut to man, which to the beast
+ Is open? or will God incense his ire
+ For such a petty trespass? and not praise
+ Rather your dauntless virtue, whom the pain
+ Of death denounced, whatever thing death be,
+ Deterred not from achieving what might lead
+ To happier life, knowledge of good and evil;
+ Of good, how just? of evil, if what is evil
+ Be real, why not known, since easier shunned?
+ God therefore cannot hurt ye, and be just;
+ Not just, not God: not feared then, nor obeyed:
+ Your fear itself of death removes the fear.
+ Why then was this forbid? Why, but to awe;
+ Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant,
+ His worshippers? He knows that in the day
+ Ye eat thereof, your eyes, that seem so clear,
+ Yet are but dim, shall perfectly be then
+ Opened and cleared, and ye shall be as gods,
+ Knowing both good and evil, as they know.
+ That ye shall be as gods, since I as Man,
+ Internal Man, is but proportion meet;
+ I, of brute, human; ye, of human, gods.
+ So ye shall die, perhaps, by putting off
+ Human, to put on gods; death to be wished,
+ Though threatened, which no worse than this can bring.
+ And what are gods, that man may not become
+ As they, participating godlike food?
+ The gods are first, and that advantage use
+ On our belief, that all from them proceeds:
+ I question it; for this fair Earth I see,
+ Warmed by the Sun, producing every kind;
+ Them, nothing: if they all things, who inclosed
+ Knowledge of good and evil in this tree,
+ That whoso eats thereof forthwith attains
+ Wisdom without their leave? and wherein lies
+ The offence, that man should thus attain to know?
+ What can your knowledge hurt him, or this tree
+ Impart against his will, if all be his?
+ Or is it envy? and can envy dwell
+ In heavenly breasts?--These, these, and many more
+ Causes import your need of this fair fruit.
+ Goddess humane, reach then, and freely taste."
+
+
+ THE FALL.
+
+ He ended, and his words replete with guile
+ Into her heart too easy entrance won:
+ Fixed on the fruit she gazed, which to behold
+ Might tempt alone, and in her ears the sound
+ Yet rung of persuasive words, impregned
+ With reason, to her seeming, and with truth:
+ Meanwhile the hour of noon drew on, and waked
+ An eager appetite, raised by the smell
+ So savory of that fruit, which with desire,
+ Inclinable now grown to touch or taste,
+ Solicited her longing eye; yet first
+ Pausing awhile, thus to herself she mused.
+ "Great are thy virtues, doubtless, best of fruits,
+ Though kept from man, and worthy to be admired,
+ Whose taste, too long forborne, at first assay
+ Gave elocution to the mute, and taught
+ The tongue not made for speech to speak thy praise:
+ Thy praise he also who forbids thy use
+ Conceals not from us, naming thee the Tree
+ Of Knowledge, knowledge both of good and evil;
+ Forbids us then to taste! but his forbidding
+ Commends thee more, while it infers the good
+ By thee communicated, and our want:
+ For good unknown sure is not had, or had
+ And yet unknown is as not had at all.
+ In plain then, what forbids he but to know,
+ Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise?
+ Such prohibitions bind not. But if death
+ Bind us with after-bands, what profits then
+ Our inward freedom? In the day we eat
+ Of this fair fruit, our doom is, we shall die.
+ How dies the serpent? he hath eaten and lives,
+ And knows, and speaks, and reasons, and discerns,
+ Irrational till then. For us alone
+ Was death invented? or to us denied
+ This intellectual food, for beasts reserved?
+ For beasts it seems: yet that one beast which first
+ Hath tasted envies not, but brings with joy
+ The good befallen him, author unsuspect,
+ Friendly to man, far from deceit or guile.
+ What fear I then? rather what know to fear
+ Under this ignorance of good and evil,
+ Of God or death, of law or penalty?
+ Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,
+ Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,
+ Of virtue to make wise: what hinders then
+ To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?"
+ So saying, her rash hand in evil hour
+ Forth reaching to the fruit, she plucked, she eat:
+ Earth felt the wound, and Nature from her seat
+ Sighing through all her works gave signs of woe,
+ That all was lost. Back to the thicket slunk
+ The guilty serpent, and well might, for Eve
+ Intent now wholly on her taste nought else
+ Regarded, such delight till then, as seemed,
+ In fruit she never tasted, whether true
+ Or fancied so, through expectation high
+ Of knowledge: nor was Godhead from her thought.
+ Greedily she ingorged without restraint,
+ And knew not eating death.
+
+
+ BOOK XI.
+
+ INTERCESSION AND REDEMPTION.
+
+ Thus they, in lowliest plight, repentant stood
+ Praying; for from the mercy-seat above
+ Prevenient grace descending had removed
+ The stony from their hearts, and made new flesh
+ Regenerate grow instead; that sighs now breathed
+ Unutterable; which the spirit of prayer
+ Inspired, and winged for Heaven with speedier flight
+ Than loudest oratory: yet their port
+ Not of mean suitors; nor important less
+ Seemed their petition, than when the ancient pair
+ In fables old, less ancient yet than these,
+ Deucalion and chaste Pyrrha, to restore
+ The race of mankind drowned, before the shrine
+ Of Themis stood devout. To Heaven their prayers
+ Flew up, nor missed the way, by envious winds
+ Blown vagabond or frustrate: in they passed
+ Dimensionless through heavenly doors; then clad
+ With incense, where the golden altar fumed,
+ By their great Intercessor, came in sight
+ Before the Father's throne: them the glad Son
+ Presenting, thus to intercede began.
+ "See, Father, what first-fruits on Earth are sprung
+ From thy implanted grace in Man; these sighs
+ And prayers, which in this golden censer, mixed
+ With incense, I thy priest before thee bring;
+ Fruits of more pleasing savor, from thy seed
+ Sown with contrition in his heart, than those
+ Which, his own hand manuring, all the trees
+ Of Paradise could have produced ere fallen
+ From innocence. Now, therefore, bend thine ear
+ To supplication; hear his sighs, though mute;
+ Unskilful with what words to pray, let me
+ Interpret for him; me, his advocate
+ And propitiation; all his works on me,
+ Good, or not good, ingraft; my merit those
+ Shall perfect, and for these my death shall pay.
+ Accept me; and, in me, from these receive
+ The smell of peace toward mankind: let him live
+ Before thee reconciled, at least his days
+ Numbered though sad; till death his doom (which I
+ To mitigate thus plead, not to reverse,)
+ To better life shall yield him: where with me
+ All my redeemed may dwell in joy and bliss;
+ Made one with me, as I with thee am one."
+ To whom the Father, without cloud, serene.
+ "All thy request for Man, accepted Son,
+ Obtain; all thy request was my decree:
+ But, longer in that Paradise to dwell,
+ The law I gave to Nature him forbids:
+ Those pure immortal elements, that know
+ No gross, no unharmonious mixture foul,
+ Eject him, tainted now; and purge him off,
+ As a distemper, gross, to air as gross,
+ And mortal food; as may dispose him best
+ For dissolution wrought by sin, that first
+ Distempered all things, and of incorrupt
+ Corrupted. I, at first, with two fair gifts
+ Created him endowed; with happiness,
+ And immortality: that fondly lost.
+ This other served but to eternize woe;
+ Till I provided death: so death becomes
+ His final remedy; and, after life,
+ Tried in sharp tribulation, and refined
+ By faith and faithful works, to second life,
+ Waked in the renovation of the just,
+ Resigns him up with Heaven and Earth renewed."
+
+
+ EVE'S LAMENT.
+
+ O unexpected stroke, worse than of death!
+ Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? thus leave
+ Thee, native soil! these happy walks and shades,
+ Fit haunt of gods; where I had hope to spend,
+ Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day
+ That must be mortal to us both? O flowers,
+ That never will in other climate grow,
+ My early visitation, and my last
+ At even, which I bred up with tender hand
+ From the first opening bud, and gave ye names!
+ Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank
+ Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount?
+ Thee, lastly, nuptial bower! by me adorned
+ With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee
+ How shall I part, and whither wander down
+ Into a lower world, to this obscure
+ And wild? how shall we breathe in other air
+ Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits?
+
+
+ EVE TO ADAM.
+
+ With sorrow and heart's distress
+ Wearied, I fell asleep. But now lead on;
+ In me is no delay; with thee to go,
+ Is to stay here; without thee here to stay,
+ Is to go hence unwilling; thou to me
+ Art all things under heaven, all places thou,
+ Who for my wilful crime art banished hence.
+ This further consolation, yet secure,
+ I carry hence; though all by me is lost,
+ Such favor I unworthy am vouchsafed,
+ By me the promised Seed shall all restore.
+
+
+ BOOK XII.
+
+ THE DEPARTURE FROM PARADISE.
+
+ In either hand the hastening angel caught
+ Our lingering parents, and to the eastern gate
+ Led them direct, and down the cliff as fast
+ To the subjected plain; then disappeared.
+ They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld
+ Of Paradise, so late their happy seat,
+ Waved over by that naming brand; the gate
+ With dreadful faces thronged and fiery arms.
+ Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon;
+ The world was all before them, where to choose
+ Their place of rest, and Providence their guide.
+ They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,
+ Through Eden took their solitary way.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+HUMAN EXPERIENCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PSALM OF LIFE.
+
+
+ Tell me not, in mournful numbers,
+ Life is but an empty dream!
+ For the soul is dead that slumbers,
+ And things are not what they seem.
+
+ Life is real! Life is earnest!
+ And the grave is not its goal;
+ Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
+ Was not spoken of the soul.
+
+ Not enjoyment, and not sorrow,
+ Is our destined end or way;
+ But to act, that each to-morrow
+ Find us farther than to-day.
+
+ Art is long, and Time is fleeting,
+ And our hearts, though stout and brave,
+ Still, like muffled drums, are beating
+ Funeral marches to the grave.
+
+ In the world's broad field of battle,
+ In the bivouac of Life,
+ Be not like dumb, driven cattle!
+ Be a hero in the strife!
+
+ Trust no Future, howe'er pleasant!
+ Let the dead Past bury its dead!
+ Act,--act in the living Present!
+ Heart within, and God o'erhead!
+
+ Lives of great men all remind us
+ We can make our lives sublime.
+ And, departing, leave behind us
+ Footprints on the sands of time;--
+
+ Footprints, that perhaps another,
+ Sailing o'er life's solemn main,
+ A forlorn and shipwrecked brother,
+ Seeing, shall take heart again.
+
+ Let us, then, be up and doing,
+ With a heart for any fate;
+ Still achieving, still pursuing,
+ Learn to labor and to wait.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GIFTS OF GOD.
+
+
+ When God at first made man,
+ Having a glass of blessings standing by,
+ Let us (said he) pour on him all we can:
+ Let the world's riches, which dispersed lie,
+ Contract into a span.
+
+ So strength first made a way;
+ Then beauty flowed, then wisdom, honor, pleasure:
+ When almost all was out, God made a stay,
+ Perceiving that, alone, of all his treasure,
+ Rest in the bottom lay.
+
+ For if I should (said he)
+ Bestow this jewel also on my creature,
+ He would adore my gifts instead of me,
+ And rest in Nature, not the God of Nature:
+ So both should losers be.
+
+ Yet let him keep the rest,
+ But keep them with repining restlessness:
+ Let him be rich and weary, that, at least,
+ If goodness lead him not, yet weariness
+ May toss him to my breast.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DUTY.
+
+
+ I slept and dreamed that life was Beauty:
+ I woke and found that life was Duty:
+ Was then thy dream a shadowy lie?
+ Toil on, sad heart, courageously,
+ And thou shalt find thy dream to be
+ A noonday light and truth to thee.
+
+ELLEN STURGIS HOOPER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE TO DUTY.
+
+
+ Stern daughter of the voice of God!
+ O Duty! if that name thou love
+ Who art a light to guide, a rod
+ To check the erring, and reprove--
+ Thou, who art victory and law
+ When empty terrors overawe;
+ From vain temptations dost set free,
+ And calm'st the weary strife of frail humanity!
+
+ There are who ask not if thine eye
+ Be on them; who, in love and truth
+ Where no misgiving is, rely
+ Upon the genial sense of youth:
+ Glad hearts! without reproach or blot,
+ Who do thy work, and know it not;
+ Long may the kindly impulse last!
+ But thou, if they should totter, teach them to stand fast!
+
+ Serene will be our days and bright,
+ And happy will our nature be,
+ When love is an unerring light.
+ And joy its own security.
+ And they a blissful course may hold
+ Even now, who, not unwisely bold.
+ Live in the spirit of this creed;
+ Yet find that other strength, according to their need.
+
+ I, loving freedom, and untried,
+ No sport of every random gust,
+ Yet being to myself a guide,
+ Too blindly have reposed my trust;
+ And oft, when in my heart was heard
+ Thy timely mandate, I deferred
+ The task, in smoother walks to stray;
+ But thee I now would serve more strictly, if I may.
+
+ Through no disturbance of my soul,
+ Or strong compunction in me wrought,
+ I supplicate for thy control,
+ But in the quietness of thought;
+ Me this unchartered freedom tires;
+ I feel the weight of chance desires,
+ My hopes no more must change their name,
+ I long for a repose that ever is the same.
+
+ Stern lawgiver! yet thou dost wear
+ The Godhead's most benignant grace;
+ Nor know we any thing so fair
+ As is the smile upon thy face;
+ Flowers laugh before thee on their beds,
+ And fragrance in thy footing treads;
+ Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong;
+ And the most ancient heavens, through thee, are fresh and strong.
+
+ To humbler functions, awful power!
+ I call thee: I myself commend
+ Unto thy guidance from this hour;
+ Oh, let my weakness have an end!
+ Give unto me, made lowly wise,
+ The spirit of self-sacrifice;
+ The confidence of reason give;
+ And in the light of truth thy bondman let me live!
+
+WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELF-INQUIRY.
+
+
+ Let not soft slumber close my eyes,
+ Before I've recollected thrice
+ The train of action through the day!
+ Where have my feet chose out their way?
+ What have I learnt, where'er I've been,
+ From all I have heard, from all I've seen?
+ What know I more that's worth the knowing?
+ What have I done that's worth the doing?
+ What have I sought that I should shun?
+ What duty have I left undone?
+ Or into what new follies run?
+ These self-inquiries are the road
+ That leads to virtue and to God.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE THREE ENEMIES.
+
+
+ THE FLESH.
+
+ "Sweet, thou art pale."
+ "More pale to see,
+ Christ hung upon the cruel tree
+ And bore his Father's wrath for me."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art sad."
+ "Beneath a rod
+ More heavy Christ for my sake trod
+ The wine-press of the wrath of God."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art weary."
+ "Not so Christ:
+ Whose mighty love of me sufficed
+ For strength, salvation, eucharist."
+
+ "Sweet, thou art footsore."
+ "If I bleed,
+ His feet have bled: yea, in my need
+ His heart once bled for mine indeed."
+
+
+ THE WORLD.
+
+ "Sweet, thou art young."
+ "So he was young
+ Who for my sake in silence hung
+ Upon the cross with passion wrung."
+
+ "Look, thou art fair."
+ "He was more fair
+ Than men, who deigned for me to wear
+ A visage marred beyond compare."
+
+ "And thou hast riches."
+ "Daily bread:
+ All else is his; who living, dead,
+ For me lacked where to lay his head."
+
+ "And life is sweet."
+ "It was not so
+ To him, whose cup did overflow
+ With mine unutterable woe."
+
+
+ THE DEVIL.
+
+ "Thou drinkest deep."
+ "When Christ would sup
+ He drained the dregs from out my cup;
+ So how should I be lifted up?"
+
+ "Thou shalt win glory."
+ "In the skies,
+ Lord Jesus, cover up mine eyes.
+ Lest they should look on vanities."
+
+ "Thou shalt have knowledge."
+ "Helpless dust,
+ In thee, O Lord, I put my trust:
+ Answer thou for me, Wise and Just."
+
+CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAID I NOT SO?
+
+
+ Said I not so,--that I would sin no more?
+ Witness, my God, I did;
+ Yet I am run again upon the score:
+ My faults cannot be hid.
+
+ What shall I do?--make vows and break them still?
+ 'Twill be but labor lost;
+ My good cannot prevail against mine ill:
+ The business will be crost.
+
+ O, say not so; thou canst not tell what strength
+ Thy God may give thee at the length.
+ Renew thy vows, and if thou keep the last,
+ Thy God will pardon all that's past.
+ Vow while thou canst; while thou canst vow, thou may'st
+ Perhaps perform it when thou thinkest least.
+
+ Thy God hath not denied thee all,
+ Whilst he permits thee but to call.
+ Call to thy God for grace to keep
+ Thy vows; and if thou break them, weep.
+ Weep for thy broken vows, and vow again:
+ Vows made with tears cannot be still in vain.
+ Then once again
+ I vow to mend my ways;
+ Lord, say Amen,
+ And thine be all the praise.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTHING BUT LEAVES.
+
+
+ Nothing but leaves; the spirit grieves
+ Over a wasted life;
+ Sin committed while conscience slept,
+ Promises made, but never kept,
+ Hatred, battle, and strife;
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ Nothing but leaves; no garnered sheaves
+ Of life's fair, ripened grain;
+ Words, idle words, for earnest deeds;
+ We sow our seeds,--lo! tares and weeds:
+ We reap, with toil and pain,
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ Nothing but leaves; memory weaves
+ No veil to screen the past:
+ As we retrace our weary way,
+ Counting each lost and misspent day,
+ We find, sadly, at last,
+ _Nothing but leaves_!
+
+ And shall we meet the Master so,
+ Bearing our withered leaves?
+ The Saviour looks for perfect fruit,
+ We stand before him, humbled, mute;
+ Waiting the words he breathes,--
+ "_Nothing but leaves_?"
+
+LUCY E. AKERMAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WORLD.
+
+ "And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of
+ righteousness, and of judgment."--JOHN xvi. 8.
+
+
+ The world is wise, for the world is old;
+ Five thousand years their tale have told;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is kind if we ask not too much;
+ It is sweet to the taste, and smooth to the touch;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is strong, with an awful strength,
+ And full of life in its breadth and length;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is so beautiful one may fear
+ Its borrowed beauty might make it too dear,
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The world is good in its own poor way,
+ There is rest by night and high spirits by day;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ The cross shines fair, and the church-bell rings,
+ And the earth is peopled with holy things;
+ Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,--
+ Why is it? why is it? Oh, answer me!
+
+ What lackest thou, world? for God made thee of old;
+ Why,--thy faith hath gone out, and thy love grown cold;
+ Thou art not happy, as thou mightest be,
+ For the want of Christ's simplicity.
+
+ It is blood that thou lackest, thou poor old world!
+ Who shall make thy love hot for thee, frozen old world?
+ Thou art not happy, as thou mightest be,
+ For the love of dear Jesus is little in thee.
+
+ Poor world! if thou cravest a better day,
+ Remember that Christ must have his own way;
+ I mourn thou art not as thou mightest be,
+ But the love of God would do all for thee.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CRY OF THE HUMAN.
+
+
+ "There is no God," the foolish saith,
+ But none, "There is no sorrow";
+ And nature oft the cry of faith
+ In bitter need will borrow:
+ Eyes which the preacher could not school,
+ By wayside graves are raised;
+ And lips say, "God be pitiful,"
+ Who ne'er said, "God be praised."
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The tempest stretches from the steep
+ The shadow of its coming;
+ The beasts grow tame, and near us creep,
+ As help were in the human:
+ Yet while the cloud-wheels roll and grind
+ We spirits tremble under!--
+ The hills have echoes; but we find
+ No answer for the thunder.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The battle hurtles on the plains--
+ Earth feels new scythes upon her:
+ We reap our brothers for the wains,
+ And call the harvest, honor,--
+ Draw face to face, front line to line,
+ One image all inherit,--
+ Then kill, curse on, by that same sign,
+ Clay, clay,--and spirit, spirit.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The plague runs festering through the town,
+ And never a bell is tolling:
+ And corpses jostled 'neath the moon,
+ Nod to the dead-cart's rolling.
+ The young child calleth for the cup--
+ The strong man brings it weeping;
+ The mother from her babe looks up,
+ And shrieks away its sleeping.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The plague of gold strides far and near,
+ And deep and strong it enters:
+ This purple chimar which we wear,
+ Makes madder than the centaur's.
+ Our thoughts grow blank, our words grow strange;
+ We cheer the pale gold-diggers--
+ Each soul is worth so much on 'Change,
+ And marked, like sheep, with figures.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The curse of gold upon the land,
+ The lack of bread enforces--
+ The rail-cars snort from strand to strand,
+ Like more of Death's White Horses:
+ The rich preach "rights" and future days,
+ And hear no angel scoffing:
+ The poor die mute--with starving gaze
+ On corn-ships in the offing.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We meet together at the feast--
+ To private mirth betake us--
+ We stare down in the winecup lest
+ Some vacant chair should shake us!
+ We name delight, and pledge it round--
+ "It shall be ours to-morrow!"
+ God's seraphs, do your voices sound
+ As sad in naming sorrow?
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We sit together, with the skies,
+ The steadfast skies, above us:
+ We look into each other's eyes,
+ "And how long will you love us?"
+ The eyes grow dim with prophecy,
+ The voice is low and breathless--
+ "Till death us part!"--O words, to be
+ Our _best_ for love the deathless!
+ Be pitiful, dear God!
+
+ We tremble by the harmless bed
+ Of one loved and departed--
+ Our tears drop on the lids that said
+ Last night, "Be stronger hearted!"
+ O God,--to clasp those fingers close,
+ And yet to feel so lonely!--
+ To see a light upon such brows,
+ Which is the daylight only!
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ The happy children come to us,
+ And look up in our faces:
+ They ask us--Was it thus, and thus,
+ When we were in their places?
+ We cannot speak:--we see anew
+ The hills we used to live in;
+ And feel our mother's smile press through
+ The kisses she is giving.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We pray together at the kirk,
+ For mercy, mercy, solely--
+ Hands weary with the evil work,
+ We lift them to the Holy!
+ The corpse is calm below our knee--
+ Its spirit bright before thee--
+ Between them, worse than either, we--
+ Without the rest of glory!
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We leave the communing of men,
+ The murmur of the passions;
+ And live alone, to live again
+ With endless generations.
+ Are we so brave?--The sea and sky
+ In silence lift their mirrors;
+ And, glassed therein, our spirits high
+ Recoil from their own terrors.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ We sit on hills our childhood wist,
+ Woods, hamlets, streams, beholding:
+ The sun strikes through the farthest mist,
+ The city's spire to golden.
+ The city's golden spire it was,
+ When hope and health were strong;
+ But now it is the churchyard grass,
+ We look upon the longest.
+ Be pitiful, O God!
+
+ And soon all vision waxeth dull--
+ Men whisper, "He is dying":
+ We cry no more, "Be pitiful!"--
+ We have no strength for crying:
+ No strength, no need! Then, Soul of mine,
+ Look up and triumph rather--
+ Lo! in the depth of God's Divine,
+ The Son adjures the Father--
+ BE PITIFUL, O GOD.
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SIFTING OF PETER.
+
+ A FOLK-SONG.
+
+ "Behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you
+ as wheat."--LUKE xxii. 31.
+
+
+ In Saint Luke's Gospel we are told
+ How Peter in the days of old
+ Was sifted;
+ And now, though ages intervene,
+ Sin is the same, while time and scene
+ Are shifted.
+
+ Satan desires us, great and small,
+ As wheat, to sift us, and we all
+ Are tempted;
+ Not one, however rich or great,
+ Is by his station or estate
+ Exempted.
+
+ No house so safely guarded is
+ But he, by some device of his,
+ Can enter;
+ No heart hath armor so complete
+ But he can pierce with arrows fleet
+ Its centre.
+
+ For all at last the cock will crow
+ Who hear the warning voice, but go
+ Unheeding,
+ Till thrice and more they have denied
+ The Man of Sorrows, crucified
+ And bleeding.
+
+ One look of that pale suffering face
+ Will make us feel the deep disgrace
+ Of weakness;
+ We shall be sifted till the strength
+ Of self-conceit be changed at length
+ To meekness.
+
+ Wounds of the soul, though healed, will ache;
+ The reddening scars remain, and make
+ Confession;
+ Lost innocence returns no more;
+ We are not what we were before
+ Transgression.
+
+ But noble souls, through dust and heat,
+ Rise from disaster and defeat
+ The stronger.
+ And conscious still of the divine
+ Within them, lie on earth supine
+ No longer.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VANITY.
+
+
+ The sun comes up and the sun goes down,
+ And day and night are the same as one;
+ The year grows green, and the year grows brown.
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ Grains of sombre or shining sand,
+ Gliding into and out of the hand.
+
+ And men go down in ships to the seas,
+ And a hundred ships are the same as one;
+ And backward and forward blows the breeze,
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ A tide with never a shore in sight
+ Getting steadily on to the night.
+
+ The fisher droppeth his net in the stream,
+ And a hundred streams are the same as one;
+ And the maiden dreameth her love-lit dream,
+ And what is it all, when all is done?
+ The net of the fisher the burden breaks,
+ And alway the dreaming the dreamer wakes.
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIFFERENT MINDS.
+
+
+ Some murmur when their sky is clear
+ And wholly bright to view,
+ If one small speck of dark appear
+ In their great heaven of blue;
+ And some with thankful love are filled
+ If but one streak of light,
+ One ray of God's good mercy, gild
+ The darkness of their night.
+
+ In palaces are hearts that ask,
+ In discontent and pride,
+ Why life is such a dreary task,
+ And all good things denied;
+ And hearts in poorest huts admire
+ How Love has in their aid
+ (Love that not ever seems to tire)
+ Such rich provision made.
+
+RICHARD CHENEVIX TRENCH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY RECOVERY.
+
+
+ Recovery,--daughter of Creation too,
+ Though not for immortality designed,--
+ The Lord of life and death
+ Sent thee from heaven to me!
+ Had I not heard thy gentle tread approach,
+ Not heard the whisper of thy welcome voice,
+ Death had with iron foot
+ My chilly forehead pressed.
+ 'Tis true, I then had wandered where the earths
+ Roll around suns; had strayed along the paths
+ Where the maned comet soars
+ Beyond the armed eye;
+ And with the rapturous, eager greet had hailed
+ The inmates of those earths and of those suns;
+ Had hailed the countless host
+ That throng the comet's disc;
+ Had asked the novice questions, and obtained
+ Such answers as a sage vouchsafes to youth;
+ Had learned in hours far more
+ Than ages here unfold!
+ But I had then not ended here below
+ What, in the enterprising bloom of life,
+ Fate with no light behest
+ Required me to begin.
+ Recovery,--daughter of Creation too,
+ Though not for immortality designed,--
+ The Lord of life and death
+ Sent thee from heaven to me!
+
+From the German of FRIEDRICH GOTTLIEB KLOPSTOCK.
+
+Translation of W. TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LADDER OF SAINT AUGUSTINE.
+
+
+ Saint Augustine! well hast thou said,
+ That of our vices we can frame
+ A ladder, if we will but tread
+ Beneath our feet each deed of shame!
+
+ All common things, each day's events,
+ That with the hour begin and end,
+ Our pleasures and our discontents,
+ Are rounds by which we may ascend.
+
+ The low desire, the base design,
+ That makes another's virtues less;
+ The revel of the ruddy wine,
+ And all occasions of excess;
+
+ The longing for ignoble things;
+ The strife for triumph more than truth;
+ The hardening of the heart, that brings
+ Irreverence for the dreams of youth;
+
+ All thoughts of ill; all evil deeds,
+ That have their root in thoughts of ill;
+ Whatever hinders or impedes
+ The action of the nobler will:--
+
+ All these must first be trampled down
+ Beneath our feet, if we would gain
+ In the bright fields of fair renown
+ The right of eminent domain.
+
+ We have not wings, we cannot soar;
+ But we have feet to scale and climb
+ By slow degrees, by more and more,
+ The cloudy summits of our time.
+
+ The mighty pyramids of stone
+ That wedge-like cleave the desert airs,
+ When nearer seen, and better known,
+ Are but gigantic flights of stairs.
+
+ The distant mountains, that uprear
+ Their solid bastions to the skies,
+ Are crossed by pathways, that appear
+ As we to higher levels rise.
+
+ The heights by great men reached and kept
+ Were not attained by sudden flight,
+ But they, while their companions slept,
+ Were toiling upward in the night.
+
+ Standing on what too long we bore
+ With shoulders bent and downcast eyes,
+ We may discern--unseen before--
+ A path to higher destinies.
+
+ Nor deem the irrevocable Past
+ As wholly wasted, wholly vain,
+ If, rising on its wrecks, at last
+ To something nobler we attain.
+
+HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT CHRISTOPHER.
+
+
+ "Carry me across!"
+ The Syrian heard, rose up, and braced
+ His huge limbs to the accustomed toil:
+ "My child, see how the waters boil?
+ The night-black heavens look angry-faced;
+ But life is little loss.
+
+ "I'll carry thee with joy,
+ If needs be, safe as nestling dove:
+ For o'er this stream I pilgrims bring
+ In service to one Christ, a King
+ Whom I have never seen, yet love."
+ "I thank thee," said the boy.
+
+ Cheerful, Arprobus took
+ The burden on his shoulders great,
+ And stepped into the waves once more;
+ When lo! they leaping rise and roar,
+ And 'neath the little child's light weight
+ The tottering giant shook.
+
+ "Who art thou?" cried he wild,
+ Struggling in middle of the ford:
+ "Boy as thou look'st, it seems to me
+ The whole world's load I bear in thee,
+ Yet--" "For the sake of Christ, thy Lord,
+ Carry me," said the child.
+
+ No more Arprobus swerved,
+ But gained the farther bank, and then
+ A voice cried, "Hence _Christopheros_ be!
+ For carrying thou hast carried Me,
+ The King of angels and of men,
+ The Master thou hast served."
+
+ And in the moonlight blue
+ The saint saw,--not the wandering boy,
+ But him who walked upon the sea
+ And o'er the plains of Galilee,
+ Till, filled with mystic, awful joy,
+ His dear Lord Christ he knew.
+
+ Oh, little is all loss,
+ And brief the space 'twixt shore and shore,
+ If thou, Lord Jesus, on us lay,
+ Through the deep waters of our way,
+ The burden that Christopheros bore,--
+ To carry thee across.
+
+DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SCORN NOT THE LEAST.
+
+
+ When words are weak and foes encountering strong,
+ Where mightier do assault than do defend,
+ The feebler part puts up enforced wrong,
+ And silent sees that speech could not amend.
+ Yet higher powers most think though they repine,--
+ When sun is set, the little stars will shine.
+
+ While pike doth range, the silly tench doth fly,
+ And crouch in privy creeks with smaller fish;
+ Yet pikes are caught when little fish go by;
+ These fleet afloat while those do fill the dish.
+ There is a time even for the worms to creep.
+ And suck the dew while all their foes do sleep.
+
+ The merlin cannot ever soar on high,
+ Nor greedy greyhound still pursue the chase;
+ The tender lark will find a time to fly.
+ And fearful hare to run a quiet race.
+ He that high-growth on cedars did bestow,
+ Gave also lowly mushrooms leave to grow.
+
+ In Haman's pomp poor Mardocheus wept,
+ Yet God did turn his fate upon his foe;
+ The Lazar pined while Dives' feast was kept,
+ Yet he to heaven, to hell did Dives go.
+ We trample grass, and prize the flowers of May,
+ Yet grass is green when flowers do fade away.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RIGHT MUST WIN.
+
+
+ O, it is hard to work for God,
+ To rise and take his part
+ Upon this battle-field of earth,
+ And not sometimes lose heart!
+
+ He hides himself so wondrously,
+ As though there were no God;
+ He is least seen when all the powers
+ Of ill are most abroad.
+
+ Or he deserts us at the hour
+ The fight is all but lost;
+ And seems to leave us to ourselves
+ Just when we need him most.
+
+ Ill masters good, good seems to change
+ To ill with greater ease;
+ And, worst of all, the good with good
+ Is at cross-purposes.
+
+ Ah! God is other than we think;
+ His ways are far above,
+ Far beyond reason's height, and reached
+ Only by childlike love.
+
+ Workman of God! O, lose not heart,
+ But learn what God is like;
+ And in the darkest battle-field
+ Thou shalt know where to strike.
+
+ Thrice blest is he to whom is given
+ The instinct that can tell
+ That God is on the field when he
+ Is most invisible.
+
+ Blest, is he who can divine
+ Where the real right doth lie,
+ And dares to take the side that seems
+ Wrong to man's blindfold eye.
+
+ For right is right, since God is God;
+ And right the day must win;
+ To doubt would be disloyalty,
+ To falter would be sin!
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE COST OF WORTH.
+
+ FROM "BITTER SWEET."
+
+
+ Thus is it all over the earth!
+ That which we call the fairest.
+ And prize for its surpassing worth,
+ Is always rarest.
+
+ Iron is heaped in mountain piles,
+ And gluts the laggard forges;
+ But gold-flakes gleam in dim defiles
+ And lonely gorges.
+
+ The snowy marble flecks the land
+ With heaped and rounded ledges,
+ But diamonds hide within the sand
+ Their starry edges.
+
+ The finny armies clog the twine
+ That sweeps the lazy river,
+ But pearls come singly from the brine
+ With the pale diver.
+
+ God gives no value unto men
+ Unmatched by meed of labor;
+ And Cost of Worth has ever been
+ The closest neighbor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ All common good has common price;
+ Exceeding good, exceeding;
+ Christ bought the keys of Paradise
+ By cruel bleeding;
+
+ And every soul that wins a place
+ Upon its hills of pleasure,
+ Must give it all, and beg for grace
+ To fill the measure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Up the broad stairs that Value rears
+ Stand motives beck'ning earthward,
+ To summon men to nobler spheres,
+ And lead them worthward.
+
+JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LABORER.
+
+
+ Stand up--erect! Thou hast the form
+ And likeness of thy God!--Who more?
+ A soul as dauntless 'mid the storm
+ Of daily life, a heart as warm
+ And pure, as breast e'er wore.
+
+ What then?--Thou art as true a man
+ As moves the human mass among;
+ As much a part of the great plan
+ That with creation's dawn began,
+ As any of the throng.
+
+ Who is thine enemy? The high
+ In station, or in wealth the chief?
+ The great, who coldly pass thee by,
+ With proud step and averted eye?
+ Nay! nurse not such belief.
+
+ If true unto thyself thou wast,
+ What were the proud one's scorn to thee?
+ A feather which thou mightest cast
+ Aside, as idly as the blast
+ The light leaf from the tree.
+
+ No: uncurbed passions, low desires,
+ Absence of noble self-respect.
+ Death, in the breast's consuming fires,
+ To that high nature which aspires
+ Forever, till thus checked;--
+
+ These are thine enemies--thy worst:
+ They chain thee to thy lowly lot;
+ Thy labor and thy life accursed.
+ O, stand erect, and from them burst,
+ And longer suffer not.
+
+ Thou art thyself thine enemy:
+ The great!--what better they than thou?
+ As theirs is not thy will as free?
+ Has God with equal favors thee
+ Neglected to endow?
+
+ True, wealth thou hast not--'tis but dust;
+ Nor place--uncertain as the wind;
+ But that thou hast, which, with thy crust
+ And water, may despise the lust
+ Of both--a noble mind.
+
+ With this, and passions under ban,
+ True faith, and holy trust in God,
+ Thou art the peer of any man.
+ Look up then; that thy little span
+ Of life may be well trod.
+
+WILLIAM D. GALLAGHER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A TRUE LENT.
+
+
+ Is this a fast,--to keep
+ The larder lean,
+ And clean
+ From fat of veals and sheep?
+
+ Is it to quit the dish
+ Of flesh, yet still
+ To fill
+ The platter high with fish?
+
+ Is it to fast an hour.
+ Or ragg'd to go,
+ Or show
+ A downcast look, and sour?
+
+ No! 't is a fast to dole
+ Thy sheaf of wheat,
+ And meat,
+ Unto the hungry soul.
+
+ It is to fast from strife,
+ From old debate
+ And hate,--
+ To circumcise thy life.
+
+ To show a heart grief-rent;
+ To starve thy sin,
+ Not bin,--
+ And that's to keep thy Lent.
+
+ROBERT HERRICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM "THE CHURCH PORCH."
+
+
+ Thou whose sweet youth and early hopes enhance
+ Thy rate and price, and mark thee for a treasure.
+ Hearken unto a Verser, who may chance
+ Rhyme thee to good, and make a bait of pleasure:
+ A verse may find him who a sermon flies
+ And turn delight into a sacrifice.
+
+ When thou dost purpose aught (within thy power),
+ Be sure to doe it, though it be but small;
+ Constancie knits the bones, and make us stowre,
+ When wanton pleasures beckon us to thrall.
+ Who breaks his own bond, forfeiteth himself:
+ What nature made a ship, he makes a shelf.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By all means use sometimes to be alone.
+ Salute thyself: see what thy soul doth wear.
+ Dare to look in thy chest; for 't is thine own;
+ And tumble up and down what thou find'st there.
+ Who cannot rest till he good fellows finde,
+ He breaks up house, turns out of doores his minde.
+
+ In clothes, cheap handsomenesse doth bear the bell.
+ Wisdome's a trimmer thing than shop e'er gave.
+ Say not then, This with that lace will do well;
+ But, This with my discretion will be brave.
+ Much curiousnesse is a perpetual wooing;
+ Nothing, with labor; folly, long a doing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When once thy foot enters the church, be bare.
+ God is more there than thou; for thou art there
+ Only by his permission. Then beware,
+ And make thyself all reverence and fear.
+ Kneeling ne'er spoiled silk stockings; quit thy state;
+ All equal are within the church's gate.
+
+ Resort to sermons, but to prayers most:
+ Praying's the end of preaching. O, be drest!
+ Stay not for th' other pin: why thou hast lost
+ A joy for it worth worlds. Thus hell doth jest
+ Away thy blessings, and extremely flout thee,
+ Thy clothes being fast, but thy soul loose about thee.
+
+ Judge not the preacher; for he is thy judge:
+ If thou mislike him, thou conceiv'st him not.
+ God calleth preaching folly. Do not grudge
+ To pick out treasures from an earthen pot.
+ The worst speak something good: if _all_ want sense,
+ God takes a text, and preacheth Pa-ti-ence.
+
+GEORGE HERBERT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRIEFS.
+
+
+ WATER TURNED INTO WINE.
+
+ The conscious water saw its God and blushed.
+
+
+ THE WIDOW'S MITES.
+
+ Two mites, two drops, yet all her house and land,
+ Fall from a steady heart, though trembling hand:
+ The other's wanton wealth foams high, and brave;
+ The other cast away, she only gave.
+
+
+ "TWO WENT UP TO THE TEMPLE TO PRAY."
+
+ Two went to pray? O, rather say,
+ One went to brag, the other to pray;
+
+ One stands up close and treads on high,
+ Where the other dares not lend his eye;
+
+ One nearer to God's altar trod,
+ The other to the altar's God.
+
+RICHARD CRASHAW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JEWISH HYMN IN BABYLON.
+
+
+ God of the thunder! from whose cloudy seat
+ The fiery winds of Desolation flow;
+ Father of vengeance, that with purple feet
+ Like a full wine-press tread'st the world below;
+ The embattled armies wait thy sign to slay,
+ Nor springs the beast of havoc on his prey,
+ Nor withering Famine walks his blasted way,
+ Till thou hast marked the guilty land for woe.
+
+ God of the rainbow! at whose gracious sign
+ The billows of the proud their rage suppress;
+ Father of mercies! at one word of thine
+ An Eden blooms in the waste wilderness,
+ And fountains sparkle in the arid sands,
+ And timbrels ring in maidens' glancing hands,
+ And marble cities crown the laughing lands,
+ And pillared temples rise thy name to bless.
+
+ O'er Judah's land thy thunders broke, O Lord!
+ The chariots rattled o'er her sunken gate,
+ Her sons were wasted by the Assyrian's sword,
+ Even her foes wept to see her fallen state;
+ And heaps her ivory palaces became,
+ Her princes wore the captive's garb of shame,
+ Her temples sank amid the smouldering flame,
+ For thou didst ride the tempest cloud of fate.
+
+ O'er Judah's land thy rainbow, Lord, shall beam,
+ And the sad City lift her crownless head,
+ And songs shall wake and dancing footsteps gleam
+ In streets where broods the silence of the dead.
+ The sun shall shine on Salem's gilded towers,
+ On Carmel's side our maidens cull the flowers
+ To deck at blushing eye their bridal bowers,
+ And angel feet the glittering Sion tread.
+
+ Thy vengeance gave us to the stranger's hand,
+ And Abraham's children were led forth for slaves.
+ With fettered steps we left our pleasant land,
+ Envying our fathers in their peaceful graves.
+ The strangers' bread with bitter tears we steep,
+ And when our weary eyes should sink to sleep,
+ In the mute midnight we steal forth to weep.
+ Where the pale willows shade Euphrates' waves.
+
+ The born in sorrow shall bring forth in joy;
+ Thy mercy, Lord, shall lead thy children home;
+ He that went forth a tender prattling boy
+ Yet, ere he die, to Salem's streets shall come;
+ And Canaan's vines for us their fruit shall bear,
+ And Hermon's bees their honeyed stores prepare,
+ And we shall kneel again in thankful prayer,
+ Where o'er the cherub seated God full blazed the irradiate dome.
+
+HENRY HART MILMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EXAMPLE.
+
+
+ We scatter seeds with careless hand,
+ And dream we ne'er shall see them more;
+ But for a thousand years
+ Their fruit appears,
+ In weeds that mar the land,
+ Or healthful store.
+
+ The deeds we do, the words we say,--
+ Into still air they seem to fleet,
+ We count them ever past;
+ But they shall last,--
+ In the dread judgment they
+ And we shall meet.
+
+ I charge thee by the years gone by,
+ For the love's sake of brethren dear,
+ Keep thou the one true way,
+ In work and play,
+ Lest in that world their cry
+ Of woe thou hear.
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SMALL BEGINNINGS.
+
+
+ A traveller through a dusty road strewed acorns on the lea;
+ And one took root and sprouted up, and grew into a tree.
+ Love sought its shade, at evening time, to breath its early vows;
+ And age was pleased, in heats of noon, to bask beneath its boughs;
+ The dormouse loved its dangling twigs, the birds sweet music bore;
+ It stood a glory in its place, a blessing evermore.
+
+ A little spring had lost its way amid the grass and fern,
+ A passing stranger scooped a well, where weary men might turn;
+ He walled it in, and hung with care a ladle at the brink;
+ He thought not of the deed he did, but judged that toil might drink.
+ He passed again, and lo! the well, by summers never dried,
+ Had cooled ten thousand parching tongues, and saved a life besides.
+
+ A dreamer dropped a random thought; 't was old, and yet 't was new;
+ A simple fancy of the brain, but strong in being true.
+ It shone upon a genial mind, and lo! its light became
+ A lamp of life, a beacon ray, a monitory flame.
+ The thought was small; its issue great; a watch-fire on the hill,
+ It shed its radiance far adown, and cheers the valley still!
+
+ A nameless man, amid the crowd that thronged the daily mart,
+ Let fall a word of Hope and Love, unstudied, from the heart;
+ A whisper on the tumult thrown,--a transitory breath,--
+ It raised a brother from the dust; it saved a soul from death.
+ O germ! O fount! O word of love! O thought at random cast!
+ Ye were but little at the first, but mighty at the last.
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RISE OF MAN.
+
+
+ Thou for whose birth the whole creation yearned
+ Through countless ages of the morning world,
+ Who, first in fiery vapors dimly hurled,
+ Next to the senseless crystal slowly turned,
+ Then to the plant which grew to something more,--
+ Humblest of creatures that draw breath of life,--
+ Wherefrom through infinites of patient pain
+ Came conscious man to reason and adore:
+ Shall we be shamed because such things have been,
+ Or bate one jot of our ancestral pride?
+ Nay, in thyself art thou not deified
+ That from such depths thou couldst such summits win?
+ While the long way behind is prophecy
+ Of those perfections which are yet to be.
+
+JOHN WHITE CHADWICK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I WOULD I WERE AN EXCELLENT DIVINE.
+
+
+ I would I were an excellent divine.
+ That had the Bible at my fingers' ends;
+ That men might hear out of this mouth of mine
+ How God doth make his enemies his friends;
+ Rather than with a thundering and long prayer
+ Be led into presumption, or despair.
+
+ This would I be, and would none other be,
+ But a religious servant of my God;
+ And know there is none other God but he.
+ And willingly to suffer mercy's rod,--
+ Joy in his grace, and live but in his love,
+ And seek my bliss but in the world above.
+
+ And I would frame a kind of faithful prayer,
+ For all estates within the state of grace,
+ That careful love might never know despair.
+ Nor servile fear might faithful love deface;
+ And this would I both day and night devise
+ To make my humble spirit's exercise.
+
+ And I would read the rules of sacred life;
+ Persuade the troubled soul to patience;
+ The husband care, and comfort to the wife,
+ To child and servant due obedience;
+ Faith to the friend, and to the neighbor peace,
+ That love might live, and quarrels all might cease.
+
+ Prayer for the health of all that are diseased,
+ Confession unto all that are convicted,
+ And patience unto all that are displeased,
+ And comfort unto all that are afflicted,
+ And mercy unto all that have offended,
+ And grace to all, that all may be amended.
+
+NICHOLAS BRETON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PASTOR'S REVERIE.
+
+
+ The pastor sits in his easy-chair,
+ With the Bible upon his knee.
+ From gold to purple the clouds in the west
+ Are changing momently;
+ The shadows lie in the valleys below,
+ And hide in the curtain's fold;
+ And the page grows dim whereon he reads,
+ "I remember the days of old."
+
+ "Not clear nor dark," as the Scripture saith,
+ The pastor's memories are;
+ No day that is gone was shadowless,
+ No night was without its star;
+ But mingled bitter and sweet hath been
+ The portion of his cup:
+ "The hand that in love hath smitten," he saith,
+ "In love hath bound us up."
+
+ Fleet flies his thoughts over many a field
+ Of stubble and snow and bloom,
+ And now it trips through a festival,
+ And now it halts at a tomb;
+ Young faces smile in his reverie,
+ Of those that are young no more,
+ And voices are heard that only come
+ With the winds from a far-off shore.
+
+ He thinks of the day when first, with fear
+ And faltering lips, he stood
+ To speak in the sacred place the Word
+ To the waiting multitude;
+ He walks again to the house of God
+ With the voice of joy and praise,
+ With many whose feet long time have pressed
+ Heaven's safe and blessed ways.
+
+ He enters again the homes of toil,
+ And joins in the homely chat;
+ He stands in the shop of the artisan;
+ He sits, where the Master sat,
+ At the poor man's fire and the rich man's feast.
+ But who to-day are the poor,
+ And who are the rich? Ask him who keeps
+ The treasures that ever endure.
+
+ Once more the green and the grove resound
+ With the merry children's din;
+ He hears their shout at the Christmas tide,
+ When Santa Claus stalks in.
+ Once more he lists while the camp-fire roars
+ On the distant mountain-side,
+ Or, proving apostleship, plies the brook
+ Where the fierce young troutlings hide.
+
+ And now he beholds the wedding train
+ To the altar slowly move,
+ And the solemn words are said that seal
+ The sacrament of love.
+ Anon at the font he meets once more
+ The tremulous youthful pair,
+ With a white-robed cherub crowing response
+ To the consecrating prayer.
+
+ By the couch of pain he kneels again;
+ Again, the thin hand lies
+ Cold in his palm, while the last far look
+ Steals into the steadfast eyes;
+ And now the burden of hearts that break
+ Lies heavy upon his own--
+ The widow's woe and the orphan's cry
+ And the desolate mother's moan.
+
+ So blithe and glad, so heavy and sad,
+ Are the days that are no more,
+ So mournfully sweet are the sounds that float
+ With the winds from a far-off shore.
+ For the pastor has learned what meaneth the word
+ That is given him to keep,--
+ "Rejoice with them that do rejoice,
+ And weep with them that weep."
+
+ It is not in vain that he has trod
+ This lonely and toilsome way.
+ It is not in vain that he has wrought
+ In the vineyard all the day;
+ For the soul that gives is the soul that lives,
+ And bearing another's load
+ Doth lighten your own and shorten the way,
+ And brighten the homeward road.
+
+WASHINGTON GLADDEN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO RABBIS.
+
+
+ The Rabbi Nathan, twoscore years and ten,
+ Walked blameless through the evil world, and then
+ Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+ Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+ And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+ Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+ No more among the elders, but went out
+ From the great congregation girt about
+ With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+ Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+ Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+ Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+ Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+ Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+ Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+ And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+ Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+ Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+ Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+ In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+ Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+ Bow with their weight. I will arise and lay
+ My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+ Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+ But even as one who, followed unawares,
+ Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+ Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+ By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+ Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+ So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+ The wail of David's penitential woe,
+ Before him still the old temptation came,
+ And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+ Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+ Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+ To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+ Smote with his staff the blackness round about.
+
+ At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+ The towers of Ecbatana far away
+ Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+ And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+ The faith of Islam reared a domed tomb,
+ Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+ He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+ Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+ The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+ Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+ Wept, praising him whose gracious providence
+ Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+ Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+ Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+ Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+ Foul from my sins to tell thee all my shame.
+ Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+ May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+ Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+ Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+ Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+ The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+ "I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+ "In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+ 'Better the eye should see than that desire
+ Should wander'? Burning with a hidden fire
+ That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+ For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+ Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+ "Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+ In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+ They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+ Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+ Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+ Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+ His prayers were answered in another's name;
+ And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+ Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+ Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+ Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+ In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+ "Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+ Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+ Thou canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+ Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+ Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!"
+
+JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUDGE NOT.
+
+
+ Judge not; the workings of his brain
+ And of his heart thou canst not see;
+ What looks to thy dim eyes a stain,
+ In God's pure light may only be
+ A scar, brought from some well-won field,
+ Where thou wouldst only faint and yield.
+
+ The look, the air, that frets thy sight
+ May be a token that below
+ The soul has closed in deadly fight
+ With some infernal fiery foe,
+ Whose glance would scorch thy smiling grace
+ And cast thee shuddering on thy face!
+
+ The fall thou darest to despise,--
+ May be the angel's slackened hand
+ Has suffered it, that he may rise
+ And take a firmer, surer stand;
+ Or, trusting less to earthly things,
+ May henceforth learn to use his wings.
+
+ And judge none lost; but wait and see,
+ With hopeful pity, not disdain;
+ The depth of the abyss may be
+ The measure of the height of pain
+ And love and glory that may raise
+ This soul to God in after days!
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO THE UNCO GUID.
+
+
+ "My son, these maxims make a rule
+ And lump them aye thegither:
+ The Rigid Righteous is a fool,
+ The Rigid Wise anither:
+ The cleanest corn that e'er was dight
+ May hae some pyles o' caff in;
+ Sae ne'er a fellow-creature slight
+ For random fits o' daffin."
+
+ --SOLOMON, _Ecclesiastes_ vii. 16.
+
+
+ O ye wha are sae guid yoursel',
+ Sae pious and sae holy,
+ Ye've nought to do but mark and tell
+ Your neebor's fauts and folly:--
+ Whase life is like a weel-gaun mill,
+ Supplied wi' store o' water.
+ The heapet happer's ebbing still,
+ And still the clap plays clatter.
+
+ Hear me, ye venerable core,
+ As counsel for poor mortals,
+ That frequent pass douce Wisdom's door,
+ For glaikit Folly's portals!
+ I, for their thoughtless, careless sakes,
+ Would here propone defences,
+ Their donsie tricks, their black mistakes,
+ Their failings and mischances.
+
+ Ye see your state wi' theirs compared,
+ And shudder at the niffer;
+ But cast a moment's fair regard,
+ What makes the mighty differ?
+ Discount what scant occasion gave
+ That purity ye pride in,
+ And (what's aft mair than a' the lave)
+ Your better art o' hidin'.
+
+ Think, when your castigated pulse
+ Gies now and then a wallop,
+ What ragings must his veins convulse,
+ That still eternal gallop:
+ Wi' wind and tide fair i' your tail,
+ Right on ye scud your sea-way;
+ But in the teeth o' baith to sail,
+ It makes an unco leeway.
+
+ See Social life and Glee sit down,
+ All joyous and unthinking,
+ Till, quite transmugrified, they're grown
+ Debauchery and Drinking:
+ O, would they stay to calculate
+ The eternal consequences;
+ Or your mortal dreaded hell to state,
+ Damnation of expenses!
+
+ Ye high, exalted, virtuous dames,
+ Tied up in godly laces,
+ Before ye gie poor Frailty names,
+ Suppose a change o' cases;
+ A dear-loved lad, convenience snug,
+ A treacherous inclination,--
+ But, let me whisper i' your lug,
+ Ye 're aiblins nae temptation.
+
+ Then gently scan your brother man,
+ Still gentler sister woman;
+ Though they may gang a kennin' wrang,
+ To step aside is human.
+ One point must still be greatly dark,
+ The moving why they do it;
+ And just as lamely can ye mark
+ How far perhaps they rue it.
+
+ Who made the heart, 't is He alone
+ Decidedly can try us;
+ He knows each chord,--its various tone,
+ Each spring,--its various bias:
+ Then at the balance let's be mute,
+ We never can adjust it;
+ What's done we partly may compute,
+ But know not what's resisted.
+
+ROBERT BURNS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STONE THE WOMAN, LET THE MAN GO FREE.
+
+
+ Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free!
+ Draw back your skirts, lest they perchance may touch
+ Her garment as she passes; but to him
+ Put forth a willing hand to clasp with his
+ That led her to destruction and disgrace.
+ Shut up from her the sacred ways of toil,
+ That she no more may win an honest meal;
+ But ope to him all honorable paths
+ Where he may win distinction; give to him
+ Fair, pressed-down measures of life's sweetest joys.
+ Pass her, O maiden, with a pure, proud face,
+ If she puts out a poor, polluted palm;
+ But lay thy hand in his on bridal day,
+ And swear to cling to him with wifely love
+ And tender reverence. Trust him who led
+ A sister woman to a fearful fate.
+
+ Yes, stone the woman, let the man go free!
+ Let one soul suffer for the guilt of two--
+ It is the doctrine of a hurried world,
+ Too out of breath for holding balances
+ Where nice distinctions and injustices
+ Are calmly weighed. But ah, how will it be
+ On that strange day of fire and flame,
+ When men shall wither with a mystic fear,
+ And all shall stand before the one true Judge?
+ Shall sex make _then_ a difference in sin?
+ Shall He, the Searcher of the hidden heart,
+ In His eternal and divine decree
+ Condemn the woman and forgive the man?
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IN PRISON.
+
+
+ God pity the wretched prisoners,
+ In their lonely cells to-day!
+ Whatever the sins that tripped them,
+ God pity them! still I say.
+
+ Only a strip of sunshine,
+ Cleft by rusty bars;
+ Only a patch of azure,
+ Only a cluster of stars;
+
+ Only a barren future,
+ To starve their hope upon;
+ Only stinging memories
+ Of a past that's better gone;
+
+ Only scorn from women.
+ Only hate from men,
+ Only remorse to whisper
+ Of a life that might have been.
+
+ Once they were little children.
+ And perhaps their unstained feet
+ Were led by a gentle mother
+ Toward the golden street;
+
+ Therefore, if in life's forest
+ They since have lost their way,
+ For the sake of her who loved them,
+ God pity them! still I say.
+
+ O mothers gone to heaven!
+ With earnest heart I ask
+ That your eyes may not look earthward
+ On the failure of your task.
+
+ For even in those mansions
+ The choking tears would rise,
+ Though the fairest hand in heaven
+ Would wipe them from your eyes!
+
+ And you, who judge so harshly,
+ Are you sure the stumbling-stone
+ That tripped the feet of others
+ Might not have bruised your own?
+
+ Are you sure the sad-faced angel
+ Who writes our errors down
+ Will ascribe to you more honor
+ Than him on whom you frown?
+
+ Or, if a steadier purpose
+ Unto your life is given;
+ A stronger will to conquer,
+ A smoother path to heaven;
+
+ If, when temptations meet you,
+ You crush them with a smile;
+ If you can chain pale passion
+ And keep your lips from guile;
+
+ Then bless the hand that crowned you,
+ Remembering, as you go,
+ 'T was not your own endeavor
+ That shaped your nature so;
+
+ And sneer not at the weakness
+ Which made a brother fall,
+ For the hand that lifts the fallen,
+ God loves the best of all!
+
+ And pray for the wretched prisoners
+ All over the land to-day,
+ That a holy hand in pity
+ May wipe their guilt away.
+
+MAY RILEY SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONSCIENCE AND REMORSE.
+
+
+ "Good-bye," I said to my Conscience--
+ "Good-bye for aye and aye;"
+ And I put her hands off harshly,
+ And turned my face away:
+ And Conscience, smitten sorely,
+ Returned not from that day.
+
+ But a time came when my spirit
+ Grew weary of its pace:
+ And I cried, "Come back, my Conscience,
+ I long to see thy face;"
+ But Conscience cried, "I cannot,--
+ Remorse sits in my place."
+
+PAUL LAWRENCE DUNBAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOUND WANTING.
+
+
+ Belshazzar had a letter,--
+ He never had but one;
+ Belshazzar's correspondent
+ Concluded and begun
+ In that immortal copy
+ The conscience of us all
+ Can read without its glasses
+ On revelation's wall.
+
+EMILY DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DALLYING WITH TEMPTATION.
+
+ FROM THE FIRST PART OF "WALLENSTEIN," ACT III. SC. 4.
+
+
+ Wallenstein _(in soliloquy_). Is it possible?
+ Is't so? I _can_ no longer what I _would_!
+ No longer draw back at my liking! I
+ Must _do_ the deed, because I _thought_ of it,
+ And fed this heart here with a dream! Because
+ I did not scowl temptation from my presence,
+ Dallied with thought of possible fulfilment,
+ Commenced no movement, left all time uncertain,
+ And only kept the road, the access open!
+ By the great God of Heaven! It was not
+ My serious meaning, it was ne'er resolve.
+ I but amused myself with thinking of it.
+ The free-will tempted me, the power to do
+ Or not to do it.--Was it criminal
+ To make the fancy minister to hope,
+ To fill the air with pretty toys of air,
+ And clutch fantastic sceptres moving t'ward me?
+ Was not the will kept free? Beheld I not
+ The road of duty clear beside me--but
+ One little step and once more I was in it!
+ Where am I? Whither have I been transported?
+ No road, no track behind one, but a wall,
+ Impenetrable, insurmountable,
+ Rises obedient to the spells I muttered
+ And meant not--my own doings tower behind me.
+
+SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EASY TO DRIFT.
+
+
+ Easy to drift to the open sea,
+ The tides are eager and swift and strong,
+ And whistling and free are the rushing winds,--
+ But O, to get back is hard and long.
+
+ Easy as told in Arabian tale,
+ To free from his jar the evil sprite
+ Till he rises like smoke to stupendous size,--
+ But O, nevermore can we prison him tight.
+
+ Easy as told in an English tale,
+ To fashion a Frankenstein, body and soul,
+ And breathe in his bosom a breath of life,--
+ But O, we create what we cannot control.
+
+ Easy to drift to the sea of doubt,
+ Easy to hurt what we cannot heal,
+ Easy to rouse what we cannot soothe,
+ Easy to speak what we do not feel,
+ Easy to show what we ought to conceal,
+ Easy to think that fancy is fate,--
+ And O, the wisdom that comes too late!
+
+OLIVER HUCKEL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRANKFORD'S SOLILOQUY.
+
+ FROM "A WOMAN KILLED WITH KINDNESS"
+
+
+ O God! O God! that it were possible
+ To undo things done; to call back yesterday!
+ That time could turn up his swift sandy glass,
+ To untell the days, and to redeem these hours!
+ Or that the sun
+ Could, rising from the West, draw his coach backward,--
+ Take from the account of time so many minutes.
+ Till he had all these seasons called again,
+ These minutes and these actions done in them.
+
+THOMAS HEYWOOD.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONSCIENCE.
+
+ FROM SATIRE XIII.
+
+
+ The Spartan rogue who, boldly bent on fraud,
+ Dared ask the god to sanction and applaud,
+ And sought for counsel at the Pythian shrine,
+ Received for answer from the lips divine,--
+ "That he who doubted to restore his trust,
+ And reasoned much, reluctant to be just,
+ Should for those doubts and that reluctance prove
+ The deepest vengeance of the powers above."
+ The tale declares that not pronounced in vain
+ Came forth the warning from the sacred fane:
+ Ere long no branch of that devoted race
+ Could mortal man on soil of Sparta trace!
+ Thus but intended mischief, stayed in time,
+ Had all the mortal guilt of finished crime.
+ If such his fate who yet but darkly dares,
+ Whose guilty purpose yet no act declares,
+ What were it, done! Ah! now farewell to peace!
+ Ne'er on this earth his soul's alarms shall cease!
+ Held in the mouth that languid fever burns,
+ His tasteless food he indolently turns;
+ On Alba's oldest stock his soul shall pine!
+ Forth from his lips he spits the joyless wine!
+ Nor all the nectar of the hills shall now
+ Or glad the heart, or smooth the wrinkled brow!
+ While o'er the couch his aching limbs are cast,
+ If care permit the brief repose at last,
+ Lo! there the altar and the fane abused!
+ Or darkly shadowed forth in dream confused,
+ While the damp brow betrays the inward storm,
+ Before him flits thy aggravated form!
+ Then as new fears o'er all his senses press,
+ Unwilling words the guilty truth confess!
+ These, these be they whom secret terrors try.
+ When muttered thunders shake the lurid sky;
+ Whose deadly paleness now the gloom conceals
+ And now the vivid flash anew reveals.
+ No storm as Nature's casualty they hold.
+ They deem without an aim no thunders rolled;
+ Where'er the lightning strikes, the flash is thought
+ Judicial fire, with Heaven's high vengeance fraught.
+ Passes this by, with yet more anxious ear
+ And greater dread, each future storm they fear;
+ In burning vigil, deadliest foe to sleep,
+ In their distempered frame if fever keep,
+ Or the pained side their wonted rest prevent,
+ Behold some incensed god his bow has bent!
+ All pains, all aches, are stones and arrows hurled
+ At bold offenders in this nether world!
+ From them no crested cock acceptance meets!
+ Their lamb before the altar vainly bleats!
+ Can pardoning Heaven on guilty sickness smile?
+ Or is there victim than itself more vile?
+ Where steadfast virtue dwells not in the breast,
+ Man is a wavering creature at the best!
+
+From the Latin of JUVENAL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FOOLISH VIRGINS.
+
+
+ The Queen looked up, and said,
+ "O maiden, if indeed you list to sing,
+ Sing, and unbind my heart, that I may weep."
+ Whereat full willingly sang the little maid:
+
+ "Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill!
+ Late, late, so late! but we can enter still.
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "No light had we: for that we do repent;
+ And learning this, the bridegroom will relent.
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "No light; so late! and dark and chill the night!
+ O, let us in, that we may find the light!
+ Too late, too late! Ye cannot enter now.
+
+ "Have we not heard the bridegroom is so sweet?
+ O, let us in, though late, to kiss his feet!
+ No, no, too late! Ye cannot enter now."
+
+ So sang the novice, while full passionately,
+ Her head upon her hands, wept the sad Queen.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UP HILL.
+
+
+ Does the road wind up hill all the way?
+ _Yes, to the very end._
+ Will the day's journey take the whole long day?
+ _From morn to night, my friend_.
+
+ But is there for the night a resting-place?
+ _A roof for when the slow dark hours begin._
+ May not the darkness hide it from my face?
+ _You cannot miss that inn_.
+
+ Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?
+ _Those who have gone before._
+ Then must I knock, or call when just in sight?
+ _They will not keep you standing at that door_.
+
+ Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak?
+ _Of labor you shall find the sum._
+ Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
+ _Yea, beds for all who come_.
+
+CHRISTINA G. ROSSETTI.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PER PACEM AD LUCEM.
+
+
+ I do not ask, O Lord, that life may be
+ A pleasant road;
+ I do not ask that Thou wouldst take from me
+ Aught of its load;
+
+ I do not ask that flowers should always spring
+ Beneath my feet;
+ I know too well the poison and the sting
+ Of things too sweet.
+
+ For one thing only, Lord, dear Lord, I plead,
+ Lead me aright--
+ Though strength should falter, and though heart should bleed--
+ Through Peace to Light.
+
+ I do not ask, O Lord, that thou shouldst shed
+ Full radiance here;
+ Give but a ray of peace, that I may tread
+ Without a fear.
+
+ I do not ask my cross to understand,
+ My way to see;
+ Better in darkness just to feel Thy hand
+ And follow Thee.
+
+ Joy is like restless day; but peace divine
+ Like quiet night:
+ Lead me, O Lord,--till perfect Day shall shine,
+ Through Peace to Light.
+
+ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ON HIS BLINDNESS.
+
+
+ When I consider how my light is spent
+ Ere half my days, in this dark world and wide,
+ And that one talent, which is death to hide,
+ Lodged with me useless, though my soul more bent
+ To serve therewith my Maker, and present
+ My true account, lest he returning chide;
+ "Doth God exact day-labor, light denied?"
+ I fondly ask. But Patience, to prevent
+ That murmur, soon replies, "God doth not need
+ Either man's work or his own gifts; who best
+ Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best: his state
+ Is kingly; thousands at his bidding speed,
+ And post o'er land and ocean without rest;
+ They also serve who only stand and wait."
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MARTYRS' HYMN.
+
+
+ Flung to the heedless winds,
+ Or on the waters cast,
+ The martyrs' ashes, watched,
+ Shall gathered be at last;
+ And from that scattered dust,
+ Around us and abroad,
+ Shall spring a plenteous seed
+ Of witnesses for God.
+
+ The Father hath received
+ Their latest living breath;
+ And vain is Satan's boast
+ Of victory in their death;
+ Still, still, though dead, they speak,
+ And, trumpet-tongued, proclaim
+ To many a wakening land
+ The one availing name.
+
+From the German of MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+Translation of W.J. FOX.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PILGRIMAGE.
+
+
+ Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,
+ My staff of faith to walk upon,
+ My scrip of joy, immortal diet,
+ My bottle of salvation,
+ My gown of glory, hope's true gauge;
+ And thus I'll take my pilgrimage!
+
+ Blood must be my body's balmer,
+ No other balm will there be given;
+ Whilst my soul, like quiet palmer,
+ Travelleth towards the land of Heaven,
+ Over the silver mountains
+ Where spring the nectar fountains:
+ There will I kiss
+ The bowl of bliss,
+ And drink mine everlasting fill
+ Upon every milken hill.
+ My soul will be a-dry before,
+ But after, it will thirst no more.
+
+ Then by that happy, blissful day,
+ More peaceful pilgrims I shall see,
+ That have cast off their rags of clay,
+ And walk apparelled fresh like me.
+ I'll take them first
+ To quench their thirst,
+ And taste of nectar's suckets
+ At those clear wells
+ Where sweetness dwells
+ Drawn up by saints in crystal buckets.
+
+ And when our bottles and all we
+ Are filled with immortality,
+ Then the blest paths we'll travel,
+ Strewed with rubies thick as gravel,--
+ Ceilings of diamonds, sapphire floors.
+ High walls of coral, and pearly bowers.
+ From thence to Heaven's bribeless hall,
+ Where no corrupted voices brawl;
+ No conscience molten into gold,
+ No forged accuser, bought or sold,
+ No cause deferred, no vain-spent journey,
+ For there Christ is the King's Attorney;
+ Who pleads for all without degrees,
+ And he hath angels, but no fees;
+ And when the grand twelve-million jury
+ Of our sins, with direful fury,
+ 'Gainst our souls black verdicts give,
+ Christ pleads his death, and then we live.
+ Be thou my speaker, taintless pleader,
+ Unblotted lawyer, true proceeder!
+ Thou giv'st salvation even for alms,--
+ Not with a bribed lawyer's palms.
+ And this is mine eternal plea
+ To Him that made heaven, earth, and sea',
+ That, since my flesh must die so soon,
+ And want a head to dine next noon,
+ Just at the stroke when my veins start and spread.
+ Set on my soul an everlasting head:
+ Then am I, like a palmer, fit
+ To tread those blest paths which before I writ.
+
+ Of death and judgment, heaven and hell,
+ Who oft doth think, must needs die well.
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MASTER'S TOUCH.
+
+
+ In the still air the music lies unheard;
+ In the rough marble beauty hides unseen:
+ To make the music and the beauty, needs
+ The master's touch, the sculptor's chisel keen.
+
+ Great Master, touch us with thy skilful hand;
+ Let not the music that is in us die!
+ Great Sculptor, hew and polish us; nor let,
+ Hidden and lost, thy form within us lie!
+
+ Spare not the stroke! do with us as thou wilt!
+ Let there be naught unfinished, broken, marred;
+ Complete thy purpose, that we may become
+ Thy perfect image, thou our God and Lord!
+
+HORATIUS BONAR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FAITHFUL ANGEL.
+
+ FROM "PARADISE LOST," BOOK V.
+
+
+ The seraph Abdiel, faithful found
+ Among the faithless, faithful only he;
+ Among innumerable false, unmoved,
+ Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified,
+ His loyalty he kept, his love, his zeal;
+ Nor number, nor example with him wrought
+ To swerve from truth, or change his constant mind,
+ Though single. From amidst them forth he passed,
+ Long way through hostile scorn, which he sustained
+ Superior, nor of violence feared aught;
+ And with retorted scorn his back he turned
+ On those proud towers to swift destruction doomed.
+
+MILTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOW SPIRITS.
+
+
+ Fever and fret and aimless stir
+ And disappointed strife,
+ All chafing, unsuccessful things,
+ Make up the sum of life.
+
+ Love adds anxiety to toil,
+ And sameness doubles cares.
+ While one unbroken chain of work
+ The flagging temper wears.
+
+ The light and air are dulled with smoke:
+ The streets resound with noise;
+ And the soul sinks to see its peers
+ Chasing their joyless joys.
+
+ Voices are round me; smiles are near;
+ Kind welcomes to be had;
+ And yet my spirit is alone,
+ Fretful, outworn, and sad.
+
+ A weary actor, I would fain
+ Be quit of my long part;
+ The burden of unquiet life
+ Lies heavy on my heart.
+
+ Sweet thought of God! now do thy work
+ As thou hast done before;
+ Wake up, and tears will wake with thee,
+ And the dull mood be o'er.
+
+ The very thinking of the thought
+ Without or praise or prayer,
+ Gives light to know, and life to do,
+ And marvellous strength to bear.
+
+ Oh, there is music in that thought,
+ Unto a heart unstrung,
+ Like sweet bells at the evening time,
+ Most musically rung.
+
+ 'Tis not his justice or his power,
+ Beauty or blest abode,
+ But the mere unexpanded thought
+ Of the eternal God.
+
+ It is not of his wondrous works,
+ Not even that he is;
+ Words fail it, but it is a thought
+ Which by itself is bliss.
+
+ Sweet thought, lie closer to my heart!
+ That I may feel thee near,
+ As one who for his weapon feels
+ In some nocturnal fear.
+
+ Mostly in hours of gloom thou com'st,
+ When sadness makes us lowly,
+ As though thou wert the echo sweet
+ Of humble melancholy.
+
+ I bless thee. Lord, for this kind check
+ To spirits over free!
+ More helpless need of thee!
+ And for all things that make me feel
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I SAW THEE.
+
+ "When thou wast under the fig-tree, I saw thee."
+
+
+ I Saw thee when, as twilight fell,
+ And evening lit her fairest star,
+ Thy footsteps sought yon quiet dell,
+ The world's confusion left afar.
+
+ I saw thee when thou stood'st alone,
+ Where drooping branches thick o'erhung,
+ Thy still retreat to all unknown,
+ Hid in deep shadows darkly flung.
+
+ I saw thee when, as died each sound
+ Of bleating flock or woodland bird,
+ Kneeling, as if on holy ground,
+ Thy voice the listening silence heard.
+
+ I saw thy calm, uplifted eyes,
+ And marked the heaving of thy breast,
+ When rose to heaven thy heartfelt sighs
+ For purer life, for perfect rest.
+
+ I saw the light that o'er thy face
+ Stole with a soft, suffusing glow,
+ As if, within, celestial grace
+ Breathed the same bliss that angels know.
+
+ I saw--what thou didst not--above
+ Thy lowly head an open heaven;
+ And tokens of thy Father's love
+ With smiles to thy rapt spirit given.
+
+ I saw thee from that sacred spot
+ With firm and peaceful soul depart;
+ I, Jesus, saw thee,--doubt it not,--
+ And read the secrets of thy heart!
+
+RAY PALMER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOSSE IN DELAYES.
+
+
+ Shun delayes, they breed remorse,
+ Take thy time while time doth serve thee,
+ Creeping snayles have weakest force,
+ Flie their fault, lest thou repent thee.
+ Good is best when soonest wrought,
+ Lingering labours come to nought.
+
+ Hoyse up sayle while gale doth last,
+ Tide and winde stay no man's pleasure;
+ Seek not time when time is past,
+ Sober speede is wisdome's leasure.
+ After-wits are dearely bought,
+ Let thy fore-wit guide thy thought.
+
+ Time weares all his locks before,
+ Take thou hold upon his forehead;
+ When he flies, he turnes no more,
+ And behind his scalpe is naked.
+ Workes adjourned have many stayes,
+ Long demurres breed new delayes.
+
+ Seeke thy salve while sore is greene,
+ Festered wounds aske deeper launcing;
+ After-cures are seldome seene,
+ Often sought, scarce ever chancing.
+ Time and place gives best advice.
+ Out of season, out of price.
+
+ Crush the serpent in the head,
+ Breake ill eggs ere they be hatched:
+ Kill bad chickens in the tread;
+ Fledged, they hardly can be catched:
+ In the rising stifle ill,
+ Lest it grow against thy will.
+
+ Drops do pierce the stubborn flint,
+ Not by force, but often falling;
+ Custome kills with feeble dint.
+ More by use than strength prevailing:
+ Single sands have little weight,
+ Many make a drowning freight.
+
+ Tender twigs are bent with ease,
+ Aged trees do breake with bending;
+ Young desires make little prease,
+ Growth doth make them past amending.
+ Happie man that soon doth knocke,
+ Babel's babes against the rocke.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHWELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SEED GROWING SECRETLY.
+
+
+ Dear, secret greenness! nurst below
+ Tempests and winds and winter nights!
+ Vex not, that but One sees thee grow;
+ That One made all these lesser lights.
+
+ What needs a conscience calm and bright
+ Within itself, an outward test?
+ Who breaks his glass, to take more light,
+ Makes way for storms into his rest.
+
+ Then bless thy secret growth, nor catch
+ At noise, but thrive unseen and dumb;
+ Keep clean, bear fruit, earn life, and watch
+ Till the white-winged reapers come!
+
+HENRY VAUGHAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATIENCE.
+
+
+ She hath no beauty in her face
+ Unless the chastened sweetness there,
+ And meek long-suffering, yield a grace
+ To make her mournful features fair:--
+
+ Shunned by the gay, the proud, the young,
+ She roams through dim, unsheltered ways;
+ Nor lover's vow, nor flatterer's tongue
+ Brings music to her sombre days:--
+
+ At best her skies are clouded o'er,
+ And oft she fronts the stinging sleet,
+ Or feels on some tempestuous shore
+ The storm-waves lash her naked feet.
+
+ Where'er she strays, or musing stands
+ By lonesome beach, by turbulent mart,
+ We see her pale, half-tremulous hands
+ Crossed humbly o'er her aching heart!
+
+ Within, a secret pain she bears,--
+ pain too deep to feel the balm
+ An April spirit finds in tears;
+ Alas! all cureless griefs are calm!
+
+ Yet in her passionate strength supreme,
+ Despair beyond her pathway flies,
+ Awed by the softly steadfast beam
+ Of sad, but heaven-enamored eyes!
+
+ Who pause to greet her, vaguely seem
+ Touched by fine wafts of holier air;
+ As those who in some mystic dream
+ Talk with the angels unaware!
+
+PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOMETIME.
+
+
+ Sometime, when all life's lessons have been learned,
+ And sun and stars forevermore have set,
+ The things o'er which our weak judgments here have spurned,
+ The things o'er which we grieved with lashes wet,
+ Will flash before us, out of life's dark night,
+ As stars shine most in deeper tints of blue;
+ And we shall see how all God's plans are right,
+ And how what seems reproof was love most true.
+
+ And we shall see how, while we frown and sigh,
+ God's plans go on as best for you and me;
+ How, when we called, he heeded not our cry,
+ Because his wisdom to the end could see.
+ And e'en as prudent parents disallow
+ Too much of sweet to craving babyhood,
+ So God, perhaps, is keeping from us now
+ Life's sweetest things, because it seemeth good.
+
+ And if sometimes, commingled with life's wine,
+ We find the wormwood, and rebel and shrink,
+ Be sure a wiser hand than yours or mine
+ Pours out this potion for our lips to drink.
+ And if some friend we love is lying low,
+ Where human kisses cannot reach his face,
+ Oh, do not blame the loving Father so,
+ But wear your sorrow with obedient grace!
+
+ And you shall shortly know that lengthened breath
+ Is not the sweetest gift God sends his friend,
+ And that, sometimes, the sable pall of death
+ Conceals the fairest bloom his love can send.
+ If we could push ajar the gates of life,
+ And stand within, and all God's workings see,
+ We could interpret all this doubt and strife,
+ And for each mystery could find a key.
+
+ But not to-day. Then be content, poor heart!
+ God's plans like lilies pure and white unfold.
+ We must not tear the close-shut leaves apart,
+ Time will reveal the calyxes of gold.
+ And if, through patient toil, we reach the land
+ Where tired feet, with sandals loosed, may rest,
+ When we shall clearly know and understand,
+ I think that we will say, "God knew the best!"
+
+MAY RILEY SMITH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATHER, THY WILL BE DONE!
+
+
+ He sendeth sun, he sendeth shower,
+ Alike they're needful for the flower;
+ And joys and tears alike are sent
+ To give the soul fit nourishment:
+ As comes to me or cloud or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+ Can loving children e'er reprove
+ With murmurs whom they trust and love?
+ Creator, I would ever be
+ A trusting, loving child to thee:
+ As comes to me or cloud or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+ Oh, ne'er will I at life repine;
+ Enough that thou hast made it mine;
+ When falls the shadow cold of death,
+ I yet will sing with parting breath:
+ As comes to me or shade or sun,
+ Father, thy will, not mine, be done!
+
+SARAH FLOWER ADAMS.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+DEATH: IMMORTALITY: HEAVEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROSPECT.
+
+
+ Methinks we do as fretful children do,
+ Leaning their faces on the window-pane
+ To sigh the glass dim with their own breath's stain,
+ And shut the sky and landscape from their view;
+ And, thus, alas! since God the maker drew
+ A mystic separation 'twixt those twain,--
+ The life beyond us and our souls in pain,--
+ We miss the prospect which we are called unto
+ By grief we are fools to use. Be still and strong,
+ O man, my brother! hold thy sobbing breath,
+ And keep thy soul's large windows pure from wrong;
+ That so, as life's appointment issueth,
+ Thy vision may be clear to watch along
+ The sunset consummation-lights of death.
+
+ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LOST PLEIAD.
+
+
+ Not in the sky,
+ Where it was seen,
+ Nor on the white tops of the glistening wave,
+ Nor in the mansions of the hidden deep,--
+ Though green,
+ And beautiful, its caves of mystery;--
+ Shall the bright watcher have
+ A place, and as of old high station keep.
+
+ Gone, gone!
+ Oh, never more to cheer
+ The mariner who holds his course alone
+ On the Atlantic, through the weary night,
+ When the stars turn to watchers, and do sleep,
+ Shall it appear,
+ With the sweet fixedness of certain light,
+ Down-shining on the shut eyes of the deep.
+
+ Vain, vain!
+ Hopeless most idly then, shall he look forth,
+ That mariner from his bark.
+ Howe'er the north
+ Does raise his certain lamp, when tempests lower--
+ He sees no more that perished light again!
+ And gloomier grows the hour
+ Which may not, through the thick and crowding dark,
+ Restore that lost and loved one to her tower.
+
+ He looks,--the shepherd of Chaldea's hills
+ Tending his flocks,--
+ And wonders the rich beacon does not blaze,
+ Gladdening his gaze;--
+ And from his dreary watch along the rocks,
+ Guiding him safely home through perilous ways!
+ Still wondering as the drowsy silence fills
+ The sorrowful scene, and every hour distils
+ Its leaden dews.--How chafes he at the night,
+ Still slow to bring the expected and sweet light,
+ So natural to his sight!
+
+ And lone,
+ Where its first splendors shone,
+ Shall be that pleasant company of stars:
+ How should they know that death
+ Such perfect beauty mars?
+ And like the earth, its crimson bloom and breath;
+ Fallen from on high,
+ Their lights grow blasted by its touch, and die!--
+ All their concerted springs of harmony
+ Snapped rudely, and the generous music gone.
+
+ A strain--a mellow strain--
+ A wailing sweetness filled the sky;
+ The stars, lamenting in unborrowed pain,
+ That one of their selectest ones must die!
+ Must vanish, when most lovely, from the rest!
+ Alas! 'tis evermore our destiny,
+ The hope, heart-cherished, is the soonest lost;
+ The flower first budden, soonest feels the frost:
+ Are not the shortest-lived still loveliest?
+ And, like the pale star shooting down the sky,
+ Look they not ever brightest when they fly
+ The desolate home they blessed?
+
+WILLIAM GILMORE SIMMS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PASSING AWAY.
+
+
+ Was it the chime of a tiny bell
+ That came so sweet to my dreaming ear,
+ Like the silvery tones of a fairy's shell
+ That he winds, on the beach, so mellow and clear,
+ When the winds and the waves lie together asleep,
+ And the Moon and the Fairy are watching the deep,
+ She dispensing her silvery light.
+ And he his notes as silvery quite.
+ While the boatman listens and ships his oar,
+ To catch the music that comes from the shore?
+ Hark! the notes on my ear that play
+ Are set to words; as they float, they say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ But no; it was not a fairy's shell.
+ Blown on the beach, so mellow and clear;
+ Nor was it the tongue of a silver bell,
+ Striking the hour, that filled my ear,
+ As I lay in my dream; yet was it a chime
+ That told of the flow of the stream of time.
+ For a beautiful clock from the ceiling hung,
+ And a plump little girl, for a pendulum, swung
+ (As you've sometimes seen, in a little ring
+ That hangs in his cage, a canary-bird swing);
+ And she held to her bosom a budding bouquet,
+ And, as she enjoyed it, she seemed to say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ Oh, how bright were the wheels, that told
+ Of the lapse of time, as they moved round slow;
+ And the hands, as they swept o'er the dial of gold,
+ Seemed to point to the girl below.
+ And lo! she had changed: in a few short hours
+ Her bouquet had become a garland of flowers,
+ That she held in her outstretched hands, and flung
+ This way and that, as she, dancing, swung
+ In the fulness of grace and of womanly pride,
+ That told me she soon was to be a bride;
+ Yet then, when expecting her happiest day,
+ In the same sweet voice I heard her say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ While I gazed at that fair one's cheek, a shade
+ Of thought or care stole softly over,
+ Like that by a cloud in a summer's day made,
+ Looking down on a field of blossoming clover.
+ The rose yet lay on her cheek, but its flush
+ Had something lost of its brilliant blush;
+ And the light in her eye, and the light on the wheels,
+ That marched so calmly round above her,
+ Was a little dimmed,--as when evening steals
+ Upon noon's hot face. Yet one couldn't but love her,
+ For she looked like a mother whose first babe lay
+ Rocked on her breast, as she swung all day;
+ And she seemed, in the same silver tone, to say,
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+ While yet I looked, what a change there came!
+ Her eye was quenched, and her cheek was wan;
+ Stooping and staffed was her withered frame,
+ Yet just as busily swung she on;
+ The garland beneath her had fallen to dust;
+ The wheels above her were eaten with rust:
+ The hands, that over the dial swept,
+ Grew crooked and tarnished, but on they kept
+ And still there came that silver tone
+ From the shrivelled lips of the toothless crone
+ (Let me never forget till my dying day
+ The tone or the burden of her lay),
+ "Passing away! passing away!"
+
+JOHN PIERPONT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LINES
+
+ FOUND IN HIS BIBLE IN THE GATE-HOUSE AT WESTMINSTER.
+
+
+ E'en such is time; that takes in trust
+ Our youth, our joys, our all we have,
+ And pays us but with earth and dust;
+ Who in the dark and silent grave,
+ When we have wandered all our ways,
+ Shuts up the story of our days:
+ But from this earth, this grave, this dust,
+ My God shall raise me up, I trust.
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY AIN COUNTREE.
+
+ "But now they desire a better country, that is, an
+ heavenly."--HEBREWS xi. 16.
+
+
+ I'm far frae my hame, an' I'm weary aftenwhiles,
+ For the langed-for hame-bringing, an' my Father's welcome smiles;
+ I'll never be fu' content, until mine een do see
+ The shining gates o' heaven an' my ain countree.
+
+ The earth is flecked wi' flowers, mony-tinted, fresh, an' gay,
+ The birdies warble blithely, for my Father made them sae;
+ But these sights an' these soun's will as naething be to me,
+ When I hear the angels singing in my ain countree.
+
+ I've his gude word of promise that some gladsome day, the King
+ To his ain royal palace his banished hame will bring:
+ Wi' een an' wi' hearts runnin' owre, we shall see
+ The King in his beauty in our ain countree.
+
+ My sins hae been mony, an' my sorrows hae been sair,
+ But there they'll never vex me, nor be remembered mair;
+ His bluid has made me white, his hand shall dry mine e'e,
+ When he brings me hame at last, to my ain countree.
+
+ Like a bairn to its mither, a wee birdie to its nest,
+ I wad fain be ganging noo, unto my Saviour's breast;
+ For he gathers in his bosom, witless, worthless lambs like me,
+ And carries them himse' to his ain countree.
+
+ He's faithfu' that hath promised, he'll surely come again,
+ He'll keep his tryst wi' me, at what hour I dinna ken;
+ But he bids me still to wait, an' ready aye to be,
+ To gang at ony moment to my ain countree.
+
+ So I'm watching aye, an' singin' o' my hame as I wait,
+ For the soun'ing o' his footfa' this side the shining gate;
+ God gie his grace to ilk ane wha listens noo to me,
+ That we a' may gang in gladness to our ain countree.
+
+MARY LEE DEMAREST.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COMING.
+
+ "At even, or at midnight, or at the cock-crowing, or in the
+ morning."--Mark xiii. 35.
+
+
+ "It may be in the evening,
+ When the work of the day is done,
+ And you have time to sit in the twilight
+ And watch the sinking sun,
+ While the long bright day dies slowly
+ Over the sea,
+ And the hour grows quiet and holy
+ With thoughts of me;
+ While you hear the village children
+ Passing along the street,
+ Among those thronging footsteps
+ May come the sound of _my_ feet.
+ Therefore I tell you: Watch.
+ By the light of the evening star,
+ When the room is growing dusky
+ As the clouds afar;
+ Let the door be on the latch
+ In your home,
+ For it may be through the gloaming
+ I will come.
+
+ "It may be when the midnight
+ Is heavy upon the land,
+ And the black waves lying dumbly
+ Along the sand;
+ When the moonless night draws close,
+ And the lights are out in the house;
+ When the fires burn low and red,
+ And the watch is ticking loudly
+ Beside the bed:
+ Though you sleep, tired out, on your couch,
+ Still your heart must wake and watch
+ In the dark room,
+ For it may be that at midnight
+ I will come.
+
+ "It may be at the cock-crow,
+ When the night is dying slowly
+ In the sky,
+ And the sea looks calm and holy,
+ Waiting for the dawn
+ Of the golden sun
+ Which draweth nigh;
+ When the mists are on the valleys, shading
+ The rivers chill,
+ And my morning-star is fading, fading
+ Over the hill:
+ Behold I say unto you: Watch;
+ Let the door be on the latch
+ In your home;
+ In the chill before the dawning,
+ Between the night and morning,
+ I may come.
+
+ "It may be in the morning,
+ When the sun is bright and strong,
+ And the dew is glittering sharply
+ Over the little lawn;
+ When the waves are laughing loudly
+ Along the shore,
+ And the little birds are singing sweetly
+ About the door;
+ With the long day's work before you,
+ You rise up with the sun,
+ And the neighbors come in to talk a little
+ Of all that must be done.
+ But remember that _I_ may be the next
+ To come in at the door,
+ To call you from all your busy work
+ Forevermore:
+ As you work your heart must watch,
+ For the door is on the latch
+ In your room,
+ And it may be in the morning
+ I will come."
+
+ So He passed down my cottage garden,
+ By the path that leads to the sea,
+ Till he came to the turn of the little road
+ Where the birch and laburnum tree
+ Lean over and arch the way;
+ There I saw him a moment stay,
+ And turn once more to me,
+ As I wept at the cottage door,
+ And lift up his hands in blessing--
+ Then I saw his face no more.
+
+ And I stood still in the doorway,
+ Leaning against the wall,
+ Not heeding the fair white roses,
+ Though I crushed them and let them fall.
+ Only looking down the pathway,
+ And looking toward the sea,
+ And wondering, and wondering
+ When he would come back for me;
+ Till I was aware of an angel
+ Who was going swiftly by,
+ With the gladness of one who goeth
+ In the light of God Most High.
+
+ He passed the end of the cottage
+ Toward the garden gate;
+ (I suppose he was come down
+ At the setting of the sun
+ To comfort some one in the village
+ Whose dwelling was desolate)
+ And he paused before the door
+ Beside my place,
+ And the likeness of a smile
+ Was on his face.
+ "Weep not," he said, "for unto you is given
+ To watch for the coming of his feet
+ Who is the glory of our blessed heaven;
+ The work and watching will be very sweet,
+ Even in an earthly home;
+ And in such an hour as you think not
+ He will come."
+
+ So I am watching quietly
+ Every day.
+ Whenever the sun shines brightly,
+ I rise and say:
+ "Surely it is the shining of his face!"
+ And look unto the gates of his high place
+ Beyond the sea;
+ For I know he is coming shortly
+ To summon me.
+ And when a shadow falls across the window
+ Of my room,
+ Where I am working my appointed task,
+ I lift my head to watch the door, and ask
+ If he is come;
+ And the angel answers sweetly
+ In my home:
+ "Only a few more shadows,
+ And he will come."
+
+BARBARA MILLER MACANDREW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EUTHANASIA.
+
+
+ Methinks, when on the languid eye
+ Life's autumn scenes grow dim;
+ When evening's shadows veil the sky;
+ And pleasure's siren hymn
+ Grows fainter on the tuneless ear,
+ Like echoes from another sphere,
+ Or dreams of seraphim--
+ It were not sad to cast away
+ This dull and cumbrous load of clay.
+
+ It were not sad to feel the heart
+ Grow passionless and cold;
+ To feel those longings to depart
+ That cheered the good of old;
+ To clasp the faith which looks on high,
+ Which fires the Christian's dying eye,
+ And makes the curtain-fold
+ That falls upon his wasting breast,
+ The door that leads to endless rest.
+
+ It seems not lonely thus to lie
+ On that triumphant bed,
+ Till the pure spirit mounts on high
+ By white-winged seraphs led:
+ Where glories, earth may never know,
+ O'er "many mansions" lingering glow,
+ In peerless lustre shed.
+ It were not lonely thus to soar
+ Where sin and grief can sting no more.
+
+ And though the way to such a goal
+ Lies through the clouded tomb,
+ If on the free, unfettered soul
+ There rest no stains of gloom,
+ How should its aspirations rise
+ Far through the blue unpillared skies,
+ Up to its final home,
+ Beyond the journeyings of the sun,
+ Where streams of living waters run!
+
+WILLIS GAYLORD CLARK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LAST MAN.
+
+
+ All worldly shapes shall melt in gloom,
+ The Sun himself must die,
+ Before this mortal shall assume
+ Its immortality!
+ I saw a vision in my sleep,
+ That gave my spirit strength to sweep
+ Adown the gulf of time!
+ I saw the last of human mould
+ That shall creation's death behold,
+ As Adam saw her prime!
+
+ The sun's eye had a sickly glare,
+ The skeletons of nations were
+ Around that lonely man!
+ Some had expired in fight,--the brands
+ Still rusted in their bony hands,
+ In plague and famine some!
+ Earth's cities had no sound nor tread;
+ And ships were drifting with the dead
+ To shores where all was dumb!
+
+ Yet, prophet-like, that lone one stood,
+ With dauntless words and high,
+ That shook the sear leaves from the wood,
+ As if a storm passed by,
+ Saying, We are twins in death, proud Sun!
+ Thy face is cold, thy race is run,
+ 'Tis Mercy bids thee go;
+ For thou ten thousand thousand years
+ Hast seen the tide of human tears,
+ That shall no longer flow.
+
+ What though beneath thee man put forth
+ His pomp, his pride, his skill;
+ And arts that made fire, flood, and earth
+ The vassals of his will?
+ Yet mourn I not thy parted sway,
+ Thou dim, discrowned king of day;
+ For all those trophied arts
+ And triumphs that beneath thee sprang,
+ Healed not a passion or a pang
+ Entailed on human hearts.
+
+ Go, let oblivion's curtain fall
+ Upon the stage of men.
+ Nor with thy rising beams recall
+ Life's tragedy again:
+ Its piteous pageants bring not back,
+ Nor waken flesh, upon the rack
+ Of pain anew to writhe;
+ Stretched in disease's shapes abhorred,
+ Or mown in battle by the sword,
+ Like grass beneath the scythe.
+
+ Even I am weary in yon skies
+ To watch thy fading fire;
+ Test of all sumless agonies,
+ Behold not me expire.
+ My lips, that speak thy dirge of death,--
+ Their rounded gasp and gurgling breath
+ To see thou shalt not boast.
+ The eclipse of Nature spreads my pall,
+ The majesty of darkness shall
+ Receive my parting ghost!
+
+ This spirit shall return to Him
+ Who gave its heavenly spark;
+ Yet think not, Sun, it shall be dim
+ When thou thyself art dark!
+ No! it shall live again, and shine
+ In bliss unknown to beams of thine,
+ By Him recalled to breath,
+ Who captive led captivity,
+ Who robbed the grave of victory,
+ And took the sting from death!
+
+ Go, Sun, while mercy holds me up
+ On Nature's awful waste
+ To drink this last and bitter cup
+ Of grief that man shall taste,--
+ Go, tell the night that hides thy face,
+ Thou saw'st the last of Adam's race,
+ On earth's sepulchral clod,
+ The darkening universe defy
+ To quench his immortality,
+ Or shake his trust in God!
+
+THOMAS CAMPBELL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHEN.
+
+
+ If I were told that I must die to-morrow,
+ That the next sun
+ Which sinks should bear me past all fear and sorrow
+ For any one,
+ All the fight fought, all the short journey through.
+ What should I do?
+
+ I do not think that I should shrink or falter,
+ But just go on,
+ Doing my work, nor change nor seek to alter
+ Aught that is gone;
+ But rise and move and love and smile and pray
+ For one more day.
+
+ And, lying down at night for a last sleeping,
+ Say in that ear
+ Which hearkens ever: "Lord, within thy keeping
+ How should I fear?
+ And when to-morrow brings thee nearer still,
+ Do thou thy will."
+
+ I might not sleep for awe; but peaceful, tender,
+ My soul would lie
+ All the night long; and when the morning splendor
+ Flushed o'er the sky,
+ I think that I could smile--could calmly say,
+ "It is his day."
+
+ But if a wondrous hand from the blue yonder
+ Held out a scroll,
+ On which my life was writ, and I with wonder
+ Beheld unroll
+ To a long century's end its mystic clew,
+ What should I do?'
+
+ What _could_ I do, O blessed Guide and Master,
+ Other than this;
+ Still to go on as now, not slower, faster,
+ Nor fear to miss
+ The road, although so very long it be,
+ While led by thee?
+
+ Step after step, feeling thee close beside me,
+ Although unseen,
+ Through thorns, through flowers, whether the tempest hide thee,
+ Or heavens serene,
+ Assured thy faithfulness cannot betray,
+ Thy love decay.
+
+ I may not know; my God, no hand revealeth
+ Thy counsels wise;
+ Along the path a deepening shadow stealeth,
+ No voice replies
+ To all my questioning thought, the time to tell;
+ And it is well.
+
+ Let me keep on, abiding and unfearing
+ Thy will always,
+ Through a long century's ripening fruition
+ Or a short day's;
+ Thou canst not come too soon; and I can wait
+ If thou come late.
+
+SARAH WOOLSEY (_Susan Coolidge_).
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BURIAL OF MOSES.
+
+ "And he buried him in a valley in the land of Moab, over
+ against Beth-peor: but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto
+ this day."--DEUTERONOMY xxxiv. 6.
+
+
+ By Nebo's lonely mountain,
+ On this side Jordan's wave,
+ In a vale in the land of Moab,
+ There lies a lonely grave;
+ But no man built that sepulchre,
+ And no man saw it e'er;
+ For the angels of God upturned the sod,
+ And laid the dead man there.
+
+ That was the grandest funeral
+ That ever passed on earth;
+ Yet no man heard the trampling,
+ Or saw the train go forth:
+ Noiselessly as daylight
+ Comes back when night is done,
+ And the crimson streak on ocean's cheek
+ Grows into the great sun;
+
+ Noiselessly as the spring-time
+ Her crown of verdure weaves,
+ And all the trees on all the hills
+ Unfold their thousand leaves:
+ So without sound of music
+ Or voice of them that wept,
+ Silently down from the mountain's crown
+ The great procession swept.
+
+ Perchance the bald old eagle
+ On gray Beth-peor's height
+ Out of his rocky eyry
+ Looked on the wondrous sight;
+ Perchance the lion stalking
+ Still shuns that hallowed spot;
+ For beast and bird have seen and heard
+ That which man knoweth not.
+
+ But, when the warrior dieth.
+ His comrades of the war.
+ With arms reversed and muffled drums,
+ Follow the funeral car:
+ They show the banners taken;
+ They tell his battles won;
+ And after him lead his masterless steed,
+ While peals the minute-gun.
+
+ Amid the noblest of the land
+ Men lay the sage to rest,
+ And give the bard an honored place,
+ With costly marbles drest,
+ In the great minster transept
+ Where lights like glories fall,
+ And the sweet choir sings, and the organ rings
+ Along the emblazoned hall.
+
+ This was the bravest warrior
+ That ever buckled sword;
+ This the most gifted poet
+ That ever breathed a word;
+ And never earth's philosopher
+ Traced with his glorious pen
+ On the deathless page truths half so sage
+ As he wrote down for men.
+
+ And had he not high honor?--
+ The hillside for a pall!
+ To lie in state while angels wait,
+ With stars for tapers tall!
+ And the dark rock-pines, like tossing plumes,
+ Over his bier to wave,
+ And God's own hand, in that lonely land,
+ To lay him in his grave!--
+
+ In that strange grave without a name,
+ Whence his uncoffined clay
+ Shall break again--O wondrous thought!--
+ Before the judgment day,
+ And stand, with glory wrapped around
+ On the hills he never trod,
+ And speak of the strife that won our life
+ With the incarnate Son of God.
+
+ O lonely tomb in Moab's land!
+ O dark Beth-peor's hill!
+ Speak to these curious hearts of ours,
+ And teach them to be still:
+ God hath his mysteries of grace,
+ Ways that we cannot tell,
+ He hides them deep, like the secret sleep
+ Of him he loved so well.
+
+CECIL FRANCES ALEXANDER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE RESIGNATION.
+
+
+ O God, whose thunder shakes the sky,
+ Whose eye this atom globe surveys,
+ To thee, my only rock, I fly,
+ Thy mercy in thy justice praise.
+
+ The mystic mazes of thy will,
+ The shadows of celestial light,
+ Are past the power of human skill;
+ But what the Eternal acts is right.
+
+ Oh, teach me in the trying hour,
+ When anguish swells the dewy tear,
+ To still my sorrows, own my power,
+ Thy goodness love, thy Justice fear.
+
+ If in this bosom aught but thee
+ Encroaching sought a boundless sway,
+ Omniscience could the danger see,
+ And Mercy look the cause away.
+
+ Then why, my soul, dost thou complain,
+ Why drooping seek the dark recess?
+ Shake off the melancholy chain,
+ For God created all to bless.
+
+ But ah! my breast is human still;
+ The rising sigh, the falling tear,
+ My languid vitals' feeble rill,
+ The sickness of my soul declare.
+
+ But yet, with fortitude resigned,
+ I'll thank the inflicter of the blow;
+ Forbid the sigh, compose my mind,
+ Nor let the gush of misery flow.
+
+ The gloomy mantle of the night,
+ Which on my sinking spirit steals,
+ Will vanish at the morning light,
+ Which God, my east, my sun, reveals.
+
+THOMAS CHATTERTON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"ONLY WAITING."
+
+ [A very aged man in an almshouse was asked what he was doing
+ now. He replied, "Only waiting."]
+
+
+ Only waiting till the shadows
+ Are a little longer grown,
+ Only waiting till the glimmer
+ Of the day's last beam is flown;
+ Till the night of earth is faded
+ From the heart, once full of day;
+ Till the stars of heaven are breaking
+ Through the twilight soft and gray.
+
+ Only waiting till the reapers
+ Have the last sheaf gathered home,
+ For the summer time is faded,
+ And the autumn winds have come.
+ Quickly, reapers! gather quickly
+ The last ripe hours of my heart,
+ For the bloom of life is withered,
+ And I hasten to depart.
+
+ Only waiting till the angels
+ Open wide the mystic gate,
+ At whose feet I long have lingered,
+ Weary, poor, and desolate.
+ Even now I hear the footsteps,
+ And their voices far away;
+ If they call me, I am waiting,
+ Only waiting to obey.
+
+ Only waiting till the shadows
+ Are a little longer grown,
+ Only waiting till the glimmer
+ Of the day's last beam is flown.
+ Then from out the gathered darkness,
+ Holy, deathless stars shall rise,
+ By whose light my soul shall gladly
+ Tread its pathway to the skies.
+
+FRANCES LAUGHTON MACE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOPEFULLY WAITING.
+
+ "Blessed are they who are homesick, for they shall come at
+ last to their Father's house."--HEINRICH STILLING.
+
+
+ Not as you meant, O learned man, and good!
+ Do I accept thy words of truth and rest;
+ God, knowing all, knows what for me is best,
+ And gives me what I need, not what he could,
+ Nor always as I would!
+ I shall go to the Father's house, and see
+ Him and the Elder Brother face to face,--
+ What day or hour I know not. Let me be
+ Steadfast in work, and earnest in the race,
+ Not as a homesick child who all day long
+ Whines at its play, and seldom speaks in song.
+
+ If for a time some loved one goes away,
+ And leaves us our appointed work to do,
+ Can we to him or to ourselves be true
+ In mourning his departure day by day,
+ And so our work delay?
+ Nay, if we love and honor, we shall make
+ The absence brief by doing well our task,--
+ Not for ourselves, but for the dear One's sake.
+ And at his coming only of him ask
+ Approval of the work, which most was done,
+ Not for ourselves, but our Beloved One.
+
+ Our Father's house, I know, is broad and grand;
+ In it how many, many mansions are!
+ And, far beyond the light of sun or star,
+ Four little ones of mine through that fair land
+ Are walking hand in hand!
+ Think you I love not, or that I forget
+ These of my loins? Still this world is fair,
+ And I am singing while my eyes are wet
+ With weeping in this balmy summer air:
+ Yet I'm not homesick, and the children _here_
+ Have need of me, and so my way is clear.
+
+ I would be joyful as my days go by,
+ Counting God's mercies to rue. He who bore
+ Life's heaviest cross is mine forever-more,
+ And I who wait his coming, shall not I
+ On his sure word rely?
+ And if sometimes the way be rough and steep,
+ Be heavy for the grief he sends to me,
+ Or at my waking I would only weep,
+ Let me remember these are things to be,
+ To work his blessed will until he comes
+ To take my hand, and lead me safely home.
+
+ANSON D.F. RANDOLPH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SIT DOWN, SAD SOUL.
+
+
+ Sit down, sad soul, and count
+ The moments flying;
+ Come, tell the sweet amount
+ That's lost by sighing!
+ How many smiles?--a score?
+ Then laugh, and count no more;
+ For day is dying!
+
+ Lie down, sad soul, and sleep,
+ And no more measure
+ The flight of time, nor weep
+ The loss of leisure;
+ But here, by this lone stream,
+ Lie down with us, and dream
+ Of starry treasure!
+
+ We dream: do thou the same;
+ We love,--forever;
+ We laugh, yet few we shame,--
+ The gentle never.
+ Stay, then, till sorrow dies;
+ Then--hope and happy skies
+ Are thine forever!
+
+BRYAN WALLER PROCTER. (_Barry Cornwall_.)
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IT KINDLES ALL MY SOUL.
+
+ "Urit me Patriae decor."
+
+
+ It kindles all my soul,
+ My country's loveliness! Those starry choirs
+ That watch around the pole,
+ And the moon's tender light, and heavenly fires
+ Through golden halls that roll.
+ O chorus of the night! O planets, sworn
+ The music of the spheres
+ To follow! Lovely watchers, that think scorn
+ To rest till day appears!
+ Me, for celestial homes of glory born,
+ Why here, O, why so long,
+ Do ye behold an exile from on high?
+ Here, O ye shining throng,
+ With lilies spread the mound where I shall lie:
+ Here let me drop my chain,
+ And dust to dust returning, cast away
+ The trammels that remain;
+ The rest of me shall spring to endless day!
+
+From the Latin of CASIMIR OF POLAND.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+ At the midnight in the silence of the sleep-time.
+ When you set your fancies free,
+ Will they pass to where--by death, fools think, imprisoned--
+ Low he lies who once so loved you, whom you loved so,
+ --Pity me?
+
+ Oh to love so, be so loved, yet so mistaken!
+ What had I on earth to do
+ With the slothful, with the mawkish, the unmanly?
+ Like the aimless, helpless, hopeless did I drivel
+ --Being--who?
+
+ One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
+ Never doubted clouds would break,
+ Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph,
+ Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,
+ Sleep to wake.
+
+ No, at noonday in the bustle of man's work-time
+ Greet the unseen with a cheer!
+ Bid him forward, breast and back as either should be,
+ "Strive and thrive!" cry "Speed,--fight on, fare ever
+ There as here!"
+
+ROBERT BROWNING.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CROSSING THE BAR.
+
+
+ Sunset and evening star,
+ And one clear call for me!
+ And may there be no moaning of the bar,
+ When I put out to sea,
+
+ But such a tide as moving seems asleep,
+ Too full for sound and foam,
+ When that which drew from out the boundless deep
+ Turns again home.
+
+ Twilight and evening bell,
+ And after that the dark!
+ And may there be no sadness of farewell,
+ When I embark;
+
+ For tho' from out our bourne of Time and Place
+ The flood may bear me far,
+ I hope to see my Pilot face to face
+ When I have crossed the bar.
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DYING CHRISTIAN TO HIS SOUL.
+
+
+ Vital spark of heavenly flame!
+ Quit, O quit this mortal frame!
+ Trembling, hoping, lingering, flying,
+ O, the pain, the bliss of dying!
+ Cease, fond nature, cease thy strife,
+ And let me languish into life!
+
+ Hark! they whisper; angels say,
+ Sister spirit, come away!
+ What is this absorbs me quite?
+ Steals my senses, shuts my sight,
+ Drowns my spirits, draws my breath?
+ Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
+
+ The world recedes; it disappears!
+ Heaven opens on my eyes! my ears
+ With sounds seraphic ring:
+ Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!
+ O Grave! where is thy victory?
+ O Death! where is thy sting?
+
+ALEXANDER POPE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ODE.
+
+ INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY FROM RECOLLECTIONS OF EARLY
+ CHILDHOOD.
+
+ I.
+
+ There was a time when meadow, grove and stream,
+ The earth, and every common sight,
+ To me did seem
+ Apparelled in celestial light,--
+ The glory and the freshness of the dream.
+ It is not now as it hath been of yore:
+ Turn wheresoe'er I may,
+ By night or day,
+ The things which I have seen I now can see no more.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ The rainbow comes and goes,
+ And lovely is the rose;
+ The moon doth with delight
+ Look round her when the heavens are bare;
+ Waters on a starry night
+ Are beautiful and fair;
+ The sunshine is a glorious birth;
+ But yet I know, where'er I go,
+ That there hath passed away a glory from the earth.
+
+
+ III.
+
+ Now, while the birds thus sing a joyous song,
+ And while the young lambs bound
+ As to the tabor's sound,
+ To me alone there came a thought of grief;
+ A timely utterance gave that thought relief,
+ And I again am strong.
+ The cataracts blow their trumpets from the steep,--
+ No more shall grief of mine the season wrong.
+ I hear the echoes through the mountains throng;
+ The winds come to me from the fields of sleep,
+ And all the earth is gay;
+ Land and sea
+ Give themselves up to jollity;
+ And with the heart of May
+ Doth every beast keep holiday;--
+ Thou child of joy,
+ Shout round me, let me hear thy shouts, thou happy shepherd boy!
+
+
+ IV.
+
+ Ye blessed creatures! I have heard the call
+ Ye to each other make; I see
+ The heavens laugh with you in your jubilee;
+ My heart is at your festival.
+ My head hath its coronal,--
+ The fulness of your bliss, I feel, I feel it all.
+ O evil day! if I were sullen
+ While Earth herself is adorning,
+ This sweet May morning,
+ And the children are culling,
+ On every side,
+ In a thousand valleys far and wide,
+ Fresh flowers; while the sun shines warm,
+ And the babe leaps up on his mother's arm;--
+ I hear, I hear, with joy I hear!--
+ But there's a tree, of many, one,
+ A single field which I have looked upon,--
+ Both of them speak of something that is gone;
+ The pansy at my feet
+ Doth the same tale repeat.
+ Whither is fled the visionary gleam?
+ Where is it now, the glory and the dream?
+
+
+ V.
+
+ Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting;
+ The soul that rises with us, our life's star,
+ Hath had elsewhere its setting,
+ And cometh from afar:
+ Not in entire forgetfulness,
+ And not in utter nakedness,
+ But trailing clouds of glory, do we come
+ From God, who is our home:
+ Heaven lies about us in our infancy!
+ Shades of the prison-house begin to close
+ Upon the growing Boy;
+ But he beholds the light, and whence it flows--
+ He sees it in his joy;
+ The Youth, who daily farther from the east
+ Must travel, still is nature's priest
+ And by the vision splendid
+ Is on his way attended:
+ At length the Man perceives it die away,
+ And fade into the light of common day.
+
+
+ VI.
+
+ Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own;
+ Yearnings she hath in her own natural kind,
+ And even with something of a mother's mind,
+ And no unworthy aim,
+ The homely nurse doth all she can
+ To make her foster-child, her inmate man,
+ Forget the glories he hath known,
+ And that imperial palace whence he came.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+ Behold the child among his new-born blisses,--
+ A six years' darling of a pygmy size!
+ See, where mid work of his own hand he lies,
+ Fretted by sallies of his mother's kisses,
+ With light upon him from his father's eyes!
+ See, at his feet, some little plan or chart,
+ Some fragment from his dream of human life,
+ Shaped by himself with newly learned art,--
+ A wedding or a festival,
+ A mourning or a funeral;--
+ And this hath now his heart,
+ And unto this he frames his song:
+ Then will he fit his tongue
+ To dialogues of business, love, or strife;
+ But it will not be long
+ Ere this be thrown aside,
+ And with new joy and pride
+ The little actor cons another part,--
+ Filling from time to time his "humorous stage"
+ With all the persons, down to palsied age,
+ That Life brings with her in her equipage;
+ As if his whole vocation
+ Were endless imitation.
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+ Thou, whose exterior semblance doth belie
+ Thy soul's immensity!
+ Thou best philosopher, who yet dost keep
+ Thy heritage! thou eye among the blind,
+ That, deaf and silent, read'st the eternal deep,
+ Haunted forever by the eternal mind!--
+ Mighty prophet! Seer blest!
+ On whom those truths do rest
+ Which we are toiling all our lives to find,
+ In darkness lost, the darkness of the grave;
+ Thou over whom thy immortality
+ Broods like the day, a master o'er a slave,
+ A presence which is not to be put by;
+ Thou little child, yet glorious in the might
+ Of heaven-born freedom on thy being's height,
+ Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke
+ The years to bring the inevitable yoke,
+ Thus blindly with thy blessedness at strife?
+ Full soon thy soul shall have her earthly freight,
+ And custom lie upon thee with a weight
+ Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life!
+
+
+ IX.
+
+ O joy! that in our embers
+ Is something that doth live;
+ That Nature yet remembers
+ What was so fugitive!
+
+ The thought of our past years in me doth breed
+ Perpetual benediction: not, indeed,
+ For that which is most worthy to be blest,--
+ Delight and liberty, the simple creed
+ Of childhood, whether busy or at rest,
+ With new-fledged hope still fluttering in his breast:--
+ Not for these I raise
+ The song of thanks and praise;
+ But for those obstinate questionings
+ Of sense and outward things,
+ Fallings from us, vanishings;
+ Blank misgivings of a creature
+ Moving about in worlds not realized,
+ High instincts, before which our mortal nature
+ Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised:
+ But for those first affections,
+ Those shadowy recollections,
+ Which, be they what they may,
+ Are yet the fountain-light of all our day,
+ Are yet a master light of all our seeing;
+ Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make
+ Our noisy years seem moments in the being
+ Of the eternal silence: truths that wake,
+ To perish never;
+ Which neither listlessness, nor mad endeavor,
+ Nor man nor boy,
+ Nor all that is at enmity with joy,
+ Can utterly abolish or destroy!
+ Hence, in a season of calm weather.
+ Though inland far we be,
+ Our souls have sight of that immortal sea
+ Which brought us hither,--
+ Can in a moment travel thither,
+ And see the children sport upon the shore,
+ And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore.
+
+
+ X.
+
+ Then sing, ye birds, sing, sing a joyous song!
+ And let the young lambs bound
+ As to the tabor's sound!
+ We in thought will join your throng,
+ Ye that pipe and ye that play,
+ Ye that through your hearts to-day
+ Feel the gladness of the May!
+ What though the radiance which was once so
+ bright
+ Be now forever taken from my sight,
+ Though nothing can bring back the hour
+ Of splendor in the grass, of glory in the flower;
+ We will grieve not, rather find
+ Strength in what remains behind;
+ In the primal sympathy
+ Which, having been, must ever be;
+ In the soothing thoughts that spring
+ Out of human suffering;
+ In the faith that looks through death,
+ In years that bring the philosophic mind.
+
+
+ XI
+
+ And O ye fountains, meadows, hills, and groves,
+ Forebode not any severing of our loves!
+ Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might;
+ I only have relinquished one delight
+ To live beneath your more habitual sway.
+ I love the brooks which down their channels fret,
+ Even more than when I tripped lightly as they;
+ The innocent brightness of a new-born day
+ Is lovely yet;
+ The clouds that gather round the setting sun
+ Do take a sober coloring from an eye
+ That hath kept watch o'er man's mortality;
+ Another race hath been, and other palms are won.
+ Thanks to the human heart by which we live,
+ Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, and fears,--
+ To me the meanest flower that blows can give
+ Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.
+
+WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOLILOQUY: ON IMMORTALITY.
+
+ FROM "CATO," ACT V. SC. I.
+
+ SCENE.--CATO, _sitting in a thoughtful posture, with book on
+ the Immortality of the Soul in his hand, and a drawn sword on
+ the table by him_.
+
+
+ It must be so--Plato, thou reasonest well!--
+ Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire.
+ This longing after immortality?
+ Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror,
+ Of falling into naught? Why shrinks the soul
+ Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
+ 'Tis the divinity that stirs within us;
+ 'Tis Heaven itself, that points out a hereafter,
+ And intimates eternity to man.
+ Eternity!--thou pleasing, dreadful thought!
+ Through what variety of untried being,
+ Through what new scenes and changes, must we pass!
+ The wide, the unbounded prospect lies before me;
+ But shadows, clouds, and darkness rest upon it.
+ Here will I hold. If there's a Power above us
+ (And that there is, all Nature cries aloud
+ Through all her works), he must delight in virtue;
+ And that which he delights in must be happy.
+ But when? or where? This world was made for Caesar.
+ I'm weary of conjectures,--this must end 'em.
+
+ _(Laying his hand on his sword.)_
+
+ Thus am I doubly armed: my death and life,
+ My bane and antidote, are both before me:
+ This in a moment brings me to an end;
+ But this informs me I shall never die.
+ The soul, secured in her existence, smiles
+ At the drawn dagger, and defies its point.
+ The stars shall fade away, the sun himself
+ Grow dim with age, and Nature sink in years;
+ But thou shalt flourish in immortal youth,
+ Unhurt amid the war of elements,
+ The wrecks of matter, and the crush of worlds!
+
+JOSEPH ADDISON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EDWIN AND PAULINUS:
+
+ THE CONVERSION OF NORTHUMBRIA.
+
+
+ The black-haired gaunt Paulinus
+ By ruddy Edwin stood:--
+ "Bow down, O king of Deira,
+ Before the blessed Rood!
+ Cast out thy heathen idols.
+ And worship Christ our Lord."
+ --But Edwin looked and pondered,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Again the gaunt Paulinus
+ To ruddy Edwin spake:
+ "God offers life immortal
+ For his dear Son's own sake!
+ Wilt thou not hear his message,
+ Who bears the keys and sword?"
+ --But Edwin looked and pondered,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Rose then a sage old warrior
+ Was fivescore winters old;
+ Whose beard from chin to girdle
+ Like one long snow-wreath rolled:
+ "At Yule-time in our chamber
+ We sit in warmth and light,
+ While cold and howling round us
+ Lies the black land of Night.
+
+ "Athwart the room a sparrow
+ Darts from the open door:
+ Within the happy hearth-light
+ One red flash,--and no more!
+ We see it come from darkness,
+ And into darkness go:--
+ So is our life. King Edwin!
+ Alas, that it is so!
+
+ "But if this pale Paulinus
+ Have somewhat more to tell;
+ Some news of Whence and Whither,
+ And where the soul will dwell;--
+ If on that outer darkness
+ The sun of hope may shine;--
+ He makes life worth the living!
+ I take his God for mine!"
+
+ So spake the wise old warrior;
+ And all about him cried,
+ "Paulinus' God hath conquered!
+ And he shall be our guide:--
+ For he makes life worth living
+ Who brings this message plain,
+ When our brief days are over,
+ That we shall live again."
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY.
+
+
+ Could we but know
+ The land that ends our dark, uncertain travel,
+ Where lie those happier hills and meadows low;
+ Ah! if beyond the spirit's inmost cavil
+ Aught of that country could we surely know,
+ Who would not go?
+
+ Might we but hear
+ The hovering angels' high imagined chorus,
+ Or catch, betimes, with wakeful eyes and clear
+ One radiant vista of the realm before us,--
+ With one rapt moment given to see and hear,
+ Ah, who would fear?
+
+ Were we quite sure
+ To find the peerless friend who left us lonely,
+ Or there, by some celestial stream as pure,
+ To gaze in eyes that here were lovelit only,--
+ This weary mortal coil, were we quite sure,
+ Who would endure?
+
+EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SONG OF THE SILENT LAND.
+
+ "Das stille Land."
+
+
+ Into the Silent Land!
+ Ah, who shall lead us thither?
+ Clouds in the evening sky more darkly gather,
+ And shattered wrecks lie thicker on the strand.
+ Who leads us with a gentle hand
+ Thither, oh, thither,
+ Into the Silent Land?
+
+ Into the Silent Land!
+ To you, ye boundless regions
+ Of all perfection! Tender morning-visions
+ Of beauteous souls! The future's pledge and band!
+ Who in life's battle firm doth stand
+ Shall bear hope's tender blossoms
+ Into the Silent Land!
+
+ O Land! O Land!
+ For all the broken-hearted
+ The mildest herald by our fate allotted
+ Beckons, and with inverted torch doth stand
+ To lead us with a gentle hand
+ Into the land of the great departed,
+ Into the Silent Land!
+
+JOHANN GAUDENZ VON SALIS.
+
+Translation of H.W. LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OTHER WORLD.
+
+
+ It lies around us like a cloud,--
+ A world we do not see;
+ Yet the sweet closing of an eye
+ May bring us there to be.
+
+ Its gentle breezes fan our cheek;
+ Amid our worldly cares
+ Its gentle voices whisper love,
+ And mingle with our prayers.
+
+ Sweet hearts around us throb and beat,
+ Sweet helping hands are stirred,
+ And palpitates the veil between
+ With breathings almost heard.
+
+ The silence--awful, sweet, and calm--
+ They have no power to break;
+ For mortal words are not for them
+ To utter or partake.
+
+ So thin, so soft, so sweet they glide,
+ So near to press they seem,--
+ They seem to lull us to our rest,
+ And melt into our dream.
+
+ And in the bush of rest they bring
+ 'Tis easy now to see
+ How lovely and how sweet a pass
+ The hour of death may be.
+
+ To close the eye, and close the ear,
+ Rapt in a trance of bliss,
+ And gently dream in loving arms
+ To swoon to that--from this.
+
+ Scarce knowing if we wake or sleep,
+ Scarce asking where we are,
+ To feel all evil sink away,
+ All sorrow and all care.
+
+ Sweet souls around us! watch us still,
+ Press nearer to our side,
+ Into our thoughts, into our prayers,
+ With gentle helpings glide.
+
+ Let death between us be as naught,
+ A dried and vanished stream;
+ Your joy be the reality.
+ Our suffering life the dream.
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ I never saw a moor,
+ I never saw the sea;
+ Yet know I how the heather looks,
+ And what a wave must be.
+
+ I never spake with God,
+ Nor visited in heaven;
+ Yet certain am I of the spot
+ As if the chart were given.
+
+EMILY DICKINSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THOUGHTS OF HEAVEN.
+
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They come and go,
+ Like the soft breathings of a listening maiden,
+ While round me flow
+ The winds, from woods and fields with gladness laden:
+ When the corn's rustle on the ear doth come--
+ When the eve's beetle sounds its drowsy hum--
+ When the stars, dew-drops of the summer sky,
+ Watch over all with soft and loving eye--
+ While the leaves quiver
+ By the lone river,
+ And the quiet heart
+ From depths doth call
+ And garners all--
+ Earth grows a shadow
+ Forgotten whole,
+ And heaven lives
+ In the blessed soul!
+
+ High thoughts
+ They are with me
+ When, deep within the bosom of the forest,
+ Thy mourning melody
+ Abroad into the sky, thou, throstle! pourest.
+ When the young sunbeams glance among the trees--
+ When on the ear comes the soft song of bees--
+ When every branch has its own favorite bird
+ And songs of summer from each thicket heard!--
+ Where the owl flitteth,
+ Where the roe sitteth,
+ And holiness
+ Seems sleeping there;
+ While nature's prayer
+ Goes up to heaven
+ In purity,
+ Till all is glory
+ And joy to me!
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They are my own
+ When I am resting on a mountain's bosom,
+ And see below me strown
+ The huts and homes where humble virtues blossom;
+ When I can trace each streamlet through the meadow,
+ When I can follow every fitful shadow--
+ When I can watch the winds among the corn,
+ And see the waves along the forest borne;
+ Where blue-bell and heather
+ Are blooming together,
+ And far doth come
+ The Sabbath bell,
+ O'er wood and fell;
+ I hear the beating
+ Of nature's heart:
+ Heaven is before me--
+ God! thou art.
+
+ High thoughts!
+ They visit us
+ In moments when the soul is dim and darkened;
+ They come to bless,
+ After the vanities to which we hearkened:
+ When weariness hath come upon the spirit--
+ (Those hours of darkness which we all inherit)--
+ Bursts there not through a glint of warm sunshine,
+ A winged thought which bids us not repine?
+ In joy and gladness,
+ In mirth and sadness,
+ Come signs and tokens;
+ Life's angel brings,
+ Upon its wings,
+ Those bright communings
+ The soul doth keep--
+ Those thoughts of heaven
+ So pure and deep!
+
+ROBERT NICOLL.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEARER HOME.
+
+
+ One sweetly solemn thought
+ Comes to me o'er and o'er;
+ I am nearer home to-day
+ That I ever have been before;
+
+ Nearer my Father's house,
+ Where the many mansions be;
+ Nearer the great white throne,
+ Nearer the crystal sea;
+
+ Nearer the bound of life,
+ Where we lay our burdens down;
+ Nearer leaving the cross,
+ Nearer gaining the crown!
+
+ But lying darkly between,
+ Winding down through the night,
+ Is the silent, unknown stream.
+ That leads at last to the light.
+
+ Closer and closer my steps
+ Come to the dread abysm:
+ Closer Death to my lips
+ Presses the awful chrism.
+
+ Oh, if my mortal feet
+ Have almost gained the brink;
+ If it be I am nearer home
+ Even to-day than I think;
+
+ Father, perfect my trust;
+ Let my spirit feel in death,
+ That her feet are firmly set
+ On the rock of a living faith!
+
+PHOEBE CARY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MEETING ABOVE.
+
+
+ If yon bright stars which gem the night
+ Be each a blissful dwelling-sphere
+ Where kindred spirits reunite
+ Whom death hath torn asunder here,--
+ How sweet it were at once to die,
+ To leave this blighted orb afar!
+ Mixt soul and soul to cleave the sky,
+ And soar away from star to star.
+
+ But oh, how dark, how drear, how lone,
+ Would seem the brightest world of bliss,
+ If, wandering through each radiant one,
+ We failed to meet the loved of this!
+ If there no more the ties shall twine
+ Which death's cold hand alone could sever,
+ Ah, would those stars in mockery shine,
+ More joyless, as they shine forever!
+
+ It cannot be,--each hope, each fear
+ That lights the eye or clouds the brow,
+ Proclaims there is a happier sphere
+ Than this bleak world that holds us now.
+ There, Lord, thy wayworn saints shall find
+ The bliss for which they longed before;
+ And holiest sympathies shall bind
+ Thine own to thee forevermore.
+
+ O Jesus, bring us to that rest,
+ Where all the ransomed shall be found,
+ In thine eternal fulness blest,
+ While ages roll their cycles round.
+
+WILLIAM LEGGETT.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MY DAYS AMONG THE DEAD.
+
+
+ My days among the dead are passed;
+ Around me I behold,
+ Where'er these casual eyes are cast,
+ The mighty minds of old;
+ My never-failing friends are they,
+ With whom I converse day by day.
+
+ With them I take delight in weal,
+ And seek relief in woe;
+ And while I understand and feel
+ How much to them I owe,
+ My cheeks have often been bedewed
+ With tears of thoughtful gratitude.
+
+ My thoughts are with the dead; with them
+ I live in long-past years;
+ Their virtues love, their faults condemn,
+ Partake their hopes and fears,
+ And from their lessons seek and find
+ Instruction with an humble mind.
+
+ My hopes are with the dead; anon
+ My place with them will be.
+ And I with them shall travel on
+ Through all futurity:
+ Yet leaving here a name, I trust,
+ That will not perish in the dust.
+
+ROBERT SOUTHEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FUTURE LIFE.
+
+
+ How shall I know thee in the sphere which keeps
+ The disembodied spirits of the dead,
+ When all of thee that time could wither sleeps
+ And perishes among the dust we tread?
+
+ For I shall feel the sting of ceaseless pain
+ If there I meet thy gentle presence not;
+ Nor hear the voice I love, nor read again
+ In thy serenest eyes the tender thought.
+
+ Will not thy own meek heart demand me there?
+ That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given;
+ My name on earth was ever in thy prayer,
+ And wilt thou never utter it in heaven?
+
+ In meadows fanned by heaven's life-breathing wind,
+ In the resplendence of that glorious sphere,
+ And larger movements of the unfettered mind,
+ Wilt thou forget the love that joined us here?
+
+ The love that lived through all the stormy past,
+ And meekly with my harsher nature bore,
+ And deeper grew, and tenderer to the last.
+ Shall it expire with life, and be no more?
+
+ A happier lot than mine, and larger light,
+ Await thee there; for thou hast bowed thy will
+ In cheerful homage to the rule of right,
+ And lovest all, and renderest good for ill.
+
+ For me, the sordid cares in which I dwell,
+ Shrink and consume my heart, as heat the scroll;
+ And wrath has left its scar--that fire of hell
+ Has left its frightful scar upon my soul.
+
+ Yet though thou wear'st the glory of the sky,
+ Wilt thou not keep the same beloved name,
+ The same fair thoughtful brow, and gentle eye,
+ Lovelier in heaven's sweet climate, yet the same?
+
+ Shalt thou not teach me, in that calmer home,
+ The wisdom that I learned so ill in this--
+ The wisdom which is love--till I become
+ Thy fit companion in that land of bliss?
+
+WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ That clime is not like this dull clime of ours;
+ All, all is brightness there;
+ A sweeter influence breathes around its flowers,
+ And a benigner air.
+ No calm below is like that calm above,
+ No region here is like that realm of love;
+ Earth's softest spring ne'er shed so soft a light,
+ Earth's brightest summer never shone so bright.
+
+ That sky is not like this sad sky of ours,
+ Tinged with earth's change and care;
+ No shadow dims it, and no rain-cloud lowers;
+ No broken sunshine there:
+ One everlasting stretch of azure pours
+ Its stainless splendor o'er those sinless shores;
+ For there Jehovah shines with heavenly ray,
+ And Jesus reigns, dispensing endless day.
+
+ The dwellers there are not like those of earth,--
+ No mortal stain they bear,--
+ And yet they seem of kindred blood and birth;
+ Whence and how came they there?
+ Earth was their native soil; from sin and shame,
+ Through tribulation, they to glory came;
+ Bond-slaves delivered from sin's crushing load,
+ Brands plucked from burning by the hand of God.
+
+ Yon robes of theirs are not like those below;
+ No angel's half so bright;
+ Whence came that beauty, whence that living glow,
+ And whence that radiant white?
+ Washed in the blood of the atoning Lamb,
+ Fair as the light these robes of theirs became;
+ And now, all tears wiped off from every eye,
+ They wander where the freshest pastures lie,
+ Through all the nightless day of that unfading sky!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO WORLDS.
+
+
+ Two worlds there are. To one our eyes we strain,
+ Whose magic joys we shall not see again;
+ Bright haze of morning veils its glimmering shore.
+ Ah, truly breathed we there
+ Intoxicating air--
+ Glad were our hearts in that sweet realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ The lover there drank her delicious breath
+ Whose love has yielded since to change or death;
+ The mother kissed her child, whose days are o'er.
+ Alas! too soon have fled
+ The irreclaimable dead:
+ We see them--visions strange--amid the
+ Nevermore.
+
+ The merrysome maiden used to sing--
+ The brown, brown hair that once was wont to cling
+ To temples long clay-cold: to the very core
+ They strike our weary hearts,
+ As some vexed memory starts
+ From that long faded land--the realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ It is perpetual summer there. But here
+ Sadly may we remember rivers clear,
+ And harebells quivering on the meadow-floor.
+ For brighter bells and bluer,
+ For tenderer hearts and truer
+ People that happy land--the realm of
+ Nevermore.
+
+ Upon the frontier of this shadowy land
+ We pilgrims of eternal sorrow stand:
+ What realm lies forward, with its happier store
+ Of forests green and deep,
+ Of valleys hushed in sleep,
+ And lakes most peaceful? 'Tis the land of
+ Evermore.
+
+ Very far off its marble cities seem--
+ Very far off--beyond our sensual dream--
+ Its woods, unruffled by the wild wind's roar;
+ Yet does the turbulent surge
+ Howl on its very verge.
+ One moment--and we breathe within the
+ Evermore.
+
+ They whom we loved and lost so long ago
+ Dwell in those cities, far from mortal woe--
+ Haunt those fresh woodlands, whence sweet carollings soar.
+ Eternal peace have they;
+ God wipes their tears away:
+ They drink that river of life which flows from
+ Evermore.
+
+ Thither we hasten through these regions dim,
+ But, lo, the wide wings of the Seraphim
+ Shine in the sunset! On that joyous shore
+ Our lightened hearts shall know
+ The life of long ago:
+ The sorrow-burdened past shall fade for
+ Evermore.
+
+MORTIMER COLLINS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ANSWER.
+
+
+ "Who would not go"
+ With buoyant steps, to gain that blessed portal,
+ Which opens to the land we long to know?
+ Where shall be satisfied the soul's immortal,
+ Where we shall drop the wearying and the woe
+ In resting so?
+
+ "Ah, who would fear?"
+ Since, sometimes through the distant pearly portal,
+ Unclosing to some happy soul a-near,
+ We catch a gleam of glorious light immortal,
+ And strains of heavenly music faintly hear,
+ Breathing good cheer!
+
+ "Who would endure"
+ To walk in doubt and darkness with misgiving,
+ When he whose tender promises are sure--
+ The Crucified, the Lord, the Ever-living--
+ Keeps us those "mansions" evermore secure
+ By waters pure?
+
+ Oh, wondrous land!
+ Fairer than all our spirit's fairest dreaming:
+ "Eye hath not seen," no heart can understand
+ The things prepared, the cloudless radiance streaming.
+ How longingly we wait our Lord's command--
+ His opening hand!
+
+ O dear ones there!
+ Whose voices, hushed, have left our pathway lonely,
+ We come, erelong, your blessed home to share;
+ We take the guiding hand, we trust it only--
+ Seeing, by faith, beyond this clouded air,
+ That land so fair!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOREVER WITH THE LORD.
+
+
+ Forever with the Lord!
+ Amen! so let it be!
+ Life from the dead is in that word,
+ And immortality.
+
+ Here in the body pent,
+ Absent from him I roam,
+ Yet nightly pitch my moving tent
+ A day's march nearer home.
+
+ My Father's house on high,
+ Home of my soul! how near,
+ At times, to faith's foreseeing eye
+ Thy golden gates appear!
+
+ Ah! then my spirit faints
+ To reach the land I love,
+ The bright inheritance of saints,
+ Jerusalem above!
+
+ Yet clouds will intervene,
+ And all my prospect flies;
+ Like Noah's dove, I flit between
+ Rough seas and stormy skies.
+
+ Anon the clouds depart,
+ The winds and waters cease;
+ While sweetly o'er my gladdened heart
+ Expands the bow of peace!
+
+ Beneath its glowing arch,
+ Along the hallowed ground,
+ I see cherubic armies march,
+ A camp of fire around.
+
+ I hear at morn and even,
+ At noon and midnight hour,
+ The choral harmonies of heaven
+ Earth's Babel tongues o'erpower.
+
+ Then, then I feel that he,
+ Remembered or forgot,
+ The Lord, is never far from me,
+ Though I perceive him not.
+
+ In darkness as in light,
+ Hidden alike from view,
+ I sleep, I wake, as in his sight
+ Who looks all nature through.
+
+ All that I am, have been,
+ All that I yet may be,
+ He sees at once, as he hath seen,
+ And shall forever see.
+
+ "Forever with the Lord;"
+ Father, if 'tis thy will,
+ The promise of that faithful word
+ Unto thy child fulfil!
+
+ So, when my latest breath
+ Shall rend the veil in twain,
+ By death I shall escape from death,
+ And life eternal gain.
+
+JAMES MONTGOMERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO HEAVEN APPROACHED A SUFI SAINT.
+
+
+ To heaven approached a Sufi Saint,
+ From groping in the darkness late,
+ And, tapping timidly and faint,
+ Besought admission at God's gate.
+
+ Said God, "Who seeks to enter here?"
+ "'Tis I, dear Friend," the Saint replied,
+ And trembling much with hope and fear.
+ "If it be _thou_, without abide."
+
+ Sadly to earth the poor Saint turned,
+ To bear the scourging of life's rods;
+ But aye his heart within him yearned
+ To mix and lose its love in God's.
+
+ He roamed alone through weary years,
+ By cruel men still scorned and mocked,
+ Until from faith's pure fires and tears
+ Again he rose, and modest knocked.
+
+ Asked God, "Who now is at the door?"
+ "It is thyself, beloved Lord,"
+ Answered the Saint, in doubt no more,
+ But clasped and rapt in his reward.
+
+From the Persian of JALLAL-AD-DIN RUMI.
+
+Translation of WILLIAM R. ALGER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MATTER AND MAN IMMORTAL.
+
+ FROM "NIGHT THOUGHTS," NIGHT VI.
+
+
+ As in a wheel, all sinks, to reascend:
+ Emblems of man, who passes, not expires.
+ With this minute distinction, emblems just,
+ Nature revolves, but man advances; both
+ Eternal, that a circle, this a line.
+ That gravitates, this soars. Th' aspiring soul,
+ Ardent, and tremulous, like flame, ascends,
+ Zeal and humility her wings, to Heaven.
+ The world of matter, with its various forms,
+ All dies into new life. Life born from death
+ Rolls the vast mass, and shall for ever roll.
+ No single atom, once in being, lost,
+ With change of counsel charges the Most High.
+ What hence infers Lorenzo? Can it be?
+ Matter immortal? And shall spirit die?
+ Above the nobler, shall less noble rise?
+ Shall man alone, for whom all else revives,
+ No resurrection know? Shall man alone,
+ Imperial man! be sown in barren ground,
+ Less privileged than grain, on which he feeds?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Look Nature through, 'tis neat gradation all.
+ By what minute degrees her scale ascends!
+ Each middle nature joined at each extreme,
+ To that above is joined, to that beneath;
+ Parts, into parts reciprocally shot,
+ Abhor divorce: what love of union reigns!
+ Here, dormant matter waits a call to life;
+ Half-life, half-death, joined there; here life and sense;
+ There, sense from reason steals a glimmering ray;
+ Reason shines out in man. But how preserved
+ The chain unbroken upward, to the realms
+ Of incorporeal life? those realms of bliss
+ Where death hath no dominion? Grant a make
+ Half-mortal, half-immortal; earthy, part,
+ And part ethereal; grant the soul of man
+ Eternal; or in man the series ends.
+ Wide yawns the gap; connection is no more;
+ Checked Reason halts; her next step wants support;
+ Striving to climb, she tumbles from her scheme.
+
+DR. EDWARD YOUNG.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIFE.
+
+ FROM "FESTUS," SCENE "A COUNTRY TOWN."
+
+
+ FESTUS.-- Oh! there is
+ A life to come, or all's a dream.
+
+ LUCIFER.-- And all
+ May be a dream. Thou seest in thine, men, deeds,
+ Clear, moving, full of speech and order; then
+ Why may not all this world be but a dream
+ Of God's? Fear not! Some morning God may waken.
+
+ FESTUS.--I would it were. This life's a mystery.
+ The value of a thought cannot be told;
+ But it is clearly worth a thousand lives
+ Like many men's. And yet men love to live
+ As if mere life were worth their living for.
+ What but perdition will it be to most?
+ Life's more than breath and the quick round of blood;
+ It is a great spirit and a busy heart.
+ The coward and the small in soul scarce do live.
+ One generous feeling--one great thought--one deed
+ Of good, ere night, would make life longer seem
+ Than if each year might number a thousand days,
+ Spent as is this by nations of mankind.
+ We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths;
+ In feelings, not in figures on a dial.
+ We should count time by heart-throbs. He most lives
+ Who thinks most--feels the noblest--acts the best.
+ Life's but a means unto an end--that end
+ Beginning, mean, and end to all things--God.
+
+PHILIP JAMES BAILEY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ O beauteous God! uncircumscribed treasure
+ Of an eternal pleasure!
+ Thy throne is seated far
+ Above the highest star,
+ Where thou preparest a glorious place,
+ Within the brightness of thy face,
+ For every spirit
+ To inherit
+ That builds his hopes upon thy merit,
+ And loves thee with a holy charity.
+ What ravished heart, seraphic tongue, or eyes
+ Clear as the morning rise,
+ Can speak, or think, or see
+ That bright eternity,
+ Where the great King's transparent throne
+ Is of an entire jasper stone?
+ There the eye
+ O' the chrysolite,
+ And a sky
+ Of diamonds, rubies, chrysoprase,--
+ And above all thy holy face,--
+ Makes an eternal charity.
+ When thou thy jewels up dost bind, that day
+ Remember us, we pray,--
+ That where the beryl lies,
+ And the crystal 'bove the skies,
+ There thou mayest appoint us place
+ Within the brightness of thy face,--
+ And our soul
+ In the scroll
+ Of life and blissfulness enroll,
+ That we may praise thee to eternity. Allelujah!
+
+JEREMY TAYLOR.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SPIRIT-LAND.
+
+
+ Father! thy wonders do not singly stand,
+ Nor far removed where feet have seldom strayed;
+ Around us ever lies the enchanted land,
+ In marvels rich to thine own sons displayed.
+ In finding thee are all things round us found;
+ In losing thee are all things lost beside;
+ Ears have we, but in vain strange voices sound;
+ And to our eyes the vision is denied.
+ We wander in the country far remote,
+ Mid tombs and ruined piles in death to dwell;
+ Or on the records of past greatness dote,
+ And for a buried soul the living sell;
+ While on our path bewildered falls the night
+ That ne'er returns us to the fields of light.
+
+JONES VERY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ Beyond these chilling winds and gloomy skies,
+ Beyond death's cloudy portal,
+ There is a land where beauty never dies,
+ Where love becomes immortal;
+
+ A land whose life is never dimmed by shade,
+ Whose fields are ever vernal;
+ Where nothing beautiful can ever fade,
+ But blooms for aye eternal.
+
+ We may know how sweet its balmy air,
+ How bright and fair its flowers;
+ We may not hear the songs that echo there,
+ Through those enchanted bowers.
+
+ The city's shining towers we may not see
+ With our dim earthly vision,
+ For Death, the silent warder, keeps the key
+ That opes the gates elysian.
+
+ But sometimes, when adown the western sky
+ A fiery sunset lingers,
+ Its golden gates swing inward noiselessly,
+ Unlocked by unseen fingers.
+
+ And while they stand a moment half ajar,
+ Gleams from the inner glory
+ Stream brightly through the azure vault afar,
+ And half reveal the story.
+
+ O land unknown! O land of love divine!
+ Father, all-wise, eternal!
+ O, guide these wandering, wayworn feet of mine
+ Into those pastures vernal!
+
+NANCY AMELIA WOODBURY PRIEST.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TELL ME, YE WINGED WINDS.
+
+
+ Tell me, ye winged winds,
+ That round my pathway roar,
+ Do ye not know some spot
+ Where mortals weep no more?
+ Some lone and pleasant dell,
+ Some valley in the west,
+ Where, free from toil and pain,
+ The weary soul may rest?
+ The loud wind dwindled to a whisper low,
+ And sighed for pity as it answered,--"No."
+
+ Tell me, thou mighty deep.
+ Whose billows round me play,
+ Know'st thou some favored spot,
+ Some island far away,
+ Where weary man may find
+ The bliss for which he sighs,--
+ Where sorrow never lives,
+ And friendship never dies?
+ The loud waves, rolling in perpetual flow,
+ Stopped for awhile, and sighed to answer,--"No."
+
+ And thou, serenest moon,
+ That, with such lovely face,
+ Dost look upon the earth,
+ Asleep in night's embrace;
+ Tell me, in all thy round
+ Hast thou not seen some spot
+ Where miserable man
+ May find a happier lot?
+ Behind a cloud the moon withdrew in woe,
+ And a voice, sweet but sad, responded,--"No."
+
+ Tell me, my secret soul,
+ O, tell me, Hope and Faith,
+ Is there no resting-place
+ From sorrow, sin, and death?
+ Is there no happy spot
+ Where mortals may be blest,
+ Where grief may find a balm,
+ And weariness a rest?
+ Faith, Hope, and Love, best boons to mortals given,
+ Waved their bright wings, and whispered,--"Yes, in heaven!"
+
+CHARLES MACKAY.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEAVEN.
+
+
+ There is a land of pure delight,
+ Where saints immortal reign;
+ Infinite day excludes the night,
+ And pleasures banish pain.
+
+ There everlasting spring abides,
+ And never-withering flowers;
+ Death, like a narrow sea, divides
+ This heavenly land from ours.
+
+ Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood
+ Stand dressed in living green;
+ So to the Jews old Canaan stood,
+ While Jordan rolled between.
+
+ But timorous mortals start and shrink
+ To cross this narrow sea,
+ And linger shivering on the brink,
+ And fear to launch away.
+
+ Oh! could we make our doubts remove,
+ Those gloomy doubts that rise,
+ And see the Canaan that we love
+ With unbeclouded eyes--
+
+ Could we but climb where Moses stood,
+ And view the landscape o'er,
+ Not Jordan's stream, nor death's cold flood
+ Should fright us from the shore.
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+ My soul, there is a country
+ Afar beyond the stars,
+ Where stands a winged sentry,
+ All skilful in the wars.
+
+ There, above noise and danger,
+ Sweet peace sits crowned with smiles,
+ And One born in a manger
+ Commands the beauteous files.
+
+ He is thy gracious friend,
+ And (O my soul awake!)
+ Did in pure love descend,
+ To die here for thy sake.
+
+ If thou canst get but thither,
+ There grows the flower of peace--
+ The rose that cannot wither--
+ Thy fortress, and thy ease.
+
+ Leave, then, thy foolish ranges;
+ For none can thee secure,
+ But one who never changes--
+ Thy God, thy life, thy cure.
+
+HENRY VAUGHAN.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STAR-MIST.
+
+ FROM "STARS."
+
+
+ More and more stars! behold yon hazy arch
+ Spanning the vault on high,
+ By planets traversed in majestic march,
+ Seeming to earth's dull eye
+ A breath of gleaming air: but take thou wing
+ Of Faith and upward spring:--
+ Into a thousand stars the misty light
+ Will part; each star a world with its own day and night.
+
+ Not otherwise of yonder Saintly host
+ Upon the glorious shore
+ Deem thou. He marks them all, not one is lost;
+ By name He counts them o'er.
+ Full many a soul, to man's dim praise unknown,
+ May on its glory throne
+ As brightly shine, and prove as strong in prayer
+ As theirs, whose separate beams shoot keenest thro' this air.
+
+JOHN KEBLE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MINISTRY OF ANGELS.
+
+ FROM "THE FAERIE QUEENE," BOOK II. CANTO 8.
+
+
+ And is there care in heaven? And is there love
+ In heavenly spirits to these creatures base,
+ That may compassion of their evils move?
+ There is:--else much more wretched were the case
+ Of men than beasts: but O the exceeding grace
+ Of Highest God! that loves his creatures so,
+ And all his workes with mercy doth embrace,
+ That blessed angels he sends to and fro,
+ To serve to wicked man, to serve his wicked foe!
+
+ How oft do they their silver bowers leave,
+ To come to succour us that succour want!
+ How oft do they with golden pinions cleave
+ The flitting skyes, like flying pursuivant,
+ Against fowle feendes to ayd us militant!
+ They for us fight, they watch, and dewly ward,
+ And their bright squadrons round about us plant;
+ And all for love, and nothing for reward;
+ O, why should heavenly God to men have such regard!
+
+EDMUND SPENSER.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SAINT AGNES.
+
+
+ Deep on the convent-roof the snows
+ Are sparkling to the moon:
+ My breath to heaven like vapor goes:
+ May my soul follow soon!
+ The shadows of the convent-towers
+ Slant down the snowy sward,
+ Still creeping with the creeping hours
+ That lead me to my Lord:
+ Make Thou my spirit pure and clear
+ As are the frosty skies,
+ Or this first snow-drop of the year
+ That in my bosom lies.
+
+ As these white robes are soiled and dark,
+ To yonder shining ground;
+ As this pale taper's earthly spark,
+ To yonder argent round;
+ So shows my soul before the Lamb,
+ My spirit before Thee;
+ So in mine earthly house I am,
+ To that I hope to be.
+ Break up the heavens, O Lord! and far,
+ Through all yon starlight keen,
+ Draw me, thy bride, a glittering star,
+ In raiment white and clean.
+
+ He lifts me to the golden doors;
+ The flashes come and go;
+ All heaven bursts her starry floors,
+ And strows her lights below,
+ And deepens on and up! the gates
+ Roll backhand far within
+ For me the Heavenly Bridegroom waits,
+ To make me pure of sin.
+ The sabbath of Eternity,
+ One sabbath deep and wide--
+ A light upon the shining sea--
+ The Bridegroom with his bride!
+
+ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRAISE OF THE CELESTIAL COUNTRY.
+
+ [The poem _De Contemptu Mundi_ was written by Bernard de
+ Morlaix, Monk of Cluni. The translation following is of a
+ portion of the poem distinguished by the sub-title "Laus
+ Patriae Coelestis."]
+
+
+ The world is very evil,
+ The times are waxing late;
+ Be sober and keep vigil,
+ The Judge is at the gate,--
+ The Judge that comes in mercy,
+ The Judge that comes with might,
+ To terminate the evil,
+ To diadem the right.
+ When the just and gentle Monarch
+ Shall summon from the tomb,
+ Let man, the guilty, tremble,
+ For Man, the God, shall doom!
+
+ Arise, arise, good Christian,
+ Let right to wrong succeed;
+ Let penitential sorrow
+ To heavenly gladness lead,--
+ To the light that hath no evening,
+ That knows nor moon nor sun,
+ The light so new and golden,
+ The light that is but one.
+
+ And when the Sole-Begotten
+ Shall render up once more
+ The kingdom to the Father,
+ Whose own it was before,
+ Then glory yet unheard of
+ Shall shed abroad its ray,
+ Resolving all enigmas,
+ An endless Sabbath-day.
+
+ For thee, O dear, dear Country!
+ Mine eyes their vigils keep;
+ For very love, beholding
+ Thy happy name, they weep.
+ The mention of thy glory
+ Is unction to the breast,
+ And medicine in sickness,
+ And love, and life, and rest.
+
+ O one, O only Mansion!
+ O Paradise of Joy,
+ Where tears are ever banished,
+ And smiles have no alloy!
+ Beside thy living waters
+ All plants are, great and small,
+ The cedar of the forest,
+ The hyssop of the wall;
+ With jaspers glow thy bulwarks,
+ Thy streets with emeralds blaze,
+ The sardius and the topaz
+ Unite in thee their rays;
+ Thine ageless walls are bonded
+ With amethyst unpriced;
+ Thy Saints build up its fabric,
+ And the corner-stone is Christ.
+
+ The Cross is all thy splendor,
+ The Crucified thy praise;
+ His laud and benediction
+ Thy ransomed people raise:
+ "Jesus, the gem of Beauty,
+ True God and Man," they sing,
+ "The never-failing Garden,
+ The ever-golden Ring;
+ The Door, the Pledge, the Husband,
+ The Guardian of his Court;
+ The Day-star of Salvation,
+ The Porter and the Port!"
+
+ Thou hast no shore, fair ocean!
+ Thou hast no time, bright day!
+ Dear fountain of refreshment
+ To pilgrims far away!
+ Upon the Rock of Ages
+ They raise thy holy tower;
+ Thine is the victor's laurel,
+ And thine the golden dower!
+
+ Thou feel'st in mystic rapture,
+ O Bride that know'st no guile,
+ The Prince's sweetest kisses,
+ The Prince's loveliest smile;
+ Unfading lilies, bracelets
+ Of living pearl thine own;
+ The Lamb is ever near thee,
+ The Bridegroom thine alone.
+ The Crown is he to guerdon,
+ The Buckler to protect,
+ And he himself the Mansion,
+ And he the Architect.
+
+ The only art thou needest--
+ Thanksgiving for thy lot;
+ The only joy thou seekest--
+ The Life where Death is not.
+ And all thine endless leisure,
+ In sweetest accents, sings
+ The ill that was thy merit,
+ The wealth that is thy King's!
+
+ Jerusalem the golden,
+ With milk and honey blest,
+ Beneath thy contemplation
+ Sink heart and voice oppressed.
+ I know not, O I know not,
+ What social joys are there!
+ What radiancy of glory,
+ What light beyond compare!
+
+ And when I fain would sing them,
+ My spirit fails and faints;
+ And vainly would it image
+ The assembly of the Saints.
+
+ They stand, those halls of Zion,
+ Conjubilant with song,
+ And bright with many an angel,
+ And all the martyr throng;
+ The Prince is ever in them,
+ The daylight is serene;
+ The pastures of the Blessed
+ Are decked in glorious sheen.
+
+ There is the Throne of David,
+ And there, from care released,
+ The song of them that triumph,
+ The shout of them that feast;
+ And they who, with their Leader,
+ Have conquered in the fight,
+ Forever and forever
+ Are clad in robes of white!
+
+ O holy, placid harp-notes
+ Of that eternal hymn!
+ O sacred, sweet reflection,
+ And peace of Seraphim!
+ O thirst, forever ardent,
+ Yet evermore content!
+ O true peculiar vision
+ Of God cunctipotent!
+ Ye know the many mansions
+ For many a glorious name,
+ And divers retributions
+ That divers merits claim;
+ For midst the constellations
+ That deck our earthly sky,
+ This star than that is brighter--
+ And so it is on high.
+
+ Jerusalem the glorious!
+ The glory of the Elect!
+ O dear and future vision
+ That eager hearts expect!
+ Even now by faith I see thee,
+ Even here thy walls discern;
+ To thee my thoughts are kindled,
+ And strive, and pant, and yearn.
+
+ Jerusalem the only,
+ That look'st from heaven below,
+ In thee is all my glory,
+ In me is all my woe;
+ And though my body may not,
+ My spirit seeks thee fain,
+ Till flesh and earth return me
+ To earth and flesh again.
+
+ O none can tell thy bulwarks,
+ How gloriously they rise!
+ O none can tell thy capitals
+ Of beautiful device!
+ Thy loveliness oppresses
+ All human thought and heart;
+ And none, O peace, O Zion,
+ Can sing thee as thou art!
+
+ New mansion of new people,
+ Whom God's own love and light
+ Promote, increase, make holy,
+ Identify, unite!
+ Thou City of the Angels!
+ Thou City of the Lord!
+ Whose everlasting music
+ Is the glorious decachord!
+
+ And there the band of Prophets
+ United praise ascribes,
+ And there the twelvefold chorus
+ Of Israel's ransomed tribes.
+ The lily-beds of virgins,
+ The roses' martyr-glow,
+ The cohort of the Fathers
+ Who kept the faith below.
+
+ And there the Sole-Begotten
+ Is Lord in regal state,--
+ He, Judah's mystic Lion,
+ He, Lamb Immaculate.
+ O fields that know no sorrow!
+ O state that fears no strife!
+ O princely bowers! O land of flowers!
+ O realm and home of Life!
+
+ Jerusalem, exulting
+ On that securest shore,
+ I hope thee, wish thee, sing thee,
+ And love thee evermore!
+ I ask not for my merit,
+ I seek not to deny
+ My merit is destruction,
+ A child of wrath am I;
+ But yet with faith I venture
+ And hope upon my way;
+ For those perennial guerdons
+ I labor night and day.
+
+ The best and dearest Father,
+ Who made me and who saved,
+ Bore with me in defilement,
+ And from defilement laved,
+ When in his strength I struggle,
+ For very joy I leap,
+ When in my sin I totter,
+ I weep, or try to weep:
+ Then grace, sweet grace celestial,
+ Shall all its love display,
+ And David's Royal Fountain
+ Purge every sin away.
+
+ O mine, my golden Zion!
+ O lovelier far than gold,
+ With laurel-girt battalions,
+ And safe victorious fold!
+ O sweet and blessed Country,
+ Shall I ever see thy face?
+ O sweet and blessed Country,
+ Shall I ever win thy grace?
+ I have the hope within me
+ To comfort and to bless!
+ Shall I ever win the prize itself?
+ O tell me, tell me, Yes!
+
+ Exult! O dust and ashes!
+ The Lord shall be thy part;
+ His only, his forever,
+ Thou shalt be, and thou art!
+ Exult, O dust and ashes!
+ The Lord shall be thy part;
+ His only, his forever,
+ Thou shalt be, and thou art!
+
+From the Latin of BERNARD DE MORLAIX.
+
+Translation of JOHN MASON NEALE.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW JERUSALEM;
+
+ OR, THE SOUL'S BREATHING AFTER THE HEAVENLY COUNTRY.
+
+ "Since Christ's fair truth needs no man's art,
+ Take this rude song in better part."
+
+
+ O mother dear, Jerusalem,
+ When shall I come to thee?
+ When shall my sorrows have an end--
+ Thy joys when shall I see?
+ O happy harbor of God's saints!
+ O sweet and pleasant soil!
+ In thee no sorrows can be found--
+ No grief, no care, no toil.
+
+ In thee no sickness is at all,
+ No hurt, nor any sore;
+ There is no death nor ugly night,
+ But life for evermore.
+ No dimming cloud o'ershadows thee,
+ No cloud nor darksome night,
+ But every soul shines as the sun--
+ For God himself gives light.
+
+ There lust and lucre cannot dwell,
+ There envy bears no sway;
+ There is no hunger, thirst, nor heat.
+ But pleasures every way.
+ Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
+ Would God I were in thee!
+ Oh! that my sorrows had an end,
+ Thy joys that I might see!
+
+ No pains, no pangs, no grieving griefs,
+ No woful night is there;
+ No sigh, no sob, no cry is heard--
+ No well-away, no fear.
+ Jerusalem the city is
+ Of God our king alone;
+ The Lamb of God, the light thereof,
+ Sits there upon His throne.
+
+ O God! that I Jerusalem
+ With speed may go behold!
+ For why? the pleasures there abound
+ Which here cannot be told.
+ Thy turrets and thy pinnacles
+ With carbuncles do shine--
+ With jasper, pearl, and chrysolite,
+ Surpassing pure and fine.
+
+ Thy houses are of ivory,
+ Thy windows crystal clear,
+ Thy streets are laid with beaten gold--
+ There angels do appear.
+ Thy walls are made of precious stone,
+ Thy bulwarks diamond square,
+ Thy gates are made of orient pearl--
+ O God! if I were there!
+
+ Within thy gates no thing can come
+ That is not passing clean;
+ No spider's web, no dirt, nor dust,
+ No filth may there be seen.
+ Jehovah, Lord, now come away,
+ And end my griefs and plaints--
+ Take me to Thy Jerusalem,
+ And place me with Thy saints!
+
+ Who there are crowned with glory great,
+ And see God face to face,
+ They triumph still, and aye rejoice--
+ Most happy is their case.
+ But we that are in banishment,
+ Continually do moan;
+ We sigh, we mourn, we sob, we weep--
+ Perpetually we groan.
+
+ Our sweetness mixed is with gall,
+ Our pleasures are but pain,
+ Our joys not worth the looking on--
+ Our sorrows aye remain.
+ But there they live in such delight,
+ Such pleasure and such play,
+ That unto them a thousand years
+ Seems but as yesterday.
+
+ O my sweet home, Jerusalem!
+ Thy joys when shall I see--
+ The King sitting upon His throne,
+ And thy felicity?
+ Thy vineyards, and thy orchards,
+ So wonderfully rare,
+ Are furnished with all kinds of fruit,
+ Most beautifully fair.
+
+ Thy gardens and thy goodly walks
+ Continually are green;
+ There grow such sweet and pleasant flowers
+ As nowhere else are seen.
+ There cinnamon and sugar grow,
+ There nard and balm abound;
+ No tongue can tell, no heart can think,
+ The pleasures there are found.
+
+ There nectar and ambrosia spring--
+ There music's ever sweet;
+ There many a fair and dainty thing
+ Are trod down under feet.
+ Quite through the streets, with pleasant sound,
+ The flood of life doth flow;
+ Upon the banks, on every side,
+ The trees of life do grow.
+
+ These trees each month yield ripened fruit--
+ For evermore they spring;
+ And all the nations of the world
+ To thee their honors bring.
+ Jerusalem, God's dwelling-place,
+ Full sore I long to see;
+ Oh! that my sorrows had an end,
+ That I might dwell in thee!
+
+ There David stands, with harp in hand,
+ As master of the choir;
+ A thousand times that man were blest
+ That might his music hear.
+ There Mary sings "Magnificat,"
+ With tunes surpassing sweet;
+ And all the virgins bear their part,
+ Singing around her feet.
+
+ "Te Deum," doth Saint Ambrose sing,
+ Saint Austin doth the like;
+ Old Simeon and Zacharie
+ Have not their songs to seek.
+ There Magdalene hath left her moan,
+ And cheerfully doth sing,
+ With all blest saints whose harmony
+ Through every street doth ring.
+
+ Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
+ Thy joys fain would I see;
+ Come quickly, Lord, and end my grief,
+ And take me home to Thee;
+ Oh! paint Thy name on my forehead,
+ And take me hence away,
+ That I may dwell with Thee in bliss,
+ And sing Thy praises aye.
+
+ Jerusalem, the happy home--
+ Jehovah's throne on high!
+ O sacred city, queen, and wife
+ Of Christ eternally!
+ O comely queen with glory clad,
+ With honor and degree,
+ All fair thou art, exceeding bright--
+ No spot there is in thee!
+
+ I long to see Jerusalem,
+ The comfort of us all;
+ For thou art fair and beautiful--
+ None ill can thee befall.
+ In thee, Jerusalem, I say,
+ No darkness dare appear--
+ No night, no shade, no winter foul--
+ No time doth alter there.
+
+ No candle needs, no moon to shine,
+ No glittering star to light;
+ For Christ, the king of righteousness,
+ For ever shineth bright.
+ A lamb unspotted, white and pure,
+ To thee doth stand in lieu
+ Of light--so great the glory is
+ Thine heavenly king to view.
+
+ He is the King of kings beset
+ In midst His servants' sight:
+ And they, His happy household all,
+ Do serve Him day and night.
+ There, there the choir of angels sing--
+ There the supernal sort
+ Of citizens, which hence are rid
+ From dangers deep, do sport.
+
+ There be the prudent prophets all,
+ The apostles six and six,
+ The glorious martyrs in a row,
+ And confessors betwixt.
+ There doth the crew of righteous men
+ And matrons all consist--
+ Young men and maids that here on earth
+ Their pleasures did resist.
+
+ The sheep and lambs, that hardly 'scaped
+ The snare of death and hell,
+ Triumph in joy eternally,
+ Whereof no tongue can tell;
+ And though the glory of each one
+ Doth differ in degree,
+ Yet is the joy of all alike
+ And common, as we see.
+
+ There love and charity do reign,
+ And Christ is all in all,
+ Whom they most perfectly behold
+ In joy celestial.
+ They love, they praise--they praise, they love;
+ They "Holy, holy," cry;
+ They neither toil, nor faint, nor end,
+ But laud continually.
+
+ Oh! happy thousand times were I,
+ If, after wretched days,
+ I might with listening ears conceive
+ Those heavenly songs of praise,
+ Which to the eternal king are sung
+ By happy wights above--
+ By saved souls and angels sweet,
+ Who love the God of love.
+
+ Oh! passing happy were my state,
+ Might I be worthy found
+ To wait upon my God and king,
+ His praises there to sound;
+ And to enjoy my Christ above,
+ His favor and His grace,
+ According to His promise made,
+ Which here I interlace:
+
+ "O Father dear," quoth He, "let them
+ Which Thou hast put of old
+ To me, be there where lo! I am--
+ Thy glory to behold;
+ Which I with Thee, before the world
+ Was made in perfect wise,
+ Have had--from whence the fountain great
+ Of glory doth arise."
+
+ Again: "If any man will serve
+ Thee, let him follow me;
+ For where I am, he there, right sure,
+ Then shall my servant be."
+ And still: "If any man loves me,
+ Him loves my Father dear,
+ Whom I do love--to him myself
+ In glory will appear."
+
+ Lord, take away my misery,
+ That then I may be bold
+ With Thee, in Thy Jerusalem,
+ Thy glory to behold;
+ And so in Zion see my king,
+ My love, my Lord, my all--
+ Where now as in a glass I see,
+ There face to face I shall.
+
+ Oh! blessed are the pure in heart--
+ Their sovereign they shall see;
+ O ye most happy, heavenly wights,
+ Which of God's household be!
+ O Lord, with speed dissolve my bands,
+ These gins and fetters strong;
+ For I have dwelt within the tents
+ Of Kedar over long.
+
+ Yet search me, Lord, and find me out!
+ Fetch me Thy fold unto,
+ That all Thy angels may rejoice,
+ While all Thy will I do.
+ O mother dear! Jerusalem!
+ When shall I come to thee?
+ When shall my sorrows have an end,
+ Thy joys when shall I see?
+
+ Yet once again I pray Thee, Lord,
+ To quit me from all strife,
+ That to Thy hill I may attain,
+ And dwell there all my life--
+ With cherubim and seraphim
+ And holy souls of men,
+ To sing Thy praise, O God of hosts!
+ Forever and amen!
+
+ANONYMOUS.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PARADISE.
+
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ Who doth not crave for rest,
+ Who would not seek the happy land
+ Where they that loved are blest?
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ The world is growing old;
+ Who would not be at rest and free
+ Where love is never cold?
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ Wherefore doth death delay?--
+ Bright death, that is the welcome dawn
+ Of our eternal day;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ 'Tis weary waiting here;
+ I long to be where Jesus is,
+ To feel, to see him near;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I want to sin no more,
+ I want to be as pure on earth
+ As on thy spotless shore;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I greatly long to see
+ The special place my dearest Lord
+ Is destining for me;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I feel 'twill not be long;
+ Patience! I almost think I hear
+ Faint fragments of thy song;
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through,
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER.
+
+
+
+
+FROM "THE DIVINE COMEDY."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HELL.
+
+ INSCRIPTION OVER THE GATE.
+
+ CANTO III.
+
+
+ "Through me you pass into the city of woe:
+ Through me you pass into eternal pain:
+ Through me among the people lost for aye.
+ Justice the founder of my fabric moved:
+ To rear me was the task of power divine,
+ Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.
+ Before me things create were none, save things
+ Eternal, and eternal I endure.
+ All hope abandon, ye who enter here."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PURGATORY.
+
+ PRAYER.
+
+ CANTO VI.
+
+
+ When I was freed
+ From all those spirits, who prayed for others' prayers
+ To hasten on their state of blessedness;
+ Straight I began: "O thou, my luminary!
+ It seems expressly in thy text denied,
+ That Heaven's supreme decree can ever bend
+ To supplication; yet with this design
+ Do these entreat. Can then their hope be vain?
+ Or is thy saying not to be revealed?"
+ He thus to me: "Both what I write is plain,
+ And these deceived not in their hope; if well
+ Thy mind consider, that the sacred height
+ Of judgment doth not stoop, because love's flame
+ In a short moment all fulfils, which he,
+ Who sojourns here, in right should satisfy.
+ Besides, when I this point concluded thus,
+ By praying no defect could be supplied:
+ Because the prayer had none access to God.
+ Yet in this deep suspicion rest thou not
+ Contented, unless she assure thee so,
+ Who betwixt truth and mind infuses light:
+ I know not if thou take me right; I mean
+ Beatrice. Her thou shalt behold above,
+ Upon this mountain's crown, fair seat of joy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PRAYER OF PENITENTS.
+
+ CANTO XI.
+
+ "O thou Almighty Father! who dost make
+ The heavens thy dwelling, not in bounds confined,
+ But that, with love intenser, there thou view'st
+ Thy primal effluence; hallowed be thy name:
+ Join, each created being, to extol
+ Thy might; for worthy humblest thanks and praise
+ Is thy blest Spirit. May thy kingdom's peace
+ Come unto us; for we, unless it come,
+ With all our striving, thither tend in vain.
+ As, of their will, the angels unto thee
+ Tender meet sacrifice, circling thy throne
+ With loud hosannas; so of theirs be done
+ By saintly men on earth. Grant us, this day,
+ Our daily manna, without which he roams
+ Through this rough desert retrograde, who most
+ Toils to advance his steps. As we to each
+ Pardon the evil done us, pardon thou
+ Benign, and of our merit take no count.
+ 'Gainst the old adversary, prove thou not
+ Our virtue, easily subdued; but free
+ From his incitements, and defeat his wiles.
+ This last petition, dearest Lord! is made
+ Not for ourselves; since that were needless now;
+ But for their sakes who after us remain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MAN'S FREE-WILL.
+
+ CANTO XVI.
+
+ "Ye, who live,
+ Do so each cause refer to heaven above,
+ E'en as its motion, of necessity,
+ Drew with it all that moves. If this were so,
+ Free choice in you were none; nor justice would
+ There should be joy for virtue, woe for ill.
+ Your movements have their primal bent from heaven;
+ Not all: yet said I all; what then ensues?
+ Light have ye still to follow evil or good,
+ And of the will free power, which, if it stand
+ Firm and unwearied in Heaven's first assay,
+ Conquers at last, so it be cherished well,
+ Triumphant over all. To mightier force,
+ To better nature subject, ye abide
+ Free, not constrained by that which forms in you
+ The reasoning mind uninfluenced of the stars.
+ If then the present race of mankind err,
+ Seek in yourselves the cause, and find it there."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FIRE OF PURIFICATION.
+
+ CANTO XXVII.
+
+ Now was the sun so stationed, as when first
+ His early radiance quivers on the heights,
+ Where streamed his Maker's blood; while Libra hangs
+ Above Hesperian Ebro; and new fires,
+ Meridian, flash on Ganges' yellow tide.
+ So day was sinking, when the angel of God
+ Appeared before us. Joy was in his mien.
+ Forth of the flame he stood upon the brink;
+ And with a voice, whose lively clearness far
+ Surpassed our human, "Blessed are the pure
+ In heart," he sang: then near him as we came,
+ "Go ye not further, holy spirits!" he cried,
+ "Ere the fire pierce you: enter in; and list
+ Attentive to the song ye hear from thence."
+ I, when I heard his saying, was as one
+ Laid in the grave. My hands together clasped,
+ And upward stretching, on the fire I looked;
+ And busy fancy conjured up the forms
+ Erewhile beheld alive consumed in flames.
+ The escorting spirits turned with gentle looks
+ Toward me; and the Mantuan spake: "My son,
+ Here torment thou may'st feel, but canst not death.
+ Remember thee, remember thee, if I
+ Safe e'en on Geryon brought thee; now I come
+ More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now?
+ Of this be sure; though in its womb that flame
+ A thousand years contained thee, from thy head
+ No hair should perish. If thou doubt my truth,
+ Approach; and with thy hands thy vesture's hem
+ Stretch forth, and for thyself confirm belief.
+ Lay now all fear, oh! lay all fear aside.
+ Turn hither, and come onward undismayed."
+ I still, though conscience urged, no step advanced.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Into the fire before me then he walked:
+ And Statius, who erewhile no little space
+ Had parted us, he prayed to come behind.
+ I would have cast me into molten glass
+ To cool me, when I entered; so intense
+ Raged the conflagrant mass. The sire beloved,
+ To comfort me, as he proceeded, still
+ Of Beatrice talked. "Her eyes," saith he,
+ "E'en now I seem to view." From the other side
+ A voice, that sang, did guide us; and the voice
+ Following, with heedful ear, we issued forth,
+ There where the path led upward. "Come," we heard,
+ "Come, blessed of my Father." Such the sounds,
+ That hailed us from within a light, which shone
+ So radiant, I could not endure the view.
+ "The sun," it added, "hastes: and evening comes.
+ Delay not: ere the western sky is hung
+ With blackness, strive ye for the pass." Our way
+ Upright within the rock arose, and faced
+ Such part of heaven, that from before my steps
+ The beams were shrouded of the sinking sun.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PARADISE.
+
+ SIN AND REDEMPTION.
+
+ CANTO VII.
+
+ What I have heard,
+ Is plain, thou say'st: but wherefore God this way
+ For our redemption chose, eludes my search.
+ "Brother! no eye of man not perfected,
+ Nor fully ripened in the flame of love,
+ May fathom this decree. It is a mark,
+ In sooth, much aimed at, and but little kenned:
+ And I will therefore show thee why such way
+ Was worthiest. The celestial love, that spurns
+ All envying in its bounty, in itself
+ With such effulgence blazeth, as sends forth
+ All beauteous things eternal. What distils
+ Immediate thence, no end of being knows;
+ Bearing its seal immutably imprest.
+ Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,
+ Free wholly, uncontrollable by power
+ Of each thing new: by such conformity
+ More grateful to its author, whose bright beams,
+ Though all partake their shining, yet in those
+ Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.
+ These tokens of pre-eminence on man
+ Largely bestowed, if any of them fail,
+ He needs must forfeit his nobility,
+ No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,
+ Which doth disfranchise him, and make unlike
+ To the chief good; for that its light in him
+ Is darkened. And to dignity thus lost
+ Is no return; unless, where guilt makes void,
+ He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.
+ Your nature, which entirely in its seed
+ Transgressed, from these distinctions fell, no less
+ Than from its state in Paradise; nor means
+ Found on recovery (search all methods out
+ As strictly as thou may) save one of these,
+ The only fords were left through which to wade:
+ Either, that God had of his courtesy
+ Released him merely; or else, man himself
+ For his own folly by himself atoned.
+ "Fix now thine eye, intently as thou canst,
+ On the everlasting counsel; and explore,
+ Instructed by my words, the dread abyss.
+ "Man in himself had ever lacked the means
+ Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop
+ Obeying, in humility so low,
+ As high, he, disobeying, thought to soar:
+ And, for this reason, he had vainly tried,
+ Out of his own sufficiency, to pay
+ The rigid satisfaction. Then behoved
+ That God should by his own ways lead him back
+ Unto the life, from whence he fell, restored:
+ By both his ways, I mean, or one alone.
+ But since the deed is ever prized the more.
+ The more the doer's good intent appears;
+ Goodness celestial, whose broad signature
+ Is on the universe, of all its ways
+ To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none.
+ Nor aught so vast or so magnificent,
+ Either for him who gave or who received,
+ Between the last night and the primal day,
+ Was or can be. For God more bounty showed,
+ Giving himself to make man capable
+ Of his return to life, than had the terms
+ Been mere and unconditional release.
+ And for his justice, every method else
+ Were all too scant, had not the Son of God
+ Humbled himself to put on mortal flesh."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE TRIUMPH OF CHRIST.
+
+ CANTO XIV.
+
+ And lo! forthwith there rose up round about
+ A lustre, over that already there;
+ Of equal clearness, like the brightening up
+ Of the horizon. As at evening hour
+ Of twilight, new appearances through heaven
+ Peer with faint glimmer, doubtfully descried;
+ So, there, new substances methought, began
+ To rise in view beyond the other twain,
+ And wheeling, sweep their ampler circuit wide.
+ O genuine glitter of eternal Beam!
+ With what a sudden whiteness did it flow,
+ O'erpowering vision in me. But so fair,
+ So passing lovely, Beatrice showed,
+ Mind cannot follow it, nor words express
+ Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes regained
+ Power to look up; and I beheld myself,
+ Sole with my lady, to more lofty bliss
+ Translated: for the star, with warmer smile
+ Impurpled, well denoted our ascent.
+ With all the heart, and with that tongue which speaks
+ The same in all, an holocaust I made
+ To God befitting the new grace vouchsafed.
+ And from my bosom had not yet upsteamed
+ The fuming of that incense, when I knew
+ The rite accepted. With such mighty sheen
+ And mantling crimson, in two listed rays
+ The splendors shot before me, that I cried,
+ "God of Sabaoth! that dost prank them thus!"
+ As leads the galaxy from pole to pole,
+ Distinguished into greater lights and less,
+ Its pathway, which the wisest fail to spell;
+ So thickly studded, in the depth of Mars,
+ Those rays described the venerable sign,
+ That quadrants in the round conjoining frame.
+ Here memory mocks the toil of genius. Christ
+ Beamed on that cross; and pattern fails me now.
+ But whoso takes his cross, and follows Christ,
+ Will pardon me for that I leave untold,
+ When in the fleckered dawning he shall spy
+ The glitterance of Christ. From horn to horn,
+ And 'tween the summit and the base, did move
+ Lights, scintillating, as they met and passed.
+ Thus oft are seen with ever-changeful glance,
+ Straight or athwart, now rapid and now slow,
+ The atomies of bodies, long or short,
+ To move along the sunbeam, whose slant line
+ Checkers the shadow interposed by art
+ Against the noontide heat. And as the chime
+ Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and harp
+ With many strings, a pleasant dinning makes
+ To him, who heareth not distinct the note;
+ So from the lights, which there appeared to me,
+ Gathered along the cross a melody,
+ That, indistinctly heard, with ravishment
+ Possessed me. Yet I marked it was a hymn
+ Of lofty praises; for there came to me
+ "Arise," and "Conquer," as to one who hears
+ And comprehends not. Me such ecstasy
+ O'ercame, that never, till that hour, was thing
+ That held me in so sweet imprisonment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SAINTS IN GLORY.
+
+ CANTO XXXI.
+
+ In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then
+ Before my view the saintly multitude,
+ Which is his own blood Christ espoused. Meanwhile,
+ That other host, that soar aloft to gaze
+ And celebrate his glory, whom they love,
+ Hovered around; and, like a troop of bees,
+ Amid the vernal sweets alighting now,
+ Now, clustering, where their fragrant labor glows,
+ Flew downward to the mighty flower, or rose
+ From the redundant petals, streaming back
+ Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.
+ Faces had they of flame, and wings of gold:
+ The rest was whiter than the driven snow;
+ And, as they flitted down into the flower,
+ From range to range, fanning their plumy loins,
+ Whispered the peace and ardor, which they won
+ From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast
+ Interposition of such numerous flight
+ Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view
+ Obstructed aught. For, through the universe,
+ Wherever merited, celestial light
+ Glides freely, and no obstacle prevents.
+ All there, who reign in safety and in bliss,
+ Ages long past or new, on one sole mark
+ Their love and vision fixed. O trinal beam
+ Of individual star, that charm'st them thus!
+ Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm below.
+ If the grim brood, from Arctic shores that roamed
+ (Where Helice forever, as she wheels,
+ Sparkles a mother's fondness on her son),
+ Stood in mute wonder mid the works of Rome,
+ When to their view the Lateran arose
+ In greatness more than earthly; I, who then
+ From human to divine had passed, from time
+ Unto eternity, and out of Florence
+ To justice and to truth, how might I chuse
+ But marvel too? 'Twixt gladness and amaze,
+ In sooth, no will had I to utter aught,
+ Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests
+ Within the temple of his vow, looks round
+ In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell
+ Of all its goodly state; e'en so mine eyes
+ Coursed up and down along the living light,
+ Now low, and now aloft, and now around,
+ Visiting every step. Looks I beheld,
+ Where charity in soft persuasion sat;
+ Smiles from within, and radiance from above;
+ And, in each gesture, grace and honor high.
+ So roved my ken, and in its general form
+ All Paradise surveyed.
+
+DANTE.
+
+Translation of HENRY FRANCIS CARY.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The World's Best Poetry Volume IV., by Bliss Carman
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORLD'S BEST POETRY VOLUME IV. ***
+
+***** This file should be named 12759.txt or 12759.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/2/7/5/12759/
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Leah Moser and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/12759.zip b/old/12759.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..630a1dc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12759.zip
Binary files differ