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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 22:28:59 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 22:28:59 -0800
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+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.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50064 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50064)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Proverbial Philosophy, by Martin F. Tupper
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Proverbial Philosophy
- The First and Second Series
-
-
-Author: Martin F. Tupper
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2015 [eBook #50064]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Chris Pinfield, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 50064-h.htm or 50064-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50064/50064-h/50064-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50064/50064-h.zip)
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Small capitals have been replaced by full capitals.
-
- The illustrations sometimes include the title of a section
- of the poem, lines from the section (not reproduced), text
- not forming part of the poem, or the initial letter of the
- following stanza. Initial letters are placed in quotation
- marks.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: Proverbial Philosophy]
-
-
-
-
-PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-(THE FIRST AND SECOND SERIES.)
-
-by
-
-MARTIN F. TUPPER, M.A., D.C.L., F.R.S.,
-
-Of Christchurch, Oxford.
-
-Illustrated.
-
-A New Edition.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-London:
-Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street.
-1867.
-
-London:
-Bradbury, Evans, and Co., Printers, Whitefriars.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-_FIRST SERIES._
- PAGE
-
- PREFATORY 1
- THE WORDS OF WISDOM 4
- OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE 8
- OF ANTICIPATION 12
- OF HIDDEN USES 14
- OF COMPENSATION 21
- OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES 27
- OF MEMORY 33
- THE DREAM OF AMBITION 38
- OF SUBJECTION 41
- OF REST 51
- OF HUMILITY 55
- OF PRIDE 59
- OF EXPERIENCE 62
- OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER 65
- OF HATRED AND ANGER 74
- OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL 76
- OF PRAYER 81
- THE LORD'S PRAYER 86
- OF DISCRETION 88
- OF TRIFLES 92
- OF RECREATION 95
- THE TRAIN OF RELIGION 100
- OF A TRINITY 103
- OF THINKING 107
- OF SPEAKING 115
- OF READING 119
- OF WRITING 121
- OF WEALTH 125
- OF INVENTION 130
- OF RIDICULE 134
- OF COMMENDATION 137
- OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE 142
- OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS 150
- OF FRIENDSHIP 153
- OF LOVE 158
- OF MARRIAGE 161
- OF EDUCATION 167
- OF TOLERANCE 177
- OF SORROW 181
- OF JOY 184
-
-_SECOND SERIES._
-
- INTRODUCTORY 189
- OF CHEERFULNESS 192
- OF YESTERDAY 197
- OF TO-DAY 203
- OF TO-MORROW 207
- OF AUTHORSHIP 210
- OF MYSTERY 219
- OF GIFTS 227
- OF BEAUTY 233
- OF FAME 250
- OF FLATTERY 258
- OF NEGLECT 266
- OF CONTENTMENT 275
- OF LIFE 281
- OF DEATH 288
- OF IMMORTALITY 297
- OF IDEAS 317
- OF NAMES 321
- OF THINGS 327
- OF FAITH 331
- OF HONESTY 341
- OF SOCIETY 348
- OF SOLITUDE 357
- RECAPITULATION 362
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
-_FIRST SERIES._
- DESIGNER. ENGRAVER. PAGE
-
- Title Page GUSTAVE DORÉ. _W. J. Linton._
- Floral Title H. N. HUMPHREYS. _J. Swain._
- Prefatory J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 1
- " " " 3
- The Words of Wisdom H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 4
- Memory and Diligence M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 5
- Of Truth in Things False J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 7
- Of Anticipation T. DALZIEL. " 12
- Of Hidden Uses E. DUNCAN. " 14
- " B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 18
- Of Compensation J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 20
- " " " 25
- Of Indirect Influences E. H. CORBOULD. " 26
- " G. DODGSON. " 29
- " W. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 32
- Of Memory W. L. LEITCH. _Dalziel Brs._ 33
- " B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 36
- The Dream of Ambition M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 38
- Of Subjection E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 48
- Of Subjection E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 49
- Of Rest M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 53
- Of Humility J. C. HORSLEY. _J. Thompson._ 55
- Of Pride J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 59
- " " " 61
- Of Experience T. DALZIEL. " 62
- Of Estimating Character J. TENNIEL. " 65
- " " " 71
- Of Hatred and Anger C. W. COPE, R.A. _S. Williams._ 74
- Of Good in Things Evil J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 76
- Of Prayer J. C. HORSLEY. " 81
- The Lord's Prayer C. W. COPE, R.A. _S. Williams._ 86
- Of Discretion E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 88
- Of Recreation E. DUNCAN. " 95
- " E. H. CORBOULD. " 99
- The Train of Religion J. TENNIEL. " 100
- Of Thinking " " 107
- Of Speaking G. DODGSON. " 114
- Of Writing J. TENNIEL. " 121
- Of Wealth J. GILBERT. " 125
- Of Invention B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 132
- Of Ridicule J. GODWIN. _Dalziel Brs._ 134
- Of Self-Acquaintance J. GILBERT. " 142
- Of Cruelty to Animals W. HARVEY. " 149
- Of Love H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 158
- Of Marriage J. SEVERN. " 161
- Of Education J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 167
- " J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 176
- Of Sorrow C. W. COPE, R.A. _W. J. Green._ 181
- Of Joy J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 184
-
- _SECOND SERIES._
-
- Title Page J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 187
- Introductory H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 189
- Of Yesterday B. FOSTER. " 198
- Of To-morrow F. R. PICKERSGILL, A.R.A. _Dalziel Brs._ 206
- Of Mystery J. GILBERT. " 218
- Of Beauty B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 237
- " J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 239
- Of Fame F. R. PICKERSGILL, A.R.A. " 249
- Of Neglect E. H. CORBOULD. _H. Vizetelly._ 266
- Of Contentment B. FOSTER. " 275
- Of Death J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 288
- " J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 291
- Of Names J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 321
- Of Faith J. TENNIEL. " 331
- " W. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 333
- Of Society E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 352
- Of Solitude J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 359
- Initial Letters H. N. HUMPHREYS. { _H. Vizetelly_
- { _and_
- { _J. Swain._
-
-
-
-
-FIRST SERIES.
-
-
-[Illustration: Prefatory "T"]
-
-PREFATORY.
-
- Thoughts, that have tarried in my mind, and peopled its inner chambers,
- The sober children of reason, or desultory train of fancy;
- Clear running wine of conviction, with the scum and the lees of
- speculation;
- Corn from the sheaves of science, with stubble from mine own garner:
- Searchings after Truth, that have tracked her secret lodes,
- And come up again to the surface-world, with a knowledge grounded deeper;
- Arguments of high scope, that have soared to the key-stone of heaven,
- And thence have swooped to their certain mark, as the falcon to its
- quarry;
- The fruits I have gathered of prudence, the ripened harvest of my musings,
- These commend I unto thee, O docile scholar of Wisdom,
- These I give to thy gentle heart, thou lover of the right.
-
- What, though a guilty man renew that hallowed theme,
- And strike with feebler hand the harp of Sirach's son?
- What, though a youthful tongue take up that ancient parable,
- And utter faintly forth dark sayings as of old?
- Sweet is the virgin honey, though the wild bee have stored it in a reed,
- And bright the jewelled band, that circleth an Ethiop's arm;
- Pure are the grains of gold in the turbid stream of Ganges,
- And fair the living flowers, that spring from the dull cold sod.
- Wherefore, thou gentle student, bend thine ear to my speech,
- For I also am as thou art; our hearts can commune together:
- To meanest matters will I stoop, for mean is the lot of mortal;
- I will rise to noblest themes, for the soul hath an heritage of glory:
- The passions of puny man; the majestic characters of God;
- The feverish shadows of time, and the mighty substance of eternity.
-
- Commend thy mind unto candour, and grudge not as though thou hadst a
- teacher,
- Nor scorn angelic Truth for the sake of her evil herald;
- Heed not him, but hear his words, and care not whence they come;
- The viewless winds might whisper them, the billows roar them forth,
- The mean unconscious sedge sigh them in the ear of evening,
- Or the mind of pride conceive, and the mouth of folly speak them.
- Lo now, I stand not forth laying hold on spear and buckler,
- I come a man of peace, to comfort, not to combat;
- With soft persuasive speech to charm thy patient ear,
- Giving the hand of fellowship, acknowledging the heart of sympathy:
- Let us walk together as friends in the shaded paths of meditation,
- Nor Judgment set his seal until he hath poised his balance;
- That the chastenings of mild reproof may meet unwitting error,
- And Charity not be a stranger at the board that is spread for brothers.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: The Words of Wisdom]
-
-THE WORDS OF WISDOM.
-
- Few and precious are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter:
- To what shall their rarity be likened? What price shall count their worth?
- Perfect and much to be desired, and giving joy with riches,
- No lovely thing on earth can picture all their beauty.
- They be chance pearls, flung among the rocks by the sullen waters of
- Oblivion,
- Which Diligence loveth to gather, and hang around the neck of Memory;
- They be white-winged seeds of happiness, wafted from the islands of the
- blessed,
- Which Thought carefully tendeth, in the kindly garden of the heart;
- They be sproutings of an harvest for eternity, bursting through the tilth
- of time,
- Green promise of the golden wheat, that yieldeth angels' food;
- They be drops of the crystal dew, which the wings of seraphs scatter,
- When on some brighter sabbath, their plumes quiver most with delight:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Yet more, for the half is not said, of their might, and dignity, and
- value;
- For life-giving be they and glorious, redolent of sanctity and heaven:
- As fumes of hallowed incense, that veil the throne of the Most High;
- As beaded bubbles that sparkle on the rim of the cup of immortality;
- As wreaths of the rainbow spray, from the pure cataracts of truth:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
- Yet once again, loving student, suffer the praises of thy teacher,
- For verily the sun of the mind, and the life of the heart is Wisdom:
- She is pure and full of light, crowning grey hairs with lustre,
- And kindling the eye of youth with a fire not its own;
- And her words, whereunto canst thou liken them? for earth cannot show
- their peers:
- They be grains of the diamond sand, the radiant floor of heaven,
- Rising in sunny dust behind the chariot of God;
- They be flashes of the dayspring from on high, shed from the windows of
- the skies;
- They be streams of living waters, fresh from the fountain of Intelligence:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
- For these shall guide thee well, and guard thee on thy way;
- And wanting all beside, with these shalt thou be rich:
- Though all around be woe, these shall make thee happy;
- Though all within be pain, these shall bring thee health:
- Thy good shall grow into ripeness, thine evil wither and decay,
- And Wisdom's words shall sweetly charm thy doubtful into virtues:
- Meanness shall then be frugal care; where shame was, thou art modest;
- Cowardice riseth into caution, rashness is sobered into courage;
- The wrathful spirit, rendering a reason, standeth justified in anger;
- The idle hand hath fair excuse, propping the thoughtful forehead.
- Life shall have no labyrinth but thy steps can track it,
- For thou hast a silken clue, to lead thee through the darkness:
- The rampant Minotaur of ignorance shall perish at thy coming,
- And thine enfranchised fellows hail thy white victorious sails.
- Wherefore, friend and scholar, hear the words of Wisdom;
- Whether she speaketh to thy soul in the full chords of revelation;
- In the teaching earth, or air, or sea; in the still melodies of thought;
- Or, haply, in the humbler strains that would detain thee here.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Error is a hardy plant; it flourisheth in every soil;
- In the heart of the wise and good, alike with the wicked and foolish.
- For there is no error so crooked, but it hath in it some lines of truth:
- Nor is any poison so deadly, that it serveth not some wholesome use:
- And the just man, enamoured of the right, is blinded by the speciousness
- of wrong;
- And the prudent, perceiving an advantage, is content to overlook the harm.
- On all things created remaineth the half-effaced signature of God,
- Somewhat of fair and good, though blotted by the finger of corruption:
- And if error cometh in like a flood, it mixeth with streams of truth;
- And the Adversary loveth to have it so, for thereby many are decoyed.
- Providence is dark in its permissions; yet one day, when all is known,
- The universe of reason shall acknowledge how just and good were they;
- For the wise man leaneth on his wisdom, and the righteous trusteth to his
- righteousness,
- And those, who thirst for independence, are suffered to drink of
- disappointment.
- Wherefore?--to prove and humble them; and to teach the idolaters of Truth,
- That it is but the ladder unto Him, on whom only they should trust.
-
- There is truth in the wildest scheme that imaginative heat hath
- engendered,
- And a man may gather somewhat from the crudest theories of fancy:
- The alchymist laboureth in folly, but catcheth chance gleams of wisdom,
- And findeth out many inventions, though his crucible breed not gold;
- The sinner, toying with witchcraft, thinketh to delude his fellows,
- But there be very spirits of evil, and what if they come at his bidding?
- He is a bold bad man who dareth to tamper with the dead;
- For their whereabout lieth in a mystery--that vestibule leading to
- Eternity,
- The waiting-room for unclad ghosts, before the presence-chamber of their
- King:
- Mind may act upon mind, though bodies be far divided;
- For the life is in the blood, but souls communicate unseen:
- And the heat of an excited intellect, radiating to its fellows,
- Doth kindle dry leaves afar off, while the green wood around it is
- unwarmed.
- The dog may have a spirit, as well as his brutal master;
- A spirit to live in happiness: for why should he be robbed of his
- existence?
- Hath he not a conscience of evil, a glimmer of moral sense,
- Love and hatred, courage and fear, and visible shame and pride?
- There may be a future rest for the patient victims of the cruel;
- And a season allotted for their bliss, to compensate for unjust suffering.
- Spurn not at seeming error, but dig below its surface for the truth;
- And beware of seeming truths, that grow on the roots of error:
- For comely are the apples that spring from the Dead Sea's cursed shore,
- But within are they dust and ashes, and the hand that plucked them shall
- rue it.
-
- A frequent similar effect argueth a constant cause:
- Yet who hath counted the links that bind an omen to its issue?
- Who hath expounded the law that rendereth calamities gregarious,
- Pressing down with yet more woes the heavy-laden mourner?
- Who knoweth wherefore a monsoon should swell the sails of the prosperous,
- Blithely speeding on their course the children of good luck?
- Who hath companied a vision from the horn or ivory gate?
- Or met another's mind in his, and explained its presence?
- There is a secret somewhat in antipathies; and love is more than fancy;
- Yea, and a palpable notice warneth of an instant danger;
- For the soul hath its feelers, cobwebs floating on the wind,
- That catch events in their approach with sure and apt presentiment;
- So that some halo of attraction heraldeth a coming friend,
- Investing in his likeness the stranger that passed on before;
- And while the word is in thy mouth, behold thy word fulfilled,
- And he of whom we spake can answer for himself.
- O man, little hast thou learnt of truth in things most true,
- How therefore shall thy blindness wot of truth in things most false?
- Thou hast not yet perceived the causes of life or motion,
- How then canst thou define the subtle sympathies of mind?
- For the spirit, sharpest and strongest when disease hath rent the body,
- Hath welcomed kindred spirits in nightly visitations,
- Or learnt from restless ghosts dark secrets of the living,
- And helped slow justice to her prey by the dreadful teaching of a dream.
-
- Verily, there is nothing so true, that the damps of error have not warped
- it;
- Verily, there is nothing so false, that a sparkle of truth is not in it.
- For the enemy, the father of lies, the giant Upas of creation,
- Whose deadly shade hath blasted this once green garden of the Lord,
- Can but pervert the good, but may not create the evil;
- He destroyeth, but cannot build; for he is not antagonist deity:
- Mighty is his stolen power, yet is he a creature and a subject;
- Not a maker of abstract wrong, but a spoiler of concrete right:
- The fiend hath not a royal crown; he is but a prowling robber,
- Suffered, for some mysterious end, to haunt the King's highway;
- And the keen sword he beareth, once was a simple ploughshare;
- Yea, and his panoply of error is but a distortion of the truth:
- The sickle that once reaped righteousness, beaten from its useful curve,
- With axe, and spike, and bar, headeth the marauder's halbert.
- Seek not further, O man, to solve the dark riddle of sin;
- Suffice it, that thine own bad heart is to thee thine origin of evil.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF ANTICIPATION.
-
- Thou hast seen many sorrows, travel-stained pilgrim of the world,
- But that which hath vexed thee most hath been the looking for evil;
- And though calamities have crossed thee, and misery been heaped on thy
- head,
- Yet ills, that never happened, have chiefly made thee wretched.
- The sting of pain and the edge of pleasure are blunted by long
- expectation,
- For the gall and the balm alike are diluted in the waters of patience:
- And often thou sippest sweetness, ere the cup is dashed from thy lip;
- Or drainest the gall of fear, while evil is passing by thy dwelling.
- A man too careful of danger liveth in continual torment,
- But a cheerful expecter of the best hath a fountain of joy within him:
- Yea, though the breath of disappointment should chill the sanguine heart,
- Speedily gloweth it again, warmed by the live embers of hope;
- Though the black and heavy surge close above the head for a moment,
- Yet the happy buoyancy of Confidence riseth superior to Despair.
- Verily, evils may be courted, may be wooed and won by distrust:
- For the wise Physician of our weal loveth not an unbelieving spirit;
- And to those giveth He good, who rely on His hand for good;
- And those leaveth He to evil, who fear, but trust Him not.
- Ask for good, and hope it, for the ocean of good is fathomless;
- Ask for good, and have it, for thy Friend would see thee happy;
- But to the timid heart, to the child of unbelief and dread,
- That leaneth on his own weak staff, and trusteth the sight of his eyes,
- The evil he feared shall come, for the soil is ready for the seed,
- And suspicion hath coldly put aside the hand that was ready to help him.
- Therefore look up, sad spirit; be strong, thou coward heart,
- Or fear will make thee wretched, though evil follow not behind:
- Cease to anticipate misfortune; there are still many chances of escape;
- But if it come, be courageous; face it, and conquer thy calamity.
- There is not an enemy so stout, as to storm and take the fortress of the
- mind,
- Unless its infirmity turn traitor, and Fear unbar the gates.
- The valiant standeth as a rock, and the billows break upon him;
- The timorous is a skiff unmoored, tost and mocked at by a ripple:
- The valiant holdeth fast to good, till evil wrench it from him;
- The timorous casteth it aside, to meet the worst half way:
- Yet oftentimes is evil but a braggart, that provoketh and will not fight;
- Or the feint of a subtle fencer, who measureth his thrust elsewhere:
- Or perchance a blessing in a masque, sent to try thy trust,
- The precious smiting of a friend, whose frowns are all in love:
- Often the storm threateneth, but is driven to other climes,
- And the weak hath quailed in fear, while the firm hath been glad in his
- confidence.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF HIDDEN USES.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The sea-wort floating on the waves, or rolled up high along the shore,
- Ye counted useless and vile, heaping on it names of contempt:
- Yet hath it gloriously triumphed, and man been humbled in his ignorance,
- For health is in the freshness of its savour, and it cumbereth the beach
- with wealth;
- Comforting the tossings of pain with its violet-tinctured essence,
- And by its humbler ashes enriching many proud.
- Be this, then, a lesson to thy soul, that thou reckon nothing worthless,
- Because thou heedest not its use, nor knowest the virtues thereof.
- And herein, as thou walkest by the sea, shall weeds be a type and an
- earnest
- Of the stored and uncounted riches lying hid in all creatures of God:
- There be flowers making glad the desert, and roots fattening the soil,
- And jewels in the secret deep, scattered among groves of coral,
- And comforts to crown all wishes, and aids unto every need,
- Influences yet unthought, and virtues, and many inventions,
- And uses above and around, which man hath not yet regarded.
- Not long to charm away disease hath the crocus yielded up its bulb,
- Nor the willow lent its bark, nor the nightshade its vanquished poison;
- Not long hath the twisted leaf, the fragrant gift of China,
- Nor that nutritious root, the boon of far Peru,
- Nor the many-coloured dahlia, nor the gorgeous flaunting cactus,
- Nor the multitude of fruits and flowers, ministered to life and luxury:
- Even so, there be virtues yet unknown in the wasted foliage of the elm,
- In the sun-dried harebell of the downs, and the hyacinth drinking in the
- meadow,
- In the sycamore's winged fruit, and the facet-cut cones of the cedar;
- And the pansy and bright geranium live not alone for beauty,
- Nor the waxen flower of the arbute, though it dieth in a day,
- Nor the sculptured crest of the fir, unseen but by the stars;
- And the meanest weed of the garden serveth unto many uses,
- The salt tamarisk, and juicy flag, the freckled orchis, and the daisy.
- The world may laugh at famine, when forest-trees yield bread,
- When acorns give out fragrant drink, and the sap of the linden is as
- fatness:
- For every green herb, from the lotus to the darnel,
- Is rich with delicate aids to help incurious man.
-
- Still, Mind is up and stirring, and pryeth in the corners of contrivance,
- Often from the dark recesses picking out bright seeds of truth:
- Knowledge hath clipped the lightning's wings, and mewed it up for a
- purpose,
- Training to some domestic task the fiery bird of heaven;
- Tamed is the spirit of the storm, to slave in all peaceful arts,
- To walk with husbandry and science; to stand in the vanguard against
- death:
- And the chemist balanceth his elements with more than magic skill,
- Commanding stones that they be bread, and draining sweetness out of
- wormwood.
- Yet man, heedless of a God, counteth up vain reckonings,
- Fearing to be jostled and starved out, by the too prolific increase of
- his kind;
- And asketh, in unbelieving dread, for how few years to come
- Will the black cellars of the world yield unto him fuel for his winter.
- Might not the wide waste sea be pent within narrower bounds?
- Might not the arm of diligence make the tangled wilderness a garden?
- And for aught thou canst tell, there may be a thousand methods
- Of comforting thy limbs in warmth, though thou kindle not a spark.
- Fear not, son of man, for thyself nor thy seed:--with a multitude is
- plenty;
- God's blessing giveth increase, and with it larger than enough.
-
- Search out the wisdom of nature, there is depth in all her doings;
- She seemeth prodigal of power, yet her rules are the maxims of frugality:
- The plant refresheth the air, and the earth filtereth the water,
- And dews are sucked into the cloud, dropping fatness on the world:
- She hath, on a mighty scale, a general use for all things;
- Yet hath she specially for each its microscopic purpose:
- There is use in the prisoned air, that swelleth the pods of the laburnum;
- Design in the venomed thorns, that sentinel the leaves of the nettle;
- A final cause for the aromatic gum, that congealeth the moss around a
- rose:
- A reason for each blade of grass, that reareth its small spire.
- How knoweth discontented man what a train of ills might follow,
- If the lowest menial of nature knew not her secret office?
- If the thistle never sprang up to mock the loose husbandry of indolence,
- Or the pestilence never swept away an unknown curse from among men?
- Would ye crush the buzzing myriads that float on the breath of evening?
- Would ye trample the creatures of God that people the rotting fruit?
- Would ye suffer no mildew forest to stain the unhealthy wall,
- Nor a noisome savour to exhale from the pool that breedeth disease?
- Pain is useful unto man, for it teacheth him to guard his life,
- And the fetid vapours of the fen warn him to fly from danger:
- And the meditative mind, looking on, winneth good food for its hunger,
- Seeing the wholesome root bring forth a poisonous berry;
- For otherwhile falleth it out that truth, driven to extremities,
- Yieldeth bitter folly as the spoilt fruit of wisdom.
- O, blinded is thine eye, if it see not just aptitude in all things:
- O, frozen is thy heart, if it glow not with gratitude for all things:
- In the perfect circle of creation not an atom could be spared,
- From earth's magnetic zone to the bindweed round a hawthorn.
-
- The sage, and the beetle at his feet, hath each a ministration to perform:
- The briar and the palm have the wages of life, rendering secret service.
- Neither is it thus alone with the definite existences of matter;
- But motion and sound, circumstance and quality, yea, all things have
- their office.
- The zephyr playing with an aspen-leaf,--the earthquake that rendeth a
- continent;
- The moon-beam silvering a ruined arch,--the desert-wave dashing up a
- pyramid;
- The thunder of jarring icebergs,--the stops of a shepherd's pipe;
- The howl of the tiger in the glen,--and the wood-dove calling to her mate;
- The vulture's cruel rage,--the grace of the stately swan;
- The fierceness looking from the lynx's eye, and the dull stupor of the
- sloth:
- To these, and to all, is there added each its USE, though man considereth
- it lightly;
- For Power hath ordained nothing which Economy saw not needful.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- All things being are in concord with the ubiquity of God;
- Neither is there one thing overmuch, nor freed from honourable servitude.
- Were there not a need-be of wisdom, nothing would be as it is;
- For essence without necessity argueth a moral weakness.
- We look through a glass darkly, we catch but glimpses of truth;
- But, doubtless, the sailing of a cloud hath Providence to its pilot,
- Doubtless, the root of an oak is gnarled for a special purpose,
- The foreknown station of a rush is as fixed as the station of a king,
- And chaff from the hand of the winnower, steered as the stars in their
- courses.
- Man liveth only in himself, but the Lord liveth in all things;
- And His pervading unity quickeneth the whole creation.
- Man doeth one thing at once, nor can he think two thoughts together;
- But God compasseth all things, mantling the globe like air:
- And we render homage to His wisdom, seeing use in all His creatures,
- For, perchance, the universe would die, were not all things as they are.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Compensation]
-
-OF COMPENSATION.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Equal is the government of heaven in allotting pleasures among men,
- And just the everlasting law, that hath wedded happiness to virtue:
- For verily on all things else broodeth disappointment with care,
- That childish man may be taught the shallowness of earthly enjoyment.
- Wherefore, ye that have enough, envy ye the rich man his abundance?
- Wherefore, daughters of affluence, covet ye the cottager's content?
- Take the good with the evil, for ye all are pensioners of God,
- And none may choose or refuse the cup His wisdom mixeth.
- The poor man rejoiceth at his toil, and his daily bread is sweet to him:
- Content with present good, he looketh not for evil to the future:
- The rich man languisheth with sloth, and findeth pleasure in nothing,
- He locketh up care with his gold, and feareth the fickleness of fortune.
- Can a cup contain within itself the measure of a bucket?
- Or the straitened appetites of man drink more than their fill of luxury?
- There is a limit to enjoyment, though the sources of wealth be boundless:
- And the choicest pleasures of life lie within the ring of moderation.
-
- Also, though penury and pain be real and bitter evils,
- I would reason with the poor afflicted, for he is not so wretched as he
- seemeth.
- What right hath an offender to complain, though others escape punishment,
- If the stripes of earned misfortune overtake him in his sin?
- Wherefore not endure with resignation the evils thou canst not avert?
- For the coward pain will flee, if thou meet him as a man:
- Consider, whatever be thy fate, that it might and ought to have been
- worse,
- And that it lieth in thy hand to gather even blessing from afflictions:
- Bethink thee, wherefore were they sent? and hath not use blunted their
- keenness?
- Need hope, and patience, and courage, be strangers to the meanest hovel?
- Thou art in an evil case, it were cruel to deny to thee compassion,
- But there is not unmitigated ill in the sharpest of this world's sorrows:
- I touch not the sore of thy guilt; but of human griefs I counsel thee,
- Cast off the weakness of regret, and gird thee to redeem thy loss:
- Thou hast gained, in the furnace of affliction, self-knowledge, patience,
- and humility,
- And these be as precious ore, that waiteth the skill of the coiner:
- Despise not the blessings of adversity, nor the gain thou hast earned so
- hardly,
- And now thou hast drained the bitter, take heed that thou lose not the
- sweet.
-
- Power is seldom innocent, and envy is the yoke-fellow of eminence;
- And the rust of the miser's riches wasteth his soul as a canker.
- The poor man counteth not the cost at which such wealth hath been
- purchased;
- He would be on the mountain's top, without the toil and travail of the
- climbing.
- But equity demandeth recompense: for high-place, calumny and care;
- For state, comfortless splendour eating out the heart of home;
- For warrior fame, dangers and death; for a name among the learned, a
- spirit overstrained;
- For honour of all kinds, the goad of ambition; on every acquirement, the
- tax of anxiety.
- He that would change with another, must take the cup as it is mixed:
- Poverty, with largeness of heart; or a full purse, with a sordid spirit;
- Wisdom, in an ailing body; or a common mind, with health:
- Godliness, with man's scorn; or the welcome of the mighty, with guilt:
- Beauty, with a fickle heart; or plainness of face, with affection.
- For so hath Providence determined, that a man shall not easily discover
- Unmingled good or evil, to quicken his envy or abhorrence.
- A bold man or a fool must he be, who would change his lot with another;
- It were a fearful bargain, and mercy hath lovingly refused it:
- For we know the worst of ourselves, but the secrets of another we see not,
- And better is certain bad, than the doubt and dread of worse.
-
- Just, and strong, and opportune is the moral rule of God;
- Ripe in its times, firm in its judgments, equal in the measure of its
- gifts:
- Yet men, scanning the surface, count the wicked happy,
- Nor heed the compensating peace, which gladdeneth the good in his
- afflictions.
- They see not the frightful dreams that crowd a bad man's pillow,
- Like wreathed adders crawling round his midnight conscience;
- They hear not the terrible suggestions, that knock at the portal of his
- will,
- Provoking to wipe away from life the one weak witness of the deed;
- They know not the torturing suspicions that sting his panting breast,
- When the clear eye of penetration quietly readeth off the truth.
- Likewise of the good what know they? The memories bringing pleasure,
- Shrined in the heart of the benevolent, and glistening from his eye;
- The calm self-justifying reason that establisheth the upright in his
- purpose;
- The warm and gushing bliss that floodeth all the thoughts of the
- religious.
- Many a beggar at the cross-way, or grey-haired shepherd on the plain,
- Hath more of the end of all wealth, than hundreds who multiply the means.
-
- Moreover, a moral compensation reacheth to the secrecy of thought;
- For if thou wilt think evil of thy neighbour, soon shalt thou have him
- for thy foe:
- And yet he may know nothing of the cause that maketh thee distasteful to
- his soul,--
- The cause of unkind suspicion, for which thou hast thy punishment:
- And if thou think of him in charity, wishing or praying for his weal,
- He shall not guess the secret charm that lureth his soul to love thee.
- For just is retributive ubiquity: Samson did sin with Dalilah,
- And his eyes and captive strength were forfeit to the Philistine:
- Jacob robbed his brother, and sorrow was his portion to the grave:
- David must fly before his foes, yea, though his guilt is covered:
- And He who, seeming old in youth, was marred for others' sin,
- For every special crime must bear its special penalty:
- By luxury, or rashness, or vice, the member that hath erred suffereth,--
- And therefore the Sacrifice for all was pained at every pore.
-
- Alike to the slave and his oppressor cometh night with sweet refreshment,
- And half of the life of the most wretched is gladdened by the soothings
- of sleep.
- Pain addeth zest unto pleasure, and teacheth the luxury of health;
- There is a joy in sorrow, which none but a mourner can know:
- Madness hath imaginary bliss, and most men have no more;
- Age hath its quiet calm, and youth enjoyeth not for haste:
- Daily, in the midst of its beatitude, the righteous soul is vexed;
- And even the misery of guilt doth attain to the bliss of pardon.
- Who, in the face of the born-blind, ever looked on other than content?
- And the deaf ear listeneth within to the silent music of the heart.
- There is evil poured upon the earth from the overflowings of corruption,--
- Sickness, and poverty, and pain, and guilt, and madness, and sorrow;
- But, as the water from a fountain riseth and sinketh to its level,
- Ceaselessly toileth justice to equalize the lots of men:
- For, habit and hope and ignorance, and the being but one of a multitude,
- And strength of reason in the sage, and dulness of feeling in the fool,
- And the light elasticity of courage, and the calm resignation of meekness,
- And the stout endurance of decision, and the weak carelessness of apathy,
- And helps invisible but real, and ministerings not unfelt,
- Angelic aid with worldly discomfiture, bodily loss with the soul's gain,
- Secret griefs, and silent joys, thorns in the flesh, and cordials for the
- spirit,
- (--Short of the insuperable barrier dividing innocence from guilt,--)
- Go far to level all things, by the gracious rule of Compensation.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Indirect Influences]
-
-OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES.
-
-[Illustration: "F"]
-
- Face thy foe in the field, and perchance thou wilt meet thy master,
- For the sword is chained to his wrist, and his armour buckled for the
- battle;
- But find him when he looketh not for thee, aim between the joints of his
- harness,
- And the crest of his pride will be humbled, his cruelty will bite the
- dust.
- Beard not a lion in his den, but fashion the secret pitfall;
- So shall thou conquer the strong, thyself triumphing in weakness.
- The hurricane rageth fiercely, and the promontory standeth in its might,
- Breasting the artillery of heaven, as darts glance from the crocodile:
- But the small continual creeping of the silent footsteps of the sea
- Mineth the wall of adamant, and stealthily compasseth its ruin.
- The weakness of accident is strong, where the strength of design is weak:
- And a casual analogy convinceth, when a mind beareth not argument.
- Will not a man listen? be silent; and prove thy maxim by example:
- Never fear, thou losest not thy hold, though thy mouth doth not render a
- reason.
- Contend not in wisdom with a fool, for thy sense maketh much of his
- conceit;
- And some errors never would have thriven, had it not been for learned
- refutation:
- Yea, much evil hath been caused by an honest wrestler for truth,
- And much of unconscious good, by the man that hated wisdom:
- For the intellect judgeth closely, and if thou overstep thy argument,
- Or seem not consistent with thyself, or fail in thy direct purpose,
- The mind that went along with thee, shall stop and return without thee,
- And thou shalt have raised a foe, where thou mightest have won a friend.
-
- Hints, shrewdly strown, mightily disturb the spirit,
- Where a bare-faced accusation would be too ridiculous for calumny:
- The sly suggestion toucheth nerves, and nerves contract the fronds,
- And the sensitive mimosa of affection trembleth to its root;
- And friendships, the growth of half a century, those oaks that laugh at
- storms,
- Have been cankered in a night by a worm, even as the prophet's gourd.
- Hast thou loved, and not known jealousy? for a sidelong look
- Can please or pain thy heart more than the multitude of proofs:
- Hast thou hated, and not learned that thy silent scorn
- Doth deeper aggravate thy foe than loud-cursing malice?--
- A wise man prevaileth in power, for he screeneth his battering engine,
- But a fool tilteth headlong, and his adversary is aware.
-
- Behold those broken arches, that oriel all unglazed,
- That crippled line of columns bleaching in the sun,
- The delicate shaft stricken midway, and the flying buttress
- Idly stretching forth to hold up tufted ivy:
- Thinkest thou the thousand eyes that shine with rapture on a ruin,
- Would have looked with half their wonder on the perfect pile?
- And wherefore not--but that light hints, suggesting unseen beauties,
- Fill the complacent gazer with self-grown conceits?
- And so, the rapid sketch winneth more praise to the painter,
- Than the consummate work elaborated on his easel:
- And so, the Helvetic lion caverned in the living rock
- Hath more of majesty and force, than it upon a marble pedestal.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Tell me, daughter of taste, what hath charmed thine ear in music?
- Is it the laboured theme, the curious fugue or cento,--
- Nor rather the sparkles of intelligence flashing from some strange chord,
- Or the soft melody of sounds far sweeter for simplicity?
- Tell me, thou son of science, what hath filled thy mind in reading?
- Is it the volume of detail where all is orderly set down,
- And they that read may run, nor need to stop and think;
- The book carefully accurate, that counteth thee no better than a fool,
- Gorging the passive mind with annotated notes;--
- Nor rather the half-suggested thoughts, the riddles thou mayst solve,
- The fair ideas, coyly peeping like young loves out of roses,
- The quaint arabesque conceptions, half cherub and half flower,
- The light analogy, or deep allusion, trusted to thy learning,
- The confidence implied in thy skill to unravel meaning mysteries?
- For ideas are ofttimes shy of the close furniture of words,
- And thought, wherein only is power, may be best conveyed by a suggestion:
- The flash that lighteth up a valley, amid the dark midnight of a storm,
- Coineth the mind with that scene sharper than fifty summers.
-
- A worldly man boasteth in his pride, that there is no power but of money;
- And he judgeth the characters of men by the differing measures of their
- means:
- He stealeth all goodly names, as worth, and value, and substance,
- Which be the ancient heritage of Virtue, but such an one ascribeth unto
- Wealth:
- He spurneth the needy sage, whose wisdom hath enriched nations,
- And the sons of poverty and learning, without whom earth were a desert:
- Music, the soother of cares, the tuner of the dank discordant
- heart-strings,
- It is nought unto such an one but sounds, whereby some earn their living:
- The poem, and the picture, and the statue, to him seem idle baubles,
- Which wealth condescendeth to favour, to gain him the name of patron.
- But little wotteth he the might of the means his folly despiseth;
- He considereth not that these be the wires which move the puppets of the
- world.
- A sentence hath formed a character, and a character subdued a kingdom;
- A picture hath ruined souls, or raised them to commerce with the skies:
- The pen hath shaken nations, and stablished the world in peace;
- And the whole full horn of plenty been filled from the vial of science.
- He regardeth man as sensual, the monarch of created matter,
- And careth not aught for mind, that linketh him with spirits unseen;
- He feedeth his carcase and is glad, though his soul be faint and famished,
- And the dull brute power of the body bindeth him a captive to himself.
-
- Man liveth from hour to hour, and knoweth not what may happen;
- Influences circle him on all sides, and yet must he answer for his
- actions:
- For the being that is master of himself, bendeth events to his will,
- But a slave to selfish passion is the wavering creature of circumstance.
- To this man temptation is a poison, to that man it addeth vigour;
- And each may render to himself influences good or evil.
- As thou directest the power, harm or advantage will follow,
- And the torrent that swept the valley, may be led to turn a mill;
- The wild electric flash, that could have kindled comets,
- May by the ductile wire give ease to an ailing child.
- For outward matter or event fashion not the character within,
- But each man, yielding or resisting, fashioneth his mind for himself.
-
- Some have said, What is in a name?--most potent plastic influence;
- A name is a word of character, and repetition stablisheth the fact:
- A word of rebuke, or of honour, tending to obscurity or fame;
- And greatest is the power of a name, when its power is least suspected.
- A low name is a thorn in the side, that hindereth the footman in his
- running;
- But a name of ancestral renown shall often put the racer to his speed.
- Few men have grown unto greatness whose names are allied to ridicule,
- And many would never have been profligate, but for the splendour of a
- name.
- A wise man scorneth nothing, be it never so small or homely,
- For he knoweth not the secret laws that may bind it to great effects.
- The world in its boyhood was credulous, and dreaded the vengeance of the
- stars,
- The world in its dotage is not wiser, fearing not the influence of small
- things:
- Planets govern not the soul, nor guide the destinies of man,
- But trifles, lighter than straws, are levers in the building up of
- character.
- A man hath the tiller in his hand, and may steer against the current,
- Or may glide down idly with the stream, till his vessel founder in the
- whirlpool.
-
- [Illustration:
- Helvetiorum Fidei ac Virtuti
- Die X Augusti II et III
- Septembris MDCCXCII]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF MEMORY.
-
- Where art thou, storehouse of the mind, garner of facts and fancies,--
- In what strange firmament are laid the beams of thine airy chambers?
- Or art thou that small cavern, the centre of the rolling brain,
- Where still one sandy morsel testifieth man's original?
- Or hast thou some grand globe, some common hall of intellect,
- Some spacious market-place for thought, where all do bring their wares,
- And gladly rescued from the littleness, the narrow closet of a self,
- The privileged soul hath large access, coming in the livery of learning?
- Live we as isolated worlds, perfect in substance and spirit,
- Each a sphere, with a special mind, prisoned in its shell of matter?
- Or rather, as converging radiations, parts of one majestic whole,
- Beams of the Sun, streams from the River, branches of the mighty Tree,
- Some bearing fruit, some bearing leaves, and some diseased and barren,--
- Some for the feast, some for the floor, and some--how many--for the fire?
- Memory may be but a power of coming to the treasury of Fact,
- A momentary self-desertion, an absence in spirit from the Now,
- An actual coursing hither and thither, by the mind, slipped from its
- leash,
- A life, as in the mystery of dreams, spent within the limits of a moment.
-
- A brutish man knoweth not this, neither can a fool comprehend it,
- But there be secrets of the Memory, deep, wondrous, and fearful.
- Were I at Petra, could I not declare, My soul hath been here before me?
- Am I strange to the columned halls, the calm dead grandeur of Palmyra?
- Know I not thy mount, O Carmel! Have I not voyaged on the Danube,
- Nor seen the glare of Arctic snows,--nor the black tents of the Tartar?
- Is it then a dream, that I remember the faces of them of old,
- While wandering in the grove with Plato, and listening to Zeno in the
- porch?
- Paul have I seen, and Pythagoras, and the Stagyrite hath spoken me
- friendly,
- And His meek eye looked also upon me, standing with Peter in the palace.
- Athens and Rome, Persepolis and Sparta, am I not a freeman of you all?
- And chiefly can my yearning heart forget thee, O Jerusalem?--
- For the strong magic of conception, mingled with the fumes of memory,
- Giveth me a life in all past time, yea, and addeth substance to the
- future.
- Be ye my judges, imaginative minds, full-fledged to soar into the sun,
- Whose grosser natural thoughts the chemistry of wisdom hath sublimed,
- Have ye not confessed to a feeling, a consciousness strange and vague,
- That ye have gone this way before, and walk again your daily life,
- Tracking an old routine, and on some foreign strand,
- Where bodily ye have never stood, finding your own footsteps?
- Hath not at times some recent friend looked out an old familiar,
- Some newest circumstance or place teemed as with ancient memories?
- A startling sudden flash lighteth up all for an instant,
- And then it is quenched, as in darkness, and leaveth the cold spirit
- trembling.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Memory is not wisdom; idiots can rote volumes:
- Yet, what is wisdom without memory? a babe that is strangled in its birth,
- The path of the swallow in the air, the path of the dolphin in the waters,
- A cask running out, a bottomless chasm: such is wisdom without memory.
- There be many wise, who cannot store their knowledge;
- Yet from themselves are they satisfied, for the fountain is within:
- There be many who store, but have no wisdom of their own,
- Lumbering their armoury with weapons their muscles cannot lift:
- There be many thieves and robbers, who glean and store unlawfully,
- Calling in to memory's help some cunningly devised Cabala:
- But to feed the mind with fatness, to fill thy granary with corn,
- Nor clog with chaff and straw the threshing-floor of reason,
- Reap the ideas, and house them well; but leave the words high stubble:
- Strive to store up what was thought, despising what was said.
- For the mind is a spirit, and drinketh in ideas, as flame melteth into
- flame;
- But for words it must pack them as on floors, cumbrous and perishable
- merchandize.
- To be pained for a minute, to fear for an hour, to hope for a week--how
- long and weary!
- But to remember fourscore years, is to look back upon a day.
- An avenue seemeth to lengthen in the eyes of the wayfaring man,
- But let him turn, those stationed elms crowd up within a yard;
- Pace the lamp-lit streets of some sleeping city,
- The multitude of cressets shall seem one, in the false picture of
- perspective;
- Even so, in sweet treachery, dealeth the aged with himself,
- He gazeth on the green hill-tops, while the marshes beneath are hidden;
- And the partial telescope of memory pierceth the blank between,
- To look with lingering love at the fair star of childhood.
- Life is as the current spark on the miner's wheel of flints;
- Whiles it spinneth there is light; stop it, all is darkness:
- Life is as a morsel of frankincense burning in the hall of Eternity;
- It is gone, but its odorous cloud curleth to the lofty roof:
- Life is as a lump of salt, melting in the temple-laver;
- It is gone,--yet its savour reacheth to the farthest atom:
- Even so, for evil or for good, is life the criterion of a man,
- For its memories of sanctity or sin pervade all the firmament of being.
- There is but the flitting moment, wherein to hope or to enjoy,
- But in the calendar of Memory, that moment is all time.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE DREAM OF AMBITION.
-
- I left the happy fields that smile around the village of Content,
- And sought with wayward feet the torrid desert of Ambition.
- Long time, parched and weary, I travelled that burning sand,
- And the hooded basilisk and adder were strewed in my way for palms;
- Black scorpions thronged me round, with sharp uplifted stings,
- Seeming to mock me as I ran; (then I guessed it was a dream,--
- But life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- So I toiled on, doubting in myself, up a steep gravel cliff,
- Whose yellow summit shot up far into the brazen sky;
- And quickly, I was wafted to the top, as upon unseen wings
- Carrying me upward like a leaf: (then I thought it was a dream,--
- Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- So I stood on the mountain, and behold! before me a giant pyramid,
- And I clomb with eager haste its high and difficult steps;
- For I longed, like another Belus, to mount up, yea, to heaven,
- Nor sought I rest until my feet had spurned the crest of earth.
-
- Then I sat on my granite throne under the burning sun,
- And the world lay smiling beneath me, but I was wrapt in flames;
- (And I hoped, in glimmering consciousness, that all this torture was a
- dream,--
- Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- And anon, as I sat scorching, the pyramid shuddered to its root,
- And I felt the quarried mass leap from its sand foundations:
- Awhile it tottered and tilted, as raised by invisible levers,--
- (And now my reason spake with me; I knew it was a dream:
- Yet I hushed that whisper into silence, for I hoped to learn of wisdom,
- By tracking up my truant thoughts, whereunto they might lead.)
- And suddenly, as rolling upon wheels, adown the cliff it rushed,
- And I thought, in my hot brain, of the Muscovites' icy slope;
- A thousand yards in a moment we ploughed the sandy seas,
- And crushed those happy fields, and that smiling village,
- And onward, as a living thing, still rushed my mighty throne,
- Thundering along, and pounding, as it went, the millions in my way:
- Before me all was life, and joy, and full-blown summer,
- Behind me death and woe, the desert and simoom.
- Then I wept and shrieked aloud, for pity and for fear;
- But might not stop, for, comet-like, flew on the maddened mass
- Over the crashing cities, and falling obelisks and towers,
- And columns, razed as by a scythe, and high domes, shivered as an
- egg-shell,
- And deep embattled ranks, and women, crowded in the streets,
- And children, kneeling as for mercy, and all I had ever loved,
- Yea, over all, mine awful throne rushed on with seeming instinct,--
- And over the crackling forests, and over the rugged beach,
- And on with a terrible hiss through the foaming wild Atlantic
- That roared around me as I sat, but could not quench my spirit,--
- Still on, through startled solitudes we shattered the pavement of the sea,
- Down, down, to that central vault, the bolted doors of hell;
- And these, with horrid shock, my huge throne battered in,
- And on to the deepest deep, where the fierce flames were hottest,
- Blazing tenfold as conquering furiously the seas that rushed in with me,--
- And there I stopped: and a fearful voice shouted in mine ear,
- "Behold the home of Discontent; behold the rest of Ambition!"
-
-
-OF SUBJECTION.
-
-[Illustration: "L"]
-
- Law hath dominion over all things, over universal mind and matter;
- For there are reciprocities of right, which no creature can gainsay.
- Unto each was there added by its Maker, in the perfect chain of being,
- Dependencies and sustentations, accidents, and qualities, and powers:
- And each must fly forward in the curve, unto which it was forced from the
- beginning;
- Each must attract and repel, or the monarchy of Order is no more.
- Laws are essential emanations from the self-poised character of God,
- And they radiate from that sun to the circling edges of creation.
- Verily, the mighty Lawgiver hath subjected Himself unto Laws,
- And God is the primal grand example of free unstrained obedience;
- His perfection is limited by right, and cannot trespass into wrong,
- Because He hath established Himself as the fountain of only good,
- And in thus much is bounded, that the evil hath He left unto another,
- And that dark other hath usurped the evil which Omnipotence laid down.
- Unto God there exist impossibilities; for the True One cannot lie,
- Nor the Wise One wander from the track which He hath determined for
- Himself:
- For His will was purposed from eternity, strong in the love of order;
- And that will altereth not, as the law of the Medes and Persians.
- God is the origin of order, and the first exemplar of His precept;
- For there is subordination of His Essence, self-guided unto holiness;
- And there is subordination of His Persons, in due procession of dignity;
- For the Son, as a son, is subject; and to Him doth the Spirit minister:
- But these things be mysteries to man, he cannot reach nor fathom them,
- And ever must he speak in paradox, when labouring to expound his God;
- For, behold, God is alone, mighty in unshackled freedom;
- And with those wondrous Persons abideth eternal equality.
-
- So then, start ye from the fountain, and follow the river of existence;
- For its current is bounded throughout by the banks of just subordination:
- Thrones, and dominions, and powers, Archangels, Cherubim, and Seraphim,
- Angels, and flaming ministers, and breathing chariots and harps.
- For there are degrees in heaven, and varied capabilities of bliss,
- And steps in the ladder of Intelligence, and ranks in approaches to
- Perfection:
- Doubtless, reverence is given, as their due, to the masters in wisdom;
- Doubtless, there are who serve; or a throne would have small glory.
- Regard now the universe of matter, the substance of visible creation,
- Which of old, with well-observing truth, the Greek hath surnamed, Order:
- Where is there an atom out of place? or a particle that yieldeth not
- obedience?
- Where is there a fragment that is free? or one thing the equal of
- another?--
- The chain is unbroken down to man, and beyond him the links are perfect:
- But he standeth solitary sin, a marvel of permitted chaos.
-
- And shall this seeming error in the scale of due subordination
- Be a spot of desert unreclaimed, in the midst of the vineyard of the Lord?
- Shall his presumptuous pride snap the safe tether of connexion,
- And his blind selfish folly refuse the burden of maintenance?
- O man, thou art a creature; boast not thyself above the law:
- Think not of thyself as free: thou art bound in the trammels of
- dependence.
- What is the sum of thy duty, but obedience to righteous rule;
- To the great commanding Oracle, uttered by delegated organs?
- Thou canst not render homage to abstract Omnipresent Power,
- Save through the concrete symbol of visible ordained authority.
- Those who obey not man, are oftenest found rebels against God;
- And seldom is the delegate so bold, as to order what he knoweth to be
- wrong.
- Yet mark me, proud gainsayer! I say not, obey unto sin;
- But, where the Principal is silent, take heed thou despise not the Deputy:
- And He that loveth order, will bless thee for thy faith,
- If thou recognize His sanction in the powers that fashion human laws.
-
- Thou, the vicegerent of the Lord, His high anointed image,
- Towards whom a good man's loyalty floweth from the heart of his religion,
- Thou, whose deep responsibilities are fathomed by a nation's prayers,
- Whom wise men fear for while they love, and envy thee nothing but thy
- virtues,
- From thy dizzy pinnacle of greatness, remember thou also art a subject,
- And the throne of thine earthly glory is itself but the footstool of thy
- God.
- The homage thy kingdoms yield thee, regard thou as yielded unto Him;
- And while girt with all the majesty of state, consider thee the Lord's
- chief servant:
- So shalt thou prosper, and be strong, grafted on the strength of Another;
- So shall thy royal heart be happy, in being humble.
- And thou shalt flourish as an oak, the monarch of thine island forests,
- Whose deep-dug roots are twisted around the stout ribs of the globe,
- That mocketh at the fury of the storm, and rejoiceth in summer sunshine,
- Glad in the smiles of heaven, and great in the stability of earth.
-
- A ruler hath not power for himself, neither is his pomp for his pride;
- But beneath the ermine of his office should he wear the rough hair-cloth
- of humility.
- Nevertheless, every way obey him, so thou break not a higher commandment;
- For Nero was an evil king, yet Paul prescribeth subjection.
- If the rulers of a nation be holy, the Lord hath blessed that nation;
- If they be lewd and impious, chastisement hath come upon that people:
- For the bitterest scourge of a land is ungodliness in them that govern it,
- And the guilt of the sons of Josiah drove Israel weeping into Babylon.
- Yet be thou resolute against them, if they change the mandates of thy God,
- If they touch the ark of His covenant, wherein all His mercies are
- enshrined:
- Be resolute, but not rebellious; lest thou be of the company of Korah:
- Set thy face against them as a flint: but be not numbered with Abiram.
- Daniel nobly disobeyed; but not from a spirit of sedition:
- And Azarias shouted from the furnace,--I will not bow down, O KING.
- If truth must be sacrificed to unity, then faithfulness were folly;
- If man must be obeyed before God, the martyrs have bled in vain:
- Yet none of that blessed army reviled the rulers of the land,
- They were loud and bold against the sin, but bent before the ensign of
- authority.
- Honesty, scorning compromise, walketh most suitably with Reverence;
- Otherwise righteous daring may show but as obstinate rebellion:
- Therefore, suffer not thy censure to lack the savour of courtesy,
- And remember, the mortal sinneth, but the staff of his power is from God.
-
- Man, thou hast a social spirit, and art deeply indebted to thy kind:
- Therefore claim not all thy rights; but yield, for thine own advantage.
- Society is a chain of obligations, and its links must support each other;
- The branch can not but wither, that is cut from the parent vine.
- Wouldst thou be a dweller in the woods, and cast away the cords that bind
- thee,
- Seeking, in thy bitterness or pride, to be exiled from thy fellows?
- Behold, the beasts shall hunt thee, weak, naked, houseless outcast,
- Disease and Death shall track thee out, as bloodhounds in the wilderness:
- Better to be vilest of the vile, in the hated company of men,
- Than to live a solitary wretch, dreading and wanting all things;
- Better to be chained to thy labour, in the dusky thoroughfares of life,
- Than to reign monarch of Sloth, in lonesome savage freedom.
-
- Whence then cometh the doctrine, that all should be equal and free?--
- It is the lie that crowded hell, when Seraphs flung away subjection.
- No man is his neighbour's equal, for no two minds are similar,
- And accidents, alike with qualities, have every shade but sameness:
- The lightest atom of difference shall destroy the nice balance of
- equality,
- And all things, from without and from within, make one man to differ from
- another.
- We are equal and free! was the watchword that spirited the legions of
- Satan;
- We are equal and free! is the double lie that entrappeth to him
- conscripts from earth:
- The messengers of that dark despot will pander to thy licence and thy
- pride,
- And draw thee from the crowd where thou art safe, to seize thee in the
- solitary desert.
- Woe unto him whose heart the syren-song of Liberty hath charmed;
- Woe unto him whose mind is bewitched by her treacherous beauty;
- In mad zeal flingeth he away the fetters of duty and restraint,
- And yieldeth up the holocaust of self to that fair Idol of the Damned.
- No man hath freedom in aught, save in that from which the wicked would be
- hindered,
- He is free toward God and good; but to all else a bondman.
-
- Thou art in a middle sphere, to render and receive honour;
- If thy king commandeth, obey; and stand not in the way with rebels:
- But if need be, lay thy hand upon thy sword, and fear not to smite a
- traitor,
- For the universe acquitteth thee with honour, fighting in defence of thy
- king.
- If a thief break thy dwelling, and thou take him, it were sin in thee to
- let him go;
- Yea, though he pleadeth to thy mercy, thou canst not spare him and be
- blameless:
- For his guilt is not only against thee, it is not thy moneys or thy
- merchandize,
- But he hath done damage to the Law, which duty constraineth thee to
- sanction.
- Feast not thine appetite of vengeance, remembering thou also art a man,
- But weep for the sad compulsion, in which the chain of Providence hath
- bound thee:
- Mercy is not thine to give; wilt thou steal another's privilege?
- Or send abroad, among thy neighbours, a felon whom impunity hath hardened?
- Remember the Roman father, strong in his stern integrity,
- And let not thy slothful self-indulgence make thee a conniver at the
- crime.
- Also, if the knife of the murderer be raised against thee or thine,
- And through good providence and courage, thou slay him that would have
- slain thee,
- Thou losest not a tittle of thy rectitude, having executed sudden justice;
- Still mayst thou walk among the blessed, though thy hands be red with
- blood.
- For thyself, thou art neither worse nor better; but thy fellows should
- count thee their creditor:
- Thou hast manfully protected the right, and the right is stronger for thy
- deed.
- Also, in the rescuing of innocence, fear not to smite the ravisher;
- What though he die at thy hand? for a good name is better than the life;
- And if Phineas had everlasting praise in the matter of Salu's son,
- With how much greater honour standeth such a rescuer acquitted?
- Uphold the laws of thy country, and fear not to fight in their defence:
- But first be convinced in thy mind; for herein the doubter sinneth.
- Above all things, look thou well around, if indeed stern duty forceth thee
- To draw the sword of justice, and stain it with the slaughter of thy
- fellows.
-
- She, that lieth in thy bosom, the tender wife of thy affections,
- Must obey thee, and be subject, that evil drop not on thy dwelling.
- The child that is used to constraint, feareth not more than he loveth;
- But give thy son his way, he will hate thee and scorn thee together.
- The master of a well-ordered home knoweth to be kind to his servants;
- Yet he exacteth reverence, and each one feareth at his post.
- There is nothing on earth so lowly, but duty giveth it importance;
- No station so degrading, but it is ennobled by obedience:
- Yea, break stones upon the highway, acknowledging the Lord in thy lot,
- Happy shalt thou be, and honourable, more than many children of the
- mighty.
- Thou that despisest the outward forms, beware thou lose not the inward
- spirit;
- For they are as words unto ideas, as symbols to things unseen.
- Keep then the form that is good; retain, and do reverence to example;
- And in all things observe subordination, for that is the whole duty of
- man.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A horse knoweth his rider, be he confident or timid,
- And the fierce spirit of Bucephalus stoopeth unto none but Alexander;
- The tigress, roused in the jungle by the prying spaniels of the fowler,
- Will quail at the eye of man, so he assert his dignity;
- Nay, the very ships, those giant swans breasting the mighty waters,
- Roll in the trough, or break the wave, to the pilot's fear or courage:
- How much more shall man, discerning the Fountain of authority,
- Bow to superior commands, and make his own obeyed.
- And yet, in travelling the world, hast thou not often known
- A gallant host led on to ruin by a feeble Xerxes?
- Hast thou not often seen the wanton luxury of indolence
- Sullying with its sleepy mist the tarnished crown of headship?
- Alas! for a thousand fathers, whose indulgent sloth
- Hath emptied the vial of confusion over a thousand homes:
- Alas! for the palaces and hovels, that might have been nurseries for
- heaven,
- By hot intestine broils blighted into schools for hell:
- None knoweth his place, yet all refuse to serve,
- None weareth the crown, yet all usurp the sceptre;
- And perchance some fiercer spirit, of natural nobility of mind,
- That needed but the kindness of constraint to have grown up great and
- good,
- Now--the rich harvest of his heart choked by unweeded tares,--
- All bold to dare and do, unchecked by wholesome fear,
- A scoffer about bigotry and priestcraft, a rebel against government and
- God,
- And standard-bearer of the turbulent, leading on the sons of Belial,
- Such an one is king of that small state, head tyrant of the thirty,
- Brandishing the torch of discord in his village home:
- And the timid Eli of the house, yon humble parish-priest,
- Liveth in shame and sorrow, fearing his own handywork;
- The mother, heart-stricken years agone, hath dropped into an early grave;
- The silent sisters long to leave a home they cannot love;
- The brothers, casting off restraint, follow their wayward wills;
- And the chance-guest, early departing, blesseth his kind stars,
- That on his humbler home hath brooded no domestic curse!
- Yet is that curse the fruit; wouldest thou the root of the evil?
- A kindness--most unkind, that hath always spared the rod;
- A weak and numbing indecision in the mind that should be master;
- A foolish love, pregnant of hate, that never frowned on sin;
- A moral cowardice of heart, that never dared command.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A kingdom is a nest of families, and a family a small kingdom;
- And the government of whole or part differeth in nothing but extent.
- The house, where the master ruleth, is strong in united subjection,
- And the only commandment with promise, being honoured, is a blessing to
- that house:
- But and if he yieldeth up the reins, it is weak in discordant anarchy,
- And the bonds of love and union melt away, as ropes of sand.
- The realm, that is ruled with vigour, lacketh neither peace nor glory,
- It dreadeth not foes from without, nor the sons of riot from within:
- But the meanness of temporizing fear robbeth a kingdom of its honour,
- And the weakness of indulgent sloth ravageth its bowels with discord.
- The best of human governments is the patriarchal rule;
- The authorized supremacy of one, the prescriptive subjection of many:
- Therefore, the children of the East have thriven from age to age,
- Obeying, even as a god, the royal father of Cathay:
- Therefore, to this our day, the Rechabite wanteth not a man,
- But they stand before the Lord, forsaking not the mandate of their sire:
- Therefore shall Magog among nations arise from his northern lair,
- And rend, in the fury of his power, the insurgent world beneath him:
- For the thunderbolt of concentrated strength can be hurled by the will of
- one,
- While the dissipated forces of many are harmless as summer lightning.
-
-
-OF REST.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- In the silent watches of the night, calm night that breedeth thoughts,
- When the task-weary mind disporteth in the careless play-hours of sleep,
- I dreamed; and behold, a valley, green and sunny and well watered,
- And thousands moving across it, thousands and tens of thousands:
- And though many seemed faint and toil-worn, and stumbled often, and fell,
- Yet moved they on unresting, as the ever-flowing cataract.
- Then I noted adders in the grass, and pitfalls under the flowers,
- And chasms yawned among the hills, and the ground was cracked and
- slippery:
- But Hope and her brother Fear suffered not a foot to linger;
- Bright phantoms of false joys beckoned alluringly forward,
- While yelling grisly shapes of dread came hunting on behind:
- And ceaselessly, like Lapland swarms, that miserable crowd sped along
- To the mist-involved banks of a dark and sullen river.
- There saw I, midway in the water, standing a giant fisher,
- And he held many lines in his hand, and they called him Iron Destiny.
- So I tracked those subtle chains, and each held one among the multitude:
- Then I understood what hindered, that they rested not in their path:
- For the fisher had sport in his fishing, and drew in his lines
- continually,
- And the new-born babe, and the aged man, were dragged into that dark
- river:
- And he pulled all those myriads along, and none might rest by the way,
- Till many, for sheer weariness, were eager to plunge into the drowning
- stream.
-
- So I knew that valley was Life, and it sloped to the waters of Death.
- But far on the thither side spread out a calm and silent shore,
- Where all was tranquil as a sleep, and the crowded strand was quiet:
- And I saw there many I had known, but their eyes glared chillingly upon
- me,
- As set in deepest slumber; and they pressed their fingers to their lips.
- Then I knew that shore was the dwelling of Rest, where spirits held their
- Sabbath,
- And it seemed they would have told me much, but they might not break that
- silence;
- For the law of their being was mystery: they glided on, hushing as they
- went.
- Yet further, under the sun, at the roots of purple mountains,
- I noted a blaze of glory, as the night-fires on northern skies;
- And I heard the hum of joy, as it were a sea of melody;
- And far as the eye could reach, were millions of happy creatures
- Basking in the golden light; and I knew that land was Heaven.
- Then the hill whereon I stood split asunder, and a crater yawned at my
- feet,
- Black and deep and dreadful, fenced round with ragged rocks;
- Dimly was the darkness lit up by spires of distant flame:
- And I saw below a moving mass of life, like reptiles bred in corruption,
- Where all was terrible unrest, shrieks and groans and thunder.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- So I woke, and I thought upon my dream; for it seemed of Wisdom's
- ministration.
- What man is he that findeth Rest, though he hunt for it year after year?
- As a child he had not yet been wearied, and cared not then to court it;
- As a youth he loved not to be quiet, for excitement spurred him into
- strife;
- As a man he tracketh rest in vain, toiling painfully to catch it,
- But still is he pulled from the pursuit, by the strong compulsion of his
- fate:
- So he hopeth to have peace in old age, as he cannot rest in manhood,
- But troubles thicken with his years, till Death hath dodged him to the
- grave.
- There remaineth a rest for the spirit on the shadowy side of life;
- But unto this world's pilgrim no rest for the sole of his foot.
- Ever, from stage to stage, he travelleth wearily forward,
- And though he pluck flowers by the way, he may not sleep among the
- flowers.
- Mind is the perpetual motion; for it is a running stream
- From an unfathomable source, the depth of the Divine Intelligence:
- And though it be stopped in its flowing, yet hath it a current within,
- The surface may sleep unruffled, but underneath are whirlpools of
- contention.
- Seekest thou rest, O mortal?--seek it no more on earth,
- For destiny will not cease from dragging thee through the rough
- wilderness of life;
- Seekest thou rest, O immortal?--hope not to find it in heaven,
- For sloth yieldeth not happiness: the bliss of a spirit is action.
- Rest dwelleth only on an island in the midst of the ocean of existence,
- Where the world-weary soul for a while may fold its tired wings,
- Until, after short sufficient slumber, it is quickened unto deathless
- energy,
- And speedeth in eagle flight to the Sun of unapproachable Perfection.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Humility]
-
-OF HUMILITY.
-
- Vice is grown aweary of her gawds, and donneth russet garments,
- Loving for change to walk as a nun, beneath a modest veil:
- For Pride hath noted how all admire the fairness of Humility,
- And to clutch the praise he coveteth, is content to be drest in
- hair-cloth;
- And wily Lust tempteth the young heart, that is proof against the bravery
- of harlots,
- With timid tears and retiring looks of an artful seeming maid;
- And indolent Apathy, sleepily ashamed of his dull lack-lustre face,
- Is glad of the livery of meekness, that charitable cloak and cowl;
- And Hatred hideth his demon frown beneath a gentle mask;
- And Slander, snake-like, creepeth in the dust, thinking to escape
- recrimination.
- But the world hath gained somewhat from its years, and is quick to
- penetrate disguises,
- Neither in all these is it deceived, but divideth the true from the false.
-
- Yet there is a meanness of spirit, that is fair in the eyes of most men,
- Yea, and seemeth fair unto itself, loving to be thought Humility.
- Its choler is not roused by insolence, neither do injuries disturb it:
- Honest indignation is strange unto its breast, and just reproof unto its
- lip.
- It shrinketh, looking fearfully on men, fawning at the feet of the great;
- The breath of calumny is sweet unto its ear, and it courteth the rod of
- persecution.
- But what! art thou not a man, deputed chief of the creation?
- Art thou not a soldier of the right, militant for God and good?
- Shall virtue and truth be degraded, because thou art too base to uphold
- them?
- Or Goliath be bolder in blaspheming for want of a David in the camp?
- I say not, avenge injuries; for the ministry of vengeance is not thine:
- But wherefore rebuke not a liar? wherefore do dishonour to thyself?
- Wherefore let the evil triumph, when the just and the right are on thy
- side?
- Such Humility is abject, it lacketh the life of sensibility,
- And that resignation is but mock, where the burden is not felt:
- Suspect thyself and thy meekness: thou art mean and indifferent to sin;
- And the heart that should grieve and forgive, is case-hardened and
- forgetteth.
-
- Humility mainly becometh the converse of man with his Maker,
- But oftentimes it seemeth out of place in the intercourse of man with man:
- Yea, it is the cringer to his equal, that is chiefly seen bold to his God,
- While the martyr, whom a world cannot brow-beat, is humble as a child
- before Him.
- Render unto all men their due, but remember thou also art a man,
- And cheat not thyself of the reverence which is owing to thy reasonable
- being.
- Be courteous, and listen, and learn: but teach and answer if thou canst:
- Serve thee of thy neighbour's wisdom, but be not enslaved as to a master.
- Where thou perceivest knowledge, bend the ear of attention and respect;
- But yield not further to the teaching, than as thy mind is warranted by
- reasons.
- Better is an obstinate disputant, that yieldeth inch by inch,
- Than the shallow traitor to himself, who surrendereth to half an argument.
-
- Modesty winneth good report, but scorn cometh close upon servility;
- Therefore, use meekness with discretion, casting not pearls before swine.
- For a fool will tread upon thy neck, if he seeth thee lying in the dust;
- And there be companies and seasons where a resolute bearing is but duty.
- If a good man discloseth his secret failings unto the view of the profane,
- What doeth he but harm unto his brother, confirming him in his sin?
- There is a concealment that is right, and an open-mouthed humility that
- erreth;
- There is a candour near akin to folly, and a meekness looking like shame.
- Masculine sentiments, vigorously holden, well become a man;
- But a weak mind hath a timorous grasp, and mistaketh it for tenderness of
- conscience.
- Many are despised for their folly, who put it to the account of their
- religion,
- And because men treat them with contempt, they look to their God for
- glory;
- But contempt shall still be their reward, who betray their Master unto
- ridicule,
- Reflecting on Him in themselves, meanness and ignorance and cowardice.
- A Christian hath a royal spirit, and need not be ashamed but unto One:
- Among just men walketh he softly, but the world should see him as a
- champion.
- His humbleness is far unlike the shame that covereth the profligate and
- weak,
- When the sober reproof of virtue hath touched their tingling ears;
- It is born of love and wisdom, and is worthy of all honour,
- And the sweet persuasion of its smile changeth contempt into reverence.
-
- A man of a haughty spirit is daily adding to his enemies:
- He standeth as the Arab in the desert, and the hands of all men are
- against him:
- A man of a base mind daily subtracteth from his friends,
- For he holdeth himself so cheaply, that others learn to despise him:
- But where the meekness of self-knowledge veileth the front of
- self-respect,
- There look thou for the man, whom none can know but they will honour.
- Humility is the softening shadow before the stature of Excellence,
- And lieth lowly on the ground, beloved and lovely as the violet:
- Humility is the fair-haired maid, that calleth Worth her brother,
- The gentle silent nurse, that fostereth infant virtues:
- Humility bringeth no excuse; she is welcome to God and to man:
- Her countenance is needful unto all, who would prosper in either world:
- And the mild light of her sweet face is mirrored in the eyes of her
- companions,
- And straightway stand they accepted, children of penitence and love.
- As when the blind man is nigh unto a rose, its sweetness is the herald of
- its beauty,
- So when thou savourest Humility, be sure thou art nigh unto merit.
- A gift rejoiceth the covetous, and praise fatteneth the vain,
- And the pride of man delighteth in the humble bearing of his fellow;
- But to the tender benevolence of the unthanked Almoner of good,
- Humility is queen among the graces, for she giveth Him occasion to bestow.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Pride]
-
-OF PRIDE.
-
- Deep is the sea, and deep is hell, but Pride mineth deeper;
- It is coiled as a poisonous worm about the foundations of the soul.
- If thou expose it in thy motives, and track it in thy springs of thought,
- Complacent in its own detection, it will seem indignant virtue;
- Smoothly will it gratulate thy skill, O subtle anatomist of self,
- And spurn at its very being, while it nestleth the deeper in thy bosom.
- Pride is a double traitor, and betrayeth itself to entrap thee,
- Making thee vain of thy self-knowledge; proud of thy discoveries of Pride.
- Fruitlessly thou strainest for humility, by darkly diving into self;
- Rather look away from innate evil, and gaze upon extraneous good:
- For in sounding the deep things of the heart, thou shalt learn to be vain
- of its capacities,
- But in viewing the heights above thee, thou shalt be taught thy
- littleness:
- Could an emmet pry into itself, it might marvel at its own anatomy,
- But let it look on eagles, to discern how mean a thing it is.
- And all things hang upon comparison; to the greater, great is small:
- Neither is there anything so vile, but somewhat yet is viler:
- On all sides is there an infinity: the culprit at the gallows hath his
- worse,
- And the virgin martyr at the stake need not look far for a better.
- Therefore see thou that thine aim reacheth unto higher than thyself:
- Beware that the standard of thy soul wave from the loftiest battlement:
- For Pride is a pestilent meteor, flitting on the marshes of corruption,
- That will lure thee forward to thy death, if thou seek to track it to its
- source:
- Pride is a gloomy bow, arching the infernal firmament,
- That will lead thee on, if thou wilt hunt it, even to the dwelling of
- despair.
- Deep calleth unto deep, and mountain overtoppeth mountain,
- And still shalt thou fathom to no end the depth and the height of Pride:
- For it is the vast ambition of the soul, warped to an idol object,
- And nothing but a Deity in Self can quench its insatiable thirst.
-
- Be aware of the smiling enemy, that openly sheatheth his weapon,
- But mingleth poison in secret with the sacred salt of hospitality:
- For Pride will lie dormant in thy heart, to snatch his secret opportunity,
- Watching, as a lion-ant, in the bottom of his toils.
- Stay not to parley with thy foe, for his tongue is more potent than his
- arm;
- But be wiser, fighting against Pride in the simple panoply of prayer.
- As one also of the poets hath said, let not the Proteus escape thee;
- For he will blaze forth as fire, and quench himself in likeness of water;
- He will fright thee as a roaring beast, or charm thee as a subtle reptile.
- Mark, amid all his transformations, the complicate deceitfulness of Pride,
- And the more he striveth to elude thee, bind him the closer in thy toils.
- Prayer is the net that snareth him; prayer is the fetter that holdeth him:
- Thou canst not nourish Pride, while waiting as an almsman on thy God,--
- Waiting in sincerity and trust, or Pride shall meet thee even there;
- Yea, from the palaces of Heaven, hath Pride cast down his millions.
- Root up the mandrake from thy heart, though it cost thee blood and groans,
- Or the cherished garden of thy graces will fade and perish utterly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Experience]
-
-OF EXPERIENCE.
-
- I knew that age was enriched with the hard-earned wages of knowledge,
- And I saw that hoary wisdom was bred in the school of disappointment:
- I noted that the wisest of youth, though provident and cautious of evil,
- Yet sailed along unsteadily, as lacking some ballast of the mind:
- And the cause seemed to lie in this, that while they considered around
- them,
- And warded off all dangers from without, they forgat their own weakness
- within.
- So steer they in self-confidence, until, from the multitude of perils,
- They begin to be wary of themselves, and learn the first lesson of
- Experience.
- I knew that in the morning of life, before its wearisome journey,
- The youthful soul doth expand, in the simple luxury of being;
- It hath not contracted its wishes, nor set a limit to its hopes;
- The wing of fancy is unclipt, and sin hath not seared the feelings:
- Each feature is stamped with immortality, for all its desires are
- infinite,
- And it seeketh an ocean of happiness, to fill the deep hollow within.
- But the old and the grave look on, pitying that generous youth,
- For they also have tasted long ago the bitterness of hope destroyed:
- They pity him, and are sad, remembering the days that are past,
- But they know he must taste for himself, or he will not give ear to their
- wisdom.
- For Experience hath another lesson, which a man will do well if he learn,
- By checking the flight of expectation, to cheat disappointment of its
- pain.
-
- Experience teacheth many things, and all men are his scholars:
- Yet is he a strange tutor, unteaching that which he hath taught.
- Youth is confident, manhood wary, and old age confident again:
- Youth is kind, manhood cold, and age returneth unto kindness.
- For youth suspecteth nought, till manhood, bitterly learned,
- Mistrusteth all, overleaping the mark; and age correcteth his excess.
- Suspicion is the scaffold unto faith, a temporary needful eyesore,
- By which the strong man's dwelling is slowly builded up behind;
- But soon as the top-stone hath been set to the well-proved goodly edifice,
- The scaffold is torn down, and timely trust taketh its long leave of
- suspicion.
-
- A thousand volumes in a thousand tongues enshrine the lessons of
- Experience,
- Yet a man shall read them all, and go forth none the wiser:
- For self-love lendeth him a glass, to colour all he conneth,
- Lest in the features of another he find his own complexion.
- And we secretly judge of ourselves as differing greatly from all men,
- And love to challenge causes to show how we can master their effects:
- Pride is pampered in expecting that we need not fear a common fate,
- Or wrong-headed prejudice exulteth, in combating old Experience;
- Or perchance caprice and discontent are the spurs that goad us into
- danger,
- Careless, and half in hope to find there an enemy to joust with.
- Private Experience is an unsafe teacher, for we rarely learn both sides,
- And from the gilt surface reckon not on steel beneath:
- The torrid sons of Guinea think scorn of icy seas,
- And the frostbitten Greenlander disbelieveth suns too hot.
- But thou, student of Wisdom, feed on the marrow of the matter:
- If thou wilt suspect, let it be thyself; if thou wilt expect, let it not
- be gladness.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Estimating Character]
-
-OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER.
-
- Rashly, nor ofttimes truly, doth man pass judgment on his brother;
- For he seeth not the springs of the heart, nor heareth the reasons of the
- mind.
- And the world is not wiser than of old, when justice was meted by the
- sword,
- When the spear avenged the wrong, and the lot decided the right,
- When the footsteps of blinded innocence were tracked by burning
- plough-shares,
- And the still condemning water delivered up the wizard to the stake:
- For we wait, like the sage of Salamis, to see what the end will be,
- Fixing the right or the wrong, by the issues of failure or success.
- Judge not of things by their events: neither of character by providence;
- And count not a man more evil, because he is more unfortunate:
- For the blessings of a better covenant lie not in the sunshine of
- prosperity,
- But pain and chastisement the rather show the wise Father's love.
-
- Behold that daughter of the world: she is full of gaiety and gladness;
- The diadem of rank is on her brow, uncounted wealth is in her coffers:
- She tricketh out her beauty like Jezebel, and is welcome in the courts of
- kings:
- She is queen of the fools of fashion, and ruleth the revels of luxury:
- And though she sitteth not as Tamar, nor standeth in the ways as Rahab,
- Yet in the secret of her chamber, she shrinketh not from dalliance and
- guilt.
- She careth not if there be a God, or a soul, or a time of retribution;
- Pleasure is the idol of her heart: she thirsteth for no purer heaven.
- And she laugheth with light good humour, and all men praise her
- gentleness;
- They are glad in her lovely smile, and the river of her bounty filleth
- them.
- So she prospered in the world: the worship and desire of thousands;
- And she died even as she had lived, careless and courteous and liberal.
- The grave swallowed up her pomp, the marble proclaimed her virtues,
- For men esteemed her excellent, and charities soundeth forth her praise:
- But elsewhere far other judgment setteth her--with infidels and harlots!
- She abused the trust of her splendour: and the wages of her sin shall be
- hereafter.
-
- Look again on this fair girl, the orphan of a village pastor
- Who is dead, and hath left her his all,--his blessing, and a name
- unstained.
- And friends, with busy zeal, that their purses be not taxed,
- Place the sad mourner in a home, poor substitute for that she hath lost.
- A stranger among strange faces she drinketh the wormwood of dependence;
- She is marked as a child of want: and the world hateth poverty.
- Prayer is not heard in that house; the day she hath loved to hallow
- Is noted but by deeper dissipation, the riot of luxury and gaming:
- And wantonness is in her master's eye, and she hath nowhere to flee to;
- She is cared for by none upon earth, and her God seemeth to forsake her.
- Then cometh, in fair show, the promise and the feint of affection,
- And her heart, long unused to kindness, remembereth her father, and
- loveth.
- And the villain hath wronged her trust, and mocked, and flung her from
- him,
- And men point at her and laugh; and women hate her as an outcast:
- But elsewhere, far other judgment seateth her--among the martyrs!
- And the Lord, who seemed to forsake, giveth double glory to the fallen.
-
- Once more, in the matter of wealth: if thou throw thine all on a chance,
- Men will come around thee, and wait, and watch the turning of the wheel:
- And if, in the lottery of life, thou hast drawn a splendid prize,
- What foresight hadst thou, and skill! yea, what enterprize and wisdom!
- But if it fall out against thee, and thou fail in thy perilous endeavour,
- Behold, the simple did sow, and hath reaped the right harvest of his
- folly:
- And the world will be gladly excused, nor will reach out a finger to help;
- For why should this speculative dullard be a whirlpool to all around him?
- Go to, let him sink by himself: we knew what the end of it would be:--
- For the man hath missed his mark, and his fellows look no further.
-
- Also, touching guilt and innocence: a man shall walk in his uprightness
- Year after year without reproach, in charity and honesty with all:
- But in one evil hour the enemy shall come in like a flood;
- Shall track him, and tempt him, and hem him,--till he knoweth not whither
- to fly.
- Perchance his famishing little ones shall scream in his ears for bread,
- And, maddened by that fierce cry, he rusheth as a thief upon the world;
- The world that hath left him to starve, itself wallowing in plenty,--
- The world, that denieth him his rights,--he daringly robbeth it of them.
- I say not, such an one is innocent; but, small is the measure of his guilt
- To that of his wealthy neighbour, who would not help him at his need;
- To that of the selfish epicure, who turned away with coldness from his
- tale;
- To that of unsuffering thousands, who look with complacence on his fall.
-
- Or perchance the continual dropping of the venomed words of spite,
- Insult and injury and scorn, have galled and pierced his heart;
- Yet, with all long-suffering and meekness, he forgiveth unto seventy
- times seven:
- Till, in some weaker moment, tempted beyond endurance,
- He striketh, more in anger than in hate; and, alas! for his heavy chance,
- He hath smitten unto instant death his spiteful life-long enemy!
- And none was by to see it; and all men knew of their contentions:
- Fierce voices shout for his blood, and rude hands hurry him to judgment.
- Then man's verdict cometh,--Murderer, with forethought malice;
- And his name is a note of execration; his guilt is too black for devils.
- But to the Righteous Judge, seemeth he the suffering victim;
- For his anger was not unlawful, but became him as a Christian and a man;
- And though his guilt was grievous when he struck that heavy bitter blow,
- Yet light is the sin of the smiter, and verily kicketh the beam,
- To the weight of that man's wickedness, whose slow relentless hatred
- Met him at every turn, with patient continuance in evil.
- Doubtless, eternal wrath shall be heaped upon that spiteful enemy.
-
- It is vain, it is vain, saith the preacher; there be none but the
- righteous and the wicked,
- Base rebels, and staunch allies, the true knight, and the traitor:
- And he beareth strong witness among men, There is no neutral ground,
- The broad highway and narrow path map out the whole domain;
- Sit here among the saints, these holy chosen few,
- Or grovel there a wretched condemned, to die among the million.
- And verily for ultimate results, there be but good and bad;
- Heaven hath no dusky twilight; hell is not gladdened with a dawn.
- Yet looking round among his fellows, who can pass righteous judgment,
- Such an one is holy and accepted, and such an one reprobate and doomed?
- There is so much of good among the worst, so much of evil in the best,
- Such seeming partialities in providence, so many things to lessen and
- expand,
- Yea, and with all man's boast, so little real freedom of his will,--
- That, to look a little lower than the surface, garb or dialect or fashion,
- Thou shalt feebly pronounce for a saint, and faintly condemn for a sinner.
- Over many a good heart and true, fluttereth the Great King's pennant;
- By many an iron hand, the pirate's black banner is unfurled:
- But there be many more besides, in the yacht and the trader and the
- fishing-boat,
- In the feathered war-canoe, and the quick mysterious gondola:
- And the army of that Great King hath no stated uniform;
- Of mingled characters and kinds goeth forth the countless host;
- There is the turbaned Damascene, with his tattooed Zealand brother,
- There the slim bather in the Ganges, with the sturdy Russian boor,
- The sluggish inmate of a Polar cave, with the fire-souled daughter of
- Brazil,
- The embruted slave from Cuba, and the Briton of gentle birth.
- For all are His inheritance, of all He taketh tithe:
- And the church, His mercy's ark, hath some of every sort.
- Who art thou, O man, that art fixing the limits of the fold?
- Wherefore settest thou stakes to spread the tent of heaven?
- Lay not the plummet to the line: religion hath no landmarks:
- No human keenness can discern the subtle shades of faith:
- In some it is as earliest dawn, the scarce diluted darkness;
- In some as dubious twilight, cold and grey and gloomy:
- In some the ebon east is streaked with flaming gold:
- In some the dayspring from on high breaketh in all its praise.
- And who hath determined the when, separating light from darkness?
- Who shall pluck from earliest dawn the promise of the day?
- Leave that care to the Husbandman, lest thou garner tares;
- Help thou the Shepherd in His seeking, but to separate be His:
- For I have often seen the noble erring spirit
- Wrecked on the shoals of passion, and numbered of the lost;
- Often the generous heart, lit by unhallowed fire,
- Counted a brand among the burning, and left uncared for in his sin:
- Yet I waited a little year, and the mercy thou hadst forgotten
- Hath purged that noble spirit, washing it in waters of repentance;
- That glowing generous heart, having burnt out all its dross,
- Is as a golden censer, ready for the aloes and cassia:
- While thou, hard-visaged man, unlovely in thy strictness,
- Who turned from him thy sympathies with self-complacent pride,
- How art thou shamed by him! his heart is a spring of love,
- While the dry well of thine affections is choked with secret mammon.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Sometimes at a glance thou judgest well; years could add little to thy
- knowledge:
- When charity gloweth on the cheek, or malice is lowering in the eye,
- When honesty's open brow, or the weasel-face of cunning is before thee,
- Or the loose lip of wantonness, or clear bright forehead of reflection.
- But often, by shrewd scrutiny, thou judgest to the good man's harm:
- For it may be his hour of trial, or he slumbereth at his post,
- Or he hath slain his foe, but not yet levelled the stronghold,
- Or barely recovered of the wounds, that fleshed him in his fray with
- passion.
- Also, of the worst, through prejudice, thou loosely shalt think well:
- For none is altogether evil, and thou mayst catch him at his prayers:
- There may be one small prize, though all beside be blanks;
- A silver thread of goodness in the black serge-cloth of crime.
-
- There is to whom all things are easy; his mind, as a master-key,
- Can open, with intuitive address, the treasuries of art and science:
- There is to whom all things are hard; but industry giveth him a crow-bar,
- To force, with groaning labour, the stubborn lock of learning:
- And often, when thou lookest on an eye, dim in native dulness,
- Little shalt thou wot of the wealth diligence hath gathered to its gaze;
- Often, the brow that should be bright with the dormant fire of genius,
- Within its ample halls, hath ignorance the tenant.
- Yet are not the sons of men cast as in moulds by the lot?
- The like in frame and feature have much alike in spirit;
- Such a shape hath such a soul, so that a deep discerner
- From his make will read the man, and err not far in judgment:
- Yea, and it holdeth in the converse, that growing similarity of mind
- Findeth or maketh for itself an apposite dwelling in the body:
- Accident may modify, circumstance may bevil, externals seem to change it,
- But still the primitive crystal is latent in its many variations:
- For the map of the face, and the picture of the eye, are traced by the
- pen of passion;
- And the mind fashioneth a tabernacle suitable for itself.
- A mean spirit boweth down the back, and the bowing fostereth meanness;
- A resolute purpose knitteth the knees, and the firm tread nourisheth
- decision;
- Love looketh softly from the eye, and kindleth love by looking;
- Hate furroweth the brow, and a man may frown till he hateth:
- For mind and body, spirit and matter, have reciprocities of power,
- And each keepeth up the strife; a man's works make or mar him.
-
- There be deeper things than these, lying in the twilight of truth;
- But few can discern them aright, from surrounding dimness of error.
- For perchance, if thou knewest the whole, and largely with comprehensive
- mind
- Couldst read the history of character, the chequered story of a life,
- And into the great account, which summeth a mortal's destiny,
- Wert to add the forces from without, dragging him this way and that,
- And the secret qualities within, grafted on the soul from the womb,
- And the might of other men's example, among whom his lot is cast,
- And the influence of want or wealth, of kindness or harsh ill-usage,
- Of ignorance he cannot help, and knowledge found for him by others,
- And first impressions, hard to be effaced, and leadings to right or to
- wrong,
- And inheritance of likeness from a father, and natural human frailty,
- And the habit of health or disease, and prejudices poured into his mind,
- And the myriad little matters none but Omniscience can know,
- And accidents that steer the thoughts, where none but Ubiquity can trace
- them;--
- If thou couldst compass all these, and the consequents flowing from them,
- And the scope to which they tend, and the necessary fitness of all things,
- Then shouldst thou see as He seeth, who judgeth all men equal,--
- Equal, touching innocence and guilt; and different alone in this,
- That one acknowledged his evil, and looketh to his God for mercy;
- Another boasteth of his good, and calleth on his God for justice;
- So He, that sendeth none away, is largely munificent to prayer,
- But, in the heart of presumption, sheatheth the sword of vengeance.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF HATRED AND ANGER.
-
- Blunted unto goodness is the heart which anger never stirreth,
- But that which hatred swelleth, is keen to carve out evil.
- Anger is a noble infirmity, the generous failing of the just,
- The one degree that riseth above zeal, asserting the prerogatives of
- virtue:
- But hatred is a slow continuing crime, a fire in the bad man's breast,
- A dull and hungry flame, for ever craving insatiate.
- Hatred would harm another; anger would indulge itself:
- Hatred is a simmering poison; anger, the opening of a valve:
- Hatred destroyeth as the upas-tree; anger smiteth as a staff:
- Hatred is the atmosphere of hell; but anger is known in heaven.
- Is there not a righteous wrath, an anger just and holy,
- When goodness is sitting in the dust, and wickedness enthroned on Babel?
- Doth pity condemn guilt?--is justice not a feeling but a law
- Appealing to the line and to the plummet, incognizant of moral sense?
- Thou that condemnest anger, small is thy sympathy with angels,
- Thou that hast accounted it for sin, cold is thy communion with heaven.
-
- Beware of the angry in his passion; but fear not to approach him
- afterward;
- For if thou acknowledge thine error, he himself will be sorry for his
- wrath:
- Beware of the hater in his coolness; for he meditateth evil against thee:
- Commending the resources of his mind calmly to work thy ruin.
- Deceit and treachery skulk with hatred, but an honest spirit flieth with
- anger:
- The one lieth secret, as a serpent; the other chaseth, as a leopard.
- Speedily be reconciled in love, and receive the returning offender,
- For wittingly prolonging Anger, thou tamperest unconsciously with Hatred.
- Patience is power in a man, nerving him to rein his spirit:
- Passion is as palsy to his arm, while it yelleth on the coursers to their
- speed:
- Patience keepeth counsel, and standeth in solid self-possession,
- But the weakness of sudden passion layeth bare the secrets of the soul.
- The sentiment of anger is not ill, when thou lookest on the impudence of
- vice,
- Or savourest the breath of calumny, or hast earned the hard wages of
- injustice;
- But see that thou curb it in expression, rendering the mildness of rebuke,
- So shall thou stand without reproach, mailed in all the dignity of virtue.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- I heard the man of sin reproaching the goodness of Jehovah,
- Wherefore, if He be Almighty Love, permitteth He misery and pain?
- I saw the child of hope vexed in the labyrinth of doubt,
- Wherefore, O holy One and just, is the horn of Thy foul foe so high
- exalted?
- And, alas! for this our groaning world, for that grief and guilt are here;
- Alas! for that Earth is the battle-field, where good must combat with
- evil:
- Angels look on and hold their breath, burning to mingle in the conflict,
- But the troops of the Captain of Salvation may be none but the soldiers
- of the cross:
- And that slender band must fight alone, and yet shall triumph gloriously,
- Enough shall they be for conquest, and the motto of their standard is,
- ENOUGH.
- Thou art sad, O denizen of earth, for pains and diseases and death,
- But remember, thy hand hath earned them; grudge not at the wages of thy
- doings:
- Thy guilt, and thy fathers' guilt, must bring many sorrows in their
- company,
- And if thou wilt drink sweet poison, doubtless it shall rot thee to the
- core.
- What art thou but the heritor of evil, with a right to nothing good?
- The respite of an interval of ease were a boon which Justice might deny
- thee:
- Therefore lay thy hand upon thy mouth, O man much to be forgiven,
- And wait, thou child of hope, for time shall teach thee all things.
-
- Yet hear, for my speech shall comfort thee: reverently, but with boldness,
- I would raise the sable curtain, that hideth the symmetry of Providence.
- Pain and sin are convicts, and toil in their fetters for good;
- The weapons of evil are turned against itself, fighting under better
- banners:
- The leech delighteth in stinging, and the wicked loveth to do harm,
- But the wise Physician of the Universe useth that ill tendency for health.
- Verily, from others' griefs are gendered sympathy and kindness;
- Patience, humility, and faith, spring not seldom from thine own:
- An enemy, humbled by his sorrows, cannot be far from thy forgiveness;
- A friend, who hath tasted of calamity, shall fan the dying incense of thy
- love:
- And for thyself, is it a small thing, so to learn thy frailty,
- That from an aching bone thou savest the whole body?
- The furnace of affliction may be fierce, but if it refineth thy soul,
- The good of one meek thought shall outweigh years of torment.
- Nevertheless, wretched man, if thy bad heart be hardened in the flame,
- Being earth-born, as of clay, and not of moulded wax,
- Judge not the hand that smiteth, as if thou wert visited in wrath:
- Reproach thyself, for He is Justice; repent thee, for He is Mercy.
-
- Cease, fond caviller at wisdom, to be satisfied that everything is wrong:
- Be sure there is good necessity, even for the flourishing of evil.
- Would the eye delight in perpetual noon? or the ear in unqualified
- harmonics?
- Hath winter's frost no welcome, contrasting sturdily with summer?
- Couldst thou discern benevolence, if there were no sorrows to be soothed?
- Or discover the resources of contrivance, if nothing stood opposed to the
- means?
- What were power without an enemy? or mercy without an object?
- Or truth, where the false were impossible? or love, where love were a
- debt?
- The characters of God were but idle, if all things around Him were
- perfection,
- And virtues might slumber on like death, if they lacked the opportunities
- of evil.
- There is One all-perfect, and but one; man dare not reason of His essence:
- But there must be deficiencies in heaven, to leave room for progression
- in bliss:
- A realm of unqualified BEST were a stagnant pool of being,
- And the circle of absolute perfection, the abstract cipher of indolence.
- Sin is an awful shadow, but it addeth new glories to the light;
- Sin is a black foil, but it setteth off the jewelry of heaven:
- Sin is the traitor that hath dragged the majesty of mercy into action;
- Sin is the whelming argument, to justify the attribute of vengeance.
- It is a deep dark thought, and needeth to be diligently studied,
- But perchance evil was essential, that God should be seen of His
- creatures:
- For where perfection is not, there lacketh possible good,
- And the absence of better that might be, taketh from the praise of it is
- well:
- And creatures must be finite, and finite cannot be perfect:
- Therefore, though in small degree, creation involveth evil,
- He chargeth His angels with folly, and the heavens are not clean in His
- sight:
- For every existence in the universe hath either imperfection or Godhead:
- And the light that blazeth but in One, must be softened with shadow for
- the many.
- There is then good in evil; or none could have known his Maker;
- No spiritual intellect or essence could have gazed on His high
- perfections,
- No angel harps could have tuned the wonders of His wisdom,
- No ransomed souls have praised the glories of His mercy,
- No howling fiends have shown the terrors of His justice,
- But God would have dwelt alone, in the fearful solitude of holiness.
-
- Nevertheless, O sinner, harden not thine heart in evil;
- Nor plume thee in imaginary triumph, because thou art not valueless as
- vile;
- Because thy dark abominations add lustre to the clarity of Light;
- Because a wonder-working alchemy draineth elixir out of poisons;
- Because the same fiery volcano that scorcheth and ravageth a continent,
- Hath in the broad blue bay cast up some petty island;
- Because to the full demonstration of the qualities and accidents of good
- The swarthy legions of the Devil have toiled as unwitting pioneers.
- For sin is still sin; so hateful Love doth hate it;
- A blot on the glory of creation, which Justice must wipe out.
- Sin is a loathsome leprosy, fretting the white robe of innocence;
- A rottenness, eating out the heart of the royal cedars of Lebanon;
- A pestilential blast, the terror of that holy pilgrimage;
- A rent in the sacred veil, whereby God left His temple.
- Therefore, consider thyself, thou that dost not sorrow for thy guilt:
- Fear evil, or face its Enemy: dread sin, or dare Justice.
-
- Yea, saith the Spirit: and their works do follow them;
- Habits, and thoughts, and deeds, are shadows and satellites of self.
- What! shall the claimant to a throne stand forward with a rabble rout,--
- Meanness, impiety, and lust; riot and indolence and vanity?
- Nay, man! the train wherewith thou comest attend whither thou shalt go:
- A throne for a king's son, but an inner dungeon for the felon.
- For a man's works do follow him: bodily, standing in the judgment,
- Behold the false accuser, behold the slandered saint;
- The slave, and his bloody driver; the poor, and his generous friend;
- The simple dupe, and the crafty knave: the murderer, and--his victim!
- Yet all are in many characters; the best stand guilty at the bar;
- And he that seemed the worst may have most of real excuse.
- The talents unto which a man is born, be they few or many,
- Are dropped into the balance of account, working unlooked-for changes;
- And perchance the convict from the galleys may stand above the hermit in
- his cell,
- For that, the obstacles in one outweigh the propensions in the other.
- There be, who have made themselves friends, yea, by unrighteous mammon,--
- Friends, ready waiting as an escort to those everlasting habitations;
- Embodied in living witnesses, thronging to meet them in a cloud,
- Charity, meekness and truth, zeal, sincerity and patience,
- There be, who have made themselves foes, yea, by honest gain,
- Foes, whose plaint must have its answer, before the bright portal is
- unbarred:
- Pride, and selfishness, and sloth, apathy, wrath and falsehood,
- Bind to their everlasting toil many that must weary in the fires.
- Love hath a power and a longing to save the gathered world,
- And rescue universal man from the hunting hell-hounds of his doings:
- Yet few, here one and there one, scanty as the gleaning after harvest,
- Are glad of the robes of praise which Mercy would fling around the naked;
- But wrapping closer to their skin the poisoned tunic of their works,
- They stand in self-dependence, to perish in abandonment of God.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF PRAYER.
-
- A wicked man scorneth prayer, in the shallow sophistry of reason,
- He derideth the silly hope that God can be moved by supplication:--
- Shall the Unchangeable be changed, or waver in His purpose?
- Can the weakness of pity affect Him? Should He turn at the bidding of a
- man?
- Methought He ruled all things, and ye called His decrees immutable,
- But if thus He listeneth to words, wherein is the firmness of His will?--
- So I heard the speech of the wicked, and, lo, it was smoother than oil;
- But I knew that his reasonings were false, for the promise of the
- Scripture is true:
- Yet was my soul in darkness, for his words were too hard for me;
- Till I turned to my God in prayer: for I know He heareth always.
- Then I looked abroad on the earth, and, behold, the Lord was in all
- things;
- Yet saw I not His hand in aught, but perceived that He worketh by means;
- Yea, and the power of the mean proveth the wisdom that ordained it,
- Yea, and no act is useless, to the hurling of a stone through the air.
- So I turned my thoughts to supplication, and beheld the mercies of
- Jehovah,
- And I saw sound argument was still the faithful friend of godliness;
- For as the rock of the affections is the solid approval of reason,
- Even so the temple of Religion is founded on the basis of Philosophy.
-
- Scorner, thy thoughts are weak, they reach not the summit of the matter;
- Go to, for the mouth of a child might show thee the mystery of prayer:
- Verily, there is no change in the counsels of the Mighty Ruler:
- Verily, His purpose is strong, and rooted in the depths of necessity:
- But who hath shown thee His purpose, who hath made known to thee His will?
- When, O gainsayer! hast thou been schooled in the secrets of wisdom?
- Fate is a creature of God, and all things move in their orbits,
- And that which shall surely happen is known unto Him from eternity;
- But as, in the field of nature, He useth the sinews of the ox,
- And commandeth diligence and toil, Himself giving the increase;
- So, in the kingdom of His grace, granteth He omnipotence to prayer,
- For He knoweth what thou wilt ask, and what thou wilt ask aright.
- No man can pray in faith, whose prayer is not grounded on a promise:
- Yet a good man commendeth all things to the righteous wisdom of his God:
- For those, who pray in faith, trust the immutable Jehovah,
- And they, who ask blessings unpromised, lean on uncovenanted mercy.
-
- Man, regard thy prayers as a purpose of love to thy soul;
- Esteem the providence that led to them as an index of God's good will;
- So shalt thou pray aright, and thy words shall meet with acceptance.
- Also, in pleading for others, be thankful for the fulness of thy prayer:
- For if thou art ready to ask, the Lord is more ready to bestow.
- The salt preserveth the sea, and the saints uphold the earth;
- Their prayers are the thousand pillars that prop the canopy of nature.
- Verily, an hour without prayer, from some terrestrial mind,
- Were a curse in the calendar of time, a spot of the blackness of darkness.
- Perchance the terrible day, when the world must rock into ruins,
- Will be one unwhitened by prayer,--shall He find faith on the earth?
- For there is an economy of mercy, as of wisdom, and power, and means;
- Neither is one blessing granted, unbesought from the treasury of good:
- And the charitable heart of the Being, to depend upon whom is happiness,
- Never withholdeth a bounty, so long as His subject prayeth;
- Yea, ask what thou wilt, to the second throne in heaven,
- It is thine, for whom it was appointed; there is no limit unto prayer:
- But and if thou cease to ask, tremble, thou self-suspended creature,
- For thy strength is cut off as was Samson's: and the hour of thy doom is
- come.
-
- Frail art thou, O man, as a bubble on the breaker,
- Weak and governed by externals, like a poor bird caught in the storm;
- Yet thy momentary breath can still the raging waters,
- Thy hand can touch a lever that may move the world.
- O Merciful, we strike eternal covenant with thee,
- For man may take for his ally the King who ruleth kings:
- How strong, yet how most weak, in utter poverty how rich,
- What possible omnipotence to good is dormant in a man!
- Behold that fragile form of delicate transparent beauty,
- Whose light-blue eye and hectic cheek are lit by the bale-fires of
- decline:
- All droopingly she lieth, as a dew-laden lily,
- Her flaxen tresses, rashly luxuriant, dank with unhealthy moisture;
- Hath not thy heart said of her, Alas! poor child of weakness?
- Thou hast erred; Goliah of Gath stood not in half her strength:
- Terribly she fighteth in the van as the virgin daughter of Orleans,
- She beareth the banner of Heaven, her onset is the rushing cataract,
- Seraphim rally at her side, and the captain of that host is God,
- And the serried ranks of evil are routed by the lightning of her eye;
- She is the King's remembrancer, and steward of many blessings,
- Holding the buckler of security over her unthankful land:
- For that weak fluttering heart is strong in faith assured,
- Dependence is her might, and behold--she prayeth.
-
- Angels are round the good man, to catch the incense of his prayers,
- And they fly to minister kindness to those for whom he pleadeth;
- For the altar of his heart is lighted, and burneth before God continually,
- And he breatheth, conscious of his joy, the native atmosphere of heaven:
- Yea, though poor, and contemned, and ignorant of this world's wisdom,
- Ill can his fellows spare him, though they know not of his value.
- Thousands bewail a hero, and a nation mourneth for its king,
- But the whole universe lamenteth the loss of a man of prayer.
- Verily, were it not for One, who sitteth on His rightful throne,
- Crowned with a rainbow of emerald, the green memorial of earth,--
- For One, a mediating man, that hath clad His Godhead with mortality,
- And offereth prayer without ceasing, the royal priest of Nature,
- Matter and life and mind had sunk into dark annihilation,
- And the lightning frown of Justice withered the world into nothing.
-
- Thus, O worshipper of reason, thou hast heard the sum of the matter:
- And woe to his hairy scalp that restraineth prayer before God.
- Prayer is a creature's strength, his very breath and being;
- Prayer is the golden key that can open the wicket of Mercy:
- Prayer is the magic sound that saith to Fate, So be it;
- Prayer is the slender nerve that moveth the muscles of Omnipotence.
- Wherefore, pray, O creature, for many and great are thy wants;
- Thy mind, thy conscience, and thy being, thy rights commend thee unto
- prayer,
- The cure of all cares, the grand panacea for all pains,
- Doubt's destroyer, ruin's remedy, the antidote to all anxieties.
-
- So then, God is true, and yet He hath not changed:
- It is He that sendeth the petition, to answer it according to His will.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE LORD'S PRAYER.
-
- Inquirest thou, O man, wherewithal may I come unto the Lord?
- And with what wonder-working sounds may I move the majesty of Heaven?
- There is a model to thy hand; upon that do thou frame thy supplication;
- Wisdom hath measured its words; and redemption urgeth thee to use them.
- Call thy God thy Father, and yet not thine alone,
- For thou art but one of many, thy brotherhood is with all:
- Remember His high estate, that He dwelleth King of Heaven;
- So shall thy thoughts be humbled, nor love be unmixed with reverence:
- Be thy first petition unselfish, the honour of Him who made thee,
- And that in the depths of thy heart His memory be shrined in holiness:
- Pray for that blessed time, when good shall triumph over evil,
- And one universal temple echo the perfections of Jehovah:
- Bend thou to His good will, and subserve His holy purposes,
- Till in thee, and those around thee, grow a little heaven upon earth:
- Humbly, as a grateful almsman, beg thy bread of God,--
- Bread for thy triple estate, for thou hast a trinity of nature:
- Humility smootheth the way, and gratitude softeneth the heart,
- Be then thy prayer for pardon mingled with the tear of penitence;
- Yea, and while, all unworthy, thou leanest on the hand that should smite,
- Thou canst not from thy fellows withhold thy less forgiveness.
- To thy Father thy weaknesses are known, and thou hast not hid thy sin,
- Therefore ask Him, in all trust, to lead thee from the dangers of
- temptation;
- While the last petition of the soul, that breatheth on the confines of
- prayer,
- Is deliverance from sin and the evil one, the miseries of earth and hell.
- And wherefore, child of hope, should the rock of thy confidence be sure?
- Thou knowest that God heareth and promiseth an answer of peace;
- Thou knowest that He is King, and none can stay His hand;
- Thou knowest His power to be boundless, for there is none other:
- And to Him thou givest glory, as a creature of His workmanship and favour,
- For the never-ending term of thy saved and bright existence.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Discretion]
-
-OF DISCRETION.
-
- For what then was I born?--to fill the circling year
- With daily toil for daily bread, with sordid pains and pleasures?--
- To walk this chequered world, alternate light and darkness,
- The day-dreams of deep thought followed by the night-dreams of fancy?--
- To be one in a full procession?--to dig my kindred clay?--
- To decorate the gallery of art?--to clear a few acres of forest?
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- Is then that noble end to feed this mind with knowledge,
- To mix for mine own thirst the sparkling wine of wisdom,
- To light with many lamps the caverns of my heart,
- To reap, in the furrows of my brain, good harvest of right reasons?--
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- Is it to grow stronger in self-government, to check the chafing will,
- To curb with tightening rein the mettled steeds of passion,
- To welcome with calm heart, far in the voiceless desert,
- The gracious visitings of heaven that bless my single self?--
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- To aim at thine own happiness, is an end idolatrous and evil;
- In earth, yea in heaven, if thou seek it for itself, seeking thou shalt
- not find.
- Happiness is a road-side flower, growing on the highway of Usefulness;
- Plucked, it shall wither in thy hand; passed by, it is fragrance to thy
- spirit:
- Love not thine own soul, regard not thine own weal,
- Trample the thyme beneath thy feet; be useful, and be happy!
-
- Thus unto fair conclusions argueth generous youth,
- And quickly he starteth on his course, knight-errant to do good.
- His sword is edged with arguments, his vizor terrible with censures;
- He goeth full mailed in faith, and zeal is flaming at his heart.
- Yet one thing he lacketh, the Mentor of the mind,
- The quiet whisper of Discretion--Thy time is not yet come.
- For he smiteth an oppressor; and vengeance for that smiting
- Is dealt in doubled stripes on the faint body of the victim:
- He is glad to give and to distribute; and clamorous pauperism feasteth,
- While honest labour, pining, hideth his sharp ribs:
- He challengeth to a fair field that subtle giant Infidelity,
- And, worsted in the unequal fight, strengtheneth the hands of error;
- He hasteth to teach and preach, as the war-horse rusheth to the battle,
- And to pave a way for truth, would break up the Apennines of prejudice:
- He wearieth by stale proofs, where none looked for a reason,
- And to the listening ear will urge the false argument of feeling.
- So hath it often been, that, judging by results,
- The hottest friends of truth have done her deadliest wrong.
- Alas! for there are enemies without, glad enough to parley with a traitor,
- And a zealot will let down the drawbridge, to prove his own prowess:
- Yea, from within will he break away a breach in the citadel of truth,
- That he may fill the gap, for fame, with his own weak body.
-
- Zeal without judgment is an evil, though it be zeal unto good;
- Touch not the ark with unclean hand, yea, though it seem to totter.
- There are evil who work good, and there are good who work evil,
- And foolish backers of wisdom have brought on her many reproaches.
- Truth hath more than enough to combat in the minds of all men,
- For the mist of sense is a thick veil, and sin hath warped their wills;
- Yet doth an officious helper awkwardly prevent her victory,--
- These thy wounded hands were smitten in the house of friends:--
- To point out a meaning in her words, he will blot those words with his
- finger;
- And winnow chaff into the eyes, before he hath wheat to show:
- He will heap sturdy logs on a faint expiring fire,
- And with a room in flames, will cast the casement open;
- By a shoulder to the wheel down hill harasseth the labouring beast,
- And where obstruction were needed, will harm by an ill-judged
- thrusting-on.
-
- A vessel foundereth at sea, if a storm hath unshipped the rudder;
- And a mind with much sail shall require heavy ballast.
- Take a lever by the middle, thou shalt seem to prove it powerless,
- Argue for truth indiscreetly, thou shalt toil for falsehood.
- There is plenty of room for a peaceable man in the most thronged assembly;
- But a quarrelsome spirit is straitened in the open field:
- Many a teacher, lacking judgment, hindereth his own lessons;
- And the savoury mess of pottage is spoiled by a bitter herb:
- The garment woven of a piece is rashly torn by schism,
- Because its unwise claimants will not cast lots for its possession.
-
- Discretion guide thee on thy way, noble-minded youth,
- Help thee to humour infirmities, to wink at innocent errors,
- To take small count of forms, to bear with prejudice and fancy:
- Discretion guard thine asking, discretion aid thine answer,
- Teach thee that well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech,
- Whisper thee, thou art Weakness, though thy cause be Strength,
- And tell thee, the key-stone of an arch can be loosened with least labour
- from within.
- The snows of Hecla lie around its troubled smoking Geysers;
- Let the cool streams of prudence temper the hot spring of zeal:
- So shalt thou gain thine honourable end, nor lose the midway prize:
- So shall thy life be useful, and thy young heart happy.
-
-
-OF TRIFLES.
-
-[Illustration: "Y"]
-
- Yet once more, saith the fool, yet once, and is it not a little one?
- Spare me this folly yet an hour, for what is one among so many?
- And he blindeth his conscience with lies, and stupifieth his heart with
- doubts;--
- Whom shall I harm in this matter? and a little ill breedeth much good;
- My thoughts, are they not mine own? and they leave no mark behind them;
- And if God so pardoneth crime, how should these petty sins affect Him?--
- So he transgresseth yet again, and falleth by little and little,
- Till the ground crumble beneath him, and he sinketh in the gulf
- despairing.
- For there is nothing in the earth so small that it may not produce great
- things,
- And no swerving from a right line, that may not lead eternally astray.
- A landmark tree was once a seed; and the dust in the balance maketh a
- difference;
- And the cairn is heaped high by each one flinging a pebble:
- The dangerous bar in the harbour's mouth is only grains of sand;
- And the shoal that hath wrecked a navy is the work of a colony of worms:
- Yea, and a despicable gnat may madden the mighty elephant;
- And the living rock is worn by the diligent flow of the brook.
- Little art thou, O man, and in trifles thou contendest with thine equals,
- For atoms must crowd upon atoms, ere crime groweth to be a giant.
- What, is thy servant a dog?--not yet wilt thou grasp the dagger,
- Not yet wilt thou laugh with the scoffers, not yet betray the innocent;
- But, if thou nourish in thy heart the reveries of injury or passion,
- And travel in mental heat the mazy labyrinths of guilt,
- And then conceive it possible, and then reflect on it as done,
- And use, by little and little, thyself to regard thyself a villain,
- Not long will crime be absent from the voice that doth invoke him to thy
- heart,
- And bitterly wilt thou grieve, that the buds have ripened into poison.
-
- A spark is a molecule of matter, yet may it kindle the world:
- Vast is the mighty ocean, but drops have made it vast.
- Despise not thou a small thing, either for evil or for good;
- For a look may work thy ruin, or a word create thy wealth:
- The walking this way or that, the casual stopping or hastening,
- Hath saved life, and destroyed it, hath cast down and built up fortunes.
- Commit thy trifles unto God, for to Him is nothing trivial;
- And it is but the littleness of man that seeth no greatness in a trifle.
- All things are infinite in parts, and the moral is as the material,
- Neither is anything vast, but it is compacted of atoms.
- Thou art wise, and shalt find comfort, if thou study thy pleasure in
- trifles,
- For slender joys, often repeated, fall as sunshine on the heart:
- Thou art wise, if thou beat off petty troubles, nor suffer their stinging
- to fret thee;
- Thrust not thine hand among the thorns, but with a leathern glove.
- Regard nothing lightly which the wisdom of Providence hath ordered;
- And therefore, consider all things that happen unto thee or unto others.
- The warrior that stood against a host, may be pierced unto death by a
- needle;
- And the saint that feareth not the fire, may perish the victim of a
- thought:
- A mote in the gunner's eye is as bad as a spike in the gun;
- And the cable of a furlong is lost through an ill-wrought inch.
- The streams of small pleasures fill the lake of happiness:
- And the deepest wretchedness of life is continuance of petty pains.
- A fool observeth nothing, and seemeth wise unto himself;
- A wise man heedeth all things, and in his own eyes is a fool:
- He that wondereth at nothing hath no capabilities of bliss:
- But he that scrutinizeth trifles hath a store of pleasure to his hand.
- If pestilence stalk through the land, ye say, This is God's doing;
- Is it not also His doing when an aphis creepeth on a rosebud?
- If an avalanche roll from its Alp, ye tremble at the will of Providence:
- Is not that will concerned when the sear leaves fall from the poplar?--
- A thing is great or little only to a mortal's thinking,
- But abstracted from the body, all things are alike important:
- The Ancient of Days noteth in His book the idle converse of a creature,
- And happy and wise is the man to whose thought existeth not a trifle.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF RECREATION.
-
- To join advantage to amusement, to gather profit with pleasure,
- Is the wise man's necessary aim, when he lieth in the shade of recreation.
- For he cannot fling aside his mind, nor bar up the flood-gates of his
- wisdom;
- Yea, though he strain after folly, his mental monitor shall check him:
- For knowledge and ignorance alike have laws essential to their being,--
- The sage studieth amusements, and the simple laugheth in his studies.
- Few, but full of understanding, are the books of the library of God,
- And fitting for all seasons are the gain and the gladness they bestow:
- The volume of mystery and Grace, for the hour of deep communings,
- When the soul considereth intensely the startling marvel of itself:
- The book of destiny and Providence, for the time of sober study,
- When the mind gleaneth wisdom from the olive grove of history:
- And the cheerful pages of Nature, to gladden the pleasant holiday,
- When the task of duty is complete, and the heart swelleth high with
- satisfaction.
- The soul may not safely dwell too long with the deep things of futurity;
- The mind may not always be bent back, like the Parthian, straining at the
- past;
- And, if thou art wearied with wrestling on the broad arena of science,
- Leave awhile thy friendly foe, half vanquished in the dust,
- Refresh thy jaded limbs, return with vigour to the strife,--
- Thou shalt easier find thyself his master, for the vacant interval of
- leisure.
-
- That which may profit and amuse is gathered from the volume of creation,
- For every chapter therein teemeth with the playfulness of wisdom.
- The elements of all things are the same, though nature hath mixed them
- with a difference,
- And Learning delighteth to discover the affinity of seeming opposites:
- So out of great things and small draweth he the secrets of the universe,
- And argueth the cycles of the stars, from a pebble flung by a child.
- It is pleasant to note all plants, from the rush to the spreading cedar,
- From the giant king of palms, to the lichen that staineth its stem;
- To watch the workings of instinct, that grosser reason of brutes,--
- The river horse browsing in the jungle, the plover screaming on the moor,
- The cayman basking on a mud-bank, and the walrus anchored to an iceberg,
- The dog at his master's feet, and the milch-kine lowing in the meadow;
- To trace the consummate skill that hath modelled the anatomy of insects,
- Small fowls that sun their wings on the petals of wild flowers;
- To learn a use in the beetle, and more than a beauty in the butterfly;
- To recognize affections in a moth, and look with admiration on a spider.
- It is glorious to gaze upon the firmament, and see from far the mansions
- of the blest,
- Each distant shining world, a kingdom for one of the redeemed;
- To read the antique history of earth, stamped upon those medals in the
- rocks
- Which Design hath rescued from decay, to tell of the green infancy of
- time;
- To gather from the unconsidered shingle mottled starlike agates,
- Full of unstoried flowers in the bubbling bloom-chalcedony:
- Or gay and curious shells, fretted with microscopic carving,
- Corallines, and fresh seaweeds, spreading forth their delicate branches.
- It is an admirable lore, to learn the cause in the change,
- To study the chemistry of Nature, her grand, but simple secrets,
- To search out all her wonders, to track the resources of her skill,
- To note her kind compensations, her unobtrusive excellence.
- In all it is wise happiness to see the well-ordained laws of Jehovah,
- The harmony that filleth all His mind, the justice that tempereth His
- bounty,
- The wonderful all-prevalent analogy that testifieth one Creator,
- The broad arrow of the Great King, carved on all the stores of His
- arsenal.
- But beware, O worshipper of God, thou forget not Him in His dealings,
- Though the bright emanations of His power hide Him in created glory;
- For if, on the sea of knowledge, thou regardest not the pole-star of
- religion,
- Thy bark will miss her port, and run upon the sand-bar of folly:
- And if, enamoured of the means, thou considerest not the scope to which
- they tend,
- Wherein art thou wiser than the child, that is pleased with toys and
- baubles?
- Verily, a trifling scholar, thou heedest but the letter of instruction:
- For, as motive is spirit unto action, as memory endeareth place,
- As the sun doth fertilize the earth, as affection quickeneth the heart,
- So is the remembrance of God in the varied wonders of creation.
-
- Man hath found out inventions, to cheat him of the weariness of life,
- To help him to forget realities, and hide the misery of guilt.
- For love of praise, and hope of gain, for passion and delusive happiness,
- He joineth the circle of folly, and heapeth on the fire of excitement;
- Oftentimes sadly out of heart at the tiresome insipidity of pleasure,
- Oftentimes labouring in vain, convinced of the palpable deceit:
- Yet a man speaketh to his brother, in the voice of glad congratulation,
- And thinketh others happy, though he himself be wretched:
- And hand joineth hand to help in the toil of amusement,
- While the secret aching heart is vacant of all but disappointment.
- The cheapest pleasures are the best; and nothing is more costly than sin;
- Yet we mortgage futurity, counting it but little loss:
- Neither can a man delight in that which breedeth sorrow,
- Yet do we hunt for joy even in the fires that consume it.
- Whoso would find gladness may meet her in the hovel of poverty,
- Where benevolence hath scattered around the gleanings of the horn of
- plenty;
- Whoso would sun himself in peace, may be seen of her in deeds of mercy,
- When the pale lean cheek of the destitute is wet with grateful tears.
- If the mind is wearied by study, or the body worn with sickness,
- It is well to lie fallow for a while, in the vacancy of sheer amusement;
- But when thou prosperest in health, and thine intellect can soar untired,
- To seek uninstructive pleasure is to slumber on the couch of indolence.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: The Train of Religion.]
-
-The Train of Religion.
-
- Stay awhile, thou blessed band! be entreated, daughters of heaven!
- While the chance-met scholar of Wisdom learneth your sacred names:
- He is resting a little from his toil, yet a little on the borders of
- earth,
- And fain would he have you his friends, to bid him glad welcome hereafter.
- Who among the glorious art thou, that walkest a Goddess and a Queen,
- Thy crown of living stars, and a golden cross thy sceptre?
- Who among flowers of loveliness is she, thy seeming herald,
- Yet she boasteth not thee nor herself, and her garments are plain in
- their neatness?
- Wherefore is there one among the train, whose eyes are red with weeping,
- Yet is her open forehead beaming with the sun of ecstasy?
- And who is that bloodstained warrior, with glory sitting on his crest?
- And who that solemn sage, calm in majestic dignity?
- Also, in the lengthening troop see I some clad in robes of triumph,
- Whose fair and sunny faces I have known and loved on earth:
- Welcome, ye glorified Loves, Graces, and Sciences, and Muses,
- That, like sisters of charity, tended in this world's hospital;
- Welcome, for verily I knew, ye could not but be children of the light,
- Though earth hath soiled your robes, and robbed you of half your glory;
- Welcome, chiefly welcome, for I find I have friends in heaven,
- And some I might scarce have looked for, as thou, light-hearted Mirth;
- Thou also, star-robed Urania; and thou, with the curious glass,
- That rejoicedst in tracking wisdom where the eye was too dull to note it:
- And art thou too among the blessed, mild, much-injured Poetry?
- Who quickenest with light and beauty the leaden face of matter,
- Who not unheard, though silent, fillest earth's gardens with music,
- And not unseen, though a spirit, dost look down upon us from the stars,--
- That hast been to me for oil and for wine, to cheer and uphold my soul,
- When wearied, battling with the surge, the stunning surge of life:
- Of thee, for well have I loved thee, of thee may I ask in hope,
- Who among the glorious is she, that walketh a Goddess and a Queen?
- And who that fair-haired herald, and who that weeping saint?
- And who that mighty warrior, and who that solemn sage?
-
- Son, happy art thou that Wisdom hath led thee hitherward:
- For otherwise never hadst thou known the joy-giving name of our Queen.
- Behold her, the life of men, the anchor of their shipwrecked hopes:
- Behold her, the shepherdess of souls, who bringeth back the wanderers to
- God.
- And for that modest herald, she is named on earth, Humility:
- And hast thou not known, my son, the tearful face of Repentance?
- Faith is yon time-scarred hero, walking in the shade of his laurels:
- And Reason, the serious sage, who followeth the footsteps of Faith:
- And we, all we, are but handmaids, ministers of minor bliss,
- Who rejoice to be counted servants in the train of a Queen so glorious:
- But for her name, son of man, it is strange to the language of heaven,
- For those who have never fallen need not and may not learn it:
- Ligeance we swear to our God, and ligeance well have we kept;
- It is only the band of the redeemed who can tell thee the fulness of that
- name;
- Yet will I comfort thee, my son, for the love wherewith thou hast loved
- me,
- And thou shalt touch for thyself the golden sceptre of Religion.
-
- So that blessed train passed by me; but the vision was sealed upon my
- soul;
- And its memory is shrined in fragrance, for the promise of the Spirit was
- true:
- I learn from the silent poem of all creation round me,
- How beautiful their feet, who follow in that train.
-
-
-OF A TRINITY.
-
-[Illustration: "D"]
-
- Despise not, shrewd reckoner, the God of a good man's worship,
- Neither let thy calculating folly gainsay the unity of three:
- Nor scorn another's creed, although he cannot solve thy doubts;
- Reason is the follower of faith, where he may not be precursor:
- It is written, and so we believe, waiting not for outward proof,
- Inasmuch as mysteries inscrutable are the clear prerogatives of godhead.
- Reason hath nothing positive, faith hath nothing doubtful;
- And the height of unbelieving wisdom is to question all things.
- When there is marvel in a doctrine, faith is joyful and adoreth;
- But when all is clear, what place is left for faith?
- Tell me the sum of thy knowledge,--is it yet assured of anything?
- Despise not what is wonderful, when all things are wonderful around thee.
- From the multitude of like effects, thou sayest, Behold a law:
- And the matter thou art baffled in unmaking, is to thy mind an element.
- Then look abroad, I pray thee, for analogy holdeth everywhere,
- And the Maker hath stamped His name on every creature of His hand:
- I know not of a matter or a spirit, that is not three in one,
- And truly should account it for a marvel, a coin without the image of its
- Cæsar.
-
- Man talketh of himself as ignorant, but judgeth by himself as wise:
- His own guess counteth he truth, but the notions of another are his scorn;
- But bear thou yet with a brother, whose thought may be less subtle than
- thine own,
- And suffer the passing speculation suggested by analogies to faith.
- Like begetteth like, and the great sea of Existence
- In each of its uncounted waves holdeth up a mirror to its Maker:
- Like begetteth like, and the spreading tree of being
- With each of its trefoil leaves pointeth at the Trinity of God.
- Let him whose eyes have been unfilmed, read this homily in all things,
- And thou, of duller sight, despise not him that readeth:
- There be three grand principles; life, generation, and obedience;
- Shadowing in every creature, the Spirit, and the Father, and the Son.
- There be three grand unities, variously mixed in trinities,
- Three catholic divisors of the million sums of matter:
- Yea, though science hath not seen it, climbing the ladder of experiment,
- Let faith, in the presence of her God, promulgate the mighty truth;
- Of three sole elements all nature's works consist:
- The pine, and the rock to which it clingeth, and the eagle sailing around
- it:
- The lion, and the northern whale, and the deeps wherein he sporteth;
- The lizard sleeping in the sun; the lightning flashing from a cloud;
- The rose, and the ruby, and the pearl; each one is made of three;
- And the three be the like ingredients, mingled in diverse measures.
- Thyself hast within thyself body, and life, and mind:
- Matter, and breath, and instinct, unite in all beasts of the field;
- Substance, coherence, and weight, fashion the fabrics of the earth;
- The will, the doing, and the deed, combine to frame a fact:
- The stem, the leaf, and the flower; beginning, middle, and end;
- Cause, circumstance, consequent: and every three is one.
- Yea, the very breath of man's life consisteth of a trinity of vapours,
- And the noonday light is a compound, the triune shadow of Jehovah.
-
- Shall all things else be in mystery, and God alone be understood?
- Shall finite fathom infinity, though it sound not the shallows of
- creation?
- Shall a man comprehend his Maker, being yet a riddle to himself?
- Or time teach the Lesson that eternity cannot master?
- If God be nothing more than one, a child can compass the thought;
- But seraphs fail to unravel the wondrous unity of three.
- One verily He is, for there can be but one who is all mighty;
- Yet the oracles of nature and religion proclaim Him three in one.
- And where were the value to thy soul, O miserable denizen of earth,
- Of the idle pageant of the cross, where hung no sacrifice for thee?
- Where the worth to thine impotent heart, of that stirred Bethesda,
- All numbed and palsied as it is, by the scorpion stings of sin?
- No, thy trinity of nature, enchained by treble death,
- Helplessly craveth of its God, Himself for three salvations:
- The soul to be reconciled in love, the mind to be glorified in light,
- While this poor dying body leapeth into life.
- And if indeed for us all the costly ransom hath been paid,
- Bethink thee, could less than Deity have owned so vast a treasure?
- Could a man contend with God, and stand against the bosses of His buckler,
- Rendering the balance for guilt, atonement to the uttermost?
- Thou art subtle to thine own thinking, but wisdom judgeth thee a fool,
- Resolving thou wilt not bow the knee to a Being thou canst not comprehend:
- The mind that could compass perfection were itself perfection's equal;
- And reason refuseth its homage to a God who can be fully understood.
-
- Thou that despiseth mystery, yet canst expound nothing,
- Wherefore rejectest thou the fact that solveth the enigma of all things?
- Wherefore veilest thou thine eyes, lest the light of revelation sun them,
- And puttest aside the key that would open the casket of truth?
- The mind and the nature of God are shadowed in all His works,
- And none could have guessed of His essence, had He not uttered it Himself.
- Therefore, thou child of folly, that scornest the record of His wisdom,
- Learn from the consistencies of nature the needful miracle of Godhead:
- Yea, let the heathen be thy teacher, who adoreth many gods,
- For there is no wide-spread error that hath not truth for its beginning.
- Be content; thine eye cannot see all the sides of a cube at one view,
- Nor thy mind in the self-same moment follow two ideas:
- There are now many marvels in thy creed, believing what thou seest,
- Then let not the conceit of intellect hinder thee from worshipping
- mystery.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Thinking.]
-
-OF THINKING.
-
- Reflection is a flower of the mind, giving out wholesome fragrance,
- But reverie is the same flower, when rank and running to seed.
- Better to read little with thought, than much with levity and quickness;
- For mind is not as merchandize, which decreaseth in the using,
- But liker to the passions of man, which rejoice and expand in exertion:
- Yet live not wholly on thine own ideas, lest they lead thee astray;
- For in spirit, as in substance, thou art a social creature;
- And if thou leanest on thyself, thou rejectest the guidance of thy
- betters,
- Yea, thou contemnest all men,--Am I not wiser than they?--
- Foolish vanity hath blinded thee, and warped thy weak judgment:
- For, though new ideas flow from new springs, and enrich the treasury of
- knowledge,
- Yet listen often, ere thou think much; and look around thee ere thou
- judgest.
- Memory, the daughter of Attention, is the teeming mother of Wisdom,
- And safer is he that storeth knowledge, than he that would make it for
- himself.
-
- Imagination is not thought, neither is fancy reflection:
- Thought paceth like a hoary sage, but imagination hath wings as an eagle:
- Reflection sternly considereth, nor is sparing to condemn evil,
- But fancy lightly laugheth, in the sun-clad gardens of amusement.
- For the shy game of the fowler the quickest shot is the surest;
- But with slow care and measured aim the gunner pointeth his cannon:
- So for all less occasions, the surface-thought is best,
- But to be master of the great take thou heavier metal.
- It is a good thing, and a wholesome, to search out bosom sins,
- But to be the hero of selfish imaginings, is the subtle poison of pride:
- At night, in the stillness of thy chamber, guard and curb thy thoughts,
- And in recounting the doings of the day, beware that thou do it with
- prayer,
- Or thinking will be an idle pleasure, and retrospect yield no fruit.
- Steer the bark of thy mind from the syren isle of reverie,
- And let a watchful spirit mingle with the glance of recollection:
- Also, in examining thine heart, in sounding the fountain of thine actions,
- Be more careful of the evil than of the good; and humble thyself in thy
- sin.
-
- The root of all wholesome thought is knowledge of thyself,
- For thus only canst thou learn the character of God toward thee.
- He made thee, and thou art; He redeemed thee, and thou wilt be:
- Thou art evil, yet He loveth thee; thou sinnest, yet He pardoneth thee.
- Though thou canst not perceive Him, yet is He in all His works,
- Infinite in grand outline, infinite in minute perfection:
- Nature is the chart of God, mapping out all His attributes;
- Art is the shadow of His wisdom, and copieth His resources.
- Thou knowest the laws of matter to be emanations of His will,
- And thy best reason for aught is this,--Thou, Lord, wouldst have it so.
- Yea, what is any law but an absolute decree of God?
- Or the properties of matter and mind, but the arbitrary fiats of Jehovah?
- He made and ordained necessity; He forged the chain of reason;
- And holdeth in His own right hand the first of the golden links.
- A fool regardeth mind as the spiritual essence of matter,
- And not rather matter as the gross accident of mind.
- Can finite govern infinite, or a part exceed the whole,
- Or the wisdom of God sit down at the feet of innate necessity?
- Necessity is a creature of His hand: for He can never change;
- And chance hath no existence where everything is needful.
-
- Canst thou measure Omnipotence, canst thou conceive Ubiquity,
- Which guideth the meanest reptile, and quickeneth the brightest seraph,
- Which steereth the particle of dust, and commandeth the path of the comet?
- To Him all things are equal, for all things are necessary.
- The smith was weary at his forge, and welded the metal carelessly,
- And the anchor breaketh in its bed; and the vessel foundereth with her
- crew:
- A word of anger is muttered, engendering the midnight murder:
- The sun bursteth from a cloud, and maddeneth the toiling husbandman.
- Shall these things be, and God not know it?
- Shall He know, and not be in them? shall He see, and not be among them?
- And how can they be otherwise than as He knoweth?
- Truly, the Lord is in all things; verily, He worketh in all.
- Think thus, and thy thoughts are firm, ascribing each circumstance to Him;
- Yet know surely, and believe the truth, that God willeth not evil;
- For adversities are blessings in disguise, and wickedness the Lord
- abhorreth:
- That He is in all things is an axiom, and that He is righteous in all:
- Ascribe holiness to Him, while thou musest on the mystery of sin,
- For infinite can grasp that, which finite cannot compass.
-
- In works of art, think justly: what praise canst thou render unto man?
- For he made not his own mind, nor is he the source of contrivance.
- If a cunning workman make an engine that fashioneth curious works,
- Which hath the praise, the machine or its maker,--the engine, or he that
- framed it?
- And could he frame it so subtly as to give it a will and freedom,
- Endow it with complicated powers, and a glorious living soul,
- Who, while he admireth the wondrous understanding creature,
- Will not pay deeper homage to the Maker of master minds?
- Otherwise, thou art senseless as the pagan, that adoreth his own
- handywork;
- Yea, while thou boastest of thy wisdom, thy mind is as the mind of the
- savage,
- For he boweth down to his idols, and thou art a worshipper of self,
- Giving to the reasoning machine the credit due to its creator.
-
- The key-stone of thy mind, to give thy thoughts solidity,
- To bind them as in an arch, to fix them as the world in its sphere,
- Is to learn from the book of the Lord, to drink from the well of His
- wisdom.
- Who can condense the sun, or analyse the fulness of the Bible,
- So that its ideas be gathered, and the harvest of its wisdom be brought
- in?
- That book is easy to the man who setteth his heart to understand it,
- But to the careless and profane it shall seem the foolishness of God;
- And it is a delicate test to prove thy moral state;
- To the humble disciple it is bread, but a stone to the proud and
- unbelieving:
- A scorner shall find nothing but the husks, wherewith to feed his hunger,
- But for the soul of the simple, it is plenty of full-ripe wheat.
- The Scripture abideth the same, in the sober majesty of truth;
- And the differing aspects of its teaching proceed from diversity in minds.
- He that would learn to think may gain that knowledge there;
- For the living word, as an angel, standeth at the gate of wisdom,
- And publisheth, This is the way, walk ye surely in it.
- Religion taketh by the hand the humble pupil of repentance,
- And teacheth him lessons of mystery, solving the questions of doubt;
- She maketh man worthy of himself, of his high prerogative of reason,
- Threadeth all the labyrinths of thought, and leadeth him to his God.
-
- Come hither, child of meditation, upon whose high fair forehead
- Glittereth the star of mind in its unearthly lustre:
- Hast thou nought to tell us of thine airy joys,--
- When, borne on sinewy pinions, strong as the western condor,
- The soul, after soaring for a while round the cloud-capped Andes of
- reflection,
- Glad in its conscious immortality, leaveth a world behind,
- To dare at one bold flight the broad Atlantic to another?
- Hast thou no secret pangs to whisper common men,
- No dread of thine own energies, still active day and night,
- Lest too ecstatic heat sublime thyself away,
- Or vivid horrors, sharp and clear, madden thy tense fibres?
- In half-shaped visions of sleep hast thou not feared thy flittings,
- Lest reason, like a raking hawk, return not to thy call:
- Nor waked to work-day life with throbbing head and heart,
- Nor welcomed early dawn to save thee from unrest?
- For the wearied spirit lieth as a fainting maiden,
- Captive and borne away on the warrior's foam-covered steed,
- And sinketh down wounded, as a gladiator on the sand,
- While the keen faulchion of Intellect is cutting through the scabbard of
- the brain.
- Imagination, like a shadowy giant looming on the twilight of the Hartz,
- Shall overwhelm judgment with affright, and scare him from his throne:
- In a dream thou mayst be mad, and feel the fire within thee;
- In a dream thou mayst travel out of self, and see thee with the eyes of
- another;
- Or sleep in thine own corpse: or wake as in many bodies;
- Or swell, as expanded to infinity; or shrink, as imprisoned to a point;
- Or among moss-grown ruins mayst wander with the sullen disembodied,
- And gaze upon their glassy eyes until thy heart-blood freeze.
-
- Alone must thou stand, O man! alone at the bar of judgment;
- Alone must thou bear thy sentence, alone must thou answer for thy deeds:
- Therefore it is well thou retirest often to secresy and solitude,
- To feel that thou art accountable separately from thy fellows:
- For a crowd hideth truth from the eyes, society drowneth thought,
- And being but one among many, stifleth the chidings of conscience.
- Solitude bringeth woe to the wicked, for his crimes are told out in his
- ear;
- But addeth peace to the good, for the mercies of his God are numbered.
- Thou mayst know if it be well with a man,--loveth he gaiety or solitude?
- For the troubled river rusheth to the sea, but the calm lake slumbereth
- among the mountains.
- How dear to the mind of the sage are the thoughts that are bred in
- loneliness;
- For there is as it were music at his heart, and he talketh within him as
- with friends:
- But guilt maddeneth the brain, and terror glareth in the eye,
- Where, in his solitary cell, the malefactor wrestleth with remorse.
- Give me but a lodge in the wilderness, drop me on an island in the desert,
- And thought shall yield me happiness, though I may not increase it by
- imparting:
- For the soul never slumbereth, but is as the eye of the Eternal,
- And mind, the breath of God, knoweth not ideal vacuity:
- At night, after weariness and watching, the body sinketh into sleep,
- But the mental eye is awake, and thou reasonest in thy dreams:
- In a dream, thou mayst live a lifetime, and all be forgotten in the
- morning:
- Even such is life, and so soon perisheth its memory.
-
-
-OF SPEAKING.
-
-[Illustration: "S"]
-
- Speech is the golden harvest that followeth the flowering of thought;
- Yet oftentimes runneth it to husk, and the grains be withered and scanty:
- Speech is reason's brother, and a kingly prerogative of man,
- That likeneth him to his Maker, who spake, and it was done:
- Spirit may mingle with spirit, but sense requireth a symbol;
- And speech is the body of a thought, without which it were not seen.
- When thou walkest, musing with thyself, in the green aisles of the forest,
- Utter thy thinkings aloud, that they take a shape and being:
- For he that pondereth in silence crowdeth the storehouse of his mind,
- And though he hath heaped great riches, yet is he hindered in the using.
- A man that speaketh too little, and thinketh much and deeply,
- Corrodeth his own heart-strings, and keepeth back good from his fellows:
- A man that speaketh too much, and museth but little and lightly,
- Wasteth his mind in words, and is counted a fool among men:
- But thou, when thou hast thought, weave charily the web of meditation,
- And clothe the ideal spirit in the suitable garments of speech.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Uttered out of time, or concealed in its season, good savoureth of evil;
- To be secret looketh like guilt, to speak out may breed contention:
- Often have I known the honest heart, flaming with indignant virtue,
- Provoke unneeded war by its rash ambassador the tongue:
- Often have I seen the charitable man go so slily on his mission,
- That those who met him in the twilight, took him for a skulking thief:
- I have heard the zealous youth telling out his holy secrets
- Before a swinish throng, who mocked him as he spake;
- And I considered, his openness was hardening them that mocked,
- Whereas a judicious keeping-back might have won their sympathy:
- I have judged rashly and harshly the hand, liberal in the dark,
- Because in the broad daylight, it hath holden it a virtue to be close;
- And the silent tongue have I condemned, because reserve hath chained it,
- That it hid, yea from a brother, the kindness it had done by comforting.
- No need to sound a trumpet, but less to hush a footfall:
- Do thou thy good openly, not as though the doing were a crime.
- Secresy goeth cowled, and Honesty demandeth wherefore?
- For he judgeth--judgeth he not well?--that nothing need be hid but guilt.
- Why should thy good be evil spoken of, through thine unrighteous silence?
- If thou art challenged, speak, and prove the good thou doest.
- The free example of benevolence, unobtruded, yet unhidden,
- Soundeth in the ears of sloth, Go, and do thou likewise:
- And I wot the hypocrite's sin to be of darker dye,
- Because the good man, fearing, thereby hideth his light:
- But neither God nor man hath bid thee cloak thy good,
- When a seasonable word would set thee in thy sphere, that all might see
- thy brightness.
- Ascribe the honour to thy Lord, but be thou jealous of that honour,
- Nor think it light and worthless, because thou mayst not wear it for
- thyself:
- Remember, thy grand prerogative is free unshackled utterance,
- And suffer not the flood-gates of secresy to lock the full river of thy
- speech.
-
- Come, I will show thee an affliction, unnumbered among this world's
- sorrows,
- Yet real and wearisome and constant, embittering the cup of life.
- There be, who can think within themselves, and the fire burneth at their
- heart,
- And eloquence waiteth at their lips, yet they speak not with their tongue:
- There be, whom zeal quickeneth, or slander stirreth to reply,
- Or need constraineth to ask, or pity sendeth as her messengers,
- But nervous dread and sensitive shame freeze the current of their speech;
- The mouth is sealed as with lead, a cold weight presseth on the heart,
- The mocking promise of power is once more broken in performance,
- And they stand impotent of words, travailing with unborn thoughts;
- Courage is cowed at the portal; wisdom is widowed of utterance;
- He that went to comfort is pitied; he that should rebuke, is silent:
- And fools who might listen and learn, stand by to look and laugh;
- While friends, with kinder eyes, wound deeper by compassion:
- And thought, finding not a vent, smouldereth, gnawing at the heart,
- And the man sinketh in his sphere, for lack of empty sounds.
- There be many cares and sorrows thou hast not yet considered,
- And well may thy soul rejoice in the fair privilege of speech;
- For at every turn to want a word,--thou canst not guess that want;
- It is as lack of breath or bread: life hath no grief more galling.
-
- Come, I will tell thee of a joy, which the parasites of pleasure have not
- known,
- Though earth and air and sea have gorged all the appetites of sense.
- Behold, what fire is in his eye, what fervour on his cheek!
- That glorious burst of winged words! how bound they from his tongue!
- The full expression of the mighty thought, the strong triumphant argument,
- The rush of native eloquence, resistless as Niagara,
- The keen demand, the clear reply, the fine poetic image,
- The nice analogy, the clenching fact, the metaphor bold and free,
- The grasp of concentrated intellect wielding the omnipotence of truth,
- The grandeur of his speech in his majesty of mind!
- Champion of the right,--patriot, or priest, or pleader of the innocent
- cause,
- Upon whose lips the mystic bee hath dropped the honey of persuasion,
- Whose heart and tongue have been touched, as of old, by the live coal
- from the altar,
- How wide the spreading of thy peace, how deep the draught of thy
- pleasures!
- To hold the multitude as one, breathing in measured cadence,
- A thousand men with flashing eyes, waiting upon thy will;
- A thousand hearts kindled by thee with consecrated fire,
- Ten flaming spiritual hecatombs offered on the mount of God:
- And now a pause, a thrilling pause,--they live but in thy words,--
- Thou hast broken the bounds of self, as the Nile at its rising,
- Thou art expanded into them, one faith, one hope, one spirit,
- They breathe but in thy breath, their minds are passive unto thine,
- Thou turnest the key of their love, bending their affections to thy
- purpose,
- And all, in sympathy with thee, tremble with tumultuous emotions:
- Verily, O man, with truth for thy theme, eloquence shall throne thee with
- archangels.
-
-
-OF READING.
-
-[Illustration: "O"]
-
- One drachma for a good book, and a thousand talents for a true friend;--
- So standeth the market, where scarce is ever costly:
- Yea, were the diamonds of Golconda common as shingles on the shore,
- A ripe apple would ransom kings before a shining stone:
- And so, were a wholesome book as rare as an honest friend,
- To choose the book be mine: the friend let another take.
- For altered looks and jealousies and fears have none entrance there:
- The silent volume listeneth well, and speaketh when thou listest:
- It praiseth thy good without envy, it chideth thine evil without malice,
- It is to thee thy waiting slave, and thine unbending teacher.
- Need to humour no caprice, need to bear with no infirmity;
- Thy sin, thy slander, or neglect, chilleth not, quencheth not, its love:
- Unalterably speaketh it the truth, warped nor by error nor interest;
- For a good book is the best of friends, the same to-day and for ever.
-
- To draw thee out of self, thy petty plans and cautions,
- To teach thee what thou lackest, to tell thee how largely thou art blest,
- To lure thy thought from sorrow, to feed thy famished mind,
- To graft another's wisdom on thee, pruning thine own folly,
- Choose discreetly, and well digest the volume most suited to thy case,
- Touching not religion with levity, nor deep things when thou art wearied.
- Thy mind is freshened by morning air, grapple with science and philosophy;
- Noon hath unnerved thy thoughts, dream for a while on fictions:
- Grey evening sobereth thy spirit, walk thou then with worshippers:
- But reason shall dig deepest in the night, and fancy fly most free.
-
- O books, ye monuments of mind, concrete wisdom of the wisest;
- Sweet solaces of daily life; proofs and results of immortality;
- Trees yielding all fruits, whose leaves are for the healing of the
- nations;
- Groves of knowledge, where all may eat, nor fear a flaming sword:
- Gentle comrades, kind advisers; friends, comforts, treasures:
- Helps, governments, diversities of tongues; who can weigh your worth?--
- To walk no longer with the just; to be driven from the porch of science;
- To bid long adieu to those intimate ones, poets, philosophers, and
- teachers;
- To see no record of the sympathies which bind thee in communion with the
- good;
- To be thrust from the feet of Him who spake as never man spake;
- To have no avenue to heaven but the dim aisle of superstition;
- To live as an Esquimaux, in lethargy; to die as the Mohawk, in ignorance:
- O what were life, but a blank? what were death, but a terror?
- What were man, but a burden to himself? what were mind, but misery?
- Yea, let another Omar burn the full library of knowledge,
- And the broad world may perish in the flames, offered on the ashes of its
- wisdom!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF WRITING.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The pen of a ready writer, whereunto shall it be likened?
- Ask of the scholar, he shall know,--to the chains that bind a Proteus:
- Ask of the poet, he shall say,--to the sun, the lamp of heaven:
- Ask of thy neighbour, he can answer,--to the friend that telleth my
- thought:
- The merchant considereth it well, as a ship freighted with wares;
- The divine holdeth it a miracle, giving utterance to the dumb.
- It fixeth, expoundeth, and disseminateth sentiment;
- Chaining up a thought, clearing it of mystery, and sending it bright into
- the world.
- To think rightly, is of knowledge; to speak fluently, is of nature;
- To read with profit, is of care; but to write aptly, is of practice.
- No talent among men hath more scholars, and fewer masters:
- For to write is to speak beyond hearing, and none stand by to explain.
- To be accurate, write; to remember, write; to know thine own mind, write;
- And a written prayer is a prayer of faith: special, sure, and to be
- answered.
- Hast thou a thought upon thy brain, catch it while thou canst;
- Or other thoughts shall settle there, and this shall soon take wing:
- Thine uncompounded unity of soul, which argueth and maketh it immortal,
- Yieldeth up its momentary self to every single thought;
- Therefore, to husband thine ideas, and give them stability and substance,
- Write often for thy secret eye; so shalt thou grow wiser.
- The commonest mind is full of thoughts; some worthy of the rarest:
- And could it see them fairly writ, would wonder at its wealth.
-
- O precious compensation to the dumb, to write his wants and wishes;
- O dear amends to the stammering tongue, to pen his burning thoughts!
- To be of the college of Eloquence, through these silent symbols;
- To pour out all the flowing mind without the toil of speech;
- To show the babbling world how it might discourse more sweetly;
- To prove that merchandize of words bringeth no monopoly of wisdom;
- To take sweet vengeance on a prating crew, for the tongue's dishonour,
- By the large triumph of the pen, the homage rendered to a writing.
- With such, that telegraph of mind is dearer than wealth or wisdom,
- Enabling to please without pain, to impart without humiliation.
-
- Fair girl, whose eye hath caught the rustic penmanship of love,
- Let thy bright brow and blushing cheek confess in this sweet hour,--
- Let thy full heart, poor guilty one, whom the scroll of pardon hath just
- reached,--
- Thy wet glad face, O mother, with news of a far-off child,--
- Thy strong and manly delight, pilgrim of other shores,
- When the dear voice of thy betrothed speaketh in the letter of
- affection,--
- Let the young poet, exulting in his lay, and hope (how false) of fame,
- While watching at deep midnight, he buildeth up the verse,--
- Let the calm child of genius, whose name shall never die,
- For that the transcript of his mind hath made his thoughts immortal,--
- Let these, let all, with no faint praise, with no light gratitude, confess
- The blessings poured upon the earth from the pen of a ready writer.
-
- Moreover, their preciousness in absence is proved by the desire of their
- presence:
- When the despairing lover waiteth day after day,
- Looking for a word in reply, one word writ by that hand,
- And cursing bitterly the morn ushered in by blank disappointment:
- Or when the long-looked-for answer argueth a cooling friend,
- And the mind is plied suspiciously with dark inexplicable doubts,
- While thy wounded heart counteth its imaginary scars,
- And thou art the innocent and injured, that friend the capricious and in
- fault:
- Or when the earnest petition, that craveth for thy needs,
- Unheeded, yea, unopened, tortureth with starving delay:
- Or when the silence of a son, who would have written of his welfare,
- Racketh a father's bosom with sharp-cutting fears.
- For a letter, timely writ, is a rivet to the chain of affection,
- And a letter, untimely delayed, is as rust to the solder.
- The pen, flowing with love, or dipped black in hate,
- Or tipped with delicate courtesies, or harshly edged with censure,
- Hath quickened more good than the sun, more evil than the sword,
- More joy than woman's smile, more woe than frowning fortune;
- And shouldst thou ask my judgment of that which hath most profit in the
- world,
- For answer take thou this, The prudent penning of a letter.
-
- Thou hast not lost an hour, whereof there is a record;
- A written thought at midnight shall redeem the livelong day.
- Idea is as a shadow that departeth, speech is fleeting as the wind,
- Reading is an unremembered pastime; but a writing is eternal:
- For therein the dead heart liveth, the clay-cold tongue is eloquent,
- And the quick eye of the reader is cleared by the reed of the scribe.
- As a fossil in the rock, or a coin in the mortar of a ruin,
- So the symbolled thoughts tell of a departed soul:
- The plastic hand hath its witness in a statue, and exactitude of vision
- in a picture,
- And so, the mind that was among us, in its writings is embalmed.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF WEALTH.
-
- Prodigality hath a sister Meanness, his fixed antagonist heart-fellow,
- Who often outliveth the short career of the brother she despiseth:
- She hath lean lips and a sharp look, and her eyes are red and hungry;
- But he sloucheth in his gait, and his mouth speaketh loosely and maudlin.
- Let a spendthrift grow to be old, he will set his heart on saving,
- And labour to build up by penury that which extravagance threw down:
- Even so, with most men, do riches earn themselves a double curse;
- They are ill-got by tight dealing: they are ill-spent by loose
- squandering.
- Give me enough, saith Wisdom;--for he feareth to ask for more;
- And that by the sweat of my brow, addeth stout-hearted Independence:
- Give me enough, and not less, for want is leagued with the tempter;
- Poverty shall make a man desperate, and hurry him ruthless into crime:
- Give me enough, and not more, saving for the children of distress;
- Wealth ofttimes killeth, where want but hindereth the budding:
- There is green glad summer near the pole, though brief and after long
- winter,
- But the burnt breasts of the torrid zone yield never kindly nourishment.
- Wouldst thou be poor, scatter to the rich,--and reap the tares of
- ingratitude;
- Wouldst thou be rich, give unto the poor; thou shalt have thine own with
- usury:
- For the secret hand of Providence prospereth the charitable all ways,
- Good luck shall he have in his pursuits, and his heart shall be glad
- within him;
- Yet perchance he never shall perceive, that, even as to earthly gains,
- The cause of his weal as of his joy, hath been small givings to the poor.
-
- In the plain of Benares is there found a root that fathereth a forest,
- Where round the parent banian-tree drop its living scions;
- Thirstily they strain to the earth, like stalactites in a grotto,
- And strike broad roots, and branch again, lengthening their cool arcades:
- And the dervish madly danceth there, and the faquir is torturing his
- flesh,
- And the calm brahmin worshippeth the sleek and pampered bull:
- At the base lean jackals coil, while from above depending
- With dull malignant stare watcheth the branch-like boa.
- Even so, in man's heart is a sin that is the root of all evil;
- Whose fibres strangle the affections, whose branches overgrow the mind:
- And oftenest beneath its shadow thou shalt meet distorted piety,--
- The clenched and rigid fist, with the eyes upturned to heaven,
- Fanatic zeal with miserly severity, a mixture of gain with godliness,
- And him, against whom passion hath no power, kneeling to a golden calf:
- The hungry hounds of extortion are there, the bond, and the mortgage, and
- the writ,
- While the appetite for gold, unslumbering, watcheth to glut its maw:--
- And the heart, so tenanted and shaded, is cold to all things else;
- It seeth not the sunshine of heaven, nor is warmed by the light of
- charity.
-
- For covetousness disbelieveth God, and laugheth at the rights of men;
- Spurring unto theft and lying, and tempting to the poison and the knife;
- It sundereth the bonds of love, and quickeneth the flames of hate;
- A curse that shall wither the brain, and case the heart with iron.
- Content is the true riches, for without it there is no satisfying,
- But a ravenous all-devouring hunger gnaweth the vitals of the soul.
- The wise man knoweth where to stop, as he runneth in the race of fortune,
- For experience of old hath taught him, that happiness lingereth midway;
- And many in hot pursuit have hasted to the goal of wealth,
- But have lost, as they ran, those apples of gold,--the mind and the power
- to enjoy it.
-
- There is no greater evil among men than a testament framed with injustice:
- Where caprice hath guided the boon, or dishonesty refused what was due.
- Generous is the robber on the highway, in the open daring of his guilt,
- To the secret coward, whose malice liveth and harmeth after him;
- Who smoothly sank into the tomb, with the smile of fraud upon his face,
- And the last black deed of his existence was injury without redress:
- For deaf is the ear of the dead, and can hear no palliating reasons;
- The smiter is not among the living, and Right pleadeth but in vain.
- Yet shall the curse of the oppressed be as blight upon the grave of the
- unjust;
- Yea, bitterly shall that handwriting testify against him at the judgment.
- I saw the humble relation that tended the peevishness of wealth,
- And ministered, with kind hand, to the wailings of disease and discontent:
- I noted how watchfulness and care were feeding on the marrow of her youth,
- How heavy was the yoke of dependence, loaded by petty tyranny;
- Yet I heard the frequent suggestion,--It can be but a little longer,
- Patience and mute submission shall one day reap a rich reward.
- So, tacitly enduring much, waited that humble friend,
- Putting off the lover of her youth until the dawn of wealth:
- And it came, that day of release, and the freed heart could not sorrow,
- For now were the years of promise to yield their golden harvest:
- Hope, so long deferred, sickly sparkled in her eye,
- The miserable past was forgotten, as she looked for the happier future,
- And she checked, as unworthy and ungrateful, the dark suspicious thought
- That perchance her right had been the safer, if not left alone with
- honour:
- But, alas, the sad knowledge soon came, that her stern task-master's will
- Hath rewarded her toil with a jibe, her patience with utter destitution!--
- Shall not the scourge of justice lash that cruel coward,
- Who mingled the gall of ingratitude with the bitterness of disappointment?
- Shall not the hate of men, and vengeance, fiercely pursuing,
- Hunt down the wretched being that sinneth in his grave?
- He fancied his idol self safe from the wrath of his fellows,
- But Hades rose as he came in, to point at him the finger of scorn;
- And again must he meet that orphan-maid to answer her face to face,
- And her wrongs shall cling around his neck, to hinder him from rising
- with the just:
- For his last most solemn act hath linked his name with liar,
- And the crime of Ananias is branded on his brow!
-
- A good man commendeth his cause to the one great Patron of innocence,
- Convinced of justice to the last, and sure of good meanwhile.
- He knoweth he hath a Guardian, wise and kind and strong,
- And can thank Him for giving, or refusing, the trust or the curse of
- riches:
- His confidence standeth as a rock; he dreadeth not malice nor caprice,
- Nor the whisperings of artful men, nor envious secret influence;
- He scorneth servile compromise, and the pliant mouthings of deceit;
- He maketh not a show of love, where he cannot concede esteem;
- He regardeth ill-got wealth, as the root most fruitful of wretchedness,
- So he walketh in straight integrity, leaning on God and his right.
-
- No gain, but by its price: labour, for the poor man's meal,
- Ofttimes heart-sickening toil, to win him a morsel for his hunger:
- Labour, for the chapman at his trade, a dull unvaried round,
- Year after year, unto death; yea, what a weariness is it!
- Labour, for the pale-faced scribe, drudging at his hated desk,
- Who bartereth for needful pittance the untold gold of health;
- Labour, with fear, for the merchant, whose hopes are ventured on the sea;
- Labour, with care, for the man of law, responsible in his gains;
- Labour, with envy and annoyance, where strangers will thee wealth;
- Labour, with indolence and gloom, where wealth falleth from a father;
- Labour unto all, whether aching thews, or aching head, or spirit,--
- The curse on the sons of men, in all their states, is labour.
- Nevertheless, to the diligent, labour bringeth blessing:
- The thought of duty sweeteneth toil, and travail is as pleasure;
- And time spent in doing hath a comfort that is not for the idle,
- The hardship is transmuted into joy by the dear alchemy of Mercy.
- Labour is good for a man, bracing up his energies to conquest,
- And without it life is dull, the man perceiving himself useless:
- For wearily the body groaneth, like a door on rusty hinges,
- And the grasp of the mind is weakened, as the talons of a caged vulture.
- Wealth hath never given happiness, but often hastened misery:
- Enough hath never caused misery, but often quickened happiness:
- Enough is less than thy thought, O pampered creature of society,
- And he that hath more than enough, is a thief of the rights of his
- brother.
-
-
-OF INVENTION.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Man is proud of his mind, boasting that it giveth him divinity,
- Yet with all its powers can it originate nothing;
- For the Great God into all His works hath largely poured out Himself,
- Saving one special property, the grand prerogative,--Creation.
- To improve and expand is ours, as well as to limit and defeat;
- But to create a thought or a thing is hopeless and impossible.
- Can a man make matter?--and yet this would-be god
- Thinketh to make mind, and form original idea:
- The potter must have his clay, and the mason his quarry,
- And mind must drain ideas from everything around it.
- Doth the soil generate herbs, or the torrid air breed flies,
- Or the water frame its monads, or the mist its swarming blight?--
- Mediately, through thousand generations, having seed within themselves,
- All things, rare or gross, own one common Father.
- Truly spake Wisdom, There is nothing new under the sun:
- We only arrange and combine the ancient elements of all things.
- Invention is activity of mind, as fire is air in motion;
- A sharpening of the spiritual sight, to discern hidden aptitudes:
- From the basket and acanthus, is modelled the graceful capital;
- The shadowed profile on the wall helpeth the limner to his likeness;
- The footmarks, stamped in clay, lead on the thoughts to printing;
- The strange skin garments cast upon the shore suggest another hemisphere:
- A falling apple taught the sage pervading gravitation;
- The Huron is certain of his prey, from tracks upon the grass:
- And shrewdness, guessing out the hint, followeth on the trail;
- But the hint must be given, the trail must be there, or the keenest sight
- is as blindness.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Behold the barren reef, which an earthquake hath just left dry;
- It hath no beauty to boast of, no harvest of fair fruits:
- But soon the lichen fixeth there, and, dying, diggeth its own grave,
- And softening suns and splitting frosts crumble the reluctant surface;
- And cormorants roost there, and the snail addeth its slime,
- And efts, with muddy feet, bring their welcome tribute;
- And the sea casteth out her dead, wrapped in a shroud of weeds;
- And orderly nature arrangeth again the disunited atoms;
- Anon, the cold smooth stone is warm with feathery grass,
- And the light sporules of the fern are dropt by the passing wind,
- The wood-pigeon, on swift wing, leaveth its crop-full of grain,
- The squirrel's jealous care planteth the fir-cone and the filbert:
- Years pass, and the sterile rock is rank with tangled herbage;
- The wild-vine clingeth to the briar, and ivy runneth green among the corn,
- Lordly beeches are studded on the down, and willows crowd around the
- rivulet,
- And the tall pine and hazel-thicket shade the rambling hunter.
- Shall the rock boast of its fertility? shall it lift the head in pride?--
- Shall the mind of man be vain of the harvest of its thoughts?
- The savage is that rock; and a million chances from without,
- By little and little acting on the mind, heap up the hot-bed of society;
- And the soul, fed and fattened on the thoughts and things around it,
- Groweth to perfection, full of fruit, the fruit of foreign seeds.
- For we learn upon a hint, we find upon a clue,
- We yield an hundred-fold; but the great sower is Analogy.
- There must be an acrid sloe before a luscious peach,
- A boll of rotting flax before the bridal veil,
- An egg before an eagle, a thought before a thing,
- A spark struck into tinder to light the lamp of knowledge,
- A slight suggestive nod to guide the watching mind,
- A half-seen hand upon the wall, pointing to the balance of Comparison.
- By culture man may do all things, short of the miracle,--Creation;
- Here is the limit of thy power,--here let thy pride be stayed:
- The soil may be rich, and the mind may be active, but neither yield
- unsown;
- The eye cannot make light, nor the mind make spirit.
- Therefore it is wise in man to name all novelty Invention;
- For it is to find out things that are, not to create the unexisting:
- It is to cling to contiguities, to be keen in catching likeness,
- And with energetic elasticity to leap the gulphs of contrast.
- The globe knoweth not increase, either of matter or spirit;
- Atoms and thoughts are used again, mixing in varied combinations;
- And though, by moulding them anew, thou makest them thine own,
- Yet have they served thousands, and all their merit is of God.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF RIDICULE.
-
- Seams of thought for the sage's brow, and laughing lines for the fool's
- face;
- For all things leave their track in the mind; and the glass of the mind
- is faithful.
- Seest thou much mirth upon the cheek? there is then little exercise of
- virtue;
- For he that looketh on the world, cannot be glad and good:
- Seest thou much gravity in the eye? be not assured of finding wisdom;
- For she hath too great praise, not to get many mimics.
- There is a grave-faced folly; and verily, a laughter-loving wisdom;
- And what, if surface-judges account it vain frivolity?
- There is indeed an evil in excess, and a field may lie fallow too long;
- Yet merriment is often as a froth, that mantleth on the strong mind:
- And note thou this for a verity,--the subtlest thinker when alone,
- From ease of thoughts unbent, will laugh the loudest with his fellows:
- And well is the loveliness of wisdom mirrored in a cheerful countenance,
- Justly the deepest pools are proved by dimpling eddies;
- For that, a true philosophy commandeth an innocent life,
- And the unguilty spirit is lighter than a linnet's heart:
- Yea, there is no cosmetic like a holy conscience;
- The eye is bright with trust, the cheek bloomed over with affection,
- The brow unwrinkled by a care, and the lip triumphant in its gladness.
-
- And for yon grave-faced folly, need not far to look for her;
- How seriously on trifles dote those leaden eyes,
- How ruefully she sigheth after chances long gone by,
- How sulkily she moaneth over evils without cure!
- I have known a true-born mirth, the child of innocence and wisdom,
- I have seen a base-born gravity, mingled of ignorance and guilt:
- And again, a base-born mirth, springing out of carelessness and folly;
- And again, a true-born gravity, the product of reflection and right fear.
- The wounded partridge hideth in a furrow, and a stricken conscience would
- be left alone;
- But when its breast is healed, it runneth gladly with its fellows:
- Whereas the solitary heron, standing in the sedgy fen,
- Holdeth aloof from the social world, intent on wiles and death.
-
- Need but of light philosophy to dare the world's dread laugh;
- For a little mind courteth notoriety, to illustrate its puny self:
- But the sneer of a man's own comrades trieth the muscles of courage,
- And to be derided in his home is as a viper in the nest:
- The laugh of a hooting world hath in it a notion of sublimity,
- But the tittering private circle stingeth as a hive of wasps.
- Some have commended ridicule, counting it the test of truth,
- But neither wittily nor wisely; for truth must prove ridicule:
- Otherwise a blunt bulrush is to pierce the proof armour of argument,
- Because the stolidity of ignorance took it for a barbed shaft.
- Softer is the hide of the rhinoceros, than the heart of deriding unbelief,
- And truth is idler there, than the Bushman's feathered reed:
- A droll conceit parrieth a thrust, that should have hit the conscience,
- And the leering looks of humour tickle the childish mind;
- For that the matter of a man is mingled most with folly,
- Neither can he long endure the searching gaze of wisdom.
- It is pleasanter to see a laughing cheek than a serious forehead,
- And there liveth not one among a thousand whose idol is not pleasure.
- Ridicule is a weak weapon, when levelled at a strong mind:
- But common men are cowards, and dread an empty laugh.
- Fear a nettle, and touch it tenderly, its poison shall burn thee to the
- shoulder;
- But grasp it with a bold hand,--is it not a bundle of myrrh?
- Betray mean terror of ridicule, thou shalt find fools enough to mock thee;
- But answer thou their laughter with contempt, and the scoffers will lick
- thy feet.
-
-
-OF COMMENDATION.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The praise of holy men is a promise of praise from their Master;
- A fore-running earnest of thy welcome,--Well done, faithful servant;
- A rich preludious note, that droppeth softly on thine ear,
- To tell thee the chords of thy heart are in tune with the choirs of
- heaven.
- Yet is it a dangerous hearing, for the sweetness may lull thee into
- slumber,
- And the cordial quaffed with thirst may generate the fumes of presumption.
- So seek it not for itself, but taste, and go gladly on thy way,
- For the mariner slacketh not his sail, though the sandal-groves of Araby
- allure him;
- And the fragrance of that incense would harm thee, as when, on a summer
- evening,
- The honied yellow flowers of the gorse oppress thy charmed sense:
- And a man hath too much of praise, for he praiseth himself continually;
- Neither lacketh he at any time self-commendation or excuse.
-
- Praise a fool, and slay him: for the canvas of his vanity is spread;
- His bark is shallow in the water, and a sudden gust shall sink it:
- Praise a wise man, and speed him on his way; for he carrieth the ballast
- of humility,
- And is glad when his course is cheered by the sympathy of brethren ashore.
- The praise of a good man is good, for he holdeth up the mirror of Truth,
- That Virtue may see her own beauty, and delight in her own fair face:
- The praise of a bad man is evil, for he hideth the deformity of Vice,
- Casting the mantle of a queen around the limbs of a leper.
- Praise is rebuke to the man whose conscience alloweth it not:
- And where conscience feeleth it her due, no praise is better than a
- little.
- He that despiseth the outward appearance, despiseth the esteem of his
- fellows;
- And he that overmuch regardeth it, shall earn only their contempt:
- The honest commendation of an equal no one can scorn, and be blameless,
- Yet even that fair fame no one can hunt for, and be honoured:
- If it come, accept it and be thankful, and be thou humble in accepting;
- If it tarry, be not thou cast down; the bee can gather honey out of rue:
- And is thine aim so low, that the breath of those around thee
- Can speed thy feathered arrow, or retard its flight?
- The child shooteth at a butterfly, but the man's mark is an eagle;
- And while his fellows talk, he hath conquered in the clouds.
- Ally thee to truth and godliness, and use the talents in thy charge;
- So shall thou walk in peace, deserving, if not having.
- With a friend, praise him when thou canst; for many a friendship hath
- decayed,
- Like a plant in a crowded corner, for want of sunshine on its leaves:
- With another, praise him not often--otherwise he shall despise thee;
- But be thou frugal in commending; so will he give honour to thy judgment:
- For thou that dost so zealously commend, art acknowledging thine own
- inferiority,
- And he, thou so highly hast exalted, shall proudly look down on thy
- esteem.
-
- Wilt thou that one remember a thing?--praise him in the midst of thy
- advice;
- Never yet forgat man the word whereby he hath been praised.
- Better to be censured by a thousand fools, than approved but by one man
- that is wise;
- For the pious are slower to help right, than the profane to hinder it:
- So, where the world rebuketh, there look thou for the excellent,
- And be suspicious of the good, which wicked men can praise.
- The captain bindeth his troop, not more by severity than kindness,
- And justly, should recompense well doing, as well as be strict with an
- offender;
- The laurel is cheap to the giver, but precious in his sight who hath won
- it,
- And the heart of the soldier rejoiceth in the approving glance of his
- chief.
- Timely given praise is even better than the merited rebuke of censure,
- For the sun is more needful to the plant than the knife that cutteth out
- a canker.
- Many a father hath erred, in that he hath withheld reproof,
- But more have mostly sinned, in withholding praise where it was due:
- There be many such as Eli among men; but these be more culpable than Eli,
- Who chill the fountain of exertion by the freezing looks of indifference:
- Ye call a man easy and good, yet he is as a two-edged sword;
- He rebuketh not vice, and it is strong: he comforteth not virtue, and it
- fainteth.
- There is nothing more potent among men than a gift timely bestowed;
- And a gift kept back where it was hoped, separateth chief friends:
- For what is a gift but a symbol, giving substance to praise and esteem?
- And where is a sharper arrow than the sting of unmerited neglect?
-
- Expect not praise from the mean, neither gratitude from the selfish;
- And to keep the proud thy friend, see thou do him not a service:
- For, behold, he will hate thee for his debt: thou hast humbled him by
- giving;
- And his stubbornness never shall acknowledge the good he hath taken from
- thy hand:
- Yea, rather will he turn and be thy foe, lest thou gather from his
- friendship
- That he doth account thee creditor, and standeth in the second place.
- Still, O kindly feeling heart, be not thou chilled by the thankless,
- Neither let the breath of gratitude fan thee into momentary heat:
- Do good for good's own sake, looking not to worthiness nor love;
- Fling thy grain among the rocks, cast thy bread upon the waters,
- His claim be strongest to thy help, who is thrown most helplessly upon
- thee,--
- So shalt thou have a better praise, and reap a richer harvest of reward.
-
- If a man hold fast to thy creed, and fit his thinkings to thy notions,
- Thou shalt take him for a man right-minded, yea, and excuse his evil:
- But seest thou not, O bigot, that thy zeal is but a hunting after praise,
- And the full pleasure of a proselyte lieth in the flattering of self?
- A man of many praises meeteth many welcomes,
- But he, who blameth often, shall not keep a friend;
- The velvet-coated apricot is one thing, and the spiked horse-chestnut is
- another,
- A handle of smooth amber is pleasanter than rough buck-horn.
- Show me a popular man; I can tell thee the secret of his power;
- He hath soothed them with glozing words, lulling their ears with flattery,
- The smile of seeming approbation is ever the companion of his presence,
- And courteous looks, and warm regards, earn him all their hearts.
-
- Nothing but may be better, and every better might be best;
- The blind may discern, and the simple prove, fault or want in all things;
- And a little mind looketh on the lily with a microscopic eye,
- Eager and glad to pry out specks on its robe of purity;
- But a great mind gazeth on the sun, glorying in his brightness,
- And taking large knowledge of his good, in the broad prairie of creation:
- What, though he hatch basilisks? what, though spots are on the sun?
- In fulness is his worth, in fulness be his praise!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE.
-
-[Illustration: "K"]
-
- Knowledge holdeth by the hilt, and heweth out a road to conquest;
- Ignorance graspeth the blade, and is wounded by its own good sword:
- Knowledge distilleth health from the virulence of opposite poisons;
- Ignorance mixeth wholesomes, unto the breeding of disease:
- Knowledge is leagued with the universe, and findeth a friend in all
- things;
- But ignorance is everywhere a stranger; unwelcome, ill at ease, and out
- of place.
- A man is helpless and unsafe up to the measure of his ignorance,
- For he lacketh perception of the aptitudes commending such a matter to
- his use,
- Clutching at the horn of danger, while he judgeth it the handle of
- security,
- Or casting his anchor so widely, that the granite reef is just within the
- tether.
- Untaught in science, he is but half alive, stupidly taking note of
- nothing,
- Or listening with dull wonder to the crafty saws of an empiric:
- Simple in the world, he trusteth unto knaves; and then to make amends for
- folly,
- Dealeth so shrewdly with the honest, they cannot but suspect him for a
- thief;
- With an unknown God, he maketh mock of reason, fathering contrivance on
- chance,
- Or doting with superstitious dread on some crooked image of his fancy:
- But ignorant of Self, he is weakness at heart; the key-stone crumbleth
- into sand,
- There is panic in the general's tent, the oak is hollow as hemlock;
- Though the warm sap creepeth up its bark, filling out the sheaf of leaves,
- Though knowledge of all things beside add proofs of seeming vigour,
- Though the master-mind of the royal sage feast on the mysteries of wisdom,
- Yet ignorance of self shall bow down the spirit of a Solomon to idols;
- The storm of temptation, sweeping by, shall snap that oak like a reed,
- And the proud luxuriance of its tufted crown drag it the sooner to the
- dust.
-
- Youth, confident in self, tampereth with dangerous dalliance,
- Till the vice his heart once hated hath locked him in her foul embrace:
- Manhood, through zeal of doing good, seeketh high place for its occasions,
- Unwitting that the bleak mountain-air will nip the tender budding of his
- motives:
- Or painfully, for love of truth, he climbeth the ladder of science,
- Till pride of intellect heating his heart, warpeth it aside to delusion:
- The maiden, to give shadow to her fairness, plaiteth her raven hair,
- Heedlessly weaving for her soul the silken net of vanity:
- The grey-beard looketh on his gold, till he loveth its yellow smile,
- Unconscious of the bright decoy which is luring his heart unto avarice:
- Wrath avoideth no quarrel, jealousy counteth its suspicions,
- Pining envy gazeth still, and melancholy seeketh solitude,
- The sensitive broodeth on his slights, the fearful poreth over horrors,
- The train of wantonness is fired, the nerves of indecision are unstrung;
- Each special proneness unto harm is pampered by ignorant indulgence,
- And the man, for want of warning, yieldeth to the apt temptation.
-
- A smith at the loom, and a weaver at the forge, were but sorry craftsmen;
- And a ship that saileth on every wind never shall reach her port:
- Yet there be thousands among men who heed not the leaning of their
- talents,
- But cutting against the grain, toil on to no good end;
- And the light of a thoughtful spirit is quenched beneath the bushel of
- commerce,
- While meaner plodding minds are driven up the mountain of philosophy:
- The cedar withereth on a wall, while the house-leek is fattening in a
- hot-bed,
- And the dock with its rank leaves hideth the sun from violets.
- To everything a fitting place, a proper honourable use;
- The humblest measure of mind is bright in its humble sphere:
- The glow-worm, creeping in the hedge, lighteth her evening torch,
- And her far-off mate, on gossamer sail, steereth his course by that star:
- But ignorance mocketh at proprieties, bringing out the glow-worm at noon;
- And setteth the faults of mediocrity in the full blaze of wisdom.
- Ravens croaking in darkness, and a skylark trilling to the sun,
- The voice of a screech-owl from a ruin, and the blackbird's whistle in a
- wood,
- A cushion-footed camel for the sands, and a swift rein-deer for the snows,
- A naked skin for Ethiopia, and rich soft furs for the Pole:
- In all things is there a fitness: discord with discord hath its music;
- And the harmony of nature is preserved by each one knowing his place.
-
- The blind at an easel, the palsied with a graver, the halt making for the
- goal,
- The deaf ear tuning psaltery, the stammerer discoursing eloquence,--
- What wonder if all fail? the shaft flieth wide of the mark
- Alike if itself be crooked, or the bow be strung awry;
- And the mind which were excellent in one way, but foolishly toileth in
- another,
- What is it but an ill-strung bow, and its aim a crooked arrow?
- By knowledge of self, thou provest thy powers: put not the racer to the
- plough,
- Nor goad the toilsome ox to wager his slowness with the fleet:
- Consider thy failings, heed thy propensities, search out thy latent
- virtues,
- Analyze the doubtful, cultivate the good, and crush the head of evil;
- So shalt thou catch with quick hand the golden ball of opportunity,
- The warrior armed shall be ready for the fray, beside his bridled steed;
- Thou shall ward off special harms, and have the sway of circumstance,
- And turn to thy special good the common current of events;
- Choosing from the wardrobe of the world, thou shalt suitably clothe thy
- spirit,
- Nor thrust the white hand of peace into the gauntlet of defiance:
- The shepherd shall go with a staff, and conquer by sling and stone;
- The soldier shall let alone the distaff, and the scribe lay down the
- sword;
- The man unlearned shall keep silence, and earn one attribute of wisdom,
- The sage be sparing of his lessons before unhearing ears:
- Calm shalt thou be, as a lion in repose, conscious of passive strength,
- And the shock that splitteth the globe, shall not unthrone thy
- self-possession.
-
- Acquaint thee with thyself, O man! so shalt thou be humble:
- The hard hot desert of thy heart shall blossom with the lily and the rose;
- The frozen cliffs of pride shall melt, as an iceberg in the tropics;
- The bitter fountains of self-seeking be sweeter than the waters of the
- Nile.
- But if thou lack that wisdom,--thy frail skiff is doomed,
- On stronger eddy whirling to the dreadful gorge;
- Untaught in that grand lore, thou standest, cased in steel,
- To dare with mocking unbelief the thunderbolts of heaven.
- For look now around thee on the universe, behold how all things serve
- thee;
- The teeming soil, and the buoyant sea, and undulating air,
- Golden crops, and bloomy fruits, and flowers, and precious gems,
- Choice perfumes and fair sights, soft touches and sweet music:
- For thee, shoaling up the bay, crowd the finny nations,
- For thee, the cattle on a thousand hills live, and labour, and die:
- Light is thy daily slave, darkness inviteth thee to slumber;
- Thou art served by the hands of Beauty, and Sublimity kneeleth at thy
- feet:
- Arise, thou sovereign of creation, and behold thy glory!
- Yet more, thou hast a mind; intellect wingeth thee to heaven,
- Tendeth thy state on earth, and by it thou divest down to hell;
- Thou hast measured the belts of Saturn, thou hast weighed the moons of
- Jupiter,
- And seen, by reason's eye, the centre of thy globe;
- Subtly hast thou numbered by billions the leagues between sun and sun,
- And noted in thy book the coming of their shadows;
- With marvellous unerring truth, thou knowest to an inch and to an instant,
- The where and the when of the comet's path that shall seem to rush by at
- thy command:
- Arise, thou king of mind, and survey thy dignity!
- Yet more,--for once believe religion's flattering tale;
- Thou hast a soul, yea, and a God,--but be not therefore humbled;
- Thy Maker's self was glad to live and die--a man;
- The brightest jewel in His crown is voluntary manhood:
- By deep dishonour, and great price, bought He that envied freedom,
- But thou wast born an heir of all, thy Master scarce could earn.
- O climax unto pride, O triumph of humanity,
- O triple crown upon thy brow, most high and mighty Self!
- Arise, thou Lord of all, thou greater than a God!--
- How saidst thou, wretched being?--cast thy glance within;
- Regard that painted sepulchre, the hovel of thy heart:
- Ha! with what fearful imagery swarmeth that small chamber;
- The horrid eye of murder, scowling in the dark,
- The bony hand of avarice, filching from the poor,
- The lurid fires of lust, the idiot face of folly,
- The sickening deed of cruelty, the foul fierce orgies of the drunken,
- Weak contemptible vanity, stubborn stolid unbelief,
- Envy's devilish sneer, and the vile features of ingratitude,--
- Man, hast thou seen enough? or are these full proof
- That thou art a miracle of mercy, and all thy dignity is dross?
-
- Well, said the wisdom of earth, O mortal, know thyself;
- But better the wisdom of heaven, O man, learn thou thy God:
- By knowledge of self thou art conusant of evil, and mailed in panoply to
- meet it;
- By knowledge of God cometh knowledge of good, and universal love is at
- thy heart.
- Every creature knoweth its capacities, running in the road of instinct,
- And reason must not lag behind, but serve itself of all proprieties:
- The swift to the race, and the strong to the burden, and the wise for
- right direction;
- For self-knowledge filleth with acceptance its niche in the temple of
- utility:
- But vainly wilt thou look for that knowledge, till the clue of all truth
- is in thy hand,
- For the labyrinth of man's heart windeth in complicate deceivings:
- Thou canst not sound its depths with the shallow plumb-line of reason,
- Till religion, the pilot of the soul, have lent thee her unfathomable
- coil:
- Therefore, for this grand knowledge, and knowledge is the parent of
- dominion,
- Learn God, thou shalt know thyself; yea, and shalt have mastery of all
- things.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Cruelty to Animals]
-
-OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS.
-
-[Illustration: "S"]
-
- Shame upon thee, savage Monarch-Man, proud monopolist of reason;
- Shame upon Creation's lord, the fierce ensanguined despot:
- What, man! are there not enough, hunger, and diseases, and fatigue,--
- And yet must thy goad or thy thong add another sorrow to existence?
- What! art thou not content thy sin hath dragged down suffering and death
- On the poor dumb servants of thy comfort, and yet must thou rack them
- with thy spite?
- The prodigal heir of creation hath gambled away his all,--
- Shall he add torment to the bondage that is galling his forfeit serfs?
- The leader in nature's pæan himself hath marred her psaltery,
- Shall he multiply the din of discord by overstraining all the strings?
- The rebel hath fortified his stronghold, shutting in his vassals with
- him,--
- Shall he aggravate the woes of the besieged by oppression from within?
- Thou twice deformed image of thy Maker, thou hateful representative of
- Love,
- For very shame be merciful, be kind unto the creatures thou hast ruined;
- Earth and her million tribes are cursed for thy sake,
- Earth and her million tribes still writhe beneath thy cruelty:
- Liveth there but one among the million that shall not bear witness
- against thee,
- A pensioner of land or air or sea, that hath not whereof it will accuse
- thee?
- From the elephant toiling at a launch, to the shrew-mouse in the
- harvest-field,
- From the whale which the harpooner hath stricken, to the minnow caught
- upon a pin,
- From the albatross wearied in its flight, to the wren in her covered nest,
- From the death-moth and lace-winged dragon-fly, to the lady-bird and the
- gnat,
- The verdict of all things is unanimous, finding their master cruel:
- The dog, thy humble friend, thy trusting, honest friend;
- The ass, thine uncomplaining slave, drudging from morn to even;
- The lamb, and the timorous hare, and the labouring ox at plough;
- The speckled trout, basking in the shallow, and the partridge, gleaning
- in the stubble,
- And the stag at bay, and the worm in thy path, and the wild bird pining
- in captivity,
- And all things that minister alike to thy life and thy comfort and thy
- pride,
- Testify with one sad voice that man is a cruel master.
-
- Verily, they are all thine: freely mayst thou serve thee of them all:
- They are thine by gift for thy needs, to be used in all gratitude and
- kindness;
- Gratitude to their God and thine,--their Father and thy Father,
- Kindness to them who toil for thee, and help thee with their all:
- For meat, but not by wantonness of slaying: for burden, but with limits
- of humanity;
- For luxury, but not through torture; for draught, but according to the
- strength:
- For a dog cannot plead his own right, nor render a reason for exemption,
- Nor give a soft answer unto wrath, to turn aside the undeserved lash;
- The galled ox cannot complain, nor supplicate a moment's respite;
- The spent horse hideth his distress, till he panteth out his spirit at
- the goal;
- Also, in the winter of life, when worn by constant toil,
- If ingratitude forget his services, he cannot bring them to remembrance;
- Behold, he is faint with hunger; the big tear standeth in his eye;
- His skin is sore with stripes, and he tottereth beneath his burden;
- His limbs are stiff with age, his sinews have lost their vigour,
- And pain is stamped upon his face, while he wrestleth unequally with toil;
- Yet once more mutely and meekly endureth he the crushing blow;
- That struggle hath cracked his heart-strings,--the generous brute is dead!
- Liveth there no advocate for him? no judge to avenge his wrongs?
- No voice that shall be heard in his defence? no sentence to be passed on
- his oppressor?
- Yea, the sad eye of the tortured pleadeth pathetically for him;
- Yea, all the justice in heaven is roused in indignation at his woes;
- Yea, all the pity upon earth shall call down a curse upon the cruel;
- Yea, the burning malice of the wicked is their own exceeding punishment.
- The Angel of Mercy stoppeth not to comfort, but passeth by on the other
- side,
- And hath no tear to shed, when a cruel man is damned.
-
-
-OF FRIENDSHIP.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- As frost to the bud, and blight to the blossom, even such is
- self-interest to Friendship:
- For Confidence cannot dwell where Selfishness is porter at the gate.
- If thou see thy friend to be selfish, thou canst not be sure of his
- honesty;
- And in seeking thine own weal, thou hast wronged the reliance of thy
- friend.
- Flattery hideth her varnished face when Friendship sitteth at his board:
- And the door is shut upon Suspicion, but Candour is bid glad welcome.
- For Friendship abhorreth doubt, its life is in mutual trust,
- And perisheth, when artful praise proveth it is sought for a purpose.
- A man may be good to thee at times, and render thee mighty service,
- Whom yet thy secret soul could not desire as a friend;
- For the sum of life is in trifles, and though, in the weightier masses,
- A man refuse thee not his purse, nay his all in thine utmost need,
- Yet if thou canst not feel that his character agreeth with thine own,
- Thou never wilt call him friend, though thou render him a heartful of
- gratitude.
- A coarse man grindeth harshly the finer feelings of his brother;
- A common mind will soon depart from the dull companionship of wisdom;
- A weak soul dareth not to follow in the track of vigour and decision;
- And the worldly regardeth with scorn the seeming foolishness of faith.
- A mountain is made up of atoms, and friendship of little matters,
- And if the atoms hold not together, the mountain is crumbled into dust.
-
- Come, I will show thee a friend; I will paint one worthy of thy trust:
- Thine heart shall not weary of him: thou shalt not secretly despise him.
- Thou art long in learning him, in unravelling all his worth;
- And he dazzleth not thine eyes at first, to be darkened in thy sight
- afterward,
- But riseth from small beginnings, and reacheth the height of thine esteem.
- He remembereth that thou art only man; he expecteth not great things from
- thee:
- And his forbearance toward thee silently teacheth thee to be considerate
- unto him.
- He despiseth not courtesy of manner, nor neglecteth the decencies of life:
- Nor mocketh the failings of others, nor is harsh in his censures before
- thee:
- For so, how couldst thou tell, if he talketh not of thee in ridicule?
- He withholdeth no secret from thee, and rejecteth not thine in turn;
- He shareth his joys with thee, and is glad to bear part in thy sorrows.
- Yet one thing, he loveth thee too well to show thee the corruptions of
- his heart:
- For as an ill example strengthened the hands of the wicked,
- So to put forward thy guilt, is a secret poison to thy friend:
- For the evil in his nature is comforted, and he warreth more weakly
- against it,
- If he find that the friend whom he honoureth, is a man more sinful than
- himself.
- I hear the communing of friends; ye speak out the fulness of your souls,
- And being but men, as men, ye own to all the sympathies of manhood:
- Confidence openeth the lips, indulgence beameth from the eye,
- The tongue loveth not boasting, the heart is made glad with kindness:
- And one standeth not as on a hill, beckoning to the other to follow,
- But ye toil up hand in hand, and carry each other's burdens.
- Ye commune of hopes and aspirations, the fervent breathings of the heart,
- Ye speak with pleasant interchange the treasured secrets of affection,
- Ye listen to the voice of complaint, and whisper the language of comfort,
- And as in a double solitude, ye think in each other's hearing.
-
- Choose thy friend discreetly, and see thou consider his station,
- For the graduated scale of ranks accordeth with the ordinance of Heaven.
- If a low companion ripen to a friend, in the full sunshine of thy
- confidence,
- Know, that for old age thou hast heaped up sorrow;
- For thou sinkest to that level, and thy kin shall scorn thee,
- Yea, and the menial thou hast pampered haply shall neglect thee in thy
- death:
- And if thou reachest up to high estates, thinking to herd with princes,
- What art thou but a footstool, though so near a throne?
- O rush among the lilies, be taught thou art a weed,
- O briar among the cedars, hot contempt shall burn thee.
- But thou, friend and scholar, select from thine own caste,
- And make not an intimate of one, thy servant or thy master;
- For only friendship among men is the true republic,
- Where all have equality of service, and all have freedom of command.
- And yet, if thou wilt take my judgment, be shy of too much openness with
- any,
- Lest thou repent hereafter, should he turn and rend thee:
- For many an apostate friend hath abused unguarded confidence,
- And bent to selfish ends the secret of the soul.
-
- Absence strengthened friendship, where the last recollections were kindly;
- But it must be good wine at the last, or absence shall weaken it daily.
- A rare thing is faith, and friendship is a marvel among men,
- Yet strange faces call they friends, and say they believe when they doubt.
- Those hours are not lost that are spent in cementing affection;
- For a friend is above gold, precious as the stores of the mind.
- Be sparing of advice by words, but teach thy lesson by example:
- For the vanity of man may be wounded, and retort unkindly upon thee.
- There be some that never had a friend, because they were gross and
- selfish;
- Worldliness, and apathy, and pride, leave not many that are worthy:
- But one who meriteth esteem, need never lack a friend:
- For as thistle-down flieth abroad, and casteth its anchor in the soil,
- So philanthropy yearneth for a heart, where it may take root and blossom.
-
- Yet I hear the child of sensibility moaning at the wintry cold,
- Wherein the mists of selfishness have wrapped the society of men:
- He grieveth, and hath deep reasons; for falsehood hath wronged his trust,
- And the breaches in his bleeding heart have been filled with the briars
- of suspicion.
- For, alas, how few be friends, of whom charity hath hoped well!
- How few there be among men who forget themselves for other!
- Each one seeketh his own, and looketh on his brethren as rivals,
- Masking envy with friendship, to serve his secret ends.
- And the world, that corrupteth all good, hath wronged that sacred name,
- For it calleth any man friend, who is not known for an enemy:
- And such be as the flies of summer, while plenty sitteth at thy board:
- But who can wonder at their flight from the cold denials of want?
- Such be as vultures round a carcase, assembled together for the feast;
- But a sudden noise scareth them, and forthwith are they specks among the
- clouds.
- There be few, O child of sensibility, who deserve to have thy confidence;
- Yet weep not, for there are some, and such some live for thee:
- To them is the chilling world a drear and barren scene,
- And gladly seek they such as thou art, for seldom find they the occasion:
- For, though no man excludeth himself from the high capability of
- friendship,
- Yet verily the man is a marvel whom truth can write a friend.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Love]
-
-Of Love.
-
- There is a fragrant blossom, that maketh glad the garden of the heart;
- Its root lieth deep: it is delicate, yet lasting, as the lilac crocus of
- autumn:
- Loneliness and thought are the dews that water it morn and even;
- Memory and Absence cherish it, as the balmy breathings of the south:
- Its sun is the brightness of Affection, and it bloometh in the borders of
- Hope;
- Its companions are gentle flowers, and the briar withereth by its side.
- I saw it budding in beauty; I felt the magic of its smile;
- The violet rejoiced beneath it, the rose stooped down and kissed it;
- And I thought some cherub had planted there a truant flower of Eden,
- As a bird bringeth foreign seeds, that they may flourish in a kindly soil.
- I saw, and asked not its name; I knew no language was so wealthy,
- Though every heart of every clime findeth its echo within.
- And yet what shall I say? Is a sordid man capable of Love?
- Hath a seducer known it? Can an adulterer perceive it?
- Or he that seeketh strange women, can he feel its purity?
- Or he that changeth often, can he know its truth?
- Longing for another's happiness, yet often destroying its own;
- Chaste, and looking up to God, as the fountain of tenderness and joy:
- Quiet, yet flowing deep, as the Rhine among rivers;
- Lasting, and knowing not change--it walketh with Truth and Sincerity.
-
- Love:--what a volume in a word, an ocean in a tear,
- A seventh heaven in a glance, a whirlwind in a sigh,
- The lightning in a touch, a millennium in a moment,
- What concentrated joy or woe in blest or blighted love!
- For it is that native poetry springing up indigenous to Mind,
- The heart's own-country music thrilling all its chords,
- The story without an end that angels throng to hear,
- The word, the king of words, carved on Jehovah's heart!
- Go, call thou snake-eyed malice mercy, call envy honest praise,
- Count selfish craft for wisdom, and coward treachery for prudence,
- Do homage to blaspheming unbelief as to bold and free philosophy,
- And estimate the recklessness of license as the right attribute of
- liberty,--
- But with the world, thou friend and scholar, stain not this pure name;
- Nor suffer the majesty of Love to be likened to the meanness of desire:
- For love is no more such, than seraphs' hymns are discord,
- And such is no more Love, than Etna's breath is summer.
-
- Love is a sweet idolatry enslaving all the soul,
- A mighty spiritual force, warring with the dulness of matter,
- An angel-mind breathed into a mortal, though fallen yet how beautiful!
- All the devotion of the heart in all its depth and grandeur.
- Behold that pale geranium, pent within the cottage window;
- How yearningly it stretcheth to the light its sickly long-stalked leaves,
- How it straineth upward to the sun, coveting his sweet influences,
- How real a living sacrifice to the god of all its worship!
- Such is the soul that loveth; and so the rose-tree of affection
- Bendeth its every leaf to look on those dear eyes,
- Its every blushing petal basketh in their light,
- And all its gladness, all its life, is hanging on their love.
-
- If the love of the heart is blighted, it buddeth not again:
- If that pleasant song is forgotten, it is to be learnt no more:
- Yet often will thought look back, and weep over early affection;
- And the dim notes of that pleasant song will be heard as a reproachful
- spirit,
- Moaning in Æolian strains over the desert of the heart,
- Where the hot siroccos of the world have withered its one oasis.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF MARRIAGE.
-
- Seek a good wife of thy God, for she is the best gift of His providence;
- Yet ask not in bold confidence that which He hath not promised:
- Thou knowest not His good will:--be thy prayer then submissive there-unto;
- And leave thy petition to His mercy, assured that He will deal well with
- thee.
- If thou art to have a wife of thy youth, she is now living on the earth;
- Therefore think of her, and pray for her weal; yea, though thou hast not
- seen her.
- They that love early become like-minded, and the tempter toucheth them
- not:
- They grow up leaning on each other, as the olive and the vine.
- Youth longeth for a kindred spirit, and yearneth for a heart that can
- commune with his own;
- He meditateth night and day, doting on the image of his fancy.
- Take heed that what charmeth thee is real, nor springeth of thine own
- imagination;
- And suffer not trifles to win thy love; for a wife is thine unto death.
- The harp and the voice may thrill thee,--sound may enchant thine ear,
- But consider thou, the hand will wither, and the sweet notes turn discord:
- The eye, so brilliant at even, may be red with sorrow in the morning;
- And the sylph-like form of elegance must writhe in the crampings of pain.
-
- O happy lot, and hallowed, even as the joy of angels,
- Where the golden chain of godliness is entwined with the roses of love:
- But beware thou seem not to be holy, to win favour in the eyes of a
- creature,
- For the guilt of the hypocrite is deadly, and winneth thee wrath
- elsewhere.
- The idol of thy heart is, as thou, a probationary sojourner on earth;
- Therefore be chary of her soul, for that is the jewel in her casket:
- Let her be a child of God, that she bring with her a blessing to thy
- house,--
- A blessing above riches, and leading contentment in its train:
- Let her be an heir of Heaven; so shall she help thee on thy way:
- For those who are one in faith, fight double-handed against evil.
- Take heed lest she love thee before God; that she be not an idolater:
- Yet see thou that she love thee well: for her heart is the heart of woman;
- And the triple nature of humanity must be bound by a triple chain,
- For soul and mind and body--godliness, esteem, and affection.
-
- How beautiful is modesty! it winneth upon all beholders:
- But a word or a glance may destroy the pure love that should have been
- for thee.
- Affect not to despise beauty: no one is freed from its dominion;
- But regard it not a pearl of price:--it is fleeting as the bow in the
- clouds.
- If the character within be gentle, it often hath its index in the
- countenance:
- The soft smile of a loving face is better than splendour that fadeth
- quickly.
- When thou choosest a wife, think not only of thyself,
- But of those God may give thee of her, that they reproach thee not for
- their being:
- See that He hath given her health, lest thou lose her early and weep:
- See that she springeth of a wholesome stock, that thy little ones perish
- not before thee:
- For many a fair skin hath covered a mining disease,
- And many a laughing cheek been bright with the glare of madness.
-
- Mark the converse of one thou lovest, that it be simple and sincere;
- For an artful or false woman shall set thy pillow with thorns.
- Observe her deportment with others, when she thinketh not that thou art
- nigh,
- For with thee will the blushes of love conceal the true colour of her
- mind.
- Hath she learning? it is good, so that modesty go with it:
- Hath she wisdom? it is precious, but beware that thou exceed;
- For woman must be subject, and the true mastery is of the mind.
- Be joined to thine equal in rank, or the foot of pride will kick at thee;
- And look not only for riches, lest thou be mated with misery:
- Marry not without means; for so shouldst thou tempt Providence;
- But wait not for more than enough; for Marriage is the DUTY of most men:
- Grievous indeed must be the burden that shall outweigh innocence and
- health,
- And a well-assorted marriage hath not many cares.
- In the day of thy joy consider the poor; thou shall reap a rich harvest
- of blessing;
- For these be the pensioners of One who filleth thy cup with pleasures:
- In the day of thy joy be thankful: He hath well deserved thy praise:
- Mean and selfish is the heart that seeketh Him only in sorrow.
- For her sake who leaneth on thine arm, court not the notice of the world,
- And remember that sober privacy is comelier than public display.
- If thou marriest, thou art allied unto strangers; see they be not such as
- shame thee:
- If thou marriest, thou leavest thine own; see that it be not done in
- anger.
-
- Bride and bridegroom, pilgrims of life, henceforward to travel together,
- In this the beginning of your journey, neglect not the favour of Heaven:
- Let the day of hopes fulfilled be blest by many prayers,
- And at eventide kneel ye together, that your joy be not unhallowed:
- Angels that are round you shall be glad, those loving ministers of mercy,
- And the richest blessings of your God shall be poured on His favoured
- children.
- Marriage is a figure and an earnest of holier things unseen,
- And reverence well becometh the symbol of dignity and glory.
- Keep thy heart pure, lest thou do dishonour to thy state;
- Selfishness is base and hateful; but love considereth not itself.
- The wicked turneth good into evil, for his mind is warped within him;
- But the heart of the righteous is chaste: his conscience casteth off sin.
- If thou wilt be loved, render implicit confidence;
- If thou wouldst not suspect, receive full confidence in turn:
- For where trust is not reciprocal, the love that trusted withereth.
- Hide not your grief nor your gladness; be open one with the other;
- Let bitterness be strange unto your tongues, but sympathy a dweller in
- your hearts:
- Imparting halveth the evils, while it doubleth the pleasures of life,
- But sorrows breed and thicken in the gloomy bosom of Reserve.
-
- Young wife, be not froward, nor forget that modesty becometh thee:
- If it be discarded now, who will not hold it feigned before?
- But be not as a timid girl,--there is honour due to thine estate;
- A matron's modesty is dignified: she blusheth not, neither is she bold.
- Be kind to the friends of thine husband, for the love they have to him:
- And gently bear with his infirmities: hast thou no need of his
- forbearance?
- Be not always in each other's company; it is often good to be alone;
- And if there be too much sameness, ye cannot but grow weary of each other:
- Ye have each a soul to be nourished, and a mind to be taught in wisdom,
- Therefore, as accountable for time, help one another to improve it.
- If ye feel love to decline, track out quickly the secret cause;
- Let it not rankle for a day, but confess and bewail it together:
- Speedily seek to be reconciled, for love is the life of marriage;
- And be ye co-partners in triumph, conquering the peevishness of self.
-
- Let no one have thy confidence, O wife, saving thine husband:
- Have not a friend more intimate, O husband, than thy wife.
- In the joy of a well-ordered home be warned that this is not your rest;
- For the substance to come may be forgotten in the present beauty of the
- shadow.
- If ye are blessed with children, ye have a fearful pleasure,
- A deeper care and a higher joy, and the range of your existence is
- widened:
- If God in wisdom refuse them, thank Him for an unknown mercy:
- For how can ye tell if they might be a blessing or a curse?
- Yet ye may pray, like Hannah, simply dependent on His will:
- Resignation sweeteneth the cup, but impatience dasheth it with vinegar.
- Now this is the sum of the matter:--if ye will be happy in marriage,
- Confide, love, and be patient: be faithful, firm, and holy.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF EDUCATION.
-
- A babe in a house is a well-spring of pleasure, a messenger of peace and
- love:
- A resting place for innocence on earth; a link between angels and men:
- Yet is it a talent of trust, a loan to be rendered back with interest;
- A delight, but redolent of care; honey-sweet, but lacking not the bitter.
- For character groweth day by day, and all things aid it in unfolding,
- And the bent unto good or evil may be given in the hours of infancy:
- Scratch the green rind of a sapling, or wantonly twist it in the soil,
- The scarred and crooked oak will tell of thee for centuries to come;
- Even so mayst thou guide the mind to good, or lead it to the marrings of
- evil,
- For disposition is builded up by the fashioning of first impressions:
- Wherefore, though the voice of instruction waiteth for the ear of reason,
- Yet with his mother's milk the young child drinketh Education.
- Patience is the first great lesson; he may learn it at the breast:
- And the habit of obedience and trust may be grafted on his mind in the
- cradle:
- Hold the little hands in prayer, teach the weak knees their kneeling;
- Let him see thee speaking to thy God; he will not forget it afterward:
- When old and grey will he feelingly remember a mother's tender piety,
- And the touching recollection of her prayers shall arrest the strong man
- in his sin.
-
- Select not to nurse thy darling one that may taint his innocence,
- For example is a constant monitor, and good seed will die among the tares.
- The arts of a strange servant have spoiled a gentle disposition:
- Mother, let him learn of thy lips, and be nourished at thy breast.
- Character is mainly moulded by the cast of the minds that surround it:
- Let then the playmates of thy little one be not other than thy judgment
- shall approve:
- For a child is in a new world, and learneth somewhat every moment,
- His eye is quick to observe, his memory storeth in secret,
- His ear is greedy of knowledge, and his mind is plastic as soft wax.
- Beware then that he heareth what is good, that he feedeth not on evil
- maxims,
- For the seeds of first instructions are dropped into the deepest furrows.
- That which immemorial use hath sanctioned, seemeth to be right and true;
- Therefore, let him never have to recollect the time when good things were
- strangers to his thought.
- Strive not to centre in thyself, fond mother, all his love;
- Nay, do not thou so selfishly, but enlarge his heart for others;
- Use him to sympathy betimes, that he learn to be sad with the afflicted;
- And check not a child in his merriment,--should not his morning be sunny?
- Give him not all his desire, so shalt thou strengthen him in hope;
- Neither stop with indulgence the fountain of his tears, so shall he fear
- thy firmness.
- Above all things graft on him subjection, yea, in the veriest trifle;
- Courtesy to all, reverence to some, and to thee unanswering obedience.
-
- Read thou first, and well approve, the books thou givest to thy child;
- But remember the weakness of his thought, and that wisdom for him must be
- diluted:
- In the honied waters of infant tales, let him taste the strong wine of
- truth:
- Pathetic stories soften the heart; but legends of terror breed midnight
- misery;
- Fairy fictions cram the mind with folly, and knowledge of evil tempteth
- to like evil:
- Be not loth to curb imagination, nor be fearful that truths will depress
- it;
- And for evil, he will learn it soon enough; be not thou the devil's envoy.
- Induce not precocity of intellect, for so shouldst thou nourish vanity;
- Neither can a plant, forced in the hot-bed, stand against the frozen
- breath of winter.
- The mind is made wealthy by ideas, but the multitude of words is a
- clogging weight:
- Therefore be understood in thy teaching, and instruct to the measure of
- capacity.
- Analogy is milk for babes, but abstract truths are strong meat;
- Precepts and rules are repulsive to a child, but happy illustration
- winneth him:
- In vain shalt thou preach of industry and prudence, till he learn of the
- bee and the ant;
- Dimly will he think of his soul, till the acorn and the chrysalis have
- taught him;
- He will fear God in thunder, and worship His loveliness in flowers;
- And parables shall charm his heart, while doctrines seem dead mystery:
- Faith shall he learn of the husbandman casting good corn into the soil;
- And if thou train him to trust thee, he will not withhold his reliance
- from the Lord.
- Fearest thou the dark, poor child? I would not have thee left to thy
- terrors;
- Darkness is the semblance of evil, and nature regardeth it with dread:
- Yet know thy father's God is with thee still, to guard thee:
- It is a simple lesson of dependence; let thy tost mind anchor upon Him.
- Did a sudden noise affright thee? lo, this or that hath caused it:
- Things undefined are full of dread, and stagger stouter nerves.
- The seeds of misery and madness have been sowed in the nights of infancy;
- Therefore be careful that ghastly fears be not the night companions of
- thy child.
-
- Lo, thou art a landmark on a hill; thy little ones copy thee in all
- things:
- Let, then, thy religion be perfect: so shalt thou be honoured in thy
- house.
- Be instructed in all wisdom, and communicate that thou knowest,
- Otherwise thy learning is hidden, and thus thou seemest unwise.
- A sluggard hath no respect; an epicure commandeth not reverence;
- Meanness is always despicable, and folly provoketh contempt.
- Those parents are best honoured whose characters best deserve it;
- Show me a child undutiful, I shall know where to look for a foolish
- father:
- Never hath a father done his duty, and lived to be despised of his son:
- But how can that son reverence an example he dare not follow?
- Should he imitate thee in thine evil? his scorn is thy rebuke.
- Nay, but bring him up aright, in obedience to God and to thee;
- Begin betimes, lest thou fail of his fear; and with judgment, that thou
- lose not his love:
- Herein use good discretion, and govern not all alike,
- Yet, perhaps, the fault will be in thee, if kindness prove not all
- sufficient:
- By kindness, the wolf and the zebra become docile as the spaniel and the
- horse;
- The kite feedeth with the starling, under the law of kindness:
- That law shall tame the fiercest, bring down the battlements of pride,
- Cherish the weak, control the strong, and win the fearful spirit.
- Be obeyed when thou commandest; but command not often:
- Let thy carriage be the gentleness of love, not the stern front of
- tyranny.
- Make not one child a warning to another; but chide the offender apart:
- For self-conceit and wounded pride rankle like poisons in the soul.
- A mild rebuke in the season of calmness, is better than a rod in the heat
- of passion;
- Nevertheless, spare not, if thy word hath passed for punishment;
- Let not thy child see thee humbled, nor learn to think thee false;
- Suffer none to reprove thee before him, and reprove not thine own
- purposes by change;
- Yet speedily turn thou again, and reward him where thou canst,
- For kind encouragement in good cutteth at the roots of evil.
-
- Drive not a timid infant from his home, in the early spring-time of his
- life,
- Commit not that treasure to an hireling, nor wrench the young heart's
- fibres:
- In his helplessness leave him not alone, a stranger among strange
- children,
- Where affection longeth for thy love, counting the dreary hours;
- Where religion is made a terror, and innocence weepeth unheard;
- Where oppression grindeth without remedy, and cruelty delighteth in
- smiting.
- Wherefore comply with an evil fashion? Is it not to spare thee trouble?
- Can he gather no knowledge at thy mouth? Wilt thou yield thine honour to
- another?
- What can he gain in learning, to equal what he loseth in innocence?
- Alas! for the price above gold, by which such learning cometh!
- For emulative pride and envy are the specious idols of the diligent,
- Oaths and foul-mouthed sin burn in the language of the idle:
- Bolder in that mimic world of boys stareth brazen-fronted vice,
- Than thereafter in the haunts of men, where society doth shame her into
- corners.
- My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thy timid infant unto
- sorrows.
- There be many that say, We were happiest in days long past,
- When our deepest care was an ill-conned book,
- And when we sported in that merry sunshine of our life,
- Sadness a stranger to the heart, and cheerfulness its gay inhabitant.
- True, ye are now less pure, and therefore are more wretched:
- But have ye quite forgotten how sorely ye travailed at your tasks,
- How childish griefs and disappointments bowed down the childish mind?
- How sorrow sat upon your pillow, and terror hath waked you up betimes,
- Dreading the strict hand of justice, that would not wait for a reason,
- Or the whims of petty tyrants, children like yourselves,
- Or the pestilent extract of evil poured into the ear of innocence?
- Behold the coral island, fresh from the floor of the Atlantic,
- It is dinted by every ripple, and a soft wave can smooth its surface;
- But soon its substance hardeneth in the winds and tropic sun,
- And weakly the foaming billows break against its adamantine wall:
- Even thus, though sin and care dash upon the firmness of manhood,
- The timid child is wasted most by his petty troubles;
- And seldom, when life is mature, and the strength proportioned to the
- burden,
- Will the feeling mind, that can remember, acknowledge to deeper anguish,
- Than when, as a stranger and a little one, the heart first ached with
- anxiety,
- And the sprouting buds of sensibility were bruised by the harshness of a
- school.
- My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thine infant unto sorrows.
- Yet there be boisterous tempers, stout nerves, and stubborn hearts,
- And there is a riper season, when the mind is well disciplined in good,
- And a time, when youth may be bettered by the wholesome occasions of
- knowledge,
- Which rarely will he meet with so well, as among the congregation of his
- fellows.
- Only for infancy, fond mother, rend not those first affections;
- Only for the sensitive and timorous, consign not thy darling unto misery.
-
- A man looketh on his little one, as a being of better hope;
- In himself ambition is dead, but it hath a resurrection in his son:
- That vein is yet untried,--and who can tell if it be not golden?
- While his, well nigh worked out, never yielded aught but lead:
- And thus is he hurt more sorely, if his wishes are defeated there,
- He has staked his all upon a throw, and lo! the dice have foiled him.
- All ways, and at all times, men follow on in flocks,
- And the rife epidemic of the day shall tincture the stream of education.
- Fashion is a foolish watcher posted at the tree of knowledge,
- Who plucketh its unripe fruit to pelt away the birds;
- But, for its golden apples,--they dry upon the boughs,
- And few have the courage or the wisdom to eat in spite of fashion.
- One while, the fever is to learn, what none will be wiser for knowing,
- Exploded errors in extinct tongues, and occasions for their use are small;
- And the bright morning of life, for years of misspent time,
- Wasted in following sounds, hath tracked up little sense,
- Till at noon a man is thrown upon the world, with a mind expert in
- trifles,
- Having yet everything to learn that can make him good or useful:
- The curious spirit of youth is crammed with unwholesome garbage,
- While starving for the mother's milk the breasts of nature yield;
- And high-coloured fables of depravity lure with their classic varnish,
- While truth is holding out in vain her mirror much despised.
-
- Of olden time, the fashion was for arms, to make an accomplished slayer,
- And set gregarious man a-tilting with his fellows;
- Thereafter, occult sciences, and mystic arts, and symbols,
- How to exorcise a wizard, and how to lay a ghost;
- Anon, all for gallantry and presence, the minuet, the palfrey, and the
- foil,
- And the grand aim of education was to produce a coxcomb;
- Soon came scholastical dispute with hydra-headed argument,
- And the true philosophy of mind confounded in a labyrinth of words;
- Then the Pantheon, and its orgies, initiating docile childhood,
- While diligent youth strove hard to render his all unto Cæsar;
- And now is seen the passion for utility, when all things are accounted by
- their price,
- And the wisdom of the wise is busied in hatching golden eggs:
- Perchance, not many moons to come, and all will again be for abstrusity,
- Unravelling the figured veil that hideth Egypt's gods;
- Or in those strange Avatars seeking benignant Vishnu,
- Kali, and Kamala the fair, and much invoked Ganesa.
-
- The mines of knowledge are oft laid bare through the forked hazel wand of
- chance,
- And in a mountain of quartz we find a grain of gold.
- Of a truth, it were well to know all things, and to learn them all at
- once,
- And what, though mortal insufficiency attain to small knowledge of any?
- Man loveth exclusions, delighting in the sterile trodden path,
- While the broad green meadow is jewelled with wild flowers:
- And whether is it better with the many to follow a beaten track,
- Or by eccentric wanderings to cull unheeded sweets?
-
- When his reason yieldeth fruit, make thy child thy friend;
- For a filial friend is a double gain, a diamond set in gold.
- As an infant, thy mandate was enough, but now let him see thy reasons;
- Confide in him, but with discretion: and bend a willing ear to his
- questions.
- More to thee than to all beside, let him owe good counsel and good
- guidance;
- Let him feel his pursuits have an interest, more to thee than to all
- beside.
- Watch his native capacities; nourish that which suiteth him the readiest;
- And cultivate early those good inclinations wherein thou fearest he is
- most lacking:
- Is he phlegmatic and desponding? let small successes comfort his hope:
- Is he obstinate and sanguine? let petty crosses accustom him to life:
- Showeth he a sordid spirit? be quick, and teach him generosity:
- Inclineth he to liberal excess? prove to him how hard it is to earn.
- Gather to thy hearth such friends as are worthy of honour and attention;
- For the company a man chooseth is a visible index of his heart:
- But let not the pastor whom thou hearest be too much a familiar in thy
- house,
- For thy children may see his infirmities, and learn to cavil at his
- teaching.
- It is well to take hold on occasions, and render indirect instruction;
- It is better to teach upon a system, and reap the wisdom of books:
- The history of nations yieldeth grand outlines: of persons, minute
- details:
- Poetry is polish to the mind, and high abstractions cleanse it.
- Consider the station of thy son, and breed him to his fortune with
- judgment:
- The rich may profit in much which would bring small advantage to the poor.
- But with all thy care for thy son, with all thy strivings for his welfare,
- Expect disappointment, and look for pain: for he is of an evil stock, and
- will grieve thee.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF TOLERANCE.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- A wise man in a crowded street winneth his way with gentleness,
- Nor rudely pusheth aside the stranger that standeth in his path;
- He knoweth that blind hurry will but hinder, stirring up contention
- against him,
- Yet holdeth he steadily right on, with his face to the scope of his
- pursuit:
- Even so, in the congress of opinions, the bustling highway of
- intelligence,
- Each man should ask of his neighbour, and yield to him again, concession.
- Terms ill-defined, and forms misunderstood, and customs, where their
- reasons are unknown,
- Have stirred up many zealous souls to fight against imaginary giants:
- But wisdom will hear the matter out, and often, by keenness of perception,
- Will find in strange disguise the precious truth he seeketh;
- So he leaveth unto prejudice or taste the garb and the manner of her
- presence,
- Content to see so nigh the mistress of his love.
- There is no similitude in nature that owneth not also to a difference,
- Yea, no two berries are alike, though twins upon one stem;
- No drop in the ocean, no pebble on the beach, no leaf in the forest, hath
- its counterpart,
- No mind in its dwelling of mortality, no spirit in the world unseen:
- And therefore, since capacity and essence differ alike with accident,
- None but a bigot partizan will hope for impossible unity.
- Wilt thou ensue peace, nor buffet with the waters of contention,
- Wilt thou be counted wise and gain the love of men,
- Let unobtruded error escape the frown of censure,
- Nor lift the glass of truth alway before thy fellows:
- I say not, compromise the right, I would not have thee countenance the
- wrong,
- But hear with charitable heart the reasons of an honest judgment;
- For thou also hast erred, and knowest not when thou art most right,
- Nor whether to-morrow's wisdom may not prove thee simple to-day:
- Perchance thou art chiding in another what once thou wast thyself;
- Perchance thou sharply reprovest what thou wilt be hereafter.
- A man that can render a reason, is a man worthy of an answer;
- But he that argueth for victory, deserveth not the tenderness of Truth.
-
- Whiles a man liveth he may mend: count not thy brother reprobate;
- When he is dead his chance is gone: remember not his faults in bitterness.
- A man, till he dieth, is immortal in thy sight; and then he is as nothing:
- Make not the living thy foe, nor take weak vengeance of the dead.
- For life is as a game of chess, where least causeth greatest,
- And an ill move bringeth loss, and a pawn may ensure victory.
- Dost thou suspect? seek out certainty: for now, by self-inflicted pain,
- Or ill-directed wrath, thou wrongest thyself or thy neighbour:
- Suspicion is an early lesson, taught in the school of experience,
- Neither shalt thou easily unlearn it, though charity ply thee with her
- preaching;
- Yet look thou well for reasons, or ever mistrust hath marred thee,
- Or fear curdled thy blood, or jealousy goaded thee to madness;
- For a look, or a word, or an act, may be taken well or ill
- As construed by the latitude of love, or the closeness of cold suspicion.
-
- Better is the wrong with sincerity, rather than the right with falsehood:
- And a prudent man will not lay siege to the stronghold of ignorant
- bigotry.
- To unsettle a weak mind were an easy inglorious triumph,
- And a strong cause taketh little count of the worthless suffrage of a
- fool:
- Lightly he held to the wrong, loosely will he cling to the right;
- Weakness is the essence of his mind, and the reed cannot yield an acorn.
- Dogged obstinacy is oftentimes the buttress that proppeth an unstable
- spirit,
- But a candid man blusheth not to own, he is wiser to-day than yesterday.
- A man of a little wisdom is a sage among fools;
- But himself is chief among the fools, if he look for admiration from them.
- A heresy is an evil thing, for its shame is its pride:
- Its necessary difference of error is the character it most esteemeth:
- Give a man all things short of liberty, thou shalt have no thanks,
- And little wilt thou speed with thine opponent, by proving points he will
- concede.
- The tost sand darkeneth the waves; and clear had been the pages of truth,
- Had not the glosses of men obscured the simplicity of faith.
- In all things consider thine own ignorance, and gladly take occasion to
- be taught;
- But suffer not excess of liberality to neutralize thy mental independence.
-
- The faults and follies of most men make their deaths a gain:
- But thou also art a man, full of faults and follies:
- Therefore sorrow for the dead, or none shall weep for thee,
- For the measure of charity thou dealest, shall be poured into thine own
- bosom.
- That which vexeth thee now, provoking thee to hate thy brother,
- Bear with it; the annoyance passeth, and may not return for ever:
- The same combinations and results which aggravate thy soul to-day,
- May not meet again for centuries in the kaleidoscope of circumstance;
- For men and matters change, new elements mixing in continually,
- And, as with chemical magic, the sour is transmuted into sweetness:
- A little explained, a little endured, a little passed over as a foible,
- And lo, the jagged atoms fit like smooth mosaic.
- Thou canst not shape another's mind to suit thine own body,
- Think not, then, to be furnishing his brain with thy special notions.
- Charity walketh with a high step, and stumbleth not at a trifle:
- Charity hath keen eyes, but the lashes half conceal them:
- Charity is praised of all, and fear not thou that praise,
- God will not love thee less, because men love thee more.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF SORROW.
-
- I said, I will seek out Sorrow, and minister the balm of pity;
- So I sought her in the house of mourning; but peace followed in her train.
- Then I marked her brooding silently in the gloomy cavern of Regret;
- But a sunbeam of heavenly hope gleamed on her folded wing.
- So I turned to the cabin of the poor, where famine dwelt with disease:
- But the bed of the sick was smoothed, and the ploughman whistled at his
- labour.
- So I stopt, and mused within myself, to remember where Sorrow dwelt,
- For I sought to see her alone, uncomforted, uncompanioned.
- I went to the prison, but penitence was there, and promise of better
- times;
- I listened at the madman's cell, but it echoed with deluded laughter.
- Then I turned me to the rich and noble; I noted the sons of fashion:
- A smile was on the languid cheek, that had no commerce with the heart;
- Unhallowed thoughts, like fires, gleamed from the window of the eye;
- And sorrow lived with those whose pleasures add unto their sins.
-
- His infancy wanted not guilt; his life was continued evil:
- He drew in pride with his mother's milk, and a father's lips taught him
- cursing.
- I marked him as the wayward boy; I traced the dissolute youth:
- I saw him betray the innocent, and sacrifice affection to his lust;
- I saw him the companion of knaves, and a squanderer of ill-got gain;
- I heard him curse his own misery, while he hugged the chains that galled
- him:
- For well had experience declared the bitterness of guilty pleasure,
- But habit, with its iron net, involved him in its folds.
- Behind him lowered the thunder-storm, which the caldron of his wickedness
- had brewed;
- Before him was the smooth steep cliff, whose base is ruin and despair.
- So he rushed madly on, and tried to forget his being:
- The noisy revel and the low debauch, and fierce excitement of play,
- With dreary interchange of palling pleasures, filled the dull round of
- existence:
- Memory was to him as a foe, so he flew for false solace to the wine-cup,
- And stunned his enemy at even; but she rent him as a giant in the morning.
-
- I turned aside to weep; I lost him a little while:
- I looked, and years had past; he was hoar with the winter of his age.
- And what was now his hope? where was the balm for his sadness?
- The memory of the past was guilt: the feeling of the present, remorse.
- Then he set his affections on gold, he worshipped the shrine of Mammon,
- And to lay richer gifts before his idol, he starved his own bowels;
- So, the youth spent in profligacy ended in the gripings of want:
- The miser grudged himself husks to take deeper vengeance of the prodigal.
- And I said, this is Sorrow, but pity cannot reach it;
- This is to be wretched indeed, to be guilty without repentance.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Joy]
-
-OF JOY.
-
- My soul was sickened within me, so I sought the dwelling place of Joy:
- And I met it not in laughter; I found it not in wealth or power;
- But I saw it in the pleasant home, where religion smiled upon content,
- And the satisfied ambition of the heart rejoiced in the favour of its God.
- Behold the happy man, his face is rayed with pleasure,
- His thoughts are of calm delight, and none can know his blessedness.
- I have watched him from his infancy, and seen him in the grasp of death,
- Yet, never have I noted on his brow the cloud of desponding sorrow.
- He hath knelt beside his cradle; his mother's hymn lulled him to sleep:
- In childhood he hath loved holiness, and drank from that fountain-head of
- peace.
- Wisdom took him for her scholar, guiding his steps in purity:
- He lived unpolluted by the world; and his young heart hated sin.
- But he owned not the spurious religion engendered of faction and
- moroseness,
- Neither were the sproutings of his soul seared by the brand of
- superstition.
- His love is pure and single, sincere, and knoweth not change;
- For his manhood hath been blest with the pleasant choice of his youth:
- Behold his one beloved, she leaneth on his arm,
- And he looketh on the years that are past, to review the dawn of her
- affection.
- Memory is sweet unto him, as a perfect landscape to the sight;
- Each object is lovely in itself, but the whole is the harmony of nature.
- Behold his little ones around him, they bask in the warmth of his smile,
- And infant innocence and joy lighten their happy faces;
- He is holy, and they honour him: he is loving, and they love him:
- He is consistent, and they esteem him: he is firm, and they fear him.
- His friends are the excellent among men; and the bands of their
- friendship are strong:
- His house is the palace of peace: for the Prince of Peace is there.
- As the wearied man to his couch, as the thoughtful man to his musings,
- Even so, from the bustle of life, he goeth to his well-ordered home.
- And though he often sin, he returneth with weeping eyes:
- For he feeleth the mercies of forgiveness, and gloweth with warmer
- gratitude.
-
- Thus did he walk in happiness, and sorrow was a stranger to his soul;
- The light of affection sunned his heart, the tear of the grateful bedewed
- his feet,
- He put his hand with constancy to good, and angels knew him as a brother,
- And the busy satellites of evil trembled as at God's ally:
- He used his wealth as a wise steward, making him friends for futurity:
- He bent his learning to religion, and religion was with him at the last:
- For I saw him after many days, when the time of his release was come,
- And I longed for a congregated world, to behold that dying saint.
- As the aloe is green and well-liking, till the last best summer of its
- age,
- And then hangeth out its golden bells, to mingle glory with corruption;
- As a meteor travelleth in splendour, but bursteth in dazzling light;
- Such was the end of the righteous: his death was the sun at its setting.
-
- Look on this picture of joy, and remember that portrait of sorrow:
- Behold the beauty of holiness, behold the deformity of sin!
- How long, ye sons of men, will ye scorn the words of wisdom?
- How long will ye hunt for happiness in the caverns that breed despair?
- Will ye comfort yourselves in misery, by denying the existence of delight,
- And from experience in woe, will ye reason that none are happy?
- Joy is not in your path, for it loveth not that bleak broad road,
- But its flowers are hung upon the hedges that line a narrower way;
- And there the faint travellers of earth may wander and gather for
- themselves,
- To soothe their wounded hearts with balm from the amaranths of heaven.
-
-ΘΕΩ ΔΟΞΑ
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Proverbial philosophy; Second series.]
-
-SECOND SERIES.
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY.
-
-[Illustration: Introductory "C"]
-
- Come again, and greet me as a friend, fellow-pilgrim upon life's highway,
- Leave awhile the hot and dusty road, to loiter in the greenwood of
- Reflection.
- Come unto my cool dim grotto, that is watered by the rivulet of truth,
- And over whose time-stained rock climb the fairy flowers of content;
- Here, upon this mossy bank of leisure fling thy load of cares,
- Taste my simple store, and rest one soothing hour.
-
- Behold, I would count thee for a brother, and commune with thy charitable
- soul;
- Though wrapt within the mantle of a prophet, I stand mine own weak
- scholar.
- Heed no disciple for a teacher, if knowledge be not found upon his tongue;
- For vanity and folly were the lessons these lips untaught could give:
- The precious staple of my merchandise cometh from a better country,
- The harvest of my reaping sprang of foreign seed:
- And this poor pensioner of Mercy--should he boast of merit?
- The grafted stock,--should that be proud of apples not its own?
- Into the bubbling brook I dip my hermit shell;
- Man receiveth as a cup, but Wisdom is the river.
-
- Moreover, for this fillagree of fancy, this Oriental garnish of
- similitude,
- Alas, the world is old,--and all things old within it:
- I walk a trodden path, I love the good old ways;
- Prophets, and priests, and kings have tuned the harp I faintly touch.
- Truth, in a garment of the past, is my choice and simple theme;
- No truth is new to-day: and the mantle was another's.
-
- Still, there is an insect swarm, the buzzing cloud of imagery,
- Mote-like steaming on my sight, and thronging my reluctant mind;
- The memories of studious culling, and multiplied analogies of nature,
- Fresh feelings unrepressed, welling from the heart spontaneous,
- Facts, and comparisons, and meditative atoms, gathered on the heap of
- combination,
- Mingle in the fashion of my speech with gossamer dreams of Reverie.
- I need not beat the underwood for game; my pheasants flock upon the lawn,
- And gamboling hares disport fearless in my dewy field;
- I roam no heath-empurpled hills, wearily watching for a covey,
- But thoughts fly swift to my decoy, eager to be caught;
- I sit no quiet angler, lingering patiently for sport,
- But spread my nets for a draught, and take the glittering shoal;
- I chase no solitary stag, tracking it with breathless toil,
- But hunt with Aurung-zebe, and spear surrounded thousands.
-
- What then,--count ye this a boast?--sweet charity, think it other,
- For the dog-fish and poisonous ray are captured in the mullet-haul:
- The crane and the kite are of my thoughts, alike with the partridge and
- the quail,
- And unclean meats as of the clean hang upon my Seric shambles.
- --How saith he? shall a man deceive, dressing up his jackal as a lion?
- Or colour in staid hues of fact the changing vest of falsehood?--
- Brother, unwittingly he may; doubtless, unwillingly he doth:
- For men are full of fault, and how should he be righteous?
- Carefully my garden hath been weeded, yet shall it be foul with thistle;
- My grapery is diligently thinned, and yet many berries will be sour:
- From my nets have I flung the bad away, to my small skill and caution;
- Yet may some slimy snake have counted for an eel.
- The rudder of Man's best hope cannot always steer himself from error;
- The arrow of Man's straightest aim flieth short of truth.
- Thus, the confession of sincerity visit not as if it were presumption:
- Nor own me for a leader, where thy reason is not guide.
-
-
-OF CHEERFULNESS.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Take courage, prisoner of time, for there be many comforts,
- Cease thy labour in the pit, and bask awhile with truants in the sun;
- Be cheerful, man of care, for great is the multitude of chances,
- Burst thy fetters of anxiety, and walk among the citizens of ease:
- Wherefore dost thou doubt? if present good is round thee,
- It may be well to look for change, but to trust in a continuance is
- better;
- Whilst, at the crisis of adversity, to hope for some amends were wisdom,
- And cheerfully to bear thy cross in patient strength is duty.
- I speak of common troubles, and the petty plagues of life,
- The phantom-spies of Unbelief, that lurk about his outposts:
- Sharp suspicion, dull distrust, and sullen stern moroseness
- Are captains in that locust swarm to lead the cloudy host.
- Thou hast need of fortitude and faith, for the adversaries come on
- thickly,
- And he that fled hath added wings to his pursuing foes;
- Fight them, and the cravens flee; thy boldness is their panic;
- Fear them, and thy treacherous heart hath lent the ranks a legion:
- Among their shouts of victory resoundeth the wail of Heraclitus,
- While Democrite, confident and cheerful, hath plucked up the standard of
- their camp.
-
- Not few nor light are the burdens of life; then load it not with
- heaviness of spirit;
- Sicknesses, and penury, and travail,--there be real ills enow:
- We are wandering benighted, with a waning moon; plunge not rashly into
- jungles,
- Where cold and poisonous damps will quench the torch of hope:
- The tide is strong against us; good oarsmen, pull or perish,--
- If your arms be slack for fear, ye shall not stem the torrent.
- A wise traveller goeth on cheerily, through fair weather or foul;
- He knoweth that his journey must be sped, so he carrieth his sunshine
- with him.
- Calamities come not as a curse,--nor prosperity for other than a trial;
- Struggle,--thou art better for the strife, and the very energy shall
- hearten thee.
- Good is taught in a Spartan school,--hard lessons and a rough discipline;
- But evil cometh idly of itself, in the luxury of Capuan holidays:
- And Wisdom will go bravely forth to meet the chastening scourge,
- Enduring with a thankful heart that punishment of Love.
-
- There be three chief rivers of despondency: sin, sorrow, fear;
- Sin is the deepest, sorrow hath its shallows, and fear is a noisy rapid:
- But even to the darkest holes in guilt's profoundest river
- Hope can pierce with quickening ray, and all those depths are lightened.
- So long as there is mercy in a God, hope is the privilege of creatures,
- And so soon as there is penitence in creatures, that hope is exalted into
- duty.
- Verily, consider this for courage; that the fearful and the unbelieving
- Are classed with idolaters and liars, because they trusted not in God:
- For it is none other than selfish sin, a hard and proud ingratitude,
- Where seeming repentance is herald of despair, instead of hope's
- forerunner.
-
- Moreover, in thy day of grief,--for friends, or fame, or fortune,
- Well I wot the heart shall ache, and mind be numbed in torpor;
- Let nature weep; leave her alone; the freshet of her sorrow must run off;
- And sooner will the lake be clear, relieved of turbid floodings.
- Yet see that her license hath a limit; with the novelty her agony is over;
- Hasten in that earliest calm, to tie her in the leash with Reason.
- For regrets are an enervating folly, and the season for energy is come,
- Yea rather, that the future may repair with diligence the ruins of the
- past.
-
- Again, for empty fears, the harassings of possible calamity,
- Pray, and thou shalt prosper; trust in God, and tread them down.
- Yield to the phantasy,--thou sinnest; resist it, He will aid thee:
- Out of Him there is no help, nor any sober courage.
- Feeble is the comfort of the faithless, a man without a God;
- Who dare counsel such an one to fling away his fears?
- Fear is the heritage of him, a portion wise and merciful,
- To drive the trembler into safety, if haply he may turn and flee:
- Nevertheless, let him reckon an he will, that all be counteth casual
- May as well be for him as against him; dice have many sides:
- And, even as in ailments of the body, diseases follow closely upon dreads,
- So, with infirmities of mind, is fear the pallid harbinger of failure.
- It were wise to walk undaunted even in an accidental chaos,
- For the brave man is at peace, and free to get the mastery of
- circumstance.
- The stoutest armour of defence is that which is worn within the bosom,
- And the weapon that no enemy can parry, is a bold and cheerful spirit:
- Catapults in old war worked like Titans, crushing foes with rocks;
- So doth a strong-springed heart throw back every load on its assailants.
-
- I went heavily for cares, and fell into the trance of sorrow;
- And behold, a vision in my trance, and my ministering angel brought it.
- There stood a mountain huge and steep, the awful Rock of Ages;
- The sun upon its summit, and storms midway, and deep ravines at foot.
- And, as I looked, a dense black cloud, suddenly dropping from the thunder,
- Filled, like a cataract with yeasty foam, a narrow smiling valley:
- Close and hard that vaporous mass seemed to press the ground,
- And lamentable sounds came up, as of some that were smothering beneath.
- Then, as I walked upon the mountain, clear in summer's noon,
- For charity I called aloud, Ho! climb up hither to the sunshine.
- And even like a stream of light my voice had pierced the mist;
- I saw below two families of men, and knew their names of old:
- Courage, struggling through the darkness, stout of heart and gladsome,
- Ran up the shining ladder which the voice of Hope had made;
- And tripping lightly by his side, a sweet-eyed helpmate with him,
- I looked upon her face to welcome pleasant Cheerfulness;
- And a babe was cradled in her bosom, a laughing little prattler,
- The child of Cheerfulness and Courage,--could his name be other than
- Success?
- So, from his happy wife, when they both stood beside me on the mountain,
- The fond father took that babe, and set him on his shoulder in the
- sunshine.
-
- Again I peered into the valley, for I heard a gasping moan,
- A desolate weak cry, as muffled in the vapours.
- So down that crystal shaft into the poisonous mine
- I sped for charity to seek and save,--and those I sought fled from me.
- At length, I spied, far distant, a trembling withered dwarf
- Who crouched beneath the cloak of a tall and spectral mourner:
- Then I knew Cowardice and Gloom, and followed them on in darkness,
- Guided by their rustling robes and moans and muffled cries,
- Until in a suffocating pit the wretched pair had perished,--
- And lo, their whitening bones were shaping out an epitaph of Failure.
-
- So I saw that despondency was death, and flung my burdens from me,
- And, lightened by that effort, I was raised above the world;
- Yea, in the strangeness of my vision, I seemed to soar on wings,
- And the names they called my wings were Cheerfulness and Wisdom.
-
-
-OF YESTERDAY.
-
- Speak, poor almsman of to-day, whom none can assure of a to-morrow,
- Tell out, with honest heart, the price thou settest upon yesterday.
- Is it then a writing in the dust, traced by the finger of idleness,
- Which Industry, clean housewife, can wipe away for ever?
- Is it as a furrow on the sand, fashioned by the toying waves,
- Quickly to be trampled then again by the feet of the returning tide?
- Is it as the pale blue smoke, rising from a peasant's hovel,
- That melted into limpid air, before it topped the larches?
- Is it but a vision, unstable and unreal, which wise men soon forget?
- Is it as the stranger of a night,--gone, we heed not whither?
- Alas! thou foolish heart, whose thoughts are but as these,
- Alas! deluded soul, that hopeth thus of Yesterday.
-
- For, behold,--those temples of Ellora, the Brahmin's rock-built shrine,
- Behold--yon granite cliff, which the North Sea buffeteth in vain,--
- That stout old forest fir,--these waking verities of life,
- This guest abiding ever, not strange, nor a servant, but a son,--
- Such, O man, are vanity and dreams, transient as a rainbow on the cloud,
- Weighed against that solid fact, thine ill-remembered Yesterday.
-
- Come, let me show thee an ensample, where Nature shall instruct us;
- Luxuriantly the arguments for truth spring native in her gardens.
- Seek we yonder woodman of the plain; he is measuring his axe to the elm,
- And anon the sturdy strokes ring upon the wintry air:
- Eagerly the village school-boys cluster on the tightened rope,
- Shouting, and bending to the pull, or lifted from the ground elastic;
- The huge tree boweth like Sisera, boweth to its foes with faintness,--
- Its sinews crack,--deep groans declare the reeling anguish of Goliath,
- The wedge is driven home,--and the saw is at its heart,--and lo, with
- solemn slowness,
- The shuddering monarch riseth from his throne,--toppled with a
- crash,--and is fallen!
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Now shall the mangled stump teach proud man a lesson:
- Now, can we from that elm-tree's sap distil the wine of Truth.
- Heed ye those hundred rings, concentric from the core,
- Eddying in various waves to the red bark's shore-like rim?
- These be the gatherings of yesterdays, present all to-day,
- This is the tree's judgment, self-history that cannot be gainsaid:
- Seven years agone there was a drought,--and the seventh ring is narrowed;
- The fifth from hence was half a deluge,--the fifth is cellular and broad.
- Thus, Man, thou art a result, the growth of many yesterdays,
- That stamp thy secret soul with marks of weal or woe:
- Thou art an almanack of self, the living record of thy deeds;
- Spirit hath its scars as well as body, sore and aching in their season:
- Here is a knot,--it was a crime; there is a canker,--selfishness;
- Lo, here, the heart-wood rotten; lo, there, perchance, the sap-wood sound.
- Nature teacheth not in vain; thy works are in thee, of thee;
- Some present evil bent hath grown of older errors:
- And what if thou be walking now uprightly? Salve not thy wounds with
- poison,
- As if a petty goodness of to-day hath blotted out the sin of yesterday:
- It is well, thou hast life and light; and the Hewer showeth mercy,
- Dressing the root, pruning the branch, and looking for thy tardy fruits;
- But, even here as thou standest, cheerful belike and careless,
- The stains of ancient evil are upon thee, the record of thy wrong is in
- thee:
- For, a curse of many yesterdays is thine, many yesterdays of sin,
- That, haply heeded little now, shall blast thy many morrows.
-
- Shall then a man reck nothing, but hurl mad defiance at his Judge,
- Knowing that less than an Omnipotent cannot make the has been, not been?
- He ought,--so Satan spake; he must,--so Atheism urgeth;
- He may,--it was the libertine's thought; he doth,--the bad world said it.
- But thou of humbler heart, thou student wiser for simplicity,
- While Nature warneth thee betimes, heed the loving counsel of Religion.
- True, this change is good, and penitence most precious;
- But trust not thou thy change, nor rest upon repentance:
- For all we are corrupted at the core, smooth as surface seemeth;
- What health can bloom in a beautiful skin, when rottenness hath fed upon
- the bones?
- And guilt is parcel of us all; not thou, sweet nursling of affection,
- Art spotless, though so passing fair,--nor thou, mild patriarch of virtue.
-
- Behold then the better Tree of Life, free unto us all for grafting,
- Cut thee from the hollow root of self, to be budded on a richer Vine.
- Be desperate, O man, as of evil, so of good; tear that tunic from thee;
- The past can never be retrieved, be the present what it may.
- Vain is the penance and the scourge, vain the fast and vigil:
- The fencer's cautious skill to-day, can this erase his scars?
- It is Man's to famish as a faquir, it is Man's to die a devotee,
- Light is the torture and the toil, balanced with the wages of Eternity:
- But, it is God's to yearn in love, on the humblest, the poorest, and the
- worst,
- For He giveth freely, as a king, asking only thanks for mercy.
- Look upon this noble-hearted Substitute; seeing thy woes, He pitied thee,
- Bowed beneath the mountain of thy sin, and perished,--but for Godhead;
- There stood the Atlas in his power, and Prometheus in his love is there,
- Emptying on wretched men the blessings earned from Heaven:
- Put them not away, hide them in thy heart, poor and penitent receiver,
- Be gratitude thy counseller to good, and wholesome fear unto obedience;
- Remember, the pruning-knife is keen, cutting cankers even from the vine;
- Remember, twelve were chosen, and one among them liveth--in perdition.
-
- Yea,--for standing unatoned, the soul is a bison on the prairie,
- Hunted by those trooping wolves, the many sinful yesterdays:
- And it speedeth a terrified Deucalion, flinging back the pebble in his
- flight,
- The pebble that must add one more to those pursuing ghosts.
- O man, there is a storm behind should drive thy bark to haven;
- The foe, the foe is on thy track, patient, certain, and avenging;
- Day by day, solemnly, and silently, followeth the fearful past,--
- His step is lame, but sure; for he catcheth the present in eternity:
- And how to escape that foe, the present-past in future?
- How to avert that fate, living consequence of causes unexistent?--
- Boldly we must overleap his birth, and date above his memories,
- Grafted on the living Tree, that WAS before a yesterday:
- No refuge of a younger birth than one that saw creation
- Can hide the child of time from still condemning Yesterday.
- There, is the Sanctuary-city, mocking at the wrath of thine Avenger,
- Close at hand, with the wicket on the latch; haste for thy life, poor
- hunted one!
- The gladiator, Guilt, fighteth as of old, armed with net and dagger;
- Snaring in the mesh of yesterdays, stabbing with the poignard of to-day:
- Fly, thy sword is broken at the hilt; fly, thy shield is shivered;
- Leap the barriers, and baffle him: the arena of the past is his.
- The bounds of Guilt are the cycles of Time: thou must be safe within
- Eternity;
- The arms of God alone shall rescue thee from Yesterday.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF TO-DAY.
-
-[Illustration: "N"]
-
- Now, is the constant syllable ticking from the clock of time,
- Now, is the watchword of the wise, Now, is on the banner of the prudent.
- Cherish thy to-day and prize it well, or ever it be gulphed into the past,
- Husband it, for who can promise, if it shall have a morrow?
- Behold, thou art,--it is enough; that present care be thine;
- Leave thou the past to thy Redeemer, entrust the future to thy Friend;
- But for To-day, child of man, tend thou charily the minutes,
- The harvest of thy yesterday, the seed-corn of thy morrow.
-
- Last night died its day; and the deeds thereof were judged:
- Thou didst lay thee down as in a shroud, in darkness and death-like
- slumber:
- But at the trumpet of this morn, waking the world to resurrection,
- Thou didst arise, like others, to live a new day's life:
- Fear, lest folly give thee cause to mourn its passing presence,
- Fear, that to-morrow's sigh be not, would God it had not dawned!
-
- For, To-day the lists are set, and thou must bear thee bravely,
- Tilting for honour, duty, life, or death without reproach:
- To-day, is the trial of thy fortitude, O dauntless Mandan chief;
- To-day, is thy watch, O sentinel; To-day, thy reprieve, O captive:
- What more? To-day is the golden chance wherewith to snatch fruition,--
- Be glad, grateful, temperate: there are asps among the figs.
- For the potter's clay is in thy hands,--to mould it or to mar it at thy
- will,
- Or idly to leave it in the sun, an uncouth lump to harden.
-
- O bright presence of To-day, let me wrestle with thee, gracious angel,
- I will not let thee go, except thou bless me; bless me, then, To-day:
- O sweet garden of To-day, let me gather of thee, precious Eden;
- I have stolen bitter knowledge, give me fruits of life To-day:
- O true temple of To-day, let me worship in thee, glorious Zion;
- I find none other place nor time, than where I am To-day:
- O living rescue of To-day, let me run into thee, ark of refuge:
- I see none other hope nor chance, but standeth in To-day:
- O rich banquet of To-day, let me feast upon thee, saving manna;
- I have none other food nor store, but daily bread To-day!
-
- Behold, thou art pilot of the ship, and owner of that freighted galleon,
- Competent, with all thy weakness, to steer into safety or be lost:
- Compass and chart are in thy hand: roadstead and rocks thou knowest;
- Thou art warned of reefs and shallows; thou beholdest the harbour and its
- lights.
- What? shall thy wantonness or sloth drive the gallant vessel on the
- breakers?
- What? shall the helmsman's hand wear upon the black lee shore?
- Vain is that excuse; thou canst escape: thy mind is responsible for wrong:
- Vain that murmur; thou mayst live: thy soul is debtor for the right.
- To-day, in the voyage of thy life down the dark tide of time,
- Stand boldly to thy tiller, guide thee by the pole-star, and be safe;
- To-day, passing near the sunken rocks, the quicksands and whirlpools of
- probation,
- Leave awhile the rudder to swing round, give the wind its heading, and be
- wrecked.
-
- The crisis of man's destiny is Now, a still recurring danger;
- Who can tell the trials and temptations coming with the coming hour?
- Thou standest a target-like Sebastian, and the arrows whistle near thee;
- Who knoweth when he may be hit? for great is the company of archers.
- Each breath is burdened with a bidding, and every minute hath its mission;
- For spirits, good and bad, cluster on the thickly-peopled air:
- Sin may blast thee, grace may bless thee, good or ill this hour:
- Chance, and change, and doubt, and fear, are parasites of all.
- A man's life is a tower, with a staircase of many steps,
- That, as he toileth upward, crumble successively behind him:
- No going back; the past is an abyss; no stopping, for the present
- perisheth;
- But ever hasting on, precarious on the foothold of To-day;
- Our cares are all To-day; our joys are all To-day;
- And in one little word, our life, what is it, but--To-day?
-
-
-[Illustration: Of To-morrow]
-
-OF TO-MORROW.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- There is a floating island, forward on the stream of time,
- Buoyant with fermenting air, and borne along the rapids;
- And on that island is a siren, singing sweetly as she goeth,
- Her eyes are bright with invitation, and allurement lurketh in her cheeks;
- Many lovers, vainly pursuing, follow her beckoning finger,
- Many lovers seek her still, even to the cataract of death.
- To-morrow is that island, a vain and foolish heritage,
- And, laughing with seductive lips, Delusion hideth there:
- Often the precious present is wasted in visions of the future,
- And coy To-morrow cometh not with prophecies fulfilled.
-
- There is a fairy skiff, plying on the sea of life,
- And charitably toiling still to save the shipwrecked crews;
- Within, kindly patient, sitteth a gentle mariner,
- Piloting, through surf and strait, the fragile barks of men:
- How cheering is her voice, how skilfully she guideth,
- How nobly leading onward yet, defying even death!
- To-morrow is that skiff, a wise and welcome rescue,
- And, full of gladdening words and looks, that mariner is Hope:
- Often, the painful present is comforted by flattering the future,
- And kind To-morrow beareth half the burdens of To-day.
-
- To-morrow, whispereth weakness: and To-morrow findeth him the weaker;
- To-morrow, promiseth conscience; and behold, no To-day for a fulfilment.
- O name of happy omen unto youth, O bitter word of terror to the dotard,
- Goal of folly's lazy wish, and sorrow's ever-coming friend;
- Fraud's loophole,--caution's hint,--and trap to catch the honest,--
- Thou wealth to many poor, disgrace to many noble,
- Thou hope and fear, thou weal and woe, thou remedy, thou ruin,
- How thickly swarms of thought are clustering round To-morrow!
- The hive of memory increaseth, to every day its cell;
- There is the labour stored, the honey or corruption;
- Each morn the bees fly forth, to fill the growing comb,
- And levy golden tribute of the uncomplaining flowers:
- To-morrow is their care; they toil for rest to-morrow;
- But man deferreth duty's task, and loveth ease to-day.
-
- To-morrow, is that lamp upon the marsh, which a traveller never reacheth;
- To-morrow, the rainbow's cup, coveted prize of ignorance;
- To-morrow, the shifting anchorage, dangerous trust of mariners;
- To-morrow, the wrecker's beacon, wily snare of the destroyer.
- Reconcile convictions with delay, and To-morrow is a fatal lie;
- Frighten resolutions into action, To-morrow is a wholesome truth:
- I must, for I fear To-morrow; this is the Cassava's food;
- Why should I? let me trust To-morrow,--this is the Cassava's poison.
-
- Lo, it is the even of To-day,--a day so lately a To-morrow;
- Where are those high resolves, those hopes of yesternight?
- O faint fond heart, still shall thy whisper be, To-morrow,
- And must the growing avalanche of sin roll down that easy slope?
- Alas, it is ponderous, and moving on in might, that a Sisyphus may not
- stop it;
- But haste thee with the lever of a prayer, and stem its strength To-day:
- For its race may speedily be run, and this poor hut, thyself,
- Be whelmed in death and suffocating guilt, that dreary Alpine snow-wreath.
-
- Pensioner of life, be wise, and heed a brother's counsel;
- I also am a beadsman, with scrip and staff as thou:
- Wouldest thou be bold against the past, and all its evil memories,
- Wouldest thou be safe amid the present, its dangers and temptations,
- Wouldest thou be hopeful of the future, vague though it be and endless?
- Haste thee, repent, believe, obey! thou standest in the courage of a
- legion.
- Commend the Past to God, with all its irrevocable harm,
- Humbly, but in cheerful trust, and banish vain regrets;
- Come to Him, continually come, casting all the Present at His feet,
- Boldly, but in prayerful love, and fling off selfish cares;
- Commit the Future to His will, the viewless fated future;
- Zealously go forward with integrity, and God will bless thy faith.
- For that, feeble as thou art, there is with thee a mighty Conqueror,
- Thy Friend, the same for ever, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow;
- That Friend, changeless as eternity, Himself shall make thee friends
- Of those thy foes transformed, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow.
-
-
-OF AUTHORSHIP.
-
-[Illustration: "G"]
-
- Great is the dignity of Authorship: I magnify mine office;
- Albeit in much feebleness I hold it thus unworthily.
- For it is to be one of a noble band, the welfare of the world,
- Whose haunt is on the lips of men, whose dwelling in their hearts,
- Who are precious in the retrospect of Memory, and walk among the visions
- of Hope,
- Who commune with the good for everlasting, and call the wisest, brother,
- Whose voice hath burst the Silence, and whose light is flung upon the
- Darkness,
- --Flashing jewels on a robe of black, and harmony bounding out of chaos,--
- Who gladden empires with their wisdom, and bless to the farthest
- generation,
- Doers of illimitable good, gainers of inestimable glory!--
- We speak but of the Magnates, we heed none humbler than the highest,
- We take no count of sorry scribes, nor waste one thought upon the
- groundlings;
- Our eyes are lifted from the multitude, groping in the dark with candles,
- To gaze upon that firmament of praise, the constellated lamps of learning.
- Ever-during witnesses of Mind, undisputed evidence of Power,
- Goodly volumes, living stones, build up their author's temple;
- Though of low estate, his rank is above princes,--though needy, he hath
- worship of the rich,
- When Genius unfurleth on the winds his banner as a mighty leader.
- Just in purpose, and self-possessed in soul, lord of many talents,
- The mental Crœsus goeth forth, rejoicing in his wealth;
- Keen and clear perception gloweth on his forehead like a sunbeam,
- He readeth men at a glance, and mists roll away before him;
- The wise have set him as their captain, the foolish are rebuked at his
- presence,
- The excellent bless him with their prayers, and the wicked praise him by
- their curses;
- His voice, mighty in operation, stirreth up the world as a trumpet,
- And kings account it honour to be numbered of his friends.
-
- Rare is the worthiness of authorship: I justify mine office;
- Albeit fancies weak as mine credit not the calling.
- For it addeth immortality to dying facts, that are ready to vanish away,
- Embalming as in amber the poor insects of an hour;
- Shedding upon stocks and stones the tender light of interest,
- And illumining dark places of the earth, with radiance of classic lustre.
- It hath power to make past things present, and availeth for the present
- in the future,
- Delivering thoughts, and words, and deeds, from the outer darkness of
- oblivion.
- Where are the sages and the heroes, giants of old time?--
- Where are the mighty kings, that reigned before Agamemnon?--
- Alas they lie unwept, unhonoured, hidden in the midnight:
- Alas, for they died unchronicled: their memorial perished with them.
- Where are the nobles of Nineveh, and mitred rulers of Babylon?
- Where are the lords of Edom, and the royal pontiffs of Thebais?
- The golden Satrap, and the Tetrarch,--the Hun, and the Druid, and the
- Celt?
- The merchant princes of Phœnicia, and the minds that fashioned
- Elephanta?
- Alas, for the poet hath forgotten them; and lo! they are outcasts of
- Memory;
- Alas, that they are withered leaves, sapless and fallen from the chaplet
- of fame.
- Speak, Etruria, whose bones be these, entombed with costly care,--
- Tell out, Herculaneum, the titles that have sounded in those thy
- palaces,--
- Lycian Xanthus, thy citadels are mute, and the honour of their architects
- hath died;
- Copan and Palenque, dreamy ruins in the West, the forest hath swallowed
- up your sculptures;
- Syracuse,--how silent of the past!--Carthage, thou art blotted from
- remembrance!
- Egypt, wondrous shores, ye are buried in the sand-hills of forgetfulness!
- Alas,--for in your glorious youth Time himself was young,
- And none durst wrestle with that Angel, iron-sinewed bridegroom of Space;
- So he flew by, strong upon the wing, nor dropped one failing feather,
- Wherewith some hoary scribe might register your honour and renown.
- Beyond the broad Atlantic, in the regions of the setting sun,
- Ask of the plume-crowned Incas, that ruled in old Peru,--
- Ask of grand Caziques, and priests of the pyramids in Mexico,--
- Ask of a thousand painted tribes, high nobility of Nature,
- Who, once, could roam their own Elysian plains, free, generous, and happy,
- Who, now, degraded and in exile, having sold their fatherland for nought,
- Sink and are extinguished in the western seas, even as the sun they
- follow,--
- Where is the record of their deeds, their prowess worthy of Achilles,
- Nestor's wisdom, the chivalry of Manlius, the native eloquence of Cicero,
- The skill of Xenophon, the spirit of Alcibiades, the firmness of a
- Maccabæan mother,
- Brotherly love that Antigone might envy, the honour and the fortitude of
- Regulus?
- Alas, their glory and their praise have vanished like a summer cloud;
- Alas! that they are dead indeed; they are not written down in the Book of
- the living.
-
- High is the privilege of Authorship: I purify mine office;
- Albeit earthy stains pollute it in my hands.
- For it is to the world a teacher and a guide, Mentor of that gay
- Telemachus;
- Warning, comforting, and helping,--a lover and friend of Man.
- Heaven's almoner, Earth's health, patient minister of goodness,
- With kind and zealous pen, the wise religious blesseth:
- Nature's worshipper, and neophyte of grace, rich in tender sympathies,
- With kindled soul and flashing eye, the poet poureth out his heartful:
- Priest of truth, champion of innocence, warder of the gates of praise,
- Carefully with sifting search laboureth the pale historian:
- Error's enemy, and acolyte of science, firm in sober argument,
- The calm philosopher marshalleth his facts, noting on his page their
- principles.
- These pour mercies upon men; and others, little less in honour,
- By cheerful wit and graphic tale refreshening the harassed spirit.
- But, there be other some beside, buyers and sellers in the temple,
- Who shame their high vocation, greedy of inglorious gain;
- There be, who fabricating books, heed of them meanly as of merchandise;
- And seek nor use, nor truth, nor fame, but sell their minds for lucre:
- O false brethren! ye wot indeed the labour, but are witless of the love;
- O lying prophets, chilled in soul, unquickened by the life of
- inspiration!--
- And there be, who, frivolous and vain, seek to make others foolish,
- Snaring youth by loose sweet song, and age by selfish maxim;
- Cleverly heartless, and wittily profane, they swell the river of
- corruption:
- Brilliant satellites of sin,--my soul, be not found among their company.
- And there be, who, haters of religion, toil to prove it priestcraft,
- Owning none other aim nor hope, but to confound the good:
- Woe unto them! for their works shall live; yea, to their utter
- condemnation:
- Woe! for their own handwriting shall testify against them for ever.
-
- Pure is the happiness of Authorship: I glorify mine office;
- Albeit lightly having sipped the cup of its lower pleasures.
- For it is to feel with a father's heart, when he yearneth on the child of
- his affections;
- To rejoice in a man's own miniature world, gladdened by its rare
- arrangement.
- The poem, is it not a fabric of mind? we love what we create:
- That choice and musical order,--how pleasant is the toil of composition!
- Yea, when the volume of the universe was blazoned out in beauty by its
- Author,
- God was glad, and blessed His work; for it was very good.
- And shall not the image of his Maker be happy in his own mind's doing,
- Looking on the structure he hath reared, gratefully with sweet
- complacence?
- Shall not the Minerva of his brain, panoplied and perfect in proportions,
- Gladden the soul and give light unto the eyes, of him the travailing
- parent?
- Go to the sculptor, and ask him of his dreams,--wherefore are his nights
- so moonlit?
- Angel faces, and beautiful shapes, fascinate the pale Pygmalion:
- Go to the painter, and trace his reveries,--wherefore are his days so
- sunny?
- Choice design, and skilful colouring, charm the flitting hours of
- Parrhasius:
- Even so, walking in his buoyancy, intoxicate with fairy fancies,
- The young enthusiast of authorship goeth on his way rejoicing:
- Behold,--he is gallantly attended; legions of thrilling thoughts
- Throng about the standard of his mind, and call his Will their captain;
- Behold,--his court is as a monarch's; ideas, and grand imaginations
- Swell, with gorgeous cavalcade, the splendour of his Spiritual State;
- Behold,--he is delicately served: for oftentimes, in solitary calmness,
- Some mental fair Egeria smileth on her Numa's worship;
- Behold,--he is happy; there is gladness in his eye, and his heart is a
- sealed fountain,
- Bounding secretly with joys unseen, and keeping down its ecstasy of
- pleasure!
-
- Yea: how dignified, and worthy, full of privilege and happiness,
- Standeth in majestic independence the self-ennobled Author!
- For God hath blessed him with a mind, and cherished it in tenderness and
- purity,
- Hath taught it in the whisperings of wisdom, and added all the riches of
- content:
- Therefore, leaning on his God, a pensioner for soul and body,
- His spirit is the subject of none other, calling no man Master.
- His hopes are mighty and eternal, scorning small ambitions:
- He hideth from the pettiness of praise, and pitieth the feebleness of
- envy.
- If he meet honours, well; it may be his humility to take them:
- If he be rebuked, better; his veriest enemy shall teach him.
- For the master-mind hath a birthright of eminence; his cradle is an
- eagle's eyrie:
- Need but to wait till his wings are grown, and Genius soareth to the sun:
- To creeping things upon the mountain leaveth he the gradual ascent,
- Resting his swiftness on the summit only for a higher flight.
- Glad in clear good-conscience, lightly doth he look for commendation;
- What, if the prophet lacketh honour? for he can spare that praise:
- The honest giant careth not to be patted on the back by pigmies;
- Flatter greatness, he brooketh it good-humouredly: blame him,--thou
- tiltest at a pyramid:
- Yet, just censure of the good never can he hear without contrition;
- Neither would he miss one wise man's praise, for scarce is that jewel and
- costly:
- Only for the herd of common minds, and the vulgar trumpetings of fame,
- If aught he heedeth in the matter, his honour is sought in their neglect.
- Slender is the marvel, and little is the glory, when round his luscious
- fruits
- The worm and the wasp and the multitude of flies are gathered as to
- banquet;
- Fashion's freak, and the critical sting, and the flood of flatteries he
- scorneth;
- Cheerfully asking of the crowd the favour to forget him:
- The while his blooming fruits ripen in richer fragrance,
- A feast for the few,--and the many yet unborn,--who still shall love
- their savour.
-
- So then, humbly with his God, and proudly independent of his fellows,
- Walketh, in pleasures multitudinous, the man ennobled by his pen:
- He hath built up, glorious architect, a monument more durable than brass;
- His children's children shall talk of him in love, and teach their sons
- his honour:
- His dignity hath set him among princes, the universe is debtor to his
- worth,
- His privilege is blessing for ever, his happiness shineth now,
- For he standeth of that grand Election, each man one among a thousand,
- Whose sound is gone out into all lands, and their words to the end of the
- world!
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Mystery.]
-
-OF MYSTERY.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- All things being are in mystery; we expound mysteries by mysteries;
- And yet the secret of them all is one in simple grandeur:
- All intricate, yet each path plain, to those who know the way;
- All unapproachable, yet easy of access, to them that hold the key:
- We walk among labyrinths of wonder, but thread the mazes with a clue;
- We sail in chartless seas, but behold! the pole-star is above us.
- For, counting down from God's good will, thou meltest every riddle into
- Him,
- The axiom of reason is an undiscovered God, and all things live in His
- ubiquity:
- There is only one great secret; but that one hideth everywhere;
- How should the infinite be understood in Time, when it stretcheth on
- ungrasped for ever?
- Can a halting Å’dipus of earth guess that enigma of the universe?
- Not one: the sword of faith must cut the Gordian knot of nature.
-
- God, pervading all, is in all things the mystery of each;
- The wherefore of its character and essence, the fountain of its virtues
- and its beauties.
- The child asketh of its mother,--Wherefore is the violet so sweet?
- The mother answereth her babe,--Darling, God hath willed it.
- And sages, diving into science, have but a profundity of words;
- They track for some few links the circling chain of consequence,
- And then, after doubts and disputations, are left where they began,
- At the bald conclusion of a clown, things are because they are.
- Wherefore are the meadows green, is it not to gratify the eye?
- But why should greenness charm the eye? such is God's good will.
- Wherefore is the ear attuned to a pleasure in musical sounds,
- And who set a number to those sounds, and fixed the laws of harmony?
- Who taught the bird to build its nest, or lent the shrub its life,
- Or poised in the balances of order the power to attract and to repel?
- Who continueth the worlds, and the sea, and the heart, in motion?
- Who commanded gravitation to tie down all upon its sphere?--
- For, even as a limestone cliff is an aggregate of countless shells,
- One riddle concrete of many, a mystery compact of mysteries,
- So God, cloud-capped in immensity, standeth the cohesion of all things,
- And secrets, sublimely indistinct, permeate that Universe, Himself;
- As is the whole, so are the parts, whether they be mighty or minute,
- The sun is not more unexplained than the tissue of an emmet's wing.
-
- Thus then, omnipresent Deity worketh His unbiassed mind,
- A mind, one in moral, but infinitely multiplied in means:
- And the uniform prudence of His will cometh to be counted law,
- Till mutable man fancieth volition stirring in the potter's clay:
- God, a wise father, showeth not His reasons to His babes;
- But willeth in secresy and goodness: for causes generate dispute:
- Then we, His darkling children, watch that invariable purpose,
- And invest the passive creature with its Maker's energy and skill:
- Therefore, they of old time stopped short of God in idols,
- Therefore, in these latter days, we heed not the Jehovah in His works.
- Mystery is God's great name; He is the mystery of goodness:
- Some other, from the hierarchs of heaven, usurped the mystery of sin.
- God is the King, yea even of Himself; He crowned Himself with holiness;
- The burning circlet of iniquity another found and wore.
- God is separate, even from His attributes; but He willed eternally the
- good;
- Therefore freely, though unchangeably, is wise, righteous, and loving:
- But ambition, open unto angels, saw the evil, flung aside from the
- beginning,
- It was Lucifer that saw, and nothing loathed those black unclaimed
- regalia,
- So he coveted and stole, to be counted for a king, antagonist of God,
- But when he touched the leprous robes, behold! a cheated traitor.
-
- For self-existence, charactered with love, with power, wisdom, and
- ubiquity,
- Could not dwell alone, but willed and worked creation.
- Thus, in continual exhalation, darkening the void with matter,
- Sprang from prolific Deity the creatures of His skill.
- And beings living on His breath, were needfully less perfect than Himself,
- Therefore less capable of bliss, whereat His benevolence was bounded;
- So, to make the capability expand, intensely progressive to eternity,
- He suffered darkness to illustrate the light, and pain to heighten
- pleasure:
- To heap up happiness on souls He loved, allowed He sin and sorrow,
- And then to guilt and grief and shame, He brought unbidden amnesty:
- Sinless, none had been redeemed, nor wrapt again in God:
- Sorrowless, no conflict had been known, and Heaven had been mulcted of
- its comfort:
- Yea, with evil unexhibited, probationary toils unfelt,
- Men had not appreciated good, nor angels valued their security.
- Herein, to reason's eye, is revealed the mystery of goodness,
- Blessing through permitted woe, and teaching by the mystery of sin.
-
- O Christian, whose chastened curiosity loveth things mysterious,
- Accounting them shadows and eclipses of Him the one great light,
- Look now, satisfied with faith, on minds that judge by sense,
- And, dull from contemplating matter, take small heed of spirit.
- Toiling feebly upward, their argument tracketh from below,
- They catch the latest consequent, and prove the nearest cause:
- What is this? that a seed produced a seed, and so for a thousand seasons;
- Ascend a thousand steps, thy ladder leaveth thee in air:
- Thou canst not climb to God, and short of Him is nothing;
- There is no cause for aught we see, but in His present will.
- Begin from the Maker, thou carriest down His attributes to reptiles,
- The sharded beetle and the lizard live and move in Him:
- Begin from the creature, corruption and infirmity mar thy foolish toil,
- Heap Ossa on Olympus, how much art thou nearer to the stars?
- It is easy running from a mountain's top down to the valleys at its foot,
- But difficult and steep the laborious ascent, and feebly shalt thou reach
- it:
- Yet man, beginning from himself, that first deluding mystery,
- Hopeth from the pit of lies to struggle up to truth;
- So, taxing knowledge to its strength, he pusheth one step further,
- And fancieth complacently that much is done by reaching a remote effect:
- Then he maketh answer to himself, as a silly nurse to her little one,
- Evading, in a mist of words, hard things he cannot solve;
- Till, like an ostrich in the desert, he burieth his head in atoms,
- Thinking that, if he is blind, no sun can shine in heaven.
-
- Therefore cometh it to pass, that an atheist is ever the most credulous,
- Snatching at any foolish cause, that may dispel his doubts;
- And, even as it were for ridicule, a spectacle for men and angels,
- The captious and cautious unbeliever is of all men weakest to believe:
- Cut from the anchorage of God, his bark is a plaything of the billows;
- The compass of his principle is broken, the rudder of his faith unshipped:
- Chance and Fate, in a stultified antagonism, govern all for him;
- Truth sprang from the conflict of falsities, and the multitude of
- accidents hath bred design!
- Where is the imposture so gross, that shall not entrap his curiosity?
- What superstition is so abject, that it doth not blanch his cheek?
- Whereof can he be sure, with whom Chaos is substitute for Order?
- How should his silly structure stand, a pyramid built upon its apex?--
- Yea, I have seen grey-headed men, the bastard slips of science,
- Go for light to glow-worms, while they scorn the sun at noon:
- Men, who fear no God, trembling at a gipsy's curse,
- Men, who jest at revelation, clinging to a madman's prophecy!
-
- There is a pleasing dread in the fashion of all mysteries,
- For hope is mixed therein and fear; who shall divine their issues?
- Even the orphan, wandering by night, lost on dreary moors,
- Is sensible of some vague bliss amidst his shapeless terrors;
- The buoyancy of instant expectation, spurring on the mind to venture,
- Overbeareth, in its energy, the cramp and the chill of apprehension.
- There is a solitary pride, when the heart, in new importance,
- Writeth gladly on its archives, the secrets none other men have seen:
- And there is a caged terror, evermore wrestling with the mind,
- When crime hath whispered his confession, and the secrets are written
- there in blood:
- The village maiden is elated at the tenderly confided tale:
- The bandit's wife with sickening fear guessed the premeditated murder:
- The sage, with triumph on his brow, hideth up his deep discovery;
- The idlest clown shall delve all day, to find a hidden treasure.
-
- For mystery is man's life; we wake to the whisperings of novelty:
- And what, though we lie down disappointed? we sleep, to wake in hope.
- The letter, or the news, the chances and the changes, matters that may
- happen,
- Sweeten or embitter daily life with the honey-gall of mystery.
- For we walk blindfold,--and a minute may be much,--a step may reach the
- precipice;
- What earthly loss, what heavenly gain, may not this day produce?
- Levelled of Alps and Andes, without its valleys and ravines,
- How dull the face of earth, unfeatured of both beauty and sublimity:
- And so, shorn of mystery, beggared in its hopes and fears,
- How flat the prospect of existence, mapped by intuitive foreknowledge.
- Praise God, creature of earth, for the mercies linked with secresy,
- That spices of uncertainty enrich the cup of life;
- Praise God, His hosts on high, for the mysteries that make all joy;
- What were intelligence with nothing more to learn, or heaven, in eternity
- of sameness?
-
- To number every mystery were to sum the sum of all things:
- None can exhaust a theme, whereof God is example and similitude.
- Nevertheless, take a garland from the garden, a handful from the harvest,
- Some scattered drops of spray from the ceaseless mighty cataract.
- Whence are we,--whither do we tend,--how do we feel, and reason?
- How strange a thing is man, a spirit saturating clay!
- When doth soul make embryos immortal,--how do they rank hereafter,--
- And will the unconscious idiot be quenched in death as nothing?
- In essence immaterial, are these minds, as it were, thinking machines?
- For, to understand may but rightly be to use a mechanism all possess,
- So that in reading or hearing of another, a man shall seem unto himself
- To be recollecting images or arguments, native and congenial to his mind:
- And yet, what shall we say,--who can arede the riddle?
- The brain may be clockwork, and mind its spring, mechanism quickened by a
- spirit.
-
- Who so shrewd as rightly to divide life, instinct, reason;
- Trees, zoophytes, creatures of the plain, and savage men among them?
- Hath the mimosa instinct,--or the scallop more than life,--
- Or the dog less than reason,--or the brute-man more than instinct?
- What is the cause of health,--and the gendering of disease?
- Why should arsenic kill, and whence is the potency of antidotes?
- Behold, a morsel,--eat and die; the term of thy probation is expired:
- Behold, a potion,--drink and be alive; the limit of thy trial is enlarged.
- Who can expound beauty? or explain the character of nations?
- Who will furnish a cause for the epidemic force of fashion?
- Is there a moral magnetism living in the light of example?
- Is practice electricity?--Yet all these are but names.
- Doth normal Art imprison, in its works, spirit translated into substance,
- So that the statue, the picture, or the poem, are crystals of the mind?
- And doth Philosophy with sublimating skill shred away the matter,
- Till rarefied intelligence exudeth even out of stocks and stones?
-
- O Mysteries, ye all are one, the mind of an inexplicable Architect
- Dwelleth alike in each, quickening and moving in them all.
- Fields, and forests, and cities of men, their woes and wealth and works,
- And customs, and contrivances of life, with all we see and know,
- For a little way, a little while, ye hang dependent on each other,
- But all are held in one right-hand, and by His will ye are.
- Here is an answer unto mystery, an unintelligible God,
- This is the end and the beginning, it is reason that He be not understood.
- Therefore it were probable and just, even to a man's weak thinking,
- To have one for God who always may be learnt, yet never fully known:
- That He, from whom all mysteries spring, in whom they all converge,
- Throned in His sublimity beyond the grovellings of lower intellect,
- Should claim to be truer than man's truest, the boasted certainty of
- numbers,
- Should baffle his arithmetic, confound his demonstrations, and paralyse
- the might of his necessity,
- Standing supreme as the mystery of mysteries, everywhere, yet impersonate,
- Essential One in three, essential Three in one!
-
-
-OF GIFTS.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- I had a seeming friend;--I gave him gifts, and he was gone:
- I had an open enemy;--I gave him gifts, and won him:
- Common friendship standeth on equalities, and cannot bear a debt;
- But the very heart of hate melteth at a good man's love:
- Go to, then, thou that sayest,--I will give and rivet the links:
- For pride shall kick at obligation, and push the giver from him.
- The covetous spirit may rejoice, revelling in thy largess,
- But chilling selfishness will mutter,--I must give again:
- The vain heart may be glad, in this new proof of man's esteem,
- But the same idolatry of self abhorreth thoughts of thanking.
-
- Nevertheless, give; for it shall be a discriminating test
- Separating honesty from falsehood, weeding insincerity from friendship.
- Give, it is like God; thou weariest the bad with benefits:
- Give, it is like God; thou gladdenest the good by gratitude.
- Give to thy near of kin, for providence hath stationed thee his helper:
- Yet see that he claim not, as his right, thy freewill offering of duty.
- Give to the young, they love it; neither hath the poison of suspicion
- Spoilt the flavour of their thanks, to look for latent motives.
- Give to merit, largely give; his conscious heart will bless thee:
- It is not flattery, but love,--the sympathy of men his brethren.
- Give, for encouragement in good; the weak desponding mind
- Hath many foes, and much to do, and leaneth on its friends.
- Yet heed thou wisely these; give seldom to thy better;
- For such obtrusive boon shall savour of presumption;
- Or, if his courteous bearing greet thy proffered kindness,
- Shall not thine independent honesty be vexed at the semblance of a bribe?
- Moreover, heed thou this; give to thine equal charily,
- The occasion fair and fitting, the gift well chosen and desired:
- Hath he been prosperous and blest? a flower may show thy gladness;
- Is he in need? with liberal love, tender him the well-filled purse:
- Disease shall welcome friendly care in grapes and precious unguents;
- And where a darling child hath died, give praise, and hope, and sympathy.
- Yet once more, heed thou this; give to the poor discreetly,
- Nor suffer idle sloth to lean upon thy charitable arm:
- To diligence give, as to an equal, on just and fit occasion;
- Or he bartereth his hard-earned self-reliance for the casual lottery of
- gifts.
- The timely loan hath added nerve, where easy liberality would palsy;
- Work and wages make a light heart; but the mendicant asked with a heavy
- spirit.
- A man's own self-respect is worth unto him more than money,
- And evil is the charity that humbleth, and maketh man less happy.
-
- There are who sow liberalities, to reap the like again;
- But men accept his boon, scorning the shallow usurer:
- I have known many such a fisherman lose his golden baits:
- And oftentimes the tame decoy escapeth with the flock.
- Yea, there are who give unto the poor, to gain large interest of God,--
- Fool,--to think His wealth is money, and not mind:
- And haply after thine alms, thy calculated givings,
- The hurricane shall blast thy crops, and sink the homeward ship;
- Then shall thy worldly soul murmur that the balances were false,
- Thy trader's mind shall think of God,--He stood not to His bargain!
-
- Give, saith the preacher, be large in liberality, yield to the holy
- impulse,
- Tarry not for cold consideration, but cheerfully and freely scatter.
- So, for complacency of conscience, in a gush of counterfeited charity,
- He that hath not wherewith to be just, selfishly presumeth to be generous:
- The debtor, and the rich by wrong, are known among the band of the
- benevolent;
- And men extol the noble hearts, who rob that they may give.
- Receivers are but little prone to challenge rights of giving,
- Nor stop to test, for conscience-sake, the righteousness of mammon:
- And the zealot in a cause is a receiver, at the hand which bettereth his
- cause;
- And thus an unsuspected bribe shall blind the good man's judgment:
- It is easy to excuse greatness, and the rich are readily forgiven:
- What, if his gains were evil, sanctified by using them aright?
- O shallow flatterer, self-interest is thy thought,
- Hopeless of partaking in the like, thou too wouldst scorn the giver.
-
- Money hath its value; and the scatterer thereof his thanks:
- Few men, drinking at a rivulet, stop to consider its source.
- The hand that closeth on an alm, be it for necessities or zeal,
- Hath small scruple whence it came: Vespasian rejoiceth in his tribute.
- Therefore have colleges and hospitals risen upon orphans' wrongs,
- Chapels and cathedrals have thriven on the welcome wages of iniquity,
- And fraud, in evil compensation, hath salved his guilty conscience,
- Not by restoring to the cheated, but by ostentatious giving to the
- grateful.
-
- So, those who reap rejoice; and reaping, bless the sower:
- No one is eager to discover, where discovery tendeth unto loss:
- Yet, if knowledge of a theft make gainers thereby guilty,
- Can he be altogether innocent, who never asked the honesty of gain?
- Therefore, O preacher, zealous for charity, temper thy warm appeal,--
- Warning the debtor and unjustly rich, they may not dare to give:
- To do good is a privilege and guerdon: how shouldst thou rejoice
- If ill-got gifts of presumptuous fraud be offered on the altar?
- The question is not of degrees; unhallowed alms are evil;
- Discourage and reject alike the obolus or talent of iniquity.
-
- Yet more, be careful that, unworthily, thou gain not an advantage over
- weakness,
- Unstable souls, fervent and profuse, fluttered by the feeling of the
- moment;
- For eloquence swayeth to its will the feeble and the conscious of defect:
- Rashly give they, and afterward are sad,--a gift that doubly erred.
- It was the worldliness of priestcraft that accounted alms-giving for
- charity;
- And many a father's penitence hath steeped his son in penury;
- Yet, considered he lightly the guilt of a death-bed selfishness
- That strove to take with him, for gain, the gold no longer his;
- So he died in a false peace, and dying robbed his kindred;
- The cunning friar at his side having cheated both the living and the dead.
-
- Charity sitteth on a fair hill-top, blessing far and near,
- But her garments drop ambrosia, chiefly, on the violets around her:
- She gladdeneth indeed the map-like scene, stretching to the verge of the
- horizon,
- For her angel face is lustrous and beloved, even as the moon in heaven:
- But the light of that beatific vision gloweth in serener concentration
- The nearer to her heart, and nearer to her home,--that hill-top where she
- sitteth:
- Therefore is she kind unto her kin, yearning in affection on her
- neighbours,
- Giving gifts to those around, who know and love her well.
- But the counterfeit of charity, an hypocrite of earth, not a grace of
- heaven,
- Seeketh not to bless at home, for her nearer aspect is ill-favoured:
- Therefore hideth she for shame, counting that pride humility,
- And none of those around her hearth are gladdened by her gifts:
- Rather, with an overreaching zeal, flingeth she her bounty to the
- stranger,
- And scattered prodigalities abroad compensate for meanness in her home:
- For benefits showered on the distant shine in unmixed beauty,
- So that even she may reap their undiscerning praise:
- Therefore native want hath pined, where foreign need was fattened;
- Woman been crushed by the tyrannous hand that upheld the flag of
- liberality;
- Poverty been prisoned up and starved, by hearts that are maudlin upon
- crime;
- And freeborn babes been manacled by men, who liberate the sturdy slave.
-
- Policy counselleth a gift, given wisely and in season,
- And policy afterwards approveth it, for great is the influence of gifts.
- The lover, unsmiled upon before, is welcome for his jewelled bauble;
- The righteous cause without a fee, must yield to bounteous guilt:
- How fair is a man in thine esteem, whose just discrimination seeketh thee,
- And so, discerning merit, honoureth it with gifts!
- Yea, let the cause appear sufficient, and the motive clear and
- unsuspicious,
- As given to one who cannot help, or proving honest thanks,
- There liveth not one among a million, who is proof against the charm of
- liberality,
- And flattery, that boon of praise, hath power with the wisest.
-
- Man is of three natures, craving all for charity;
- It is not enough to give him meats, withholding other comfort:
- For the mind starveth, and the soul is scorned, and so the human animal
- Eateth his unsatisfying pittance, a thankless heartless pauper:
- Yet would he bless thee and be grateful, didst thou feed his spirit,
- And teach him that thine alms-givings are charities, are loves:
- --I saw a beggar in the street, and another beggar pitied him;
- Sympathy sank into his soul, and the pitied one felt happier:
- Anon passed by a cavalcade, children of wealth and gaiety;
- They laughed, and looked upon the beggar, and the gallants flung him gold;
- He, poor spirit-humbled wretch, gathered up their givings with a curse,
- And went--to share it with his brother, the beggar who had pitied him!
-
-
-OF BEAUTY.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Thou mightier than Manoah's son, whence is thy great strength,
- And wherein the secret of thy craft, O charmer charming wisely?--
- For thou art strong in weakness, and in artlessness well skilled,
- Constant in the multitude of change, and simple amidst intricate
- complexity.
- Folly's shallow lip can ask the deepest question,
- And many wise in many words should answer, what is beauty?--
- Who shall separate the hues that flicker on a dying dolphin,
- Or analyse the jewelled lights that deck the peacock's train,
- Or shrewdly mix upon a palette the tints of an iridescent spar,
- Or set in rank the wandering shades about a watered silk?
-
- For beauty is intangible, vague, ill to be defined;
- She hath the coat of a chameleon, changing while we watch it.
- Strangely woven is the web, disorderly yet harmonious,
- A glistering robe of mingled mesh, that may not be unravelled.
- It is shot with heaven's blue, the soul of summer skies,
- And twisted strings of light, the mind of noonday suns,
- And ruddy gleams of life, that roll along the veins,
- A coat of many colours, running curiously together.
- There is threefold beauty for man; twofold beauty for the animal;
- And the beauty of inanimates is single: body, temper, spirit.
- Multiplied in endless combination, issue the changeable results;
- Each class verging on the other twain, with imperceptible gradation;
- And every individual in each having his propriety of difference,
- So that the meanest of creation bringeth in a tribute of the beautiful.
- Yea, from the worst in favour shineth out a fitness of design,
- The patent mark of beauty, its Maker's name imprest.
- For the great Creator's seal is set to all His works;
- Its quarterings are Attributes of praise, and all the shield is Beauty:
- So, that heraldic blazon is Creation's common signet;
- And the universal family of life goeth in the colours of its Lord:
- But each one, as a several son, shall bear those arms with a difference;
- Beauty, various in phase, and similar in seeming oppositions.
- The coins of old Rome were struck with a diversity for each,
- Barely two be found alike, in every Cæsar's image:
- So, note thou the seals, ranged round the charters of the Universe,
- The finger of God is the stamp upon them all, but each hath its separate
- variety.
-
- Beauty, theme of innocence, how may guilt discourse thee?
- Let holy angels sing thy praise, for man hath marred thy visage.
- Still the maimed torso of a Theseus can gladden taste with its
- proportions;
- Though sin hath shattered every limb, how comely are the fragments!
- And music leaveth on the ear a memory of sweet sounds;
- And broken arches charm the sight with hints of fair completeness.
- So, while humbled at the ruin, be thou grateful for the relics;
- Go forth, and look on all around with kind uncaptious eye:
- Freely let us wander through these unfrequented ways,
- And talk of glorious beauty, filling all the world.
-
- For beauty hideth everywhere, that Reason's child may seek her,
- And having found the gem of price, may set it in God's crown.
- Beauty nestleth in the rosebud, or walketh the firmament with planets,
- She is heard in the beetle's evening hymn, and shouteth in the matins of
- the sun;
- The cheek of the peach is glowing with her smile, her splendour blazeth
- in the lightning,
- She is the dryad of the woods, the naiad of the streams;
- Her golden hair hath tapestried the silkworm's silent chamber,
- And to her measured harmonies the wild waves beat in time;
- With tinkling feet at eventide she danceth in the meadow,
- Or, like a Titan, lieth stretched athwart the ridgy Alps;
- She is rising, in her veil of mist, a Venus from the waters,--
- Men gaze upon the loveliness,--and lo, it is beautiful exceedingly;
- She, with the might of a Briareus, is dragging down the clouds upon the
- mountain,--
- Men look upon the grandeur,--and lo, it is excellent in glory.
- For I judge that beauty and sublimity be but the lesser and the great,
- Sublime, as magnified to giants, and beautiful, diminished into fairies.
- It were a false fancy to solve all beauty by desire,
- It were a lowering thought to expound sublimity by dread.
- Cowardly men with trembling hearts have feared the furious storm,
- Nor felt its thrilling beauty; but is it then not beautiful?
- And careless men, at summer's eve, have loved the dimpled waves;
- O that smile upon the seas,--hath it no sublimity?
- Dost thou nothing know of this,--to be awed at woman's beauty?
- Nor, with exhilarated heart, to hail the crashing thunder?
- Thou hast much to learn, that never found a fearfulness in flowers;
- Thou hast missed of joy, that never basked in beauties of the terrible.
-
- Show me an enthusiast in aught; he hath noted one thing narrowly,
- And lo, his keenness hath detected the one dear hiding place of beauty:
- Then he boasteth, simple soul, flattered by discovery,
- Fancying that no science else can show so fair and precious:
- He hath found a ray of light, and cherisheth the treasure in his closet,
- Mocking at those larger minds, that bathe in floods of noon;
- Lo, what a jewel hath he gotten,--this is the monopolist of beauty,--
- And lightly heeding all beside, he poured his yearnings thitherward:
- Be it for love, or for learning, habit, art, or nature,
- Exclusive thought is all the cause of this particular zeal.
- But like intensity of fitness, kind and skilful beauty,
- So pleasant to his mind in one thing, filleth all beside:
- From the waking minute of a chrysalis, to the perfect cycle of chronology,
- From the centipede's jointed armour to the mammoth's fossil ribs,
- From the kingfisher's shrill note, to the cataract's thundering bass,
- From the greensward's grateful hues, to the fascinating eye of woman,
- Beauty, various in all things, setteth up her home in each,
- Shedding graciously around an omnipresent smile.
-
- There is beauty in the rolling clouds, and placid shingle beach,
- In feathery snows, and whistling winds, and dun electric skies;
- There is beauty in the rounded woods, dank with heavy foliage,
- In laughing fields, and dinted hills, the valley and its lake;
- There is beauty in the gullies, beauty on the cliffs, beauty in sun and
- shade,
- In rocks and rivers, seas and plains,--the earth is drowned in beauty.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Beauty coileth with the watersnake, and is cradled in the shrewmouse's
- nest,
- She flitteth out with evening bats, and the soft mole hid her in his
- tunnel;
- The limpet is encamped upon the shore, and beauty not a stranger to his
- tent;
- The silvery dace and golden carp thread the rushes with her:
- She saileth into clouds with an eagle, she fluttereth into tulips with a
- humming bird;
- The pasturing kine are of her company, and she prowleth with the leopard
- in his jungle.
-
- Moreover, for the reasonable world, its words, and acts, and speculations,
- For frail and fallen manhood, in his every work and way,
- Beauty, wrecked and stricken, lingereth still among us,
- And morsels of that shattered sun are dropt upon the darkness.
- Yea, with savages and boors, the mean, the cruel, and besotted,
- Ever in extenuating grace hide some relics of the beautiful.
- Gleams of kindness, deeds of courage, patience, justice, generosity,
- Truth welcomed, knowledge prized, rebukes taken with contrition,
- All, in various measure, have been blest with some of these,
- And never yet hath lived the man, utterly beggared of the beautiful.
-
- Beauty is as crystal in the torchlight, sparkling on the poet's page;
- Virgin honey of Hymettus, distilled from the lips of the orator;
- A savour of sweet spikenard, anointing the hands of liberality;
- A feast of angels' food set upon the tables of religion.
- She is seen in the tear of sorrow, and heard in the exuberance of mirth;
- She goeth out early with the huntsman, and watcheth at the pillow of
- disease.
- Science in his secret laws hath found out latent beauty,
- Sphere and square, and cone and curve, are fashioned by her rules:
- Mechanism met her in his forces, fancy caught her in its flittings,
- Day is lightened by her eyes, and her eyelids close upon the night.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Beauty is dependence in the babe, a toothless tender nurseling;
- Beauty is boldness in the boy, a curly rosy truant;
- Beauty is modesty and grace in fair retiring girlhood;
- Beauty is openness and strength in pure high-minded youth:
- Man, the noble and intelligent, gladdeneth earth with beauty,
- And woman's beauty sunneth him, as with a smile from heaven.
-
- There is none enchantment against beauty, Magician for all time,
- Whose potent spells of sympathy have charmed the passive world:
- Verily, she reigneth a Semiramis; there is no might against her;
- The lords of every land are harnessed to her triumph.
- Beauty is conqueror of all, nor ever yet was found among the nations
- That iron-moulded mind, full proof against her power.
- Beauty, like a summer's day, subdueth by sweet influences;
- Who can wrestle against Sleep?--yet is that giant, very gentleness.
-
- Ajax may rout a phalanx, but beauty shall enslave him single-handed;
- Pericles ruled Athens, yet he is the servant of Aspasia:
- Light were the labour, and often-told the tale, to count the victories of
- beauty,--
- Helen, and Judith, and Omphale, and Thais, many a trophied name.
- At a glance the misanthrope was softened, and repented of his vows,
- When Beauty asked, he gave, and banned her--with a blessing;
- The cold ascetic loved the smile that lit his dismal cell,
- And kindly stayed her step, and wept when she departed;
- The bigot abbess felt her heart gush with a mother's feeling,
- When looking on some lovely face beneath the cloister's shade;
- Usury freed her without ransom; the buccaneer was gentle in her presence;
- Madness kissed her on the cheek, and Idiotcy brightened at her coming:
- Yea, the very cattle in the field, and hungry prowlers of the forest
- With fawning homage greeted her, as Beauty glided by.
- A welcome guest unbidden, she is dear to every hearth;
- A glad spontaneous growth of friends is springing round her rest:
- Learning sitteth at her feet, and Idleness laboureth to please her,
- Folly hath flung aside his bells, and leaden Dulness gloweth;
- Prudence is rash in her defence; Frugality filleth her with riches;
- Despair came to her for counsel; and Bereavement was glad when she
- consoled;
- Justice putteth up his sword at the tear of supplicating beauty,
- And Mercy, with indulgent haste, hath pardoned beauty's sin.
-
- For beauty is the substitute for all things, satisfying every absence,
- The rich delirious cup to make all else forgotten:
- She also is the zest unto all things, enhancing every presence,
- The rare and precious ambergris, to quicken each perfume.
- O beauty, thou art eloquent; yea, though slow of tongue,
- Thy breast, fair Phryne, pleaded well before the dazzled judge:
- O beauty, thou art wise; yea, though teaching falsely,
- Sages listen, sweet Corinna, to commend thy lips;
- O beauty, thou art ruler; yea, though lowly as a slave,
- Myrrha, that imperial brow is monarch of thy lord;
- O beauty, thou art winner; yea, though halting in the race,
- Hippodame, Camilla, Atalanta,--in gracefulness ye fascinate your umpires;
- O beauty, thou art rich; yea, though clad in russet,
- Attalus cannot boast his gold against the wealth of beauty;
- O beauty, thou art noble; yea, though Esther be an exile,
- Set her up on high, ye kings, and bow before the majesty of beauty!
-
- Friend and scholar, who, in charity, hast walked with me thus far,
- We have wandered in a wilderness of sweets, tracking beauty's footsteps:
- And ever as we rambled on among the tangled thicket,
- Many a startled thought hath tempted further roaming:
- Passion, sympathetic influence, might of imaginary haloes,--
- Many the like would lure aside, to hunt their wayward themes.
- And, look you!--from his ferny bed in yonder hazel coppice,
- A dappled hart hath flung aside the boughs and broke away;
- He is fleet and capricious as the zephyr, and with exulting bounds
- Hieth down a turfy lane between the sounding woods;
- His neck is garlanded with flowers, his antlers hung with chaplets,
- And rainbow-coloured ribbons stream adown his mottled flanks:
- Should we follow?--foolish hunters, thus to chase afoot,--
- Who can track the airy speed and doubling wiles of Taste?
-
- For the estimates of human beauty, dependent upon time and clime,
- Manifold and changeable, are multiplied the more by strange gregarious
- fashion:
- And notable ensamples in the great turn to epidemics in the lower,
- So that a nation's taste shall vary with its rulers.
- Stern Egypt, humbled to the Greek, fancied softer idols;
- Greece, the Roman province, nigh forgat her classic sculpture;
- Rome, crushed beneath the Goth, loved his barbarian habits;
- And Alaric, with his ruffian horde, is tamed by silken Rome.
- Columbia's flattened head, and China's crumpled feet,--
- The civilized tapering waist,--and the pendulous ears of the savage,--
- The swollen throat among the mountains, and an ebon skin beneath the
- tropics,--
- These shall all be reckoned beauty: and for weighty cause.
- First, for the latter: Providence in mercy tempereth taste by
- circumstance,
- So that Nature's must shall hit her creature's liking;
- Second, for the middle: though the foolishness of vanity seek to mar
- proportion,
- Still, defects in those we love shall soon be counted praise;
- Third, for the first: a chief, and a princess, maimed or distorted from
- the cradle
- Shall coax the flattery of slaves to imitate the great in their deformity:
- Hence groweth habit: and habits make a taste,
- And so shall servile zeal deface the types of beauty.
- Whiles Alexander conquered, crookedness was comely:
- And followers learn to praise the scars upon their leader's brow.
- Youth hath sought to flatter age by mimicking grey hairs;
- Age plastereth her wrinkles, and is painted in the ruddiness of Youth.
- Fashion, the parasite of Rank, apeth faults and failings,
- Until the general Taste depraved hath warped its sense of beauty.
-
- Each man hath a measure for himself, yet all shall coincide in much;
- A perfect form of human grace would captivate the world:
- Be it manhood's lustre, or the loveliness of woman, all would own its
- beauty,
- The Caffre and Circassian, Russians and Hindoos, the Briton, the Turk and
- Japanese.
- Not all alike, nor all at once, but each in proportion to intelligence,
- His purer state in morals, and a lesser grade in guilt:
- For the high standard of the beautiful is fixed in Reason's forum,
- And sins, and customs, and caprice, have failed to break it down:
- And reason's standard for the creature pointeth three perfections,
- Frame, knowledge, and the feeling heart, well and kindly mingled;
- A fair dwelling, furnished wisely, with a gentle tenant in it,--
- This is the glory of humanity: thou hast seen it seldom.
-
- There is a beauty for the body; the superficial polish of a statue,
- The symmetry of form and feature delicately carved and painted.
- How bright in early bloom the Georgian sitteth at her lattice,
- How softened off in graceful curves her young and gentle shape:
- Those dark eyes, lit by curiosity, flash beneath the lashes,
- And still her velvet cheek is dimpled with a smile.
- Dost thou count her beautiful?--even as a mere fair figure,
- A plastic image, little more,--the outer garb of woman:
- Yea,--and thus far it is well; but Reason's hopes are higher,--
- Can he sate his soul on a scantling third of beauty?
-
- Yet is this the pleasing trickery, that cheateth half the world,
- Nature's wise deceit to make up waste in life;
- And few be they that rest uncaught, for many a twig is limed;
- Where is the wise among a million, that took not form for beauty?
- But watch it well; for vanity and sin, malice, hate, suspicion,
- Louring as clouds upon the countenance, will disenchant its charms.
- The needful complexity of beauty claimeth mind and soul,
- Though many coins of foul alloy pass current for the true:
- And albeit fairness in the creature shall often co-exist with excellence,
- Yet hath many an angel shape been tenanted by fiends.
- A man, spiritually keen, shall detect in surface beauty
- Those marring specks of evil which the sensual cannot see;
- Therefore is he proof against a face, unlovely to his likings,
- And common minds shall scorn the taste, that shrunk from sin's distortion.
-
- There is a beauty for the reason; grandly independent of externals,
- It looketh from the windows of the house, shining in the man triumphant.
- I have seen the broad blank face of some misshapen dwarf
- Lit on a sudden as with glory, the brilliant light of mind:
- Who then imagined him deformed? intelligence is blazing on his forehead,
- There is empire in his eye, and sweetness on his lip, and his brown cheek
- glittereth with beauty:
- And I have known some Nireus of the camp, a varnished paragon of
- chamberers,
- Fine, elegant, and shapely, moulded as the master-piece of Phidias,--
- Such an one, with intellects abased, have I noted crouching to the dwarf,
- Whilst his lovers scorn the fool, whose beauty hath departed!
-
- And there is a beauty for the spirit; mind in its perfect flowering,
- Fragrant, expanded into soul, full of love and blessed.
- Go to some squalid couch, some famishing death-bed of the poor;
- He is shrunken, cadaverous, diseased;--there is here no beauty of the
- body:
- Never hath he fed on knowledge, nor drank at the streams of science,
- He is of the common herd, illiterate;--there is here no beauty of the
- reason:
- But lo! his filming eye is bright with love from heaven,
- In every look it beameth praise, as worshipping with seraphs;
- What honeycomb is hived upon his lips, eloquent of gratitude and prayer,--
- What triumph shrined serene upon that clammy brow,
- What glory flickering transparent under those thin cheeks,--
- What beauty in his face!--Is it not the face of an angel?
-
- Now, of these three, infinitely mingled and combined,
- Consisteth human beauty, in all the marvels of its mightiness:
- And forth from human beauty springeth the intensity of Love;
- Feeling, thought, desire, the three deep fountains of affection.
- Son of Adam, or daughter of Eve, art thou trapped by nature,
- And is thy young eye dazzled with the pleasant form of beauty?
- This is but a lower love; still it hath its honour;
- What God hath made and meant to charm, let not man despise.
- Nevertheless, as reason's child, look thou wisely farther,
- For age, disease, and care, and sin, shall tarnish all the surface:
- Reach a loftier love: be lured by the comeliness of mind,--
- Gentle, kind, and calm, or lustrous in the livery of knowledge.
- And more, there is a higher grade; force the mind to its perfection--
- Win those golden trophies of consummate love:
- Add unto riches of the reason, and a beauty moulded to thy liking,
- The precious things of nobler grace that well adorn a soul;
- Thus, be thou owner of a treasure, great in earth and heaven,
- Beauty, wisdom, goodness, in a creature like its God.
-
- So then, draw we to an end; with feeble step and faltering,
- I follow beauty through the universe, and find her home Ubiquity:
- In all that God hath made, in all that man hath marred,
- Lingereth beauty, or its wreck, a broken mould and castings.
- And now, having wandered long time, freely and with desultory feet,
- To gather in the garden of the world a few fair sample flowers,
- With patient scrutinizing care let us cull the conclusion of their
- essence,
- And answer to the riddle of Zorobabel, Whence the might of beauty?
-
- Ugliness is native unto nothing, but an attribute of concrete evil;
- In everything created, at its worst, lurk the dregs of loveliness:
- We be fallen into utter depths, yet once we stood sublime,
- For man was made in perfect praise, his Maker's comely image:
- And so his new-born ill is spiced with older good,
- He carrieth with him, yea to crime, the withered limbs of beauty.
- Passions may be crooked generosities; the robber stealeth for his
- children;
- Murder was avenger of the innocent, or wiped out shame with blood.
- Many virtues, weighted by excess, sink among the vices;
- Many vices, amicably buoyed, float among the virtues.
- For, albeit sin is hate, a foul and bitter turpitude,
- As hurling back against the Giver all His gifts with insult,
- Still when concrete in the sinner, it will seem to partake of his
- attractions,
- And in seductive masquerade shall cloak its leprous skin;
- His broken lights of beauty shall illumine its utter black,
- And those refracted rays glitter on the hunch of its deformity.
-
- Verily the fancy may be false, yet hath it met me in my musings,
- (As expounding the pleasantness of pleasure, but no ways extenuating
- licence,)
- That even those yearnings after beauty, in wayward wanton youth,
- When, guileless of ulterior end, it craveth but to look upon the lovely,
- Seem like struggles of the soul, dimly remembering pre-existence,
- And feeling in its blindness for a long-lost god, to satisfy its longing;
- As if the sucking babe, tenderly mindful of his mother,
- Should pull a dragon's dugs, and drain the teats of poison.
- Our primal source was beauty, and we pant for it ever and again;
- But sin hath stopped the way with thorns; we turn aside, wander, and are
- lost.
-
- God, the undiluted good, is root and stock of beauty,
- And every child of reason drew his essence from that stem.
- Therefore, it is of intuition, an innate hankering for home,
- A sweet returning to the well, from which our spirit flowed,
- That we, unconscious of a cause, should bask these darkened souls
- In some poor relics of the light that blazed in primal beauty,
- And, even like as exiles of idolatry, should quaff from the cisterns of
- creation
- Stagnant draughts, for those fresh springs that rise in the Creator.
-
- Only, being burdened with the body, spiritual appetite is warped,
- And sensual man, with taste corrupted, drinketh of pollutions:
- Impulse is left, but indiscriminate; his hunger feasteth upon carrion;
- His natural love of beauty doateth over beauty in decay.
- He still thirsteth for the beautiful; but his delicate ideal hath grown
- gross,
- And the very sense of thirst hath been fevered from affection into
- passion.
- He remembereth the blessedness of light, but it is with an old man's
- memory,
- A blind old man from infancy, that once hath seen the sun,
- Whom long experience of night hath darkened in his cradle recollections,
- Until his brightest thought of noon is but a shade of black.
-
- This then is thy charm, O beauty all pervading;
- And this thy wondrous strength, O beauty, conqueror of all:
- The outline of our shadowy best, the pure and comely creature,
- That winneth on the conscience with a saddening admiration:
- And some untutored thirst for God, the root of every pleasure,
- Native to creatures, yea in ruin, and dating from the birthday of the
- soul.
- For God sealeth up the sum, confirmed exemplar of proportions,
- Rich in love, full of wisdom, and perfect in the plenitude of Beauty.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Fame.]
-
-OF FAME.
-
-[Illustration: "B"]
-
- Blow the trumpet, spread the wing, fling thy scroll upon the sky,
- Rouse the slumbering world, O Fame, and fill the sphere with echo!
- --Beneath thy blast they wake, and murmurs come hoarsely on the wind,
- And flashing eyes and bristling hands proclaim they hear thy message:
- Rolling and surging as a sea, that upturned flood of faces
- Hasteneth with its million tongues to spread the wondrous tale;
- The hum of added voices groweth to the roaring of a cataract,
- And rapidly from wave to wave is tossed that exaggerated story,
- Until those stunning clamours, gradually diluted in the distance,
- Sink ashamed, and shrink afraid of noise, and die away.
- Then brooding Silence, forth from his hollow caverns,
- Cloaked and cowled, and gliding along, a cold and stealthy shadow,
- Once more is mingled with the multitude, whispering as he walketh,
- And hushing all their eager ears, to hear some newer Fame.
- So all is still again; but nothing of the past hath been forgotten;
- A stirring recollection of the trumpet ringeth in the hearts of men:
- And each one, either envious or admiring, hath wished the chance were his
- To fill as thus the startled world with fame, or fear, or wonder.
- This lit thy torch of sacrilege, Ephesian Eratostratus;
- This dug thy living grave, Pythagoras, the traveller from Hadës;
- For this, dived Empedocles into Etna's fiery whirlpool;
- For this, conquerors, regicides, and rebels, have dared their perilous
- crimes.
- In all men, from the monarch to the menial, lurketh lust of fame:
- The savage and the sage alike regard their labours proudly:
- Yea, in death, the glazing eye is illumined by the hope of reputation,
- And the stricken warrior is glad, that his wounds are salved with glory.
-
- For fame is a sweet self-homage, an offering grateful to the idol,
- A spiritual nectar for the spiritual thirst, a mental food for mind,
- A pregnant evidence to all of an after immaterial existence,
- A proof that soul is scatheless, when its dwelling is dissolved.
- And the manifold pleasures of fame are sought by the guilty and the good:
- Pleasures, various in kind, and spiced to every palate:
- The thoughtful loveth fame as an earnest of better immortality,
- The industrious and deserving, as a symbol of just appreciation,
- The selfish, as a promise of advancement, at least to a man's own kin,
- And common minds, as a flattering fact that men have been told of their
- existence.
-
- There is a blameless love of fame, springing from desire of justice,
- When a man hath featly won and fairly claimed his honours:
- And then fame cometh as encouragement to the inward consciousness of
- merit,
- Gladdening by the kindliness and thanks, wherewithal his labours are
- rewarded.
- But there is a sordid imitation, a feverish thirst for notoriety,
- Waiting upon vanity and sloth, and utterly regardless of deserving:
- And then fame cometh as a curse; the fire-damp is gathered in the mine:
- The soul is swelled with poisonous air, and a spark of temptation shall
- explode it.
-
- Idle causes, noised awhile, shall yield most active consequents,
- And therefore it were ill upon occasion to scorn the voice of rumour.
- Ye have seen the chemist in his art mingle invisible gases;
- And lo, the product is a substance, a heavy dark precipitate:
- Even so fame, hurtling on the quiet with many meeting tongues,
- Can out of nothing bring forth fruits, and blossom on a nourishment of
- air.
- For many have earned honour, and thereby rank and riches,
- From false and fleeting tales, some casual mere mistake;
- And many have been wrecked upon disgrace, and have struggled with poverty
- and scorn,
- From envious hints and ill reports, the slanders cast on innocence.
- Whom may not scandal hit? those shafts are shot at a venture:
- Who standeth not in danger of suspicion? that net hath caught the noblest.
- Cæsar's wife was spotless, but a martyr to false fame;
- And Rumour, in temporary things, is gigantic as a ruin or a remedy:
- Many poor and many rich have testified its popular omnipotence,
- And many a panic-stricken army hath perished with the host of the
- Assyrians.
-
- Nevertheless, if opportunity be nought, let a man bide his time;
- So the matter be not merchandise nor conquest, fear thou less for
- character.
- If a liar accuseth thee of evil, be not swift to answer;
- Yea, rather give him license for awhile; it shall help thine honour
- afterward:
- Never yet was calumny engendered, but good men speedily discerned it,
- And innocence hath burst from its injustice, as the green world rolling
- out of Chaos.
- What, though still the wicked scoff,--this also turneth to his praise;
- Did ye never hear that censure of the bad is buttress to a good man's
- glory?
- What, if the ignorant still hold out, obstinate in unkind judgment,--
- Ignorance and calumny are paired; we affirm by two negations:
- Let them stand round about, pushing at the column in a circle,
- For all their toil and wasted strength, the foolish do but prop it.
- And note thou this; in the secret of their hearts, they feel the taunt is
- false,
- And cannot help but reverence the courage, that walketh amid calumnies
- unanswering:
- He standeth as a gallant chief, unheeding shot or shell;
- He trusteth in God his Judge: neither arrows nor the pestilence shall
- harm him.
-
- A high heart is a sacrifice to Heaven: should it stoop among the creepers
- in the dust,
- To tell them that what God approved, is worthy of their praise?
- Never shall it heed the thought; but flaming on in triumph to the skies,
- And quite forgetting fame, shall find it added as a trophy.
- A great mind is an altar on a hill: should the priest descend from his
- altitude,
- To canvass offerings and worship from dwellers on the plain?
- Rather, with majestic perseverance will he minister in solitary grandeur,
- Confident the time will come, when pilgrims shall be flocking to the
- shrine.
- For fame is the birthright of genius; and he recketh not how long it be
- delayed;
- The heir need not hasten to his heritage, when he knoweth that his tenure
- is eternal.
- The careless poet of Avon, was he troubled for his fame,
- Or the deep-mouthed chronicler of Paradise, heeded he the suffrage of his
- equals?
- Mæonides took no thought, committing all his honours to the future,
- And Flaccus, standing on his watch-tower, spied the praise of ages.
-
- Smoking flax will breed a flame, and the flame may illuminate a world;
- Where is he who scorned that smoke as foul and murky vapour?
- The village stream swelled to a river, and the river was a kingdom's
- wealth,
- Where is he who boasted he could step across that stream?
- Such are the beginnings of the famous: little in the judgment of their
- peers,
- The juster verdict of posterity shall fix them in the orbits of the Great.
- Therefore dull Zoilus, clamouring ascendant of the hour,
- Will soon be fain to hide his hate, and bury up his bitterness for shame:
- Therefore mocking Momus, offended at the footsteps of Beauty,
- Shall win the prize of his presumption, and be hooted from his throne
- among the stars.
- For, as the shadow of a mountain lengtheneth before the setting sun,
- Until that screening Alp have darkened all the canton,--
- So, Fame groweth to its great ones; their images loom longer in departing;
- But the shadow of mind is light, and earth is filled with its glory.
-
- And thou, student of the truth, commended to the praise of God,
- Wouldst thou find applause with men?--seek it not, nor shun it.
- Ancient fame is roofed in cedar, and her walls are marble;
- Modern fame lodgeth in a hut, a slight and temporary dwelling:
- Lay not up the treasures of thy soul within so damp a chamber,
- For the moth of detraction shall fret thy robe, and drop its eggs upon
- thy motive;
- Or the rust of disheartening reserve shall spoil the lustre of thy gold,
- Until its burnished beauty shall be dim as tarnished brass;
- Or thieves, breaking through to steal, shall claim thy jewelled thoughts,
- And turn to charge the theft on thee, a pilferer from them!
-
- There is a magnanimity in recklessness of fame, so fame be well deserving,
- That rusheth on in fearless might, the conscious sense of merit:
- And there is a littleness in jealousy of fame, looking as aware of
- weakness,
- That creepeth cautiously along, afraid that its title will be challenged.
- The wild boar, full of beechmast, flingeth him down among the brambles;
- Secure in bristly strength, without a watch, he sleepeth:
- But the hare, afraid to feed, croucheth in its own soft form;
- Wakefully with timid eyes, and quivering ears, he listeneth.
- Even so, a giant's might is bound up in the soul of Genius,
- His neck is strong with confidence, and he goeth tusked with power:
- Sturdily he roameth in the forest, or sunneth him in fen and field,
- And scareth from his marshy lair a host of fearful foes.
- But there is a mimic Talent, whose safety lieth in its quickness,
- A timorous thing of doubling guile, that scarce can face a friend:
- This one is captious of reproof, provident to snatch occasion,
- Greedy of applause, and vexed to lose one tittle of the glory.
- He is a poor warder of his fame, who is ever on the watch to keep it
- spotless;
- Such care argueth debility, a garrison relying on its sentinel.
- Passive strength shall scorn excuses, patiently waiting a re-action,
- He wotteth well that truth is great, and must prevail at last;
- But fretful weakness hasteth to explain, anxiously dreading prejudice,
- And ignorant that perishable falsehood dieth as a branch cut off.
-
- Purity of motive and nobility of mind shall rarely condescend
- To prove its rights, and prate of wrongs, or evidence its worth to others.
- And it shall be small care to the high and happy conscience
- What jealous friends, or envious foes, or common fools may judge.
- Should the lion turn and rend every snarling jackal,
- Or an eagle be stopt in his career to punish the petulance of sparrows?
- Should the palm-tree bend his crown to chide the briar at his feet,
- Nor kindly help its climbing, if it hope, and be ambitious?
- Should the nightingale account it worth her pains to vindicate her music,
- Before some sorry finches, that affect to judge of song?
- No: many an injustice, many a sneer, and slur,
- Is passed aside with noble scorn by lovers of true fame:
- For well they wot that glory shall be tinctured good or evil,
- By the character of those who give it, as wine is flavoured by the
- wineskin:
- So that worthy fame floweth only from a worthy fountain,
- But from an ill-conditioned troop the best report is worthless.
- And if the sensibility of genius count his injuries in secret,
- Wisely will he hide the pains a hardened herd would mock:
- For the great mind well may be sad to note such littleness in brethren,
- The while he is comforted and happy in the firmest assurance of desert.
-
- Cease awhile, gentle scholar;--seek other thoughts and themes;
- Or dazzling Fame with wildfire light shall lure us on for ever.
- For look, all subjects of the mind may range beneath its banner,
- And time would fail and patience droop, to count that numerous host.
- The mine is deep, and branching wide,--and who can work it out?
- Years of thought would leave untold the boundless topic, Fame.
- Every matter in the universe is linked in suchwise unto others,
- That a deep full treatise upon one thing might reach to the history of
- all things:
- And before some single thesis had been followed out in all its branches,
- The wandering thinker would be lost in the pathless forest of existence.
- What were the matter or the spirit, that hath no part in Fame?
- Where were the fact irrelevant, or the fancy out of place?
- For the handling of that mighty theme should stretch from past to future,
- Catching up the present on its way, as a traveller burdened with time.
- All manner of men, their deeds, hopes, fortunes, and ambitions,
- All manner of events and things, climate, circumstance, and custom,
- Wealth and war, fear and hope, contentment, jealousy, devotion,
- Skill and learning, truth, falsehood, knowledge of things gone and things
- to come,
- Pride and praise, honour and dishonour, warnings, ensamples, emulations,
- The excellent in virtues, and the reprobate in vice, with the cloud of
- indifferent spectators,--
- Wave on wave with flooding force throng the shoals of thought,
- Filling that immeasurable theme, the height and depth of Fame.
- With soul unsatisfied and mind dismayed, my feet have touched the
- threshold,
- Fain to pour these flowers and fruits an offering on that altar:
- Lo, how vast the temple,--there are clouds within the dome!
- Yet might the huge expanse be filled, with volumes writ on Fame.
-
-
-OF FLATTERY.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Music is commended of the deaf:--but is that praise despised?
- I trow not: with flattered soul the musician heard him gladly.
- Beauty is commended of the blind:--but is that compliment misliking?
- I trow not: though false and insincere, woman listened greedily.
- Vacant Folly talketh high of Learning's deepest reason:
- Is she hated for her hollowness?--learning held her wiser for the nonce.
- The worldly and the sensual, to gain some end, did homage to religion:
- And the good man gave thanks as for a convert, where others saw the
- hypocrite.
-
- Yet none of these were cheated at the heart, nor steadily believed those
- flatteries;
- They feared the core was rotten, while they hoped the skin was sound:
- But the fruits have so sweet fragrance, and are verily so pleasant to the
- eyes,
- It were an ungracious disenchantment to find them apples of Sodom.
- So they laboured to think all honest, winking hard with both their eyes;
- And hushed up every whisper that could prove that praise absurd:
- They willingly regard not the infirmities that make such worship vain,
- And palliate to their own fond hearts the faults they will not see.
- For the idol rejoiceth in his incense, and loveth not to shame his
- suppliants,
- Should he seek to find them false, his honours die with theirs:
- An offering is welcome for its own sake, set aside the giver,
- And praise is precious to a man, though uttered by the parrot or the
- mocking-bird.
-
- The world is full of fools; and sycophancy liveth on the foolish:
- So he groweth great and rich, that fawning supple parasite.
- Sometimes he boweth like a reed, cringing to the pompousness of pride,
- Sometimes he strutteth as a gallant, pampering the fickleness of vanity;
- I have known him listen with the humble, enacting silent marveller,
- To hear some purse-proud dunce expose his poverty of mind;
- I have heard him wrangle with the obstinate, vowing that he will not be
- convinced,
- When some weak youth hath wisely feared the chance of ill success:
- Now, he will barely be a winner,--to magnify thy triumphs afterward;
- Now, he will hardly be a loser,--but cannot cease to wonder at thy skill:
- He laudeth his own worth, that the leader may have glory in his follower;
- He meekly confesseth his unworthiness, that the leader may have glory in
- himself.
- Many wiles hath he, and many modes of catching,
- But every trap is selfishness, and every bait is praise.
-
- Come, I would forewarn thee and forearm thee; for keen are the weapons of
- his warfare;
- And, while my soul hath scorned him, I have watched his skill from far.
- His thoughts are full of guile, deceitfully combining contrarieties,
- And when he doeth battle in a man, he is leagued with traitorous
- Self-love.
- Strange things have I noted, and opposite to common fancy;
- We leave the open surface, and would plumb the secret depths.
- For he will magnify a lover, even to disparaging his mistress;
- So much wisdom, goodness, grace,--and all to be enslaved?
- Till the Narcissus, self-enamoured, whelmed in floods of flattery,
- Is cheated from the constancy and fervency of love by friendship's subtle
- praise.
- Moreover, he will glorify a parent, even to the censure of his child,--
- O degenerate scion, of a stock so excellent and noble!
- Scant will he be in well-earned praise of a son before his father;
- And rarely commendeth to a mother her daughter's budding beauty:
- Yet shall he extol the daughter to her father, and be warm about the son
- before his mother;
- Knowing that self-love entereth not, to resist applause with jealousies.
- Wisely is he sparing of hyperbole where vehemence of praise would humble,
- For many a father liketh ill to be counted second to his son:
- And shrewdly the flatterer hath reckoned on a self still lurking in the
- mother,
- When his tongue was slow to speak of graces in the daughter.
- But if he descend a generation, to the grandsire his talk is of the
- grandson,
- Because in such high praise he hideth the honours of the son;
- And the daughter of a daughter may well exceed, in beauty, love, and
- learning,
- For unconsciously old age perceived--she cannot be my rival.
- These are of the deep things of flattery: and many a shallow sycophant
- Hath marvelled ill that praise of children seldom won their parents.
- This therefore note, unto detection: flattery can sneer as well as smile;
- And a master in the craft wotteth well, that his oblique thrust is surest.
-
- Flattery sticketh like a burr, holding to the soil with anchors,
- A vital, natural, subtle seed, everywhere hardy and indigenous.
- Go to the storehouse of thy memory, and take what is readiest to thy
- hand,--
- The noble deed, the clever phrase, for which thy pride was flattered:
- Oh, it hath been dwelt upon in solitude, and comforted thy heart in
- crowds,
- It hath made thee walk as in a dream, and lifted up the head above thy
- fellows;
- It hath compensated months of gloom, that minute of sweet sunshine,
- Drying up the pools of apathy, and kindling the fire of ambition:
- Yea, the flavour of that spice, mingled in the cup of life,
- Shall linger even to the dregs, and still be tasted with a welcome;
- The dame shall tell her grandchild of her coy and courted youth,
- And the grey-beard prateth of a stranger, who praised his task at school.
-
- Oftimes to the sluggard and the dull, flattery hath done good service,
- Quickening the mind to emulation, and encouraging the heart that failed.
- Even so, a stimulating poison, wisely tendered by the leech,
- Shall speed the pulse, and rally life, and cheat astonished death.
- For, as a timid swimmer ventureth afloat with bladders,
- Until self-confidence and growth of skill have made him spurn their aid,
- Thus commendation may be prudent, where a child hath ill deserved it;
- But praise unmerited is flattery, and the cure will bring its cares:
- For thy son may find thee out, and thou shalt rue the remedy:
- Yea, rather, where thou canst not praise, be honest in rebuke.
-
- I have seen the objects of a flatterer mirrored clearly on the surface,
- Where self-love scattereth praise, to gather praise again.
- This is a commodity of merchandize, words put out at interest:
- A scheme for canvassing opinions, and tinging them all with partiality.
- He is but a harmless fool; humour him with pitiful good-nature:
- If a poetaster quote thy song, be thou tender to his poem:
- Did the painter praise thy sketch? be kind, commend his picture;
- He looketh for a like return; then thank him with thy praise.
- In these small things with these small minds count thou the sycophant a
- courtier,
- And pay back, as blindly as ye may, the too transparent honour.
-
- Also, where the flattery is delicate, coming unobtrusive and in season,
- Though thou be suspicious of its truth, be generous at least to its
- gentility.
- The skilful thief of Lacedæmon had praise before his judges,
- And many caitiffs win applause for genius in their callings.
- Moreover, his meaning may be kind,--and thou art a debtor to his tongue;
- Hasten well to pay the debt, with charity and shrewdness:
- He must not think thee caught, nor feel himself discovered,
- Nor find thine answering compliment as hollow as his own.
- Though he be a smiling enemy, let him heed thee as the fearless and the
- friendly;
- A searching look, a poignant word, may prove thou art aware:
- Still, with compassion to the frail, though keen to see his soul,
- Let him not fear for thy discretion: see thou keep his secret, and thine
- own.
-
- However, where the flattery is gross, a falsehood clear and fulsome,
- Crush the venomous toad, and spare not for a jewel in its head.
- Tell the presumptuous in flattery, that or ever he bespatter thee with
- praise,
- It might be well to stop and ask how little it were worth:
- Thou hast not solicited his suffrage,--let him not force thee to refuse
- it;
- Look to it, man, thy fence is foiled,--and thus we spoil the plot.
- Self-knowledge goeth armed, girt with many weapons,
- But carrieth whips for flattery, to lash it like a slave:
- But the dunce in that great science goeth as a greedy tunny,
- To gorge both bait and hook, unheeding all but appetite:
- He smelleth praise and swalloweth,--yea, though it be palpable and plain,
- Say unto him, Folly, thou art Wisdom,--he will bless thee for thy lie.
-
- Flatterer, thou shalt rue thy trade, though it have many present gains;
- Those varnished wares may sell apace, yet shall they spoil thy credit.
- Thine is the intoxicating cup, which whoso drinketh it shall nauseate:
- Thine is trickery and cheating; but deception never pleased for long.
- And though while fresh thy fragrance seemed even as the dews of charity,
- Yet afterward it fouled thy censer, as with savour of stale smoke.
- For the great mind detected thee at once, answering thine emptiness with
- pity,
- He saw thy self-interested zeal, and was not cozened by vain-glory:
- And the little mind is bloated with the praise, scorning him who gave it,
- A fool shall turn to be thy tyrant, an thou hast dubbed him great:
- And the medium mind of common men, loving first thy music,
- After, when the harmonies are done, shall feel small comfort in their
- echoes;
- For either he shall know thee false, conscious of contrary deservings,
- And, hating thee for falsehood, soon will scorn himself for truth,
- Or, if in aught to toilsome merit honest praise be due,
- Though for a season, belike, his weakness hath been raptured at thy
- witching,
- Shall he not speedily perceive, to the vexing of his disappointed spirit,
- That thine exaggerated tongue hath robbed him of fair fame?
- Thou hast paid in forger's coins, and he had earned true money:
- For the substance of just praise, thou hast put him off with shadows of
- the sycophant:
- Thou art all things to all men, for ends false and selfish,
- Therefore shalt be nothing unto any one, when those thine ends are seen.
-
- Turn aside, young scholar, turn from the song of Flattery!
- She hath the Siren's musical voice, to ravish and betray.
- Her tongue droppeth honey, but it is the honey of Anticyra;
- Her face is a mask of fascination, but there hideth deformity behind;
- Her coming is the presence of a queen, heralded by courtesy and beauty,
- But, going away, her train is held by the hideous dwarf, Disgust.
-
- Know thyself, thine evil as thy good, and flattery shall not harm thee:
- Yea, her speech shall be a warning, a humbling and a guide.
- For wherein thou lackest most, there chiefly will the sycophant commend
- thee,
- And then most warmly will congratulate, when a man hath least deserved.
- Behold, she is doubly a traitor; and will underrate her victim's best,
- That, to the comforting of conscience, she may plead his worse for better.
-
- Therefore, is she dangerous,--as every lie is dangerous:
- Believe her tales, and perish: if thou act upon such counsel.
- Her aims are thine not thee, thy wealth and not thy welfare,
- Thy suffrage not thy safety, thine aid and not thine honour.
- Moreover, with those aims insured, ceaseth all her glozing;
- She hath used thee as a handle,--but her hand was wise to turn it;
- Thus will she glorify her skill, that it deftly caught thy kindness,
- Thus will she scorn thy kindness, so pliable and easy to her skill.
- And then, the flatterer will turn to be thy foe, the bitterest and
- hottest,
- Because he oweth thee much hate to pay off many humblings.
- Thinkest thou now that he is high, he loveth the remembrance of his
- lowliness,
- The servile manner, the dependent smile, the conscience self-abased?
- No, this hour is his own, and the flatterer will be found a busy mocker;
- He that hath salved thee with his tongue, shall now gnash upon thee with
- his teeth;
- Yea, he will be leader in the laugh,--silly one, to listen to thy loss,
- We scarce had hoped to lime and take another of the fools of flattery.
-
- At the last; have charity, young scholar,--yea, to the sycophant
- convicted;
- Be not a Brutus to thyself, nor stern in thine own cause.
- Pardon exaggerated praise; for there is a natural impulse,
- Spurring on the nobler mind, to colour facts by feelings:
- Take an indulgent view of each man's interest in self,
- Be large and liberal in excuses; is not that infirmity thine own?
- Search thy soul and be humble; and mercy abideth with humility;
- So that, yea, the insincere may find thee pitiful, and love thee.
- Mildly put aside, without rudeness of repulse, the pampering hand of
- flattery,
- For courtesy and kindness have gone beneath its guise, and ill shouldst
- thou rebuke them.
-
- Thou art incapable of theft: but flowers in the garden of a friend
- Are thine to pluck with confidence, and it were unfriendliness to
- hesitate:
- Thou abhorrest flattery: but a generous excess in praise
- Is thine to yield with honest heart, and false were the charity to doubt
- it:
- The difference lieth in thine aim; kindliness and good are of charity,
- But selfish, harmful, vile, and bad, is Flattery's evil end.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF NEGLECT.
-
- Generous and righteous is thy grief, slighted child of sensibility;
- For kindliness enkindleth love, but the waters of indifference quench it:
- Thy soul is athirst for sympathy, and hungereth to find affection,
- The tender scions of thy heart yearn for the sunshine of good feeling;
- And it is an evil thing and bitter, when the cheerful face of Charity,
- Going forth gaily in the morning to woo the world with smiles,
- Is met by those wayfaring men with coldness, suspicion, and repulse,
- And turneth into hard dead stone at the Gorgon visage of Neglect.
- O brother, warm and young, covetous of other's favour,
- I see thee checked and chilled, sorrowing for censure or forgetfulness:
- Let coarse and common minds despise--that wounding of thy vanity,
- Alas, I note a sorer cause, the blighting of thy love;
- Let the callous sensual deride thee,--disappointed of thy praise,
- Alas, thou hast a juster grief, defrauded of their kindness:
- It is a theme for tears to feel the soft heart hardening,
- The frozen breath of apathy sealing up the fountain of affection;
- It is a pang, keen only to the best, to be injured well-deserving,
- And slumbering Neglect is injury,--Could ye not watch one hour?
- When God Himself complained, it was that none regarded,
- And indifference bowed to the rebuke, Thou gavest Me no kiss when I came
- in.
-
- Moreover, praise is good; honour is a treasure to be hoarded;
- A good man's praise foreshadoweth God's, and in His smile is heaven:
- But men walk on in hardihood, steeling their sinfulness to censure,
- And when rebuke is ridiculed, the love of praise were an infirmity;
- The judge thou heedest not in fear, cannot have deep homage of thy hope,
- And who then is the wise of this world, that will own he trembleth at his
- fellows?
- Calm, careless, and insensible, he mocketh blame or calumny,
- Neither should his dignity be humbled to some pittance of their praise:
- The rather, let false pride affect to trample on the treasure
- Which evermore in secret strength unconquered Nature prizeth;
- Rather, shall ye stifle now the rising bliss of triumph,
- Lest after, in the world's Neglect, he must acknowledge bitterness.
-
-
- For lo, that world is wide, a huge and crowded continent,
- Its brazen sun is mammon, and its iron soil is care:
- A world full of men, where each man clingeth to his idol;
- A world full of men, where each man cherisheth his sorrow;
- A world full of men, multitude shoaling upon multitude;
- A surging sea, where every wave is burdened with an argosy of self;
- A boundless beach, where every stone is a separate microscopic world:
- A forest of innumerable trees, where every root is independent.
-
- What then is the marvel or the shame, if units be lost among the million?
- Canst thou reasonably murmur, if a leaf drop off unnoticed?
- Wondrous in architecture, intricate and beautiful, delicately tinged and
- scented,
- Exquisite of feeling and mysterious in life, none cared for its growth,
- or its decay:
- None? yea,--no one of its fellows,--nor cedar, palm, nor bramble,--
- None? its twin-born brother scarcely missed it from the spray:
- None?--if none indeed, then man's neglect were bitterness;
- And Life a land without a sun, a globe without a God!
- Yea, flowers in the desert, there be that love your beauty;
- Yea, jewels in the sea, there be that prize your brightness;
- Children of unmerited oblivion, there be that watch and woo you,
- And many tend your sweets, with gentle ministering care:
- Thronging spirits of the happy, and the ever-present Good One
- Yearning seek those precious things, man hath not heart to love,
- Gems of the humblest or the highest, pure and patient in their kind,
- The souls unhardened by ill usage, and uncorrupt by luxury.
-
- And ye, poor desolates unsunned, toilers in the dark damp mine,
- Wearied daughters of oppression, crushed beneath the car of avarice,
- There be that count your tears,--He hath numbered the hairs of thy head,--
- There be that can forgive your ill, with kind considerate pity:
- Count ye this for comfort, Justice hath her balances,
- And yet another world can compensate for all:
- The daily martyrdom of patience shall not be wanting of reward;
- Duty is a prickly shrub, but its flower will be happiness and glory.
-
- Ye too, the friendless, yet dependent, that find nor home nor lover,
- Sad imprisoned hearts, captive to the net of circumstance,--
- And ye, too harshly judged, noble unappreciated intellects,
- Who, capable of highest, lowlier fix your just ambition in content,--
- And chiefest, ye, famished infants of the poor, toiling for your parents'
- bread,
- Tired, and sore, and uncomforted the while, for want of love and learning,
- Who struggle with the pitiless machine in dull continuous conflict,
- Tasked by iron men, who care for nothing but your labour,--
- Be ye long-suffering and courageous: abide the will of Heaven;
- God is on your side; all things are tenderly remembered:
- His servants here shall help you; and where those fail you through
- Neglect,
- His kingdom still hath time and space for ample discriminative Justice:
- Yea, though utterly on this bad earth ye lose both right and mercy,
- The tears that we forgat to note, our God shall wipe away.
-
- Nevertheless, kind spirit, susceptible and guileless,
- Meek uncherished dove, in a carrion flock of fowls,
- Sensitive mimosa, shrinking from the winds that help to root the fir,
- Fragile nautilus, shipwrecked in the gale whereat the conch is glad,
- Thy sharp peculiar grief is uncomforted by hope of compensation,
- For it is a delicate and spiritual wound, which the probe of pity
- bruiseth:
- Yet hear how many thoughts extenuate its pain;
- Even while a kindred heart can sorrow for its presence.
- For the sting of neglect is in this,--that such as we are all, forget us,
- That men and women, kith and kin, so lightly heed of other:
- Sympathy is lacking from the guilty such as we, even where angels
- minister,
- And souls of fine accord must prize a fellow-sinner's love;
- For the worst love those who love them, and the best claim heart for
- heart,
- And it is a holy thirst to long for love's requital:
- Hard it will be, hard and sad, to love and be unloved;
- And many a thorn is thrust into the side of him that is forgotten.
- The oppressive silence of reserve, the frost of failing friendship,
- Affection blighted by repulse, or chilled by shallow courtesy,
- The unaided struggle, the unconsidered grief, the unesteemed
- self-sacrifice,
- The gift, dear evidence of kindness, long due, but never offered,
- The glance estranged, the letter flung aside, the greeting ill received,
- The services of unobtrusive care unthanked, perchance unheeded,
- These things, which hard men mock at, rend the feelings of the tender,
- For the delicate tissue of a spiritual mind is torn by those sharp barbs;
- The coldness of a trusted friend, a plenitude ending in vacuity,
- Is as if the stable world had burst a hollow bubble.
-
- But consider, child of sensibility; the lot of men is labour,
- Labour for the mouth, or labour in the spirit, labour stern and
- individual.
- Worldly cares and worldly hopes exact the thoughts of all,
- And there is a necessary selfishness, rooted in each mortal breast.
- The plans of prudence, or the whisperings of pride, or all-absorbing
- reveries of love,
- Ambition, grief, or fear, or joy, set each man for himself;
- Therefore, the centre of a circle, whereunto all the universe convergeth,
- Is seen in fallen solitude, the naked selfish heart:
- Stripped of conventional deceptions, untrammelled from the harness of
- society,
- We all may read one little word engraved on all we do;
- Other men, what are they unto us? the age, the mass, the million,--
- We segregate, distinct from generalities, that isolated particle, a self:
- It is the very law of our life, a law for soul and body,
- An earthly law for earthly men, toiling in responsible probation.
- For each is the all unto himself, disguise it as we may,
- Each infinite, each most precious; yet even as a nothing to his neighbour.
- O consider, we be crowding up an avenue, trapped in the decoy of time,
- Behind us the irrevocable past, before us the illimitable future:
- What wonder is there, if the traveller, wayworn, hopeful, fearful,
- Burdened himself, so lightly heed the burden of his brother?
- How shouldst thou marvel and be sad, that the pilgrims trouble not to
- learn thee,
- When each hath to master for himself the lessons of life and immortality?
-
- Moreover, what art thou,--so vainly impatient of Neglect,
- Where then is thy worthiness, that so thou claimest honour?
- Let the true judgment of humility reckon up thine ill deserts,
- How little is there to be loved, how much to stir up scorn!
- The double heart, the bitter tongue, the rash and erring spirit,
- Be these, ye purest among men, your passports unto favour?
- It is mercy in the Merciful, and justice in the Just, to be jealous of
- His creature's love,
- But how should evil or duplicity arrogate affection to itself?
- Where love is happiness and duty, to be jealous of that love is godlike,
- But who can reverence the guilty? who findeth pleasure in the mean?
- Check the presumption of thy hopes: thankfully take refuge in obscurity,
- Or, if thou claimest merit, thy sin shall be proclaimed upon the
- housetops.
-
- Yet again: consider them of old, the good, the great, the learned,
- Who have blessed the world by wisdom, and glorified their God by purity.
- Did those speed in favour? were they the loved and the admired?
- Was every prophet had in honour? and every deserving one remembered to
- his praise?
- What shall I say of yonder band, a glorious cloud of witnesses,
- The scorned, defamed, insulted,--but the excellent of earth?
- It were weariness to count up noble names, neglected in their lives,
- Whom none esteemed, nor cared to love, till death had sealed them his.
- For good men are the health of the world, valued only when it perisheth,
- Like water, light, and air, all precious in their absence.
- Who hath considered the blessing of his breath, till the poison of an
- asthma struck him?
- Who hath regarded the just pulses of his heart, till spasm or paralysis
- have stopped them?
- Even thus, an unobserved routine of daily grace and wisdom,
- When no more here, had worship of a world, whose penitence atoned for its
- neglect.
- And living genius is seen among infirmities, wherefrom the commoner are
- free;
- And other rival men of mind crowd this arena of contention;
- And there be many cares; and a man knoweth little of his brother;
- Feebly we appreciate a motive, and slowly keep pace with a feeling:
- And social difference is much; and experience teacheth sadly,
- How great the treachery of friends, how dangerous the courtesy of enemies.
- So, the sum of all these things operateth largely upon all men,
- Hedging us about with thorns, to cramp our yearning sympathies,
- And we grow materialized in mind, forgetting what we see not,
- But, immersed in perceptions of the present, keep things absent out of
- thought:
- Thus, where ingratitude, and guilt, and labour, and selfishness would
- harden,
- Humbly will the good man bow, unmurmuring, to Neglect.
-
- Yet once more, griever at Neglect, hear me to thy comfort, or rebuke:
- For, after all thy just complaint, the world is full of love.
- O heart of childhood, tender, trusting, and affectionate,
- O youth, warm youth, full of generous attentions,
- O woman, self-forgetting woman, poetry of human life,
- And not less thou, O man, so often the disinterested brother,
- Many a smile of love, many a tear of pity,
- Many a word of comfort, many a deed of magnanimity,
- Many a stream of milk and honey pour ye freely on the earth,
- And many a rosebud of love rejoiceth in the dew of your affection.
- Neglect? O liberal world, for thine are many prizes:
- Neglect? O charitable world, where thousands feed on bounty;
- Neglect? O just world, for thy judgments err not often;
- Neglect? O libel on a world where half that world is woman!
- Where is the afflicted, whose voice, once heard, stirreth not a host of
- comforters?
- Where is the sick untended, or in prison, and they visited him not?
- The hungry is fed, and the thirsty satisfied, till ability set limits to
- the will,
- And those who did it unto them, have done it unto God!
- For human benevolence is large, though many matters dwarf it,
- Prudence, ignorance, imposture, and the straitenings of circumstance and
- time.
- And if to the body, so to the mind, the mass of men are generous;
- Their estimate, who know us best, is seldom seen to err;
- Be sure the fault is thine, as pride, or shallowness, or vanity,
- If all around thee, good and bad, neglect thy seeming merit:
- No man yet deserved, who found not some to love him;
- And he, that never kept a friend, need only blame himself:
- Many for unworthiness will droop and die, but all are not unworthy;
- It must indeed be cold clay soil, that killeth every seed.
- Therefore, examine thy state, O self-accounted martyr of Neglect,
- It may be, thy merit is a cubit, and thy measure thereof a furlong;
- But grant it greater than thy thoughts, and grant that men thy fellows,
- For pleasure, business, or interest, misuse, forget, neglect thee,--
- Still be thou conqueror in this, the consciousness of high deservings;
- Let it suffice thee to be worthy; faint not thou for praise;
- For that thou art, be grateful; go humbly even in thy confidence;
- And set thy foot upon the neck of an enemy so harmless as Neglect.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF CONTENTMENT.
-
- Godliness with Contentment,--these be the pillars of felicity,
- Jachin, wherewithal it is established, and Boaz, in the which is strength;
- And upon their capitals is lily-work, the lotus fruit and flower,
- Those fair and fragrant types of holiness, innocence, and beauty;
- Great gain pertaineth to the pillars, nets and chains of wreathen gold,
- And they stand up straight in the temple porch, the house where Glory
- dwelleth.
-
- The body craveth meats, and the spirit is athirst for peacefulness,
- He that hath these, hath enough; for all beyond is vanity.
- Surfeit vaulteth over pleasure, to light upon the hither side of pain;
- And great store is great care, the rather if it mightily increaseth.
- Albeit too little is a trouble, yet too much shall swell into an evil,
- If wisdom stand not nigh to moderate the wishes:
- For covetousness never had enough, but moaneth at its wants for ever,
- And rich men have commonly more need to be taught contentment than the
- poor.
- That hungry chasm in their market-place gapeth still unsatisfied,
- Yea, fling in all the wealth of Rome,--it asketh higher victims;
- So, when the miser's gold cannot fill the measure of his lust,
- Curtius must leap into the pit, and avarice shall close upon his life.
-
- Behold Independence in his rags, all too easily contented,
- Careful for nothing, thankful for much, and uncomplaining in his poverty:
- Such an one have I somewhile seen earn his crust with gladness;
- He is a gatherer of simples, culling wild herbs upon the hills;
- And now, as he sitteth on the beach, with his motherless child beside him,
- To rest them in the cheerful sun, and sort their mints and horehound,--
- Tell me, can ye find upon his forehead the cloud of covetous anxiety,
- Or note the dull unkindled eyes of sated sons of pleasure?--
- For there is more joy of life with that poor picker of the ditches,
- Than among the multitude of wealthy who wed their gains to discontent.
-
- I have seen many rich, burdened with the fear of poverty,
- I have seen many poor, buoyed with all the carelessness of wealth:
- For the rich had the spirit of a pauper, and the moneyless a liberal
- heart;
- The first enjoyeth not for having, and the latter hath nothing but
- enjoyment.
- None is poor but the mean in mind, the timorous, the weak, and
- unbelieving;
- None is wealthy but the affluent in soul, who is satisfied and floweth
- over.
- The poor-rich is attenuate for fears, the rich-poor is fattened upon
- hopes;
- Cheerfulness is one man's welcome, and the other warneth from him by his
- gloom.
- Many poor have the pleasures of the rich, even in their own possessions;
- And many rich miss the poor man's comforts, and yet feel all his cares.
- Liberty is affluence, and the Helots of anxiety never can be counted
- wealthy;
- But he that is disenthralled from fear, goeth for the time a king;
- He is royal, great, and opulent, living free of fortune,
- And looking on the world as owner of its good, the Maker's child and heir:
- Whereas, the covetous is slavish, a very Midas in his avarice,
- Full of dismal dreams, and starved amongst his treasures:
- The ceaseless spur of discontent goaded him with instant apprehension,
- And his thirst for gold could never be quenched, for he drank with the
- throat of Crassus.
-
- Vanity, and dreary disappointment, care, and weariness, and envy;
- Vanity is graven upon all things; wisely spake the preacher.
- For ambition is a burning mountain, thrown up amid the turbid sea,
- A Stromboli in sullen pride above the hissing waves;
- And the statesman climbing there, forgetful of his patriot intentions,
- Shall hate the strife of each rough step, or ever he hath toiled midway:
- And every truant from his home, the happy home of duty,
- Shall live to loathe his eminence of cares, that seething smoke and lava.
- Contentment is the temperate repast, flowing with milk and honey:
- Ambition is the drunken orgy, fed by liquid flames:
- A black and bitter frown is stamped upon the forehead of Ambition,
- But fair Contentment's angel-face is rayed with winning smiles.
-
- There was in Tyre a merchant, the favourite child of fortune,
- An opulent man with many ships, to trade in many climes;
- And he rose up early to his merchandize, after feverish dreaming,
- And lay down late to his hot unrest, overwhelmed with calculated cares.
- So, day by day, and month by month, and year by year, he gained;
- And grew grey, and waxed great: for money brought him all things.
- All things?--verily, not all; the kernel of the nut is lacking,--
- His mind was a stranger to content, and as for Peace, he knew her not:
- Luxuries palled upon his palate, and his eyes were satiate with purple;
- He could coin much gold, but buy no happiness with it.
- And on a day, a day of dread, in the heat of inordinate ambition,
- When he threw with a gambler's hand, to lose or to double his possessions,
- The chance hit him,--he had speculated ill,--and men began to whisper;--
- Those he trusted, failed; and their usuries had bribed him deeply;
- One ship foundered out at sea,--and another met the pirate,--
- And so, with broken fortunes, men discreetly shunned him.
- He was a stricken stag, and went to hide away in solitude,
- And there in humility, he thought,--he resolved, and promptly acted:
- From the wreck of all his splendours, from the dregs of the goblet of
- affluence,
- He saved with management a morsel and a drop, for his daily cup and
- platter:
- And lo, that little was enough, and in enough was competence;
- His cares were gone,--he slept by night, and lived at peace by day;
- Cured of his guilty selfishness,--money's love, envy, competition,--
- He lived to be thankful in a cottage that he had lost a palace:
- For he found in his abasement what he vainly had sought in high estate,
- Both mind and body well at ease, though robed in the russet of the lowly.
-
- Once more; a certain priest, happy in his high vocation,
- With faith, and hope, and charity, well served his village altar;
- As men count riches, he was poor; but great were his treasures in heaven,
- And great his joys on earth, for God's sake doing good:
- He had few cares and many consolations, one of the welcome everywhere;
- The labourer accounted him his friend, and magnates did him honour at
- their table:
- With a large heart and little means he still made many grateful,
- And felt as the centre of a circle, of comfort, calmness, and content.
- But, on a weaker sabbath,--for he preached both well and wisely,--
- Some casual hearer loudly praised his great neglected talents:
- Why should he be buried in obscurity, and throw these pearls to swine?
- Could he not still be doing good,--the whilst he pushed his fortunes?
- Then came temptation, even on the spark of discontent;
- The neighbouring town had a pulpit to be filled; hotly did he canvass,
- and won it:
- Now was he popular and courted, and listened to the spell of admiration,
- And toiled to please the taste, rather than to pierce the conscience.
- Greedily he sought, and seeking found, the patronizing notice of the
- great;
- He thirsted for emoluments and honours, and counted rich men happy:
- So he flattered, so he preached; and gold and fame flowed in;
- They flowed in,--he was reaping his reward, and felt himself a fool.
- Alas, what a shadow was he following,--how precious was the substance he
- had left!
- Man for God, gold for good, this was his miserable bargain.
- The village church, its humble flock, and humbler parish priest,
- Zeal, devotion, and approving Heaven,--his books, and simple life,
- His little farm and flower-beds,--his recreative rambles with a friend,
- And haply, at eventide, the leaping trouts, to help their humble fare,
- All these wretchedly exchanged for what the world called fortune,
- With the harrowing conscience of a state relapsed to vain ambitions.
- Then,--for God was gracious to his soul,--his better thoughts returned,
- And better aims with better thoughts, his holy walk of old.
- Sickened of style, and ostentation, and the dissipative fashions of
- society,
- He deserted from the ranks of Mammon, and renewed his allegiance to God:
- For he found that the praises of men, and all that gold can give,
- Are not worthy to be named, against godliness and calm contentment.
-
-
-OF LIFE.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- A child was playing in a garden, a merry little child,
- Bounding with triumphant health, and full of happy fancies;
- His kite was floating in the sunshine,--but he tied the string to a twig
- And ran among the roses to catch a new-born butterfly;
- His horn-book lay upon a bank, but the pretty truant hid it,
- Buried up in gathered grass, and moss, and sweet wild-thyme;
- He launched a paper boat upon the fountain, then wayward turned aside,
- To twine some fragrant jessamines about the dripping marble:
- So, in various pastime shadowing the schemes of manhood,
- That curly-headed boy consumed the golden hours:
- And I blessed his glowing face, envying the merry little child,
- As he shouted with the ecstasy of being, clapping his hands for
- joyfulness:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is happiness and hope,
- Thy days are bright, thy flowers are sweet, and pleasure the condition of
- thy gift.
-
- A youth was walking in the moonlight, walking not alone,
- For a fair and gentle maid leant on his trembling arm:
- Their whispering was still of beauty, and the light of love was in their
- eyes,
- Their twin young hearts had not a thought unvowed to love and beauty;
- The stars and the sleeping world, and the guardian eye of God,
- The murmur of the distant waterfall, and nightingales warbling in the
- thicket,
- Sweet speech of years to come, and promises of fondest hope,
- And more, a present gladness in each other's trust,
- All these fed their souls with the hidden manna of affection,
- While their faces shone beatified in the radiance of reflected Eden:
- I gazed on that fond youth, and coveted his heart,
- Attuned to holiest symphonies, with music in its strings:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is love and beauty,
- Thy joys are full, thy looks most fair, thy feelings pure and sensitive.
-
- A man sat beside his merchandize, a careworn altered man,
- His waking hope, his nightly fear, were money, and its losses:
- Rarely was the laugh upon his cheek, except in bitter scorn
- For his foolishness of heart, and the lie of its romance, counting Love a
- treasure.
- His talk is of stern Reality, chilling unimaginative facts,
- The dull material accidents of this sensual body;
- Lucreless honour were contemptible, impoverished affection but a pauper's
- riches,
- Duty, struggling unrewarded, the bargain of a cheated fool:
- The market value of a fancy must be measured by the gain it bringeth,
- No man is fed or clothed by fame, or love, or duty:--
- So toiled he day by day, that cold and joyless man,
- I gazed upon his haggard face, and sorrowed for the change:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is care and weariness,
- Thy soil is parched, thy winds are fierce, and the suns above thee
- hardening.
-
- A withered elder lay upon his bed, a desolate man and feeble:
- His thoughts were of the past, the early past, the bygone days of youth:
- Bitterly repented he the years stolen by the god of this world:
- Remembering the maiden of his love, and the heart-stricken wife of his
- selfishness.
- For the sunshiny morning of life came again to him a vivid truth,
- But the years of toil as a long dim dream, a cloudy blighted noon:
- He saw the nutting schoolboy, but forgat the speculative merchant;
- The callous calculating husband was shamed by the generous lover:
- He knew that the weeds of worldliness, and the smoky breath of Mammon
- Had choked and killed those tender shoots, his yearnings after honour and
- affection;
- So was he sick at heart, and my pity strove to cheer him,
- But a deep and dismal gulf lay between comfort and his soul.
- Then I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is vanity and sorrow,
- Thy storms at noon are many, and thine eventide is clouded by remorse.
-
- Now, when I thought upon these things, my heart was grieved within me:
- I wept, with bitterness of speech, and these were the words of my
- complaining:
- "Wherefore then must happiness and love wither into care and vanity,--
- Wherefore is the bud so beautiful, but flower and fruit so blighted?
- Hard is the lot of man; to be lured by the meteor of romance,
- Only to be snared, and to sink, in the turbid mudpool of reality."
-
- Suddenly, a light,--and a rushing presence,--and a consciousness of
- Something near me,--
- I trembled, and listened, and prayed: then I knew the Angel of Life:
- Vague, and dimly visible, mine eye could not behold Him,
- As, calmly unimpassioned, He looked upon an erring creature;
- Unseen, my spirit apprehended Him; though He spake not, yet I heard:
- For a sympathetic communing with Him flashed upon my mind electric.
-
- Pensioner of God, be grateful; the gift of Life is good:
- The life of heart, and life of soul, mingled with life for the body.
- Gladness and beauty are its just inheritance,--the beauty thou hast
- counted for romance:
- And guardian spirits weep that selfishness and sorrow should destroy it.
- Thou hast seen the natural blessing marred into a curse by man;
- Come then, in favour will I show thee the proper excellence of life.
- Keep thou purity, and watch against suspicion,--love shall never perish;
- Guard thine innocency spotless, and the buoyancy of childhood shall
- remain.
- Sweet ideals feed the soul, thoughts of loveliness delight it,
- The chivalrous affection of uncalculating youth lacketh not honourable
- wisdom.
- Charge not folly on invisibles, that render thee happier and purer,
- The fair frail visions of Romance have a use beyond the maxims of the
- Real.
-
- Behold a patriarch of years, who leaneth on the staff of religion;
- His heart is fresh, quick to feel, a bursting fount of generosity:
- He, playful in his wisdom, is gladdened in his children's gladness,
- He, pure in his experience, loveth in his son's first love:
- Lofty aspirations, deep affections, holy hopes are his delight;
- His abhorrence is to strip from Life its charitable garment of Idea.
- The cold and callous sneerer, who heedeth of the merely practical,
- And mocketh at good uses in imaginary things, that man is his scorn:
- The hard unsympathizing modern, filled with facts and figures,
- Cautious, and coarse, and materialized in mind, that man is his pity.
- Passionate thirst for gain never hath burnt within his bosom,
- The leaden chains of that dull lust have not bound him prisoner:
- The shrewd world laughed at him for honesty, the vain world mouthed at
- him for honour,
- The false world hated him for truth, the cold world despised him for
- affection:
- Still, he kept his treasure, the warm and noble heart,
- And in that happy wise old man survive the child and lover.
- For human Life is as Chian wine, flavoured unto him who drinketh it,
- Delicate fragrance comforting the soul, as needful substance for the body:
- Therefore, see thou art pure and guileless; so shall thy Realities of Life
- Be sweetened, and tempered, and gladdened by the wholesome spirit of
- Romance.
-
- Dost thou live, man, dost thou live,--or only breathe and labour?
- Art thou free, or enslaved to a routine, the daily machinery of habit?
- For, one man is quickened into life, where thousands exist as in a torpor,
- Feeding, toiling, sleeping, an insensate weary round:
- The plough, or the ledger, or the trade, with animal cares and indolence,
- Make the mass of vital years a heavy lump unleavened.
- Drowsily lie down in thy dulness, fettered with the irons of circumstance,
- Thou wilt not wake to think and feel a minute in a month.
- The epitome of common life is seen in the common epitaph,
- Born on such a day, and dead on such another, with an interval of
- threescore years.
- For time hath been wasted on the senses, to the hourly diminishing of
- spirit:
- Lean is the soul and pineth, in the midst of abundance for the body:
- He forgat the worlds to which he tended, and a creature's true nobility,
- Nor wished that hope and wholesome fear should stir him from his hardened
- satisfaction.
- And this is death in life; to be sunk beneath the waters of the Actual,
- Without one feebly-struggling sense of an airier spiritual realm:
- Affection, fancy, feeling--dead; imagination, conscience, faith,
- All wilfully expunged, till they leave the man mere carcase.
- See thou livest, whiles thou art: for heart must live, and soul,
- But care and sloth and sin and self, combine to kill that life.
- A man will grow to an automaton, an appendage to the counter or the desk,
- If mind and spirit be not roused, to raise the plodding groveller:
- Then praise God for sabbaths, for books, and dreams, and pains,
- For the recreative face of nature, and the kindling charities of home;
- And remember, thou that labourest,--thy leisure is not loss,
- If it help to expose and undermine that solid falsehood, the Material.
-
- Life is a strange avenue of various trees and flowers;
- Lightsome at commencement, but darkening to its end, in a distant massy
- portal.
- It beginneth as a little path, edged with the violet and primrose,
- A little path of lawny grass, and soft to tiny feet:
- Soon, spring thistles in the way, those early griefs of school,
- And fruit-trees ranged on either hand show holiday delights:
- Anon, the rose and the mimosa hint at sensitive affection,
- And vipers hide among the grass, and briars are woven in the hedges:
- Shortly, staked along in order, stand the tender saplings,
- While hollow hemlock and tall ferns fill the frequent interval:
- So advancing, quaintly mixed, majestic line the way
- Sturdy oaks, and vigorous elms, the beech and forest-pine:
- And here the road is rough with rocks, wide, and scant of herbage,
- The sun is hot in heaven, and the ground is cleft and parched:
- And many-times a hollow trunk, decayed, or lightning-scathed,
- Or in its deadly solitude, the melancholy upas:
- But soon, with closer ranks, are set the sentinel trees,
- And darker shadows hover amongst Autumn's mellow tints;
- Ever and anon, a holly,--junipers, and cypresses, and yews;
- The soil is damp; the air is chill; night cometh on apace:
- Speed to the portal, traveller,--lo, there is a moon,
- With smiling light to guide thee safely through the dreadful shade:
- Hark,--that hollow knock,--behold, the warder openeth,
- The gate is gaping, and for thee;--those are the jaws of Death!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF DEATH.
-
-[Illustration: "K"]
-
- Keep silence, daughter of frivolity,--for Death is in that chamber!
- Startle not with echoing sound the strangely solemn peace.
- Death is here in spirit, watcher of a marble corpse,--
- That eye is fixed, that heart is still,--how dreadful in its stillness!
- Death, new tenant of the house, pervadeth all the fabric;
- He waiteth at the head, and he standeth at the feet, and hideth in the
- caverns of the breast:
- Death, subtle leech, hath anatomized soul from body,
- Dissecting well in every nerve its spirit from its substance:
- Death, rigid lord, hath claimed the heriot clay,
- While joyously the youthful soul hath gone to take his heritage:
- Death, cold usurer, hath seized his bonded debtor;
- Death, savage despot, hath caught his forfeit serf;
- Death, blind foe, wreaketh petty vengeance on the flesh;
- Death, fell cannibal, gloateth on his victim,
- And carrieth it with him to the grave, that dismal banquet-hall,
- Where in foul state the Royal Goul holdeth secret orgies.
-
- Hide it up, hide it up, draw the decent curtain:
- Hence! curious fool, and pry not on corruption:
- For the fearful mysteries of change are being there enacted,
- And many actors play their part on that small stage, the tomb.
- Leave the clay, that leprous thing, touch not the fleshly garment:
- Dust to dust, it mingleth well among the sacred soil:
- It is scattered by the winds, it is wafted by the waves, it mixeth with
- herbs and cattle,
- But God hath watched those morsels, and hath guided them in care:
- Each waiting soul must claim his own, when the archangel soundeth,
- And all the fields, and all the hills, shall move a mass of life;
- Bodies numberless crowding on the land, and covering the trampled sea,
- Darkening the air precipitate, and gathered scatheless from the fire;
- The Himalayan peaks shall yield their charge, and the desolate steppes of
- Siberia,
- The Maelström disengulph its spoil, and the iceberg manumit its captive:
- All shall teem with life, the converging fragments of humanity,
- Till every conscious essence greet his individual frame;
- For in some dignified similitude, alike, yet different in glory,
- This body shall be shaped anew, fit dwelling for the soul:
- The hovel hath grown to a palace, the bulb hath burst into the flower,
- Matter hath put on incorruption, and is at peace with spirit.
-
- Amen,--and so it shall be:--but now, the scene is drear,--
- Yea, though promises and hope strive to cheat its sadness;
- Full of grief, though faith herself is strong to speed the soul,
- For the partner of its toil is left behind to endure an ordeal of change.
- Dear partner, dear and frail, my loved though humble home,--
- Should I cast thee off without a pang, as a garment flung aside?
- Many years, for joy and sorrow, have I dwelt in thee,
- How shall I be reckless of thy weal, nor hope for thy perfection?--
- This also, He that lent thee for my uses in mortality,
- Shall well fulfil with boundless praise on that returning day:
- Behold, thou shalt be glorified: thou, mine abject friend,
- And should I meanly scorn thy state, until it rise to greatness?
- Far be it, O my soul, from thine expectant essence,
- To be heedless, if indignity or folly desecrate those thine ashes:
- Keep them safe with careful love; and let the mound be holy;
- And, thou that passest by, revere the waiting dead.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Naples sitteth by the sea, key-stone of an arch of azure,
- Crowned by consenting nations peerless queen of gaiety:
- She laugheth at the wrath of Ocean, she mocketh the fury of Vesuvius,
- She spurneth disease and misery and famine, that crowd her sunny streets:
- The giddy dance, the merry song, the festal glad procession,
- The noonday slumber and the midnight serenade,--all these make up her
- Life:
- Her Life?--and what her Death?--look we to the end of life,--
- Solon, and Tellus the Athenian, wisely have ye pointed to the grave.
- For behold yon dreary precinct,--those hundreds of stone wells,
- A pit for a day, a pit for a day,--a pit to be sealed for a year:
- And in the gloom of night, they raise the year-closed lid,--
- Look in,--for gnawing lime hath half consumed the carcases;
- Thus they hurl the daily dead into that horrible pit,
- The dead that only died this day,--as unconsidered offal!
- There, a stark white heap, unwept, unloved, uncared for,
- Old men and maidens, young men and infants, mingle in hideous corruption;
- Fling in the gnawing lime,--seal up the charnel for a year;
- For lo, a morrow's dawn hath tinged the mountain summit.
- O fair false city, thou gay and gilded harlot,
- Woe, for thy wanton heart, woe, for thy wicked hardness:
- Woe unto thee, that the lightsomeness of Life, beneath Italian suns,
- Should meet the solemnity of Death, in a sepulchre so foul and fearful.
-
- For that, even to the best, the wise and pure and pious,
- Death, repulsive king, thine iron rule is terrible:
- Yea, and even at the best, in company of buried kindred,
- With hallowing rites, and friendly tears, and the dear old country church,
- Death, cold and lonely, thy frigid face is hateful,
- The bravest look on thee with dread, the humblest curse thy coming.
- Still, ye unwise among mankind, your foolishness hath added fears;
- The crowded cemetery, the catacomb of bones, the pestilential vault,
- With fancy's gliding ghost at eve, her moans and flaky footfalls,
- And the gibbering train of terror to fright your coward hearts.
- We speak not here of sin, nor the phantoms of a bloody conscience,
- Nor of solaces, and merciful pardon: we heed but the inevitable grave;
- The grave, that wage of guilt, that due return to dust,
- The grave, that goal of earth, and starting-post for Heaven.
-
- Plant it with laurels, sprinkle it with lilies, set it upon yonder dewy
- hill
- Midst holy prayers, and generous griefs, and consecrating blessings:
- Let Sophocles sleep among his ivy, green perennial garlands,
- Let olives shade their Virgil, and roses bloom above Corinne;
- To his foster-mother, Ocean, entrust the mariner in hope;
- The warrior's spirit, let it rise on high from the flaming fragrant pyre.
- But heap not coffins and corruption to infect the mass of living,
- Nor steal from odious realities the charitable poetry of Death:
- It is wise to gild uncomeliness, it is wise to mask necessity,
- It is wise from cheerful sights and sounds to draw their gentle uses:
- Hide the facts, the bitter facts, the foul, and fearful facts,
- Tend the body well in hope, this were praise and wisdom:
- But to plunge in gloom the parting soul, that hath loved its clay
- tenement so long,
- This were vanity and folly, the counsel of moroseness and despair.
- Not thus, the Scythian of old time welcomed Death with songs;
- Not thus, the shrewd Egyptian decorated Death with braveries;
- Not thus, on his funeral tower sleepeth the sun-worshipping Parsee;
- Not thus, the Moslem saint lieth in his arabesque mausoleum;
- Not thus, the wild red Indian, hunter of the far Missouri,
- In flowering trees hath nested up his forest-loving ancestry;
- Not thus, the Switzer mountaineer scattereth ribboned garlands
- About the rustic cross that halloweth the bed of his beloved;
- Not thus, the village maiden wisheth she may die in spring,
- With store of violets and cowslips to be sprinkled on her snow-white
- shroud;
- Not thus, the dying poet asketh a cheerful grave,--
- Lay him in the sunshine, friends, nor sorrow that a Christian hath
- departed!
-
- Yea; it is the poetry of Death, an Orpheus gladdening Hadës,
- To care with mindful love for all so dear--and dead;
- To think of them in hope, to look for them in joy, and--but for its
- simple vanity,--
- To pray with all the earnestness of nature for souls who cannot change.
- For the tree is felled, and boughed, and bare, and the Measurer standeth
- with His line;
- The chance is gone for ever, and is past the reach of prayer:
- For men and angels, good and ill, have rendered all their witness;
- The trial is over, the jury are gone in, and none can now be heard;
- Well are they agreed upon the verdict, just, and fixt, and final,
- And the sentence showeth clear, before the Judge hath spoken:
- Now,--while resting matter is at peace within the tomb,
- The conscious spirit watcheth in unspeakable suspense;
- Racked with a fearful looking-forward, or blissfully feeding on the
- foretaste,
- Waiting souls in eager expectation pass the solemn interval:
- They slumber not at death, but awaken, quickened to the terrors of the
- judgment;
- They lie not insensate among darkness, but exult, looking forward to the
- light:
- Idiotcy, brightening on the instant, when that veil is torn,
- Is grateful that his torpor here hath left him as an innocent:
- The young child, stricken as he played, and guileless babes unborn,
- Freed from fetters of the flesh, burst into mind immediate:
- Madness judgeth wisely, and the visions of the lunatic are gone,
- And each hasteneth to praise the mercy that made him irresponsible.
- For the soul is one, though manifold in act, working the machinery of
- brain,
- Reason, fancy, conscience, passion, are but varying phases;
- If, in God's wise purpose, the machine were shattered or confused,
- Still is soul the same, though it exhibit with a difference:
- Therefore, dissipate the brain, and set its inmate free,
- Behold, the maniacs and embryos stand in their place intelligent.
- That solvent eateth away all dross, leaving the gold intact:
- Matter lingereth in the retort, spirit hath flown to the receiver:
- And lo, that recipient of the spirits, it is some aerial world,
- An oasis midway on the desert space, separating earth from heaven,
- A prison-house for essences incorporate, a limbus vague and wide,
- Tartarus for evil, and Paradise for good, that intermediate Hadës.
-
- O Death, what art thou? a Lawgiver that never altereth,
- Fixing the consummating seal, whereby the deeds of life become
- established:
- O Death, what art thou? a stern and silent usher,
- Leading to the judgment for Eternity, after the trial-scene of Time:
- O Death, what art thou? an Husbandman, that reapeth always,
- Out of season, as in season, with the sickle in his hand:
- O Death, what art thou? the shadow unto every substance,
- In the bower as in the battle, haunting night and day:
- O Death, what art thou? Nurse of dreamless slumbers
- Freshening the fevered flesh to a wakefulness eternal:
- O Death, what art thou? strange and solemn Alchymist,
- Elaborating life's elixir from these clayey crucibles:
- O Death, what art thou? Antitype of Nature's marvels,
- The seed and dormant chrysalis bursting into energy and glory.
- Thou calm safe anchorage for the shattered hulls of men,--
- Thou spot of gelid shade, after the hot-breathed desert,--
- Thou silent waiting-hall, where Adam meeteth with his children,--
- How full of dread, how full of hope, loometh inevitable Death:
- Of dread, for all have sinned; of hope, for One hath saved;
- The dread is drowned in joy, the hope is filled with immortality!
- --Pass along, pilgrim of life, go to thy grave unfearing,
- The terrors are but shadows now, that haunt the vale of Death.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF IMMORTALITY.
-
-[Illustration: "G"]
-
- Gird up thy mind to contemplation, trembling inhabitant of earth;
- Tenant of a hovel for a day,--thou art heir of the universe for ever!
- For, neither congealing of the grave, nor gulphing waters of the
- firmament,
- Nor expansive airs of heaven, nor dissipative fires of Gehenna,
- Nor rust of rest, nor wear, nor waste, nor loss, nor chance, nor change,
- Shall avail to quench or overwhelm the spark of soul within thee!
-
- Thou art an imperishable leaf on the evergreen bay-tree of Existence;
- A word from Wisdom's mouth, that cannot be unspoken;
- A ray of Love's own light; a drop in Mercy's sea;
- A creature, marvellous and fearful, begotten by the fiat of Omnipotence.
- I, that speak in weakness, and ye, that hear in charity,
- Shall not cease to live and feel, though flesh must see corruption;
- For the prison-gates of matter shall be broken, and the shackled soul go
- free,
- Free, for good or ill, to satisfy its appetence for ever:
- For ever,--dreadful doom, to be hurried on eternally to evil,--
- For ever,--happy fate, to ripen into perfectness--for ever!
-
- And is there a thought within thy heart, O slave of sin and fear,
- A black and harmful hope, that erring spirit dieth?
- That primal disobedience hath ensured the death of soul,
- And separate evil sealed it thine--thy curse, Annihilation?
- Heed thou this; there is a Sacrifice; the Maker is Redeemer of His
- creature;
- Freely unto each, universally to all, is restored the privilege of
- essence:
- Whether unto grace or guilt, all must live through Him,
- Live in vital joy, or live in dying woe:
- Death in Adam, Life in Christ; the curse hung upon the cross:
- Who art thou that heedest of redemption, as narrower than the fall?
- All were dead,--He died for all; that living, they might love;
- If living souls withhold their love,--still, He hath died for them.
- Eve stole the knowledge; Christ gave the life:
- Knowledge and life are the perquisites of soul, the privilege of Man:
- Mercy stepped between, and stayed the double theft;
- God gave; and giving, bought; and buying, asketh love:
- And in such asking rendereth bliss, to all that hear and answer,
- For love with life is heaven; and life unloving, hell.
-
- Creature of God, His will is for thy weal, eternally progressing;
- Fear not to trust a Maker's love, nor a Saviour's ransom:
- He drank for all,--for thee, and me,--the poison of our deeds;
- We shall not die, but live,--and, of His grace, we love.
- For, in the mysteries of Mercy, the One fore-knowing Spirit
- Outstrippeth reason's halting choice, and winneth men to Him:
- Who shall sound the depths? who shall reach the heights?
- Freedom, in the gyves of fate; and sovereignty, reconciled with justice.
-
- If then, as annihilate by sin, the soul was ever forfeit,
- Godhead paid the mighty price, the pledge hath been redeemed:
- He from the waters of Oblivion raised the drowning race,
- Lifting them even to Himself, the baseless Rock of Ages.
- None can escape from Adam's guilt, or second Adam's guerdon:
- Sin and death are thine; thine also is interminable being:
- Let it be even as thou wilt, still are we ransomed from nonentity,
- The worlds of bliss and woe are peopled with immortals:
- And ruin is thy blame; for thou, the worst, art free
- To take from Heaven the grace of love, as the gift of life:
- Yet is not remedy thy praise; for thou, the best, art bound
- In self, and sin, and darkling sloth, until He break the chain:
- None can tell, without a struggle, if that chain be broken;
- Strive to-day,--one effort more may prove that thou art free!
- Here is faith and prayer, here is the Grace and the Atonement,
- Here is the creature feeling for its God, and the prodigal returning to
- his Father.
- But, behold, His reasonable children, standing in just probation,
- With ears to hear, neglect; with eyes to see, refuse:
- They will not have the blessing with the life, the blessing that
- enricheth Immortality;
- And look for pleasures out of God, for heaven in life alone:
- So, they snatch that awful prize, existence void of love,
- And in their darkening exile make a needful hell of self.
-
- Therefore fear, thou sinner, lest the huge blessing, Immortality,
- Be blighted in thine evil to a curse,--it were better he had not been
- born:
- Therefore hope, thou saint, for the gift of Immortality is free;
- Take and live, and live in love; fear not, thou art redeemed!
- The happy life, that height of hope, the knowledge of all good,
- This is the blessing on obedience, obedience the child of faith:
- The miserable life, that depth of all despair, the knowledge of all evil,
- This is the curse upon impenitence, impenitence that sprung of unbelief.
- God, from a beautiful necessity, is Love in all He doeth,
- Love, a brilliant fire, to gladden or consume:
- The wicked work their woe by looking upon love, and hating it:
- The righteous find their joys in yearning on its loveliness for ever.
-
- Who shall imagine Immortality, or picture its illimitable prospect?
- How feebly can a faltering tongue express the vast idea!
- For consider the primæval woods that bristle over broad Australia,
- And count their autumn leaves, millions multiplied by millions;
- Thence look up to a moonless sky from a sleeping isle of the Ægæan,
- And add to these leaves yon starry host, sparkling on the midnight
- numberless;
- Thence traverse an Arabia, some continent of eddying sand,
- Gather each grain, let none escape, add them to the leaves and to the
- stars;
- Afterward gaze upon the sea, the thousand leagues of an Atlantic,
- Take drop by drop, and add their sum, to the grains, and leaves, and
- stars;
- The drops of ocean, the desert sands, the leaves, and stars innumerable,
- (Albeit, in that multitude of multitudes, each small unit were an age,)
- All might reckon for an instant, a transient flash of Time,
- Compared with this intolerable blaze, the measureless enduring of
- Eternity!
-
- O grandest gift of the Creator,--O largess worthy of a God,--
- Who shall grasp that thrilling thought, life and joy for ever?
- For the sun in heaven's heaven is Love that cannot change,
- And the shining of that sun is life, to all beneath its beams:
- Who shall arrest it in the firmament,--or drag it from its sphere?
- Or bid its beauty smile no more, but be extinct for ever?
- Yea, where God hath given, none shall take away,
- Nor build up limits to His love, nor bid His bounty cease;
- Wide, as space is peopled, endless as the empire of heaven,
- The river of the water of life floweth on in majesty for ever!
-
- Why should it seem a thing impossible to thee, O man of many doubts,
- That God shall wake the dead, and give this mortal immortality?
- Is it that such riches are unsearchable, the bounty too profuse?
- And yet, what gift, to cease or change, is worthy of the King Almighty?
- For remember the moment thou art not, thou mightest as well not have been;
- A millennium and an hour are equal in the gulph of that desolate abyss,
- annihilation:
- If Adam had existed till to-day, and to-day had perished utterly,
- What were his gain in length of a life, that hath passed away for ever?
- No tribute of thanks can exhale from the empty censer of nonentity;
- The Giver, with His gift reclaimed, is mulcted of all praise.
-
- Tell me, ye that strive in vain to cramp and dwarf the soul,
- Wherefore should it cease to be, and when shall essence die?
- It is,--and therefore shall be, till just obstacle opposeth:
- Show no cause for change, and reason leaneth to continuance.
- The body verily shall change; this curious house we live in
- Never had continuing stay, but changeth every instant:
- But the spiritual tenant of the house abideth in unalterable
- consciousness,
- He may fly to many lands, but cannot flee himself.
- The soil wherein ye drop the seed, by suns or rains may vary;
- But the seed is the same; and soul is the seed; and flesh but its
- anchorage to earth.
-
- The machine may be broken, and rust corrode the springs: but can rust
- feed on motion?
- Worms may batten on the brain: but can worms gnaw the mind?
- Dynamics are, and dwell apart, though matter be not made;
- Spirit is, and can be separate, though a body were not:
- Power is one, be it lever, screw, or wedge; but it needeth these for
- illustration:
- Mind is one, be it casual or ideal; but it is shown in these.
- The creature is constructed individual, for trial of his reasonable will,
- Clay and soul, commingled wisely, mingled not confused:
- As power is not in the spring, till somewhat give it action,
- So, until spirit be infused, the organism lieth inergetic.
-
- Or shalt thou say that mind is the delicate offspring of matter,
- The bright consummate flower that must perish with its leaf?
- Go to: doth weight breed lightness? is freedom the atmosphere of prisons?
- When did the body elevate, expand, and bud the mind?
- Lo, a red-hot cinder flung from the furnaces of Ætna,--
- There is fire in that ash; but did the pumice make it?
- Nay, cold clod, never canst thou generate a flame,
- Nay, most exquisite machinery, nevermore elaborate a mind:
- Rather do ye battle and contend, opposite the one to the other;
- Till God shall stop the strife, and call the body colleague.
-
- Garment of flesh, and art thou then a vest, so tinged with subtle poison,
- (Maddening tunic of the centaur,) as to kill the soul?
- Not so: fruit of disobedience, rot in dissolution, as thou must,--
- The seed is in the core, its germ is safe, and life is in that germ:
- Moreover, Marah shall be sweetened; and a Good Physician
- Yet shall heal those gangrene wounds, the spotted plague of sin:
- He, through worldly trials, and the separative cleansing of the grave,
- Shall change its corruptible to glory, and wash that garment white.
-
- Still, is the whisper in thy heart, that oftenest the bed of death
- Seemeth but a sluggish ebb, of sinking soul and body?
- Mind dwelling, long-time, sensual in the chambers of the flesh,
- May slumber on in conscious sloth, and wilfully be dulled:
- But is it therefore nigh to dissolution, even as the body of this death?
- Ask the stricken conscience, gasping out its terrors;
- Ask the dying miser, loth to leave his gold;
- Ask the widowed poor, confiding her fatherless to strangers;
- Ask the martyr-maid, a broken reed so strong,
- That weak and tortured frame, with triumph on its brow!--
- O thou gainsayer, the finger of disease may seem to reach the soul,
- But it is a spiritual touch, sympathy with that which aileth:
- Pain or fear may dislocate and shatter this delicate machinery of nerves;
- But madness proveth mind: the fault is in the engine, not the impetus:
- Dissipate the mists of matter, lo, the soul is clear:
- Timour's cage bowed it in the dust; but now it goeth forth a freedman.
-
- Yet more, there is reason in moralities, that the soul must live;
- If God be king in heaven, or have care for earth.
- Can wickedness have triumphed with impunity, or virtue toiled unseen?
- Shall cruelty torture unavenged, and the innocent complain unheard?
- Is there no recompense for woe, must there be no other world for
- justice,--
- No hope in setting suns of good, nor terror for the evil at its zenith?
- How shall ye make answer unto this; a just God prospering iniquity,
- Wisdom encouraging the foolish, and goodness abetting the depraved!
-
- Yet again; mine erring brother, pardon this abundance of my speech,
- Yield me thy candour and thy charity, listening with a welcome:
- For, even now, a thousand thoughts are trooping to my theme;
- O mighty theme, O feeble thoughts! Alas! who is sufficient?
- Judge not so high a cause by these poor words alone,
- For lo, the advocate hath little skill: pardon and pass on:
- Certify thyself with surer proofs; fledge thine own mind for flight;
- Think, and pray; those better proofs shall follow on with holy aspiration.
- Yet in my humbler grade to help thy weal and comfort,
- Thy weal for this and higher worlds, and comfort in thy sickness,
- Suffer the multitude of fancies, walking with me still in love;
- But tread in fear, it is holy ground,--remember, Immortality!
-
- Wilt thou argue from infirmities, thine abject evil state,
- As how should stricken wretched man indeed exist for ever:
- The brutal and besotted, the savage and the slave, the sucking infant and
- the idiot,
- The mass of mean and common minds, and all to be immortal?--
- Consider every beginning, how small it is and feeble:
- Ganges, and the rolling Mississippi sprung of brooks among the mountains;
- The Yew-tree of a thousand years was once a little seed,
- And Nero's marble Rome, a shepherd's mud-built hovel:
- A speck is on the tropic sky, and it groweth to the terrible tornado;
- An apple, all too fair to see, destroyed a world of souls:
- A tender babe is born,--it is Attila, scourge of the nations!
- A seeming malefactor dieth,--it is Jesus, the Saviour of men!
-
- And hive not in thy thoughts the vain and wordy notion
- That nothing which was born in Time can tire out the footsteps of
- Infinity:
- Reckon up a sum in numbers; where shall progression stop?
- The starting-post is definite and fixed, but what is the goal of
- numeration?
- So, begin upon a moment, and when shall being end?
- Souls emanate from God, to travel with Him equally for ever.
- Moreover, thou that objectest the unenterable circle of eternity,
- That none but He from everlasting can endure, as to a future everlasting,
- Consider, may it be impossible that creatures were counted in their Maker,
- And so, that the confines of Eternity are filled by God alone?
- Trust not thy soul upon a fancy: who would freight a bubble with a
- diamond,
- And launch that priceless gem on the boiling rapids of a cataract?
-
- If then we perish not at death, but walk in spirit through the darkness,
- Waiting for a mansion incorruptible, whereof this body is the seed,
- Tell me, when shall be the period? time and its ordeals are done:
- The storms are passed, the night is at end, behold the Sabbath morning.
- Is death to be conqueror again, and claim once more the victory,--
- Can the enemy's corpse awaken into life, and bruise the Champion's head?
- Evil, terrible ensample, that foil to the attributes of Good,
- Is banished to its own black world, weeded out of earth and heaven:
- Shall that great gulf be passed, and sin be sown again?--
- We know but this, the book of truth proclaimeth gladly, Never!
-
- There remaineth the will of our God: when He repenteth of His creature,
- Made by self-suggested mercy, ransomed by self-sacrificing justice,--
- When Truth, that swore unto his neighbour, disappointeth him, and
- cleaveth to a lie,--
- When the counsels of Wisdom are confounded, and Love warreth with
- itself,--
- When the Unchangeable is changed, and the arm of Omnipotence is broken,--
- Then,--thy quenchless soul shall have reached the goal of its existence.
-
- But it seemeth to thy notions of the merciful and just, a false and
- fearful thing,
- To lay such a burden upon time, that eternity be built on its foundation:
- As if so casual good or ill should colour all the future,
- And the vanity of accident, or sternness of necessity, save or wreck a
- soul.
- Were it casual, vain, or stern, this might pass for truth:
- But all things are marshalled by Design, and carefully tended by
- Benevolence.
- O man, thy Judge is righteous,--noting, remembering, and weighing;--
- Want, ignorance, diversities of state, are cast into the balance of
- advantage:
- The poisonous example of a parent asketh for allowance in the child;
- Care, diseases, toils, and frailties,--all things are considered.
- And again, a mysterious Omniscience knoweth the spirits that are His,
- While the delicate tissues of Event are woven by the fingers of Ubiquity.
- Should Providence be taken by surprise from the possible impinging of an
- accident,
- One fortuitous grain might dislocate the banded universe:
- The merest seeming trifle is ordered as the morning light;
- And He, that rideth on the hurricane, is pilot of the bubble on the
- breaker.
-
- Once more, consider Matter, how small a thing is father to the greatest;
- Thou that lightly hast regarded the results of so-called accident.
- A blade of grass took fire in the sun,--and the prairies are burnt to the
- horizon:
- A grain of sand may blind the eye, and madden the brain to murder:
- A careful fly deposited its egg in the swelling bud of an acorn,--
- The sapling grew,--cankrous and gnarled,--it is yonder hollow oak:
- A child touched a spring, and the spring closed a valve, and the
- labouring engine burst,--
- A thousand lives were in that ship,--wrecked by an infant's finger!
- Shall nature preach in vain? thy casualty, guided in its orbit,
- Though less than a mote upon the sunbeam, saileth in a fleet of worlds;
- That trivial cause, watered and observed of the Husbandman day by day,--
- In calm undeviating strength doth work its large effect.
- Thus, in the pettiness of life note thou seeds of grandeur,
- And watch the hour-glass of Time with the eyes of an heir of Immortality.
-
- There still be clouds of witnesses,--if thou art not weary of my speech,--
- Flocks of thoughts adding lustre to the light, and pointing on to Life.
- For reflect how Truth and Goodness, well and wisely put,
- Commend themselves to every mind with wondrous intuition:
- What is this? the recognition of a standard, unwritten, natural, uniform;
- Telling of one common source, the root of Good and True.
- And if thus present soul can trace descent from Deity,
- Being, as it standeth, individual, a separate reasonable thing,
- What should hinder that its hope may not trace gladly forward,
- And, in astounding parallel, like Enoch walk with God?
- Yea, the genealogy of soul, that vivifying breath of a Creator,
- Breath, no transient air, but essence, energy, and reason,
- Is looming on the past, and shadowing the future, sublimely as
- Melchisedek of old,
- Having not beginning, nor end of days, but present in the majesty of
- Peace!
-
- O false scholar, credulous in vanities, and only sceptical of truth,
- Wherefore toil to cheat thy soul of its birthright, Immortality?
- Is it for thy guilt? He pardoneth: Is it for thy frailty? He will help:
- Though thou fearest, He is love; and Mercy shall be deeper than Despair:
- Even for thy full-blown pride, is it much to be receiver of a God?
- And lo, thy rights, He made thee; thy claims, He hath redeemed.
- Hath the fair aspect of affection no beauty that thou shouldst desire it?
- And are those sorrows nothing, to thee that passest by?
- For it is Fact, immutable, that God hath dwelt in Man:
- With gentle generous love ennobling while He bought us.
- What, though thou art false, ignorant, weak and daring,--
- Can the sun be quenched in heaven--or only Belisarius be blind?
-
- But, even stooping to thy folly, grant all these hopes are vain;
- Stultify reason, wrestle against conscience, and wither up the heart:
- Where is thy vast advantage?--I have all that thou hast,
- The buoyancy of life as strong, and term of days no shorter;
- My cup is full with gladness, my griefs are not more galling:
- And thus, we walk together, even to the gates of death:
- There, (if not also on my journey, blessing every step,
- Gladdening with light, and quickening with love, and killing all my
- cares,)
- There,--while thou art quailing, or sullenly expecting to be nothing,--
- There,--is found my gain; I triumph, where thou tremblest.
- Grant all my solace is a lie, yet it is a fountain of delight,
- A spice in every pleasure, and a balm for every pain:
- O precious wise delusion, scattering both misery and sin,--
- O vile and silly truth, depraving while it curseth!
-
- Darkling child of knowledge, commune with Socrates and Cicero,
- They had no prejudice of birth, no dull parental warpings;
- See, those lustrous minds anticipate the dawning day,--
- Whilst thou, poor mole, art burrowing back to darkness from the light.
- I will not urge a revelation, mercies, miracles, and martyrs,
- But, after twice a thousand years, go, learn thou of the pagan:
- It were happier and wiser even among fools, to cling to the shadow of a
- hope,
- Than, in the company of sages, to win the substance of despair;
- But here, the sages hope; despair is with the fools,
- The base bad hearts, the stolid heads, the sensual and the selfish.
-
- And wilt thou, sorry scorner, mock the phrase, despair?
- Despair for those who die and live,--for me, I live and die:
- What have I to do with dread?--my taper must go out;--
- I nurse no silly hopes, and therefore feel no fears:
- I am hastening to an end.--O false and feeble answer:
- For hope is in thee still, and fear, a racking deep anxiety.
- Erring brother, listen: and take thine answer from the ancients:
- Consider every end, that it is but the end of a beginning.
- All things work in circles; weariness induceth unto rest,
- Rest invigorateth labour, and labour causeth weariness:
- War produceth peace, and peace is wanton unto war:
- Light dieth into darkness, and night dawneth into day:
- The rotting jungle reeds scatter fertility around;
- The buffalo's dead carcase hath quickened life in millions:
- The end of toil is gain, the end of gain is pleasure,
- Pleasure tendeth unto waste, and waste commandeth toil.
-
- So, is death an end,--but it breedeth an infinite beginning;
- Limits are for time, and death killed time: Eternity's beginning is for
- ever.
- Ambition, hath it any goal indeed? is not all fruition, disappointment?
- A step upon the ladder, and another, and another,--we start from every
- end?
- Look to the eras of mortality, babe, student, man,
- The husband, the father, the death-bed of a saint,--and is it then an end?
- That common climax, Death, shall it lead to nothing?
- How strong a root of causes flowering a consequence of vapour:
- That solid chain of facts, is it to be snapped for ever?
- How stout a show of figures, weakly summing to nonentity.
-
- Or haply, Death, in the doublings of thy thought, shall seem continuous
- ending;
- A dull eternal slumber, not an end abrupt.
- O most futile chrysalis, wherefore dost thou sleep?
- Dreamless, unconscious, never to awake,--what object in such slumber?
- If thou art still to live, it may as well be wakefully as sleeping:
- How grovelling must that spirit be, to need eternal sleep!
- Or was indeed the toil of life so heavy and so long,
- That nevermore can rest refresh thine overburdened soul?--
- Sleep is a recreance to body, but when was mind asleep?
- Even in a swoon it dreameth, though all be forgotten afterward:
- The muscles seek relaxing, and the irritable nerves ask peace;
- But life is a constant force, spirit an unquietable impetus:
- The eye may wear out as a telescope, and the brain work slow as a machine,
- But soul unwearied, and for ever, is capable of effort unimpaired.
-
- I live, move, am conscious: what shall bar my being?
- Where is the rude hand, to rend this tissue of existence?
- Not thine, shadowy Death, what art thou but a phantom?
- Not thine, foul Corruption, what art thou but a fear?
- For death is merely absent life, as darkness absent light;
- Not even a suspension, for the life hath sailed away, steering gladly
- somewhere.
- And corruption, closely noted, is but a dissolving of the parts,
- The parts remain, and nothing lost, to build a better whole.
- Moreover, mind is unity, however versatile and rapid;
- Thou canst not entertain two coincident ideas, although they quickly
- follow:
- And Unity hath no parts, so that there is nothing to dissolve:
- An element is still unchanged in every searching solvent.
- Who then shall bid me be annulled,--He that gave me being?
- Amen, if God so will; I know that will is love:
- But love hath promised life, and therefore I shall live;
- So long as He is God, I shall be His Creature!
-
- And here, shrewd reasoner, so eager to prove that thou must perish,
- I note a sneer upon thy lip, and ridicule is haply on thy tongue:
- How, said he,--creature of a God, and are not all His creatures,--
- The lion, and the gnat,--yea, the mushroom, and the crystal,--have all
- these a soul?
- Thy fancies tend to prove too much, and overshoot the mark:
- If I die not with brutes, then brutes must live with me?--
- I dare not tell thee that they will, for the word is not in my commission;
- But of the twain it is the likelier; continuance is the chance:
- Men, dying in their sins, are likened unto beasts that perish;
- They are dark, animal, insensate, but have they not a lurking soul?
- The spirit of a man goeth upward, reasonable, apprehending God;
- The spirit of a beast goeth downward, sensual, doting on the creature:
- Who told thee they die at dissolution?--boldly think it out,--
- The multitude of flies, and the multitude of herbs, the world with all
- its beings:
- Is Infinity too narrow, Omnipotence too weak, and Love so anxious to
- destroy,
- Doth Wisdom change its plan, and a Maker cancel His created?
- God's will may compass all things, to fashion and to nullify at pleasure:
- Yet are there many thoughts of hope, that all which are shall live.
- True, there is no conscience in the brute, beyond some educated habit,
- They lay them down without a fear, and wake without a hope:
- Hunger and pain is of the animal: but when did they reckon or compare?
- They live, idealess, in instinct; and while they breathe they gain:
- The master is an idol to his dog, who cannot rise beyond him;
- And void of capability for God, there would seem small cause for an
- infinity.
- Therefore, caviller, my poor thoughts dare not grant they live:
- But is it not a great thing to assume their annihilation--and thine own?
- Would it be much if a speck on space, this globe with all its millions,
- Verily, after its pollution, were suffered to exist in purity?
- Or much, if guiltless creatures, that were cruelly entreated upon earth,
- Found some commensurate reward in lower joys hereafter?
- Or much, if a Creator, prodigal of life, and filled with the profundity
- of love,
- Rejoice in all creatures of His skill, and lead them to perfection in
- their kind?
- O man, there are many marvels; yet life is more a mystery than death:
- For death may be some stagnant life,--but life is present God!
-
- Many are the lurking-holes of evil; who shall search them out?
- Who so skilled to cut away the cancer with its fibres?
- For wily minds with sinuous ease escape from lie to lie;
- And cowards driven from the trench steal back to hide again.
- Vain were the battle, if a warrior, having slain his foes,
- Shall turn and find them vital still, unharmed, yea, unashamed:
- For Error, dark magician, daily cast out killed,
- Quickeneth animate anew beneath the midnight moon:
- Once and again, once and again, hath reason answered wisely;
- But not the less with brazen front doth folly urge her questions.
- It were but unprofitable toil, a stand-up fight with unbelief:
- When was there candour in a caviller, and who can satisfy the faithless?
- Too long, O truant from the fold, have I tracked thy devious paths;
- Too long, treacherous deserter, fought thee as a noble foeman:
- Haply, my small art, and an arm too weakly for its weapon,
- Hath failed to pierce thine iron coat, and reach thy stricken soul:
- Haply, the fervour of my speech, and too patient sifting of thy fancies,
- Shall tend to make thee prize them more, as worthier and wiser:
- Go to: be mine the gain: we measure swords no more;
- Go,--and a word go with thee,--Man, thou ART Immortal!
-
- Child of light, and student in the truth, too long have I forgotten thee:
- Lo, after parley with an alien, let me hold sweet converse with a brother.
- Glorious hopes and ineffable imaginings, crowd our holy theme,
- Fear hath been slaughtered on the portal, and Doubt driven back to
- darkness:
- For Christ hath died, and we in Him; by faith His All is ours;
- Cross and crown, and love, and life; and we shall reign in Him!
- Yea, there is a fitness and a beauty in ascribing immortality to mind,
- That its energies and lofty aspirations may have scope for indefinite
- expansion.
- To learn all things is privilege of reason, and that with a growing
- capability,
- But in this age of toil and time we scarce attain to alphabets:
- How hardly in the midst of our hurry, and jostled by the cares of life,
- Shall a man turn and stop to consider mighty secrets;
- With barely hours, and barely powers, to fill up daily duties,
- How small the glimpse of knowledge his wondering eye can catch!
- And knowledge is a noting of the order wherein God's attributes evolve,
- Therefore worthy of the creature, worthy of an angel's seeking;
- Yea, and human knowledge, meagre though the harvest,
- Hath its roots, both deep and strong; but the plants are exotic to the
- climate;
- All we seem to know demand a longer learning,
- History and science, and prophecy and art, are workings all of God:
- And there are galaxies of globes, millions of unimagined beings,
- Other senses, wondrous sounds, and thoughts of thrilling fire,
- Powers of strange might, quickening unknown elements,
- And attributes and energies of God which man may never guess.
-
- Not in vain, O brother, hath soul the spurs of enterprize,
- Nor aimlessly panteth for adventure, waiting at the cave of mystery:
- Not in vain the cup of curiosity, sweet and richly spiced,
- Is ruby to the sight, and ambrosia to the taste, and redolent with all
- fragrance:
- Thou shalt drink, and deeply, filling the mind with marvels;
- Thou shalt watch no more, lingering, disappointed of thy hope;
- Thou shalt roam where road is none, a traveller untrammelled,
- Speeding at a wish, emancipate, to where the stars are suns!
-
- Count, count your hopes, heirs of immortality and love;
- And hear my kindred faith, and turn again to bless me.
- For lo, my trust is strong to dwell in many worlds,
- And cull of many brethren there, sweet knowledge ever new:
- I yearn for realms where fancy shall be filled, and the ecstasies of
- freedom shall be felt,
- And the soul reign gloriously, risen to its royal destinies:
- I look to recognize again, through the beautiful mask of their perfection,
- The dear familiar faces I have somewhile loved on earth:
- I long to talk with grateful tongue of storms and perils past,
- And praise the mighty Pilot that hath steered us through the rapids:
- He shall be the focus of it all, the very heart of gladness,--
- My soul is athirst for God, the God who dwelt in Man!
- Prophet, priest, and king, the sacrifice, the substitute, the Saviour,
- Rapture of the blessed in the hunted One of earth, the Pardoner in the
- victim;
- How many centuries of joy concentrate in that theme,
- How often a Methusalem might count his thousand years, and leave it
- unexhausted!
- And lo, the heavenly Jerusalem, with all its gates one pearl,
- That pearl of countless price, the door by which we entered,--
- Come, tread the golden streets, and join that glorious throng,
- The happy ones of heaven and earth, ten thousand times ten thousand;
- Hark, they sing that song,--and cast their crowns before Him;
- Their souls alight with love,--Glory, and Praise, and Immortality!--
- Veil thine eyes: no son of time may see that holy vision,
- And even the seraph at thy side hath covered his face with wings.
-
- Doth he not speak parables?--each one goeth on his way,
- Ye that hear, and I that counsel, go on our ways forgetful.
- For the terrible realities whereto we tend, are hidden from our eyes,
- We know, but heed them not, and walk as if the temporal were all things.
- Vanities, buzzing on the ear, fill its drowsy chambers,
- Slow to dread those coming fears, the thunder and the trumpet;
- Motes, steaming on the sight, dim our purblind eyes,
- Dark to see the ponderous orb of nearing Immortality:
- Hemmed in by hostile foes, the trifler is busied on an epigram;
- The dull ox, driven to slaughter, careth but for pasture by the way.
- Alas, that the precious things of truth, and the everlasting hills,
- The mighty hopes we spake of, and the consciousness we feel,--
- Alas, that all the future, and its adamantine facts,
- Clouded by the present with intoxicating fumes,--
- Should seem even to us, the great expectant heirs,
- To us, the responsible and free, fearful sons of reason,
- Only as a lovely song, sweet sounds of solemn music,
- A pleasant voice, and nothing more,--doth he not speak parables?
-
- Look to thy soul, O man, for none can be surety for his brother:
- Behold, for heaven--or for hell,--thou canst not escape from Immortality!
-
-
-OF IDEAS.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Mind is like a volatile essence, flitting hither and thither,
- A solitary sentinel of the fortress body, to show himself everywhere by
- turns:
- Mind is indivisible and instant, with neither parts nor organs,
- That it doeth, it doth quickly, but the whole mind doth it:
- An active versatile agent, untiring in the principle of energy,
- Nor space, nor time, nor rest, nor toil, can affect the tenant of the
- brain;
- His dwelling may verily be shattered, and the furniture thereof be
- disarranged,
- But the particle of Deity in man slumbereth not, neither can be wearied:
- However swift to change, even as the field of a kaleidoscope,
- It taketh in but one idea at once, moulded for the moment to its likeness:
- Mind is as the quicksilver, which, poured from vessel to vessel,
- Instantly seizeth on a shape, and as instantly again discardeth it;
- For it is an apprehensive power, closing on the properties of Matter,
- Expanding to enwrap a world, collapsing to prison up an atom:
- As, by night, thine irritable eyes may have seen strange changing figures,
- Now a wheel, now suddenly a point, a line, a curve, a zigzag,
- A maze ever altering, as the dance of gnats upon a sunbeam,
- Swift, intricate, neither to be prophesied, nor to be remembered in
- succession,
- So, the mind of a man, single, and perpetually moving,
- Flickereth about from thought to thought, changed with each idea;
- For the passing second metamorphosed to the image of that within its ken,
- And throwing its immediate perceptions into each cause of contemplation.
- It shall regard a tree; and unconsciously, in separate review,
- Embrace its colour, shape, and use, whole and individual conceptions;
- It shall read or hear of crime, and cast itself into the commission;
- It shall note a generous deed, and glow for a moment as the doer;
- It shall imagine pride or pleasure, treading on the edges of temptation;
- Or heed of God and of His Christ, and grow transformed to glory.
-
- Therefore, it is wise and well to guide the mind aright,
- That its aptness may be sensitive to good, and shrink with antipathy from
- evil:
- For use will mould and mark it, or nonusage dull and blunt it;--
- So to talk of spirit by analogy with substance;
- And analogy is a truer guide, than many teachers tell of,
- Similitudes are scattered round, to help us, not to hurt us;
- Moses, in his every type, and the Greater than Moses, in His parables,
- Preach, in terms that all may learn, the philosophic lessons of analogy:
- And here, in a topic immaterial, the likeness of analogy is just;
- By habits, knit the nerves of mind, and train the gladiator shrewdly:
- For thought shall strengthen thinking, and imagery speed imagination,
- Until thy spiritual inmate shall have swelled to the giant of Otranto.
-
- Nevertheless, heed well, that this Athlete, growing in thy brain,
- Be a wholesome Genius, not a cursed Afrite:
- And see thou discipline his strength, and point his aim discreetly;
- Feed him on humility and holy things, weaned from covetous desires;
- Hour by hour and day by day, ply him with ideas of excellence,
- Dragging forth the evil but to loathe, as a Spartan's drunken Helot:
- And win, by gradual allurements, the still expanding soul,
- To rise from a contemplated universe, even to the Hand that made it.
-
- A common mind perceiveth not beyond his eyes and ears:
- The palings of the park of sense enthral this captured roebuck:
- And still, though fettered in the flesh, he doth not feel his chains,
- Externals are the world to him, and circumstance his atmosphere.
- Therefore tangible pleasures are enough for the animal man;
- He is swift to speak and slow to think, dreading his own dim conscience;
- And solitude is terrible, and exile worse than death,
- He cannot dwell apart, nor breathe at a distance from the crowd.
- But minds of nobler stamp, and chiefest the mint-marked of heaven,
- Walk independent, by themselves, freely manumitted of externals:
- They carry viands with them, and need no refreshment by the way,
- Nor drink of other wells than their own inner fountain.
- Strange shall it seem how little such a man will lean upon the accidents
- of life,
- He is winged and needeth not a staff; if it break, he shall not fall:
- And lightly perchance doth he remember the stale trivialities around him,
- He liveth in the realm of thought, beyond the world of things;
- These are but transient Matter, and himself enduring Spirit:
- And worldliness will laugh to scorn that sublimated wisdom.
- His eyes may open on a prison-cell, but the bare walls glow with imagery;
- His ears may be filled with execration, but are listening to the music of
- sweet thoughts;
- He may dwell in a hovel with a hero's heart, and canopy his penury with
- peace,
- For mind is a kingdom to the man, who gathereth his pleasure from Ideas.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF NAMES.
-
- Adam gave the name, when the Lord had made His creature,
- For God led them in review, to see what man would call them.
- As they struck his senses, he proclaimed their sounds,
- A name for the distinguishing of each, a numeral by which it should be
- known:
- He specified the partridge by her cry, and the forest prowler by his
- roaring,
- The tree by its use, and the flower by its beauty, and everything
- according to its truth.
-
- There is an arbitrary name; whereunto the idea attacheth;
- And there is a reasonable name, linking its fitness to idea:
- Yet shall these twain run in parallel courses,
- Neither shall thou readily discern the habit from the nature.
- For mind is apt and quick to wed ideas and names together,
- Nor stoppeth its perception to be curious of priorities;
- And there is but little in the sound, as some have vainly fancied,
- The same tone in different tongues shall be suitable to opposite ideas:
- Yea, take an ensample in thine own; consider similar words:
- How various and contrary the thoughts those kindred names produce:
- A house shall seem a fitting word to call a roomy dwelling,
- Yet there is a like propriety in the small smooth sound, a mouse:
- Mountain, as if of a necessity, is a word both mighty and majestic,--
- What heed ye then of Fountain?--flowing silver in the sun.
-
- Many a fair flower is burdened with preposterous appellatives,
- Which the wiser simplicity of rustics entitled by its beauties;
- And often the conceit of science, loving to be thought cosmopolite,
- Shall mingle names of every clime, alike obscure to each.
- There is wisdom in calling a thing fitly; name should note particulars
- Through a character obvious to all men, and worthy of their instant
- acceptation.
- The herbalist had a simple cause for every word upon his catalogue,
- But now the mouth of Botany is filled with empty sound;
- And many a peasant hath an answer on his tongue, concerning some vexed
- flower,
- Shrewder than the centipede phrase, wherewithal philosophers invest it.
-
- For that, the foolishness of pride, and flatteries of cringing homage,
- Strew with chaff the threshing-floors of science; names perplex them all:
- The entomologist, who hath pried upon an insect, straightway shall endow
- it with his name;
- It had many qualities and marks of note,--but in chief, a vain observer:
- The geographer shall journey to the pole, through biting frost and
- desolation,
- And, for some simple patron's sake, shall name that land, the happy:
- The fossilist hath found a bone, the rib of some huge lizard,
- And forthwith standeth to it sponsor, to tack himself on reptile
- immortalities:
- The sportsman, hunting at the Cape, found some strange-horned antelope,
- The spots are new, the fame is cheap, and so his name is added.
- Thus, obscurities encumber knowledge, even by the vanity of men
- Who play into each other's hand the game of giving names.
-
- Various are the names of men, and drawn from different wells;
- Aspects of body, or characters of mind, the creature's first idea:
- And some have sprung of trades, and some of dignities or office;
- Other some added to a father's, and yet more growing from a place:
- Animal creation, with sciences, and things,--their composites, and near
- associations,
- Contributed their symbollings of old, wherewith to title men:
- And heraldry set upon its cresture the figured attributes as ensigns
- By which, as by a name concrete, its bearer should be known.
-
- Egypt opened on the theme, dressing up her gods in qualities;
- Horns of power, feathers of the swift, mitres of catholic dominion,
- The sovereign asp, the circle everlasting, the crook and thong of justice,
- By many mystic shapes and sounds displayed the idol's name.
- Thereafter, high-plumed warriors, the chieftains of Etruria and Troy,
- And Xerxes, urging on his millions to the tomb of pride, Thermopylæ,
- And Hiero with his bounding ships, all figured at the prow,
- And Rome's Prætorian standards, piled with strange devices,
- And stout crusaders pressing to the battle, clad in sable mail;
- These all in their speaking symbols, earned, or wore, a name.
- Eve; the mother of all living, and Abraham, father of a multitude,
- Jacob, the supplanter, and David, the beloved, and all the worthies of
- old time,
- Noah, who came for consolation, and Benoni, son of sorrow,
- Kings and prophets, children of the East, owned each his title of
- significance.
-
- There be names of high descent, and thereby storied honours;
- Names of fair renown, and therein characters of merit:
- But to lend the lowborn noble names, is to shed upon them ridicule and
- evil;
- Yea, many weeds run rank in pride, if men have dubbed them cedars.
- And to herald common mediocrity with the noisy notes of fame,
- Tendeth to its deeper scorn; as if it were to call the mole a mammoth.
- Yet shall ye find the trader's babe dignified with sounding titles,
- And little hath the father guessed the harm he did his child:
- For either may they breed him discontent, a peevish repining at his
- station,
- Or point the finger of despite at the mule in the trappings of an
- elephant:
- And it is a kind of theft to filch appellations from the famous,
- A soiling of the shrines of praise with folly's vulgar herd.
- Prudence hath often gone ashamed for the name they added to his father's,
- If minds of mark and great achievements bore it well before;
- For he walketh as the jay in the fable, though not by his own folly,
- Another's fault hath compassed his misfortune, making him a martyr to his
- name.
-
- Who would call the tench a whale, or style a torch, Orion?
- Yet many a silly parent hath dealt likewise with his nurseling.
- Give thy child a fit distinguishment, making him sole tenant of a name,
- For it were a sore hindrance to hold it in common with a hundred:
- In the Babel of confused identities fame is little feasible,
- The felon shall detract from the philanthropist, and the sage share
- honours with the simple:
- Still, in thy title of distinguishment, fall not into arrogant assumption,
- Steering from caprice and affectations; and for all thou doest, have a
- reason.
- He that is ambitious for his son, should give him untried names,
- For those that have served other men, haply may injure by their evils;
- Or otherwise may hinder by their glories; therefore, set him by himself,
- To win for his individual name some clear specific praise.
- There were nine Homers, all goodly sons of song, but where is any record
- of the eight?
- One grew to fame, an Aaron's rod, and swallowed up his brethren:
- Who knoweth? more distinctly titled, those dead eight had lived;
- But the censers were ranged in a circle to mingle their sweets without a
- difference.
-
- Art thou named of a common crowd, and sensible of high aspirings?
- It is hard for thee to rise,--yet strive: thou mayest be among them a
- Musæus.
- Art thou named of a family, the same in successive generations?
- It is open to thee still to earn for epithets, such an one, the good or
- great.
- Art thou named foolishly? Show that thou art wiser than thy fathers;
- Live to shame their vanity or sin by dutiful devotion to thy sphere.
- Art thou named discreetly? It is well, the course is free;
- No competitor shall claim thy colours, neither fix his faults upon thee:
- Hasten to the goal of fame between the posts of duty,
- And win a blessing from the world, that men may love thy name:
- Yea, that the unction of its praise, in fragrance well deserving,
- May float adown the stream of time, like ambergris at sea;
- So thy sons may tell their sons, and those may teach their children,
- He died in goodness, as he lived;--and left us his good name.
- And more than these: there is a roll whereon thy name is written;
- See that, in the Book of Doom, that name is fixed in light:
- Then, safe within a better home, where time and its titles are not found,
- God will give thee His new Name, and write it on thy heart:
- A Name better than of sons, a Name dearer than of daughters,
- A Name of union, peace, and praise, as numbered in thy God.
-
-
-OF THINGS.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Taken separately from all substance, and flying with the feathered flock
- of thoughts,
- The idea of a thing hath the nature of its Soul, a separate seeming
- essence:
- Intimately linked to the idea, suggesting many qualities,
- The name of a thing hath the nature of its Mind, an intellectual recorder:
- And the matter of a thing, concrete, is a Body to the perfect creature,
- Compacted three in one, as all things else within the universe.
- Nothing canst thou add to them, and nothing take away, for all have these
- proportions,
- The thought, the word, the form, combining in the Thing:
- All separate, yet harmonizing well, and mingled each with other,
- One whole in several parts, yet each part spreading to a whole:
- The idea is a whole; and the meaning phrase that spake idea, a whole;
- And the matter, as ye see it, is a whole; the mystery of true triunity:
- Yea, there is even a deeper mystery,--which none, I wot, can fathom,
- Matter, different from properties whereby the solid substance is
- described;
- For, size and weight, cohesion and the like, live distinct from matter,
- Yet who can imagine matter, unendowed with size and weight?
- As in the spiritual, so in the material, man must rest with patience,
- And wait for other eyes wherewith to read the books of God.
-
- Men have talked learnedly of atoms, as if matter could be ever
- indivisible;
- They talk, but ill are skilled to teach, and darken truth by fancies:
- An atom by our grosser sense was never yet conceived,
- And nothing can be thought so small, as not to be divided:
- For an atom runneth to infinity, and never shall be caught in space,
- And a molecule is no more indivisible than Saturn's belted orb.
- Things intangible, multiplied by multitudes, never will amass to
- substance,
- Neither can a thing which may be touched, be made of impalpable
- proportions;
- The sum of indivisibles must needs be indivisible, as adding many
- nothings,
- And the building up of atoms into matter is but a silly sophism;
- Lucretius, and keen Anaximander, and many that have followed in their
- thoughts,
- (For error hath a long black shadow, dimming light for ages,)
- In the foolishness of men without a God fancied to fashion Matter
- Of intangibles, and therefore uncohering, indivisibles, and therefore
- Spirit.
-
- Things breed thoughts; therefore at Thebes and Heliopolis,
- In hieroglyphic sculptures are the priestly secrets written:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore was the Athens of idolatry
- Set with carved images, frequent as the trees of Academus:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the Brahmin and the Burman
- With mythologic shapes adorn their coarse pantheon:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the statue and the picture,
- Relics, rosaries, and miracles in act, quicken the Papist in his worship:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the lovers at their parting,
- Interchanged with tearful smiles the dear reminding tokens:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore when the clansman met his foe,
- The bloodstained claymore in his hand revived the memories of vengeance.
-
- Things teach with double force; through the animal eye, and through the
- mind,
- And the eye catcheth in an instant, what the ear shall not learn within
- an hour.
- Thence is the potency of travel, the precious might of its advantages
- To compensate its dissipative harm, its toil and cost and danger.
- Ulysses, wandering to many shores, lived in many cities,
- And thereby learnt the minds of men, and stored his own more richly:
- Herodotus, the accurate and kindly, spake of that he saw,
- And reaped his knowledge on the spot, in fertile fields of Egypt:
- Lycurgus culled from every clime the golden fruits of justice;
- And Plato roamed through foreign lands, to feed on truth in all.
- For travel, conversant with Things, bringeth them in contact with the
- mind;
- We breathe the wholesome atmosphere about ungarbled truth:
- Pictures of fact are painted on the eye, to decorate the house of
- intellect,
- Rather than visions of fancy, filling all the chambers with a vapour.
- For, in Ideas, the great mind will exaggerate, and the lesser extenuate
- truth;
- But in Things the one is chastened, and the other quickened, to equality:
- And in Names,--though a property be told, rather than some arbitrary
- accident,
- Still shall the thought be vague or false, if none have seen the Thing:
- For in Things the property with accident standeth in a mass concrete,
- These cannot cheat the sense, nor elude the vigilance of spirit.
- Travel is a ceaseless fount of surface education,
- But its wisdom will be simply superficial, if thou add not thoughts to
- things:
- Yet, aided by the varnish of society, things may serve for thoughts,
- Till many dullards that have seen the world shall pass for scholars:
- Because one single glance will conquer all descriptions,
- Though graphic, these left some unsaid, though true, these tended to some
- error;
- And the most witless eye that saw, had a juster notion of its object,
- Than the shrewdest mind that heard and shaped its gathered thoughts of
- Things.
-
-
-[Illustration: of faith]
-
-OF FAITH.
-
- Confidence was bearer of the palm; for it looked like conviction of
- desert:
- And where the strong is well assured, the weaker soon allow it.
- Majesty and Beauty are commingled, in moving with immutable decision,
- And well may charm the coward hearts that turn and hide for fear.
- Faith, firmness, confidence, consistency,--these are well allied;
- Yea, let a man press on in aught, he shall not lack of honour:
- For such an one seemeth as superior to the native instability of
- creatures;
- That he doeth, he doeth as a god, and men will marvel at his courage.
- Even in crimes, a partial praise cannot be denied to daring,
- And many fearless chiefs have won the friendship of a foe.
-
- Confidence is conqueror of men; victorious both over them and in them;
- The iron will of one stout heart shall make a thousand quail:
- A feeble dwarf, dauntlessly resolved, will turn the tide of battle,
- And rally to a nobler strife the giants that had fled;
- The tenderest child, unconscious of a fear, will shame the man to danger,
- And when he dared it, danger died, and faith had vanquished fear.
- Boldness is akin to power: yea, because ignorance is weakness,
- Knowledge with unshrinking might will nerve the vigorous hand:
- Boldness hath a startling strength; the mouse may fright a lion,
- And oftentimes the horned herd is scared by some brave cur.
- Courage hath analogy with faith, for it standeth both in animal and moral;
- The true is mindful of a God, the false is stout in self:
- But true or false, the twain are faith; and faith worketh wonders:
- Never was a marvel done upon the earth, but it had sprung of faith:
- Nothing noble, generous, or great, but faith was the root of the
- achievement;
- Nothing comely, nothing famous, but its praise is faith.
- Leonidas fought in human faith, as Joshua in divine:
- Xenophon trusted to his skill, and the sons of Mattathias to their cause:
- In faith Columbus found a path across those untried waters;
- The heroines of Arc and Saragossa fought in earthly faith:
- Tell was strong, and Alfred great, and Luther wise, by faith;
- Margaret by faith was valiant for her son, and Wallace mighty for his
- people:
- Faith in his reason made Socrates sublime, as faith in his science,
- Galileo:
- Ambassadors in faith are bold, and unreproved for boldness:
- Faith urged Fabius to delays, and sent forth Hannibal to Cannæ:
- Cæsar at the Rubicon, Miltiades at Marathon; both were sped by faith.
- I set not all in equal spheres: I number not the martyr with the patriot;
- I class not the hero with his horse, because the twain have courage;
- But only for ensample and instruction, that all things stand by faith;
- Albeit faith of divers kinds, and varying in degree.
- There is a faith towards men, and there is a faith towards God;
- The latter is the gold and the former is the brass; but both are sturdy
- metal:
- And the brass mingled with the gold floweth into rich Corinthian;
- A substance bright and hard and keen, to point Achilles' spear:
- So shall thou stop the way against the foes that hem thee;
- Trust in God to strengthen man;--be bold, for He doth help.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Yet more: for confidence in man, even to the worst and meanest,
- Hath power to overcome his ill, by charitable good.
- Fling thine unreserving trust even on the conscience of a culprit,
- Soon wilt thou shame him by thy faith, and he will melt and mend:
- The nest of thieves will harm thee not, if thou dost bear thee boldly;
- Boldly, yea and kindly, as relying on their honour:
- For the hand so stout against aggression, is quite disarmed by charity;
- And that warm sun will thaw the heart case-hardened by long frost.
- Treat men gently, trust them strongly, if thou wish their weal;
- Or cautious doubt and bitter thoughts will tempt the best to foil thee.
- Believe the well in sanguine hope, and thou shall reap the better;
- But if thou deal with men so ill, thy dealings make them worse;
- Despair not of some gleams of good still lingering in the darkest,
- And among veterans in crime, plead thou as with their children:
- So, astonied at humanities, the bad heart long estranged,
- Shall even weep to feel himself so little worth thy love;
- In wholesome sorrow will he bless thee; yea, and in that spirit may
- repent;
- Thus wilt thou gain a soul, in mercy given to thy Faith.
-
- Look aside to lack of faith, the mass of ills it bringeth:
- All things treacherous, base, and vile, dissolving the brotherhood of men.
- Bonds break; the cement hath lost its hold; and each is separate from
- other;
- That which should be neighbourly and good, is cankered into bitterness
- and evil.
- O thou serpent, fell Suspicion, coiling coldly round the heart,--
- O thou asp of subtle Jealousy, stinging hotly to the soul,--
- O distrust, reserve, and doubt,--what reptile shapes are here,
- Poisoning the garden of a world with death among its flowers!
- No need of many words, the tale is easy to be told;
- A point will touch the truth, a line suggest the picture.
- For if, in thine own home, a cautious man and captious,
- Thou hintest at suspicion of a servant, thou soon wilt make a thief;
- Or if, too keen in care, thou dost evidently disbelieve thy child,
- Thou hast injured the texture of his honour, and smoothed to him the way
- of lying:
- Or if thou observest upon friends, as seeking thee selfishly for interest,
- Thou hast hurt their kindliness to thee, and shalt be paid with scorn;
- Or if, O silly ones of marriage, your foul and foolish thoughts,
- Harshly misinterpreting in each the levity of innocence for sin,
- Shall pour upon the lap of home pain where once was pleasure,
- And mix contentions in the cup, that mantled once with comforts,
- Bitterly and justly shall ye rue the punishment due to unbelief;
- Ye trust not each the other, nor the mutual vows of God;
- Take heed, for the pit may now be near, a pit of your own digging,--
- Faith abused tempteth unto crime, and doubt may make its monster.
-
- Man verily is vile, but more in capability than action;
- His sinfulness is deep, but his transgressions may be few, even from the
- absence of temptation:
- He is hanging in a gulf midway, but the air is breathable about him:
- Thrust him not from that slight hold, to perish in the vapours underneath.
- For, God pleadeth with the deaf, as having ears to hear,
- Christ speaketh to the dead, as those that are capable of living;
- And an evil teacher is that man, a tempter to much sin,
- Who looketh on his hearers with distrust, and hath no confidence in
- brethren.
- All may mend; and sympathies are healing: and reason hath its influence
- with the worst;
- And in those worst is ample hope, if only thou hast charity, and faith.
-
- Somewhiles have I watched a man exchanging the sobriety of faith,
- Old lamps for new,--even for fanatical excitements.
- He gained surface, but lost solidity; heat, in lieu of health;
- And still with swelling words and thoughts he scorned his ancient
- coldness:
- But, his strength was shorn as Samson's; he walked he knew not whither;
- Doubt was on his daily path; and duties shewed not certain:
- Until, in an hour of enthusiasm, stung with secret fears,
- He pinned the safety of his soul on some false prophet's sleeve.
- And then, that sure word failed; and with it, failed his faith;
- It failed, and fell; O deep and dreadful was his fall in faith!
- He could not stop, with reason's rein, his coursers on the slope,
- And so they dashed him down the cliff of hardened unbelief.
- With overreaching grasp he had strained for visionary treasures,
- But a fiend had cheated his presumption, and hurled him to despair.
- So he lay in his blood, the victim of a credulous false faith,
- And many nights, and night-like days, he dwelt in outer darkness.
- But, within a while, his variable mind caught a new impression,
- A new impression of the good old stamp, that sealed him when a child:
- He was softened, and abjured his infidelity; he was wiser, and despised
- his credulity;
- And turned again to simple faith more simply than before.
- Experience had declared too well his mind was built of water,
- And so, renouncing strength in self, he fixed his faith in God.
-
- It is not for me to stipulate for creeds; Bible, Church, and Reason,
- These three shall lead the mind, if any can, to truth.
- But I must stipulate for faith: both God and man demand it:
- Trust is great in either world, if any would be well.
- Verily, the sceptical propensity is an universal foe;
- Sneering Pyrrho never found, nor cared to find, a friend:
- How could he trust another? and himself, whom would he not deceive?
- His proper gains were all his aim, and interests clash with kindness.
- So, the Bedouin goeth armed, an enemy to all,
- The spear is stuck beside his couch, the dagger hid beneath his pillow.
- For society, void of mutual trust, of credit, and of faith,
- Would fall asunder as a waterspout, snapped from the cloud's attraction.
-
- Faith may rise into miracles of might, as some few wise have shown:
- Faith may sink into credulities of weakness, as the mass of fools have
- witnessed.
- Therefore, in the first, saints and martyrs have fulfilled their mission,
- Conquering dangers, courting deaths, and triumphing in all.
- Therefore, in the last, the magician and the witch, victims of their own
- delusion,
- Have gained the bitter wages of impracticable sins.
- They believed in allegiance with Satan; they worked in that belief,
- And thereby earned the loss and harm of guilt that might not be.
- For, faith hath two hands; with the one it addeth virtue to indifferents;
- Yea, it sanctified a Judith and a Jael, for what otherwise were treachery
- and murder:
- With the other hand it heapeth crime even on impossibles or simples,
- And many a wizard well deserved the faggot for his faith:
- He trusted in his intercourse with evil, he sacrificed heartily to fiends,
- He withered up with curses to the limit of his will, and was vile,
- because he thought himself a villain.
-
- A great mind is ready to believe, for he hungereth to feed on facts,
- And the gnawing stomach of his ignorance craveth unceasing to be filled:
- A little mind is boastful and incredulous, for he fancieth all knowledge
- is his own,
- So will he cavil at a truth; how should it be true, and he not know it?--
- There is an easy scheme, to solve all riddles by the sensual,
- And thus, despising mysteries, to feel the more sufficient;
- For it comforteth the foul hard heart, to reject the pure unseen,
- And relieveth the dull soft head, to hinder one from gazing upon vacancy.
- True wisdom, labouring to expound, heareth others readily;
- False wisdom, sturdy to deny, closeth up her mind to argument.
- The sum of certainties is found so small, their field so wide an universe,
- That many things may truly be, which man hath not conceived:
- The characters revealed of God are a strong mind's sole assurance
- That any strangeness may not stand a sober theme for faith.
- Ignorance being light denied, this ought to show the stronger in its view,
- But ignorance is commonly a double negative, both of light and morals:
- So, adding vanity to blindness, for ease, it taketh refuge in a doubt,
- And aching soon with ceaseless doubt, it finisheth the strife by
- misbelieving.
-
- Faith, by its very nature, shall embrace both credence and obedience:
- Yea, the word for both is one, and cannot be divided.
- For, work void of faith, wherein can it be counted for a duty;
- And faith not seen in work,--whereby can the doctrine be discovered?
- Faith in religion is an instrument; a handle, and the hand to turn it:
- Less a condition than a mean, and more an operation than a virtue.
- A moral sickness, like to sin, must have a moral cure;
- And faith alone can heal the mind, whose malady is sense.
- Ye are told of God's deep love: they that believe will love Him:
- They that love Him, will obey: and obedience hath its blessing.
- Ye are taught of the soul's great price; they that believe will prize it,
- And, prizing soul, will cherish well the hopes that make it happy.
- Effects spring from feelings; and feelings grow of faith:
- If a man conceive himself insulted, will not his anger smite?
- Thus, let a soul believe his state, his danger, destiny, redemption,
- Will he not feel eager to be safe, like him that kept the prison at
- Philippi?
-
- A mother had an only son, and sent him out to sea:
- She was a widow, and in penury; and he must seek his fortunes.
- How often in the wintry nights, when waves and winds were howling,
- Her heart was torn with sickening dread, and bled to see her boy.
- And on one sunny morn, when all around was comfort,
- News came, that weeks agone, the vessel had been wrecked;
- Yea, wrecked, and he was dead! they had seen him perish in his agony:
- Oh then, what agony was like to her's,--for she believed the tale.
- She was bowed and broken down with sorrow, and uncomforted in prayer;
- Many nights she mourned, and pined, and had no hope but death.
- But on a day, while sorely she was weeping, a stranger broke upon her
- loneliness,--
- He had news to tell, that weather-beaten man, and must not be denied:
- And what were the wonder-working words that made this mourner joyous,
- That swept her heaviness away, and filled her world with praise?
- Her son was saved,--is alive,--is near!--O did she stop to question?
- No, rushing in the force of faith, she met him at the door!
-
-
-OF HONESTY.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- All is vanity that is not honesty;--thus is it graven on the tomb:
- And there is no wisdom but in piety;--so the dead man preacheth:
- For, in a simple village church, among those classic shades
- Which sylvan Evelyn loved to rear, (his praise, and my delight,)
- These, the words of truth, are writ upon his sepulchre
- Who learnt much lore, and knew all trees, from the cedar to the hyssop on
- the wall.
- A just conjunction, godliness and honesty; ministering to both worlds,
- Well wed, and ill to be divided, a pair that God hath joined together.
- I touch not now the vulgar thought, as of tricks and cheateries in trade;
- I speak of honest purpose, character, speech and action.
- For an honest man hath special need of charity, and prudence,
- Of a deep and humbling self-acquaintance, and of blessed commerce with
- his God,
- So that the keennesses of truth may be freed from asperities of censure,
- And the just but vacillating mind be not made the pendulum of arguments:
- For a false reason, shrewdly put, can often not be answered on the
- instant,
- And prudence looketh unto faith, content to wait solutions;
- Yea, it looketh, yea, it waiteth, still holding honesty in leash,
- Lest, as a hot young hound, it track not game, but vermin.
- Many a man of honest heart, but ignorant of self and God,
- Hath followed the marsh-fires of pestilence, esteeming them the lights of
- truth;
- He heard a cause, which he had not skill to solve,--and so received it
- gladly;
- And that cause brought its consequence, of harm to an unstable soul.
- Prudence, for a man's own sake, never should be separate from honesty;
- And charity, for other's good, and his, must still be joined therewith:
- For the harshly chiding tongue hath neither pleasuring nor profit,
- And the cold unsympathizing heart never gained a good.
- Sin is a sore, and folly is a fever; touch them tenderly for healing;
- The bad chirurgeon's awkward knife harmeth, spite of honesty.
- Still, a rough diamond is better than the polished paste,--
- That courteous flattering fool, who spake of vice as virtue:
- And honesty, even by itself, though making many adversaries
- Whom prudence might have set aside, or charity have softened,
- Evermore will prosper at the last, and gain a man great honour
- By giving others many goods, to his own cost and hindrance.
-
- Freedom is father of the honest, and sturdy Independence is his brother;
- These three, with heart and hand, dwell together in unity.
- The blunt yeoman, stout and true, will speak unto princes unabashed:
- His mind is loyal, just and free, a crystal in its plain integrity;
- What should make such an one ashamed? where courtiers kneel, he
- standeth;--
- I will indeed bow before the king, but knees were knit for God.
- And many such there be, of a high and noble conscience,
- Honourable, generous, and kind, though blest with little light:
- What should he barter for his Freedom? some petty gain of gold?
- Free of speech, and free in act, magnates honour him for boldness:
- Long may he flourish in his peace, and a stalwarth race around him,
- Rooted in the soil like oaks, and hardy as the pine upon the mountains!
-
- Yet, there be others, that will truckle to a lie, selling honesty for
- interest:
- And do they gain?--they gain but loss; a little cash, with scorn.
- Behold, the sorrowful change wrought upon a fallen nature:
- He hath lost his own esteem, and other men's respect;
- For the buoyancy of upright faith, he is clothed in the heaviness of
- cringing;
- For plain truth where none could err, he hath chosen tortuous paths;
- In lieu of his majesty of countenance--the timorous glances of servility;
- Instead of Freedom's honest pride,--the spirit of a slave.
-
- Nevertheless, there is something to be pleaded, even for a necessary
- guile,
- Whilst the world, and all that is therein, lieth deep in evil.
- Who can be altogether honest,--a champion never out of mail,
- Ready to break a lance for truth with every crowding error?
- Who can be altogether honest,--dragging out the secresies of life,
- And risking to be lashed and loathed for each unkind disclosure?
- Who can be altogether honest,--living in perpetual contentions,
- And prying out the petty cheats that swell the social scheme?
- For he must speak his instant mind,--a mind corrupt and sinful,
- Exhibiting to other men's disgust its undisguised deformities:
- He must utter all the hatred of his heart, and add to it the venom of his
- tongue;
- Shall he feel, and hide his feelings? that were the meanness of a
- hypocrite:--
- Still, O man, such hypocrisy is better, than this bold honesty to sin:
- Kill the feeling, or conceal it: let shame at least do the work of
- charity.
-
- O charity, thou livest not in warnings, meddling among men,
- Rebuking every foolish word, and censuring small sins;
- This is not thy secret,--rather wilt thou hide their multitude,
- And silence the condemning tongue, and wearisome exhortation.
- But for thee, thy strength and zeal shine in encouragement to good,
- Lifting up the lantern of ensample, that wanderers may find the way:
- That lantern is not lit to gaze on all the hatefulness of evil,
- But set on high for life and light, the loveliness of good.
- The hard censorious mind sitteth as a keen anatomist
- Tracking up the fibres in corruption, and prying on a fearful corpse:
- But the charitable soul is a young lover, enamoured little wisely,
- That saw no fault in her he loved, and sought to see one less;
- So, in his kind and genial light, she grew more worthy of his love;
- Won to good by gentle suns, and not by frowning tempest.
-
- Verily, infirm thyself,--be slow to chide a brother's imperfections;
- For many times the decent veil must hang on faults of nature:
- And the rude hands, that rend it, offend against the modesty of right,
- While seeming zeal, and its effort to do good, is only feigned
- self-praise:
- Often will the meannesses of life, hidden away in corners,
- Prove wisdom; and the generous is glad to leave them unregarded in the
- shade.
- The follies none are found to praise, let them die unblamed;
- Thine honest strife will only tend to make some think them wise:
- And small conventional deceits, let them live uncensured:
- Or if thou war with pigmies, thou shalt haply help the cranes.
- Where to be blind was safety, Ovid had been wise for winking:
- And when a tell-tale might do harm, be sure it is prudent to be dumb;
- That which is just and fit is often found combating with honesty:
- In the cause of good, be wise; and in a case indifferent, keep silence.
-
- Let honesty's unblushing face be shaded by the mantle of humility,
- So shall it shine a lamp of love, and not the torch of strife:
- Otherwise the lantern of Diogenes, presumptuously thrust before the face,
- If it never find an honest man, shall often make an angered.
- Let honesty be companied by charity of heart, lest it walk unwelcome;
- Or the mouthing censor of others and himself, soon shall sink to scorn.
- Let honesty be added unto innocence of life: then a man may only be its
- martyr;
- But if openness of speech be found with secresy of guilt, the martyr will
- be seen a malefactor.
-
- There is a cunning scheme, to put on surface bluntness,
- And cover still deep water, with the clamorous ripples of a shallow.
- For a man, to gain his selfish ends, will make a stalking-horse of
- honesty;
- And hide his poaching limbs behind, that he may cheat the quicker.
- Such an one is loud and ostentatious, full of oaths for argument,
- Boastful of honour and sincerity, and not to be put down by facts:
- He is obstinate, and sheweth it for firmness; he is rude, displaying it
- for truth;
- And glorieth in doggedness of temper, as if it were uncompromising
- justice.
- Be aware of such a man; his brawling covereth designs;
- This specious show of honesty cometh as the herald of a thief:
- His feint is made with awkward clashing on the buckler's boss,
- But meanwhile doth his secret skill ensure its fatal aim.
- This is the hypocrite of honesty; ye may know him by an overacted part;
- Taking pains to turn and twist, where other men walk straight;
- Or walking straight, he will not step aside to let another pass,
- But roughly pusheth on, provoking opposition on the way;
- He is full of disquietude for calmness, full of intriguing for simplicity,
- Valorous with those who cannot fight, and humble to the brave:
- Where brotherly advice were good, this man rudely blameth,
- And on some small occasion, flattereth with coarse praise.
- The craven in a lion's skin hath conquered by his character for courage;
- Sheep's clothing helped the wolf, till he slew by his character for
- kindness.
-
- For honesty hath many gains, and well the wise have known
- This will prosper to the end, and fill their house with gold.
- The phosphorus of cheatery will fade, and all its profits perish,
- While honesty with growing light endureth as the moon.
- Yea, it would be wise in a world of thieves, where cheating were a virtue,
- To dare the vice of honesty, if any would be rich.
- For that which by the laws of God is heightened into duty,
- Ever, in the practice of a man, will be seen both policy and privilege.
- Thank God, ye toilers for your bread, in that, daily labouring,
- He hath suffered the bubbles of self-interest to float upon the stream of
- duty:
- For honesty, of every kind, approved by God and man,
- Of wealth and better weal is found the richest cornucopia.
- Tempered by humbleness and charity, honesty of speech hath honour;
- And mingled well with prudence, honesty of purpose hath its praise:
- Trust payeth homage unto truth, rewarding honesty of action:
- And all men love to lean on him, who never failed nor fainted.
- Freedom gloweth in his eyes, and Nobleness of nature at his heart,
- And Independence took a crown and fixed it on his head:
- So, he stood in his integrity, just and firm of purpose,
- Aiding many, fearing none, a spectacle to angels, and to men:
- Yea,--when the shattered globe shall rock in the throes of dissolution,
- Still, will he stand in his integrity, sublime--an honest man.
-
-
-OF SOCIETY.
-
-[Illustration: "B"]
-
- Better is the mass of men, Suspicion, than thy fears,
- Kinder than thy thoughts, O chilling heart of Prudence,
- Purer than thy judgments, ascetic tongue of Censure,
- In all things worthier to love, if not also wiser to esteem.
- Yea, let the moralist condemn, there be large extenuations of his verdict,
- Let the misanthrope shun men and abjure, the most are rather loveable
- than hateful.
- How many pleasant faces shed their light on every side,
- How many angels unawares have crossed thy casual way!
- How often, in thy journeyings, hast thou made thee instant friends,
- Found, to be loved a little while, and lost, to meet no more;
- Friends of happy reminiscence, although so transient in their converse,
- Liberal, cheerful, and sincere, a crowd of kindly traits.
- I have sped by land and sea, and mingled with much people,
- But never yet could find a spot, unsunned by human kindness;
- Some more, and some less,--but truly all can claim a little;
- And a man may travel through the world, and sow it thick with friendships.
-
- There be indeed, to say it in all sorrow, bad apostate souls,
- Deserted of their ministering angels, and given up to liberty of sin,--
- And other some, the miserly and mean, whose eyes are keen and greedy,
- With stony hearts, and iron fists, to filch and scrape and clutch,--
- And others yet again, the coarse in mind, selfish, sensual, brutish,
- Seeming as incapable of softer thoughts, and dead to better deeds;
- Such, no lover of the good, no follower of the generous and gentle,
- Can nearer grow to love, than may consist with pity.
- Few verily are these among the mass, and cast in fouler moulds,
- Few and poor in friends, and well-deserving of their poverty:
- Yet, or ever thou hast harshly judged, and linked their presence to
- disgust,
- Consider well the thousand things that made them all they are.
- Thou hast not thought upon the causes, ranged in consecutive necessity,
- Which tended long to these effects, with sure constraining power.
- For each of those unlovely ones, if thou couldst hear his story,
- Hath much to urge of just excuse, at least as men count justice:
- Foolish education, thwarted opportunities, natural propensities
- unchecked,--
- Thus were they discouraged from all good, and pampered in their evil;
- And, if thou wilt apprehend them well, tenderly looking on temptations,
- Bearing the base indulgently, and liberally dealing with the froward,
- Thou shalt discern a few fair fruits even upon trees so withered,
- Thou shalt understand how some may praise, and some be found to love them.
-
- Nevertheless for these, my counsel is, Avoid them if thou canst;
- For the finer edges of thy virtues will be dulled by attrition with their
- vice.
- And there is an enemy within thee; either to palliate their sin,
- Until, for surface-sweetness, thou too art drawn adown the vortex;
- Or, even unto fatal pride, to glorify thy purity by contrast,
- Until the publican and harlot stand nearer heaven than the Pharisee:
- Or daily strife against their ill, in subtleness may irritate thy soul,
- And in that struggle thou shall fail, even through infirmity of goodness;
- Or, callous by continuance of injuries, thou wilt cease to pardon,
- Cease to feel, and cease to care, a cold case-hardened man.
- Beware of their example,--and thine own; beware the hazards of the battle;
- But chiefly be thou ware of this, an unforgiving spirit.
- Many are the dangers and temptations compassing a bad man's presence;
- The upas hath a poisonous shade, and who would slumber there?
- Wherefore, avoid them if thou canst; only, under providence and duty,
- If thy lot be cast with Kedar, patiently and silently live to their
- rebuke.
-
- How beautiful thy feet, and full of grace thy coming,
- O better kind companion, that art well for either world!
- There is an atmosphere of happiness floating round that man,
- Love is throned upon his heart, and light is found within his dwelling:
- His eyes are rayed with peacefulness, and wisdom waiteth on his tongue;
- Seek him out, cherish him well, walking in the halo of his influence:
- For he shall be fragrance to thy soul, as a garden of sweet lilies,
- Hedged and apart from the outer world, an island of the blest among the
- seas.
-
- There is an outer world, and there is an inner centre;
- And many varying rings concentric round the self.
- For, first, about a man,--after his communion with Heaven,--
- Is found the helpmate even as himself, the wife of his vows and his
- affections:
- See then that ye love in faith, scorning petty jealousies,
- For Satan spoileth too much love, by souring it with doubts;
- See that intimacy die not to indifference, nor anxiety sink into
- moroseness,
- And tend ye well the mutual minds bound in a copartnership for life.
-
- Next of those concentric circles, radiating widely in circumference,
- Wheel in wheel, and world in world,--come the band of children:
- A tender nest of soft young hearts, each to be separately studied,
- A curious eager flock of minds, to be severally tamed and tutored.
- And a man, blest with these, hath made his own society,
- He is independent of the world, hanging on his friends more loosely:
- For the little faces round his hearth are friends enow for him,
- If he seek others, it is for sake of these, and less for his own pleasure.
- What companionship so sweet, yea, who can teach so well
- As these pure budding intellects, and bright unsullied hearts?
- What voice so musical as theirs, what visions of elegance so comely,
- What thoughts and hopes and holy prayers, can others cause like these?
- If ye count society for pastime,--what happier recreation than a
- nurseling,
- Its winning ways, its prattling tongue, its innocence and mirth?
- If ye count society for good,--how fair a field is here,
- To guide these souls to God, and multiply thyself for heaven!
- And this sweet social commerce with thy children groweth as their growth,
- Unless thou fail of duty, or have weaned them by thine absence.
- Keep them near thee, rear them well, guide, correct, instruct them;
- And be the playmate of their games, the judge in their complainings.
- So shall the maiden and the youth love thee as their sympathizing friend,
- And bring their joys to share with thee, their sorrows for consoling:
- Yea, their inmost hopes shall yearn to thee for counsel,
- They will not hide their very loves, if thou hast won their trust;
- But, even as man and woman, shall they gladly seek their father,
- Feeling yet as children feel, though void of fear in honour:
- And thou shall be a Nestor in the camp, the just and good old man,
- Hearty still, though full of years, and held the friend of all;
- No secret shall be kept from thee; for if ill, thy wisdom may repair it;
- If well, thy praise is precious; and they would not miss that prize.
- O the blessing of a home, where old and young mix kindly,
- The young unawed, the old unchilled, in unreserved communion!
- O that refuge from the world, when a stricken son or daughter
- May seek, with confidence of love, a father's hearth and heart;
- Sure of a welcome, though others cast them out; of kindness, though men
- scorn them;
- And finding there the last to blame, the earliest to commend.
- Come unto me, my son, if sin shall have tempted thee astray,
- I will not chide thee like the rest, but help thee to return;
- Come unto me, my son, if men rebuke and mock thee,
- There always shall be one to bless,--for I am on thy side!
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Alas,--and bitter is their loss, the parents, and the children,
- Who, loving up and down the world, have missed each other's friendship.
- Haply, it had grown of careless life, for years go swiftly by;
- Or sprang of too much carefulness, that drank up all the streams:
- Haply, sullen disappointment came and quenched the fire;
- Haply, sternness, or misrule, crushed or warped the feelings.
- Then, ill-combined in tempers, they learnt not each the other;
- The growing child grew out of love, and drew the breath of fear;
- The youth, ill-trained, renounced his fears, and made a league with
- cunning;
- And so those hardened men were foes, that should have been chief friends.
- Where was the cause, the mutual cause? O hunt it out to kill it:
- And what the cure, the simple cure?--A mutual flash of love.
- For dull estrangement's daily air froze up those early sympathies
- By cold continuance in apathy, or cutting winds of censure;
- It was a slow process, which any fleeting hour could have melted;
- But every hour duly came, and passed without the sun.
- Caution, care, and dry distrust, obscured each other's minds,
- Till both those gardens, rich to yield, were rank with many weeds:
- And doubt, a hidden worm, gnawed at the root of their Society,
- They lacked of mutual confidence, and lived in mutual dread.
- Judge me, many fathers; and hearken to my counsel, many sons;
- I come with good in either hand, to reconcile contentions;
- For better friends can no man have, than those whom God hath given,
- And he that hath despised the gift, thought ill of that he knew not.
- Be ye wiser,--(I speak unto the sons,)--and win paternal friendships,
- Cultivate their kindness, seek them out with honour, and be the screening
- Japhet to their failings:
- And be ye wiser,--(I speak unto the fathers)--gain those filial comrades,
- Cherish their reasonable converse, and look not with coldness on your
- children.
- For the friendship of a child is the brightest gem set upon the circlet
- of Society,
- A jewel worth a world of pains--a jewel seldom seen.
-
- The third cycle on the waters, another of those rings upon the onyx,
- A further definite broad zone, holdeth kith and kin:
- A motley band of many tribes, and under various banners;
- The intimate and strangers, the known and loved, or only seen for
- loathing:
- Some, dear for their deserts, shall honour and have honour of
- relationship,
- Some, despising duties, will add to it both burden and disgrace.
- A man's nearest kin are oftentimes far other than his dearest,
- Yet in the season of affliction those will haste to help him.
- For, note thou this, the providence of God hath bound up families
- together,
- To mutual aid and patient trial; yea, those ties are strong.
- Friends are ever dearer in thy wealth, but relations to be trusted in thy
- need,
- For these are God's appointed way, and those the choice of man:
- There is lower warmth in kin, but smaller truth in friends,
- The latter show more surface, and the first have more of depth:
- Relations rally to the rescue, even in estrangement and neglect,
- Where friends will have fled at thy defeat, even after promises and
- kindness;
- For friends come and go, the whim that bound may loose them,
- But none can dissever a relationship, and Fate hath tied the knot.
-
- Wide, and edged with shadowy bounds, a distant boulevard to the city,
- The common crowd of social life is buzzing round about:
- That is as the outer court, with all defences levelled,
- Ranged around a man's own fortress, and his father's house.
- For many friends go in and out, and praise thee, finding pasture,
- And some are honeycomb to-day, who turn to gall to-morrow:
- And many a garrulous acquaintance with his frequent visit
- Will spend his leisure to thy cost, selling dulness dearly:
- For the idle call is a heavy tax, where time is counted gold,
- And even in the day of relaxation, haply he may spare his presence,--
- He found himself alone, and came to talk,--till they that hear are tired;
- Let the man bethink him of an errand, that his face be not unwelcome.
-
- But many friends there be, both well and wisely greeted,
- Gladly are they hailed upon the hills, and are chidden that they come so
- seldom.
- Of such are the early recollections, school friendships that have thriven
- to grey hairs,
- And veteran men are young once more, and talk of boyish pranks:
- And such, yet older on the list, are those who loved thy father,
- Thy father's friend, and thine, who tendereth thee tried love:
- Such also, many gentle hearts, whom thou hast known too lately,
- Hastening now to learn their worth, and chary of those minutes:
- And such, thy faithful pastor, coming to thy home with peace;--
- Greet the good man heartily,--and bid thy children bless him!
-
- Many thoughts, many thoughts,--who can catch them all?
- The best are ever swiftest winged, the duller lag behind:
- For, behold, in these vast themes, my mind is as a forest of the West,
- And flocking pigeons come in clouds, and bend the groaning branches;
- Here for a rest, then off and away,--they have sped to other climes,
- And leave me to my peace once more, a holiday from thoughts.
- I dare not lure them back, for the mighty subject of Society
- Would tempt to many a hackneyed note in many a weary key:
- Sage warnings, stout advice, experiences ever to be learned,
- The foolish floatiness of vanity, and solemn trumperies of pride,--
- Economy, the poor man's mint,--extravagance, the rich man's pitfall,
- Harmful copings with the better, and empty-headed apings of the worse,
- Circumstance and custom, sympathies, antipathies, diverse kinds of
- conversation,
- Vapid pleasures, the weariness of gaiety, the strife and bustle of the
- world,
- Home comforts, the miseries of style, the cobweb lines of etiquette,
- The hollowness of courtesies, and substance of deceits,--idleness,
- business, and pastime,--
- The multitude of matters to be done, the when, and where, and how,
- And varying shades of character, to do, undo, or miss them,--
- All these, and many more alike, thick converging fancies,
- Flit in throngs about my theme, as honey-bees at even to their hive.
- Find an end, or make one: these seeds are dragon's teeth:
- Sown thoughts grow to things, and fill that field, the world:
- Many wise have gone before, and used the sickle well;
- Who can find a corner now, where none have bound the sheaves?
- So, other some may reap: I do but glean and gather:
- My sorry handful hath been culled after the ripe harvest of Society.
-
-
-OF SOLITUDE.
-
-[Illustration: "W"]
-
- Who hath known his brother,--or found him in his freedom unrestrained?
- Even he, whose hidden glance hath watched his deepest Solitude.
- For we walk the world in domino, putting on characters and habits,
- And wear a social Janus mask, while others stand around:
- I speak not of the hypocrite, nor dream of meant deceptions,
- But of that quick unconscious change, whereof the best know most.
-
- For mind hath its influence on mind; and no man is free but when alone;
- Yea, let a dog be watching thee, its eye will tend to thy restraint:
- Self-possession cannot be so perfect, with another intellect beside thee,
- It is not as a natural result, but rather the educated produce:
- The presence of a second spirit must control thine own,
- And throw it off its equipoise of peace, to balance by an effort.
- The common minds of common men know of this but little;
- What then? they know nothing of themselves: I speak to those who know.
- The consciousness that some are hearing, cometh as a care,
- The sense that some are watching near, bindeth thee to caution;
- And the tree of tender nerves shrinketh as a touched mimosa,
- Drooping like a plant in drought, with half its strength decayed.
- There are antipathies warning from the many, and sympathies drawing to
- the few,
- But merchant-minds have crushed the first, and cannot feel the latter:
- Whereas to the quickened apprehension of a keen and spiritual intellect,
- Antipathies are galling, and sympathies oppress, and solitude is quiet.
-
- He that dwelleth mainly by himself, heedeth most of others,
- But they that live in crowds, think chiefly of themselves.
- There is indeed a selfish seeming, where the anchorite liveth alone,
- But probe his thoughts,--they travel far, dreaming for ever of the world:
- And there is an apparent generosity, when a man mixeth freely with his
- fellows;
- But prove his mind, by day and night, his thoughts are all of self:
- The world, inciting him to pleasures, or relentlessly provoking him to
- toil,
- Is full of anxious rivals, each with a difference of interest;
- So must he plan and practise for himself, even as his own best friend;
- And the gay soul of dissipation never had a thought unselfish.
- The hermit standeth out of strife, abiding in a contemplative calmness;
- What shall he contemplate,--himself? a meagre theme for musing:
- He hath cast off follies, and kept aloof from cares; a man of simple
- wants;
- God and the soul, these are his excuse, a just excuse, for solitude:
- But he carried with him to his cell the half-dead feelings of humanity;
- There were they rested and refreshed; and he yearned once more on men.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Where is the wise, or the learned, or the good, that sought not solitude
- for thinking,
- And from seclusion's secret vale brought forth his precious fruits?
- Forests of Aricia, your deep shade mellowed Numa's wisdom,
- Peaceful gardens of Vaucluse, ye nourished Petrarch's love;
- Solitude made a Cincinnatus, ripening the hero and the patriot,
- And taught De Staël self-knowledge, even in the damp Bastile;
- It fostered the piety of Jerome, matured the labours of Augustine,
- And gave imperial Charles religion for ambition:
- That which Scipio praised, that which Alfred practised,
- Which fired Demosthenes to eloquence, and fed the mind of Milton,
- Which quickened zeal, nurtured genius, found out the secret things of
- science,
- Helped repentance, shamed folly, and comforted the good with peace,--
- By all men just and wise, by all things pure and perfect,
- How truly, Solitude, art thou the fostering nurse of greatness!
-
- Enough;--the theme is vast; sear me these necks of Hydra:
- What shall drive away the thoughts flocking to this carcase?
- Yea,--that all which man may think, hath long been said of Solitude:
- For many wise have proved and preached its evils and its good.
- I cannot add,--I will not steal; enough, for all is spoken:
- Yet heed thou these for practice, and discernment among men.
-
- There are pompous talkers, solemn, oracular, and dull:
- Track them from society to solitude; and there ye find them fools.
- There are light-hearted jesters, taking up with company for pastime;
- How speed they when alone?--serious, wise, and thoughtful.
- And wherefore? both are actors, saving when in solitude,
- There they live their truest life, and all things show sincere:
- But the fool by pomposity of speech striveth to be counted wise,
- And the wise, for holiday and pleasance, playeth with the fool's best
- bauble.
- The solemn seemer, as a rule, will be found more ignorant and shallow
- Than those who laugh both loud and long, content to hide their knowledge.
-
- For thee; seek thou Solitude, but neither in excess, nor morosely;
- Seek her for her precious things, and not of thine own pride.
- For there, separate from a crowd, the still small voice will talk with
- thee,
- Truth's whisper, heard and echoed by responding conscience;
- There, shalt thou gather up the ravelled skeins of feeling,
- And mend the nets of usefulness, and rest awhile for duties;
- There, thou shalt hive thy lore, and eat the fruits of study,
- For Solitude delighteth well to feed on many thoughts:
- There, as thou sittest peaceful, communing with fancy,
- The precious poetry of life shall gild its leaden cares:
- There, as thou walkest by the sea, beneath the gentle stars,
- Many kindling seeds of good will sprout within thy soul;
- Thou shalt weep in Solitude,--thou shalt pray in Solitude,
- Thou shalt sing for joy of heart, and praise the grace of Solitude.
- Pass on, pass on!--for this is the path of wisdom:
- God make thee prosper on the way; I leave thee well with Solitude.
-
-
-RECAPITULATION.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Every beginning is shrouded in a mist, those vague ideas beyond,
- And the traveller setteth on his journey, oppressed with many thoughts,
- Balancing his hopes and fears, and looking for some order in the chaos,
- Some secret path between the cliffs, that seem to bar his way:
- So, he commenceth at a clue, unravelling its tangled skein,
- And boldly speedeth on to thread the labyrinth before him.
- Then as he gropeth in the darkness, light is attendant on his steps,
- He walketh straight in fervent faith, and difficulties vanish at his
- presence;
- The very flashing of his sword scattereth those shadowy foes;
- Confident and sanguine of success, he goeth forth conquering and to
- conquer.
-
- Every middle is burdened with a weariness,--to have to go as far again,--
- And Diligence is sick at heart, and Enterprise foot-sore:
- That which began in zeal, bursting as a fresh-dug spring,
- Goeth on doggedly in toil, and hath no help of nature:
- Then, is need of moral might, to wrestle with the animal re-action,
- Still to fight, with few men left, and still though faint pursuing.
- The middle is a marshy flat, whereon the wheels go heavily,
- With clouds of doubt above, and ruts of discouragement below:
- Press on, sturdy traveller, yet a league, and yet a league!
- While every step is binding wings on thy victorious feet.
-
- Every end is happiness, the glorious consummation of design,
- The perils past, the fears annulled, the journey at its close:
- And the traveller resteth in complacency, home-returned at last:
- Work done may claim its wages, the goal gained hath won its prize:
- While the labour lasted, while the race was running,
- Many-times the sinews ached, and half refused the struggle:
- But now, all is quietness, a pleasant hour given to repose;
- Calmness in the retrospect of good, and calmness in the prospect of a
- blessing.
- Hope was glad in the beginning, and fear was sad midway,
- But sweet fruition cometh in the end, a harvest safe and sure.
- That which is, can never not have been: facts are solid as the pyramids:
- A thing done is written in the rock, yea, with a pen of iron.
- Uncertainty no more can scare, the proof is seen complete,
- Nor accident render unaccomplished, for the deed is finished.
- Thus the end shall crown the work, with grace, grace, unto the top-stone,
- And the work shall triumph in its crown, with peace, peace, unto the
- builder.
-
- I have written, as other some of old, in quaint and meaning phrase,
- Of many things for either world, a crowd of facts and fancies:
- And will ye judge me, men of mind?--judge in kindly calmness;
- For bitter words of haste or hate have often been repented.
- Deep dreaming upon surface reading; imagery crowded over argument;
- Order less considered in the multitude of thoughts: this witnessing is
- just.
- Scripture gave the holier themes, the well-turned words and wisdom;
- While Fancy on her swallow's wing skimmed those deeper waters.
- And wilt thou say with shrewdness,--He hath burnished up old truths,
- But where he seemed to fashion new, the novelty was false?
- Alas, for us in these last days, our elders reaped the harvest:
- Alas, for all men in all times, who glean so many tares!
- That which is true, how should it be new? for time is old in years:
- That which is new, how should it be true? for I am young in wisdom:
- Nevertheless, I have spoken at my best, according to the mercies given me,
- Of high, and deep, and famous things, of Evil, or of Good.
- I have told of Errors near akin to Truth, and wholesomes linked with
- poison;
- Of subtle Uses in the humblest, and the deep laid plots of Pride:
- I have praised Wisdom, comforted thy Hope, and proved to thee the folly
- of Complainings;
- Hinted at the hazard of an Influence, and turned thee from the terrors of
- Ambition.
- I have shown thee thy captivity to Law: yet bade thee hide Humilities;
- I have lifted the curtains of Memory; and smoothed the soft pillow of
- Rest.
- Experience had his sober hour; and Character its keen appreciation;
- And holy Anger stood sublime, where Hatred fell condemned.
- Prayer spake the mind of God, even in His own good words:
- And Zeal, with kindness warmly mixt, allied him to Discretion.
- I taught thee that nothing is a Trifle, even to the laugh of Recreation;
- I led thee with the Train of Religion, to be dazzled at the name of the
- Triune.
- Thought confessed his unseen fears; and Speech declared his triumphs;
- I sang the blessedness of books; and commended the prudence of a letter:
- Riches found their room, either unto honour--or despising:
- Inventions took their lower place, for all things come of God.
- I scorned Ridicule; nor would humble me for Praise; for I had gained
- Self-knowledge;
- And pleaded fervently for Brutes, who suffer for man's sin.
- Then, I rose to Friendship; and bathed in all the tenderness of Love;
- Knew the purity of Marriage; and blest the face of Children.
- And whereas, by petulance or pride, I had haply said some evil,
- Mine after-thought was Tolerance, to bear the faults of all:
- Many faults, ill to bear, bred the theme of Sorrow;
- Many virtues, dear to see, induced the gush of Joy.
-
- Thus, for awhile, as leaving thee in joy, was I loth to break that spell;
- I roamed to other things and thoughts, and fashioned other books.
- But in a season of reflection, after many days,
- A thought stood before me in its garment of the past,--and lo, a legion
- with it!
- They came in thronging bands,--I could not fight nor fly them,--
- And so they took me to their tent, the prisoner of thoughts.
-
- Then, I bade thee greet me well, and heed my cheerful counsels;
- For every day we have a Friend, who changeth not with time.
- Gladly did I speak of my commission, for I felt it graven on my heart,
- And could not hold my wiser peace, but magnified mine office.
- Mystery had left her echoes in my mind, and I discoursed her secret:
- And thence I turned aside to man, and judged him for his Gifts.
- Beauty, noble thesis, had a world of sweets to sing of,
- And dated all her praise from God, the birthday of the soul.
- Thence grew Fame; and Flattery came like Agag;
- But this was as the nauseous dregs, of that inspiring cup:
- Forth from Flattery sprang in opposition harsh and dull Neglect;
- And kind Contentment's gentle face to smile away the sadness.
- Life, all buoyancy and light, and Death, that sullen silence,
- Sped the soul to Immortality, the final home of man.
- Then, in metaphysical review, passed a triple troop,
- Swift Ideas, sounding Names, and heavily armed Things:
- Faith spake of her achievements even among men her brethren;
- And Honesty, with open mouth, would vindicate himself:
- The retrospect of Social life had many truths to tell of,
- And then I left thee to thy Solitude, learning there of Wisdom.
-
- Friend and scholar, lover of the right, mine equal kind companion,--
- I prize indeed thy favour, and these sympathies are dear:
- Still, if thy heart be little with me, wot thou well, my brother,
- I canvass not the smiles of praise, nor dread the frowns of censure.
- Through many themes in many thoughts, have we held sweet converse;
- But God alone be praised for mind! He only is sufficient,
- And every thought in every theme by prayer had been established:
- Who then should fear the face of man, when God hath answered prayer?--
- I speak it not in arrogance of heart, but humbly as of justice,
- I think it not in vanity of soul, but tenderly, for gratitude,--
- God hath blest my mind, and taught it many truths:
- And I have echoed some to thee, in weakness, yet sincerely:
- Yea, though ignorance and error shall have marred those lessons of His
- teaching,
- I stand in mine own Master's praise, or fall to His reproof.
- If thou lovest, help me with thy blessing; if otherwise, mine shall be
- for thee;
- If thou approvest, heed my words; if otherwise, in kindness be my teacher.
- Many mingled thoughts for self have warped my better aim;
- Many motives tempted still, to toil for pride or praise:
- Alas, I have loved pride and praise, like others worse or worthier;
- But hate and fear them now, as snakes that fastened on my hand:
- Scævola burnt both hand and crime; but Paul flung the viper on the fire:
- He shook it off, and felt no harm: so be it! I renounce them.
- Rebuke then, if thou wilt rebuke,--but neither hastily nor harshly;
- Or, if thou wilt commend, be it honestly, of right: I work for God and
- good.
-
-
-[Illustration: The End of the Second Series]
-
-
-
-
-BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Apparent typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-Hyphenation has been made consistent.
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Proverbial Philosophy, by Martin F. Tupper
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Proverbial Philosophy
- The First and Second Series
-
-
-Author: Martin F. Tupper
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2015 [eBook #50064]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Chris Pinfield, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 50064-h.htm or 50064-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50064/50064-h/50064-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50064/50064-h.zip)
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Small capitals have been replaced by full capitals.
-
- A transliterated Greek phrase is enclosed by equal signs
- (=THEÔ DOXA=)
-
- The illustrations sometimes include the title of a section
- of the poem, lines from the section (not reproduced), text
- not forming part of the poem, or the initial letter of the
- following stanza. Initial letters are placed in quotation
- marks.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: Proverbial Philosophy]
-
-
-PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-(THE FIRST AND SECOND SERIES.)
-
-by
-
-MARTIN F. TUPPER, M.A., D.C.L., F.R.S.,
-
-Of Christchurch, Oxford.
-
-Illustrated.
-
-A New Edition.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-London:
-Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street.
-1867.
-
-London:
-Bradbury, Evans, and Co., Printers, Whitefriars.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-_FIRST SERIES._
- PAGE
-
- PREFATORY 1
- THE WORDS OF WISDOM 4
- OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE 8
- OF ANTICIPATION 12
- OF HIDDEN USES 14
- OF COMPENSATION 21
- OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES 27
- OF MEMORY 33
- THE DREAM OF AMBITION 38
- OF SUBJECTION 41
- OF REST 51
- OF HUMILITY 55
- OF PRIDE 59
- OF EXPERIENCE 62
- OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER 65
- OF HATRED AND ANGER 74
- OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL 76
- OF PRAYER 81
- THE LORD'S PRAYER 86
- OF DISCRETION 88
- OF TRIFLES 92
- OF RECREATION 95
- THE TRAIN OF RELIGION 100
- OF A TRINITY 103
- OF THINKING 107
- OF SPEAKING 115
- OF READING 119
- OF WRITING 121
- OF WEALTH 125
- OF INVENTION 130
- OF RIDICULE 134
- OF COMMENDATION 137
- OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE 142
- OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS 150
- OF FRIENDSHIP 153
- OF LOVE 158
- OF MARRIAGE 161
- OF EDUCATION 167
- OF TOLERANCE 177
- OF SORROW 181
- OF JOY 184
-
-_SECOND SERIES._
-
- INTRODUCTORY 189
- OF CHEERFULNESS 192
- OF YESTERDAY 197
- OF TO-DAY 203
- OF TO-MORROW 207
- OF AUTHORSHIP 210
- OF MYSTERY 219
- OF GIFTS 227
- OF BEAUTY 233
- OF FAME 250
- OF FLATTERY 258
- OF NEGLECT 266
- OF CONTENTMENT 275
- OF LIFE 281
- OF DEATH 288
- OF IMMORTALITY 297
- OF IDEAS 317
- OF NAMES 321
- OF THINGS 327
- OF FAITH 331
- OF HONESTY 341
- OF SOCIETY 348
- OF SOLITUDE 357
- RECAPITULATION 362
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
-_FIRST SERIES._
- DESIGNER. ENGRAVER. PAGE
-
- Title Page GUSTAVE DORÉ. _W. J. Linton._
- Floral Title H. N. HUMPHREYS. _J. Swain._
- Prefatory J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 1
- " " " 3
- The Words of Wisdom H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 4
- Memory and Diligence M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 5
- Of Truth in Things False J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 7
- Of Anticipation T. DALZIEL. " 12
- Of Hidden Uses E. DUNCAN. " 14
- " B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 18
- Of Compensation J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 20
- " " " 25
- Of Indirect Influences E. H. CORBOULD. " 26
- " G. DODGSON. " 29
- " W. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 32
- Of Memory W. L. LEITCH. _Dalziel Brs._ 33
- " B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 36
- The Dream of Ambition M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 38
- Of Subjection E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 48
- Of Subjection E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 49
- Of Rest M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 53
- Of Humility J. C. HORSLEY. _J. Thompson._ 55
- Of Pride J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 59
- " " " 61
- Of Experience T. DALZIEL. " 62
- Of Estimating Character J. TENNIEL. " 65
- " " " 71
- Of Hatred and Anger C. W. COPE, R.A. _S. Williams._ 74
- Of Good in Things Evil J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 76
- Of Prayer J. C. HORSLEY. " 81
- The Lord's Prayer C. W. COPE, R.A. _S. Williams._ 86
- Of Discretion E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 88
- Of Recreation E. DUNCAN. " 95
- " E. H. CORBOULD. " 99
- The Train of Religion J. TENNIEL. " 100
- Of Thinking " " 107
- Of Speaking G. DODGSON. " 114
- Of Writing J. TENNIEL. " 121
- Of Wealth J. GILBERT. " 125
- Of Invention B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 132
- Of Ridicule J. GODWIN. _Dalziel Brs._ 134
- Of Self-Acquaintance J. GILBERT. " 142
- Of Cruelty to Animals W. HARVEY. " 149
- Of Love H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 158
- Of Marriage J. SEVERN. " 161
- Of Education J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 167
- " J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 176
- Of Sorrow C. W. COPE, R.A. _W. J. Green._ 181
- Of Joy J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 184
-
- _SECOND SERIES._
-
- Title Page J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 187
- Introductory H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 189
- Of Yesterday B. FOSTER. " 198
- Of To-morrow F. R. PICKERSGILL, A.R.A. _Dalziel Brs._ 206
- Of Mystery J. GILBERT. " 218
- Of Beauty B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 237
- " J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 239
- Of Fame F. R. PICKERSGILL, A.R.A. " 249
- Of Neglect E. H. CORBOULD. _H. Vizetelly._ 266
- Of Contentment B. FOSTER. " 275
- Of Death J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 288
- " J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 291
- Of Names J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 321
- Of Faith J. TENNIEL. " 331
- " W. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 333
- Of Society E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 352
- Of Solitude J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 359
- Initial Letters H. N. HUMPHREYS. { _H. Vizetelly_
- { _and_
- { _J. Swain._
-
-
-
-
-FIRST SERIES.
-
-
-[Illustration: Prefatory "T"]
-
-PREFATORY.
-
- Thoughts, that have tarried in my mind, and peopled its inner chambers,
- The sober children of reason, or desultory train of fancy;
- Clear running wine of conviction, with the scum and the lees of
- speculation;
- Corn from the sheaves of science, with stubble from mine own garner:
- Searchings after Truth, that have tracked her secret lodes,
- And come up again to the surface-world, with a knowledge grounded deeper;
- Arguments of high scope, that have soared to the key-stone of heaven,
- And thence have swooped to their certain mark, as the falcon to its
- quarry;
- The fruits I have gathered of prudence, the ripened harvest of my musings,
- These commend I unto thee, O docile scholar of Wisdom,
- These I give to thy gentle heart, thou lover of the right.
-
- What, though a guilty man renew that hallowed theme,
- And strike with feebler hand the harp of Sirach's son?
- What, though a youthful tongue take up that ancient parable,
- And utter faintly forth dark sayings as of old?
- Sweet is the virgin honey, though the wild bee have stored it in a reed,
- And bright the jewelled band, that circleth an Ethiop's arm;
- Pure are the grains of gold in the turbid stream of Ganges,
- And fair the living flowers, that spring from the dull cold sod.
- Wherefore, thou gentle student, bend thine ear to my speech,
- For I also am as thou art; our hearts can commune together:
- To meanest matters will I stoop, for mean is the lot of mortal;
- I will rise to noblest themes, for the soul hath an heritage of glory:
- The passions of puny man; the majestic characters of God;
- The feverish shadows of time, and the mighty substance of eternity.
-
- Commend thy mind unto candour, and grudge not as though thou hadst a
- teacher,
- Nor scorn angelic Truth for the sake of her evil herald;
- Heed not him, but hear his words, and care not whence they come;
- The viewless winds might whisper them, the billows roar them forth,
- The mean unconscious sedge sigh them in the ear of evening,
- Or the mind of pride conceive, and the mouth of folly speak them.
- Lo now, I stand not forth laying hold on spear and buckler,
- I come a man of peace, to comfort, not to combat;
- With soft persuasive speech to charm thy patient ear,
- Giving the hand of fellowship, acknowledging the heart of sympathy:
- Let us walk together as friends in the shaded paths of meditation,
- Nor Judgment set his seal until he hath poised his balance;
- That the chastenings of mild reproof may meet unwitting error,
- And Charity not be a stranger at the board that is spread for brothers.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: The Words of Wisdom]
-
-THE WORDS OF WISDOM.
-
- Few and precious are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter:
- To what shall their rarity be likened? What price shall count their worth?
- Perfect and much to be desired, and giving joy with riches,
- No lovely thing on earth can picture all their beauty.
- They be chance pearls, flung among the rocks by the sullen waters of
- Oblivion,
- Which Diligence loveth to gather, and hang around the neck of Memory;
- They be white-winged seeds of happiness, wafted from the islands of the
- blessed,
- Which Thought carefully tendeth, in the kindly garden of the heart;
- They be sproutings of an harvest for eternity, bursting through the tilth
- of time,
- Green promise of the golden wheat, that yieldeth angels' food;
- They be drops of the crystal dew, which the wings of seraphs scatter,
- When on some brighter sabbath, their plumes quiver most with delight:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Yet more, for the half is not said, of their might, and dignity, and
- value;
- For life-giving be they and glorious, redolent of sanctity and heaven:
- As fumes of hallowed incense, that veil the throne of the Most High;
- As beaded bubbles that sparkle on the rim of the cup of immortality;
- As wreaths of the rainbow spray, from the pure cataracts of truth:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
- Yet once again, loving student, suffer the praises of thy teacher,
- For verily the sun of the mind, and the life of the heart is Wisdom:
- She is pure and full of light, crowning grey hairs with lustre,
- And kindling the eye of youth with a fire not its own;
- And her words, whereunto canst thou liken them? for earth cannot show
- their peers:
- They be grains of the diamond sand, the radiant floor of heaven,
- Rising in sunny dust behind the chariot of God;
- They be flashes of the dayspring from on high, shed from the windows of
- the skies;
- They be streams of living waters, fresh from the fountain of Intelligence:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
- For these shall guide thee well, and guard thee on thy way;
- And wanting all beside, with these shalt thou be rich:
- Though all around be woe, these shall make thee happy;
- Though all within be pain, these shall bring thee health:
- Thy good shall grow into ripeness, thine evil wither and decay,
- And Wisdom's words shall sweetly charm thy doubtful into virtues:
- Meanness shall then be frugal care; where shame was, thou art modest;
- Cowardice riseth into caution, rashness is sobered into courage;
- The wrathful spirit, rendering a reason, standeth justified in anger;
- The idle hand hath fair excuse, propping the thoughtful forehead.
- Life shall have no labyrinth but thy steps can track it,
- For thou hast a silken clue, to lead thee through the darkness:
- The rampant Minotaur of ignorance shall perish at thy coming,
- And thine enfranchised fellows hail thy white victorious sails.
- Wherefore, friend and scholar, hear the words of Wisdom;
- Whether she speaketh to thy soul in the full chords of revelation;
- In the teaching earth, or air, or sea; in the still melodies of thought;
- Or, haply, in the humbler strains that would detain thee here.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Error is a hardy plant; it flourisheth in every soil;
- In the heart of the wise and good, alike with the wicked and foolish.
- For there is no error so crooked, but it hath in it some lines of truth:
- Nor is any poison so deadly, that it serveth not some wholesome use:
- And the just man, enamoured of the right, is blinded by the speciousness
- of wrong;
- And the prudent, perceiving an advantage, is content to overlook the harm.
- On all things created remaineth the half-effaced signature of God,
- Somewhat of fair and good, though blotted by the finger of corruption:
- And if error cometh in like a flood, it mixeth with streams of truth;
- And the Adversary loveth to have it so, for thereby many are decoyed.
- Providence is dark in its permissions; yet one day, when all is known,
- The universe of reason shall acknowledge how just and good were they;
- For the wise man leaneth on his wisdom, and the righteous trusteth to his
- righteousness,
- And those, who thirst for independence, are suffered to drink of
- disappointment.
- Wherefore?--to prove and humble them; and to teach the idolaters of Truth,
- That it is but the ladder unto Him, on whom only they should trust.
-
- There is truth in the wildest scheme that imaginative heat hath
- engendered,
- And a man may gather somewhat from the crudest theories of fancy:
- The alchymist laboureth in folly, but catcheth chance gleams of wisdom,
- And findeth out many inventions, though his crucible breed not gold;
- The sinner, toying with witchcraft, thinketh to delude his fellows,
- But there be very spirits of evil, and what if they come at his bidding?
- He is a bold bad man who dareth to tamper with the dead;
- For their whereabout lieth in a mystery--that vestibule leading to
- Eternity,
- The waiting-room for unclad ghosts, before the presence-chamber of their
- King:
- Mind may act upon mind, though bodies be far divided;
- For the life is in the blood, but souls communicate unseen:
- And the heat of an excited intellect, radiating to its fellows,
- Doth kindle dry leaves afar off, while the green wood around it is
- unwarmed.
- The dog may have a spirit, as well as his brutal master;
- A spirit to live in happiness: for why should he be robbed of his
- existence?
- Hath he not a conscience of evil, a glimmer of moral sense,
- Love and hatred, courage and fear, and visible shame and pride?
- There may be a future rest for the patient victims of the cruel;
- And a season allotted for their bliss, to compensate for unjust suffering.
- Spurn not at seeming error, but dig below its surface for the truth;
- And beware of seeming truths, that grow on the roots of error:
- For comely are the apples that spring from the Dead Sea's cursed shore,
- But within are they dust and ashes, and the hand that plucked them shall
- rue it.
-
- A frequent similar effect argueth a constant cause:
- Yet who hath counted the links that bind an omen to its issue?
- Who hath expounded the law that rendereth calamities gregarious,
- Pressing down with yet more woes the heavy-laden mourner?
- Who knoweth wherefore a monsoon should swell the sails of the prosperous,
- Blithely speeding on their course the children of good luck?
- Who hath companied a vision from the horn or ivory gate?
- Or met another's mind in his, and explained its presence?
- There is a secret somewhat in antipathies; and love is more than fancy;
- Yea, and a palpable notice warneth of an instant danger;
- For the soul hath its feelers, cobwebs floating on the wind,
- That catch events in their approach with sure and apt presentiment;
- So that some halo of attraction heraldeth a coming friend,
- Investing in his likeness the stranger that passed on before;
- And while the word is in thy mouth, behold thy word fulfilled,
- And he of whom we spake can answer for himself.
- O man, little hast thou learnt of truth in things most true,
- How therefore shall thy blindness wot of truth in things most false?
- Thou hast not yet perceived the causes of life or motion,
- How then canst thou define the subtle sympathies of mind?
- For the spirit, sharpest and strongest when disease hath rent the body,
- Hath welcomed kindred spirits in nightly visitations,
- Or learnt from restless ghosts dark secrets of the living,
- And helped slow justice to her prey by the dreadful teaching of a dream.
-
- Verily, there is nothing so true, that the damps of error have not warped
- it;
- Verily, there is nothing so false, that a sparkle of truth is not in it.
- For the enemy, the father of lies, the giant Upas of creation,
- Whose deadly shade hath blasted this once green garden of the Lord,
- Can but pervert the good, but may not create the evil;
- He destroyeth, but cannot build; for he is not antagonist deity:
- Mighty is his stolen power, yet is he a creature and a subject;
- Not a maker of abstract wrong, but a spoiler of concrete right:
- The fiend hath not a royal crown; he is but a prowling robber,
- Suffered, for some mysterious end, to haunt the King's highway;
- And the keen sword he beareth, once was a simple ploughshare;
- Yea, and his panoply of error is but a distortion of the truth:
- The sickle that once reaped righteousness, beaten from its useful curve,
- With axe, and spike, and bar, headeth the marauder's halbert.
- Seek not further, O man, to solve the dark riddle of sin;
- Suffice it, that thine own bad heart is to thee thine origin of evil.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF ANTICIPATION.
-
- Thou hast seen many sorrows, travel-stained pilgrim of the world,
- But that which hath vexed thee most hath been the looking for evil;
- And though calamities have crossed thee, and misery been heaped on thy
- head,
- Yet ills, that never happened, have chiefly made thee wretched.
- The sting of pain and the edge of pleasure are blunted by long
- expectation,
- For the gall and the balm alike are diluted in the waters of patience:
- And often thou sippest sweetness, ere the cup is dashed from thy lip;
- Or drainest the gall of fear, while evil is passing by thy dwelling.
- A man too careful of danger liveth in continual torment,
- But a cheerful expecter of the best hath a fountain of joy within him:
- Yea, though the breath of disappointment should chill the sanguine heart,
- Speedily gloweth it again, warmed by the live embers of hope;
- Though the black and heavy surge close above the head for a moment,
- Yet the happy buoyancy of Confidence riseth superior to Despair.
- Verily, evils may be courted, may be wooed and won by distrust:
- For the wise Physician of our weal loveth not an unbelieving spirit;
- And to those giveth He good, who rely on His hand for good;
- And those leaveth He to evil, who fear, but trust Him not.
- Ask for good, and hope it, for the ocean of good is fathomless;
- Ask for good, and have it, for thy Friend would see thee happy;
- But to the timid heart, to the child of unbelief and dread,
- That leaneth on his own weak staff, and trusteth the sight of his eyes,
- The evil he feared shall come, for the soil is ready for the seed,
- And suspicion hath coldly put aside the hand that was ready to help him.
- Therefore look up, sad spirit; be strong, thou coward heart,
- Or fear will make thee wretched, though evil follow not behind:
- Cease to anticipate misfortune; there are still many chances of escape;
- But if it come, be courageous; face it, and conquer thy calamity.
- There is not an enemy so stout, as to storm and take the fortress of the
- mind,
- Unless its infirmity turn traitor, and Fear unbar the gates.
- The valiant standeth as a rock, and the billows break upon him;
- The timorous is a skiff unmoored, tost and mocked at by a ripple:
- The valiant holdeth fast to good, till evil wrench it from him;
- The timorous casteth it aside, to meet the worst half way:
- Yet oftentimes is evil but a braggart, that provoketh and will not fight;
- Or the feint of a subtle fencer, who measureth his thrust elsewhere:
- Or perchance a blessing in a masque, sent to try thy trust,
- The precious smiting of a friend, whose frowns are all in love:
- Often the storm threateneth, but is driven to other climes,
- And the weak hath quailed in fear, while the firm hath been glad in his
- confidence.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF HIDDEN USES.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The sea-wort floating on the waves, or rolled up high along the shore,
- Ye counted useless and vile, heaping on it names of contempt:
- Yet hath it gloriously triumphed, and man been humbled in his ignorance,
- For health is in the freshness of its savour, and it cumbereth the beach
- with wealth;
- Comforting the tossings of pain with its violet-tinctured essence,
- And by its humbler ashes enriching many proud.
- Be this, then, a lesson to thy soul, that thou reckon nothing worthless,
- Because thou heedest not its use, nor knowest the virtues thereof.
- And herein, as thou walkest by the sea, shall weeds be a type and an
- earnest
- Of the stored and uncounted riches lying hid in all creatures of God:
- There be flowers making glad the desert, and roots fattening the soil,
- And jewels in the secret deep, scattered among groves of coral,
- And comforts to crown all wishes, and aids unto every need,
- Influences yet unthought, and virtues, and many inventions,
- And uses above and around, which man hath not yet regarded.
- Not long to charm away disease hath the crocus yielded up its bulb,
- Nor the willow lent its bark, nor the nightshade its vanquished poison;
- Not long hath the twisted leaf, the fragrant gift of China,
- Nor that nutritious root, the boon of far Peru,
- Nor the many-coloured dahlia, nor the gorgeous flaunting cactus,
- Nor the multitude of fruits and flowers, ministered to life and luxury:
- Even so, there be virtues yet unknown in the wasted foliage of the elm,
- In the sun-dried harebell of the downs, and the hyacinth drinking in the
- meadow,
- In the sycamore's winged fruit, and the facet-cut cones of the cedar;
- And the pansy and bright geranium live not alone for beauty,
- Nor the waxen flower of the arbute, though it dieth in a day,
- Nor the sculptured crest of the fir, unseen but by the stars;
- And the meanest weed of the garden serveth unto many uses,
- The salt tamarisk, and juicy flag, the freckled orchis, and the daisy.
- The world may laugh at famine, when forest-trees yield bread,
- When acorns give out fragrant drink, and the sap of the linden is as
- fatness:
- For every green herb, from the lotus to the darnel,
- Is rich with delicate aids to help incurious man.
-
- Still, Mind is up and stirring, and pryeth in the corners of contrivance,
- Often from the dark recesses picking out bright seeds of truth:
- Knowledge hath clipped the lightning's wings, and mewed it up for a
- purpose,
- Training to some domestic task the fiery bird of heaven;
- Tamed is the spirit of the storm, to slave in all peaceful arts,
- To walk with husbandry and science; to stand in the vanguard against
- death:
- And the chemist balanceth his elements with more than magic skill,
- Commanding stones that they be bread, and draining sweetness out of
- wormwood.
- Yet man, heedless of a God, counteth up vain reckonings,
- Fearing to be jostled and starved out, by the too prolific increase of
- his kind;
- And asketh, in unbelieving dread, for how few years to come
- Will the black cellars of the world yield unto him fuel for his winter.
- Might not the wide waste sea be pent within narrower bounds?
- Might not the arm of diligence make the tangled wilderness a garden?
- And for aught thou canst tell, there may be a thousand methods
- Of comforting thy limbs in warmth, though thou kindle not a spark.
- Fear not, son of man, for thyself nor thy seed:--with a multitude is
- plenty;
- God's blessing giveth increase, and with it larger than enough.
-
- Search out the wisdom of nature, there is depth in all her doings;
- She seemeth prodigal of power, yet her rules are the maxims of frugality:
- The plant refresheth the air, and the earth filtereth the water,
- And dews are sucked into the cloud, dropping fatness on the world:
- She hath, on a mighty scale, a general use for all things;
- Yet hath she specially for each its microscopic purpose:
- There is use in the prisoned air, that swelleth the pods of the laburnum;
- Design in the venomed thorns, that sentinel the leaves of the nettle;
- A final cause for the aromatic gum, that congealeth the moss around a
- rose:
- A reason for each blade of grass, that reareth its small spire.
- How knoweth discontented man what a train of ills might follow,
- If the lowest menial of nature knew not her secret office?
- If the thistle never sprang up to mock the loose husbandry of indolence,
- Or the pestilence never swept away an unknown curse from among men?
- Would ye crush the buzzing myriads that float on the breath of evening?
- Would ye trample the creatures of God that people the rotting fruit?
- Would ye suffer no mildew forest to stain the unhealthy wall,
- Nor a noisome savour to exhale from the pool that breedeth disease?
- Pain is useful unto man, for it teacheth him to guard his life,
- And the fetid vapours of the fen warn him to fly from danger:
- And the meditative mind, looking on, winneth good food for its hunger,
- Seeing the wholesome root bring forth a poisonous berry;
- For otherwhile falleth it out that truth, driven to extremities,
- Yieldeth bitter folly as the spoilt fruit of wisdom.
- O, blinded is thine eye, if it see not just aptitude in all things:
- O, frozen is thy heart, if it glow not with gratitude for all things:
- In the perfect circle of creation not an atom could be spared,
- From earth's magnetic zone to the bindweed round a hawthorn.
-
- The sage, and the beetle at his feet, hath each a ministration to perform:
- The briar and the palm have the wages of life, rendering secret service.
- Neither is it thus alone with the definite existences of matter;
- But motion and sound, circumstance and quality, yea, all things have
- their office.
- The zephyr playing with an aspen-leaf,--the earthquake that rendeth a
- continent;
- The moon-beam silvering a ruined arch,--the desert-wave dashing up a
- pyramid;
- The thunder of jarring icebergs,--the stops of a shepherd's pipe;
- The howl of the tiger in the glen,--and the wood-dove calling to her mate;
- The vulture's cruel rage,--the grace of the stately swan;
- The fierceness looking from the lynx's eye, and the dull stupor of the
- sloth:
- To these, and to all, is there added each its USE, though man considereth
- it lightly;
- For Power hath ordained nothing which Economy saw not needful.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- All things being are in concord with the ubiquity of God;
- Neither is there one thing overmuch, nor freed from honourable servitude.
- Were there not a need-be of wisdom, nothing would be as it is;
- For essence without necessity argueth a moral weakness.
- We look through a glass darkly, we catch but glimpses of truth;
- But, doubtless, the sailing of a cloud hath Providence to its pilot,
- Doubtless, the root of an oak is gnarled for a special purpose,
- The foreknown station of a rush is as fixed as the station of a king,
- And chaff from the hand of the winnower, steered as the stars in their
- courses.
- Man liveth only in himself, but the Lord liveth in all things;
- And His pervading unity quickeneth the whole creation.
- Man doeth one thing at once, nor can he think two thoughts together;
- But God compasseth all things, mantling the globe like air:
- And we render homage to His wisdom, seeing use in all His creatures,
- For, perchance, the universe would die, were not all things as they are.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Compensation]
-
-OF COMPENSATION.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Equal is the government of heaven in allotting pleasures among men,
- And just the everlasting law, that hath wedded happiness to virtue:
- For verily on all things else broodeth disappointment with care,
- That childish man may be taught the shallowness of earthly enjoyment.
- Wherefore, ye that have enough, envy ye the rich man his abundance?
- Wherefore, daughters of affluence, covet ye the cottager's content?
- Take the good with the evil, for ye all are pensioners of God,
- And none may choose or refuse the cup His wisdom mixeth.
- The poor man rejoiceth at his toil, and his daily bread is sweet to him:
- Content with present good, he looketh not for evil to the future:
- The rich man languisheth with sloth, and findeth pleasure in nothing,
- He locketh up care with his gold, and feareth the fickleness of fortune.
- Can a cup contain within itself the measure of a bucket?
- Or the straitened appetites of man drink more than their fill of luxury?
- There is a limit to enjoyment, though the sources of wealth be boundless:
- And the choicest pleasures of life lie within the ring of moderation.
-
- Also, though penury and pain be real and bitter evils,
- I would reason with the poor afflicted, for he is not so wretched as he
- seemeth.
- What right hath an offender to complain, though others escape punishment,
- If the stripes of earned misfortune overtake him in his sin?
- Wherefore not endure with resignation the evils thou canst not avert?
- For the coward pain will flee, if thou meet him as a man:
- Consider, whatever be thy fate, that it might and ought to have been
- worse,
- And that it lieth in thy hand to gather even blessing from afflictions:
- Bethink thee, wherefore were they sent? and hath not use blunted their
- keenness?
- Need hope, and patience, and courage, be strangers to the meanest hovel?
- Thou art in an evil case, it were cruel to deny to thee compassion,
- But there is not unmitigated ill in the sharpest of this world's sorrows:
- I touch not the sore of thy guilt; but of human griefs I counsel thee,
- Cast off the weakness of regret, and gird thee to redeem thy loss:
- Thou hast gained, in the furnace of affliction, self-knowledge, patience,
- and humility,
- And these be as precious ore, that waiteth the skill of the coiner:
- Despise not the blessings of adversity, nor the gain thou hast earned so
- hardly,
- And now thou hast drained the bitter, take heed that thou lose not the
- sweet.
-
- Power is seldom innocent, and envy is the yoke-fellow of eminence;
- And the rust of the miser's riches wasteth his soul as a canker.
- The poor man counteth not the cost at which such wealth hath been
- purchased;
- He would be on the mountain's top, without the toil and travail of the
- climbing.
- But equity demandeth recompense: for high-place, calumny and care;
- For state, comfortless splendour eating out the heart of home;
- For warrior fame, dangers and death; for a name among the learned, a
- spirit overstrained;
- For honour of all kinds, the goad of ambition; on every acquirement, the
- tax of anxiety.
- He that would change with another, must take the cup as it is mixed:
- Poverty, with largeness of heart; or a full purse, with a sordid spirit;
- Wisdom, in an ailing body; or a common mind, with health:
- Godliness, with man's scorn; or the welcome of the mighty, with guilt:
- Beauty, with a fickle heart; or plainness of face, with affection.
- For so hath Providence determined, that a man shall not easily discover
- Unmingled good or evil, to quicken his envy or abhorrence.
- A bold man or a fool must he be, who would change his lot with another;
- It were a fearful bargain, and mercy hath lovingly refused it:
- For we know the worst of ourselves, but the secrets of another we see not,
- And better is certain bad, than the doubt and dread of worse.
-
- Just, and strong, and opportune is the moral rule of God;
- Ripe in its times, firm in its judgments, equal in the measure of its
- gifts:
- Yet men, scanning the surface, count the wicked happy,
- Nor heed the compensating peace, which gladdeneth the good in his
- afflictions.
- They see not the frightful dreams that crowd a bad man's pillow,
- Like wreathed adders crawling round his midnight conscience;
- They hear not the terrible suggestions, that knock at the portal of his
- will,
- Provoking to wipe away from life the one weak witness of the deed;
- They know not the torturing suspicions that sting his panting breast,
- When the clear eye of penetration quietly readeth off the truth.
- Likewise of the good what know they? The memories bringing pleasure,
- Shrined in the heart of the benevolent, and glistening from his eye;
- The calm self-justifying reason that establisheth the upright in his
- purpose;
- The warm and gushing bliss that floodeth all the thoughts of the
- religious.
- Many a beggar at the cross-way, or grey-haired shepherd on the plain,
- Hath more of the end of all wealth, than hundreds who multiply the means.
-
- Moreover, a moral compensation reacheth to the secrecy of thought;
- For if thou wilt think evil of thy neighbour, soon shalt thou have him
- for thy foe:
- And yet he may know nothing of the cause that maketh thee distasteful to
- his soul,--
- The cause of unkind suspicion, for which thou hast thy punishment:
- And if thou think of him in charity, wishing or praying for his weal,
- He shall not guess the secret charm that lureth his soul to love thee.
- For just is retributive ubiquity: Samson did sin with Dalilah,
- And his eyes and captive strength were forfeit to the Philistine:
- Jacob robbed his brother, and sorrow was his portion to the grave:
- David must fly before his foes, yea, though his guilt is covered:
- And He who, seeming old in youth, was marred for others' sin,
- For every special crime must bear its special penalty:
- By luxury, or rashness, or vice, the member that hath erred suffereth,--
- And therefore the Sacrifice for all was pained at every pore.
-
- Alike to the slave and his oppressor cometh night with sweet refreshment,
- And half of the life of the most wretched is gladdened by the soothings
- of sleep.
- Pain addeth zest unto pleasure, and teacheth the luxury of health;
- There is a joy in sorrow, which none but a mourner can know:
- Madness hath imaginary bliss, and most men have no more;
- Age hath its quiet calm, and youth enjoyeth not for haste:
- Daily, in the midst of its beatitude, the righteous soul is vexed;
- And even the misery of guilt doth attain to the bliss of pardon.
- Who, in the face of the born-blind, ever looked on other than content?
- And the deaf ear listeneth within to the silent music of the heart.
- There is evil poured upon the earth from the overflowings of corruption,--
- Sickness, and poverty, and pain, and guilt, and madness, and sorrow;
- But, as the water from a fountain riseth and sinketh to its level,
- Ceaselessly toileth justice to equalize the lots of men:
- For, habit and hope and ignorance, and the being but one of a multitude,
- And strength of reason in the sage, and dulness of feeling in the fool,
- And the light elasticity of courage, and the calm resignation of meekness,
- And the stout endurance of decision, and the weak carelessness of apathy,
- And helps invisible but real, and ministerings not unfelt,
- Angelic aid with worldly discomfiture, bodily loss with the soul's gain,
- Secret griefs, and silent joys, thorns in the flesh, and cordials for the
- spirit,
- (--Short of the insuperable barrier dividing innocence from guilt,--)
- Go far to level all things, by the gracious rule of Compensation.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Indirect Influences]
-
-OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES.
-
-[Illustration: "F"]
-
- Face thy foe in the field, and perchance thou wilt meet thy master,
- For the sword is chained to his wrist, and his armour buckled for the
- battle;
- But find him when he looketh not for thee, aim between the joints of his
- harness,
- And the crest of his pride will be humbled, his cruelty will bite the
- dust.
- Beard not a lion in his den, but fashion the secret pitfall;
- So shall thou conquer the strong, thyself triumphing in weakness.
- The hurricane rageth fiercely, and the promontory standeth in its might,
- Breasting the artillery of heaven, as darts glance from the crocodile:
- But the small continual creeping of the silent footsteps of the sea
- Mineth the wall of adamant, and stealthily compasseth its ruin.
- The weakness of accident is strong, where the strength of design is weak:
- And a casual analogy convinceth, when a mind beareth not argument.
- Will not a man listen? be silent; and prove thy maxim by example:
- Never fear, thou losest not thy hold, though thy mouth doth not render a
- reason.
- Contend not in wisdom with a fool, for thy sense maketh much of his
- conceit;
- And some errors never would have thriven, had it not been for learned
- refutation:
- Yea, much evil hath been caused by an honest wrestler for truth,
- And much of unconscious good, by the man that hated wisdom:
- For the intellect judgeth closely, and if thou overstep thy argument,
- Or seem not consistent with thyself, or fail in thy direct purpose,
- The mind that went along with thee, shall stop and return without thee,
- And thou shalt have raised a foe, where thou mightest have won a friend.
-
- Hints, shrewdly strown, mightily disturb the spirit,
- Where a bare-faced accusation would be too ridiculous for calumny:
- The sly suggestion toucheth nerves, and nerves contract the fronds,
- And the sensitive mimosa of affection trembleth to its root;
- And friendships, the growth of half a century, those oaks that laugh at
- storms,
- Have been cankered in a night by a worm, even as the prophet's gourd.
- Hast thou loved, and not known jealousy? for a sidelong look
- Can please or pain thy heart more than the multitude of proofs:
- Hast thou hated, and not learned that thy silent scorn
- Doth deeper aggravate thy foe than loud-cursing malice?--
- A wise man prevaileth in power, for he screeneth his battering engine,
- But a fool tilteth headlong, and his adversary is aware.
-
- Behold those broken arches, that oriel all unglazed,
- That crippled line of columns bleaching in the sun,
- The delicate shaft stricken midway, and the flying buttress
- Idly stretching forth to hold up tufted ivy:
- Thinkest thou the thousand eyes that shine with rapture on a ruin,
- Would have looked with half their wonder on the perfect pile?
- And wherefore not--but that light hints, suggesting unseen beauties,
- Fill the complacent gazer with self-grown conceits?
- And so, the rapid sketch winneth more praise to the painter,
- Than the consummate work elaborated on his easel:
- And so, the Helvetic lion caverned in the living rock
- Hath more of majesty and force, than it upon a marble pedestal.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Tell me, daughter of taste, what hath charmed thine ear in music?
- Is it the laboured theme, the curious fugue or cento,--
- Nor rather the sparkles of intelligence flashing from some strange chord,
- Or the soft melody of sounds far sweeter for simplicity?
- Tell me, thou son of science, what hath filled thy mind in reading?
- Is it the volume of detail where all is orderly set down,
- And they that read may run, nor need to stop and think;
- The book carefully accurate, that counteth thee no better than a fool,
- Gorging the passive mind with annotated notes;--
- Nor rather the half-suggested thoughts, the riddles thou mayst solve,
- The fair ideas, coyly peeping like young loves out of roses,
- The quaint arabesque conceptions, half cherub and half flower,
- The light analogy, or deep allusion, trusted to thy learning,
- The confidence implied in thy skill to unravel meaning mysteries?
- For ideas are ofttimes shy of the close furniture of words,
- And thought, wherein only is power, may be best conveyed by a suggestion:
- The flash that lighteth up a valley, amid the dark midnight of a storm,
- Coineth the mind with that scene sharper than fifty summers.
-
- A worldly man boasteth in his pride, that there is no power but of money;
- And he judgeth the characters of men by the differing measures of their
- means:
- He stealeth all goodly names, as worth, and value, and substance,
- Which be the ancient heritage of Virtue, but such an one ascribeth unto
- Wealth:
- He spurneth the needy sage, whose wisdom hath enriched nations,
- And the sons of poverty and learning, without whom earth were a desert:
- Music, the soother of cares, the tuner of the dank discordant
- heart-strings,
- It is nought unto such an one but sounds, whereby some earn their living:
- The poem, and the picture, and the statue, to him seem idle baubles,
- Which wealth condescendeth to favour, to gain him the name of patron.
- But little wotteth he the might of the means his folly despiseth;
- He considereth not that these be the wires which move the puppets of the
- world.
- A sentence hath formed a character, and a character subdued a kingdom;
- A picture hath ruined souls, or raised them to commerce with the skies:
- The pen hath shaken nations, and stablished the world in peace;
- And the whole full horn of plenty been filled from the vial of science.
- He regardeth man as sensual, the monarch of created matter,
- And careth not aught for mind, that linketh him with spirits unseen;
- He feedeth his carcase and is glad, though his soul be faint and famished,
- And the dull brute power of the body bindeth him a captive to himself.
-
- Man liveth from hour to hour, and knoweth not what may happen;
- Influences circle him on all sides, and yet must he answer for his
- actions:
- For the being that is master of himself, bendeth events to his will,
- But a slave to selfish passion is the wavering creature of circumstance.
- To this man temptation is a poison, to that man it addeth vigour;
- And each may render to himself influences good or evil.
- As thou directest the power, harm or advantage will follow,
- And the torrent that swept the valley, may be led to turn a mill;
- The wild electric flash, that could have kindled comets,
- May by the ductile wire give ease to an ailing child.
- For outward matter or event fashion not the character within,
- But each man, yielding or resisting, fashioneth his mind for himself.
-
- Some have said, What is in a name?--most potent plastic influence;
- A name is a word of character, and repetition stablisheth the fact:
- A word of rebuke, or of honour, tending to obscurity or fame;
- And greatest is the power of a name, when its power is least suspected.
- A low name is a thorn in the side, that hindereth the footman in his
- running;
- But a name of ancestral renown shall often put the racer to his speed.
- Few men have grown unto greatness whose names are allied to ridicule,
- And many would never have been profligate, but for the splendour of a
- name.
- A wise man scorneth nothing, be it never so small or homely,
- For he knoweth not the secret laws that may bind it to great effects.
- The world in its boyhood was credulous, and dreaded the vengeance of the
- stars,
- The world in its dotage is not wiser, fearing not the influence of small
- things:
- Planets govern not the soul, nor guide the destinies of man,
- But trifles, lighter than straws, are levers in the building up of
- character.
- A man hath the tiller in his hand, and may steer against the current,
- Or may glide down idly with the stream, till his vessel founder in the
- whirlpool.
-
- [Illustration:
- Helvetiorum Fidei ac Virtuti
- Die X Augusti II et III
- Septembris MDCCXCII]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF MEMORY.
-
- Where art thou, storehouse of the mind, garner of facts and fancies,--
- In what strange firmament are laid the beams of thine airy chambers?
- Or art thou that small cavern, the centre of the rolling brain,
- Where still one sandy morsel testifieth man's original?
- Or hast thou some grand globe, some common hall of intellect,
- Some spacious market-place for thought, where all do bring their wares,
- And gladly rescued from the littleness, the narrow closet of a self,
- The privileged soul hath large access, coming in the livery of learning?
- Live we as isolated worlds, perfect in substance and spirit,
- Each a sphere, with a special mind, prisoned in its shell of matter?
- Or rather, as converging radiations, parts of one majestic whole,
- Beams of the Sun, streams from the River, branches of the mighty Tree,
- Some bearing fruit, some bearing leaves, and some diseased and barren,--
- Some for the feast, some for the floor, and some--how many--for the fire?
- Memory may be but a power of coming to the treasury of Fact,
- A momentary self-desertion, an absence in spirit from the Now,
- An actual coursing hither and thither, by the mind, slipped from its
- leash,
- A life, as in the mystery of dreams, spent within the limits of a moment.
-
- A brutish man knoweth not this, neither can a fool comprehend it,
- But there be secrets of the Memory, deep, wondrous, and fearful.
- Were I at Petra, could I not declare, My soul hath been here before me?
- Am I strange to the columned halls, the calm dead grandeur of Palmyra?
- Know I not thy mount, O Carmel! Have I not voyaged on the Danube,
- Nor seen the glare of Arctic snows,--nor the black tents of the Tartar?
- Is it then a dream, that I remember the faces of them of old,
- While wandering in the grove with Plato, and listening to Zeno in the
- porch?
- Paul have I seen, and Pythagoras, and the Stagyrite hath spoken me
- friendly,
- And His meek eye looked also upon me, standing with Peter in the palace.
- Athens and Rome, Persepolis and Sparta, am I not a freeman of you all?
- And chiefly can my yearning heart forget thee, O Jerusalem?--
- For the strong magic of conception, mingled with the fumes of memory,
- Giveth me a life in all past time, yea, and addeth substance to the
- future.
- Be ye my judges, imaginative minds, full-fledged to soar into the sun,
- Whose grosser natural thoughts the chemistry of wisdom hath sublimed,
- Have ye not confessed to a feeling, a consciousness strange and vague,
- That ye have gone this way before, and walk again your daily life,
- Tracking an old routine, and on some foreign strand,
- Where bodily ye have never stood, finding your own footsteps?
- Hath not at times some recent friend looked out an old familiar,
- Some newest circumstance or place teemed as with ancient memories?
- A startling sudden flash lighteth up all for an instant,
- And then it is quenched, as in darkness, and leaveth the cold spirit
- trembling.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Memory is not wisdom; idiots can rote volumes:
- Yet, what is wisdom without memory? a babe that is strangled in its birth,
- The path of the swallow in the air, the path of the dolphin in the waters,
- A cask running out, a bottomless chasm: such is wisdom without memory.
- There be many wise, who cannot store their knowledge;
- Yet from themselves are they satisfied, for the fountain is within:
- There be many who store, but have no wisdom of their own,
- Lumbering their armoury with weapons their muscles cannot lift:
- There be many thieves and robbers, who glean and store unlawfully,
- Calling in to memory's help some cunningly devised Cabala:
- But to feed the mind with fatness, to fill thy granary with corn,
- Nor clog with chaff and straw the threshing-floor of reason,
- Reap the ideas, and house them well; but leave the words high stubble:
- Strive to store up what was thought, despising what was said.
- For the mind is a spirit, and drinketh in ideas, as flame melteth into
- flame;
- But for words it must pack them as on floors, cumbrous and perishable
- merchandize.
- To be pained for a minute, to fear for an hour, to hope for a week--how
- long and weary!
- But to remember fourscore years, is to look back upon a day.
- An avenue seemeth to lengthen in the eyes of the wayfaring man,
- But let him turn, those stationed elms crowd up within a yard;
- Pace the lamp-lit streets of some sleeping city,
- The multitude of cressets shall seem one, in the false picture of
- perspective;
- Even so, in sweet treachery, dealeth the aged with himself,
- He gazeth on the green hill-tops, while the marshes beneath are hidden;
- And the partial telescope of memory pierceth the blank between,
- To look with lingering love at the fair star of childhood.
- Life is as the current spark on the miner's wheel of flints;
- Whiles it spinneth there is light; stop it, all is darkness:
- Life is as a morsel of frankincense burning in the hall of Eternity;
- It is gone, but its odorous cloud curleth to the lofty roof:
- Life is as a lump of salt, melting in the temple-laver;
- It is gone,--yet its savour reacheth to the farthest atom:
- Even so, for evil or for good, is life the criterion of a man,
- For its memories of sanctity or sin pervade all the firmament of being.
- There is but the flitting moment, wherein to hope or to enjoy,
- But in the calendar of Memory, that moment is all time.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE DREAM OF AMBITION.
-
- I left the happy fields that smile around the village of Content,
- And sought with wayward feet the torrid desert of Ambition.
- Long time, parched and weary, I travelled that burning sand,
- And the hooded basilisk and adder were strewed in my way for palms;
- Black scorpions thronged me round, with sharp uplifted stings,
- Seeming to mock me as I ran; (then I guessed it was a dream,--
- But life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- So I toiled on, doubting in myself, up a steep gravel cliff,
- Whose yellow summit shot up far into the brazen sky;
- And quickly, I was wafted to the top, as upon unseen wings
- Carrying me upward like a leaf: (then I thought it was a dream,--
- Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- So I stood on the mountain, and behold! before me a giant pyramid,
- And I clomb with eager haste its high and difficult steps;
- For I longed, like another Belus, to mount up, yea, to heaven,
- Nor sought I rest until my feet had spurned the crest of earth.
-
- Then I sat on my granite throne under the burning sun,
- And the world lay smiling beneath me, but I was wrapt in flames;
- (And I hoped, in glimmering consciousness, that all this torture was a
- dream,--
- Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- And anon, as I sat scorching, the pyramid shuddered to its root,
- And I felt the quarried mass leap from its sand foundations:
- Awhile it tottered and tilted, as raised by invisible levers,--
- (And now my reason spake with me; I knew it was a dream:
- Yet I hushed that whisper into silence, for I hoped to learn of wisdom,
- By tracking up my truant thoughts, whereunto they might lead.)
- And suddenly, as rolling upon wheels, adown the cliff it rushed,
- And I thought, in my hot brain, of the Muscovites' icy slope;
- A thousand yards in a moment we ploughed the sandy seas,
- And crushed those happy fields, and that smiling village,
- And onward, as a living thing, still rushed my mighty throne,
- Thundering along, and pounding, as it went, the millions in my way:
- Before me all was life, and joy, and full-blown summer,
- Behind me death and woe, the desert and simoom.
- Then I wept and shrieked aloud, for pity and for fear;
- But might not stop, for, comet-like, flew on the maddened mass
- Over the crashing cities, and falling obelisks and towers,
- And columns, razed as by a scythe, and high domes, shivered as an
- egg-shell,
- And deep embattled ranks, and women, crowded in the streets,
- And children, kneeling as for mercy, and all I had ever loved,
- Yea, over all, mine awful throne rushed on with seeming instinct,--
- And over the crackling forests, and over the rugged beach,
- And on with a terrible hiss through the foaming wild Atlantic
- That roared around me as I sat, but could not quench my spirit,--
- Still on, through startled solitudes we shattered the pavement of the sea,
- Down, down, to that central vault, the bolted doors of hell;
- And these, with horrid shock, my huge throne battered in,
- And on to the deepest deep, where the fierce flames were hottest,
- Blazing tenfold as conquering furiously the seas that rushed in with me,--
- And there I stopped: and a fearful voice shouted in mine ear,
- "Behold the home of Discontent; behold the rest of Ambition!"
-
-
-OF SUBJECTION.
-
-[Illustration: "L"]
-
- Law hath dominion over all things, over universal mind and matter;
- For there are reciprocities of right, which no creature can gainsay.
- Unto each was there added by its Maker, in the perfect chain of being,
- Dependencies and sustentations, accidents, and qualities, and powers:
- And each must fly forward in the curve, unto which it was forced from the
- beginning;
- Each must attract and repel, or the monarchy of Order is no more.
- Laws are essential emanations from the self-poised character of God,
- And they radiate from that sun to the circling edges of creation.
- Verily, the mighty Lawgiver hath subjected Himself unto Laws,
- And God is the primal grand example of free unstrained obedience;
- His perfection is limited by right, and cannot trespass into wrong,
- Because He hath established Himself as the fountain of only good,
- And in thus much is bounded, that the evil hath He left unto another,
- And that dark other hath usurped the evil which Omnipotence laid down.
- Unto God there exist impossibilities; for the True One cannot lie,
- Nor the Wise One wander from the track which He hath determined for
- Himself:
- For His will was purposed from eternity, strong in the love of order;
- And that will altereth not, as the law of the Medes and Persians.
- God is the origin of order, and the first exemplar of His precept;
- For there is subordination of His Essence, self-guided unto holiness;
- And there is subordination of His Persons, in due procession of dignity;
- For the Son, as a son, is subject; and to Him doth the Spirit minister:
- But these things be mysteries to man, he cannot reach nor fathom them,
- And ever must he speak in paradox, when labouring to expound his God;
- For, behold, God is alone, mighty in unshackled freedom;
- And with those wondrous Persons abideth eternal equality.
-
- So then, start ye from the fountain, and follow the river of existence;
- For its current is bounded throughout by the banks of just subordination:
- Thrones, and dominions, and powers, Archangels, Cherubim, and Seraphim,
- Angels, and flaming ministers, and breathing chariots and harps.
- For there are degrees in heaven, and varied capabilities of bliss,
- And steps in the ladder of Intelligence, and ranks in approaches to
- Perfection:
- Doubtless, reverence is given, as their due, to the masters in wisdom;
- Doubtless, there are who serve; or a throne would have small glory.
- Regard now the universe of matter, the substance of visible creation,
- Which of old, with well-observing truth, the Greek hath surnamed, Order:
- Where is there an atom out of place? or a particle that yieldeth not
- obedience?
- Where is there a fragment that is free? or one thing the equal of
- another?--
- The chain is unbroken down to man, and beyond him the links are perfect:
- But he standeth solitary sin, a marvel of permitted chaos.
-
- And shall this seeming error in the scale of due subordination
- Be a spot of desert unreclaimed, in the midst of the vineyard of the Lord?
- Shall his presumptuous pride snap the safe tether of connexion,
- And his blind selfish folly refuse the burden of maintenance?
- O man, thou art a creature; boast not thyself above the law:
- Think not of thyself as free: thou art bound in the trammels of
- dependence.
- What is the sum of thy duty, but obedience to righteous rule;
- To the great commanding Oracle, uttered by delegated organs?
- Thou canst not render homage to abstract Omnipresent Power,
- Save through the concrete symbol of visible ordained authority.
- Those who obey not man, are oftenest found rebels against God;
- And seldom is the delegate so bold, as to order what he knoweth to be
- wrong.
- Yet mark me, proud gainsayer! I say not, obey unto sin;
- But, where the Principal is silent, take heed thou despise not the Deputy:
- And He that loveth order, will bless thee for thy faith,
- If thou recognize His sanction in the powers that fashion human laws.
-
- Thou, the vicegerent of the Lord, His high anointed image,
- Towards whom a good man's loyalty floweth from the heart of his religion,
- Thou, whose deep responsibilities are fathomed by a nation's prayers,
- Whom wise men fear for while they love, and envy thee nothing but thy
- virtues,
- From thy dizzy pinnacle of greatness, remember thou also art a subject,
- And the throne of thine earthly glory is itself but the footstool of thy
- God.
- The homage thy kingdoms yield thee, regard thou as yielded unto Him;
- And while girt with all the majesty of state, consider thee the Lord's
- chief servant:
- So shalt thou prosper, and be strong, grafted on the strength of Another;
- So shall thy royal heart be happy, in being humble.
- And thou shalt flourish as an oak, the monarch of thine island forests,
- Whose deep-dug roots are twisted around the stout ribs of the globe,
- That mocketh at the fury of the storm, and rejoiceth in summer sunshine,
- Glad in the smiles of heaven, and great in the stability of earth.
-
- A ruler hath not power for himself, neither is his pomp for his pride;
- But beneath the ermine of his office should he wear the rough hair-cloth
- of humility.
- Nevertheless, every way obey him, so thou break not a higher commandment;
- For Nero was an evil king, yet Paul prescribeth subjection.
- If the rulers of a nation be holy, the Lord hath blessed that nation;
- If they be lewd and impious, chastisement hath come upon that people:
- For the bitterest scourge of a land is ungodliness in them that govern it,
- And the guilt of the sons of Josiah drove Israel weeping into Babylon.
- Yet be thou resolute against them, if they change the mandates of thy God,
- If they touch the ark of His covenant, wherein all His mercies are
- enshrined:
- Be resolute, but not rebellious; lest thou be of the company of Korah:
- Set thy face against them as a flint: but be not numbered with Abiram.
- Daniel nobly disobeyed; but not from a spirit of sedition:
- And Azarias shouted from the furnace,--I will not bow down, O KING.
- If truth must be sacrificed to unity, then faithfulness were folly;
- If man must be obeyed before God, the martyrs have bled in vain:
- Yet none of that blessed army reviled the rulers of the land,
- They were loud and bold against the sin, but bent before the ensign of
- authority.
- Honesty, scorning compromise, walketh most suitably with Reverence;
- Otherwise righteous daring may show but as obstinate rebellion:
- Therefore, suffer not thy censure to lack the savour of courtesy,
- And remember, the mortal sinneth, but the staff of his power is from God.
-
- Man, thou hast a social spirit, and art deeply indebted to thy kind:
- Therefore claim not all thy rights; but yield, for thine own advantage.
- Society is a chain of obligations, and its links must support each other;
- The branch can not but wither, that is cut from the parent vine.
- Wouldst thou be a dweller in the woods, and cast away the cords that bind
- thee,
- Seeking, in thy bitterness or pride, to be exiled from thy fellows?
- Behold, the beasts shall hunt thee, weak, naked, houseless outcast,
- Disease and Death shall track thee out, as bloodhounds in the wilderness:
- Better to be vilest of the vile, in the hated company of men,
- Than to live a solitary wretch, dreading and wanting all things;
- Better to be chained to thy labour, in the dusky thoroughfares of life,
- Than to reign monarch of Sloth, in lonesome savage freedom.
-
- Whence then cometh the doctrine, that all should be equal and free?--
- It is the lie that crowded hell, when Seraphs flung away subjection.
- No man is his neighbour's equal, for no two minds are similar,
- And accidents, alike with qualities, have every shade but sameness:
- The lightest atom of difference shall destroy the nice balance of
- equality,
- And all things, from without and from within, make one man to differ from
- another.
- We are equal and free! was the watchword that spirited the legions of
- Satan;
- We are equal and free! is the double lie that entrappeth to him
- conscripts from earth:
- The messengers of that dark despot will pander to thy licence and thy
- pride,
- And draw thee from the crowd where thou art safe, to seize thee in the
- solitary desert.
- Woe unto him whose heart the syren-song of Liberty hath charmed;
- Woe unto him whose mind is bewitched by her treacherous beauty;
- In mad zeal flingeth he away the fetters of duty and restraint,
- And yieldeth up the holocaust of self to that fair Idol of the Damned.
- No man hath freedom in aught, save in that from which the wicked would be
- hindered,
- He is free toward God and good; but to all else a bondman.
-
- Thou art in a middle sphere, to render and receive honour;
- If thy king commandeth, obey; and stand not in the way with rebels:
- But if need be, lay thy hand upon thy sword, and fear not to smite a
- traitor,
- For the universe acquitteth thee with honour, fighting in defence of thy
- king.
- If a thief break thy dwelling, and thou take him, it were sin in thee to
- let him go;
- Yea, though he pleadeth to thy mercy, thou canst not spare him and be
- blameless:
- For his guilt is not only against thee, it is not thy moneys or thy
- merchandize,
- But he hath done damage to the Law, which duty constraineth thee to
- sanction.
- Feast not thine appetite of vengeance, remembering thou also art a man,
- But weep for the sad compulsion, in which the chain of Providence hath
- bound thee:
- Mercy is not thine to give; wilt thou steal another's privilege?
- Or send abroad, among thy neighbours, a felon whom impunity hath hardened?
- Remember the Roman father, strong in his stern integrity,
- And let not thy slothful self-indulgence make thee a conniver at the
- crime.
- Also, if the knife of the murderer be raised against thee or thine,
- And through good providence and courage, thou slay him that would have
- slain thee,
- Thou losest not a tittle of thy rectitude, having executed sudden justice;
- Still mayst thou walk among the blessed, though thy hands be red with
- blood.
- For thyself, thou art neither worse nor better; but thy fellows should
- count thee their creditor:
- Thou hast manfully protected the right, and the right is stronger for thy
- deed.
- Also, in the rescuing of innocence, fear not to smite the ravisher;
- What though he die at thy hand? for a good name is better than the life;
- And if Phineas had everlasting praise in the matter of Salu's son,
- With how much greater honour standeth such a rescuer acquitted?
- Uphold the laws of thy country, and fear not to fight in their defence:
- But first be convinced in thy mind; for herein the doubter sinneth.
- Above all things, look thou well around, if indeed stern duty forceth thee
- To draw the sword of justice, and stain it with the slaughter of thy
- fellows.
-
- She, that lieth in thy bosom, the tender wife of thy affections,
- Must obey thee, and be subject, that evil drop not on thy dwelling.
- The child that is used to constraint, feareth not more than he loveth;
- But give thy son his way, he will hate thee and scorn thee together.
- The master of a well-ordered home knoweth to be kind to his servants;
- Yet he exacteth reverence, and each one feareth at his post.
- There is nothing on earth so lowly, but duty giveth it importance;
- No station so degrading, but it is ennobled by obedience:
- Yea, break stones upon the highway, acknowledging the Lord in thy lot,
- Happy shalt thou be, and honourable, more than many children of the
- mighty.
- Thou that despisest the outward forms, beware thou lose not the inward
- spirit;
- For they are as words unto ideas, as symbols to things unseen.
- Keep then the form that is good; retain, and do reverence to example;
- And in all things observe subordination, for that is the whole duty of
- man.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A horse knoweth his rider, be he confident or timid,
- And the fierce spirit of Bucephalus stoopeth unto none but Alexander;
- The tigress, roused in the jungle by the prying spaniels of the fowler,
- Will quail at the eye of man, so he assert his dignity;
- Nay, the very ships, those giant swans breasting the mighty waters,
- Roll in the trough, or break the wave, to the pilot's fear or courage:
- How much more shall man, discerning the Fountain of authority,
- Bow to superior commands, and make his own obeyed.
- And yet, in travelling the world, hast thou not often known
- A gallant host led on to ruin by a feeble Xerxes?
- Hast thou not often seen the wanton luxury of indolence
- Sullying with its sleepy mist the tarnished crown of headship?
- Alas! for a thousand fathers, whose indulgent sloth
- Hath emptied the vial of confusion over a thousand homes:
- Alas! for the palaces and hovels, that might have been nurseries for
- heaven,
- By hot intestine broils blighted into schools for hell:
- None knoweth his place, yet all refuse to serve,
- None weareth the crown, yet all usurp the sceptre;
- And perchance some fiercer spirit, of natural nobility of mind,
- That needed but the kindness of constraint to have grown up great and
- good,
- Now--the rich harvest of his heart choked by unweeded tares,--
- All bold to dare and do, unchecked by wholesome fear,
- A scoffer about bigotry and priestcraft, a rebel against government and
- God,
- And standard-bearer of the turbulent, leading on the sons of Belial,
- Such an one is king of that small state, head tyrant of the thirty,
- Brandishing the torch of discord in his village home:
- And the timid Eli of the house, yon humble parish-priest,
- Liveth in shame and sorrow, fearing his own handywork;
- The mother, heart-stricken years agone, hath dropped into an early grave;
- The silent sisters long to leave a home they cannot love;
- The brothers, casting off restraint, follow their wayward wills;
- And the chance-guest, early departing, blesseth his kind stars,
- That on his humbler home hath brooded no domestic curse!
- Yet is that curse the fruit; wouldest thou the root of the evil?
- A kindness--most unkind, that hath always spared the rod;
- A weak and numbing indecision in the mind that should be master;
- A foolish love, pregnant of hate, that never frowned on sin;
- A moral cowardice of heart, that never dared command.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A kingdom is a nest of families, and a family a small kingdom;
- And the government of whole or part differeth in nothing but extent.
- The house, where the master ruleth, is strong in united subjection,
- And the only commandment with promise, being honoured, is a blessing to
- that house:
- But and if he yieldeth up the reins, it is weak in discordant anarchy,
- And the bonds of love and union melt away, as ropes of sand.
- The realm, that is ruled with vigour, lacketh neither peace nor glory,
- It dreadeth not foes from without, nor the sons of riot from within:
- But the meanness of temporizing fear robbeth a kingdom of its honour,
- And the weakness of indulgent sloth ravageth its bowels with discord.
- The best of human governments is the patriarchal rule;
- The authorized supremacy of one, the prescriptive subjection of many:
- Therefore, the children of the East have thriven from age to age,
- Obeying, even as a god, the royal father of Cathay:
- Therefore, to this our day, the Rechabite wanteth not a man,
- But they stand before the Lord, forsaking not the mandate of their sire:
- Therefore shall Magog among nations arise from his northern lair,
- And rend, in the fury of his power, the insurgent world beneath him:
- For the thunderbolt of concentrated strength can be hurled by the will of
- one,
- While the dissipated forces of many are harmless as summer lightning.
-
-
-OF REST.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- In the silent watches of the night, calm night that breedeth thoughts,
- When the task-weary mind disporteth in the careless play-hours of sleep,
- I dreamed; and behold, a valley, green and sunny and well watered,
- And thousands moving across it, thousands and tens of thousands:
- And though many seemed faint and toil-worn, and stumbled often, and fell,
- Yet moved they on unresting, as the ever-flowing cataract.
- Then I noted adders in the grass, and pitfalls under the flowers,
- And chasms yawned among the hills, and the ground was cracked and
- slippery:
- But Hope and her brother Fear suffered not a foot to linger;
- Bright phantoms of false joys beckoned alluringly forward,
- While yelling grisly shapes of dread came hunting on behind:
- And ceaselessly, like Lapland swarms, that miserable crowd sped along
- To the mist-involved banks of a dark and sullen river.
- There saw I, midway in the water, standing a giant fisher,
- And he held many lines in his hand, and they called him Iron Destiny.
- So I tracked those subtle chains, and each held one among the multitude:
- Then I understood what hindered, that they rested not in their path:
- For the fisher had sport in his fishing, and drew in his lines
- continually,
- And the new-born babe, and the aged man, were dragged into that dark
- river:
- And he pulled all those myriads along, and none might rest by the way,
- Till many, for sheer weariness, were eager to plunge into the drowning
- stream.
-
- So I knew that valley was Life, and it sloped to the waters of Death.
- But far on the thither side spread out a calm and silent shore,
- Where all was tranquil as a sleep, and the crowded strand was quiet:
- And I saw there many I had known, but their eyes glared chillingly upon
- me,
- As set in deepest slumber; and they pressed their fingers to their lips.
- Then I knew that shore was the dwelling of Rest, where spirits held their
- Sabbath,
- And it seemed they would have told me much, but they might not break that
- silence;
- For the law of their being was mystery: they glided on, hushing as they
- went.
- Yet further, under the sun, at the roots of purple mountains,
- I noted a blaze of glory, as the night-fires on northern skies;
- And I heard the hum of joy, as it were a sea of melody;
- And far as the eye could reach, were millions of happy creatures
- Basking in the golden light; and I knew that land was Heaven.
- Then the hill whereon I stood split asunder, and a crater yawned at my
- feet,
- Black and deep and dreadful, fenced round with ragged rocks;
- Dimly was the darkness lit up by spires of distant flame:
- And I saw below a moving mass of life, like reptiles bred in corruption,
- Where all was terrible unrest, shrieks and groans and thunder.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- So I woke, and I thought upon my dream; for it seemed of Wisdom's
- ministration.
- What man is he that findeth Rest, though he hunt for it year after year?
- As a child he had not yet been wearied, and cared not then to court it;
- As a youth he loved not to be quiet, for excitement spurred him into
- strife;
- As a man he tracketh rest in vain, toiling painfully to catch it,
- But still is he pulled from the pursuit, by the strong compulsion of his
- fate:
- So he hopeth to have peace in old age, as he cannot rest in manhood,
- But troubles thicken with his years, till Death hath dodged him to the
- grave.
- There remaineth a rest for the spirit on the shadowy side of life;
- But unto this world's pilgrim no rest for the sole of his foot.
- Ever, from stage to stage, he travelleth wearily forward,
- And though he pluck flowers by the way, he may not sleep among the
- flowers.
- Mind is the perpetual motion; for it is a running stream
- From an unfathomable source, the depth of the Divine Intelligence:
- And though it be stopped in its flowing, yet hath it a current within,
- The surface may sleep unruffled, but underneath are whirlpools of
- contention.
- Seekest thou rest, O mortal?--seek it no more on earth,
- For destiny will not cease from dragging thee through the rough
- wilderness of life;
- Seekest thou rest, O immortal?--hope not to find it in heaven,
- For sloth yieldeth not happiness: the bliss of a spirit is action.
- Rest dwelleth only on an island in the midst of the ocean of existence,
- Where the world-weary soul for a while may fold its tired wings,
- Until, after short sufficient slumber, it is quickened unto deathless
- energy,
- And speedeth in eagle flight to the Sun of unapproachable Perfection.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Humility]
-
-OF HUMILITY.
-
- Vice is grown aweary of her gawds, and donneth russet garments,
- Loving for change to walk as a nun, beneath a modest veil:
- For Pride hath noted how all admire the fairness of Humility,
- And to clutch the praise he coveteth, is content to be drest in
- hair-cloth;
- And wily Lust tempteth the young heart, that is proof against the bravery
- of harlots,
- With timid tears and retiring looks of an artful seeming maid;
- And indolent Apathy, sleepily ashamed of his dull lack-lustre face,
- Is glad of the livery of meekness, that charitable cloak and cowl;
- And Hatred hideth his demon frown beneath a gentle mask;
- And Slander, snake-like, creepeth in the dust, thinking to escape
- recrimination.
- But the world hath gained somewhat from its years, and is quick to
- penetrate disguises,
- Neither in all these is it deceived, but divideth the true from the false.
-
- Yet there is a meanness of spirit, that is fair in the eyes of most men,
- Yea, and seemeth fair unto itself, loving to be thought Humility.
- Its choler is not roused by insolence, neither do injuries disturb it:
- Honest indignation is strange unto its breast, and just reproof unto its
- lip.
- It shrinketh, looking fearfully on men, fawning at the feet of the great;
- The breath of calumny is sweet unto its ear, and it courteth the rod of
- persecution.
- But what! art thou not a man, deputed chief of the creation?
- Art thou not a soldier of the right, militant for God and good?
- Shall virtue and truth be degraded, because thou art too base to uphold
- them?
- Or Goliath be bolder in blaspheming for want of a David in the camp?
- I say not, avenge injuries; for the ministry of vengeance is not thine:
- But wherefore rebuke not a liar? wherefore do dishonour to thyself?
- Wherefore let the evil triumph, when the just and the right are on thy
- side?
- Such Humility is abject, it lacketh the life of sensibility,
- And that resignation is but mock, where the burden is not felt:
- Suspect thyself and thy meekness: thou art mean and indifferent to sin;
- And the heart that should grieve and forgive, is case-hardened and
- forgetteth.
-
- Humility mainly becometh the converse of man with his Maker,
- But oftentimes it seemeth out of place in the intercourse of man with man:
- Yea, it is the cringer to his equal, that is chiefly seen bold to his God,
- While the martyr, whom a world cannot brow-beat, is humble as a child
- before Him.
- Render unto all men their due, but remember thou also art a man,
- And cheat not thyself of the reverence which is owing to thy reasonable
- being.
- Be courteous, and listen, and learn: but teach and answer if thou canst:
- Serve thee of thy neighbour's wisdom, but be not enslaved as to a master.
- Where thou perceivest knowledge, bend the ear of attention and respect;
- But yield not further to the teaching, than as thy mind is warranted by
- reasons.
- Better is an obstinate disputant, that yieldeth inch by inch,
- Than the shallow traitor to himself, who surrendereth to half an argument.
-
- Modesty winneth good report, but scorn cometh close upon servility;
- Therefore, use meekness with discretion, casting not pearls before swine.
- For a fool will tread upon thy neck, if he seeth thee lying in the dust;
- And there be companies and seasons where a resolute bearing is but duty.
- If a good man discloseth his secret failings unto the view of the profane,
- What doeth he but harm unto his brother, confirming him in his sin?
- There is a concealment that is right, and an open-mouthed humility that
- erreth;
- There is a candour near akin to folly, and a meekness looking like shame.
- Masculine sentiments, vigorously holden, well become a man;
- But a weak mind hath a timorous grasp, and mistaketh it for tenderness of
- conscience.
- Many are despised for their folly, who put it to the account of their
- religion,
- And because men treat them with contempt, they look to their God for
- glory;
- But contempt shall still be their reward, who betray their Master unto
- ridicule,
- Reflecting on Him in themselves, meanness and ignorance and cowardice.
- A Christian hath a royal spirit, and need not be ashamed but unto One:
- Among just men walketh he softly, but the world should see him as a
- champion.
- His humbleness is far unlike the shame that covereth the profligate and
- weak,
- When the sober reproof of virtue hath touched their tingling ears;
- It is born of love and wisdom, and is worthy of all honour,
- And the sweet persuasion of its smile changeth contempt into reverence.
-
- A man of a haughty spirit is daily adding to his enemies:
- He standeth as the Arab in the desert, and the hands of all men are
- against him:
- A man of a base mind daily subtracteth from his friends,
- For he holdeth himself so cheaply, that others learn to despise him:
- But where the meekness of self-knowledge veileth the front of
- self-respect,
- There look thou for the man, whom none can know but they will honour.
- Humility is the softening shadow before the stature of Excellence,
- And lieth lowly on the ground, beloved and lovely as the violet:
- Humility is the fair-haired maid, that calleth Worth her brother,
- The gentle silent nurse, that fostereth infant virtues:
- Humility bringeth no excuse; she is welcome to God and to man:
- Her countenance is needful unto all, who would prosper in either world:
- And the mild light of her sweet face is mirrored in the eyes of her
- companions,
- And straightway stand they accepted, children of penitence and love.
- As when the blind man is nigh unto a rose, its sweetness is the herald of
- its beauty,
- So when thou savourest Humility, be sure thou art nigh unto merit.
- A gift rejoiceth the covetous, and praise fatteneth the vain,
- And the pride of man delighteth in the humble bearing of his fellow;
- But to the tender benevolence of the unthanked Almoner of good,
- Humility is queen among the graces, for she giveth Him occasion to bestow.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Pride]
-
-OF PRIDE.
-
- Deep is the sea, and deep is hell, but Pride mineth deeper;
- It is coiled as a poisonous worm about the foundations of the soul.
- If thou expose it in thy motives, and track it in thy springs of thought,
- Complacent in its own detection, it will seem indignant virtue;
- Smoothly will it gratulate thy skill, O subtle anatomist of self,
- And spurn at its very being, while it nestleth the deeper in thy bosom.
- Pride is a double traitor, and betrayeth itself to entrap thee,
- Making thee vain of thy self-knowledge; proud of thy discoveries of Pride.
- Fruitlessly thou strainest for humility, by darkly diving into self;
- Rather look away from innate evil, and gaze upon extraneous good:
- For in sounding the deep things of the heart, thou shalt learn to be vain
- of its capacities,
- But in viewing the heights above thee, thou shalt be taught thy
- littleness:
- Could an emmet pry into itself, it might marvel at its own anatomy,
- But let it look on eagles, to discern how mean a thing it is.
- And all things hang upon comparison; to the greater, great is small:
- Neither is there anything so vile, but somewhat yet is viler:
- On all sides is there an infinity: the culprit at the gallows hath his
- worse,
- And the virgin martyr at the stake need not look far for a better.
- Therefore see thou that thine aim reacheth unto higher than thyself:
- Beware that the standard of thy soul wave from the loftiest battlement:
- For Pride is a pestilent meteor, flitting on the marshes of corruption,
- That will lure thee forward to thy death, if thou seek to track it to its
- source:
- Pride is a gloomy bow, arching the infernal firmament,
- That will lead thee on, if thou wilt hunt it, even to the dwelling of
- despair.
- Deep calleth unto deep, and mountain overtoppeth mountain,
- And still shalt thou fathom to no end the depth and the height of Pride:
- For it is the vast ambition of the soul, warped to an idol object,
- And nothing but a Deity in Self can quench its insatiable thirst.
-
- Be aware of the smiling enemy, that openly sheatheth his weapon,
- But mingleth poison in secret with the sacred salt of hospitality:
- For Pride will lie dormant in thy heart, to snatch his secret opportunity,
- Watching, as a lion-ant, in the bottom of his toils.
- Stay not to parley with thy foe, for his tongue is more potent than his
- arm;
- But be wiser, fighting against Pride in the simple panoply of prayer.
- As one also of the poets hath said, let not the Proteus escape thee;
- For he will blaze forth as fire, and quench himself in likeness of water;
- He will fright thee as a roaring beast, or charm thee as a subtle reptile.
- Mark, amid all his transformations, the complicate deceitfulness of Pride,
- And the more he striveth to elude thee, bind him the closer in thy toils.
- Prayer is the net that snareth him; prayer is the fetter that holdeth him:
- Thou canst not nourish Pride, while waiting as an almsman on thy God,--
- Waiting in sincerity and trust, or Pride shall meet thee even there;
- Yea, from the palaces of Heaven, hath Pride cast down his millions.
- Root up the mandrake from thy heart, though it cost thee blood and groans,
- Or the cherished garden of thy graces will fade and perish utterly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Experience]
-
-OF EXPERIENCE.
-
- I knew that age was enriched with the hard-earned wages of knowledge,
- And I saw that hoary wisdom was bred in the school of disappointment:
- I noted that the wisest of youth, though provident and cautious of evil,
- Yet sailed along unsteadily, as lacking some ballast of the mind:
- And the cause seemed to lie in this, that while they considered around
- them,
- And warded off all dangers from without, they forgat their own weakness
- within.
- So steer they in self-confidence, until, from the multitude of perils,
- They begin to be wary of themselves, and learn the first lesson of
- Experience.
- I knew that in the morning of life, before its wearisome journey,
- The youthful soul doth expand, in the simple luxury of being;
- It hath not contracted its wishes, nor set a limit to its hopes;
- The wing of fancy is unclipt, and sin hath not seared the feelings:
- Each feature is stamped with immortality, for all its desires are
- infinite,
- And it seeketh an ocean of happiness, to fill the deep hollow within.
- But the old and the grave look on, pitying that generous youth,
- For they also have tasted long ago the bitterness of hope destroyed:
- They pity him, and are sad, remembering the days that are past,
- But they know he must taste for himself, or he will not give ear to their
- wisdom.
- For Experience hath another lesson, which a man will do well if he learn,
- By checking the flight of expectation, to cheat disappointment of its
- pain.
-
- Experience teacheth many things, and all men are his scholars:
- Yet is he a strange tutor, unteaching that which he hath taught.
- Youth is confident, manhood wary, and old age confident again:
- Youth is kind, manhood cold, and age returneth unto kindness.
- For youth suspecteth nought, till manhood, bitterly learned,
- Mistrusteth all, overleaping the mark; and age correcteth his excess.
- Suspicion is the scaffold unto faith, a temporary needful eyesore,
- By which the strong man's dwelling is slowly builded up behind;
- But soon as the top-stone hath been set to the well-proved goodly edifice,
- The scaffold is torn down, and timely trust taketh its long leave of
- suspicion.
-
- A thousand volumes in a thousand tongues enshrine the lessons of
- Experience,
- Yet a man shall read them all, and go forth none the wiser:
- For self-love lendeth him a glass, to colour all he conneth,
- Lest in the features of another he find his own complexion.
- And we secretly judge of ourselves as differing greatly from all men,
- And love to challenge causes to show how we can master their effects:
- Pride is pampered in expecting that we need not fear a common fate,
- Or wrong-headed prejudice exulteth, in combating old Experience;
- Or perchance caprice and discontent are the spurs that goad us into
- danger,
- Careless, and half in hope to find there an enemy to joust with.
- Private Experience is an unsafe teacher, for we rarely learn both sides,
- And from the gilt surface reckon not on steel beneath:
- The torrid sons of Guinea think scorn of icy seas,
- And the frostbitten Greenlander disbelieveth suns too hot.
- But thou, student of Wisdom, feed on the marrow of the matter:
- If thou wilt suspect, let it be thyself; if thou wilt expect, let it not
- be gladness.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Estimating Character]
-
-OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER.
-
- Rashly, nor ofttimes truly, doth man pass judgment on his brother;
- For he seeth not the springs of the heart, nor heareth the reasons of the
- mind.
- And the world is not wiser than of old, when justice was meted by the
- sword,
- When the spear avenged the wrong, and the lot decided the right,
- When the footsteps of blinded innocence were tracked by burning
- plough-shares,
- And the still condemning water delivered up the wizard to the stake:
- For we wait, like the sage of Salamis, to see what the end will be,
- Fixing the right or the wrong, by the issues of failure or success.
- Judge not of things by their events: neither of character by providence;
- And count not a man more evil, because he is more unfortunate:
- For the blessings of a better covenant lie not in the sunshine of
- prosperity,
- But pain and chastisement the rather show the wise Father's love.
-
- Behold that daughter of the world: she is full of gaiety and gladness;
- The diadem of rank is on her brow, uncounted wealth is in her coffers:
- She tricketh out her beauty like Jezebel, and is welcome in the courts of
- kings:
- She is queen of the fools of fashion, and ruleth the revels of luxury:
- And though she sitteth not as Tamar, nor standeth in the ways as Rahab,
- Yet in the secret of her chamber, she shrinketh not from dalliance and
- guilt.
- She careth not if there be a God, or a soul, or a time of retribution;
- Pleasure is the idol of her heart: she thirsteth for no purer heaven.
- And she laugheth with light good humour, and all men praise her
- gentleness;
- They are glad in her lovely smile, and the river of her bounty filleth
- them.
- So she prospered in the world: the worship and desire of thousands;
- And she died even as she had lived, careless and courteous and liberal.
- The grave swallowed up her pomp, the marble proclaimed her virtues,
- For men esteemed her excellent, and charities soundeth forth her praise:
- But elsewhere far other judgment setteth her--with infidels and harlots!
- She abused the trust of her splendour: and the wages of her sin shall be
- hereafter.
-
- Look again on this fair girl, the orphan of a village pastor
- Who is dead, and hath left her his all,--his blessing, and a name
- unstained.
- And friends, with busy zeal, that their purses be not taxed,
- Place the sad mourner in a home, poor substitute for that she hath lost.
- A stranger among strange faces she drinketh the wormwood of dependence;
- She is marked as a child of want: and the world hateth poverty.
- Prayer is not heard in that house; the day she hath loved to hallow
- Is noted but by deeper dissipation, the riot of luxury and gaming:
- And wantonness is in her master's eye, and she hath nowhere to flee to;
- She is cared for by none upon earth, and her God seemeth to forsake her.
- Then cometh, in fair show, the promise and the feint of affection,
- And her heart, long unused to kindness, remembereth her father, and
- loveth.
- And the villain hath wronged her trust, and mocked, and flung her from
- him,
- And men point at her and laugh; and women hate her as an outcast:
- But elsewhere, far other judgment seateth her--among the martyrs!
- And the Lord, who seemed to forsake, giveth double glory to the fallen.
-
- Once more, in the matter of wealth: if thou throw thine all on a chance,
- Men will come around thee, and wait, and watch the turning of the wheel:
- And if, in the lottery of life, thou hast drawn a splendid prize,
- What foresight hadst thou, and skill! yea, what enterprize and wisdom!
- But if it fall out against thee, and thou fail in thy perilous endeavour,
- Behold, the simple did sow, and hath reaped the right harvest of his
- folly:
- And the world will be gladly excused, nor will reach out a finger to help;
- For why should this speculative dullard be a whirlpool to all around him?
- Go to, let him sink by himself: we knew what the end of it would be:--
- For the man hath missed his mark, and his fellows look no further.
-
- Also, touching guilt and innocence: a man shall walk in his uprightness
- Year after year without reproach, in charity and honesty with all:
- But in one evil hour the enemy shall come in like a flood;
- Shall track him, and tempt him, and hem him,--till he knoweth not whither
- to fly.
- Perchance his famishing little ones shall scream in his ears for bread,
- And, maddened by that fierce cry, he rusheth as a thief upon the world;
- The world that hath left him to starve, itself wallowing in plenty,--
- The world, that denieth him his rights,--he daringly robbeth it of them.
- I say not, such an one is innocent; but, small is the measure of his guilt
- To that of his wealthy neighbour, who would not help him at his need;
- To that of the selfish epicure, who turned away with coldness from his
- tale;
- To that of unsuffering thousands, who look with complacence on his fall.
-
- Or perchance the continual dropping of the venomed words of spite,
- Insult and injury and scorn, have galled and pierced his heart;
- Yet, with all long-suffering and meekness, he forgiveth unto seventy
- times seven:
- Till, in some weaker moment, tempted beyond endurance,
- He striketh, more in anger than in hate; and, alas! for his heavy chance,
- He hath smitten unto instant death his spiteful life-long enemy!
- And none was by to see it; and all men knew of their contentions:
- Fierce voices shout for his blood, and rude hands hurry him to judgment.
- Then man's verdict cometh,--Murderer, with forethought malice;
- And his name is a note of execration; his guilt is too black for devils.
- But to the Righteous Judge, seemeth he the suffering victim;
- For his anger was not unlawful, but became him as a Christian and a man;
- And though his guilt was grievous when he struck that heavy bitter blow,
- Yet light is the sin of the smiter, and verily kicketh the beam,
- To the weight of that man's wickedness, whose slow relentless hatred
- Met him at every turn, with patient continuance in evil.
- Doubtless, eternal wrath shall be heaped upon that spiteful enemy.
-
- It is vain, it is vain, saith the preacher; there be none but the
- righteous and the wicked,
- Base rebels, and staunch allies, the true knight, and the traitor:
- And he beareth strong witness among men, There is no neutral ground,
- The broad highway and narrow path map out the whole domain;
- Sit here among the saints, these holy chosen few,
- Or grovel there a wretched condemned, to die among the million.
- And verily for ultimate results, there be but good and bad;
- Heaven hath no dusky twilight; hell is not gladdened with a dawn.
- Yet looking round among his fellows, who can pass righteous judgment,
- Such an one is holy and accepted, and such an one reprobate and doomed?
- There is so much of good among the worst, so much of evil in the best,
- Such seeming partialities in providence, so many things to lessen and
- expand,
- Yea, and with all man's boast, so little real freedom of his will,--
- That, to look a little lower than the surface, garb or dialect or fashion,
- Thou shalt feebly pronounce for a saint, and faintly condemn for a sinner.
- Over many a good heart and true, fluttereth the Great King's pennant;
- By many an iron hand, the pirate's black banner is unfurled:
- But there be many more besides, in the yacht and the trader and the
- fishing-boat,
- In the feathered war-canoe, and the quick mysterious gondola:
- And the army of that Great King hath no stated uniform;
- Of mingled characters and kinds goeth forth the countless host;
- There is the turbaned Damascene, with his tattooed Zealand brother,
- There the slim bather in the Ganges, with the sturdy Russian boor,
- The sluggish inmate of a Polar cave, with the fire-souled daughter of
- Brazil,
- The embruted slave from Cuba, and the Briton of gentle birth.
- For all are His inheritance, of all He taketh tithe:
- And the church, His mercy's ark, hath some of every sort.
- Who art thou, O man, that art fixing the limits of the fold?
- Wherefore settest thou stakes to spread the tent of heaven?
- Lay not the plummet to the line: religion hath no landmarks:
- No human keenness can discern the subtle shades of faith:
- In some it is as earliest dawn, the scarce diluted darkness;
- In some as dubious twilight, cold and grey and gloomy:
- In some the ebon east is streaked with flaming gold:
- In some the dayspring from on high breaketh in all its praise.
- And who hath determined the when, separating light from darkness?
- Who shall pluck from earliest dawn the promise of the day?
- Leave that care to the Husbandman, lest thou garner tares;
- Help thou the Shepherd in His seeking, but to separate be His:
- For I have often seen the noble erring spirit
- Wrecked on the shoals of passion, and numbered of the lost;
- Often the generous heart, lit by unhallowed fire,
- Counted a brand among the burning, and left uncared for in his sin:
- Yet I waited a little year, and the mercy thou hadst forgotten
- Hath purged that noble spirit, washing it in waters of repentance;
- That glowing generous heart, having burnt out all its dross,
- Is as a golden censer, ready for the aloes and cassia:
- While thou, hard-visaged man, unlovely in thy strictness,
- Who turned from him thy sympathies with self-complacent pride,
- How art thou shamed by him! his heart is a spring of love,
- While the dry well of thine affections is choked with secret mammon.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Sometimes at a glance thou judgest well; years could add little to thy
- knowledge:
- When charity gloweth on the cheek, or malice is lowering in the eye,
- When honesty's open brow, or the weasel-face of cunning is before thee,
- Or the loose lip of wantonness, or clear bright forehead of reflection.
- But often, by shrewd scrutiny, thou judgest to the good man's harm:
- For it may be his hour of trial, or he slumbereth at his post,
- Or he hath slain his foe, but not yet levelled the stronghold,
- Or barely recovered of the wounds, that fleshed him in his fray with
- passion.
- Also, of the worst, through prejudice, thou loosely shalt think well:
- For none is altogether evil, and thou mayst catch him at his prayers:
- There may be one small prize, though all beside be blanks;
- A silver thread of goodness in the black serge-cloth of crime.
-
- There is to whom all things are easy; his mind, as a master-key,
- Can open, with intuitive address, the treasuries of art and science:
- There is to whom all things are hard; but industry giveth him a crow-bar,
- To force, with groaning labour, the stubborn lock of learning:
- And often, when thou lookest on an eye, dim in native dulness,
- Little shalt thou wot of the wealth diligence hath gathered to its gaze;
- Often, the brow that should be bright with the dormant fire of genius,
- Within its ample halls, hath ignorance the tenant.
- Yet are not the sons of men cast as in moulds by the lot?
- The like in frame and feature have much alike in spirit;
- Such a shape hath such a soul, so that a deep discerner
- From his make will read the man, and err not far in judgment:
- Yea, and it holdeth in the converse, that growing similarity of mind
- Findeth or maketh for itself an apposite dwelling in the body:
- Accident may modify, circumstance may bevil, externals seem to change it,
- But still the primitive crystal is latent in its many variations:
- For the map of the face, and the picture of the eye, are traced by the
- pen of passion;
- And the mind fashioneth a tabernacle suitable for itself.
- A mean spirit boweth down the back, and the bowing fostereth meanness;
- A resolute purpose knitteth the knees, and the firm tread nourisheth
- decision;
- Love looketh softly from the eye, and kindleth love by looking;
- Hate furroweth the brow, and a man may frown till he hateth:
- For mind and body, spirit and matter, have reciprocities of power,
- And each keepeth up the strife; a man's works make or mar him.
-
- There be deeper things than these, lying in the twilight of truth;
- But few can discern them aright, from surrounding dimness of error.
- For perchance, if thou knewest the whole, and largely with comprehensive
- mind
- Couldst read the history of character, the chequered story of a life,
- And into the great account, which summeth a mortal's destiny,
- Wert to add the forces from without, dragging him this way and that,
- And the secret qualities within, grafted on the soul from the womb,
- And the might of other men's example, among whom his lot is cast,
- And the influence of want or wealth, of kindness or harsh ill-usage,
- Of ignorance he cannot help, and knowledge found for him by others,
- And first impressions, hard to be effaced, and leadings to right or to
- wrong,
- And inheritance of likeness from a father, and natural human frailty,
- And the habit of health or disease, and prejudices poured into his mind,
- And the myriad little matters none but Omniscience can know,
- And accidents that steer the thoughts, where none but Ubiquity can trace
- them;--
- If thou couldst compass all these, and the consequents flowing from them,
- And the scope to which they tend, and the necessary fitness of all things,
- Then shouldst thou see as He seeth, who judgeth all men equal,--
- Equal, touching innocence and guilt; and different alone in this,
- That one acknowledged his evil, and looketh to his God for mercy;
- Another boasteth of his good, and calleth on his God for justice;
- So He, that sendeth none away, is largely munificent to prayer,
- But, in the heart of presumption, sheatheth the sword of vengeance.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF HATRED AND ANGER.
-
- Blunted unto goodness is the heart which anger never stirreth,
- But that which hatred swelleth, is keen to carve out evil.
- Anger is a noble infirmity, the generous failing of the just,
- The one degree that riseth above zeal, asserting the prerogatives of
- virtue:
- But hatred is a slow continuing crime, a fire in the bad man's breast,
- A dull and hungry flame, for ever craving insatiate.
- Hatred would harm another; anger would indulge itself:
- Hatred is a simmering poison; anger, the opening of a valve:
- Hatred destroyeth as the upas-tree; anger smiteth as a staff:
- Hatred is the atmosphere of hell; but anger is known in heaven.
- Is there not a righteous wrath, an anger just and holy,
- When goodness is sitting in the dust, and wickedness enthroned on Babel?
- Doth pity condemn guilt?--is justice not a feeling but a law
- Appealing to the line and to the plummet, incognizant of moral sense?
- Thou that condemnest anger, small is thy sympathy with angels,
- Thou that hast accounted it for sin, cold is thy communion with heaven.
-
- Beware of the angry in his passion; but fear not to approach him
- afterward;
- For if thou acknowledge thine error, he himself will be sorry for his
- wrath:
- Beware of the hater in his coolness; for he meditateth evil against thee:
- Commending the resources of his mind calmly to work thy ruin.
- Deceit and treachery skulk with hatred, but an honest spirit flieth with
- anger:
- The one lieth secret, as a serpent; the other chaseth, as a leopard.
- Speedily be reconciled in love, and receive the returning offender,
- For wittingly prolonging Anger, thou tamperest unconsciously with Hatred.
- Patience is power in a man, nerving him to rein his spirit:
- Passion is as palsy to his arm, while it yelleth on the coursers to their
- speed:
- Patience keepeth counsel, and standeth in solid self-possession,
- But the weakness of sudden passion layeth bare the secrets of the soul.
- The sentiment of anger is not ill, when thou lookest on the impudence of
- vice,
- Or savourest the breath of calumny, or hast earned the hard wages of
- injustice;
- But see that thou curb it in expression, rendering the mildness of rebuke,
- So shall thou stand without reproach, mailed in all the dignity of virtue.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- I heard the man of sin reproaching the goodness of Jehovah,
- Wherefore, if He be Almighty Love, permitteth He misery and pain?
- I saw the child of hope vexed in the labyrinth of doubt,
- Wherefore, O holy One and just, is the horn of Thy foul foe so high
- exalted?
- And, alas! for this our groaning world, for that grief and guilt are here;
- Alas! for that Earth is the battle-field, where good must combat with
- evil:
- Angels look on and hold their breath, burning to mingle in the conflict,
- But the troops of the Captain of Salvation may be none but the soldiers
- of the cross:
- And that slender band must fight alone, and yet shall triumph gloriously,
- Enough shall they be for conquest, and the motto of their standard is,
- ENOUGH.
- Thou art sad, O denizen of earth, for pains and diseases and death,
- But remember, thy hand hath earned them; grudge not at the wages of thy
- doings:
- Thy guilt, and thy fathers' guilt, must bring many sorrows in their
- company,
- And if thou wilt drink sweet poison, doubtless it shall rot thee to the
- core.
- What art thou but the heritor of evil, with a right to nothing good?
- The respite of an interval of ease were a boon which Justice might deny
- thee:
- Therefore lay thy hand upon thy mouth, O man much to be forgiven,
- And wait, thou child of hope, for time shall teach thee all things.
-
- Yet hear, for my speech shall comfort thee: reverently, but with boldness,
- I would raise the sable curtain, that hideth the symmetry of Providence.
- Pain and sin are convicts, and toil in their fetters for good;
- The weapons of evil are turned against itself, fighting under better
- banners:
- The leech delighteth in stinging, and the wicked loveth to do harm,
- But the wise Physician of the Universe useth that ill tendency for health.
- Verily, from others' griefs are gendered sympathy and kindness;
- Patience, humility, and faith, spring not seldom from thine own:
- An enemy, humbled by his sorrows, cannot be far from thy forgiveness;
- A friend, who hath tasted of calamity, shall fan the dying incense of thy
- love:
- And for thyself, is it a small thing, so to learn thy frailty,
- That from an aching bone thou savest the whole body?
- The furnace of affliction may be fierce, but if it refineth thy soul,
- The good of one meek thought shall outweigh years of torment.
- Nevertheless, wretched man, if thy bad heart be hardened in the flame,
- Being earth-born, as of clay, and not of moulded wax,
- Judge not the hand that smiteth, as if thou wert visited in wrath:
- Reproach thyself, for He is Justice; repent thee, for He is Mercy.
-
- Cease, fond caviller at wisdom, to be satisfied that everything is wrong:
- Be sure there is good necessity, even for the flourishing of evil.
- Would the eye delight in perpetual noon? or the ear in unqualified
- harmonics?
- Hath winter's frost no welcome, contrasting sturdily with summer?
- Couldst thou discern benevolence, if there were no sorrows to be soothed?
- Or discover the resources of contrivance, if nothing stood opposed to the
- means?
- What were power without an enemy? or mercy without an object?
- Or truth, where the false were impossible? or love, where love were a
- debt?
- The characters of God were but idle, if all things around Him were
- perfection,
- And virtues might slumber on like death, if they lacked the opportunities
- of evil.
- There is One all-perfect, and but one; man dare not reason of His essence:
- But there must be deficiencies in heaven, to leave room for progression
- in bliss:
- A realm of unqualified BEST were a stagnant pool of being,
- And the circle of absolute perfection, the abstract cipher of indolence.
- Sin is an awful shadow, but it addeth new glories to the light;
- Sin is a black foil, but it setteth off the jewelry of heaven:
- Sin is the traitor that hath dragged the majesty of mercy into action;
- Sin is the whelming argument, to justify the attribute of vengeance.
- It is a deep dark thought, and needeth to be diligently studied,
- But perchance evil was essential, that God should be seen of His
- creatures:
- For where perfection is not, there lacketh possible good,
- And the absence of better that might be, taketh from the praise of it is
- well:
- And creatures must be finite, and finite cannot be perfect:
- Therefore, though in small degree, creation involveth evil,
- He chargeth His angels with folly, and the heavens are not clean in His
- sight:
- For every existence in the universe hath either imperfection or Godhead:
- And the light that blazeth but in One, must be softened with shadow for
- the many.
- There is then good in evil; or none could have known his Maker;
- No spiritual intellect or essence could have gazed on His high
- perfections,
- No angel harps could have tuned the wonders of His wisdom,
- No ransomed souls have praised the glories of His mercy,
- No howling fiends have shown the terrors of His justice,
- But God would have dwelt alone, in the fearful solitude of holiness.
-
- Nevertheless, O sinner, harden not thine heart in evil;
- Nor plume thee in imaginary triumph, because thou art not valueless as
- vile;
- Because thy dark abominations add lustre to the clarity of Light;
- Because a wonder-working alchemy draineth elixir out of poisons;
- Because the same fiery volcano that scorcheth and ravageth a continent,
- Hath in the broad blue bay cast up some petty island;
- Because to the full demonstration of the qualities and accidents of good
- The swarthy legions of the Devil have toiled as unwitting pioneers.
- For sin is still sin; so hateful Love doth hate it;
- A blot on the glory of creation, which Justice must wipe out.
- Sin is a loathsome leprosy, fretting the white robe of innocence;
- A rottenness, eating out the heart of the royal cedars of Lebanon;
- A pestilential blast, the terror of that holy pilgrimage;
- A rent in the sacred veil, whereby God left His temple.
- Therefore, consider thyself, thou that dost not sorrow for thy guilt:
- Fear evil, or face its Enemy: dread sin, or dare Justice.
-
- Yea, saith the Spirit: and their works do follow them;
- Habits, and thoughts, and deeds, are shadows and satellites of self.
- What! shall the claimant to a throne stand forward with a rabble rout,--
- Meanness, impiety, and lust; riot and indolence and vanity?
- Nay, man! the train wherewith thou comest attend whither thou shalt go:
- A throne for a king's son, but an inner dungeon for the felon.
- For a man's works do follow him: bodily, standing in the judgment,
- Behold the false accuser, behold the slandered saint;
- The slave, and his bloody driver; the poor, and his generous friend;
- The simple dupe, and the crafty knave: the murderer, and--his victim!
- Yet all are in many characters; the best stand guilty at the bar;
- And he that seemed the worst may have most of real excuse.
- The talents unto which a man is born, be they few or many,
- Are dropped into the balance of account, working unlooked-for changes;
- And perchance the convict from the galleys may stand above the hermit in
- his cell,
- For that, the obstacles in one outweigh the propensions in the other.
- There be, who have made themselves friends, yea, by unrighteous mammon,--
- Friends, ready waiting as an escort to those everlasting habitations;
- Embodied in living witnesses, thronging to meet them in a cloud,
- Charity, meekness and truth, zeal, sincerity and patience,
- There be, who have made themselves foes, yea, by honest gain,
- Foes, whose plaint must have its answer, before the bright portal is
- unbarred:
- Pride, and selfishness, and sloth, apathy, wrath and falsehood,
- Bind to their everlasting toil many that must weary in the fires.
- Love hath a power and a longing to save the gathered world,
- And rescue universal man from the hunting hell-hounds of his doings:
- Yet few, here one and there one, scanty as the gleaning after harvest,
- Are glad of the robes of praise which Mercy would fling around the naked;
- But wrapping closer to their skin the poisoned tunic of their works,
- They stand in self-dependence, to perish in abandonment of God.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF PRAYER.
-
- A wicked man scorneth prayer, in the shallow sophistry of reason,
- He derideth the silly hope that God can be moved by supplication:--
- Shall the Unchangeable be changed, or waver in His purpose?
- Can the weakness of pity affect Him? Should He turn at the bidding of a
- man?
- Methought He ruled all things, and ye called His decrees immutable,
- But if thus He listeneth to words, wherein is the firmness of His will?--
- So I heard the speech of the wicked, and, lo, it was smoother than oil;
- But I knew that his reasonings were false, for the promise of the
- Scripture is true:
- Yet was my soul in darkness, for his words were too hard for me;
- Till I turned to my God in prayer: for I know He heareth always.
- Then I looked abroad on the earth, and, behold, the Lord was in all
- things;
- Yet saw I not His hand in aught, but perceived that He worketh by means;
- Yea, and the power of the mean proveth the wisdom that ordained it,
- Yea, and no act is useless, to the hurling of a stone through the air.
- So I turned my thoughts to supplication, and beheld the mercies of
- Jehovah,
- And I saw sound argument was still the faithful friend of godliness;
- For as the rock of the affections is the solid approval of reason,
- Even so the temple of Religion is founded on the basis of Philosophy.
-
- Scorner, thy thoughts are weak, they reach not the summit of the matter;
- Go to, for the mouth of a child might show thee the mystery of prayer:
- Verily, there is no change in the counsels of the Mighty Ruler:
- Verily, His purpose is strong, and rooted in the depths of necessity:
- But who hath shown thee His purpose, who hath made known to thee His will?
- When, O gainsayer! hast thou been schooled in the secrets of wisdom?
- Fate is a creature of God, and all things move in their orbits,
- And that which shall surely happen is known unto Him from eternity;
- But as, in the field of nature, He useth the sinews of the ox,
- And commandeth diligence and toil, Himself giving the increase;
- So, in the kingdom of His grace, granteth He omnipotence to prayer,
- For He knoweth what thou wilt ask, and what thou wilt ask aright.
- No man can pray in faith, whose prayer is not grounded on a promise:
- Yet a good man commendeth all things to the righteous wisdom of his God:
- For those, who pray in faith, trust the immutable Jehovah,
- And they, who ask blessings unpromised, lean on uncovenanted mercy.
-
- Man, regard thy prayers as a purpose of love to thy soul;
- Esteem the providence that led to them as an index of God's good will;
- So shalt thou pray aright, and thy words shall meet with acceptance.
- Also, in pleading for others, be thankful for the fulness of thy prayer:
- For if thou art ready to ask, the Lord is more ready to bestow.
- The salt preserveth the sea, and the saints uphold the earth;
- Their prayers are the thousand pillars that prop the canopy of nature.
- Verily, an hour without prayer, from some terrestrial mind,
- Were a curse in the calendar of time, a spot of the blackness of darkness.
- Perchance the terrible day, when the world must rock into ruins,
- Will be one unwhitened by prayer,--shall He find faith on the earth?
- For there is an economy of mercy, as of wisdom, and power, and means;
- Neither is one blessing granted, unbesought from the treasury of good:
- And the charitable heart of the Being, to depend upon whom is happiness,
- Never withholdeth a bounty, so long as His subject prayeth;
- Yea, ask what thou wilt, to the second throne in heaven,
- It is thine, for whom it was appointed; there is no limit unto prayer:
- But and if thou cease to ask, tremble, thou self-suspended creature,
- For thy strength is cut off as was Samson's: and the hour of thy doom is
- come.
-
- Frail art thou, O man, as a bubble on the breaker,
- Weak and governed by externals, like a poor bird caught in the storm;
- Yet thy momentary breath can still the raging waters,
- Thy hand can touch a lever that may move the world.
- O Merciful, we strike eternal covenant with thee,
- For man may take for his ally the King who ruleth kings:
- How strong, yet how most weak, in utter poverty how rich,
- What possible omnipotence to good is dormant in a man!
- Behold that fragile form of delicate transparent beauty,
- Whose light-blue eye and hectic cheek are lit by the bale-fires of
- decline:
- All droopingly she lieth, as a dew-laden lily,
- Her flaxen tresses, rashly luxuriant, dank with unhealthy moisture;
- Hath not thy heart said of her, Alas! poor child of weakness?
- Thou hast erred; Goliah of Gath stood not in half her strength:
- Terribly she fighteth in the van as the virgin daughter of Orleans,
- She beareth the banner of Heaven, her onset is the rushing cataract,
- Seraphim rally at her side, and the captain of that host is God,
- And the serried ranks of evil are routed by the lightning of her eye;
- She is the King's remembrancer, and steward of many blessings,
- Holding the buckler of security over her unthankful land:
- For that weak fluttering heart is strong in faith assured,
- Dependence is her might, and behold--she prayeth.
-
- Angels are round the good man, to catch the incense of his prayers,
- And they fly to minister kindness to those for whom he pleadeth;
- For the altar of his heart is lighted, and burneth before God continually,
- And he breatheth, conscious of his joy, the native atmosphere of heaven:
- Yea, though poor, and contemned, and ignorant of this world's wisdom,
- Ill can his fellows spare him, though they know not of his value.
- Thousands bewail a hero, and a nation mourneth for its king,
- But the whole universe lamenteth the loss of a man of prayer.
- Verily, were it not for One, who sitteth on His rightful throne,
- Crowned with a rainbow of emerald, the green memorial of earth,--
- For One, a mediating man, that hath clad His Godhead with mortality,
- And offereth prayer without ceasing, the royal priest of Nature,
- Matter and life and mind had sunk into dark annihilation,
- And the lightning frown of Justice withered the world into nothing.
-
- Thus, O worshipper of reason, thou hast heard the sum of the matter:
- And woe to his hairy scalp that restraineth prayer before God.
- Prayer is a creature's strength, his very breath and being;
- Prayer is the golden key that can open the wicket of Mercy:
- Prayer is the magic sound that saith to Fate, So be it;
- Prayer is the slender nerve that moveth the muscles of Omnipotence.
- Wherefore, pray, O creature, for many and great are thy wants;
- Thy mind, thy conscience, and thy being, thy rights commend thee unto
- prayer,
- The cure of all cares, the grand panacea for all pains,
- Doubt's destroyer, ruin's remedy, the antidote to all anxieties.
-
- So then, God is true, and yet He hath not changed:
- It is He that sendeth the petition, to answer it according to His will.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE LORD'S PRAYER.
-
- Inquirest thou, O man, wherewithal may I come unto the Lord?
- And with what wonder-working sounds may I move the majesty of Heaven?
- There is a model to thy hand; upon that do thou frame thy supplication;
- Wisdom hath measured its words; and redemption urgeth thee to use them.
- Call thy God thy Father, and yet not thine alone,
- For thou art but one of many, thy brotherhood is with all:
- Remember His high estate, that He dwelleth King of Heaven;
- So shall thy thoughts be humbled, nor love be unmixed with reverence:
- Be thy first petition unselfish, the honour of Him who made thee,
- And that in the depths of thy heart His memory be shrined in holiness:
- Pray for that blessed time, when good shall triumph over evil,
- And one universal temple echo the perfections of Jehovah:
- Bend thou to His good will, and subserve His holy purposes,
- Till in thee, and those around thee, grow a little heaven upon earth:
- Humbly, as a grateful almsman, beg thy bread of God,--
- Bread for thy triple estate, for thou hast a trinity of nature:
- Humility smootheth the way, and gratitude softeneth the heart,
- Be then thy prayer for pardon mingled with the tear of penitence;
- Yea, and while, all unworthy, thou leanest on the hand that should smite,
- Thou canst not from thy fellows withhold thy less forgiveness.
- To thy Father thy weaknesses are known, and thou hast not hid thy sin,
- Therefore ask Him, in all trust, to lead thee from the dangers of
- temptation;
- While the last petition of the soul, that breatheth on the confines of
- prayer,
- Is deliverance from sin and the evil one, the miseries of earth and hell.
- And wherefore, child of hope, should the rock of thy confidence be sure?
- Thou knowest that God heareth and promiseth an answer of peace;
- Thou knowest that He is King, and none can stay His hand;
- Thou knowest His power to be boundless, for there is none other:
- And to Him thou givest glory, as a creature of His workmanship and favour,
- For the never-ending term of thy saved and bright existence.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Discretion]
-
-OF DISCRETION.
-
- For what then was I born?--to fill the circling year
- With daily toil for daily bread, with sordid pains and pleasures?--
- To walk this chequered world, alternate light and darkness,
- The day-dreams of deep thought followed by the night-dreams of fancy?--
- To be one in a full procession?--to dig my kindred clay?--
- To decorate the gallery of art?--to clear a few acres of forest?
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- Is then that noble end to feed this mind with knowledge,
- To mix for mine own thirst the sparkling wine of wisdom,
- To light with many lamps the caverns of my heart,
- To reap, in the furrows of my brain, good harvest of right reasons?--
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- Is it to grow stronger in self-government, to check the chafing will,
- To curb with tightening rein the mettled steeds of passion,
- To welcome with calm heart, far in the voiceless desert,
- The gracious visitings of heaven that bless my single self?--
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- To aim at thine own happiness, is an end idolatrous and evil;
- In earth, yea in heaven, if thou seek it for itself, seeking thou shalt
- not find.
- Happiness is a road-side flower, growing on the highway of Usefulness;
- Plucked, it shall wither in thy hand; passed by, it is fragrance to thy
- spirit:
- Love not thine own soul, regard not thine own weal,
- Trample the thyme beneath thy feet; be useful, and be happy!
-
- Thus unto fair conclusions argueth generous youth,
- And quickly he starteth on his course, knight-errant to do good.
- His sword is edged with arguments, his vizor terrible with censures;
- He goeth full mailed in faith, and zeal is flaming at his heart.
- Yet one thing he lacketh, the Mentor of the mind,
- The quiet whisper of Discretion--Thy time is not yet come.
- For he smiteth an oppressor; and vengeance for that smiting
- Is dealt in doubled stripes on the faint body of the victim:
- He is glad to give and to distribute; and clamorous pauperism feasteth,
- While honest labour, pining, hideth his sharp ribs:
- He challengeth to a fair field that subtle giant Infidelity,
- And, worsted in the unequal fight, strengtheneth the hands of error;
- He hasteth to teach and preach, as the war-horse rusheth to the battle,
- And to pave a way for truth, would break up the Apennines of prejudice:
- He wearieth by stale proofs, where none looked for a reason,
- And to the listening ear will urge the false argument of feeling.
- So hath it often been, that, judging by results,
- The hottest friends of truth have done her deadliest wrong.
- Alas! for there are enemies without, glad enough to parley with a traitor,
- And a zealot will let down the drawbridge, to prove his own prowess:
- Yea, from within will he break away a breach in the citadel of truth,
- That he may fill the gap, for fame, with his own weak body.
-
- Zeal without judgment is an evil, though it be zeal unto good;
- Touch not the ark with unclean hand, yea, though it seem to totter.
- There are evil who work good, and there are good who work evil,
- And foolish backers of wisdom have brought on her many reproaches.
- Truth hath more than enough to combat in the minds of all men,
- For the mist of sense is a thick veil, and sin hath warped their wills;
- Yet doth an officious helper awkwardly prevent her victory,--
- These thy wounded hands were smitten in the house of friends:--
- To point out a meaning in her words, he will blot those words with his
- finger;
- And winnow chaff into the eyes, before he hath wheat to show:
- He will heap sturdy logs on a faint expiring fire,
- And with a room in flames, will cast the casement open;
- By a shoulder to the wheel down hill harasseth the labouring beast,
- And where obstruction were needed, will harm by an ill-judged
- thrusting-on.
-
- A vessel foundereth at sea, if a storm hath unshipped the rudder;
- And a mind with much sail shall require heavy ballast.
- Take a lever by the middle, thou shalt seem to prove it powerless,
- Argue for truth indiscreetly, thou shalt toil for falsehood.
- There is plenty of room for a peaceable man in the most thronged assembly;
- But a quarrelsome spirit is straitened in the open field:
- Many a teacher, lacking judgment, hindereth his own lessons;
- And the savoury mess of pottage is spoiled by a bitter herb:
- The garment woven of a piece is rashly torn by schism,
- Because its unwise claimants will not cast lots for its possession.
-
- Discretion guide thee on thy way, noble-minded youth,
- Help thee to humour infirmities, to wink at innocent errors,
- To take small count of forms, to bear with prejudice and fancy:
- Discretion guard thine asking, discretion aid thine answer,
- Teach thee that well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech,
- Whisper thee, thou art Weakness, though thy cause be Strength,
- And tell thee, the key-stone of an arch can be loosened with least labour
- from within.
- The snows of Hecla lie around its troubled smoking Geysers;
- Let the cool streams of prudence temper the hot spring of zeal:
- So shalt thou gain thine honourable end, nor lose the midway prize:
- So shall thy life be useful, and thy young heart happy.
-
-
-OF TRIFLES.
-
-[Illustration: "Y"]
-
- Yet once more, saith the fool, yet once, and is it not a little one?
- Spare me this folly yet an hour, for what is one among so many?
- And he blindeth his conscience with lies, and stupifieth his heart with
- doubts;--
- Whom shall I harm in this matter? and a little ill breedeth much good;
- My thoughts, are they not mine own? and they leave no mark behind them;
- And if God so pardoneth crime, how should these petty sins affect Him?--
- So he transgresseth yet again, and falleth by little and little,
- Till the ground crumble beneath him, and he sinketh in the gulf
- despairing.
- For there is nothing in the earth so small that it may not produce great
- things,
- And no swerving from a right line, that may not lead eternally astray.
- A landmark tree was once a seed; and the dust in the balance maketh a
- difference;
- And the cairn is heaped high by each one flinging a pebble:
- The dangerous bar in the harbour's mouth is only grains of sand;
- And the shoal that hath wrecked a navy is the work of a colony of worms:
- Yea, and a despicable gnat may madden the mighty elephant;
- And the living rock is worn by the diligent flow of the brook.
- Little art thou, O man, and in trifles thou contendest with thine equals,
- For atoms must crowd upon atoms, ere crime groweth to be a giant.
- What, is thy servant a dog?--not yet wilt thou grasp the dagger,
- Not yet wilt thou laugh with the scoffers, not yet betray the innocent;
- But, if thou nourish in thy heart the reveries of injury or passion,
- And travel in mental heat the mazy labyrinths of guilt,
- And then conceive it possible, and then reflect on it as done,
- And use, by little and little, thyself to regard thyself a villain,
- Not long will crime be absent from the voice that doth invoke him to thy
- heart,
- And bitterly wilt thou grieve, that the buds have ripened into poison.
-
- A spark is a molecule of matter, yet may it kindle the world:
- Vast is the mighty ocean, but drops have made it vast.
- Despise not thou a small thing, either for evil or for good;
- For a look may work thy ruin, or a word create thy wealth:
- The walking this way or that, the casual stopping or hastening,
- Hath saved life, and destroyed it, hath cast down and built up fortunes.
- Commit thy trifles unto God, for to Him is nothing trivial;
- And it is but the littleness of man that seeth no greatness in a trifle.
- All things are infinite in parts, and the moral is as the material,
- Neither is anything vast, but it is compacted of atoms.
- Thou art wise, and shalt find comfort, if thou study thy pleasure in
- trifles,
- For slender joys, often repeated, fall as sunshine on the heart:
- Thou art wise, if thou beat off petty troubles, nor suffer their stinging
- to fret thee;
- Thrust not thine hand among the thorns, but with a leathern glove.
- Regard nothing lightly which the wisdom of Providence hath ordered;
- And therefore, consider all things that happen unto thee or unto others.
- The warrior that stood against a host, may be pierced unto death by a
- needle;
- And the saint that feareth not the fire, may perish the victim of a
- thought:
- A mote in the gunner's eye is as bad as a spike in the gun;
- And the cable of a furlong is lost through an ill-wrought inch.
- The streams of small pleasures fill the lake of happiness:
- And the deepest wretchedness of life is continuance of petty pains.
- A fool observeth nothing, and seemeth wise unto himself;
- A wise man heedeth all things, and in his own eyes is a fool:
- He that wondereth at nothing hath no capabilities of bliss:
- But he that scrutinizeth trifles hath a store of pleasure to his hand.
- If pestilence stalk through the land, ye say, This is God's doing;
- Is it not also His doing when an aphis creepeth on a rosebud?
- If an avalanche roll from its Alp, ye tremble at the will of Providence:
- Is not that will concerned when the sear leaves fall from the poplar?--
- A thing is great or little only to a mortal's thinking,
- But abstracted from the body, all things are alike important:
- The Ancient of Days noteth in His book the idle converse of a creature,
- And happy and wise is the man to whose thought existeth not a trifle.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF RECREATION.
-
- To join advantage to amusement, to gather profit with pleasure,
- Is the wise man's necessary aim, when he lieth in the shade of recreation.
- For he cannot fling aside his mind, nor bar up the flood-gates of his
- wisdom;
- Yea, though he strain after folly, his mental monitor shall check him:
- For knowledge and ignorance alike have laws essential to their being,--
- The sage studieth amusements, and the simple laugheth in his studies.
- Few, but full of understanding, are the books of the library of God,
- And fitting for all seasons are the gain and the gladness they bestow:
- The volume of mystery and Grace, for the hour of deep communings,
- When the soul considereth intensely the startling marvel of itself:
- The book of destiny and Providence, for the time of sober study,
- When the mind gleaneth wisdom from the olive grove of history:
- And the cheerful pages of Nature, to gladden the pleasant holiday,
- When the task of duty is complete, and the heart swelleth high with
- satisfaction.
- The soul may not safely dwell too long with the deep things of futurity;
- The mind may not always be bent back, like the Parthian, straining at the
- past;
- And, if thou art wearied with wrestling on the broad arena of science,
- Leave awhile thy friendly foe, half vanquished in the dust,
- Refresh thy jaded limbs, return with vigour to the strife,--
- Thou shalt easier find thyself his master, for the vacant interval of
- leisure.
-
- That which may profit and amuse is gathered from the volume of creation,
- For every chapter therein teemeth with the playfulness of wisdom.
- The elements of all things are the same, though nature hath mixed them
- with a difference,
- And Learning delighteth to discover the affinity of seeming opposites:
- So out of great things and small draweth he the secrets of the universe,
- And argueth the cycles of the stars, from a pebble flung by a child.
- It is pleasant to note all plants, from the rush to the spreading cedar,
- From the giant king of palms, to the lichen that staineth its stem;
- To watch the workings of instinct, that grosser reason of brutes,--
- The river horse browsing in the jungle, the plover screaming on the moor,
- The cayman basking on a mud-bank, and the walrus anchored to an iceberg,
- The dog at his master's feet, and the milch-kine lowing in the meadow;
- To trace the consummate skill that hath modelled the anatomy of insects,
- Small fowls that sun their wings on the petals of wild flowers;
- To learn a use in the beetle, and more than a beauty in the butterfly;
- To recognize affections in a moth, and look with admiration on a spider.
- It is glorious to gaze upon the firmament, and see from far the mansions
- of the blest,
- Each distant shining world, a kingdom for one of the redeemed;
- To read the antique history of earth, stamped upon those medals in the
- rocks
- Which Design hath rescued from decay, to tell of the green infancy of
- time;
- To gather from the unconsidered shingle mottled starlike agates,
- Full of unstoried flowers in the bubbling bloom-chalcedony:
- Or gay and curious shells, fretted with microscopic carving,
- Corallines, and fresh seaweeds, spreading forth their delicate branches.
- It is an admirable lore, to learn the cause in the change,
- To study the chemistry of Nature, her grand, but simple secrets,
- To search out all her wonders, to track the resources of her skill,
- To note her kind compensations, her unobtrusive excellence.
- In all it is wise happiness to see the well-ordained laws of Jehovah,
- The harmony that filleth all His mind, the justice that tempereth His
- bounty,
- The wonderful all-prevalent analogy that testifieth one Creator,
- The broad arrow of the Great King, carved on all the stores of His
- arsenal.
- But beware, O worshipper of God, thou forget not Him in His dealings,
- Though the bright emanations of His power hide Him in created glory;
- For if, on the sea of knowledge, thou regardest not the pole-star of
- religion,
- Thy bark will miss her port, and run upon the sand-bar of folly:
- And if, enamoured of the means, thou considerest not the scope to which
- they tend,
- Wherein art thou wiser than the child, that is pleased with toys and
- baubles?
- Verily, a trifling scholar, thou heedest but the letter of instruction:
- For, as motive is spirit unto action, as memory endeareth place,
- As the sun doth fertilize the earth, as affection quickeneth the heart,
- So is the remembrance of God in the varied wonders of creation.
-
- Man hath found out inventions, to cheat him of the weariness of life,
- To help him to forget realities, and hide the misery of guilt.
- For love of praise, and hope of gain, for passion and delusive happiness,
- He joineth the circle of folly, and heapeth on the fire of excitement;
- Oftentimes sadly out of heart at the tiresome insipidity of pleasure,
- Oftentimes labouring in vain, convinced of the palpable deceit:
- Yet a man speaketh to his brother, in the voice of glad congratulation,
- And thinketh others happy, though he himself be wretched:
- And hand joineth hand to help in the toil of amusement,
- While the secret aching heart is vacant of all but disappointment.
- The cheapest pleasures are the best; and nothing is more costly than sin;
- Yet we mortgage futurity, counting it but little loss:
- Neither can a man delight in that which breedeth sorrow,
- Yet do we hunt for joy even in the fires that consume it.
- Whoso would find gladness may meet her in the hovel of poverty,
- Where benevolence hath scattered around the gleanings of the horn of
- plenty;
- Whoso would sun himself in peace, may be seen of her in deeds of mercy,
- When the pale lean cheek of the destitute is wet with grateful tears.
- If the mind is wearied by study, or the body worn with sickness,
- It is well to lie fallow for a while, in the vacancy of sheer amusement;
- But when thou prosperest in health, and thine intellect can soar untired,
- To seek uninstructive pleasure is to slumber on the couch of indolence.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: The Train of Religion.]
-
-The Train of Religion.
-
- Stay awhile, thou blessed band! be entreated, daughters of heaven!
- While the chance-met scholar of Wisdom learneth your sacred names:
- He is resting a little from his toil, yet a little on the borders of
- earth,
- And fain would he have you his friends, to bid him glad welcome hereafter.
- Who among the glorious art thou, that walkest a Goddess and a Queen,
- Thy crown of living stars, and a golden cross thy sceptre?
- Who among flowers of loveliness is she, thy seeming herald,
- Yet she boasteth not thee nor herself, and her garments are plain in
- their neatness?
- Wherefore is there one among the train, whose eyes are red with weeping,
- Yet is her open forehead beaming with the sun of ecstasy?
- And who is that bloodstained warrior, with glory sitting on his crest?
- And who that solemn sage, calm in majestic dignity?
- Also, in the lengthening troop see I some clad in robes of triumph,
- Whose fair and sunny faces I have known and loved on earth:
- Welcome, ye glorified Loves, Graces, and Sciences, and Muses,
- That, like sisters of charity, tended in this world's hospital;
- Welcome, for verily I knew, ye could not but be children of the light,
- Though earth hath soiled your robes, and robbed you of half your glory;
- Welcome, chiefly welcome, for I find I have friends in heaven,
- And some I might scarce have looked for, as thou, light-hearted Mirth;
- Thou also, star-robed Urania; and thou, with the curious glass,
- That rejoicedst in tracking wisdom where the eye was too dull to note it:
- And art thou too among the blessed, mild, much-injured Poetry?
- Who quickenest with light and beauty the leaden face of matter,
- Who not unheard, though silent, fillest earth's gardens with music,
- And not unseen, though a spirit, dost look down upon us from the stars,--
- That hast been to me for oil and for wine, to cheer and uphold my soul,
- When wearied, battling with the surge, the stunning surge of life:
- Of thee, for well have I loved thee, of thee may I ask in hope,
- Who among the glorious is she, that walketh a Goddess and a Queen?
- And who that fair-haired herald, and who that weeping saint?
- And who that mighty warrior, and who that solemn sage?
-
- Son, happy art thou that Wisdom hath led thee hitherward:
- For otherwise never hadst thou known the joy-giving name of our Queen.
- Behold her, the life of men, the anchor of their shipwrecked hopes:
- Behold her, the shepherdess of souls, who bringeth back the wanderers to
- God.
- And for that modest herald, she is named on earth, Humility:
- And hast thou not known, my son, the tearful face of Repentance?
- Faith is yon time-scarred hero, walking in the shade of his laurels:
- And Reason, the serious sage, who followeth the footsteps of Faith:
- And we, all we, are but handmaids, ministers of minor bliss,
- Who rejoice to be counted servants in the train of a Queen so glorious:
- But for her name, son of man, it is strange to the language of heaven,
- For those who have never fallen need not and may not learn it:
- Ligeance we swear to our God, and ligeance well have we kept;
- It is only the band of the redeemed who can tell thee the fulness of that
- name;
- Yet will I comfort thee, my son, for the love wherewith thou hast loved
- me,
- And thou shalt touch for thyself the golden sceptre of Religion.
-
- So that blessed train passed by me; but the vision was sealed upon my
- soul;
- And its memory is shrined in fragrance, for the promise of the Spirit was
- true:
- I learn from the silent poem of all creation round me,
- How beautiful their feet, who follow in that train.
-
-
-OF A TRINITY.
-
-[Illustration: "D"]
-
- Despise not, shrewd reckoner, the God of a good man's worship,
- Neither let thy calculating folly gainsay the unity of three:
- Nor scorn another's creed, although he cannot solve thy doubts;
- Reason is the follower of faith, where he may not be precursor:
- It is written, and so we believe, waiting not for outward proof,
- Inasmuch as mysteries inscrutable are the clear prerogatives of godhead.
- Reason hath nothing positive, faith hath nothing doubtful;
- And the height of unbelieving wisdom is to question all things.
- When there is marvel in a doctrine, faith is joyful and adoreth;
- But when all is clear, what place is left for faith?
- Tell me the sum of thy knowledge,--is it yet assured of anything?
- Despise not what is wonderful, when all things are wonderful around thee.
- From the multitude of like effects, thou sayest, Behold a law:
- And the matter thou art baffled in unmaking, is to thy mind an element.
- Then look abroad, I pray thee, for analogy holdeth everywhere,
- And the Maker hath stamped His name on every creature of His hand:
- I know not of a matter or a spirit, that is not three in one,
- And truly should account it for a marvel, a coin without the image of its
- Cæsar.
-
- Man talketh of himself as ignorant, but judgeth by himself as wise:
- His own guess counteth he truth, but the notions of another are his scorn;
- But bear thou yet with a brother, whose thought may be less subtle than
- thine own,
- And suffer the passing speculation suggested by analogies to faith.
- Like begetteth like, and the great sea of Existence
- In each of its uncounted waves holdeth up a mirror to its Maker:
- Like begetteth like, and the spreading tree of being
- With each of its trefoil leaves pointeth at the Trinity of God.
- Let him whose eyes have been unfilmed, read this homily in all things,
- And thou, of duller sight, despise not him that readeth:
- There be three grand principles; life, generation, and obedience;
- Shadowing in every creature, the Spirit, and the Father, and the Son.
- There be three grand unities, variously mixed in trinities,
- Three catholic divisors of the million sums of matter:
- Yea, though science hath not seen it, climbing the ladder of experiment,
- Let faith, in the presence of her God, promulgate the mighty truth;
- Of three sole elements all nature's works consist:
- The pine, and the rock to which it clingeth, and the eagle sailing around
- it:
- The lion, and the northern whale, and the deeps wherein he sporteth;
- The lizard sleeping in the sun; the lightning flashing from a cloud;
- The rose, and the ruby, and the pearl; each one is made of three;
- And the three be the like ingredients, mingled in diverse measures.
- Thyself hast within thyself body, and life, and mind:
- Matter, and breath, and instinct, unite in all beasts of the field;
- Substance, coherence, and weight, fashion the fabrics of the earth;
- The will, the doing, and the deed, combine to frame a fact:
- The stem, the leaf, and the flower; beginning, middle, and end;
- Cause, circumstance, consequent: and every three is one.
- Yea, the very breath of man's life consisteth of a trinity of vapours,
- And the noonday light is a compound, the triune shadow of Jehovah.
-
- Shall all things else be in mystery, and God alone be understood?
- Shall finite fathom infinity, though it sound not the shallows of
- creation?
- Shall a man comprehend his Maker, being yet a riddle to himself?
- Or time teach the Lesson that eternity cannot master?
- If God be nothing more than one, a child can compass the thought;
- But seraphs fail to unravel the wondrous unity of three.
- One verily He is, for there can be but one who is all mighty;
- Yet the oracles of nature and religion proclaim Him three in one.
- And where were the value to thy soul, O miserable denizen of earth,
- Of the idle pageant of the cross, where hung no sacrifice for thee?
- Where the worth to thine impotent heart, of that stirred Bethesda,
- All numbed and palsied as it is, by the scorpion stings of sin?
- No, thy trinity of nature, enchained by treble death,
- Helplessly craveth of its God, Himself for three salvations:
- The soul to be reconciled in love, the mind to be glorified in light,
- While this poor dying body leapeth into life.
- And if indeed for us all the costly ransom hath been paid,
- Bethink thee, could less than Deity have owned so vast a treasure?
- Could a man contend with God, and stand against the bosses of His buckler,
- Rendering the balance for guilt, atonement to the uttermost?
- Thou art subtle to thine own thinking, but wisdom judgeth thee a fool,
- Resolving thou wilt not bow the knee to a Being thou canst not comprehend:
- The mind that could compass perfection were itself perfection's equal;
- And reason refuseth its homage to a God who can be fully understood.
-
- Thou that despiseth mystery, yet canst expound nothing,
- Wherefore rejectest thou the fact that solveth the enigma of all things?
- Wherefore veilest thou thine eyes, lest the light of revelation sun them,
- And puttest aside the key that would open the casket of truth?
- The mind and the nature of God are shadowed in all His works,
- And none could have guessed of His essence, had He not uttered it Himself.
- Therefore, thou child of folly, that scornest the record of His wisdom,
- Learn from the consistencies of nature the needful miracle of Godhead:
- Yea, let the heathen be thy teacher, who adoreth many gods,
- For there is no wide-spread error that hath not truth for its beginning.
- Be content; thine eye cannot see all the sides of a cube at one view,
- Nor thy mind in the self-same moment follow two ideas:
- There are now many marvels in thy creed, believing what thou seest,
- Then let not the conceit of intellect hinder thee from worshipping
- mystery.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Thinking.]
-
-OF THINKING.
-
- Reflection is a flower of the mind, giving out wholesome fragrance,
- But reverie is the same flower, when rank and running to seed.
- Better to read little with thought, than much with levity and quickness;
- For mind is not as merchandize, which decreaseth in the using,
- But liker to the passions of man, which rejoice and expand in exertion:
- Yet live not wholly on thine own ideas, lest they lead thee astray;
- For in spirit, as in substance, thou art a social creature;
- And if thou leanest on thyself, thou rejectest the guidance of thy
- betters,
- Yea, thou contemnest all men,--Am I not wiser than they?--
- Foolish vanity hath blinded thee, and warped thy weak judgment:
- For, though new ideas flow from new springs, and enrich the treasury of
- knowledge,
- Yet listen often, ere thou think much; and look around thee ere thou
- judgest.
- Memory, the daughter of Attention, is the teeming mother of Wisdom,
- And safer is he that storeth knowledge, than he that would make it for
- himself.
-
- Imagination is not thought, neither is fancy reflection:
- Thought paceth like a hoary sage, but imagination hath wings as an eagle:
- Reflection sternly considereth, nor is sparing to condemn evil,
- But fancy lightly laugheth, in the sun-clad gardens of amusement.
- For the shy game of the fowler the quickest shot is the surest;
- But with slow care and measured aim the gunner pointeth his cannon:
- So for all less occasions, the surface-thought is best,
- But to be master of the great take thou heavier metal.
- It is a good thing, and a wholesome, to search out bosom sins,
- But to be the hero of selfish imaginings, is the subtle poison of pride:
- At night, in the stillness of thy chamber, guard and curb thy thoughts,
- And in recounting the doings of the day, beware that thou do it with
- prayer,
- Or thinking will be an idle pleasure, and retrospect yield no fruit.
- Steer the bark of thy mind from the syren isle of reverie,
- And let a watchful spirit mingle with the glance of recollection:
- Also, in examining thine heart, in sounding the fountain of thine actions,
- Be more careful of the evil than of the good; and humble thyself in thy
- sin.
-
- The root of all wholesome thought is knowledge of thyself,
- For thus only canst thou learn the character of God toward thee.
- He made thee, and thou art; He redeemed thee, and thou wilt be:
- Thou art evil, yet He loveth thee; thou sinnest, yet He pardoneth thee.
- Though thou canst not perceive Him, yet is He in all His works,
- Infinite in grand outline, infinite in minute perfection:
- Nature is the chart of God, mapping out all His attributes;
- Art is the shadow of His wisdom, and copieth His resources.
- Thou knowest the laws of matter to be emanations of His will,
- And thy best reason for aught is this,--Thou, Lord, wouldst have it so.
- Yea, what is any law but an absolute decree of God?
- Or the properties of matter and mind, but the arbitrary fiats of Jehovah?
- He made and ordained necessity; He forged the chain of reason;
- And holdeth in His own right hand the first of the golden links.
- A fool regardeth mind as the spiritual essence of matter,
- And not rather matter as the gross accident of mind.
- Can finite govern infinite, or a part exceed the whole,
- Or the wisdom of God sit down at the feet of innate necessity?
- Necessity is a creature of His hand: for He can never change;
- And chance hath no existence where everything is needful.
-
- Canst thou measure Omnipotence, canst thou conceive Ubiquity,
- Which guideth the meanest reptile, and quickeneth the brightest seraph,
- Which steereth the particle of dust, and commandeth the path of the comet?
- To Him all things are equal, for all things are necessary.
- The smith was weary at his forge, and welded the metal carelessly,
- And the anchor breaketh in its bed; and the vessel foundereth with her
- crew:
- A word of anger is muttered, engendering the midnight murder:
- The sun bursteth from a cloud, and maddeneth the toiling husbandman.
- Shall these things be, and God not know it?
- Shall He know, and not be in them? shall He see, and not be among them?
- And how can they be otherwise than as He knoweth?
- Truly, the Lord is in all things; verily, He worketh in all.
- Think thus, and thy thoughts are firm, ascribing each circumstance to Him;
- Yet know surely, and believe the truth, that God willeth not evil;
- For adversities are blessings in disguise, and wickedness the Lord
- abhorreth:
- That He is in all things is an axiom, and that He is righteous in all:
- Ascribe holiness to Him, while thou musest on the mystery of sin,
- For infinite can grasp that, which finite cannot compass.
-
- In works of art, think justly: what praise canst thou render unto man?
- For he made not his own mind, nor is he the source of contrivance.
- If a cunning workman make an engine that fashioneth curious works,
- Which hath the praise, the machine or its maker,--the engine, or he that
- framed it?
- And could he frame it so subtly as to give it a will and freedom,
- Endow it with complicated powers, and a glorious living soul,
- Who, while he admireth the wondrous understanding creature,
- Will not pay deeper homage to the Maker of master minds?
- Otherwise, thou art senseless as the pagan, that adoreth his own
- handywork;
- Yea, while thou boastest of thy wisdom, thy mind is as the mind of the
- savage,
- For he boweth down to his idols, and thou art a worshipper of self,
- Giving to the reasoning machine the credit due to its creator.
-
- The key-stone of thy mind, to give thy thoughts solidity,
- To bind them as in an arch, to fix them as the world in its sphere,
- Is to learn from the book of the Lord, to drink from the well of His
- wisdom.
- Who can condense the sun, or analyse the fulness of the Bible,
- So that its ideas be gathered, and the harvest of its wisdom be brought
- in?
- That book is easy to the man who setteth his heart to understand it,
- But to the careless and profane it shall seem the foolishness of God;
- And it is a delicate test to prove thy moral state;
- To the humble disciple it is bread, but a stone to the proud and
- unbelieving:
- A scorner shall find nothing but the husks, wherewith to feed his hunger,
- But for the soul of the simple, it is plenty of full-ripe wheat.
- The Scripture abideth the same, in the sober majesty of truth;
- And the differing aspects of its teaching proceed from diversity in minds.
- He that would learn to think may gain that knowledge there;
- For the living word, as an angel, standeth at the gate of wisdom,
- And publisheth, This is the way, walk ye surely in it.
- Religion taketh by the hand the humble pupil of repentance,
- And teacheth him lessons of mystery, solving the questions of doubt;
- She maketh man worthy of himself, of his high prerogative of reason,
- Threadeth all the labyrinths of thought, and leadeth him to his God.
-
- Come hither, child of meditation, upon whose high fair forehead
- Glittereth the star of mind in its unearthly lustre:
- Hast thou nought to tell us of thine airy joys,--
- When, borne on sinewy pinions, strong as the western condor,
- The soul, after soaring for a while round the cloud-capped Andes of
- reflection,
- Glad in its conscious immortality, leaveth a world behind,
- To dare at one bold flight the broad Atlantic to another?
- Hast thou no secret pangs to whisper common men,
- No dread of thine own energies, still active day and night,
- Lest too ecstatic heat sublime thyself away,
- Or vivid horrors, sharp and clear, madden thy tense fibres?
- In half-shaped visions of sleep hast thou not feared thy flittings,
- Lest reason, like a raking hawk, return not to thy call:
- Nor waked to work-day life with throbbing head and heart,
- Nor welcomed early dawn to save thee from unrest?
- For the wearied spirit lieth as a fainting maiden,
- Captive and borne away on the warrior's foam-covered steed,
- And sinketh down wounded, as a gladiator on the sand,
- While the keen faulchion of Intellect is cutting through the scabbard of
- the brain.
- Imagination, like a shadowy giant looming on the twilight of the Hartz,
- Shall overwhelm judgment with affright, and scare him from his throne:
- In a dream thou mayst be mad, and feel the fire within thee;
- In a dream thou mayst travel out of self, and see thee with the eyes of
- another;
- Or sleep in thine own corpse: or wake as in many bodies;
- Or swell, as expanded to infinity; or shrink, as imprisoned to a point;
- Or among moss-grown ruins mayst wander with the sullen disembodied,
- And gaze upon their glassy eyes until thy heart-blood freeze.
-
- Alone must thou stand, O man! alone at the bar of judgment;
- Alone must thou bear thy sentence, alone must thou answer for thy deeds:
- Therefore it is well thou retirest often to secresy and solitude,
- To feel that thou art accountable separately from thy fellows:
- For a crowd hideth truth from the eyes, society drowneth thought,
- And being but one among many, stifleth the chidings of conscience.
- Solitude bringeth woe to the wicked, for his crimes are told out in his
- ear;
- But addeth peace to the good, for the mercies of his God are numbered.
- Thou mayst know if it be well with a man,--loveth he gaiety or solitude?
- For the troubled river rusheth to the sea, but the calm lake slumbereth
- among the mountains.
- How dear to the mind of the sage are the thoughts that are bred in
- loneliness;
- For there is as it were music at his heart, and he talketh within him as
- with friends:
- But guilt maddeneth the brain, and terror glareth in the eye,
- Where, in his solitary cell, the malefactor wrestleth with remorse.
- Give me but a lodge in the wilderness, drop me on an island in the desert,
- And thought shall yield me happiness, though I may not increase it by
- imparting:
- For the soul never slumbereth, but is as the eye of the Eternal,
- And mind, the breath of God, knoweth not ideal vacuity:
- At night, after weariness and watching, the body sinketh into sleep,
- But the mental eye is awake, and thou reasonest in thy dreams:
- In a dream, thou mayst live a lifetime, and all be forgotten in the
- morning:
- Even such is life, and so soon perisheth its memory.
-
-
-OF SPEAKING.
-
-[Illustration: "S"]
-
- Speech is the golden harvest that followeth the flowering of thought;
- Yet oftentimes runneth it to husk, and the grains be withered and scanty:
- Speech is reason's brother, and a kingly prerogative of man,
- That likeneth him to his Maker, who spake, and it was done:
- Spirit may mingle with spirit, but sense requireth a symbol;
- And speech is the body of a thought, without which it were not seen.
- When thou walkest, musing with thyself, in the green aisles of the forest,
- Utter thy thinkings aloud, that they take a shape and being:
- For he that pondereth in silence crowdeth the storehouse of his mind,
- And though he hath heaped great riches, yet is he hindered in the using.
- A man that speaketh too little, and thinketh much and deeply,
- Corrodeth his own heart-strings, and keepeth back good from his fellows:
- A man that speaketh too much, and museth but little and lightly,
- Wasteth his mind in words, and is counted a fool among men:
- But thou, when thou hast thought, weave charily the web of meditation,
- And clothe the ideal spirit in the suitable garments of speech.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Uttered out of time, or concealed in its season, good savoureth of evil;
- To be secret looketh like guilt, to speak out may breed contention:
- Often have I known the honest heart, flaming with indignant virtue,
- Provoke unneeded war by its rash ambassador the tongue:
- Often have I seen the charitable man go so slily on his mission,
- That those who met him in the twilight, took him for a skulking thief:
- I have heard the zealous youth telling out his holy secrets
- Before a swinish throng, who mocked him as he spake;
- And I considered, his openness was hardening them that mocked,
- Whereas a judicious keeping-back might have won their sympathy:
- I have judged rashly and harshly the hand, liberal in the dark,
- Because in the broad daylight, it hath holden it a virtue to be close;
- And the silent tongue have I condemned, because reserve hath chained it,
- That it hid, yea from a brother, the kindness it had done by comforting.
- No need to sound a trumpet, but less to hush a footfall:
- Do thou thy good openly, not as though the doing were a crime.
- Secresy goeth cowled, and Honesty demandeth wherefore?
- For he judgeth--judgeth he not well?--that nothing need be hid but guilt.
- Why should thy good be evil spoken of, through thine unrighteous silence?
- If thou art challenged, speak, and prove the good thou doest.
- The free example of benevolence, unobtruded, yet unhidden,
- Soundeth in the ears of sloth, Go, and do thou likewise:
- And I wot the hypocrite's sin to be of darker dye,
- Because the good man, fearing, thereby hideth his light:
- But neither God nor man hath bid thee cloak thy good,
- When a seasonable word would set thee in thy sphere, that all might see
- thy brightness.
- Ascribe the honour to thy Lord, but be thou jealous of that honour,
- Nor think it light and worthless, because thou mayst not wear it for
- thyself:
- Remember, thy grand prerogative is free unshackled utterance,
- And suffer not the flood-gates of secresy to lock the full river of thy
- speech.
-
- Come, I will show thee an affliction, unnumbered among this world's
- sorrows,
- Yet real and wearisome and constant, embittering the cup of life.
- There be, who can think within themselves, and the fire burneth at their
- heart,
- And eloquence waiteth at their lips, yet they speak not with their tongue:
- There be, whom zeal quickeneth, or slander stirreth to reply,
- Or need constraineth to ask, or pity sendeth as her messengers,
- But nervous dread and sensitive shame freeze the current of their speech;
- The mouth is sealed as with lead, a cold weight presseth on the heart,
- The mocking promise of power is once more broken in performance,
- And they stand impotent of words, travailing with unborn thoughts;
- Courage is cowed at the portal; wisdom is widowed of utterance;
- He that went to comfort is pitied; he that should rebuke, is silent:
- And fools who might listen and learn, stand by to look and laugh;
- While friends, with kinder eyes, wound deeper by compassion:
- And thought, finding not a vent, smouldereth, gnawing at the heart,
- And the man sinketh in his sphere, for lack of empty sounds.
- There be many cares and sorrows thou hast not yet considered,
- And well may thy soul rejoice in the fair privilege of speech;
- For at every turn to want a word,--thou canst not guess that want;
- It is as lack of breath or bread: life hath no grief more galling.
-
- Come, I will tell thee of a joy, which the parasites of pleasure have not
- known,
- Though earth and air and sea have gorged all the appetites of sense.
- Behold, what fire is in his eye, what fervour on his cheek!
- That glorious burst of winged words! how bound they from his tongue!
- The full expression of the mighty thought, the strong triumphant argument,
- The rush of native eloquence, resistless as Niagara,
- The keen demand, the clear reply, the fine poetic image,
- The nice analogy, the clenching fact, the metaphor bold and free,
- The grasp of concentrated intellect wielding the omnipotence of truth,
- The grandeur of his speech in his majesty of mind!
- Champion of the right,--patriot, or priest, or pleader of the innocent
- cause,
- Upon whose lips the mystic bee hath dropped the honey of persuasion,
- Whose heart and tongue have been touched, as of old, by the live coal
- from the altar,
- How wide the spreading of thy peace, how deep the draught of thy
- pleasures!
- To hold the multitude as one, breathing in measured cadence,
- A thousand men with flashing eyes, waiting upon thy will;
- A thousand hearts kindled by thee with consecrated fire,
- Ten flaming spiritual hecatombs offered on the mount of God:
- And now a pause, a thrilling pause,--they live but in thy words,--
- Thou hast broken the bounds of self, as the Nile at its rising,
- Thou art expanded into them, one faith, one hope, one spirit,
- They breathe but in thy breath, their minds are passive unto thine,
- Thou turnest the key of their love, bending their affections to thy
- purpose,
- And all, in sympathy with thee, tremble with tumultuous emotions:
- Verily, O man, with truth for thy theme, eloquence shall throne thee with
- archangels.
-
-
-OF READING.
-
-[Illustration: "O"]
-
- One drachma for a good book, and a thousand talents for a true friend;--
- So standeth the market, where scarce is ever costly:
- Yea, were the diamonds of Golconda common as shingles on the shore,
- A ripe apple would ransom kings before a shining stone:
- And so, were a wholesome book as rare as an honest friend,
- To choose the book be mine: the friend let another take.
- For altered looks and jealousies and fears have none entrance there:
- The silent volume listeneth well, and speaketh when thou listest:
- It praiseth thy good without envy, it chideth thine evil without malice,
- It is to thee thy waiting slave, and thine unbending teacher.
- Need to humour no caprice, need to bear with no infirmity;
- Thy sin, thy slander, or neglect, chilleth not, quencheth not, its love:
- Unalterably speaketh it the truth, warped nor by error nor interest;
- For a good book is the best of friends, the same to-day and for ever.
-
- To draw thee out of self, thy petty plans and cautions,
- To teach thee what thou lackest, to tell thee how largely thou art blest,
- To lure thy thought from sorrow, to feed thy famished mind,
- To graft another's wisdom on thee, pruning thine own folly,
- Choose discreetly, and well digest the volume most suited to thy case,
- Touching not religion with levity, nor deep things when thou art wearied.
- Thy mind is freshened by morning air, grapple with science and philosophy;
- Noon hath unnerved thy thoughts, dream for a while on fictions:
- Grey evening sobereth thy spirit, walk thou then with worshippers:
- But reason shall dig deepest in the night, and fancy fly most free.
-
- O books, ye monuments of mind, concrete wisdom of the wisest;
- Sweet solaces of daily life; proofs and results of immortality;
- Trees yielding all fruits, whose leaves are for the healing of the
- nations;
- Groves of knowledge, where all may eat, nor fear a flaming sword:
- Gentle comrades, kind advisers; friends, comforts, treasures:
- Helps, governments, diversities of tongues; who can weigh your worth?--
- To walk no longer with the just; to be driven from the porch of science;
- To bid long adieu to those intimate ones, poets, philosophers, and
- teachers;
- To see no record of the sympathies which bind thee in communion with the
- good;
- To be thrust from the feet of Him who spake as never man spake;
- To have no avenue to heaven but the dim aisle of superstition;
- To live as an Esquimaux, in lethargy; to die as the Mohawk, in ignorance:
- O what were life, but a blank? what were death, but a terror?
- What were man, but a burden to himself? what were mind, but misery?
- Yea, let another Omar burn the full library of knowledge,
- And the broad world may perish in the flames, offered on the ashes of its
- wisdom!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF WRITING.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The pen of a ready writer, whereunto shall it be likened?
- Ask of the scholar, he shall know,--to the chains that bind a Proteus:
- Ask of the poet, he shall say,--to the sun, the lamp of heaven:
- Ask of thy neighbour, he can answer,--to the friend that telleth my
- thought:
- The merchant considereth it well, as a ship freighted with wares;
- The divine holdeth it a miracle, giving utterance to the dumb.
- It fixeth, expoundeth, and disseminateth sentiment;
- Chaining up a thought, clearing it of mystery, and sending it bright into
- the world.
- To think rightly, is of knowledge; to speak fluently, is of nature;
- To read with profit, is of care; but to write aptly, is of practice.
- No talent among men hath more scholars, and fewer masters:
- For to write is to speak beyond hearing, and none stand by to explain.
- To be accurate, write; to remember, write; to know thine own mind, write;
- And a written prayer is a prayer of faith: special, sure, and to be
- answered.
- Hast thou a thought upon thy brain, catch it while thou canst;
- Or other thoughts shall settle there, and this shall soon take wing:
- Thine uncompounded unity of soul, which argueth and maketh it immortal,
- Yieldeth up its momentary self to every single thought;
- Therefore, to husband thine ideas, and give them stability and substance,
- Write often for thy secret eye; so shalt thou grow wiser.
- The commonest mind is full of thoughts; some worthy of the rarest:
- And could it see them fairly writ, would wonder at its wealth.
-
- O precious compensation to the dumb, to write his wants and wishes;
- O dear amends to the stammering tongue, to pen his burning thoughts!
- To be of the college of Eloquence, through these silent symbols;
- To pour out all the flowing mind without the toil of speech;
- To show the babbling world how it might discourse more sweetly;
- To prove that merchandize of words bringeth no monopoly of wisdom;
- To take sweet vengeance on a prating crew, for the tongue's dishonour,
- By the large triumph of the pen, the homage rendered to a writing.
- With such, that telegraph of mind is dearer than wealth or wisdom,
- Enabling to please without pain, to impart without humiliation.
-
- Fair girl, whose eye hath caught the rustic penmanship of love,
- Let thy bright brow and blushing cheek confess in this sweet hour,--
- Let thy full heart, poor guilty one, whom the scroll of pardon hath just
- reached,--
- Thy wet glad face, O mother, with news of a far-off child,--
- Thy strong and manly delight, pilgrim of other shores,
- When the dear voice of thy betrothed speaketh in the letter of
- affection,--
- Let the young poet, exulting in his lay, and hope (how false) of fame,
- While watching at deep midnight, he buildeth up the verse,--
- Let the calm child of genius, whose name shall never die,
- For that the transcript of his mind hath made his thoughts immortal,--
- Let these, let all, with no faint praise, with no light gratitude, confess
- The blessings poured upon the earth from the pen of a ready writer.
-
- Moreover, their preciousness in absence is proved by the desire of their
- presence:
- When the despairing lover waiteth day after day,
- Looking for a word in reply, one word writ by that hand,
- And cursing bitterly the morn ushered in by blank disappointment:
- Or when the long-looked-for answer argueth a cooling friend,
- And the mind is plied suspiciously with dark inexplicable doubts,
- While thy wounded heart counteth its imaginary scars,
- And thou art the innocent and injured, that friend the capricious and in
- fault:
- Or when the earnest petition, that craveth for thy needs,
- Unheeded, yea, unopened, tortureth with starving delay:
- Or when the silence of a son, who would have written of his welfare,
- Racketh a father's bosom with sharp-cutting fears.
- For a letter, timely writ, is a rivet to the chain of affection,
- And a letter, untimely delayed, is as rust to the solder.
- The pen, flowing with love, or dipped black in hate,
- Or tipped with delicate courtesies, or harshly edged with censure,
- Hath quickened more good than the sun, more evil than the sword,
- More joy than woman's smile, more woe than frowning fortune;
- And shouldst thou ask my judgment of that which hath most profit in the
- world,
- For answer take thou this, The prudent penning of a letter.
-
- Thou hast not lost an hour, whereof there is a record;
- A written thought at midnight shall redeem the livelong day.
- Idea is as a shadow that departeth, speech is fleeting as the wind,
- Reading is an unremembered pastime; but a writing is eternal:
- For therein the dead heart liveth, the clay-cold tongue is eloquent,
- And the quick eye of the reader is cleared by the reed of the scribe.
- As a fossil in the rock, or a coin in the mortar of a ruin,
- So the symbolled thoughts tell of a departed soul:
- The plastic hand hath its witness in a statue, and exactitude of vision
- in a picture,
- And so, the mind that was among us, in its writings is embalmed.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF WEALTH.
-
- Prodigality hath a sister Meanness, his fixed antagonist heart-fellow,
- Who often outliveth the short career of the brother she despiseth:
- She hath lean lips and a sharp look, and her eyes are red and hungry;
- But he sloucheth in his gait, and his mouth speaketh loosely and maudlin.
- Let a spendthrift grow to be old, he will set his heart on saving,
- And labour to build up by penury that which extravagance threw down:
- Even so, with most men, do riches earn themselves a double curse;
- They are ill-got by tight dealing: they are ill-spent by loose
- squandering.
- Give me enough, saith Wisdom;--for he feareth to ask for more;
- And that by the sweat of my brow, addeth stout-hearted Independence:
- Give me enough, and not less, for want is leagued with the tempter;
- Poverty shall make a man desperate, and hurry him ruthless into crime:
- Give me enough, and not more, saving for the children of distress;
- Wealth ofttimes killeth, where want but hindereth the budding:
- There is green glad summer near the pole, though brief and after long
- winter,
- But the burnt breasts of the torrid zone yield never kindly nourishment.
- Wouldst thou be poor, scatter to the rich,--and reap the tares of
- ingratitude;
- Wouldst thou be rich, give unto the poor; thou shalt have thine own with
- usury:
- For the secret hand of Providence prospereth the charitable all ways,
- Good luck shall he have in his pursuits, and his heart shall be glad
- within him;
- Yet perchance he never shall perceive, that, even as to earthly gains,
- The cause of his weal as of his joy, hath been small givings to the poor.
-
- In the plain of Benares is there found a root that fathereth a forest,
- Where round the parent banian-tree drop its living scions;
- Thirstily they strain to the earth, like stalactites in a grotto,
- And strike broad roots, and branch again, lengthening their cool arcades:
- And the dervish madly danceth there, and the faquir is torturing his
- flesh,
- And the calm brahmin worshippeth the sleek and pampered bull:
- At the base lean jackals coil, while from above depending
- With dull malignant stare watcheth the branch-like boa.
- Even so, in man's heart is a sin that is the root of all evil;
- Whose fibres strangle the affections, whose branches overgrow the mind:
- And oftenest beneath its shadow thou shalt meet distorted piety,--
- The clenched and rigid fist, with the eyes upturned to heaven,
- Fanatic zeal with miserly severity, a mixture of gain with godliness,
- And him, against whom passion hath no power, kneeling to a golden calf:
- The hungry hounds of extortion are there, the bond, and the mortgage, and
- the writ,
- While the appetite for gold, unslumbering, watcheth to glut its maw:--
- And the heart, so tenanted and shaded, is cold to all things else;
- It seeth not the sunshine of heaven, nor is warmed by the light of
- charity.
-
- For covetousness disbelieveth God, and laugheth at the rights of men;
- Spurring unto theft and lying, and tempting to the poison and the knife;
- It sundereth the bonds of love, and quickeneth the flames of hate;
- A curse that shall wither the brain, and case the heart with iron.
- Content is the true riches, for without it there is no satisfying,
- But a ravenous all-devouring hunger gnaweth the vitals of the soul.
- The wise man knoweth where to stop, as he runneth in the race of fortune,
- For experience of old hath taught him, that happiness lingereth midway;
- And many in hot pursuit have hasted to the goal of wealth,
- But have lost, as they ran, those apples of gold,--the mind and the power
- to enjoy it.
-
- There is no greater evil among men than a testament framed with injustice:
- Where caprice hath guided the boon, or dishonesty refused what was due.
- Generous is the robber on the highway, in the open daring of his guilt,
- To the secret coward, whose malice liveth and harmeth after him;
- Who smoothly sank into the tomb, with the smile of fraud upon his face,
- And the last black deed of his existence was injury without redress:
- For deaf is the ear of the dead, and can hear no palliating reasons;
- The smiter is not among the living, and Right pleadeth but in vain.
- Yet shall the curse of the oppressed be as blight upon the grave of the
- unjust;
- Yea, bitterly shall that handwriting testify against him at the judgment.
- I saw the humble relation that tended the peevishness of wealth,
- And ministered, with kind hand, to the wailings of disease and discontent:
- I noted how watchfulness and care were feeding on the marrow of her youth,
- How heavy was the yoke of dependence, loaded by petty tyranny;
- Yet I heard the frequent suggestion,--It can be but a little longer,
- Patience and mute submission shall one day reap a rich reward.
- So, tacitly enduring much, waited that humble friend,
- Putting off the lover of her youth until the dawn of wealth:
- And it came, that day of release, and the freed heart could not sorrow,
- For now were the years of promise to yield their golden harvest:
- Hope, so long deferred, sickly sparkled in her eye,
- The miserable past was forgotten, as she looked for the happier future,
- And she checked, as unworthy and ungrateful, the dark suspicious thought
- That perchance her right had been the safer, if not left alone with
- honour:
- But, alas, the sad knowledge soon came, that her stern task-master's will
- Hath rewarded her toil with a jibe, her patience with utter destitution!--
- Shall not the scourge of justice lash that cruel coward,
- Who mingled the gall of ingratitude with the bitterness of disappointment?
- Shall not the hate of men, and vengeance, fiercely pursuing,
- Hunt down the wretched being that sinneth in his grave?
- He fancied his idol self safe from the wrath of his fellows,
- But Hades rose as he came in, to point at him the finger of scorn;
- And again must he meet that orphan-maid to answer her face to face,
- And her wrongs shall cling around his neck, to hinder him from rising
- with the just:
- For his last most solemn act hath linked his name with liar,
- And the crime of Ananias is branded on his brow!
-
- A good man commendeth his cause to the one great Patron of innocence,
- Convinced of justice to the last, and sure of good meanwhile.
- He knoweth he hath a Guardian, wise and kind and strong,
- And can thank Him for giving, or refusing, the trust or the curse of
- riches:
- His confidence standeth as a rock; he dreadeth not malice nor caprice,
- Nor the whisperings of artful men, nor envious secret influence;
- He scorneth servile compromise, and the pliant mouthings of deceit;
- He maketh not a show of love, where he cannot concede esteem;
- He regardeth ill-got wealth, as the root most fruitful of wretchedness,
- So he walketh in straight integrity, leaning on God and his right.
-
- No gain, but by its price: labour, for the poor man's meal,
- Ofttimes heart-sickening toil, to win him a morsel for his hunger:
- Labour, for the chapman at his trade, a dull unvaried round,
- Year after year, unto death; yea, what a weariness is it!
- Labour, for the pale-faced scribe, drudging at his hated desk,
- Who bartereth for needful pittance the untold gold of health;
- Labour, with fear, for the merchant, whose hopes are ventured on the sea;
- Labour, with care, for the man of law, responsible in his gains;
- Labour, with envy and annoyance, where strangers will thee wealth;
- Labour, with indolence and gloom, where wealth falleth from a father;
- Labour unto all, whether aching thews, or aching head, or spirit,--
- The curse on the sons of men, in all their states, is labour.
- Nevertheless, to the diligent, labour bringeth blessing:
- The thought of duty sweeteneth toil, and travail is as pleasure;
- And time spent in doing hath a comfort that is not for the idle,
- The hardship is transmuted into joy by the dear alchemy of Mercy.
- Labour is good for a man, bracing up his energies to conquest,
- And without it life is dull, the man perceiving himself useless:
- For wearily the body groaneth, like a door on rusty hinges,
- And the grasp of the mind is weakened, as the talons of a caged vulture.
- Wealth hath never given happiness, but often hastened misery:
- Enough hath never caused misery, but often quickened happiness:
- Enough is less than thy thought, O pampered creature of society,
- And he that hath more than enough, is a thief of the rights of his
- brother.
-
-
-OF INVENTION.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Man is proud of his mind, boasting that it giveth him divinity,
- Yet with all its powers can it originate nothing;
- For the Great God into all His works hath largely poured out Himself,
- Saving one special property, the grand prerogative,--Creation.
- To improve and expand is ours, as well as to limit and defeat;
- But to create a thought or a thing is hopeless and impossible.
- Can a man make matter?--and yet this would-be god
- Thinketh to make mind, and form original idea:
- The potter must have his clay, and the mason his quarry,
- And mind must drain ideas from everything around it.
- Doth the soil generate herbs, or the torrid air breed flies,
- Or the water frame its monads, or the mist its swarming blight?--
- Mediately, through thousand generations, having seed within themselves,
- All things, rare or gross, own one common Father.
- Truly spake Wisdom, There is nothing new under the sun:
- We only arrange and combine the ancient elements of all things.
- Invention is activity of mind, as fire is air in motion;
- A sharpening of the spiritual sight, to discern hidden aptitudes:
- From the basket and acanthus, is modelled the graceful capital;
- The shadowed profile on the wall helpeth the limner to his likeness;
- The footmarks, stamped in clay, lead on the thoughts to printing;
- The strange skin garments cast upon the shore suggest another hemisphere:
- A falling apple taught the sage pervading gravitation;
- The Huron is certain of his prey, from tracks upon the grass:
- And shrewdness, guessing out the hint, followeth on the trail;
- But the hint must be given, the trail must be there, or the keenest sight
- is as blindness.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Behold the barren reef, which an earthquake hath just left dry;
- It hath no beauty to boast of, no harvest of fair fruits:
- But soon the lichen fixeth there, and, dying, diggeth its own grave,
- And softening suns and splitting frosts crumble the reluctant surface;
- And cormorants roost there, and the snail addeth its slime,
- And efts, with muddy feet, bring their welcome tribute;
- And the sea casteth out her dead, wrapped in a shroud of weeds;
- And orderly nature arrangeth again the disunited atoms;
- Anon, the cold smooth stone is warm with feathery grass,
- And the light sporules of the fern are dropt by the passing wind,
- The wood-pigeon, on swift wing, leaveth its crop-full of grain,
- The squirrel's jealous care planteth the fir-cone and the filbert:
- Years pass, and the sterile rock is rank with tangled herbage;
- The wild-vine clingeth to the briar, and ivy runneth green among the corn,
- Lordly beeches are studded on the down, and willows crowd around the
- rivulet,
- And the tall pine and hazel-thicket shade the rambling hunter.
- Shall the rock boast of its fertility? shall it lift the head in pride?--
- Shall the mind of man be vain of the harvest of its thoughts?
- The savage is that rock; and a million chances from without,
- By little and little acting on the mind, heap up the hot-bed of society;
- And the soul, fed and fattened on the thoughts and things around it,
- Groweth to perfection, full of fruit, the fruit of foreign seeds.
- For we learn upon a hint, we find upon a clue,
- We yield an hundred-fold; but the great sower is Analogy.
- There must be an acrid sloe before a luscious peach,
- A boll of rotting flax before the bridal veil,
- An egg before an eagle, a thought before a thing,
- A spark struck into tinder to light the lamp of knowledge,
- A slight suggestive nod to guide the watching mind,
- A half-seen hand upon the wall, pointing to the balance of Comparison.
- By culture man may do all things, short of the miracle,--Creation;
- Here is the limit of thy power,--here let thy pride be stayed:
- The soil may be rich, and the mind may be active, but neither yield
- unsown;
- The eye cannot make light, nor the mind make spirit.
- Therefore it is wise in man to name all novelty Invention;
- For it is to find out things that are, not to create the unexisting:
- It is to cling to contiguities, to be keen in catching likeness,
- And with energetic elasticity to leap the gulphs of contrast.
- The globe knoweth not increase, either of matter or spirit;
- Atoms and thoughts are used again, mixing in varied combinations;
- And though, by moulding them anew, thou makest them thine own,
- Yet have they served thousands, and all their merit is of God.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF RIDICULE.
-
- Seams of thought for the sage's brow, and laughing lines for the fool's
- face;
- For all things leave their track in the mind; and the glass of the mind
- is faithful.
- Seest thou much mirth upon the cheek? there is then little exercise of
- virtue;
- For he that looketh on the world, cannot be glad and good:
- Seest thou much gravity in the eye? be not assured of finding wisdom;
- For she hath too great praise, not to get many mimics.
- There is a grave-faced folly; and verily, a laughter-loving wisdom;
- And what, if surface-judges account it vain frivolity?
- There is indeed an evil in excess, and a field may lie fallow too long;
- Yet merriment is often as a froth, that mantleth on the strong mind:
- And note thou this for a verity,--the subtlest thinker when alone,
- From ease of thoughts unbent, will laugh the loudest with his fellows:
- And well is the loveliness of wisdom mirrored in a cheerful countenance,
- Justly the deepest pools are proved by dimpling eddies;
- For that, a true philosophy commandeth an innocent life,
- And the unguilty spirit is lighter than a linnet's heart:
- Yea, there is no cosmetic like a holy conscience;
- The eye is bright with trust, the cheek bloomed over with affection,
- The brow unwrinkled by a care, and the lip triumphant in its gladness.
-
- And for yon grave-faced folly, need not far to look for her;
- How seriously on trifles dote those leaden eyes,
- How ruefully she sigheth after chances long gone by,
- How sulkily she moaneth over evils without cure!
- I have known a true-born mirth, the child of innocence and wisdom,
- I have seen a base-born gravity, mingled of ignorance and guilt:
- And again, a base-born mirth, springing out of carelessness and folly;
- And again, a true-born gravity, the product of reflection and right fear.
- The wounded partridge hideth in a furrow, and a stricken conscience would
- be left alone;
- But when its breast is healed, it runneth gladly with its fellows:
- Whereas the solitary heron, standing in the sedgy fen,
- Holdeth aloof from the social world, intent on wiles and death.
-
- Need but of light philosophy to dare the world's dread laugh;
- For a little mind courteth notoriety, to illustrate its puny self:
- But the sneer of a man's own comrades trieth the muscles of courage,
- And to be derided in his home is as a viper in the nest:
- The laugh of a hooting world hath in it a notion of sublimity,
- But the tittering private circle stingeth as a hive of wasps.
- Some have commended ridicule, counting it the test of truth,
- But neither wittily nor wisely; for truth must prove ridicule:
- Otherwise a blunt bulrush is to pierce the proof armour of argument,
- Because the stolidity of ignorance took it for a barbed shaft.
- Softer is the hide of the rhinoceros, than the heart of deriding unbelief,
- And truth is idler there, than the Bushman's feathered reed:
- A droll conceit parrieth a thrust, that should have hit the conscience,
- And the leering looks of humour tickle the childish mind;
- For that the matter of a man is mingled most with folly,
- Neither can he long endure the searching gaze of wisdom.
- It is pleasanter to see a laughing cheek than a serious forehead,
- And there liveth not one among a thousand whose idol is not pleasure.
- Ridicule is a weak weapon, when levelled at a strong mind:
- But common men are cowards, and dread an empty laugh.
- Fear a nettle, and touch it tenderly, its poison shall burn thee to the
- shoulder;
- But grasp it with a bold hand,--is it not a bundle of myrrh?
- Betray mean terror of ridicule, thou shalt find fools enough to mock thee;
- But answer thou their laughter with contempt, and the scoffers will lick
- thy feet.
-
-
-OF COMMENDATION.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The praise of holy men is a promise of praise from their Master;
- A fore-running earnest of thy welcome,--Well done, faithful servant;
- A rich preludious note, that droppeth softly on thine ear,
- To tell thee the chords of thy heart are in tune with the choirs of
- heaven.
- Yet is it a dangerous hearing, for the sweetness may lull thee into
- slumber,
- And the cordial quaffed with thirst may generate the fumes of presumption.
- So seek it not for itself, but taste, and go gladly on thy way,
- For the mariner slacketh not his sail, though the sandal-groves of Araby
- allure him;
- And the fragrance of that incense would harm thee, as when, on a summer
- evening,
- The honied yellow flowers of the gorse oppress thy charmed sense:
- And a man hath too much of praise, for he praiseth himself continually;
- Neither lacketh he at any time self-commendation or excuse.
-
- Praise a fool, and slay him: for the canvas of his vanity is spread;
- His bark is shallow in the water, and a sudden gust shall sink it:
- Praise a wise man, and speed him on his way; for he carrieth the ballast
- of humility,
- And is glad when his course is cheered by the sympathy of brethren ashore.
- The praise of a good man is good, for he holdeth up the mirror of Truth,
- That Virtue may see her own beauty, and delight in her own fair face:
- The praise of a bad man is evil, for he hideth the deformity of Vice,
- Casting the mantle of a queen around the limbs of a leper.
- Praise is rebuke to the man whose conscience alloweth it not:
- And where conscience feeleth it her due, no praise is better than a
- little.
- He that despiseth the outward appearance, despiseth the esteem of his
- fellows;
- And he that overmuch regardeth it, shall earn only their contempt:
- The honest commendation of an equal no one can scorn, and be blameless,
- Yet even that fair fame no one can hunt for, and be honoured:
- If it come, accept it and be thankful, and be thou humble in accepting;
- If it tarry, be not thou cast down; the bee can gather honey out of rue:
- And is thine aim so low, that the breath of those around thee
- Can speed thy feathered arrow, or retard its flight?
- The child shooteth at a butterfly, but the man's mark is an eagle;
- And while his fellows talk, he hath conquered in the clouds.
- Ally thee to truth and godliness, and use the talents in thy charge;
- So shall thou walk in peace, deserving, if not having.
- With a friend, praise him when thou canst; for many a friendship hath
- decayed,
- Like a plant in a crowded corner, for want of sunshine on its leaves:
- With another, praise him not often--otherwise he shall despise thee;
- But be thou frugal in commending; so will he give honour to thy judgment:
- For thou that dost so zealously commend, art acknowledging thine own
- inferiority,
- And he, thou so highly hast exalted, shall proudly look down on thy
- esteem.
-
- Wilt thou that one remember a thing?--praise him in the midst of thy
- advice;
- Never yet forgat man the word whereby he hath been praised.
- Better to be censured by a thousand fools, than approved but by one man
- that is wise;
- For the pious are slower to help right, than the profane to hinder it:
- So, where the world rebuketh, there look thou for the excellent,
- And be suspicious of the good, which wicked men can praise.
- The captain bindeth his troop, not more by severity than kindness,
- And justly, should recompense well doing, as well as be strict with an
- offender;
- The laurel is cheap to the giver, but precious in his sight who hath won
- it,
- And the heart of the soldier rejoiceth in the approving glance of his
- chief.
- Timely given praise is even better than the merited rebuke of censure,
- For the sun is more needful to the plant than the knife that cutteth out
- a canker.
- Many a father hath erred, in that he hath withheld reproof,
- But more have mostly sinned, in withholding praise where it was due:
- There be many such as Eli among men; but these be more culpable than Eli,
- Who chill the fountain of exertion by the freezing looks of indifference:
- Ye call a man easy and good, yet he is as a two-edged sword;
- He rebuketh not vice, and it is strong: he comforteth not virtue, and it
- fainteth.
- There is nothing more potent among men than a gift timely bestowed;
- And a gift kept back where it was hoped, separateth chief friends:
- For what is a gift but a symbol, giving substance to praise and esteem?
- And where is a sharper arrow than the sting of unmerited neglect?
-
- Expect not praise from the mean, neither gratitude from the selfish;
- And to keep the proud thy friend, see thou do him not a service:
- For, behold, he will hate thee for his debt: thou hast humbled him by
- giving;
- And his stubbornness never shall acknowledge the good he hath taken from
- thy hand:
- Yea, rather will he turn and be thy foe, lest thou gather from his
- friendship
- That he doth account thee creditor, and standeth in the second place.
- Still, O kindly feeling heart, be not thou chilled by the thankless,
- Neither let the breath of gratitude fan thee into momentary heat:
- Do good for good's own sake, looking not to worthiness nor love;
- Fling thy grain among the rocks, cast thy bread upon the waters,
- His claim be strongest to thy help, who is thrown most helplessly upon
- thee,--
- So shalt thou have a better praise, and reap a richer harvest of reward.
-
- If a man hold fast to thy creed, and fit his thinkings to thy notions,
- Thou shalt take him for a man right-minded, yea, and excuse his evil:
- But seest thou not, O bigot, that thy zeal is but a hunting after praise,
- And the full pleasure of a proselyte lieth in the flattering of self?
- A man of many praises meeteth many welcomes,
- But he, who blameth often, shall not keep a friend;
- The velvet-coated apricot is one thing, and the spiked horse-chestnut is
- another,
- A handle of smooth amber is pleasanter than rough buck-horn.
- Show me a popular man; I can tell thee the secret of his power;
- He hath soothed them with glozing words, lulling their ears with flattery,
- The smile of seeming approbation is ever the companion of his presence,
- And courteous looks, and warm regards, earn him all their hearts.
-
- Nothing but may be better, and every better might be best;
- The blind may discern, and the simple prove, fault or want in all things;
- And a little mind looketh on the lily with a microscopic eye,
- Eager and glad to pry out specks on its robe of purity;
- But a great mind gazeth on the sun, glorying in his brightness,
- And taking large knowledge of his good, in the broad prairie of creation:
- What, though he hatch basilisks? what, though spots are on the sun?
- In fulness is his worth, in fulness be his praise!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE.
-
-[Illustration: "K"]
-
- Knowledge holdeth by the hilt, and heweth out a road to conquest;
- Ignorance graspeth the blade, and is wounded by its own good sword:
- Knowledge distilleth health from the virulence of opposite poisons;
- Ignorance mixeth wholesomes, unto the breeding of disease:
- Knowledge is leagued with the universe, and findeth a friend in all
- things;
- But ignorance is everywhere a stranger; unwelcome, ill at ease, and out
- of place.
- A man is helpless and unsafe up to the measure of his ignorance,
- For he lacketh perception of the aptitudes commending such a matter to
- his use,
- Clutching at the horn of danger, while he judgeth it the handle of
- security,
- Or casting his anchor so widely, that the granite reef is just within the
- tether.
- Untaught in science, he is but half alive, stupidly taking note of
- nothing,
- Or listening with dull wonder to the crafty saws of an empiric:
- Simple in the world, he trusteth unto knaves; and then to make amends for
- folly,
- Dealeth so shrewdly with the honest, they cannot but suspect him for a
- thief;
- With an unknown God, he maketh mock of reason, fathering contrivance on
- chance,
- Or doting with superstitious dread on some crooked image of his fancy:
- But ignorant of Self, he is weakness at heart; the key-stone crumbleth
- into sand,
- There is panic in the general's tent, the oak is hollow as hemlock;
- Though the warm sap creepeth up its bark, filling out the sheaf of leaves,
- Though knowledge of all things beside add proofs of seeming vigour,
- Though the master-mind of the royal sage feast on the mysteries of wisdom,
- Yet ignorance of self shall bow down the spirit of a Solomon to idols;
- The storm of temptation, sweeping by, shall snap that oak like a reed,
- And the proud luxuriance of its tufted crown drag it the sooner to the
- dust.
-
- Youth, confident in self, tampereth with dangerous dalliance,
- Till the vice his heart once hated hath locked him in her foul embrace:
- Manhood, through zeal of doing good, seeketh high place for its occasions,
- Unwitting that the bleak mountain-air will nip the tender budding of his
- motives:
- Or painfully, for love of truth, he climbeth the ladder of science,
- Till pride of intellect heating his heart, warpeth it aside to delusion:
- The maiden, to give shadow to her fairness, plaiteth her raven hair,
- Heedlessly weaving for her soul the silken net of vanity:
- The grey-beard looketh on his gold, till he loveth its yellow smile,
- Unconscious of the bright decoy which is luring his heart unto avarice:
- Wrath avoideth no quarrel, jealousy counteth its suspicions,
- Pining envy gazeth still, and melancholy seeketh solitude,
- The sensitive broodeth on his slights, the fearful poreth over horrors,
- The train of wantonness is fired, the nerves of indecision are unstrung;
- Each special proneness unto harm is pampered by ignorant indulgence,
- And the man, for want of warning, yieldeth to the apt temptation.
-
- A smith at the loom, and a weaver at the forge, were but sorry craftsmen;
- And a ship that saileth on every wind never shall reach her port:
- Yet there be thousands among men who heed not the leaning of their
- talents,
- But cutting against the grain, toil on to no good end;
- And the light of a thoughtful spirit is quenched beneath the bushel of
- commerce,
- While meaner plodding minds are driven up the mountain of philosophy:
- The cedar withereth on a wall, while the house-leek is fattening in a
- hot-bed,
- And the dock with its rank leaves hideth the sun from violets.
- To everything a fitting place, a proper honourable use;
- The humblest measure of mind is bright in its humble sphere:
- The glow-worm, creeping in the hedge, lighteth her evening torch,
- And her far-off mate, on gossamer sail, steereth his course by that star:
- But ignorance mocketh at proprieties, bringing out the glow-worm at noon;
- And setteth the faults of mediocrity in the full blaze of wisdom.
- Ravens croaking in darkness, and a skylark trilling to the sun,
- The voice of a screech-owl from a ruin, and the blackbird's whistle in a
- wood,
- A cushion-footed camel for the sands, and a swift rein-deer for the snows,
- A naked skin for Ethiopia, and rich soft furs for the Pole:
- In all things is there a fitness: discord with discord hath its music;
- And the harmony of nature is preserved by each one knowing his place.
-
- The blind at an easel, the palsied with a graver, the halt making for the
- goal,
- The deaf ear tuning psaltery, the stammerer discoursing eloquence,--
- What wonder if all fail? the shaft flieth wide of the mark
- Alike if itself be crooked, or the bow be strung awry;
- And the mind which were excellent in one way, but foolishly toileth in
- another,
- What is it but an ill-strung bow, and its aim a crooked arrow?
- By knowledge of self, thou provest thy powers: put not the racer to the
- plough,
- Nor goad the toilsome ox to wager his slowness with the fleet:
- Consider thy failings, heed thy propensities, search out thy latent
- virtues,
- Analyze the doubtful, cultivate the good, and crush the head of evil;
- So shalt thou catch with quick hand the golden ball of opportunity,
- The warrior armed shall be ready for the fray, beside his bridled steed;
- Thou shall ward off special harms, and have the sway of circumstance,
- And turn to thy special good the common current of events;
- Choosing from the wardrobe of the world, thou shalt suitably clothe thy
- spirit,
- Nor thrust the white hand of peace into the gauntlet of defiance:
- The shepherd shall go with a staff, and conquer by sling and stone;
- The soldier shall let alone the distaff, and the scribe lay down the
- sword;
- The man unlearned shall keep silence, and earn one attribute of wisdom,
- The sage be sparing of his lessons before unhearing ears:
- Calm shalt thou be, as a lion in repose, conscious of passive strength,
- And the shock that splitteth the globe, shall not unthrone thy
- self-possession.
-
- Acquaint thee with thyself, O man! so shalt thou be humble:
- The hard hot desert of thy heart shall blossom with the lily and the rose;
- The frozen cliffs of pride shall melt, as an iceberg in the tropics;
- The bitter fountains of self-seeking be sweeter than the waters of the
- Nile.
- But if thou lack that wisdom,--thy frail skiff is doomed,
- On stronger eddy whirling to the dreadful gorge;
- Untaught in that grand lore, thou standest, cased in steel,
- To dare with mocking unbelief the thunderbolts of heaven.
- For look now around thee on the universe, behold how all things serve
- thee;
- The teeming soil, and the buoyant sea, and undulating air,
- Golden crops, and bloomy fruits, and flowers, and precious gems,
- Choice perfumes and fair sights, soft touches and sweet music:
- For thee, shoaling up the bay, crowd the finny nations,
- For thee, the cattle on a thousand hills live, and labour, and die:
- Light is thy daily slave, darkness inviteth thee to slumber;
- Thou art served by the hands of Beauty, and Sublimity kneeleth at thy
- feet:
- Arise, thou sovereign of creation, and behold thy glory!
- Yet more, thou hast a mind; intellect wingeth thee to heaven,
- Tendeth thy state on earth, and by it thou divest down to hell;
- Thou hast measured the belts of Saturn, thou hast weighed the moons of
- Jupiter,
- And seen, by reason's eye, the centre of thy globe;
- Subtly hast thou numbered by billions the leagues between sun and sun,
- And noted in thy book the coming of their shadows;
- With marvellous unerring truth, thou knowest to an inch and to an instant,
- The where and the when of the comet's path that shall seem to rush by at
- thy command:
- Arise, thou king of mind, and survey thy dignity!
- Yet more,--for once believe religion's flattering tale;
- Thou hast a soul, yea, and a God,--but be not therefore humbled;
- Thy Maker's self was glad to live and die--a man;
- The brightest jewel in His crown is voluntary manhood:
- By deep dishonour, and great price, bought He that envied freedom,
- But thou wast born an heir of all, thy Master scarce could earn.
- O climax unto pride, O triumph of humanity,
- O triple crown upon thy brow, most high and mighty Self!
- Arise, thou Lord of all, thou greater than a God!--
- How saidst thou, wretched being?--cast thy glance within;
- Regard that painted sepulchre, the hovel of thy heart:
- Ha! with what fearful imagery swarmeth that small chamber;
- The horrid eye of murder, scowling in the dark,
- The bony hand of avarice, filching from the poor,
- The lurid fires of lust, the idiot face of folly,
- The sickening deed of cruelty, the foul fierce orgies of the drunken,
- Weak contemptible vanity, stubborn stolid unbelief,
- Envy's devilish sneer, and the vile features of ingratitude,--
- Man, hast thou seen enough? or are these full proof
- That thou art a miracle of mercy, and all thy dignity is dross?
-
- Well, said the wisdom of earth, O mortal, know thyself;
- But better the wisdom of heaven, O man, learn thou thy God:
- By knowledge of self thou art conusant of evil, and mailed in panoply to
- meet it;
- By knowledge of God cometh knowledge of good, and universal love is at
- thy heart.
- Every creature knoweth its capacities, running in the road of instinct,
- And reason must not lag behind, but serve itself of all proprieties:
- The swift to the race, and the strong to the burden, and the wise for
- right direction;
- For self-knowledge filleth with acceptance its niche in the temple of
- utility:
- But vainly wilt thou look for that knowledge, till the clue of all truth
- is in thy hand,
- For the labyrinth of man's heart windeth in complicate deceivings:
- Thou canst not sound its depths with the shallow plumb-line of reason,
- Till religion, the pilot of the soul, have lent thee her unfathomable
- coil:
- Therefore, for this grand knowledge, and knowledge is the parent of
- dominion,
- Learn God, thou shalt know thyself; yea, and shalt have mastery of all
- things.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Cruelty to Animals]
-
-OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS.
-
-[Illustration: "S"]
-
- Shame upon thee, savage Monarch-Man, proud monopolist of reason;
- Shame upon Creation's lord, the fierce ensanguined despot:
- What, man! are there not enough, hunger, and diseases, and fatigue,--
- And yet must thy goad or thy thong add another sorrow to existence?
- What! art thou not content thy sin hath dragged down suffering and death
- On the poor dumb servants of thy comfort, and yet must thou rack them
- with thy spite?
- The prodigal heir of creation hath gambled away his all,--
- Shall he add torment to the bondage that is galling his forfeit serfs?
- The leader in nature's pæan himself hath marred her psaltery,
- Shall he multiply the din of discord by overstraining all the strings?
- The rebel hath fortified his stronghold, shutting in his vassals with
- him,--
- Shall he aggravate the woes of the besieged by oppression from within?
- Thou twice deformed image of thy Maker, thou hateful representative of
- Love,
- For very shame be merciful, be kind unto the creatures thou hast ruined;
- Earth and her million tribes are cursed for thy sake,
- Earth and her million tribes still writhe beneath thy cruelty:
- Liveth there but one among the million that shall not bear witness
- against thee,
- A pensioner of land or air or sea, that hath not whereof it will accuse
- thee?
- From the elephant toiling at a launch, to the shrew-mouse in the
- harvest-field,
- From the whale which the harpooner hath stricken, to the minnow caught
- upon a pin,
- From the albatross wearied in its flight, to the wren in her covered nest,
- From the death-moth and lace-winged dragon-fly, to the lady-bird and the
- gnat,
- The verdict of all things is unanimous, finding their master cruel:
- The dog, thy humble friend, thy trusting, honest friend;
- The ass, thine uncomplaining slave, drudging from morn to even;
- The lamb, and the timorous hare, and the labouring ox at plough;
- The speckled trout, basking in the shallow, and the partridge, gleaning
- in the stubble,
- And the stag at bay, and the worm in thy path, and the wild bird pining
- in captivity,
- And all things that minister alike to thy life and thy comfort and thy
- pride,
- Testify with one sad voice that man is a cruel master.
-
- Verily, they are all thine: freely mayst thou serve thee of them all:
- They are thine by gift for thy needs, to be used in all gratitude and
- kindness;
- Gratitude to their God and thine,--their Father and thy Father,
- Kindness to them who toil for thee, and help thee with their all:
- For meat, but not by wantonness of slaying: for burden, but with limits
- of humanity;
- For luxury, but not through torture; for draught, but according to the
- strength:
- For a dog cannot plead his own right, nor render a reason for exemption,
- Nor give a soft answer unto wrath, to turn aside the undeserved lash;
- The galled ox cannot complain, nor supplicate a moment's respite;
- The spent horse hideth his distress, till he panteth out his spirit at
- the goal;
- Also, in the winter of life, when worn by constant toil,
- If ingratitude forget his services, he cannot bring them to remembrance;
- Behold, he is faint with hunger; the big tear standeth in his eye;
- His skin is sore with stripes, and he tottereth beneath his burden;
- His limbs are stiff with age, his sinews have lost their vigour,
- And pain is stamped upon his face, while he wrestleth unequally with toil;
- Yet once more mutely and meekly endureth he the crushing blow;
- That struggle hath cracked his heart-strings,--the generous brute is dead!
- Liveth there no advocate for him? no judge to avenge his wrongs?
- No voice that shall be heard in his defence? no sentence to be passed on
- his oppressor?
- Yea, the sad eye of the tortured pleadeth pathetically for him;
- Yea, all the justice in heaven is roused in indignation at his woes;
- Yea, all the pity upon earth shall call down a curse upon the cruel;
- Yea, the burning malice of the wicked is their own exceeding punishment.
- The Angel of Mercy stoppeth not to comfort, but passeth by on the other
- side,
- And hath no tear to shed, when a cruel man is damned.
-
-
-OF FRIENDSHIP.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- As frost to the bud, and blight to the blossom, even such is
- self-interest to Friendship:
- For Confidence cannot dwell where Selfishness is porter at the gate.
- If thou see thy friend to be selfish, thou canst not be sure of his
- honesty;
- And in seeking thine own weal, thou hast wronged the reliance of thy
- friend.
- Flattery hideth her varnished face when Friendship sitteth at his board:
- And the door is shut upon Suspicion, but Candour is bid glad welcome.
- For Friendship abhorreth doubt, its life is in mutual trust,
- And perisheth, when artful praise proveth it is sought for a purpose.
- A man may be good to thee at times, and render thee mighty service,
- Whom yet thy secret soul could not desire as a friend;
- For the sum of life is in trifles, and though, in the weightier masses,
- A man refuse thee not his purse, nay his all in thine utmost need,
- Yet if thou canst not feel that his character agreeth with thine own,
- Thou never wilt call him friend, though thou render him a heartful of
- gratitude.
- A coarse man grindeth harshly the finer feelings of his brother;
- A common mind will soon depart from the dull companionship of wisdom;
- A weak soul dareth not to follow in the track of vigour and decision;
- And the worldly regardeth with scorn the seeming foolishness of faith.
- A mountain is made up of atoms, and friendship of little matters,
- And if the atoms hold not together, the mountain is crumbled into dust.
-
- Come, I will show thee a friend; I will paint one worthy of thy trust:
- Thine heart shall not weary of him: thou shalt not secretly despise him.
- Thou art long in learning him, in unravelling all his worth;
- And he dazzleth not thine eyes at first, to be darkened in thy sight
- afterward,
- But riseth from small beginnings, and reacheth the height of thine esteem.
- He remembereth that thou art only man; he expecteth not great things from
- thee:
- And his forbearance toward thee silently teacheth thee to be considerate
- unto him.
- He despiseth not courtesy of manner, nor neglecteth the decencies of life:
- Nor mocketh the failings of others, nor is harsh in his censures before
- thee:
- For so, how couldst thou tell, if he talketh not of thee in ridicule?
- He withholdeth no secret from thee, and rejecteth not thine in turn;
- He shareth his joys with thee, and is glad to bear part in thy sorrows.
- Yet one thing, he loveth thee too well to show thee the corruptions of
- his heart:
- For as an ill example strengthened the hands of the wicked,
- So to put forward thy guilt, is a secret poison to thy friend:
- For the evil in his nature is comforted, and he warreth more weakly
- against it,
- If he find that the friend whom he honoureth, is a man more sinful than
- himself.
- I hear the communing of friends; ye speak out the fulness of your souls,
- And being but men, as men, ye own to all the sympathies of manhood:
- Confidence openeth the lips, indulgence beameth from the eye,
- The tongue loveth not boasting, the heart is made glad with kindness:
- And one standeth not as on a hill, beckoning to the other to follow,
- But ye toil up hand in hand, and carry each other's burdens.
- Ye commune of hopes and aspirations, the fervent breathings of the heart,
- Ye speak with pleasant interchange the treasured secrets of affection,
- Ye listen to the voice of complaint, and whisper the language of comfort,
- And as in a double solitude, ye think in each other's hearing.
-
- Choose thy friend discreetly, and see thou consider his station,
- For the graduated scale of ranks accordeth with the ordinance of Heaven.
- If a low companion ripen to a friend, in the full sunshine of thy
- confidence,
- Know, that for old age thou hast heaped up sorrow;
- For thou sinkest to that level, and thy kin shall scorn thee,
- Yea, and the menial thou hast pampered haply shall neglect thee in thy
- death:
- And if thou reachest up to high estates, thinking to herd with princes,
- What art thou but a footstool, though so near a throne?
- O rush among the lilies, be taught thou art a weed,
- O briar among the cedars, hot contempt shall burn thee.
- But thou, friend and scholar, select from thine own caste,
- And make not an intimate of one, thy servant or thy master;
- For only friendship among men is the true republic,
- Where all have equality of service, and all have freedom of command.
- And yet, if thou wilt take my judgment, be shy of too much openness with
- any,
- Lest thou repent hereafter, should he turn and rend thee:
- For many an apostate friend hath abused unguarded confidence,
- And bent to selfish ends the secret of the soul.
-
- Absence strengthened friendship, where the last recollections were kindly;
- But it must be good wine at the last, or absence shall weaken it daily.
- A rare thing is faith, and friendship is a marvel among men,
- Yet strange faces call they friends, and say they believe when they doubt.
- Those hours are not lost that are spent in cementing affection;
- For a friend is above gold, precious as the stores of the mind.
- Be sparing of advice by words, but teach thy lesson by example:
- For the vanity of man may be wounded, and retort unkindly upon thee.
- There be some that never had a friend, because they were gross and
- selfish;
- Worldliness, and apathy, and pride, leave not many that are worthy:
- But one who meriteth esteem, need never lack a friend:
- For as thistle-down flieth abroad, and casteth its anchor in the soil,
- So philanthropy yearneth for a heart, where it may take root and blossom.
-
- Yet I hear the child of sensibility moaning at the wintry cold,
- Wherein the mists of selfishness have wrapped the society of men:
- He grieveth, and hath deep reasons; for falsehood hath wronged his trust,
- And the breaches in his bleeding heart have been filled with the briars
- of suspicion.
- For, alas, how few be friends, of whom charity hath hoped well!
- How few there be among men who forget themselves for other!
- Each one seeketh his own, and looketh on his brethren as rivals,
- Masking envy with friendship, to serve his secret ends.
- And the world, that corrupteth all good, hath wronged that sacred name,
- For it calleth any man friend, who is not known for an enemy:
- And such be as the flies of summer, while plenty sitteth at thy board:
- But who can wonder at their flight from the cold denials of want?
- Such be as vultures round a carcase, assembled together for the feast;
- But a sudden noise scareth them, and forthwith are they specks among the
- clouds.
- There be few, O child of sensibility, who deserve to have thy confidence;
- Yet weep not, for there are some, and such some live for thee:
- To them is the chilling world a drear and barren scene,
- And gladly seek they such as thou art, for seldom find they the occasion:
- For, though no man excludeth himself from the high capability of
- friendship,
- Yet verily the man is a marvel whom truth can write a friend.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Love]
-
-Of Love.
-
- There is a fragrant blossom, that maketh glad the garden of the heart;
- Its root lieth deep: it is delicate, yet lasting, as the lilac crocus of
- autumn:
- Loneliness and thought are the dews that water it morn and even;
- Memory and Absence cherish it, as the balmy breathings of the south:
- Its sun is the brightness of Affection, and it bloometh in the borders of
- Hope;
- Its companions are gentle flowers, and the briar withereth by its side.
- I saw it budding in beauty; I felt the magic of its smile;
- The violet rejoiced beneath it, the rose stooped down and kissed it;
- And I thought some cherub had planted there a truant flower of Eden,
- As a bird bringeth foreign seeds, that they may flourish in a kindly soil.
- I saw, and asked not its name; I knew no language was so wealthy,
- Though every heart of every clime findeth its echo within.
- And yet what shall I say? Is a sordid man capable of Love?
- Hath a seducer known it? Can an adulterer perceive it?
- Or he that seeketh strange women, can he feel its purity?
- Or he that changeth often, can he know its truth?
- Longing for another's happiness, yet often destroying its own;
- Chaste, and looking up to God, as the fountain of tenderness and joy:
- Quiet, yet flowing deep, as the Rhine among rivers;
- Lasting, and knowing not change--it walketh with Truth and Sincerity.
-
- Love:--what a volume in a word, an ocean in a tear,
- A seventh heaven in a glance, a whirlwind in a sigh,
- The lightning in a touch, a millennium in a moment,
- What concentrated joy or woe in blest or blighted love!
- For it is that native poetry springing up indigenous to Mind,
- The heart's own-country music thrilling all its chords,
- The story without an end that angels throng to hear,
- The word, the king of words, carved on Jehovah's heart!
- Go, call thou snake-eyed malice mercy, call envy honest praise,
- Count selfish craft for wisdom, and coward treachery for prudence,
- Do homage to blaspheming unbelief as to bold and free philosophy,
- And estimate the recklessness of license as the right attribute of
- liberty,--
- But with the world, thou friend and scholar, stain not this pure name;
- Nor suffer the majesty of Love to be likened to the meanness of desire:
- For love is no more such, than seraphs' hymns are discord,
- And such is no more Love, than Etna's breath is summer.
-
- Love is a sweet idolatry enslaving all the soul,
- A mighty spiritual force, warring with the dulness of matter,
- An angel-mind breathed into a mortal, though fallen yet how beautiful!
- All the devotion of the heart in all its depth and grandeur.
- Behold that pale geranium, pent within the cottage window;
- How yearningly it stretcheth to the light its sickly long-stalked leaves,
- How it straineth upward to the sun, coveting his sweet influences,
- How real a living sacrifice to the god of all its worship!
- Such is the soul that loveth; and so the rose-tree of affection
- Bendeth its every leaf to look on those dear eyes,
- Its every blushing petal basketh in their light,
- And all its gladness, all its life, is hanging on their love.
-
- If the love of the heart is blighted, it buddeth not again:
- If that pleasant song is forgotten, it is to be learnt no more:
- Yet often will thought look back, and weep over early affection;
- And the dim notes of that pleasant song will be heard as a reproachful
- spirit,
- Moaning in Æolian strains over the desert of the heart,
- Where the hot siroccos of the world have withered its one oasis.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF MARRIAGE.
-
- Seek a good wife of thy God, for she is the best gift of His providence;
- Yet ask not in bold confidence that which He hath not promised:
- Thou knowest not His good will:--be thy prayer then submissive there-unto;
- And leave thy petition to His mercy, assured that He will deal well with
- thee.
- If thou art to have a wife of thy youth, she is now living on the earth;
- Therefore think of her, and pray for her weal; yea, though thou hast not
- seen her.
- They that love early become like-minded, and the tempter toucheth them
- not:
- They grow up leaning on each other, as the olive and the vine.
- Youth longeth for a kindred spirit, and yearneth for a heart that can
- commune with his own;
- He meditateth night and day, doting on the image of his fancy.
- Take heed that what charmeth thee is real, nor springeth of thine own
- imagination;
- And suffer not trifles to win thy love; for a wife is thine unto death.
- The harp and the voice may thrill thee,--sound may enchant thine ear,
- But consider thou, the hand will wither, and the sweet notes turn discord:
- The eye, so brilliant at even, may be red with sorrow in the morning;
- And the sylph-like form of elegance must writhe in the crampings of pain.
-
- O happy lot, and hallowed, even as the joy of angels,
- Where the golden chain of godliness is entwined with the roses of love:
- But beware thou seem not to be holy, to win favour in the eyes of a
- creature,
- For the guilt of the hypocrite is deadly, and winneth thee wrath
- elsewhere.
- The idol of thy heart is, as thou, a probationary sojourner on earth;
- Therefore be chary of her soul, for that is the jewel in her casket:
- Let her be a child of God, that she bring with her a blessing to thy
- house,--
- A blessing above riches, and leading contentment in its train:
- Let her be an heir of Heaven; so shall she help thee on thy way:
- For those who are one in faith, fight double-handed against evil.
- Take heed lest she love thee before God; that she be not an idolater:
- Yet see thou that she love thee well: for her heart is the heart of woman;
- And the triple nature of humanity must be bound by a triple chain,
- For soul and mind and body--godliness, esteem, and affection.
-
- How beautiful is modesty! it winneth upon all beholders:
- But a word or a glance may destroy the pure love that should have been
- for thee.
- Affect not to despise beauty: no one is freed from its dominion;
- But regard it not a pearl of price:--it is fleeting as the bow in the
- clouds.
- If the character within be gentle, it often hath its index in the
- countenance:
- The soft smile of a loving face is better than splendour that fadeth
- quickly.
- When thou choosest a wife, think not only of thyself,
- But of those God may give thee of her, that they reproach thee not for
- their being:
- See that He hath given her health, lest thou lose her early and weep:
- See that she springeth of a wholesome stock, that thy little ones perish
- not before thee:
- For many a fair skin hath covered a mining disease,
- And many a laughing cheek been bright with the glare of madness.
-
- Mark the converse of one thou lovest, that it be simple and sincere;
- For an artful or false woman shall set thy pillow with thorns.
- Observe her deportment with others, when she thinketh not that thou art
- nigh,
- For with thee will the blushes of love conceal the true colour of her
- mind.
- Hath she learning? it is good, so that modesty go with it:
- Hath she wisdom? it is precious, but beware that thou exceed;
- For woman must be subject, and the true mastery is of the mind.
- Be joined to thine equal in rank, or the foot of pride will kick at thee;
- And look not only for riches, lest thou be mated with misery:
- Marry not without means; for so shouldst thou tempt Providence;
- But wait not for more than enough; for Marriage is the DUTY of most men:
- Grievous indeed must be the burden that shall outweigh innocence and
- health,
- And a well-assorted marriage hath not many cares.
- In the day of thy joy consider the poor; thou shall reap a rich harvest
- of blessing;
- For these be the pensioners of One who filleth thy cup with pleasures:
- In the day of thy joy be thankful: He hath well deserved thy praise:
- Mean and selfish is the heart that seeketh Him only in sorrow.
- For her sake who leaneth on thine arm, court not the notice of the world,
- And remember that sober privacy is comelier than public display.
- If thou marriest, thou art allied unto strangers; see they be not such as
- shame thee:
- If thou marriest, thou leavest thine own; see that it be not done in
- anger.
-
- Bride and bridegroom, pilgrims of life, henceforward to travel together,
- In this the beginning of your journey, neglect not the favour of Heaven:
- Let the day of hopes fulfilled be blest by many prayers,
- And at eventide kneel ye together, that your joy be not unhallowed:
- Angels that are round you shall be glad, those loving ministers of mercy,
- And the richest blessings of your God shall be poured on His favoured
- children.
- Marriage is a figure and an earnest of holier things unseen,
- And reverence well becometh the symbol of dignity and glory.
- Keep thy heart pure, lest thou do dishonour to thy state;
- Selfishness is base and hateful; but love considereth not itself.
- The wicked turneth good into evil, for his mind is warped within him;
- But the heart of the righteous is chaste: his conscience casteth off sin.
- If thou wilt be loved, render implicit confidence;
- If thou wouldst not suspect, receive full confidence in turn:
- For where trust is not reciprocal, the love that trusted withereth.
- Hide not your grief nor your gladness; be open one with the other;
- Let bitterness be strange unto your tongues, but sympathy a dweller in
- your hearts:
- Imparting halveth the evils, while it doubleth the pleasures of life,
- But sorrows breed and thicken in the gloomy bosom of Reserve.
-
- Young wife, be not froward, nor forget that modesty becometh thee:
- If it be discarded now, who will not hold it feigned before?
- But be not as a timid girl,--there is honour due to thine estate;
- A matron's modesty is dignified: she blusheth not, neither is she bold.
- Be kind to the friends of thine husband, for the love they have to him:
- And gently bear with his infirmities: hast thou no need of his
- forbearance?
- Be not always in each other's company; it is often good to be alone;
- And if there be too much sameness, ye cannot but grow weary of each other:
- Ye have each a soul to be nourished, and a mind to be taught in wisdom,
- Therefore, as accountable for time, help one another to improve it.
- If ye feel love to decline, track out quickly the secret cause;
- Let it not rankle for a day, but confess and bewail it together:
- Speedily seek to be reconciled, for love is the life of marriage;
- And be ye co-partners in triumph, conquering the peevishness of self.
-
- Let no one have thy confidence, O wife, saving thine husband:
- Have not a friend more intimate, O husband, than thy wife.
- In the joy of a well-ordered home be warned that this is not your rest;
- For the substance to come may be forgotten in the present beauty of the
- shadow.
- If ye are blessed with children, ye have a fearful pleasure,
- A deeper care and a higher joy, and the range of your existence is
- widened:
- If God in wisdom refuse them, thank Him for an unknown mercy:
- For how can ye tell if they might be a blessing or a curse?
- Yet ye may pray, like Hannah, simply dependent on His will:
- Resignation sweeteneth the cup, but impatience dasheth it with vinegar.
- Now this is the sum of the matter:--if ye will be happy in marriage,
- Confide, love, and be patient: be faithful, firm, and holy.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF EDUCATION.
-
- A babe in a house is a well-spring of pleasure, a messenger of peace and
- love:
- A resting place for innocence on earth; a link between angels and men:
- Yet is it a talent of trust, a loan to be rendered back with interest;
- A delight, but redolent of care; honey-sweet, but lacking not the bitter.
- For character groweth day by day, and all things aid it in unfolding,
- And the bent unto good or evil may be given in the hours of infancy:
- Scratch the green rind of a sapling, or wantonly twist it in the soil,
- The scarred and crooked oak will tell of thee for centuries to come;
- Even so mayst thou guide the mind to good, or lead it to the marrings of
- evil,
- For disposition is builded up by the fashioning of first impressions:
- Wherefore, though the voice of instruction waiteth for the ear of reason,
- Yet with his mother's milk the young child drinketh Education.
- Patience is the first great lesson; he may learn it at the breast:
- And the habit of obedience and trust may be grafted on his mind in the
- cradle:
- Hold the little hands in prayer, teach the weak knees their kneeling;
- Let him see thee speaking to thy God; he will not forget it afterward:
- When old and grey will he feelingly remember a mother's tender piety,
- And the touching recollection of her prayers shall arrest the strong man
- in his sin.
-
- Select not to nurse thy darling one that may taint his innocence,
- For example is a constant monitor, and good seed will die among the tares.
- The arts of a strange servant have spoiled a gentle disposition:
- Mother, let him learn of thy lips, and be nourished at thy breast.
- Character is mainly moulded by the cast of the minds that surround it:
- Let then the playmates of thy little one be not other than thy judgment
- shall approve:
- For a child is in a new world, and learneth somewhat every moment,
- His eye is quick to observe, his memory storeth in secret,
- His ear is greedy of knowledge, and his mind is plastic as soft wax.
- Beware then that he heareth what is good, that he feedeth not on evil
- maxims,
- For the seeds of first instructions are dropped into the deepest furrows.
- That which immemorial use hath sanctioned, seemeth to be right and true;
- Therefore, let him never have to recollect the time when good things were
- strangers to his thought.
- Strive not to centre in thyself, fond mother, all his love;
- Nay, do not thou so selfishly, but enlarge his heart for others;
- Use him to sympathy betimes, that he learn to be sad with the afflicted;
- And check not a child in his merriment,--should not his morning be sunny?
- Give him not all his desire, so shalt thou strengthen him in hope;
- Neither stop with indulgence the fountain of his tears, so shall he fear
- thy firmness.
- Above all things graft on him subjection, yea, in the veriest trifle;
- Courtesy to all, reverence to some, and to thee unanswering obedience.
-
- Read thou first, and well approve, the books thou givest to thy child;
- But remember the weakness of his thought, and that wisdom for him must be
- diluted:
- In the honied waters of infant tales, let him taste the strong wine of
- truth:
- Pathetic stories soften the heart; but legends of terror breed midnight
- misery;
- Fairy fictions cram the mind with folly, and knowledge of evil tempteth
- to like evil:
- Be not loth to curb imagination, nor be fearful that truths will depress
- it;
- And for evil, he will learn it soon enough; be not thou the devil's envoy.
- Induce not precocity of intellect, for so shouldst thou nourish vanity;
- Neither can a plant, forced in the hot-bed, stand against the frozen
- breath of winter.
- The mind is made wealthy by ideas, but the multitude of words is a
- clogging weight:
- Therefore be understood in thy teaching, and instruct to the measure of
- capacity.
- Analogy is milk for babes, but abstract truths are strong meat;
- Precepts and rules are repulsive to a child, but happy illustration
- winneth him:
- In vain shalt thou preach of industry and prudence, till he learn of the
- bee and the ant;
- Dimly will he think of his soul, till the acorn and the chrysalis have
- taught him;
- He will fear God in thunder, and worship His loveliness in flowers;
- And parables shall charm his heart, while doctrines seem dead mystery:
- Faith shall he learn of the husbandman casting good corn into the soil;
- And if thou train him to trust thee, he will not withhold his reliance
- from the Lord.
- Fearest thou the dark, poor child? I would not have thee left to thy
- terrors;
- Darkness is the semblance of evil, and nature regardeth it with dread:
- Yet know thy father's God is with thee still, to guard thee:
- It is a simple lesson of dependence; let thy tost mind anchor upon Him.
- Did a sudden noise affright thee? lo, this or that hath caused it:
- Things undefined are full of dread, and stagger stouter nerves.
- The seeds of misery and madness have been sowed in the nights of infancy;
- Therefore be careful that ghastly fears be not the night companions of
- thy child.
-
- Lo, thou art a landmark on a hill; thy little ones copy thee in all
- things:
- Let, then, thy religion be perfect: so shalt thou be honoured in thy
- house.
- Be instructed in all wisdom, and communicate that thou knowest,
- Otherwise thy learning is hidden, and thus thou seemest unwise.
- A sluggard hath no respect; an epicure commandeth not reverence;
- Meanness is always despicable, and folly provoketh contempt.
- Those parents are best honoured whose characters best deserve it;
- Show me a child undutiful, I shall know where to look for a foolish
- father:
- Never hath a father done his duty, and lived to be despised of his son:
- But how can that son reverence an example he dare not follow?
- Should he imitate thee in thine evil? his scorn is thy rebuke.
- Nay, but bring him up aright, in obedience to God and to thee;
- Begin betimes, lest thou fail of his fear; and with judgment, that thou
- lose not his love:
- Herein use good discretion, and govern not all alike,
- Yet, perhaps, the fault will be in thee, if kindness prove not all
- sufficient:
- By kindness, the wolf and the zebra become docile as the spaniel and the
- horse;
- The kite feedeth with the starling, under the law of kindness:
- That law shall tame the fiercest, bring down the battlements of pride,
- Cherish the weak, control the strong, and win the fearful spirit.
- Be obeyed when thou commandest; but command not often:
- Let thy carriage be the gentleness of love, not the stern front of
- tyranny.
- Make not one child a warning to another; but chide the offender apart:
- For self-conceit and wounded pride rankle like poisons in the soul.
- A mild rebuke in the season of calmness, is better than a rod in the heat
- of passion;
- Nevertheless, spare not, if thy word hath passed for punishment;
- Let not thy child see thee humbled, nor learn to think thee false;
- Suffer none to reprove thee before him, and reprove not thine own
- purposes by change;
- Yet speedily turn thou again, and reward him where thou canst,
- For kind encouragement in good cutteth at the roots of evil.
-
- Drive not a timid infant from his home, in the early spring-time of his
- life,
- Commit not that treasure to an hireling, nor wrench the young heart's
- fibres:
- In his helplessness leave him not alone, a stranger among strange
- children,
- Where affection longeth for thy love, counting the dreary hours;
- Where religion is made a terror, and innocence weepeth unheard;
- Where oppression grindeth without remedy, and cruelty delighteth in
- smiting.
- Wherefore comply with an evil fashion? Is it not to spare thee trouble?
- Can he gather no knowledge at thy mouth? Wilt thou yield thine honour to
- another?
- What can he gain in learning, to equal what he loseth in innocence?
- Alas! for the price above gold, by which such learning cometh!
- For emulative pride and envy are the specious idols of the diligent,
- Oaths and foul-mouthed sin burn in the language of the idle:
- Bolder in that mimic world of boys stareth brazen-fronted vice,
- Than thereafter in the haunts of men, where society doth shame her into
- corners.
- My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thy timid infant unto
- sorrows.
- There be many that say, We were happiest in days long past,
- When our deepest care was an ill-conned book,
- And when we sported in that merry sunshine of our life,
- Sadness a stranger to the heart, and cheerfulness its gay inhabitant.
- True, ye are now less pure, and therefore are more wretched:
- But have ye quite forgotten how sorely ye travailed at your tasks,
- How childish griefs and disappointments bowed down the childish mind?
- How sorrow sat upon your pillow, and terror hath waked you up betimes,
- Dreading the strict hand of justice, that would not wait for a reason,
- Or the whims of petty tyrants, children like yourselves,
- Or the pestilent extract of evil poured into the ear of innocence?
- Behold the coral island, fresh from the floor of the Atlantic,
- It is dinted by every ripple, and a soft wave can smooth its surface;
- But soon its substance hardeneth in the winds and tropic sun,
- And weakly the foaming billows break against its adamantine wall:
- Even thus, though sin and care dash upon the firmness of manhood,
- The timid child is wasted most by his petty troubles;
- And seldom, when life is mature, and the strength proportioned to the
- burden,
- Will the feeling mind, that can remember, acknowledge to deeper anguish,
- Than when, as a stranger and a little one, the heart first ached with
- anxiety,
- And the sprouting buds of sensibility were bruised by the harshness of a
- school.
- My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thine infant unto sorrows.
- Yet there be boisterous tempers, stout nerves, and stubborn hearts,
- And there is a riper season, when the mind is well disciplined in good,
- And a time, when youth may be bettered by the wholesome occasions of
- knowledge,
- Which rarely will he meet with so well, as among the congregation of his
- fellows.
- Only for infancy, fond mother, rend not those first affections;
- Only for the sensitive and timorous, consign not thy darling unto misery.
-
- A man looketh on his little one, as a being of better hope;
- In himself ambition is dead, but it hath a resurrection in his son:
- That vein is yet untried,--and who can tell if it be not golden?
- While his, well nigh worked out, never yielded aught but lead:
- And thus is he hurt more sorely, if his wishes are defeated there,
- He has staked his all upon a throw, and lo! the dice have foiled him.
- All ways, and at all times, men follow on in flocks,
- And the rife epidemic of the day shall tincture the stream of education.
- Fashion is a foolish watcher posted at the tree of knowledge,
- Who plucketh its unripe fruit to pelt away the birds;
- But, for its golden apples,--they dry upon the boughs,
- And few have the courage or the wisdom to eat in spite of fashion.
- One while, the fever is to learn, what none will be wiser for knowing,
- Exploded errors in extinct tongues, and occasions for their use are small;
- And the bright morning of life, for years of misspent time,
- Wasted in following sounds, hath tracked up little sense,
- Till at noon a man is thrown upon the world, with a mind expert in
- trifles,
- Having yet everything to learn that can make him good or useful:
- The curious spirit of youth is crammed with unwholesome garbage,
- While starving for the mother's milk the breasts of nature yield;
- And high-coloured fables of depravity lure with their classic varnish,
- While truth is holding out in vain her mirror much despised.
-
- Of olden time, the fashion was for arms, to make an accomplished slayer,
- And set gregarious man a-tilting with his fellows;
- Thereafter, occult sciences, and mystic arts, and symbols,
- How to exorcise a wizard, and how to lay a ghost;
- Anon, all for gallantry and presence, the minuet, the palfrey, and the
- foil,
- And the grand aim of education was to produce a coxcomb;
- Soon came scholastical dispute with hydra-headed argument,
- And the true philosophy of mind confounded in a labyrinth of words;
- Then the Pantheon, and its orgies, initiating docile childhood,
- While diligent youth strove hard to render his all unto Cæsar;
- And now is seen the passion for utility, when all things are accounted by
- their price,
- And the wisdom of the wise is busied in hatching golden eggs:
- Perchance, not many moons to come, and all will again be for abstrusity,
- Unravelling the figured veil that hideth Egypt's gods;
- Or in those strange Avatars seeking benignant Vishnu,
- Kali, and Kamala the fair, and much invoked Ganesa.
-
- The mines of knowledge are oft laid bare through the forked hazel wand of
- chance,
- And in a mountain of quartz we find a grain of gold.
- Of a truth, it were well to know all things, and to learn them all at
- once,
- And what, though mortal insufficiency attain to small knowledge of any?
- Man loveth exclusions, delighting in the sterile trodden path,
- While the broad green meadow is jewelled with wild flowers:
- And whether is it better with the many to follow a beaten track,
- Or by eccentric wanderings to cull unheeded sweets?
-
- When his reason yieldeth fruit, make thy child thy friend;
- For a filial friend is a double gain, a diamond set in gold.
- As an infant, thy mandate was enough, but now let him see thy reasons;
- Confide in him, but with discretion: and bend a willing ear to his
- questions.
- More to thee than to all beside, let him owe good counsel and good
- guidance;
- Let him feel his pursuits have an interest, more to thee than to all
- beside.
- Watch his native capacities; nourish that which suiteth him the readiest;
- And cultivate early those good inclinations wherein thou fearest he is
- most lacking:
- Is he phlegmatic and desponding? let small successes comfort his hope:
- Is he obstinate and sanguine? let petty crosses accustom him to life:
- Showeth he a sordid spirit? be quick, and teach him generosity:
- Inclineth he to liberal excess? prove to him how hard it is to earn.
- Gather to thy hearth such friends as are worthy of honour and attention;
- For the company a man chooseth is a visible index of his heart:
- But let not the pastor whom thou hearest be too much a familiar in thy
- house,
- For thy children may see his infirmities, and learn to cavil at his
- teaching.
- It is well to take hold on occasions, and render indirect instruction;
- It is better to teach upon a system, and reap the wisdom of books:
- The history of nations yieldeth grand outlines: of persons, minute
- details:
- Poetry is polish to the mind, and high abstractions cleanse it.
- Consider the station of thy son, and breed him to his fortune with
- judgment:
- The rich may profit in much which would bring small advantage to the poor.
- But with all thy care for thy son, with all thy strivings for his welfare,
- Expect disappointment, and look for pain: for he is of an evil stock, and
- will grieve thee.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF TOLERANCE.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- A wise man in a crowded street winneth his way with gentleness,
- Nor rudely pusheth aside the stranger that standeth in his path;
- He knoweth that blind hurry will but hinder, stirring up contention
- against him,
- Yet holdeth he steadily right on, with his face to the scope of his
- pursuit:
- Even so, in the congress of opinions, the bustling highway of
- intelligence,
- Each man should ask of his neighbour, and yield to him again, concession.
- Terms ill-defined, and forms misunderstood, and customs, where their
- reasons are unknown,
- Have stirred up many zealous souls to fight against imaginary giants:
- But wisdom will hear the matter out, and often, by keenness of perception,
- Will find in strange disguise the precious truth he seeketh;
- So he leaveth unto prejudice or taste the garb and the manner of her
- presence,
- Content to see so nigh the mistress of his love.
- There is no similitude in nature that owneth not also to a difference,
- Yea, no two berries are alike, though twins upon one stem;
- No drop in the ocean, no pebble on the beach, no leaf in the forest, hath
- its counterpart,
- No mind in its dwelling of mortality, no spirit in the world unseen:
- And therefore, since capacity and essence differ alike with accident,
- None but a bigot partizan will hope for impossible unity.
- Wilt thou ensue peace, nor buffet with the waters of contention,
- Wilt thou be counted wise and gain the love of men,
- Let unobtruded error escape the frown of censure,
- Nor lift the glass of truth alway before thy fellows:
- I say not, compromise the right, I would not have thee countenance the
- wrong,
- But hear with charitable heart the reasons of an honest judgment;
- For thou also hast erred, and knowest not when thou art most right,
- Nor whether to-morrow's wisdom may not prove thee simple to-day:
- Perchance thou art chiding in another what once thou wast thyself;
- Perchance thou sharply reprovest what thou wilt be hereafter.
- A man that can render a reason, is a man worthy of an answer;
- But he that argueth for victory, deserveth not the tenderness of Truth.
-
- Whiles a man liveth he may mend: count not thy brother reprobate;
- When he is dead his chance is gone: remember not his faults in bitterness.
- A man, till he dieth, is immortal in thy sight; and then he is as nothing:
- Make not the living thy foe, nor take weak vengeance of the dead.
- For life is as a game of chess, where least causeth greatest,
- And an ill move bringeth loss, and a pawn may ensure victory.
- Dost thou suspect? seek out certainty: for now, by self-inflicted pain,
- Or ill-directed wrath, thou wrongest thyself or thy neighbour:
- Suspicion is an early lesson, taught in the school of experience,
- Neither shalt thou easily unlearn it, though charity ply thee with her
- preaching;
- Yet look thou well for reasons, or ever mistrust hath marred thee,
- Or fear curdled thy blood, or jealousy goaded thee to madness;
- For a look, or a word, or an act, may be taken well or ill
- As construed by the latitude of love, or the closeness of cold suspicion.
-
- Better is the wrong with sincerity, rather than the right with falsehood:
- And a prudent man will not lay siege to the stronghold of ignorant
- bigotry.
- To unsettle a weak mind were an easy inglorious triumph,
- And a strong cause taketh little count of the worthless suffrage of a
- fool:
- Lightly he held to the wrong, loosely will he cling to the right;
- Weakness is the essence of his mind, and the reed cannot yield an acorn.
- Dogged obstinacy is oftentimes the buttress that proppeth an unstable
- spirit,
- But a candid man blusheth not to own, he is wiser to-day than yesterday.
- A man of a little wisdom is a sage among fools;
- But himself is chief among the fools, if he look for admiration from them.
- A heresy is an evil thing, for its shame is its pride:
- Its necessary difference of error is the character it most esteemeth:
- Give a man all things short of liberty, thou shalt have no thanks,
- And little wilt thou speed with thine opponent, by proving points he will
- concede.
- The tost sand darkeneth the waves; and clear had been the pages of truth,
- Had not the glosses of men obscured the simplicity of faith.
- In all things consider thine own ignorance, and gladly take occasion to
- be taught;
- But suffer not excess of liberality to neutralize thy mental independence.
-
- The faults and follies of most men make their deaths a gain:
- But thou also art a man, full of faults and follies:
- Therefore sorrow for the dead, or none shall weep for thee,
- For the measure of charity thou dealest, shall be poured into thine own
- bosom.
- That which vexeth thee now, provoking thee to hate thy brother,
- Bear with it; the annoyance passeth, and may not return for ever:
- The same combinations and results which aggravate thy soul to-day,
- May not meet again for centuries in the kaleidoscope of circumstance;
- For men and matters change, new elements mixing in continually,
- And, as with chemical magic, the sour is transmuted into sweetness:
- A little explained, a little endured, a little passed over as a foible,
- And lo, the jagged atoms fit like smooth mosaic.
- Thou canst not shape another's mind to suit thine own body,
- Think not, then, to be furnishing his brain with thy special notions.
- Charity walketh with a high step, and stumbleth not at a trifle:
- Charity hath keen eyes, but the lashes half conceal them:
- Charity is praised of all, and fear not thou that praise,
- God will not love thee less, because men love thee more.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF SORROW.
-
- I said, I will seek out Sorrow, and minister the balm of pity;
- So I sought her in the house of mourning; but peace followed in her train.
- Then I marked her brooding silently in the gloomy cavern of Regret;
- But a sunbeam of heavenly hope gleamed on her folded wing.
- So I turned to the cabin of the poor, where famine dwelt with disease:
- But the bed of the sick was smoothed, and the ploughman whistled at his
- labour.
- So I stopt, and mused within myself, to remember where Sorrow dwelt,
- For I sought to see her alone, uncomforted, uncompanioned.
- I went to the prison, but penitence was there, and promise of better
- times;
- I listened at the madman's cell, but it echoed with deluded laughter.
- Then I turned me to the rich and noble; I noted the sons of fashion:
- A smile was on the languid cheek, that had no commerce with the heart;
- Unhallowed thoughts, like fires, gleamed from the window of the eye;
- And sorrow lived with those whose pleasures add unto their sins.
-
- His infancy wanted not guilt; his life was continued evil:
- He drew in pride with his mother's milk, and a father's lips taught him
- cursing.
- I marked him as the wayward boy; I traced the dissolute youth:
- I saw him betray the innocent, and sacrifice affection to his lust;
- I saw him the companion of knaves, and a squanderer of ill-got gain;
- I heard him curse his own misery, while he hugged the chains that galled
- him:
- For well had experience declared the bitterness of guilty pleasure,
- But habit, with its iron net, involved him in its folds.
- Behind him lowered the thunder-storm, which the caldron of his wickedness
- had brewed;
- Before him was the smooth steep cliff, whose base is ruin and despair.
- So he rushed madly on, and tried to forget his being:
- The noisy revel and the low debauch, and fierce excitement of play,
- With dreary interchange of palling pleasures, filled the dull round of
- existence:
- Memory was to him as a foe, so he flew for false solace to the wine-cup,
- And stunned his enemy at even; but she rent him as a giant in the morning.
-
- I turned aside to weep; I lost him a little while:
- I looked, and years had past; he was hoar with the winter of his age.
- And what was now his hope? where was the balm for his sadness?
- The memory of the past was guilt: the feeling of the present, remorse.
- Then he set his affections on gold, he worshipped the shrine of Mammon,
- And to lay richer gifts before his idol, he starved his own bowels;
- So, the youth spent in profligacy ended in the gripings of want:
- The miser grudged himself husks to take deeper vengeance of the prodigal.
- And I said, this is Sorrow, but pity cannot reach it;
- This is to be wretched indeed, to be guilty without repentance.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Joy]
-
-OF JOY.
-
- My soul was sickened within me, so I sought the dwelling place of Joy:
- And I met it not in laughter; I found it not in wealth or power;
- But I saw it in the pleasant home, where religion smiled upon content,
- And the satisfied ambition of the heart rejoiced in the favour of its God.
- Behold the happy man, his face is rayed with pleasure,
- His thoughts are of calm delight, and none can know his blessedness.
- I have watched him from his infancy, and seen him in the grasp of death,
- Yet, never have I noted on his brow the cloud of desponding sorrow.
- He hath knelt beside his cradle; his mother's hymn lulled him to sleep:
- In childhood he hath loved holiness, and drank from that fountain-head of
- peace.
- Wisdom took him for her scholar, guiding his steps in purity:
- He lived unpolluted by the world; and his young heart hated sin.
- But he owned not the spurious religion engendered of faction and
- moroseness,
- Neither were the sproutings of his soul seared by the brand of
- superstition.
- His love is pure and single, sincere, and knoweth not change;
- For his manhood hath been blest with the pleasant choice of his youth:
- Behold his one beloved, she leaneth on his arm,
- And he looketh on the years that are past, to review the dawn of her
- affection.
- Memory is sweet unto him, as a perfect landscape to the sight;
- Each object is lovely in itself, but the whole is the harmony of nature.
- Behold his little ones around him, they bask in the warmth of his smile,
- And infant innocence and joy lighten their happy faces;
- He is holy, and they honour him: he is loving, and they love him:
- He is consistent, and they esteem him: he is firm, and they fear him.
- His friends are the excellent among men; and the bands of their
- friendship are strong:
- His house is the palace of peace: for the Prince of Peace is there.
- As the wearied man to his couch, as the thoughtful man to his musings,
- Even so, from the bustle of life, he goeth to his well-ordered home.
- And though he often sin, he returneth with weeping eyes:
- For he feeleth the mercies of forgiveness, and gloweth with warmer
- gratitude.
-
- Thus did he walk in happiness, and sorrow was a stranger to his soul;
- The light of affection sunned his heart, the tear of the grateful bedewed
- his feet,
- He put his hand with constancy to good, and angels knew him as a brother,
- And the busy satellites of evil trembled as at God's ally:
- He used his wealth as a wise steward, making him friends for futurity:
- He bent his learning to religion, and religion was with him at the last:
- For I saw him after many days, when the time of his release was come,
- And I longed for a congregated world, to behold that dying saint.
- As the aloe is green and well-liking, till the last best summer of its
- age,
- And then hangeth out its golden bells, to mingle glory with corruption;
- As a meteor travelleth in splendour, but bursteth in dazzling light;
- Such was the end of the righteous: his death was the sun at its setting.
-
- Look on this picture of joy, and remember that portrait of sorrow:
- Behold the beauty of holiness, behold the deformity of sin!
- How long, ye sons of men, will ye scorn the words of wisdom?
- How long will ye hunt for happiness in the caverns that breed despair?
- Will ye comfort yourselves in misery, by denying the existence of delight,
- And from experience in woe, will ye reason that none are happy?
- Joy is not in your path, for it loveth not that bleak broad road,
- But its flowers are hung upon the hedges that line a narrower way;
- And there the faint travellers of earth may wander and gather for
- themselves,
- To soothe their wounded hearts with balm from the amaranths of heaven.
-
-=THEÔ DOXA=.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Proverbial philosophy; Second Series.]
-
-SECOND SERIES.
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY.
-
-[Illustration: Introductory "C"]
-
- Come again, and greet me as a friend, fellow-pilgrim upon life's highway,
- Leave awhile the hot and dusty road, to loiter in the greenwood of
- Reflection.
- Come unto my cool dim grotto, that is watered by the rivulet of truth,
- And over whose time-stained rock climb the fairy flowers of content;
- Here, upon this mossy bank of leisure fling thy load of cares,
- Taste my simple store, and rest one soothing hour.
-
- Behold, I would count thee for a brother, and commune with thy charitable
- soul;
- Though wrapt within the mantle of a prophet, I stand mine own weak
- scholar.
- Heed no disciple for a teacher, if knowledge be not found upon his tongue;
- For vanity and folly were the lessons these lips untaught could give:
- The precious staple of my merchandise cometh from a better country,
- The harvest of my reaping sprang of foreign seed:
- And this poor pensioner of Mercy--should he boast of merit?
- The grafted stock,--should that be proud of apples not its own?
- Into the bubbling brook I dip my hermit shell;
- Man receiveth as a cup, but Wisdom is the river.
-
- Moreover, for this fillagree of fancy, this Oriental garnish of
- similitude,
- Alas, the world is old,--and all things old within it:
- I walk a trodden path, I love the good old ways;
- Prophets, and priests, and kings have tuned the harp I faintly touch.
- Truth, in a garment of the past, is my choice and simple theme;
- No truth is new to-day: and the mantle was another's.
-
- Still, there is an insect swarm, the buzzing cloud of imagery,
- Mote-like steaming on my sight, and thronging my reluctant mind;
- The memories of studious culling, and multiplied analogies of nature,
- Fresh feelings unrepressed, welling from the heart spontaneous,
- Facts, and comparisons, and meditative atoms, gathered on the heap of
- combination,
- Mingle in the fashion of my speech with gossamer dreams of Reverie.
- I need not beat the underwood for game; my pheasants flock upon the lawn,
- And gamboling hares disport fearless in my dewy field;
- I roam no heath-empurpled hills, wearily watching for a covey,
- But thoughts fly swift to my decoy, eager to be caught;
- I sit no quiet angler, lingering patiently for sport,
- But spread my nets for a draught, and take the glittering shoal;
- I chase no solitary stag, tracking it with breathless toil,
- But hunt with Aurung-zebe, and spear surrounded thousands.
-
- What then,--count ye this a boast?--sweet charity, think it other,
- For the dog-fish and poisonous ray are captured in the mullet-haul:
- The crane and the kite are of my thoughts, alike with the partridge and
- the quail,
- And unclean meats as of the clean hang upon my Seric shambles.
- --How saith he? shall a man deceive, dressing up his jackal as a lion?
- Or colour in staid hues of fact the changing vest of falsehood?--
- Brother, unwittingly he may; doubtless, unwillingly he doth:
- For men are full of fault, and how should he be righteous?
- Carefully my garden hath been weeded, yet shall it be foul with thistle;
- My grapery is diligently thinned, and yet many berries will be sour:
- From my nets have I flung the bad away, to my small skill and caution;
- Yet may some slimy snake have counted for an eel.
- The rudder of Man's best hope cannot always steer himself from error;
- The arrow of Man's straightest aim flieth short of truth.
- Thus, the confession of sincerity visit not as if it were presumption:
- Nor own me for a leader, where thy reason is not guide.
-
-
-OF CHEERFULNESS.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Take courage, prisoner of time, for there be many comforts,
- Cease thy labour in the pit, and bask awhile with truants in the sun;
- Be cheerful, man of care, for great is the multitude of chances,
- Burst thy fetters of anxiety, and walk among the citizens of ease:
- Wherefore dost thou doubt? if present good is round thee,
- It may be well to look for change, but to trust in a continuance is
- better;
- Whilst, at the crisis of adversity, to hope for some amends were wisdom,
- And cheerfully to bear thy cross in patient strength is duty.
- I speak of common troubles, and the petty plagues of life,
- The phantom-spies of Unbelief, that lurk about his outposts:
- Sharp suspicion, dull distrust, and sullen stern moroseness
- Are captains in that locust swarm to lead the cloudy host.
- Thou hast need of fortitude and faith, for the adversaries come on
- thickly,
- And he that fled hath added wings to his pursuing foes;
- Fight them, and the cravens flee; thy boldness is their panic;
- Fear them, and thy treacherous heart hath lent the ranks a legion:
- Among their shouts of victory resoundeth the wail of Heraclitus,
- While Democrite, confident and cheerful, hath plucked up the standard of
- their camp.
-
- Not few nor light are the burdens of life; then load it not with
- heaviness of spirit;
- Sicknesses, and penury, and travail,--there be real ills enow:
- We are wandering benighted, with a waning moon; plunge not rashly into
- jungles,
- Where cold and poisonous damps will quench the torch of hope:
- The tide is strong against us; good oarsmen, pull or perish,--
- If your arms be slack for fear, ye shall not stem the torrent.
- A wise traveller goeth on cheerily, through fair weather or foul;
- He knoweth that his journey must be sped, so he carrieth his sunshine
- with him.
- Calamities come not as a curse,--nor prosperity for other than a trial;
- Struggle,--thou art better for the strife, and the very energy shall
- hearten thee.
- Good is taught in a Spartan school,--hard lessons and a rough discipline;
- But evil cometh idly of itself, in the luxury of Capuan holidays:
- And Wisdom will go bravely forth to meet the chastening scourge,
- Enduring with a thankful heart that punishment of Love.
-
- There be three chief rivers of despondency: sin, sorrow, fear;
- Sin is the deepest, sorrow hath its shallows, and fear is a noisy rapid:
- But even to the darkest holes in guilt's profoundest river
- Hope can pierce with quickening ray, and all those depths are lightened.
- So long as there is mercy in a God, hope is the privilege of creatures,
- And so soon as there is penitence in creatures, that hope is exalted into
- duty.
- Verily, consider this for courage; that the fearful and the unbelieving
- Are classed with idolaters and liars, because they trusted not in God:
- For it is none other than selfish sin, a hard and proud ingratitude,
- Where seeming repentance is herald of despair, instead of hope's
- forerunner.
-
- Moreover, in thy day of grief,--for friends, or fame, or fortune,
- Well I wot the heart shall ache, and mind be numbed in torpor;
- Let nature weep; leave her alone; the freshet of her sorrow must run off;
- And sooner will the lake be clear, relieved of turbid floodings.
- Yet see that her license hath a limit; with the novelty her agony is over;
- Hasten in that earliest calm, to tie her in the leash with Reason.
- For regrets are an enervating folly, and the season for energy is come,
- Yea rather, that the future may repair with diligence the ruins of the
- past.
-
- Again, for empty fears, the harassings of possible calamity,
- Pray, and thou shalt prosper; trust in God, and tread them down.
- Yield to the phantasy,--thou sinnest; resist it, He will aid thee:
- Out of Him there is no help, nor any sober courage.
- Feeble is the comfort of the faithless, a man without a God;
- Who dare counsel such an one to fling away his fears?
- Fear is the heritage of him, a portion wise and merciful,
- To drive the trembler into safety, if haply he may turn and flee:
- Nevertheless, let him reckon an he will, that all be counteth casual
- May as well be for him as against him; dice have many sides:
- And, even as in ailments of the body, diseases follow closely upon dreads,
- So, with infirmities of mind, is fear the pallid harbinger of failure.
- It were wise to walk undaunted even in an accidental chaos,
- For the brave man is at peace, and free to get the mastery of
- circumstance.
- The stoutest armour of defence is that which is worn within the bosom,
- And the weapon that no enemy can parry, is a bold and cheerful spirit:
- Catapults in old war worked like Titans, crushing foes with rocks;
- So doth a strong-springed heart throw back every load on its assailants.
-
- I went heavily for cares, and fell into the trance of sorrow;
- And behold, a vision in my trance, and my ministering angel brought it.
- There stood a mountain huge and steep, the awful Rock of Ages;
- The sun upon its summit, and storms midway, and deep ravines at foot.
- And, as I looked, a dense black cloud, suddenly dropping from the thunder,
- Filled, like a cataract with yeasty foam, a narrow smiling valley:
- Close and hard that vaporous mass seemed to press the ground,
- And lamentable sounds came up, as of some that were smothering beneath.
- Then, as I walked upon the mountain, clear in summer's noon,
- For charity I called aloud, Ho! climb up hither to the sunshine.
- And even like a stream of light my voice had pierced the mist;
- I saw below two families of men, and knew their names of old:
- Courage, struggling through the darkness, stout of heart and gladsome,
- Ran up the shining ladder which the voice of Hope had made;
- And tripping lightly by his side, a sweet-eyed helpmate with him,
- I looked upon her face to welcome pleasant Cheerfulness;
- And a babe was cradled in her bosom, a laughing little prattler,
- The child of Cheerfulness and Courage,--could his name be other than
- Success?
- So, from his happy wife, when they both stood beside me on the mountain,
- The fond father took that babe, and set him on his shoulder in the
- sunshine.
-
- Again I peered into the valley, for I heard a gasping moan,
- A desolate weak cry, as muffled in the vapours.
- So down that crystal shaft into the poisonous mine
- I sped for charity to seek and save,--and those I sought fled from me.
- At length, I spied, far distant, a trembling withered dwarf
- Who crouched beneath the cloak of a tall and spectral mourner:
- Then I knew Cowardice and Gloom, and followed them on in darkness,
- Guided by their rustling robes and moans and muffled cries,
- Until in a suffocating pit the wretched pair had perished,--
- And lo, their whitening bones were shaping out an epitaph of Failure.
-
- So I saw that despondency was death, and flung my burdens from me,
- And, lightened by that effort, I was raised above the world;
- Yea, in the strangeness of my vision, I seemed to soar on wings,
- And the names they called my wings were Cheerfulness and Wisdom.
-
-
-OF YESTERDAY.
-
- Speak, poor almsman of to-day, whom none can assure of a to-morrow,
- Tell out, with honest heart, the price thou settest upon yesterday.
- Is it then a writing in the dust, traced by the finger of idleness,
- Which Industry, clean housewife, can wipe away for ever?
- Is it as a furrow on the sand, fashioned by the toying waves,
- Quickly to be trampled then again by the feet of the returning tide?
- Is it as the pale blue smoke, rising from a peasant's hovel,
- That melted into limpid air, before it topped the larches?
- Is it but a vision, unstable and unreal, which wise men soon forget?
- Is it as the stranger of a night,--gone, we heed not whither?
- Alas! thou foolish heart, whose thoughts are but as these,
- Alas! deluded soul, that hopeth thus of Yesterday.
-
- For, behold,--those temples of Ellora, the Brahmin's rock-built shrine,
- Behold--yon granite cliff, which the North Sea buffeteth in vain,--
- That stout old forest fir,--these waking verities of life,
- This guest abiding ever, not strange, nor a servant, but a son,--
- Such, O man, are vanity and dreams, transient as a rainbow on the cloud,
- Weighed against that solid fact, thine ill-remembered Yesterday.
-
- Come, let me show thee an ensample, where Nature shall instruct us;
- Luxuriantly the arguments for truth spring native in her gardens.
- Seek we yonder woodman of the plain; he is measuring his axe to the elm,
- And anon the sturdy strokes ring upon the wintry air:
- Eagerly the village school-boys cluster on the tightened rope,
- Shouting, and bending to the pull, or lifted from the ground elastic;
- The huge tree boweth like Sisera, boweth to its foes with faintness,--
- Its sinews crack,--deep groans declare the reeling anguish of Goliath,
- The wedge is driven home,--and the saw is at its heart,--and lo, with
- solemn slowness,
- The shuddering monarch riseth from his throne,--toppled with a
- crash,--and is fallen!
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Now shall the mangled stump teach proud man a lesson:
- Now, can we from that elm-tree's sap distil the wine of Truth.
- Heed ye those hundred rings, concentric from the core,
- Eddying in various waves to the red bark's shore-like rim?
- These be the gatherings of yesterdays, present all to-day,
- This is the tree's judgment, self-history that cannot be gainsaid:
- Seven years agone there was a drought,--and the seventh ring is narrowed;
- The fifth from hence was half a deluge,--the fifth is cellular and broad.
- Thus, Man, thou art a result, the growth of many yesterdays,
- That stamp thy secret soul with marks of weal or woe:
- Thou art an almanack of self, the living record of thy deeds;
- Spirit hath its scars as well as body, sore and aching in their season:
- Here is a knot,--it was a crime; there is a canker,--selfishness;
- Lo, here, the heart-wood rotten; lo, there, perchance, the sap-wood sound.
- Nature teacheth not in vain; thy works are in thee, of thee;
- Some present evil bent hath grown of older errors:
- And what if thou be walking now uprightly? Salve not thy wounds with
- poison,
- As if a petty goodness of to-day hath blotted out the sin of yesterday:
- It is well, thou hast life and light; and the Hewer showeth mercy,
- Dressing the root, pruning the branch, and looking for thy tardy fruits;
- But, even here as thou standest, cheerful belike and careless,
- The stains of ancient evil are upon thee, the record of thy wrong is in
- thee:
- For, a curse of many yesterdays is thine, many yesterdays of sin,
- That, haply heeded little now, shall blast thy many morrows.
-
- Shall then a man reck nothing, but hurl mad defiance at his Judge,
- Knowing that less than an Omnipotent cannot make the has been, not been?
- He ought,--so Satan spake; he must,--so Atheism urgeth;
- He may,--it was the libertine's thought; he doth,--the bad world said it.
- But thou of humbler heart, thou student wiser for simplicity,
- While Nature warneth thee betimes, heed the loving counsel of Religion.
- True, this change is good, and penitence most precious;
- But trust not thou thy change, nor rest upon repentance:
- For all we are corrupted at the core, smooth as surface seemeth;
- What health can bloom in a beautiful skin, when rottenness hath fed upon
- the bones?
- And guilt is parcel of us all; not thou, sweet nursling of affection,
- Art spotless, though so passing fair,--nor thou, mild patriarch of virtue.
-
- Behold then the better Tree of Life, free unto us all for grafting,
- Cut thee from the hollow root of self, to be budded on a richer Vine.
- Be desperate, O man, as of evil, so of good; tear that tunic from thee;
- The past can never be retrieved, be the present what it may.
- Vain is the penance and the scourge, vain the fast and vigil:
- The fencer's cautious skill to-day, can this erase his scars?
- It is Man's to famish as a faquir, it is Man's to die a devotee,
- Light is the torture and the toil, balanced with the wages of Eternity:
- But, it is God's to yearn in love, on the humblest, the poorest, and the
- worst,
- For He giveth freely, as a king, asking only thanks for mercy.
- Look upon this noble-hearted Substitute; seeing thy woes, He pitied thee,
- Bowed beneath the mountain of thy sin, and perished,--but for Godhead;
- There stood the Atlas in his power, and Prometheus in his love is there,
- Emptying on wretched men the blessings earned from Heaven:
- Put them not away, hide them in thy heart, poor and penitent receiver,
- Be gratitude thy counseller to good, and wholesome fear unto obedience;
- Remember, the pruning-knife is keen, cutting cankers even from the vine;
- Remember, twelve were chosen, and one among them liveth--in perdition.
-
- Yea,--for standing unatoned, the soul is a bison on the prairie,
- Hunted by those trooping wolves, the many sinful yesterdays:
- And it speedeth a terrified Deucalion, flinging back the pebble in his
- flight,
- The pebble that must add one more to those pursuing ghosts.
- O man, there is a storm behind should drive thy bark to haven;
- The foe, the foe is on thy track, patient, certain, and avenging;
- Day by day, solemnly, and silently, followeth the fearful past,--
- His step is lame, but sure; for he catcheth the present in eternity:
- And how to escape that foe, the present-past in future?
- How to avert that fate, living consequence of causes unexistent?--
- Boldly we must overleap his birth, and date above his memories,
- Grafted on the living Tree, that WAS before a yesterday:
- No refuge of a younger birth than one that saw creation
- Can hide the child of time from still condemning Yesterday.
- There, is the Sanctuary-city, mocking at the wrath of thine Avenger,
- Close at hand, with the wicket on the latch; haste for thy life, poor
- hunted one!
- The gladiator, Guilt, fighteth as of old, armed with net and dagger;
- Snaring in the mesh of yesterdays, stabbing with the poignard of to-day:
- Fly, thy sword is broken at the hilt; fly, thy shield is shivered;
- Leap the barriers, and baffle him: the arena of the past is his.
- The bounds of Guilt are the cycles of Time: thou must be safe within
- Eternity;
- The arms of God alone shall rescue thee from Yesterday.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF TO-DAY.
-
-[Illustration: "N"]
-
- Now, is the constant syllable ticking from the clock of time,
- Now, is the watchword of the wise, Now, is on the banner of the prudent.
- Cherish thy to-day and prize it well, or ever it be gulphed into the past,
- Husband it, for who can promise, if it shall have a morrow?
- Behold, thou art,--it is enough; that present care be thine;
- Leave thou the past to thy Redeemer, entrust the future to thy Friend;
- But for To-day, child of man, tend thou charily the minutes,
- The harvest of thy yesterday, the seed-corn of thy morrow.
-
- Last night died its day; and the deeds thereof were judged:
- Thou didst lay thee down as in a shroud, in darkness and death-like
- slumber:
- But at the trumpet of this morn, waking the world to resurrection,
- Thou didst arise, like others, to live a new day's life:
- Fear, lest folly give thee cause to mourn its passing presence,
- Fear, that to-morrow's sigh be not, would God it had not dawned!
-
- For, To-day the lists are set, and thou must bear thee bravely,
- Tilting for honour, duty, life, or death without reproach:
- To-day, is the trial of thy fortitude, O dauntless Mandan chief;
- To-day, is thy watch, O sentinel; To-day, thy reprieve, O captive:
- What more? To-day is the golden chance wherewith to snatch fruition,--
- Be glad, grateful, temperate: there are asps among the figs.
- For the potter's clay is in thy hands,--to mould it or to mar it at thy
- will,
- Or idly to leave it in the sun, an uncouth lump to harden.
-
- O bright presence of To-day, let me wrestle with thee, gracious angel,
- I will not let thee go, except thou bless me; bless me, then, To-day:
- O sweet garden of To-day, let me gather of thee, precious Eden;
- I have stolen bitter knowledge, give me fruits of life To-day:
- O true temple of To-day, let me worship in thee, glorious Zion;
- I find none other place nor time, than where I am To-day:
- O living rescue of To-day, let me run into thee, ark of refuge:
- I see none other hope nor chance, but standeth in To-day:
- O rich banquet of To-day, let me feast upon thee, saving manna;
- I have none other food nor store, but daily bread To-day!
-
- Behold, thou art pilot of the ship, and owner of that freighted galleon,
- Competent, with all thy weakness, to steer into safety or be lost:
- Compass and chart are in thy hand: roadstead and rocks thou knowest;
- Thou art warned of reefs and shallows; thou beholdest the harbour and its
- lights.
- What? shall thy wantonness or sloth drive the gallant vessel on the
- breakers?
- What? shall the helmsman's hand wear upon the black lee shore?
- Vain is that excuse; thou canst escape: thy mind is responsible for wrong:
- Vain that murmur; thou mayst live: thy soul is debtor for the right.
- To-day, in the voyage of thy life down the dark tide of time,
- Stand boldly to thy tiller, guide thee by the pole-star, and be safe;
- To-day, passing near the sunken rocks, the quicksands and whirlpools of
- probation,
- Leave awhile the rudder to swing round, give the wind its heading, and be
- wrecked.
-
- The crisis of man's destiny is Now, a still recurring danger;
- Who can tell the trials and temptations coming with the coming hour?
- Thou standest a target-like Sebastian, and the arrows whistle near thee;
- Who knoweth when he may be hit? for great is the company of archers.
- Each breath is burdened with a bidding, and every minute hath its mission;
- For spirits, good and bad, cluster on the thickly-peopled air:
- Sin may blast thee, grace may bless thee, good or ill this hour:
- Chance, and change, and doubt, and fear, are parasites of all.
- A man's life is a tower, with a staircase of many steps,
- That, as he toileth upward, crumble successively behind him:
- No going back; the past is an abyss; no stopping, for the present
- perisheth;
- But ever hasting on, precarious on the foothold of To-day;
- Our cares are all To-day; our joys are all To-day;
- And in one little word, our life, what is it, but--To-day?
-
-
-[Illustration: Of To-morrow]
-
-OF TO-MORROW.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- There is a floating island, forward on the stream of time,
- Buoyant with fermenting air, and borne along the rapids;
- And on that island is a siren, singing sweetly as she goeth,
- Her eyes are bright with invitation, and allurement lurketh in her cheeks;
- Many lovers, vainly pursuing, follow her beckoning finger,
- Many lovers seek her still, even to the cataract of death.
- To-morrow is that island, a vain and foolish heritage,
- And, laughing with seductive lips, Delusion hideth there:
- Often the precious present is wasted in visions of the future,
- And coy To-morrow cometh not with prophecies fulfilled.
-
- There is a fairy skiff, plying on the sea of life,
- And charitably toiling still to save the shipwrecked crews;
- Within, kindly patient, sitteth a gentle mariner,
- Piloting, through surf and strait, the fragile barks of men:
- How cheering is her voice, how skilfully she guideth,
- How nobly leading onward yet, defying even death!
- To-morrow is that skiff, a wise and welcome rescue,
- And, full of gladdening words and looks, that mariner is Hope:
- Often, the painful present is comforted by flattering the future,
- And kind To-morrow beareth half the burdens of To-day.
-
- To-morrow, whispereth weakness: and To-morrow findeth him the weaker;
- To-morrow, promiseth conscience; and behold, no To-day for a fulfilment.
- O name of happy omen unto youth, O bitter word of terror to the dotard,
- Goal of folly's lazy wish, and sorrow's ever-coming friend;
- Fraud's loophole,--caution's hint,--and trap to catch the honest,--
- Thou wealth to many poor, disgrace to many noble,
- Thou hope and fear, thou weal and woe, thou remedy, thou ruin,
- How thickly swarms of thought are clustering round To-morrow!
- The hive of memory increaseth, to every day its cell;
- There is the labour stored, the honey or corruption;
- Each morn the bees fly forth, to fill the growing comb,
- And levy golden tribute of the uncomplaining flowers:
- To-morrow is their care; they toil for rest to-morrow;
- But man deferreth duty's task, and loveth ease to-day.
-
- To-morrow, is that lamp upon the marsh, which a traveller never reacheth;
- To-morrow, the rainbow's cup, coveted prize of ignorance;
- To-morrow, the shifting anchorage, dangerous trust of mariners;
- To-morrow, the wrecker's beacon, wily snare of the destroyer.
- Reconcile convictions with delay, and To-morrow is a fatal lie;
- Frighten resolutions into action, To-morrow is a wholesome truth:
- I must, for I fear To-morrow; this is the Cassava's food;
- Why should I? let me trust To-morrow,--this is the Cassava's poison.
-
- Lo, it is the even of To-day,--a day so lately a To-morrow;
- Where are those high resolves, those hopes of yesternight?
- O faint fond heart, still shall thy whisper be, To-morrow,
- And must the growing avalanche of sin roll down that easy slope?
- Alas, it is ponderous, and moving on in might, that a Sisyphus may not
- stop it;
- But haste thee with the lever of a prayer, and stem its strength To-day:
- For its race may speedily be run, and this poor hut, thyself,
- Be whelmed in death and suffocating guilt, that dreary Alpine snow-wreath.
-
- Pensioner of life, be wise, and heed a brother's counsel;
- I also am a beadsman, with scrip and staff as thou:
- Wouldest thou be bold against the past, and all its evil memories,
- Wouldest thou be safe amid the present, its dangers and temptations,
- Wouldest thou be hopeful of the future, vague though it be and endless?
- Haste thee, repent, believe, obey! thou standest in the courage of a
- legion.
- Commend the Past to God, with all its irrevocable harm,
- Humbly, but in cheerful trust, and banish vain regrets;
- Come to Him, continually come, casting all the Present at His feet,
- Boldly, but in prayerful love, and fling off selfish cares;
- Commit the Future to His will, the viewless fated future;
- Zealously go forward with integrity, and God will bless thy faith.
- For that, feeble as thou art, there is with thee a mighty Conqueror,
- Thy Friend, the same for ever, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow;
- That Friend, changeless as eternity, Himself shall make thee friends
- Of those thy foes transformed, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow.
-
-
-OF AUTHORSHIP.
-
-[Illustration: "G"]
-
- Great is the dignity of Authorship: I magnify mine office;
- Albeit in much feebleness I hold it thus unworthily.
- For it is to be one of a noble band, the welfare of the world,
- Whose haunt is on the lips of men, whose dwelling in their hearts,
- Who are precious in the retrospect of Memory, and walk among the visions
- of Hope,
- Who commune with the good for everlasting, and call the wisest, brother,
- Whose voice hath burst the Silence, and whose light is flung upon the
- Darkness,
- --Flashing jewels on a robe of black, and harmony bounding out of chaos,--
- Who gladden empires with their wisdom, and bless to the farthest
- generation,
- Doers of illimitable good, gainers of inestimable glory!--
- We speak but of the Magnates, we heed none humbler than the highest,
- We take no count of sorry scribes, nor waste one thought upon the
- groundlings;
- Our eyes are lifted from the multitude, groping in the dark with candles,
- To gaze upon that firmament of praise, the constellated lamps of learning.
- Ever-during witnesses of Mind, undisputed evidence of Power,
- Goodly volumes, living stones, build up their author's temple;
- Though of low estate, his rank is above princes,--though needy, he hath
- worship of the rich,
- When Genius unfurleth on the winds his banner as a mighty leader.
- Just in purpose, and self-possessed in soul, lord of many talents,
- The mental Croesus goeth forth, rejoicing in his wealth;
- Keen and clear perception gloweth on his forehead like a sunbeam,
- He readeth men at a glance, and mists roll away before him;
- The wise have set him as their captain, the foolish are rebuked at his
- presence,
- The excellent bless him with their prayers, and the wicked praise him by
- their curses;
- His voice, mighty in operation, stirreth up the world as a trumpet,
- And kings account it honour to be numbered of his friends.
-
- Rare is the worthiness of authorship: I justify mine office;
- Albeit fancies weak as mine credit not the calling.
- For it addeth immortality to dying facts, that are ready to vanish away,
- Embalming as in amber the poor insects of an hour;
- Shedding upon stocks and stones the tender light of interest,
- And illumining dark places of the earth, with radiance of classic lustre.
- It hath power to make past things present, and availeth for the present
- in the future,
- Delivering thoughts, and words, and deeds, from the outer darkness of
- oblivion.
- Where are the sages and the heroes, giants of old time?--
- Where are the mighty kings, that reigned before Agamemnon?--
- Alas they lie unwept, unhonoured, hidden in the midnight:
- Alas, for they died unchronicled: their memorial perished with them.
- Where are the nobles of Nineveh, and mitred rulers of Babylon?
- Where are the lords of Edom, and the royal pontiffs of Thebais?
- The golden Satrap, and the Tetrarch,--the Hun, and the Druid, and the
- Celt?
- The merchant princes of Phoenicia, and the minds that fashioned
- Elephanta?
- Alas, for the poet hath forgotten them; and lo! they are outcasts of
- Memory;
- Alas, that they are withered leaves, sapless and fallen from the chaplet
- of fame.
- Speak, Etruria, whose bones be these, entombed with costly care,--
- Tell out, Herculaneum, the titles that have sounded in those thy
- palaces,--
- Lycian Xanthus, thy citadels are mute, and the honour of their architects
- hath died;
- Copan and Palenque, dreamy ruins in the West, the forest hath swallowed
- up your sculptures;
- Syracuse,--how silent of the past!--Carthage, thou art blotted from
- remembrance!
- Egypt, wondrous shores, ye are buried in the sand-hills of forgetfulness!
- Alas,--for in your glorious youth Time himself was young,
- And none durst wrestle with that Angel, iron-sinewed bridegroom of Space;
- So he flew by, strong upon the wing, nor dropped one failing feather,
- Wherewith some hoary scribe might register your honour and renown.
- Beyond the broad Atlantic, in the regions of the setting sun,
- Ask of the plume-crowned Incas, that ruled in old Peru,--
- Ask of grand Caziques, and priests of the pyramids in Mexico,--
- Ask of a thousand painted tribes, high nobility of Nature,
- Who, once, could roam their own Elysian plains, free, generous, and happy,
- Who, now, degraded and in exile, having sold their fatherland for nought,
- Sink and are extinguished in the western seas, even as the sun they
- follow,--
- Where is the record of their deeds, their prowess worthy of Achilles,
- Nestor's wisdom, the chivalry of Manlius, the native eloquence of Cicero,
- The skill of Xenophon, the spirit of Alcibiades, the firmness of a
- Maccabæan mother,
- Brotherly love that Antigone might envy, the honour and the fortitude of
- Regulus?
- Alas, their glory and their praise have vanished like a summer cloud;
- Alas! that they are dead indeed; they are not written down in the Book of
- the living.
-
- High is the privilege of Authorship: I purify mine office;
- Albeit earthy stains pollute it in my hands.
- For it is to the world a teacher and a guide, Mentor of that gay
- Telemachus;
- Warning, comforting, and helping,--a lover and friend of Man.
- Heaven's almoner, Earth's health, patient minister of goodness,
- With kind and zealous pen, the wise religious blesseth:
- Nature's worshipper, and neophyte of grace, rich in tender sympathies,
- With kindled soul and flashing eye, the poet poureth out his heartful:
- Priest of truth, champion of innocence, warder of the gates of praise,
- Carefully with sifting search laboureth the pale historian:
- Error's enemy, and acolyte of science, firm in sober argument,
- The calm philosopher marshalleth his facts, noting on his page their
- principles.
- These pour mercies upon men; and others, little less in honour,
- By cheerful wit and graphic tale refreshening the harassed spirit.
- But, there be other some beside, buyers and sellers in the temple,
- Who shame their high vocation, greedy of inglorious gain;
- There be, who fabricating books, heed of them meanly as of merchandise;
- And seek nor use, nor truth, nor fame, but sell their minds for lucre:
- O false brethren! ye wot indeed the labour, but are witless of the love;
- O lying prophets, chilled in soul, unquickened by the life of
- inspiration!--
- And there be, who, frivolous and vain, seek to make others foolish,
- Snaring youth by loose sweet song, and age by selfish maxim;
- Cleverly heartless, and wittily profane, they swell the river of
- corruption:
- Brilliant satellites of sin,--my soul, be not found among their company.
- And there be, who, haters of religion, toil to prove it priestcraft,
- Owning none other aim nor hope, but to confound the good:
- Woe unto them! for their works shall live; yea, to their utter
- condemnation:
- Woe! for their own handwriting shall testify against them for ever.
-
- Pure is the happiness of Authorship: I glorify mine office;
- Albeit lightly having sipped the cup of its lower pleasures.
- For it is to feel with a father's heart, when he yearneth on the child of
- his affections;
- To rejoice in a man's own miniature world, gladdened by its rare
- arrangement.
- The poem, is it not a fabric of mind? we love what we create:
- That choice and musical order,--how pleasant is the toil of composition!
- Yea, when the volume of the universe was blazoned out in beauty by its
- Author,
- God was glad, and blessed His work; for it was very good.
- And shall not the image of his Maker be happy in his own mind's doing,
- Looking on the structure he hath reared, gratefully with sweet
- complacence?
- Shall not the Minerva of his brain, panoplied and perfect in proportions,
- Gladden the soul and give light unto the eyes, of him the travailing
- parent?
- Go to the sculptor, and ask him of his dreams,--wherefore are his nights
- so moonlit?
- Angel faces, and beautiful shapes, fascinate the pale Pygmalion:
- Go to the painter, and trace his reveries,--wherefore are his days so
- sunny?
- Choice design, and skilful colouring, charm the flitting hours of
- Parrhasius:
- Even so, walking in his buoyancy, intoxicate with fairy fancies,
- The young enthusiast of authorship goeth on his way rejoicing:
- Behold,--he is gallantly attended; legions of thrilling thoughts
- Throng about the standard of his mind, and call his Will their captain;
- Behold,--his court is as a monarch's; ideas, and grand imaginations
- Swell, with gorgeous cavalcade, the splendour of his Spiritual State;
- Behold,--he is delicately served: for oftentimes, in solitary calmness,
- Some mental fair Egeria smileth on her Numa's worship;
- Behold,--he is happy; there is gladness in his eye, and his heart is a
- sealed fountain,
- Bounding secretly with joys unseen, and keeping down its ecstasy of
- pleasure!
-
- Yea: how dignified, and worthy, full of privilege and happiness,
- Standeth in majestic independence the self-ennobled Author!
- For God hath blessed him with a mind, and cherished it in tenderness and
- purity,
- Hath taught it in the whisperings of wisdom, and added all the riches of
- content:
- Therefore, leaning on his God, a pensioner for soul and body,
- His spirit is the subject of none other, calling no man Master.
- His hopes are mighty and eternal, scorning small ambitions:
- He hideth from the pettiness of praise, and pitieth the feebleness of
- envy.
- If he meet honours, well; it may be his humility to take them:
- If he be rebuked, better; his veriest enemy shall teach him.
- For the master-mind hath a birthright of eminence; his cradle is an
- eagle's eyrie:
- Need but to wait till his wings are grown, and Genius soareth to the sun:
- To creeping things upon the mountain leaveth he the gradual ascent,
- Resting his swiftness on the summit only for a higher flight.
- Glad in clear good-conscience, lightly doth he look for commendation;
- What, if the prophet lacketh honour? for he can spare that praise:
- The honest giant careth not to be patted on the back by pigmies;
- Flatter greatness, he brooketh it good-humouredly: blame him,--thou
- tiltest at a pyramid:
- Yet, just censure of the good never can he hear without contrition;
- Neither would he miss one wise man's praise, for scarce is that jewel and
- costly:
- Only for the herd of common minds, and the vulgar trumpetings of fame,
- If aught he heedeth in the matter, his honour is sought in their neglect.
- Slender is the marvel, and little is the glory, when round his luscious
- fruits
- The worm and the wasp and the multitude of flies are gathered as to
- banquet;
- Fashion's freak, and the critical sting, and the flood of flatteries he
- scorneth;
- Cheerfully asking of the crowd the favour to forget him:
- The while his blooming fruits ripen in richer fragrance,
- A feast for the few,--and the many yet unborn,--who still shall love
- their savour.
-
- So then, humbly with his God, and proudly independent of his fellows,
- Walketh, in pleasures multitudinous, the man ennobled by his pen:
- He hath built up, glorious architect, a monument more durable than brass;
- His children's children shall talk of him in love, and teach their sons
- his honour:
- His dignity hath set him among princes, the universe is debtor to his
- worth,
- His privilege is blessing for ever, his happiness shineth now,
- For he standeth of that grand Election, each man one among a thousand,
- Whose sound is gone out into all lands, and their words to the end of the
- world!
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Mystery.]
-
-OF MYSTERY.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- All things being are in mystery; we expound mysteries by mysteries;
- And yet the secret of them all is one in simple grandeur:
- All intricate, yet each path plain, to those who know the way;
- All unapproachable, yet easy of access, to them that hold the key:
- We walk among labyrinths of wonder, but thread the mazes with a clue;
- We sail in chartless seas, but behold! the pole-star is above us.
- For, counting down from God's good will, thou meltest every riddle into
- Him,
- The axiom of reason is an undiscovered God, and all things live in His
- ubiquity:
- There is only one great secret; but that one hideth everywhere;
- How should the infinite be understood in Time, when it stretcheth on
- ungrasped for ever?
- Can a halting Oedipus of earth guess that enigma of the universe?
- Not one: the sword of faith must cut the Gordian knot of nature.
-
- God, pervading all, is in all things the mystery of each;
- The wherefore of its character and essence, the fountain of its virtues
- and its beauties.
- The child asketh of its mother,--Wherefore is the violet so sweet?
- The mother answereth her babe,--Darling, God hath willed it.
- And sages, diving into science, have but a profundity of words;
- They track for some few links the circling chain of consequence,
- And then, after doubts and disputations, are left where they began,
- At the bald conclusion of a clown, things are because they are.
- Wherefore are the meadows green, is it not to gratify the eye?
- But why should greenness charm the eye? such is God's good will.
- Wherefore is the ear attuned to a pleasure in musical sounds,
- And who set a number to those sounds, and fixed the laws of harmony?
- Who taught the bird to build its nest, or lent the shrub its life,
- Or poised in the balances of order the power to attract and to repel?
- Who continueth the worlds, and the sea, and the heart, in motion?
- Who commanded gravitation to tie down all upon its sphere?--
- For, even as a limestone cliff is an aggregate of countless shells,
- One riddle concrete of many, a mystery compact of mysteries,
- So God, cloud-capped in immensity, standeth the cohesion of all things,
- And secrets, sublimely indistinct, permeate that Universe, Himself;
- As is the whole, so are the parts, whether they be mighty or minute,
- The sun is not more unexplained than the tissue of an emmet's wing.
-
- Thus then, omnipresent Deity worketh His unbiassed mind,
- A mind, one in moral, but infinitely multiplied in means:
- And the uniform prudence of His will cometh to be counted law,
- Till mutable man fancieth volition stirring in the potter's clay:
- God, a wise father, showeth not His reasons to His babes;
- But willeth in secresy and goodness: for causes generate dispute:
- Then we, His darkling children, watch that invariable purpose,
- And invest the passive creature with its Maker's energy and skill:
- Therefore, they of old time stopped short of God in idols,
- Therefore, in these latter days, we heed not the Jehovah in His works.
- Mystery is God's great name; He is the mystery of goodness:
- Some other, from the hierarchs of heaven, usurped the mystery of sin.
- God is the King, yea even of Himself; He crowned Himself with holiness;
- The burning circlet of iniquity another found and wore.
- God is separate, even from His attributes; but He willed eternally the
- good;
- Therefore freely, though unchangeably, is wise, righteous, and loving:
- But ambition, open unto angels, saw the evil, flung aside from the
- beginning,
- It was Lucifer that saw, and nothing loathed those black unclaimed
- regalia,
- So he coveted and stole, to be counted for a king, antagonist of God,
- But when he touched the leprous robes, behold! a cheated traitor.
-
- For self-existence, charactered with love, with power, wisdom, and
- ubiquity,
- Could not dwell alone, but willed and worked creation.
- Thus, in continual exhalation, darkening the void with matter,
- Sprang from prolific Deity the creatures of His skill.
- And beings living on His breath, were needfully less perfect than Himself,
- Therefore less capable of bliss, whereat His benevolence was bounded;
- So, to make the capability expand, intensely progressive to eternity,
- He suffered darkness to illustrate the light, and pain to heighten
- pleasure:
- To heap up happiness on souls He loved, allowed He sin and sorrow,
- And then to guilt and grief and shame, He brought unbidden amnesty:
- Sinless, none had been redeemed, nor wrapt again in God:
- Sorrowless, no conflict had been known, and Heaven had been mulcted of
- its comfort:
- Yea, with evil unexhibited, probationary toils unfelt,
- Men had not appreciated good, nor angels valued their security.
- Herein, to reason's eye, is revealed the mystery of goodness,
- Blessing through permitted woe, and teaching by the mystery of sin.
-
- O Christian, whose chastened curiosity loveth things mysterious,
- Accounting them shadows and eclipses of Him the one great light,
- Look now, satisfied with faith, on minds that judge by sense,
- And, dull from contemplating matter, take small heed of spirit.
- Toiling feebly upward, their argument tracketh from below,
- They catch the latest consequent, and prove the nearest cause:
- What is this? that a seed produced a seed, and so for a thousand seasons;
- Ascend a thousand steps, thy ladder leaveth thee in air:
- Thou canst not climb to God, and short of Him is nothing;
- There is no cause for aught we see, but in His present will.
- Begin from the Maker, thou carriest down His attributes to reptiles,
- The sharded beetle and the lizard live and move in Him:
- Begin from the creature, corruption and infirmity mar thy foolish toil,
- Heap Ossa on Olympus, how much art thou nearer to the stars?
- It is easy running from a mountain's top down to the valleys at its foot,
- But difficult and steep the laborious ascent, and feebly shalt thou reach
- it:
- Yet man, beginning from himself, that first deluding mystery,
- Hopeth from the pit of lies to struggle up to truth;
- So, taxing knowledge to its strength, he pusheth one step further,
- And fancieth complacently that much is done by reaching a remote effect:
- Then he maketh answer to himself, as a silly nurse to her little one,
- Evading, in a mist of words, hard things he cannot solve;
- Till, like an ostrich in the desert, he burieth his head in atoms,
- Thinking that, if he is blind, no sun can shine in heaven.
-
- Therefore cometh it to pass, that an atheist is ever the most credulous,
- Snatching at any foolish cause, that may dispel his doubts;
- And, even as it were for ridicule, a spectacle for men and angels,
- The captious and cautious unbeliever is of all men weakest to believe:
- Cut from the anchorage of God, his bark is a plaything of the billows;
- The compass of his principle is broken, the rudder of his faith unshipped:
- Chance and Fate, in a stultified antagonism, govern all for him;
- Truth sprang from the conflict of falsities, and the multitude of
- accidents hath bred design!
- Where is the imposture so gross, that shall not entrap his curiosity?
- What superstition is so abject, that it doth not blanch his cheek?
- Whereof can he be sure, with whom Chaos is substitute for Order?
- How should his silly structure stand, a pyramid built upon its apex?--
- Yea, I have seen grey-headed men, the bastard slips of science,
- Go for light to glow-worms, while they scorn the sun at noon:
- Men, who fear no God, trembling at a gipsy's curse,
- Men, who jest at revelation, clinging to a madman's prophecy!
-
- There is a pleasing dread in the fashion of all mysteries,
- For hope is mixed therein and fear; who shall divine their issues?
- Even the orphan, wandering by night, lost on dreary moors,
- Is sensible of some vague bliss amidst his shapeless terrors;
- The buoyancy of instant expectation, spurring on the mind to venture,
- Overbeareth, in its energy, the cramp and the chill of apprehension.
- There is a solitary pride, when the heart, in new importance,
- Writeth gladly on its archives, the secrets none other men have seen:
- And there is a caged terror, evermore wrestling with the mind,
- When crime hath whispered his confession, and the secrets are written
- there in blood:
- The village maiden is elated at the tenderly confided tale:
- The bandit's wife with sickening fear guessed the premeditated murder:
- The sage, with triumph on his brow, hideth up his deep discovery;
- The idlest clown shall delve all day, to find a hidden treasure.
-
- For mystery is man's life; we wake to the whisperings of novelty:
- And what, though we lie down disappointed? we sleep, to wake in hope.
- The letter, or the news, the chances and the changes, matters that may
- happen,
- Sweeten or embitter daily life with the honey-gall of mystery.
- For we walk blindfold,--and a minute may be much,--a step may reach the
- precipice;
- What earthly loss, what heavenly gain, may not this day produce?
- Levelled of Alps and Andes, without its valleys and ravines,
- How dull the face of earth, unfeatured of both beauty and sublimity:
- And so, shorn of mystery, beggared in its hopes and fears,
- How flat the prospect of existence, mapped by intuitive foreknowledge.
- Praise God, creature of earth, for the mercies linked with secresy,
- That spices of uncertainty enrich the cup of life;
- Praise God, His hosts on high, for the mysteries that make all joy;
- What were intelligence with nothing more to learn, or heaven, in eternity
- of sameness?
-
- To number every mystery were to sum the sum of all things:
- None can exhaust a theme, whereof God is example and similitude.
- Nevertheless, take a garland from the garden, a handful from the harvest,
- Some scattered drops of spray from the ceaseless mighty cataract.
- Whence are we,--whither do we tend,--how do we feel, and reason?
- How strange a thing is man, a spirit saturating clay!
- When doth soul make embryos immortal,--how do they rank hereafter,--
- And will the unconscious idiot be quenched in death as nothing?
- In essence immaterial, are these minds, as it were, thinking machines?
- For, to understand may but rightly be to use a mechanism all possess,
- So that in reading or hearing of another, a man shall seem unto himself
- To be recollecting images or arguments, native and congenial to his mind:
- And yet, what shall we say,--who can arede the riddle?
- The brain may be clockwork, and mind its spring, mechanism quickened by a
- spirit.
-
- Who so shrewd as rightly to divide life, instinct, reason;
- Trees, zoophytes, creatures of the plain, and savage men among them?
- Hath the mimosa instinct,--or the scallop more than life,--
- Or the dog less than reason,--or the brute-man more than instinct?
- What is the cause of health,--and the gendering of disease?
- Why should arsenic kill, and whence is the potency of antidotes?
- Behold, a morsel,--eat and die; the term of thy probation is expired:
- Behold, a potion,--drink and be alive; the limit of thy trial is enlarged.
- Who can expound beauty? or explain the character of nations?
- Who will furnish a cause for the epidemic force of fashion?
- Is there a moral magnetism living in the light of example?
- Is practice electricity?--Yet all these are but names.
- Doth normal Art imprison, in its works, spirit translated into substance,
- So that the statue, the picture, or the poem, are crystals of the mind?
- And doth Philosophy with sublimating skill shred away the matter,
- Till rarefied intelligence exudeth even out of stocks and stones?
-
- O Mysteries, ye all are one, the mind of an inexplicable Architect
- Dwelleth alike in each, quickening and moving in them all.
- Fields, and forests, and cities of men, their woes and wealth and works,
- And customs, and contrivances of life, with all we see and know,
- For a little way, a little while, ye hang dependent on each other,
- But all are held in one right-hand, and by His will ye are.
- Here is an answer unto mystery, an unintelligible God,
- This is the end and the beginning, it is reason that He be not understood.
- Therefore it were probable and just, even to a man's weak thinking,
- To have one for God who always may be learnt, yet never fully known:
- That He, from whom all mysteries spring, in whom they all converge,
- Throned in His sublimity beyond the grovellings of lower intellect,
- Should claim to be truer than man's truest, the boasted certainty of
- numbers,
- Should baffle his arithmetic, confound his demonstrations, and paralyse
- the might of his necessity,
- Standing supreme as the mystery of mysteries, everywhere, yet impersonate,
- Essential One in three, essential Three in one!
-
-
-OF GIFTS.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- I had a seeming friend;--I gave him gifts, and he was gone:
- I had an open enemy;--I gave him gifts, and won him:
- Common friendship standeth on equalities, and cannot bear a debt;
- But the very heart of hate melteth at a good man's love:
- Go to, then, thou that sayest,--I will give and rivet the links:
- For pride shall kick at obligation, and push the giver from him.
- The covetous spirit may rejoice, revelling in thy largess,
- But chilling selfishness will mutter,--I must give again:
- The vain heart may be glad, in this new proof of man's esteem,
- But the same idolatry of self abhorreth thoughts of thanking.
-
- Nevertheless, give; for it shall be a discriminating test
- Separating honesty from falsehood, weeding insincerity from friendship.
- Give, it is like God; thou weariest the bad with benefits:
- Give, it is like God; thou gladdenest the good by gratitude.
- Give to thy near of kin, for providence hath stationed thee his helper:
- Yet see that he claim not, as his right, thy freewill offering of duty.
- Give to the young, they love it; neither hath the poison of suspicion
- Spoilt the flavour of their thanks, to look for latent motives.
- Give to merit, largely give; his conscious heart will bless thee:
- It is not flattery, but love,--the sympathy of men his brethren.
- Give, for encouragement in good; the weak desponding mind
- Hath many foes, and much to do, and leaneth on its friends.
- Yet heed thou wisely these; give seldom to thy better;
- For such obtrusive boon shall savour of presumption;
- Or, if his courteous bearing greet thy proffered kindness,
- Shall not thine independent honesty be vexed at the semblance of a bribe?
- Moreover, heed thou this; give to thine equal charily,
- The occasion fair and fitting, the gift well chosen and desired:
- Hath he been prosperous and blest? a flower may show thy gladness;
- Is he in need? with liberal love, tender him the well-filled purse:
- Disease shall welcome friendly care in grapes and precious unguents;
- And where a darling child hath died, give praise, and hope, and sympathy.
- Yet once more, heed thou this; give to the poor discreetly,
- Nor suffer idle sloth to lean upon thy charitable arm:
- To diligence give, as to an equal, on just and fit occasion;
- Or he bartereth his hard-earned self-reliance for the casual lottery of
- gifts.
- The timely loan hath added nerve, where easy liberality would palsy;
- Work and wages make a light heart; but the mendicant asked with a heavy
- spirit.
- A man's own self-respect is worth unto him more than money,
- And evil is the charity that humbleth, and maketh man less happy.
-
- There are who sow liberalities, to reap the like again;
- But men accept his boon, scorning the shallow usurer:
- I have known many such a fisherman lose his golden baits:
- And oftentimes the tame decoy escapeth with the flock.
- Yea, there are who give unto the poor, to gain large interest of God,--
- Fool,--to think His wealth is money, and not mind:
- And haply after thine alms, thy calculated givings,
- The hurricane shall blast thy crops, and sink the homeward ship;
- Then shall thy worldly soul murmur that the balances were false,
- Thy trader's mind shall think of God,--He stood not to His bargain!
-
- Give, saith the preacher, be large in liberality, yield to the holy
- impulse,
- Tarry not for cold consideration, but cheerfully and freely scatter.
- So, for complacency of conscience, in a gush of counterfeited charity,
- He that hath not wherewith to be just, selfishly presumeth to be generous:
- The debtor, and the rich by wrong, are known among the band of the
- benevolent;
- And men extol the noble hearts, who rob that they may give.
- Receivers are but little prone to challenge rights of giving,
- Nor stop to test, for conscience-sake, the righteousness of mammon:
- And the zealot in a cause is a receiver, at the hand which bettereth his
- cause;
- And thus an unsuspected bribe shall blind the good man's judgment:
- It is easy to excuse greatness, and the rich are readily forgiven:
- What, if his gains were evil, sanctified by using them aright?
- O shallow flatterer, self-interest is thy thought,
- Hopeless of partaking in the like, thou too wouldst scorn the giver.
-
- Money hath its value; and the scatterer thereof his thanks:
- Few men, drinking at a rivulet, stop to consider its source.
- The hand that closeth on an alm, be it for necessities or zeal,
- Hath small scruple whence it came: Vespasian rejoiceth in his tribute.
- Therefore have colleges and hospitals risen upon orphans' wrongs,
- Chapels and cathedrals have thriven on the welcome wages of iniquity,
- And fraud, in evil compensation, hath salved his guilty conscience,
- Not by restoring to the cheated, but by ostentatious giving to the
- grateful.
-
- So, those who reap rejoice; and reaping, bless the sower:
- No one is eager to discover, where discovery tendeth unto loss:
- Yet, if knowledge of a theft make gainers thereby guilty,
- Can he be altogether innocent, who never asked the honesty of gain?
- Therefore, O preacher, zealous for charity, temper thy warm appeal,--
- Warning the debtor and unjustly rich, they may not dare to give:
- To do good is a privilege and guerdon: how shouldst thou rejoice
- If ill-got gifts of presumptuous fraud be offered on the altar?
- The question is not of degrees; unhallowed alms are evil;
- Discourage and reject alike the obolus or talent of iniquity.
-
- Yet more, be careful that, unworthily, thou gain not an advantage over
- weakness,
- Unstable souls, fervent and profuse, fluttered by the feeling of the
- moment;
- For eloquence swayeth to its will the feeble and the conscious of defect:
- Rashly give they, and afterward are sad,--a gift that doubly erred.
- It was the worldliness of priestcraft that accounted alms-giving for
- charity;
- And many a father's penitence hath steeped his son in penury;
- Yet, considered he lightly the guilt of a death-bed selfishness
- That strove to take with him, for gain, the gold no longer his;
- So he died in a false peace, and dying robbed his kindred;
- The cunning friar at his side having cheated both the living and the dead.
-
- Charity sitteth on a fair hill-top, blessing far and near,
- But her garments drop ambrosia, chiefly, on the violets around her:
- She gladdeneth indeed the map-like scene, stretching to the verge of the
- horizon,
- For her angel face is lustrous and beloved, even as the moon in heaven:
- But the light of that beatific vision gloweth in serener concentration
- The nearer to her heart, and nearer to her home,--that hill-top where she
- sitteth:
- Therefore is she kind unto her kin, yearning in affection on her
- neighbours,
- Giving gifts to those around, who know and love her well.
- But the counterfeit of charity, an hypocrite of earth, not a grace of
- heaven,
- Seeketh not to bless at home, for her nearer aspect is ill-favoured:
- Therefore hideth she for shame, counting that pride humility,
- And none of those around her hearth are gladdened by her gifts:
- Rather, with an overreaching zeal, flingeth she her bounty to the
- stranger,
- And scattered prodigalities abroad compensate for meanness in her home:
- For benefits showered on the distant shine in unmixed beauty,
- So that even she may reap their undiscerning praise:
- Therefore native want hath pined, where foreign need was fattened;
- Woman been crushed by the tyrannous hand that upheld the flag of
- liberality;
- Poverty been prisoned up and starved, by hearts that are maudlin upon
- crime;
- And freeborn babes been manacled by men, who liberate the sturdy slave.
-
- Policy counselleth a gift, given wisely and in season,
- And policy afterwards approveth it, for great is the influence of gifts.
- The lover, unsmiled upon before, is welcome for his jewelled bauble;
- The righteous cause without a fee, must yield to bounteous guilt:
- How fair is a man in thine esteem, whose just discrimination seeketh thee,
- And so, discerning merit, honoureth it with gifts!
- Yea, let the cause appear sufficient, and the motive clear and
- unsuspicious,
- As given to one who cannot help, or proving honest thanks,
- There liveth not one among a million, who is proof against the charm of
- liberality,
- And flattery, that boon of praise, hath power with the wisest.
-
- Man is of three natures, craving all for charity;
- It is not enough to give him meats, withholding other comfort:
- For the mind starveth, and the soul is scorned, and so the human animal
- Eateth his unsatisfying pittance, a thankless heartless pauper:
- Yet would he bless thee and be grateful, didst thou feed his spirit,
- And teach him that thine alms-givings are charities, are loves:
- --I saw a beggar in the street, and another beggar pitied him;
- Sympathy sank into his soul, and the pitied one felt happier:
- Anon passed by a cavalcade, children of wealth and gaiety;
- They laughed, and looked upon the beggar, and the gallants flung him gold;
- He, poor spirit-humbled wretch, gathered up their givings with a curse,
- And went--to share it with his brother, the beggar who had pitied him!
-
-
-OF BEAUTY.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Thou mightier than Manoah's son, whence is thy great strength,
- And wherein the secret of thy craft, O charmer charming wisely?--
- For thou art strong in weakness, and in artlessness well skilled,
- Constant in the multitude of change, and simple amidst intricate
- complexity.
- Folly's shallow lip can ask the deepest question,
- And many wise in many words should answer, what is beauty?--
- Who shall separate the hues that flicker on a dying dolphin,
- Or analyse the jewelled lights that deck the peacock's train,
- Or shrewdly mix upon a palette the tints of an iridescent spar,
- Or set in rank the wandering shades about a watered silk?
-
- For beauty is intangible, vague, ill to be defined;
- She hath the coat of a chameleon, changing while we watch it.
- Strangely woven is the web, disorderly yet harmonious,
- A glistering robe of mingled mesh, that may not be unravelled.
- It is shot with heaven's blue, the soul of summer skies,
- And twisted strings of light, the mind of noonday suns,
- And ruddy gleams of life, that roll along the veins,
- A coat of many colours, running curiously together.
- There is threefold beauty for man; twofold beauty for the animal;
- And the beauty of inanimates is single: body, temper, spirit.
- Multiplied in endless combination, issue the changeable results;
- Each class verging on the other twain, with imperceptible gradation;
- And every individual in each having his propriety of difference,
- So that the meanest of creation bringeth in a tribute of the beautiful.
- Yea, from the worst in favour shineth out a fitness of design,
- The patent mark of beauty, its Maker's name imprest.
- For the great Creator's seal is set to all His works;
- Its quarterings are Attributes of praise, and all the shield is Beauty:
- So, that heraldic blazon is Creation's common signet;
- And the universal family of life goeth in the colours of its Lord:
- But each one, as a several son, shall bear those arms with a difference;
- Beauty, various in phase, and similar in seeming oppositions.
- The coins of old Rome were struck with a diversity for each,
- Barely two be found alike, in every Cæsar's image:
- So, note thou the seals, ranged round the charters of the Universe,
- The finger of God is the stamp upon them all, but each hath its separate
- variety.
-
- Beauty, theme of innocence, how may guilt discourse thee?
- Let holy angels sing thy praise, for man hath marred thy visage.
- Still the maimed torso of a Theseus can gladden taste with its
- proportions;
- Though sin hath shattered every limb, how comely are the fragments!
- And music leaveth on the ear a memory of sweet sounds;
- And broken arches charm the sight with hints of fair completeness.
- So, while humbled at the ruin, be thou grateful for the relics;
- Go forth, and look on all around with kind uncaptious eye:
- Freely let us wander through these unfrequented ways,
- And talk of glorious beauty, filling all the world.
-
- For beauty hideth everywhere, that Reason's child may seek her,
- And having found the gem of price, may set it in God's crown.
- Beauty nestleth in the rosebud, or walketh the firmament with planets,
- She is heard in the beetle's evening hymn, and shouteth in the matins of
- the sun;
- The cheek of the peach is glowing with her smile, her splendour blazeth
- in the lightning,
- She is the dryad of the woods, the naiad of the streams;
- Her golden hair hath tapestried the silkworm's silent chamber,
- And to her measured harmonies the wild waves beat in time;
- With tinkling feet at eventide she danceth in the meadow,
- Or, like a Titan, lieth stretched athwart the ridgy Alps;
- She is rising, in her veil of mist, a Venus from the waters,--
- Men gaze upon the loveliness,--and lo, it is beautiful exceedingly;
- She, with the might of a Briareus, is dragging down the clouds upon the
- mountain,--
- Men look upon the grandeur,--and lo, it is excellent in glory.
- For I judge that beauty and sublimity be but the lesser and the great,
- Sublime, as magnified to giants, and beautiful, diminished into fairies.
- It were a false fancy to solve all beauty by desire,
- It were a lowering thought to expound sublimity by dread.
- Cowardly men with trembling hearts have feared the furious storm,
- Nor felt its thrilling beauty; but is it then not beautiful?
- And careless men, at summer's eve, have loved the dimpled waves;
- O that smile upon the seas,--hath it no sublimity?
- Dost thou nothing know of this,--to be awed at woman's beauty?
- Nor, with exhilarated heart, to hail the crashing thunder?
- Thou hast much to learn, that never found a fearfulness in flowers;
- Thou hast missed of joy, that never basked in beauties of the terrible.
-
- Show me an enthusiast in aught; he hath noted one thing narrowly,
- And lo, his keenness hath detected the one dear hiding place of beauty:
- Then he boasteth, simple soul, flattered by discovery,
- Fancying that no science else can show so fair and precious:
- He hath found a ray of light, and cherisheth the treasure in his closet,
- Mocking at those larger minds, that bathe in floods of noon;
- Lo, what a jewel hath he gotten,--this is the monopolist of beauty,--
- And lightly heeding all beside, he poured his yearnings thitherward:
- Be it for love, or for learning, habit, art, or nature,
- Exclusive thought is all the cause of this particular zeal.
- But like intensity of fitness, kind and skilful beauty,
- So pleasant to his mind in one thing, filleth all beside:
- From the waking minute of a chrysalis, to the perfect cycle of chronology,
- From the centipede's jointed armour to the mammoth's fossil ribs,
- From the kingfisher's shrill note, to the cataract's thundering bass,
- From the greensward's grateful hues, to the fascinating eye of woman,
- Beauty, various in all things, setteth up her home in each,
- Shedding graciously around an omnipresent smile.
-
- There is beauty in the rolling clouds, and placid shingle beach,
- In feathery snows, and whistling winds, and dun electric skies;
- There is beauty in the rounded woods, dank with heavy foliage,
- In laughing fields, and dinted hills, the valley and its lake;
- There is beauty in the gullies, beauty on the cliffs, beauty in sun and
- shade,
- In rocks and rivers, seas and plains,--the earth is drowned in beauty.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Beauty coileth with the watersnake, and is cradled in the shrewmouse's
- nest,
- She flitteth out with evening bats, and the soft mole hid her in his
- tunnel;
- The limpet is encamped upon the shore, and beauty not a stranger to his
- tent;
- The silvery dace and golden carp thread the rushes with her:
- She saileth into clouds with an eagle, she fluttereth into tulips with a
- humming bird;
- The pasturing kine are of her company, and she prowleth with the leopard
- in his jungle.
-
- Moreover, for the reasonable world, its words, and acts, and speculations,
- For frail and fallen manhood, in his every work and way,
- Beauty, wrecked and stricken, lingereth still among us,
- And morsels of that shattered sun are dropt upon the darkness.
- Yea, with savages and boors, the mean, the cruel, and besotted,
- Ever in extenuating grace hide some relics of the beautiful.
- Gleams of kindness, deeds of courage, patience, justice, generosity,
- Truth welcomed, knowledge prized, rebukes taken with contrition,
- All, in various measure, have been blest with some of these,
- And never yet hath lived the man, utterly beggared of the beautiful.
-
- Beauty is as crystal in the torchlight, sparkling on the poet's page;
- Virgin honey of Hymettus, distilled from the lips of the orator;
- A savour of sweet spikenard, anointing the hands of liberality;
- A feast of angels' food set upon the tables of religion.
- She is seen in the tear of sorrow, and heard in the exuberance of mirth;
- She goeth out early with the huntsman, and watcheth at the pillow of
- disease.
- Science in his secret laws hath found out latent beauty,
- Sphere and square, and cone and curve, are fashioned by her rules:
- Mechanism met her in his forces, fancy caught her in its flittings,
- Day is lightened by her eyes, and her eyelids close upon the night.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Beauty is dependence in the babe, a toothless tender nurseling;
- Beauty is boldness in the boy, a curly rosy truant;
- Beauty is modesty and grace in fair retiring girlhood;
- Beauty is openness and strength in pure high-minded youth:
- Man, the noble and intelligent, gladdeneth earth with beauty,
- And woman's beauty sunneth him, as with a smile from heaven.
-
- There is none enchantment against beauty, Magician for all time,
- Whose potent spells of sympathy have charmed the passive world:
- Verily, she reigneth a Semiramis; there is no might against her;
- The lords of every land are harnessed to her triumph.
- Beauty is conqueror of all, nor ever yet was found among the nations
- That iron-moulded mind, full proof against her power.
- Beauty, like a summer's day, subdueth by sweet influences;
- Who can wrestle against Sleep?--yet is that giant, very gentleness.
-
- Ajax may rout a phalanx, but beauty shall enslave him single-handed;
- Pericles ruled Athens, yet he is the servant of Aspasia:
- Light were the labour, and often-told the tale, to count the victories of
- beauty,--
- Helen, and Judith, and Omphale, and Thais, many a trophied name.
- At a glance the misanthrope was softened, and repented of his vows,
- When Beauty asked, he gave, and banned her--with a blessing;
- The cold ascetic loved the smile that lit his dismal cell,
- And kindly stayed her step, and wept when she departed;
- The bigot abbess felt her heart gush with a mother's feeling,
- When looking on some lovely face beneath the cloister's shade;
- Usury freed her without ransom; the buccaneer was gentle in her presence;
- Madness kissed her on the cheek, and Idiotcy brightened at her coming:
- Yea, the very cattle in the field, and hungry prowlers of the forest
- With fawning homage greeted her, as Beauty glided by.
- A welcome guest unbidden, she is dear to every hearth;
- A glad spontaneous growth of friends is springing round her rest:
- Learning sitteth at her feet, and Idleness laboureth to please her,
- Folly hath flung aside his bells, and leaden Dulness gloweth;
- Prudence is rash in her defence; Frugality filleth her with riches;
- Despair came to her for counsel; and Bereavement was glad when she
- consoled;
- Justice putteth up his sword at the tear of supplicating beauty,
- And Mercy, with indulgent haste, hath pardoned beauty's sin.
-
- For beauty is the substitute for all things, satisfying every absence,
- The rich delirious cup to make all else forgotten:
- She also is the zest unto all things, enhancing every presence,
- The rare and precious ambergris, to quicken each perfume.
- O beauty, thou art eloquent; yea, though slow of tongue,
- Thy breast, fair Phryne, pleaded well before the dazzled judge:
- O beauty, thou art wise; yea, though teaching falsely,
- Sages listen, sweet Corinna, to commend thy lips;
- O beauty, thou art ruler; yea, though lowly as a slave,
- Myrrha, that imperial brow is monarch of thy lord;
- O beauty, thou art winner; yea, though halting in the race,
- Hippodame, Camilla, Atalanta,--in gracefulness ye fascinate your umpires;
- O beauty, thou art rich; yea, though clad in russet,
- Attalus cannot boast his gold against the wealth of beauty;
- O beauty, thou art noble; yea, though Esther be an exile,
- Set her up on high, ye kings, and bow before the majesty of beauty!
-
- Friend and scholar, who, in charity, hast walked with me thus far,
- We have wandered in a wilderness of sweets, tracking beauty's footsteps:
- And ever as we rambled on among the tangled thicket,
- Many a startled thought hath tempted further roaming:
- Passion, sympathetic influence, might of imaginary haloes,--
- Many the like would lure aside, to hunt their wayward themes.
- And, look you!--from his ferny bed in yonder hazel coppice,
- A dappled hart hath flung aside the boughs and broke away;
- He is fleet and capricious as the zephyr, and with exulting bounds
- Hieth down a turfy lane between the sounding woods;
- His neck is garlanded with flowers, his antlers hung with chaplets,
- And rainbow-coloured ribbons stream adown his mottled flanks:
- Should we follow?--foolish hunters, thus to chase afoot,--
- Who can track the airy speed and doubling wiles of Taste?
-
- For the estimates of human beauty, dependent upon time and clime,
- Manifold and changeable, are multiplied the more by strange gregarious
- fashion:
- And notable ensamples in the great turn to epidemics in the lower,
- So that a nation's taste shall vary with its rulers.
- Stern Egypt, humbled to the Greek, fancied softer idols;
- Greece, the Roman province, nigh forgat her classic sculpture;
- Rome, crushed beneath the Goth, loved his barbarian habits;
- And Alaric, with his ruffian horde, is tamed by silken Rome.
- Columbia's flattened head, and China's crumpled feet,--
- The civilized tapering waist,--and the pendulous ears of the savage,--
- The swollen throat among the mountains, and an ebon skin beneath the
- tropics,--
- These shall all be reckoned beauty: and for weighty cause.
- First, for the latter: Providence in mercy tempereth taste by
- circumstance,
- So that Nature's must shall hit her creature's liking;
- Second, for the middle: though the foolishness of vanity seek to mar
- proportion,
- Still, defects in those we love shall soon be counted praise;
- Third, for the first: a chief, and a princess, maimed or distorted from
- the cradle
- Shall coax the flattery of slaves to imitate the great in their deformity:
- Hence groweth habit: and habits make a taste,
- And so shall servile zeal deface the types of beauty.
- Whiles Alexander conquered, crookedness was comely:
- And followers learn to praise the scars upon their leader's brow.
- Youth hath sought to flatter age by mimicking grey hairs;
- Age plastereth her wrinkles, and is painted in the ruddiness of Youth.
- Fashion, the parasite of Rank, apeth faults and failings,
- Until the general Taste depraved hath warped its sense of beauty.
-
- Each man hath a measure for himself, yet all shall coincide in much;
- A perfect form of human grace would captivate the world:
- Be it manhood's lustre, or the loveliness of woman, all would own its
- beauty,
- The Caffre and Circassian, Russians and Hindoos, the Briton, the Turk and
- Japanese.
- Not all alike, nor all at once, but each in proportion to intelligence,
- His purer state in morals, and a lesser grade in guilt:
- For the high standard of the beautiful is fixed in Reason's forum,
- And sins, and customs, and caprice, have failed to break it down:
- And reason's standard for the creature pointeth three perfections,
- Frame, knowledge, and the feeling heart, well and kindly mingled;
- A fair dwelling, furnished wisely, with a gentle tenant in it,--
- This is the glory of humanity: thou hast seen it seldom.
-
- There is a beauty for the body; the superficial polish of a statue,
- The symmetry of form and feature delicately carved and painted.
- How bright in early bloom the Georgian sitteth at her lattice,
- How softened off in graceful curves her young and gentle shape:
- Those dark eyes, lit by curiosity, flash beneath the lashes,
- And still her velvet cheek is dimpled with a smile.
- Dost thou count her beautiful?--even as a mere fair figure,
- A plastic image, little more,--the outer garb of woman:
- Yea,--and thus far it is well; but Reason's hopes are higher,--
- Can he sate his soul on a scantling third of beauty?
-
- Yet is this the pleasing trickery, that cheateth half the world,
- Nature's wise deceit to make up waste in life;
- And few be they that rest uncaught, for many a twig is limed;
- Where is the wise among a million, that took not form for beauty?
- But watch it well; for vanity and sin, malice, hate, suspicion,
- Louring as clouds upon the countenance, will disenchant its charms.
- The needful complexity of beauty claimeth mind and soul,
- Though many coins of foul alloy pass current for the true:
- And albeit fairness in the creature shall often co-exist with excellence,
- Yet hath many an angel shape been tenanted by fiends.
- A man, spiritually keen, shall detect in surface beauty
- Those marring specks of evil which the sensual cannot see;
- Therefore is he proof against a face, unlovely to his likings,
- And common minds shall scorn the taste, that shrunk from sin's distortion.
-
- There is a beauty for the reason; grandly independent of externals,
- It looketh from the windows of the house, shining in the man triumphant.
- I have seen the broad blank face of some misshapen dwarf
- Lit on a sudden as with glory, the brilliant light of mind:
- Who then imagined him deformed? intelligence is blazing on his forehead,
- There is empire in his eye, and sweetness on his lip, and his brown cheek
- glittereth with beauty:
- And I have known some Nireus of the camp, a varnished paragon of
- chamberers,
- Fine, elegant, and shapely, moulded as the master-piece of Phidias,--
- Such an one, with intellects abased, have I noted crouching to the dwarf,
- Whilst his lovers scorn the fool, whose beauty hath departed!
-
- And there is a beauty for the spirit; mind in its perfect flowering,
- Fragrant, expanded into soul, full of love and blessed.
- Go to some squalid couch, some famishing death-bed of the poor;
- He is shrunken, cadaverous, diseased;--there is here no beauty of the
- body:
- Never hath he fed on knowledge, nor drank at the streams of science,
- He is of the common herd, illiterate;--there is here no beauty of the
- reason:
- But lo! his filming eye is bright with love from heaven,
- In every look it beameth praise, as worshipping with seraphs;
- What honeycomb is hived upon his lips, eloquent of gratitude and prayer,--
- What triumph shrined serene upon that clammy brow,
- What glory flickering transparent under those thin cheeks,--
- What beauty in his face!--Is it not the face of an angel?
-
- Now, of these three, infinitely mingled and combined,
- Consisteth human beauty, in all the marvels of its mightiness:
- And forth from human beauty springeth the intensity of Love;
- Feeling, thought, desire, the three deep fountains of affection.
- Son of Adam, or daughter of Eve, art thou trapped by nature,
- And is thy young eye dazzled with the pleasant form of beauty?
- This is but a lower love; still it hath its honour;
- What God hath made and meant to charm, let not man despise.
- Nevertheless, as reason's child, look thou wisely farther,
- For age, disease, and care, and sin, shall tarnish all the surface:
- Reach a loftier love: be lured by the comeliness of mind,--
- Gentle, kind, and calm, or lustrous in the livery of knowledge.
- And more, there is a higher grade; force the mind to its perfection--
- Win those golden trophies of consummate love:
- Add unto riches of the reason, and a beauty moulded to thy liking,
- The precious things of nobler grace that well adorn a soul;
- Thus, be thou owner of a treasure, great in earth and heaven,
- Beauty, wisdom, goodness, in a creature like its God.
-
- So then, draw we to an end; with feeble step and faltering,
- I follow beauty through the universe, and find her home Ubiquity:
- In all that God hath made, in all that man hath marred,
- Lingereth beauty, or its wreck, a broken mould and castings.
- And now, having wandered long time, freely and with desultory feet,
- To gather in the garden of the world a few fair sample flowers,
- With patient scrutinizing care let us cull the conclusion of their
- essence,
- And answer to the riddle of Zorobabel, Whence the might of beauty?
-
- Ugliness is native unto nothing, but an attribute of concrete evil;
- In everything created, at its worst, lurk the dregs of loveliness:
- We be fallen into utter depths, yet once we stood sublime,
- For man was made in perfect praise, his Maker's comely image:
- And so his new-born ill is spiced with older good,
- He carrieth with him, yea to crime, the withered limbs of beauty.
- Passions may be crooked generosities; the robber stealeth for his
- children;
- Murder was avenger of the innocent, or wiped out shame with blood.
- Many virtues, weighted by excess, sink among the vices;
- Many vices, amicably buoyed, float among the virtues.
- For, albeit sin is hate, a foul and bitter turpitude,
- As hurling back against the Giver all His gifts with insult,
- Still when concrete in the sinner, it will seem to partake of his
- attractions,
- And in seductive masquerade shall cloak its leprous skin;
- His broken lights of beauty shall illumine its utter black,
- And those refracted rays glitter on the hunch of its deformity.
-
- Verily the fancy may be false, yet hath it met me in my musings,
- (As expounding the pleasantness of pleasure, but no ways extenuating
- licence,)
- That even those yearnings after beauty, in wayward wanton youth,
- When, guileless of ulterior end, it craveth but to look upon the lovely,
- Seem like struggles of the soul, dimly remembering pre-existence,
- And feeling in its blindness for a long-lost god, to satisfy its longing;
- As if the sucking babe, tenderly mindful of his mother,
- Should pull a dragon's dugs, and drain the teats of poison.
- Our primal source was beauty, and we pant for it ever and again;
- But sin hath stopped the way with thorns; we turn aside, wander, and are
- lost.
-
- God, the undiluted good, is root and stock of beauty,
- And every child of reason drew his essence from that stem.
- Therefore, it is of intuition, an innate hankering for home,
- A sweet returning to the well, from which our spirit flowed,
- That we, unconscious of a cause, should bask these darkened souls
- In some poor relics of the light that blazed in primal beauty,
- And, even like as exiles of idolatry, should quaff from the cisterns of
- creation
- Stagnant draughts, for those fresh springs that rise in the Creator.
-
- Only, being burdened with the body, spiritual appetite is warped,
- And sensual man, with taste corrupted, drinketh of pollutions:
- Impulse is left, but indiscriminate; his hunger feasteth upon carrion;
- His natural love of beauty doateth over beauty in decay.
- He still thirsteth for the beautiful; but his delicate ideal hath grown
- gross,
- And the very sense of thirst hath been fevered from affection into
- passion.
- He remembereth the blessedness of light, but it is with an old man's
- memory,
- A blind old man from infancy, that once hath seen the sun,
- Whom long experience of night hath darkened in his cradle recollections,
- Until his brightest thought of noon is but a shade of black.
-
- This then is thy charm, O beauty all pervading;
- And this thy wondrous strength, O beauty, conqueror of all:
- The outline of our shadowy best, the pure and comely creature,
- That winneth on the conscience with a saddening admiration:
- And some untutored thirst for God, the root of every pleasure,
- Native to creatures, yea in ruin, and dating from the birthday of the
- soul.
- For God sealeth up the sum, confirmed exemplar of proportions,
- Rich in love, full of wisdom, and perfect in the plenitude of Beauty.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Fame.]
-
-OF FAME.
-
-[Illustration: "B"]
-
- Blow the trumpet, spread the wing, fling thy scroll upon the sky,
- Rouse the slumbering world, O Fame, and fill the sphere with echo!
- --Beneath thy blast they wake, and murmurs come hoarsely on the wind,
- And flashing eyes and bristling hands proclaim they hear thy message:
- Rolling and surging as a sea, that upturned flood of faces
- Hasteneth with its million tongues to spread the wondrous tale;
- The hum of added voices groweth to the roaring of a cataract,
- And rapidly from wave to wave is tossed that exaggerated story,
- Until those stunning clamours, gradually diluted in the distance,
- Sink ashamed, and shrink afraid of noise, and die away.
- Then brooding Silence, forth from his hollow caverns,
- Cloaked and cowled, and gliding along, a cold and stealthy shadow,
- Once more is mingled with the multitude, whispering as he walketh,
- And hushing all their eager ears, to hear some newer Fame.
- So all is still again; but nothing of the past hath been forgotten;
- A stirring recollection of the trumpet ringeth in the hearts of men:
- And each one, either envious or admiring, hath wished the chance were his
- To fill as thus the startled world with fame, or fear, or wonder.
- This lit thy torch of sacrilege, Ephesian Eratostratus;
- This dug thy living grave, Pythagoras, the traveller from Hadës;
- For this, dived Empedocles into Etna's fiery whirlpool;
- For this, conquerors, regicides, and rebels, have dared their perilous
- crimes.
- In all men, from the monarch to the menial, lurketh lust of fame:
- The savage and the sage alike regard their labours proudly:
- Yea, in death, the glazing eye is illumined by the hope of reputation,
- And the stricken warrior is glad, that his wounds are salved with glory.
-
- For fame is a sweet self-homage, an offering grateful to the idol,
- A spiritual nectar for the spiritual thirst, a mental food for mind,
- A pregnant evidence to all of an after immaterial existence,
- A proof that soul is scatheless, when its dwelling is dissolved.
- And the manifold pleasures of fame are sought by the guilty and the good:
- Pleasures, various in kind, and spiced to every palate:
- The thoughtful loveth fame as an earnest of better immortality,
- The industrious and deserving, as a symbol of just appreciation,
- The selfish, as a promise of advancement, at least to a man's own kin,
- And common minds, as a flattering fact that men have been told of their
- existence.
-
- There is a blameless love of fame, springing from desire of justice,
- When a man hath featly won and fairly claimed his honours:
- And then fame cometh as encouragement to the inward consciousness of
- merit,
- Gladdening by the kindliness and thanks, wherewithal his labours are
- rewarded.
- But there is a sordid imitation, a feverish thirst for notoriety,
- Waiting upon vanity and sloth, and utterly regardless of deserving:
- And then fame cometh as a curse; the fire-damp is gathered in the mine:
- The soul is swelled with poisonous air, and a spark of temptation shall
- explode it.
-
- Idle causes, noised awhile, shall yield most active consequents,
- And therefore it were ill upon occasion to scorn the voice of rumour.
- Ye have seen the chemist in his art mingle invisible gases;
- And lo, the product is a substance, a heavy dark precipitate:
- Even so fame, hurtling on the quiet with many meeting tongues,
- Can out of nothing bring forth fruits, and blossom on a nourishment of
- air.
- For many have earned honour, and thereby rank and riches,
- From false and fleeting tales, some casual mere mistake;
- And many have been wrecked upon disgrace, and have struggled with poverty
- and scorn,
- From envious hints and ill reports, the slanders cast on innocence.
- Whom may not scandal hit? those shafts are shot at a venture:
- Who standeth not in danger of suspicion? that net hath caught the noblest.
- Cæsar's wife was spotless, but a martyr to false fame;
- And Rumour, in temporary things, is gigantic as a ruin or a remedy:
- Many poor and many rich have testified its popular omnipotence,
- And many a panic-stricken army hath perished with the host of the
- Assyrians.
-
- Nevertheless, if opportunity be nought, let a man bide his time;
- So the matter be not merchandise nor conquest, fear thou less for
- character.
- If a liar accuseth thee of evil, be not swift to answer;
- Yea, rather give him license for awhile; it shall help thine honour
- afterward:
- Never yet was calumny engendered, but good men speedily discerned it,
- And innocence hath burst from its injustice, as the green world rolling
- out of Chaos.
- What, though still the wicked scoff,--this also turneth to his praise;
- Did ye never hear that censure of the bad is buttress to a good man's
- glory?
- What, if the ignorant still hold out, obstinate in unkind judgment,--
- Ignorance and calumny are paired; we affirm by two negations:
- Let them stand round about, pushing at the column in a circle,
- For all their toil and wasted strength, the foolish do but prop it.
- And note thou this; in the secret of their hearts, they feel the taunt is
- false,
- And cannot help but reverence the courage, that walketh amid calumnies
- unanswering:
- He standeth as a gallant chief, unheeding shot or shell;
- He trusteth in God his Judge: neither arrows nor the pestilence shall
- harm him.
-
- A high heart is a sacrifice to Heaven: should it stoop among the creepers
- in the dust,
- To tell them that what God approved, is worthy of their praise?
- Never shall it heed the thought; but flaming on in triumph to the skies,
- And quite forgetting fame, shall find it added as a trophy.
- A great mind is an altar on a hill: should the priest descend from his
- altitude,
- To canvass offerings and worship from dwellers on the plain?
- Rather, with majestic perseverance will he minister in solitary grandeur,
- Confident the time will come, when pilgrims shall be flocking to the
- shrine.
- For fame is the birthright of genius; and he recketh not how long it be
- delayed;
- The heir need not hasten to his heritage, when he knoweth that his tenure
- is eternal.
- The careless poet of Avon, was he troubled for his fame,
- Or the deep-mouthed chronicler of Paradise, heeded he the suffrage of his
- equals?
- Mæonides took no thought, committing all his honours to the future,
- And Flaccus, standing on his watch-tower, spied the praise of ages.
-
- Smoking flax will breed a flame, and the flame may illuminate a world;
- Where is he who scorned that smoke as foul and murky vapour?
- The village stream swelled to a river, and the river was a kingdom's
- wealth,
- Where is he who boasted he could step across that stream?
- Such are the beginnings of the famous: little in the judgment of their
- peers,
- The juster verdict of posterity shall fix them in the orbits of the Great.
- Therefore dull Zoilus, clamouring ascendant of the hour,
- Will soon be fain to hide his hate, and bury up his bitterness for shame:
- Therefore mocking Momus, offended at the footsteps of Beauty,
- Shall win the prize of his presumption, and be hooted from his throne
- among the stars.
- For, as the shadow of a mountain lengtheneth before the setting sun,
- Until that screening Alp have darkened all the canton,--
- So, Fame groweth to its great ones; their images loom longer in departing;
- But the shadow of mind is light, and earth is filled with its glory.
-
- And thou, student of the truth, commended to the praise of God,
- Wouldst thou find applause with men?--seek it not, nor shun it.
- Ancient fame is roofed in cedar, and her walls are marble;
- Modern fame lodgeth in a hut, a slight and temporary dwelling:
- Lay not up the treasures of thy soul within so damp a chamber,
- For the moth of detraction shall fret thy robe, and drop its eggs upon
- thy motive;
- Or the rust of disheartening reserve shall spoil the lustre of thy gold,
- Until its burnished beauty shall be dim as tarnished brass;
- Or thieves, breaking through to steal, shall claim thy jewelled thoughts,
- And turn to charge the theft on thee, a pilferer from them!
-
- There is a magnanimity in recklessness of fame, so fame be well deserving,
- That rusheth on in fearless might, the conscious sense of merit:
- And there is a littleness in jealousy of fame, looking as aware of
- weakness,
- That creepeth cautiously along, afraid that its title will be challenged.
- The wild boar, full of beechmast, flingeth him down among the brambles;
- Secure in bristly strength, without a watch, he sleepeth:
- But the hare, afraid to feed, croucheth in its own soft form;
- Wakefully with timid eyes, and quivering ears, he listeneth.
- Even so, a giant's might is bound up in the soul of Genius,
- His neck is strong with confidence, and he goeth tusked with power:
- Sturdily he roameth in the forest, or sunneth him in fen and field,
- And scareth from his marshy lair a host of fearful foes.
- But there is a mimic Talent, whose safety lieth in its quickness,
- A timorous thing of doubling guile, that scarce can face a friend:
- This one is captious of reproof, provident to snatch occasion,
- Greedy of applause, and vexed to lose one tittle of the glory.
- He is a poor warder of his fame, who is ever on the watch to keep it
- spotless;
- Such care argueth debility, a garrison relying on its sentinel.
- Passive strength shall scorn excuses, patiently waiting a re-action,
- He wotteth well that truth is great, and must prevail at last;
- But fretful weakness hasteth to explain, anxiously dreading prejudice,
- And ignorant that perishable falsehood dieth as a branch cut off.
-
- Purity of motive and nobility of mind shall rarely condescend
- To prove its rights, and prate of wrongs, or evidence its worth to others.
- And it shall be small care to the high and happy conscience
- What jealous friends, or envious foes, or common fools may judge.
- Should the lion turn and rend every snarling jackal,
- Or an eagle be stopt in his career to punish the petulance of sparrows?
- Should the palm-tree bend his crown to chide the briar at his feet,
- Nor kindly help its climbing, if it hope, and be ambitious?
- Should the nightingale account it worth her pains to vindicate her music,
- Before some sorry finches, that affect to judge of song?
- No: many an injustice, many a sneer, and slur,
- Is passed aside with noble scorn by lovers of true fame:
- For well they wot that glory shall be tinctured good or evil,
- By the character of those who give it, as wine is flavoured by the
- wineskin:
- So that worthy fame floweth only from a worthy fountain,
- But from an ill-conditioned troop the best report is worthless.
- And if the sensibility of genius count his injuries in secret,
- Wisely will he hide the pains a hardened herd would mock:
- For the great mind well may be sad to note such littleness in brethren,
- The while he is comforted and happy in the firmest assurance of desert.
-
- Cease awhile, gentle scholar;--seek other thoughts and themes;
- Or dazzling Fame with wildfire light shall lure us on for ever.
- For look, all subjects of the mind may range beneath its banner,
- And time would fail and patience droop, to count that numerous host.
- The mine is deep, and branching wide,--and who can work it out?
- Years of thought would leave untold the boundless topic, Fame.
- Every matter in the universe is linked in suchwise unto others,
- That a deep full treatise upon one thing might reach to the history of
- all things:
- And before some single thesis had been followed out in all its branches,
- The wandering thinker would be lost in the pathless forest of existence.
- What were the matter or the spirit, that hath no part in Fame?
- Where were the fact irrelevant, or the fancy out of place?
- For the handling of that mighty theme should stretch from past to future,
- Catching up the present on its way, as a traveller burdened with time.
- All manner of men, their deeds, hopes, fortunes, and ambitions,
- All manner of events and things, climate, circumstance, and custom,
- Wealth and war, fear and hope, contentment, jealousy, devotion,
- Skill and learning, truth, falsehood, knowledge of things gone and things
- to come,
- Pride and praise, honour and dishonour, warnings, ensamples, emulations,
- The excellent in virtues, and the reprobate in vice, with the cloud of
- indifferent spectators,--
- Wave on wave with flooding force throng the shoals of thought,
- Filling that immeasurable theme, the height and depth of Fame.
- With soul unsatisfied and mind dismayed, my feet have touched the
- threshold,
- Fain to pour these flowers and fruits an offering on that altar:
- Lo, how vast the temple,--there are clouds within the dome!
- Yet might the huge expanse be filled, with volumes writ on Fame.
-
-
-OF FLATTERY.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Music is commended of the deaf:--but is that praise despised?
- I trow not: with flattered soul the musician heard him gladly.
- Beauty is commended of the blind:--but is that compliment misliking?
- I trow not: though false and insincere, woman listened greedily.
- Vacant Folly talketh high of Learning's deepest reason:
- Is she hated for her hollowness?--learning held her wiser for the nonce.
- The worldly and the sensual, to gain some end, did homage to religion:
- And the good man gave thanks as for a convert, where others saw the
- hypocrite.
-
- Yet none of these were cheated at the heart, nor steadily believed those
- flatteries;
- They feared the core was rotten, while they hoped the skin was sound:
- But the fruits have so sweet fragrance, and are verily so pleasant to the
- eyes,
- It were an ungracious disenchantment to find them apples of Sodom.
- So they laboured to think all honest, winking hard with both their eyes;
- And hushed up every whisper that could prove that praise absurd:
- They willingly regard not the infirmities that make such worship vain,
- And palliate to their own fond hearts the faults they will not see.
- For the idol rejoiceth in his incense, and loveth not to shame his
- suppliants,
- Should he seek to find them false, his honours die with theirs:
- An offering is welcome for its own sake, set aside the giver,
- And praise is precious to a man, though uttered by the parrot or the
- mocking-bird.
-
- The world is full of fools; and sycophancy liveth on the foolish:
- So he groweth great and rich, that fawning supple parasite.
- Sometimes he boweth like a reed, cringing to the pompousness of pride,
- Sometimes he strutteth as a gallant, pampering the fickleness of vanity;
- I have known him listen with the humble, enacting silent marveller,
- To hear some purse-proud dunce expose his poverty of mind;
- I have heard him wrangle with the obstinate, vowing that he will not be
- convinced,
- When some weak youth hath wisely feared the chance of ill success:
- Now, he will barely be a winner,--to magnify thy triumphs afterward;
- Now, he will hardly be a loser,--but cannot cease to wonder at thy skill:
- He laudeth his own worth, that the leader may have glory in his follower;
- He meekly confesseth his unworthiness, that the leader may have glory in
- himself.
- Many wiles hath he, and many modes of catching,
- But every trap is selfishness, and every bait is praise.
-
- Come, I would forewarn thee and forearm thee; for keen are the weapons of
- his warfare;
- And, while my soul hath scorned him, I have watched his skill from far.
- His thoughts are full of guile, deceitfully combining contrarieties,
- And when he doeth battle in a man, he is leagued with traitorous
- Self-love.
- Strange things have I noted, and opposite to common fancy;
- We leave the open surface, and would plumb the secret depths.
- For he will magnify a lover, even to disparaging his mistress;
- So much wisdom, goodness, grace,--and all to be enslaved?
- Till the Narcissus, self-enamoured, whelmed in floods of flattery,
- Is cheated from the constancy and fervency of love by friendship's subtle
- praise.
- Moreover, he will glorify a parent, even to the censure of his child,--
- O degenerate scion, of a stock so excellent and noble!
- Scant will he be in well-earned praise of a son before his father;
- And rarely commendeth to a mother her daughter's budding beauty:
- Yet shall he extol the daughter to her father, and be warm about the son
- before his mother;
- Knowing that self-love entereth not, to resist applause with jealousies.
- Wisely is he sparing of hyperbole where vehemence of praise would humble,
- For many a father liketh ill to be counted second to his son:
- And shrewdly the flatterer hath reckoned on a self still lurking in the
- mother,
- When his tongue was slow to speak of graces in the daughter.
- But if he descend a generation, to the grandsire his talk is of the
- grandson,
- Because in such high praise he hideth the honours of the son;
- And the daughter of a daughter may well exceed, in beauty, love, and
- learning,
- For unconsciously old age perceived--she cannot be my rival.
- These are of the deep things of flattery: and many a shallow sycophant
- Hath marvelled ill that praise of children seldom won their parents.
- This therefore note, unto detection: flattery can sneer as well as smile;
- And a master in the craft wotteth well, that his oblique thrust is surest.
-
- Flattery sticketh like a burr, holding to the soil with anchors,
- A vital, natural, subtle seed, everywhere hardy and indigenous.
- Go to the storehouse of thy memory, and take what is readiest to thy
- hand,--
- The noble deed, the clever phrase, for which thy pride was flattered:
- Oh, it hath been dwelt upon in solitude, and comforted thy heart in
- crowds,
- It hath made thee walk as in a dream, and lifted up the head above thy
- fellows;
- It hath compensated months of gloom, that minute of sweet sunshine,
- Drying up the pools of apathy, and kindling the fire of ambition:
- Yea, the flavour of that spice, mingled in the cup of life,
- Shall linger even to the dregs, and still be tasted with a welcome;
- The dame shall tell her grandchild of her coy and courted youth,
- And the grey-beard prateth of a stranger, who praised his task at school.
-
- Oftimes to the sluggard and the dull, flattery hath done good service,
- Quickening the mind to emulation, and encouraging the heart that failed.
- Even so, a stimulating poison, wisely tendered by the leech,
- Shall speed the pulse, and rally life, and cheat astonished death.
- For, as a timid swimmer ventureth afloat with bladders,
- Until self-confidence and growth of skill have made him spurn their aid,
- Thus commendation may be prudent, where a child hath ill deserved it;
- But praise unmerited is flattery, and the cure will bring its cares:
- For thy son may find thee out, and thou shalt rue the remedy:
- Yea, rather, where thou canst not praise, be honest in rebuke.
-
- I have seen the objects of a flatterer mirrored clearly on the surface,
- Where self-love scattereth praise, to gather praise again.
- This is a commodity of merchandize, words put out at interest:
- A scheme for canvassing opinions, and tinging them all with partiality.
- He is but a harmless fool; humour him with pitiful good-nature:
- If a poetaster quote thy song, be thou tender to his poem:
- Did the painter praise thy sketch? be kind, commend his picture;
- He looketh for a like return; then thank him with thy praise.
- In these small things with these small minds count thou the sycophant a
- courtier,
- And pay back, as blindly as ye may, the too transparent honour.
-
- Also, where the flattery is delicate, coming unobtrusive and in season,
- Though thou be suspicious of its truth, be generous at least to its
- gentility.
- The skilful thief of Lacedæmon had praise before his judges,
- And many caitiffs win applause for genius in their callings.
- Moreover, his meaning may be kind,--and thou art a debtor to his tongue;
- Hasten well to pay the debt, with charity and shrewdness:
- He must not think thee caught, nor feel himself discovered,
- Nor find thine answering compliment as hollow as his own.
- Though he be a smiling enemy, let him heed thee as the fearless and the
- friendly;
- A searching look, a poignant word, may prove thou art aware:
- Still, with compassion to the frail, though keen to see his soul,
- Let him not fear for thy discretion: see thou keep his secret, and thine
- own.
-
- However, where the flattery is gross, a falsehood clear and fulsome,
- Crush the venomous toad, and spare not for a jewel in its head.
- Tell the presumptuous in flattery, that or ever he bespatter thee with
- praise,
- It might be well to stop and ask how little it were worth:
- Thou hast not solicited his suffrage,--let him not force thee to refuse
- it;
- Look to it, man, thy fence is foiled,--and thus we spoil the plot.
- Self-knowledge goeth armed, girt with many weapons,
- But carrieth whips for flattery, to lash it like a slave:
- But the dunce in that great science goeth as a greedy tunny,
- To gorge both bait and hook, unheeding all but appetite:
- He smelleth praise and swalloweth,--yea, though it be palpable and plain,
- Say unto him, Folly, thou art Wisdom,--he will bless thee for thy lie.
-
- Flatterer, thou shalt rue thy trade, though it have many present gains;
- Those varnished wares may sell apace, yet shall they spoil thy credit.
- Thine is the intoxicating cup, which whoso drinketh it shall nauseate:
- Thine is trickery and cheating; but deception never pleased for long.
- And though while fresh thy fragrance seemed even as the dews of charity,
- Yet afterward it fouled thy censer, as with savour of stale smoke.
- For the great mind detected thee at once, answering thine emptiness with
- pity,
- He saw thy self-interested zeal, and was not cozened by vain-glory:
- And the little mind is bloated with the praise, scorning him who gave it,
- A fool shall turn to be thy tyrant, an thou hast dubbed him great:
- And the medium mind of common men, loving first thy music,
- After, when the harmonies are done, shall feel small comfort in their
- echoes;
- For either he shall know thee false, conscious of contrary deservings,
- And, hating thee for falsehood, soon will scorn himself for truth,
- Or, if in aught to toilsome merit honest praise be due,
- Though for a season, belike, his weakness hath been raptured at thy
- witching,
- Shall he not speedily perceive, to the vexing of his disappointed spirit,
- That thine exaggerated tongue hath robbed him of fair fame?
- Thou hast paid in forger's coins, and he had earned true money:
- For the substance of just praise, thou hast put him off with shadows of
- the sycophant:
- Thou art all things to all men, for ends false and selfish,
- Therefore shalt be nothing unto any one, when those thine ends are seen.
-
- Turn aside, young scholar, turn from the song of Flattery!
- She hath the Siren's musical voice, to ravish and betray.
- Her tongue droppeth honey, but it is the honey of Anticyra;
- Her face is a mask of fascination, but there hideth deformity behind;
- Her coming is the presence of a queen, heralded by courtesy and beauty,
- But, going away, her train is held by the hideous dwarf, Disgust.
-
- Know thyself, thine evil as thy good, and flattery shall not harm thee:
- Yea, her speech shall be a warning, a humbling and a guide.
- For wherein thou lackest most, there chiefly will the sycophant commend
- thee,
- And then most warmly will congratulate, when a man hath least deserved.
- Behold, she is doubly a traitor; and will underrate her victim's best,
- That, to the comforting of conscience, she may plead his worse for better.
-
- Therefore, is she dangerous,--as every lie is dangerous:
- Believe her tales, and perish: if thou act upon such counsel.
- Her aims are thine not thee, thy wealth and not thy welfare,
- Thy suffrage not thy safety, thine aid and not thine honour.
- Moreover, with those aims insured, ceaseth all her glozing;
- She hath used thee as a handle,--but her hand was wise to turn it;
- Thus will she glorify her skill, that it deftly caught thy kindness,
- Thus will she scorn thy kindness, so pliable and easy to her skill.
- And then, the flatterer will turn to be thy foe, the bitterest and
- hottest,
- Because he oweth thee much hate to pay off many humblings.
- Thinkest thou now that he is high, he loveth the remembrance of his
- lowliness,
- The servile manner, the dependent smile, the conscience self-abased?
- No, this hour is his own, and the flatterer will be found a busy mocker;
- He that hath salved thee with his tongue, shall now gnash upon thee with
- his teeth;
- Yea, he will be leader in the laugh,--silly one, to listen to thy loss,
- We scarce had hoped to lime and take another of the fools of flattery.
-
- At the last; have charity, young scholar,--yea, to the sycophant
- convicted;
- Be not a Brutus to thyself, nor stern in thine own cause.
- Pardon exaggerated praise; for there is a natural impulse,
- Spurring on the nobler mind, to colour facts by feelings:
- Take an indulgent view of each man's interest in self,
- Be large and liberal in excuses; is not that infirmity thine own?
- Search thy soul and be humble; and mercy abideth with humility;
- So that, yea, the insincere may find thee pitiful, and love thee.
- Mildly put aside, without rudeness of repulse, the pampering hand of
- flattery,
- For courtesy and kindness have gone beneath its guise, and ill shouldst
- thou rebuke them.
-
- Thou art incapable of theft: but flowers in the garden of a friend
- Are thine to pluck with confidence, and it were unfriendliness to
- hesitate:
- Thou abhorrest flattery: but a generous excess in praise
- Is thine to yield with honest heart, and false were the charity to doubt
- it:
- The difference lieth in thine aim; kindliness and good are of charity,
- But selfish, harmful, vile, and bad, is Flattery's evil end.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF NEGLECT.
-
- Generous and righteous is thy grief, slighted child of sensibility;
- For kindliness enkindleth love, but the waters of indifference quench it:
- Thy soul is athirst for sympathy, and hungereth to find affection,
- The tender scions of thy heart yearn for the sunshine of good feeling;
- And it is an evil thing and bitter, when the cheerful face of Charity,
- Going forth gaily in the morning to woo the world with smiles,
- Is met by those wayfaring men with coldness, suspicion, and repulse,
- And turneth into hard dead stone at the Gorgon visage of Neglect.
- O brother, warm and young, covetous of other's favour,
- I see thee checked and chilled, sorrowing for censure or forgetfulness:
- Let coarse and common minds despise--that wounding of thy vanity,
- Alas, I note a sorer cause, the blighting of thy love;
- Let the callous sensual deride thee,--disappointed of thy praise,
- Alas, thou hast a juster grief, defrauded of their kindness:
- It is a theme for tears to feel the soft heart hardening,
- The frozen breath of apathy sealing up the fountain of affection;
- It is a pang, keen only to the best, to be injured well-deserving,
- And slumbering Neglect is injury,--Could ye not watch one hour?
- When God Himself complained, it was that none regarded,
- And indifference bowed to the rebuke, Thou gavest Me no kiss when I came
- in.
-
- Moreover, praise is good; honour is a treasure to be hoarded;
- A good man's praise foreshadoweth God's, and in His smile is heaven:
- But men walk on in hardihood, steeling their sinfulness to censure,
- And when rebuke is ridiculed, the love of praise were an infirmity;
- The judge thou heedest not in fear, cannot have deep homage of thy hope,
- And who then is the wise of this world, that will own he trembleth at his
- fellows?
- Calm, careless, and insensible, he mocketh blame or calumny,
- Neither should his dignity be humbled to some pittance of their praise:
- The rather, let false pride affect to trample on the treasure
- Which evermore in secret strength unconquered Nature prizeth;
- Rather, shall ye stifle now the rising bliss of triumph,
- Lest after, in the world's Neglect, he must acknowledge bitterness.
-
-
- For lo, that world is wide, a huge and crowded continent,
- Its brazen sun is mammon, and its iron soil is care:
- A world full of men, where each man clingeth to his idol;
- A world full of men, where each man cherisheth his sorrow;
- A world full of men, multitude shoaling upon multitude;
- A surging sea, where every wave is burdened with an argosy of self;
- A boundless beach, where every stone is a separate microscopic world:
- A forest of innumerable trees, where every root is independent.
-
- What then is the marvel or the shame, if units be lost among the million?
- Canst thou reasonably murmur, if a leaf drop off unnoticed?
- Wondrous in architecture, intricate and beautiful, delicately tinged and
- scented,
- Exquisite of feeling and mysterious in life, none cared for its growth,
- or its decay:
- None? yea,--no one of its fellows,--nor cedar, palm, nor bramble,--
- None? its twin-born brother scarcely missed it from the spray:
- None?--if none indeed, then man's neglect were bitterness;
- And Life a land without a sun, a globe without a God!
- Yea, flowers in the desert, there be that love your beauty;
- Yea, jewels in the sea, there be that prize your brightness;
- Children of unmerited oblivion, there be that watch and woo you,
- And many tend your sweets, with gentle ministering care:
- Thronging spirits of the happy, and the ever-present Good One
- Yearning seek those precious things, man hath not heart to love,
- Gems of the humblest or the highest, pure and patient in their kind,
- The souls unhardened by ill usage, and uncorrupt by luxury.
-
- And ye, poor desolates unsunned, toilers in the dark damp mine,
- Wearied daughters of oppression, crushed beneath the car of avarice,
- There be that count your tears,--He hath numbered the hairs of thy head,--
- There be that can forgive your ill, with kind considerate pity:
- Count ye this for comfort, Justice hath her balances,
- And yet another world can compensate for all:
- The daily martyrdom of patience shall not be wanting of reward;
- Duty is a prickly shrub, but its flower will be happiness and glory.
-
- Ye too, the friendless, yet dependent, that find nor home nor lover,
- Sad imprisoned hearts, captive to the net of circumstance,--
- And ye, too harshly judged, noble unappreciated intellects,
- Who, capable of highest, lowlier fix your just ambition in content,--
- And chiefest, ye, famished infants of the poor, toiling for your parents'
- bread,
- Tired, and sore, and uncomforted the while, for want of love and learning,
- Who struggle with the pitiless machine in dull continuous conflict,
- Tasked by iron men, who care for nothing but your labour,--
- Be ye long-suffering and courageous: abide the will of Heaven;
- God is on your side; all things are tenderly remembered:
- His servants here shall help you; and where those fail you through
- Neglect,
- His kingdom still hath time and space for ample discriminative Justice:
- Yea, though utterly on this bad earth ye lose both right and mercy,
- The tears that we forgat to note, our God shall wipe away.
-
- Nevertheless, kind spirit, susceptible and guileless,
- Meek uncherished dove, in a carrion flock of fowls,
- Sensitive mimosa, shrinking from the winds that help to root the fir,
- Fragile nautilus, shipwrecked in the gale whereat the conch is glad,
- Thy sharp peculiar grief is uncomforted by hope of compensation,
- For it is a delicate and spiritual wound, which the probe of pity
- bruiseth:
- Yet hear how many thoughts extenuate its pain;
- Even while a kindred heart can sorrow for its presence.
- For the sting of neglect is in this,--that such as we are all, forget us,
- That men and women, kith and kin, so lightly heed of other:
- Sympathy is lacking from the guilty such as we, even where angels
- minister,
- And souls of fine accord must prize a fellow-sinner's love;
- For the worst love those who love them, and the best claim heart for
- heart,
- And it is a holy thirst to long for love's requital:
- Hard it will be, hard and sad, to love and be unloved;
- And many a thorn is thrust into the side of him that is forgotten.
- The oppressive silence of reserve, the frost of failing friendship,
- Affection blighted by repulse, or chilled by shallow courtesy,
- The unaided struggle, the unconsidered grief, the unesteemed
- self-sacrifice,
- The gift, dear evidence of kindness, long due, but never offered,
- The glance estranged, the letter flung aside, the greeting ill received,
- The services of unobtrusive care unthanked, perchance unheeded,
- These things, which hard men mock at, rend the feelings of the tender,
- For the delicate tissue of a spiritual mind is torn by those sharp barbs;
- The coldness of a trusted friend, a plenitude ending in vacuity,
- Is as if the stable world had burst a hollow bubble.
-
- But consider, child of sensibility; the lot of men is labour,
- Labour for the mouth, or labour in the spirit, labour stern and
- individual.
- Worldly cares and worldly hopes exact the thoughts of all,
- And there is a necessary selfishness, rooted in each mortal breast.
- The plans of prudence, or the whisperings of pride, or all-absorbing
- reveries of love,
- Ambition, grief, or fear, or joy, set each man for himself;
- Therefore, the centre of a circle, whereunto all the universe convergeth,
- Is seen in fallen solitude, the naked selfish heart:
- Stripped of conventional deceptions, untrammelled from the harness of
- society,
- We all may read one little word engraved on all we do;
- Other men, what are they unto us? the age, the mass, the million,--
- We segregate, distinct from generalities, that isolated particle, a self:
- It is the very law of our life, a law for soul and body,
- An earthly law for earthly men, toiling in responsible probation.
- For each is the all unto himself, disguise it as we may,
- Each infinite, each most precious; yet even as a nothing to his neighbour.
- O consider, we be crowding up an avenue, trapped in the decoy of time,
- Behind us the irrevocable past, before us the illimitable future:
- What wonder is there, if the traveller, wayworn, hopeful, fearful,
- Burdened himself, so lightly heed the burden of his brother?
- How shouldst thou marvel and be sad, that the pilgrims trouble not to
- learn thee,
- When each hath to master for himself the lessons of life and immortality?
-
- Moreover, what art thou,--so vainly impatient of Neglect,
- Where then is thy worthiness, that so thou claimest honour?
- Let the true judgment of humility reckon up thine ill deserts,
- How little is there to be loved, how much to stir up scorn!
- The double heart, the bitter tongue, the rash and erring spirit,
- Be these, ye purest among men, your passports unto favour?
- It is mercy in the Merciful, and justice in the Just, to be jealous of
- His creature's love,
- But how should evil or duplicity arrogate affection to itself?
- Where love is happiness and duty, to be jealous of that love is godlike,
- But who can reverence the guilty? who findeth pleasure in the mean?
- Check the presumption of thy hopes: thankfully take refuge in obscurity,
- Or, if thou claimest merit, thy sin shall be proclaimed upon the
- housetops.
-
- Yet again: consider them of old, the good, the great, the learned,
- Who have blessed the world by wisdom, and glorified their God by purity.
- Did those speed in favour? were they the loved and the admired?
- Was every prophet had in honour? and every deserving one remembered to
- his praise?
- What shall I say of yonder band, a glorious cloud of witnesses,
- The scorned, defamed, insulted,--but the excellent of earth?
- It were weariness to count up noble names, neglected in their lives,
- Whom none esteemed, nor cared to love, till death had sealed them his.
- For good men are the health of the world, valued only when it perisheth,
- Like water, light, and air, all precious in their absence.
- Who hath considered the blessing of his breath, till the poison of an
- asthma struck him?
- Who hath regarded the just pulses of his heart, till spasm or paralysis
- have stopped them?
- Even thus, an unobserved routine of daily grace and wisdom,
- When no more here, had worship of a world, whose penitence atoned for its
- neglect.
- And living genius is seen among infirmities, wherefrom the commoner are
- free;
- And other rival men of mind crowd this arena of contention;
- And there be many cares; and a man knoweth little of his brother;
- Feebly we appreciate a motive, and slowly keep pace with a feeling:
- And social difference is much; and experience teacheth sadly,
- How great the treachery of friends, how dangerous the courtesy of enemies.
- So, the sum of all these things operateth largely upon all men,
- Hedging us about with thorns, to cramp our yearning sympathies,
- And we grow materialized in mind, forgetting what we see not,
- But, immersed in perceptions of the present, keep things absent out of
- thought:
- Thus, where ingratitude, and guilt, and labour, and selfishness would
- harden,
- Humbly will the good man bow, unmurmuring, to Neglect.
-
- Yet once more, griever at Neglect, hear me to thy comfort, or rebuke:
- For, after all thy just complaint, the world is full of love.
- O heart of childhood, tender, trusting, and affectionate,
- O youth, warm youth, full of generous attentions,
- O woman, self-forgetting woman, poetry of human life,
- And not less thou, O man, so often the disinterested brother,
- Many a smile of love, many a tear of pity,
- Many a word of comfort, many a deed of magnanimity,
- Many a stream of milk and honey pour ye freely on the earth,
- And many a rosebud of love rejoiceth in the dew of your affection.
- Neglect? O liberal world, for thine are many prizes:
- Neglect? O charitable world, where thousands feed on bounty;
- Neglect? O just world, for thy judgments err not often;
- Neglect? O libel on a world where half that world is woman!
- Where is the afflicted, whose voice, once heard, stirreth not a host of
- comforters?
- Where is the sick untended, or in prison, and they visited him not?
- The hungry is fed, and the thirsty satisfied, till ability set limits to
- the will,
- And those who did it unto them, have done it unto God!
- For human benevolence is large, though many matters dwarf it,
- Prudence, ignorance, imposture, and the straitenings of circumstance and
- time.
- And if to the body, so to the mind, the mass of men are generous;
- Their estimate, who know us best, is seldom seen to err;
- Be sure the fault is thine, as pride, or shallowness, or vanity,
- If all around thee, good and bad, neglect thy seeming merit:
- No man yet deserved, who found not some to love him;
- And he, that never kept a friend, need only blame himself:
- Many for unworthiness will droop and die, but all are not unworthy;
- It must indeed be cold clay soil, that killeth every seed.
- Therefore, examine thy state, O self-accounted martyr of Neglect,
- It may be, thy merit is a cubit, and thy measure thereof a furlong;
- But grant it greater than thy thoughts, and grant that men thy fellows,
- For pleasure, business, or interest, misuse, forget, neglect thee,--
- Still be thou conqueror in this, the consciousness of high deservings;
- Let it suffice thee to be worthy; faint not thou for praise;
- For that thou art, be grateful; go humbly even in thy confidence;
- And set thy foot upon the neck of an enemy so harmless as Neglect.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF CONTENTMENT.
-
- Godliness with Contentment,--these be the pillars of felicity,
- Jachin, wherewithal it is established, and Boaz, in the which is strength;
- And upon their capitals is lily-work, the lotus fruit and flower,
- Those fair and fragrant types of holiness, innocence, and beauty;
- Great gain pertaineth to the pillars, nets and chains of wreathen gold,
- And they stand up straight in the temple porch, the house where Glory
- dwelleth.
-
- The body craveth meats, and the spirit is athirst for peacefulness,
- He that hath these, hath enough; for all beyond is vanity.
- Surfeit vaulteth over pleasure, to light upon the hither side of pain;
- And great store is great care, the rather if it mightily increaseth.
- Albeit too little is a trouble, yet too much shall swell into an evil,
- If wisdom stand not nigh to moderate the wishes:
- For covetousness never had enough, but moaneth at its wants for ever,
- And rich men have commonly more need to be taught contentment than the
- poor.
- That hungry chasm in their market-place gapeth still unsatisfied,
- Yea, fling in all the wealth of Rome,--it asketh higher victims;
- So, when the miser's gold cannot fill the measure of his lust,
- Curtius must leap into the pit, and avarice shall close upon his life.
-
- Behold Independence in his rags, all too easily contented,
- Careful for nothing, thankful for much, and uncomplaining in his poverty:
- Such an one have I somewhile seen earn his crust with gladness;
- He is a gatherer of simples, culling wild herbs upon the hills;
- And now, as he sitteth on the beach, with his motherless child beside him,
- To rest them in the cheerful sun, and sort their mints and horehound,--
- Tell me, can ye find upon his forehead the cloud of covetous anxiety,
- Or note the dull unkindled eyes of sated sons of pleasure?--
- For there is more joy of life with that poor picker of the ditches,
- Than among the multitude of wealthy who wed their gains to discontent.
-
- I have seen many rich, burdened with the fear of poverty,
- I have seen many poor, buoyed with all the carelessness of wealth:
- For the rich had the spirit of a pauper, and the moneyless a liberal
- heart;
- The first enjoyeth not for having, and the latter hath nothing but
- enjoyment.
- None is poor but the mean in mind, the timorous, the weak, and
- unbelieving;
- None is wealthy but the affluent in soul, who is satisfied and floweth
- over.
- The poor-rich is attenuate for fears, the rich-poor is fattened upon
- hopes;
- Cheerfulness is one man's welcome, and the other warneth from him by his
- gloom.
- Many poor have the pleasures of the rich, even in their own possessions;
- And many rich miss the poor man's comforts, and yet feel all his cares.
- Liberty is affluence, and the Helots of anxiety never can be counted
- wealthy;
- But he that is disenthralled from fear, goeth for the time a king;
- He is royal, great, and opulent, living free of fortune,
- And looking on the world as owner of its good, the Maker's child and heir:
- Whereas, the covetous is slavish, a very Midas in his avarice,
- Full of dismal dreams, and starved amongst his treasures:
- The ceaseless spur of discontent goaded him with instant apprehension,
- And his thirst for gold could never be quenched, for he drank with the
- throat of Crassus.
-
- Vanity, and dreary disappointment, care, and weariness, and envy;
- Vanity is graven upon all things; wisely spake the preacher.
- For ambition is a burning mountain, thrown up amid the turbid sea,
- A Stromboli in sullen pride above the hissing waves;
- And the statesman climbing there, forgetful of his patriot intentions,
- Shall hate the strife of each rough step, or ever he hath toiled midway:
- And every truant from his home, the happy home of duty,
- Shall live to loathe his eminence of cares, that seething smoke and lava.
- Contentment is the temperate repast, flowing with milk and honey:
- Ambition is the drunken orgy, fed by liquid flames:
- A black and bitter frown is stamped upon the forehead of Ambition,
- But fair Contentment's angel-face is rayed with winning smiles.
-
- There was in Tyre a merchant, the favourite child of fortune,
- An opulent man with many ships, to trade in many climes;
- And he rose up early to his merchandize, after feverish dreaming,
- And lay down late to his hot unrest, overwhelmed with calculated cares.
- So, day by day, and month by month, and year by year, he gained;
- And grew grey, and waxed great: for money brought him all things.
- All things?--verily, not all; the kernel of the nut is lacking,--
- His mind was a stranger to content, and as for Peace, he knew her not:
- Luxuries palled upon his palate, and his eyes were satiate with purple;
- He could coin much gold, but buy no happiness with it.
- And on a day, a day of dread, in the heat of inordinate ambition,
- When he threw with a gambler's hand, to lose or to double his possessions,
- The chance hit him,--he had speculated ill,--and men began to whisper;--
- Those he trusted, failed; and their usuries had bribed him deeply;
- One ship foundered out at sea,--and another met the pirate,--
- And so, with broken fortunes, men discreetly shunned him.
- He was a stricken stag, and went to hide away in solitude,
- And there in humility, he thought,--he resolved, and promptly acted:
- From the wreck of all his splendours, from the dregs of the goblet of
- affluence,
- He saved with management a morsel and a drop, for his daily cup and
- platter:
- And lo, that little was enough, and in enough was competence;
- His cares were gone,--he slept by night, and lived at peace by day;
- Cured of his guilty selfishness,--money's love, envy, competition,--
- He lived to be thankful in a cottage that he had lost a palace:
- For he found in his abasement what he vainly had sought in high estate,
- Both mind and body well at ease, though robed in the russet of the lowly.
-
- Once more; a certain priest, happy in his high vocation,
- With faith, and hope, and charity, well served his village altar;
- As men count riches, he was poor; but great were his treasures in heaven,
- And great his joys on earth, for God's sake doing good:
- He had few cares and many consolations, one of the welcome everywhere;
- The labourer accounted him his friend, and magnates did him honour at
- their table:
- With a large heart and little means he still made many grateful,
- And felt as the centre of a circle, of comfort, calmness, and content.
- But, on a weaker sabbath,--for he preached both well and wisely,--
- Some casual hearer loudly praised his great neglected talents:
- Why should he be buried in obscurity, and throw these pearls to swine?
- Could he not still be doing good,--the whilst he pushed his fortunes?
- Then came temptation, even on the spark of discontent;
- The neighbouring town had a pulpit to be filled; hotly did he canvass,
- and won it:
- Now was he popular and courted, and listened to the spell of admiration,
- And toiled to please the taste, rather than to pierce the conscience.
- Greedily he sought, and seeking found, the patronizing notice of the
- great;
- He thirsted for emoluments and honours, and counted rich men happy:
- So he flattered, so he preached; and gold and fame flowed in;
- They flowed in,--he was reaping his reward, and felt himself a fool.
- Alas, what a shadow was he following,--how precious was the substance he
- had left!
- Man for God, gold for good, this was his miserable bargain.
- The village church, its humble flock, and humbler parish priest,
- Zeal, devotion, and approving Heaven,--his books, and simple life,
- His little farm and flower-beds,--his recreative rambles with a friend,
- And haply, at eventide, the leaping trouts, to help their humble fare,
- All these wretchedly exchanged for what the world called fortune,
- With the harrowing conscience of a state relapsed to vain ambitions.
- Then,--for God was gracious to his soul,--his better thoughts returned,
- And better aims with better thoughts, his holy walk of old.
- Sickened of style, and ostentation, and the dissipative fashions of
- society,
- He deserted from the ranks of Mammon, and renewed his allegiance to God:
- For he found that the praises of men, and all that gold can give,
- Are not worthy to be named, against godliness and calm contentment.
-
-
-OF LIFE.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- A child was playing in a garden, a merry little child,
- Bounding with triumphant health, and full of happy fancies;
- His kite was floating in the sunshine,--but he tied the string to a twig
- And ran among the roses to catch a new-born butterfly;
- His horn-book lay upon a bank, but the pretty truant hid it,
- Buried up in gathered grass, and moss, and sweet wild-thyme;
- He launched a paper boat upon the fountain, then wayward turned aside,
- To twine some fragrant jessamines about the dripping marble:
- So, in various pastime shadowing the schemes of manhood,
- That curly-headed boy consumed the golden hours:
- And I blessed his glowing face, envying the merry little child,
- As he shouted with the ecstasy of being, clapping his hands for
- joyfulness:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is happiness and hope,
- Thy days are bright, thy flowers are sweet, and pleasure the condition of
- thy gift.
-
- A youth was walking in the moonlight, walking not alone,
- For a fair and gentle maid leant on his trembling arm:
- Their whispering was still of beauty, and the light of love was in their
- eyes,
- Their twin young hearts had not a thought unvowed to love and beauty;
- The stars and the sleeping world, and the guardian eye of God,
- The murmur of the distant waterfall, and nightingales warbling in the
- thicket,
- Sweet speech of years to come, and promises of fondest hope,
- And more, a present gladness in each other's trust,
- All these fed their souls with the hidden manna of affection,
- While their faces shone beatified in the radiance of reflected Eden:
- I gazed on that fond youth, and coveted his heart,
- Attuned to holiest symphonies, with music in its strings:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is love and beauty,
- Thy joys are full, thy looks most fair, thy feelings pure and sensitive.
-
- A man sat beside his merchandize, a careworn altered man,
- His waking hope, his nightly fear, were money, and its losses:
- Rarely was the laugh upon his cheek, except in bitter scorn
- For his foolishness of heart, and the lie of its romance, counting Love a
- treasure.
- His talk is of stern Reality, chilling unimaginative facts,
- The dull material accidents of this sensual body;
- Lucreless honour were contemptible, impoverished affection but a pauper's
- riches,
- Duty, struggling unrewarded, the bargain of a cheated fool:
- The market value of a fancy must be measured by the gain it bringeth,
- No man is fed or clothed by fame, or love, or duty:--
- So toiled he day by day, that cold and joyless man,
- I gazed upon his haggard face, and sorrowed for the change:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is care and weariness,
- Thy soil is parched, thy winds are fierce, and the suns above thee
- hardening.
-
- A withered elder lay upon his bed, a desolate man and feeble:
- His thoughts were of the past, the early past, the bygone days of youth:
- Bitterly repented he the years stolen by the god of this world:
- Remembering the maiden of his love, and the heart-stricken wife of his
- selfishness.
- For the sunshiny morning of life came again to him a vivid truth,
- But the years of toil as a long dim dream, a cloudy blighted noon:
- He saw the nutting schoolboy, but forgat the speculative merchant;
- The callous calculating husband was shamed by the generous lover:
- He knew that the weeds of worldliness, and the smoky breath of Mammon
- Had choked and killed those tender shoots, his yearnings after honour and
- affection;
- So was he sick at heart, and my pity strove to cheer him,
- But a deep and dismal gulf lay between comfort and his soul.
- Then I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is vanity and sorrow,
- Thy storms at noon are many, and thine eventide is clouded by remorse.
-
- Now, when I thought upon these things, my heart was grieved within me:
- I wept, with bitterness of speech, and these were the words of my
- complaining:
- "Wherefore then must happiness and love wither into care and vanity,--
- Wherefore is the bud so beautiful, but flower and fruit so blighted?
- Hard is the lot of man; to be lured by the meteor of romance,
- Only to be snared, and to sink, in the turbid mudpool of reality."
-
- Suddenly, a light,--and a rushing presence,--and a consciousness of
- Something near me,--
- I trembled, and listened, and prayed: then I knew the Angel of Life:
- Vague, and dimly visible, mine eye could not behold Him,
- As, calmly unimpassioned, He looked upon an erring creature;
- Unseen, my spirit apprehended Him; though He spake not, yet I heard:
- For a sympathetic communing with Him flashed upon my mind electric.
-
- Pensioner of God, be grateful; the gift of Life is good:
- The life of heart, and life of soul, mingled with life for the body.
- Gladness and beauty are its just inheritance,--the beauty thou hast
- counted for romance:
- And guardian spirits weep that selfishness and sorrow should destroy it.
- Thou hast seen the natural blessing marred into a curse by man;
- Come then, in favour will I show thee the proper excellence of life.
- Keep thou purity, and watch against suspicion,--love shall never perish;
- Guard thine innocency spotless, and the buoyancy of childhood shall
- remain.
- Sweet ideals feed the soul, thoughts of loveliness delight it,
- The chivalrous affection of uncalculating youth lacketh not honourable
- wisdom.
- Charge not folly on invisibles, that render thee happier and purer,
- The fair frail visions of Romance have a use beyond the maxims of the
- Real.
-
- Behold a patriarch of years, who leaneth on the staff of religion;
- His heart is fresh, quick to feel, a bursting fount of generosity:
- He, playful in his wisdom, is gladdened in his children's gladness,
- He, pure in his experience, loveth in his son's first love:
- Lofty aspirations, deep affections, holy hopes are his delight;
- His abhorrence is to strip from Life its charitable garment of Idea.
- The cold and callous sneerer, who heedeth of the merely practical,
- And mocketh at good uses in imaginary things, that man is his scorn:
- The hard unsympathizing modern, filled with facts and figures,
- Cautious, and coarse, and materialized in mind, that man is his pity.
- Passionate thirst for gain never hath burnt within his bosom,
- The leaden chains of that dull lust have not bound him prisoner:
- The shrewd world laughed at him for honesty, the vain world mouthed at
- him for honour,
- The false world hated him for truth, the cold world despised him for
- affection:
- Still, he kept his treasure, the warm and noble heart,
- And in that happy wise old man survive the child and lover.
- For human Life is as Chian wine, flavoured unto him who drinketh it,
- Delicate fragrance comforting the soul, as needful substance for the body:
- Therefore, see thou art pure and guileless; so shall thy Realities of Life
- Be sweetened, and tempered, and gladdened by the wholesome spirit of
- Romance.
-
- Dost thou live, man, dost thou live,--or only breathe and labour?
- Art thou free, or enslaved to a routine, the daily machinery of habit?
- For, one man is quickened into life, where thousands exist as in a torpor,
- Feeding, toiling, sleeping, an insensate weary round:
- The plough, or the ledger, or the trade, with animal cares and indolence,
- Make the mass of vital years a heavy lump unleavened.
- Drowsily lie down in thy dulness, fettered with the irons of circumstance,
- Thou wilt not wake to think and feel a minute in a month.
- The epitome of common life is seen in the common epitaph,
- Born on such a day, and dead on such another, with an interval of
- threescore years.
- For time hath been wasted on the senses, to the hourly diminishing of
- spirit:
- Lean is the soul and pineth, in the midst of abundance for the body:
- He forgat the worlds to which he tended, and a creature's true nobility,
- Nor wished that hope and wholesome fear should stir him from his hardened
- satisfaction.
- And this is death in life; to be sunk beneath the waters of the Actual,
- Without one feebly-struggling sense of an airier spiritual realm:
- Affection, fancy, feeling--dead; imagination, conscience, faith,
- All wilfully expunged, till they leave the man mere carcase.
- See thou livest, whiles thou art: for heart must live, and soul,
- But care and sloth and sin and self, combine to kill that life.
- A man will grow to an automaton, an appendage to the counter or the desk,
- If mind and spirit be not roused, to raise the plodding groveller:
- Then praise God for sabbaths, for books, and dreams, and pains,
- For the recreative face of nature, and the kindling charities of home;
- And remember, thou that labourest,--thy leisure is not loss,
- If it help to expose and undermine that solid falsehood, the Material.
-
- Life is a strange avenue of various trees and flowers;
- Lightsome at commencement, but darkening to its end, in a distant massy
- portal.
- It beginneth as a little path, edged with the violet and primrose,
- A little path of lawny grass, and soft to tiny feet:
- Soon, spring thistles in the way, those early griefs of school,
- And fruit-trees ranged on either hand show holiday delights:
- Anon, the rose and the mimosa hint at sensitive affection,
- And vipers hide among the grass, and briars are woven in the hedges:
- Shortly, staked along in order, stand the tender saplings,
- While hollow hemlock and tall ferns fill the frequent interval:
- So advancing, quaintly mixed, majestic line the way
- Sturdy oaks, and vigorous elms, the beech and forest-pine:
- And here the road is rough with rocks, wide, and scant of herbage,
- The sun is hot in heaven, and the ground is cleft and parched:
- And many-times a hollow trunk, decayed, or lightning-scathed,
- Or in its deadly solitude, the melancholy upas:
- But soon, with closer ranks, are set the sentinel trees,
- And darker shadows hover amongst Autumn's mellow tints;
- Ever and anon, a holly,--junipers, and cypresses, and yews;
- The soil is damp; the air is chill; night cometh on apace:
- Speed to the portal, traveller,--lo, there is a moon,
- With smiling light to guide thee safely through the dreadful shade:
- Hark,--that hollow knock,--behold, the warder openeth,
- The gate is gaping, and for thee;--those are the jaws of Death!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF DEATH.
-
-[Illustration: "K"]
-
- Keep silence, daughter of frivolity,--for Death is in that chamber!
- Startle not with echoing sound the strangely solemn peace.
- Death is here in spirit, watcher of a marble corpse,--
- That eye is fixed, that heart is still,--how dreadful in its stillness!
- Death, new tenant of the house, pervadeth all the fabric;
- He waiteth at the head, and he standeth at the feet, and hideth in the
- caverns of the breast:
- Death, subtle leech, hath anatomized soul from body,
- Dissecting well in every nerve its spirit from its substance:
- Death, rigid lord, hath claimed the heriot clay,
- While joyously the youthful soul hath gone to take his heritage:
- Death, cold usurer, hath seized his bonded debtor;
- Death, savage despot, hath caught his forfeit serf;
- Death, blind foe, wreaketh petty vengeance on the flesh;
- Death, fell cannibal, gloateth on his victim,
- And carrieth it with him to the grave, that dismal banquet-hall,
- Where in foul state the Royal Goul holdeth secret orgies.
-
- Hide it up, hide it up, draw the decent curtain:
- Hence! curious fool, and pry not on corruption:
- For the fearful mysteries of change are being there enacted,
- And many actors play their part on that small stage, the tomb.
- Leave the clay, that leprous thing, touch not the fleshly garment:
- Dust to dust, it mingleth well among the sacred soil:
- It is scattered by the winds, it is wafted by the waves, it mixeth with
- herbs and cattle,
- But God hath watched those morsels, and hath guided them in care:
- Each waiting soul must claim his own, when the archangel soundeth,
- And all the fields, and all the hills, shall move a mass of life;
- Bodies numberless crowding on the land, and covering the trampled sea,
- Darkening the air precipitate, and gathered scatheless from the fire;
- The Himalayan peaks shall yield their charge, and the desolate steppes of
- Siberia,
- The Maelström disengulph its spoil, and the iceberg manumit its captive:
- All shall teem with life, the converging fragments of humanity,
- Till every conscious essence greet his individual frame;
- For in some dignified similitude, alike, yet different in glory,
- This body shall be shaped anew, fit dwelling for the soul:
- The hovel hath grown to a palace, the bulb hath burst into the flower,
- Matter hath put on incorruption, and is at peace with spirit.
-
- Amen,--and so it shall be:--but now, the scene is drear,--
- Yea, though promises and hope strive to cheat its sadness;
- Full of grief, though faith herself is strong to speed the soul,
- For the partner of its toil is left behind to endure an ordeal of change.
- Dear partner, dear and frail, my loved though humble home,--
- Should I cast thee off without a pang, as a garment flung aside?
- Many years, for joy and sorrow, have I dwelt in thee,
- How shall I be reckless of thy weal, nor hope for thy perfection?--
- This also, He that lent thee for my uses in mortality,
- Shall well fulfil with boundless praise on that returning day:
- Behold, thou shalt be glorified: thou, mine abject friend,
- And should I meanly scorn thy state, until it rise to greatness?
- Far be it, O my soul, from thine expectant essence,
- To be heedless, if indignity or folly desecrate those thine ashes:
- Keep them safe with careful love; and let the mound be holy;
- And, thou that passest by, revere the waiting dead.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Naples sitteth by the sea, key-stone of an arch of azure,
- Crowned by consenting nations peerless queen of gaiety:
- She laugheth at the wrath of Ocean, she mocketh the fury of Vesuvius,
- She spurneth disease and misery and famine, that crowd her sunny streets:
- The giddy dance, the merry song, the festal glad procession,
- The noonday slumber and the midnight serenade,--all these make up her
- Life:
- Her Life?--and what her Death?--look we to the end of life,--
- Solon, and Tellus the Athenian, wisely have ye pointed to the grave.
- For behold yon dreary precinct,--those hundreds of stone wells,
- A pit for a day, a pit for a day,--a pit to be sealed for a year:
- And in the gloom of night, they raise the year-closed lid,--
- Look in,--for gnawing lime hath half consumed the carcases;
- Thus they hurl the daily dead into that horrible pit,
- The dead that only died this day,--as unconsidered offal!
- There, a stark white heap, unwept, unloved, uncared for,
- Old men and maidens, young men and infants, mingle in hideous corruption;
- Fling in the gnawing lime,--seal up the charnel for a year;
- For lo, a morrow's dawn hath tinged the mountain summit.
- O fair false city, thou gay and gilded harlot,
- Woe, for thy wanton heart, woe, for thy wicked hardness:
- Woe unto thee, that the lightsomeness of Life, beneath Italian suns,
- Should meet the solemnity of Death, in a sepulchre so foul and fearful.
-
- For that, even to the best, the wise and pure and pious,
- Death, repulsive king, thine iron rule is terrible:
- Yea, and even at the best, in company of buried kindred,
- With hallowing rites, and friendly tears, and the dear old country church,
- Death, cold and lonely, thy frigid face is hateful,
- The bravest look on thee with dread, the humblest curse thy coming.
- Still, ye unwise among mankind, your foolishness hath added fears;
- The crowded cemetery, the catacomb of bones, the pestilential vault,
- With fancy's gliding ghost at eve, her moans and flaky footfalls,
- And the gibbering train of terror to fright your coward hearts.
- We speak not here of sin, nor the phantoms of a bloody conscience,
- Nor of solaces, and merciful pardon: we heed but the inevitable grave;
- The grave, that wage of guilt, that due return to dust,
- The grave, that goal of earth, and starting-post for Heaven.
-
- Plant it with laurels, sprinkle it with lilies, set it upon yonder dewy
- hill
- Midst holy prayers, and generous griefs, and consecrating blessings:
- Let Sophocles sleep among his ivy, green perennial garlands,
- Let olives shade their Virgil, and roses bloom above Corinne;
- To his foster-mother, Ocean, entrust the mariner in hope;
- The warrior's spirit, let it rise on high from the flaming fragrant pyre.
- But heap not coffins and corruption to infect the mass of living,
- Nor steal from odious realities the charitable poetry of Death:
- It is wise to gild uncomeliness, it is wise to mask necessity,
- It is wise from cheerful sights and sounds to draw their gentle uses:
- Hide the facts, the bitter facts, the foul, and fearful facts,
- Tend the body well in hope, this were praise and wisdom:
- But to plunge in gloom the parting soul, that hath loved its clay
- tenement so long,
- This were vanity and folly, the counsel of moroseness and despair.
- Not thus, the Scythian of old time welcomed Death with songs;
- Not thus, the shrewd Egyptian decorated Death with braveries;
- Not thus, on his funeral tower sleepeth the sun-worshipping Parsee;
- Not thus, the Moslem saint lieth in his arabesque mausoleum;
- Not thus, the wild red Indian, hunter of the far Missouri,
- In flowering trees hath nested up his forest-loving ancestry;
- Not thus, the Switzer mountaineer scattereth ribboned garlands
- About the rustic cross that halloweth the bed of his beloved;
- Not thus, the village maiden wisheth she may die in spring,
- With store of violets and cowslips to be sprinkled on her snow-white
- shroud;
- Not thus, the dying poet asketh a cheerful grave,--
- Lay him in the sunshine, friends, nor sorrow that a Christian hath
- departed!
-
- Yea; it is the poetry of Death, an Orpheus gladdening Hadës,
- To care with mindful love for all so dear--and dead;
- To think of them in hope, to look for them in joy, and--but for its
- simple vanity,--
- To pray with all the earnestness of nature for souls who cannot change.
- For the tree is felled, and boughed, and bare, and the Measurer standeth
- with His line;
- The chance is gone for ever, and is past the reach of prayer:
- For men and angels, good and ill, have rendered all their witness;
- The trial is over, the jury are gone in, and none can now be heard;
- Well are they agreed upon the verdict, just, and fixt, and final,
- And the sentence showeth clear, before the Judge hath spoken:
- Now,--while resting matter is at peace within the tomb,
- The conscious spirit watcheth in unspeakable suspense;
- Racked with a fearful looking-forward, or blissfully feeding on the
- foretaste,
- Waiting souls in eager expectation pass the solemn interval:
- They slumber not at death, but awaken, quickened to the terrors of the
- judgment;
- They lie not insensate among darkness, but exult, looking forward to the
- light:
- Idiotcy, brightening on the instant, when that veil is torn,
- Is grateful that his torpor here hath left him as an innocent:
- The young child, stricken as he played, and guileless babes unborn,
- Freed from fetters of the flesh, burst into mind immediate:
- Madness judgeth wisely, and the visions of the lunatic are gone,
- And each hasteneth to praise the mercy that made him irresponsible.
- For the soul is one, though manifold in act, working the machinery of
- brain,
- Reason, fancy, conscience, passion, are but varying phases;
- If, in God's wise purpose, the machine were shattered or confused,
- Still is soul the same, though it exhibit with a difference:
- Therefore, dissipate the brain, and set its inmate free,
- Behold, the maniacs and embryos stand in their place intelligent.
- That solvent eateth away all dross, leaving the gold intact:
- Matter lingereth in the retort, spirit hath flown to the receiver:
- And lo, that recipient of the spirits, it is some aerial world,
- An oasis midway on the desert space, separating earth from heaven,
- A prison-house for essences incorporate, a limbus vague and wide,
- Tartarus for evil, and Paradise for good, that intermediate Hadës.
-
- O Death, what art thou? a Lawgiver that never altereth,
- Fixing the consummating seal, whereby the deeds of life become
- established:
- O Death, what art thou? a stern and silent usher,
- Leading to the judgment for Eternity, after the trial-scene of Time:
- O Death, what art thou? an Husbandman, that reapeth always,
- Out of season, as in season, with the sickle in his hand:
- O Death, what art thou? the shadow unto every substance,
- In the bower as in the battle, haunting night and day:
- O Death, what art thou? Nurse of dreamless slumbers
- Freshening the fevered flesh to a wakefulness eternal:
- O Death, what art thou? strange and solemn Alchymist,
- Elaborating life's elixir from these clayey crucibles:
- O Death, what art thou? Antitype of Nature's marvels,
- The seed and dormant chrysalis bursting into energy and glory.
- Thou calm safe anchorage for the shattered hulls of men,--
- Thou spot of gelid shade, after the hot-breathed desert,--
- Thou silent waiting-hall, where Adam meeteth with his children,--
- How full of dread, how full of hope, loometh inevitable Death:
- Of dread, for all have sinned; of hope, for One hath saved;
- The dread is drowned in joy, the hope is filled with immortality!
- --Pass along, pilgrim of life, go to thy grave unfearing,
- The terrors are but shadows now, that haunt the vale of Death.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF IMMORTALITY.
-
-[Illustration: "G"]
-
- Gird up thy mind to contemplation, trembling inhabitant of earth;
- Tenant of a hovel for a day,--thou art heir of the universe for ever!
- For, neither congealing of the grave, nor gulphing waters of the
- firmament,
- Nor expansive airs of heaven, nor dissipative fires of Gehenna,
- Nor rust of rest, nor wear, nor waste, nor loss, nor chance, nor change,
- Shall avail to quench or overwhelm the spark of soul within thee!
-
- Thou art an imperishable leaf on the evergreen bay-tree of Existence;
- A word from Wisdom's mouth, that cannot be unspoken;
- A ray of Love's own light; a drop in Mercy's sea;
- A creature, marvellous and fearful, begotten by the fiat of Omnipotence.
- I, that speak in weakness, and ye, that hear in charity,
- Shall not cease to live and feel, though flesh must see corruption;
- For the prison-gates of matter shall be broken, and the shackled soul go
- free,
- Free, for good or ill, to satisfy its appetence for ever:
- For ever,--dreadful doom, to be hurried on eternally to evil,--
- For ever,--happy fate, to ripen into perfectness--for ever!
-
- And is there a thought within thy heart, O slave of sin and fear,
- A black and harmful hope, that erring spirit dieth?
- That primal disobedience hath ensured the death of soul,
- And separate evil sealed it thine--thy curse, Annihilation?
- Heed thou this; there is a Sacrifice; the Maker is Redeemer of His
- creature;
- Freely unto each, universally to all, is restored the privilege of
- essence:
- Whether unto grace or guilt, all must live through Him,
- Live in vital joy, or live in dying woe:
- Death in Adam, Life in Christ; the curse hung upon the cross:
- Who art thou that heedest of redemption, as narrower than the fall?
- All were dead,--He died for all; that living, they might love;
- If living souls withhold their love,--still, He hath died for them.
- Eve stole the knowledge; Christ gave the life:
- Knowledge and life are the perquisites of soul, the privilege of Man:
- Mercy stepped between, and stayed the double theft;
- God gave; and giving, bought; and buying, asketh love:
- And in such asking rendereth bliss, to all that hear and answer,
- For love with life is heaven; and life unloving, hell.
-
- Creature of God, His will is for thy weal, eternally progressing;
- Fear not to trust a Maker's love, nor a Saviour's ransom:
- He drank for all,--for thee, and me,--the poison of our deeds;
- We shall not die, but live,--and, of His grace, we love.
- For, in the mysteries of Mercy, the One fore-knowing Spirit
- Outstrippeth reason's halting choice, and winneth men to Him:
- Who shall sound the depths? who shall reach the heights?
- Freedom, in the gyves of fate; and sovereignty, reconciled with justice.
-
- If then, as annihilate by sin, the soul was ever forfeit,
- Godhead paid the mighty price, the pledge hath been redeemed:
- He from the waters of Oblivion raised the drowning race,
- Lifting them even to Himself, the baseless Rock of Ages.
- None can escape from Adam's guilt, or second Adam's guerdon:
- Sin and death are thine; thine also is interminable being:
- Let it be even as thou wilt, still are we ransomed from nonentity,
- The worlds of bliss and woe are peopled with immortals:
- And ruin is thy blame; for thou, the worst, art free
- To take from Heaven the grace of love, as the gift of life:
- Yet is not remedy thy praise; for thou, the best, art bound
- In self, and sin, and darkling sloth, until He break the chain:
- None can tell, without a struggle, if that chain be broken;
- Strive to-day,--one effort more may prove that thou art free!
- Here is faith and prayer, here is the Grace and the Atonement,
- Here is the creature feeling for its God, and the prodigal returning to
- his Father.
- But, behold, His reasonable children, standing in just probation,
- With ears to hear, neglect; with eyes to see, refuse:
- They will not have the blessing with the life, the blessing that
- enricheth Immortality;
- And look for pleasures out of God, for heaven in life alone:
- So, they snatch that awful prize, existence void of love,
- And in their darkening exile make a needful hell of self.
-
- Therefore fear, thou sinner, lest the huge blessing, Immortality,
- Be blighted in thine evil to a curse,--it were better he had not been
- born:
- Therefore hope, thou saint, for the gift of Immortality is free;
- Take and live, and live in love; fear not, thou art redeemed!
- The happy life, that height of hope, the knowledge of all good,
- This is the blessing on obedience, obedience the child of faith:
- The miserable life, that depth of all despair, the knowledge of all evil,
- This is the curse upon impenitence, impenitence that sprung of unbelief.
- God, from a beautiful necessity, is Love in all He doeth,
- Love, a brilliant fire, to gladden or consume:
- The wicked work their woe by looking upon love, and hating it:
- The righteous find their joys in yearning on its loveliness for ever.
-
- Who shall imagine Immortality, or picture its illimitable prospect?
- How feebly can a faltering tongue express the vast idea!
- For consider the primæval woods that bristle over broad Australia,
- And count their autumn leaves, millions multiplied by millions;
- Thence look up to a moonless sky from a sleeping isle of the Ægæan,
- And add to these leaves yon starry host, sparkling on the midnight
- numberless;
- Thence traverse an Arabia, some continent of eddying sand,
- Gather each grain, let none escape, add them to the leaves and to the
- stars;
- Afterward gaze upon the sea, the thousand leagues of an Atlantic,
- Take drop by drop, and add their sum, to the grains, and leaves, and
- stars;
- The drops of ocean, the desert sands, the leaves, and stars innumerable,
- (Albeit, in that multitude of multitudes, each small unit were an age,)
- All might reckon for an instant, a transient flash of Time,
- Compared with this intolerable blaze, the measureless enduring of
- Eternity!
-
- O grandest gift of the Creator,--O largess worthy of a God,--
- Who shall grasp that thrilling thought, life and joy for ever?
- For the sun in heaven's heaven is Love that cannot change,
- And the shining of that sun is life, to all beneath its beams:
- Who shall arrest it in the firmament,--or drag it from its sphere?
- Or bid its beauty smile no more, but be extinct for ever?
- Yea, where God hath given, none shall take away,
- Nor build up limits to His love, nor bid His bounty cease;
- Wide, as space is peopled, endless as the empire of heaven,
- The river of the water of life floweth on in majesty for ever!
-
- Why should it seem a thing impossible to thee, O man of many doubts,
- That God shall wake the dead, and give this mortal immortality?
- Is it that such riches are unsearchable, the bounty too profuse?
- And yet, what gift, to cease or change, is worthy of the King Almighty?
- For remember the moment thou art not, thou mightest as well not have been;
- A millennium and an hour are equal in the gulph of that desolate abyss,
- annihilation:
- If Adam had existed till to-day, and to-day had perished utterly,
- What were his gain in length of a life, that hath passed away for ever?
- No tribute of thanks can exhale from the empty censer of nonentity;
- The Giver, with His gift reclaimed, is mulcted of all praise.
-
- Tell me, ye that strive in vain to cramp and dwarf the soul,
- Wherefore should it cease to be, and when shall essence die?
- It is,--and therefore shall be, till just obstacle opposeth:
- Show no cause for change, and reason leaneth to continuance.
- The body verily shall change; this curious house we live in
- Never had continuing stay, but changeth every instant:
- But the spiritual tenant of the house abideth in unalterable
- consciousness,
- He may fly to many lands, but cannot flee himself.
- The soil wherein ye drop the seed, by suns or rains may vary;
- But the seed is the same; and soul is the seed; and flesh but its
- anchorage to earth.
-
- The machine may be broken, and rust corrode the springs: but can rust
- feed on motion?
- Worms may batten on the brain: but can worms gnaw the mind?
- Dynamics are, and dwell apart, though matter be not made;
- Spirit is, and can be separate, though a body were not:
- Power is one, be it lever, screw, or wedge; but it needeth these for
- illustration:
- Mind is one, be it casual or ideal; but it is shown in these.
- The creature is constructed individual, for trial of his reasonable will,
- Clay and soul, commingled wisely, mingled not confused:
- As power is not in the spring, till somewhat give it action,
- So, until spirit be infused, the organism lieth inergetic.
-
- Or shalt thou say that mind is the delicate offspring of matter,
- The bright consummate flower that must perish with its leaf?
- Go to: doth weight breed lightness? is freedom the atmosphere of prisons?
- When did the body elevate, expand, and bud the mind?
- Lo, a red-hot cinder flung from the furnaces of Ætna,--
- There is fire in that ash; but did the pumice make it?
- Nay, cold clod, never canst thou generate a flame,
- Nay, most exquisite machinery, nevermore elaborate a mind:
- Rather do ye battle and contend, opposite the one to the other;
- Till God shall stop the strife, and call the body colleague.
-
- Garment of flesh, and art thou then a vest, so tinged with subtle poison,
- (Maddening tunic of the centaur,) as to kill the soul?
- Not so: fruit of disobedience, rot in dissolution, as thou must,--
- The seed is in the core, its germ is safe, and life is in that germ:
- Moreover, Marah shall be sweetened; and a Good Physician
- Yet shall heal those gangrene wounds, the spotted plague of sin:
- He, through worldly trials, and the separative cleansing of the grave,
- Shall change its corruptible to glory, and wash that garment white.
-
- Still, is the whisper in thy heart, that oftenest the bed of death
- Seemeth but a sluggish ebb, of sinking soul and body?
- Mind dwelling, long-time, sensual in the chambers of the flesh,
- May slumber on in conscious sloth, and wilfully be dulled:
- But is it therefore nigh to dissolution, even as the body of this death?
- Ask the stricken conscience, gasping out its terrors;
- Ask the dying miser, loth to leave his gold;
- Ask the widowed poor, confiding her fatherless to strangers;
- Ask the martyr-maid, a broken reed so strong,
- That weak and tortured frame, with triumph on its brow!--
- O thou gainsayer, the finger of disease may seem to reach the soul,
- But it is a spiritual touch, sympathy with that which aileth:
- Pain or fear may dislocate and shatter this delicate machinery of nerves;
- But madness proveth mind: the fault is in the engine, not the impetus:
- Dissipate the mists of matter, lo, the soul is clear:
- Timour's cage bowed it in the dust; but now it goeth forth a freedman.
-
- Yet more, there is reason in moralities, that the soul must live;
- If God be king in heaven, or have care for earth.
- Can wickedness have triumphed with impunity, or virtue toiled unseen?
- Shall cruelty torture unavenged, and the innocent complain unheard?
- Is there no recompense for woe, must there be no other world for
- justice,--
- No hope in setting suns of good, nor terror for the evil at its zenith?
- How shall ye make answer unto this; a just God prospering iniquity,
- Wisdom encouraging the foolish, and goodness abetting the depraved!
-
- Yet again; mine erring brother, pardon this abundance of my speech,
- Yield me thy candour and thy charity, listening with a welcome:
- For, even now, a thousand thoughts are trooping to my theme;
- O mighty theme, O feeble thoughts! Alas! who is sufficient?
- Judge not so high a cause by these poor words alone,
- For lo, the advocate hath little skill: pardon and pass on:
- Certify thyself with surer proofs; fledge thine own mind for flight;
- Think, and pray; those better proofs shall follow on with holy aspiration.
- Yet in my humbler grade to help thy weal and comfort,
- Thy weal for this and higher worlds, and comfort in thy sickness,
- Suffer the multitude of fancies, walking with me still in love;
- But tread in fear, it is holy ground,--remember, Immortality!
-
- Wilt thou argue from infirmities, thine abject evil state,
- As how should stricken wretched man indeed exist for ever:
- The brutal and besotted, the savage and the slave, the sucking infant and
- the idiot,
- The mass of mean and common minds, and all to be immortal?--
- Consider every beginning, how small it is and feeble:
- Ganges, and the rolling Mississippi sprung of brooks among the mountains;
- The Yew-tree of a thousand years was once a little seed,
- And Nero's marble Rome, a shepherd's mud-built hovel:
- A speck is on the tropic sky, and it groweth to the terrible tornado;
- An apple, all too fair to see, destroyed a world of souls:
- A tender babe is born,--it is Attila, scourge of the nations!
- A seeming malefactor dieth,--it is Jesus, the Saviour of men!
-
- And hive not in thy thoughts the vain and wordy notion
- That nothing which was born in Time can tire out the footsteps of
- Infinity:
- Reckon up a sum in numbers; where shall progression stop?
- The starting-post is definite and fixed, but what is the goal of
- numeration?
- So, begin upon a moment, and when shall being end?
- Souls emanate from God, to travel with Him equally for ever.
- Moreover, thou that objectest the unenterable circle of eternity,
- That none but He from everlasting can endure, as to a future everlasting,
- Consider, may it be impossible that creatures were counted in their Maker,
- And so, that the confines of Eternity are filled by God alone?
- Trust not thy soul upon a fancy: who would freight a bubble with a
- diamond,
- And launch that priceless gem on the boiling rapids of a cataract?
-
- If then we perish not at death, but walk in spirit through the darkness,
- Waiting for a mansion incorruptible, whereof this body is the seed,
- Tell me, when shall be the period? time and its ordeals are done:
- The storms are passed, the night is at end, behold the Sabbath morning.
- Is death to be conqueror again, and claim once more the victory,--
- Can the enemy's corpse awaken into life, and bruise the Champion's head?
- Evil, terrible ensample, that foil to the attributes of Good,
- Is banished to its own black world, weeded out of earth and heaven:
- Shall that great gulf be passed, and sin be sown again?--
- We know but this, the book of truth proclaimeth gladly, Never!
-
- There remaineth the will of our God: when He repenteth of His creature,
- Made by self-suggested mercy, ransomed by self-sacrificing justice,--
- When Truth, that swore unto his neighbour, disappointeth him, and
- cleaveth to a lie,--
- When the counsels of Wisdom are confounded, and Love warreth with
- itself,--
- When the Unchangeable is changed, and the arm of Omnipotence is broken,--
- Then,--thy quenchless soul shall have reached the goal of its existence.
-
- But it seemeth to thy notions of the merciful and just, a false and
- fearful thing,
- To lay such a burden upon time, that eternity be built on its foundation:
- As if so casual good or ill should colour all the future,
- And the vanity of accident, or sternness of necessity, save or wreck a
- soul.
- Were it casual, vain, or stern, this might pass for truth:
- But all things are marshalled by Design, and carefully tended by
- Benevolence.
- O man, thy Judge is righteous,--noting, remembering, and weighing;--
- Want, ignorance, diversities of state, are cast into the balance of
- advantage:
- The poisonous example of a parent asketh for allowance in the child;
- Care, diseases, toils, and frailties,--all things are considered.
- And again, a mysterious Omniscience knoweth the spirits that are His,
- While the delicate tissues of Event are woven by the fingers of Ubiquity.
- Should Providence be taken by surprise from the possible impinging of an
- accident,
- One fortuitous grain might dislocate the banded universe:
- The merest seeming trifle is ordered as the morning light;
- And He, that rideth on the hurricane, is pilot of the bubble on the
- breaker.
-
- Once more, consider Matter, how small a thing is father to the greatest;
- Thou that lightly hast regarded the results of so-called accident.
- A blade of grass took fire in the sun,--and the prairies are burnt to the
- horizon:
- A grain of sand may blind the eye, and madden the brain to murder:
- A careful fly deposited its egg in the swelling bud of an acorn,--
- The sapling grew,--cankrous and gnarled,--it is yonder hollow oak:
- A child touched a spring, and the spring closed a valve, and the
- labouring engine burst,--
- A thousand lives were in that ship,--wrecked by an infant's finger!
- Shall nature preach in vain? thy casualty, guided in its orbit,
- Though less than a mote upon the sunbeam, saileth in a fleet of worlds;
- That trivial cause, watered and observed of the Husbandman day by day,--
- In calm undeviating strength doth work its large effect.
- Thus, in the pettiness of life note thou seeds of grandeur,
- And watch the hour-glass of Time with the eyes of an heir of Immortality.
-
- There still be clouds of witnesses,--if thou art not weary of my speech,--
- Flocks of thoughts adding lustre to the light, and pointing on to Life.
- For reflect how Truth and Goodness, well and wisely put,
- Commend themselves to every mind with wondrous intuition:
- What is this? the recognition of a standard, unwritten, natural, uniform;
- Telling of one common source, the root of Good and True.
- And if thus present soul can trace descent from Deity,
- Being, as it standeth, individual, a separate reasonable thing,
- What should hinder that its hope may not trace gladly forward,
- And, in astounding parallel, like Enoch walk with God?
- Yea, the genealogy of soul, that vivifying breath of a Creator,
- Breath, no transient air, but essence, energy, and reason,
- Is looming on the past, and shadowing the future, sublimely as
- Melchisedek of old,
- Having not beginning, nor end of days, but present in the majesty of
- Peace!
-
- O false scholar, credulous in vanities, and only sceptical of truth,
- Wherefore toil to cheat thy soul of its birthright, Immortality?
- Is it for thy guilt? He pardoneth: Is it for thy frailty? He will help:
- Though thou fearest, He is love; and Mercy shall be deeper than Despair:
- Even for thy full-blown pride, is it much to be receiver of a God?
- And lo, thy rights, He made thee; thy claims, He hath redeemed.
- Hath the fair aspect of affection no beauty that thou shouldst desire it?
- And are those sorrows nothing, to thee that passest by?
- For it is Fact, immutable, that God hath dwelt in Man:
- With gentle generous love ennobling while He bought us.
- What, though thou art false, ignorant, weak and daring,--
- Can the sun be quenched in heaven--or only Belisarius be blind?
-
- But, even stooping to thy folly, grant all these hopes are vain;
- Stultify reason, wrestle against conscience, and wither up the heart:
- Where is thy vast advantage?--I have all that thou hast,
- The buoyancy of life as strong, and term of days no shorter;
- My cup is full with gladness, my griefs are not more galling:
- And thus, we walk together, even to the gates of death:
- There, (if not also on my journey, blessing every step,
- Gladdening with light, and quickening with love, and killing all my
- cares,)
- There,--while thou art quailing, or sullenly expecting to be nothing,--
- There,--is found my gain; I triumph, where thou tremblest.
- Grant all my solace is a lie, yet it is a fountain of delight,
- A spice in every pleasure, and a balm for every pain:
- O precious wise delusion, scattering both misery and sin,--
- O vile and silly truth, depraving while it curseth!
-
- Darkling child of knowledge, commune with Socrates and Cicero,
- They had no prejudice of birth, no dull parental warpings;
- See, those lustrous minds anticipate the dawning day,--
- Whilst thou, poor mole, art burrowing back to darkness from the light.
- I will not urge a revelation, mercies, miracles, and martyrs,
- But, after twice a thousand years, go, learn thou of the pagan:
- It were happier and wiser even among fools, to cling to the shadow of a
- hope,
- Than, in the company of sages, to win the substance of despair;
- But here, the sages hope; despair is with the fools,
- The base bad hearts, the stolid heads, the sensual and the selfish.
-
- And wilt thou, sorry scorner, mock the phrase, despair?
- Despair for those who die and live,--for me, I live and die:
- What have I to do with dread?--my taper must go out;--
- I nurse no silly hopes, and therefore feel no fears:
- I am hastening to an end.--O false and feeble answer:
- For hope is in thee still, and fear, a racking deep anxiety.
- Erring brother, listen: and take thine answer from the ancients:
- Consider every end, that it is but the end of a beginning.
- All things work in circles; weariness induceth unto rest,
- Rest invigorateth labour, and labour causeth weariness:
- War produceth peace, and peace is wanton unto war:
- Light dieth into darkness, and night dawneth into day:
- The rotting jungle reeds scatter fertility around;
- The buffalo's dead carcase hath quickened life in millions:
- The end of toil is gain, the end of gain is pleasure,
- Pleasure tendeth unto waste, and waste commandeth toil.
-
- So, is death an end,--but it breedeth an infinite beginning;
- Limits are for time, and death killed time: Eternity's beginning is for
- ever.
- Ambition, hath it any goal indeed? is not all fruition, disappointment?
- A step upon the ladder, and another, and another,--we start from every
- end?
- Look to the eras of mortality, babe, student, man,
- The husband, the father, the death-bed of a saint,--and is it then an end?
- That common climax, Death, shall it lead to nothing?
- How strong a root of causes flowering a consequence of vapour:
- That solid chain of facts, is it to be snapped for ever?
- How stout a show of figures, weakly summing to nonentity.
-
- Or haply, Death, in the doublings of thy thought, shall seem continuous
- ending;
- A dull eternal slumber, not an end abrupt.
- O most futile chrysalis, wherefore dost thou sleep?
- Dreamless, unconscious, never to awake,--what object in such slumber?
- If thou art still to live, it may as well be wakefully as sleeping:
- How grovelling must that spirit be, to need eternal sleep!
- Or was indeed the toil of life so heavy and so long,
- That nevermore can rest refresh thine overburdened soul?--
- Sleep is a recreance to body, but when was mind asleep?
- Even in a swoon it dreameth, though all be forgotten afterward:
- The muscles seek relaxing, and the irritable nerves ask peace;
- But life is a constant force, spirit an unquietable impetus:
- The eye may wear out as a telescope, and the brain work slow as a machine,
- But soul unwearied, and for ever, is capable of effort unimpaired.
-
- I live, move, am conscious: what shall bar my being?
- Where is the rude hand, to rend this tissue of existence?
- Not thine, shadowy Death, what art thou but a phantom?
- Not thine, foul Corruption, what art thou but a fear?
- For death is merely absent life, as darkness absent light;
- Not even a suspension, for the life hath sailed away, steering gladly
- somewhere.
- And corruption, closely noted, is but a dissolving of the parts,
- The parts remain, and nothing lost, to build a better whole.
- Moreover, mind is unity, however versatile and rapid;
- Thou canst not entertain two coincident ideas, although they quickly
- follow:
- And Unity hath no parts, so that there is nothing to dissolve:
- An element is still unchanged in every searching solvent.
- Who then shall bid me be annulled,--He that gave me being?
- Amen, if God so will; I know that will is love:
- But love hath promised life, and therefore I shall live;
- So long as He is God, I shall be His Creature!
-
- And here, shrewd reasoner, so eager to prove that thou must perish,
- I note a sneer upon thy lip, and ridicule is haply on thy tongue:
- How, said he,--creature of a God, and are not all His creatures,--
- The lion, and the gnat,--yea, the mushroom, and the crystal,--have all
- these a soul?
- Thy fancies tend to prove too much, and overshoot the mark:
- If I die not with brutes, then brutes must live with me?--
- I dare not tell thee that they will, for the word is not in my commission;
- But of the twain it is the likelier; continuance is the chance:
- Men, dying in their sins, are likened unto beasts that perish;
- They are dark, animal, insensate, but have they not a lurking soul?
- The spirit of a man goeth upward, reasonable, apprehending God;
- The spirit of a beast goeth downward, sensual, doting on the creature:
- Who told thee they die at dissolution?--boldly think it out,--
- The multitude of flies, and the multitude of herbs, the world with all
- its beings:
- Is Infinity too narrow, Omnipotence too weak, and Love so anxious to
- destroy,
- Doth Wisdom change its plan, and a Maker cancel His created?
- God's will may compass all things, to fashion and to nullify at pleasure:
- Yet are there many thoughts of hope, that all which are shall live.
- True, there is no conscience in the brute, beyond some educated habit,
- They lay them down without a fear, and wake without a hope:
- Hunger and pain is of the animal: but when did they reckon or compare?
- They live, idealess, in instinct; and while they breathe they gain:
- The master is an idol to his dog, who cannot rise beyond him;
- And void of capability for God, there would seem small cause for an
- infinity.
- Therefore, caviller, my poor thoughts dare not grant they live:
- But is it not a great thing to assume their annihilation--and thine own?
- Would it be much if a speck on space, this globe with all its millions,
- Verily, after its pollution, were suffered to exist in purity?
- Or much, if guiltless creatures, that were cruelly entreated upon earth,
- Found some commensurate reward in lower joys hereafter?
- Or much, if a Creator, prodigal of life, and filled with the profundity
- of love,
- Rejoice in all creatures of His skill, and lead them to perfection in
- their kind?
- O man, there are many marvels; yet life is more a mystery than death:
- For death may be some stagnant life,--but life is present God!
-
- Many are the lurking-holes of evil; who shall search them out?
- Who so skilled to cut away the cancer with its fibres?
- For wily minds with sinuous ease escape from lie to lie;
- And cowards driven from the trench steal back to hide again.
- Vain were the battle, if a warrior, having slain his foes,
- Shall turn and find them vital still, unharmed, yea, unashamed:
- For Error, dark magician, daily cast out killed,
- Quickeneth animate anew beneath the midnight moon:
- Once and again, once and again, hath reason answered wisely;
- But not the less with brazen front doth folly urge her questions.
- It were but unprofitable toil, a stand-up fight with unbelief:
- When was there candour in a caviller, and who can satisfy the faithless?
- Too long, O truant from the fold, have I tracked thy devious paths;
- Too long, treacherous deserter, fought thee as a noble foeman:
- Haply, my small art, and an arm too weakly for its weapon,
- Hath failed to pierce thine iron coat, and reach thy stricken soul:
- Haply, the fervour of my speech, and too patient sifting of thy fancies,
- Shall tend to make thee prize them more, as worthier and wiser:
- Go to: be mine the gain: we measure swords no more;
- Go,--and a word go with thee,--Man, thou ART Immortal!
-
- Child of light, and student in the truth, too long have I forgotten thee:
- Lo, after parley with an alien, let me hold sweet converse with a brother.
- Glorious hopes and ineffable imaginings, crowd our holy theme,
- Fear hath been slaughtered on the portal, and Doubt driven back to
- darkness:
- For Christ hath died, and we in Him; by faith His All is ours;
- Cross and crown, and love, and life; and we shall reign in Him!
- Yea, there is a fitness and a beauty in ascribing immortality to mind,
- That its energies and lofty aspirations may have scope for indefinite
- expansion.
- To learn all things is privilege of reason, and that with a growing
- capability,
- But in this age of toil and time we scarce attain to alphabets:
- How hardly in the midst of our hurry, and jostled by the cares of life,
- Shall a man turn and stop to consider mighty secrets;
- With barely hours, and barely powers, to fill up daily duties,
- How small the glimpse of knowledge his wondering eye can catch!
- And knowledge is a noting of the order wherein God's attributes evolve,
- Therefore worthy of the creature, worthy of an angel's seeking;
- Yea, and human knowledge, meagre though the harvest,
- Hath its roots, both deep and strong; but the plants are exotic to the
- climate;
- All we seem to know demand a longer learning,
- History and science, and prophecy and art, are workings all of God:
- And there are galaxies of globes, millions of unimagined beings,
- Other senses, wondrous sounds, and thoughts of thrilling fire,
- Powers of strange might, quickening unknown elements,
- And attributes and energies of God which man may never guess.
-
- Not in vain, O brother, hath soul the spurs of enterprize,
- Nor aimlessly panteth for adventure, waiting at the cave of mystery:
- Not in vain the cup of curiosity, sweet and richly spiced,
- Is ruby to the sight, and ambrosia to the taste, and redolent with all
- fragrance:
- Thou shalt drink, and deeply, filling the mind with marvels;
- Thou shalt watch no more, lingering, disappointed of thy hope;
- Thou shalt roam where road is none, a traveller untrammelled,
- Speeding at a wish, emancipate, to where the stars are suns!
-
- Count, count your hopes, heirs of immortality and love;
- And hear my kindred faith, and turn again to bless me.
- For lo, my trust is strong to dwell in many worlds,
- And cull of many brethren there, sweet knowledge ever new:
- I yearn for realms where fancy shall be filled, and the ecstasies of
- freedom shall be felt,
- And the soul reign gloriously, risen to its royal destinies:
- I look to recognize again, through the beautiful mask of their perfection,
- The dear familiar faces I have somewhile loved on earth:
- I long to talk with grateful tongue of storms and perils past,
- And praise the mighty Pilot that hath steered us through the rapids:
- He shall be the focus of it all, the very heart of gladness,--
- My soul is athirst for God, the God who dwelt in Man!
- Prophet, priest, and king, the sacrifice, the substitute, the Saviour,
- Rapture of the blessed in the hunted One of earth, the Pardoner in the
- victim;
- How many centuries of joy concentrate in that theme,
- How often a Methusalem might count his thousand years, and leave it
- unexhausted!
- And lo, the heavenly Jerusalem, with all its gates one pearl,
- That pearl of countless price, the door by which we entered,--
- Come, tread the golden streets, and join that glorious throng,
- The happy ones of heaven and earth, ten thousand times ten thousand;
- Hark, they sing that song,--and cast their crowns before Him;
- Their souls alight with love,--Glory, and Praise, and Immortality!--
- Veil thine eyes: no son of time may see that holy vision,
- And even the seraph at thy side hath covered his face with wings.
-
- Doth he not speak parables?--each one goeth on his way,
- Ye that hear, and I that counsel, go on our ways forgetful.
- For the terrible realities whereto we tend, are hidden from our eyes,
- We know, but heed them not, and walk as if the temporal were all things.
- Vanities, buzzing on the ear, fill its drowsy chambers,
- Slow to dread those coming fears, the thunder and the trumpet;
- Motes, steaming on the sight, dim our purblind eyes,
- Dark to see the ponderous orb of nearing Immortality:
- Hemmed in by hostile foes, the trifler is busied on an epigram;
- The dull ox, driven to slaughter, careth but for pasture by the way.
- Alas, that the precious things of truth, and the everlasting hills,
- The mighty hopes we spake of, and the consciousness we feel,--
- Alas, that all the future, and its adamantine facts,
- Clouded by the present with intoxicating fumes,--
- Should seem even to us, the great expectant heirs,
- To us, the responsible and free, fearful sons of reason,
- Only as a lovely song, sweet sounds of solemn music,
- A pleasant voice, and nothing more,--doth he not speak parables?
-
- Look to thy soul, O man, for none can be surety for his brother:
- Behold, for heaven--or for hell,--thou canst not escape from Immortality!
-
-
-OF IDEAS.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Mind is like a volatile essence, flitting hither and thither,
- A solitary sentinel of the fortress body, to show himself everywhere by
- turns:
- Mind is indivisible and instant, with neither parts nor organs,
- That it doeth, it doth quickly, but the whole mind doth it:
- An active versatile agent, untiring in the principle of energy,
- Nor space, nor time, nor rest, nor toil, can affect the tenant of the
- brain;
- His dwelling may verily be shattered, and the furniture thereof be
- disarranged,
- But the particle of Deity in man slumbereth not, neither can be wearied:
- However swift to change, even as the field of a kaleidoscope,
- It taketh in but one idea at once, moulded for the moment to its likeness:
- Mind is as the quicksilver, which, poured from vessel to vessel,
- Instantly seizeth on a shape, and as instantly again discardeth it;
- For it is an apprehensive power, closing on the properties of Matter,
- Expanding to enwrap a world, collapsing to prison up an atom:
- As, by night, thine irritable eyes may have seen strange changing figures,
- Now a wheel, now suddenly a point, a line, a curve, a zigzag,
- A maze ever altering, as the dance of gnats upon a sunbeam,
- Swift, intricate, neither to be prophesied, nor to be remembered in
- succession,
- So, the mind of a man, single, and perpetually moving,
- Flickereth about from thought to thought, changed with each idea;
- For the passing second metamorphosed to the image of that within its ken,
- And throwing its immediate perceptions into each cause of contemplation.
- It shall regard a tree; and unconsciously, in separate review,
- Embrace its colour, shape, and use, whole and individual conceptions;
- It shall read or hear of crime, and cast itself into the commission;
- It shall note a generous deed, and glow for a moment as the doer;
- It shall imagine pride or pleasure, treading on the edges of temptation;
- Or heed of God and of His Christ, and grow transformed to glory.
-
- Therefore, it is wise and well to guide the mind aright,
- That its aptness may be sensitive to good, and shrink with antipathy from
- evil:
- For use will mould and mark it, or nonusage dull and blunt it;--
- So to talk of spirit by analogy with substance;
- And analogy is a truer guide, than many teachers tell of,
- Similitudes are scattered round, to help us, not to hurt us;
- Moses, in his every type, and the Greater than Moses, in His parables,
- Preach, in terms that all may learn, the philosophic lessons of analogy:
- And here, in a topic immaterial, the likeness of analogy is just;
- By habits, knit the nerves of mind, and train the gladiator shrewdly:
- For thought shall strengthen thinking, and imagery speed imagination,
- Until thy spiritual inmate shall have swelled to the giant of Otranto.
-
- Nevertheless, heed well, that this Athlete, growing in thy brain,
- Be a wholesome Genius, not a cursed Afrite:
- And see thou discipline his strength, and point his aim discreetly;
- Feed him on humility and holy things, weaned from covetous desires;
- Hour by hour and day by day, ply him with ideas of excellence,
- Dragging forth the evil but to loathe, as a Spartan's drunken Helot:
- And win, by gradual allurements, the still expanding soul,
- To rise from a contemplated universe, even to the Hand that made it.
-
- A common mind perceiveth not beyond his eyes and ears:
- The palings of the park of sense enthral this captured roebuck:
- And still, though fettered in the flesh, he doth not feel his chains,
- Externals are the world to him, and circumstance his atmosphere.
- Therefore tangible pleasures are enough for the animal man;
- He is swift to speak and slow to think, dreading his own dim conscience;
- And solitude is terrible, and exile worse than death,
- He cannot dwell apart, nor breathe at a distance from the crowd.
- But minds of nobler stamp, and chiefest the mint-marked of heaven,
- Walk independent, by themselves, freely manumitted of externals:
- They carry viands with them, and need no refreshment by the way,
- Nor drink of other wells than their own inner fountain.
- Strange shall it seem how little such a man will lean upon the accidents
- of life,
- He is winged and needeth not a staff; if it break, he shall not fall:
- And lightly perchance doth he remember the stale trivialities around him,
- He liveth in the realm of thought, beyond the world of things;
- These are but transient Matter, and himself enduring Spirit:
- And worldliness will laugh to scorn that sublimated wisdom.
- His eyes may open on a prison-cell, but the bare walls glow with imagery;
- His ears may be filled with execration, but are listening to the music of
- sweet thoughts;
- He may dwell in a hovel with a hero's heart, and canopy his penury with
- peace,
- For mind is a kingdom to the man, who gathereth his pleasure from Ideas.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF NAMES.
-
- Adam gave the name, when the Lord had made His creature,
- For God led them in review, to see what man would call them.
- As they struck his senses, he proclaimed their sounds,
- A name for the distinguishing of each, a numeral by which it should be
- known:
- He specified the partridge by her cry, and the forest prowler by his
- roaring,
- The tree by its use, and the flower by its beauty, and everything
- according to its truth.
-
- There is an arbitrary name; whereunto the idea attacheth;
- And there is a reasonable name, linking its fitness to idea:
- Yet shall these twain run in parallel courses,
- Neither shall thou readily discern the habit from the nature.
- For mind is apt and quick to wed ideas and names together,
- Nor stoppeth its perception to be curious of priorities;
- And there is but little in the sound, as some have vainly fancied,
- The same tone in different tongues shall be suitable to opposite ideas:
- Yea, take an ensample in thine own; consider similar words:
- How various and contrary the thoughts those kindred names produce:
- A house shall seem a fitting word to call a roomy dwelling,
- Yet there is a like propriety in the small smooth sound, a mouse:
- Mountain, as if of a necessity, is a word both mighty and majestic,--
- What heed ye then of Fountain?--flowing silver in the sun.
-
- Many a fair flower is burdened with preposterous appellatives,
- Which the wiser simplicity of rustics entitled by its beauties;
- And often the conceit of science, loving to be thought cosmopolite,
- Shall mingle names of every clime, alike obscure to each.
- There is wisdom in calling a thing fitly; name should note particulars
- Through a character obvious to all men, and worthy of their instant
- acceptation.
- The herbalist had a simple cause for every word upon his catalogue,
- But now the mouth of Botany is filled with empty sound;
- And many a peasant hath an answer on his tongue, concerning some vexed
- flower,
- Shrewder than the centipede phrase, wherewithal philosophers invest it.
-
- For that, the foolishness of pride, and flatteries of cringing homage,
- Strew with chaff the threshing-floors of science; names perplex them all:
- The entomologist, who hath pried upon an insect, straightway shall endow
- it with his name;
- It had many qualities and marks of note,--but in chief, a vain observer:
- The geographer shall journey to the pole, through biting frost and
- desolation,
- And, for some simple patron's sake, shall name that land, the happy:
- The fossilist hath found a bone, the rib of some huge lizard,
- And forthwith standeth to it sponsor, to tack himself on reptile
- immortalities:
- The sportsman, hunting at the Cape, found some strange-horned antelope,
- The spots are new, the fame is cheap, and so his name is added.
- Thus, obscurities encumber knowledge, even by the vanity of men
- Who play into each other's hand the game of giving names.
-
- Various are the names of men, and drawn from different wells;
- Aspects of body, or characters of mind, the creature's first idea:
- And some have sprung of trades, and some of dignities or office;
- Other some added to a father's, and yet more growing from a place:
- Animal creation, with sciences, and things,--their composites, and near
- associations,
- Contributed their symbollings of old, wherewith to title men:
- And heraldry set upon its cresture the figured attributes as ensigns
- By which, as by a name concrete, its bearer should be known.
-
- Egypt opened on the theme, dressing up her gods in qualities;
- Horns of power, feathers of the swift, mitres of catholic dominion,
- The sovereign asp, the circle everlasting, the crook and thong of justice,
- By many mystic shapes and sounds displayed the idol's name.
- Thereafter, high-plumed warriors, the chieftains of Etruria and Troy,
- And Xerxes, urging on his millions to the tomb of pride, Thermopylæ,
- And Hiero with his bounding ships, all figured at the prow,
- And Rome's Prætorian standards, piled with strange devices,
- And stout crusaders pressing to the battle, clad in sable mail;
- These all in their speaking symbols, earned, or wore, a name.
- Eve; the mother of all living, and Abraham, father of a multitude,
- Jacob, the supplanter, and David, the beloved, and all the worthies of
- old time,
- Noah, who came for consolation, and Benoni, son of sorrow,
- Kings and prophets, children of the East, owned each his title of
- significance.
-
- There be names of high descent, and thereby storied honours;
- Names of fair renown, and therein characters of merit:
- But to lend the lowborn noble names, is to shed upon them ridicule and
- evil;
- Yea, many weeds run rank in pride, if men have dubbed them cedars.
- And to herald common mediocrity with the noisy notes of fame,
- Tendeth to its deeper scorn; as if it were to call the mole a mammoth.
- Yet shall ye find the trader's babe dignified with sounding titles,
- And little hath the father guessed the harm he did his child:
- For either may they breed him discontent, a peevish repining at his
- station,
- Or point the finger of despite at the mule in the trappings of an
- elephant:
- And it is a kind of theft to filch appellations from the famous,
- A soiling of the shrines of praise with folly's vulgar herd.
- Prudence hath often gone ashamed for the name they added to his father's,
- If minds of mark and great achievements bore it well before;
- For he walketh as the jay in the fable, though not by his own folly,
- Another's fault hath compassed his misfortune, making him a martyr to his
- name.
-
- Who would call the tench a whale, or style a torch, Orion?
- Yet many a silly parent hath dealt likewise with his nurseling.
- Give thy child a fit distinguishment, making him sole tenant of a name,
- For it were a sore hindrance to hold it in common with a hundred:
- In the Babel of confused identities fame is little feasible,
- The felon shall detract from the philanthropist, and the sage share
- honours with the simple:
- Still, in thy title of distinguishment, fall not into arrogant assumption,
- Steering from caprice and affectations; and for all thou doest, have a
- reason.
- He that is ambitious for his son, should give him untried names,
- For those that have served other men, haply may injure by their evils;
- Or otherwise may hinder by their glories; therefore, set him by himself,
- To win for his individual name some clear specific praise.
- There were nine Homers, all goodly sons of song, but where is any record
- of the eight?
- One grew to fame, an Aaron's rod, and swallowed up his brethren:
- Who knoweth? more distinctly titled, those dead eight had lived;
- But the censers were ranged in a circle to mingle their sweets without a
- difference.
-
- Art thou named of a common crowd, and sensible of high aspirings?
- It is hard for thee to rise,--yet strive: thou mayest be among them a
- Musæus.
- Art thou named of a family, the same in successive generations?
- It is open to thee still to earn for epithets, such an one, the good or
- great.
- Art thou named foolishly? Show that thou art wiser than thy fathers;
- Live to shame their vanity or sin by dutiful devotion to thy sphere.
- Art thou named discreetly? It is well, the course is free;
- No competitor shall claim thy colours, neither fix his faults upon thee:
- Hasten to the goal of fame between the posts of duty,
- And win a blessing from the world, that men may love thy name:
- Yea, that the unction of its praise, in fragrance well deserving,
- May float adown the stream of time, like ambergris at sea;
- So thy sons may tell their sons, and those may teach their children,
- He died in goodness, as he lived;--and left us his good name.
- And more than these: there is a roll whereon thy name is written;
- See that, in the Book of Doom, that name is fixed in light:
- Then, safe within a better home, where time and its titles are not found,
- God will give thee His new Name, and write it on thy heart:
- A Name better than of sons, a Name dearer than of daughters,
- A Name of union, peace, and praise, as numbered in thy God.
-
-
-OF THINGS.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Taken separately from all substance, and flying with the feathered flock
- of thoughts,
- The idea of a thing hath the nature of its Soul, a separate seeming
- essence:
- Intimately linked to the idea, suggesting many qualities,
- The name of a thing hath the nature of its Mind, an intellectual recorder:
- And the matter of a thing, concrete, is a Body to the perfect creature,
- Compacted three in one, as all things else within the universe.
- Nothing canst thou add to them, and nothing take away, for all have these
- proportions,
- The thought, the word, the form, combining in the Thing:
- All separate, yet harmonizing well, and mingled each with other,
- One whole in several parts, yet each part spreading to a whole:
- The idea is a whole; and the meaning phrase that spake idea, a whole;
- And the matter, as ye see it, is a whole; the mystery of true triunity:
- Yea, there is even a deeper mystery,--which none, I wot, can fathom,
- Matter, different from properties whereby the solid substance is
- described;
- For, size and weight, cohesion and the like, live distinct from matter,
- Yet who can imagine matter, unendowed with size and weight?
- As in the spiritual, so in the material, man must rest with patience,
- And wait for other eyes wherewith to read the books of God.
-
- Men have talked learnedly of atoms, as if matter could be ever
- indivisible;
- They talk, but ill are skilled to teach, and darken truth by fancies:
- An atom by our grosser sense was never yet conceived,
- And nothing can be thought so small, as not to be divided:
- For an atom runneth to infinity, and never shall be caught in space,
- And a molecule is no more indivisible than Saturn's belted orb.
- Things intangible, multiplied by multitudes, never will amass to
- substance,
- Neither can a thing which may be touched, be made of impalpable
- proportions;
- The sum of indivisibles must needs be indivisible, as adding many
- nothings,
- And the building up of atoms into matter is but a silly sophism;
- Lucretius, and keen Anaximander, and many that have followed in their
- thoughts,
- (For error hath a long black shadow, dimming light for ages,)
- In the foolishness of men without a God fancied to fashion Matter
- Of intangibles, and therefore uncohering, indivisibles, and therefore
- Spirit.
-
- Things breed thoughts; therefore at Thebes and Heliopolis,
- In hieroglyphic sculptures are the priestly secrets written:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore was the Athens of idolatry
- Set with carved images, frequent as the trees of Academus:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the Brahmin and the Burman
- With mythologic shapes adorn their coarse pantheon:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the statue and the picture,
- Relics, rosaries, and miracles in act, quicken the Papist in his worship:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the lovers at their parting,
- Interchanged with tearful smiles the dear reminding tokens:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore when the clansman met his foe,
- The bloodstained claymore in his hand revived the memories of vengeance.
-
- Things teach with double force; through the animal eye, and through the
- mind,
- And the eye catcheth in an instant, what the ear shall not learn within
- an hour.
- Thence is the potency of travel, the precious might of its advantages
- To compensate its dissipative harm, its toil and cost and danger.
- Ulysses, wandering to many shores, lived in many cities,
- And thereby learnt the minds of men, and stored his own more richly:
- Herodotus, the accurate and kindly, spake of that he saw,
- And reaped his knowledge on the spot, in fertile fields of Egypt:
- Lycurgus culled from every clime the golden fruits of justice;
- And Plato roamed through foreign lands, to feed on truth in all.
- For travel, conversant with Things, bringeth them in contact with the
- mind;
- We breathe the wholesome atmosphere about ungarbled truth:
- Pictures of fact are painted on the eye, to decorate the house of
- intellect,
- Rather than visions of fancy, filling all the chambers with a vapour.
- For, in Ideas, the great mind will exaggerate, and the lesser extenuate
- truth;
- But in Things the one is chastened, and the other quickened, to equality:
- And in Names,--though a property be told, rather than some arbitrary
- accident,
- Still shall the thought be vague or false, if none have seen the Thing:
- For in Things the property with accident standeth in a mass concrete,
- These cannot cheat the sense, nor elude the vigilance of spirit.
- Travel is a ceaseless fount of surface education,
- But its wisdom will be simply superficial, if thou add not thoughts to
- things:
- Yet, aided by the varnish of society, things may serve for thoughts,
- Till many dullards that have seen the world shall pass for scholars:
- Because one single glance will conquer all descriptions,
- Though graphic, these left some unsaid, though true, these tended to some
- error;
- And the most witless eye that saw, had a juster notion of its object,
- Than the shrewdest mind that heard and shaped its gathered thoughts of
- Things.
-
-
-[Illustration: of faith]
-
-OF FAITH.
-
- Confidence was bearer of the palm; for it looked like conviction of
- desert:
- And where the strong is well assured, the weaker soon allow it.
- Majesty and Beauty are commingled, in moving with immutable decision,
- And well may charm the coward hearts that turn and hide for fear.
- Faith, firmness, confidence, consistency,--these are well allied;
- Yea, let a man press on in aught, he shall not lack of honour:
- For such an one seemeth as superior to the native instability of
- creatures;
- That he doeth, he doeth as a god, and men will marvel at his courage.
- Even in crimes, a partial praise cannot be denied to daring,
- And many fearless chiefs have won the friendship of a foe.
-
- Confidence is conqueror of men; victorious both over them and in them;
- The iron will of one stout heart shall make a thousand quail:
- A feeble dwarf, dauntlessly resolved, will turn the tide of battle,
- And rally to a nobler strife the giants that had fled;
- The tenderest child, unconscious of a fear, will shame the man to danger,
- And when he dared it, danger died, and faith had vanquished fear.
- Boldness is akin to power: yea, because ignorance is weakness,
- Knowledge with unshrinking might will nerve the vigorous hand:
- Boldness hath a startling strength; the mouse may fright a lion,
- And oftentimes the horned herd is scared by some brave cur.
- Courage hath analogy with faith, for it standeth both in animal and moral;
- The true is mindful of a God, the false is stout in self:
- But true or false, the twain are faith; and faith worketh wonders:
- Never was a marvel done upon the earth, but it had sprung of faith:
- Nothing noble, generous, or great, but faith was the root of the
- achievement;
- Nothing comely, nothing famous, but its praise is faith.
- Leonidas fought in human faith, as Joshua in divine:
- Xenophon trusted to his skill, and the sons of Mattathias to their cause:
- In faith Columbus found a path across those untried waters;
- The heroines of Arc and Saragossa fought in earthly faith:
- Tell was strong, and Alfred great, and Luther wise, by faith;
- Margaret by faith was valiant for her son, and Wallace mighty for his
- people:
- Faith in his reason made Socrates sublime, as faith in his science,
- Galileo:
- Ambassadors in faith are bold, and unreproved for boldness:
- Faith urged Fabius to delays, and sent forth Hannibal to Cannæ:
- Cæsar at the Rubicon, Miltiades at Marathon; both were sped by faith.
- I set not all in equal spheres: I number not the martyr with the patriot;
- I class not the hero with his horse, because the twain have courage;
- But only for ensample and instruction, that all things stand by faith;
- Albeit faith of divers kinds, and varying in degree.
- There is a faith towards men, and there is a faith towards God;
- The latter is the gold and the former is the brass; but both are sturdy
- metal:
- And the brass mingled with the gold floweth into rich Corinthian;
- A substance bright and hard and keen, to point Achilles' spear:
- So shall thou stop the way against the foes that hem thee;
- Trust in God to strengthen man;--be bold, for He doth help.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Yet more: for confidence in man, even to the worst and meanest,
- Hath power to overcome his ill, by charitable good.
- Fling thine unreserving trust even on the conscience of a culprit,
- Soon wilt thou shame him by thy faith, and he will melt and mend:
- The nest of thieves will harm thee not, if thou dost bear thee boldly;
- Boldly, yea and kindly, as relying on their honour:
- For the hand so stout against aggression, is quite disarmed by charity;
- And that warm sun will thaw the heart case-hardened by long frost.
- Treat men gently, trust them strongly, if thou wish their weal;
- Or cautious doubt and bitter thoughts will tempt the best to foil thee.
- Believe the well in sanguine hope, and thou shall reap the better;
- But if thou deal with men so ill, thy dealings make them worse;
- Despair not of some gleams of good still lingering in the darkest,
- And among veterans in crime, plead thou as with their children:
- So, astonied at humanities, the bad heart long estranged,
- Shall even weep to feel himself so little worth thy love;
- In wholesome sorrow will he bless thee; yea, and in that spirit may
- repent;
- Thus wilt thou gain a soul, in mercy given to thy Faith.
-
- Look aside to lack of faith, the mass of ills it bringeth:
- All things treacherous, base, and vile, dissolving the brotherhood of men.
- Bonds break; the cement hath lost its hold; and each is separate from
- other;
- That which should be neighbourly and good, is cankered into bitterness
- and evil.
- O thou serpent, fell Suspicion, coiling coldly round the heart,--
- O thou asp of subtle Jealousy, stinging hotly to the soul,--
- O distrust, reserve, and doubt,--what reptile shapes are here,
- Poisoning the garden of a world with death among its flowers!
- No need of many words, the tale is easy to be told;
- A point will touch the truth, a line suggest the picture.
- For if, in thine own home, a cautious man and captious,
- Thou hintest at suspicion of a servant, thou soon wilt make a thief;
- Or if, too keen in care, thou dost evidently disbelieve thy child,
- Thou hast injured the texture of his honour, and smoothed to him the way
- of lying:
- Or if thou observest upon friends, as seeking thee selfishly for interest,
- Thou hast hurt their kindliness to thee, and shalt be paid with scorn;
- Or if, O silly ones of marriage, your foul and foolish thoughts,
- Harshly misinterpreting in each the levity of innocence for sin,
- Shall pour upon the lap of home pain where once was pleasure,
- And mix contentions in the cup, that mantled once with comforts,
- Bitterly and justly shall ye rue the punishment due to unbelief;
- Ye trust not each the other, nor the mutual vows of God;
- Take heed, for the pit may now be near, a pit of your own digging,--
- Faith abused tempteth unto crime, and doubt may make its monster.
-
- Man verily is vile, but more in capability than action;
- His sinfulness is deep, but his transgressions may be few, even from the
- absence of temptation:
- He is hanging in a gulf midway, but the air is breathable about him:
- Thrust him not from that slight hold, to perish in the vapours underneath.
- For, God pleadeth with the deaf, as having ears to hear,
- Christ speaketh to the dead, as those that are capable of living;
- And an evil teacher is that man, a tempter to much sin,
- Who looketh on his hearers with distrust, and hath no confidence in
- brethren.
- All may mend; and sympathies are healing: and reason hath its influence
- with the worst;
- And in those worst is ample hope, if only thou hast charity, and faith.
-
- Somewhiles have I watched a man exchanging the sobriety of faith,
- Old lamps for new,--even for fanatical excitements.
- He gained surface, but lost solidity; heat, in lieu of health;
- And still with swelling words and thoughts he scorned his ancient
- coldness:
- But, his strength was shorn as Samson's; he walked he knew not whither;
- Doubt was on his daily path; and duties shewed not certain:
- Until, in an hour of enthusiasm, stung with secret fears,
- He pinned the safety of his soul on some false prophet's sleeve.
- And then, that sure word failed; and with it, failed his faith;
- It failed, and fell; O deep and dreadful was his fall in faith!
- He could not stop, with reason's rein, his coursers on the slope,
- And so they dashed him down the cliff of hardened unbelief.
- With overreaching grasp he had strained for visionary treasures,
- But a fiend had cheated his presumption, and hurled him to despair.
- So he lay in his blood, the victim of a credulous false faith,
- And many nights, and night-like days, he dwelt in outer darkness.
- But, within a while, his variable mind caught a new impression,
- A new impression of the good old stamp, that sealed him when a child:
- He was softened, and abjured his infidelity; he was wiser, and despised
- his credulity;
- And turned again to simple faith more simply than before.
- Experience had declared too well his mind was built of water,
- And so, renouncing strength in self, he fixed his faith in God.
-
- It is not for me to stipulate for creeds; Bible, Church, and Reason,
- These three shall lead the mind, if any can, to truth.
- But I must stipulate for faith: both God and man demand it:
- Trust is great in either world, if any would be well.
- Verily, the sceptical propensity is an universal foe;
- Sneering Pyrrho never found, nor cared to find, a friend:
- How could he trust another? and himself, whom would he not deceive?
- His proper gains were all his aim, and interests clash with kindness.
- So, the Bedouin goeth armed, an enemy to all,
- The spear is stuck beside his couch, the dagger hid beneath his pillow.
- For society, void of mutual trust, of credit, and of faith,
- Would fall asunder as a waterspout, snapped from the cloud's attraction.
-
- Faith may rise into miracles of might, as some few wise have shown:
- Faith may sink into credulities of weakness, as the mass of fools have
- witnessed.
- Therefore, in the first, saints and martyrs have fulfilled their mission,
- Conquering dangers, courting deaths, and triumphing in all.
- Therefore, in the last, the magician and the witch, victims of their own
- delusion,
- Have gained the bitter wages of impracticable sins.
- They believed in allegiance with Satan; they worked in that belief,
- And thereby earned the loss and harm of guilt that might not be.
- For, faith hath two hands; with the one it addeth virtue to indifferents;
- Yea, it sanctified a Judith and a Jael, for what otherwise were treachery
- and murder:
- With the other hand it heapeth crime even on impossibles or simples,
- And many a wizard well deserved the faggot for his faith:
- He trusted in his intercourse with evil, he sacrificed heartily to fiends,
- He withered up with curses to the limit of his will, and was vile,
- because he thought himself a villain.
-
- A great mind is ready to believe, for he hungereth to feed on facts,
- And the gnawing stomach of his ignorance craveth unceasing to be filled:
- A little mind is boastful and incredulous, for he fancieth all knowledge
- is his own,
- So will he cavil at a truth; how should it be true, and he not know it?--
- There is an easy scheme, to solve all riddles by the sensual,
- And thus, despising mysteries, to feel the more sufficient;
- For it comforteth the foul hard heart, to reject the pure unseen,
- And relieveth the dull soft head, to hinder one from gazing upon vacancy.
- True wisdom, labouring to expound, heareth others readily;
- False wisdom, sturdy to deny, closeth up her mind to argument.
- The sum of certainties is found so small, their field so wide an universe,
- That many things may truly be, which man hath not conceived:
- The characters revealed of God are a strong mind's sole assurance
- That any strangeness may not stand a sober theme for faith.
- Ignorance being light denied, this ought to show the stronger in its view,
- But ignorance is commonly a double negative, both of light and morals:
- So, adding vanity to blindness, for ease, it taketh refuge in a doubt,
- And aching soon with ceaseless doubt, it finisheth the strife by
- misbelieving.
-
- Faith, by its very nature, shall embrace both credence and obedience:
- Yea, the word for both is one, and cannot be divided.
- For, work void of faith, wherein can it be counted for a duty;
- And faith not seen in work,--whereby can the doctrine be discovered?
- Faith in religion is an instrument; a handle, and the hand to turn it:
- Less a condition than a mean, and more an operation than a virtue.
- A moral sickness, like to sin, must have a moral cure;
- And faith alone can heal the mind, whose malady is sense.
- Ye are told of God's deep love: they that believe will love Him:
- They that love Him, will obey: and obedience hath its blessing.
- Ye are taught of the soul's great price; they that believe will prize it,
- And, prizing soul, will cherish well the hopes that make it happy.
- Effects spring from feelings; and feelings grow of faith:
- If a man conceive himself insulted, will not his anger smite?
- Thus, let a soul believe his state, his danger, destiny, redemption,
- Will he not feel eager to be safe, like him that kept the prison at
- Philippi?
-
- A mother had an only son, and sent him out to sea:
- She was a widow, and in penury; and he must seek his fortunes.
- How often in the wintry nights, when waves and winds were howling,
- Her heart was torn with sickening dread, and bled to see her boy.
- And on one sunny morn, when all around was comfort,
- News came, that weeks agone, the vessel had been wrecked;
- Yea, wrecked, and he was dead! they had seen him perish in his agony:
- Oh then, what agony was like to her's,--for she believed the tale.
- She was bowed and broken down with sorrow, and uncomforted in prayer;
- Many nights she mourned, and pined, and had no hope but death.
- But on a day, while sorely she was weeping, a stranger broke upon her
- loneliness,--
- He had news to tell, that weather-beaten man, and must not be denied:
- And what were the wonder-working words that made this mourner joyous,
- That swept her heaviness away, and filled her world with praise?
- Her son was saved,--is alive,--is near!--O did she stop to question?
- No, rushing in the force of faith, she met him at the door!
-
-
-OF HONESTY.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- All is vanity that is not honesty;--thus is it graven on the tomb:
- And there is no wisdom but in piety;--so the dead man preacheth:
- For, in a simple village church, among those classic shades
- Which sylvan Evelyn loved to rear, (his praise, and my delight,)
- These, the words of truth, are writ upon his sepulchre
- Who learnt much lore, and knew all trees, from the cedar to the hyssop on
- the wall.
- A just conjunction, godliness and honesty; ministering to both worlds,
- Well wed, and ill to be divided, a pair that God hath joined together.
- I touch not now the vulgar thought, as of tricks and cheateries in trade;
- I speak of honest purpose, character, speech and action.
- For an honest man hath special need of charity, and prudence,
- Of a deep and humbling self-acquaintance, and of blessed commerce with
- his God,
- So that the keennesses of truth may be freed from asperities of censure,
- And the just but vacillating mind be not made the pendulum of arguments:
- For a false reason, shrewdly put, can often not be answered on the
- instant,
- And prudence looketh unto faith, content to wait solutions;
- Yea, it looketh, yea, it waiteth, still holding honesty in leash,
- Lest, as a hot young hound, it track not game, but vermin.
- Many a man of honest heart, but ignorant of self and God,
- Hath followed the marsh-fires of pestilence, esteeming them the lights of
- truth;
- He heard a cause, which he had not skill to solve,--and so received it
- gladly;
- And that cause brought its consequence, of harm to an unstable soul.
- Prudence, for a man's own sake, never should be separate from honesty;
- And charity, for other's good, and his, must still be joined therewith:
- For the harshly chiding tongue hath neither pleasuring nor profit,
- And the cold unsympathizing heart never gained a good.
- Sin is a sore, and folly is a fever; touch them tenderly for healing;
- The bad chirurgeon's awkward knife harmeth, spite of honesty.
- Still, a rough diamond is better than the polished paste,--
- That courteous flattering fool, who spake of vice as virtue:
- And honesty, even by itself, though making many adversaries
- Whom prudence might have set aside, or charity have softened,
- Evermore will prosper at the last, and gain a man great honour
- By giving others many goods, to his own cost and hindrance.
-
- Freedom is father of the honest, and sturdy Independence is his brother;
- These three, with heart and hand, dwell together in unity.
- The blunt yeoman, stout and true, will speak unto princes unabashed:
- His mind is loyal, just and free, a crystal in its plain integrity;
- What should make such an one ashamed? where courtiers kneel, he
- standeth;--
- I will indeed bow before the king, but knees were knit for God.
- And many such there be, of a high and noble conscience,
- Honourable, generous, and kind, though blest with little light:
- What should he barter for his Freedom? some petty gain of gold?
- Free of speech, and free in act, magnates honour him for boldness:
- Long may he flourish in his peace, and a stalwarth race around him,
- Rooted in the soil like oaks, and hardy as the pine upon the mountains!
-
- Yet, there be others, that will truckle to a lie, selling honesty for
- interest:
- And do they gain?--they gain but loss; a little cash, with scorn.
- Behold, the sorrowful change wrought upon a fallen nature:
- He hath lost his own esteem, and other men's respect;
- For the buoyancy of upright faith, he is clothed in the heaviness of
- cringing;
- For plain truth where none could err, he hath chosen tortuous paths;
- In lieu of his majesty of countenance--the timorous glances of servility;
- Instead of Freedom's honest pride,--the spirit of a slave.
-
- Nevertheless, there is something to be pleaded, even for a necessary
- guile,
- Whilst the world, and all that is therein, lieth deep in evil.
- Who can be altogether honest,--a champion never out of mail,
- Ready to break a lance for truth with every crowding error?
- Who can be altogether honest,--dragging out the secresies of life,
- And risking to be lashed and loathed for each unkind disclosure?
- Who can be altogether honest,--living in perpetual contentions,
- And prying out the petty cheats that swell the social scheme?
- For he must speak his instant mind,--a mind corrupt and sinful,
- Exhibiting to other men's disgust its undisguised deformities:
- He must utter all the hatred of his heart, and add to it the venom of his
- tongue;
- Shall he feel, and hide his feelings? that were the meanness of a
- hypocrite:--
- Still, O man, such hypocrisy is better, than this bold honesty to sin:
- Kill the feeling, or conceal it: let shame at least do the work of
- charity.
-
- O charity, thou livest not in warnings, meddling among men,
- Rebuking every foolish word, and censuring small sins;
- This is not thy secret,--rather wilt thou hide their multitude,
- And silence the condemning tongue, and wearisome exhortation.
- But for thee, thy strength and zeal shine in encouragement to good,
- Lifting up the lantern of ensample, that wanderers may find the way:
- That lantern is not lit to gaze on all the hatefulness of evil,
- But set on high for life and light, the loveliness of good.
- The hard censorious mind sitteth as a keen anatomist
- Tracking up the fibres in corruption, and prying on a fearful corpse:
- But the charitable soul is a young lover, enamoured little wisely,
- That saw no fault in her he loved, and sought to see one less;
- So, in his kind and genial light, she grew more worthy of his love;
- Won to good by gentle suns, and not by frowning tempest.
-
- Verily, infirm thyself,--be slow to chide a brother's imperfections;
- For many times the decent veil must hang on faults of nature:
- And the rude hands, that rend it, offend against the modesty of right,
- While seeming zeal, and its effort to do good, is only feigned
- self-praise:
- Often will the meannesses of life, hidden away in corners,
- Prove wisdom; and the generous is glad to leave them unregarded in the
- shade.
- The follies none are found to praise, let them die unblamed;
- Thine honest strife will only tend to make some think them wise:
- And small conventional deceits, let them live uncensured:
- Or if thou war with pigmies, thou shalt haply help the cranes.
- Where to be blind was safety, Ovid had been wise for winking:
- And when a tell-tale might do harm, be sure it is prudent to be dumb;
- That which is just and fit is often found combating with honesty:
- In the cause of good, be wise; and in a case indifferent, keep silence.
-
- Let honesty's unblushing face be shaded by the mantle of humility,
- So shall it shine a lamp of love, and not the torch of strife:
- Otherwise the lantern of Diogenes, presumptuously thrust before the face,
- If it never find an honest man, shall often make an angered.
- Let honesty be companied by charity of heart, lest it walk unwelcome;
- Or the mouthing censor of others and himself, soon shall sink to scorn.
- Let honesty be added unto innocence of life: then a man may only be its
- martyr;
- But if openness of speech be found with secresy of guilt, the martyr will
- be seen a malefactor.
-
- There is a cunning scheme, to put on surface bluntness,
- And cover still deep water, with the clamorous ripples of a shallow.
- For a man, to gain his selfish ends, will make a stalking-horse of
- honesty;
- And hide his poaching limbs behind, that he may cheat the quicker.
- Such an one is loud and ostentatious, full of oaths for argument,
- Boastful of honour and sincerity, and not to be put down by facts:
- He is obstinate, and sheweth it for firmness; he is rude, displaying it
- for truth;
- And glorieth in doggedness of temper, as if it were uncompromising
- justice.
- Be aware of such a man; his brawling covereth designs;
- This specious show of honesty cometh as the herald of a thief:
- His feint is made with awkward clashing on the buckler's boss,
- But meanwhile doth his secret skill ensure its fatal aim.
- This is the hypocrite of honesty; ye may know him by an overacted part;
- Taking pains to turn and twist, where other men walk straight;
- Or walking straight, he will not step aside to let another pass,
- But roughly pusheth on, provoking opposition on the way;
- He is full of disquietude for calmness, full of intriguing for simplicity,
- Valorous with those who cannot fight, and humble to the brave:
- Where brotherly advice were good, this man rudely blameth,
- And on some small occasion, flattereth with coarse praise.
- The craven in a lion's skin hath conquered by his character for courage;
- Sheep's clothing helped the wolf, till he slew by his character for
- kindness.
-
- For honesty hath many gains, and well the wise have known
- This will prosper to the end, and fill their house with gold.
- The phosphorus of cheatery will fade, and all its profits perish,
- While honesty with growing light endureth as the moon.
- Yea, it would be wise in a world of thieves, where cheating were a virtue,
- To dare the vice of honesty, if any would be rich.
- For that which by the laws of God is heightened into duty,
- Ever, in the practice of a man, will be seen both policy and privilege.
- Thank God, ye toilers for your bread, in that, daily labouring,
- He hath suffered the bubbles of self-interest to float upon the stream of
- duty:
- For honesty, of every kind, approved by God and man,
- Of wealth and better weal is found the richest cornucopia.
- Tempered by humbleness and charity, honesty of speech hath honour;
- And mingled well with prudence, honesty of purpose hath its praise:
- Trust payeth homage unto truth, rewarding honesty of action:
- And all men love to lean on him, who never failed nor fainted.
- Freedom gloweth in his eyes, and Nobleness of nature at his heart,
- And Independence took a crown and fixed it on his head:
- So, he stood in his integrity, just and firm of purpose,
- Aiding many, fearing none, a spectacle to angels, and to men:
- Yea,--when the shattered globe shall rock in the throes of dissolution,
- Still, will he stand in his integrity, sublime--an honest man.
-
-
-OF SOCIETY.
-
-[Illustration: "B"]
-
- Better is the mass of men, Suspicion, than thy fears,
- Kinder than thy thoughts, O chilling heart of Prudence,
- Purer than thy judgments, ascetic tongue of Censure,
- In all things worthier to love, if not also wiser to esteem.
- Yea, let the moralist condemn, there be large extenuations of his verdict,
- Let the misanthrope shun men and abjure, the most are rather loveable
- than hateful.
- How many pleasant faces shed their light on every side,
- How many angels unawares have crossed thy casual way!
- How often, in thy journeyings, hast thou made thee instant friends,
- Found, to be loved a little while, and lost, to meet no more;
- Friends of happy reminiscence, although so transient in their converse,
- Liberal, cheerful, and sincere, a crowd of kindly traits.
- I have sped by land and sea, and mingled with much people,
- But never yet could find a spot, unsunned by human kindness;
- Some more, and some less,--but truly all can claim a little;
- And a man may travel through the world, and sow it thick with friendships.
-
- There be indeed, to say it in all sorrow, bad apostate souls,
- Deserted of their ministering angels, and given up to liberty of sin,--
- And other some, the miserly and mean, whose eyes are keen and greedy,
- With stony hearts, and iron fists, to filch and scrape and clutch,--
- And others yet again, the coarse in mind, selfish, sensual, brutish,
- Seeming as incapable of softer thoughts, and dead to better deeds;
- Such, no lover of the good, no follower of the generous and gentle,
- Can nearer grow to love, than may consist with pity.
- Few verily are these among the mass, and cast in fouler moulds,
- Few and poor in friends, and well-deserving of their poverty:
- Yet, or ever thou hast harshly judged, and linked their presence to
- disgust,
- Consider well the thousand things that made them all they are.
- Thou hast not thought upon the causes, ranged in consecutive necessity,
- Which tended long to these effects, with sure constraining power.
- For each of those unlovely ones, if thou couldst hear his story,
- Hath much to urge of just excuse, at least as men count justice:
- Foolish education, thwarted opportunities, natural propensities
- unchecked,--
- Thus were they discouraged from all good, and pampered in their evil;
- And, if thou wilt apprehend them well, tenderly looking on temptations,
- Bearing the base indulgently, and liberally dealing with the froward,
- Thou shalt discern a few fair fruits even upon trees so withered,
- Thou shalt understand how some may praise, and some be found to love them.
-
- Nevertheless for these, my counsel is, Avoid them if thou canst;
- For the finer edges of thy virtues will be dulled by attrition with their
- vice.
- And there is an enemy within thee; either to palliate their sin,
- Until, for surface-sweetness, thou too art drawn adown the vortex;
- Or, even unto fatal pride, to glorify thy purity by contrast,
- Until the publican and harlot stand nearer heaven than the Pharisee:
- Or daily strife against their ill, in subtleness may irritate thy soul,
- And in that struggle thou shall fail, even through infirmity of goodness;
- Or, callous by continuance of injuries, thou wilt cease to pardon,
- Cease to feel, and cease to care, a cold case-hardened man.
- Beware of their example,--and thine own; beware the hazards of the battle;
- But chiefly be thou ware of this, an unforgiving spirit.
- Many are the dangers and temptations compassing a bad man's presence;
- The upas hath a poisonous shade, and who would slumber there?
- Wherefore, avoid them if thou canst; only, under providence and duty,
- If thy lot be cast with Kedar, patiently and silently live to their
- rebuke.
-
- How beautiful thy feet, and full of grace thy coming,
- O better kind companion, that art well for either world!
- There is an atmosphere of happiness floating round that man,
- Love is throned upon his heart, and light is found within his dwelling:
- His eyes are rayed with peacefulness, and wisdom waiteth on his tongue;
- Seek him out, cherish him well, walking in the halo of his influence:
- For he shall be fragrance to thy soul, as a garden of sweet lilies,
- Hedged and apart from the outer world, an island of the blest among the
- seas.
-
- There is an outer world, and there is an inner centre;
- And many varying rings concentric round the self.
- For, first, about a man,--after his communion with Heaven,--
- Is found the helpmate even as himself, the wife of his vows and his
- affections:
- See then that ye love in faith, scorning petty jealousies,
- For Satan spoileth too much love, by souring it with doubts;
- See that intimacy die not to indifference, nor anxiety sink into
- moroseness,
- And tend ye well the mutual minds bound in a copartnership for life.
-
- Next of those concentric circles, radiating widely in circumference,
- Wheel in wheel, and world in world,--come the band of children:
- A tender nest of soft young hearts, each to be separately studied,
- A curious eager flock of minds, to be severally tamed and tutored.
- And a man, blest with these, hath made his own society,
- He is independent of the world, hanging on his friends more loosely:
- For the little faces round his hearth are friends enow for him,
- If he seek others, it is for sake of these, and less for his own pleasure.
- What companionship so sweet, yea, who can teach so well
- As these pure budding intellects, and bright unsullied hearts?
- What voice so musical as theirs, what visions of elegance so comely,
- What thoughts and hopes and holy prayers, can others cause like these?
- If ye count society for pastime,--what happier recreation than a
- nurseling,
- Its winning ways, its prattling tongue, its innocence and mirth?
- If ye count society for good,--how fair a field is here,
- To guide these souls to God, and multiply thyself for heaven!
- And this sweet social commerce with thy children groweth as their growth,
- Unless thou fail of duty, or have weaned them by thine absence.
- Keep them near thee, rear them well, guide, correct, instruct them;
- And be the playmate of their games, the judge in their complainings.
- So shall the maiden and the youth love thee as their sympathizing friend,
- And bring their joys to share with thee, their sorrows for consoling:
- Yea, their inmost hopes shall yearn to thee for counsel,
- They will not hide their very loves, if thou hast won their trust;
- But, even as man and woman, shall they gladly seek their father,
- Feeling yet as children feel, though void of fear in honour:
- And thou shall be a Nestor in the camp, the just and good old man,
- Hearty still, though full of years, and held the friend of all;
- No secret shall be kept from thee; for if ill, thy wisdom may repair it;
- If well, thy praise is precious; and they would not miss that prize.
- O the blessing of a home, where old and young mix kindly,
- The young unawed, the old unchilled, in unreserved communion!
- O that refuge from the world, when a stricken son or daughter
- May seek, with confidence of love, a father's hearth and heart;
- Sure of a welcome, though others cast them out; of kindness, though men
- scorn them;
- And finding there the last to blame, the earliest to commend.
- Come unto me, my son, if sin shall have tempted thee astray,
- I will not chide thee like the rest, but help thee to return;
- Come unto me, my son, if men rebuke and mock thee,
- There always shall be one to bless,--for I am on thy side!
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Alas,--and bitter is their loss, the parents, and the children,
- Who, loving up and down the world, have missed each other's friendship.
- Haply, it had grown of careless life, for years go swiftly by;
- Or sprang of too much carefulness, that drank up all the streams:
- Haply, sullen disappointment came and quenched the fire;
- Haply, sternness, or misrule, crushed or warped the feelings.
- Then, ill-combined in tempers, they learnt not each the other;
- The growing child grew out of love, and drew the breath of fear;
- The youth, ill-trained, renounced his fears, and made a league with
- cunning;
- And so those hardened men were foes, that should have been chief friends.
- Where was the cause, the mutual cause? O hunt it out to kill it:
- And what the cure, the simple cure?--A mutual flash of love.
- For dull estrangement's daily air froze up those early sympathies
- By cold continuance in apathy, or cutting winds of censure;
- It was a slow process, which any fleeting hour could have melted;
- But every hour duly came, and passed without the sun.
- Caution, care, and dry distrust, obscured each other's minds,
- Till both those gardens, rich to yield, were rank with many weeds:
- And doubt, a hidden worm, gnawed at the root of their Society,
- They lacked of mutual confidence, and lived in mutual dread.
- Judge me, many fathers; and hearken to my counsel, many sons;
- I come with good in either hand, to reconcile contentions;
- For better friends can no man have, than those whom God hath given,
- And he that hath despised the gift, thought ill of that he knew not.
- Be ye wiser,--(I speak unto the sons,)--and win paternal friendships,
- Cultivate their kindness, seek them out with honour, and be the screening
- Japhet to their failings:
- And be ye wiser,--(I speak unto the fathers)--gain those filial comrades,
- Cherish their reasonable converse, and look not with coldness on your
- children.
- For the friendship of a child is the brightest gem set upon the circlet
- of Society,
- A jewel worth a world of pains--a jewel seldom seen.
-
- The third cycle on the waters, another of those rings upon the onyx,
- A further definite broad zone, holdeth kith and kin:
- A motley band of many tribes, and under various banners;
- The intimate and strangers, the known and loved, or only seen for
- loathing:
- Some, dear for their deserts, shall honour and have honour of
- relationship,
- Some, despising duties, will add to it both burden and disgrace.
- A man's nearest kin are oftentimes far other than his dearest,
- Yet in the season of affliction those will haste to help him.
- For, note thou this, the providence of God hath bound up families
- together,
- To mutual aid and patient trial; yea, those ties are strong.
- Friends are ever dearer in thy wealth, but relations to be trusted in thy
- need,
- For these are God's appointed way, and those the choice of man:
- There is lower warmth in kin, but smaller truth in friends,
- The latter show more surface, and the first have more of depth:
- Relations rally to the rescue, even in estrangement and neglect,
- Where friends will have fled at thy defeat, even after promises and
- kindness;
- For friends come and go, the whim that bound may loose them,
- But none can dissever a relationship, and Fate hath tied the knot.
-
- Wide, and edged with shadowy bounds, a distant boulevard to the city,
- The common crowd of social life is buzzing round about:
- That is as the outer court, with all defences levelled,
- Ranged around a man's own fortress, and his father's house.
- For many friends go in and out, and praise thee, finding pasture,
- And some are honeycomb to-day, who turn to gall to-morrow:
- And many a garrulous acquaintance with his frequent visit
- Will spend his leisure to thy cost, selling dulness dearly:
- For the idle call is a heavy tax, where time is counted gold,
- And even in the day of relaxation, haply he may spare his presence,--
- He found himself alone, and came to talk,--till they that hear are tired;
- Let the man bethink him of an errand, that his face be not unwelcome.
-
- But many friends there be, both well and wisely greeted,
- Gladly are they hailed upon the hills, and are chidden that they come so
- seldom.
- Of such are the early recollections, school friendships that have thriven
- to grey hairs,
- And veteran men are young once more, and talk of boyish pranks:
- And such, yet older on the list, are those who loved thy father,
- Thy father's friend, and thine, who tendereth thee tried love:
- Such also, many gentle hearts, whom thou hast known too lately,
- Hastening now to learn their worth, and chary of those minutes:
- And such, thy faithful pastor, coming to thy home with peace;--
- Greet the good man heartily,--and bid thy children bless him!
-
- Many thoughts, many thoughts,--who can catch them all?
- The best are ever swiftest winged, the duller lag behind:
- For, behold, in these vast themes, my mind is as a forest of the West,
- And flocking pigeons come in clouds, and bend the groaning branches;
- Here for a rest, then off and away,--they have sped to other climes,
- And leave me to my peace once more, a holiday from thoughts.
- I dare not lure them back, for the mighty subject of Society
- Would tempt to many a hackneyed note in many a weary key:
- Sage warnings, stout advice, experiences ever to be learned,
- The foolish floatiness of vanity, and solemn trumperies of pride,--
- Economy, the poor man's mint,--extravagance, the rich man's pitfall,
- Harmful copings with the better, and empty-headed apings of the worse,
- Circumstance and custom, sympathies, antipathies, diverse kinds of
- conversation,
- Vapid pleasures, the weariness of gaiety, the strife and bustle of the
- world,
- Home comforts, the miseries of style, the cobweb lines of etiquette,
- The hollowness of courtesies, and substance of deceits,--idleness,
- business, and pastime,--
- The multitude of matters to be done, the when, and where, and how,
- And varying shades of character, to do, undo, or miss them,--
- All these, and many more alike, thick converging fancies,
- Flit in throngs about my theme, as honey-bees at even to their hive.
- Find an end, or make one: these seeds are dragon's teeth:
- Sown thoughts grow to things, and fill that field, the world:
- Many wise have gone before, and used the sickle well;
- Who can find a corner now, where none have bound the sheaves?
- So, other some may reap: I do but glean and gather:
- My sorry handful hath been culled after the ripe harvest of Society.
-
-
-OF SOLITUDE.
-
-[Illustration: "W"]
-
- Who hath known his brother,--or found him in his freedom unrestrained?
- Even he, whose hidden glance hath watched his deepest Solitude.
- For we walk the world in domino, putting on characters and habits,
- And wear a social Janus mask, while others stand around:
- I speak not of the hypocrite, nor dream of meant deceptions,
- But of that quick unconscious change, whereof the best know most.
-
- For mind hath its influence on mind; and no man is free but when alone;
- Yea, let a dog be watching thee, its eye will tend to thy restraint:
- Self-possession cannot be so perfect, with another intellect beside thee,
- It is not as a natural result, but rather the educated produce:
- The presence of a second spirit must control thine own,
- And throw it off its equipoise of peace, to balance by an effort.
- The common minds of common men know of this but little;
- What then? they know nothing of themselves: I speak to those who know.
- The consciousness that some are hearing, cometh as a care,
- The sense that some are watching near, bindeth thee to caution;
- And the tree of tender nerves shrinketh as a touched mimosa,
- Drooping like a plant in drought, with half its strength decayed.
- There are antipathies warning from the many, and sympathies drawing to
- the few,
- But merchant-minds have crushed the first, and cannot feel the latter:
- Whereas to the quickened apprehension of a keen and spiritual intellect,
- Antipathies are galling, and sympathies oppress, and solitude is quiet.
-
- He that dwelleth mainly by himself, heedeth most of others,
- But they that live in crowds, think chiefly of themselves.
- There is indeed a selfish seeming, where the anchorite liveth alone,
- But probe his thoughts,--they travel far, dreaming for ever of the world:
- And there is an apparent generosity, when a man mixeth freely with his
- fellows;
- But prove his mind, by day and night, his thoughts are all of self:
- The world, inciting him to pleasures, or relentlessly provoking him to
- toil,
- Is full of anxious rivals, each with a difference of interest;
- So must he plan and practise for himself, even as his own best friend;
- And the gay soul of dissipation never had a thought unselfish.
- The hermit standeth out of strife, abiding in a contemplative calmness;
- What shall he contemplate,--himself? a meagre theme for musing:
- He hath cast off follies, and kept aloof from cares; a man of simple
- wants;
- God and the soul, these are his excuse, a just excuse, for solitude:
- But he carried with him to his cell the half-dead feelings of humanity;
- There were they rested and refreshed; and he yearned once more on men.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Where is the wise, or the learned, or the good, that sought not solitude
- for thinking,
- And from seclusion's secret vale brought forth his precious fruits?
- Forests of Aricia, your deep shade mellowed Numa's wisdom,
- Peaceful gardens of Vaucluse, ye nourished Petrarch's love;
- Solitude made a Cincinnatus, ripening the hero and the patriot,
- And taught De Staël self-knowledge, even in the damp Bastile;
- It fostered the piety of Jerome, matured the labours of Augustine,
- And gave imperial Charles religion for ambition:
- That which Scipio praised, that which Alfred practised,
- Which fired Demosthenes to eloquence, and fed the mind of Milton,
- Which quickened zeal, nurtured genius, found out the secret things of
- science,
- Helped repentance, shamed folly, and comforted the good with peace,--
- By all men just and wise, by all things pure and perfect,
- How truly, Solitude, art thou the fostering nurse of greatness!
-
- Enough;--the theme is vast; sear me these necks of Hydra:
- What shall drive away the thoughts flocking to this carcase?
- Yea,--that all which man may think, hath long been said of Solitude:
- For many wise have proved and preached its evils and its good.
- I cannot add,--I will not steal; enough, for all is spoken:
- Yet heed thou these for practice, and discernment among men.
-
- There are pompous talkers, solemn, oracular, and dull:
- Track them from society to solitude; and there ye find them fools.
- There are light-hearted jesters, taking up with company for pastime;
- How speed they when alone?--serious, wise, and thoughtful.
- And wherefore? both are actors, saving when in solitude,
- There they live their truest life, and all things show sincere:
- But the fool by pomposity of speech striveth to be counted wise,
- And the wise, for holiday and pleasance, playeth with the fool's best
- bauble.
- The solemn seemer, as a rule, will be found more ignorant and shallow
- Than those who laugh both loud and long, content to hide their knowledge.
-
- For thee; seek thou Solitude, but neither in excess, nor morosely;
- Seek her for her precious things, and not of thine own pride.
- For there, separate from a crowd, the still small voice will talk with
- thee,
- Truth's whisper, heard and echoed by responding conscience;
- There, shalt thou gather up the ravelled skeins of feeling,
- And mend the nets of usefulness, and rest awhile for duties;
- There, thou shalt hive thy lore, and eat the fruits of study,
- For Solitude delighteth well to feed on many thoughts:
- There, as thou sittest peaceful, communing with fancy,
- The precious poetry of life shall gild its leaden cares:
- There, as thou walkest by the sea, beneath the gentle stars,
- Many kindling seeds of good will sprout within thy soul;
- Thou shalt weep in Solitude,--thou shalt pray in Solitude,
- Thou shalt sing for joy of heart, and praise the grace of Solitude.
- Pass on, pass on!--for this is the path of wisdom:
- God make thee prosper on the way; I leave thee well with Solitude.
-
-
-RECAPITULATION.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Every beginning is shrouded in a mist, those vague ideas beyond,
- And the traveller setteth on his journey, oppressed with many thoughts,
- Balancing his hopes and fears, and looking for some order in the chaos,
- Some secret path between the cliffs, that seem to bar his way:
- So, he commenceth at a clue, unravelling its tangled skein,
- And boldly speedeth on to thread the labyrinth before him.
- Then as he gropeth in the darkness, light is attendant on his steps,
- He walketh straight in fervent faith, and difficulties vanish at his
- presence;
- The very flashing of his sword scattereth those shadowy foes;
- Confident and sanguine of success, he goeth forth conquering and to
- conquer.
-
- Every middle is burdened with a weariness,--to have to go as far again,--
- And Diligence is sick at heart, and Enterprise foot-sore:
- That which began in zeal, bursting as a fresh-dug spring,
- Goeth on doggedly in toil, and hath no help of nature:
- Then, is need of moral might, to wrestle with the animal re-action,
- Still to fight, with few men left, and still though faint pursuing.
- The middle is a marshy flat, whereon the wheels go heavily,
- With clouds of doubt above, and ruts of discouragement below:
- Press on, sturdy traveller, yet a league, and yet a league!
- While every step is binding wings on thy victorious feet.
-
- Every end is happiness, the glorious consummation of design,
- The perils past, the fears annulled, the journey at its close:
- And the traveller resteth in complacency, home-returned at last:
- Work done may claim its wages, the goal gained hath won its prize:
- While the labour lasted, while the race was running,
- Many-times the sinews ached, and half refused the struggle:
- But now, all is quietness, a pleasant hour given to repose;
- Calmness in the retrospect of good, and calmness in the prospect of a
- blessing.
- Hope was glad in the beginning, and fear was sad midway,
- But sweet fruition cometh in the end, a harvest safe and sure.
- That which is, can never not have been: facts are solid as the pyramids:
- A thing done is written in the rock, yea, with a pen of iron.
- Uncertainty no more can scare, the proof is seen complete,
- Nor accident render unaccomplished, for the deed is finished.
- Thus the end shall crown the work, with grace, grace, unto the top-stone,
- And the work shall triumph in its crown, with peace, peace, unto the
- builder.
-
- I have written, as other some of old, in quaint and meaning phrase,
- Of many things for either world, a crowd of facts and fancies:
- And will ye judge me, men of mind?--judge in kindly calmness;
- For bitter words of haste or hate have often been repented.
- Deep dreaming upon surface reading; imagery crowded over argument;
- Order less considered in the multitude of thoughts: this witnessing is
- just.
- Scripture gave the holier themes, the well-turned words and wisdom;
- While Fancy on her swallow's wing skimmed those deeper waters.
- And wilt thou say with shrewdness,--He hath burnished up old truths,
- But where he seemed to fashion new, the novelty was false?
- Alas, for us in these last days, our elders reaped the harvest:
- Alas, for all men in all times, who glean so many tares!
- That which is true, how should it be new? for time is old in years:
- That which is new, how should it be true? for I am young in wisdom:
- Nevertheless, I have spoken at my best, according to the mercies given me,
- Of high, and deep, and famous things, of Evil, or of Good.
- I have told of Errors near akin to Truth, and wholesomes linked with
- poison;
- Of subtle Uses in the humblest, and the deep laid plots of Pride:
- I have praised Wisdom, comforted thy Hope, and proved to thee the folly
- of Complainings;
- Hinted at the hazard of an Influence, and turned thee from the terrors of
- Ambition.
- I have shown thee thy captivity to Law: yet bade thee hide Humilities;
- I have lifted the curtains of Memory; and smoothed the soft pillow of
- Rest.
- Experience had his sober hour; and Character its keen appreciation;
- And holy Anger stood sublime, where Hatred fell condemned.
- Prayer spake the mind of God, even in His own good words:
- And Zeal, with kindness warmly mixt, allied him to Discretion.
- I taught thee that nothing is a Trifle, even to the laugh of Recreation;
- I led thee with the Train of Religion, to be dazzled at the name of the
- Triune.
- Thought confessed his unseen fears; and Speech declared his triumphs;
- I sang the blessedness of books; and commended the prudence of a letter:
- Riches found their room, either unto honour--or despising:
- Inventions took their lower place, for all things come of God.
- I scorned Ridicule; nor would humble me for Praise; for I had gained
- Self-knowledge;
- And pleaded fervently for Brutes, who suffer for man's sin.
- Then, I rose to Friendship; and bathed in all the tenderness of Love;
- Knew the purity of Marriage; and blest the face of Children.
- And whereas, by petulance or pride, I had haply said some evil,
- Mine after-thought was Tolerance, to bear the faults of all:
- Many faults, ill to bear, bred the theme of Sorrow;
- Many virtues, dear to see, induced the gush of Joy.
-
- Thus, for awhile, as leaving thee in joy, was I loth to break that spell;
- I roamed to other things and thoughts, and fashioned other books.
- But in a season of reflection, after many days,
- A thought stood before me in its garment of the past,--and lo, a legion
- with it!
- They came in thronging bands,--I could not fight nor fly them,--
- And so they took me to their tent, the prisoner of thoughts.
-
- Then, I bade thee greet me well, and heed my cheerful counsels;
- For every day we have a Friend, who changeth not with time.
- Gladly did I speak of my commission, for I felt it graven on my heart,
- And could not hold my wiser peace, but magnified mine office.
- Mystery had left her echoes in my mind, and I discoursed her secret:
- And thence I turned aside to man, and judged him for his Gifts.
- Beauty, noble thesis, had a world of sweets to sing of,
- And dated all her praise from God, the birthday of the soul.
- Thence grew Fame; and Flattery came like Agag;
- But this was as the nauseous dregs, of that inspiring cup:
- Forth from Flattery sprang in opposition harsh and dull Neglect;
- And kind Contentment's gentle face to smile away the sadness.
- Life, all buoyancy and light, and Death, that sullen silence,
- Sped the soul to Immortality, the final home of man.
- Then, in metaphysical review, passed a triple troop,
- Swift Ideas, sounding Names, and heavily armed Things:
- Faith spake of her achievements even among men her brethren;
- And Honesty, with open mouth, would vindicate himself:
- The retrospect of Social life had many truths to tell of,
- And then I left thee to thy Solitude, learning there of Wisdom.
-
- Friend and scholar, lover of the right, mine equal kind companion,--
- I prize indeed thy favour, and these sympathies are dear:
- Still, if thy heart be little with me, wot thou well, my brother,
- I canvass not the smiles of praise, nor dread the frowns of censure.
- Through many themes in many thoughts, have we held sweet converse;
- But God alone be praised for mind! He only is sufficient,
- And every thought in every theme by prayer had been established:
- Who then should fear the face of man, when God hath answered prayer?--
- I speak it not in arrogance of heart, but humbly as of justice,
- I think it not in vanity of soul, but tenderly, for gratitude,--
- God hath blest my mind, and taught it many truths:
- And I have echoed some to thee, in weakness, yet sincerely:
- Yea, though ignorance and error shall have marred those lessons of His
- teaching,
- I stand in mine own Master's praise, or fall to His reproof.
- If thou lovest, help me with thy blessing; if otherwise, mine shall be
- for thee;
- If thou approvest, heed my words; if otherwise, in kindness be my teacher.
- Many mingled thoughts for self have warped my better aim;
- Many motives tempted still, to toil for pride or praise:
- Alas, I have loved pride and praise, like others worse or worthier;
- But hate and fear them now, as snakes that fastened on my hand:
- Scævola burnt both hand and crime; but Paul flung the viper on the fire:
- He shook it off, and felt no harm: so be it! I renounce them.
- Rebuke then, if thou wilt rebuke,--but neither hastily nor harshly;
- Or, if thou wilt commend, be it honestly, of right: I work for God and
- good.
-
-
-[Illustration: The End of the Second Series]
-
-
-
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-BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
-
-
-
-
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-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Apparent typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-Hyphenation has been made consistent.
-
-"OE" and "oe" ligatures have been removed.
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Proverbial Philosophy, by Martin F. Tupper</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Proverbial Philosophy</p>
-<p> The First and Second Series</p>
-<p>Author: Martin F. Tupper</p>
-<p>Release Date: September 27, 2015 [eBook #50064]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Chris Pinfield,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="tnote">
-<p>Transcriber's Note.</p>
-
-<p>The captions of the illustrations do not include lines that form part of
-the poem or the titles of individual sections. These are reproduced in the
-poem itself.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations embodying the initial letter of a stanza, that
-extend down and across the page, have been truncated so as to fit to the
-left of the stanza while retaining the initial letter.</p>
-</div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="299" height="386" alt="" src="images/image01r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="front">
-
-<h1>PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY.</h1>
-
-<p>(THE FIRST AND SECOND SERIES.)</p>
-
-<p class="x-small">BY</p>
-
-<p>MARTIN F. TUPPER, M.A., D.C.L., F.R.S.,<br />
-<span class="x-small">OF CHRISTCHURCH, OXFORD.</span></p>
-
-<p><i>ILLUSTRATED.</i></p>
-
-<p>A NEW EDITION.</p>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="70" height="71" alt="" src="images/image03ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<p>LONDON:<br />
- EDWARD MOXON &amp; CO., DOVER STREET.<br />
- 1867.</p>
-
-<p class="x-small">LONDON:<br />
-BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table class="toc-toi" summary="table of contents">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="series" colspan="2">FIRST SERIES.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="loc"><span class="x-small smcap">PAGE</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Prefatory</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">The Words of Wisdom</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Truth in Things False</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Anticipation</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Hidden Uses</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Compensation</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Indirect Influences</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Memory</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">The Dream of Ambition</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Subjection</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Rest</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Humility</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Pride</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Experience</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Estimating Character</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Hatred and Anger</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Good in Things Evil</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Prayer</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">The Lord's Prayer</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Discretion</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Trifles</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Recreation</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">The Train of Religion</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of a Trinity</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Thinking</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Speaking</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Reading</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Writing</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Wealth</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Invention</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Ridicule</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Commendation</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Self-acquaintance</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Cruelty to Animals</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Friendship</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Love</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Marriage</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Education</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Tolerance</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Sorrow</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Joy</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="series" colspan="2">SECOND SERIES.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Introductory</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Cheerfulness</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Yesterday</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of To-day</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of To-morrow</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Authorship</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Mystery</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Gifts</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Beauty</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Fame</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Flattery</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Neglect</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Contentment</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Life</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Death</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Immortality</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_297">297</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Ideas</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Names</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Things</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_327">327</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Faith</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_331">331</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Honesty</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_341">341</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Society</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_348">348</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Of Solitude</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_357">357</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smcap">Recapitulation</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_362">362</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-<table class="toc-toi" summary="list of illustrations">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="series" colspan="4">FIRST SERIES.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="smcap center">Designer.</td>
- <td class="smcap center">Engraver.</td>
- <td class="loc"><span class="x-small smcap">PAGE</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Title Page</td>
- <td class="smcap">Gustave Doré.</td>
- <td><i>W. J. Linton.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Floral Title</td>
- <td class="smcap">H. N. Humphreys.</td>
- <td><i>J. Swain.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Prefatory</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>The Words of Wisdom</td>
- <td class="smcap">H. N. Humphreys.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Memory and Diligence</td>
- <td class="smcap">M. F. Tupper.</td>
- <td><i>W. J. Green.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Truth in Things False</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Gilbert.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Anticipation</td>
- <td class="smcap">T. Dalziel.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Hidden Uses</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. Duncan.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">B. Foster.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Compensation</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Indirect Influences</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">G. Dodgson.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">W. Severn.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Memory</td>
- <td class="smcap">W. L. Leitch.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">B. Foster.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>The Dream of Ambition</td>
- <td class="smcap">M. F. Tupper.</td>
- <td><i>W. J. Green.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Subjection</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Subjection</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Rest</td>
- <td class="smcap">M. F. Tupper.</td>
- <td><i>W. J. Green.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Humility</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. C. Horsley.</td>
- <td><i>J. Thompson.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Pride</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Experience</td>
- <td class="smcap">T. Dalziel.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Estimating Character</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Hatred and Anger</td>
- <td class="smcap">C. W. Cope, R.A.</td>
- <td><i>S. Williams.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Good in Things Evil</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Gilbert.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Prayer</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. C. Horsley.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>The Lord's Prayer</td>
- <td class="smcap">C. W. Cope, R.A.</td>
- <td><i>S. Williams.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Discretion</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Recreation</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. Duncan.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>The Train of Religion</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Thinking</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Speaking</td>
- <td class="smcap">G. Dodgson.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Writing</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Wealth</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Gilbert.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Invention</td>
- <td class="smcap">B. Foster.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Ridicule</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Godwin.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Self-Acquaintance</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Gilbert.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Cruelty to Animals</td>
- <td class="smcap">W. Harvey.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Love</td>
- <td class="smcap">H. N. Humphreys.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Marriage</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Severn.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Education</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Severn.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Sorrow</td>
- <td class="smcap">C. W. Cope, R.A.</td>
- <td><i>W. J. Green.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Joy</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="series" colspan="4">SECOND SERIES.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Title Page</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Introductory</td>
- <td class="smcap">H. N. Humphreys.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Yesterday</td>
- <td class="smcap">B. Foster.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of To-morrow</td>
- <td class="smcap">F. R. Pickersgill, A.R.A.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_206">206</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Mystery</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Gilbert.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Beauty</td>
- <td class="smcap">B. Foster.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Fame</td>
- <td class="smcap">F. R. Pickersgill, A.R.A.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Neglect</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Contentment</td>
- <td class="smcap">B. Foster.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Death</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Severn.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Names</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Gilbert.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Faith</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Tenniel.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_331">331</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="smcap">W. Severn.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Society</td>
- <td class="smcap">E. H. Corbould.</td>
- <td><i>Dalziel Brs.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_352">352</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Of Solitude</td>
- <td class="smcap">J. Severn.</td>
- <td><i>H. Vizetelly.</i></td>
- <td class="loc"><a href="#Page_359">359</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="initial">
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td>{ <i>H. Vizetelly</i></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="initial">
- <td>Initial Letters</td>
- <td class="smcap">H. N. Humphreys.</td>
- <td>{ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>and</i></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="initial">
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td>{ <i>J. Swain.</i></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">{1}</a></span></div>
-
-<h2>FIRST SERIES.</h2>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="271" height="369" alt="" src="images/image04r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>PREFATORY.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Thoughts,</span> that have tarried in my mind, and peopled its inner chambers,</p>
- <p>The sober children of reason, or desultory train of fancy;</p>
- <p>Clear running wine of conviction, with the scum and the lees of speculation;</p>
- <p>Corn from the sheaves of science, with stubble from mine own garner:</p>
- <p>Searchings after Truth, that have tracked her secret lodes,</p>
- <p>And come up again to the surface-world, with a knowledge grounded deeper;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">{2}</a></span>
- <p>Arguments of high scope, that have soared to the key-stone of heaven,</p>
- <p>And thence have swooped to their certain mark, as the falcon to its quarry;</p>
- <p>The fruits I have gathered of prudence, the ripened harvest of my musings,</p>
- <p>These commend I unto thee, O docile scholar of Wisdom,</p>
- <p>These I give to thy gentle heart, thou lover of the right.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">What,</span> though a guilty man renew that hallowed theme,</p>
- <p>And strike with feebler hand the harp of Sirach's son?</p>
- <p>What, though a youthful tongue take up that ancient parable,</p>
- <p>And utter faintly forth dark sayings as of old?</p>
- <p>Sweet is the virgin honey, though the wild bee have stored it in a reed,</p>
- <p>And bright the jewelled band, that circleth an Ethiop's arm;</p>
- <p>Pure are the grains of gold in the turbid stream of Ganges,</p>
- <p>And fair the living flowers, that spring from the dull cold sod.</p>
- <p>Wherefore, thou gentle student, bend thine ear to my speech,</p>
- <p>For I also am as thou art; our hearts can commune together:</p>
- <p>To meanest matters will I stoop, for mean is the lot of mortal;</p>
- <p>I will rise to noblest themes, for the soul hath an heritage of glory:</p>
- <p>The passions of puny man; the majestic characters of God;</p>
- <p>The feverish shadows of time, and the mighty substance of eternity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Commend</span> thy mind unto candour, and grudge not as though thou hadst a teacher,</p>
- <p>Nor scorn angelic Truth for the sake of her evil herald;</p>
- <p>Heed not him, but hear his words, and care not whence they come;</p>
- <p>The viewless winds might whisper them, the billows roar them forth,</p>
- <p>The mean unconscious sedge sigh them in the ear of evening,</p>
- <p>Or the mind of pride conceive, and the mouth of folly speak them.</p>
- <p>Lo now, I stand not forth laying hold on spear and buckler,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">{3}</a></span>
- <p>I come a man of peace, to comfort, not to combat;</p>
- <p>With soft persuasive speech to charm thy patient ear,</p>
- <p>Giving the hand of fellowship, acknowledging the heart of sympathy:</p>
- <p>Let us walk together as friends in the shaded paths of meditation,</p>
- <p>Nor Judgment set his seal until he hath poised his balance;</p>
- <p>That the chastenings of mild reproof may meet unwitting error,</p>
- <p>And Charity not be a stranger at the board that is spread for brothers.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="193" height="192" alt="" src="images/image05ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">{4}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="270" height="367" alt="" src="images/image06r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>THE WORDS OF WISDOM.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Few</span> and precious are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter:</p>
- <p>To what shall their rarity be likened? What price shall count their worth?</p>
- <p>Perfect and much to be desired, and giving joy with riches,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">{5}</a></span>
- <p>No lovely thing on earth can picture all their beauty.</p>
- <p>They be chance pearls, flung among the rocks by the sullen waters of Oblivion,</p>
- <p>Which Diligence loveth to gather, and hang around the neck of Memory;</p>
- <p>They be white-winged seeds of happiness, wafted from the islands of the blessed,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">{6}</a></span>
- <p>Which Thought carefully tendeth, in the kindly garden of the heart;</p>
- <p>They be sproutings of an harvest for eternity, bursting through the tilth of time,</p>
- <p>Green promise of the golden wheat, that yieldeth angels' food;</p>
- <p>They be drops of the crystal dew, which the wings of seraphs scatter,</p>
- <p>When on some brighter sabbath, their plumes quiver most with delight:</p>
- <p>Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="225" height="230" alt="" src="images/image07ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> more, for the half is not said, of their might, and dignity, and value;</p>
- <p>For life-giving be they and glorious, redolent of sanctity and heaven:</p>
- <p>As fumes of hallowed incense, that veil the throne of the Most High;</p>
- <p>As beaded bubbles that sparkle on the rim of the cup of immortality;</p>
- <p>As wreaths of the rainbow spray, from the pure cataracts of truth:</p>
- <p>Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> once again, loving student, suffer the praises of thy teacher,</p>
- <p>For verily the sun of the mind, and the life of the heart is Wisdom:</p>
- <p>She is pure and full of light, crowning grey hairs with lustre,</p>
- <p>And kindling the eye of youth with a fire not its own;</p>
- <p>And her words, whereunto canst thou liken them? for earth cannot show their peers:</p>
- <p>They be grains of the diamond sand, the radiant floor of heaven,</p>
- <p>Rising in sunny dust behind the chariot of God;</p>
- <p>They be flashes of the dayspring from on high, shed from the windows of the skies;</p>
- <p>They be streams of living waters, fresh from the fountain of Intelligence:</p>
- <p>Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> these shall guide thee well, and guard thee on thy way;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">{7}</a></span>
- <p>And wanting all beside, with these shalt thou be rich:</p>
- <p>Though all around be woe, these shall make thee happy;</p>
- <p>Though all within be pain, these shall bring thee health:</p>
- <p>Thy good shall grow into ripeness, thine evil wither and decay,</p>
- <p>And Wisdom's words shall sweetly charm thy doubtful into virtues:</p>
- <p>Meanness shall then be frugal care; where shame was, thou art modest;</p>
- <p>Cowardice riseth into caution, rashness is sobered into courage;</p>
- <p>The wrathful spirit, rendering a reason, standeth justified in anger;</p>
- <p>The idle hand hath fair excuse, propping the thoughtful forehead.</p>
- <p>Life shall have no labyrinth but thy steps can track it,</p>
- <p>For thou hast a silken clue, to lead thee through the darkness:</p>
- <p>The rampant Minotaur of ignorance shall perish at thy coming,</p>
- <p>And thine enfranchised fellows hail thy white victorious sails.</p>
- <p>Wherefore, friend and scholar, hear the words of Wisdom;</p>
- <p>Whether she speaketh to thy soul in the full chords of revelation;</p>
- <p>In the teaching earth, or air, or sea; in the still melodies of thought;</p>
- <p>Or, haply, in the humbler strains that would detain thee here.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">{8}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="225" height="157" alt="" src="images/image08ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="72" height="147" alt="" src="images/image08cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Error</span>
- is a hardy plant; it flourisheth in every soil;</p>
- <p>In the heart of the wise and good, alike with the wicked and foolish.</p>
- <p>For there is no error so crooked, but it hath in it some lines of truth:</p>
- <p>Nor is any poison so deadly, that it serveth not some wholesome use:</p>
- <p>And the just man, enamoured of the right, is blinded by the speciousness of wrong;</p>
- <p>And the prudent, perceiving an advantage, is content to overlook the harm.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></span>
- <p>On all things created remaineth the half-effaced signature of God,</p>
- <p>Somewhat of fair and good, though blotted by the finger of corruption:</p>
- <p>And if error cometh in like a flood, it mixeth with streams of truth;</p>
- <p>And the Adversary loveth to have it so, for thereby many are decoyed.</p>
- <p>Providence is dark in its permissions; yet one day, when all is known,</p>
- <p>The universe of reason shall acknowledge how just and good were they;</p>
- <p>For the wise man leaneth on his wisdom, and the righteous trusteth to his righteousness,</p>
- <p>And those, who thirst for independence, are suffered to drink of disappointment.</p>
- <p>Wherefore?&mdash;to prove and humble them; and to teach the idolaters of Truth,</p>
- <p>That it is but the ladder unto Him, on whom only they should trust.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is truth in the wildest scheme that imaginative heat hath engendered,</p>
- <p>And a man may gather somewhat from the crudest theories of fancy:</p>
- <p>The alchymist laboureth in folly, but catcheth chance gleams of wisdom,</p>
- <p>And findeth out many inventions, though his crucible breed not gold;</p>
- <p>The sinner, toying with witchcraft, thinketh to delude his fellows,</p>
- <p>But there be very spirits of evil, and what if they come at his bidding?</p>
- <p>He is a bold bad man who dareth to tamper with the dead;</p>
- <p>For their whereabout lieth in a mystery&mdash;that vestibule leading to Eternity,</p>
- <p>The waiting-room for unclad ghosts, before the presence-chamber of their King:</p>
- <p>Mind may act upon mind, though bodies be far divided;</p>
- <p>For the life is in the blood, but souls communicate unseen:</p>
- <p>And the heat of an excited intellect, radiating to its fellows,</p>
- <p>Doth kindle dry leaves afar off, while the green wood around it is unwarmed.</p>
- <p>The dog may have a spirit, as well as his brutal master;</p>
- <p>A spirit to live in happiness: for why should he be robbed of his existence?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></span>
- <p>Hath he not a conscience of evil, a glimmer of moral sense,</p>
- <p>Love and hatred, courage and fear, and visible shame and pride?</p>
- <p>There may be a future rest for the patient victims of the cruel;</p>
- <p>And a season allotted for their bliss, to compensate for unjust suffering.</p>
- <p>Spurn not at seeming error, but dig below its surface for the truth;</p>
- <p>And beware of seeming truths, that grow on the roots of error:</p>
- <p>For comely are the apples that spring from the Dead Sea's cursed shore,</p>
- <p>But within are they dust and ashes, and the hand that plucked them shall rue it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A frequent</span> similar effect argueth a constant cause:</p>
- <p>Yet who hath counted the links that bind an omen to its issue?</p>
- <p>Who hath expounded the law that rendereth calamities gregarious,</p>
- <p>Pressing down with yet more woes the heavy-laden mourner?</p>
- <p>Who knoweth wherefore a monsoon should swell the sails of the prosperous,</p>
- <p>Blithely speeding on their course the children of good luck?</p>
- <p>Who hath companied a vision from the horn or ivory gate?</p>
- <p>Or met another's mind in his, and explained its presence?</p>
- <p>There is a secret somewhat in antipathies; and love is more than fancy;</p>
- <p>Yea, and a palpable notice warneth of an instant danger;</p>
- <p>For the soul hath its feelers, cobwebs floating on the wind,</p>
- <p>That catch events in their approach with sure and apt presentiment;</p>
- <p>So that some halo of attraction heraldeth a coming friend,</p>
- <p>Investing in his likeness the stranger that passed on before;</p>
- <p>And while the word is in thy mouth, behold thy word fulfilled,</p>
- <p>And he of whom we spake can answer for himself.</p>
- <p>O man, little hast thou learnt of truth in things most true,</p>
- <p>How therefore shall thy blindness wot of truth in things most false?</p>
- <p>Thou hast not yet perceived the causes of life or motion,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span>
- <p>How then canst thou define the subtle sympathies of mind?</p>
- <p>For the spirit, sharpest and strongest when disease hath rent the body,</p>
- <p>Hath welcomed kindred spirits in nightly visitations,</p>
- <p>Or learnt from restless ghosts dark secrets of the living,</p>
- <p>And helped slow justice to her prey by the dreadful teaching of a dream.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Verily,</span> there is nothing so true, that the damps of error have not warped it;</p>
- <p>Verily, there is nothing so false, that a sparkle of truth is not in it.</p>
- <p>For the enemy, the father of lies, the giant Upas of creation,</p>
- <p>Whose deadly shade hath blasted this once green garden of the Lord,</p>
- <p>Can but pervert the good, but may not create the evil;</p>
- <p>He destroyeth, but cannot build; for he is not antagonist deity:</p>
- <p>Mighty is his stolen power, yet is he a creature and a subject;</p>
- <p>Not a maker of abstract wrong, but a spoiler of concrete right:</p>
- <p>The fiend hath not a royal crown; he is but a prowling robber,</p>
- <p>Suffered, for some mysterious end, to haunt the King's highway;</p>
- <p>And the keen sword he beareth, once was a simple ploughshare;</p>
- <p>Yea, and his panoply of error is but a distortion of the truth:</p>
- <p>The sickle that once reaped righteousness, beaten from its useful curve,</p>
- <p>With axe, and spike, and bar, headeth the marauder's halbert.</p>
- <p>Seek not further, O man, to solve the dark riddle of sin;</p>
- <p>Suffice it, that thine own bad heart is to thee thine origin of evil.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="239" height="178" alt="" src="images/image09ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF ANTICIPATION.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Thou</span> hast seen many sorrows, travel-stained pilgrim of the world,</p>
- <p>But that which hath vexed thee most hath been the looking for evil;</p>
- <p>And though calamities have crossed thee, and misery been heaped on thy head,</p>
- <p>Yet ills, that never happened, have chiefly made thee wretched.</p>
- <p>The sting of pain and the edge of pleasure are blunted by long expectation,</p>
- <p>For the gall and the balm alike are diluted in the waters of patience:</p>
- <p>And often thou sippest sweetness, ere the cup is dashed from thy lip;</p>
- <p>Or drainest the gall of fear, while evil is passing by thy dwelling.</p>
- <p>A man too careful of danger liveth in continual torment,</p>
- <p>But a cheerful expecter of the best hath a fountain of joy within him:</p>
- <p>Yea, though the breath of disappointment should chill the sanguine heart,</p>
- <p>Speedily gloweth it again, warmed by the live embers of hope;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
- <p>Though the black and heavy surge close above the head for a moment,</p>
- <p>Yet the happy buoyancy of Confidence riseth superior to Despair.</p>
- <p>Verily, evils may be courted, may be wooed and won by distrust:</p>
- <p>For the wise Physician of our weal loveth not an unbelieving spirit;</p>
- <p>And to those giveth He good, who rely on His hand for good;</p>
- <p>And those leaveth He to evil, who fear, but trust Him not.</p>
- <p>Ask for good, and hope it, for the ocean of good is fathomless;</p>
- <p>Ask for good, and have it, for thy Friend would see thee happy;</p>
- <p>But to the timid heart, to the child of unbelief and dread,</p>
- <p>That leaneth on his own weak staff, and trusteth the sight of his eyes,</p>
- <p>The evil he feared shall come, for the soil is ready for the seed,</p>
- <p>And suspicion hath coldly put aside the hand that was ready to help him.</p>
- <p>Therefore look up, sad spirit; be strong, thou coward heart,</p>
- <p>Or fear will make thee wretched, though evil follow not behind:</p>
- <p>Cease to anticipate misfortune; there are still many chances of escape;</p>
- <p>But if it come, be courageous; face it, and conquer thy calamity.</p>
- <p>There is not an enemy so stout, as to storm and take the fortress of the mind,</p>
- <p>Unless its infirmity turn traitor, and Fear unbar the gates.</p>
- <p>The valiant standeth as a rock, and the billows break upon him;</p>
- <p>The timorous is a skiff unmoored, tost and mocked at by a ripple:</p>
- <p>The valiant holdeth fast to good, till evil wrench it from him;</p>
- <p>The timorous casteth it aside, to meet the worst half way:</p>
- <p>Yet oftentimes is evil but a braggart, that provoketh and will not fight;</p>
- <p>Or the feint of a subtle fencer, who measureth his thrust elsewhere:</p>
- <p>Or perchance a blessing in a masque, sent to try thy trust,</p>
- <p>The precious smiting of a friend, whose frowns are all in love:</p>
- <p>Often the storm threateneth, but is driven to other climes,</p>
- <p>And the weak hath quailed in fear, while the firm hath been glad in his confidence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="228" height="121" alt="" src="images/image10ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF HIDDEN USES.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="82" height="164" alt="" src="images/image10cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">The</span>
- sea-wort floating on the waves, or rolled up high along the shore,</p>
- <p>Ye counted useless and vile, heaping on it names of contempt:</p>
- <p>Yet hath it gloriously triumphed, and man been humbled in his ignorance,</p>
- <p>For health is in the freshness of its savour, and it cumbereth the beach with wealth;</p>
- <p>Comforting the tossings of pain with its violet-tinctured essence,</p>
- <p>And by its humbler ashes enriching many proud.</p>
- <p>Be this, then, a lesson to thy soul, that thou reckon nothing worthless,</p>
- <p>Because thou heedest not its use, nor knowest the virtues thereof.</p>
- <p>And herein, as thou walkest by the sea, shall weeds be a type and an earnest</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></span>
- <p>Of the stored and uncounted riches lying hid in all creatures of God:</p>
- <p>There be flowers making glad the desert, and roots fattening the soil,</p>
- <p>And jewels in the secret deep, scattered among groves of coral,</p>
- <p>And comforts to crown all wishes, and aids unto every need,</p>
- <p>Influences yet unthought, and virtues, and many inventions,</p>
- <p>And uses above and around, which man hath not yet regarded.</p>
- <p>Not long to charm away disease hath the crocus yielded up its bulb,</p>
- <p>Nor the willow lent its bark, nor the nightshade its vanquished poison;</p>
- <p>Not long hath the twisted leaf, the fragrant gift of China,</p>
- <p>Nor that nutritious root, the boon of far Peru,</p>
- <p>Nor the many-coloured dahlia, nor the gorgeous flaunting cactus,</p>
- <p>Nor the multitude of fruits and flowers, ministered to life and luxury:</p>
- <p>Even so, there be virtues yet unknown in the wasted foliage of the elm,</p>
- <p>In the sun-dried harebell of the downs, and the hyacinth drinking in the meadow,</p>
- <p>In the sycamore's winged fruit, and the facet-cut cones of the cedar;</p>
- <p>And the pansy and bright geranium live not alone for beauty,</p>
- <p>Nor the waxen flower of the arbute, though it dieth in a day,</p>
- <p>Nor the sculptured crest of the fir, unseen but by the stars;</p>
- <p>And the meanest weed of the garden serveth unto many uses,</p>
- <p>The salt tamarisk, and juicy flag, the freckled orchis, and the daisy.</p>
- <p>The world may laugh at famine, when forest-trees yield bread,</p>
- <p>When acorns give out fragrant drink, and the sap of the linden is as fatness:</p>
- <p>For every green herb, from the lotus to the darnel,</p>
- <p>Is rich with delicate aids to help incurious man.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Still,</span> Mind is up and stirring, and pryeth in the corners of contrivance,</p>
- <p>Often from the dark recesses picking out bright seeds of truth:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span>
- <p>Knowledge hath clipped the lightning's wings, and mewed it up for a purpose,</p>
- <p>Training to some domestic task the fiery bird of heaven;</p>
- <p>Tamed is the spirit of the storm, to slave in all peaceful arts,</p>
- <p>To walk with husbandry and science; to stand in the vanguard against death:</p>
- <p>And the chemist balanceth his elements with more than magic skill,</p>
- <p>Commanding stones that they be bread, and draining sweetness out of wormwood.</p>
- <p>Yet man, heedless of a God, counteth up vain reckonings,</p>
- <p>Fearing to be jostled and starved out, by the too prolific increase of his kind;</p>
- <p>And asketh, in unbelieving dread, for how few years to come</p>
- <p>Will the black cellars of the world yield unto him fuel for his winter.</p>
- <p>Might not the wide waste sea be pent within narrower bounds?</p>
- <p>Might not the arm of diligence make the tangled wilderness a garden?</p>
- <p>And for aught thou canst tell, there may be a thousand methods</p>
- <p>Of comforting thy limbs in warmth, though thou kindle not a spark.</p>
- <p>Fear not, son of man, for thyself nor thy seed:&mdash;with a multitude is plenty;</p>
- <p>God's blessing giveth increase, and with it larger than enough.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Search</span> out the wisdom of nature, there is depth in all her doings;</p>
- <p>She seemeth prodigal of power, yet her rules are the maxims of frugality:</p>
- <p>The plant refresheth the air, and the earth filtereth the water,</p>
- <p>And dews are sucked into the cloud, dropping fatness on the world:</p>
- <p>She hath, on a mighty scale, a general use for all things;</p>
- <p>Yet hath she specially for each its microscopic purpose:</p>
- <p>There is use in the prisoned air, that swelleth the pods of the laburnum;</p>
- <p>Design in the venomed thorns, that sentinel the leaves of the nettle;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
- <p>A final cause for the aromatic gum, that congealeth the moss around a rose:</p>
- <p>A reason for each blade of grass, that reareth its small spire.</p>
- <p>How knoweth discontented man what a train of ills might follow,</p>
- <p>If the lowest menial of nature knew not her secret office?</p>
- <p>If the thistle never sprang up to mock the loose husbandry of indolence,</p>
- <p>Or the pestilence never swept away an unknown curse from among men?</p>
- <p>Would ye crush the buzzing myriads that float on the breath of evening?</p>
- <p>Would ye trample the creatures of God that people the rotting fruit?</p>
- <p>Would ye suffer no mildew forest to stain the unhealthy wall,</p>
- <p>Nor a noisome savour to exhale from the pool that breedeth disease?</p>
- <p>Pain is useful unto man, for it teacheth him to guard his life,</p>
- <p>And the fetid vapours of the fen warn him to fly from danger:</p>
- <p>And the meditative mind, looking on, winneth good food for its hunger,</p>
- <p>Seeing the wholesome root bring forth a poisonous berry;</p>
- <p>For otherwhile falleth it out that truth, driven to extremities,</p>
- <p>Yieldeth bitter folly as the spoilt fruit of wisdom.</p>
- <p>O, blinded is thine eye, if it see not just aptitude in all things:</p>
- <p>O, frozen is thy heart, if it glow not with gratitude for all things:</p>
- <p>In the perfect circle of creation not an atom could be spared,</p>
- <p>From earth's magnetic zone to the bindweed round a hawthorn.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> sage, and the beetle at his feet, hath each a ministration to perform:</p>
- <p>The briar and the palm have the wages of life, rendering secret service.</p>
- <p>Neither is it thus alone with the definite existences of matter;</p>
- <p>But motion and sound, circumstance and quality, yea, all things have their office.</p>
- <p>The zephyr playing with an aspen-leaf,&mdash;the earthquake that rendeth a continent;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</a></span>
- <p>The moon-beam silvering a ruined arch,&mdash;the desert-wave dashing up a pyramid;</p>
- <p>The thunder of jarring icebergs,&mdash;the stops of a shepherd's pipe;</p>
- <p>The howl of the tiger in the glen,&mdash;and the wood-dove calling to her mate;</p>
- <p>The vulture's cruel rage,&mdash;the grace of the stately swan;</p>
- <p>The fierceness looking from the lynx's eye, and the dull stupor of the sloth:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
- <p>To these, and to all, is there added each its <small>USE</small>, though man considereth it lightly;</p>
- <p>For Power hath ordained nothing which Economy saw not needful.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="229" height="271" alt="" src="images/image11ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">All</span> things being are in concord with the ubiquity of God;</p>
- <p>Neither is there one thing overmuch, nor freed from honourable servitude.</p>
- <p>Were there not a need-be of wisdom, nothing would be as it is;</p>
- <p>For essence without necessity argueth a moral weakness.</p>
- <p>We look through a glass darkly, we catch but glimpses of truth;</p>
- <p>But, doubtless, the sailing of a cloud hath Providence to its pilot,</p>
- <p>Doubtless, the root of an oak is gnarled for a special purpose,</p>
- <p>The foreknown station of a rush is as fixed as the station of a king,</p>
- <p>And chaff from the hand of the winnower, steered as the stars in their courses.</p>
- <p>Man liveth only in himself, but the Lord liveth in all things;</p>
- <p>And His pervading unity quickeneth the whole creation.</p>
- <p>Man doeth one thing at once, nor can he think two thoughts together;</p>
- <p>But God compasseth all things, mantling the globe like air:</p>
- <p>And we render homage to His wisdom, seeing use in all His creatures,</p>
- <p>For, perchance, the universe would die, were not all things as they are.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="233" height="314" alt="" src="images/image12r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF COMPENSATION.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="79" height="140" alt="" src="images/image13cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Equal</span>
- is the government of heaven in allotting pleasures among men,</p>
- <p>And just the everlasting law, that hath wedded happiness to virtue:</p>
- <p>For verily on all things else broodeth disappointment with care,</p>
- <p>That childish man may be taught the shallowness of earthly enjoyment.</p>
- <p>Wherefore, ye that have enough, envy ye the rich man his abundance?</p>
- <p>Wherefore, daughters of affluence, covet ye the cottager's content?</p>
- <p>Take the good with the evil, for ye all are pensioners of God,</p>
- <p>And none may choose or refuse the cup His wisdom mixeth.</p>
- <p>The poor man rejoiceth at his toil, and his daily bread is sweet to him:</p>
- <p>Content with present good, he looketh not for evil to the future:</p>
- <p>The rich man languisheth with sloth, and findeth pleasure in nothing,</p>
- <p>He locketh up care with his gold, and feareth the fickleness of fortune.</p>
- <p>Can a cup contain within itself the measure of a bucket?</p>
- <p>Or the straitened appetites of man drink more than their fill of luxury?</p>
- <p>There is a limit to enjoyment, though the sources of wealth be boundless:</p>
- <p>And the choicest pleasures of life lie within the ring of moderation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Also,</span> though penury and pain be real and bitter evils,</p>
- <p>I would reason with the poor afflicted, for he is not so wretched as he seemeth.</p>
- <p>What right hath an offender to complain, though others escape punishment,</p>
- <p>If the stripes of earned misfortune overtake him in his sin?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
- <p>Wherefore not endure with resignation the evils thou canst not avert?</p>
- <p>For the coward pain will flee, if thou meet him as a man:</p>
- <p>Consider, whatever be thy fate, that it might and ought to have been worse,</p>
- <p>And that it lieth in thy hand to gather even blessing from afflictions:</p>
- <p>Bethink thee, wherefore were they sent? and hath not use blunted their keenness?</p>
- <p>Need hope, and patience, and courage, be strangers to the meanest hovel?</p>
- <p>Thou art in an evil case, it were cruel to deny to thee compassion,</p>
- <p>But there is not unmitigated ill in the sharpest of this world's sorrows:</p>
- <p>I touch not the sore of thy guilt; but of human griefs I counsel thee,</p>
- <p>Cast off the weakness of regret, and gird thee to redeem thy loss:</p>
- <p>Thou hast gained, in the furnace of affliction, self-knowledge, patience, and humility,</p>
- <p>And these be as precious ore, that waiteth the skill of the coiner:</p>
- <p>Despise not the blessings of adversity, nor the gain thou hast earned so hardly,</p>
- <p>And now thou hast drained the bitter, take heed that thou lose not the sweet.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Power</span> is seldom innocent, and envy is the yoke-fellow of eminence;</p>
- <p>And the rust of the miser's riches wasteth his soul as a canker.</p>
- <p>The poor man counteth not the cost at which such wealth hath been purchased;</p>
- <p>He would be on the mountain's top, without the toil and travail of the climbing.</p>
- <p>But equity demandeth recompense: for high-place, calumny and care;</p>
- <p>For state, comfortless splendour eating out the heart of home;</p>
- <p>For warrior fame, dangers and death; for a name among the learned, a spirit overstrained;</p>
- <p>For honour of all kinds, the goad of ambition; on every acquirement, the tax of anxiety.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></span>
- <p>He that would change with another, must take the cup as it is mixed:</p>
- <p>Poverty, with largeness of heart; or a full purse, with a sordid spirit;</p>
- <p>Wisdom, in an ailing body; or a common mind, with health:</p>
- <p>Godliness, with man's scorn; or the welcome of the mighty, with guilt:</p>
- <p>Beauty, with a fickle heart; or plainness of face, with affection.</p>
- <p>For so hath Providence determined, that a man shall not easily discover</p>
- <p>Unmingled good or evil, to quicken his envy or abhorrence.</p>
- <p>A bold man or a fool must he be, who would change his lot with another;</p>
- <p>It were a fearful bargain, and mercy hath lovingly refused it:</p>
- <p>For we know the worst of ourselves, but the secrets of another we see not,</p>
- <p>And better is certain bad, than the doubt and dread of worse.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Just,</span> and strong, and opportune is the moral rule of God;</p>
- <p>Ripe in its times, firm in its judgments, equal in the measure of its gifts:</p>
- <p>Yet men, scanning the surface, count the wicked happy,</p>
- <p>Nor heed the compensating peace, which gladdeneth the good in his afflictions.</p>
- <p>They see not the frightful dreams that crowd a bad man's pillow,</p>
- <p>Like wreathed adders crawling round his midnight conscience;</p>
- <p>They hear not the terrible suggestions, that knock at the portal of his will,</p>
- <p>Provoking to wipe away from life the one weak witness of the deed;</p>
- <p>They know not the torturing suspicions that sting his panting breast,</p>
- <p>When the clear eye of penetration quietly readeth off the truth.</p>
- <p>Likewise of the good what know they? The memories bringing pleasure,</p>
- <p>Shrined in the heart of the benevolent, and glistening from his eye;</p>
- <p>The calm self-justifying reason that establisheth the upright in his purpose;</p>
- <p>The warm and gushing bliss that floodeth all the thoughts of the religious.</p>
- <p>Many a beggar at the cross-way, or grey-haired shepherd on the plain,</p>
- <p>Hath more of the end of all wealth, than hundreds who multiply the means.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> a moral compensation reacheth to the secrecy of thought;</p>
- <p>For if thou wilt think evil of thy neighbour, soon shalt thou have him for thy foe:</p>
- <p>And yet he may know nothing of the cause that maketh thee distasteful to his soul,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The cause of unkind suspicion, for which thou hast thy punishment:</p>
- <p>And if thou think of him in charity, wishing or praying for his weal,</p>
- <p>He shall not guess the secret charm that lureth his soul to love thee.</p>
- <p>For just is retributive ubiquity: Samson did sin with Dalilah,</p>
- <p>And his eyes and captive strength were forfeit to the Philistine:</p>
- <p>Jacob robbed his brother, and sorrow was his portion to the grave:</p>
- <p>David must fly before his foes, yea, though his guilt is covered:</p>
- <p>And He who, seeming old in youth, was marred for others' sin,</p>
- <p>For every special crime must bear its special penalty:</p>
- <p>By luxury, or rashness, or vice, the member that hath erred suffereth,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And therefore the Sacrifice for all was pained at every pore.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Alike</span> to the slave and his oppressor cometh night with sweet refreshment,</p>
- <p>And half of the life of the most wretched is gladdened by the soothings of sleep.</p>
- <p>Pain addeth zest unto pleasure, and teacheth the luxury of health;</p>
- <p>There is a joy in sorrow, which none but a mourner can know:</p>
- <p>Madness hath imaginary bliss, and most men have no more;</p>
- <p>Age hath its quiet calm, and youth enjoyeth not for haste:</p>
- <p>Daily, in the midst of its beatitude, the righteous soul is vexed;</p>
- <p>And even the misery of guilt doth attain to the bliss of pardon.</p>
- <p>Who, in the face of the born-blind, ever looked on other than content?</p>
- <p>And the deaf ear listeneth within to the silent music of the heart.</p>
- <p>There is evil poured upon the earth from the overflowings of corruption,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span>
- <p>Sickness, and poverty, and pain, and guilt, and madness, and sorrow;</p>
- <p>But, as the water from a fountain riseth and sinketh to its level,</p>
- <p>Ceaselessly toileth justice to equalize the lots of men:</p>
- <p>For, habit and hope and ignorance, and the being but one of a multitude,</p>
- <p>And strength of reason in the sage, and dulness of feeling in the fool,</p>
- <p>And the light elasticity of courage, and the calm resignation of meekness,</p>
- <p>And the stout endurance of decision, and the weak carelessness of apathy,</p>
- <p>And helps invisible but real, and ministerings not unfelt,</p>
- <p>Angelic aid with worldly discomfiture, bodily loss with the soul's gain,</p>
- <p>Secret griefs, and silent joys, thorns in the flesh, and cordials for the spirit,</p>
- (&mdash;Short of the insuperable barrier dividing innocence from guilt,&mdash;)
- <p>Go far to level all things, by the gracious rule of Compensation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="160" height="164" alt="" src="images/image14ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="268" height="312" alt="" src="images/image15r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="155" alt="" src="images/image16cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Face</span>
- thy foe in the field, and perchance thou wilt meet thy master,</p>
- <p>For the sword is chained to his wrist, and his armour buckled for the battle;</p>
- <p>But find him when he looketh not for thee, aim between the joints of his harness,</p>
- <p>And the crest of his pride will be humbled, his cruelty will bite the dust.</p>
- <p>Beard not a lion in his den, but fashion the secret pitfall;</p>
- <p>So shall thou conquer the strong, thyself triumphing in weakness.</p>
- <p>The hurricane rageth fiercely, and the promontory standeth in its might,</p>
- <p>Breasting the artillery of heaven, as darts glance from the crocodile:</p>
- <p>But the small continual creeping of the silent footsteps of the sea</p>
- <p>Mineth the wall of adamant, and stealthily compasseth its ruin.</p>
- <p>The weakness of accident is strong, where the strength of design is weak:</p>
- <p>And a casual analogy convinceth, when a mind beareth not argument.</p>
- <p>Will not a man listen? be silent; and prove thy maxim by example:</p>
- <p>Never fear, thou losest not thy hold, though thy mouth doth not render a reason.</p>
- <p>Contend not in wisdom with a fool, for thy sense maketh much of his conceit;</p>
- <p>And some errors never would have thriven, had it not been for learned refutation:</p>
- <p>Yea, much evil hath been caused by an honest wrestler for truth,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
- <p>And much of unconscious good, by the man that hated wisdom:</p>
- <p>For the intellect judgeth closely, and if thou overstep thy argument,</p>
- <p>Or seem not consistent with thyself, or fail in thy direct purpose,</p>
- <p>The mind that went along with thee, shall stop and return without thee,</p>
- <p>And thou shalt have raised a foe, where thou mightest have won a friend.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Hints,</span> shrewdly strown, mightily disturb the spirit,</p>
- <p>Where a bare-faced accusation would be too ridiculous for calumny:</p>
- <p>The sly suggestion toucheth nerves, and nerves contract the fronds,</p>
- <p>And the sensitive mimosa of affection trembleth to its root;</p>
- <p>And friendships, the growth of half a century, those oaks that laugh at storms,</p>
- <p>Have been cankered in a night by a worm, even as the prophet's gourd.</p>
- <p>Hast thou loved, and not known jealousy? for a sidelong look</p>
- <p>Can please or pain thy heart more than the multitude of proofs:</p>
- <p>Hast thou hated, and not learned that thy silent scorn</p>
- <p>Doth deeper aggravate thy foe than loud-cursing malice?&mdash;</p>
- <p>A wise man prevaileth in power, for he screeneth his battering engine,</p>
- <p>But a fool tilteth headlong, and his adversary is aware.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold</span> those broken arches, that oriel all unglazed,</p>
- <p>That crippled line of columns bleaching in the sun,</p>
- <p>The delicate shaft stricken midway, and the flying buttress</p>
- <p>Idly stretching forth to hold up tufted ivy:</p>
- <p>Thinkest thou the thousand eyes that shine with rapture on a ruin,</p>
- <p>Would have looked with half their wonder on the perfect pile?</p>
- <p>And wherefore not&mdash;but that light hints, suggesting unseen beauties,</p>
- <p>Fill the complacent gazer with self-grown conceits?</p>
- <p>And so, the rapid sketch winneth more praise to the painter,</p>
- <p>Than the consummate work elaborated on his easel:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></span>
- <p>And so, the Helvetic lion caverned in the living rock</p>
- <p>Hath more of majesty and force, than it upon a marble pedestal.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="226" height="219" alt="" src="images/image17ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Tell</span> me, daughter of taste, what hath charmed thine ear in music?</p>
- <p>Is it the laboured theme, the curious fugue or cento,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Nor rather the sparkles of intelligence flashing from some strange chord,</p>
- <p>Or the soft melody of sounds far sweeter for simplicity?</p>
- <p>Tell me, thou son of science, what hath filled thy mind in reading?</p>
- <p>Is it the volume of detail where all is orderly set down,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
- <p>And they that read may run, nor need to stop and think;</p>
- <p>The book carefully accurate, that counteth thee no better than a fool,</p>
- <p>Gorging the passive mind with annotated notes;&mdash;</p>
- <p>Nor rather the half-suggested thoughts, the riddles thou mayst solve,</p>
- <p>The fair ideas, coyly peeping like young loves out of roses,</p>
- <p>The quaint arabesque conceptions, half cherub and half flower,</p>
- <p>The light analogy, or deep allusion, trusted to thy learning,</p>
- <p>The confidence implied in thy skill to unravel meaning mysteries?</p>
- <p>For ideas are ofttimes shy of the close furniture of words,</p>
- <p>And thought, wherein only is power, may be best conveyed by a suggestion:</p>
- <p>The flash that lighteth up a valley, amid the dark midnight of a storm,</p>
- <p>Coineth the mind with that scene sharper than fifty summers.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A worldly</span> man boasteth in his pride, that there is no power but of money;</p>
- <p>And he judgeth the characters of men by the differing measures of their means:</p>
- <p>He stealeth all goodly names, as worth, and value, and substance,</p>
- <p>Which be the ancient heritage of Virtue, but such an one ascribeth unto Wealth:</p>
- <p>He spurneth the needy sage, whose wisdom hath enriched nations,</p>
- <p>And the sons of poverty and learning, without whom earth were a desert:</p>
- <p>Music, the soother of cares, the tuner of the dank discordant heart-strings,</p>
- <p>It is nought unto such an one but sounds, whereby some earn their living:</p>
- <p>The poem, and the picture, and the statue, to him seem idle baubles,</p>
- <p>Which wealth condescendeth to favour, to gain him the name of patron.</p>
- <p>But little wotteth he the might of the means his folly despiseth;</p>
- <p>He considereth not that these be the wires which move the puppets of the world.</p>
- <p>A sentence hath formed a character, and a character subdued a kingdom;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
- <p>A picture hath ruined souls, or raised them to commerce with the skies:</p>
- <p>The pen hath shaken nations, and stablished the world in peace;</p>
- <p>And the whole full horn of plenty been filled from the vial of science.</p>
- <p>He regardeth man as sensual, the monarch of created matter,</p>
- <p>And careth not aught for mind, that linketh him with spirits unseen;</p>
- <p>He feedeth his carcase and is glad, though his soul be faint and famished,</p>
- <p>And the dull brute power of the body bindeth him a captive to himself.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man</span> liveth from hour to hour, and knoweth not what may happen;</p>
- <p>Influences circle him on all sides, and yet must he answer for his actions:</p>
- <p>For the being that is master of himself, bendeth events to his will,</p>
- <p>But a slave to selfish passion is the wavering creature of circumstance.</p>
- <p>To this man temptation is a poison, to that man it addeth vigour;</p>
- <p>And each may render to himself influences good or evil.</p>
- <p>As thou directest the power, harm or advantage will follow,</p>
- <p>And the torrent that swept the valley, may be led to turn a mill;</p>
- <p>The wild electric flash, that could have kindled comets,</p>
- <p>May by the ductile wire give ease to an ailing child.</p>
- <p>For outward matter or event fashion not the character within,</p>
- <p>But each man, yielding or resisting, fashioneth his mind for himself.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Some</span> have said, What is in a name?&mdash;most potent plastic influence;</p>
- <p>A name is a word of character, and repetition stablisheth the fact:</p>
- <p>A word of rebuke, or of honour, tending to obscurity or fame;</p>
- <p>And greatest is the power of a name, when its power is least suspected.</p>
- <p>A low name is a thorn in the side, that hindereth the footman in his running;</p>
- <p>But a name of ancestral renown shall often put the racer to his speed.</p>
- <p>Few men have grown unto greatness whose names are allied to ridicule,</p>
- <p>And many would never have been profligate, but for the splendour of a name.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</a></span>
- <p>A wise man scorneth nothing, be it never so small or homely,</p>
- <p>For he knoweth not the secret laws that may bind it to great effects.</p>
- <p>The world in its boyhood was credulous, and dreaded the vengeance of the stars,</p>
- <p>The world in its dotage is not wiser, fearing not the influence of small things:</p>
- <p>Planets govern not the soul, nor guide the destinies of man,</p>
- <p>But trifles, lighter than straws, are levers in the building up of character.</p>
- <p>A man hath the tiller in his hand, and may steer against the current,</p>
- <p>Or may glide down idly with the stream, till his vessel founder in the whirlpool.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="222" height="164" alt="" src="images/image18ar.jpg" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p>Helvetiorum Fidei ac Virtuti<br />
- Die X Augusti II et III<br />
- Septembris MDCCXCII</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="231" height="262" alt="" src="images/image19ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF MEMORY.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Where</span> art thou, storehouse of the mind, garner of facts and fancies,&mdash;</p>
- <p>In what strange firmament are laid the beams of thine airy chambers?</p>
- <p>Or art thou that small cavern, the centre of the rolling brain,</p>
- <p>Where still one sandy morsel testifieth man's original?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
- <p>Or hast thou some grand globe, some common hall of intellect,</p>
- <p>Some spacious market-place for thought, where all do bring their wares,</p>
- <p>And gladly rescued from the littleness, the narrow closet of a self,</p>
- <p>The privileged soul hath large access, coming in the livery of learning?</p>
- <p>Live we as isolated worlds, perfect in substance and spirit,</p>
- <p>Each a sphere, with a special mind, prisoned in its shell of matter?</p>
- <p>Or rather, as converging radiations, parts of one majestic whole,</p>
- <p>Beams of the Sun, streams from the River, branches of the mighty Tree,</p>
- <p>Some bearing fruit, some bearing leaves, and some diseased and barren,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Some for the feast, some for the floor, and some&mdash;how many&mdash;for the fire?</p>
- <p>Memory may be but a power of coming to the treasury of Fact,</p>
- <p>A momentary self-desertion, an absence in spirit from the Now,</p>
- <p>An actual coursing hither and thither, by the mind, slipped from its leash,</p>
- <p>A life, as in the mystery of dreams, spent within the limits of a moment.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A brutish</span> man knoweth not this, neither can a fool comprehend it,</p>
- <p>But there be secrets of the Memory, deep, wondrous, and fearful.</p>
- <p>Were I at Petra, could I not declare, My soul hath been here before me?</p>
- <p>Am I strange to the columned halls, the calm dead grandeur of Palmyra?</p>
- <p>Know I not thy mount, O Carmel! Have I not voyaged on the Danube,</p>
- <p>Nor seen the glare of Arctic snows,&mdash;nor the black tents of the Tartar?</p>
- <p>Is it then a dream, that I remember the faces of them of old,</p>
- <p>While wandering in the grove with Plato, and listening to Zeno in the porch?</p>
- <p>Paul have I seen, and Pythagoras, and the Stagyrite hath spoken me friendly,</p>
- <p>And His meek eye looked also upon me, standing with Peter in the palace.</p>
- <p>Athens and Rome, Persepolis and Sparta, am I not a freeman of you all?</p>
- <p>And chiefly can my yearning heart forget thee, O Jerusalem?&mdash;</p>
- <p>For the strong magic of conception, mingled with the fumes of memory,</p>
- <p>Giveth me a life in all past time, yea, and addeth substance to the future.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></span>
- <p>Be ye my judges, imaginative minds, full-fledged to soar into the sun,</p>
- <p>Whose grosser natural thoughts the chemistry of wisdom hath sublimed,</p>
- <p>Have ye not confessed to a feeling, a consciousness strange and vague,</p>
- <p>That ye have gone this way before, and walk again your daily life,</p>
- <p>Tracking an old routine, and on some foreign strand,</p>
- <p>Where bodily ye have never stood, finding your own footsteps?</p>
- <p>Hath not at times some recent friend looked out an old familiar,</p>
- <p>Some newest circumstance or place teemed as with ancient memories?</p>
- <p>A startling sudden flash lighteth up all for an instant,</p>
- <p>And then it is quenched, as in darkness, and leaveth the cold spirit trembling.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="261" height="361" alt="" src="images/image20r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Memory</span> is not wisdom; idiots can rote volumes:</p>
- <p>Yet, what is wisdom without memory? a babe that is strangled in its birth,</p>
- <p>The path of the swallow in the air, the path of the dolphin in the waters,</p>
- <p>A cask running out, a bottomless chasm: such is wisdom without memory.</p>
- <p>There be many wise, who cannot store their knowledge;</p>
- <p>Yet from themselves are they satisfied, for the fountain is within:</p>
- <p>There be many who store, but have no wisdom of their own,</p>
- <p>Lumbering their armoury with weapons their muscles cannot lift:</p>
- <p>There be many thieves and robbers, who glean and store unlawfully,</p>
- <p>Calling in to memory's help some cunningly devised Cabala:</p>
- <p>But to feed the mind with fatness, to fill thy granary with corn,</p>
- <p>Nor clog with chaff and straw the threshing-floor of reason,</p>
- <p>Reap the ideas, and house them well; but leave the words high stubble:</p>
- <p>Strive to store up what was thought, despising what was said.</p>
- <p>For the mind is a spirit, and drinketh in ideas, as flame melteth into flame;</p>
- <p>But for words it must pack them as on floors, cumbrous and perishable merchandize.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
- <p>To be pained for a minute, to fear for an hour, to hope for a week&mdash;how long and weary!</p>
- <p>But to remember fourscore years, is to look back upon a day.</p>
- <p>An avenue seemeth to lengthen in the eyes of the wayfaring man,</p>
- <p>But let him turn, those stationed elms crowd up within a yard;</p>
- <p>Pace the lamp-lit streets of some sleeping city,</p>
- <p>The multitude of cressets shall seem one, in the false picture of perspective;</p>
- <p>Even so, in sweet treachery, dealeth the aged with himself,</p>
- <p>He gazeth on the green hill-tops, while the marshes beneath are hidden;</p>
- <p>And the partial telescope of memory pierceth the blank between,</p>
- <p>To look with lingering love at the fair star of childhood.</p>
- <p>Life is as the current spark on the miner's wheel of flints;</p>
- <p>Whiles it spinneth there is light; stop it, all is darkness:</p>
- <p>Life is as a morsel of frankincense burning in the hall of Eternity;</p>
- <p>It is gone, but its odorous cloud curleth to the lofty roof:</p>
- <p>Life is as a lump of salt, melting in the temple-laver;</p>
- <p>It is gone,&mdash;yet its savour reacheth to the farthest atom:</p>
- <p>Even so, for evil or for good, is life the criterion of a man,</p>
- <p>For its memories of sanctity or sin pervade all the firmament of being.</p>
- <p>There is but the flitting moment, wherein to hope or to enjoy,</p>
- <p>But in the calendar of Memory, that moment is all time.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="232" height="243" alt="" src="images/image21ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>THE DREAM OF AMBITION.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">I left</span> the happy fields that smile around the village of Content,</p>
- <p>And sought with wayward feet the torrid desert of Ambition.</p>
- <p>Long time, parched and weary, I travelled that burning sand,</p>
- <p>And the hooded basilisk and adder were strewed in my way for palms;</p>
- <p>Black scorpions thronged me round, with sharp uplifted stings,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
- <p>Seeming to mock me as I ran; (then I guessed it was a dream,&mdash;</p>
- <p>But life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)</p>
- <p>So I toiled on, doubting in myself, up a steep gravel cliff,</p>
- <p>Whose yellow summit shot up far into the brazen sky;</p>
- <p>And quickly, I was wafted to the top, as upon unseen wings</p>
- <p>Carrying me upward like a leaf: (then I thought it was a dream,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)</p>
- <p>So I stood on the mountain, and behold! before me a giant pyramid,</p>
- <p>And I clomb with eager haste its high and difficult steps;</p>
- <p>For I longed, like another Belus, to mount up, yea, to heaven,</p>
- <p>Nor sought I rest until my feet had spurned the crest of earth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Then</span> I sat on my granite throne under the burning sun,</p>
- <p>And the world lay smiling beneath me, but I was wrapt in flames;</p>
- (And I hoped, in glimmering consciousness, that all this torture was a dream,&mdash;
- <p>Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)</p>
- <p>And anon, as I sat scorching, the pyramid shuddered to its root,</p>
- <p>And I felt the quarried mass leap from its sand foundations:</p>
- <p>Awhile it tottered and tilted, as raised by invisible levers,&mdash;</p>
- (And now my reason spake with me; I knew it was a dream:
- <p>Yet I hushed that whisper into silence, for I hoped to learn of wisdom,</p>
- <p>By tracking up my truant thoughts, whereunto they might lead.)</p>
- <p>And suddenly, as rolling upon wheels, adown the cliff it rushed,</p>
- <p>And I thought, in my hot brain, of the Muscovites' icy slope;</p>
- <p>A thousand yards in a moment we ploughed the sandy seas,</p>
- <p>And crushed those happy fields, and that smiling village,</p>
- <p>And onward, as a living thing, still rushed my mighty throne,</p>
- <p>Thundering along, and pounding, as it went, the millions in my way:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
- <p>Before me all was life, and joy, and full-blown summer,</p>
- <p>Behind me death and woe, the desert and simoom.</p>
- <p>Then I wept and shrieked aloud, for pity and for fear;</p>
- <p>But might not stop, for, comet-like, flew on the maddened mass</p>
- <p>Over the crashing cities, and falling obelisks and towers,</p>
- <p>And columns, razed as by a scythe, and high domes, shivered as an egg-shell,</p>
- <p>And deep embattled ranks, and women, crowded in the streets,</p>
- <p>And children, kneeling as for mercy, and all I had ever loved,</p>
- <p>Yea, over all, mine awful throne rushed on with seeming instinct,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And over the crackling forests, and over the rugged beach,</p>
- <p>And on with a terrible hiss through the foaming wild Atlantic</p>
- <p>That roared around me as I sat, but could not quench my spirit,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Still on, through startled solitudes we shattered the pavement of the sea,</p>
- <p>Down, down, to that central vault, the bolted doors of hell;</p>
- <p>And these, with horrid shock, my huge throne battered in,</p>
- <p>And on to the deepest deep, where the fierce flames were hottest,</p>
- <p>Blazing tenfold as conquering furiously the seas that rushed in with me,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And there I stopped: and a fearful voice shouted in mine ear,</p>
- "Behold the home of Discontent; behold the rest of Ambition!"
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF SUBJECTION.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="77" height="166" alt="" src="images/image22cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Law</span>
- hath dominion over all things, over universal mind and matter;</p>
- <p>For there are reciprocities of right, which no creature can gainsay.</p>
- <p>Unto each was there added by its Maker, in the perfect chain of being,</p>
- <p>Dependencies and sustentations, accidents, and qualities, and powers:</p>
- <p>And each must fly forward in the curve, unto which it was forced from the beginning;</p>
- <p>Each must attract and repel, or the monarchy of Order is no more.</p>
- <p>Laws are essential emanations from the self-poised character of God,</p>
- <p>And they radiate from that sun to the circling edges of creation.</p>
- <p>Verily, the mighty Lawgiver hath subjected Himself unto Laws,</p>
- <p>And God is the primal grand example of free unstrained obedience;</p>
- <p>His perfection is limited by right, and cannot trespass into wrong,</p>
- <p>Because He hath established Himself as the fountain of only good,</p>
- <p>And in thus much is bounded, that the evil hath He left unto another,</p>
- <p>And that dark other hath usurped the evil which Omnipotence laid down.</p>
- <p>Unto God there exist impossibilities; for the True One cannot lie,</p>
- <p>Nor the Wise One wander from the track which He hath determined for Himself:</p>
- <p>For His will was purposed from eternity, strong in the love of order;</p>
- <p>And that will altereth not, as the law of the Medes and Persians.</p>
- <p>God is the origin of order, and the first exemplar of His precept;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
- <p>For there is subordination of His Essence, self-guided unto holiness;</p>
- <p>And there is subordination of His Persons, in due procession of dignity;</p>
- <p>For the Son, as a son, is subject; and to Him doth the Spirit minister:</p>
- <p>But these things be mysteries to man, he cannot reach nor fathom them,</p>
- <p>And ever must he speak in paradox, when labouring to expound his God;</p>
- <p>For, behold, God is alone, mighty in unshackled freedom;</p>
- <p>And with those wondrous Persons abideth eternal equality.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So</span> then, start ye from the fountain, and follow the river of existence;</p>
- <p>For its current is bounded throughout by the banks of just subordination:</p>
- <p>Thrones, and dominions, and powers, Archangels, Cherubim, and Seraphim,</p>
- <p>Angels, and flaming ministers, and breathing chariots and harps.</p>
- <p>For there are degrees in heaven, and varied capabilities of bliss,</p>
- <p>And steps in the ladder of Intelligence, and ranks in approaches to Perfection:</p>
- <p>Doubtless, reverence is given, as their due, to the masters in wisdom;</p>
- <p>Doubtless, there are who serve; or a throne would have small glory.</p>
- <p>Regard now the universe of matter, the substance of visible creation,</p>
- <p>Which of old, with well-observing truth, the Greek hath surnamed, Order:</p>
- <p>Where is there an atom out of place? or a particle that yieldeth not obedience?</p>
- <p>Where is there a fragment that is free? or one thing the equal of another?&mdash;</p>
- <p>The chain is unbroken down to man, and beyond him the links are perfect:</p>
- <p>But he standeth solitary sin, a marvel of permitted chaos.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> shall this seeming error in the scale of due subordination</p>
- <p>Be a spot of desert unreclaimed, in the midst of the vineyard of the Lord?</p>
- <p>Shall his presumptuous pride snap the safe tether of connexion,</p>
- <p>And his blind selfish folly refuse the burden of maintenance?</p>
- <p>O man, thou art a creature; boast not thyself above the law:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></span>
- <p>Think not of thyself as free: thou art bound in the trammels of dependence.</p>
- <p>What is the sum of thy duty, but obedience to righteous rule;</p>
- <p>To the great commanding Oracle, uttered by delegated organs?</p>
- <p>Thou canst not render homage to abstract Omnipresent Power,</p>
- <p>Save through the concrete symbol of visible ordained authority.</p>
- <p>Those who obey not man, are oftenest found rebels against God;</p>
- <p>And seldom is the delegate so bold, as to order what he knoweth to be wrong.</p>
- <p>Yet mark me, proud gainsayer! I say not, obey unto sin;</p>
- <p>But, where the Principal is silent, take heed thou despise not the Deputy:</p>
- <p>And He that loveth order, will bless thee for thy faith,</p>
- <p>If thou recognize His sanction in the powers that fashion human laws.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thou,</span> the vicegerent of the Lord, His high anointed image,</p>
- <p>Towards whom a good man's loyalty floweth from the heart of his religion,</p>
- <p>Thou, whose deep responsibilities are fathomed by a nation's prayers,</p>
- <p>Whom wise men fear for while they love, and envy thee nothing but thy virtues,</p>
- <p>From thy dizzy pinnacle of greatness, remember thou also art a subject,</p>
- <p>And the throne of thine earthly glory is itself but the footstool of thy God.</p>
- <p>The homage thy kingdoms yield thee, regard thou as yielded unto Him;</p>
- <p>And while girt with all the majesty of state, consider thee the Lord's chief servant:</p>
- <p>So shalt thou prosper, and be strong, grafted on the strength of Another;</p>
- <p>So shall thy royal heart be happy, in being humble.</p>
- <p>And thou shalt flourish as an oak, the monarch of thine island forests,</p>
- <p>Whose deep-dug roots are twisted around the stout ribs of the globe,</p>
- <p>That mocketh at the fury of the storm, and rejoiceth in summer sunshine,</p>
- <p>Glad in the smiles of heaven, and great in the stability of earth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">A ruler</span> hath not power for himself, neither is his pomp for his pride;</p>
- <p>But beneath the ermine of his office should he wear the rough hair-cloth of humility.</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, every way obey him, so thou break not a higher commandment;</p>
- <p>For Nero was an evil king, yet Paul prescribeth subjection.</p>
- <p>If the rulers of a nation be holy, the Lord hath blessed that nation;</p>
- <p>If they be lewd and impious, chastisement hath come upon that people:</p>
- <p>For the bitterest scourge of a land is ungodliness in them that govern it,</p>
- <p>And the guilt of the sons of Josiah drove Israel weeping into Babylon.</p>
- <p>Yet be thou resolute against them, if they change the mandates of thy God,</p>
- <p>If they touch the ark of His covenant, wherein all His mercies are enshrined:</p>
- <p>Be resolute, but not rebellious; lest thou be of the company of Korah:</p>
- <p>Set thy face against them as a flint: but be not numbered with Abiram.</p>
- <p>Daniel nobly disobeyed; but not from a spirit of sedition:</p>
- <p>And Azarias shouted from the furnace,&mdash;I will not bow down, O <small>KING</small>.</p>
- <p>If truth must be sacrificed to unity, then faithfulness were folly;</p>
- <p>If man must be obeyed before God, the martyrs have bled in vain:</p>
- <p>Yet none of that blessed army reviled the rulers of the land,</p>
- <p>They were loud and bold against the sin, but bent before the ensign of authority.</p>
- <p>Honesty, scorning compromise, walketh most suitably with Reverence;</p>
- <p>Otherwise righteous daring may show but as obstinate rebellion:</p>
- <p>Therefore, suffer not thy censure to lack the savour of courtesy,</p>
- <p>And remember, the mortal sinneth, but the staff of his power is from God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man,</span> thou hast a social spirit, and art deeply indebted to thy kind:</p>
- <p>Therefore claim not all thy rights; but yield, for thine own advantage.</p>
- <p>Society is a chain of obligations, and its links must support each other;</p>
- <p>The branch can not but wither, that is cut from the parent vine.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span>
- <p>Wouldst thou be a dweller in the woods, and cast away the cords that bind thee,</p>
- <p>Seeking, in thy bitterness or pride, to be exiled from thy fellows?</p>
- <p>Behold, the beasts shall hunt thee, weak, naked, houseless outcast,</p>
- <p>Disease and Death shall track thee out, as bloodhounds in the wilderness:</p>
- <p>Better to be vilest of the vile, in the hated company of men,</p>
- <p>Than to live a solitary wretch, dreading and wanting all things;</p>
- <p>Better to be chained to thy labour, in the dusky thoroughfares of life,</p>
- <p>Than to reign monarch of Sloth, in lonesome savage freedom.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Whence</span> then cometh the doctrine, that all should be equal and free?&mdash;</p>
- <p>It is the lie that crowded hell, when Seraphs flung away subjection.</p>
- <p>No man is his neighbour's equal, for no two minds are similar,</p>
- <p>And accidents, alike with qualities, have every shade but sameness:</p>
- <p>The lightest atom of difference shall destroy the nice balance of equality,</p>
- <p>And all things, from without and from within, make one man to differ from another.</p>
- <p>We are equal and free! was the watchword that spirited the legions of Satan;</p>
- <p>We are equal and free! is the double lie that entrappeth to him conscripts from earth:</p>
- <p>The messengers of that dark despot will pander to thy licence and thy pride,</p>
- <p>And draw thee from the crowd where thou art safe, to seize thee in the solitary desert.</p>
- <p>Woe unto him whose heart the syren-song of Liberty hath charmed;</p>
- <p>Woe unto him whose mind is bewitched by her treacherous beauty;</p>
- <p>In mad zeal flingeth he away the fetters of duty and restraint,</p>
- <p>And yieldeth up the holocaust of self to that fair Idol of the Damned.</p>
- <p>No man hath freedom in aught, save in that from which the wicked would be hindered,</p>
- <p>He is free toward God and good; but to all else a bondman.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Thou</span> art in a middle sphere, to render and receive honour;</p>
- <p>If thy king commandeth, obey; and stand not in the way with rebels:</p>
- <p>But if need be, lay thy hand upon thy sword, and fear not to smite a traitor,</p>
- <p>For the universe acquitteth thee with honour, fighting in defence of thy king.</p>
- <p>If a thief break thy dwelling, and thou take him, it were sin in thee to let him go;</p>
- <p>Yea, though he pleadeth to thy mercy, thou canst not spare him and be blameless:</p>
- <p>For his guilt is not only against thee, it is not thy moneys or thy merchandize,</p>
- <p>But he hath done damage to the Law, which duty constraineth thee to sanction.</p>
- <p>Feast not thine appetite of vengeance, remembering thou also art a man,</p>
- <p>But weep for the sad compulsion, in which the chain of Providence hath bound thee:</p>
- <p>Mercy is not thine to give; wilt thou steal another's privilege?</p>
- <p>Or send abroad, among thy neighbours, a felon whom impunity hath hardened?</p>
- <p>Remember the Roman father, strong in his stern integrity,</p>
- <p>And let not thy slothful self-indulgence make thee a conniver at the crime.</p>
- <p>Also, if the knife of the murderer be raised against thee or thine,</p>
- <p>And through good providence and courage, thou slay him that would have slain thee,</p>
- <p>Thou losest not a tittle of thy rectitude, having executed sudden justice;</p>
- <p>Still mayst thou walk among the blessed, though thy hands be red with blood.</p>
- <p>For thyself, thou art neither worse nor better; but thy fellows should count thee their creditor:</p>
- <p>Thou hast manfully protected the right, and the right is stronger for thy deed.</p>
- <p>Also, in the rescuing of innocence, fear not to smite the ravisher;</p>
- <p>What though he die at thy hand? for a good name is better than the life;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></span>
- <p>And if Phineas had everlasting praise in the matter of Salu's son,</p>
- <p>With how much greater honour standeth such a rescuer acquitted?</p>
- <p>Uphold the laws of thy country, and fear not to fight in their defence:</p>
- <p>But first be convinced in thy mind; for herein the doubter sinneth.</p>
- <p>Above all things, look thou well around, if indeed stern duty forceth thee</p>
- <p>To draw the sword of justice, and stain it with the slaughter of thy fellows.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">She,</span> that lieth in thy bosom, the tender wife of thy affections,</p>
- <p>Must obey thee, and be subject, that evil drop not on thy dwelling.</p>
- <p>The child that is used to constraint, feareth not more than he loveth;</p>
- <p>But give thy son his way, he will hate thee and scorn thee together.</p>
- <p>The master of a well-ordered home knoweth to be kind to his servants;</p>
- <p>Yet he exacteth reverence, and each one feareth at his post.</p>
- <p>There is nothing on earth so lowly, but duty giveth it importance;</p>
- <p>No station so degrading, but it is ennobled by obedience:</p>
- <p>Yea, break stones upon the highway, acknowledging the Lord in thy lot,</p>
- <p>Happy shalt thou be, and honourable, more than many children of the mighty.</p>
- <p>Thou that despisest the outward forms, beware thou lose not the inward spirit;</p>
- <p>For they are as words unto ideas, as symbols to things unseen.</p>
- <p>Keep then the form that is good; retain, and do reverence to example;</p>
- <p>And in all things observe subordination, for that is the whole duty of man.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="229" height="133" alt="" src="images/image23ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A horse</span> knoweth his rider, be he confident or timid,</p>
- <p>And the fierce spirit of Bucephalus stoopeth unto none but Alexander;</p>
- <p>The tigress, roused in the jungle by the prying spaniels of the fowler,</p>
- <p>Will quail at the eye of man, so he assert his dignity;</p>
- <p>Nay, the very ships, those giant swans breasting the mighty waters,</p>
- <p>Roll in the trough, or break the wave, to the pilot's fear or courage:</p>
- <p>How much more shall man, discerning the Fountain of authority,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span>
- <p>Bow to superior commands, and make his own obeyed.</p>
- <p>And yet, in travelling the world, hast thou not often known</p>
- <p>A gallant host led on to ruin by a feeble Xerxes?</p>
- <p>Hast thou not often seen the wanton luxury of indolence</p>
- <p>Sullying with its sleepy mist the tarnished crown of headship?</p>
- <p>Alas! for a thousand fathers, whose indulgent sloth</p>
- <p>Hath emptied the vial of confusion over a thousand homes:</p>
- <p>Alas! for the palaces and hovels, that might have been nurseries for heaven,</p>
- <p>By hot intestine broils blighted into schools for hell:</p>
- <p>None knoweth his place, yet all refuse to serve,</p>
- <p>None weareth the crown, yet all usurp the sceptre;</p>
- <p>And perchance some fiercer spirit, of natural nobility of mind,</p>
- <p>That needed but the kindness of constraint to have grown up great and good,</p>
- <p>Now&mdash;the rich harvest of his heart choked by unweeded tares,&mdash;</p>
- <p>All bold to dare and do, unchecked by wholesome fear,</p>
- <p>A scoffer about bigotry and priestcraft, a rebel against government and God,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
- <p>And standard-bearer of the turbulent, leading on the sons of Belial,</p>
- <p>Such an one is king of that small state, head tyrant of the thirty,</p>
- <p>Brandishing the torch of discord in his village home:</p>
- <p>And the timid Eli of the house, yon humble parish-priest,</p>
- <p>Liveth in shame and sorrow, fearing his own handywork;</p>
- <p>The mother, heart-stricken years agone, hath dropped into an early grave;</p>
- <p>The silent sisters long to leave a home they cannot love;</p>
- <p>The brothers, casting off restraint, follow their wayward wills;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
- <p>And the chance-guest, early departing, blesseth his kind stars,</p>
- <p>That on his humbler home hath brooded no domestic curse!</p>
- <p>Yet is that curse the fruit; wouldest thou the root of the evil?</p>
- <p>A kindness&mdash;most unkind, that hath always spared the rod;</p>
- <p>A weak and numbing indecision in the mind that should be master;</p>
- <p>A foolish love, pregnant of hate, that never frowned on sin;</p>
- <p>A moral cowardice of heart, that never dared command.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="216" height="213" alt="" src="images/image24ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A kingdom</span> is a nest of families, and a family a small kingdom;</p>
- <p>And the government of whole or part differeth in nothing but extent.</p>
- <p>The house, where the master ruleth, is strong in united subjection,</p>
- <p>And the only commandment with promise, being honoured, is a blessing to that house:</p>
- <p>But and if he yieldeth up the reins, it is weak in discordant anarchy,</p>
- <p>And the bonds of love and union melt away, as ropes of sand.</p>
- <p>The realm, that is ruled with vigour, lacketh neither peace nor glory,</p>
- <p>It dreadeth not foes from without, nor the sons of riot from within:</p>
- <p>But the meanness of temporizing fear robbeth a kingdom of its honour,</p>
- <p>And the weakness of indulgent sloth ravageth its bowels with discord.</p>
- <p>The best of human governments is the patriarchal rule;</p>
- <p>The authorized supremacy of one, the prescriptive subjection of many:</p>
- <p>Therefore, the children of the East have thriven from age to age,</p>
- <p>Obeying, even as a god, the royal father of Cathay:</p>
- <p>Therefore, to this our day, the Rechabite wanteth not a man,</p>
- <p>But they stand before the Lord, forsaking not the mandate of their sire:</p>
- <p>Therefore shall Magog among nations arise from his northern lair,</p>
- <p>And rend, in the fury of his power, the insurgent world beneath him:</p>
- <p>For the thunderbolt of concentrated strength can be hurled by the will of one,</p>
- <p>While the dissipated forces of many are harmless as summer lightning.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF REST.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="77" height="163" alt="" src="images/image25cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">In the</span>
- silent watches of the night, calm night that breedeth thoughts,</p>
- <p>When the task-weary mind disporteth in the careless play-hours of sleep,</p>
- <p>I dreamed; and behold, a valley, green and sunny and well watered,</p>
- <p>And thousands moving across it, thousands and tens of thousands:</p>
- <p>And though many seemed faint and toil-worn, and stumbled often, and fell,</p>
- <p>Yet moved they on unresting, as the ever-flowing cataract.</p>
- <p>Then I noted adders in the grass, and pitfalls under the flowers,</p>
- <p>And chasms yawned among the hills, and the ground was cracked and slippery:</p>
- <p>But Hope and her brother Fear suffered not a foot to linger;</p>
- <p>Bright phantoms of false joys beckoned alluringly forward,</p>
- <p>While yelling grisly shapes of dread came hunting on behind:</p>
- <p>And ceaselessly, like Lapland swarms, that miserable crowd sped along</p>
- <p>To the mist-involved banks of a dark and sullen river.</p>
- <p>There saw I, midway in the water, standing a giant fisher,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></span>
- <p>And he held many lines in his hand, and they called him Iron Destiny.</p>
- <p>So I tracked those subtle chains, and each held one among the multitude:</p>
- <p>Then I understood what hindered, that they rested not in their path:</p>
- <p>For the fisher had sport in his fishing, and drew in his lines continually,</p>
- <p>And the new-born babe, and the aged man, were dragged into that dark river:</p>
- <p>And he pulled all those myriads along, and none might rest by the way,</p>
- <p>Till many, for sheer weariness, were eager to plunge into the drowning stream.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So I</span> knew that valley was Life, and it sloped to the waters of Death.</p>
- <p>But far on the thither side spread out a calm and silent shore,</p>
- <p>Where all was tranquil as a sleep, and the crowded strand was quiet:</p>
- <p>And I saw there many I had known, but their eyes glared chillingly upon me,</p>
- <p>As set in deepest slumber; and they pressed their fingers to their lips.</p>
- <p>Then I knew that shore was the dwelling of Rest, where spirits held their Sabbath,</p>
- <p>And it seemed they would have told me much, but they might not break that silence;</p>
- <p>For the law of their being was mystery: they glided on, hushing as they went.</p>
- <p>Yet further, under the sun, at the roots of purple mountains,</p>
- <p>I noted a blaze of glory, as the night-fires on northern skies;</p>
- <p>And I heard the hum of joy, as it were a sea of melody;</p>
- <p>And far as the eye could reach, were millions of happy creatures</p>
- <p>Basking in the golden light; and I knew that land was Heaven.</p>
- <p>Then the hill whereon I stood split asunder, and a crater yawned at my feet,</p>
- <p>Black and deep and dreadful, fenced round with ragged rocks;</p>
- <p>Dimly was the darkness lit up by spires of distant flame:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></span>
- <p>And I saw below a moving mass of life, like reptiles bred in corruption,</p>
- <p>Where all was terrible unrest, shrieks and groans and thunder.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="225" height="232" alt="" src="images/image26ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So I</span> woke, and I thought upon my dream; for it seemed of Wisdom's ministration.</p>
- <p>What man is he that findeth Rest, though he hunt for it year after year?</p>
- <p>As a child he had not yet been wearied, and cared not then to court it;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></span>
- <p>As a youth he loved not to be quiet, for excitement spurred him into strife;</p>
- <p>As a man he tracketh rest in vain, toiling painfully to catch it,</p>
- <p>But still is he pulled from the pursuit, by the strong compulsion of his fate:</p>
- <p>So he hopeth to have peace in old age, as he cannot rest in manhood,</p>
- <p>But troubles thicken with his years, till Death hath dodged him to the grave.</p>
- <p>There remaineth a rest for the spirit on the shadowy side of life;</p>
- <p>But unto this world's pilgrim no rest for the sole of his foot.</p>
- <p>Ever, from stage to stage, he travelleth wearily forward,</p>
- <p>And though he pluck flowers by the way, he may not sleep among the flowers.</p>
- <p>Mind is the perpetual motion; for it is a running stream</p>
- <p>From an unfathomable source, the depth of the Divine Intelligence:</p>
- <p>And though it be stopped in its flowing, yet hath it a current within,</p>
- <p>The surface may sleep unruffled, but underneath are whirlpools of contention.</p>
- <p>Seekest thou rest, O mortal?&mdash;seek it no more on earth,</p>
- <p>For destiny will not cease from dragging thee through the rough wilderness of life;</p>
- <p>Seekest thou rest, O immortal?&mdash;hope not to find it in heaven,</p>
- <p>For sloth yieldeth not happiness: the bliss of a spirit is action.</p>
- <p>Rest dwelleth only on an island in the midst of the ocean of existence,</p>
- <p>Where the world-weary soul for a while may fold its tired wings,</p>
- <p>Until, after short sufficient slumber, it is quickened unto deathless energy,</p>
- <p>And speedeth in eagle flight to the Sun of unapproachable Perfection.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="233" height="273" alt="" src="images/image27ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF HUMILITY.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Vice</span> is grown aweary of her gawds, and donneth russet garments,</p>
- <p>Loving for change to walk as a nun, beneath a modest veil:</p>
- <p>For Pride hath noted how all admire the fairness of Humility,</p>
- <p>And to clutch the praise he coveteth, is content to be drest in hair-cloth;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</a></span>
- <p>And wily Lust tempteth the young heart, that is proof against the bravery of harlots,</p>
- <p>With timid tears and retiring looks of an artful seeming maid;</p>
- <p>And indolent Apathy, sleepily ashamed of his dull lack-lustre face,</p>
- <p>Is glad of the livery of meekness, that charitable cloak and cowl;</p>
- <p>And Hatred hideth his demon frown beneath a gentle mask;</p>
- <p>And Slander, snake-like, creepeth in the dust, thinking to escape recrimination.</p>
- <p>But the world hath gained somewhat from its years, and is quick to penetrate disguises,</p>
- <p>Neither in all these is it deceived, but divideth the true from the false.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> there is a meanness of spirit, that is fair in the eyes of most men,</p>
- <p>Yea, and seemeth fair unto itself, loving to be thought Humility.</p>
- <p>Its choler is not roused by insolence, neither do injuries disturb it:</p>
- <p>Honest indignation is strange unto its breast, and just reproof unto its lip.</p>
- <p>It shrinketh, looking fearfully on men, fawning at the feet of the great;</p>
- <p>The breath of calumny is sweet unto its ear, and it courteth the rod of persecution.</p>
- <p>But what! art thou not a man, deputed chief of the creation?</p>
- <p>Art thou not a soldier of the right, militant for God and good?</p>
- <p>Shall virtue and truth be degraded, because thou art too base to uphold them?</p>
- <p>Or Goliath be bolder in blaspheming for want of a David in the camp?</p>
- <p>I say not, avenge injuries; for the ministry of vengeance is not thine:</p>
- <p>But wherefore rebuke not a liar? wherefore do dishonour to thyself?</p>
- <p>Wherefore let the evil triumph, when the just and the right are on thy side?</p>
- <p>Such Humility is abject, it lacketh the life of sensibility,</p>
- <p>And that resignation is but mock, where the burden is not felt:</p>
- <p>Suspect thyself and thy meekness: thou art mean and indifferent to sin;</p>
- <p>And the heart that should grieve and forgive, is case-hardened and forgetteth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Humility</span> mainly becometh the converse of man with his Maker,</p>
- <p>But oftentimes it seemeth out of place in the intercourse of man with man:</p>
- <p>Yea, it is the cringer to his equal, that is chiefly seen bold to his God,</p>
- <p>While the martyr, whom a world cannot brow-beat, is humble as a child before Him.</p>
- <p>Render unto all men their due, but remember thou also art a man,</p>
- <p>And cheat not thyself of the reverence which is owing to thy reasonable being.</p>
- <p>Be courteous, and listen, and learn: but teach and answer if thou canst:</p>
- <p>Serve thee of thy neighbour's wisdom, but be not enslaved as to a master.</p>
- <p>Where thou perceivest knowledge, bend the ear of attention and respect;</p>
- <p>But yield not further to the teaching, than as thy mind is warranted by reasons.</p>
- <p>Better is an obstinate disputant, that yieldeth inch by inch,</p>
- <p>Than the shallow traitor to himself, who surrendereth to half an argument.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Modesty</span> winneth good report, but scorn cometh close upon servility;</p>
- <p>Therefore, use meekness with discretion, casting not pearls before swine.</p>
- <p>For a fool will tread upon thy neck, if he seeth thee lying in the dust;</p>
- <p>And there be companies and seasons where a resolute bearing is but duty.</p>
- <p>If a good man discloseth his secret failings unto the view of the profane,</p>
- <p>What doeth he but harm unto his brother, confirming him in his sin?</p>
- <p>There is a concealment that is right, and an open-mouthed humility that erreth;</p>
- <p>There is a candour near akin to folly, and a meekness looking like shame.</p>
- <p>Masculine sentiments, vigorously holden, well become a man;</p>
- <p>But a weak mind hath a timorous grasp, and mistaketh it for tenderness of conscience.</p>
- <p>Many are despised for their folly, who put it to the account of their religion,</p>
- <p>And because men treat them with contempt, they look to their God for glory;</p>
- <p>But contempt shall still be their reward, who betray their Master unto ridicule,</p>
- <p>Reflecting on Him in themselves, meanness and ignorance and cowardice.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">{58}</a></span>
- <p>A Christian hath a royal spirit, and need not be ashamed but unto One:</p>
- <p>Among just men walketh he softly, but the world should see him as a champion.</p>
- <p>His humbleness is far unlike the shame that covereth the profligate and weak,</p>
- <p>When the sober reproof of virtue hath touched their tingling ears;</p>
- <p>It is born of love and wisdom, and is worthy of all honour,</p>
- <p>And the sweet persuasion of its smile changeth contempt into reverence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A man</span> of a haughty spirit is daily adding to his enemies:</p>
- <p>He standeth as the Arab in the desert, and the hands of all men are against him:</p>
- <p>A man of a base mind daily subtracteth from his friends,</p>
- <p>For he holdeth himself so cheaply, that others learn to despise him:</p>
- <p>But where the meekness of self-knowledge veileth the front of self-respect,</p>
- <p>There look thou for the man, whom none can know but they will honour.</p>
- <p>Humility is the softening shadow before the stature of Excellence,</p>
- <p>And lieth lowly on the ground, beloved and lovely as the violet:</p>
- <p>Humility is the fair-haired maid, that calleth Worth her brother,</p>
- <p>The gentle silent nurse, that fostereth infant virtues:</p>
- <p>Humility bringeth no excuse; she is welcome to God and to man:</p>
- <p>Her countenance is needful unto all, who would prosper in either world:</p>
- <p>And the mild light of her sweet face is mirrored in the eyes of her companions,</p>
- <p>And straightway stand they accepted, children of penitence and love.</p>
- <p>As when the blind man is nigh unto a rose, its sweetness is the herald of its beauty,</p>
- <p>So when thou savourest Humility, be sure thou art nigh unto merit.</p>
- <p>A gift rejoiceth the covetous, and praise fatteneth the vain,</p>
- <p>And the pride of man delighteth in the humble bearing of his fellow;</p>
- <p>But to the tender benevolence of the unthanked Almoner of good,</p>
- <p>Humility is queen among the graces, for she giveth Him occasion to bestow.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">{59}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="232" height="252" alt="" src="images/image28ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF PRIDE.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Deep</span> is the sea, and deep is hell, but Pride mineth deeper;</p>
- <p>It is coiled as a poisonous worm about the foundations of the soul.</p>
- <p>If thou expose it in thy motives, and track it in thy springs of thought,</p>
- <p>Complacent in its own detection, it will seem indignant virtue;</p>
- <p>Smoothly will it gratulate thy skill, O subtle anatomist of self,</p>
- <p>And spurn at its very being, while it nestleth the deeper in thy bosom.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></span>
- <p>Pride is a double traitor, and betrayeth itself to entrap thee,</p>
- <p>Making thee vain of thy self-knowledge; proud of thy discoveries of Pride.</p>
- <p>Fruitlessly thou strainest for humility, by darkly diving into self;</p>
- <p>Rather look away from innate evil, and gaze upon extraneous good:</p>
- <p>For in sounding the deep things of the heart, thou shalt learn to be vain of its capacities,</p>
- <p>But in viewing the heights above thee, thou shalt be taught thy littleness:</p>
- <p>Could an emmet pry into itself, it might marvel at its own anatomy,</p>
- <p>But let it look on eagles, to discern how mean a thing it is.</p>
- <p>And all things hang upon comparison; to the greater, great is small:</p>
- <p>Neither is there anything so vile, but somewhat yet is viler:</p>
- <p>On all sides is there an infinity: the culprit at the gallows hath his worse,</p>
- <p>And the virgin martyr at the stake need not look far for a better.</p>
- <p>Therefore see thou that thine aim reacheth unto higher than thyself:</p>
- <p>Beware that the standard of thy soul wave from the loftiest battlement:</p>
- <p>For Pride is a pestilent meteor, flitting on the marshes of corruption,</p>
- <p>That will lure thee forward to thy death, if thou seek to track it to its source:</p>
- <p>Pride is a gloomy bow, arching the infernal firmament,</p>
- <p>That will lead thee on, if thou wilt hunt it, even to the dwelling of despair.</p>
- <p>Deep calleth unto deep, and mountain overtoppeth mountain,</p>
- <p>And still shalt thou fathom to no end the depth and the height of Pride:</p>
- <p>For it is the vast ambition of the soul, warped to an idol object,</p>
- <p>And nothing but a Deity in Self can quench its insatiable thirst.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Be</span> aware of the smiling enemy, that openly sheatheth his weapon,</p>
- <p>But mingleth poison in secret with the sacred salt of hospitality:</p>
- <p>For Pride will lie dormant in thy heart, to snatch his secret opportunity,</p>
- <p>Watching, as a lion-ant, in the bottom of his toils.</p>
- <p>Stay not to parley with thy foe, for his tongue is more potent than his arm;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
- <p>But be wiser, fighting against Pride in the simple panoply of prayer.</p>
- <p>As one also of the poets hath said, let not the Proteus escape thee;</p>
- <p>For he will blaze forth as fire, and quench himself in likeness of water;</p>
- <p>He will fright thee as a roaring beast, or charm thee as a subtle reptile.</p>
- <p>Mark, amid all his transformations, the complicate deceitfulness of Pride,</p>
- <p>And the more he striveth to elude thee, bind him the closer in thy toils.</p>
- <p>Prayer is the net that snareth him; prayer is the fetter that holdeth him:</p>
- <p>Thou canst not nourish Pride, while waiting as an almsman on thy God,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Waiting in sincerity and trust, or Pride shall meet thee even there;</p>
- <p>Yea, from the palaces of Heaven, hath Pride cast down his millions.</p>
- <p>Root up the mandrake from thy heart, though it cost thee blood and groans,</p>
- <p>Or the cherished garden of thy graces will fade and perish utterly.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="193" height="123" alt="" src="images/image29ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="230" height="246" alt="" src="images/image30ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF EXPERIENCE.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">I knew</span> that age was enriched with the hard-earned wages of knowledge,</p>
- <p>And I saw that hoary wisdom was bred in the school of disappointment:</p>
- <p>I noted that the wisest of youth, though provident and cautious of evil,</p>
- <p>Yet sailed along unsteadily, as lacking some ballast of the mind:</p>
- <p>And the cause seemed to lie in this, that while they considered around them,</p>
- <p>And warded off all dangers from without, they forgat their own weakness within.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">{63}</a></span>
- <p>So steer they in self-confidence, until, from the multitude of perils,</p>
- <p>They begin to be wary of themselves, and learn the first lesson of Experience.</p>
- <p>I knew that in the morning of life, before its wearisome journey,</p>
- <p>The youthful soul doth expand, in the simple luxury of being;</p>
- <p>It hath not contracted its wishes, nor set a limit to its hopes;</p>
- <p>The wing of fancy is unclipt, and sin hath not seared the feelings:</p>
- <p>Each feature is stamped with immortality, for all its desires are infinite,</p>
- <p>And it seeketh an ocean of happiness, to fill the deep hollow within.</p>
- <p>But the old and the grave look on, pitying that generous youth,</p>
- <p>For they also have tasted long ago the bitterness of hope destroyed:</p>
- <p>They pity him, and are sad, remembering the days that are past,</p>
- <p>But they know he must taste for himself, or he will not give ear to their wisdom.</p>
- <p>For Experience hath another lesson, which a man will do well if he learn,</p>
- <p>By checking the flight of expectation, to cheat disappointment of its pain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Experience</span> teacheth many things, and all men are his scholars:</p>
- <p>Yet is he a strange tutor, unteaching that which he hath taught.</p>
- <p>Youth is confident, manhood wary, and old age confident again:</p>
- <p>Youth is kind, manhood cold, and age returneth unto kindness.</p>
- <p>For youth suspecteth nought, till manhood, bitterly learned,</p>
- <p>Mistrusteth all, overleaping the mark; and age correcteth his excess.</p>
- <p>Suspicion is the scaffold unto faith, a temporary needful eyesore,</p>
- <p>By which the strong man's dwelling is slowly builded up behind;</p>
- <p>But soon as the top-stone hath been set to the well-proved goodly edifice,</p>
- <p>The scaffold is torn down, and timely trust taketh its long leave of suspicion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">{64}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">A thousand</span> volumes in a thousand tongues enshrine the lessons of Experience,</p>
- <p>Yet a man shall read them all, and go forth none the wiser:</p>
- <p>For self-love lendeth him a glass, to colour all he conneth,</p>
- <p>Lest in the features of another he find his own complexion.</p>
- <p>And we secretly judge of ourselves as differing greatly from all men,</p>
- <p>And love to challenge causes to show how we can master their effects:</p>
- <p>Pride is pampered in expecting that we need not fear a common fate,</p>
- <p>Or wrong-headed prejudice exulteth, in combating old Experience;</p>
- <p>Or perchance caprice and discontent are the spurs that goad us into danger,</p>
- <p>Careless, and half in hope to find there an enemy to joust with.</p>
- <p>Private Experience is an unsafe teacher, for we rarely learn both sides,</p>
- <p>And from the gilt surface reckon not on steel beneath:</p>
- <p>The torrid sons of Guinea think scorn of icy seas,</p>
- <p>And the frostbitten Greenlander disbelieveth suns too hot.</p>
- <p>But thou, student of Wisdom, feed on the marrow of the matter:</p>
- <p>If thou wilt suspect, let it be thyself; if thou wilt expect, let it not be gladness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="272" height="362" alt="" src="images/image31r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Rashly,</span> nor ofttimes truly, doth man pass judgment on his brother;</p>
- <p>For he seeth not the springs of the heart, nor heareth the reasons of the mind.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">{66}</a></span>
- <p>And the world is not wiser than of old, when justice was meted by the sword,</p>
- <p>When the spear avenged the wrong, and the lot decided the right,</p>
- <p>When the footsteps of blinded innocence were tracked by burning plough-shares,</p>
- <p>And the still condemning water delivered up the wizard to the stake:</p>
- <p>For we wait, like the sage of Salamis, to see what the end will be,</p>
- <p>Fixing the right or the wrong, by the issues of failure or success.</p>
- <p>Judge not of things by their events: neither of character by providence;</p>
- <p>And count not a man more evil, because he is more unfortunate:</p>
- <p>For the blessings of a better covenant lie not in the sunshine of prosperity,</p>
- <p>But pain and chastisement the rather show the wise Father's love.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold</span> that daughter of the world: she is full of gaiety and gladness;</p>
- <p>The diadem of rank is on her brow, uncounted wealth is in her coffers:</p>
- <p>She tricketh out her beauty like Jezebel, and is welcome in the courts of kings:</p>
- <p>She is queen of the fools of fashion, and ruleth the revels of luxury:</p>
- <p>And though she sitteth not as Tamar, nor standeth in the ways as Rahab,</p>
- <p>Yet in the secret of her chamber, she shrinketh not from dalliance and guilt.</p>
- <p>She careth not if there be a God, or a soul, or a time of retribution;</p>
- <p>Pleasure is the idol of her heart: she thirsteth for no purer heaven.</p>
- <p>And she laugheth with light good humour, and all men praise her gentleness;</p>
- <p>They are glad in her lovely smile, and the river of her bounty filleth them.</p>
- <p>So she prospered in the world: the worship and desire of thousands;</p>
- <p>And she died even as she had lived, careless and courteous and liberal.</p>
- <p>The grave swallowed up her pomp, the marble proclaimed her virtues,</p>
- <p>For men esteemed her excellent, and charities soundeth forth her praise:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
- <p>But elsewhere far other judgment setteth her&mdash;with infidels and harlots!</p>
- <p>She abused the trust of her splendour: and the wages of her sin shall be hereafter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Look</span> again on this fair girl, the orphan of a village pastor</p>
- <p>Who is dead, and hath left her his all,&mdash;his blessing, and a name unstained.</p>
- <p>And friends, with busy zeal, that their purses be not taxed,</p>
- <p>Place the sad mourner in a home, poor substitute for that she hath lost.</p>
- <p>A stranger among strange faces she drinketh the wormwood of dependence;</p>
- <p>She is marked as a child of want: and the world hateth poverty.</p>
- <p>Prayer is not heard in that house; the day she hath loved to hallow</p>
- <p>Is noted but by deeper dissipation, the riot of luxury and gaming:</p>
- <p>And wantonness is in her master's eye, and she hath nowhere to flee to;</p>
- <p>She is cared for by none upon earth, and her God seemeth to forsake her.</p>
- <p>Then cometh, in fair show, the promise and the feint of affection,</p>
- <p>And her heart, long unused to kindness, remembereth her father, and loveth.</p>
- <p>And the villain hath wronged her trust, and mocked, and flung her from him,</p>
- <p>And men point at her and laugh; and women hate her as an outcast:</p>
- <p>But elsewhere, far other judgment seateth her&mdash;among the martyrs!</p>
- <p>And the Lord, who seemed to forsake, giveth double glory to the fallen.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Once</span> more, in the matter of wealth: if thou throw thine all on a chance,</p>
- <p>Men will come around thee, and wait, and watch the turning of the wheel:</p>
- <p>And if, in the lottery of life, thou hast drawn a splendid prize,</p>
- <p>What foresight hadst thou, and skill! yea, what enterprize and wisdom!</p>
- <p>But if it fall out against thee, and thou fail in thy perilous endeavour,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">{68}</a></span>
- <p>Behold, the simple did sow, and hath reaped the right harvest of his folly:</p>
- <p>And the world will be gladly excused, nor will reach out a finger to help;</p>
- <p>For why should this speculative dullard be a whirlpool to all around him?</p>
- <p>Go to, let him sink by himself: we knew what the end of it would be:&mdash;</p>
- <p>For the man hath missed his mark, and his fellows look no further.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Also,</span> touching guilt and innocence: a man shall walk in his uprightness</p>
- <p>Year after year without reproach, in charity and honesty with all:</p>
- <p>But in one evil hour the enemy shall come in like a flood;</p>
- <p>Shall track him, and tempt him, and hem him,&mdash;till he knoweth not whither to fly.</p>
- <p>Perchance his famishing little ones shall scream in his ears for bread,</p>
- <p>And, maddened by that fierce cry, he rusheth as a thief upon the world;</p>
- <p>The world that hath left him to starve, itself wallowing in plenty,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The world, that denieth him his rights,&mdash;he daringly robbeth it of them.</p>
- <p>I say not, such an one is innocent; but, small is the measure of his guilt</p>
- <p>To that of his wealthy neighbour, who would not help him at his need;</p>
- <p>To that of the selfish epicure, who turned away with coldness from his tale;</p>
- <p>To that of unsuffering thousands, who look with complacence on his fall.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Or</span> perchance the continual dropping of the venomed words of spite,</p>
- <p>Insult and injury and scorn, have galled and pierced his heart;</p>
- <p>Yet, with all long-suffering and meekness, he forgiveth unto seventy times seven:</p>
- <p>Till, in some weaker moment, tempted beyond endurance,</p>
- <p>He striketh, more in anger than in hate; and, alas! for his heavy chance,</p>
- <p>He hath smitten unto instant death his spiteful life-long enemy!</p>
- <p>And none was by to see it; and all men knew of their contentions:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
- <p>Fierce voices shout for his blood, and rude hands hurry him to judgment.</p>
- <p>Then man's verdict cometh,&mdash;Murderer, with forethought malice;</p>
- <p>And his name is a note of execration; his guilt is too black for devils.</p>
- <p>But to the Righteous Judge, seemeth he the suffering victim;</p>
- <p>For his anger was not unlawful, but became him as a Christian and a man;</p>
- <p>And though his guilt was grievous when he struck that heavy bitter blow,</p>
- <p>Yet light is the sin of the smiter, and verily kicketh the beam,</p>
- <p>To the weight of that man's wickedness, whose slow relentless hatred</p>
- <p>Met him at every turn, with patient continuance in evil.</p>
- <p>Doubtless, eternal wrath shall be heaped upon that spiteful enemy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">It</span> is vain, it is vain, saith the preacher; there be none but the righteous and the wicked,</p>
- <p>Base rebels, and staunch allies, the true knight, and the traitor:</p>
- <p>And he beareth strong witness among men, There is no neutral ground,</p>
- <p>The broad highway and narrow path map out the whole domain;</p>
- <p>Sit here among the saints, these holy chosen few,</p>
- <p>Or grovel there a wretched condemned, to die among the million.</p>
- <p>And verily for ultimate results, there be but good and bad;</p>
- <p>Heaven hath no dusky twilight; hell is not gladdened with a dawn.</p>
- <p>Yet looking round among his fellows, who can pass righteous judgment,</p>
- <p>Such an one is holy and accepted, and such an one reprobate and doomed?</p>
- <p>There is so much of good among the worst, so much of evil in the best,</p>
- <p>Such seeming partialities in providence, so many things to lessen and expand,</p>
- <p>Yea, and with all man's boast, so little real freedom of his will,&mdash;</p>
- <p>That, to look a little lower than the surface, garb or dialect or fashion,</p>
- <p>Thou shalt feebly pronounce for a saint, and faintly condemn for a sinner.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">{70}</a></span>
- <p>Over many a good heart and true, fluttereth the Great King's pennant;</p>
- <p>By many an iron hand, the pirate's black banner is unfurled:</p>
- <p>But there be many more besides, in the yacht and the trader and the fishing-boat,</p>
- <p>In the feathered war-canoe, and the quick mysterious gondola:</p>
- <p>And the army of that Great King hath no stated uniform;</p>
- <p>Of mingled characters and kinds goeth forth the countless host;</p>
- <p>There is the turbaned Damascene, with his tattooed Zealand brother,</p>
- <p>There the slim bather in the Ganges, with the sturdy Russian boor,</p>
- <p>The sluggish inmate of a Polar cave, with the fire-souled daughter of Brazil,</p>
- <p>The embruted slave from Cuba, and the Briton of gentle birth.</p>
- <p>For all are His inheritance, of all He taketh tithe:</p>
- <p>And the church, His mercy's ark, hath some of every sort.</p>
- <p>Who art thou, O man, that art fixing the limits of the fold?</p>
- <p>Wherefore settest thou stakes to spread the tent of heaven?</p>
- <p>Lay not the plummet to the line: religion hath no landmarks:</p>
- <p>No human keenness can discern the subtle shades of faith:</p>
- <p>In some it is as earliest dawn, the scarce diluted darkness;</p>
- <p>In some as dubious twilight, cold and grey and gloomy:</p>
- <p>In some the ebon east is streaked with flaming gold:</p>
- <p>In some the dayspring from on high breaketh in all its praise.</p>
- <p>And who hath determined the when, separating light from darkness?</p>
- <p>Who shall pluck from earliest dawn the promise of the day?</p>
- <p>Leave that care to the Husbandman, lest thou garner tares;</p>
- <p>Help thou the Shepherd in His seeking, but to separate be His:</p>
- <p>For I have often seen the noble erring spirit</p>
- <p>Wrecked on the shoals of passion, and numbered of the lost;</p>
- <p>Often the generous heart, lit by unhallowed fire,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">{71}</a></span>
- <p>Counted a brand among the burning, and left uncared for in his sin:</p>
- <p>Yet I waited a little year, and the mercy thou hadst forgotten</p>
- <p>Hath purged that noble spirit, washing it in waters of repentance;</p>
- <p>That glowing generous heart, having burnt out all its dross,</p>
- <p>Is as a golden censer, ready for the aloes and cassia:</p>
- <p>While thou, hard-visaged man, unlovely in thy strictness,</p>
- <p>Who turned from him thy sympathies with self-complacent pride,</p>
- <p>How art thou shamed by him! his heart is a spring of love,</p>
- <p>While the dry well of thine affections is choked with secret mammon.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="204" height="123" alt="" src="images/image32ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Sometimes</span> at a glance thou judgest well; years could add little to thy knowledge:</p>
- <p>When charity gloweth on the cheek, or malice is lowering in the eye,</p>
- <p>When honesty's open brow, or the weasel-face of cunning is before thee,</p>
- <p>Or the loose lip of wantonness, or clear bright forehead of reflection.</p>
- <p>But often, by shrewd scrutiny, thou judgest to the good man's harm:</p>
- <p>For it may be his hour of trial, or he slumbereth at his post,</p>
- <p>Or he hath slain his foe, but not yet levelled the stronghold,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
- <p>Or barely recovered of the wounds, that fleshed him in his fray with passion.</p>
- <p>Also, of the worst, through prejudice, thou loosely shalt think well:</p>
- <p>For none is altogether evil, and thou mayst catch him at his prayers:</p>
- <p>There may be one small prize, though all beside be blanks;</p>
- <p>A silver thread of goodness in the black serge-cloth of crime.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is to whom all things are easy; his mind, as a master-key,</p>
- <p>Can open, with intuitive address, the treasuries of art and science:</p>
- <p>There is to whom all things are hard; but industry giveth him a crow-bar,</p>
- <p>To force, with groaning labour, the stubborn lock of learning:</p>
- <p>And often, when thou lookest on an eye, dim in native dulness,</p>
- <p>Little shalt thou wot of the wealth diligence hath gathered to its gaze;</p>
- <p>Often, the brow that should be bright with the dormant fire of genius,</p>
- <p>Within its ample halls, hath ignorance the tenant.</p>
- <p>Yet are not the sons of men cast as in moulds by the lot?</p>
- <p>The like in frame and feature have much alike in spirit;</p>
- <p>Such a shape hath such a soul, so that a deep discerner</p>
- <p>From his make will read the man, and err not far in judgment:</p>
- <p>Yea, and it holdeth in the converse, that growing similarity of mind</p>
- <p>Findeth or maketh for itself an apposite dwelling in the body:</p>
- <p>Accident may modify, circumstance may bevil, externals seem to change it,</p>
- <p>But still the primitive crystal is latent in its many variations:</p>
- <p>For the map of the face, and the picture of the eye, are traced by the pen of passion;</p>
- <p>And the mind fashioneth a tabernacle suitable for itself.</p>
- <p>A mean spirit boweth down the back, and the bowing fostereth meanness;</p>
- <p>A resolute purpose knitteth the knees, and the firm tread nourisheth decision;</p>
- <p>Love looketh softly from the eye, and kindleth love by looking;</p>
- <p>Hate furroweth the brow, and a man may frown till he hateth:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span>
- <p>For mind and body, spirit and matter, have reciprocities of power,</p>
- <p>And each keepeth up the strife; a man's works make or mar him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> be deeper things than these, lying in the twilight of truth;</p>
- <p>But few can discern them aright, from surrounding dimness of error.</p>
- <p>For perchance, if thou knewest the whole, and largely with comprehensive mind</p>
- <p>Couldst read the history of character, the chequered story of a life,</p>
- <p>And into the great account, which summeth a mortal's destiny,</p>
- <p>Wert to add the forces from without, dragging him this way and that,</p>
- <p>And the secret qualities within, grafted on the soul from the womb,</p>
- <p>And the might of other men's example, among whom his lot is cast,</p>
- <p>And the influence of want or wealth, of kindness or harsh ill-usage,</p>
- <p>Of ignorance he cannot help, and knowledge found for him by others,</p>
- <p>And first impressions, hard to be effaced, and leadings to right or to wrong,</p>
- <p>And inheritance of likeness from a father, and natural human frailty,</p>
- <p>And the habit of health or disease, and prejudices poured into his mind,</p>
- <p>And the myriad little matters none but Omniscience can know,</p>
- <p>And accidents that steer the thoughts, where none but Ubiquity can trace them;&mdash;</p>
- <p>If thou couldst compass all these, and the consequents flowing from them,</p>
- <p>And the scope to which they tend, and the necessary fitness of all things,</p>
- <p>Then shouldst thou see as He seeth, who judgeth all men equal,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Equal, touching innocence and guilt; and different alone in this,</p>
- <p>That one acknowledged his evil, and looketh to his God for mercy;</p>
- <p>Another boasteth of his good, and calleth on his God for justice;</p>
- <p>So He, that sendeth none away, is largely munificent to prayer,</p>
- <p>But, in the heart of presumption, sheatheth the sword of vengeance.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="191" height="239" alt="" src="images/image33ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF HATRED AND ANGER.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Blunted</span> unto goodness is the heart which anger never stirreth,</p>
- <p>But that which hatred swelleth, is keen to carve out evil.</p>
- <p>Anger is a noble infirmity, the generous failing of the just,</p>
- <p>The one degree that riseth above zeal, asserting the prerogatives of virtue:</p>
- <p>But hatred is a slow continuing crime, a fire in the bad man's breast,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></span>
- <p>A dull and hungry flame, for ever craving insatiate.</p>
- <p>Hatred would harm another; anger would indulge itself:</p>
- <p>Hatred is a simmering poison; anger, the opening of a valve:</p>
- <p>Hatred destroyeth as the upas-tree; anger smiteth as a staff:</p>
- <p>Hatred is the atmosphere of hell; but anger is known in heaven.</p>
- <p>Is there not a righteous wrath, an anger just and holy,</p>
- <p>When goodness is sitting in the dust, and wickedness enthroned on Babel?</p>
- <p>Doth pity condemn guilt?&mdash;is justice not a feeling but a law</p>
- <p>Appealing to the line and to the plummet, incognizant of moral sense?</p>
- <p>Thou that condemnest anger, small is thy sympathy with angels,</p>
- <p>Thou that hast accounted it for sin, cold is thy communion with heaven.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Beware</span> of the angry in his passion; but fear not to approach him afterward;</p>
- <p>For if thou acknowledge thine error, he himself will be sorry for his wrath:</p>
- <p>Beware of the hater in his coolness; for he meditateth evil against thee:</p>
- <p>Commending the resources of his mind calmly to work thy ruin.</p>
- <p>Deceit and treachery skulk with hatred, but an honest spirit flieth with anger:</p>
- <p>The one lieth secret, as a serpent; the other chaseth, as a leopard.</p>
- <p>Speedily be reconciled in love, and receive the returning offender,</p>
- <p>For wittingly prolonging Anger, thou tamperest unconsciously with Hatred.</p>
- <p>Patience is power in a man, nerving him to rein his spirit:</p>
- <p>Passion is as palsy to his arm, while it yelleth on the coursers to their speed:</p>
- <p>Patience keepeth counsel, and standeth in solid self-possession,</p>
- <p>But the weakness of sudden passion layeth bare the secrets of the soul.</p>
- <p>The sentiment of anger is not ill, when thou lookest on the impudence of vice,</p>
- <p>Or savourest the breath of calumny, or hast earned the hard wages of injustice;</p>
- <p>But see that thou curb it in expression, rendering the mildness of rebuke,</p>
- <p>So shall thou stand without reproach, mailed in all the dignity of virtue.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="173" height="167" alt="" src="images/image34ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="78" height="93" alt="" src="images/image35cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">I heard</span>
- the man of sin reproaching the goodness of Jehovah,</p>
- <p>Wherefore, if He be Almighty Love, permitteth He misery and pain?</p>
- <p>I saw the child of hope vexed in the labyrinth of doubt,</p>
- <p>Wherefore, O holy One and just, is the horn of Thy foul foe so high exalted?</p>
- <p>And, alas! for this our groaning world, for that grief and guilt are here;</p>
- <p>Alas! for that Earth is the battle-field, where good must combat with evil:</p>
- <p>Angels look on and hold their breath, burning to mingle in the conflict,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></span>
- <p>But the troops of the Captain of Salvation may be none but the soldiers of the cross:</p>
- <p>And that slender band must fight alone, and yet shall triumph gloriously,</p>
- <p>Enough shall they be for conquest, and the motto of their standard is, <span class="smcap">Enough</span>.</p>
- <p>Thou art sad, O denizen of earth, for pains and diseases and death,</p>
- <p>But remember, thy hand hath earned them; grudge not at the wages of thy doings:</p>
- <p>Thy guilt, and thy fathers' guilt, must bring many sorrows in their company,</p>
- <p>And if thou wilt drink sweet poison, doubtless it shall rot thee to the core.</p>
- <p>What art thou but the heritor of evil, with a right to nothing good?</p>
- <p>The respite of an interval of ease were a boon which Justice might deny thee:</p>
- <p>Therefore lay thy hand upon thy mouth, O man much to be forgiven,</p>
- <p>And wait, thou child of hope, for time shall teach thee all things.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> hear, for my speech shall comfort thee: reverently, but with boldness,</p>
- <p>I would raise the sable curtain, that hideth the symmetry of Providence.</p>
- <p>Pain and sin are convicts, and toil in their fetters for good;</p>
- <p>The weapons of evil are turned against itself, fighting under better banners:</p>
- <p>The leech delighteth in stinging, and the wicked loveth to do harm,</p>
- <p>But the wise Physician of the Universe useth that ill tendency for health.</p>
- <p>Verily, from others' griefs are gendered sympathy and kindness;</p>
- <p>Patience, humility, and faith, spring not seldom from thine own:</p>
- <p>An enemy, humbled by his sorrows, cannot be far from thy forgiveness;</p>
- <p>A friend, who hath tasted of calamity, shall fan the dying incense of thy love:</p>
- <p>And for thyself, is it a small thing, so to learn thy frailty,</p>
- <p>That from an aching bone thou savest the whole body?</p>
- <p>The furnace of affliction may be fierce, but if it refineth thy soul,</p>
- <p>The good of one meek thought shall outweigh years of torment.</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, wretched man, if thy bad heart be hardened in the flame,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></span>
- <p>Being earth-born, as of clay, and not of moulded wax,</p>
- <p>Judge not the hand that smiteth, as if thou wert visited in wrath:</p>
- <p>Reproach thyself, for He is Justice; repent thee, for He is Mercy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Cease,</span> fond caviller at wisdom, to be satisfied that everything is wrong:</p>
- <p>Be sure there is good necessity, even for the flourishing of evil.</p>
- <p>Would the eye delight in perpetual noon? or the ear in unqualified harmonics?</p>
- <p>Hath winter's frost no welcome, contrasting sturdily with summer?</p>
- <p>Couldst thou discern benevolence, if there were no sorrows to be soothed?</p>
- <p>Or discover the resources of contrivance, if nothing stood opposed to the means?</p>
- <p>What were power without an enemy? or mercy without an object?</p>
- <p>Or truth, where the false were impossible? or love, where love were a debt?</p>
- <p>The characters of God were but idle, if all things around Him were perfection,</p>
- <p>And virtues might slumber on like death, if they lacked the opportunities of evil.</p>
- <p>There is One all-perfect, and but one; man dare not reason of His essence:</p>
- <p>But there must be deficiencies in heaven, to leave room for progression in bliss:</p>
- <p>A realm of unqualified <small>BEST</small> were a stagnant pool of being,</p>
- <p>And the circle of absolute perfection, the abstract cipher of indolence.</p>
- <p>Sin is an awful shadow, but it addeth new glories to the light;</p>
- <p>Sin is a black foil, but it setteth off the jewelry of heaven:</p>
- <p>Sin is the traitor that hath dragged the majesty of mercy into action;</p>
- <p>Sin is the whelming argument, to justify the attribute of vengeance.</p>
- <p>It is a deep dark thought, and needeth to be diligently studied,</p>
- <p>But perchance evil was essential, that God should be seen of His creatures:</p>
- <p>For where perfection is not, there lacketh possible good,</p>
- <p>And the absence of better that might be, taketh from the praise of it is well:</p>
- <p>And creatures must be finite, and finite cannot be perfect:</p>
- <p>Therefore, though in small degree, creation involveth evil,</p>
- <p>He chargeth His angels with folly, and the heavens are not clean in His sight:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></span>
- <p>For every existence in the universe hath either imperfection or Godhead:</p>
- <p>And the light that blazeth but in One, must be softened with shadow for the many.</p>
- <p>There is then good in evil; or none could have known his Maker;</p>
- <p>No spiritual intellect or essence could have gazed on His high perfections,</p>
- <p>No angel harps could have tuned the wonders of His wisdom,</p>
- <p>No ransomed souls have praised the glories of His mercy,</p>
- <p>No howling fiends have shown the terrors of His justice,</p>
- <p>But God would have dwelt alone, in the fearful solitude of holiness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless,</span> O sinner, harden not thine heart in evil;</p>
- <p>Nor plume thee in imaginary triumph, because thou art not valueless as vile;</p>
- <p>Because thy dark abominations add lustre to the clarity of Light;</p>
- <p>Because a wonder-working alchemy draineth elixir out of poisons;</p>
- <p>Because the same fiery volcano that scorcheth and ravageth a continent,</p>
- <p>Hath in the broad blue bay cast up some petty island;</p>
- <p>Because to the full demonstration of the qualities and accidents of good</p>
- <p>The swarthy legions of the Devil have toiled as unwitting pioneers.</p>
- <p>For sin is still sin; so hateful Love doth hate it;</p>
- <p>A blot on the glory of creation, which Justice must wipe out.</p>
- <p>Sin is a loathsome leprosy, fretting the white robe of innocence;</p>
- <p>A rottenness, eating out the heart of the royal cedars of Lebanon;</p>
- <p>A pestilential blast, the terror of that holy pilgrimage;</p>
- <p>A rent in the sacred veil, whereby God left His temple.</p>
- <p>Therefore, consider thyself, thou that dost not sorrow for thy guilt:</p>
- <p>Fear evil, or face its Enemy: dread sin, or dare Justice.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yea,</span> saith the Spirit: and their works do follow them;</p>
- <p>Habits, and thoughts, and deeds, are shadows and satellites of self.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</a></span>
- <p>What! shall the claimant to a throne stand forward with a rabble rout,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Meanness, impiety, and lust; riot and indolence and vanity?</p>
- <p>Nay, man! the train wherewith thou comest attend whither thou shalt go:</p>
- <p>A throne for a king's son, but an inner dungeon for the felon.</p>
- <p>For a man's works do follow him: bodily, standing in the judgment,</p>
- <p>Behold the false accuser, behold the slandered saint;</p>
- <p>The slave, and his bloody driver; the poor, and his generous friend;</p>
- <p>The simple dupe, and the crafty knave: the murderer, and&mdash;his victim!</p>
- <p>Yet all are in many characters; the best stand guilty at the bar;</p>
- <p>And he that seemed the worst may have most of real excuse.</p>
- <p>The talents unto which a man is born, be they few or many,</p>
- <p>Are dropped into the balance of account, working unlooked-for changes;</p>
- <p>And perchance the convict from the galleys may stand above the hermit in his cell,</p>
- <p>For that, the obstacles in one outweigh the propensions in the other.</p>
- <p>There be, who have made themselves friends, yea, by unrighteous mammon,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Friends, ready waiting as an escort to those everlasting habitations;</p>
- <p>Embodied in living witnesses, thronging to meet them in a cloud,</p>
- <p>Charity, meekness and truth, zeal, sincerity and patience,</p>
- <p>There be, who have made themselves foes, yea, by honest gain,</p>
- <p>Foes, whose plaint must have its answer, before the bright portal is unbarred:</p>
- <p>Pride, and selfishness, and sloth, apathy, wrath and falsehood,</p>
- <p>Bind to their everlasting toil many that must weary in the fires.</p>
- <p>Love hath a power and a longing to save the gathered world,</p>
- <p>And rescue universal man from the hunting hell-hounds of his doings:</p>
- <p>Yet few, here one and there one, scanty as the gleaning after harvest,</p>
- <p>Are glad of the robes of praise which Mercy would fling around the naked;</p>
- <p>But wrapping closer to their skin the poisoned tunic of their works,</p>
- <p>They stand in self-dependence, to perish in abandonment of God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="230" height="283" alt="" src="images/image36ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF PRAYER.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">A wicked</span> man scorneth prayer, in the shallow sophistry of reason,</p>
- <p>He derideth the silly hope that God can be moved by supplication:&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</a></span>
- <p>Shall the Unchangeable be changed, or waver in His purpose?</p>
- <p>Can the weakness of pity affect Him? Should He turn at the bidding of a man?</p>
- <p>Methought He ruled all things, and ye called His decrees immutable,</p>
- <p>But if thus He listeneth to words, wherein is the firmness of His will?&mdash;</p>
- <p>So I heard the speech of the wicked, and, lo, it was smoother than oil;</p>
- <p>But I knew that his reasonings were false, for the promise of the Scripture is true:</p>
- <p>Yet was my soul in darkness, for his words were too hard for me;</p>
- <p>Till I turned to my God in prayer: for I know He heareth always.</p>
- <p>Then I looked abroad on the earth, and, behold, the Lord was in all things;</p>
- <p>Yet saw I not His hand in aught, but perceived that He worketh by means;</p>
- <p>Yea, and the power of the mean proveth the wisdom that ordained it,</p>
- <p>Yea, and no act is useless, to the hurling of a stone through the air.</p>
- <p>So I turned my thoughts to supplication, and beheld the mercies of Jehovah,</p>
- <p>And I saw sound argument was still the faithful friend of godliness;</p>
- <p>For as the rock of the affections is the solid approval of reason,</p>
- <p>Even so the temple of Religion is founded on the basis of Philosophy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Scorner,</span> thy thoughts are weak, they reach not the summit of the matter;</p>
- <p>Go to, for the mouth of a child might show thee the mystery of prayer:</p>
- <p>Verily, there is no change in the counsels of the Mighty Ruler:</p>
- <p>Verily, His purpose is strong, and rooted in the depths of necessity:</p>
- <p>But who hath shown thee His purpose, who hath made known to thee His will?</p>
- <p>When, O gainsayer! hast thou been schooled in the secrets of wisdom?</p>
- <p>Fate is a creature of God, and all things move in their orbits,</p>
- <p>And that which shall surely happen is known unto Him from eternity;</p>
- <p>But as, in the field of nature, He useth the sinews of the ox,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></span>
- <p>And commandeth diligence and toil, Himself giving the increase;</p>
- <p>So, in the kingdom of His grace, granteth He omnipotence to prayer,</p>
- <p>For He knoweth what thou wilt ask, and what thou wilt ask aright.</p>
- <p>No man can pray in faith, whose prayer is not grounded on a promise:</p>
- <p>Yet a good man commendeth all things to the righteous wisdom of his God:</p>
- <p>For those, who pray in faith, trust the immutable Jehovah,</p>
- <p>And they, who ask blessings unpromised, lean on uncovenanted mercy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man,</span> regard thy prayers as a purpose of love to thy soul;</p>
- <p>Esteem the providence that led to them as an index of God's good will;</p>
- <p>So shalt thou pray aright, and thy words shall meet with acceptance.</p>
- <p>Also, in pleading for others, be thankful for the fulness of thy prayer:</p>
- <p>For if thou art ready to ask, the Lord is more ready to bestow.</p>
- <p>The salt preserveth the sea, and the saints uphold the earth;</p>
- <p>Their prayers are the thousand pillars that prop the canopy of nature.</p>
- <p>Verily, an hour without prayer, from some terrestrial mind,</p>
- <p>Were a curse in the calendar of time, a spot of the blackness of darkness.</p>
- <p>Perchance the terrible day, when the world must rock into ruins,</p>
- <p>Will be one unwhitened by prayer,&mdash;shall He find faith on the earth?</p>
- <p>For there is an economy of mercy, as of wisdom, and power, and means;</p>
- <p>Neither is one blessing granted, unbesought from the treasury of good:</p>
- <p>And the charitable heart of the Being, to depend upon whom is happiness,</p>
- <p>Never withholdeth a bounty, so long as His subject prayeth;</p>
- <p>Yea, ask what thou wilt, to the second throne in heaven,</p>
- <p>It is thine, for whom it was appointed; there is no limit unto prayer:</p>
- <p>But and if thou cease to ask, tremble, thou self-suspended creature,</p>
- <p>For thy strength is cut off as was Samson's: and the hour of thy doom is come.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Frail</span> art thou, O man, as a bubble on the breaker,</p>
- <p>Weak and governed by externals, like a poor bird caught in the storm;</p>
- <p>Yet thy momentary breath can still the raging waters,</p>
- <p>Thy hand can touch a lever that may move the world.</p>
- <p>O Merciful, we strike eternal covenant with thee,</p>
- <p>For man may take for his ally the King who ruleth kings:</p>
- <p>How strong, yet how most weak, in utter poverty how rich,</p>
- <p>What possible omnipotence to good is dormant in a man!</p>
- <p>Behold that fragile form of delicate transparent beauty,</p>
- <p>Whose light-blue eye and hectic cheek are lit by the bale-fires of decline:</p>
- <p>All droopingly she lieth, as a dew-laden lily,</p>
- <p>Her flaxen tresses, rashly luxuriant, dank with unhealthy moisture;</p>
- <p>Hath not thy heart said of her, Alas! poor child of weakness?</p>
- <p>Thou hast erred; Goliah of Gath stood not in half her strength:</p>
- <p>Terribly she fighteth in the van as the virgin daughter of Orleans,</p>
- <p>She beareth the banner of Heaven, her onset is the rushing cataract,</p>
- <p>Seraphim rally at her side, and the captain of that host is God,</p>
- <p>And the serried ranks of evil are routed by the lightning of her eye;</p>
- <p>She is the King's remembrancer, and steward of many blessings,</p>
- <p>Holding the buckler of security over her unthankful land:</p>
- <p>For that weak fluttering heart is strong in faith assured,</p>
- <p>Dependence is her might, and behold&mdash;she prayeth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Angels</span> are round the good man, to catch the incense of his prayers,</p>
- <p>And they fly to minister kindness to those for whom he pleadeth;</p>
- <p>For the altar of his heart is lighted, and burneth before God continually,</p>
- <p>And he breatheth, conscious of his joy, the native atmosphere of heaven:</p>
- <p>Yea, though poor, and contemned, and ignorant of this world's wisdom,</p>
- <p>Ill can his fellows spare him, though they know not of his value.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span>
- <p>Thousands bewail a hero, and a nation mourneth for its king,</p>
- <p>But the whole universe lamenteth the loss of a man of prayer.</p>
- <p>Verily, were it not for One, who sitteth on His rightful throne,</p>
- <p>Crowned with a rainbow of emerald, the green memorial of earth,&mdash;</p>
- <p>For One, a mediating man, that hath clad His Godhead with mortality,</p>
- <p>And offereth prayer without ceasing, the royal priest of Nature,</p>
- <p>Matter and life and mind had sunk into dark annihilation,</p>
- <p>And the lightning frown of Justice withered the world into nothing.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thus,</span> O worshipper of reason, thou hast heard the sum of the matter:</p>
- <p>And woe to his hairy scalp that restraineth prayer before God.</p>
- <p>Prayer is a creature's strength, his very breath and being;</p>
- <p>Prayer is the golden key that can open the wicket of Mercy:</p>
- <p>Prayer is the magic sound that saith to Fate, So be it;</p>
- <p>Prayer is the slender nerve that moveth the muscles of Omnipotence.</p>
- <p>Wherefore, pray, O creature, for many and great are thy wants;</p>
- <p>Thy mind, thy conscience, and thy being, thy rights commend thee unto prayer,</p>
- <p>The cure of all cares, the grand panacea for all pains,</p>
- <p>Doubt's destroyer, ruin's remedy, the antidote to all anxieties.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So</span> then, God is true, and yet He hath not changed:</p>
- <p>It is He that sendeth the petition, to answer it according to His will.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="229" height="268" alt="" src="images/image37ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>THE LORD'S PRAYER.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Inquirest</span> thou, O man, wherewithal may I come unto the Lord?</p>
- <p>And with what wonder-working sounds may I move the majesty of Heaven?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
- <p>There is a model to thy hand; upon that do thou frame thy supplication;</p>
- <p>Wisdom hath measured its words; and redemption urgeth thee to use them.</p>
- <p>Call thy God thy Father, and yet not thine alone,</p>
- <p>For thou art but one of many, thy brotherhood is with all:</p>
- <p>Remember His high estate, that He dwelleth King of Heaven;</p>
- <p>So shall thy thoughts be humbled, nor love be unmixed with reverence:</p>
- <p>Be thy first petition unselfish, the honour of Him who made thee,</p>
- <p>And that in the depths of thy heart His memory be shrined in holiness:</p>
- <p>Pray for that blessed time, when good shall triumph over evil,</p>
- <p>And one universal temple echo the perfections of Jehovah:</p>
- <p>Bend thou to His good will, and subserve His holy purposes,</p>
- <p>Till in thee, and those around thee, grow a little heaven upon earth:</p>
- <p>Humbly, as a grateful almsman, beg thy bread of God,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Bread for thy triple estate, for thou hast a trinity of nature:</p>
- <p>Humility smootheth the way, and gratitude softeneth the heart,</p>
- <p>Be then thy prayer for pardon mingled with the tear of penitence;</p>
- <p>Yea, and while, all unworthy, thou leanest on the hand that should smite,</p>
- <p>Thou canst not from thy fellows withhold thy less forgiveness.</p>
- <p>To thy Father thy weaknesses are known, and thou hast not hid thy sin,</p>
- <p>Therefore ask Him, in all trust, to lead thee from the dangers of temptation;</p>
- <p>While the last petition of the soul, that breatheth on the confines of prayer,</p>
- <p>Is deliverance from sin and the evil one, the miseries of earth and hell.</p>
- <p>And wherefore, child of hope, should the rock of thy confidence be sure?</p>
- <p>Thou knowest that God heareth and promiseth an answer of peace;</p>
- <p>Thou knowest that He is King, and none can stay His hand;</p>
- <p>Thou knowest His power to be boundless, for there is none other:</p>
- <p>And to Him thou givest glory, as a creature of His workmanship and favour,</p>
- <p>For the never-ending term of thy saved and bright existence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="273" height="355" alt="" src="images/image38r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF DISCRETION.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">For</span> what then was I born?&mdash;to fill the circling year</p>
- <p>With daily toil for daily bread, with sordid pains and pleasures?&mdash;</p>
- <p>To walk this chequered world, alternate light and darkness,</p>
- <p>The day-dreams of deep thought followed by the night-dreams of fancy?&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
- <p>To be one in a full procession?&mdash;to dig my kindred clay?&mdash;</p>
- <p>To decorate the gallery of art?&mdash;to clear a few acres of forest?</p>
- <p>For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.</p>
- <p>Is then that noble end to feed this mind with knowledge,</p>
- <p>To mix for mine own thirst the sparkling wine of wisdom,</p>
- <p>To light with many lamps the caverns of my heart,</p>
- <p>To reap, in the furrows of my brain, good harvest of right reasons?&mdash;</p>
- <p>For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.</p>
- <p>Is it to grow stronger in self-government, to check the chafing will,</p>
- <p>To curb with tightening rein the mettled steeds of passion,</p>
- <p>To welcome with calm heart, far in the voiceless desert,</p>
- <p>The gracious visitings of heaven that bless my single self?&mdash;</p>
- <p>For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.</p>
- <p>To aim at thine own happiness, is an end idolatrous and evil;</p>
- <p>In earth, yea in heaven, if thou seek it for itself, seeking thou shalt not find.</p>
- <p>Happiness is a road-side flower, growing on the highway of Usefulness;</p>
- <p>Plucked, it shall wither in thy hand; passed by, it is fragrance to thy spirit:</p>
- <p>Love not thine own soul, regard not thine own weal,</p>
- <p>Trample the thyme beneath thy feet; be useful, and be happy!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thus</span> unto fair conclusions argueth generous youth,</p>
- <p>And quickly he starteth on his course, knight-errant to do good.</p>
- <p>His sword is edged with arguments, his vizor terrible with censures;</p>
- <p>He goeth full mailed in faith, and zeal is flaming at his heart.</p>
- <p>Yet one thing he lacketh, the Mentor of the mind,</p>
- <p>The quiet whisper of Discretion&mdash;Thy time is not yet come.</p>
- <p>For he smiteth an oppressor; and vengeance for that smiting</p>
- <p>Is dealt in doubled stripes on the faint body of the victim:</p>
- <p>He is glad to give and to distribute; and clamorous pauperism feasteth,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
- <p>While honest labour, pining, hideth his sharp ribs:</p>
- <p>He challengeth to a fair field that subtle giant Infidelity,</p>
- <p>And, worsted in the unequal fight, strengtheneth the hands of error;</p>
- <p>He hasteth to teach and preach, as the war-horse rusheth to the battle,</p>
- <p>And to pave a way for truth, would break up the Apennines of prejudice:</p>
- <p>He wearieth by stale proofs, where none looked for a reason,</p>
- <p>And to the listening ear will urge the false argument of feeling.</p>
- <p>So hath it often been, that, judging by results,</p>
- <p>The hottest friends of truth have done her deadliest wrong.</p>
- <p>Alas! for there are enemies without, glad enough to parley with a traitor,</p>
- <p>And a zealot will let down the drawbridge, to prove his own prowess:</p>
- <p>Yea, from within will he break away a breach in the citadel of truth,</p>
- <p>That he may fill the gap, for fame, with his own weak body.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Zeal</span> without judgment is an evil, though it be zeal unto good;</p>
- <p>Touch not the ark with unclean hand, yea, though it seem to totter.</p>
- <p>There are evil who work good, and there are good who work evil,</p>
- <p>And foolish backers of wisdom have brought on her many reproaches.</p>
- <p>Truth hath more than enough to combat in the minds of all men,</p>
- <p>For the mist of sense is a thick veil, and sin hath warped their wills;</p>
- <p>Yet doth an officious helper awkwardly prevent her victory,&mdash;</p>
- <p>These thy wounded hands were smitten in the house of friends:&mdash;</p>
- <p>To point out a meaning in her words, he will blot those words with his finger;</p>
- <p>And winnow chaff into the eyes, before he hath wheat to show:</p>
- <p>He will heap sturdy logs on a faint expiring fire,</p>
- <p>And with a room in flames, will cast the casement open;</p>
- <p>By a shoulder to the wheel down hill harasseth the labouring beast,</p>
- <p>And where obstruction were needed, will harm by an ill-judged thrusting-on.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">A vessel</span> foundereth at sea, if a storm hath unshipped the rudder;</p>
- <p>And a mind with much sail shall require heavy ballast.</p>
- <p>Take a lever by the middle, thou shalt seem to prove it powerless,</p>
- <p>Argue for truth indiscreetly, thou shalt toil for falsehood.</p>
- <p>There is plenty of room for a peaceable man in the most thronged assembly;</p>
- <p>But a quarrelsome spirit is straitened in the open field:</p>
- <p>Many a teacher, lacking judgment, hindereth his own lessons;</p>
- <p>And the savoury mess of pottage is spoiled by a bitter herb:</p>
- <p>The garment woven of a piece is rashly torn by schism,</p>
- <p>Because its unwise claimants will not cast lots for its possession.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Discretion</span> guide thee on thy way, noble-minded youth,</p>
- <p>Help thee to humour infirmities, to wink at innocent errors,</p>
- <p>To take small count of forms, to bear with prejudice and fancy:</p>
- <p>Discretion guard thine asking, discretion aid thine answer,</p>
- <p>Teach thee that well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech,</p>
- <p>Whisper thee, thou art Weakness, though thy cause be Strength,</p>
- <p>And tell thee, the key-stone of an arch can be loosened with least labour from within.</p>
- <p>The snows of Hecla lie around its troubled smoking Geysers;</p>
- <p>Let the cool streams of prudence temper the hot spring of zeal:</p>
- <p>So shalt thou gain thine honourable end, nor lose the midway prize:</p>
- <p>So shall thy life be useful, and thy young heart happy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF TRIFLES.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="79" height="187" alt="" src="images/image39cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Yet</span> once more, saith the fool, yet once, and is it not a little one?</p>
- <p>Spare me this folly yet an hour, for what is one among so many?</p>
- <p>And he blindeth his conscience with lies, and stupifieth his heart with doubts;&mdash;</p>
- <p>Whom shall I harm in this matter? and a little ill breedeth much good;</p>
- <p>My thoughts, are they not mine own? and they leave no mark behind them;</p>
- <p>And if God so pardoneth crime, how should these petty sins affect Him?&mdash;</p>
- <p>So he transgresseth yet again, and falleth by little and little,</p>
- <p>Till the ground crumble beneath him, and he sinketh in the gulf despairing.</p>
- <p>For there is nothing in the earth so small that it may not produce great things,</p>
- <p>And no swerving from a right line, that may not lead eternally astray.</p>
- <p>A landmark tree was once a seed; and the dust in the balance maketh a difference;</p>
- <p>And the cairn is heaped high by each one flinging a pebble:</p>
- <p>The dangerous bar in the harbour's mouth is only grains of sand;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></span>
- <p>And the shoal that hath wrecked a navy is the work of a colony of worms:</p>
- <p>Yea, and a despicable gnat may madden the mighty elephant;</p>
- <p>And the living rock is worn by the diligent flow of the brook.</p>
- <p>Little art thou, O man, and in trifles thou contendest with thine equals,</p>
- <p>For atoms must crowd upon atoms, ere crime groweth to be a giant.</p>
- <p>What, is thy servant a dog?&mdash;not yet wilt thou grasp the dagger,</p>
- <p>Not yet wilt thou laugh with the scoffers, not yet betray the innocent;</p>
- <p>But, if thou nourish in thy heart the reveries of injury or passion,</p>
- <p>And travel in mental heat the mazy labyrinths of guilt,</p>
- <p>And then conceive it possible, and then reflect on it as done,</p>
- <p>And use, by little and little, thyself to regard thyself a villain,</p>
- <p>Not long will crime be absent from the voice that doth invoke him to thy heart,</p>
- <p>And bitterly wilt thou grieve, that the buds have ripened into poison.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A spark</span> is a molecule of matter, yet may it kindle the world:</p>
- <p>Vast is the mighty ocean, but drops have made it vast.</p>
- <p>Despise not thou a small thing, either for evil or for good;</p>
- <p>For a look may work thy ruin, or a word create thy wealth:</p>
- <p>The walking this way or that, the casual stopping or hastening,</p>
- <p>Hath saved life, and destroyed it, hath cast down and built up fortunes.</p>
- <p>Commit thy trifles unto God, for to Him is nothing trivial;</p>
- <p>And it is but the littleness of man that seeth no greatness in a trifle.</p>
- <p>All things are infinite in parts, and the moral is as the material,</p>
- <p>Neither is anything vast, but it is compacted of atoms.</p>
- <p>Thou art wise, and shalt find comfort, if thou study thy pleasure in trifles,</p>
- <p>For slender joys, often repeated, fall as sunshine on the heart:</p>
- <p>Thou art wise, if thou beat off petty troubles, nor suffer their stinging to fret thee;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
- <p>Thrust not thine hand among the thorns, but with a leathern glove.</p>
- <p>Regard nothing lightly which the wisdom of Providence hath ordered;</p>
- <p>And therefore, consider all things that happen unto thee or unto others.</p>
- <p>The warrior that stood against a host, may be pierced unto death by a needle;</p>
- <p>And the saint that feareth not the fire, may perish the victim of a thought:</p>
- <p>A mote in the gunner's eye is as bad as a spike in the gun;</p>
- <p>And the cable of a furlong is lost through an ill-wrought inch.</p>
- <p>The streams of small pleasures fill the lake of happiness:</p>
- <p>And the deepest wretchedness of life is continuance of petty pains.</p>
- <p>A fool observeth nothing, and seemeth wise unto himself;</p>
- <p>A wise man heedeth all things, and in his own eyes is a fool:</p>
- <p>He that wondereth at nothing hath no capabilities of bliss:</p>
- <p>But he that scrutinizeth trifles hath a store of pleasure to his hand.</p>
- <p>If pestilence stalk through the land, ye say, This is God's doing;</p>
- <p>Is it not also His doing when an aphis creepeth on a rosebud?</p>
- <p>If an avalanche roll from its Alp, ye tremble at the will of Providence:</p>
- <p>Is not that will concerned when the sear leaves fall from the poplar?&mdash;</p>
- <p>A thing is great or little only to a mortal's thinking,</p>
- <p>But abstracted from the body, all things are alike important:</p>
- <p>The Ancient of Days noteth in His book the idle converse of a creature,</p>
- <p>And happy and wise is the man to whose thought existeth not a trifle.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="217" height="237" alt="" src="images/image40ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF RECREATION.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">To</span> join advantage to amusement, to gather profit with pleasure,</p>
- <p>Is the wise man's necessary aim, when he lieth in the shade of recreation.</p>
- <p>For he cannot fling aside his mind, nor bar up the flood-gates of his wisdom;</p>
- <p>Yea, though he strain after folly, his mental monitor shall check him:</p>
- <p>For knowledge and ignorance alike have laws essential to their being,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
- <p>The sage studieth amusements, and the simple laugheth in his studies.</p>
- <p>Few, but full of understanding, are the books of the library of God,</p>
- <p>And fitting for all seasons are the gain and the gladness they bestow:</p>
- <p>The volume of mystery and Grace, for the hour of deep communings,</p>
- <p>When the soul considereth intensely the startling marvel of itself:</p>
- <p>The book of destiny and Providence, for the time of sober study,</p>
- <p>When the mind gleaneth wisdom from the olive grove of history:</p>
- <p>And the cheerful pages of Nature, to gladden the pleasant holiday,</p>
- <p>When the task of duty is complete, and the heart swelleth high with satisfaction.</p>
- <p>The soul may not safely dwell too long with the deep things of futurity;</p>
- <p>The mind may not always be bent back, like the Parthian, straining at the past;</p>
- <p>And, if thou art wearied with wrestling on the broad arena of science,</p>
- <p>Leave awhile thy friendly foe, half vanquished in the dust,</p>
- <p>Refresh thy jaded limbs, return with vigour to the strife,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thou shalt easier find thyself his master, for the vacant interval of leisure.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">That</span> which may profit and amuse is gathered from the volume of creation,</p>
- <p>For every chapter therein teemeth with the playfulness of wisdom.</p>
- <p>The elements of all things are the same, though nature hath mixed them with a difference,</p>
- <p>And Learning delighteth to discover the affinity of seeming opposites:</p>
- <p>So out of great things and small draweth he the secrets of the universe,</p>
- <p>And argueth the cycles of the stars, from a pebble flung by a child.</p>
- <p>It is pleasant to note all plants, from the rush to the spreading cedar,</p>
- <p>From the giant king of palms, to the lichen that staineth its stem;</p>
- <p>To watch the workings of instinct, that grosser reason of brutes,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The river horse browsing in the jungle, the plover screaming on the moor,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
- <p>The cayman basking on a mud-bank, and the walrus anchored to an iceberg,</p>
- <p>The dog at his master's feet, and the milch-kine lowing in the meadow;</p>
- <p>To trace the consummate skill that hath modelled the anatomy of insects,</p>
- <p>Small fowls that sun their wings on the petals of wild flowers;</p>
- <p>To learn a use in the beetle, and more than a beauty in the butterfly;</p>
- <p>To recognize affections in a moth, and look with admiration on a spider.</p>
- <p>It is glorious to gaze upon the firmament, and see from far the mansions of the blest,</p>
- <p>Each distant shining world, a kingdom for one of the redeemed;</p>
- <p>To read the antique history of earth, stamped upon those medals in the rocks</p>
- <p>Which Design hath rescued from decay, to tell of the green infancy of time;</p>
- <p>To gather from the unconsidered shingle mottled starlike agates,</p>
- <p>Full of unstoried flowers in the bubbling bloom-chalcedony:</p>
- <p>Or gay and curious shells, fretted with microscopic carving,</p>
- <p>Corallines, and fresh seaweeds, spreading forth their delicate branches.</p>
- <p>It is an admirable lore, to learn the cause in the change,</p>
- <p>To study the chemistry of Nature, her grand, but simple secrets,</p>
- <p>To search out all her wonders, to track the resources of her skill,</p>
- <p>To note her kind compensations, her unobtrusive excellence.</p>
- <p>In all it is wise happiness to see the well-ordained laws of Jehovah,</p>
- <p>The harmony that filleth all His mind, the justice that tempereth His bounty,</p>
- <p>The wonderful all-prevalent analogy that testifieth one Creator,</p>
- <p>The broad arrow of the Great King, carved on all the stores of His arsenal.</p>
- <p>But beware, O worshipper of God, thou forget not Him in His dealings,</p>
- <p>Though the bright emanations of His power hide Him in created glory;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>
- <p>For if, on the sea of knowledge, thou regardest not the pole-star of religion,</p>
- <p>Thy bark will miss her port, and run upon the sand-bar of folly:</p>
- <p>And if, enamoured of the means, thou considerest not the scope to which they tend,</p>
- <p>Wherein art thou wiser than the child, that is pleased with toys and baubles?</p>
- <p>Verily, a trifling scholar, thou heedest but the letter of instruction:</p>
- <p>For, as motive is spirit unto action, as memory endeareth place,</p>
- <p>As the sun doth fertilize the earth, as affection quickeneth the heart,</p>
- <p>So is the remembrance of God in the varied wonders of creation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man</span> hath found out inventions, to cheat him of the weariness of life,</p>
- <p>To help him to forget realities, and hide the misery of guilt.</p>
- <p>For love of praise, and hope of gain, for passion and delusive happiness,</p>
- <p>He joineth the circle of folly, and heapeth on the fire of excitement;</p>
- <p>Oftentimes sadly out of heart at the tiresome insipidity of pleasure,</p>
- <p>Oftentimes labouring in vain, convinced of the palpable deceit:</p>
- <p>Yet a man speaketh to his brother, in the voice of glad congratulation,</p>
- <p>And thinketh others happy, though he himself be wretched:</p>
- <p>And hand joineth hand to help in the toil of amusement,</p>
- <p>While the secret aching heart is vacant of all but disappointment.</p>
- <p>The cheapest pleasures are the best; and nothing is more costly than sin;</p>
- <p>Yet we mortgage futurity, counting it but little loss:</p>
- <p>Neither can a man delight in that which breedeth sorrow,</p>
- <p>Yet do we hunt for joy even in the fires that consume it.</p>
- <p>Whoso would find gladness may meet her in the hovel of poverty,</p>
- <p>Where benevolence hath scattered around the gleanings of the horn of plenty;</p>
- <p>Whoso would sun himself in peace, may be seen of her in deeds of mercy,</p>
- <p>When the pale lean cheek of the destitute is wet with grateful tears.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span>
- <p>If the mind is wearied by study, or the body worn with sickness,</p>
- <p>It is well to lie fallow for a while, in the vacancy of sheer amusement;</p>
- <p>But when thou prosperest in health, and thine intellect can soar untired,</p>
- <p>To seek uninstructive pleasure is to slumber on the couch of indolence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="261" height="361" alt="" src="images/image41r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">{100}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="259" height="349" alt="" src="images/image42r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>THE TRAIN OF RELIGION.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Stay</span> awhile, thou blessed band! be entreated, daughters of heaven!</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">{101}</a></span>
- <p>While the chance-met scholar of Wisdom learneth your sacred names:</p>
- <p>He is resting a little from his toil, yet a little on the borders of earth,</p>
- <p>And fain would he have you his friends, to bid him glad welcome hereafter.</p>
- <p>Who among the glorious art thou, that walkest a Goddess and a Queen,</p>
- <p>Thy crown of living stars, and a golden cross thy sceptre?</p>
- <p>Who among flowers of loveliness is she, thy seeming herald,</p>
- <p>Yet she boasteth not thee nor herself, and her garments are plain in their neatness?</p>
- <p>Wherefore is there one among the train, whose eyes are red with weeping,</p>
- <p>Yet is her open forehead beaming with the sun of ecstasy?</p>
- <p>And who is that bloodstained warrior, with glory sitting on his crest?</p>
- <p>And who that solemn sage, calm in majestic dignity?</p>
- <p>Also, in the lengthening troop see I some clad in robes of triumph,</p>
- <p>Whose fair and sunny faces I have known and loved on earth:</p>
- <p>Welcome, ye glorified Loves, Graces, and Sciences, and Muses,</p>
- <p>That, like sisters of charity, tended in this world's hospital;</p>
- <p>Welcome, for verily I knew, ye could not but be children of the light,</p>
- <p>Though earth hath soiled your robes, and robbed you of half your glory;</p>
- <p>Welcome, chiefly welcome, for I find I have friends in heaven,</p>
- <p>And some I might scarce have looked for, as thou, light-hearted Mirth;</p>
- <p>Thou also, star-robed Urania; and thou, with the curious glass,</p>
- <p>That rejoicedst in tracking wisdom where the eye was too dull to note it:</p>
- <p>And art thou too among the blessed, mild, much-injured Poetry?</p>
- <p>Who quickenest with light and beauty the leaden face of matter,</p>
- <p>Who not unheard, though silent, fillest earth's gardens with music,</p>
- <p>And not unseen, though a spirit, dost look down upon us from the stars,&mdash;</p>
- <p>That hast been to me for oil and for wine, to cheer and uphold my soul,</p>
- <p>When wearied, battling with the surge, the stunning surge of life:</p>
- <p>Of thee, for well have I loved thee, of thee may I ask in hope,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></span>
- <p>Who among the glorious is she, that walketh a Goddess and a Queen?</p>
- <p>And who that fair-haired herald, and who that weeping saint?</p>
- <p>And who that mighty warrior, and who that solemn sage?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Son,</span> happy art thou that Wisdom hath led thee hitherward:</p>
- <p>For otherwise never hadst thou known the joy-giving name of our Queen.</p>
- <p>Behold her, the life of men, the anchor of their shipwrecked hopes:</p>
- <p>Behold her, the shepherdess of souls, who bringeth back the wanderers to God.</p>
- <p>And for that modest herald, she is named on earth, Humility:</p>
- <p>And hast thou not known, my son, the tearful face of Repentance?</p>
- <p>Faith is yon time-scarred hero, walking in the shade of his laurels:</p>
- <p>And Reason, the serious sage, who followeth the footsteps of Faith:</p>
- <p>And we, all we, are but handmaids, ministers of minor bliss,</p>
- <p>Who rejoice to be counted servants in the train of a Queen so glorious:</p>
- <p>But for her name, son of man, it is strange to the language of heaven,</p>
- <p>For those who have never fallen need not and may not learn it:</p>
- <p>Ligeance we swear to our God, and ligeance well have we kept;</p>
- <p>It is only the band of the redeemed who can tell thee the fulness of that name;</p>
- <p>Yet will I comfort thee, my son, for the love wherewith thou hast loved me,</p>
- <p>And thou shalt touch for thyself the golden sceptre of Religion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So</span> that blessed train passed by me; but the vision was sealed upon my soul;</p>
- <p>And its memory is shrined in fragrance, for the promise of the Spirit was true:</p>
- <p>I learn from the silent poem of all creation round me,</p>
- <p>How beautiful their feet, who follow in that train.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF A TRINITY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="190" alt="" src="images/image43cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Despise</span>
- not, shrewd reckoner, the God of a good man's worship,</p>
- <p>Neither let thy calculating folly gainsay the unity of three:</p>
- <p>Nor scorn another's creed, although he cannot solve thy doubts;</p>
- <p>Reason is the follower of faith, where he may not be precursor:</p>
- <p>It is written, and so we believe, waiting not for outward proof,</p>
- <p>Inasmuch as mysteries inscrutable are the clear prerogatives of godhead.</p>
- <p>Reason hath nothing positive, faith hath nothing doubtful;</p>
- <p>And the height of unbelieving wisdom is to question all things.</p>
- <p>When there is marvel in a doctrine, faith is joyful and adoreth;</p>
- <p>But when all is clear, what place is left for faith?</p>
- <p>Tell me the sum of thy knowledge,&mdash;is it yet assured of anything?</p>
- <p>Despise not what is wonderful, when all things are wonderful around thee.</p>
- <p>From the multitude of like effects, thou sayest, Behold a law:</p>
- <p>And the matter thou art baffled in unmaking, is to thy mind an element.</p>
- <p>Then look abroad, I pray thee, for analogy holdeth everywhere,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></span>
- <p>And the Maker hath stamped His name on every creature of His hand:</p>
- <p>I know not of a matter or a spirit, that is not three in one,</p>
- <p>And truly should account it for a marvel, a coin without the image of its Cæsar.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man</span> talketh of himself as ignorant, but judgeth by himself as wise:</p>
- <p>His own guess counteth he truth, but the notions of another are his scorn;</p>
- <p>But bear thou yet with a brother, whose thought may be less subtle than thine own,</p>
- <p>And suffer the passing speculation suggested by analogies to faith.</p>
- <p>Like begetteth like, and the great sea of Existence</p>
- <p>In each of its uncounted waves holdeth up a mirror to its Maker:</p>
- <p>Like begetteth like, and the spreading tree of being</p>
- <p>With each of its trefoil leaves pointeth at the Trinity of God.</p>
- <p>Let him whose eyes have been unfilmed, read this homily in all things,</p>
- <p>And thou, of duller sight, despise not him that readeth:</p>
- <p>There be three grand principles; life, generation, and obedience;</p>
- <p>Shadowing in every creature, the Spirit, and the Father, and the Son.</p>
- <p>There be three grand unities, variously mixed in trinities,</p>
- <p>Three catholic divisors of the million sums of matter:</p>
- <p>Yea, though science hath not seen it, climbing the ladder of experiment,</p>
- <p>Let faith, in the presence of her God, promulgate the mighty truth;</p>
- <p>Of three sole elements all nature's works consist:</p>
- <p>The pine, and the rock to which it clingeth, and the eagle sailing around it:</p>
- <p>The lion, and the northern whale, and the deeps wherein he sporteth;</p>
- <p>The lizard sleeping in the sun; the lightning flashing from a cloud;</p>
- <p>The rose, and the ruby, and the pearl; each one is made of three;</p>
- <p>And the three be the like ingredients, mingled in diverse measures.</p>
- <p>Thyself hast within thyself body, and life, and mind:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span>
- <p>Matter, and breath, and instinct, unite in all beasts of the field;</p>
- <p>Substance, coherence, and weight, fashion the fabrics of the earth;</p>
- <p>The will, the doing, and the deed, combine to frame a fact:</p>
- <p>The stem, the leaf, and the flower; beginning, middle, and end;</p>
- <p>Cause, circumstance, consequent: and every three is one.</p>
- <p>Yea, the very breath of man's life consisteth of a trinity of vapours,</p>
- <p>And the noonday light is a compound, the triune shadow of Jehovah.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Shall</span> all things else be in mystery, and God alone be understood?</p>
- <p>Shall finite fathom infinity, though it sound not the shallows of creation?</p>
- <p>Shall a man comprehend his Maker, being yet a riddle to himself?</p>
- <p>Or time teach the Lesson that eternity cannot master?</p>
- <p>If God be nothing more than one, a child can compass the thought;</p>
- <p>But seraphs fail to unravel the wondrous unity of three.</p>
- <p>One verily He is, for there can be but one who is all mighty;</p>
- <p>Yet the oracles of nature and religion proclaim Him three in one.</p>
- <p>And where were the value to thy soul, O miserable denizen of earth,</p>
- <p>Of the idle pageant of the cross, where hung no sacrifice for thee?</p>
- <p>Where the worth to thine impotent heart, of that stirred Bethesda,</p>
- <p>All numbed and palsied as it is, by the scorpion stings of sin?</p>
- <p>No, thy trinity of nature, enchained by treble death,</p>
- <p>Helplessly craveth of its God, Himself for three salvations:</p>
- <p>The soul to be reconciled in love, the mind to be glorified in light,</p>
- <p>While this poor dying body leapeth into life.</p>
- <p>And if indeed for us all the costly ransom hath been paid,</p>
- <p>Bethink thee, could less than Deity have owned so vast a treasure?</p>
- <p>Could a man contend with God, and stand against the bosses of His buckler,</p>
- <p>Rendering the balance for guilt, atonement to the uttermost?</p>
- <p>Thou art subtle to thine own thinking, but wisdom judgeth thee a fool,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</a></span>
- <p>Resolving thou wilt not bow the knee to a Being thou canst not comprehend:</p>
- <p>The mind that could compass perfection were itself perfection's equal;</p>
- <p>And reason refuseth its homage to a God who can be fully understood.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thou</span> that despiseth mystery, yet canst expound nothing,</p>
- <p>Wherefore rejectest thou the fact that solveth the enigma of all things?</p>
- <p>Wherefore veilest thou thine eyes, lest the light of revelation sun them,</p>
- <p>And puttest aside the key that would open the casket of truth?</p>
- <p>The mind and the nature of God are shadowed in all His works,</p>
- <p>And none could have guessed of His essence, had He not uttered it Himself.</p>
- <p>Therefore, thou child of folly, that scornest the record of His wisdom,</p>
- <p>Learn from the consistencies of nature the needful miracle of Godhead:</p>
- <p>Yea, let the heathen be thy teacher, who adoreth many gods,</p>
- <p>For there is no wide-spread error that hath not truth for its beginning.</p>
- <p>Be content; thine eye cannot see all the sides of a cube at one view,</p>
- <p>Nor thy mind in the self-same moment follow two ideas:</p>
- <p>There are now many marvels in thy creed, believing what thou seest,</p>
- <p>Then let not the conceit of intellect hinder thee from worshipping mystery.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="262" height="350" alt="" src="images/image44r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF THINKING.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Reflection</span> is a flower of the mind, giving out wholesome fragrance,</p>
- <p>But reverie is the same flower, when rank and running to seed.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></span>
- <p>Better to read little with thought, than much with levity and quickness;</p>
- <p>For mind is not as merchandize, which decreaseth in the using,</p>
- <p>But liker to the passions of man, which rejoice and expand in exertion:</p>
- <p>Yet live not wholly on thine own ideas, lest they lead thee astray;</p>
- <p>For in spirit, as in substance, thou art a social creature;</p>
- <p>And if thou leanest on thyself, thou rejectest the guidance of thy betters,</p>
- <p>Yea, thou contemnest all men,&mdash;Am I not wiser than they?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Foolish vanity hath blinded thee, and warped thy weak judgment:</p>
- <p>For, though new ideas flow from new springs, and enrich the treasury of knowledge,</p>
- <p>Yet listen often, ere thou think much; and look around thee ere thou judgest.</p>
- <p>Memory, the daughter of Attention, is the teeming mother of Wisdom,</p>
- <p>And safer is he that storeth knowledge, than he that would make it for himself.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Imagination</span> is not thought, neither is fancy reflection:</p>
- <p>Thought paceth like a hoary sage, but imagination hath wings as an eagle:</p>
- <p>Reflection sternly considereth, nor is sparing to condemn evil,</p>
- <p>But fancy lightly laugheth, in the sun-clad gardens of amusement.</p>
- <p>For the shy game of the fowler the quickest shot is the surest;</p>
- <p>But with slow care and measured aim the gunner pointeth his cannon:</p>
- <p>So for all less occasions, the surface-thought is best,</p>
- <p>But to be master of the great take thou heavier metal.</p>
- <p>It is a good thing, and a wholesome, to search out bosom sins,</p>
- <p>But to be the hero of selfish imaginings, is the subtle poison of pride:</p>
- <p>At night, in the stillness of thy chamber, guard and curb thy thoughts,</p>
- <p>And in recounting the doings of the day, beware that thou do it with prayer,</p>
- <p>Or thinking will be an idle pleasure, and retrospect yield no fruit.</p>
- <p>Steer the bark of thy mind from the syren isle of reverie,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></span>
- <p>And let a watchful spirit mingle with the glance of recollection:</p>
- <p>Also, in examining thine heart, in sounding the fountain of thine actions,</p>
- <p>Be more careful of the evil than of the good; and humble thyself in thy sin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> root of all wholesome thought is knowledge of thyself,</p>
- <p>For thus only canst thou learn the character of God toward thee.</p>
- <p>He made thee, and thou art; He redeemed thee, and thou wilt be:</p>
- <p>Thou art evil, yet He loveth thee; thou sinnest, yet He pardoneth thee.</p>
- <p>Though thou canst not perceive Him, yet is He in all His works,</p>
- <p>Infinite in grand outline, infinite in minute perfection:</p>
- <p>Nature is the chart of God, mapping out all His attributes;</p>
- <p>Art is the shadow of His wisdom, and copieth His resources.</p>
- <p>Thou knowest the laws of matter to be emanations of His will,</p>
- <p>And thy best reason for aught is this,&mdash;Thou, Lord, wouldst have it so.</p>
- <p>Yea, what is any law but an absolute decree of God?</p>
- <p>Or the properties of matter and mind, but the arbitrary fiats of Jehovah?</p>
- <p>He made and ordained necessity; He forged the chain of reason;</p>
- <p>And holdeth in His own right hand the first of the golden links.</p>
- <p>A fool regardeth mind as the spiritual essence of matter,</p>
- <p>And not rather matter as the gross accident of mind.</p>
- <p>Can finite govern infinite, or a part exceed the whole,</p>
- <p>Or the wisdom of God sit down at the feet of innate necessity?</p>
- <p>Necessity is a creature of His hand: for He can never change;</p>
- <p>And chance hath no existence where everything is needful.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Canst</span> thou measure Omnipotence, canst thou conceive Ubiquity,</p>
- <p>Which guideth the meanest reptile, and quickeneth the brightest seraph,</p>
- <p>Which steereth the particle of dust, and commandeth the path of the comet?</p>
- <p>To Him all things are equal, for all things are necessary.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</a></span>
- <p>The smith was weary at his forge, and welded the metal carelessly,</p>
- <p>And the anchor breaketh in its bed; and the vessel foundereth with her crew:</p>
- <p>A word of anger is muttered, engendering the midnight murder:</p>
- <p>The sun bursteth from a cloud, and maddeneth the toiling husbandman.</p>
- <p>Shall these things be, and God not know it?</p>
- <p>Shall He know, and not be in them? shall He see, and not be among them?</p>
- <p>And how can they be otherwise than as He knoweth?</p>
- <p>Truly, the Lord is in all things; verily, He worketh in all.</p>
- <p>Think thus, and thy thoughts are firm, ascribing each circumstance to Him;</p>
- <p>Yet know surely, and believe the truth, that God willeth not evil;</p>
- <p>For adversities are blessings in disguise, and wickedness the Lord abhorreth:</p>
- <p>That He is in all things is an axiom, and that He is righteous in all:</p>
- <p>Ascribe holiness to Him, while thou musest on the mystery of sin,</p>
- <p>For infinite can grasp that, which finite cannot compass.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">In</span> works of art, think justly: what praise canst thou render unto man?</p>
- <p>For he made not his own mind, nor is he the source of contrivance.</p>
- <p>If a cunning workman make an engine that fashioneth curious works,</p>
- <p>Which hath the praise, the machine or its maker,&mdash;the engine, or he that framed it?</p>
- <p>And could he frame it so subtly as to give it a will and freedom,</p>
- <p>Endow it with complicated powers, and a glorious living soul,</p>
- <p>Who, while he admireth the wondrous understanding creature,</p>
- <p>Will not pay deeper homage to the Maker of master minds?</p>
- <p>Otherwise, thou art senseless as the pagan, that adoreth his own handywork;</p>
- <p>Yea, while thou boastest of thy wisdom, thy mind is as the mind of the savage,</p>
- <p>For he boweth down to his idols, and thou art a worshipper of self,</p>
- <p>Giving to the reasoning machine the credit due to its creator.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> key-stone of thy mind, to give thy thoughts solidity,</p>
- <p>To bind them as in an arch, to fix them as the world in its sphere,</p>
- <p>Is to learn from the book of the Lord, to drink from the well of His wisdom.</p>
- <p>Who can condense the sun, or analyse the fulness of the Bible,</p>
- <p>So that its ideas be gathered, and the harvest of its wisdom be brought in?</p>
- <p>That book is easy to the man who setteth his heart to understand it,</p>
- <p>But to the careless and profane it shall seem the foolishness of God;</p>
- <p>And it is a delicate test to prove thy moral state;</p>
- <p>To the humble disciple it is bread, but a stone to the proud and unbelieving:</p>
- <p>A scorner shall find nothing but the husks, wherewith to feed his hunger,</p>
- <p>But for the soul of the simple, it is plenty of full-ripe wheat.</p>
- <p>The Scripture abideth the same, in the sober majesty of truth;</p>
- <p>And the differing aspects of its teaching proceed from diversity in minds.</p>
- <p>He that would learn to think may gain that knowledge there;</p>
- <p>For the living word, as an angel, standeth at the gate of wisdom,</p>
- <p>And publisheth, This is the way, walk ye surely in it.</p>
- <p>Religion taketh by the hand the humble pupil of repentance,</p>
- <p>And teacheth him lessons of mystery, solving the questions of doubt;</p>
- <p>She maketh man worthy of himself, of his high prerogative of reason,</p>
- <p>Threadeth all the labyrinths of thought, and leadeth him to his God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Come</span> hither, child of meditation, upon whose high fair forehead</p>
- <p>Glittereth the star of mind in its unearthly lustre:</p>
- <p>Hast thou nought to tell us of thine airy joys,&mdash;</p>
- <p>When, borne on sinewy pinions, strong as the western condor,</p>
- <p>The soul, after soaring for a while round the cloud-capped Andes of reflection,</p>
- <p>Glad in its conscious immortality, leaveth a world behind,</p>
- <p>To dare at one bold flight the broad Atlantic to another?</p>
- <p>Hast thou no secret pangs to whisper common men,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></span>
- <p>No dread of thine own energies, still active day and night,</p>
- <p>Lest too ecstatic heat sublime thyself away,</p>
- <p>Or vivid horrors, sharp and clear, madden thy tense fibres?</p>
- <p>In half-shaped visions of sleep hast thou not feared thy flittings,</p>
- <p>Lest reason, like a raking hawk, return not to thy call:</p>
- <p>Nor waked to work-day life with throbbing head and heart,</p>
- <p>Nor welcomed early dawn to save thee from unrest?</p>
- <p>For the wearied spirit lieth as a fainting maiden,</p>
- <p>Captive and borne away on the warrior's foam-covered steed,</p>
- <p>And sinketh down wounded, as a gladiator on the sand,</p>
- <p>While the keen faulchion of Intellect is cutting through the scabbard of the brain.</p>
- <p>Imagination, like a shadowy giant looming on the twilight of the Hartz,</p>
- <p>Shall overwhelm judgment with affright, and scare him from his throne:</p>
- <p>In a dream thou mayst be mad, and feel the fire within thee;</p>
- <p>In a dream thou mayst travel out of self, and see thee with the eyes of another;</p>
- <p>Or sleep in thine own corpse: or wake as in many bodies;</p>
- <p>Or swell, as expanded to infinity; or shrink, as imprisoned to a point;</p>
- <p>Or among moss-grown ruins mayst wander with the sullen disembodied,</p>
- <p>And gaze upon their glassy eyes until thy heart-blood freeze.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Alone</span> must thou stand, O man! alone at the bar of judgment;</p>
- <p>Alone must thou bear thy sentence, alone must thou answer for thy deeds:</p>
- <p>Therefore it is well thou retirest often to secresy and solitude,</p>
- <p>To feel that thou art accountable separately from thy fellows:</p>
- <p>For a crowd hideth truth from the eyes, society drowneth thought,</p>
- <p>And being but one among many, stifleth the chidings of conscience.</p>
- <p>Solitude bringeth woe to the wicked, for his crimes are told out in his ear;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></span>
- <p>But addeth peace to the good, for the mercies of his God are numbered.</p>
- <p>Thou mayst know if it be well with a man,&mdash;loveth he gaiety or solitude?</p>
- <p>For the troubled river rusheth to the sea, but the calm lake slumbereth among the mountains.</p>
- <p>How dear to the mind of the sage are the thoughts that are bred in loneliness;</p>
- <p>For there is as it were music at his heart, and he talketh within him as with friends:</p>
- <p>But guilt maddeneth the brain, and terror glareth in the eye,</p>
- <p>Where, in his solitary cell, the malefactor wrestleth with remorse.</p>
- <p>Give me but a lodge in the wilderness, drop me on an island in the desert,</p>
- <p>And thought shall yield me happiness, though I may not increase it by imparting:</p>
- <p>For the soul never slumbereth, but is as the eye of the Eternal,</p>
- <p>And mind, the breath of God, knoweth not ideal vacuity:</p>
- <p>At night, after weariness and watching, the body sinketh into sleep,</p>
- <p>But the mental eye is awake, and thou reasonest in thy dreams:</p>
- <p>In a dream, thou mayst live a lifetime, and all be forgotten in the morning:</p>
- <p>Even such is life, and so soon perisheth its memory.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF SPEAKING.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="88" height="203" alt="" src="images/image46cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Speech</span>
- is the golden harvest that followeth the flowering of thought;</p>
- <p>Yet oftentimes runneth it to husk, and the grains be withered and scanty:</p>
- <p>Speech is reason's brother, and a kingly prerogative of man,</p>
- <p>That likeneth him to his Maker, who spake, and it was done:</p>
- <p>Spirit may mingle with spirit, but sense requireth a symbol;</p>
- <p>And speech is the body of a thought, without which it were not seen.</p>
- <p>When thou walkest, musing with thyself, in the green aisles of the forest,</p>
- <p>Utter thy thinkings aloud, that they take a shape and being:</p>
- <p>For he that pondereth in silence crowdeth the storehouse of his mind,</p>
- <p>And though he hath heaped great riches, yet is he hindered in the using.</p>
- <p>A man that speaketh too little, and thinketh much and deeply,</p>
- <p>Corrodeth his own heart-strings, and keepeth back good from his fellows:</p>
- <p>A man that speaketh too much, and museth but little and lightly,</p>
- <p>Wasteth his mind in words, and is counted a fool among men:</p>
- <p>But thou, when thou hast thought, weave charily the web of meditation,</p>
- <p>And clothe the ideal spirit in the suitable garments of speech.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="229" height="306" alt="" src="images/image45ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Uttered</span> out of time, or concealed in its season, good savoureth of evil;</p>
- <p>To be secret looketh like guilt, to speak out may breed contention:</p>
- <p>Often have I known the honest heart, flaming with indignant virtue,</p>
- <p>Provoke unneeded war by its rash ambassador the tongue:</p>
- <p>Often have I seen the charitable man go so slily on his mission,</p>
- <p>That those who met him in the twilight, took him for a skulking thief:</p>
- <p>I have heard the zealous youth telling out his holy secrets</p>
- <p>Before a swinish throng, who mocked him as he spake;</p>
- <p>And I considered, his openness was hardening them that mocked,</p>
- <p>Whereas a judicious keeping-back might have won their sympathy:</p>
- <p>I have judged rashly and harshly the hand, liberal in the dark,</p>
- <p>Because in the broad daylight, it hath holden it a virtue to be close;</p>
- <p>And the silent tongue have I condemned, because reserve hath chained it,</p>
- <p>That it hid, yea from a brother, the kindness it had done by comforting.</p>
- <p>No need to sound a trumpet, but less to hush a footfall:</p>
- <p>Do thou thy good openly, not as though the doing were a crime.</p>
- <p>Secresy goeth cowled, and Honesty demandeth wherefore?</p>
- <p>For he judgeth&mdash;judgeth he not well?&mdash;that nothing need be hid but guilt.</p>
- <p>Why should thy good be evil spoken of, through thine unrighteous silence?</p>
- <p>If thou art challenged, speak, and prove the good thou doest.</p>
- <p>The free example of benevolence, unobtruded, yet unhidden,</p>
- <p>Soundeth in the ears of sloth, Go, and do thou likewise:</p>
- <p>And I wot the hypocrite's sin to be of darker dye,</p>
- <p>Because the good man, fearing, thereby hideth his light:</p>
- <p>But neither God nor man hath bid thee cloak thy good,</p>
- <p>When a seasonable word would set thee in thy sphere, that all might see thy brightness.</p>
- <p>Ascribe the honour to thy Lord, but be thou jealous of that honour,</p>
- <p>Nor think it light and worthless, because thou mayst not wear it for thyself:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></span>
- <p>Remember, thy grand prerogative is free unshackled utterance,</p>
- <p>And suffer not the flood-gates of secresy to lock the full river of thy speech.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Come,</span> I will show thee an affliction, unnumbered among this world's sorrows,</p>
- <p>Yet real and wearisome and constant, embittering the cup of life.</p>
- <p>There be, who can think within themselves, and the fire burneth at their heart,</p>
- <p>And eloquence waiteth at their lips, yet they speak not with their tongue:</p>
- <p>There be, whom zeal quickeneth, or slander stirreth to reply,</p>
- <p>Or need constraineth to ask, or pity sendeth as her messengers,</p>
- <p>But nervous dread and sensitive shame freeze the current of their speech;</p>
- <p>The mouth is sealed as with lead, a cold weight presseth on the heart,</p>
- <p>The mocking promise of power is once more broken in performance,</p>
- <p>And they stand impotent of words, travailing with unborn thoughts;</p>
- <p>Courage is cowed at the portal; wisdom is widowed of utterance;</p>
- <p>He that went to comfort is pitied; he that should rebuke, is silent:</p>
- <p>And fools who might listen and learn, stand by to look and laugh;</p>
- <p>While friends, with kinder eyes, wound deeper by compassion:</p>
- <p>And thought, finding not a vent, smouldereth, gnawing at the heart,</p>
- <p>And the man sinketh in his sphere, for lack of empty sounds.</p>
- <p>There be many cares and sorrows thou hast not yet considered,</p>
- <p>And well may thy soul rejoice in the fair privilege of speech;</p>
- <p>For at every turn to want a word,&mdash;thou canst not guess that want;</p>
- <p>It is as lack of breath or bread: life hath no grief more galling.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Come,</span> I will tell thee of a joy, which the parasites of pleasure have not known,</p>
- <p>Though earth and air and sea have gorged all the appetites of sense.</p>
- <p>Behold, what fire is in his eye, what fervour on his cheek!</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</a></span>
- <p>That glorious burst of winged words! how bound they from his tongue!</p>
- <p>The full expression of the mighty thought, the strong triumphant argument,</p>
- <p>The rush of native eloquence, resistless as Niagara,</p>
- <p>The keen demand, the clear reply, the fine poetic image,</p>
- <p>The nice analogy, the clenching fact, the metaphor bold and free,</p>
- <p>The grasp of concentrated intellect wielding the omnipotence of truth,</p>
- <p>The grandeur of his speech in his majesty of mind!</p>
- <p>Champion of the right,&mdash;patriot, or priest, or pleader of the innocent cause,</p>
- <p>Upon whose lips the mystic bee hath dropped the honey of persuasion,</p>
- <p>Whose heart and tongue have been touched, as of old, by the live coal from the altar,</p>
- <p>How wide the spreading of thy peace, how deep the draught of thy pleasures!</p>
- <p>To hold the multitude as one, breathing in measured cadence,</p>
- <p>A thousand men with flashing eyes, waiting upon thy will;</p>
- <p>A thousand hearts kindled by thee with consecrated fire,</p>
- <p>Ten flaming spiritual hecatombs offered on the mount of God:</p>
- <p>And now a pause, a thrilling pause,&mdash;they live but in thy words,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thou hast broken the bounds of self, as the Nile at its rising,</p>
- <p>Thou art expanded into them, one faith, one hope, one spirit,</p>
- <p>They breathe but in thy breath, their minds are passive unto thine,</p>
- <p>Thou turnest the key of their love, bending their affections to thy purpose,</p>
- <p>And all, in sympathy with thee, tremble with tumultuous emotions:</p>
- <p>Verily, O man, with truth for thy theme, eloquence shall throne thee with archangels.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF READING.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="82" height="168" alt="" src="images/image47cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">One</span>
- drachma for a good book, and a thousand talents for a true friend;&mdash;</p>
- <p>So standeth the market, where scarce is ever costly:</p>
- <p>Yea, were the diamonds of Golconda common as shingles on the shore,</p>
- <p>A ripe apple would ransom kings before a shining stone:</p>
- <p>And so, were a wholesome book as rare as an honest friend,</p>
- <p>To choose the book be mine: the friend let another take.</p>
- <p>For altered looks and jealousies and fears have none entrance there:</p>
- <p>The silent volume listeneth well, and speaketh when thou listest:</p>
- <p>It praiseth thy good without envy, it chideth thine evil without malice,</p>
- <p>It is to thee thy waiting slave, and thine unbending teacher.</p>
- <p>Need to humour no caprice, need to bear with no infirmity;</p>
- <p>Thy sin, thy slander, or neglect, chilleth not, quencheth not, its love:</p>
- <p>Unalterably speaketh it the truth, warped nor by error nor interest;</p>
- <p>For a good book is the best of friends, the same to-day and for ever.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">To</span> draw thee out of self, thy petty plans and cautions,</p>
- <p>To teach thee what thou lackest, to tell thee how largely thou art blest,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</a></span>
- <p>To lure thy thought from sorrow, to feed thy famished mind,</p>
- <p>To graft another's wisdom on thee, pruning thine own folly,</p>
- <p>Choose discreetly, and well digest the volume most suited to thy case,</p>
- <p>Touching not religion with levity, nor deep things when thou art wearied.</p>
- <p>Thy mind is freshened by morning air, grapple with science and philosophy;</p>
- <p>Noon hath unnerved thy thoughts, dream for a while on fictions:</p>
- <p>Grey evening sobereth thy spirit, walk thou then with worshippers:</p>
- <p>But reason shall dig deepest in the night, and fancy fly most free.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O books,</span> ye monuments of mind, concrete wisdom of the wisest;</p>
- <p>Sweet solaces of daily life; proofs and results of immortality;</p>
- <p>Trees yielding all fruits, whose leaves are for the healing of the nations;</p>
- <p>Groves of knowledge, where all may eat, nor fear a flaming sword:</p>
- <p>Gentle comrades, kind advisers; friends, comforts, treasures:</p>
- <p>Helps, governments, diversities of tongues; who can weigh your worth?&mdash;</p>
- <p>To walk no longer with the just; to be driven from the porch of science;</p>
- <p>To bid long adieu to those intimate ones, poets, philosophers, and teachers;</p>
- <p>To see no record of the sympathies which bind thee in communion with the good;</p>
- <p>To be thrust from the feet of Him who spake as never man spake;</p>
- <p>To have no avenue to heaven but the dim aisle of superstition;</p>
- <p>To live as an Esquimaux, in lethargy; to die as the Mohawk, in ignorance:</p>
- <p>O what were life, but a blank? what were death, but a terror?</p>
- <p>What were man, but a burden to himself? what were mind, but misery?</p>
- <p>Yea, let another Omar burn the full library of knowledge,</p>
- <p>And the broad world may perish in the flames, offered on the ashes of its wisdom!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="227" height="160" alt="" src="images/image48ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF WRITING.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="81" height="142" alt="" src="images/image48cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">The</span>
- pen of a ready writer, whereunto shall it be likened?</p>
- <p>Ask of the scholar, he shall know,&mdash;to the chains that bind a Proteus:</p>
- <p>Ask of the poet, he shall say,&mdash;to the sun, the lamp of heaven:</p>
- <p>Ask of thy neighbour, he can answer,&mdash;to the friend that telleth my thought:</p>
- <p>The merchant considereth it well, as a ship freighted with wares;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
- <p>The divine holdeth it a miracle, giving utterance to the dumb.</p>
- <p>It fixeth, expoundeth, and disseminateth sentiment;</p>
- <p>Chaining up a thought, clearing it of mystery, and sending it bright into the world.</p>
- <p>To think rightly, is of knowledge; to speak fluently, is of nature;</p>
- <p>To read with profit, is of care; but to write aptly, is of practice.</p>
- <p>No talent among men hath more scholars, and fewer masters:</p>
- <p>For to write is to speak beyond hearing, and none stand by to explain.</p>
- <p>To be accurate, write; to remember, write; to know thine own mind, write;</p>
- <p>And a written prayer is a prayer of faith: special, sure, and to be answered.</p>
- <p>Hast thou a thought upon thy brain, catch it while thou canst;</p>
- <p>Or other thoughts shall settle there, and this shall soon take wing:</p>
- <p>Thine uncompounded unity of soul, which argueth and maketh it immortal,</p>
- <p>Yieldeth up its momentary self to every single thought;</p>
- <p>Therefore, to husband thine ideas, and give them stability and substance,</p>
- <p>Write often for thy secret eye; so shalt thou grow wiser.</p>
- <p>The commonest mind is full of thoughts; some worthy of the rarest:</p>
- <p>And could it see them fairly writ, would wonder at its wealth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O precious</span> compensation to the dumb, to write his wants and wishes;</p>
- <p>O dear amends to the stammering tongue, to pen his burning thoughts!</p>
- <p>To be of the college of Eloquence, through these silent symbols;</p>
- <p>To pour out all the flowing mind without the toil of speech;</p>
- <p>To show the babbling world how it might discourse more sweetly;</p>
- <p>To prove that merchandize of words bringeth no monopoly of wisdom;</p>
- <p>To take sweet vengeance on a prating crew, for the tongue's dishonour,</p>
- <p>By the large triumph of the pen, the homage rendered to a writing.</p>
- <p>With such, that telegraph of mind is dearer than wealth or wisdom,</p>
- <p>Enabling to please without pain, to impart without humiliation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Fair</span> girl, whose eye hath caught the rustic penmanship of love,</p>
- <p>Let thy bright brow and blushing cheek confess in this sweet hour,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Let thy full heart, poor guilty one, whom the scroll of pardon hath just reached,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thy wet glad face, O mother, with news of a far-off child,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thy strong and manly delight, pilgrim of other shores,</p>
- <p>When the dear voice of thy betrothed speaketh in the letter of affection,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Let the young poet, exulting in his lay, and hope (how false) of fame,</p>
- <p>While watching at deep midnight, he buildeth up the verse,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Let the calm child of genius, whose name shall never die,</p>
- <p>For that the transcript of his mind hath made his thoughts immortal,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Let these, let all, with no faint praise, with no light gratitude, confess</p>
- <p>The blessings poured upon the earth from the pen of a ready writer.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> their preciousness in absence is proved by the desire of their presence:</p>
- <p>When the despairing lover waiteth day after day,</p>
- <p>Looking for a word in reply, one word writ by that hand,</p>
- <p>And cursing bitterly the morn ushered in by blank disappointment:</p>
- <p>Or when the long-looked-for answer argueth a cooling friend,</p>
- <p>And the mind is plied suspiciously with dark inexplicable doubts,</p>
- <p>While thy wounded heart counteth its imaginary scars,</p>
- <p>And thou art the innocent and injured, that friend the capricious and in fault:</p>
- <p>Or when the earnest petition, that craveth for thy needs,</p>
- <p>Unheeded, yea, unopened, tortureth with starving delay:</p>
- <p>Or when the silence of a son, who would have written of his welfare,</p>
- <p>Racketh a father's bosom with sharp-cutting fears.</p>
- <p>For a letter, timely writ, is a rivet to the chain of affection,</p>
- <p>And a letter, untimely delayed, is as rust to the solder.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
- <p>The pen, flowing with love, or dipped black in hate,</p>
- <p>Or tipped with delicate courtesies, or harshly edged with censure,</p>
- <p>Hath quickened more good than the sun, more evil than the sword,</p>
- <p>More joy than woman's smile, more woe than frowning fortune;</p>
- <p>And shouldst thou ask my judgment of that which hath most profit in the world,</p>
- <p>For answer take thou this, The prudent penning of a letter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thou</span> hast not lost an hour, whereof there is a record;</p>
- <p>A written thought at midnight shall redeem the livelong day.</p>
- <p>Idea is as a shadow that departeth, speech is fleeting as the wind,</p>
- <p>Reading is an unremembered pastime; but a writing is eternal:</p>
- <p>For therein the dead heart liveth, the clay-cold tongue is eloquent,</p>
- <p>And the quick eye of the reader is cleared by the reed of the scribe.</p>
- <p>As a fossil in the rock, or a coin in the mortar of a ruin,</p>
- <p>So the symbolled thoughts tell of a departed soul:</p>
- <p>The plastic hand hath its witness in a statue, and exactitude of vision in a picture,</p>
- <p>And so, the mind that was among us, in its writings is embalmed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="178" height="194" alt="" src="images/image49ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF WEALTH.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Prodigality</span> hath a sister Meanness, his fixed antagonist heart-fellow,</p>
- <p>Who often outliveth the short career of the brother she despiseth:</p>
- <p>She hath lean lips and a sharp look, and her eyes are red and hungry;</p>
- <p>But he sloucheth in his gait, and his mouth speaketh loosely and maudlin.</p>
- <p>Let a spendthrift grow to be old, he will set his heart on saving,</p>
- <p>And labour to build up by penury that which extravagance threw down:</p>
- <p>Even so, with most men, do riches earn themselves a double curse;</p>
- <p>They are ill-got by tight dealing: they are ill-spent by loose squandering.</p>
- <p>Give me enough, saith Wisdom;&mdash;for he feareth to ask for more;</p>
- <p>And that by the sweat of my brow, addeth stout-hearted Independence:</p>
- <p>Give me enough, and not less, for want is leagued with the tempter;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</a></span>
- <p>Poverty shall make a man desperate, and hurry him ruthless into crime:</p>
- <p>Give me enough, and not more, saving for the children of distress;</p>
- <p>Wealth ofttimes killeth, where want but hindereth the budding:</p>
- <p>There is green glad summer near the pole, though brief and after long winter,</p>
- <p>But the burnt breasts of the torrid zone yield never kindly nourishment.</p>
- <p>Wouldst thou be poor, scatter to the rich,&mdash;and reap the tares of ingratitude;</p>
- <p>Wouldst thou be rich, give unto the poor; thou shalt have thine own with usury:</p>
- <p>For the secret hand of Providence prospereth the charitable all ways,</p>
- <p>Good luck shall he have in his pursuits, and his heart shall be glad within him;</p>
- <p>Yet perchance he never shall perceive, that, even as to earthly gains,</p>
- <p>The cause of his weal as of his joy, hath been small givings to the poor.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">In</span> the plain of Benares is there found a root that fathereth a forest,</p>
- <p>Where round the parent banian-tree drop its living scions;</p>
- <p>Thirstily they strain to the earth, like stalactites in a grotto,</p>
- <p>And strike broad roots, and branch again, lengthening their cool arcades:</p>
- <p>And the dervish madly danceth there, and the faquir is torturing his flesh,</p>
- <p>And the calm brahmin worshippeth the sleek and pampered bull:</p>
- <p>At the base lean jackals coil, while from above depending</p>
- <p>With dull malignant stare watcheth the branch-like boa.</p>
- <p>Even so, in man's heart is a sin that is the root of all evil;</p>
- <p>Whose fibres strangle the affections, whose branches overgrow the mind:</p>
- <p>And oftenest beneath its shadow thou shalt meet distorted piety,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The clenched and rigid fist, with the eyes upturned to heaven,</p>
- <p>Fanatic zeal with miserly severity, a mixture of gain with godliness,</p>
- <p>And him, against whom passion hath no power, kneeling to a golden calf:</p>
- <p>The hungry hounds of extortion are there, the bond, and the mortgage, and the writ,</p>
- <p>While the appetite for gold, unslumbering, watcheth to glut its maw:&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span>
- <p>And the heart, so tenanted and shaded, is cold to all things else;</p>
- <p>It seeth not the sunshine of heaven, nor is warmed by the light of charity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> covetousness disbelieveth God, and laugheth at the rights of men;</p>
- <p>Spurring unto theft and lying, and tempting to the poison and the knife;</p>
- <p>It sundereth the bonds of love, and quickeneth the flames of hate;</p>
- <p>A curse that shall wither the brain, and case the heart with iron.</p>
- <p>Content is the true riches, for without it there is no satisfying,</p>
- <p>But a ravenous all-devouring hunger gnaweth the vitals of the soul.</p>
- <p>The wise man knoweth where to stop, as he runneth in the race of fortune,</p>
- <p>For experience of old hath taught him, that happiness lingereth midway;</p>
- <p>And many in hot pursuit have hasted to the goal of wealth,</p>
- <p>But have lost, as they ran, those apples of gold,&mdash;the mind and the power to enjoy it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is no greater evil among men than a testament framed with injustice:</p>
- <p>Where caprice hath guided the boon, or dishonesty refused what was due.</p>
- <p>Generous is the robber on the highway, in the open daring of his guilt,</p>
- <p>To the secret coward, whose malice liveth and harmeth after him;</p>
- <p>Who smoothly sank into the tomb, with the smile of fraud upon his face,</p>
- <p>And the last black deed of his existence was injury without redress:</p>
- <p>For deaf is the ear of the dead, and can hear no palliating reasons;</p>
- <p>The smiter is not among the living, and Right pleadeth but in vain.</p>
- <p>Yet shall the curse of the oppressed be as blight upon the grave of the unjust;</p>
- <p>Yea, bitterly shall that handwriting testify against him at the judgment.</p>
- <p>I saw the humble relation that tended the peevishness of wealth,</p>
- <p>And ministered, with kind hand, to the wailings of disease and discontent:</p>
- <p>I noted how watchfulness and care were feeding on the marrow of her youth,</p>
- <p>How heavy was the yoke of dependence, loaded by petty tyranny;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
- <p>Yet I heard the frequent suggestion,&mdash;It can be but a little longer,</p>
- <p>Patience and mute submission shall one day reap a rich reward.</p>
- <p>So, tacitly enduring much, waited that humble friend,</p>
- <p>Putting off the lover of her youth until the dawn of wealth:</p>
- <p>And it came, that day of release, and the freed heart could not sorrow,</p>
- <p>For now were the years of promise to yield their golden harvest:</p>
- <p>Hope, so long deferred, sickly sparkled in her eye,</p>
- <p>The miserable past was forgotten, as she looked for the happier future,</p>
- <p>And she checked, as unworthy and ungrateful, the dark suspicious thought</p>
- <p>That perchance her right had been the safer, if not left alone with honour:</p>
- <p>But, alas, the sad knowledge soon came, that her stern task-master's will</p>
- <p>Hath rewarded her toil with a jibe, her patience with utter destitution!&mdash;</p>
- <p>Shall not the scourge of justice lash that cruel coward,</p>
- <p>Who mingled the gall of ingratitude with the bitterness of disappointment?</p>
- <p>Shall not the hate of men, and vengeance, fiercely pursuing,</p>
- <p>Hunt down the wretched being that sinneth in his grave?</p>
- <p>He fancied his idol self safe from the wrath of his fellows,</p>
- <p>But Hades rose as he came in, to point at him the finger of scorn;</p>
- <p>And again must he meet that orphan-maid to answer her face to face,</p>
- <p>And her wrongs shall cling around his neck, to hinder him from rising with the just:</p>
- <p>For his last most solemn act hath linked his name with liar,</p>
- <p>And the crime of Ananias is branded on his brow!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A good</span> man commendeth his cause to the one great Patron of innocence,</p>
- <p>Convinced of justice to the last, and sure of good meanwhile.</p>
- <p>He knoweth he hath a Guardian, wise and kind and strong,</p>
- <p>And can thank Him for giving, or refusing, the trust or the curse of riches:</p>
- <p>His confidence standeth as a rock; he dreadeth not malice nor caprice,</p>
- <p>Nor the whisperings of artful men, nor envious secret influence;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></span>
- <p>He scorneth servile compromise, and the pliant mouthings of deceit;</p>
- <p>He maketh not a show of love, where he cannot concede esteem;</p>
- <p>He regardeth ill-got wealth, as the root most fruitful of wretchedness,</p>
- <p>So he walketh in straight integrity, leaning on God and his right.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">No</span> gain, but by its price: labour, for the poor man's meal,</p>
- <p>Ofttimes heart-sickening toil, to win him a morsel for his hunger:</p>
- <p>Labour, for the chapman at his trade, a dull unvaried round,</p>
- <p>Year after year, unto death; yea, what a weariness is it!</p>
- <p>Labour, for the pale-faced scribe, drudging at his hated desk,</p>
- <p>Who bartereth for needful pittance the untold gold of health;</p>
- <p>Labour, with fear, for the merchant, whose hopes are ventured on the sea;</p>
- <p>Labour, with care, for the man of law, responsible in his gains;</p>
- <p>Labour, with envy and annoyance, where strangers will thee wealth;</p>
- <p>Labour, with indolence and gloom, where wealth falleth from a father;</p>
- <p>Labour unto all, whether aching thews, or aching head, or spirit,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The curse on the sons of men, in all their states, is labour.</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, to the diligent, labour bringeth blessing:</p>
- <p>The thought of duty sweeteneth toil, and travail is as pleasure;</p>
- <p>And time spent in doing hath a comfort that is not for the idle,</p>
- <p>The hardship is transmuted into joy by the dear alchemy of Mercy.</p>
- <p>Labour is good for a man, bracing up his energies to conquest,</p>
- <p>And without it life is dull, the man perceiving himself useless:</p>
- <p>For wearily the body groaneth, like a door on rusty hinges,</p>
- <p>And the grasp of the mind is weakened, as the talons of a caged vulture.</p>
- <p>Wealth hath never given happiness, but often hastened misery:</p>
- <p>Enough hath never caused misery, but often quickened happiness:</p>
- <p>Enough is less than thy thought, O pampered creature of society,</p>
- <p>And he that hath more than enough, is a thief of the rights of his brother.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">{130}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF INVENTION.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="81" height="166" alt="" src="images/image50cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Man</span>
- is proud of his mind, boasting that it giveth him divinity,</p>
- <p>Yet with all its powers can it originate nothing;</p>
- <p>For the Great God into all His works hath largely poured out Himself,</p>
- <p>Saving one special property, the grand prerogative,&mdash;Creation.</p>
- <p>To improve and expand is ours, as well as to limit and defeat;</p>
- <p>But to create a thought or a thing is hopeless and impossible.</p>
- <p>Can a man make matter?&mdash;and yet this would-be god</p>
- <p>Thinketh to make mind, and form original idea:</p>
- <p>The potter must have his clay, and the mason his quarry,</p>
- <p>And mind must drain ideas from everything around it.</p>
- <p>Doth the soil generate herbs, or the torrid air breed flies,</p>
- <p>Or the water frame its monads, or the mist its swarming blight?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Mediately, through thousand generations, having seed within themselves,</p>
- <p>All things, rare or gross, own one common Father.</p>
- <p>Truly spake Wisdom, There is nothing new under the sun:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
- <p>We only arrange and combine the ancient elements of all things.</p>
- <p>Invention is activity of mind, as fire is air in motion;</p>
- <p>A sharpening of the spiritual sight, to discern hidden aptitudes:</p>
- <p>From the basket and acanthus, is modelled the graceful capital;</p>
- <p>The shadowed profile on the wall helpeth the limner to his likeness;</p>
- <p>The footmarks, stamped in clay, lead on the thoughts to printing;</p>
- <p>The strange skin garments cast upon the shore suggest another hemisphere:</p>
- <p>A falling apple taught the sage pervading gravitation;</p>
- <p>The Huron is certain of his prey, from tracks upon the grass:</p>
- <p>And shrewdness, guessing out the hint, followeth on the trail;</p>
- <p>But the hint must be given, the trail must be there, or the keenest sight is as blindness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="248" height="339" alt="" src="images/image51r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold</span> the barren reef, which an earthquake hath just left dry;</p>
- <p>It hath no beauty to boast of, no harvest of fair fruits:</p>
- <p>But soon the lichen fixeth there, and, dying, diggeth its own grave,</p>
- <p>And softening suns and splitting frosts crumble the reluctant surface;</p>
- <p>And cormorants roost there, and the snail addeth its slime,</p>
- <p>And efts, with muddy feet, bring their welcome tribute;</p>
- <p>And the sea casteth out her dead, wrapped in a shroud of weeds;</p>
- <p>And orderly nature arrangeth again the disunited atoms;</p>
- <p>Anon, the cold smooth stone is warm with feathery grass,</p>
- <p>And the light sporules of the fern are dropt by the passing wind,</p>
- <p>The wood-pigeon, on swift wing, leaveth its crop-full of grain,</p>
- <p>The squirrel's jealous care planteth the fir-cone and the filbert:</p>
- <p>Years pass, and the sterile rock is rank with tangled herbage;</p>
- <p>The wild-vine clingeth to the briar, and ivy runneth green among the corn,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">{132}</a></span>
- <p>Lordly beeches are studded on the down, and willows crowd around the rivulet,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
- <p>And the tall pine and hazel-thicket shade the rambling hunter.</p>
- <p>Shall the rock boast of its fertility? shall it lift the head in pride?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Shall the mind of man be vain of the harvest of its thoughts?</p>
- <p>The savage is that rock; and a million chances from without,</p>
- <p>By little and little acting on the mind, heap up the hot-bed of society;</p>
- <p>And the soul, fed and fattened on the thoughts and things around it,</p>
- <p>Groweth to perfection, full of fruit, the fruit of foreign seeds.</p>
- <p>For we learn upon a hint, we find upon a clue,</p>
- <p>We yield an hundred-fold; but the great sower is Analogy.</p>
- <p>There must be an acrid sloe before a luscious peach,</p>
- <p>A boll of rotting flax before the bridal veil,</p>
- <p>An egg before an eagle, a thought before a thing,</p>
- <p>A spark struck into tinder to light the lamp of knowledge,</p>
- <p>A slight suggestive nod to guide the watching mind,</p>
- <p>A half-seen hand upon the wall, pointing to the balance of Comparison.</p>
- <p>By culture man may do all things, short of the miracle,&mdash;Creation;</p>
- <p>Here is the limit of thy power,&mdash;here let thy pride be stayed:</p>
- <p>The soil may be rich, and the mind may be active, but neither yield unsown;</p>
- <p>The eye cannot make light, nor the mind make spirit.</p>
- <p>Therefore it is wise in man to name all novelty Invention;</p>
- <p>For it is to find out things that are, not to create the unexisting:</p>
- <p>It is to cling to contiguities, to be keen in catching likeness,</p>
- <p>And with energetic elasticity to leap the gulphs of contrast.</p>
- <p>The globe knoweth not increase, either of matter or spirit;</p>
- <p>Atoms and thoughts are used again, mixing in varied combinations;</p>
- <p>And though, by moulding them anew, thou makest them thine own,</p>
- <p>Yet have they served thousands, and all their merit is of God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="210" height="236" alt="" src="images/image52ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF RIDICULE.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Seams</span> of thought for the sage's brow, and laughing lines for the fool's face;</p>
- <p>For all things leave their track in the mind; and the glass of the mind is faithful.</p>
- <p>Seest thou much mirth upon the cheek? there is then little exercise of virtue;</p>
- <p>For he that looketh on the world, cannot be glad and good:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
- <p>Seest thou much gravity in the eye? be not assured of finding wisdom;</p>
- <p>For she hath too great praise, not to get many mimics.</p>
- <p>There is a grave-faced folly; and verily, a laughter-loving wisdom;</p>
- <p>And what, if surface-judges account it vain frivolity?</p>
- <p>There is indeed an evil in excess, and a field may lie fallow too long;</p>
- <p>Yet merriment is often as a froth, that mantleth on the strong mind:</p>
- <p>And note thou this for a verity,&mdash;the subtlest thinker when alone,</p>
- <p>From ease of thoughts unbent, will laugh the loudest with his fellows:</p>
- <p>And well is the loveliness of wisdom mirrored in a cheerful countenance,</p>
- <p>Justly the deepest pools are proved by dimpling eddies;</p>
- <p>For that, a true philosophy commandeth an innocent life,</p>
- <p>And the unguilty spirit is lighter than a linnet's heart:</p>
- <p>Yea, there is no cosmetic like a holy conscience;</p>
- <p>The eye is bright with trust, the cheek bloomed over with affection,</p>
- <p>The brow unwrinkled by a care, and the lip triumphant in its gladness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> for yon grave-faced folly, need not far to look for her;</p>
- <p>How seriously on trifles dote those leaden eyes,</p>
- <p>How ruefully she sigheth after chances long gone by,</p>
- <p>How sulkily she moaneth over evils without cure!</p>
- <p>I have known a true-born mirth, the child of innocence and wisdom,</p>
- <p>I have seen a base-born gravity, mingled of ignorance and guilt:</p>
- <p>And again, a base-born mirth, springing out of carelessness and folly;</p>
- <p>And again, a true-born gravity, the product of reflection and right fear.</p>
- <p>The wounded partridge hideth in a furrow, and a stricken conscience would be left alone;</p>
- <p>But when its breast is healed, it runneth gladly with its fellows:</p>
- <p>Whereas the solitary heron, standing in the sedgy fen,</p>
- <p>Holdeth aloof from the social world, intent on wiles and death.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Need</span> but of light philosophy to dare the world's dread laugh;</p>
- <p>For a little mind courteth notoriety, to illustrate its puny self:</p>
- <p>But the sneer of a man's own comrades trieth the muscles of courage,</p>
- <p>And to be derided in his home is as a viper in the nest:</p>
- <p>The laugh of a hooting world hath in it a notion of sublimity,</p>
- <p>But the tittering private circle stingeth as a hive of wasps.</p>
- <p>Some have commended ridicule, counting it the test of truth,</p>
- <p>But neither wittily nor wisely; for truth must prove ridicule:</p>
- <p>Otherwise a blunt bulrush is to pierce the proof armour of argument,</p>
- <p>Because the stolidity of ignorance took it for a barbed shaft.</p>
- <p>Softer is the hide of the rhinoceros, than the heart of deriding unbelief,</p>
- <p>And truth is idler there, than the Bushman's feathered reed:</p>
- <p>A droll conceit parrieth a thrust, that should have hit the conscience,</p>
- <p>And the leering looks of humour tickle the childish mind;</p>
- <p>For that the matter of a man is mingled most with folly,</p>
- <p>Neither can he long endure the searching gaze of wisdom.</p>
- <p>It is pleasanter to see a laughing cheek than a serious forehead,</p>
- <p>And there liveth not one among a thousand whose idol is not pleasure.</p>
- <p>Ridicule is a weak weapon, when levelled at a strong mind:</p>
- <p>But common men are cowards, and dread an empty laugh.</p>
- <p>Fear a nettle, and touch it tenderly, its poison shall burn thee to the shoulder;</p>
- <p>But grasp it with a bold hand,&mdash;is it not a bundle of myrrh?</p>
- <p>Betray mean terror of ridicule, thou shalt find fools enough to mock thee;</p>
- <p>But answer thou their laughter with contempt, and the scoffers will lick thy feet.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF COMMENDATION.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="192" alt="" src="images/image53cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">The</span>
- praise of holy men is a promise of praise from their Master;</p>
- <p>A fore-running earnest of thy welcome,&mdash;Well done, faithful servant;</p>
- <p>A rich preludious note, that droppeth softly on thine ear,</p>
- <p>To tell thee the chords of thy heart are in tune with the choirs of heaven.</p>
- <p>Yet is it a dangerous hearing, for the sweetness may lull thee into slumber,</p>
- <p>And the cordial quaffed with thirst may generate the fumes of presumption.</p>
- <p>So seek it not for itself, but taste, and go gladly on thy way,</p>
- <p>For the mariner slacketh not his sail, though the sandal-groves of Araby allure him;</p>
- <p>And the fragrance of that incense would harm thee, as when, on a summer evening,</p>
- <p>The honied yellow flowers of the gorse oppress thy charmed sense:</p>
- <p>And a man hath too much of praise, for he praiseth himself continually;</p>
- <p>Neither lacketh he at any time self-commendation or excuse.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">{138}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Praise</span> a fool, and slay him: for the canvas of his vanity is spread;</p>
- <p>His bark is shallow in the water, and a sudden gust shall sink it:</p>
- <p>Praise a wise man, and speed him on his way; for he carrieth the ballast of humility,</p>
- <p>And is glad when his course is cheered by the sympathy of brethren ashore.</p>
- <p>The praise of a good man is good, for he holdeth up the mirror of Truth,</p>
- <p>That Virtue may see her own beauty, and delight in her own fair face:</p>
- <p>The praise of a bad man is evil, for he hideth the deformity of Vice,</p>
- <p>Casting the mantle of a queen around the limbs of a leper.</p>
- <p>Praise is rebuke to the man whose conscience alloweth it not:</p>
- <p>And where conscience feeleth it her due, no praise is better than a little.</p>
- <p>He that despiseth the outward appearance, despiseth the esteem of his fellows;</p>
- <p>And he that overmuch regardeth it, shall earn only their contempt:</p>
- <p>The honest commendation of an equal no one can scorn, and be blameless,</p>
- <p>Yet even that fair fame no one can hunt for, and be honoured:</p>
- <p>If it come, accept it and be thankful, and be thou humble in accepting;</p>
- <p>If it tarry, be not thou cast down; the bee can gather honey out of rue:</p>
- <p>And is thine aim so low, that the breath of those around thee</p>
- <p>Can speed thy feathered arrow, or retard its flight?</p>
- <p>The child shooteth at a butterfly, but the man's mark is an eagle;</p>
- <p>And while his fellows talk, he hath conquered in the clouds.</p>
- <p>Ally thee to truth and godliness, and use the talents in thy charge;</p>
- <p>So shall thou walk in peace, deserving, if not having.</p>
- <p>With a friend, praise him when thou canst; for many a friendship hath decayed,</p>
- <p>Like a plant in a crowded corner, for want of sunshine on its leaves:</p>
- <p>With another, praise him not often&mdash;otherwise he shall despise thee;</p>
- <p>But be thou frugal in commending; so will he give honour to thy judgment:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></span>
- <p>For thou that dost so zealously commend, art acknowledging thine own inferiority,</p>
- <p>And he, thou so highly hast exalted, shall proudly look down on thy esteem.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Wilt</span> thou that one remember a thing?&mdash;praise him in the midst of thy advice;</p>
- <p>Never yet forgat man the word whereby he hath been praised.</p>
- <p>Better to be censured by a thousand fools, than approved but by one man that is wise;</p>
- <p>For the pious are slower to help right, than the profane to hinder it:</p>
- <p>So, where the world rebuketh, there look thou for the excellent,</p>
- <p>And be suspicious of the good, which wicked men can praise.</p>
- <p>The captain bindeth his troop, not more by severity than kindness,</p>
- <p>And justly, should recompense well doing, as well as be strict with an offender;</p>
- <p>The laurel is cheap to the giver, but precious in his sight who hath won it,</p>
- <p>And the heart of the soldier rejoiceth in the approving glance of his chief.</p>
- <p>Timely given praise is even better than the merited rebuke of censure,</p>
- <p>For the sun is more needful to the plant than the knife that cutteth out a canker.</p>
- <p>Many a father hath erred, in that he hath withheld reproof,</p>
- <p>But more have mostly sinned, in withholding praise where it was due:</p>
- <p>There be many such as Eli among men; but these be more culpable than Eli,</p>
- <p>Who chill the fountain of exertion by the freezing looks of indifference:</p>
- <p>Ye call a man easy and good, yet he is as a two-edged sword;</p>
- <p>He rebuketh not vice, and it is strong: he comforteth not virtue, and it fainteth.</p>
- <p>There is nothing more potent among men than a gift timely bestowed;</p>
- <p>And a gift kept back where it was hoped, separateth chief friends:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
- <p>For what is a gift but a symbol, giving substance to praise and esteem?</p>
- <p>And where is a sharper arrow than the sting of unmerited neglect?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Expect</span> not praise from the mean, neither gratitude from the selfish;</p>
- <p>And to keep the proud thy friend, see thou do him not a service:</p>
- <p>For, behold, he will hate thee for his debt: thou hast humbled him by giving;</p>
- <p>And his stubbornness never shall acknowledge the good he hath taken from thy hand:</p>
- <p>Yea, rather will he turn and be thy foe, lest thou gather from his friendship</p>
- <p>That he doth account thee creditor, and standeth in the second place.</p>
- <p>Still, O kindly feeling heart, be not thou chilled by the thankless,</p>
- <p>Neither let the breath of gratitude fan thee into momentary heat:</p>
- <p>Do good for good's own sake, looking not to worthiness nor love;</p>
- <p>Fling thy grain among the rocks, cast thy bread upon the waters,</p>
- <p>His claim be strongest to thy help, who is thrown most helplessly upon thee,&mdash;</p>
- <p>So shalt thou have a better praise, and reap a richer harvest of reward.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">If</span> a man hold fast to thy creed, and fit his thinkings to thy notions,</p>
- <p>Thou shalt take him for a man right-minded, yea, and excuse his evil:</p>
- <p>But seest thou not, O bigot, that thy zeal is but a hunting after praise,</p>
- <p>And the full pleasure of a proselyte lieth in the flattering of self?</p>
- <p>A man of many praises meeteth many welcomes,</p>
- <p>But he, who blameth often, shall not keep a friend;</p>
- <p>The velvet-coated apricot is one thing, and the spiked horse-chestnut is another,</p>
- <p>A handle of smooth amber is pleasanter than rough buck-horn.</p>
- <p>Show me a popular man; I can tell thee the secret of his power;</p>
- <p>He hath soothed them with glozing words, lulling their ears with flattery,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
- <p>The smile of seeming approbation is ever the companion of his presence,</p>
- <p>And courteous looks, and warm regards, earn him all their hearts.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Nothing</span> but may be better, and every better might be best;</p>
- <p>The blind may discern, and the simple prove, fault or want in all things;</p>
- <p>And a little mind looketh on the lily with a microscopic eye,</p>
- <p>Eager and glad to pry out specks on its robe of purity;</p>
- <p>But a great mind gazeth on the sun, glorying in his brightness,</p>
- <p>And taking large knowledge of his good, in the broad prairie of creation:</p>
- <p>What, though he hatch basilisks? what, though spots are on the sun?</p>
- <p>In fulness is his worth, in fulness be his praise!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">{142}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="206" height="159" alt="" src="images/image54ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="81" height="125" alt="" src="images/image54cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Knowledge</span>
- holdeth by the hilt, and heweth out a road to conquest;</p>
- <p>Ignorance graspeth the blade, and is wounded by its own good sword:</p>
- <p>Knowledge distilleth health from the virulence of opposite poisons;</p>
- <p>Ignorance mixeth wholesomes, unto the breeding of disease:</p>
- <p>Knowledge is leagued with the universe, and findeth a friend in all things;</p>
- <p>But ignorance is everywhere a stranger; unwelcome, ill at ease, and out of place.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span>
- <p>A man is helpless and unsafe up to the measure of his ignorance,</p>
- <p>For he lacketh perception of the aptitudes commending such a matter to his use,</p>
- <p>Clutching at the horn of danger, while he judgeth it the handle of security,</p>
- <p>Or casting his anchor so widely, that the granite reef is just within the tether.</p>
- <p>Untaught in science, he is but half alive, stupidly taking note of nothing,</p>
- <p>Or listening with dull wonder to the crafty saws of an empiric:</p>
- <p>Simple in the world, he trusteth unto knaves; and then to make amends for folly,</p>
- <p>Dealeth so shrewdly with the honest, they cannot but suspect him for a thief;</p>
- <p>With an unknown God, he maketh mock of reason, fathering contrivance on chance,</p>
- <p>Or doting with superstitious dread on some crooked image of his fancy:</p>
- <p>But ignorant of Self, he is weakness at heart; the key-stone crumbleth into sand,</p>
- <p>There is panic in the general's tent, the oak is hollow as hemlock;</p>
- <p>Though the warm sap creepeth up its bark, filling out the sheaf of leaves,</p>
- <p>Though knowledge of all things beside add proofs of seeming vigour,</p>
- <p>Though the master-mind of the royal sage feast on the mysteries of wisdom,</p>
- <p>Yet ignorance of self shall bow down the spirit of a Solomon to idols;</p>
- <p>The storm of temptation, sweeping by, shall snap that oak like a reed,</p>
- <p>And the proud luxuriance of its tufted crown drag it the sooner to the dust.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Youth,</span> confident in self, tampereth with dangerous dalliance,</p>
- <p>Till the vice his heart once hated hath locked him in her foul embrace:</p>
- <p>Manhood, through zeal of doing good, seeketh high place for its occasions,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
- <p>Unwitting that the bleak mountain-air will nip the tender budding of his motives:</p>
- <p>Or painfully, for love of truth, he climbeth the ladder of science,</p>
- <p>Till pride of intellect heating his heart, warpeth it aside to delusion:</p>
- <p>The maiden, to give shadow to her fairness, plaiteth her raven hair,</p>
- <p>Heedlessly weaving for her soul the silken net of vanity:</p>
- <p>The grey-beard looketh on his gold, till he loveth its yellow smile,</p>
- <p>Unconscious of the bright decoy which is luring his heart unto avarice:</p>
- <p>Wrath avoideth no quarrel, jealousy counteth its suspicions,</p>
- <p>Pining envy gazeth still, and melancholy seeketh solitude,</p>
- <p>The sensitive broodeth on his slights, the fearful poreth over horrors,</p>
- <p>The train of wantonness is fired, the nerves of indecision are unstrung;</p>
- <p>Each special proneness unto harm is pampered by ignorant indulgence,</p>
- <p>And the man, for want of warning, yieldeth to the apt temptation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A smith</span> at the loom, and a weaver at the forge, were but sorry craftsmen;</p>
- <p>And a ship that saileth on every wind never shall reach her port:</p>
- <p>Yet there be thousands among men who heed not the leaning of their talents,</p>
- <p>But cutting against the grain, toil on to no good end;</p>
- <p>And the light of a thoughtful spirit is quenched beneath the bushel of commerce,</p>
- <p>While meaner plodding minds are driven up the mountain of philosophy:</p>
- <p>The cedar withereth on a wall, while the house-leek is fattening in a hot-bed,</p>
- <p>And the dock with its rank leaves hideth the sun from violets.</p>
- <p>To everything a fitting place, a proper honourable use;</p>
- <p>The humblest measure of mind is bright in its humble sphere:</p>
- <p>The glow-worm, creeping in the hedge, lighteth her evening torch,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></span>
- <p>And her far-off mate, on gossamer sail, steereth his course by that star:</p>
- <p>But ignorance mocketh at proprieties, bringing out the glow-worm at noon;</p>
- <p>And setteth the faults of mediocrity in the full blaze of wisdom.</p>
- <p>Ravens croaking in darkness, and a skylark trilling to the sun,</p>
- <p>The voice of a screech-owl from a ruin, and the blackbird's whistle in a wood,</p>
- <p>A cushion-footed camel for the sands, and a swift rein-deer for the snows,</p>
- <p>A naked skin for Ethiopia, and rich soft furs for the Pole:</p>
- <p>In all things is there a fitness: discord with discord hath its music;</p>
- <p>And the harmony of nature is preserved by each one knowing his place.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> blind at an easel, the palsied with a graver, the halt making for the goal,</p>
- <p>The deaf ear tuning psaltery, the stammerer discoursing eloquence,&mdash;</p>
- <p>What wonder if all fail? the shaft flieth wide of the mark</p>
- <p>Alike if itself be crooked, or the bow be strung awry;</p>
- <p>And the mind which were excellent in one way, but foolishly toileth in another,</p>
- <p>What is it but an ill-strung bow, and its aim a crooked arrow?</p>
- <p>By knowledge of self, thou provest thy powers: put not the racer to the plough,</p>
- <p>Nor goad the toilsome ox to wager his slowness with the fleet:</p>
- <p>Consider thy failings, heed thy propensities, search out thy latent virtues,</p>
- <p>Analyze the doubtful, cultivate the good, and crush the head of evil;</p>
- <p>So shalt thou catch with quick hand the golden ball of opportunity,</p>
- <p>The warrior armed shall be ready for the fray, beside his bridled steed;</p>
- <p>Thou shall ward off special harms, and have the sway of circumstance,</p>
- <p>And turn to thy special good the common current of events;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">{146}</a></span>
- <p>Choosing from the wardrobe of the world, thou shalt suitably clothe thy spirit,</p>
- <p>Nor thrust the white hand of peace into the gauntlet of defiance:</p>
- <p>The shepherd shall go with a staff, and conquer by sling and stone;</p>
- <p>The soldier shall let alone the distaff, and the scribe lay down the sword;</p>
- <p>The man unlearned shall keep silence, and earn one attribute of wisdom,</p>
- <p>The sage be sparing of his lessons before unhearing ears:</p>
- <p>Calm shalt thou be, as a lion in repose, conscious of passive strength,</p>
- <p>And the shock that splitteth the globe, shall not unthrone thy self-possession.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Acquaint</span> thee with thyself, O man! so shalt thou be humble:</p>
- <p>The hard hot desert of thy heart shall blossom with the lily and the rose;</p>
- <p>The frozen cliffs of pride shall melt, as an iceberg in the tropics;</p>
- <p>The bitter fountains of self-seeking be sweeter than the waters of the Nile.</p>
- <p>But if thou lack that wisdom,&mdash;thy frail skiff is doomed,</p>
- <p>On stronger eddy whirling to the dreadful gorge;</p>
- <p>Untaught in that grand lore, thou standest, cased in steel,</p>
- <p>To dare with mocking unbelief the thunderbolts of heaven.</p>
- <p>For look now around thee on the universe, behold how all things serve thee;</p>
- <p>The teeming soil, and the buoyant sea, and undulating air,</p>
- <p>Golden crops, and bloomy fruits, and flowers, and precious gems,</p>
- <p>Choice perfumes and fair sights, soft touches and sweet music:</p>
- <p>For thee, shoaling up the bay, crowd the finny nations,</p>
- <p>For thee, the cattle on a thousand hills live, and labour, and die:</p>
- <p>Light is thy daily slave, darkness inviteth thee to slumber;</p>
- <p>Thou art served by the hands of Beauty, and Sublimity kneeleth at thy feet:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
- <p>Arise, thou sovereign of creation, and behold thy glory!</p>
- <p>Yet more, thou hast a mind; intellect wingeth thee to heaven,</p>
- <p>Tendeth thy state on earth, and by it thou divest down to hell;</p>
- <p>Thou hast measured the belts of Saturn, thou hast weighed the moons of Jupiter,</p>
- <p>And seen, by reason's eye, the centre of thy globe;</p>
- <p>Subtly hast thou numbered by billions the leagues between sun and sun,</p>
- <p>And noted in thy book the coming of their shadows;</p>
- <p>With marvellous unerring truth, thou knowest to an inch and to an instant,</p>
- <p>The where and the when of the comet's path that shall seem to rush by at thy command:</p>
- <p>Arise, thou king of mind, and survey thy dignity!</p>
- <p>Yet more,&mdash;for once believe religion's flattering tale;</p>
- <p>Thou hast a soul, yea, and a God,&mdash;but be not therefore humbled;</p>
- <p>Thy Maker's self was glad to live and die&mdash;a man;</p>
- <p>The brightest jewel in His crown is voluntary manhood:</p>
- <p>By deep dishonour, and great price, bought He that envied freedom,</p>
- <p>But thou wast born an heir of all, thy Master scarce could earn.</p>
- <p>O climax unto pride, O triumph of humanity,</p>
- <p>O triple crown upon thy brow, most high and mighty Self!</p>
- <p>Arise, thou Lord of all, thou greater than a God!&mdash;</p>
- <p>How saidst thou, wretched being?&mdash;cast thy glance within;</p>
- <p>Regard that painted sepulchre, the hovel of thy heart:</p>
- <p>Ha! with what fearful imagery swarmeth that small chamber;</p>
- <p>The horrid eye of murder, scowling in the dark,</p>
- <p>The bony hand of avarice, filching from the poor,</p>
- <p>The lurid fires of lust, the idiot face of folly,</p>
- <p>The sickening deed of cruelty, the foul fierce orgies of the drunken,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
- <p>Weak contemptible vanity, stubborn stolid unbelief,</p>
- <p>Envy's devilish sneer, and the vile features of ingratitude,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Man, hast thou seen enough? or are these full proof</p>
- <p>That thou art a miracle of mercy, and all thy dignity is dross?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Well,</span> said the wisdom of earth, O mortal, know thyself;</p>
- <p>But better the wisdom of heaven, O man, learn thou thy God:</p>
- <p>By knowledge of self thou art conusant of evil, and mailed in panoply to meet it;</p>
- <p>By knowledge of God cometh knowledge of good, and universal love is at thy heart.</p>
- <p>Every creature knoweth its capacities, running in the road of instinct,</p>
- <p>And reason must not lag behind, but serve itself of all proprieties:</p>
- <p>The swift to the race, and the strong to the burden, and the wise for right direction;</p>
- <p>For self-knowledge filleth with acceptance its niche in the temple of utility:</p>
- <p>But vainly wilt thou look for that knowledge, till the clue of all truth is in thy hand,</p>
- <p>For the labyrinth of man's heart windeth in complicate deceivings:</p>
- <p>Thou canst not sound its depths with the shallow plumb-line of reason,</p>
- <p>Till religion, the pilot of the soul, have lent thee her unfathomable coil:</p>
- <p>Therefore, for this grand knowledge, and knowledge is the parent of dominion,</p>
- <p>Learn God, thou shalt know thyself; yea, and shalt have mastery of all things.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="248" height="345" alt="" src="images/image55r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">{150}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="83" height="244" alt="" src="images/image56cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Shame</span> upon thee, savage Monarch-Man, proud monopolist of reason;</p>
- <p>Shame upon Creation's lord, the fierce ensanguined despot:</p>
- <p>What, man! are there not enough, hunger, and diseases, and fatigue,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And yet must thy goad or thy thong add another sorrow to existence?</p>
- <p>What! art thou not content thy sin hath dragged down suffering and death</p>
- <p>On the poor dumb servants of thy comfort, and yet must thou rack them with thy spite?</p>
- <p>The prodigal heir of creation hath gambled away his all,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Shall he add torment to the bondage that is galling his forfeit serfs?</p>
- <p>The leader in nature's pæan himself hath marred her psaltery,</p>
- <p>Shall he multiply the din of discord by overstraining all the strings?</p>
- <p>The rebel hath fortified his stronghold, shutting in his vassals with him,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Shall he aggravate the woes of the besieged by oppression from within?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
- <p>Thou twice deformed image of thy Maker, thou hateful representative of Love,</p>
- <p>For very shame be merciful, be kind unto the creatures thou hast ruined;</p>
- <p>Earth and her million tribes are cursed for thy sake,</p>
- <p>Earth and her million tribes still writhe beneath thy cruelty:</p>
- <p>Liveth there but one among the million that shall not bear witness against thee,</p>
- <p>A pensioner of land or air or sea, that hath not whereof it will accuse thee?</p>
- <p>From the elephant toiling at a launch, to the shrew-mouse in the harvest-field,</p>
- <p>From the whale which the harpooner hath stricken, to the minnow caught upon a pin,</p>
- <p>From the albatross wearied in its flight, to the wren in her covered nest,</p>
- <p>From the death-moth and lace-winged dragon-fly, to the lady-bird and the gnat,</p>
- <p>The verdict of all things is unanimous, finding their master cruel:</p>
- <p>The dog, thy humble friend, thy trusting, honest friend;</p>
- <p>The ass, thine uncomplaining slave, drudging from morn to even;</p>
- <p>The lamb, and the timorous hare, and the labouring ox at plough;</p>
- <p>The speckled trout, basking in the shallow, and the partridge, gleaning in the stubble,</p>
- <p>And the stag at bay, and the worm in thy path, and the wild bird pining in captivity,</p>
- <p>And all things that minister alike to thy life and thy comfort and thy pride,</p>
- <p>Testify with one sad voice that man is a cruel master.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Verily,</span> they are all thine: freely mayst thou serve thee of them all:</p>
- <p>They are thine by gift for thy needs, to be used in all gratitude and kindness;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
- <p>Gratitude to their God and thine,&mdash;their Father and thy Father,</p>
- <p>Kindness to them who toil for thee, and help thee with their all:</p>
- <p>For meat, but not by wantonness of slaying: for burden, but with limits of humanity;</p>
- <p>For luxury, but not through torture; for draught, but according to the strength:</p>
- <p>For a dog cannot plead his own right, nor render a reason for exemption,</p>
- <p>Nor give a soft answer unto wrath, to turn aside the undeserved lash;</p>
- <p>The galled ox cannot complain, nor supplicate a moment's respite;</p>
- <p>The spent horse hideth his distress, till he panteth out his spirit at the goal;</p>
- <p>Also, in the winter of life, when worn by constant toil,</p>
- <p>If ingratitude forget his services, he cannot bring them to remembrance;</p>
- <p>Behold, he is faint with hunger; the big tear standeth in his eye;</p>
- <p>His skin is sore with stripes, and he tottereth beneath his burden;</p>
- <p>His limbs are stiff with age, his sinews have lost their vigour,</p>
- <p>And pain is stamped upon his face, while he wrestleth unequally with toil;</p>
- <p>Yet once more mutely and meekly endureth he the crushing blow;</p>
- <p>That struggle hath cracked his heart-strings,&mdash;the generous brute is dead!</p>
- <p>Liveth there no advocate for him? no judge to avenge his wrongs?</p>
- <p>No voice that shall be heard in his defence? no sentence to be passed on his oppressor?</p>
- <p>Yea, the sad eye of the tortured pleadeth pathetically for him;</p>
- <p>Yea, all the justice in heaven is roused in indignation at his woes;</p>
- <p>Yea, all the pity upon earth shall call down a curse upon the cruel;</p>
- <p>Yea, the burning malice of the wicked is their own exceeding punishment.</p>
- <p>The Angel of Mercy stoppeth not to comfort, but passeth by on the other side,</p>
- <p>And hath no tear to shed, when a cruel man is damned.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF FRIENDSHIP.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="79" height="165" alt="" src="images/image57cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">As</span>
- frost to the bud, and blight to the blossom, even such is self-interest to Friendship:</p>
- <p>For Confidence cannot dwell where Selfishness is porter at the gate.</p>
- <p>If thou see thy friend to be selfish, thou canst not be sure of his honesty;</p>
- <p>And in seeking thine own weal, thou hast wronged the reliance of thy friend.</p>
- <p>Flattery hideth her varnished face when Friendship sitteth at his board:</p>
- <p>And the door is shut upon Suspicion, but Candour is bid glad welcome.</p>
- <p>For Friendship abhorreth doubt, its life is in mutual trust,</p>
- <p>And perisheth, when artful praise proveth it is sought for a purpose.</p>
- <p>A man may be good to thee at times, and render thee mighty service,</p>
- <p>Whom yet thy secret soul could not desire as a friend;</p>
- <p>For the sum of life is in trifles, and though, in the weightier masses,</p>
- <p>A man refuse thee not his purse, nay his all in thine utmost need,</p>
- <p>Yet if thou canst not feel that his character agreeth with thine own,</p>
- <p>Thou never wilt call him friend, though thou render him a heartful of gratitude.</p>
- <p>A coarse man grindeth harshly the finer feelings of his brother;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
- <p>A common mind will soon depart from the dull companionship of wisdom;</p>
- <p>A weak soul dareth not to follow in the track of vigour and decision;</p>
- <p>And the worldly regardeth with scorn the seeming foolishness of faith.</p>
- <p>A mountain is made up of atoms, and friendship of little matters,</p>
- <p>And if the atoms hold not together, the mountain is crumbled into dust.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Come,</span> I will show thee a friend; I will paint one worthy of thy trust:</p>
- <p>Thine heart shall not weary of him: thou shalt not secretly despise him.</p>
- <p>Thou art long in learning him, in unravelling all his worth;</p>
- <p>And he dazzleth not thine eyes at first, to be darkened in thy sight afterward,</p>
- <p>But riseth from small beginnings, and reacheth the height of thine esteem.</p>
- <p>He remembereth that thou art only man; he expecteth not great things from thee:</p>
- <p>And his forbearance toward thee silently teacheth thee to be considerate unto him.</p>
- <p>He despiseth not courtesy of manner, nor neglecteth the decencies of life:</p>
- <p>Nor mocketh the failings of others, nor is harsh in his censures before thee:</p>
- <p>For so, how couldst thou tell, if he talketh not of thee in ridicule?</p>
- <p>He withholdeth no secret from thee, and rejecteth not thine in turn;</p>
- <p>He shareth his joys with thee, and is glad to bear part in thy sorrows.</p>
- <p>Yet one thing, he loveth thee too well to show thee the corruptions of his heart:</p>
- <p>For as an ill example strengthened the hands of the wicked,</p>
- <p>So to put forward thy guilt, is a secret poison to thy friend:</p>
- <p>For the evil in his nature is comforted, and he warreth more weakly against it,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span>
- <p>If he find that the friend whom he honoureth, is a man more sinful than himself.</p>
- <p>I hear the communing of friends; ye speak out the fulness of your souls,</p>
- <p>And being but men, as men, ye own to all the sympathies of manhood:</p>
- <p>Confidence openeth the lips, indulgence beameth from the eye,</p>
- <p>The tongue loveth not boasting, the heart is made glad with kindness:</p>
- <p>And one standeth not as on a hill, beckoning to the other to follow,</p>
- <p>But ye toil up hand in hand, and carry each other's burdens.</p>
- <p>Ye commune of hopes and aspirations, the fervent breathings of the heart,</p>
- <p>Ye speak with pleasant interchange the treasured secrets of affection,</p>
- <p>Ye listen to the voice of complaint, and whisper the language of comfort,</p>
- <p>And as in a double solitude, ye think in each other's hearing.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Choose</span> thy friend discreetly, and see thou consider his station,</p>
- <p>For the graduated scale of ranks accordeth with the ordinance of Heaven.</p>
- <p>If a low companion ripen to a friend, in the full sunshine of thy confidence,</p>
- <p>Know, that for old age thou hast heaped up sorrow;</p>
- <p>For thou sinkest to that level, and thy kin shall scorn thee,</p>
- <p>Yea, and the menial thou hast pampered haply shall neglect thee in thy death:</p>
- <p>And if thou reachest up to high estates, thinking to herd with princes,</p>
- <p>What art thou but a footstool, though so near a throne?</p>
- <p>O rush among the lilies, be taught thou art a weed,</p>
- <p>O briar among the cedars, hot contempt shall burn thee.</p>
- <p>But thou, friend and scholar, select from thine own caste,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
- <p>And make not an intimate of one, thy servant or thy master;</p>
- <p>For only friendship among men is the true republic,</p>
- <p>Where all have equality of service, and all have freedom of command.</p>
- <p>And yet, if thou wilt take my judgment, be shy of too much openness with any,</p>
- <p>Lest thou repent hereafter, should he turn and rend thee:</p>
- <p>For many an apostate friend hath abused unguarded confidence,</p>
- <p>And bent to selfish ends the secret of the soul.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Absence</span> strengthened friendship, where the last recollections were kindly;</p>
- <p>But it must be good wine at the last, or absence shall weaken it daily.</p>
- <p>A rare thing is faith, and friendship is a marvel among men,</p>
- <p>Yet strange faces call they friends, and say they believe when they doubt.</p>
- <p>Those hours are not lost that are spent in cementing affection;</p>
- <p>For a friend is above gold, precious as the stores of the mind.</p>
- <p>Be sparing of advice by words, but teach thy lesson by example:</p>
- <p>For the vanity of man may be wounded, and retort unkindly upon thee.</p>
- <p>There be some that never had a friend, because they were gross and selfish;</p>
- <p>Worldliness, and apathy, and pride, leave not many that are worthy:</p>
- <p>But one who meriteth esteem, need never lack a friend:</p>
- <p>For as thistle-down flieth abroad, and casteth its anchor in the soil,</p>
- <p>So philanthropy yearneth for a heart, where it may take root and blossom.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> I hear the child of sensibility moaning at the wintry cold,</p>
- <p>Wherein the mists of selfishness have wrapped the society of men:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
- <p>He grieveth, and hath deep reasons; for falsehood hath wronged his trust,</p>
- <p>And the breaches in his bleeding heart have been filled with the briars of suspicion.</p>
- <p>For, alas, how few be friends, of whom charity hath hoped well!</p>
- <p>How few there be among men who forget themselves for other!</p>
- <p>Each one seeketh his own, and looketh on his brethren as rivals,</p>
- <p>Masking envy with friendship, to serve his secret ends.</p>
- <p>And the world, that corrupteth all good, hath wronged that sacred name,</p>
- <p>For it calleth any man friend, who is not known for an enemy:</p>
- <p>And such be as the flies of summer, while plenty sitteth at thy board:</p>
- <p>But who can wonder at their flight from the cold denials of want?</p>
- <p>Such be as vultures round a carcase, assembled together for the feast;</p>
- <p>But a sudden noise scareth them, and forthwith are they specks among the clouds.</p>
- <p>There be few, O child of sensibility, who deserve to have thy confidence;</p>
- <p>Yet weep not, for there are some, and such some live for thee:</p>
- <p>To them is the chilling world a drear and barren scene,</p>
- <p>And gladly seek they such as thou art, for seldom find they the occasion:</p>
- <p>For, though no man excludeth himself from the high capability of friendship,</p>
- <p>Yet verily the man is a marvel whom truth can write a friend.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="250" height="345" alt="" src="images/image58r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>Of Love.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">There</span> is a fragrant blossom, that maketh glad the garden of the heart;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
- <p>Its root lieth deep: it is delicate, yet lasting, as the lilac crocus of autumn:</p>
- <p>Loneliness and thought are the dews that water it morn and even;</p>
- <p>Memory and Absence cherish it, as the balmy breathings of the south:</p>
- <p>Its sun is the brightness of Affection, and it bloometh in the borders of Hope;</p>
- <p>Its companions are gentle flowers, and the briar withereth by its side.</p>
- <p>I saw it budding in beauty; I felt the magic of its smile;</p>
- <p>The violet rejoiced beneath it, the rose stooped down and kissed it;</p>
- <p>And I thought some cherub had planted there a truant flower of Eden,</p>
- <p>As a bird bringeth foreign seeds, that they may flourish in a kindly soil.</p>
- <p>I saw, and asked not its name; I knew no language was so wealthy,</p>
- <p>Though every heart of every clime findeth its echo within.</p>
- <p>And yet what shall I say? Is a sordid man capable of Love?</p>
- <p>Hath a seducer known it? Can an adulterer perceive it?</p>
- <p>Or he that seeketh strange women, can he feel its purity?</p>
- <p>Or he that changeth often, can he know its truth?</p>
- <p>Longing for another's happiness, yet often destroying its own;</p>
- <p>Chaste, and looking up to God, as the fountain of tenderness and joy:</p>
- <p>Quiet, yet flowing deep, as the Rhine among rivers;</p>
- <p>Lasting, and knowing not change&mdash;it walketh with Truth and Sincerity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Love</span>:&mdash;what a volume in a word, an ocean in a tear,</p>
- <p>A seventh heaven in a glance, a whirlwind in a sigh,</p>
- <p>The lightning in a touch, a millennium in a moment,</p>
- <p>What concentrated joy or woe in blest or blighted love!</p>
- <p>For it is that native poetry springing up indigenous to Mind,</p>
- <p>The heart's own-country music thrilling all its chords,</p>
- <p>The story without an end that angels throng to hear,</p>
- <p>The word, the king of words, carved on Jehovah's heart!</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
- <p>Go, call thou snake-eyed malice mercy, call envy honest praise,</p>
- <p>Count selfish craft for wisdom, and coward treachery for prudence,</p>
- <p>Do homage to blaspheming unbelief as to bold and free philosophy,</p>
- <p>And estimate the recklessness of license as the right attribute of liberty,&mdash;</p>
- <p>But with the world, thou friend and scholar, stain not this pure name;</p>
- <p>Nor suffer the majesty of Love to be likened to the meanness of desire:</p>
- <p>For love is no more such, than seraphs' hymns are discord,</p>
- <p>And such is no more Love, than Etna's breath is summer.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Love</span> is a sweet idolatry enslaving all the soul,</p>
- <p>A mighty spiritual force, warring with the dulness of matter,</p>
- <p>An angel-mind breathed into a mortal, though fallen yet how beautiful!</p>
- <p>All the devotion of the heart in all its depth and grandeur.</p>
- <p>Behold that pale geranium, pent within the cottage window;</p>
- <p>How yearningly it stretcheth to the light its sickly long-stalked leaves,</p>
- <p>How it straineth upward to the sun, coveting his sweet influences,</p>
- <p>How real a living sacrifice to the god of all its worship!</p>
- <p>Such is the soul that loveth; and so the rose-tree of affection</p>
- <p>Bendeth its every leaf to look on those dear eyes,</p>
- <p>Its every blushing petal basketh in their light,</p>
- <p>And all its gladness, all its life, is hanging on their love.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">If</span> the love of the heart is blighted, it buddeth not again:</p>
- <p>If that pleasant song is forgotten, it is to be learnt no more:</p>
- <p>Yet often will thought look back, and weep over early affection;</p>
- <p>And the dim notes of that pleasant song will be heard as a reproachful spirit,</p>
- <p>Moaning in Æolian strains over the desert of the heart,</p>
- <p>Where the hot siroccos of the world have withered its one oasis.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="222" height="276" alt="" src="images/image59ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF MARRIAGE.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Seek</span> a good wife of thy God, for she is the best gift of His providence;</p>
- <p>Yet ask not in bold confidence that which He hath not promised:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></span>
- <p>Thou knowest not His good will:&mdash;be thy prayer then submissive there-unto;</p>
- <p>And leave thy petition to His mercy, assured that He will deal well with thee.</p>
- <p>If thou art to have a wife of thy youth, she is now living on the earth;</p>
- <p>Therefore think of her, and pray for her weal; yea, though thou hast not seen her.</p>
- <p>They that love early become like-minded, and the tempter toucheth them not:</p>
- <p>They grow up leaning on each other, as the olive and the vine.</p>
- <p>Youth longeth for a kindred spirit, and yearneth for a heart that can commune with his own;</p>
- <p>He meditateth night and day, doting on the image of his fancy.</p>
- <p>Take heed that what charmeth thee is real, nor springeth of thine own imagination;</p>
- <p>And suffer not trifles to win thy love; for a wife is thine unto death.</p>
- <p>The harp and the voice may thrill thee,&mdash;sound may enchant thine ear,</p>
- <p>But consider thou, the hand will wither, and the sweet notes turn discord:</p>
- <p>The eye, so brilliant at even, may be red with sorrow in the morning;</p>
- <p>And the sylph-like form of elegance must writhe in the crampings of pain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O happy</span> lot, and hallowed, even as the joy of angels,</p>
- <p>Where the golden chain of godliness is entwined with the roses of love:</p>
- <p>But beware thou seem not to be holy, to win favour in the eyes of a creature,</p>
- <p>For the guilt of the hypocrite is deadly, and winneth thee wrath elsewhere.</p>
- <p>The idol of thy heart is, as thou, a probationary sojourner on earth;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
- <p>Therefore be chary of her soul, for that is the jewel in her casket:</p>
- <p>Let her be a child of God, that she bring with her a blessing to thy house,&mdash;</p>
- <p>A blessing above riches, and leading contentment in its train:</p>
- <p>Let her be an heir of Heaven; so shall she help thee on thy way:</p>
- <p>For those who are one in faith, fight double-handed against evil.</p>
- <p>Take heed lest she love thee before God; that she be not an idolater:</p>
- <p>Yet see thou that she love thee well: for her heart is the heart of woman;</p>
- <p>And the triple nature of humanity must be bound by a triple chain,</p>
- <p>For soul and mind and body&mdash;godliness, esteem, and affection.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">How</span> beautiful is modesty! it winneth upon all beholders:</p>
- <p>But a word or a glance may destroy the pure love that should have been for thee.</p>
- <p>Affect not to despise beauty: no one is freed from its dominion;</p>
- <p>But regard it not a pearl of price:&mdash;it is fleeting as the bow in the clouds.</p>
- <p>If the character within be gentle, it often hath its index in the countenance:</p>
- <p>The soft smile of a loving face is better than splendour that fadeth quickly.</p>
- <p>When thou choosest a wife, think not only of thyself,</p>
- <p>But of those God may give thee of her, that they reproach thee not for their being:</p>
- <p>See that He hath given her health, lest thou lose her early and weep:</p>
- <p>See that she springeth of a wholesome stock, that thy little ones perish not before thee:</p>
- <p>For many a fair skin hath covered a mining disease,</p>
- <p>And many a laughing cheek been bright with the glare of madness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Mark</span> the converse of one thou lovest, that it be simple and sincere;</p>
- <p>For an artful or false woman shall set thy pillow with thorns.</p>
- <p>Observe her deportment with others, when she thinketh not that thou art nigh,</p>
- <p>For with thee will the blushes of love conceal the true colour of her mind.</p>
- <p>Hath she learning? it is good, so that modesty go with it:</p>
- <p>Hath she wisdom? it is precious, but beware that thou exceed;</p>
- <p>For woman must be subject, and the true mastery is of the mind.</p>
- <p>Be joined to thine equal in rank, or the foot of pride will kick at thee;</p>
- <p>And look not only for riches, lest thou be mated with misery:</p>
- <p>Marry not without means; for so shouldst thou tempt Providence;</p>
- <p>But wait not for more than enough; for Marriage is the <small>DUTY</small> of most men:</p>
- <p>Grievous indeed must be the burden that shall outweigh innocence and health,</p>
- <p>And a well-assorted marriage hath not many cares.</p>
- <p>In the day of thy joy consider the poor; thou shall reap a rich harvest of blessing;</p>
- <p>For these be the pensioners of One who filleth thy cup with pleasures:</p>
- <p>In the day of thy joy be thankful: He hath well deserved thy praise:</p>
- <p>Mean and selfish is the heart that seeketh Him only in sorrow.</p>
- <p>For her sake who leaneth on thine arm, court not the notice of the world,</p>
- <p>And remember that sober privacy is comelier than public display.</p>
- <p>If thou marriest, thou art allied unto strangers; see they be not such as shame thee:</p>
- <p>If thou marriest, thou leavest thine own; see that it be not done in anger.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Bride</span> and bridegroom, pilgrims of life, henceforward to travel together,</p>
- <p>In this the beginning of your journey, neglect not the favour of Heaven:</p>
- <p>Let the day of hopes fulfilled be blest by many prayers,</p>
- <p>And at eventide kneel ye together, that your joy be not unhallowed:</p>
- <p>Angels that are round you shall be glad, those loving ministers of mercy,</p>
- <p>And the richest blessings of your God shall be poured on His favoured children.</p>
- <p>Marriage is a figure and an earnest of holier things unseen,</p>
- <p>And reverence well becometh the symbol of dignity and glory.</p>
- <p>Keep thy heart pure, lest thou do dishonour to thy state;</p>
- <p>Selfishness is base and hateful; but love considereth not itself.</p>
- <p>The wicked turneth good into evil, for his mind is warped within him;</p>
- <p>But the heart of the righteous is chaste: his conscience casteth off sin.</p>
- <p>If thou wilt be loved, render implicit confidence;</p>
- <p>If thou wouldst not suspect, receive full confidence in turn:</p>
- <p>For where trust is not reciprocal, the love that trusted withereth.</p>
- <p>Hide not your grief nor your gladness; be open one with the other;</p>
- <p>Let bitterness be strange unto your tongues, but sympathy a dweller in your hearts:</p>
- <p>Imparting halveth the evils, while it doubleth the pleasures of life,</p>
- <p>But sorrows breed and thicken in the gloomy bosom of Reserve.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Young</span> wife, be not froward, nor forget that modesty becometh thee:</p>
- <p>If it be discarded now, who will not hold it feigned before?</p>
- <p>But be not as a timid girl,&mdash;there is honour due to thine estate;</p>
- <p>A matron's modesty is dignified: she blusheth not, neither is she bold.</p>
- <p>Be kind to the friends of thine husband, for the love they have to him:</p>
- <p>And gently bear with his infirmities: hast thou no need of his forbearance?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span>
- <p>Be not always in each other's company; it is often good to be alone;</p>
- <p>And if there be too much sameness, ye cannot but grow weary of each other:</p>
- <p>Ye have each a soul to be nourished, and a mind to be taught in wisdom,</p>
- <p>Therefore, as accountable for time, help one another to improve it.</p>
- <p>If ye feel love to decline, track out quickly the secret cause;</p>
- <p>Let it not rankle for a day, but confess and bewail it together:</p>
- <p>Speedily seek to be reconciled, for love is the life of marriage;</p>
- <p>And be ye co-partners in triumph, conquering the peevishness of self.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Let</span> no one have thy confidence, O wife, saving thine husband:</p>
- <p>Have not a friend more intimate, O husband, than thy wife.</p>
- <p>In the joy of a well-ordered home be warned that this is not your rest;</p>
- <p>For the substance to come may be forgotten in the present beauty of the shadow.</p>
- <p>If ye are blessed with children, ye have a fearful pleasure,</p>
- <p>A deeper care and a higher joy, and the range of your existence is widened:</p>
- <p>If God in wisdom refuse them, thank Him for an unknown mercy:</p>
- <p>For how can ye tell if they might be a blessing or a curse?</p>
- <p>Yet ye may pray, like Hannah, simply dependent on His will:</p>
- <p>Resignation sweeteneth the cup, but impatience dasheth it with vinegar.</p>
- <p>Now this is the sum of the matter:&mdash;if ye will be happy in marriage,</p>
- <p>Confide, love, and be patient: be faithful, firm, and holy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="215" height="244" alt="" src="images/image60ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF EDUCATION.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">A babe</span> in a house is a well-spring of pleasure, a messenger of peace and love:</p>
- <p>A resting place for innocence on earth; a link between angels and men:</p>
- <p>Yet is it a talent of trust, a loan to be rendered back with interest;</p>
- <p>A delight, but redolent of care; honey-sweet, but lacking not the bitter.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">{168}</a></span>
- <p>For character groweth day by day, and all things aid it in unfolding,</p>
- <p>And the bent unto good or evil may be given in the hours of infancy:</p>
- <p>Scratch the green rind of a sapling, or wantonly twist it in the soil,</p>
- <p>The scarred and crooked oak will tell of thee for centuries to come;</p>
- <p>Even so mayst thou guide the mind to good, or lead it to the marrings of evil,</p>
- <p>For disposition is builded up by the fashioning of first impressions:</p>
- <p>Wherefore, though the voice of instruction waiteth for the ear of reason,</p>
- <p>Yet with his mother's milk the young child drinketh Education.</p>
- <p>Patience is the first great lesson; he may learn it at the breast:</p>
- <p>And the habit of obedience and trust may be grafted on his mind in the cradle:</p>
- <p>Hold the little hands in prayer, teach the weak knees their kneeling;</p>
- <p>Let him see thee speaking to thy God; he will not forget it afterward:</p>
- <p>When old and grey will he feelingly remember a mother's tender piety,</p>
- <p>And the touching recollection of her prayers shall arrest the strong man in his sin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Select</span> not to nurse thy darling one that may taint his innocence,</p>
- <p>For example is a constant monitor, and good seed will die among the tares.</p>
- <p>The arts of a strange servant have spoiled a gentle disposition:</p>
- <p>Mother, let him learn of thy lips, and be nourished at thy breast.</p>
- <p>Character is mainly moulded by the cast of the minds that surround it:</p>
- <p>Let then the playmates of thy little one be not other than thy judgment shall approve:</p>
- <p>For a child is in a new world, and learneth somewhat every moment,</p>
- <p>His eye is quick to observe, his memory storeth in secret,</p>
- <p>His ear is greedy of knowledge, and his mind is plastic as soft wax.</p>
- <p>Beware then that he heareth what is good, that he feedeth not on evil maxims,</p>
- <p>For the seeds of first instructions are dropped into the deepest furrows.</p>
- <p>That which immemorial use hath sanctioned, seemeth to be right and true;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
- <p>Therefore, let him never have to recollect the time when good things were strangers to his thought.</p>
- <p>Strive not to centre in thyself, fond mother, all his love;</p>
- <p>Nay, do not thou so selfishly, but enlarge his heart for others;</p>
- <p>Use him to sympathy betimes, that he learn to be sad with the afflicted;</p>
- <p>And check not a child in his merriment,&mdash;should not his morning be sunny?</p>
- <p>Give him not all his desire, so shalt thou strengthen him in hope;</p>
- <p>Neither stop with indulgence the fountain of his tears, so shall he fear thy firmness.</p>
- <p>Above all things graft on him subjection, yea, in the veriest trifle;</p>
- <p>Courtesy to all, reverence to some, and to thee unanswering obedience.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Read</span> thou first, and well approve, the books thou givest to thy child;</p>
- <p>But remember the weakness of his thought, and that wisdom for him must be diluted:</p>
- <p>In the honied waters of infant tales, let him taste the strong wine of truth:</p>
- <p>Pathetic stories soften the heart; but legends of terror breed midnight misery;</p>
- <p>Fairy fictions cram the mind with folly, and knowledge of evil tempteth to like evil:</p>
- <p>Be not loth to curb imagination, nor be fearful that truths will depress it;</p>
- <p>And for evil, he will learn it soon enough; be not thou the devil's envoy.</p>
- <p>Induce not precocity of intellect, for so shouldst thou nourish vanity;</p>
- <p>Neither can a plant, forced in the hot-bed, stand against the frozen breath of winter.</p>
- <p>The mind is made wealthy by ideas, but the multitude of words is a clogging weight:</p>
- <p>Therefore be understood in thy teaching, and instruct to the measure of capacity.</p>
- <p>Analogy is milk for babes, but abstract truths are strong meat;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">{170}</a></span>
- <p>Precepts and rules are repulsive to a child, but happy illustration winneth him:</p>
- <p>In vain shalt thou preach of industry and prudence, till he learn of the bee and the ant;</p>
- <p>Dimly will he think of his soul, till the acorn and the chrysalis have taught him;</p>
- <p>He will fear God in thunder, and worship His loveliness in flowers;</p>
- <p>And parables shall charm his heart, while doctrines seem dead mystery:</p>
- <p>Faith shall he learn of the husbandman casting good corn into the soil;</p>
- <p>And if thou train him to trust thee, he will not withhold his reliance from the Lord.</p>
- <p>Fearest thou the dark, poor child? I would not have thee left to thy terrors;</p>
- <p>Darkness is the semblance of evil, and nature regardeth it with dread:</p>
- <p>Yet know thy father's God is with thee still, to guard thee:</p>
- <p>It is a simple lesson of dependence; let thy tost mind anchor upon Him.</p>
- <p>Did a sudden noise affright thee? lo, this or that hath caused it:</p>
- <p>Things undefined are full of dread, and stagger stouter nerves.</p>
- <p>The seeds of misery and madness have been sowed in the nights of infancy;</p>
- <p>Therefore be careful that ghastly fears be not the night companions of thy child.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Lo,</span> thou art a landmark on a hill; thy little ones copy thee in all things:</p>
- <p>Let, then, thy religion be perfect: so shalt thou be honoured in thy house.</p>
- <p>Be instructed in all wisdom, and communicate that thou knowest,</p>
- <p>Otherwise thy learning is hidden, and thus thou seemest unwise.</p>
- <p>A sluggard hath no respect; an epicure commandeth not reverence;</p>
- <p>Meanness is always despicable, and folly provoketh contempt.</p>
- <p>Those parents are best honoured whose characters best deserve it;</p>
- <p>Show me a child undutiful, I shall know where to look for a foolish father:</p>
- <p>Never hath a father done his duty, and lived to be despised of his son:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span>
- <p>But how can that son reverence an example he dare not follow?</p>
- <p>Should he imitate thee in thine evil? his scorn is thy rebuke.</p>
- <p>Nay, but bring him up aright, in obedience to God and to thee;</p>
- <p>Begin betimes, lest thou fail of his fear; and with judgment, that thou lose not his love:</p>
- <p>Herein use good discretion, and govern not all alike,</p>
- <p>Yet, perhaps, the fault will be in thee, if kindness prove not all sufficient:</p>
- <p>By kindness, the wolf and the zebra become docile as the spaniel and the horse;</p>
- <p>The kite feedeth with the starling, under the law of kindness:</p>
- <p>That law shall tame the fiercest, bring down the battlements of pride,</p>
- <p>Cherish the weak, control the strong, and win the fearful spirit.</p>
- <p>Be obeyed when thou commandest; but command not often:</p>
- <p>Let thy carriage be the gentleness of love, not the stern front of tyranny.</p>
- <p>Make not one child a warning to another; but chide the offender apart:</p>
- <p>For self-conceit and wounded pride rankle like poisons in the soul.</p>
- <p>A mild rebuke in the season of calmness, is better than a rod in the heat of passion;</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, spare not, if thy word hath passed for punishment;</p>
- <p>Let not thy child see thee humbled, nor learn to think thee false;</p>
- <p>Suffer none to reprove thee before him, and reprove not thine own purposes by change;</p>
- <p>Yet speedily turn thou again, and reward him where thou canst,</p>
- <p>For kind encouragement in good cutteth at the roots of evil.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Drive</span> not a timid infant from his home, in the early spring-time of his life,</p>
- <p>Commit not that treasure to an hireling, nor wrench the young heart's fibres:</p>
- <p>In his helplessness leave him not alone, a stranger among strange children,</p>
- <p>Where affection longeth for thy love, counting the dreary hours;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span>
- <p>Where religion is made a terror, and innocence weepeth unheard;</p>
- <p>Where oppression grindeth without remedy, and cruelty delighteth in smiting.</p>
- <p>Wherefore comply with an evil fashion? Is it not to spare thee trouble?</p>
- <p>Can he gather no knowledge at thy mouth? Wilt thou yield thine honour to another?</p>
- <p>What can he gain in learning, to equal what he loseth in innocence?</p>
- <p>Alas! for the price above gold, by which such learning cometh!</p>
- <p>For emulative pride and envy are the specious idols of the diligent,</p>
- <p>Oaths and foul-mouthed sin burn in the language of the idle:</p>
- <p>Bolder in that mimic world of boys stareth brazen-fronted vice,</p>
- <p>Than thereafter in the haunts of men, where society doth shame her into corners.</p>
- <p>My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thy timid infant unto sorrows.</p>
- <p>There be many that say, We were happiest in days long past,</p>
- <p>When our deepest care was an ill-conned book,</p>
- <p>And when we sported in that merry sunshine of our life,</p>
- <p>Sadness a stranger to the heart, and cheerfulness its gay inhabitant.</p>
- <p>True, ye are now less pure, and therefore are more wretched:</p>
- <p>But have ye quite forgotten how sorely ye travailed at your tasks,</p>
- <p>How childish griefs and disappointments bowed down the childish mind?</p>
- <p>How sorrow sat upon your pillow, and terror hath waked you up betimes,</p>
- <p>Dreading the strict hand of justice, that would not wait for a reason,</p>
- <p>Or the whims of petty tyrants, children like yourselves,</p>
- <p>Or the pestilent extract of evil poured into the ear of innocence?</p>
- <p>Behold the coral island, fresh from the floor of the Atlantic,</p>
- <p>It is dinted by every ripple, and a soft wave can smooth its surface;</p>
- <p>But soon its substance hardeneth in the winds and tropic sun,</p>
- <p>And weakly the foaming billows break against its adamantine wall:</p>
- <p>Even thus, though sin and care dash upon the firmness of manhood,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span>
- <p>The timid child is wasted most by his petty troubles;</p>
- <p>And seldom, when life is mature, and the strength proportioned to the burden,</p>
- <p>Will the feeling mind, that can remember, acknowledge to deeper anguish,</p>
- <p>Than when, as a stranger and a little one, the heart first ached with anxiety,</p>
- <p>And the sprouting buds of sensibility were bruised by the harshness of a school.</p>
- <p>My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thine infant unto sorrows.</p>
- <p>Yet there be boisterous tempers, stout nerves, and stubborn hearts,</p>
- <p>And there is a riper season, when the mind is well disciplined in good,</p>
- <p>And a time, when youth may be bettered by the wholesome occasions of knowledge,</p>
- <p>Which rarely will he meet with so well, as among the congregation of his fellows.</p>
- <p>Only for infancy, fond mother, rend not those first affections;</p>
- <p>Only for the sensitive and timorous, consign not thy darling unto misery.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A man</span> looketh on his little one, as a being of better hope;</p>
- <p>In himself ambition is dead, but it hath a resurrection in his son:</p>
- <p>That vein is yet untried,&mdash;and who can tell if it be not golden?</p>
- <p>While his, well nigh worked out, never yielded aught but lead:</p>
- <p>And thus is he hurt more sorely, if his wishes are defeated there,</p>
- <p>He has staked his all upon a throw, and lo! the dice have foiled him.</p>
- <p>All ways, and at all times, men follow on in flocks,</p>
- <p>And the rife epidemic of the day shall tincture the stream of education.</p>
- <p>Fashion is a foolish watcher posted at the tree of knowledge,</p>
- <p>Who plucketh its unripe fruit to pelt away the birds;</p>
- <p>But, for its golden apples,&mdash;they dry upon the boughs,</p>
- <p>And few have the courage or the wisdom to eat in spite of fashion.</p>
- <p>One while, the fever is to learn, what none will be wiser for knowing,</p>
- <p>Exploded errors in extinct tongues, and occasions for their use are small;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">{174}</a></span>
- <p>And the bright morning of life, for years of misspent time,</p>
- <p>Wasted in following sounds, hath tracked up little sense,</p>
- <p>Till at noon a man is thrown upon the world, with a mind expert in trifles,</p>
- <p>Having yet everything to learn that can make him good or useful:</p>
- <p>The curious spirit of youth is crammed with unwholesome garbage,</p>
- <p>While starving for the mother's milk the breasts of nature yield;</p>
- <p>And high-coloured fables of depravity lure with their classic varnish,</p>
- <p>While truth is holding out in vain her mirror much despised.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Of</span> olden time, the fashion was for arms, to make an accomplished slayer,</p>
- <p>And set gregarious man a-tilting with his fellows;</p>
- <p>Thereafter, occult sciences, and mystic arts, and symbols,</p>
- <p>How to exorcise a wizard, and how to lay a ghost;</p>
- <p>Anon, all for gallantry and presence, the minuet, the palfrey, and the foil,</p>
- <p>And the grand aim of education was to produce a coxcomb;</p>
- <p>Soon came scholastical dispute with hydra-headed argument,</p>
- <p>And the true philosophy of mind confounded in a labyrinth of words;</p>
- <p>Then the Pantheon, and its orgies, initiating docile childhood,</p>
- <p>While diligent youth strove hard to render his all unto Cæsar;</p>
- <p>And now is seen the passion for utility, when all things are accounted by their price,</p>
- <p>And the wisdom of the wise is busied in hatching golden eggs:</p>
- <p>Perchance, not many moons to come, and all will again be for abstrusity,</p>
- <p>Unravelling the figured veil that hideth Egypt's gods;</p>
- <p>Or in those strange Avatars seeking benignant Vishnu,</p>
- <p>Kali, and Kamala the fair, and much invoked Ganesa.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> mines of knowledge are oft laid bare through the forked hazel wand of chance,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></span>
- <p>And in a mountain of quartz we find a grain of gold.</p>
- <p>Of a truth, it were well to know all things, and to learn them all at once,</p>
- <p>And what, though mortal insufficiency attain to small knowledge of any?</p>
- <p>Man loveth exclusions, delighting in the sterile trodden path,</p>
- <p>While the broad green meadow is jewelled with wild flowers:</p>
- <p>And whether is it better with the many to follow a beaten track,</p>
- <p>Or by eccentric wanderings to cull unheeded sweets?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">When</span> his reason yieldeth fruit, make thy child thy friend;</p>
- <p>For a filial friend is a double gain, a diamond set in gold.</p>
- <p>As an infant, thy mandate was enough, but now let him see thy reasons;</p>
- <p>Confide in him, but with discretion: and bend a willing ear to his questions.</p>
- <p>More to thee than to all beside, let him owe good counsel and good guidance;</p>
- <p>Let him feel his pursuits have an interest, more to thee than to all beside.</p>
- <p>Watch his native capacities; nourish that which suiteth him the readiest;</p>
- <p>And cultivate early those good inclinations wherein thou fearest he is most lacking:</p>
- <p>Is he phlegmatic and desponding? let small successes comfort his hope:</p>
- <p>Is he obstinate and sanguine? let petty crosses accustom him to life:</p>
- <p>Showeth he a sordid spirit? be quick, and teach him generosity:</p>
- <p>Inclineth he to liberal excess? prove to him how hard it is to earn.</p>
- <p>Gather to thy hearth such friends as are worthy of honour and attention;</p>
- <p>For the company a man chooseth is a visible index of his heart:</p>
- <p>But let not the pastor whom thou hearest be too much a familiar in thy house,</p>
- <p>For thy children may see his infirmities, and learn to cavil at his teaching.</p>
- <p>It is well to take hold on occasions, and render indirect instruction;</p>
- <p>It is better to teach upon a system, and reap the wisdom of books:</p>
- <p>The history of nations yieldeth grand outlines: of persons, minute details:</p>
- <p>Poetry is polish to the mind, and high abstractions cleanse it.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
- <p>Consider the station of thy son, and breed him to his fortune with judgment:</p>
- <p>The rich may profit in much which would bring small advantage to the poor.</p>
- <p>But with all thy care for thy son, with all thy strivings for his welfare,</p>
- <p>Expect disappointment, and look for pain: for he is of an evil stock, and will grieve thee.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="232" height="217" alt="" src="images/image61ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF TOLERANCE.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="79" height="188" alt="" src="images/image62cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">A wise</span>
- man in a crowded street winneth his way with gentleness,</p>
- <p>Nor rudely pusheth aside the stranger that standeth in his path;</p>
- <p>He knoweth that blind hurry will but hinder, stirring up contention against him,</p>
- <p>Yet holdeth he steadily right on, with his face to the scope of his pursuit:</p>
- <p>Even so, in the congress of opinions, the bustling highway of intelligence,</p>
- <p>Each man should ask of his neighbour, and yield to him again, concession.</p>
- <p>Terms ill-defined, and forms misunderstood, and customs, where their reasons are unknown,</p>
- <p>Have stirred up many zealous souls to fight against imaginary giants:</p>
- <p>But wisdom will hear the matter out, and often, by keenness of perception,</p>
- <p>Will find in strange disguise the precious truth he seeketh;</p>
- <p>So he leaveth unto prejudice or taste the garb and the manner of her presence,</p>
- <p>Content to see so nigh the mistress of his love.</p>
- <p>There is no similitude in nature that owneth not also to a difference,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">{178}</a></span>
- <p>Yea, no two berries are alike, though twins upon one stem;</p>
- <p>No drop in the ocean, no pebble on the beach, no leaf in the forest, hath its counterpart,</p>
- <p>No mind in its dwelling of mortality, no spirit in the world unseen:</p>
- <p>And therefore, since capacity and essence differ alike with accident,</p>
- <p>None but a bigot partizan will hope for impossible unity.</p>
- <p>Wilt thou ensue peace, nor buffet with the waters of contention,</p>
- <p>Wilt thou be counted wise and gain the love of men,</p>
- <p>Let unobtruded error escape the frown of censure,</p>
- <p>Nor lift the glass of truth alway before thy fellows:</p>
- <p>I say not, compromise the right, I would not have thee countenance the wrong,</p>
- <p>But hear with charitable heart the reasons of an honest judgment;</p>
- <p>For thou also hast erred, and knowest not when thou art most right,</p>
- <p>Nor whether to-morrow's wisdom may not prove thee simple to-day:</p>
- <p>Perchance thou art chiding in another what once thou wast thyself;</p>
- <p>Perchance thou sharply reprovest what thou wilt be hereafter.</p>
- <p>A man that can render a reason, is a man worthy of an answer;</p>
- <p>But he that argueth for victory, deserveth not the tenderness of Truth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Whiles</span> a man liveth he may mend: count not thy brother reprobate;</p>
- <p>When he is dead his chance is gone: remember not his faults in bitterness.</p>
- <p>A man, till he dieth, is immortal in thy sight; and then he is as nothing:</p>
- <p>Make not the living thy foe, nor take weak vengeance of the dead.</p>
- <p>For life is as a game of chess, where least causeth greatest,</p>
- <p>And an ill move bringeth loss, and a pawn may ensure victory.</p>
- <p>Dost thou suspect? seek out certainty: for now, by self-inflicted pain,</p>
- <p>Or ill-directed wrath, thou wrongest thyself or thy neighbour:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span>
- <p>Suspicion is an early lesson, taught in the school of experience,</p>
- <p>Neither shalt thou easily unlearn it, though charity ply thee with her preaching;</p>
- <p>Yet look thou well for reasons, or ever mistrust hath marred thee,</p>
- <p>Or fear curdled thy blood, or jealousy goaded thee to madness;</p>
- <p>For a look, or a word, or an act, may be taken well or ill</p>
- <p>As construed by the latitude of love, or the closeness of cold suspicion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Better</span> is the wrong with sincerity, rather than the right with falsehood:</p>
- <p>And a prudent man will not lay siege to the stronghold of ignorant bigotry.</p>
- <p>To unsettle a weak mind were an easy inglorious triumph,</p>
- <p>And a strong cause taketh little count of the worthless suffrage of a fool:</p>
- <p>Lightly he held to the wrong, loosely will he cling to the right;</p>
- <p>Weakness is the essence of his mind, and the reed cannot yield an acorn.</p>
- <p>Dogged obstinacy is oftentimes the buttress that proppeth an unstable spirit,</p>
- <p>But a candid man blusheth not to own, he is wiser to-day than yesterday.</p>
- <p>A man of a little wisdom is a sage among fools;</p>
- <p>But himself is chief among the fools, if he look for admiration from them.</p>
- <p>A heresy is an evil thing, for its shame is its pride:</p>
- <p>Its necessary difference of error is the character it most esteemeth:</p>
- <p>Give a man all things short of liberty, thou shalt have no thanks,</p>
- <p>And little wilt thou speed with thine opponent, by proving points he will concede.</p>
- <p>The tost sand darkeneth the waves; and clear had been the pages of truth,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
- <p>Had not the glosses of men obscured the simplicity of faith.</p>
- <p>In all things consider thine own ignorance, and gladly take occasion to be taught;</p>
- <p>But suffer not excess of liberality to neutralize thy mental independence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> faults and follies of most men make their deaths a gain:</p>
- <p>But thou also art a man, full of faults and follies:</p>
- <p>Therefore sorrow for the dead, or none shall weep for thee,</p>
- <p>For the measure of charity thou dealest, shall be poured into thine own bosom.</p>
- <p>That which vexeth thee now, provoking thee to hate thy brother,</p>
- <p>Bear with it; the annoyance passeth, and may not return for ever:</p>
- <p>The same combinations and results which aggravate thy soul to-day,</p>
- <p>May not meet again for centuries in the kaleidoscope of circumstance;</p>
- <p>For men and matters change, new elements mixing in continually,</p>
- <p>And, as with chemical magic, the sour is transmuted into sweetness:</p>
- <p>A little explained, a little endured, a little passed over as a foible,</p>
- <p>And lo, the jagged atoms fit like smooth mosaic.</p>
- <p>Thou canst not shape another's mind to suit thine own body,</p>
- <p>Think not, then, to be furnishing his brain with thy special notions.</p>
- <p>Charity walketh with a high step, and stumbleth not at a trifle:</p>
- <p>Charity hath keen eyes, but the lashes half conceal them:</p>
- <p>Charity is praised of all, and fear not thou that praise,</p>
- <p>God will not love thee less, because men love thee more.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">{181}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="225" height="288" alt="" src="images/image63ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF SORROW.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">I said,</span> I will seek out Sorrow, and minister the balm of pity;</p>
- <p>So I sought her in the house of mourning; but peace followed in her train.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></span>
- <p>Then I marked her brooding silently in the gloomy cavern of Regret;</p>
- <p>But a sunbeam of heavenly hope gleamed on her folded wing.</p>
- <p>So I turned to the cabin of the poor, where famine dwelt with disease:</p>
- <p>But the bed of the sick was smoothed, and the ploughman whistled at his labour.</p>
- <p>So I stopt, and mused within myself, to remember where Sorrow dwelt,</p>
- <p>For I sought to see her alone, uncomforted, uncompanioned.</p>
- <p>I went to the prison, but penitence was there, and promise of better times;</p>
- <p>I listened at the madman's cell, but it echoed with deluded laughter.</p>
- <p>Then I turned me to the rich and noble; I noted the sons of fashion:</p>
- <p>A smile was on the languid cheek, that had no commerce with the heart;</p>
- <p>Unhallowed thoughts, like fires, gleamed from the window of the eye;</p>
- <p>And sorrow lived with those whose pleasures add unto their sins.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">His</span> infancy wanted not guilt; his life was continued evil:</p>
- <p>He drew in pride with his mother's milk, and a father's lips taught him cursing.</p>
- <p>I marked him as the wayward boy; I traced the dissolute youth:</p>
- <p>I saw him betray the innocent, and sacrifice affection to his lust;</p>
- <p>I saw him the companion of knaves, and a squanderer of ill-got gain;</p>
- <p>I heard him curse his own misery, while he hugged the chains that galled him:</p>
- <p>For well had experience declared the bitterness of guilty pleasure,</p>
- <p>But habit, with its iron net, involved him in its folds.</p>
- <p>Behind him lowered the thunder-storm, which the caldron of his wickedness had brewed;</p>
- <p>Before him was the smooth steep cliff, whose base is ruin and despair.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span>
- <p>So he rushed madly on, and tried to forget his being:</p>
- <p>The noisy revel and the low debauch, and fierce excitement of play,</p>
- <p>With dreary interchange of palling pleasures, filled the dull round of existence:</p>
- <p>Memory was to him as a foe, so he flew for false solace to the wine-cup,</p>
- <p>And stunned his enemy at even; but she rent him as a giant in the morning.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">I turned</span> aside to weep; I lost him a little while:</p>
- <p>I looked, and years had past; he was hoar with the winter of his age.</p>
- <p>And what was now his hope? where was the balm for his sadness?</p>
- <p>The memory of the past was guilt: the feeling of the present, remorse.</p>
- <p>Then he set his affections on gold, he worshipped the shrine of Mammon,</p>
- <p>And to lay richer gifts before his idol, he starved his own bowels;</p>
- <p>So, the youth spent in profligacy ended in the gripings of want:</p>
- <p>The miser grudged himself husks to take deeper vengeance of the prodigal.</p>
- <p>And I said, this is Sorrow, but pity cannot reach it;</p>
- <p>This is to be wretched indeed, to be guilty without repentance.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="232" height="216" alt="" src="images/image64ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF JOY.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">My</span> soul was sickened within me, so I sought the dwelling place of Joy:</p>
- <p>And I met it not in laughter; I found it not in wealth or power;</p>
- <p>But I saw it in the pleasant home, where religion smiled upon content,</p>
- <p>And the satisfied ambition of the heart rejoiced in the favour of its God.</p>
- <p>Behold the happy man, his face is rayed with pleasure,</p>
- <p>His thoughts are of calm delight, and none can know his blessedness.</p>
- <p>I have watched him from his infancy, and seen him in the grasp of death,</p>
- <p>Yet, never have I noted on his brow the cloud of desponding sorrow.</p>
- <p>He hath knelt beside his cradle; his mother's hymn lulled him to sleep:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
- <p>In childhood he hath loved holiness, and drank from that fountain-head of peace.</p>
- <p>Wisdom took him for her scholar, guiding his steps in purity:</p>
- <p>He lived unpolluted by the world; and his young heart hated sin.</p>
- <p>But he owned not the spurious religion engendered of faction and moroseness,</p>
- <p>Neither were the sproutings of his soul seared by the brand of superstition.</p>
- <p>His love is pure and single, sincere, and knoweth not change;</p>
- <p>For his manhood hath been blest with the pleasant choice of his youth:</p>
- <p>Behold his one beloved, she leaneth on his arm,</p>
- <p>And he looketh on the years that are past, to review the dawn of her affection.</p>
- <p>Memory is sweet unto him, as a perfect landscape to the sight;</p>
- <p>Each object is lovely in itself, but the whole is the harmony of nature.</p>
- <p>Behold his little ones around him, they bask in the warmth of his smile,</p>
- <p>And infant innocence and joy lighten their happy faces;</p>
- <p>He is holy, and they honour him: he is loving, and they love him:</p>
- <p>He is consistent, and they esteem him: he is firm, and they fear him.</p>
- <p>His friends are the excellent among men; and the bands of their friendship are strong:</p>
- <p>His house is the palace of peace: for the Prince of Peace is there.</p>
- <p>As the wearied man to his couch, as the thoughtful man to his musings,</p>
- <p>Even so, from the bustle of life, he goeth to his well-ordered home.</p>
- <p>And though he often sin, he returneth with weeping eyes:</p>
- <p>For he feeleth the mercies of forgiveness, and gloweth with warmer gratitude.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thus</span> did he walk in happiness, and sorrow was a stranger to his soul;</p>
- <p>The light of affection sunned his heart, the tear of the grateful bedewed his feet,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
- <p>He put his hand with constancy to good, and angels knew him as a brother,</p>
- <p>And the busy satellites of evil trembled as at God's ally:</p>
- <p>He used his wealth as a wise steward, making him friends for futurity:</p>
- <p>He bent his learning to religion, and religion was with him at the last:</p>
- <p>For I saw him after many days, when the time of his release was come,</p>
- <p>And I longed for a congregated world, to behold that dying saint.</p>
- <p>As the aloe is green and well-liking, till the last best summer of its age,</p>
- <p>And then hangeth out its golden bells, to mingle glory with corruption;</p>
- <p>As a meteor travelleth in splendour, but bursteth in dazzling light;</p>
- <p>Such was the end of the righteous: his death was the sun at its setting.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Look</span> on this picture of joy, and remember that portrait of sorrow:</p>
- <p>Behold the beauty of holiness, behold the deformity of sin!</p>
- <p>How long, ye sons of men, will ye scorn the words of wisdom?</p>
- <p>How long will ye hunt for happiness in the caverns that breed despair?</p>
- <p>Will ye comfort yourselves in misery, by denying the existence of delight,</p>
- <p>And from experience in woe, will ye reason that none are happy?</p>
- <p>Joy is not in your path, for it loveth not that bleak broad road,</p>
- <p>But its flowers are hung upon the hedges that line a narrower way;</p>
- <p>And there the faint travellers of earth may wander and gather for themselves,</p>
- <p>To soothe their wounded hearts with balm from the amaranths of heaven.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="gap-above center">&#920;&#917;&#937;&nbsp;&nbsp;&#916;&#927;&#926;&#913;.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="270" height="352" alt="" src="images/image65r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h2>SECOND SERIES.</h2>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="253" height="349" alt="" src="images/image66r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>INTRODUCTORY.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Come</span> again, and greet me as a friend, fellow-pilgrim upon life's highway,</p>
- <p>Leave awhile the hot and dusty road, to loiter in the greenwood of Reflection.</p>
- <p>Come unto my cool dim grotto, that is watered by the rivulet of truth,</p>
- <p>And over whose time-stained rock climb the fairy flowers of content;</p>
- <p>Here, upon this mossy bank of leisure fling thy load of cares,</p>
- <p>Taste my simple store, and rest one soothing hour.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">{190}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold,</span> I would count thee for a brother, and commune with thy charitable soul;</p>
- <p>Though wrapt within the mantle of a prophet, I stand mine own weak scholar.</p>
- <p>Heed no disciple for a teacher, if knowledge be not found upon his tongue;</p>
- <p>For vanity and folly were the lessons these lips untaught could give:</p>
- <p>The precious staple of my merchandise cometh from a better country,</p>
- <p>The harvest of my reaping sprang of foreign seed:</p>
- <p>And this poor pensioner of Mercy&mdash;should he boast of merit?</p>
- <p>The grafted stock,&mdash;should that be proud of apples not its own?</p>
- <p>Into the bubbling brook I dip my hermit shell;</p>
- <p>Man receiveth as a cup, but Wisdom is the river.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> for this fillagree of fancy, this Oriental garnish of similitude,</p>
- <p>Alas, the world is old,&mdash;and all things old within it:</p>
- <p>I walk a trodden path, I love the good old ways;</p>
- <p>Prophets, and priests, and kings have tuned the harp I faintly touch.</p>
- <p>Truth, in a garment of the past, is my choice and simple theme;</p>
- <p>No truth is new to-day: and the mantle was another's.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Still,</span> there is an insect swarm, the buzzing cloud of imagery,</p>
- <p>Mote-like steaming on my sight, and thronging my reluctant mind;</p>
- <p>The memories of studious culling, and multiplied analogies of nature,</p>
- <p>Fresh feelings unrepressed, welling from the heart spontaneous,</p>
- <p>Facts, and comparisons, and meditative atoms, gathered on the heap of combination,</p>
- <p>Mingle in the fashion of my speech with gossamer dreams of Reverie.</p>
- <p>I need not beat the underwood for game; my pheasants flock upon the lawn,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
- <p>And gamboling hares disport fearless in my dewy field;</p>
- <p>I roam no heath-empurpled hills, wearily watching for a covey,</p>
- <p>But thoughts fly swift to my decoy, eager to be caught;</p>
- <p>I sit no quiet angler, lingering patiently for sport,</p>
- <p>But spread my nets for a draught, and take the glittering shoal;</p>
- <p>I chase no solitary stag, tracking it with breathless toil,</p>
- <p>But hunt with Aurung-zebe, and spear surrounded thousands.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">What</span> then,&mdash;count ye this a boast?&mdash;sweet charity, think it other,</p>
- <p>For the dog-fish and poisonous ray are captured in the mullet-haul:</p>
- <p>The crane and the kite are of my thoughts, alike with the partridge and the quail,</p>
- <p>And unclean meats as of the clean hang upon my Seric shambles.</p>
- &mdash;How saith he? shall a man deceive, dressing up his jackal as a lion?
- <p>Or colour in staid hues of fact the changing vest of falsehood?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Brother, unwittingly he may; doubtless, unwillingly he doth:</p>
- <p>For men are full of fault, and how should he be righteous?</p>
- <p>Carefully my garden hath been weeded, yet shall it be foul with thistle;</p>
- <p>My grapery is diligently thinned, and yet many berries will be sour:</p>
- <p>From my nets have I flung the bad away, to my small skill and caution;</p>
- <p>Yet may some slimy snake have counted for an eel.</p>
- <p>The rudder of Man's best hope cannot always steer himself from error;</p>
- <p>The arrow of Man's straightest aim flieth short of truth.</p>
- <p>Thus, the confession of sincerity visit not as if it were presumption:</p>
- <p>Nor own me for a leader, where thy reason is not guide.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF CHEERFULNESS.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="81" height="228" alt="" src="images/image67cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Take</span>
- courage, prisoner of time, for there be many comforts,</p>
- <p>Cease thy labour in the pit, and bask awhile with truants in the sun;</p>
- <p>Be cheerful, man of care, for great is the multitude of chances,</p>
- <p>Burst thy fetters of anxiety, and walk among the citizens of ease:</p>
- <p>Wherefore dost thou doubt? if present good is round thee,</p>
- <p>It may be well to look for change, but to trust in a continuance is better;</p>
- <p>Whilst, at the crisis of adversity, to hope for some amends were wisdom,</p>
- <p>And cheerfully to bear thy cross in patient strength is duty.</p>
- <p>I speak of common troubles, and the petty plagues of life,</p>
- <p>The phantom-spies of Unbelief, that lurk about his outposts:</p>
- <p>Sharp suspicion, dull distrust, and sullen stern moroseness</p>
- <p>Are captains in that locust swarm to lead the cloudy host.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
- <p>Thou hast need of fortitude and faith, for the adversaries come on thickly,</p>
- <p>And he that fled hath added wings to his pursuing foes;</p>
- <p>Fight them, and the cravens flee; thy boldness is their panic;</p>
- <p>Fear them, and thy treacherous heart hath lent the ranks a legion:</p>
- <p>Among their shouts of victory resoundeth the wail of Heraclitus,</p>
- <p>While Democrite, confident and cheerful, hath plucked up the standard of their camp.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Not</span> few nor light are the burdens of life; then load it not with heaviness of spirit;</p>
- <p>Sicknesses, and penury, and travail,&mdash;there be real ills enow:</p>
- <p>We are wandering benighted, with a waning moon; plunge not rashly into jungles,</p>
- <p>Where cold and poisonous damps will quench the torch of hope:</p>
- <p>The tide is strong against us; good oarsmen, pull or perish,&mdash;</p>
- <p>If your arms be slack for fear, ye shall not stem the torrent.</p>
- <p>A wise traveller goeth on cheerily, through fair weather or foul;</p>
- <p>He knoweth that his journey must be sped, so he carrieth his sunshine with him.</p>
- <p>Calamities come not as a curse,&mdash;nor prosperity for other than a trial;</p>
- <p>Struggle,&mdash;thou art better for the strife, and the very energy shall hearten thee.</p>
- <p>Good is taught in a Spartan school,&mdash;hard lessons and a rough discipline;</p>
- <p>But evil cometh idly of itself, in the luxury of Capuan holidays:</p>
- <p>And Wisdom will go bravely forth to meet the chastening scourge,</p>
- <p>Enduring with a thankful heart that punishment of Love.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> be three chief rivers of despondency: sin, sorrow, fear;</p>
- <p>Sin is the deepest, sorrow hath its shallows, and fear is a noisy rapid:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">{194}</a></span>
- <p>But even to the darkest holes in guilt's profoundest river</p>
- <p>Hope can pierce with quickening ray, and all those depths are lightened.</p>
- <p>So long as there is mercy in a God, hope is the privilege of creatures,</p>
- <p>And so soon as there is penitence in creatures, that hope is exalted into duty.</p>
- <p>Verily, consider this for courage; that the fearful and the unbelieving</p>
- <p>Are classed with idolaters and liars, because they trusted not in God:</p>
- <p>For it is none other than selfish sin, a hard and proud ingratitude,</p>
- <p>Where seeming repentance is herald of despair, instead of hope's forerunner.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> in thy day of grief,&mdash;for friends, or fame, or fortune,</p>
- <p>Well I wot the heart shall ache, and mind be numbed in torpor;</p>
- <p>Let nature weep; leave her alone; the freshet of her sorrow must run off;</p>
- <p>And sooner will the lake be clear, relieved of turbid floodings.</p>
- <p>Yet see that her license hath a limit; with the novelty her agony is over;</p>
- <p>Hasten in that earliest calm, to tie her in the leash with Reason.</p>
- <p>For regrets are an enervating folly, and the season for energy is come,</p>
- <p>Yea rather, that the future may repair with diligence the ruins of the past.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Again,</span> for empty fears, the harassings of possible calamity,</p>
- <p>Pray, and thou shalt prosper; trust in God, and tread them down.</p>
- <p>Yield to the phantasy,&mdash;thou sinnest; resist it, He will aid thee:</p>
- <p>Out of Him there is no help, nor any sober courage.</p>
- <p>Feeble is the comfort of the faithless, a man without a God;</p>
- <p>Who dare counsel such an one to fling away his fears?</p>
- <p>Fear is the heritage of him, a portion wise and merciful,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
- <p>To drive the trembler into safety, if haply he may turn and flee:</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, let him reckon an he will, that all be counteth casual</p>
- <p>May as well be for him as against him; dice have many sides:</p>
- <p>And, even as in ailments of the body, diseases follow closely upon dreads,</p>
- <p>So, with infirmities of mind, is fear the pallid harbinger of failure.</p>
- <p>It were wise to walk undaunted even in an accidental chaos,</p>
- <p>For the brave man is at peace, and free to get the mastery of circumstance.</p>
- <p>The stoutest armour of defence is that which is worn within the bosom,</p>
- <p>And the weapon that no enemy can parry, is a bold and cheerful spirit:</p>
- <p>Catapults in old war worked like Titans, crushing foes with rocks;</p>
- <p>So doth a strong-springed heart throw back every load on its assailants.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">I went</span> heavily for cares, and fell into the trance of sorrow;</p>
- <p>And behold, a vision in my trance, and my ministering angel brought it.</p>
- <p>There stood a mountain huge and steep, the awful Rock of Ages;</p>
- <p>The sun upon its summit, and storms midway, and deep ravines at foot.</p>
- <p>And, as I looked, a dense black cloud, suddenly dropping from the thunder,</p>
- <p>Filled, like a cataract with yeasty foam, a narrow smiling valley:</p>
- <p>Close and hard that vaporous mass seemed to press the ground,</p>
- <p>And lamentable sounds came up, as of some that were smothering beneath.</p>
- <p>Then, as I walked upon the mountain, clear in summer's noon,</p>
- <p>For charity I called aloud, Ho! climb up hither to the sunshine.</p>
- <p>And even like a stream of light my voice had pierced the mist;</p>
- <p>I saw below two families of men, and knew their names of old:</p>
- <p>Courage, struggling through the darkness, stout of heart and gladsome,</p>
- <p>Ran up the shining ladder which the voice of Hope had made;</p>
- <p>And tripping lightly by his side, a sweet-eyed helpmate with him,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></span>
- <p>I looked upon her face to welcome pleasant Cheerfulness;</p>
- <p>And a babe was cradled in her bosom, a laughing little prattler,</p>
- <p>The child of Cheerfulness and Courage,&mdash;could his name be other than Success?</p>
- <p>So, from his happy wife, when they both stood beside me on the mountain,</p>
- <p>The fond father took that babe, and set him on his shoulder in the sunshine.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Again</span> I peered into the valley, for I heard a gasping moan,</p>
- <p>A desolate weak cry, as muffled in the vapours.</p>
- <p>So down that crystal shaft into the poisonous mine</p>
- <p>I sped for charity to seek and save,&mdash;and those I sought fled from me.</p>
- <p>At length, I spied, far distant, a trembling withered dwarf</p>
- <p>Who crouched beneath the cloak of a tall and spectral mourner:</p>
- <p>Then I knew Cowardice and Gloom, and followed them on in darkness,</p>
- <p>Guided by their rustling robes and moans and muffled cries,</p>
- <p>Until in a suffocating pit the wretched pair had perished,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And lo, their whitening bones were shaping out an epitaph of Failure.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So</span> I saw that despondency was death, and flung my burdens from me,</p>
- <p>And, lightened by that effort, I was raised above the world;</p>
- <p>Yea, in the strangeness of my vision, I seemed to soar on wings,</p>
- <p>And the names they called my wings were Cheerfulness and Wisdom.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF YESTERDAY.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Speak,</span> poor almsman of to-day, whom none can assure of a to-morrow,</p>
- <p>Tell out, with honest heart, the price thou settest upon yesterday.</p>
- <p>Is it then a writing in the dust, traced by the finger of idleness,</p>
- <p>Which Industry, clean housewife, can wipe away for ever?</p>
- <p>Is it as a furrow on the sand, fashioned by the toying waves,</p>
- <p>Quickly to be trampled then again by the feet of the returning tide?</p>
- <p>Is it as the pale blue smoke, rising from a peasant's hovel,</p>
- <p>That melted into limpid air, before it topped the larches?</p>
- <p>Is it but a vision, unstable and unreal, which wise men soon forget?</p>
- <p>Is it as the stranger of a night,&mdash;gone, we heed not whither?</p>
- <p>Alas! thou foolish heart, whose thoughts are but as these,</p>
- <p>Alas! deluded soul, that hopeth thus of Yesterday.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For,</span> behold,&mdash;those temples of Ellora, the Brahmin's rock-built shrine,</p>
- <p>Behold&mdash;yon granite cliff, which the North Sea buffeteth in vain,&mdash;</p>
- <p>That stout old forest fir,&mdash;these waking verities of life,</p>
- <p>This guest abiding ever, not strange, nor a servant, but a son,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Such, O man, are vanity and dreams, transient as a rainbow on the cloud,</p>
- <p>Weighed against that solid fact, thine ill-remembered Yesterday.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Come,</span> let me show thee an ensample, where Nature shall instruct us;</p>
- <p>Luxuriantly the arguments for truth spring native in her gardens.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
- <p>Seek we yonder woodman of the plain; he is measuring his axe to the elm,</p>
- <p>And anon the sturdy strokes ring upon the wintry air:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span>
- <p>Eagerly the village school-boys cluster on the tightened rope,</p>
- <p>Shouting, and bending to the pull, or lifted from the ground elastic;</p>
- <p>The huge tree boweth like Sisera, boweth to its foes with faintness,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Its sinews crack,&mdash;deep groans declare the reeling anguish of Goliath,</p>
- <p>The wedge is driven home,&mdash;and the saw is at its heart,&mdash;and lo, with solemn slowness,</p>
- <p>The shuddering monarch riseth from his throne,&mdash;toppled with a crash,&mdash;and is fallen!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="245" height="342" alt="" src="images/image68r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Now</span> shall the mangled stump teach proud man a lesson:</p>
- <p>Now, can we from that elm-tree's sap distil the wine of Truth.</p>
- <p>Heed ye those hundred rings, concentric from the core,</p>
- <p>Eddying in various waves to the red bark's shore-like rim?</p>
- <p>These be the gatherings of yesterdays, present all to-day,</p>
- <p>This is the tree's judgment, self-history that cannot be gainsaid:</p>
- <p>Seven years agone there was a drought,&mdash;and the seventh ring is narrowed;</p>
- <p>The fifth from hence was half a deluge,&mdash;the fifth is cellular and broad.</p>
- <p>Thus, Man, thou art a result, the growth of many yesterdays,</p>
- <p>That stamp thy secret soul with marks of weal or woe:</p>
- <p>Thou art an almanack of self, the living record of thy deeds;</p>
- <p>Spirit hath its scars as well as body, sore and aching in their season:</p>
- <p>Here is a knot,&mdash;it was a crime; there is a canker,&mdash;selfishness;</p>
- <p>Lo, here, the heart-wood rotten; lo, there, perchance, the sap-wood sound.</p>
- <p>Nature teacheth not in vain; thy works are in thee, of thee;</p>
- <p>Some present evil bent hath grown of older errors:</p>
- <p>And what if thou be walking now uprightly? Salve not thy wounds with poison,</p>
- <p>As if a petty goodness of to-day hath blotted out the sin of yesterday:</p>
- <p>It is well, thou hast life and light; and the Hewer showeth mercy,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
- <p>Dressing the root, pruning the branch, and looking for thy tardy fruits;</p>
- <p>But, even here as thou standest, cheerful belike and careless,</p>
- <p>The stains of ancient evil are upon thee, the record of thy wrong is in thee:</p>
- <p>For, a curse of many yesterdays is thine, many yesterdays of sin,</p>
- <p>That, haply heeded little now, shall blast thy many morrows.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Shall</span> then a man reck nothing, but hurl mad defiance at his Judge,</p>
- <p>Knowing that less than an Omnipotent cannot make the has been, not been?</p>
- <p>He ought,&mdash;so Satan spake; he must,&mdash;so Atheism urgeth;</p>
- <p>He may,&mdash;it was the libertine's thought; he doth,&mdash;the bad world said it.</p>
- <p>But thou of humbler heart, thou student wiser for simplicity,</p>
- <p>While Nature warneth thee betimes, heed the loving counsel of Religion.</p>
- <p>True, this change is good, and penitence most precious;</p>
- <p>But trust not thou thy change, nor rest upon repentance:</p>
- <p>For all we are corrupted at the core, smooth as surface seemeth;</p>
- <p>What health can bloom in a beautiful skin, when rottenness hath fed upon the bones?</p>
- <p>And guilt is parcel of us all; not thou, sweet nursling of affection,</p>
- <p>Art spotless, though so passing fair,&mdash;nor thou, mild patriarch of virtue.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold</span> then the better Tree of Life, free unto us all for grafting,</p>
- <p>Cut thee from the hollow root of self, to be budded on a richer Vine.</p>
- <p>Be desperate, O man, as of evil, so of good; tear that tunic from thee;</p>
- <p>The past can never be retrieved, be the present what it may.</p>
- <p>Vain is the penance and the scourge, vain the fast and vigil:</p>
- <p>The fencer's cautious skill to-day, can this erase his scars?</p>
- <p>It is Man's to famish as a faquir, it is Man's to die a devotee,</p>
- <p>Light is the torture and the toil, balanced with the wages of Eternity:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span>
- <p>But, it is God's to yearn in love, on the humblest, the poorest, and the worst,</p>
- <p>For He giveth freely, as a king, asking only thanks for mercy.</p>
- <p>Look upon this noble-hearted Substitute; seeing thy woes, He pitied thee,</p>
- <p>Bowed beneath the mountain of thy sin, and perished,&mdash;but for Godhead;</p>
- <p>There stood the Atlas in his power, and Prometheus in his love is there,</p>
- <p>Emptying on wretched men the blessings earned from Heaven:</p>
- <p>Put them not away, hide them in thy heart, poor and penitent receiver,</p>
- <p>Be gratitude thy counseller to good, and wholesome fear unto obedience;</p>
- <p>Remember, the pruning-knife is keen, cutting cankers even from the vine;</p>
- <p>Remember, twelve were chosen, and one among them liveth&mdash;in perdition.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yea,&mdash;</span>for standing unatoned, the soul is a bison on the prairie,</p>
- <p>Hunted by those trooping wolves, the many sinful yesterdays:</p>
- <p>And it speedeth a terrified Deucalion, flinging back the pebble in his flight,</p>
- <p>The pebble that must add one more to those pursuing ghosts.</p>
- <p>O man, there is a storm behind should drive thy bark to haven;</p>
- <p>The foe, the foe is on thy track, patient, certain, and avenging;</p>
- <p>Day by day, solemnly, and silently, followeth the fearful past,&mdash;</p>
- <p>His step is lame, but sure; for he catcheth the present in eternity:</p>
- <p>And how to escape that foe, the present-past in future?</p>
- <p>How to avert that fate, living consequence of causes unexistent?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Boldly we must overleap his birth, and date above his memories,</p>
- <p>Grafted on the living Tree, that <small>WAS</small> before a yesterday:</p>
- <p>No refuge of a younger birth than one that saw creation</p>
- <p>Can hide the child of time from still condemning Yesterday.</p>
- <p>There, is the Sanctuary-city, mocking at the wrath of thine Avenger,</p>
- <p>Close at hand, with the wicket on the latch; haste for thy life, poor hunted one!</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></span>
- <p>The gladiator, Guilt, fighteth as of old, armed with net and dagger;</p>
- <p>Snaring in the mesh of yesterdays, stabbing with the poignard of to-day:</p>
- <p>Fly, thy sword is broken at the hilt; fly, thy shield is shivered;</p>
- <p>Leap the barriers, and baffle him: the arena of the past is his.</p>
- <p>The bounds of Guilt are the cycles of Time: thou must be safe within Eternity;</p>
- <p>The arms of God alone shall rescue thee from Yesterday.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="156" height="162" alt="" src="images/image69ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF TO-DAY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="78" height="128" alt="" src="images/image70cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Now,</span>
- is the constant syllable ticking from the clock of time,</p>
- <p>Now, is the watchword of the wise, Now, is on the banner of the prudent.</p>
- <p>Cherish thy to-day and prize it well, or ever it be gulphed into the past,</p>
- <p>Husband it, for who can promise, if it shall have a morrow?</p>
- <p>Behold, thou art,&mdash;it is enough; that present care be thine;</p>
- <p>Leave thou the past to thy Redeemer, entrust the future to thy Friend;</p>
- <p>But for To-day, child of man, tend thou charily the minutes,</p>
- <p>The harvest of thy yesterday, the seed-corn of thy morrow.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Last</span> night died its day; and the deeds thereof were judged:</p>
- <p>Thou didst lay thee down as in a shroud, in darkness and death-like slumber:</p>
- <p>But at the trumpet of this morn, waking the world to resurrection,</p>
- <p>Thou didst arise, like others, to live a new day's life:</p>
- <p>Fear, lest folly give thee cause to mourn its passing presence,</p>
- <p>Fear, that to-morrow's sigh be not, would God it had not dawned!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">For,</span> To-day the lists are set, and thou must bear thee bravely,</p>
- <p>Tilting for honour, duty, life, or death without reproach:</p>
- <p>To-day, is the trial of thy fortitude, O dauntless Mandan chief;</p>
- <p>To-day, is thy watch, O sentinel; To-day, thy reprieve, O captive:</p>
- <p>What more? To-day is the golden chance wherewith to snatch fruition,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Be glad, grateful, temperate: there are asps among the figs.</p>
- <p>For the potter's clay is in thy hands,&mdash;to mould it or to mar it at thy will,</p>
- <p>Or idly to leave it in the sun, an uncouth lump to harden.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O bright</span> presence of To-day, let me wrestle with thee, gracious angel,</p>
- <p>I will not let thee go, except thou bless me; bless me, then, To-day:</p>
- <p>O sweet garden of To-day, let me gather of thee, precious Eden;</p>
- <p>I have stolen bitter knowledge, give me fruits of life To-day:</p>
- <p>O true temple of To-day, let me worship in thee, glorious Zion;</p>
- <p>I find none other place nor time, than where I am To-day:</p>
- <p>O living rescue of To-day, let me run into thee, ark of refuge:</p>
- <p>I see none other hope nor chance, but standeth in To-day:</p>
- <p>O rich banquet of To-day, let me feast upon thee, saving manna;</p>
- <p>I have none other food nor store, but daily bread To-day!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold,</span> thou art pilot of the ship, and owner of that freighted galleon,</p>
- <p>Competent, with all thy weakness, to steer into safety or be lost:</p>
- <p>Compass and chart are in thy hand: roadstead and rocks thou knowest;</p>
- <p>Thou art warned of reefs and shallows; thou beholdest the harbour and its lights.</p>
- <p>What? shall thy wantonness or sloth drive the gallant vessel on the breakers?</p>
- <p>What? shall the helmsman's hand wear upon the black lee shore?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
- <p>Vain is that excuse; thou canst escape: thy mind is responsible for wrong:</p>
- <p>Vain that murmur; thou mayst live: thy soul is debtor for the right.</p>
- <p>To-day, in the voyage of thy life down the dark tide of time,</p>
- <p>Stand boldly to thy tiller, guide thee by the pole-star, and be safe;</p>
- <p>To-day, passing near the sunken rocks, the quicksands and whirlpools of probation,</p>
- <p>Leave awhile the rudder to swing round, give the wind its heading, and be wrecked.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> crisis of man's destiny is Now, a still recurring danger;</p>
- <p>Who can tell the trials and temptations coming with the coming hour?</p>
- <p>Thou standest a target-like Sebastian, and the arrows whistle near thee;</p>
- <p>Who knoweth when he may be hit? for great is the company of archers.</p>
- <p>Each breath is burdened with a bidding, and every minute hath its mission;</p>
- <p>For spirits, good and bad, cluster on the thickly-peopled air:</p>
- <p>Sin may blast thee, grace may bless thee, good or ill this hour:</p>
- <p>Chance, and change, and doubt, and fear, are parasites of all.</p>
- <p>A man's life is a tower, with a staircase of many steps,</p>
- <p>That, as he toileth upward, crumble successively behind him:</p>
- <p>No going back; the past is an abyss; no stopping, for the present perisheth;</p>
- <p>But ever hasting on, precarious on the foothold of To-day;</p>
- <p>Our cares are all To-day; our joys are all To-day;</p>
- <p>And in one little word, our life, what is it, but&mdash;To-day?</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="237" height="329" alt="" src="images/image71r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">{207}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF TO-MORROW.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="167" alt="" src="images/image72cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">There</span>
- is a floating island, forward on the stream of time,</p>
- <p>Buoyant with fermenting air, and borne along the rapids;</p>
- <p>And on that island is a siren, singing sweetly as she goeth,</p>
- <p>Her eyes are bright with invitation, and allurement lurketh in her cheeks;</p>
- <p>Many lovers, vainly pursuing, follow her beckoning finger,</p>
- <p>Many lovers seek her still, even to the cataract of death.</p>
- <p>To-morrow is that island, a vain and foolish heritage,</p>
- <p>And, laughing with seductive lips, Delusion hideth there:</p>
- <p>Often the precious present is wasted in visions of the future,</p>
- <p>And coy To-morrow cometh not with prophecies fulfilled.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a fairy skiff, plying on the sea of life,</p>
- <p>And charitably toiling still to save the shipwrecked crews;</p>
- <p>Within, kindly patient, sitteth a gentle mariner,</p>
- <p>Piloting, through surf and strait, the fragile barks of men:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
- <p>How cheering is her voice, how skilfully she guideth,</p>
- <p>How nobly leading onward yet, defying even death!</p>
- <p>To-morrow is that skiff, a wise and welcome rescue,</p>
- <p>And, full of gladdening words and looks, that mariner is Hope:</p>
- <p>Often, the painful present is comforted by flattering the future,</p>
- <p>And kind To-morrow beareth half the burdens of To-day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">To-morrow,</span> whispereth weakness: and To-morrow findeth him the weaker;</p>
- <p>To-morrow, promiseth conscience; and behold, no To-day for a fulfilment.</p>
- <p>O name of happy omen unto youth, O bitter word of terror to the dotard,</p>
- <p>Goal of folly's lazy wish, and sorrow's ever-coming friend;</p>
- <p>Fraud's loophole,&mdash;caution's hint,&mdash;and trap to catch the honest,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thou wealth to many poor, disgrace to many noble,</p>
- <p>Thou hope and fear, thou weal and woe, thou remedy, thou ruin,</p>
- <p>How thickly swarms of thought are clustering round To-morrow!</p>
- <p>The hive of memory increaseth, to every day its cell;</p>
- <p>There is the labour stored, the honey or corruption;</p>
- <p>Each morn the bees fly forth, to fill the growing comb,</p>
- <p>And levy golden tribute of the uncomplaining flowers:</p>
- <p>To-morrow is their care; they toil for rest to-morrow;</p>
- <p>But man deferreth duty's task, and loveth ease to-day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">To-morrow,</span> is that lamp upon the marsh, which a traveller never reacheth;</p>
- <p>To-morrow, the rainbow's cup, coveted prize of ignorance;</p>
- <p>To-morrow, the shifting anchorage, dangerous trust of mariners;</p>
- <p>To-morrow, the wrecker's beacon, wily snare of the destroyer.</p>
- <p>Reconcile convictions with delay, and To-morrow is a fatal lie;</p>
- <p>Frighten resolutions into action, To-morrow is a wholesome truth:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span>
- <p>I must, for I fear To-morrow; this is the Cassava's food;</p>
- <p>Why should I? let me trust To-morrow,&mdash;this is the Cassava's poison.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Lo,</span> it is the even of To-day,&mdash;a day so lately a To-morrow;</p>
- <p>Where are those high resolves, those hopes of yesternight?</p>
- <p>O faint fond heart, still shall thy whisper be, To-morrow,</p>
- <p>And must the growing avalanche of sin roll down that easy slope?</p>
- <p>Alas, it is ponderous, and moving on in might, that a Sisyphus may not stop it;</p>
- <p>But haste thee with the lever of a prayer, and stem its strength To-day:</p>
- <p>For its race may speedily be run, and this poor hut, thyself,</p>
- <p>Be whelmed in death and suffocating guilt, that dreary Alpine snow-wreath.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Pensioner</span> of life, be wise, and heed a brother's counsel;</p>
- <p>I also am a beadsman, with scrip and staff as thou:</p>
- <p>Wouldest thou be bold against the past, and all its evil memories,</p>
- <p>Wouldest thou be safe amid the present, its dangers and temptations,</p>
- <p>Wouldest thou be hopeful of the future, vague though it be and endless?</p>
- <p>Haste thee, repent, believe, obey! thou standest in the courage of a legion.</p>
- <p>Commend the Past to God, with all its irrevocable harm,</p>
- <p>Humbly, but in cheerful trust, and banish vain regrets;</p>
- <p>Come to Him, continually come, casting all the Present at His feet,</p>
- <p>Boldly, but in prayerful love, and fling off selfish cares;</p>
- <p>Commit the Future to His will, the viewless fated future;</p>
- <p>Zealously go forward with integrity, and God will bless thy faith.</p>
- <p>For that, feeble as thou art, there is with thee a mighty Conqueror,</p>
- <p>Thy Friend, the same for ever, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow;</p>
- <p>That Friend, changeless as eternity, Himself shall make thee friends</p>
- <p>Of those thy foes transformed, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF AUTHORSHIP.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="78" height="188" alt="" src="images/image73cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Great</span>
- is the dignity of Authorship: I magnify mine office;</p>
- <p>Albeit in much feebleness I hold it thus unworthily.</p>
- <p>For it is to be one of a noble band, the welfare of the world,</p>
- <p>Whose haunt is on the lips of men, whose dwelling in their hearts,</p>
- <p>Who are precious in the retrospect of Memory, and walk among the visions of Hope,</p>
- <p>Who commune with the good for everlasting, and call the wisest, brother,</p>
- <p>Whose voice hath burst the Silence, and whose light is flung upon the Darkness,</p>
- &mdash;Flashing jewels on a robe of black, and harmony bounding out of chaos,&mdash;
- <p>Who gladden empires with their wisdom, and bless to the farthest generation,</p>
- <p>Doers of illimitable good, gainers of inestimable glory!&mdash;</p>
- <p>We speak but of the Magnates, we heed none humbler than the highest,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
- <p>We take no count of sorry scribes, nor waste one thought upon the groundlings;</p>
- <p>Our eyes are lifted from the multitude, groping in the dark with candles,</p>
- <p>To gaze upon that firmament of praise, the constellated lamps of learning.</p>
- <p>Ever-during witnesses of Mind, undisputed evidence of Power,</p>
- <p>Goodly volumes, living stones, build up their author's temple;</p>
- <p>Though of low estate, his rank is above princes,&mdash;though needy, he hath worship of the rich,</p>
- <p>When Genius unfurleth on the winds his banner as a mighty leader.</p>
- <p>Just in purpose, and self-possessed in soul, lord of many talents,</p>
- <p>The mental Cr&oelig;sus goeth forth, rejoicing in his wealth;</p>
- <p>Keen and clear perception gloweth on his forehead like a sunbeam,</p>
- <p>He readeth men at a glance, and mists roll away before him;</p>
- <p>The wise have set him as their captain, the foolish are rebuked at his presence,</p>
- <p>The excellent bless him with their prayers, and the wicked praise him by their curses;</p>
- <p>His voice, mighty in operation, stirreth up the world as a trumpet,</p>
- <p>And kings account it honour to be numbered of his friends.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Rare</span> is the worthiness of authorship: I justify mine office;</p>
- <p>Albeit fancies weak as mine credit not the calling.</p>
- <p>For it addeth immortality to dying facts, that are ready to vanish away,</p>
- <p>Embalming as in amber the poor insects of an hour;</p>
- <p>Shedding upon stocks and stones the tender light of interest,</p>
- <p>And illumining dark places of the earth, with radiance of classic lustre.</p>
- <p>It hath power to make past things present, and availeth for the present in the future,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
- <p>Delivering thoughts, and words, and deeds, from the outer darkness of oblivion.</p>
- <p>Where are the sages and the heroes, giants of old time?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Where are the mighty kings, that reigned before Agamemnon?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Alas they lie unwept, unhonoured, hidden in the midnight:</p>
- <p>Alas, for they died unchronicled: their memorial perished with them.</p>
- <p>Where are the nobles of Nineveh, and mitred rulers of Babylon?</p>
- <p>Where are the lords of Edom, and the royal pontiffs of Thebais?</p>
- <p>The golden Satrap, and the Tetrarch,&mdash;the Hun, and the Druid, and the Celt?</p>
- <p>The merchant princes of Ph&oelig;nicia, and the minds that fashioned Elephanta?</p>
- <p>Alas, for the poet hath forgotten them; and lo! they are outcasts of Memory;</p>
- <p>Alas, that they are withered leaves, sapless and fallen from the chaplet of fame.</p>
- <p>Speak, Etruria, whose bones be these, entombed with costly care,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Tell out, Herculaneum, the titles that have sounded in those thy palaces,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Lycian Xanthus, thy citadels are mute, and the honour of their architects hath died;</p>
- <p>Copan and Palenque, dreamy ruins in the West, the forest hath swallowed up your sculptures;</p>
- <p>Syracuse,&mdash;how silent of the past!&mdash;Carthage, thou art blotted from remembrance!</p>
- <p>Egypt, wondrous shores, ye are buried in the sand-hills of forgetfulness!</p>
- <p>Alas,&mdash;for in your glorious youth Time himself was young,</p>
- <p>And none durst wrestle with that Angel, iron-sinewed bridegroom of Space;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>
- <p>So he flew by, strong upon the wing, nor dropped one failing feather,</p>
- <p>Wherewith some hoary scribe might register your honour and renown.</p>
- <p>Beyond the broad Atlantic, in the regions of the setting sun,</p>
- <p>Ask of the plume-crowned Incas, that ruled in old Peru,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Ask of grand Caziques, and priests of the pyramids in Mexico,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Ask of a thousand painted tribes, high nobility of Nature,</p>
- <p>Who, once, could roam their own Elysian plains, free, generous, and happy,</p>
- <p>Who, now, degraded and in exile, having sold their fatherland for nought,</p>
- <p>Sink and are extinguished in the western seas, even as the sun they follow,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Where is the record of their deeds, their prowess worthy of Achilles,</p>
- <p>Nestor's wisdom, the chivalry of Manlius, the native eloquence of Cicero,</p>
- <p>The skill of Xenophon, the spirit of Alcibiades, the firmness of a Maccabæan mother,</p>
- <p>Brotherly love that Antigone might envy, the honour and the fortitude of Regulus?</p>
- <p>Alas, their glory and their praise have vanished like a summer cloud;</p>
- <p>Alas! that they are dead indeed; they are not written down in the Book of the living.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">High</span> is the privilege of Authorship: I purify mine office;</p>
- <p>Albeit earthy stains pollute it in my hands.</p>
- <p>For it is to the world a teacher and a guide, Mentor of that gay Telemachus;</p>
- <p>Warning, comforting, and helping,&mdash;a lover and friend of Man.</p>
- <p>Heaven's almoner, Earth's health, patient minister of goodness,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>
- <p>With kind and zealous pen, the wise religious blesseth:</p>
- <p>Nature's worshipper, and neophyte of grace, rich in tender sympathies,</p>
- <p>With kindled soul and flashing eye, the poet poureth out his heartful:</p>
- <p>Priest of truth, champion of innocence, warder of the gates of praise,</p>
- <p>Carefully with sifting search laboureth the pale historian:</p>
- <p>Error's enemy, and acolyte of science, firm in sober argument,</p>
- <p>The calm philosopher marshalleth his facts, noting on his page their principles.</p>
- <p>These pour mercies upon men; and others, little less in honour,</p>
- <p>By cheerful wit and graphic tale refreshening the harassed spirit.</p>
- <p>But, there be other some beside, buyers and sellers in the temple,</p>
- <p>Who shame their high vocation, greedy of inglorious gain;</p>
- <p>There be, who fabricating books, heed of them meanly as of merchandise;</p>
- <p>And seek nor use, nor truth, nor fame, but sell their minds for lucre:</p>
- <p>O false brethren! ye wot indeed the labour, but are witless of the love;</p>
- <p>O lying prophets, chilled in soul, unquickened by the life of inspiration!&mdash;</p>
- <p>And there be, who, frivolous and vain, seek to make others foolish,</p>
- <p>Snaring youth by loose sweet song, and age by selfish maxim;</p>
- <p>Cleverly heartless, and wittily profane, they swell the river of corruption:</p>
- <p>Brilliant satellites of sin,&mdash;my soul, be not found among their company.</p>
- <p>And there be, who, haters of religion, toil to prove it priestcraft,</p>
- <p>Owning none other aim nor hope, but to confound the good:</p>
- <p>Woe unto them! for their works shall live; yea, to their utter condemnation:</p>
- <p>Woe! for their own handwriting shall testify against them for ever.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Pure</span> is the happiness of Authorship: I glorify mine office;</p>
- <p>Albeit lightly having sipped the cup of its lower pleasures.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
- <p>For it is to feel with a father's heart, when he yearneth on the child of his affections;</p>
- <p>To rejoice in a man's own miniature world, gladdened by its rare arrangement.</p>
- <p>The poem, is it not a fabric of mind? we love what we create:</p>
- <p>That choice and musical order,&mdash;how pleasant is the toil of composition!</p>
- <p>Yea, when the volume of the universe was blazoned out in beauty by its Author,</p>
- <p>God was glad, and blessed His work; for it was very good.</p>
- <p>And shall not the image of his Maker be happy in his own mind's doing,</p>
- <p>Looking on the structure he hath reared, gratefully with sweet complacence?</p>
- <p>Shall not the Minerva of his brain, panoplied and perfect in proportions,</p>
- <p>Gladden the soul and give light unto the eyes, of him the travailing parent?</p>
- <p>Go to the sculptor, and ask him of his dreams,&mdash;wherefore are his nights so moonlit?</p>
- <p>Angel faces, and beautiful shapes, fascinate the pale Pygmalion:</p>
- <p>Go to the painter, and trace his reveries,&mdash;wherefore are his days so sunny?</p>
- <p>Choice design, and skilful colouring, charm the flitting hours of Parrhasius:</p>
- <p>Even so, walking in his buoyancy, intoxicate with fairy fancies,</p>
- <p>The young enthusiast of authorship goeth on his way rejoicing:</p>
- <p>Behold,&mdash;he is gallantly attended; legions of thrilling thoughts</p>
- <p>Throng about the standard of his mind, and call his Will their captain;</p>
- <p>Behold,&mdash;his court is as a monarch's; ideas, and grand imaginations</p>
- <p>Swell, with gorgeous cavalcade, the splendour of his Spiritual State;</p>
- <p>Behold,&mdash;he is delicately served: for oftentimes, in solitary calmness,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
- <p>Some mental fair Egeria smileth on her Numa's worship;</p>
- <p>Behold,&mdash;he is happy; there is gladness in his eye, and his heart is a sealed fountain,</p>
- <p>Bounding secretly with joys unseen, and keeping down its ecstasy of pleasure!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yea:</span> how dignified, and worthy, full of privilege and happiness,</p>
- <p>Standeth in majestic independence the self-ennobled Author!</p>
- <p>For God hath blessed him with a mind, and cherished it in tenderness and purity,</p>
- <p>Hath taught it in the whisperings of wisdom, and added all the riches of content:</p>
- <p>Therefore, leaning on his God, a pensioner for soul and body,</p>
- <p>His spirit is the subject of none other, calling no man Master.</p>
- <p>His hopes are mighty and eternal, scorning small ambitions:</p>
- <p>He hideth from the pettiness of praise, and pitieth the feebleness of envy.</p>
- <p>If he meet honours, well; it may be his humility to take them:</p>
- <p>If he be rebuked, better; his veriest enemy shall teach him.</p>
- <p>For the master-mind hath a birthright of eminence; his cradle is an eagle's eyrie:</p>
- <p>Need but to wait till his wings are grown, and Genius soareth to the sun:</p>
- <p>To creeping things upon the mountain leaveth he the gradual ascent,</p>
- <p>Resting his swiftness on the summit only for a higher flight.</p>
- <p>Glad in clear good-conscience, lightly doth he look for commendation;</p>
- <p>What, if the prophet lacketh honour? for he can spare that praise:</p>
- <p>The honest giant careth not to be patted on the back by pigmies;</p>
- <p>Flatter greatness, he brooketh it good-humouredly: blame him,&mdash;thou tiltest at a pyramid:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
- <p>Yet, just censure of the good never can he hear without contrition;</p>
- <p>Neither would he miss one wise man's praise, for scarce is that jewel and costly:</p>
- <p>Only for the herd of common minds, and the vulgar trumpetings of fame,</p>
- <p>If aught he heedeth in the matter, his honour is sought in their neglect.</p>
- <p>Slender is the marvel, and little is the glory, when round his luscious fruits</p>
- <p>The worm and the wasp and the multitude of flies are gathered as to banquet;</p>
- <p>Fashion's freak, and the critical sting, and the flood of flatteries he scorneth;</p>
- <p>Cheerfully asking of the crowd the favour to forget him:</p>
- <p>The while his blooming fruits ripen in richer fragrance,</p>
- <p>A feast for the few,&mdash;and the many yet unborn,&mdash;who still shall love their savour.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So</span> then, humbly with his God, and proudly independent of his fellows,</p>
- <p>Walketh, in pleasures multitudinous, the man ennobled by his pen:</p>
- <p>He hath built up, glorious architect, a monument more durable than brass;</p>
- <p>His children's children shall talk of him in love, and teach their sons his honour:</p>
- <p>His dignity hath set him among princes, the universe is debtor to his worth,</p>
- <p>His privilege is blessing for ever, his happiness shineth now,</p>
- <p>For he standeth of that grand Election, each man one among a thousand,</p>
- <p>Whose sound is gone out into all lands, and their words to the end of the world!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="243" height="316" alt="" src="images/image74r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF MYSTERY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="86" height="252" alt="" src="images/image75cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">All</span>
- things being are in mystery; we expound mysteries by mysteries;</p>
- <p>And yet the secret of them all is one in simple grandeur:</p>
- <p>All intricate, yet each path plain, to those who know the way;</p>
- <p>All unapproachable, yet easy of access, to them that hold the key:</p>
- <p>We walk among labyrinths of wonder, but thread the mazes with a clue;</p>
- <p>We sail in chartless seas, but behold! the pole-star is above us.</p>
- <p>For, counting down from God's good will, thou meltest every riddle into Him,</p>
- <p>The axiom of reason is an undiscovered God, and all things live in His ubiquity:</p>
- <p>There is only one great secret; but that one hideth everywhere;</p>
- <p>How should the infinite be understood in Time, when it stretcheth on ungrasped for ever?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
- <p>Can a halting &OElig;dipus of earth guess that enigma of the universe?</p>
- <p>Not one: the sword of faith must cut the Gordian knot of nature.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">God,</span> pervading all, is in all things the mystery of each;</p>
- <p>The wherefore of its character and essence, the fountain of its virtues and its beauties.</p>
- <p>The child asketh of its mother,&mdash;Wherefore is the violet so sweet?</p>
- <p>The mother answereth her babe,&mdash;Darling, God hath willed it.</p>
- <p>And sages, diving into science, have but a profundity of words;</p>
- <p>They track for some few links the circling chain of consequence,</p>
- <p>And then, after doubts and disputations, are left where they began,</p>
- <p>At the bald conclusion of a clown, things are because they are.</p>
- <p>Wherefore are the meadows green, is it not to gratify the eye?</p>
- <p>But why should greenness charm the eye? such is God's good will.</p>
- <p>Wherefore is the ear attuned to a pleasure in musical sounds,</p>
- <p>And who set a number to those sounds, and fixed the laws of harmony?</p>
- <p>Who taught the bird to build its nest, or lent the shrub its life,</p>
- <p>Or poised in the balances of order the power to attract and to repel?</p>
- <p>Who continueth the worlds, and the sea, and the heart, in motion?</p>
- <p>Who commanded gravitation to tie down all upon its sphere?&mdash;</p>
- <p>For, even as a limestone cliff is an aggregate of countless shells,</p>
- <p>One riddle concrete of many, a mystery compact of mysteries,</p>
- <p>So God, cloud-capped in immensity, standeth the cohesion of all things,</p>
- <p>And secrets, sublimely indistinct, permeate that Universe, Himself;</p>
- <p>As is the whole, so are the parts, whether they be mighty or minute,</p>
- <p>The sun is not more unexplained than the tissue of an emmet's wing.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thus</span> then, omnipresent Deity worketh His unbiassed mind,</p>
- <p>A mind, one in moral, but infinitely multiplied in means:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
- <p>And the uniform prudence of His will cometh to be counted law,</p>
- <p>Till mutable man fancieth volition stirring in the potter's clay:</p>
- <p>God, a wise father, showeth not His reasons to His babes;</p>
- <p>But willeth in secresy and goodness: for causes generate dispute:</p>
- <p>Then we, His darkling children, watch that invariable purpose,</p>
- <p>And invest the passive creature with its Maker's energy and skill:</p>
- <p>Therefore, they of old time stopped short of God in idols,</p>
- <p>Therefore, in these latter days, we heed not the Jehovah in His works.</p>
- <p>Mystery is God's great name; He is the mystery of goodness:</p>
- <p>Some other, from the hierarchs of heaven, usurped the mystery of sin.</p>
- <p>God is the King, yea even of Himself; He crowned Himself with holiness;</p>
- <p>The burning circlet of iniquity another found and wore.</p>
- <p>God is separate, even from His attributes; but He willed eternally the good;</p>
- <p>Therefore freely, though unchangeably, is wise, righteous, and loving:</p>
- <p>But ambition, open unto angels, saw the evil, flung aside from the beginning,</p>
- <p>It was Lucifer that saw, and nothing loathed those black unclaimed regalia,</p>
- <p>So he coveted and stole, to be counted for a king, antagonist of God,</p>
- <p>But when he touched the leprous robes, behold! a cheated traitor.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> self-existence, charactered with love, with power, wisdom, and ubiquity,</p>
- <p>Could not dwell alone, but willed and worked creation.</p>
- <p>Thus, in continual exhalation, darkening the void with matter,</p>
- <p>Sprang from prolific Deity the creatures of His skill.</p>
- <p>And beings living on His breath, were needfully less perfect than Himself,</p>
- <p>Therefore less capable of bliss, whereat His benevolence was bounded;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
- <p>So, to make the capability expand, intensely progressive to eternity,</p>
- <p>He suffered darkness to illustrate the light, and pain to heighten pleasure:</p>
- <p>To heap up happiness on souls He loved, allowed He sin and sorrow,</p>
- <p>And then to guilt and grief and shame, He brought unbidden amnesty:</p>
- <p>Sinless, none had been redeemed, nor wrapt again in God:</p>
- <p>Sorrowless, no conflict had been known, and Heaven had been mulcted of its comfort:</p>
- <p>Yea, with evil unexhibited, probationary toils unfelt,</p>
- <p>Men had not appreciated good, nor angels valued their security.</p>
- <p>Herein, to reason's eye, is revealed the mystery of goodness,</p>
- <p>Blessing through permitted woe, and teaching by the mystery of sin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O Christian,</span> whose chastened curiosity loveth things mysterious,</p>
- <p>Accounting them shadows and eclipses of Him the one great light,</p>
- <p>Look now, satisfied with faith, on minds that judge by sense,</p>
- <p>And, dull from contemplating matter, take small heed of spirit.</p>
- <p>Toiling feebly upward, their argument tracketh from below,</p>
- <p>They catch the latest consequent, and prove the nearest cause:</p>
- <p>What is this? that a seed produced a seed, and so for a thousand seasons;</p>
- <p>Ascend a thousand steps, thy ladder leaveth thee in air:</p>
- <p>Thou canst not climb to God, and short of Him is nothing;</p>
- <p>There is no cause for aught we see, but in His present will.</p>
- <p>Begin from the Maker, thou carriest down His attributes to reptiles,</p>
- <p>The sharded beetle and the lizard live and move in Him:</p>
- <p>Begin from the creature, corruption and infirmity mar thy foolish toil,</p>
- <p>Heap Ossa on Olympus, how much art thou nearer to the stars?</p>
- <p>It is easy running from a mountain's top down to the valleys at its foot,</p>
- <p>But difficult and steep the laborious ascent, and feebly shalt thou reach it:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span>
- <p>Yet man, beginning from himself, that first deluding mystery,</p>
- <p>Hopeth from the pit of lies to struggle up to truth;</p>
- <p>So, taxing knowledge to its strength, he pusheth one step further,</p>
- <p>And fancieth complacently that much is done by reaching a remote effect:</p>
- <p>Then he maketh answer to himself, as a silly nurse to her little one,</p>
- <p>Evading, in a mist of words, hard things he cannot solve;</p>
- <p>Till, like an ostrich in the desert, he burieth his head in atoms,</p>
- <p>Thinking that, if he is blind, no sun can shine in heaven.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Therefore</span> cometh it to pass, that an atheist is ever the most credulous,</p>
- <p>Snatching at any foolish cause, that may dispel his doubts;</p>
- <p>And, even as it were for ridicule, a spectacle for men and angels,</p>
- <p>The captious and cautious unbeliever is of all men weakest to believe:</p>
- <p>Cut from the anchorage of God, his bark is a plaything of the billows;</p>
- <p>The compass of his principle is broken, the rudder of his faith unshipped:</p>
- <p>Chance and Fate, in a stultified antagonism, govern all for him;</p>
- <p>Truth sprang from the conflict of falsities, and the multitude of accidents hath bred design!</p>
- <p>Where is the imposture so gross, that shall not entrap his curiosity?</p>
- <p>What superstition is so abject, that it doth not blanch his cheek?</p>
- <p>Whereof can he be sure, with whom Chaos is substitute for Order?</p>
- <p>How should his silly structure stand, a pyramid built upon its apex?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Yea, I have seen grey-headed men, the bastard slips of science,</p>
- <p>Go for light to glow-worms, while they scorn the sun at noon:</p>
- <p>Men, who fear no God, trembling at a gipsy's curse,</p>
- <p>Men, who jest at revelation, clinging to a madman's prophecy!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a pleasing dread in the fashion of all mysteries,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span>
- <p>For hope is mixed therein and fear; who shall divine their issues?</p>
- <p>Even the orphan, wandering by night, lost on dreary moors,</p>
- <p>Is sensible of some vague bliss amidst his shapeless terrors;</p>
- <p>The buoyancy of instant expectation, spurring on the mind to venture,</p>
- <p>Overbeareth, in its energy, the cramp and the chill of apprehension.</p>
- <p>There is a solitary pride, when the heart, in new importance,</p>
- <p>Writeth gladly on its archives, the secrets none other men have seen:</p>
- <p>And there is a caged terror, evermore wrestling with the mind,</p>
- <p>When crime hath whispered his confession, and the secrets are written there in blood:</p>
- <p>The village maiden is elated at the tenderly confided tale:</p>
- <p>The bandit's wife with sickening fear guessed the premeditated murder:</p>
- <p>The sage, with triumph on his brow, hideth up his deep discovery;</p>
- <p>The idlest clown shall delve all day, to find a hidden treasure.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> mystery is man's life; we wake to the whisperings of novelty:</p>
- <p>And what, though we lie down disappointed? we sleep, to wake in hope.</p>
- <p>The letter, or the news, the chances and the changes, matters that may happen,</p>
- <p>Sweeten or embitter daily life with the honey-gall of mystery.</p>
- <p>For we walk blindfold,&mdash;and a minute may be much,&mdash;a step may reach the precipice;</p>
- <p>What earthly loss, what heavenly gain, may not this day produce?</p>
- <p>Levelled of Alps and Andes, without its valleys and ravines,</p>
- <p>How dull the face of earth, unfeatured of both beauty and sublimity:</p>
- <p>And so, shorn of mystery, beggared in its hopes and fears,</p>
- <p>How flat the prospect of existence, mapped by intuitive foreknowledge.</p>
- <p>Praise God, creature of earth, for the mercies linked with secresy,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span>
- <p>That spices of uncertainty enrich the cup of life;</p>
- <p>Praise God, His hosts on high, for the mysteries that make all joy;</p>
- <p>What were intelligence with nothing more to learn, or heaven, in eternity of sameness?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">To</span> number every mystery were to sum the sum of all things:</p>
- <p>None can exhaust a theme, whereof God is example and similitude.</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, take a garland from the garden, a handful from the harvest,</p>
- <p>Some scattered drops of spray from the ceaseless mighty cataract.</p>
- <p>Whence are we,&mdash;whither do we tend,&mdash;how do we feel, and reason?</p>
- <p>How strange a thing is man, a spirit saturating clay!</p>
- <p>When doth soul make embryos immortal,&mdash;how do they rank hereafter,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And will the unconscious idiot be quenched in death as nothing?</p>
- <p>In essence immaterial, are these minds, as it were, thinking machines?</p>
- <p>For, to understand may but rightly be to use a mechanism all possess,</p>
- <p>So that in reading or hearing of another, a man shall seem unto himself</p>
- <p>To be recollecting images or arguments, native and congenial to his mind:</p>
- <p>And yet, what shall we say,&mdash;who can arede the riddle?</p>
- <p>The brain may be clockwork, and mind its spring, mechanism quickened by a spirit.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Who</span> so shrewd as rightly to divide life, instinct, reason;</p>
- <p>Trees, zoophytes, creatures of the plain, and savage men among them?</p>
- <p>Hath the mimosa instinct,&mdash;or the scallop more than life,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Or the dog less than reason,&mdash;or the brute-man more than instinct?</p>
- <p>What is the cause of health,&mdash;and the gendering of disease?</p>
- <p>Why should arsenic kill, and whence is the potency of antidotes?</p>
- <p>Behold, a morsel,&mdash;eat and die; the term of thy probation is expired:</p>
- <p>Behold, a potion,&mdash;drink and be alive; the limit of thy trial is enlarged.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
- <p>Who can expound beauty? or explain the character of nations?</p>
- <p>Who will furnish a cause for the epidemic force of fashion?</p>
- <p>Is there a moral magnetism living in the light of example?</p>
- <p>Is practice electricity?&mdash;Yet all these are but names.</p>
- <p>Doth normal Art imprison, in its works, spirit translated into substance,</p>
- <p>So that the statue, the picture, or the poem, are crystals of the mind?</p>
- <p>And doth Philosophy with sublimating skill shred away the matter,</p>
- <p>Till rarefied intelligence exudeth even out of stocks and stones?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O Mysteries,</span> ye all are one, the mind of an inexplicable Architect</p>
- <p>Dwelleth alike in each, quickening and moving in them all.</p>
- <p>Fields, and forests, and cities of men, their woes and wealth and works,</p>
- <p>And customs, and contrivances of life, with all we see and know,</p>
- <p>For a little way, a little while, ye hang dependent on each other,</p>
- <p>But all are held in one right-hand, and by His will ye are.</p>
- <p>Here is an answer unto mystery, an unintelligible God,</p>
- <p>This is the end and the beginning, it is reason that He be not understood.</p>
- <p>Therefore it were probable and just, even to a man's weak thinking,</p>
- <p>To have one for God who always may be learnt, yet never fully known:</p>
- <p>That He, from whom all mysteries spring, in whom they all converge,</p>
- <p>Throned in His sublimity beyond the grovellings of lower intellect,</p>
- <p>Should claim to be truer than man's truest, the boasted certainty of numbers,</p>
- <p>Should baffle his arithmetic, confound his demonstrations, and paralyse the might of his necessity,</p>
- <p>Standing supreme as the mystery of mysteries, everywhere, yet impersonate,</p>
- <p>Essential One in three, essential Three in one!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF GIFTS.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="85" height="194" alt="" src="images/image76cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">I had</span>
- a seeming friend;&mdash;I gave him gifts, and he was gone:</p>
- <p>I had an open enemy;&mdash;I gave him gifts, and won him:</p>
- <p>Common friendship standeth on equalities, and cannot bear a debt;</p>
- <p>But the very heart of hate melteth at a good man's love:</p>
- <p>Go to, then, thou that sayest,&mdash;I will give and rivet the links:</p>
- <p>For pride shall kick at obligation, and push the giver from him.</p>
- <p>The covetous spirit may rejoice, revelling in thy largess,</p>
- <p>But chilling selfishness will mutter,&mdash;I must give again:</p>
- <p>The vain heart may be glad, in this new proof of man's esteem,</p>
- <p>But the same idolatry of self abhorreth thoughts of thanking.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless,</span> give; for it shall be a discriminating test</p>
- <p>Separating honesty from falsehood, weeding insincerity from friendship.</p>
- <p>Give, it is like God; thou weariest the bad with benefits:</p>
- <p>Give, it is like God; thou gladdenest the good by gratitude.</p>
- <p>Give to thy near of kin, for providence hath stationed thee his helper:</p>
- <p>Yet see that he claim not, as his right, thy freewill offering of duty.</p>
- <p>Give to the young, they love it; neither hath the poison of suspicion</p>
- <p>Spoilt the flavour of their thanks, to look for latent motives.</p>
- <p>Give to merit, largely give; his conscious heart will bless thee:</p>
- <p>It is not flattery, but love,&mdash;the sympathy of men his brethren.</p>
- <p>Give, for encouragement in good; the weak desponding mind</p>
- <p>Hath many foes, and much to do, and leaneth on its friends.</p>
- <p>Yet heed thou wisely these; give seldom to thy better;</p>
- <p>For such obtrusive boon shall savour of presumption;</p>
- <p>Or, if his courteous bearing greet thy proffered kindness,</p>
- <p>Shall not thine independent honesty be vexed at the semblance of a bribe?</p>
- <p>Moreover, heed thou this; give to thine equal charily,</p>
- <p>The occasion fair and fitting, the gift well chosen and desired:</p>
- <p>Hath he been prosperous and blest? a flower may show thy gladness;</p>
- <p>Is he in need? with liberal love, tender him the well-filled purse:</p>
- <p>Disease shall welcome friendly care in grapes and precious unguents;</p>
- <p>And where a darling child hath died, give praise, and hope, and sympathy.</p>
- <p>Yet once more, heed thou this; give to the poor discreetly,</p>
- <p>Nor suffer idle sloth to lean upon thy charitable arm:</p>
- <p>To diligence give, as to an equal, on just and fit occasion;</p>
- <p>Or he bartereth his hard-earned self-reliance for the casual lottery of gifts.</p>
- <p>The timely loan hath added nerve, where easy liberality would palsy;</p>
- <p>Work and wages make a light heart; but the mendicant asked with a heavy spirit.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
- <p>A man's own self-respect is worth unto him more than money,</p>
- <p>And evil is the charity that humbleth, and maketh man less happy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> are who sow liberalities, to reap the like again;</p>
- <p>But men accept his boon, scorning the shallow usurer:</p>
- <p>I have known many such a fisherman lose his golden baits:</p>
- <p>And oftentimes the tame decoy escapeth with the flock.</p>
- <p>Yea, there are who give unto the poor, to gain large interest of God,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Fool,&mdash;to think His wealth is money, and not mind:</p>
- <p>And haply after thine alms, thy calculated givings,</p>
- <p>The hurricane shall blast thy crops, and sink the homeward ship;</p>
- <p>Then shall thy worldly soul murmur that the balances were false,</p>
- <p>Thy trader's mind shall think of God,&mdash;He stood not to His bargain!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Give,</span> saith the preacher, be large in liberality, yield to the holy impulse,</p>
- <p>Tarry not for cold consideration, but cheerfully and freely scatter.</p>
- <p>So, for complacency of conscience, in a gush of counterfeited charity,</p>
- <p>He that hath not wherewith to be just, selfishly presumeth to be generous:</p>
- <p>The debtor, and the rich by wrong, are known among the band of the benevolent;</p>
- <p>And men extol the noble hearts, who rob that they may give.</p>
- <p>Receivers are but little prone to challenge rights of giving,</p>
- <p>Nor stop to test, for conscience-sake, the righteousness of mammon:</p>
- <p>And the zealot in a cause is a receiver, at the hand which bettereth his cause;</p>
- <p>And thus an unsuspected bribe shall blind the good man's judgment:</p>
- <p>It is easy to excuse greatness, and the rich are readily forgiven:</p>
- <p>What, if his gains were evil, sanctified by using them aright?</p>
- <p>O shallow flatterer, self-interest is thy thought,</p>
- <p>Hopeless of partaking in the like, thou too wouldst scorn the giver.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">{230}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Money</span> hath its value; and the scatterer thereof his thanks:</p>
- <p>Few men, drinking at a rivulet, stop to consider its source.</p>
- <p>The hand that closeth on an alm, be it for necessities or zeal,</p>
- <p>Hath small scruple whence it came: Vespasian rejoiceth in his tribute.</p>
- <p>Therefore have colleges and hospitals risen upon orphans' wrongs,</p>
- <p>Chapels and cathedrals have thriven on the welcome wages of iniquity,</p>
- <p>And fraud, in evil compensation, hath salved his guilty conscience,</p>
- <p>Not by restoring to the cheated, but by ostentatious giving to the grateful.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So,</span> those who reap rejoice; and reaping, bless the sower:</p>
- <p>No one is eager to discover, where discovery tendeth unto loss:</p>
- <p>Yet, if knowledge of a theft make gainers thereby guilty,</p>
- <p>Can he be altogether innocent, who never asked the honesty of gain?</p>
- <p>Therefore, O preacher, zealous for charity, temper thy warm appeal,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Warning the debtor and unjustly rich, they may not dare to give:</p>
- <p>To do good is a privilege and guerdon: how shouldst thou rejoice</p>
- <p>If ill-got gifts of presumptuous fraud be offered on the altar?</p>
- <p>The question is not of degrees; unhallowed alms are evil;</p>
- <p>Discourage and reject alike the obolus or talent of iniquity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> more, be careful that, unworthily, thou gain not an advantage over weakness,</p>
- <p>Unstable souls, fervent and profuse, fluttered by the feeling of the moment;</p>
- <p>For eloquence swayeth to its will the feeble and the conscious of defect:</p>
- <p>Rashly give they, and afterward are sad,&mdash;a gift that doubly erred.</p>
- <p>It was the worldliness of priestcraft that accounted alms-giving for charity;</p>
- <p>And many a father's penitence hath steeped his son in penury;</p>
- <p>Yet, considered he lightly the guilt of a death-bed selfishness</p>
- <p>That strove to take with him, for gain, the gold no longer his;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
- <p>So he died in a false peace, and dying robbed his kindred;</p>
- <p>The cunning friar at his side having cheated both the living and the dead.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Charity</span> sitteth on a fair hill-top, blessing far and near,</p>
- <p>But her garments drop ambrosia, chiefly, on the violets around her:</p>
- <p>She gladdeneth indeed the map-like scene, stretching to the verge of the horizon,</p>
- <p>For her angel face is lustrous and beloved, even as the moon in heaven:</p>
- <p>But the light of that beatific vision gloweth in serener concentration</p>
- <p>The nearer to her heart, and nearer to her home,&mdash;that hill-top where she sitteth:</p>
- <p>Therefore is she kind unto her kin, yearning in affection on her neighbours,</p>
- <p>Giving gifts to those around, who know and love her well.</p>
- <p>But the counterfeit of charity, an hypocrite of earth, not a grace of heaven,</p>
- <p>Seeketh not to bless at home, for her nearer aspect is ill-favoured:</p>
- <p>Therefore hideth she for shame, counting that pride humility,</p>
- <p>And none of those around her hearth are gladdened by her gifts:</p>
- <p>Rather, with an overreaching zeal, flingeth she her bounty to the stranger,</p>
- <p>And scattered prodigalities abroad compensate for meanness in her home:</p>
- <p>For benefits showered on the distant shine in unmixed beauty,</p>
- <p>So that even she may reap their undiscerning praise:</p>
- <p>Therefore native want hath pined, where foreign need was fattened;</p>
- <p>Woman been crushed by the tyrannous hand that upheld the flag of liberality;</p>
- <p>Poverty been prisoned up and starved, by hearts that are maudlin upon crime;</p>
- <p>And freeborn babes been manacled by men, who liberate the sturdy slave.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Policy</span> counselleth a gift, given wisely and in season,</p>
- <p>And policy afterwards approveth it, for great is the influence of gifts.</p>
- <p>The lover, unsmiled upon before, is welcome for his jewelled bauble;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
- <p>The righteous cause without a fee, must yield to bounteous guilt:</p>
- <p>How fair is a man in thine esteem, whose just discrimination seeketh thee,</p>
- <p>And so, discerning merit, honoureth it with gifts!</p>
- <p>Yea, let the cause appear sufficient, and the motive clear and unsuspicious,</p>
- <p>As given to one who cannot help, or proving honest thanks,</p>
- <p>There liveth not one among a million, who is proof against the charm of liberality,</p>
- <p>And flattery, that boon of praise, hath power with the wisest.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man</span> is of three natures, craving all for charity;</p>
- <p>It is not enough to give him meats, withholding other comfort:</p>
- <p>For the mind starveth, and the soul is scorned, and so the human animal</p>
- <p>Eateth his unsatisfying pittance, a thankless heartless pauper:</p>
- <p>Yet would he bless thee and be grateful, didst thou feed his spirit,</p>
- <p>And teach him that thine alms-givings are charities, are loves:</p>
- &mdash;I saw a beggar in the street, and another beggar pitied him;
- <p>Sympathy sank into his soul, and the pitied one felt happier:</p>
- <p>Anon passed by a cavalcade, children of wealth and gaiety;</p>
- <p>They laughed, and looked upon the beggar, and the gallants flung him gold;</p>
- <p>He, poor spirit-humbled wretch, gathered up their givings with a curse,</p>
- <p>And went&mdash;to share it with his brother, the beggar who had pitied him!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF BEAUTY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="89" height="245" alt="" src="images/image77cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Thou</span>
- mightier than Manoah's son, whence is thy great strength,</p>
- <p>And wherein the secret of thy craft, O charmer charming wisely?&mdash;</p>
- <p>For thou art strong in weakness, and in artlessness well skilled,</p>
- <p>Constant in the multitude of change, and simple amidst intricate complexity.</p>
- <p>Folly's shallow lip can ask the deepest question,</p>
- <p>And many wise in many words should answer, what is beauty?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Who shall separate the hues that flicker on a dying dolphin,</p>
- <p>Or analyse the jewelled lights that deck the peacock's train,</p>
- <p>Or shrewdly mix upon a palette the tints of an iridescent spar,</p>
- <p>Or set in rank the wandering shades about a watered silk?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> beauty is intangible, vague, ill to be defined;</p>
- <p>She hath the coat of a chameleon, changing while we watch it.</p>
- <p>Strangely woven is the web, disorderly yet harmonious,</p>
- <p>A glistering robe of mingled mesh, that may not be unravelled.</p>
- <p>It is shot with heaven's blue, the soul of summer skies,</p>
- <p>And twisted strings of light, the mind of noonday suns,</p>
- <p>And ruddy gleams of life, that roll along the veins,</p>
- <p>A coat of many colours, running curiously together.</p>
- <p>There is threefold beauty for man; twofold beauty for the animal;</p>
- <p>And the beauty of inanimates is single: body, temper, spirit.</p>
- <p>Multiplied in endless combination, issue the changeable results;</p>
- <p>Each class verging on the other twain, with imperceptible gradation;</p>
- <p>And every individual in each having his propriety of difference,</p>
- <p>So that the meanest of creation bringeth in a tribute of the beautiful.</p>
- <p>Yea, from the worst in favour shineth out a fitness of design,</p>
- <p>The patent mark of beauty, its Maker's name imprest.</p>
- <p>For the great Creator's seal is set to all His works;</p>
- <p>Its quarterings are Attributes of praise, and all the shield is Beauty:</p>
- <p>So, that heraldic blazon is Creation's common signet;</p>
- <p>And the universal family of life goeth in the colours of its Lord:</p>
- <p>But each one, as a several son, shall bear those arms with a difference;</p>
- <p>Beauty, various in phase, and similar in seeming oppositions.</p>
- <p>The coins of old Rome were struck with a diversity for each,</p>
- <p>Barely two be found alike, in every Cæsar's image:</p>
- <p>So, note thou the seals, ranged round the charters of the Universe,</p>
- <p>The finger of God is the stamp upon them all, but each hath its separate variety.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Beauty,</span> theme of innocence, how may guilt discourse thee?</p>
- <p>Let holy angels sing thy praise, for man hath marred thy visage.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
- <p>Still the maimed torso of a Theseus can gladden taste with its proportions;</p>
- <p>Though sin hath shattered every limb, how comely are the fragments!</p>
- <p>And music leaveth on the ear a memory of sweet sounds;</p>
- <p>And broken arches charm the sight with hints of fair completeness.</p>
- <p>So, while humbled at the ruin, be thou grateful for the relics;</p>
- <p>Go forth, and look on all around with kind uncaptious eye:</p>
- <p>Freely let us wander through these unfrequented ways,</p>
- <p>And talk of glorious beauty, filling all the world.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> beauty hideth everywhere, that Reason's child may seek her,</p>
- <p>And having found the gem of price, may set it in God's crown.</p>
- <p>Beauty nestleth in the rosebud, or walketh the firmament with planets,</p>
- <p>She is heard in the beetle's evening hymn, and shouteth in the matins of the sun;</p>
- <p>The cheek of the peach is glowing with her smile, her splendour blazeth in the lightning,</p>
- <p>She is the dryad of the woods, the naiad of the streams;</p>
- <p>Her golden hair hath tapestried the silkworm's silent chamber,</p>
- <p>And to her measured harmonies the wild waves beat in time;</p>
- <p>With tinkling feet at eventide she danceth in the meadow,</p>
- <p>Or, like a Titan, lieth stretched athwart the ridgy Alps;</p>
- <p>She is rising, in her veil of mist, a Venus from the waters,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Men gaze upon the loveliness,&mdash;and lo, it is beautiful exceedingly;</p>
- <p>She, with the might of a Briareus, is dragging down the clouds upon the mountain,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Men look upon the grandeur,&mdash;and lo, it is excellent in glory.</p>
- <p>For I judge that beauty and sublimity be but the lesser and the great,</p>
- <p>Sublime, as magnified to giants, and beautiful, diminished into fairies.</p>
- <p>It were a false fancy to solve all beauty by desire,</p>
- <p>It were a lowering thought to expound sublimity by dread.</p>
- <p>Cowardly men with trembling hearts have feared the furious storm,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">{236}</a></span>
- <p>Nor felt its thrilling beauty; but is it then not beautiful?</p>
- <p>And careless men, at summer's eve, have loved the dimpled waves;</p>
- <p>O that smile upon the seas,&mdash;hath it no sublimity?</p>
- <p>Dost thou nothing know of this,&mdash;to be awed at woman's beauty?</p>
- <p>Nor, with exhilarated heart, to hail the crashing thunder?</p>
- <p>Thou hast much to learn, that never found a fearfulness in flowers;</p>
- <p>Thou hast missed of joy, that never basked in beauties of the terrible.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Show</span> me an enthusiast in aught; he hath noted one thing narrowly,</p>
- <p>And lo, his keenness hath detected the one dear hiding place of beauty:</p>
- <p>Then he boasteth, simple soul, flattered by discovery,</p>
- <p>Fancying that no science else can show so fair and precious:</p>
- <p>He hath found a ray of light, and cherisheth the treasure in his closet,</p>
- <p>Mocking at those larger minds, that bathe in floods of noon;</p>
- <p>Lo, what a jewel hath he gotten,&mdash;this is the monopolist of beauty,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And lightly heeding all beside, he poured his yearnings thitherward:</p>
- <p>Be it for love, or for learning, habit, art, or nature,</p>
- <p>Exclusive thought is all the cause of this particular zeal.</p>
- <p>But like intensity of fitness, kind and skilful beauty,</p>
- <p>So pleasant to his mind in one thing, filleth all beside:</p>
- <p>From the waking minute of a chrysalis, to the perfect cycle of chronology,</p>
- <p>From the centipede's jointed armour to the mammoth's fossil ribs,</p>
- <p>From the kingfisher's shrill note, to the cataract's thundering bass,</p>
- <p>From the greensward's grateful hues, to the fascinating eye of woman,</p>
- <p>Beauty, various in all things, setteth up her home in each,</p>
- <p>Shedding graciously around an omnipresent smile.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is beauty in the rolling clouds, and placid shingle beach,</p>
- <p>In feathery snows, and whistling winds, and dun electric skies;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></span>
- <p>There is beauty in the rounded woods, dank with heavy foliage,</p>
- <p>In laughing fields, and dinted hills, the valley and its lake;</p>
- <p>There is beauty in the gullies, beauty on the cliffs, beauty in sun and shade,</p>
- <p>In rocks and rivers, seas and plains,&mdash;the earth is drowned in beauty.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="278" height="263" alt="" src="images/image78ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Beauty</span> coileth with the watersnake, and is cradled in the shrewmouse's nest,</p>
- <p>She flitteth out with evening bats, and the soft mole hid her in his tunnel;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></span>
- <p>The limpet is encamped upon the shore, and beauty not a stranger to his tent;</p>
- <p>The silvery dace and golden carp thread the rushes with her:</p>
- <p>She saileth into clouds with an eagle, she fluttereth into tulips with a humming bird;</p>
- <p>The pasturing kine are of her company, and she prowleth with the leopard in his jungle.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> for the reasonable world, its words, and acts, and speculations,</p>
- <p>For frail and fallen manhood, in his every work and way,</p>
- <p>Beauty, wrecked and stricken, lingereth still among us,</p>
- <p>And morsels of that shattered sun are dropt upon the darkness.</p>
- <p>Yea, with savages and boors, the mean, the cruel, and besotted,</p>
- <p>Ever in extenuating grace hide some relics of the beautiful.</p>
- <p>Gleams of kindness, deeds of courage, patience, justice, generosity,</p>
- <p>Truth welcomed, knowledge prized, rebukes taken with contrition,</p>
- <p>All, in various measure, have been blest with some of these,</p>
- <p>And never yet hath lived the man, utterly beggared of the beautiful.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Beauty</span> is as crystal in the torchlight, sparkling on the poet's page;</p>
- <p>Virgin honey of Hymettus, distilled from the lips of the orator;</p>
- <p>A savour of sweet spikenard, anointing the hands of liberality;</p>
- <p>A feast of angels' food set upon the tables of religion.</p>
- <p>She is seen in the tear of sorrow, and heard in the exuberance of mirth;</p>
- <p>She goeth out early with the huntsman, and watcheth at the pillow of disease.</p>
- <p>Science in his secret laws hath found out latent beauty,</p>
- <p>Sphere and square, and cone and curve, are fashioned by her rules:</p>
- <p>Mechanism met her in his forces, fancy caught her in its flittings,</p>
- <p>Day is lightened by her eyes, and her eyelids close upon the night.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">{239}</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="253" height="353" alt="" src="images/image79r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Beauty</span> is dependence in the babe, a toothless tender nurseling;</p>
- <p>Beauty is boldness in the boy, a curly rosy truant;</p>
- <p>Beauty is modesty and grace in fair retiring girlhood;</p>
- <p>Beauty is openness and strength in pure high-minded youth:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span>
- <p>Man, the noble and intelligent, gladdeneth earth with beauty,</p>
- <p>And woman's beauty sunneth him, as with a smile from heaven.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is none enchantment against beauty, Magician for all time,</p>
- <p>Whose potent spells of sympathy have charmed the passive world:</p>
- <p>Verily, she reigneth a Semiramis; there is no might against her;</p>
- <p>The lords of every land are harnessed to her triumph.</p>
- <p>Beauty is conqueror of all, nor ever yet was found among the nations</p>
- <p>That iron-moulded mind, full proof against her power.</p>
- <p>Beauty, like a summer's day, subdueth by sweet influences;</p>
- <p>Who can wrestle against Sleep?&mdash;yet is that giant, very gentleness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Ajax</span> may rout a phalanx, but beauty shall enslave him single-handed;</p>
- <p>Pericles ruled Athens, yet he is the servant of Aspasia:</p>
- <p>Light were the labour, and often-told the tale, to count the victories of beauty,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Helen, and Judith, and Omphale, and Thais, many a trophied name.</p>
- <p>At a glance the misanthrope was softened, and repented of his vows,</p>
- <p>When Beauty asked, he gave, and banned her&mdash;with a blessing;</p>
- <p>The cold ascetic loved the smile that lit his dismal cell,</p>
- <p>And kindly stayed her step, and wept when she departed;</p>
- <p>The bigot abbess felt her heart gush with a mother's feeling,</p>
- <p>When looking on some lovely face beneath the cloister's shade;</p>
- <p>Usury freed her without ransom; the buccaneer was gentle in her presence;</p>
- <p>Madness kissed her on the cheek, and Idiotcy brightened at her coming:</p>
- <p>Yea, the very cattle in the field, and hungry prowlers of the forest</p>
- <p>With fawning homage greeted her, as Beauty glided by.</p>
- <p>A welcome guest unbidden, she is dear to every hearth;</p>
- <p>A glad spontaneous growth of friends is springing round her rest:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span>
- <p>Learning sitteth at her feet, and Idleness laboureth to please her,</p>
- <p>Folly hath flung aside his bells, and leaden Dulness gloweth;</p>
- <p>Prudence is rash in her defence; Frugality filleth her with riches;</p>
- <p>Despair came to her for counsel; and Bereavement was glad when she consoled;</p>
- <p>Justice putteth up his sword at the tear of supplicating beauty,</p>
- <p>And Mercy, with indulgent haste, hath pardoned beauty's sin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> beauty is the substitute for all things, satisfying every absence,</p>
- <p>The rich delirious cup to make all else forgotten:</p>
- <p>She also is the zest unto all things, enhancing every presence,</p>
- <p>The rare and precious ambergris, to quicken each perfume.</p>
- <p>O beauty, thou art eloquent; yea, though slow of tongue,</p>
- <p>Thy breast, fair Phryne, pleaded well before the dazzled judge:</p>
- <p>O beauty, thou art wise; yea, though teaching falsely,</p>
- <p>Sages listen, sweet Corinna, to commend thy lips;</p>
- <p>O beauty, thou art ruler; yea, though lowly as a slave,</p>
- <p>Myrrha, that imperial brow is monarch of thy lord;</p>
- <p>O beauty, thou art winner; yea, though halting in the race,</p>
- <p>Hippodame, Camilla, Atalanta,&mdash;in gracefulness ye fascinate your umpires;</p>
- <p>O beauty, thou art rich; yea, though clad in russet,</p>
- <p>Attalus cannot boast his gold against the wealth of beauty;</p>
- <p>O beauty, thou art noble; yea, though Esther be an exile,</p>
- <p>Set her up on high, ye kings, and bow before the majesty of beauty!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Friend</span> and scholar, who, in charity, hast walked with me thus far,</p>
- <p>We have wandered in a wilderness of sweets, tracking beauty's footsteps:</p>
- <p>And ever as we rambled on among the tangled thicket,</p>
- <p>Many a startled thought hath tempted further roaming:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
- <p>Passion, sympathetic influence, might of imaginary haloes,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Many the like would lure aside, to hunt their wayward themes.</p>
- <p>And, look you!&mdash;from his ferny bed in yonder hazel coppice,</p>
- <p>A dappled hart hath flung aside the boughs and broke away;</p>
- <p>He is fleet and capricious as the zephyr, and with exulting bounds</p>
- <p>Hieth down a turfy lane between the sounding woods;</p>
- <p>His neck is garlanded with flowers, his antlers hung with chaplets,</p>
- <p>And rainbow-coloured ribbons stream adown his mottled flanks:</p>
- <p>Should we follow?&mdash;foolish hunters, thus to chase afoot,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Who can track the airy speed and doubling wiles of Taste?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> the estimates of human beauty, dependent upon time and clime,</p>
- <p>Manifold and changeable, are multiplied the more by strange gregarious fashion:</p>
- <p>And notable ensamples in the great turn to epidemics in the lower,</p>
- <p>So that a nation's taste shall vary with its rulers.</p>
- <p>Stern Egypt, humbled to the Greek, fancied softer idols;</p>
- <p>Greece, the Roman province, nigh forgat her classic sculpture;</p>
- <p>Rome, crushed beneath the Goth, loved his barbarian habits;</p>
- <p>And Alaric, with his ruffian horde, is tamed by silken Rome.</p>
- <p>Columbia's flattened head, and China's crumpled feet,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The civilized tapering waist,&mdash;and the pendulous ears of the savage,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The swollen throat among the mountains, and an ebon skin beneath the tropics,&mdash;</p>
- <p>These shall all be reckoned beauty: and for weighty cause.</p>
- <p>First, for the latter: Providence in mercy tempereth taste by circumstance,</p>
- <p>So that Nature's must shall hit her creature's liking;</p>
- <p>Second, for the middle: though the foolishness of vanity seek to mar proportion,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
- <p>Still, defects in those we love shall soon be counted praise;</p>
- <p>Third, for the first: a chief, and a princess, maimed or distorted from the cradle</p>
- <p>Shall coax the flattery of slaves to imitate the great in their deformity:</p>
- <p>Hence groweth habit: and habits make a taste,</p>
- <p>And so shall servile zeal deface the types of beauty.</p>
- <p>Whiles Alexander conquered, crookedness was comely:</p>
- <p>And followers learn to praise the scars upon their leader's brow.</p>
- <p>Youth hath sought to flatter age by mimicking grey hairs;</p>
- <p>Age plastereth her wrinkles, and is painted in the ruddiness of Youth.</p>
- <p>Fashion, the parasite of Rank, apeth faults and failings,</p>
- <p>Until the general Taste depraved hath warped its sense of beauty.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Each</span> man hath a measure for himself, yet all shall coincide in much;</p>
- <p>A perfect form of human grace would captivate the world:</p>
- <p>Be it manhood's lustre, or the loveliness of woman, all would own its beauty,</p>
- <p>The Caffre and Circassian, Russians and Hindoos, the Briton, the Turk and Japanese.</p>
- <p>Not all alike, nor all at once, but each in proportion to intelligence,</p>
- <p>His purer state in morals, and a lesser grade in guilt:</p>
- <p>For the high standard of the beautiful is fixed in Reason's forum,</p>
- <p>And sins, and customs, and caprice, have failed to break it down:</p>
- <p>And reason's standard for the creature pointeth three perfections,</p>
- <p>Frame, knowledge, and the feeling heart, well and kindly mingled;</p>
- <p>A fair dwelling, furnished wisely, with a gentle tenant in it,&mdash;</p>
- <p>This is the glory of humanity: thou hast seen it seldom.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a beauty for the body; the superficial polish of a statue,</p>
- <p>The symmetry of form and feature delicately carved and painted.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">{244}</a></span>
- <p>How bright in early bloom the Georgian sitteth at her lattice,</p>
- <p>How softened off in graceful curves her young and gentle shape:</p>
- <p>Those dark eyes, lit by curiosity, flash beneath the lashes,</p>
- <p>And still her velvet cheek is dimpled with a smile.</p>
- <p>Dost thou count her beautiful?&mdash;even as a mere fair figure,</p>
- <p>A plastic image, little more,&mdash;the outer garb of woman:</p>
- <p>Yea,&mdash;and thus far it is well; but Reason's hopes are higher,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Can he sate his soul on a scantling third of beauty?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> is this the pleasing trickery, that cheateth half the world,</p>
- <p>Nature's wise deceit to make up waste in life;</p>
- <p>And few be they that rest uncaught, for many a twig is limed;</p>
- <p>Where is the wise among a million, that took not form for beauty?</p>
- <p>But watch it well; for vanity and sin, malice, hate, suspicion,</p>
- <p>Louring as clouds upon the countenance, will disenchant its charms.</p>
- <p>The needful complexity of beauty claimeth mind and soul,</p>
- <p>Though many coins of foul alloy pass current for the true:</p>
- <p>And albeit fairness in the creature shall often co-exist with excellence,</p>
- <p>Yet hath many an angel shape been tenanted by fiends.</p>
- <p>A man, spiritually keen, shall detect in surface beauty</p>
- <p>Those marring specks of evil which the sensual cannot see;</p>
- <p>Therefore is he proof against a face, unlovely to his likings,</p>
- <p>And common minds shall scorn the taste, that shrunk from sin's distortion.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a beauty for the reason; grandly independent of externals,</p>
- <p>It looketh from the windows of the house, shining in the man triumphant.</p>
- <p>I have seen the broad blank face of some misshapen dwarf</p>
- <p>Lit on a sudden as with glory, the brilliant light of mind:</p>
- <p>Who then imagined him deformed? intelligence is blazing on his forehead,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></span>
- <p>There is empire in his eye, and sweetness on his lip, and his brown cheek glittereth with beauty:</p>
- <p>And I have known some Nireus of the camp, a varnished paragon of chamberers,</p>
- <p>Fine, elegant, and shapely, moulded as the master-piece of Phidias,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Such an one, with intellects abased, have I noted crouching to the dwarf,</p>
- <p>Whilst his lovers scorn the fool, whose beauty hath departed!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> there is a beauty for the spirit; mind in its perfect flowering,</p>
- <p>Fragrant, expanded into soul, full of love and blessed.</p>
- <p>Go to some squalid couch, some famishing death-bed of the poor;</p>
- <p>He is shrunken, cadaverous, diseased;&mdash;there is here no beauty of the body:</p>
- <p>Never hath he fed on knowledge, nor drank at the streams of science,</p>
- <p>He is of the common herd, illiterate;&mdash;there is here no beauty of the reason:</p>
- <p>But lo! his filming eye is bright with love from heaven,</p>
- <p>In every look it beameth praise, as worshipping with seraphs;</p>
- <p>What honeycomb is hived upon his lips, eloquent of gratitude and prayer,&mdash;</p>
- <p>What triumph shrined serene upon that clammy brow,</p>
- <p>What glory flickering transparent under those thin cheeks,&mdash;</p>
- <p>What beauty in his face!&mdash;Is it not the face of an angel?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Now,</span> of these three, infinitely mingled and combined,</p>
- <p>Consisteth human beauty, in all the marvels of its mightiness:</p>
- <p>And forth from human beauty springeth the intensity of Love;</p>
- <p>Feeling, thought, desire, the three deep fountains of affection.</p>
- <p>Son of Adam, or daughter of Eve, art thou trapped by nature,</p>
- <p>And is thy young eye dazzled with the pleasant form of beauty?</p>
- <p>This is but a lower love; still it hath its honour;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">{246}</a></span>
- <p>What God hath made and meant to charm, let not man despise.</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, as reason's child, look thou wisely farther,</p>
- <p>For age, disease, and care, and sin, shall tarnish all the surface:</p>
- <p>Reach a loftier love: be lured by the comeliness of mind,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Gentle, kind, and calm, or lustrous in the livery of knowledge.</p>
- <p>And more, there is a higher grade; force the mind to its perfection&mdash;</p>
- <p>Win those golden trophies of consummate love:</p>
- <p>Add unto riches of the reason, and a beauty moulded to thy liking,</p>
- <p>The precious things of nobler grace that well adorn a soul;</p>
- <p>Thus, be thou owner of a treasure, great in earth and heaven,</p>
- <p>Beauty, wisdom, goodness, in a creature like its God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So</span> then, draw we to an end; with feeble step and faltering,</p>
- <p>I follow beauty through the universe, and find her home Ubiquity:</p>
- <p>In all that God hath made, in all that man hath marred,</p>
- <p>Lingereth beauty, or its wreck, a broken mould and castings.</p>
- <p>And now, having wandered long time, freely and with desultory feet,</p>
- <p>To gather in the garden of the world a few fair sample flowers,</p>
- <p>With patient scrutinizing care let us cull the conclusion of their essence,</p>
- <p>And answer to the riddle of Zorobabel, Whence the might of beauty?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Ugliness</span> is native unto nothing, but an attribute of concrete evil;</p>
- <p>In everything created, at its worst, lurk the dregs of loveliness:</p>
- <p>We be fallen into utter depths, yet once we stood sublime,</p>
- <p>For man was made in perfect praise, his Maker's comely image:</p>
- <p>And so his new-born ill is spiced with older good,</p>
- <p>He carrieth with him, yea to crime, the withered limbs of beauty.</p>
- <p>Passions may be crooked generosities; the robber stealeth for his children;</p>
- <p>Murder was avenger of the innocent, or wiped out shame with blood.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></span>
- <p>Many virtues, weighted by excess, sink among the vices;</p>
- <p>Many vices, amicably buoyed, float among the virtues.</p>
- <p>For, albeit sin is hate, a foul and bitter turpitude,</p>
- <p>As hurling back against the Giver all His gifts with insult,</p>
- <p>Still when concrete in the sinner, it will seem to partake of his attractions,</p>
- <p>And in seductive masquerade shall cloak its leprous skin;</p>
- <p>His broken lights of beauty shall illumine its utter black,</p>
- <p>And those refracted rays glitter on the hunch of its deformity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Verily</span> the fancy may be false, yet hath it met me in my musings,</p>
- (As expounding the pleasantness of pleasure, but no ways extenuating licence,)
- <p>That even those yearnings after beauty, in wayward wanton youth,</p>
- <p>When, guileless of ulterior end, it craveth but to look upon the lovely,</p>
- <p>Seem like struggles of the soul, dimly remembering pre-existence,</p>
- <p>And feeling in its blindness for a long-lost god, to satisfy its longing;</p>
- <p>As if the sucking babe, tenderly mindful of his mother,</p>
- <p>Should pull a dragon's dugs, and drain the teats of poison.</p>
- <p>Our primal source was beauty, and we pant for it ever and again;</p>
- <p>But sin hath stopped the way with thorns; we turn aside, wander, and are lost.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">God,</span> the undiluted good, is root and stock of beauty,</p>
- <p>And every child of reason drew his essence from that stem.</p>
- <p>Therefore, it is of intuition, an innate hankering for home,</p>
- <p>A sweet returning to the well, from which our spirit flowed,</p>
- <p>That we, unconscious of a cause, should bask these darkened souls</p>
- <p>In some poor relics of the light that blazed in primal beauty,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
- <p>And, even like as exiles of idolatry, should quaff from the cisterns of creation</p>
- <p>Stagnant draughts, for those fresh springs that rise in the Creator.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Only,</span> being burdened with the body, spiritual appetite is warped,</p>
- <p>And sensual man, with taste corrupted, drinketh of pollutions:</p>
- <p>Impulse is left, but indiscriminate; his hunger feasteth upon carrion;</p>
- <p>His natural love of beauty doateth over beauty in decay.</p>
- <p>He still thirsteth for the beautiful; but his delicate ideal hath grown gross,</p>
- <p>And the very sense of thirst hath been fevered from affection into passion.</p>
- <p>He remembereth the blessedness of light, but it is with an old man's memory,</p>
- <p>A blind old man from infancy, that once hath seen the sun,</p>
- <p>Whom long experience of night hath darkened in his cradle recollections,</p>
- <p>Until his brightest thought of noon is but a shade of black.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">This</span> then is thy charm, O beauty all pervading;</p>
- <p>And this thy wondrous strength, O beauty, conqueror of all:</p>
- <p>The outline of our shadowy best, the pure and comely creature,</p>
- <p>That winneth on the conscience with a saddening admiration:</p>
- <p>And some untutored thirst for God, the root of every pleasure,</p>
- <p>Native to creatures, yea in ruin, and dating from the birthday of the soul.</p>
- <p>For God sealeth up the sum, confirmed exemplar of proportions,</p>
- <p>Rich in love, full of wisdom, and perfect in the plenitude of Beauty.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="249" height="342" alt="" src="images/image80r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF FAME.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="82" height="188" alt="" src="images/image81cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Blow</span>
- the trumpet, spread the wing, fling thy scroll upon the sky,</p>
- <p>Rouse the slumbering world, O Fame, and fill the sphere with echo!</p>
- <p>&mdash;Beneath thy blast they wake, and murmurs come hoarsely on the wind,</p>
- <p>And flashing eyes and bristling hands proclaim they hear thy message:</p>
- <p>Rolling and surging as a sea, that upturned flood of faces</p>
- <p>Hasteneth with its million tongues to spread the wondrous tale;</p>
- <p>The hum of added voices groweth to the roaring of a cataract,</p>
- <p>And rapidly from wave to wave is tossed that exaggerated story,</p>
- <p>Until those stunning clamours, gradually diluted in the distance,</p>
- <p>Sink ashamed, and shrink afraid of noise, and die away.</p>
- <p>Then brooding Silence, forth from his hollow caverns,</p>
- <p>Cloaked and cowled, and gliding along, a cold and stealthy shadow,</p>
- <p>Once more is mingled with the multitude, whispering as he walketh,</p>
- <p>And hushing all their eager ears, to hear some newer Fame.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
- <p>So all is still again; but nothing of the past hath been forgotten;</p>
- <p>A stirring recollection of the trumpet ringeth in the hearts of men:</p>
- <p>And each one, either envious or admiring, hath wished the chance were his</p>
- <p>To fill as thus the startled world with fame, or fear, or wonder.</p>
- <p>This lit thy torch of sacrilege, Ephesian Eratostratus;</p>
- <p>This dug thy living grave, Pythagoras, the traveller from Hadës;</p>
- <p>For this, dived Empedocles into Etna's fiery whirlpool;</p>
- <p>For this, conquerors, regicides, and rebels, have dared their perilous crimes.</p>
- <p>In all men, from the monarch to the menial, lurketh lust of fame:</p>
- <p>The savage and the sage alike regard their labours proudly:</p>
- <p>Yea, in death, the glazing eye is illumined by the hope of reputation,</p>
- <p>And the stricken warrior is glad, that his wounds are salved with glory.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> fame is a sweet self-homage, an offering grateful to the idol,</p>
- <p>A spiritual nectar for the spiritual thirst, a mental food for mind,</p>
- <p>A pregnant evidence to all of an after immaterial existence,</p>
- <p>A proof that soul is scatheless, when its dwelling is dissolved.</p>
- <p>And the manifold pleasures of fame are sought by the guilty and the good:</p>
- <p>Pleasures, various in kind, and spiced to every palate:</p>
- <p>The thoughtful loveth fame as an earnest of better immortality,</p>
- <p>The industrious and deserving, as a symbol of just appreciation,</p>
- <p>The selfish, as a promise of advancement, at least to a man's own kin,</p>
- <p>And common minds, as a flattering fact that men have been told of their existence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a blameless love of fame, springing from desire of justice,</p>
- <p>When a man hath featly won and fairly claimed his honours:</p>
- <p>And then fame cometh as encouragement to the inward consciousness of merit,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">{252}</a></span>
- <p>Gladdening by the kindliness and thanks, wherewithal his labours are rewarded.</p>
- <p>But there is a sordid imitation, a feverish thirst for notoriety,</p>
- <p>Waiting upon vanity and sloth, and utterly regardless of deserving:</p>
- <p>And then fame cometh as a curse; the fire-damp is gathered in the mine:</p>
- <p>The soul is swelled with poisonous air, and a spark of temptation shall explode it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Idle</span> causes, noised awhile, shall yield most active consequents,</p>
- <p>And therefore it were ill upon occasion to scorn the voice of rumour.</p>
- <p>Ye have seen the chemist in his art mingle invisible gases;</p>
- <p>And lo, the product is a substance, a heavy dark precipitate:</p>
- <p>Even so fame, hurtling on the quiet with many meeting tongues,</p>
- <p>Can out of nothing bring forth fruits, and blossom on a nourishment of air.</p>
- <p>For many have earned honour, and thereby rank and riches,</p>
- <p>From false and fleeting tales, some casual mere mistake;</p>
- <p>And many have been wrecked upon disgrace, and have struggled with poverty and scorn,</p>
- <p>From envious hints and ill reports, the slanders cast on innocence.</p>
- <p>Whom may not scandal hit? those shafts are shot at a venture:</p>
- <p>Who standeth not in danger of suspicion? that net hath caught the noblest.</p>
- <p>Cæsar's wife was spotless, but a martyr to false fame;</p>
- <p>And Rumour, in temporary things, is gigantic as a ruin or a remedy:</p>
- <p>Many poor and many rich have testified its popular omnipotence,</p>
- <p>And many a panic-stricken army hath perished with the host of the Assyrians.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless,</span> if opportunity be nought, let a man bide his time;</p>
- <p>So the matter be not merchandise nor conquest, fear thou less for character.</p>
- <p>If a liar accuseth thee of evil, be not swift to answer;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
- <p>Yea, rather give him license for awhile; it shall help thine honour afterward:</p>
- <p>Never yet was calumny engendered, but good men speedily discerned it,</p>
- <p>And innocence hath burst from its injustice, as the green world rolling out of Chaos.</p>
- <p>What, though still the wicked scoff,&mdash;this also turneth to his praise;</p>
- <p>Did ye never hear that censure of the bad is buttress to a good man's glory?</p>
- <p>What, if the ignorant still hold out, obstinate in unkind judgment,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Ignorance and calumny are paired; we affirm by two negations:</p>
- <p>Let them stand round about, pushing at the column in a circle,</p>
- <p>For all their toil and wasted strength, the foolish do but prop it.</p>
- <p>And note thou this; in the secret of their hearts, they feel the taunt is false,</p>
- <p>And cannot help but reverence the courage, that walketh amid calumnies unanswering:</p>
- <p>He standeth as a gallant chief, unheeding shot or shell;</p>
- <p>He trusteth in God his Judge: neither arrows nor the pestilence shall harm him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A high</span> heart is a sacrifice to Heaven: should it stoop among the creepers in the dust,</p>
- <p>To tell them that what God approved, is worthy of their praise?</p>
- <p>Never shall it heed the thought; but flaming on in triumph to the skies,</p>
- <p>And quite forgetting fame, shall find it added as a trophy.</p>
- <p>A great mind is an altar on a hill: should the priest descend from his altitude,</p>
- <p>To canvass offerings and worship from dwellers on the plain?</p>
- <p>Rather, with majestic perseverance will he minister in solitary grandeur,</p>
- <p>Confident the time will come, when pilgrims shall be flocking to the shrine.</p>
- <p>For fame is the birthright of genius; and he recketh not how long it be delayed;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
- <p>The heir need not hasten to his heritage, when he knoweth that his tenure is eternal.</p>
- <p>The careless poet of Avon, was he troubled for his fame,</p>
- <p>Or the deep-mouthed chronicler of Paradise, heeded he the suffrage of his equals?</p>
- <p>Mæonides took no thought, committing all his honours to the future,</p>
- <p>And Flaccus, standing on his watch-tower, spied the praise of ages.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Smoking</span> flax will breed a flame, and the flame may illuminate a world;</p>
- <p>Where is he who scorned that smoke as foul and murky vapour?</p>
- <p>The village stream swelled to a river, and the river was a kingdom's wealth,</p>
- <p>Where is he who boasted he could step across that stream?</p>
- <p>Such are the beginnings of the famous: little in the judgment of their peers,</p>
- <p>The juster verdict of posterity shall fix them in the orbits of the Great.</p>
- <p>Therefore dull Zoilus, clamouring ascendant of the hour,</p>
- <p>Will soon be fain to hide his hate, and bury up his bitterness for shame:</p>
- <p>Therefore mocking Momus, offended at the footsteps of Beauty,</p>
- <p>Shall win the prize of his presumption, and be hooted from his throne among the stars.</p>
- <p>For, as the shadow of a mountain lengtheneth before the setting sun,</p>
- <p>Until that screening Alp have darkened all the canton,&mdash;</p>
- <p>So, Fame groweth to its great ones; their images loom longer in departing;</p>
- <p>But the shadow of mind is light, and earth is filled with its glory.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> thou, student of the truth, commended to the praise of God,</p>
- <p>Wouldst thou find applause with men?&mdash;seek it not, nor shun it.</p>
- <p>Ancient fame is roofed in cedar, and her walls are marble;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">{255}</a></span>
- <p>Modern fame lodgeth in a hut, a slight and temporary dwelling:</p>
- <p>Lay not up the treasures of thy soul within so damp a chamber,</p>
- <p>For the moth of detraction shall fret thy robe, and drop its eggs upon thy motive;</p>
- <p>Or the rust of disheartening reserve shall spoil the lustre of thy gold,</p>
- <p>Until its burnished beauty shall be dim as tarnished brass;</p>
- <p>Or thieves, breaking through to steal, shall claim thy jewelled thoughts,</p>
- <p>And turn to charge the theft on thee, a pilferer from them!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a magnanimity in recklessness of fame, so fame be well deserving,</p>
- <p>That rusheth on in fearless might, the conscious sense of merit:</p>
- <p>And there is a littleness in jealousy of fame, looking as aware of weakness,</p>
- <p>That creepeth cautiously along, afraid that its title will be challenged.</p>
- <p>The wild boar, full of beechmast, flingeth him down among the brambles;</p>
- <p>Secure in bristly strength, without a watch, he sleepeth:</p>
- <p>But the hare, afraid to feed, croucheth in its own soft form;</p>
- <p>Wakefully with timid eyes, and quivering ears, he listeneth.</p>
- <p>Even so, a giant's might is bound up in the soul of Genius,</p>
- <p>His neck is strong with confidence, and he goeth tusked with power:</p>
- <p>Sturdily he roameth in the forest, or sunneth him in fen and field,</p>
- <p>And scareth from his marshy lair a host of fearful foes.</p>
- <p>But there is a mimic Talent, whose safety lieth in its quickness,</p>
- <p>A timorous thing of doubling guile, that scarce can face a friend:</p>
- <p>This one is captious of reproof, provident to snatch occasion,</p>
- <p>Greedy of applause, and vexed to lose one tittle of the glory.</p>
- <p>He is a poor warder of his fame, who is ever on the watch to keep it spotless;</p>
- <p>Such care argueth debility, a garrison relying on its sentinel.</p>
- <p>Passive strength shall scorn excuses, patiently waiting a re-action,</p>
- <p>He wotteth well that truth is great, and must prevail at last;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span>
- <p>But fretful weakness hasteth to explain, anxiously dreading prejudice,</p>
- <p>And ignorant that perishable falsehood dieth as a branch cut off.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Purity</span> of motive and nobility of mind shall rarely condescend</p>
- <p>To prove its rights, and prate of wrongs, or evidence its worth to others.</p>
- <p>And it shall be small care to the high and happy conscience</p>
- <p>What jealous friends, or envious foes, or common fools may judge.</p>
- <p>Should the lion turn and rend every snarling jackal,</p>
- <p>Or an eagle be stopt in his career to punish the petulance of sparrows?</p>
- <p>Should the palm-tree bend his crown to chide the briar at his feet,</p>
- <p>Nor kindly help its climbing, if it hope, and be ambitious?</p>
- <p>Should the nightingale account it worth her pains to vindicate her music,</p>
- <p>Before some sorry finches, that affect to judge of song?</p>
- <p>No: many an injustice, many a sneer, and slur,</p>
- <p>Is passed aside with noble scorn by lovers of true fame:</p>
- <p>For well they wot that glory shall be tinctured good or evil,</p>
- <p>By the character of those who give it, as wine is flavoured by the wineskin:</p>
- <p>So that worthy fame floweth only from a worthy fountain,</p>
- <p>But from an ill-conditioned troop the best report is worthless.</p>
- <p>And if the sensibility of genius count his injuries in secret,</p>
- <p>Wisely will he hide the pains a hardened herd would mock:</p>
- <p>For the great mind well may be sad to note such littleness in brethren,</p>
- <p>The while he is comforted and happy in the firmest assurance of desert.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Cease</span> awhile, gentle scholar;&mdash;seek other thoughts and themes;</p>
- <p>Or dazzling Fame with wildfire light shall lure us on for ever.</p>
- <p>For look, all subjects of the mind may range beneath its banner,</p>
- <p>And time would fail and patience droop, to count that numerous host.</p>
- <p>The mine is deep, and branching wide,&mdash;and who can work it out?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
- <p>Years of thought would leave untold the boundless topic, Fame.</p>
- <p>Every matter in the universe is linked in suchwise unto others,</p>
- <p>That a deep full treatise upon one thing might reach to the history of all things:</p>
- <p>And before some single thesis had been followed out in all its branches,</p>
- <p>The wandering thinker would be lost in the pathless forest of existence.</p>
- <p>What were the matter or the spirit, that hath no part in Fame?</p>
- <p>Where were the fact irrelevant, or the fancy out of place?</p>
- <p>For the handling of that mighty theme should stretch from past to future,</p>
- <p>Catching up the present on its way, as a traveller burdened with time.</p>
- <p>All manner of men, their deeds, hopes, fortunes, and ambitions,</p>
- <p>All manner of events and things, climate, circumstance, and custom,</p>
- <p>Wealth and war, fear and hope, contentment, jealousy, devotion,</p>
- <p>Skill and learning, truth, falsehood, knowledge of things gone and things to come,</p>
- <p>Pride and praise, honour and dishonour, warnings, ensamples, emulations,</p>
- <p>The excellent in virtues, and the reprobate in vice, with the cloud of indifferent spectators,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Wave on wave with flooding force throng the shoals of thought,</p>
- <p>Filling that immeasurable theme, the height and depth of Fame.</p>
- <p>With soul unsatisfied and mind dismayed, my feet have touched the threshold,</p>
- <p>Fain to pour these flowers and fruits an offering on that altar:</p>
- <p>Lo, how vast the temple,&mdash;there are clouds within the dome!</p>
- <p>Yet might the huge expanse be filled, with volumes writ on Fame.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF FLATTERY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="190" alt="" src="images/image82cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Music</span>
- is commended of the deaf:&mdash;but is that praise despised?</p>
- <p>I trow not: with flattered soul the musician heard him gladly.</p>
- <p>Beauty is commended of the blind:&mdash;but is that compliment misliking?</p>
- <p>I trow not: though false and insincere, woman listened greedily.</p>
- <p>Vacant Folly talketh high of Learning's deepest reason:</p>
- <p>Is she hated for her hollowness?&mdash;learning held her wiser for the nonce.</p>
- <p>The worldly and the sensual, to gain some end, did homage to religion:</p>
- <p>And the good man gave thanks as for a convert, where others saw the hypocrite.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> none of these were cheated at the heart, nor steadily believed those flatteries;</p>
- <p>They feared the core was rotten, while they hoped the skin was sound:</p>
- <p>But the fruits have so sweet fragrance, and are verily so pleasant to the eyes,</p>
- <p>It were an ungracious disenchantment to find them apples of Sodom.</p>
- <p>So they laboured to think all honest, winking hard with both their eyes;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
- <p>And hushed up every whisper that could prove that praise absurd:</p>
- <p>They willingly regard not the infirmities that make such worship vain,</p>
- <p>And palliate to their own fond hearts the faults they will not see.</p>
- <p>For the idol rejoiceth in his incense, and loveth not to shame his suppliants,</p>
- <p>Should he seek to find them false, his honours die with theirs:</p>
- <p>An offering is welcome for its own sake, set aside the giver,</p>
- <p>And praise is precious to a man, though uttered by the parrot or the mocking-bird.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> world is full of fools; and sycophancy liveth on the foolish:</p>
- <p>So he groweth great and rich, that fawning supple parasite.</p>
- <p>Sometimes he boweth like a reed, cringing to the pompousness of pride,</p>
- <p>Sometimes he strutteth as a gallant, pampering the fickleness of vanity;</p>
- <p>I have known him listen with the humble, enacting silent marveller,</p>
- <p>To hear some purse-proud dunce expose his poverty of mind;</p>
- <p>I have heard him wrangle with the obstinate, vowing that he will not be convinced,</p>
- <p>When some weak youth hath wisely feared the chance of ill success:</p>
- <p>Now, he will barely be a winner,&mdash;to magnify thy triumphs afterward;</p>
- <p>Now, he will hardly be a loser,&mdash;but cannot cease to wonder at thy skill:</p>
- <p>He laudeth his own worth, that the leader may have glory in his follower;</p>
- <p>He meekly confesseth his unworthiness, that the leader may have glory in himself.</p>
- <p>Many wiles hath he, and many modes of catching,</p>
- <p>But every trap is selfishness, and every bait is praise.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Come,</span> I would forewarn thee and forearm thee; for keen are the weapons of his warfare;</p>
- <p>And, while my soul hath scorned him, I have watched his skill from far.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">{260}</a></span>
- <p>His thoughts are full of guile, deceitfully combining contrarieties,</p>
- <p>And when he doeth battle in a man, he is leagued with traitorous Self-love.</p>
- <p>Strange things have I noted, and opposite to common fancy;</p>
- <p>We leave the open surface, and would plumb the secret depths.</p>
- <p>For he will magnify a lover, even to disparaging his mistress;</p>
- <p>So much wisdom, goodness, grace,&mdash;and all to be enslaved?</p>
- <p>Till the Narcissus, self-enamoured, whelmed in floods of flattery,</p>
- <p>Is cheated from the constancy and fervency of love by friendship's subtle praise.</p>
- <p>Moreover, he will glorify a parent, even to the censure of his child,&mdash;</p>
- <p>O degenerate scion, of a stock so excellent and noble!</p>
- <p>Scant will he be in well-earned praise of a son before his father;</p>
- <p>And rarely commendeth to a mother her daughter's budding beauty:</p>
- <p>Yet shall he extol the daughter to her father, and be warm about the son before his mother;</p>
- <p>Knowing that self-love entereth not, to resist applause with jealousies.</p>
- <p>Wisely is he sparing of hyperbole where vehemence of praise would humble,</p>
- <p>For many a father liketh ill to be counted second to his son:</p>
- <p>And shrewdly the flatterer hath reckoned on a self still lurking in the mother,</p>
- <p>When his tongue was slow to speak of graces in the daughter.</p>
- <p>But if he descend a generation, to the grandsire his talk is of the grandson,</p>
- <p>Because in such high praise he hideth the honours of the son;</p>
- <p>And the daughter of a daughter may well exceed, in beauty, love, and learning,</p>
- <p>For unconsciously old age perceived&mdash;she cannot be my rival.</p>
- <p>These are of the deep things of flattery: and many a shallow sycophant</p>
- <p>Hath marvelled ill that praise of children seldom won their parents.</p>
- <p>This therefore note, unto detection: flattery can sneer as well as smile;</p>
- <p>And a master in the craft wotteth well, that his oblique thrust is surest.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Flattery</span> sticketh like a burr, holding to the soil with anchors,</p>
- <p>A vital, natural, subtle seed, everywhere hardy and indigenous.</p>
- <p>Go to the storehouse of thy memory, and take what is readiest to thy hand,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The noble deed, the clever phrase, for which thy pride was flattered:</p>
- <p>Oh, it hath been dwelt upon in solitude, and comforted thy heart in crowds,</p>
- <p>It hath made thee walk as in a dream, and lifted up the head above thy fellows;</p>
- <p>It hath compensated months of gloom, that minute of sweet sunshine,</p>
- <p>Drying up the pools of apathy, and kindling the fire of ambition:</p>
- <p>Yea, the flavour of that spice, mingled in the cup of life,</p>
- <p>Shall linger even to the dregs, and still be tasted with a welcome;</p>
- <p>The dame shall tell her grandchild of her coy and courted youth,</p>
- <p>And the grey-beard prateth of a stranger, who praised his task at school.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Oftimes</span> to the sluggard and the dull, flattery hath done good service,</p>
- <p>Quickening the mind to emulation, and encouraging the heart that failed.</p>
- <p>Even so, a stimulating poison, wisely tendered by the leech,</p>
- <p>Shall speed the pulse, and rally life, and cheat astonished death.</p>
- <p>For, as a timid swimmer ventureth afloat with bladders,</p>
- <p>Until self-confidence and growth of skill have made him spurn their aid,</p>
- <p>Thus commendation may be prudent, where a child hath ill deserved it;</p>
- <p>But praise unmerited is flattery, and the cure will bring its cares:</p>
- <p>For thy son may find thee out, and thou shalt rue the remedy:</p>
- <p>Yea, rather, where thou canst not praise, be honest in rebuke.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">I have</span> seen the objects of a flatterer mirrored clearly on the surface,</p>
- <p>Where self-love scattereth praise, to gather praise again.</p>
- <p>This is a commodity of merchandize, words put out at interest:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
- <p>A scheme for canvassing opinions, and tinging them all with partiality.</p>
- <p>He is but a harmless fool; humour him with pitiful good-nature:</p>
- <p>If a poetaster quote thy song, be thou tender to his poem:</p>
- <p>Did the painter praise thy sketch? be kind, commend his picture;</p>
- <p>He looketh for a like return; then thank him with thy praise.</p>
- <p>In these small things with these small minds count thou the sycophant a courtier,</p>
- <p>And pay back, as blindly as ye may, the too transparent honour.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Also,</span> where the flattery is delicate, coming unobtrusive and in season,</p>
- <p>Though thou be suspicious of its truth, be generous at least to its gentility.</p>
- <p>The skilful thief of Lacedæmon had praise before his judges,</p>
- <p>And many caitiffs win applause for genius in their callings.</p>
- <p>Moreover, his meaning may be kind,&mdash;and thou art a debtor to his tongue;</p>
- <p>Hasten well to pay the debt, with charity and shrewdness:</p>
- <p>He must not think thee caught, nor feel himself discovered,</p>
- <p>Nor find thine answering compliment as hollow as his own.</p>
- <p>Though he be a smiling enemy, let him heed thee as the fearless and the friendly;</p>
- <p>A searching look, a poignant word, may prove thou art aware:</p>
- <p>Still, with compassion to the frail, though keen to see his soul,</p>
- <p>Let him not fear for thy discretion: see thou keep his secret, and thine own.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">However,</span> where the flattery is gross, a falsehood clear and fulsome,</p>
- <p>Crush the venomous toad, and spare not for a jewel in its head.</p>
- <p>Tell the presumptuous in flattery, that or ever he bespatter thee with praise,</p>
- <p>It might be well to stop and ask how little it were worth:</p>
- <p>Thou hast not solicited his suffrage,&mdash;let him not force thee to refuse it;</p>
- <p>Look to it, man, thy fence is foiled,&mdash;and thus we spoil the plot.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
- <p>Self-knowledge goeth armed, girt with many weapons,</p>
- <p>But carrieth whips for flattery, to lash it like a slave:</p>
- <p>But the dunce in that great science goeth as a greedy tunny,</p>
- <p>To gorge both bait and hook, unheeding all but appetite:</p>
- <p>He smelleth praise and swalloweth,&mdash;yea, though it be palpable and plain,</p>
- <p>Say unto him, Folly, thou art Wisdom,&mdash;he will bless thee for thy lie.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Flatterer,</span> thou shalt rue thy trade, though it have many present gains;</p>
- <p>Those varnished wares may sell apace, yet shall they spoil thy credit.</p>
- <p>Thine is the intoxicating cup, which whoso drinketh it shall nauseate:</p>
- <p>Thine is trickery and cheating; but deception never pleased for long.</p>
- <p>And though while fresh thy fragrance seemed even as the dews of charity,</p>
- <p>Yet afterward it fouled thy censer, as with savour of stale smoke.</p>
- <p>For the great mind detected thee at once, answering thine emptiness with pity,</p>
- <p>He saw thy self-interested zeal, and was not cozened by vain-glory:</p>
- <p>And the little mind is bloated with the praise, scorning him who gave it,</p>
- <p>A fool shall turn to be thy tyrant, an thou hast dubbed him great:</p>
- <p>And the medium mind of common men, loving first thy music,</p>
- <p>After, when the harmonies are done, shall feel small comfort in their echoes;</p>
- <p>For either he shall know thee false, conscious of contrary deservings,</p>
- <p>And, hating thee for falsehood, soon will scorn himself for truth,</p>
- <p>Or, if in aught to toilsome merit honest praise be due,</p>
- <p>Though for a season, belike, his weakness hath been raptured at thy witching,</p>
- <p>Shall he not speedily perceive, to the vexing of his disappointed spirit,</p>
- <p>That thine exaggerated tongue hath robbed him of fair fame?</p>
- <p>Thou hast paid in forger's coins, and he had earned true money:</p>
- <p>For the substance of just praise, thou hast put him off with shadows of the sycophant:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">{264}</a></span>
- <p>Thou art all things to all men, for ends false and selfish,</p>
- <p>Therefore shalt be nothing unto any one, when those thine ends are seen.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Turn</span> aside, young scholar, turn from the song of Flattery!</p>
- <p>She hath the Siren's musical voice, to ravish and betray.</p>
- <p>Her tongue droppeth honey, but it is the honey of Anticyra;</p>
- <p>Her face is a mask of fascination, but there hideth deformity behind;</p>
- <p>Her coming is the presence of a queen, heralded by courtesy and beauty,</p>
- <p>But, going away, her train is held by the hideous dwarf, Disgust.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Know</span> thyself, thine evil as thy good, and flattery shall not harm thee:</p>
- <p>Yea, her speech shall be a warning, a humbling and a guide.</p>
- <p>For wherein thou lackest most, there chiefly will the sycophant commend thee,</p>
- <p>And then most warmly will congratulate, when a man hath least deserved.</p>
- <p>Behold, she is doubly a traitor; and will underrate her victim's best,</p>
- <p>That, to the comforting of conscience, she may plead his worse for better.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Therefore,</span> is she dangerous,&mdash;as every lie is dangerous:</p>
- <p>Believe her tales, and perish: if thou act upon such counsel.</p>
- <p>Her aims are thine not thee, thy wealth and not thy welfare,</p>
- <p>Thy suffrage not thy safety, thine aid and not thine honour.</p>
- <p>Moreover, with those aims insured, ceaseth all her glozing;</p>
- <p>She hath used thee as a handle,&mdash;but her hand was wise to turn it;</p>
- <p>Thus will she glorify her skill, that it deftly caught thy kindness,</p>
- <p>Thus will she scorn thy kindness, so pliable and easy to her skill.</p>
- <p>And then, the flatterer will turn to be thy foe, the bitterest and hottest,</p>
- <p>Because he oweth thee much hate to pay off many humblings.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></span>
- <p>Thinkest thou now that he is high, he loveth the remembrance of his lowliness,</p>
- <p>The servile manner, the dependent smile, the conscience self-abased?</p>
- <p>No, this hour is his own, and the flatterer will be found a busy mocker;</p>
- <p>He that hath salved thee with his tongue, shall now gnash upon thee with his teeth;</p>
- <p>Yea, he will be leader in the laugh,&mdash;silly one, to listen to thy loss,</p>
- <p>We scarce had hoped to lime and take another of the fools of flattery.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">At</span> the last; have charity, young scholar,&mdash;yea, to the sycophant convicted;</p>
- <p>Be not a Brutus to thyself, nor stern in thine own cause.</p>
- <p>Pardon exaggerated praise; for there is a natural impulse,</p>
- <p>Spurring on the nobler mind, to colour facts by feelings:</p>
- <p>Take an indulgent view of each man's interest in self,</p>
- <p>Be large and liberal in excuses; is not that infirmity thine own?</p>
- <p>Search thy soul and be humble; and mercy abideth with humility;</p>
- <p>So that, yea, the insincere may find thee pitiful, and love thee.</p>
- <p>Mildly put aside, without rudeness of repulse, the pampering hand of flattery,</p>
- <p>For courtesy and kindness have gone beneath its guise, and ill shouldst thou rebuke them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thou</span> art incapable of theft: but flowers in the garden of a friend</p>
- <p>Are thine to pluck with confidence, and it were unfriendliness to hesitate:</p>
- <p>Thou abhorrest flattery: but a generous excess in praise</p>
- <p>Is thine to yield with honest heart, and false were the charity to doubt it:</p>
- <p>The difference lieth in thine aim; kindliness and good are of charity,</p>
- <p>But selfish, harmful, vile, and bad, is Flattery's evil end.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="236" height="235" alt="" src="images/image83ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF NEGLECT.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Generous</span> and righteous is thy grief, slighted child of sensibility;</p>
- <p>For kindliness enkindleth love, but the waters of indifference quench it:</p>
- <p>Thy soul is athirst for sympathy, and hungereth to find affection,</p>
- <p>The tender scions of thy heart yearn for the sunshine of good feeling;</p>
- <p>And it is an evil thing and bitter, when the cheerful face of Charity,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
- <p>Going forth gaily in the morning to woo the world with smiles,</p>
- <p>Is met by those wayfaring men with coldness, suspicion, and repulse,</p>
- <p>And turneth into hard dead stone at the Gorgon visage of Neglect.</p>
- <p>O brother, warm and young, covetous of other's favour,</p>
- <p>I see thee checked and chilled, sorrowing for censure or forgetfulness:</p>
- <p>Let coarse and common minds despise&mdash;that wounding of thy vanity,</p>
- <p>Alas, I note a sorer cause, the blighting of thy love;</p>
- <p>Let the callous sensual deride thee,&mdash;disappointed of thy praise,</p>
- <p>Alas, thou hast a juster grief, defrauded of their kindness:</p>
- <p>It is a theme for tears to feel the soft heart hardening,</p>
- <p>The frozen breath of apathy sealing up the fountain of affection;</p>
- <p>It is a pang, keen only to the best, to be injured well-deserving,</p>
- <p>And slumbering Neglect is injury,&mdash;Could ye not watch one hour?</p>
- <p>When God Himself complained, it was that none regarded,</p>
- <p>And indifference bowed to the rebuke, Thou gavest Me no kiss when I came in.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> praise is good; honour is a treasure to be hoarded;</p>
- <p>A good man's praise foreshadoweth God's, and in His smile is heaven:</p>
- <p>But men walk on in hardihood, steeling their sinfulness to censure,</p>
- <p>And when rebuke is ridiculed, the love of praise were an infirmity;</p>
- <p>The judge thou heedest not in fear, cannot have deep homage of thy hope,</p>
- <p>And who then is the wise of this world, that will own he trembleth at his fellows?</p>
- <p>Calm, careless, and insensible, he mocketh blame or calumny,</p>
- <p>Neither should his dignity be humbled to some pittance of their praise:</p>
- <p>The rather, let false pride affect to trample on the treasure</p>
- <p>Which evermore in secret strength unconquered Nature prizeth;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">{268}</a></span>
- <p>Rather, shall ye stifle now the rising bliss of triumph,</p>
- <p>Lest after, in the world's Neglect, he must acknowledge bitterness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> lo, that world is wide, a huge and crowded continent,</p>
- <p>Its brazen sun is mammon, and its iron soil is care:</p>
- <p>A world full of men, where each man clingeth to his idol;</p>
- <p>A world full of men, where each man cherisheth his sorrow;</p>
- <p>A world full of men, multitude shoaling upon multitude;</p>
- <p>A surging sea, where every wave is burdened with an argosy of self;</p>
- <p>A boundless beach, where every stone is a separate microscopic world:</p>
- <p>A forest of innumerable trees, where every root is independent.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">What</span> then is the marvel or the shame, if units be lost among the million?</p>
- <p>Canst thou reasonably murmur, if a leaf drop off unnoticed?</p>
- <p>Wondrous in architecture, intricate and beautiful, delicately tinged and scented,</p>
- <p>Exquisite of feeling and mysterious in life, none cared for its growth, or its decay:</p>
- <p>None? yea,&mdash;no one of its fellows,&mdash;nor cedar, palm, nor bramble,&mdash;</p>
- <p>None? its twin-born brother scarcely missed it from the spray:</p>
- <p>None?&mdash;if none indeed, then man's neglect were bitterness;</p>
- <p>And Life a land without a sun, a globe without a God!</p>
- <p>Yea, flowers in the desert, there be that love your beauty;</p>
- <p>Yea, jewels in the sea, there be that prize your brightness;</p>
- <p>Children of unmerited oblivion, there be that watch and woo you,</p>
- <p>And many tend your sweets, with gentle ministering care:</p>
- <p>Thronging spirits of the happy, and the ever-present Good One</p>
- <p>Yearning seek those precious things, man hath not heart to love,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span>
- <p>Gems of the humblest or the highest, pure and patient in their kind,</p>
- <p>The souls unhardened by ill usage, and uncorrupt by luxury.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> ye, poor desolates unsunned, toilers in the dark damp mine,</p>
- <p>Wearied daughters of oppression, crushed beneath the car of avarice,</p>
- <p>There be that count your tears,&mdash;He hath numbered the hairs of thy head,&mdash;</p>
- <p>There be that can forgive your ill, with kind considerate pity:</p>
- <p>Count ye this for comfort, Justice hath her balances,</p>
- <p>And yet another world can compensate for all:</p>
- <p>The daily martyrdom of patience shall not be wanting of reward;</p>
- <p>Duty is a prickly shrub, but its flower will be happiness and glory.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Ye</span> too, the friendless, yet dependent, that find nor home nor lover,</p>
- <p>Sad imprisoned hearts, captive to the net of circumstance,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And ye, too harshly judged, noble unappreciated intellects,</p>
- <p>Who, capable of highest, lowlier fix your just ambition in content,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And chiefest, ye, famished infants of the poor, toiling for your parents' bread,</p>
- <p>Tired, and sore, and uncomforted the while, for want of love and learning,</p>
- <p>Who struggle with the pitiless machine in dull continuous conflict,</p>
- <p>Tasked by iron men, who care for nothing but your labour,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Be ye long-suffering and courageous: abide the will of Heaven;</p>
- <p>God is on your side; all things are tenderly remembered:</p>
- <p>His servants here shall help you; and where those fail you through Neglect,</p>
- <p>His kingdom still hath time and space for ample discriminative Justice:</p>
- <p>Yea, though utterly on this bad earth ye lose both right and mercy,</p>
- <p>The tears that we forgat to note, our God shall wipe away.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless,</span> kind spirit, susceptible and guileless,</p>
- <p>Meek uncherished dove, in a carrion flock of fowls,</p>
- <p>Sensitive mimosa, shrinking from the winds that help to root the fir,</p>
- <p>Fragile nautilus, shipwrecked in the gale whereat the conch is glad,</p>
- <p>Thy sharp peculiar grief is uncomforted by hope of compensation,</p>
- <p>For it is a delicate and spiritual wound, which the probe of pity bruiseth:</p>
- <p>Yet hear how many thoughts extenuate its pain;</p>
- <p>Even while a kindred heart can sorrow for its presence.</p>
- <p>For the sting of neglect is in this,&mdash;that such as we are all, forget us,</p>
- <p>That men and women, kith and kin, so lightly heed of other:</p>
- <p>Sympathy is lacking from the guilty such as we, even where angels minister,</p>
- <p>And souls of fine accord must prize a fellow-sinner's love;</p>
- <p>For the worst love those who love them, and the best claim heart for heart,</p>
- <p>And it is a holy thirst to long for love's requital:</p>
- <p>Hard it will be, hard and sad, to love and be unloved;</p>
- <p>And many a thorn is thrust into the side of him that is forgotten.</p>
- <p>The oppressive silence of reserve, the frost of failing friendship,</p>
- <p>Affection blighted by repulse, or chilled by shallow courtesy,</p>
- <p>The unaided struggle, the unconsidered grief, the unesteemed self-sacrifice,</p>
- <p>The gift, dear evidence of kindness, long due, but never offered,</p>
- <p>The glance estranged, the letter flung aside, the greeting ill received,</p>
- <p>The services of unobtrusive care unthanked, perchance unheeded,</p>
- <p>These things, which hard men mock at, rend the feelings of the tender,</p>
- <p>For the delicate tissue of a spiritual mind is torn by those sharp barbs;</p>
- <p>The coldness of a trusted friend, a plenitude ending in vacuity,</p>
- <p>Is as if the stable world had burst a hollow bubble.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">But</span> consider, child of sensibility; the lot of men is labour,</p>
- <p>Labour for the mouth, or labour in the spirit, labour stern and individual.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span>
- <p>Worldly cares and worldly hopes exact the thoughts of all,</p>
- <p>And there is a necessary selfishness, rooted in each mortal breast.</p>
- <p>The plans of prudence, or the whisperings of pride, or all-absorbing reveries of love,</p>
- <p>Ambition, grief, or fear, or joy, set each man for himself;</p>
- <p>Therefore, the centre of a circle, whereunto all the universe convergeth,</p>
- <p>Is seen in fallen solitude, the naked selfish heart:</p>
- <p>Stripped of conventional deceptions, untrammelled from the harness of society,</p>
- <p>We all may read one little word engraved on all we do;</p>
- <p>Other men, what are they unto us? the age, the mass, the million,&mdash;</p>
- <p>We segregate, distinct from generalities, that isolated particle, a self:</p>
- <p>It is the very law of our life, a law for soul and body,</p>
- <p>An earthly law for earthly men, toiling in responsible probation.</p>
- <p>For each is the all unto himself, disguise it as we may,</p>
- <p>Each infinite, each most precious; yet even as a nothing to his neighbour.</p>
- <p>O consider, we be crowding up an avenue, trapped in the decoy of time,</p>
- <p>Behind us the irrevocable past, before us the illimitable future:</p>
- <p>What wonder is there, if the traveller, wayworn, hopeful, fearful,</p>
- <p>Burdened himself, so lightly heed the burden of his brother?</p>
- <p>How shouldst thou marvel and be sad, that the pilgrims trouble not to learn thee,</p>
- <p>When each hath to master for himself the lessons of life and immortality?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Moreover,</span> what art thou,&mdash;so vainly impatient of Neglect,</p>
- <p>Where then is thy worthiness, that so thou claimest honour?</p>
- <p>Let the true judgment of humility reckon up thine ill deserts,</p>
- <p>How little is there to be loved, how much to stir up scorn!</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">{272}</a></span>
- <p>The double heart, the bitter tongue, the rash and erring spirit,</p>
- <p>Be these, ye purest among men, your passports unto favour?</p>
- <p>It is mercy in the Merciful, and justice in the Just, to be jealous of His creature's love,</p>
- <p>But how should evil or duplicity arrogate affection to itself?</p>
- <p>Where love is happiness and duty, to be jealous of that love is godlike,</p>
- <p>But who can reverence the guilty? who findeth pleasure in the mean?</p>
- <p>Check the presumption of thy hopes: thankfully take refuge in obscurity,</p>
- <p>Or, if thou claimest merit, thy sin shall be proclaimed upon the housetops.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> again: consider them of old, the good, the great, the learned,</p>
- <p>Who have blessed the world by wisdom, and glorified their God by purity.</p>
- <p>Did those speed in favour? were they the loved and the admired?</p>
- <p>Was every prophet had in honour? and every deserving one remembered to his praise?</p>
- <p>What shall I say of yonder band, a glorious cloud of witnesses,</p>
- <p>The scorned, defamed, insulted,&mdash;but the excellent of earth?</p>
- <p>It were weariness to count up noble names, neglected in their lives,</p>
- <p>Whom none esteemed, nor cared to love, till death had sealed them his.</p>
- <p>For good men are the health of the world, valued only when it perisheth,</p>
- <p>Like water, light, and air, all precious in their absence.</p>
- <p>Who hath considered the blessing of his breath, till the poison of an asthma struck him?</p>
- <p>Who hath regarded the just pulses of his heart, till spasm or paralysis have stopped them?</p>
- <p>Even thus, an unobserved routine of daily grace and wisdom,</p>
- <p>When no more here, had worship of a world, whose penitence atoned for its neglect.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
- <p>And living genius is seen among infirmities, wherefrom the commoner are free;</p>
- <p>And other rival men of mind crowd this arena of contention;</p>
- <p>And there be many cares; and a man knoweth little of his brother;</p>
- <p>Feebly we appreciate a motive, and slowly keep pace with a feeling:</p>
- <p>And social difference is much; and experience teacheth sadly,</p>
- <p>How great the treachery of friends, how dangerous the courtesy of enemies.</p>
- <p>So, the sum of all these things operateth largely upon all men,</p>
- <p>Hedging us about with thorns, to cramp our yearning sympathies,</p>
- <p>And we grow materialized in mind, forgetting what we see not,</p>
- <p>But, immersed in perceptions of the present, keep things absent out of thought:</p>
- <p>Thus, where ingratitude, and guilt, and labour, and selfishness would harden,</p>
- <p>Humbly will the good man bow, unmurmuring, to Neglect.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> once more, griever at Neglect, hear me to thy comfort, or rebuke:</p>
- <p>For, after all thy just complaint, the world is full of love.</p>
- <p>O heart of childhood, tender, trusting, and affectionate,</p>
- <p>O youth, warm youth, full of generous attentions,</p>
- <p>O woman, self-forgetting woman, poetry of human life,</p>
- <p>And not less thou, O man, so often the disinterested brother,</p>
- <p>Many a smile of love, many a tear of pity,</p>
- <p>Many a word of comfort, many a deed of magnanimity,</p>
- <p>Many a stream of milk and honey pour ye freely on the earth,</p>
- <p>And many a rosebud of love rejoiceth in the dew of your affection.</p>
- <p>Neglect? O liberal world, for thine are many prizes:</p>
- <p>Neglect? O charitable world, where thousands feed on bounty;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></span>
- <p>Neglect? O just world, for thy judgments err not often;</p>
- <p>Neglect? O libel on a world where half that world is woman!</p>
- <p>Where is the afflicted, whose voice, once heard, stirreth not a host of comforters?</p>
- <p>Where is the sick untended, or in prison, and they visited him not?</p>
- <p>The hungry is fed, and the thirsty satisfied, till ability set limits to the will,</p>
- <p>And those who did it unto them, have done it unto God!</p>
- <p>For human benevolence is large, though many matters dwarf it,</p>
- <p>Prudence, ignorance, imposture, and the straitenings of circumstance and time.</p>
- <p>And if to the body, so to the mind, the mass of men are generous;</p>
- <p>Their estimate, who know us best, is seldom seen to err;</p>
- <p>Be sure the fault is thine, as pride, or shallowness, or vanity,</p>
- <p>If all around thee, good and bad, neglect thy seeming merit:</p>
- <p>No man yet deserved, who found not some to love him;</p>
- <p>And he, that never kept a friend, need only blame himself:</p>
- <p>Many for unworthiness will droop and die, but all are not unworthy;</p>
- <p>It must indeed be cold clay soil, that killeth every seed.</p>
- <p>Therefore, examine thy state, O self-accounted martyr of Neglect,</p>
- <p>It may be, thy merit is a cubit, and thy measure thereof a furlong;</p>
- <p>But grant it greater than thy thoughts, and grant that men thy fellows,</p>
- <p>For pleasure, business, or interest, misuse, forget, neglect thee,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Still be thou conqueror in this, the consciousness of high deservings;</p>
- <p>Let it suffice thee to be worthy; faint not thou for praise;</p>
- <p>For that thou art, be grateful; go humbly even in thy confidence;</p>
- <p>And set thy foot upon the neck of an enemy so harmless as Neglect.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="223" height="261" alt="" src="images/image84ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF CONTENTMENT.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Godliness</span> with Contentment,&mdash;these be the pillars of felicity,</p>
- <p>Jachin, wherewithal it is established, and Boaz, in the which is strength;</p>
- <p>And upon their capitals is lily-work, the lotus fruit and flower,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">{276}</a></span>
- <p>Those fair and fragrant types of holiness, innocence, and beauty;</p>
- <p>Great gain pertaineth to the pillars, nets and chains of wreathen gold,</p>
- <p>And they stand up straight in the temple porch, the house where Glory dwelleth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> body craveth meats, and the spirit is athirst for peacefulness,</p>
- <p>He that hath these, hath enough; for all beyond is vanity.</p>
- <p>Surfeit vaulteth over pleasure, to light upon the hither side of pain;</p>
- <p>And great store is great care, the rather if it mightily increaseth.</p>
- <p>Albeit too little is a trouble, yet too much shall swell into an evil,</p>
- <p>If wisdom stand not nigh to moderate the wishes:</p>
- <p>For covetousness never had enough, but moaneth at its wants for ever,</p>
- <p>And rich men have commonly more need to be taught contentment than the poor.</p>
- <p>That hungry chasm in their market-place gapeth still unsatisfied,</p>
- <p>Yea, fling in all the wealth of Rome,&mdash;it asketh higher victims;</p>
- <p>So, when the miser's gold cannot fill the measure of his lust,</p>
- <p>Curtius must leap into the pit, and avarice shall close upon his life.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold</span> Independence in his rags, all too easily contented,</p>
- <p>Careful for nothing, thankful for much, and uncomplaining in his poverty:</p>
- <p>Such an one have I somewhile seen earn his crust with gladness;</p>
- <p>He is a gatherer of simples, culling wild herbs upon the hills;</p>
- <p>And now, as he sitteth on the beach, with his motherless child beside him,</p>
- <p>To rest them in the cheerful sun, and sort their mints and horehound,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Tell me, can ye find upon his forehead the cloud of covetous anxiety,</p>
- <p>Or note the dull unkindled eyes of sated sons of pleasure?&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">{277}</a></span>
- <p>For there is more joy of life with that poor picker of the ditches,</p>
- <p>Than among the multitude of wealthy who wed their gains to discontent.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">I have</span> seen many rich, burdened with the fear of poverty,</p>
- <p>I have seen many poor, buoyed with all the carelessness of wealth:</p>
- <p>For the rich had the spirit of a pauper, and the moneyless a liberal heart;</p>
- <p>The first enjoyeth not for having, and the latter hath nothing but enjoyment.</p>
- <p>None is poor but the mean in mind, the timorous, the weak, and unbelieving;</p>
- <p>None is wealthy but the affluent in soul, who is satisfied and floweth over.</p>
- <p>The poor-rich is attenuate for fears, the rich-poor is fattened upon hopes;</p>
- <p>Cheerfulness is one man's welcome, and the other warneth from him by his gloom.</p>
- <p>Many poor have the pleasures of the rich, even in their own possessions;</p>
- <p>And many rich miss the poor man's comforts, and yet feel all his cares.</p>
- <p>Liberty is affluence, and the Helots of anxiety never can be counted wealthy;</p>
- <p>But he that is disenthralled from fear, goeth for the time a king;</p>
- <p>He is royal, great, and opulent, living free of fortune,</p>
- <p>And looking on the world as owner of its good, the Maker's child and heir:</p>
- <p>Whereas, the covetous is slavish, a very Midas in his avarice,</p>
- <p>Full of dismal dreams, and starved amongst his treasures:</p>
- <p>The ceaseless spur of discontent goaded him with instant apprehension,</p>
- <p>And his thirst for gold could never be quenched, for he drank with the throat of Crassus.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Vanity,</span> and dreary disappointment, care, and weariness, and envy;</p>
- <p>Vanity is graven upon all things; wisely spake the preacher.</p>
- <p>For ambition is a burning mountain, thrown up amid the turbid sea,</p>
- <p>A Stromboli in sullen pride above the hissing waves;</p>
- <p>And the statesman climbing there, forgetful of his patriot intentions,</p>
- <p>Shall hate the strife of each rough step, or ever he hath toiled midway:</p>
- <p>And every truant from his home, the happy home of duty,</p>
- <p>Shall live to loathe his eminence of cares, that seething smoke and lava.</p>
- <p>Contentment is the temperate repast, flowing with milk and honey:</p>
- <p>Ambition is the drunken orgy, fed by liquid flames:</p>
- <p>A black and bitter frown is stamped upon the forehead of Ambition,</p>
- <p>But fair Contentment's angel-face is rayed with winning smiles.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> was in Tyre a merchant, the favourite child of fortune,</p>
- <p>An opulent man with many ships, to trade in many climes;</p>
- <p>And he rose up early to his merchandize, after feverish dreaming,</p>
- <p>And lay down late to his hot unrest, overwhelmed with calculated cares.</p>
- <p>So, day by day, and month by month, and year by year, he gained;</p>
- <p>And grew grey, and waxed great: for money brought him all things.</p>
- <p>All things?&mdash;verily, not all; the kernel of the nut is lacking,&mdash;</p>
- <p>His mind was a stranger to content, and as for Peace, he knew her not:</p>
- <p>Luxuries palled upon his palate, and his eyes were satiate with purple;</p>
- <p>He could coin much gold, but buy no happiness with it.</p>
- <p>And on a day, a day of dread, in the heat of inordinate ambition,</p>
- <p>When he threw with a gambler's hand, to lose or to double his possessions,</p>
- <p>The chance hit him,&mdash;he had speculated ill,&mdash;and men began to whisper;&mdash;</p>
- <p>Those he trusted, failed; and their usuries had bribed him deeply;</p>
- <p>One ship foundered out at sea,&mdash;and another met the pirate,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And so, with broken fortunes, men discreetly shunned him.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span>
- <p>He was a stricken stag, and went to hide away in solitude,</p>
- <p>And there in humility, he thought,&mdash;he resolved, and promptly acted:</p>
- <p>From the wreck of all his splendours, from the dregs of the goblet of affluence,</p>
- <p>He saved with management a morsel and a drop, for his daily cup and platter:</p>
- <p>And lo, that little was enough, and in enough was competence;</p>
- <p>His cares were gone,&mdash;he slept by night, and lived at peace by day;</p>
- <p>Cured of his guilty selfishness,&mdash;money's love, envy, competition,&mdash;</p>
- <p>He lived to be thankful in a cottage that he had lost a palace:</p>
- <p>For he found in his abasement what he vainly had sought in high estate,</p>
- <p>Both mind and body well at ease, though robed in the russet of the lowly.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Once</span> more; a certain priest, happy in his high vocation,</p>
- <p>With faith, and hope, and charity, well served his village altar;</p>
- <p>As men count riches, he was poor; but great were his treasures in heaven,</p>
- <p>And great his joys on earth, for God's sake doing good:</p>
- <p>He had few cares and many consolations, one of the welcome everywhere;</p>
- <p>The labourer accounted him his friend, and magnates did him honour at their table:</p>
- <p>With a large heart and little means he still made many grateful,</p>
- <p>And felt as the centre of a circle, of comfort, calmness, and content.</p>
- <p>But, on a weaker sabbath,&mdash;for he preached both well and wisely,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Some casual hearer loudly praised his great neglected talents:</p>
- <p>Why should he be buried in obscurity, and throw these pearls to swine?</p>
- <p>Could he not still be doing good,&mdash;the whilst he pushed his fortunes?</p>
- <p>Then came temptation, even on the spark of discontent;</p>
- <p>The neighbouring town had a pulpit to be filled; hotly did he canvass, and won it:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
- <p>Now was he popular and courted, and listened to the spell of admiration,</p>
- <p>And toiled to please the taste, rather than to pierce the conscience.</p>
- <p>Greedily he sought, and seeking found, the patronizing notice of the great;</p>
- <p>He thirsted for emoluments and honours, and counted rich men happy:</p>
- <p>So he flattered, so he preached; and gold and fame flowed in;</p>
- <p>They flowed in,&mdash;he was reaping his reward, and felt himself a fool.</p>
- <p>Alas, what a shadow was he following,&mdash;how precious was the substance he had left!</p>
- <p>Man for God, gold for good, this was his miserable bargain.</p>
- <p>The village church, its humble flock, and humbler parish priest,</p>
- <p>Zeal, devotion, and approving Heaven,&mdash;his books, and simple life,</p>
- <p>His little farm and flower-beds,&mdash;his recreative rambles with a friend,</p>
- <p>And haply, at eventide, the leaping trouts, to help their humble fare,</p>
- <p>All these wretchedly exchanged for what the world called fortune,</p>
- <p>With the harrowing conscience of a state relapsed to vain ambitions.</p>
- <p>Then,&mdash;for God was gracious to his soul,&mdash;his better thoughts returned,</p>
- <p>And better aims with better thoughts, his holy walk of old.</p>
- <p>Sickened of style, and ostentation, and the dissipative fashions of society,</p>
- <p>He deserted from the ranks of Mammon, and renewed his allegiance to God:</p>
- <p>For he found that the praises of men, and all that gold can give,</p>
- <p>Are not worthy to be named, against godliness and calm contentment.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF LIFE.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="82" height="188" alt="" src="images/image85cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">A child</span>
- was playing in a garden, a merry little child,</p>
- <p>Bounding with triumphant health, and full of happy fancies;</p>
- <p>His kite was floating in the sunshine,&mdash;but he tied the string to a twig</p>
- <p>And ran among the roses to catch a new-born butterfly;</p>
- <p>His horn-book lay upon a bank, but the pretty truant hid it,</p>
- <p>Buried up in gathered grass, and moss, and sweet wild-thyme;</p>
- <p>He launched a paper boat upon the fountain, then wayward turned aside,</p>
- <p>To twine some fragrant jessamines about the dripping marble:</p>
- <p>So, in various pastime shadowing the schemes of manhood,</p>
- <p>That curly-headed boy consumed the golden hours:</p>
- <p>And I blessed his glowing face, envying the merry little child,</p>
- <p>As he shouted with the ecstasy of being, clapping his hands for joyfulness:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">{282}</a></span>
- <p>For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is happiness and hope,</p>
- <p>Thy days are bright, thy flowers are sweet, and pleasure the condition of thy gift.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A youth</span> was walking in the moonlight, walking not alone,</p>
- <p>For a fair and gentle maid leant on his trembling arm:</p>
- <p>Their whispering was still of beauty, and the light of love was in their eyes,</p>
- <p>Their twin young hearts had not a thought unvowed to love and beauty;</p>
- <p>The stars and the sleeping world, and the guardian eye of God,</p>
- <p>The murmur of the distant waterfall, and nightingales warbling in the thicket,</p>
- <p>Sweet speech of years to come, and promises of fondest hope,</p>
- <p>And more, a present gladness in each other's trust,</p>
- <p>All these fed their souls with the hidden manna of affection,</p>
- <p>While their faces shone beatified in the radiance of reflected Eden:</p>
- <p>I gazed on that fond youth, and coveted his heart,</p>
- <p>Attuned to holiest symphonies, with music in its strings:</p>
- <p>For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is love and beauty,</p>
- <p>Thy joys are full, thy looks most fair, thy feelings pure and sensitive.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A man</span> sat beside his merchandize, a careworn altered man,</p>
- <p>His waking hope, his nightly fear, were money, and its losses:</p>
- <p>Rarely was the laugh upon his cheek, except in bitter scorn</p>
- <p>For his foolishness of heart, and the lie of its romance, counting Love a treasure.</p>
- <p>His talk is of stern Reality, chilling unimaginative facts,</p>
- <p>The dull material accidents of this sensual body;</p>
- <p>Lucreless honour were contemptible, impoverished affection but a pauper's riches,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
- <p>Duty, struggling unrewarded, the bargain of a cheated fool:</p>
- <p>The market value of a fancy must be measured by the gain it bringeth,</p>
- <p>No man is fed or clothed by fame, or love, or duty:&mdash;</p>
- <p>So toiled he day by day, that cold and joyless man,</p>
- <p>I gazed upon his haggard face, and sorrowed for the change:</p>
- <p>For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is care and weariness,</p>
- <p>Thy soil is parched, thy winds are fierce, and the suns above thee hardening.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A withered</span> elder lay upon his bed, a desolate man and feeble:</p>
- <p>His thoughts were of the past, the early past, the bygone days of youth:</p>
- <p>Bitterly repented he the years stolen by the god of this world:</p>
- <p>Remembering the maiden of his love, and the heart-stricken wife of his selfishness.</p>
- <p>For the sunshiny morning of life came again to him a vivid truth,</p>
- <p>But the years of toil as a long dim dream, a cloudy blighted noon:</p>
- <p>He saw the nutting schoolboy, but forgat the speculative merchant;</p>
- <p>The callous calculating husband was shamed by the generous lover:</p>
- <p>He knew that the weeds of worldliness, and the smoky breath of Mammon</p>
- <p>Had choked and killed those tender shoots, his yearnings after honour and affection;</p>
- <p>So was he sick at heart, and my pity strove to cheer him,</p>
- <p>But a deep and dismal gulf lay between comfort and his soul.</p>
- <p>Then I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is vanity and sorrow,</p>
- <p>Thy storms at noon are many, and thine eventide is clouded by remorse.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Now,</span> when I thought upon these things, my heart was grieved within me:</p>
- <p>I wept, with bitterness of speech, and these were the words of my complaining:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
- "Wherefore then must happiness and love wither into care and vanity,&mdash;
- <p>Wherefore is the bud so beautiful, but flower and fruit so blighted?</p>
- <p>Hard is the lot of man; to be lured by the meteor of romance,</p>
- <p>Only to be snared, and to sink, in the turbid mudpool of reality."</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Suddenly,</span> a light,&mdash;and a rushing presence,&mdash;and a consciousness of Something near me,&mdash;</p>
- <p>I trembled, and listened, and prayed: then I knew the Angel of Life:</p>
- <p>Vague, and dimly visible, mine eye could not behold Him,</p>
- <p>As, calmly unimpassioned, He looked upon an erring creature;</p>
- <p>Unseen, my spirit apprehended Him; though He spake not, yet I heard:</p>
- <p>For a sympathetic communing with Him flashed upon my mind electric.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Pensioner</span> of God, be grateful; the gift of Life is good:</p>
- <p>The life of heart, and life of soul, mingled with life for the body.</p>
- <p>Gladness and beauty are its just inheritance,&mdash;the beauty thou hast counted for romance:</p>
- <p>And guardian spirits weep that selfishness and sorrow should destroy it.</p>
- <p>Thou hast seen the natural blessing marred into a curse by man;</p>
- <p>Come then, in favour will I show thee the proper excellence of life.</p>
- <p>Keep thou purity, and watch against suspicion,&mdash;love shall never perish;</p>
- <p>Guard thine innocency spotless, and the buoyancy of childhood shall remain.</p>
- <p>Sweet ideals feed the soul, thoughts of loveliness delight it,</p>
- <p>The chivalrous affection of uncalculating youth lacketh not honourable wisdom.</p>
- <p>Charge not folly on invisibles, that render thee happier and purer,</p>
- <p>The fair frail visions of Romance have a use beyond the maxims of the Real.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Behold</span> a patriarch of years, who leaneth on the staff of religion;</p>
- <p>His heart is fresh, quick to feel, a bursting fount of generosity:</p>
- <p>He, playful in his wisdom, is gladdened in his children's gladness,</p>
- <p>He, pure in his experience, loveth in his son's first love:</p>
- <p>Lofty aspirations, deep affections, holy hopes are his delight;</p>
- <p>His abhorrence is to strip from Life its charitable garment of Idea.</p>
- <p>The cold and callous sneerer, who heedeth of the merely practical,</p>
- <p>And mocketh at good uses in imaginary things, that man is his scorn:</p>
- <p>The hard unsympathizing modern, filled with facts and figures,</p>
- <p>Cautious, and coarse, and materialized in mind, that man is his pity.</p>
- <p>Passionate thirst for gain never hath burnt within his bosom,</p>
- <p>The leaden chains of that dull lust have not bound him prisoner:</p>
- <p>The shrewd world laughed at him for honesty, the vain world mouthed at him for honour,</p>
- <p>The false world hated him for truth, the cold world despised him for affection:</p>
- <p>Still, he kept his treasure, the warm and noble heart,</p>
- <p>And in that happy wise old man survive the child and lover.</p>
- <p>For human Life is as Chian wine, flavoured unto him who drinketh it,</p>
- <p>Delicate fragrance comforting the soul, as needful substance for the body:</p>
- <p>Therefore, see thou art pure and guileless; so shall thy Realities of Life</p>
- <p>Be sweetened, and tempered, and gladdened by the wholesome spirit of Romance.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Dost</span> thou live, man, dost thou live,&mdash;or only breathe and labour?</p>
- <p>Art thou free, or enslaved to a routine, the daily machinery of habit?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">{286}</a></span>
- <p>For, one man is quickened into life, where thousands exist as in a torpor,</p>
- <p>Feeding, toiling, sleeping, an insensate weary round:</p>
- <p>The plough, or the ledger, or the trade, with animal cares and indolence,</p>
- <p>Make the mass of vital years a heavy lump unleavened.</p>
- <p>Drowsily lie down in thy dulness, fettered with the irons of circumstance,</p>
- <p>Thou wilt not wake to think and feel a minute in a month.</p>
- <p>The epitome of common life is seen in the common epitaph,</p>
- <p>Born on such a day, and dead on such another, with an interval of threescore years.</p>
- <p>For time hath been wasted on the senses, to the hourly diminishing of spirit:</p>
- <p>Lean is the soul and pineth, in the midst of abundance for the body:</p>
- <p>He forgat the worlds to which he tended, and a creature's true nobility,</p>
- <p>Nor wished that hope and wholesome fear should stir him from his hardened satisfaction.</p>
- <p>And this is death in life; to be sunk beneath the waters of the Actual,</p>
- <p>Without one feebly-struggling sense of an airier spiritual realm:</p>
- <p>Affection, fancy, feeling&mdash;dead; imagination, conscience, faith,</p>
- <p>All wilfully expunged, till they leave the man mere carcase.</p>
- <p>See thou livest, whiles thou art: for heart must live, and soul,</p>
- <p>But care and sloth and sin and self, combine to kill that life.</p>
- <p>A man will grow to an automaton, an appendage to the counter or the desk,</p>
- <p>If mind and spirit be not roused, to raise the plodding groveller:</p>
- <p>Then praise God for sabbaths, for books, and dreams, and pains,</p>
- <p>For the recreative face of nature, and the kindling charities of home;</p>
- <p>And remember, thou that labourest,&mdash;thy leisure is not loss,</p>
- <p>If it help to expose and undermine that solid falsehood, the Material.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Life</span> is a strange avenue of various trees and flowers;</p>
- <p>Lightsome at commencement, but darkening to its end, in a distant massy portal.</p>
- <p>It beginneth as a little path, edged with the violet and primrose,</p>
- <p>A little path of lawny grass, and soft to tiny feet:</p>
- <p>Soon, spring thistles in the way, those early griefs of school,</p>
- <p>And fruit-trees ranged on either hand show holiday delights:</p>
- <p>Anon, the rose and the mimosa hint at sensitive affection,</p>
- <p>And vipers hide among the grass, and briars are woven in the hedges:</p>
- <p>Shortly, staked along in order, stand the tender saplings,</p>
- <p>While hollow hemlock and tall ferns fill the frequent interval:</p>
- <p>So advancing, quaintly mixed, majestic line the way</p>
- <p>Sturdy oaks, and vigorous elms, the beech and forest-pine:</p>
- <p>And here the road is rough with rocks, wide, and scant of herbage,</p>
- <p>The sun is hot in heaven, and the ground is cleft and parched:</p>
- <p>And many-times a hollow trunk, decayed, or lightning-scathed,</p>
- <p>Or in its deadly solitude, the melancholy upas:</p>
- <p>But soon, with closer ranks, are set the sentinel trees,</p>
- <p>And darker shadows hover amongst Autumn's mellow tints;</p>
- <p>Ever and anon, a holly,&mdash;junipers, and cypresses, and yews;</p>
- <p>The soil is damp; the air is chill; night cometh on apace:</p>
- <p>Speed to the portal, traveller,&mdash;lo, there is a moon,</p>
- <p>With smiling light to guide thee safely through the dreadful shade:</p>
- <p>Hark,&mdash;that hollow knock,&mdash;behold, the warder openeth,</p>
- <p>The gate is gaping, and for thee;&mdash;those are the jaws of Death!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="230" height="198" alt="" src="images/image86ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF DEATH.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="130" alt="" src="images/image86cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Keep</span>
- silence, daughter of frivolity,&mdash;for Death is in that chamber!</p>
- <p>Startle not with echoing sound the strangely solemn peace.</p>
- <p>Death is here in spirit, watcher of a marble corpse,&mdash;</p>
- <p>That eye is fixed, that heart is still,&mdash;how dreadful in its stillness!</p>
- <p>Death, new tenant of the house, pervadeth all the fabric;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
- <p>He waiteth at the head, and he standeth at the feet, and hideth in the caverns of the breast:</p>
- <p>Death, subtle leech, hath anatomized soul from body,</p>
- <p>Dissecting well in every nerve its spirit from its substance:</p>
- <p>Death, rigid lord, hath claimed the heriot clay,</p>
- <p>While joyously the youthful soul hath gone to take his heritage:</p>
- <p>Death, cold usurer, hath seized his bonded debtor;</p>
- <p>Death, savage despot, hath caught his forfeit serf;</p>
- <p>Death, blind foe, wreaketh petty vengeance on the flesh;</p>
- <p>Death, fell cannibal, gloateth on his victim,</p>
- <p>And carrieth it with him to the grave, that dismal banquet-hall,</p>
- <p>Where in foul state the Royal Goul holdeth secret orgies.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Hide</span> it up, hide it up, draw the decent curtain:</p>
- <p>Hence! curious fool, and pry not on corruption:</p>
- <p>For the fearful mysteries of change are being there enacted,</p>
- <p>And many actors play their part on that small stage, the tomb.</p>
- <p>Leave the clay, that leprous thing, touch not the fleshly garment:</p>
- <p>Dust to dust, it mingleth well among the sacred soil:</p>
- <p>It is scattered by the winds, it is wafted by the waves, it mixeth with herbs and cattle,</p>
- <p>But God hath watched those morsels, and hath guided them in care:</p>
- <p>Each waiting soul must claim his own, when the archangel soundeth,</p>
- <p>And all the fields, and all the hills, shall move a mass of life;</p>
- <p>Bodies numberless crowding on the land, and covering the trampled sea,</p>
- <p>Darkening the air precipitate, and gathered scatheless from the fire;</p>
- <p>The Himalayan peaks shall yield their charge, and the desolate steppes of Siberia,</p>
- <p>The Maelström disengulph its spoil, and the iceberg manumit its captive:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
- <p>All shall teem with life, the converging fragments of humanity,</p>
- <p>Till every conscious essence greet his individual frame;</p>
- <p>For in some dignified similitude, alike, yet different in glory,</p>
- <p>This body shall be shaped anew, fit dwelling for the soul:</p>
- <p>The hovel hath grown to a palace, the bulb hath burst into the flower,</p>
- <p>Matter hath put on incorruption, and is at peace with spirit.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Amen</span>,&mdash;and so it shall be:&mdash;but now, the scene is drear,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Yea, though promises and hope strive to cheat its sadness;</p>
- <p>Full of grief, though faith herself is strong to speed the soul,</p>
- <p>For the partner of its toil is left behind to endure an ordeal of change.</p>
- <p>Dear partner, dear and frail, my loved though humble home,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Should I cast thee off without a pang, as a garment flung aside?</p>
- <p>Many years, for joy and sorrow, have I dwelt in thee,</p>
- <p>How shall I be reckless of thy weal, nor hope for thy perfection?&mdash;</p>
- <p>This also, He that lent thee for my uses in mortality,</p>
- <p>Shall well fulfil with boundless praise on that returning day:</p>
- <p>Behold, thou shalt be glorified: thou, mine abject friend,</p>
- <p>And should I meanly scorn thy state, until it rise to greatness?</p>
- <p>Far be it, O my soul, from thine expectant essence,</p>
- <p>To be heedless, if indignity or folly desecrate those thine ashes:</p>
- <p>Keep them safe with careful love; and let the mound be holy;</p>
- <p>And, thou that passest by, revere the waiting dead.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="225" height="210" alt="" src="images/image87ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Naples</span> sitteth by the sea, key-stone of an arch of azure,</p>
- <p>Crowned by consenting nations peerless queen of gaiety:</p>
- <p>She laugheth at the wrath of Ocean, she mocketh the fury of Vesuvius,</p>
- <p>She spurneth disease and misery and famine, that crowd her sunny streets:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span>
- <p>The giddy dance, the merry song, the festal glad procession,</p>
- <p>The noonday slumber and the midnight serenade,&mdash;all these make up her Life:</p>
- <p>Her Life?&mdash;and what her Death?&mdash;look we to the end of life,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Solon, and Tellus the Athenian, wisely have ye pointed to the grave.</p>
- <p>For behold yon dreary precinct,&mdash;those hundreds of stone wells,</p>
- <p>A pit for a day, a pit for a day,&mdash;a pit to be sealed for a year:</p>
- <p>And in the gloom of night, they raise the year-closed lid,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span>
- <p>Look in,&mdash;for gnawing lime hath half consumed the carcases;</p>
- <p>Thus they hurl the daily dead into that horrible pit,</p>
- <p>The dead that only died this day,&mdash;as unconsidered offal!</p>
- <p>There, a stark white heap, unwept, unloved, uncared for,</p>
- <p>Old men and maidens, young men and infants, mingle in hideous corruption;</p>
- <p>Fling in the gnawing lime,&mdash;seal up the charnel for a year;</p>
- <p>For lo, a morrow's dawn hath tinged the mountain summit.</p>
- <p>O fair false city, thou gay and gilded harlot,</p>
- <p>Woe, for thy wanton heart, woe, for thy wicked hardness:</p>
- <p>Woe unto thee, that the lightsomeness of Life, beneath Italian suns,</p>
- <p>Should meet the solemnity of Death, in a sepulchre so foul and fearful.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> that, even to the best, the wise and pure and pious,</p>
- <p>Death, repulsive king, thine iron rule is terrible:</p>
- <p>Yea, and even at the best, in company of buried kindred,</p>
- <p>With hallowing rites, and friendly tears, and the dear old country church,</p>
- <p>Death, cold and lonely, thy frigid face is hateful,</p>
- <p>The bravest look on thee with dread, the humblest curse thy coming.</p>
- <p>Still, ye unwise among mankind, your foolishness hath added fears;</p>
- <p>The crowded cemetery, the catacomb of bones, the pestilential vault,</p>
- <p>With fancy's gliding ghost at eve, her moans and flaky footfalls,</p>
- <p>And the gibbering train of terror to fright your coward hearts.</p>
- <p>We speak not here of sin, nor the phantoms of a bloody conscience,</p>
- <p>Nor of solaces, and merciful pardon: we heed but the inevitable grave;</p>
- <p>The grave, that wage of guilt, that due return to dust,</p>
- <p>The grave, that goal of earth, and starting-post for Heaven.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Plant</span> it with laurels, sprinkle it with lilies, set it upon yonder dewy hill</p>
- <p>Midst holy prayers, and generous griefs, and consecrating blessings:</p>
- <p>Let Sophocles sleep among his ivy, green perennial garlands,</p>
- <p>Let olives shade their Virgil, and roses bloom above Corinne;</p>
- <p>To his foster-mother, Ocean, entrust the mariner in hope;</p>
- <p>The warrior's spirit, let it rise on high from the flaming fragrant pyre.</p>
- <p>But heap not coffins and corruption to infect the mass of living,</p>
- <p>Nor steal from odious realities the charitable poetry of Death:</p>
- <p>It is wise to gild uncomeliness, it is wise to mask necessity,</p>
- <p>It is wise from cheerful sights and sounds to draw their gentle uses:</p>
- <p>Hide the facts, the bitter facts, the foul, and fearful facts,</p>
- <p>Tend the body well in hope, this were praise and wisdom:</p>
- <p>But to plunge in gloom the parting soul, that hath loved its clay tenement so long,</p>
- <p>This were vanity and folly, the counsel of moroseness and despair.</p>
- <p>Not thus, the Scythian of old time welcomed Death with songs;</p>
- <p>Not thus, the shrewd Egyptian decorated Death with braveries;</p>
- <p>Not thus, on his funeral tower sleepeth the sun-worshipping Parsee;</p>
- <p>Not thus, the Moslem saint lieth in his arabesque mausoleum;</p>
- <p>Not thus, the wild red Indian, hunter of the far Missouri,</p>
- <p>In flowering trees hath nested up his forest-loving ancestry;</p>
- <p>Not thus, the Switzer mountaineer scattereth ribboned garlands</p>
- <p>About the rustic cross that halloweth the bed of his beloved;</p>
- <p>Not thus, the village maiden wisheth she may die in spring,</p>
- <p>With store of violets and cowslips to be sprinkled on her snow-white shroud;</p>
- <p>Not thus, the dying poet asketh a cheerful grave,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
- <p>Lay him in the sunshine, friends, nor sorrow that a Christian hath departed!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yea;</span> it is the poetry of Death, an Orpheus gladdening Hadës,</p>
- <p>To care with mindful love for all so dear&mdash;and dead;</p>
- <p>To think of them in hope, to look for them in joy, and&mdash;but for its simple vanity,&mdash;</p>
- <p>To pray with all the earnestness of nature for souls who cannot change.</p>
- <p>For the tree is felled, and boughed, and bare, and the Measurer standeth with His line;</p>
- <p>The chance is gone for ever, and is past the reach of prayer:</p>
- <p>For men and angels, good and ill, have rendered all their witness;</p>
- <p>The trial is over, the jury are gone in, and none can now be heard;</p>
- <p>Well are they agreed upon the verdict, just, and fixt, and final,</p>
- <p>And the sentence showeth clear, before the Judge hath spoken:</p>
- <p>Now,&mdash;while resting matter is at peace within the tomb,</p>
- <p>The conscious spirit watcheth in unspeakable suspense;</p>
- <p>Racked with a fearful looking-forward, or blissfully feeding on the foretaste,</p>
- <p>Waiting souls in eager expectation pass the solemn interval:</p>
- <p>They slumber not at death, but awaken, quickened to the terrors of the judgment;</p>
- <p>They lie not insensate among darkness, but exult, looking forward to the light:</p>
- <p>Idiotcy, brightening on the instant, when that veil is torn,</p>
- <p>Is grateful that his torpor here hath left him as an innocent:</p>
- <p>The young child, stricken as he played, and guileless babes unborn,</p>
- <p>Freed from fetters of the flesh, burst into mind immediate:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></span>
- <p>Madness judgeth wisely, and the visions of the lunatic are gone,</p>
- <p>And each hasteneth to praise the mercy that made him irresponsible.</p>
- <p>For the soul is one, though manifold in act, working the machinery of brain,</p>
- <p>Reason, fancy, conscience, passion, are but varying phases;</p>
- <p>If, in God's wise purpose, the machine were shattered or confused,</p>
- <p>Still is soul the same, though it exhibit with a difference:</p>
- <p>Therefore, dissipate the brain, and set its inmate free,</p>
- <p>Behold, the maniacs and embryos stand in their place intelligent.</p>
- <p>That solvent eateth away all dross, leaving the gold intact:</p>
- <p>Matter lingereth in the retort, spirit hath flown to the receiver:</p>
- <p>And lo, that recipient of the spirits, it is some aerial world,</p>
- <p>An oasis midway on the desert space, separating earth from heaven,</p>
- <p>A prison-house for essences incorporate, a limbus vague and wide,</p>
- <p>Tartarus for evil, and Paradise for good, that intermediate Hadës.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O Death,</span> what art thou? a Lawgiver that never altereth,</p>
- <p>Fixing the consummating seal, whereby the deeds of life become established:</p>
- <p>O Death, what art thou? a stern and silent usher,</p>
- <p>Leading to the judgment for Eternity, after the trial-scene of Time:</p>
- <p>O Death, what art thou? an Husbandman, that reapeth always,</p>
- <p>Out of season, as in season, with the sickle in his hand:</p>
- <p>O Death, what art thou? the shadow unto every substance,</p>
- <p>In the bower as in the battle, haunting night and day:</p>
- <p>O Death, what art thou? Nurse of dreamless slumbers</p>
- <p>Freshening the fevered flesh to a wakefulness eternal:</p>
- <p>O Death, what art thou? strange and solemn Alchymist,</p>
- <p>Elaborating life's elixir from these clayey crucibles:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>
- <p>O Death, what art thou? Antitype of Nature's marvels,</p>
- <p>The seed and dormant chrysalis bursting into energy and glory.</p>
- <p>Thou calm safe anchorage for the shattered hulls of men,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thou spot of gelid shade, after the hot-breathed desert,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thou silent waiting-hall, where Adam meeteth with his children,&mdash;</p>
- <p>How full of dread, how full of hope, loometh inevitable Death:</p>
- <p>Of dread, for all have sinned; of hope, for One hath saved;</p>
- <p>The dread is drowned in joy, the hope is filled with immortality!</p>
- &mdash;Pass along, pilgrim of life, go to thy grave unfearing,
- <p>The terrors are but shadows now, that haunt the vale of Death.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="198" height="127" alt="" src="images/image88ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF IMMORTALITY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="79" height="147" alt="" src="images/image89cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Gird</span>
- up thy mind to contemplation, trembling inhabitant of earth;</p>
- <p>Tenant of a hovel for a day,&mdash;thou art heir of the universe for ever!</p>
- <p>For, neither congealing of the grave, nor gulphing waters of the firmament,</p>
- <p>Nor expansive airs of heaven, nor dissipative fires of Gehenna,</p>
- <p>Nor rust of rest, nor wear, nor waste, nor loss, nor chance, nor change,</p>
- <p>Shall avail to quench or overwhelm the spark of soul within thee!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thou</span> art an imperishable leaf on the evergreen bay-tree of Existence;</p>
- <p>A word from Wisdom's mouth, that cannot be unspoken;</p>
- <p>A ray of Love's own light; a drop in Mercy's sea;</p>
- <p>A creature, marvellous and fearful, begotten by the fiat of Omnipotence.</p>
- <p>I, that speak in weakness, and ye, that hear in charity,</p>
- <p>Shall not cease to live and feel, though flesh must see corruption;</p>
- <p>For the prison-gates of matter shall be broken, and the shackled soul go free,</p>
- <p>Free, for good or ill, to satisfy its appetence for ever:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
- <p>For ever,&mdash;dreadful doom, to be hurried on eternally to evil,&mdash;</p>
- <p>For ever,&mdash;happy fate, to ripen into perfectness&mdash;for ever!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> is there a thought within thy heart, O slave of sin and fear,</p>
- <p>A black and harmful hope, that erring spirit dieth?</p>
- <p>That primal disobedience hath ensured the death of soul,</p>
- <p>And separate evil sealed it thine&mdash;thy curse, Annihilation?</p>
- <p>Heed thou this; there is a Sacrifice; the Maker is Redeemer of His creature;</p>
- <p>Freely unto each, universally to all, is restored the privilege of essence:</p>
- <p>Whether unto grace or guilt, all must live through Him,</p>
- <p>Live in vital joy, or live in dying woe:</p>
- <p>Death in Adam, Life in Christ; the curse hung upon the cross:</p>
- <p>Who art thou that heedest of redemption, as narrower than the fall?</p>
- <p>All were dead,&mdash;He died for all; that living, they might love;</p>
- <p>If living souls withhold their love,&mdash;still, He hath died for them.</p>
- <p>Eve stole the knowledge; Christ gave the life:</p>
- <p>Knowledge and life are the perquisites of soul, the privilege of Man:</p>
- <p>Mercy stepped between, and stayed the double theft;</p>
- <p>God gave; and giving, bought; and buying, asketh love:</p>
- <p>And in such asking rendereth bliss, to all that hear and answer,</p>
- <p>For love with life is heaven; and life unloving, hell.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Creature</span> of God, His will is for thy weal, eternally progressing;</p>
- <p>Fear not to trust a Maker's love, nor a Saviour's ransom:</p>
- <p>He drank for all,&mdash;for thee, and me,&mdash;the poison of our deeds;</p>
- <p>We shall not die, but live,&mdash;and, of His grace, we love.</p>
- <p>For, in the mysteries of Mercy, the One fore-knowing Spirit</p>
- <p>Outstrippeth reason's halting choice, and winneth men to Him:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
- <p>Who shall sound the depths? who shall reach the heights?</p>
- <p>Freedom, in the gyves of fate; and sovereignty, reconciled with justice.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">If</span> then, as annihilate by sin, the soul was ever forfeit,</p>
- <p>Godhead paid the mighty price, the pledge hath been redeemed:</p>
- <p>He from the waters of Oblivion raised the drowning race,</p>
- <p>Lifting them even to Himself, the baseless Rock of Ages.</p>
- <p>None can escape from Adam's guilt, or second Adam's guerdon:</p>
- <p>Sin and death are thine; thine also is interminable being:</p>
- <p>Let it be even as thou wilt, still are we ransomed from nonentity,</p>
- <p>The worlds of bliss and woe are peopled with immortals:</p>
- <p>And ruin is thy blame; for thou, the worst, art free</p>
- <p>To take from Heaven the grace of love, as the gift of life:</p>
- <p>Yet is not remedy thy praise; for thou, the best, art bound</p>
- <p>In self, and sin, and darkling sloth, until He break the chain:</p>
- <p>None can tell, without a struggle, if that chain be broken;</p>
- <p>Strive to-day,&mdash;one effort more may prove that thou art free!</p>
- <p>Here is faith and prayer, here is the Grace and the Atonement,</p>
- <p>Here is the creature feeling for its God, and the prodigal returning to his Father.</p>
- <p>But, behold, His reasonable children, standing in just probation,</p>
- <p>With ears to hear, neglect; with eyes to see, refuse:</p>
- <p>They will not have the blessing with the life, the blessing that enricheth Immortality;</p>
- <p>And look for pleasures out of God, for heaven in life alone:</p>
- <p>So, they snatch that awful prize, existence void of love,</p>
- <p>And in their darkening exile make a needful hell of self.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Therefore</span> fear, thou sinner, lest the huge blessing, Immortality,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
- <p>Be blighted in thine evil to a curse,&mdash;it were better he had not been born:</p>
- <p>Therefore hope, thou saint, for the gift of Immortality is free;</p>
- <p>Take and live, and live in love; fear not, thou art redeemed!</p>
- <p>The happy life, that height of hope, the knowledge of all good,</p>
- <p>This is the blessing on obedience, obedience the child of faith:</p>
- <p>The miserable life, that depth of all despair, the knowledge of all evil,</p>
- <p>This is the curse upon impenitence, impenitence that sprung of unbelief.</p>
- <p>God, from a beautiful necessity, is Love in all He doeth,</p>
- <p>Love, a brilliant fire, to gladden or consume:</p>
- <p>The wicked work their woe by looking upon love, and hating it:</p>
- <p>The righteous find their joys in yearning on its loveliness for ever.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Who</span> shall imagine Immortality, or picture its illimitable prospect?</p>
- <p>How feebly can a faltering tongue express the vast idea!</p>
- <p>For consider the primæval woods that bristle over broad Australia,</p>
- <p>And count their autumn leaves, millions multiplied by millions;</p>
- <p>Thence look up to a moonless sky from a sleeping isle of the Ægæan,</p>
- <p>And add to these leaves yon starry host, sparkling on the midnight numberless;</p>
- <p>Thence traverse an Arabia, some continent of eddying sand,</p>
- <p>Gather each grain, let none escape, add them to the leaves and to the stars;</p>
- <p>Afterward gaze upon the sea, the thousand leagues of an Atlantic,</p>
- <p>Take drop by drop, and add their sum, to the grains, and leaves, and stars;</p>
- <p>The drops of ocean, the desert sands, the leaves, and stars innumerable,</p>
- (Albeit, in that multitude of multitudes, each small unit were an age,)
- <p>All might reckon for an instant, a transient flash of Time,</p>
- <p>Compared with this intolerable blaze, the measureless enduring of Eternity!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O grandest</span> gift of the Creator,&mdash;O largess worthy of a God,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></span>
- <p>Who shall grasp that thrilling thought, life and joy for ever?</p>
- <p>For the sun in heaven's heaven is Love that cannot change,</p>
- <p>And the shining of that sun is life, to all beneath its beams:</p>
- <p>Who shall arrest it in the firmament,&mdash;or drag it from its sphere?</p>
- <p>Or bid its beauty smile no more, but be extinct for ever?</p>
- <p>Yea, where God hath given, none shall take away,</p>
- <p>Nor build up limits to His love, nor bid His bounty cease;</p>
- <p>Wide, as space is peopled, endless as the empire of heaven,</p>
- <p>The river of the water of life floweth on in majesty for ever!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Why</span> should it seem a thing impossible to thee, O man of many doubts,</p>
- <p>That God shall wake the dead, and give this mortal immortality?</p>
- <p>Is it that such riches are unsearchable, the bounty too profuse?</p>
- <p>And yet, what gift, to cease or change, is worthy of the King Almighty?</p>
- <p>For remember the moment thou art not, thou mightest as well not have been;</p>
- <p>A millennium and an hour are equal in the gulph of that desolate abyss, annihilation:</p>
- <p>If Adam had existed till to-day, and to-day had perished utterly,</p>
- <p>What were his gain in length of a life, that hath passed away for ever?</p>
- <p>No tribute of thanks can exhale from the empty censer of nonentity;</p>
- <p>The Giver, with His gift reclaimed, is mulcted of all praise.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Tell</span> me, ye that strive in vain to cramp and dwarf the soul,</p>
- <p>Wherefore should it cease to be, and when shall essence die?</p>
- <p>It is,&mdash;and therefore shall be, till just obstacle opposeth:</p>
- <p>Show no cause for change, and reason leaneth to continuance.</p>
- <p>The body verily shall change; this curious house we live in</p>
- <p>Never had continuing stay, but changeth every instant:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">{302}</a></span>
- <p>But the spiritual tenant of the house abideth in unalterable consciousness,</p>
- <p>He may fly to many lands, but cannot flee himself.</p>
- <p>The soil wherein ye drop the seed, by suns or rains may vary;</p>
- <p>But the seed is the same; and soul is the seed; and flesh but its anchorage to earth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> machine may be broken, and rust corrode the springs: but can rust feed on motion?</p>
- <p>Worms may batten on the brain: but can worms gnaw the mind?</p>
- <p>Dynamics are, and dwell apart, though matter be not made;</p>
- <p>Spirit is, and can be separate, though a body were not:</p>
- <p>Power is one, be it lever, screw, or wedge; but it needeth these for illustration:</p>
- <p>Mind is one, be it casual or ideal; but it is shown in these.</p>
- <p>The creature is constructed individual, for trial of his reasonable will,</p>
- <p>Clay and soul, commingled wisely, mingled not confused:</p>
- <p>As power is not in the spring, till somewhat give it action,</p>
- <p>So, until spirit be infused, the organism lieth inergetic.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Or</span> shalt thou say that mind is the delicate offspring of matter,</p>
- <p>The bright consummate flower that must perish with its leaf?</p>
- <p>Go to: doth weight breed lightness? is freedom the atmosphere of prisons?</p>
- <p>When did the body elevate, expand, and bud the mind?</p>
- <p>Lo, a red-hot cinder flung from the furnaces of Ætna,&mdash;</p>
- <p>There is fire in that ash; but did the pumice make it?</p>
- <p>Nay, cold clod, never canst thou generate a flame,</p>
- <p>Nay, most exquisite machinery, nevermore elaborate a mind:</p>
- <p>Rather do ye battle and contend, opposite the one to the other;</p>
- <p>Till God shall stop the strife, and call the body colleague.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Garment</span> of flesh, and art thou then a vest, so tinged with subtle poison,</p>
- (Maddening tunic of the centaur,) as to kill the soul?
- <p>Not so: fruit of disobedience, rot in dissolution, as thou must,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The seed is in the core, its germ is safe, and life is in that germ:</p>
- <p>Moreover, Marah shall be sweetened; and a Good Physician</p>
- <p>Yet shall heal those gangrene wounds, the spotted plague of sin:</p>
- <p>He, through worldly trials, and the separative cleansing of the grave,</p>
- <p>Shall change its corruptible to glory, and wash that garment white.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Still,</span> is the whisper in thy heart, that oftenest the bed of death</p>
- <p>Seemeth but a sluggish ebb, of sinking soul and body?</p>
- <p>Mind dwelling, long-time, sensual in the chambers of the flesh,</p>
- <p>May slumber on in conscious sloth, and wilfully be dulled:</p>
- <p>But is it therefore nigh to dissolution, even as the body of this death?</p>
- <p>Ask the stricken conscience, gasping out its terrors;</p>
- <p>Ask the dying miser, loth to leave his gold;</p>
- <p>Ask the widowed poor, confiding her fatherless to strangers;</p>
- <p>Ask the martyr-maid, a broken reed so strong,</p>
- <p>That weak and tortured frame, with triumph on its brow!&mdash;</p>
- <p>O thou gainsayer, the finger of disease may seem to reach the soul,</p>
- <p>But it is a spiritual touch, sympathy with that which aileth:</p>
- <p>Pain or fear may dislocate and shatter this delicate machinery of nerves;</p>
- <p>But madness proveth mind: the fault is in the engine, not the impetus:</p>
- <p>Dissipate the mists of matter, lo, the soul is clear:</p>
- <p>Timour's cage bowed it in the dust; but now it goeth forth a freedman.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> more, there is reason in moralities, that the soul must live;</p>
- <p>If God be king in heaven, or have care for earth.</p>
- <p>Can wickedness have triumphed with impunity, or virtue toiled unseen?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">{304}</a></span>
- <p>Shall cruelty torture unavenged, and the innocent complain unheard?</p>
- <p>Is there no recompense for woe, must there be no other world for justice,&mdash;</p>
- <p>No hope in setting suns of good, nor terror for the evil at its zenith?</p>
- <p>How shall ye make answer unto this; a just God prospering iniquity,</p>
- <p>Wisdom encouraging the foolish, and goodness abetting the depraved!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> again; mine erring brother, pardon this abundance of my speech,</p>
- <p>Yield me thy candour and thy charity, listening with a welcome:</p>
- <p>For, even now, a thousand thoughts are trooping to my theme;</p>
- <p>O mighty theme, O feeble thoughts! Alas! who is sufficient?</p>
- <p>Judge not so high a cause by these poor words alone,</p>
- <p>For lo, the advocate hath little skill: pardon and pass on:</p>
- <p>Certify thyself with surer proofs; fledge thine own mind for flight;</p>
- <p>Think, and pray; those better proofs shall follow on with holy aspiration.</p>
- <p>Yet in my humbler grade to help thy weal and comfort,</p>
- <p>Thy weal for this and higher worlds, and comfort in thy sickness,</p>
- <p>Suffer the multitude of fancies, walking with me still in love;</p>
- <p>But tread in fear, it is holy ground,&mdash;remember, Immortality!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Wilt</span> thou argue from infirmities, thine abject evil state,</p>
- <p>As how should stricken wretched man indeed exist for ever:</p>
- <p>The brutal and besotted, the savage and the slave, the sucking infant and the idiot,</p>
- <p>The mass of mean and common minds, and all to be immortal?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Consider every beginning, how small it is and feeble:</p>
- <p>Ganges, and the rolling Mississippi sprung of brooks among the mountains;</p>
- <p>The Yew-tree of a thousand years was once a little seed,</p>
- <p>And Nero's marble Rome, a shepherd's mud-built hovel:</p>
- <p>A speck is on the tropic sky, and it groweth to the terrible tornado;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></span>
- <p>An apple, all too fair to see, destroyed a world of souls:</p>
- <p>A tender babe is born,&mdash;it is Attila, scourge of the nations!</p>
- <p>A seeming malefactor dieth,&mdash;it is Jesus, the Saviour of men!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> hive not in thy thoughts the vain and wordy notion</p>
- <p>That nothing which was born in Time can tire out the footsteps of Infinity:</p>
- <p>Reckon up a sum in numbers; where shall progression stop?</p>
- <p>The starting-post is definite and fixed, but what is the goal of numeration?</p>
- <p>So, begin upon a moment, and when shall being end?</p>
- <p>Souls emanate from God, to travel with Him equally for ever.</p>
- <p>Moreover, thou that objectest the unenterable circle of eternity,</p>
- <p>That none but He from everlasting can endure, as to a future everlasting,</p>
- <p>Consider, may it be impossible that creatures were counted in their Maker,</p>
- <p>And so, that the confines of Eternity are filled by God alone?</p>
- <p>Trust not thy soul upon a fancy: who would freight a bubble with a diamond,</p>
- <p>And launch that priceless gem on the boiling rapids of a cataract?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">If</span> then we perish not at death, but walk in spirit through the darkness,</p>
- <p>Waiting for a mansion incorruptible, whereof this body is the seed,</p>
- <p>Tell me, when shall be the period? time and its ordeals are done:</p>
- <p>The storms are passed, the night is at end, behold the Sabbath morning.</p>
- <p>Is death to be conqueror again, and claim once more the victory,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Can the enemy's corpse awaken into life, and bruise the Champion's head?</p>
- <p>Evil, terrible ensample, that foil to the attributes of Good,</p>
- <p>Is banished to its own black world, weeded out of earth and heaven:</p>
- <p>Shall that great gulf be passed, and sin be sown again?&mdash;</p>
- <p>We know but this, the book of truth proclaimeth gladly, Never!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">{306}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> remaineth the will of our God: when He repenteth of His creature,</p>
- <p>Made by self-suggested mercy, ransomed by self-sacrificing justice,&mdash;</p>
- <p>When Truth, that swore unto his neighbour, disappointeth him, and cleaveth to a lie,&mdash;</p>
- <p>When the counsels of Wisdom are confounded, and Love warreth with itself,&mdash;</p>
- <p>When the Unchangeable is changed, and the arm of Omnipotence is broken,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Then,&mdash;thy quenchless soul shall have reached the goal of its existence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">But</span> it seemeth to thy notions of the merciful and just, a false and fearful thing,</p>
- <p>To lay such a burden upon time, that eternity be built on its foundation:</p>
- <p>As if so casual good or ill should colour all the future,</p>
- <p>And the vanity of accident, or sternness of necessity, save or wreck a soul.</p>
- <p>Were it casual, vain, or stern, this might pass for truth:</p>
- <p>But all things are marshalled by Design, and carefully tended by Benevolence.</p>
- <p>O man, thy Judge is righteous,&mdash;noting, remembering, and weighing;&mdash;</p>
- <p>Want, ignorance, diversities of state, are cast into the balance of advantage:</p>
- <p>The poisonous example of a parent asketh for allowance in the child;</p>
- <p>Care, diseases, toils, and frailties,&mdash;all things are considered.</p>
- <p>And again, a mysterious Omniscience knoweth the spirits that are His,</p>
- <p>While the delicate tissues of Event are woven by the fingers of Ubiquity.</p>
- <p>Should Providence be taken by surprise from the possible impinging of an accident,</p>
- <p>One fortuitous grain might dislocate the banded universe:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></span>
- <p>The merest seeming trifle is ordered as the morning light;</p>
- <p>And He, that rideth on the hurricane, is pilot of the bubble on the breaker.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Once</span> more, consider Matter, how small a thing is father to the greatest;</p>
- <p>Thou that lightly hast regarded the results of so-called accident.</p>
- <p>A blade of grass took fire in the sun,&mdash;and the prairies are burnt to the horizon:</p>
- <p>A grain of sand may blind the eye, and madden the brain to murder:</p>
- <p>A careful fly deposited its egg in the swelling bud of an acorn,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The sapling grew,&mdash;cankrous and gnarled,&mdash;it is yonder hollow oak:</p>
- <p>A child touched a spring, and the spring closed a valve, and the labouring engine burst,&mdash;</p>
- <p>A thousand lives were in that ship,&mdash;wrecked by an infant's finger!</p>
- <p>Shall nature preach in vain? thy casualty, guided in its orbit,</p>
- <p>Though less than a mote upon the sunbeam, saileth in a fleet of worlds;</p>
- <p>That trivial cause, watered and observed of the Husbandman day by day,&mdash;</p>
- <p>In calm undeviating strength doth work its large effect.</p>
- <p>Thus, in the pettiness of life note thou seeds of grandeur,</p>
- <p>And watch the hour-glass of Time with the eyes of an heir of Immortality.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> still be clouds of witnesses,&mdash;if thou art not weary of my speech,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Flocks of thoughts adding lustre to the light, and pointing on to Life.</p>
- <p>For reflect how Truth and Goodness, well and wisely put,</p>
- <p>Commend themselves to every mind with wondrous intuition:</p>
- <p>What is this? the recognition of a standard, unwritten, natural, uniform;</p>
- <p>Telling of one common source, the root of Good and True.</p>
- <p>And if thus present soul can trace descent from Deity,</p>
- <p>Being, as it standeth, individual, a separate reasonable thing,</p>
- <p>What should hinder that its hope may not trace gladly forward,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></span>
- <p>And, in astounding parallel, like Enoch walk with God?</p>
- <p>Yea, the genealogy of soul, that vivifying breath of a Creator,</p>
- <p>Breath, no transient air, but essence, energy, and reason,</p>
- <p>Is looming on the past, and shadowing the future, sublimely as Melchisedek of old,</p>
- <p>Having not beginning, nor end of days, but present in the majesty of Peace!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O false</span> scholar, credulous in vanities, and only sceptical of truth,</p>
- <p>Wherefore toil to cheat thy soul of its birthright, Immortality?</p>
- <p>Is it for thy guilt? He pardoneth: Is it for thy frailty? He will help:</p>
- <p>Though thou fearest, He is love; and Mercy shall be deeper than Despair:</p>
- <p>Even for thy full-blown pride, is it much to be receiver of a God?</p>
- <p>And lo, thy rights, He made thee; thy claims, He hath redeemed.</p>
- <p>Hath the fair aspect of affection no beauty that thou shouldst desire it?</p>
- <p>And are those sorrows nothing, to thee that passest by?</p>
- <p>For it is Fact, immutable, that God hath dwelt in Man:</p>
- <p>With gentle generous love ennobling while He bought us.</p>
- <p>What, though thou art false, ignorant, weak and daring,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Can the sun be quenched in heaven&mdash;or only Belisarius be blind?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">But,</span> even stooping to thy folly, grant all these hopes are vain;</p>
- <p>Stultify reason, wrestle against conscience, and wither up the heart:</p>
- <p>Where is thy vast advantage?&mdash;I have all that thou hast,</p>
- <p>The buoyancy of life as strong, and term of days no shorter;</p>
- <p>My cup is full with gladness, my griefs are not more galling:</p>
- <p>And thus, we walk together, even to the gates of death:</p>
- <p>There, (if not also on my journey, blessing every step,</p>
- <p>Gladdening with light, and quickening with love, and killing all my cares,)</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
- <p>There,&mdash;while thou art quailing, or sullenly expecting to be nothing,&mdash;</p>
- <p>There,&mdash;is found my gain; I triumph, where thou tremblest.</p>
- <p>Grant all my solace is a lie, yet it is a fountain of delight,</p>
- <p>A spice in every pleasure, and a balm for every pain:</p>
- <p>O precious wise delusion, scattering both misery and sin,&mdash;</p>
- <p>O vile and silly truth, depraving while it curseth!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Darkling</span> child of knowledge, commune with Socrates and Cicero,</p>
- <p>They had no prejudice of birth, no dull parental warpings;</p>
- <p>See, those lustrous minds anticipate the dawning day,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Whilst thou, poor mole, art burrowing back to darkness from the light.</p>
- <p>I will not urge a revelation, mercies, miracles, and martyrs,</p>
- <p>But, after twice a thousand years, go, learn thou of the pagan:</p>
- <p>It were happier and wiser even among fools, to cling to the shadow of a hope,</p>
- <p>Than, in the company of sages, to win the substance of despair;</p>
- <p>But here, the sages hope; despair is with the fools,</p>
- <p>The base bad hearts, the stolid heads, the sensual and the selfish.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> wilt thou, sorry scorner, mock the phrase, despair?</p>
- <p>Despair for those who die and live,&mdash;for me, I live and die:</p>
- <p>What have I to do with dread?&mdash;my taper must go out;&mdash;</p>
- <p>I nurse no silly hopes, and therefore feel no fears:</p>
- <p>I am hastening to an end.&mdash;O false and feeble answer:</p>
- <p>For hope is in thee still, and fear, a racking deep anxiety.</p>
- <p>Erring brother, listen: and take thine answer from the ancients:</p>
- <p>Consider every end, that it is but the end of a beginning.</p>
- <p>All things work in circles; weariness induceth unto rest,</p>
- <p>Rest invigorateth labour, and labour causeth weariness:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
- <p>War produceth peace, and peace is wanton unto war:</p>
- <p>Light dieth into darkness, and night dawneth into day:</p>
- <p>The rotting jungle reeds scatter fertility around;</p>
- <p>The buffalo's dead carcase hath quickened life in millions:</p>
- <p>The end of toil is gain, the end of gain is pleasure,</p>
- <p>Pleasure tendeth unto waste, and waste commandeth toil.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">So,</span> is death an end,&mdash;but it breedeth an infinite beginning;</p>
- <p>Limits are for time, and death killed time: Eternity's beginning is for ever.</p>
- <p>Ambition, hath it any goal indeed? is not all fruition, disappointment?</p>
- <p>A step upon the ladder, and another, and another,&mdash;we start from every end?</p>
- <p>Look to the eras of mortality, babe, student, man,</p>
- <p>The husband, the father, the death-bed of a saint,&mdash;and is it then an end?</p>
- <p>That common climax, Death, shall it lead to nothing?</p>
- <p>How strong a root of causes flowering a consequence of vapour:</p>
- <p>That solid chain of facts, is it to be snapped for ever?</p>
- <p>How stout a show of figures, weakly summing to nonentity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Or</span> haply, Death, in the doublings of thy thought, shall seem continuous ending;</p>
- <p>A dull eternal slumber, not an end abrupt.</p>
- <p>O most futile chrysalis, wherefore dost thou sleep?</p>
- <p>Dreamless, unconscious, never to awake,&mdash;what object in such slumber?</p>
- <p>If thou art still to live, it may as well be wakefully as sleeping:</p>
- <p>How grovelling must that spirit be, to need eternal sleep!</p>
- <p>Or was indeed the toil of life so heavy and so long,</p>
- <p>That nevermore can rest refresh thine overburdened soul?&mdash;</p>
- <p>Sleep is a recreance to body, but when was mind asleep?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
- <p>Even in a swoon it dreameth, though all be forgotten afterward:</p>
- <p>The muscles seek relaxing, and the irritable nerves ask peace;</p>
- <p>But life is a constant force, spirit an unquietable impetus:</p>
- <p>The eye may wear out as a telescope, and the brain work slow as a machine,</p>
- <p>But soul unwearied, and for ever, is capable of effort unimpaired.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">I live,</span> move, am conscious: what shall bar my being?</p>
- <p>Where is the rude hand, to rend this tissue of existence?</p>
- <p>Not thine, shadowy Death, what art thou but a phantom?</p>
- <p>Not thine, foul Corruption, what art thou but a fear?</p>
- <p>For death is merely absent life, as darkness absent light;</p>
- <p>Not even a suspension, for the life hath sailed away, steering gladly somewhere.</p>
- <p>And corruption, closely noted, is but a dissolving of the parts,</p>
- <p>The parts remain, and nothing lost, to build a better whole.</p>
- <p>Moreover, mind is unity, however versatile and rapid;</p>
- <p>Thou canst not entertain two coincident ideas, although they quickly follow:</p>
- <p>And Unity hath no parts, so that there is nothing to dissolve:</p>
- <p>An element is still unchanged in every searching solvent.</p>
- <p>Who then shall bid me be annulled,&mdash;He that gave me being?</p>
- <p>Amen, if God so will; I know that will is love:</p>
- <p>But love hath promised life, and therefore I shall live;</p>
- <p>So long as He is God, I shall be His Creature!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">And</span> here, shrewd reasoner, so eager to prove that thou must perish,</p>
- <p>I note a sneer upon thy lip, and ridicule is haply on thy tongue:</p>
- <p>How, said he,&mdash;creature of a God, and are not all His creatures,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span>
- <p>The lion, and the gnat,&mdash;yea, the mushroom, and the crystal,&mdash;have all these a soul?</p>
- <p>Thy fancies tend to prove too much, and overshoot the mark:</p>
- <p>If I die not with brutes, then brutes must live with me?&mdash;</p>
- <p>I dare not tell thee that they will, for the word is not in my commission;</p>
- <p>But of the twain it is the likelier; continuance is the chance:</p>
- <p>Men, dying in their sins, are likened unto beasts that perish;</p>
- <p>They are dark, animal, insensate, but have they not a lurking soul?</p>
- <p>The spirit of a man goeth upward, reasonable, apprehending God;</p>
- <p>The spirit of a beast goeth downward, sensual, doting on the creature:</p>
- <p>Who told thee they die at dissolution?&mdash;boldly think it out,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The multitude of flies, and the multitude of herbs, the world with all its beings:</p>
- <p>Is Infinity too narrow, Omnipotence too weak, and Love so anxious to destroy,</p>
- <p>Doth Wisdom change its plan, and a Maker cancel His created?</p>
- <p>God's will may compass all things, to fashion and to nullify at pleasure:</p>
- <p>Yet are there many thoughts of hope, that all which are shall live.</p>
- <p>True, there is no conscience in the brute, beyond some educated habit,</p>
- <p>They lay them down without a fear, and wake without a hope:</p>
- <p>Hunger and pain is of the animal: but when did they reckon or compare?</p>
- <p>They live, idealess, in instinct; and while they breathe they gain:</p>
- <p>The master is an idol to his dog, who cannot rise beyond him;</p>
- <p>And void of capability for God, there would seem small cause for an infinity.</p>
- <p>Therefore, caviller, my poor thoughts dare not grant they live:</p>
- <p>But is it not a great thing to assume their annihilation&mdash;and thine own?</p>
- <p>Would it be much if a speck on space, this globe with all its millions,</p>
- <p>Verily, after its pollution, were suffered to exist in purity?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></span>
- <p>Or much, if guiltless creatures, that were cruelly entreated upon earth,</p>
- <p>Found some commensurate reward in lower joys hereafter?</p>
- <p>Or much, if a Creator, prodigal of life, and filled with the profundity of love,</p>
- <p>Rejoice in all creatures of His skill, and lead them to perfection in their kind?</p>
- <p>O man, there are many marvels; yet life is more a mystery than death:</p>
- <p>For death may be some stagnant life,&mdash;but life is present God!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Many</span> are the lurking-holes of evil; who shall search them out?</p>
- <p>Who so skilled to cut away the cancer with its fibres?</p>
- <p>For wily minds with sinuous ease escape from lie to lie;</p>
- <p>And cowards driven from the trench steal back to hide again.</p>
- <p>Vain were the battle, if a warrior, having slain his foes,</p>
- <p>Shall turn and find them vital still, unharmed, yea, unashamed:</p>
- <p>For Error, dark magician, daily cast out killed,</p>
- <p>Quickeneth animate anew beneath the midnight moon:</p>
- <p>Once and again, once and again, hath reason answered wisely;</p>
- <p>But not the less with brazen front doth folly urge her questions.</p>
- <p>It were but unprofitable toil, a stand-up fight with unbelief:</p>
- <p>When was there candour in a caviller, and who can satisfy the faithless?</p>
- <p>Too long, O truant from the fold, have I tracked thy devious paths;</p>
- <p>Too long, treacherous deserter, fought thee as a noble foeman:</p>
- <p>Haply, my small art, and an arm too weakly for its weapon,</p>
- <p>Hath failed to pierce thine iron coat, and reach thy stricken soul:</p>
- <p>Haply, the fervour of my speech, and too patient sifting of thy fancies,</p>
- <p>Shall tend to make thee prize them more, as worthier and wiser:</p>
- <p>Go to: be mine the gain: we measure swords no more;</p>
- <p>Go,&mdash;and a word go with thee,&mdash;Man, thou <small>ART</small> Immortal!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Child</span> of light, and student in the truth, too long have I forgotten thee:</p>
- <p>Lo, after parley with an alien, let me hold sweet converse with a brother.</p>
- <p>Glorious hopes and ineffable imaginings, crowd our holy theme,</p>
- <p>Fear hath been slaughtered on the portal, and Doubt driven back to darkness:</p>
- <p>For Christ hath died, and we in Him; by faith His All is ours;</p>
- <p>Cross and crown, and love, and life; and we shall reign in Him!</p>
- <p>Yea, there is a fitness and a beauty in ascribing immortality to mind,</p>
- <p>That its energies and lofty aspirations may have scope for indefinite expansion.</p>
- <p>To learn all things is privilege of reason, and that with a growing capability,</p>
- <p>But in this age of toil and time we scarce attain to alphabets:</p>
- <p>How hardly in the midst of our hurry, and jostled by the cares of life,</p>
- <p>Shall a man turn and stop to consider mighty secrets;</p>
- <p>With barely hours, and barely powers, to fill up daily duties,</p>
- <p>How small the glimpse of knowledge his wondering eye can catch!</p>
- <p>And knowledge is a noting of the order wherein God's attributes evolve,</p>
- <p>Therefore worthy of the creature, worthy of an angel's seeking;</p>
- <p>Yea, and human knowledge, meagre though the harvest,</p>
- <p>Hath its roots, both deep and strong; but the plants are exotic to the climate;</p>
- <p>All we seem to know demand a longer learning,</p>
- <p>History and science, and prophecy and art, are workings all of God:</p>
- <p>And there are galaxies of globes, millions of unimagined beings,</p>
- <p>Other senses, wondrous sounds, and thoughts of thrilling fire,</p>
- <p>Powers of strange might, quickening unknown elements,</p>
- <p>And attributes and energies of God which man may never guess.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Not</span> in vain, O brother, hath soul the spurs of enterprize,</p>
- <p>Nor aimlessly panteth for adventure, waiting at the cave of mystery:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
- <p>Not in vain the cup of curiosity, sweet and richly spiced,</p>
- <p>Is ruby to the sight, and ambrosia to the taste, and redolent with all fragrance:</p>
- <p>Thou shalt drink, and deeply, filling the mind with marvels;</p>
- <p>Thou shalt watch no more, lingering, disappointed of thy hope;</p>
- <p>Thou shalt roam where road is none, a traveller untrammelled,</p>
- <p>Speeding at a wish, emancipate, to where the stars are suns!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Count,</span> count your hopes, heirs of immortality and love;</p>
- <p>And hear my kindred faith, and turn again to bless me.</p>
- <p>For lo, my trust is strong to dwell in many worlds,</p>
- <p>And cull of many brethren there, sweet knowledge ever new:</p>
- <p>I yearn for realms where fancy shall be filled, and the ecstasies of freedom shall be felt,</p>
- <p>And the soul reign gloriously, risen to its royal destinies:</p>
- <p>I look to recognize again, through the beautiful mask of their perfection,</p>
- <p>The dear familiar faces I have somewhile loved on earth:</p>
- <p>I long to talk with grateful tongue of storms and perils past,</p>
- <p>And praise the mighty Pilot that hath steered us through the rapids:</p>
- <p>He shall be the focus of it all, the very heart of gladness,&mdash;</p>
- <p>My soul is athirst for God, the God who dwelt in Man!</p>
- <p>Prophet, priest, and king, the sacrifice, the substitute, the Saviour,</p>
- <p>Rapture of the blessed in the hunted One of earth, the Pardoner in the victim;</p>
- <p>How many centuries of joy concentrate in that theme,</p>
- <p>How often a Methusalem might count his thousand years, and leave it unexhausted!</p>
- <p>And lo, the heavenly Jerusalem, with all its gates one pearl,</p>
- <p>That pearl of countless price, the door by which we entered,&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
- <p>Come, tread the golden streets, and join that glorious throng,</p>
- <p>The happy ones of heaven and earth, ten thousand times ten thousand;</p>
- <p>Hark, they sing that song,&mdash;and cast their crowns before Him;</p>
- <p>Their souls alight with love,&mdash;Glory, and Praise, and Immortality!&mdash;</p>
- <p>Veil thine eyes: no son of time may see that holy vision,</p>
- <p>And even the seraph at thy side hath covered his face with wings.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Doth</span> he not speak parables?&mdash;each one goeth on his way,</p>
- <p>Ye that hear, and I that counsel, go on our ways forgetful.</p>
- <p>For the terrible realities whereto we tend, are hidden from our eyes,</p>
- <p>We know, but heed them not, and walk as if the temporal were all things.</p>
- <p>Vanities, buzzing on the ear, fill its drowsy chambers,</p>
- <p>Slow to dread those coming fears, the thunder and the trumpet;</p>
- <p>Motes, steaming on the sight, dim our purblind eyes,</p>
- <p>Dark to see the ponderous orb of nearing Immortality:</p>
- <p>Hemmed in by hostile foes, the trifler is busied on an epigram;</p>
- <p>The dull ox, driven to slaughter, careth but for pasture by the way.</p>
- <p>Alas, that the precious things of truth, and the everlasting hills,</p>
- <p>The mighty hopes we spake of, and the consciousness we feel,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Alas, that all the future, and its adamantine facts,</p>
- <p>Clouded by the present with intoxicating fumes,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Should seem even to us, the great expectant heirs,</p>
- <p>To us, the responsible and free, fearful sons of reason,</p>
- <p>Only as a lovely song, sweet sounds of solemn music,</p>
- <p>A pleasant voice, and nothing more,&mdash;doth he not speak parables?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Look</span> to thy soul, O man, for none can be surety for his brother:</p>
- <p>Behold, for heaven&mdash;or for hell,&mdash;thou canst not escape from Immortality!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF IDEAS.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="80" height="205" alt="" src="images/image90cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Mind</span>
- is like a volatile essence, flitting hither and thither,</p>
- <p>A solitary sentinel of the fortress body, to show himself everywhere by turns:</p>
- <p>Mind is indivisible and instant, with neither parts nor organs,</p>
- <p>That it doeth, it doth quickly, but the whole mind doth it:</p>
- <p>An active versatile agent, untiring in the principle of energy,</p>
- <p>Nor space, nor time, nor rest, nor toil, can affect the tenant of the brain;</p>
- <p>His dwelling may verily be shattered, and the furniture thereof be disarranged,</p>
- <p>But the particle of Deity in man slumbereth not, neither can be wearied:</p>
- <p>However swift to change, even as the field of a kaleidoscope,</p>
- <p>It taketh in but one idea at once, moulded for the moment to its likeness:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">{318}</a></span>
- <p>Mind is as the quicksilver, which, poured from vessel to vessel,</p>
- <p>Instantly seizeth on a shape, and as instantly again discardeth it;</p>
- <p>For it is an apprehensive power, closing on the properties of Matter,</p>
- <p>Expanding to enwrap a world, collapsing to prison up an atom:</p>
- <p>As, by night, thine irritable eyes may have seen strange changing figures,</p>
- <p>Now a wheel, now suddenly a point, a line, a curve, a zigzag,</p>
- <p>A maze ever altering, as the dance of gnats upon a sunbeam,</p>
- <p>Swift, intricate, neither to be prophesied, nor to be remembered in succession,</p>
- <p>So, the mind of a man, single, and perpetually moving,</p>
- <p>Flickereth about from thought to thought, changed with each idea;</p>
- <p>For the passing second metamorphosed to the image of that within its ken,</p>
- <p>And throwing its immediate perceptions into each cause of contemplation.</p>
- <p>It shall regard a tree; and unconsciously, in separate review,</p>
- <p>Embrace its colour, shape, and use, whole and individual conceptions;</p>
- <p>It shall read or hear of crime, and cast itself into the commission;</p>
- <p>It shall note a generous deed, and glow for a moment as the doer;</p>
- <p>It shall imagine pride or pleasure, treading on the edges of temptation;</p>
- <p>Or heed of God and of His Christ, and grow transformed to glory.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Therefore,</span> it is wise and well to guide the mind aright,</p>
- <p>That its aptness may be sensitive to good, and shrink with antipathy from evil:</p>
- <p>For use will mould and mark it, or nonusage dull and blunt it;&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
- <p>So to talk of spirit by analogy with substance;</p>
- <p>And analogy is a truer guide, than many teachers tell of,</p>
- <p>Similitudes are scattered round, to help us, not to hurt us;</p>
- <p>Moses, in his every type, and the Greater than Moses, in His parables,</p>
- <p>Preach, in terms that all may learn, the philosophic lessons of analogy:</p>
- <p>And here, in a topic immaterial, the likeness of analogy is just;</p>
- <p>By habits, knit the nerves of mind, and train the gladiator shrewdly:</p>
- <p>For thought shall strengthen thinking, and imagery speed imagination,</p>
- <p>Until thy spiritual inmate shall have swelled to the giant of Otranto.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless,</span> heed well, that this Athlete, growing in thy brain,</p>
- <p>Be a wholesome Genius, not a cursed Afrite:</p>
- <p>And see thou discipline his strength, and point his aim discreetly;</p>
- <p>Feed him on humility and holy things, weaned from covetous desires;</p>
- <p>Hour by hour and day by day, ply him with ideas of excellence,</p>
- <p>Dragging forth the evil but to loathe, as a Spartan's drunken Helot:</p>
- <p>And win, by gradual allurements, the still expanding soul,</p>
- <p>To rise from a contemplated universe, even to the Hand that made it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A common</span> mind perceiveth not beyond his eyes and ears:</p>
- <p>The palings of the park of sense enthral this captured roebuck:</p>
- <p>And still, though fettered in the flesh, he doth not feel his chains,</p>
- <p>Externals are the world to him, and circumstance his atmosphere.</p>
- <p>Therefore tangible pleasures are enough for the animal man;</p>
- <p>He is swift to speak and slow to think, dreading his own dim conscience;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span>
- <p>And solitude is terrible, and exile worse than death,</p>
- <p>He cannot dwell apart, nor breathe at a distance from the crowd.</p>
- <p>But minds of nobler stamp, and chiefest the mint-marked of heaven,</p>
- <p>Walk independent, by themselves, freely manumitted of externals:</p>
- <p>They carry viands with them, and need no refreshment by the way,</p>
- <p>Nor drink of other wells than their own inner fountain.</p>
- <p>Strange shall it seem how little such a man will lean upon the accidents of life,</p>
- <p>He is winged and needeth not a staff; if it break, he shall not fall:</p>
- <p>And lightly perchance doth he remember the stale trivialities around him,</p>
- <p>He liveth in the realm of thought, beyond the world of things;</p>
- <p>These are but transient Matter, and himself enduring Spirit:</p>
- <p>And worldliness will laugh to scorn that sublimated wisdom.</p>
- <p>His eyes may open on a prison-cell, but the bare walls glow with imagery;</p>
- <p>His ears may be filled with execration, but are listening to the music of sweet thoughts;</p>
- <p>He may dwell in a hovel with a hero's heart, and canopy his penury with peace,</p>
- <p>For mind is a kingdom to the man, who gathereth his pleasure from Ideas.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="215" height="248" alt="" src="images/image91ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF NAMES.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Adam</span> gave the name, when the Lord had made His creature,</p>
- <p>For God led them in review, to see what man would call them.</p>
- <p>As they struck his senses, he proclaimed their sounds,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></span>
- <p>A name for the distinguishing of each, a numeral by which it should be known:</p>
- <p>He specified the partridge by her cry, and the forest prowler by his roaring,</p>
- <p>The tree by its use, and the flower by its beauty, and everything according to its truth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is an arbitrary name; whereunto the idea attacheth;</p>
- <p>And there is a reasonable name, linking its fitness to idea:</p>
- <p>Yet shall these twain run in parallel courses,</p>
- <p>Neither shall thou readily discern the habit from the nature.</p>
- <p>For mind is apt and quick to wed ideas and names together,</p>
- <p>Nor stoppeth its perception to be curious of priorities;</p>
- <p>And there is but little in the sound, as some have vainly fancied,</p>
- <p>The same tone in different tongues shall be suitable to opposite ideas:</p>
- <p>Yea, take an ensample in thine own; consider similar words:</p>
- <p>How various and contrary the thoughts those kindred names produce:</p>
- <p>A house shall seem a fitting word to call a roomy dwelling,</p>
- <p>Yet there is a like propriety in the small smooth sound, a mouse:</p>
- <p>Mountain, as if of a necessity, is a word both mighty and majestic,&mdash;</p>
- <p>What heed ye then of Fountain?&mdash;flowing silver in the sun.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Many</span> a fair flower is burdened with preposterous appellatives,</p>
- <p>Which the wiser simplicity of rustics entitled by its beauties;</p>
- <p>And often the conceit of science, loving to be thought cosmopolite,</p>
- <p>Shall mingle names of every clime, alike obscure to each.</p>
- <p>There is wisdom in calling a thing fitly; name should note particulars</p>
- <p>Through a character obvious to all men, and worthy of their instant acceptation.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></span>
- <p>The herbalist had a simple cause for every word upon his catalogue,</p>
- <p>But now the mouth of Botany is filled with empty sound;</p>
- <p>And many a peasant hath an answer on his tongue, concerning some vexed flower,</p>
- <p>Shrewder than the centipede phrase, wherewithal philosophers invest it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> that, the foolishness of pride, and flatteries of cringing homage,</p>
- <p>Strew with chaff the threshing-floors of science; names perplex them all:</p>
- <p>The entomologist, who hath pried upon an insect, straightway shall endow it with his name;</p>
- <p>It had many qualities and marks of note,&mdash;but in chief, a vain observer:</p>
- <p>The geographer shall journey to the pole, through biting frost and desolation,</p>
- <p>And, for some simple patron's sake, shall name that land, the happy:</p>
- <p>The fossilist hath found a bone, the rib of some huge lizard,</p>
- <p>And forthwith standeth to it sponsor, to tack himself on reptile immortalities:</p>
- <p>The sportsman, hunting at the Cape, found some strange-horned antelope,</p>
- <p>The spots are new, the fame is cheap, and so his name is added.</p>
- <p>Thus, obscurities encumber knowledge, even by the vanity of men</p>
- <p>Who play into each other's hand the game of giving names.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Various</span> are the names of men, and drawn from different wells;</p>
- <p>Aspects of body, or characters of mind, the creature's first idea:</p>
- <p>And some have sprung of trades, and some of dignities or office;</p>
- <p>Other some added to a father's, and yet more growing from a place:</p>
- <p>Animal creation, with sciences, and things,&mdash;their composites, and near associations,</p>
- <p>Contributed their symbollings of old, wherewith to title men:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
- <p>And heraldry set upon its cresture the figured attributes as ensigns</p>
- <p>By which, as by a name concrete, its bearer should be known.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Egypt</span> opened on the theme, dressing up her gods in qualities;</p>
- <p>Horns of power, feathers of the swift, mitres of catholic dominion,</p>
- <p>The sovereign asp, the circle everlasting, the crook and thong of justice,</p>
- <p>By many mystic shapes and sounds displayed the idol's name.</p>
- <p>Thereafter, high-plumed warriors, the chieftains of Etruria and Troy,</p>
- <p>And Xerxes, urging on his millions to the tomb of pride, Thermopylæ,</p>
- <p>And Hiero with his bounding ships, all figured at the prow,</p>
- <p>And Rome's Prætorian standards, piled with strange devices,</p>
- <p>And stout crusaders pressing to the battle, clad in sable mail;</p>
- <p>These all in their speaking symbols, earned, or wore, a name.</p>
- <p>Eve; the mother of all living, and Abraham, father of a multitude,</p>
- <p>Jacob, the supplanter, and David, the beloved, and all the worthies of old time,</p>
- <p>Noah, who came for consolation, and Benoni, son of sorrow,</p>
- <p>Kings and prophets, children of the East, owned each his title of significance.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> be names of high descent, and thereby storied honours;</p>
- <p>Names of fair renown, and therein characters of merit:</p>
- <p>But to lend the lowborn noble names, is to shed upon them ridicule and evil;</p>
- <p>Yea, many weeds run rank in pride, if men have dubbed them cedars.</p>
- <p>And to herald common mediocrity with the noisy notes of fame,</p>
- <p>Tendeth to its deeper scorn; as if it were to call the mole a mammoth.</p>
- <p>Yet shall ye find the trader's babe dignified with sounding titles,</p>
- <p>And little hath the father guessed the harm he did his child:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span>
- <p>For either may they breed him discontent, a peevish repining at his station,</p>
- <p>Or point the finger of despite at the mule in the trappings of an elephant:</p>
- <p>And it is a kind of theft to filch appellations from the famous,</p>
- <p>A soiling of the shrines of praise with folly's vulgar herd.</p>
- <p>Prudence hath often gone ashamed for the name they added to his father's,</p>
- <p>If minds of mark and great achievements bore it well before;</p>
- <p>For he walketh as the jay in the fable, though not by his own folly,</p>
- <p>Another's fault hath compassed his misfortune, making him a martyr to his name.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Who</span> would call the tench a whale, or style a torch, Orion?</p>
- <p>Yet many a silly parent hath dealt likewise with his nurseling.</p>
- <p>Give thy child a fit distinguishment, making him sole tenant of a name,</p>
- <p>For it were a sore hindrance to hold it in common with a hundred:</p>
- <p>In the Babel of confused identities fame is little feasible,</p>
- <p>The felon shall detract from the philanthropist, and the sage share honours with the simple:</p>
- <p>Still, in thy title of distinguishment, fall not into arrogant assumption,</p>
- <p>Steering from caprice and affectations; and for all thou doest, have a reason.</p>
- <p>He that is ambitious for his son, should give him untried names,</p>
- <p>For those that have served other men, haply may injure by their evils;</p>
- <p>Or otherwise may hinder by their glories; therefore, set him by himself,</p>
- <p>To win for his individual name some clear specific praise.</p>
- <p>There were nine Homers, all goodly sons of song, but where is any record of the eight?</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>
- <p>One grew to fame, an Aaron's rod, and swallowed up his brethren:</p>
- <p>Who knoweth? more distinctly titled, those dead eight had lived;</p>
- <p>But the censers were ranged in a circle to mingle their sweets without a difference.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Art</span> thou named of a common crowd, and sensible of high aspirings?</p>
- <p>It is hard for thee to rise,&mdash;yet strive: thou mayest be among them a Musæus.</p>
- <p>Art thou named of a family, the same in successive generations?</p>
- <p>It is open to thee still to earn for epithets, such an one, the good or great.</p>
- <p>Art thou named foolishly? Show that thou art wiser than thy fathers;</p>
- <p>Live to shame their vanity or sin by dutiful devotion to thy sphere.</p>
- <p>Art thou named discreetly? It is well, the course is free;</p>
- <p>No competitor shall claim thy colours, neither fix his faults upon thee:</p>
- <p>Hasten to the goal of fame between the posts of duty,</p>
- <p>And win a blessing from the world, that men may love thy name:</p>
- <p>Yea, that the unction of its praise, in fragrance well deserving,</p>
- <p>May float adown the stream of time, like ambergris at sea;</p>
- <p>So thy sons may tell their sons, and those may teach their children,</p>
- <p>He died in goodness, as he lived;&mdash;and left us his good name.</p>
- <p>And more than these: there is a roll whereon thy name is written;</p>
- <p>See that, in the Book of Doom, that name is fixed in light:</p>
- <p>Then, safe within a better home, where time and its titles are not found,</p>
- <p>God will give thee His new Name, and write it on thy heart:</p>
- <p>A Name better than of sons, a Name dearer than of daughters,</p>
- <p>A Name of union, peace, and praise, as numbered in thy God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF THINGS.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="78" height="245" alt="" src="images/image92cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Taken</span>
- separately from all substance, and flying with the feathered flock of thoughts,</p>
- <p>The idea of a thing hath the nature of its Soul, a separate seeming essence:</p>
- <p>Intimately linked to the idea, suggesting many qualities,</p>
- <p>The name of a thing hath the nature of its Mind, an intellectual recorder:</p>
- <p>And the matter of a thing, concrete, is a Body to the perfect creature,</p>
- <p>Compacted three in one, as all things else within the universe.</p>
- <p>Nothing canst thou add to them, and nothing take away, for all have these proportions,</p>
- <p>The thought, the word, the form, combining in the Thing:</p>
- <p>All separate, yet harmonizing well, and mingled each with other,</p>
- <p>One whole in several parts, yet each part spreading to a whole:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
- <p>The idea is a whole; and the meaning phrase that spake idea, a whole;</p>
- <p>And the matter, as ye see it, is a whole; the mystery of true triunity:</p>
- <p>Yea, there is even a deeper mystery,&mdash;which none, I wot, can fathom,</p>
- <p>Matter, different from properties whereby the solid substance is described;</p>
- <p>For, size and weight, cohesion and the like, live distinct from matter,</p>
- <p>Yet who can imagine matter, unendowed with size and weight?</p>
- <p>As in the spiritual, so in the material, man must rest with patience,</p>
- <p>And wait for other eyes wherewith to read the books of God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Men</span> have talked learnedly of atoms, as if matter could be ever indivisible;</p>
- <p>They talk, but ill are skilled to teach, and darken truth by fancies:</p>
- <p>An atom by our grosser sense was never yet conceived,</p>
- <p>And nothing can be thought so small, as not to be divided:</p>
- <p>For an atom runneth to infinity, and never shall be caught in space,</p>
- <p>And a molecule is no more indivisible than Saturn's belted orb.</p>
- <p>Things intangible, multiplied by multitudes, never will amass to substance,</p>
- <p>Neither can a thing which may be touched, be made of impalpable proportions;</p>
- <p>The sum of indivisibles must needs be indivisible, as adding many nothings,</p>
- <p>And the building up of atoms into matter is but a silly sophism;</p>
- <p>Lucretius, and keen Anaximander, and many that have followed in their thoughts,</p>
- (For error hath a long black shadow, dimming light for ages,)
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
- <p>In the foolishness of men without a God fancied to fashion Matter</p>
- <p>Of intangibles, and therefore uncohering, indivisibles, and therefore Spirit.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Things</span> breed thoughts; therefore at Thebes and Heliopolis,</p>
- <p>In hieroglyphic sculptures are the priestly secrets written:</p>
- <p>Things breed thoughts; therefore was the Athens of idolatry</p>
- <p>Set with carved images, frequent as the trees of Academus:</p>
- <p>Things breed thoughts; therefore the Brahmin and the Burman</p>
- <p>With mythologic shapes adorn their coarse pantheon:</p>
- <p>Things breed thoughts; therefore the statue and the picture,</p>
- <p>Relics, rosaries, and miracles in act, quicken the Papist in his worship:</p>
- <p>Things breed thoughts; therefore the lovers at their parting,</p>
- <p>Interchanged with tearful smiles the dear reminding tokens:</p>
- <p>Things breed thoughts; therefore when the clansman met his foe,</p>
- <p>The bloodstained claymore in his hand revived the memories of vengeance.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Things</span> teach with double force; through the animal eye, and through the mind,</p>
- <p>And the eye catcheth in an instant, what the ear shall not learn within an hour.</p>
- <p>Thence is the potency of travel, the precious might of its advantages</p>
- <p>To compensate its dissipative harm, its toil and cost and danger.</p>
- <p>Ulysses, wandering to many shores, lived in many cities,</p>
- <p>And thereby learnt the minds of men, and stored his own more richly:</p>
- <p>Herodotus, the accurate and kindly, spake of that he saw,</p>
- <p>And reaped his knowledge on the spot, in fertile fields of Egypt:</p>
- <p>Lycurgus culled from every clime the golden fruits of justice;</p>
- <p>And Plato roamed through foreign lands, to feed on truth in all.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">{330}</a></span>
- <p>For travel, conversant with Things, bringeth them in contact with the mind;</p>
- <p>We breathe the wholesome atmosphere about ungarbled truth:</p>
- <p>Pictures of fact are painted on the eye, to decorate the house of intellect,</p>
- <p>Rather than visions of fancy, filling all the chambers with a vapour.</p>
- <p>For, in Ideas, the great mind will exaggerate, and the lesser extenuate truth;</p>
- <p>But in Things the one is chastened, and the other quickened, to equality:</p>
- <p>And in Names,&mdash;though a property be told, rather than some arbitrary accident,</p>
- <p>Still shall the thought be vague or false, if none have seen the Thing:</p>
- <p>For in Things the property with accident standeth in a mass concrete,</p>
- <p>These cannot cheat the sense, nor elude the vigilance of spirit.</p>
- <p>Travel is a ceaseless fount of surface education,</p>
- <p>But its wisdom will be simply superficial, if thou add not thoughts to things:</p>
- <p>Yet, aided by the varnish of society, things may serve for thoughts,</p>
- <p>Till many dullards that have seen the world shall pass for scholars:</p>
- <p>Because one single glance will conquer all descriptions,</p>
- <p>Though graphic, these left some unsaid, though true, these tended to some error;</p>
- <p>And the most witless eye that saw, had a juster notion of its object,</p>
- <p>Than the shrewdest mind that heard and shaped its gathered thoughts of Things.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></span></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="264" height="352" alt="" src="images/image93r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>OF FAITH.</h3>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="upper-case">Confidence</span> was bearer of the palm; for it looked like conviction of desert:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">{332}</a></span>
- <p>And where the strong is well assured, the weaker soon allow it.</p>
- <p>Majesty and Beauty are commingled, in moving with immutable decision,</p>
- <p>And well may charm the coward hearts that turn and hide for fear.</p>
- <p>Faith, firmness, confidence, consistency,&mdash;these are well allied;</p>
- <p>Yea, let a man press on in aught, he shall not lack of honour:</p>
- <p>For such an one seemeth as superior to the native instability of creatures;</p>
- <p>That he doeth, he doeth as a god, and men will marvel at his courage.</p>
- <p>Even in crimes, a partial praise cannot be denied to daring,</p>
- <p>And many fearless chiefs have won the friendship of a foe.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Confidence</span> is conqueror of men; victorious both over them and in them;</p>
- <p>The iron will of one stout heart shall make a thousand quail:</p>
- <p>A feeble dwarf, dauntlessly resolved, will turn the tide of battle,</p>
- <p>And rally to a nobler strife the giants that had fled;</p>
- <p>The tenderest child, unconscious of a fear, will shame the man to danger,</p>
- <p>And when he dared it, danger died, and faith had vanquished fear.</p>
- <p>Boldness is akin to power: yea, because ignorance is weakness,</p>
- <p>Knowledge with unshrinking might will nerve the vigorous hand:</p>
- <p>Boldness hath a startling strength; the mouse may fright a lion,</p>
- <p>And oftentimes the horned herd is scared by some brave cur.</p>
- <p>Courage hath analogy with faith, for it standeth both in animal and moral;</p>
- <p>The true is mindful of a God, the false is stout in self:</p>
- <p>But true or false, the twain are faith; and faith worketh wonders:</p>
- <p>Never was a marvel done upon the earth, but it had sprung of faith:</p>
- <p>Nothing noble, generous, or great, but faith was the root of the achievement;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
- <p>Nothing comely, nothing famous, but its praise is faith.</p>
- <p>Leonidas fought in human faith, as Joshua in divine:</p>
- <p>Xenophon trusted to his skill, and the sons of Mattathias to their cause:</p>
- <p>In faith Columbus found a path across those untried waters;</p>
- <p>The heroines of Arc and Saragossa fought in earthly faith:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
- <p>Tell was strong, and Alfred great, and Luther wise, by faith;</p>
- <p>Margaret by faith was valiant for her son, and Wallace mighty for his people:</p>
- <p>Faith in his reason made Socrates sublime, as faith in his science, Galileo:</p>
- <p>Ambassadors in faith are bold, and unreproved for boldness:</p>
- <p>Faith urged Fabius to delays, and sent forth Hannibal to Cannæ:</p>
- <p>Cæsar at the Rubicon, Miltiades at Marathon; both were sped by faith.</p>
- <p>I set not all in equal spheres: I number not the martyr with the patriot;</p>
- <p>I class not the hero with his horse, because the twain have courage;</p>
- <p>But only for ensample and instruction, that all things stand by faith;</p>
- <p>Albeit faith of divers kinds, and varying in degree.</p>
- <p>There is a faith towards men, and there is a faith towards God;</p>
- <p>The latter is the gold and the former is the brass; but both are sturdy metal:</p>
- <p>And the brass mingled with the gold floweth into rich Corinthian;</p>
- <p>A substance bright and hard and keen, to point Achilles' spear:</p>
- <p>So shall thou stop the way against the foes that hem thee;</p>
- <p>Trust in God to strengthen man;&mdash;be bold, for He doth help.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="251" height="343" alt="" src="images/image94r.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet</span> more: for confidence in man, even to the worst and meanest,</p>
- <p>Hath power to overcome his ill, by charitable good.</p>
- <p>Fling thine unreserving trust even on the conscience of a culprit,</p>
- <p>Soon wilt thou shame him by thy faith, and he will melt and mend:</p>
- <p>The nest of thieves will harm thee not, if thou dost bear thee boldly;</p>
- <p>Boldly, yea and kindly, as relying on their honour:</p>
- <p>For the hand so stout against aggression, is quite disarmed by charity;</p>
- <p>And that warm sun will thaw the heart case-hardened by long frost.</p>
- <p>Treat men gently, trust them strongly, if thou wish their weal;</p>
- <p>Or cautious doubt and bitter thoughts will tempt the best to foil thee.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span>
- <p>Believe the well in sanguine hope, and thou shall reap the better;</p>
- <p>But if thou deal with men so ill, thy dealings make them worse;</p>
- <p>Despair not of some gleams of good still lingering in the darkest,</p>
- <p>And among veterans in crime, plead thou as with their children:</p>
- <p>So, astonied at humanities, the bad heart long estranged,</p>
- <p>Shall even weep to feel himself so little worth thy love;</p>
- <p>In wholesome sorrow will he bless thee; yea, and in that spirit may repent;</p>
- <p>Thus wilt thou gain a soul, in mercy given to thy Faith.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Look</span> aside to lack of faith, the mass of ills it bringeth:</p>
- <p>All things treacherous, base, and vile, dissolving the brotherhood of men.</p>
- <p>Bonds break; the cement hath lost its hold; and each is separate from other;</p>
- <p>That which should be neighbourly and good, is cankered into bitterness and evil.</p>
- <p>O thou serpent, fell Suspicion, coiling coldly round the heart,&mdash;</p>
- <p>O thou asp of subtle Jealousy, stinging hotly to the soul,&mdash;</p>
- <p>O distrust, reserve, and doubt,&mdash;what reptile shapes are here,</p>
- <p>Poisoning the garden of a world with death among its flowers!</p>
- <p>No need of many words, the tale is easy to be told;</p>
- <p>A point will touch the truth, a line suggest the picture.</p>
- <p>For if, in thine own home, a cautious man and captious,</p>
- <p>Thou hintest at suspicion of a servant, thou soon wilt make a thief;</p>
- <p>Or if, too keen in care, thou dost evidently disbelieve thy child,</p>
- <p>Thou hast injured the texture of his honour, and smoothed to him the way of lying:</p>
- <p>Or if thou observest upon friends, as seeking thee selfishly for interest,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span>
- <p>Thou hast hurt their kindliness to thee, and shalt be paid with scorn;</p>
- <p>Or if, O silly ones of marriage, your foul and foolish thoughts,</p>
- <p>Harshly misinterpreting in each the levity of innocence for sin,</p>
- <p>Shall pour upon the lap of home pain where once was pleasure,</p>
- <p>And mix contentions in the cup, that mantled once with comforts,</p>
- <p>Bitterly and justly shall ye rue the punishment due to unbelief;</p>
- <p>Ye trust not each the other, nor the mutual vows of God;</p>
- <p>Take heed, for the pit may now be near, a pit of your own digging,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Faith abused tempteth unto crime, and doubt may make its monster.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Man</span> verily is vile, but more in capability than action;</p>
- <p>His sinfulness is deep, but his transgressions may be few, even from the absence of temptation:</p>
- <p>He is hanging in a gulf midway, but the air is breathable about him:</p>
- <p>Thrust him not from that slight hold, to perish in the vapours underneath.</p>
- <p>For, God pleadeth with the deaf, as having ears to hear,</p>
- <p>Christ speaketh to the dead, as those that are capable of living;</p>
- <p>And an evil teacher is that man, a tempter to much sin,</p>
- <p>Who looketh on his hearers with distrust, and hath no confidence in brethren.</p>
- <p>All may mend; and sympathies are healing: and reason hath its influence with the worst;</p>
- <p>And in those worst is ample hope, if only thou hast charity, and faith.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Somewhiles</span> have I watched a man exchanging the sobriety of faith,</p>
- <p>Old lamps for new,&mdash;even for fanatical excitements.</p>
- <p>He gained surface, but lost solidity; heat, in lieu of health;</p>
- <p>And still with swelling words and thoughts he scorned his ancient coldness:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></span>
- <p>But, his strength was shorn as Samson's; he walked he knew not whither;</p>
- <p>Doubt was on his daily path; and duties shewed not certain:</p>
- <p>Until, in an hour of enthusiasm, stung with secret fears,</p>
- <p>He pinned the safety of his soul on some false prophet's sleeve.</p>
- <p>And then, that sure word failed; and with it, failed his faith;</p>
- <p>It failed, and fell; O deep and dreadful was his fall in faith!</p>
- <p>He could not stop, with reason's rein, his coursers on the slope,</p>
- <p>And so they dashed him down the cliff of hardened unbelief.</p>
- <p>With overreaching grasp he had strained for visionary treasures,</p>
- <p>But a fiend had cheated his presumption, and hurled him to despair.</p>
- <p>So he lay in his blood, the victim of a credulous false faith,</p>
- <p>And many nights, and night-like days, he dwelt in outer darkness.</p>
- <p>But, within a while, his variable mind caught a new impression,</p>
- <p>A new impression of the good old stamp, that sealed him when a child:</p>
- <p>He was softened, and abjured his infidelity; he was wiser, and despised his credulity;</p>
- <p>And turned again to simple faith more simply than before.</p>
- <p>Experience had declared too well his mind was built of water,</p>
- <p>And so, renouncing strength in self, he fixed his faith in God.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">It</span> is not for me to stipulate for creeds; Bible, Church, and Reason,</p>
- <p>These three shall lead the mind, if any can, to truth.</p>
- <p>But I must stipulate for faith: both God and man demand it:</p>
- <p>Trust is great in either world, if any would be well.</p>
- <p>Verily, the sceptical propensity is an universal foe;</p>
- <p>Sneering Pyrrho never found, nor cared to find, a friend:</p>
- <p>How could he trust another? and himself, whom would he not deceive?</p>
- <p>His proper gains were all his aim, and interests clash with kindness.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
- <p>So, the Bedouin goeth armed, an enemy to all,</p>
- <p>The spear is stuck beside his couch, the dagger hid beneath his pillow.</p>
- <p>For society, void of mutual trust, of credit, and of faith,</p>
- <p>Would fall asunder as a waterspout, snapped from the cloud's attraction.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Faith</span> may rise into miracles of might, as some few wise have shown:</p>
- <p>Faith may sink into credulities of weakness, as the mass of fools have witnessed.</p>
- <p>Therefore, in the first, saints and martyrs have fulfilled their mission,</p>
- <p>Conquering dangers, courting deaths, and triumphing in all.</p>
- <p>Therefore, in the last, the magician and the witch, victims of their own delusion,</p>
- <p>Have gained the bitter wages of impracticable sins.</p>
- <p>They believed in allegiance with Satan; they worked in that belief,</p>
- <p>And thereby earned the loss and harm of guilt that might not be.</p>
- <p>For, faith hath two hands; with the one it addeth virtue to indifferents;</p>
- <p>Yea, it sanctified a Judith and a Jael, for what otherwise were treachery and murder:</p>
- <p>With the other hand it heapeth crime even on impossibles or simples,</p>
- <p>And many a wizard well deserved the faggot for his faith:</p>
- <p>He trusted in his intercourse with evil, he sacrificed heartily to fiends,</p>
- <p>He withered up with curses to the limit of his will, and was vile, because he thought himself a villain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A great</span> mind is ready to believe, for he hungereth to feed on facts,</p>
- <p>And the gnawing stomach of his ignorance craveth unceasing to be filled:</p>
- <p>A little mind is boastful and incredulous, for he fancieth all knowledge is his own,</p>
- <p>So will he cavil at a truth; how should it be true, and he not know it?&mdash;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span>
- <p>There is an easy scheme, to solve all riddles by the sensual,</p>
- <p>And thus, despising mysteries, to feel the more sufficient;</p>
- <p>For it comforteth the foul hard heart, to reject the pure unseen,</p>
- <p>And relieveth the dull soft head, to hinder one from gazing upon vacancy.</p>
- <p>True wisdom, labouring to expound, heareth others readily;</p>
- <p>False wisdom, sturdy to deny, closeth up her mind to argument.</p>
- <p>The sum of certainties is found so small, their field so wide an universe,</p>
- <p>That many things may truly be, which man hath not conceived:</p>
- <p>The characters revealed of God are a strong mind's sole assurance</p>
- <p>That any strangeness may not stand a sober theme for faith.</p>
- <p>Ignorance being light denied, this ought to show the stronger in its view,</p>
- <p>But ignorance is commonly a double negative, both of light and morals:</p>
- <p>So, adding vanity to blindness, for ease, it taketh refuge in a doubt,</p>
- <p>And aching soon with ceaseless doubt, it finisheth the strife by misbelieving.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Faith,</span> by its very nature, shall embrace both credence and obedience:</p>
- <p>Yea, the word for both is one, and cannot be divided.</p>
- <p>For, work void of faith, wherein can it be counted for a duty;</p>
- <p>And faith not seen in work,&mdash;whereby can the doctrine be discovered?</p>
- <p>Faith in religion is an instrument; a handle, and the hand to turn it:</p>
- <p>Less a condition than a mean, and more an operation than a virtue.</p>
- <p>A moral sickness, like to sin, must have a moral cure;</p>
- <p>And faith alone can heal the mind, whose malady is sense.</p>
- <p>Ye are told of God's deep love: they that believe will love Him:</p>
- <p>They that love Him, will obey: and obedience hath its blessing.</p>
- <p>Ye are taught of the soul's great price; they that believe will prize it,</p>
- <p>And, prizing soul, will cherish well the hopes that make it happy.</p>
- <p>Effects spring from feelings; and feelings grow of faith:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span>
- <p>If a man conceive himself insulted, will not his anger smite?</p>
- <p>Thus, let a soul believe his state, his danger, destiny, redemption,</p>
- <p>Will he not feel eager to be safe, like him that kept the prison at Philippi?</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">A mother</span> had an only son, and sent him out to sea:</p>
- <p>She was a widow, and in penury; and he must seek his fortunes.</p>
- <p>How often in the wintry nights, when waves and winds were howling,</p>
- <p>Her heart was torn with sickening dread, and bled to see her boy.</p>
- <p>And on one sunny morn, when all around was comfort,</p>
- <p>News came, that weeks agone, the vessel had been wrecked;</p>
- <p>Yea, wrecked, and he was dead! they had seen him perish in his agony:</p>
- <p>Oh then, what agony was like to her's,&mdash;for she believed the tale.</p>
- <p>She was bowed and broken down with sorrow, and uncomforted in prayer;</p>
- <p>Many nights she mourned, and pined, and had no hope but death.</p>
- <p>But on a day, while sorely she was weeping, a stranger broke upon her loneliness,&mdash;</p>
- <p>He had news to tell, that weather-beaten man, and must not be denied:</p>
- <p>And what were the wonder-working words that made this mourner joyous,</p>
- <p>That swept her heaviness away, and filled her world with praise?</p>
- <p>Her son was saved,&mdash;is alive,&mdash;is near!&mdash;O did she stop to question?</p>
- <p>No, rushing in the force of faith, she met him at the door!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF HONESTY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="91" height="200" alt="" src="images/image95cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">All</span>
- is vanity that is not honesty;&mdash;thus is it graven on the tomb:</p>
- <p>And there is no wisdom but in piety;&mdash;so the dead man preacheth:</p>
- <p>For, in a simple village church, among those classic shades</p>
- <p>Which sylvan Evelyn loved to rear, (his praise, and my delight,)</p>
- <p>These, the words of truth, are writ upon his sepulchre</p>
- <p>Who learnt much lore, and knew all trees, from the cedar to the hyssop on the wall.</p>
- <p>A just conjunction, godliness and honesty; ministering to both worlds,</p>
- <p>Well wed, and ill to be divided, a pair that God hath joined together.</p>
- <p>I touch not now the vulgar thought, as of tricks and cheateries in trade;</p>
- <p>I speak of honest purpose, character, speech and action.</p>
- <p>For an honest man hath special need of charity, and prudence,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">{342}</a></span>
- <p>Of a deep and humbling self-acquaintance, and of blessed commerce with his God,</p>
- <p>So that the keennesses of truth may be freed from asperities of censure,</p>
- <p>And the just but vacillating mind be not made the pendulum of arguments:</p>
- <p>For a false reason, shrewdly put, can often not be answered on the instant,</p>
- <p>And prudence looketh unto faith, content to wait solutions;</p>
- <p>Yea, it looketh, yea, it waiteth, still holding honesty in leash,</p>
- <p>Lest, as a hot young hound, it track not game, but vermin.</p>
- <p>Many a man of honest heart, but ignorant of self and God,</p>
- <p>Hath followed the marsh-fires of pestilence, esteeming them the lights of truth;</p>
- <p>He heard a cause, which he had not skill to solve,&mdash;and so received it gladly;</p>
- <p>And that cause brought its consequence, of harm to an unstable soul.</p>
- <p>Prudence, for a man's own sake, never should be separate from honesty;</p>
- <p>And charity, for other's good, and his, must still be joined therewith:</p>
- <p>For the harshly chiding tongue hath neither pleasuring nor profit,</p>
- <p>And the cold unsympathizing heart never gained a good.</p>
- <p>Sin is a sore, and folly is a fever; touch them tenderly for healing;</p>
- <p>The bad chirurgeon's awkward knife harmeth, spite of honesty.</p>
- <p>Still, a rough diamond is better than the polished paste,&mdash;</p>
- <p>That courteous flattering fool, who spake of vice as virtue:</p>
- <p>And honesty, even by itself, though making many adversaries</p>
- <p>Whom prudence might have set aside, or charity have softened,</p>
- <p>Evermore will prosper at the last, and gain a man great honour</p>
- <p>By giving others many goods, to his own cost and hindrance.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Freedom</span> is father of the honest, and sturdy Independence is his brother;</p>
- <p>These three, with heart and hand, dwell together in unity.</p>
- <p>The blunt yeoman, stout and true, will speak unto princes unabashed:</p>
- <p>His mind is loyal, just and free, a crystal in its plain integrity;</p>
- <p>What should make such an one ashamed? where courtiers kneel, he standeth;&mdash;</p>
- <p>I will indeed bow before the king, but knees were knit for God.</p>
- <p>And many such there be, of a high and noble conscience,</p>
- <p>Honourable, generous, and kind, though blest with little light:</p>
- <p>What should he barter for his Freedom? some petty gain of gold?</p>
- <p>Free of speech, and free in act, magnates honour him for boldness:</p>
- <p>Long may he flourish in his peace, and a stalwarth race around him,</p>
- <p>Rooted in the soil like oaks, and hardy as the pine upon the mountains!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Yet,</span> there be others, that will truckle to a lie, selling honesty for interest:</p>
- <p>And do they gain?&mdash;they gain but loss; a little cash, with scorn.</p>
- <p>Behold, the sorrowful change wrought upon a fallen nature:</p>
- <p>He hath lost his own esteem, and other men's respect;</p>
- <p>For the buoyancy of upright faith, he is clothed in the heaviness of cringing;</p>
- <p>For plain truth where none could err, he hath chosen tortuous paths;</p>
- <p>In lieu of his majesty of countenance&mdash;the timorous glances of servility;</p>
- <p>Instead of Freedom's honest pride,&mdash;the spirit of a slave.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless,</span> there is something to be pleaded, even for a necessary guile,</p>
- <p>Whilst the world, and all that is therein, lieth deep in evil.</p>
- <p>Who can be altogether honest,&mdash;a champion never out of mail,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span>
- <p>Ready to break a lance for truth with every crowding error?</p>
- <p>Who can be altogether honest,&mdash;dragging out the secresies of life,</p>
- <p>And risking to be lashed and loathed for each unkind disclosure?</p>
- <p>Who can be altogether honest,&mdash;living in perpetual contentions,</p>
- <p>And prying out the petty cheats that swell the social scheme?</p>
- <p>For he must speak his instant mind,&mdash;a mind corrupt and sinful,</p>
- <p>Exhibiting to other men's disgust its undisguised deformities:</p>
- <p>He must utter all the hatred of his heart, and add to it the venom of his tongue;</p>
- <p>Shall he feel, and hide his feelings? that were the meanness of a hypocrite:&mdash;</p>
- <p>Still, O man, such hypocrisy is better, than this bold honesty to sin:</p>
- <p>Kill the feeling, or conceal it: let shame at least do the work of charity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">O charity,</span> thou livest not in warnings, meddling among men,</p>
- <p>Rebuking every foolish word, and censuring small sins;</p>
- <p>This is not thy secret,&mdash;rather wilt thou hide their multitude,</p>
- <p>And silence the condemning tongue, and wearisome exhortation.</p>
- <p>But for thee, thy strength and zeal shine in encouragement to good,</p>
- <p>Lifting up the lantern of ensample, that wanderers may find the way:</p>
- <p>That lantern is not lit to gaze on all the hatefulness of evil,</p>
- <p>But set on high for life and light, the loveliness of good.</p>
- <p>The hard censorious mind sitteth as a keen anatomist</p>
- <p>Tracking up the fibres in corruption, and prying on a fearful corpse:</p>
- <p>But the charitable soul is a young lover, enamoured little wisely,</p>
- <p>That saw no fault in her he loved, and sought to see one less;</p>
- <p>So, in his kind and genial light, she grew more worthy of his love;</p>
- <p>Won to good by gentle suns, and not by frowning tempest.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Verily,</span> infirm thyself,&mdash;be slow to chide a brother's imperfections;</p>
- <p>For many times the decent veil must hang on faults of nature:</p>
- <p>And the rude hands, that rend it, offend against the modesty of right,</p>
- <p>While seeming zeal, and its effort to do good, is only feigned self-praise:</p>
- <p>Often will the meannesses of life, hidden away in corners,</p>
- <p>Prove wisdom; and the generous is glad to leave them unregarded in the shade.</p>
- <p>The follies none are found to praise, let them die unblamed;</p>
- <p>Thine honest strife will only tend to make some think them wise:</p>
- <p>And small conventional deceits, let them live uncensured:</p>
- <p>Or if thou war with pigmies, thou shalt haply help the cranes.</p>
- <p>Where to be blind was safety, Ovid had been wise for winking:</p>
- <p>And when a tell-tale might do harm, be sure it is prudent to be dumb;</p>
- <p>That which is just and fit is often found combating with honesty:</p>
- <p>In the cause of good, be wise; and in a case indifferent, keep silence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Let</span> honesty's unblushing face be shaded by the mantle of humility,</p>
- <p>So shall it shine a lamp of love, and not the torch of strife:</p>
- <p>Otherwise the lantern of Diogenes, presumptuously thrust before the face,</p>
- <p>If it never find an honest man, shall often make an angered.</p>
- <p>Let honesty be companied by charity of heart, lest it walk unwelcome;</p>
- <p>Or the mouthing censor of others and himself, soon shall sink to scorn.</p>
- <p>Let honesty be added unto innocence of life: then a man may only be its martyr;</p>
- <p>But if openness of speech be found with secresy of guilt, the martyr will be seen a malefactor.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">{346}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a cunning scheme, to put on surface bluntness,</p>
- <p>And cover still deep water, with the clamorous ripples of a shallow.</p>
- <p>For a man, to gain his selfish ends, will make a stalking-horse of honesty;</p>
- <p>And hide his poaching limbs behind, that he may cheat the quicker.</p>
- <p>Such an one is loud and ostentatious, full of oaths for argument,</p>
- <p>Boastful of honour and sincerity, and not to be put down by facts:</p>
- <p>He is obstinate, and sheweth it for firmness; he is rude, displaying it for truth;</p>
- <p>And glorieth in doggedness of temper, as if it were uncompromising justice.</p>
- <p>Be aware of such a man; his brawling covereth designs;</p>
- <p>This specious show of honesty cometh as the herald of a thief:</p>
- <p>His feint is made with awkward clashing on the buckler's boss,</p>
- <p>But meanwhile doth his secret skill ensure its fatal aim.</p>
- <p>This is the hypocrite of honesty; ye may know him by an overacted part;</p>
- <p>Taking pains to turn and twist, where other men walk straight;</p>
- <p>Or walking straight, he will not step aside to let another pass,</p>
- <p>But roughly pusheth on, provoking opposition on the way;</p>
- <p>He is full of disquietude for calmness, full of intriguing for simplicity,</p>
- <p>Valorous with those who cannot fight, and humble to the brave:</p>
- <p>Where brotherly advice were good, this man rudely blameth,</p>
- <p>And on some small occasion, flattereth with coarse praise.</p>
- <p>The craven in a lion's skin hath conquered by his character for courage;</p>
- <p>Sheep's clothing helped the wolf, till he slew by his character for kindness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> honesty hath many gains, and well the wise have known</p>
- <p>This will prosper to the end, and fill their house with gold.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
- <p>The phosphorus of cheatery will fade, and all its profits perish,</p>
- <p>While honesty with growing light endureth as the moon.</p>
- <p>Yea, it would be wise in a world of thieves, where cheating were a virtue,</p>
- <p>To dare the vice of honesty, if any would be rich.</p>
- <p>For that which by the laws of God is heightened into duty,</p>
- <p>Ever, in the practice of a man, will be seen both policy and privilege.</p>
- <p>Thank God, ye toilers for your bread, in that, daily labouring,</p>
- <p>He hath suffered the bubbles of self-interest to float upon the stream of duty:</p>
- <p>For honesty, of every kind, approved by God and man,</p>
- <p>Of wealth and better weal is found the richest cornucopia.</p>
- <p>Tempered by humbleness and charity, honesty of speech hath honour;</p>
- <p>And mingled well with prudence, honesty of purpose hath its praise:</p>
- <p>Trust payeth homage unto truth, rewarding honesty of action:</p>
- <p>And all men love to lean on him, who never failed nor fainted.</p>
- <p>Freedom gloweth in his eyes, and Nobleness of nature at his heart,</p>
- <p>And Independence took a crown and fixed it on his head:</p>
- <p>So, he stood in his integrity, just and firm of purpose,</p>
- <p>Aiding many, fearing none, a spectacle to angels, and to men:</p>
- <p>Yea,&mdash;when the shattered globe shall rock in the throes of dissolution,</p>
- <p>Still, will he stand in his integrity, sublime&mdash;an honest man.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">{348}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF SOCIETY.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="81" height="190" alt="" src="images/image96cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Better</span>
- is the mass of men, Suspicion, than thy fears,</p>
- <p>Kinder than thy thoughts, O chilling heart of Prudence,</p>
- <p>Purer than thy judgments, ascetic tongue of Censure,</p>
- <p>In all things worthier to love, if not also wiser to esteem.</p>
- <p>Yea, let the moralist condemn, there be large extenuations of his verdict,</p>
- <p>Let the misanthrope shun men and abjure, the most are rather loveable than hateful.</p>
- <p>How many pleasant faces shed their light on every side,</p>
- <p>How many angels unawares have crossed thy casual way!</p>
- <p>How often, in thy journeyings, hast thou made thee instant friends,</p>
- <p>Found, to be loved a little while, and lost, to meet no more;</p>
- <p>Friends of happy reminiscence, although so transient in their converse,</p>
- <p>Liberal, cheerful, and sincere, a crowd of kindly traits.</p>
- <p>I have sped by land and sea, and mingled with much people,</p>
- <p>But never yet could find a spot, unsunned by human kindness;</p>
- <p>Some more, and some less,&mdash;but truly all can claim a little;</p>
- <p>And a man may travel through the world, and sow it thick with friendships.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> be indeed, to say it in all sorrow, bad apostate souls,</p>
- <p>Deserted of their ministering angels, and given up to liberty of sin,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And other some, the miserly and mean, whose eyes are keen and greedy,</p>
- <p>With stony hearts, and iron fists, to filch and scrape and clutch,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And others yet again, the coarse in mind, selfish, sensual, brutish,</p>
- <p>Seeming as incapable of softer thoughts, and dead to better deeds;</p>
- <p>Such, no lover of the good, no follower of the generous and gentle,</p>
- <p>Can nearer grow to love, than may consist with pity.</p>
- <p>Few verily are these among the mass, and cast in fouler moulds,</p>
- <p>Few and poor in friends, and well-deserving of their poverty:</p>
- <p>Yet, or ever thou hast harshly judged, and linked their presence to disgust,</p>
- <p>Consider well the thousand things that made them all they are.</p>
- <p>Thou hast not thought upon the causes, ranged in consecutive necessity,</p>
- <p>Which tended long to these effects, with sure constraining power.</p>
- <p>For each of those unlovely ones, if thou couldst hear his story,</p>
- <p>Hath much to urge of just excuse, at least as men count justice:</p>
- <p>Foolish education, thwarted opportunities, natural propensities unchecked,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Thus were they discouraged from all good, and pampered in their evil;</p>
- <p>And, if thou wilt apprehend them well, tenderly looking on temptations,</p>
- <p>Bearing the base indulgently, and liberally dealing with the froward,</p>
- <p>Thou shalt discern a few fair fruits even upon trees so withered,</p>
- <p>Thou shalt understand how some may praise, and some be found to love them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Nevertheless</span> for these, my counsel is, Avoid them if thou canst;</p>
- <p>For the finer edges of thy virtues will be dulled by attrition with their vice.</p>
- <p>And there is an enemy within thee; either to palliate their sin,</p>
- <p>Until, for surface-sweetness, thou too art drawn adown the vortex;</p>
- <p>Or, even unto fatal pride, to glorify thy purity by contrast,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">{350}</a></span>
- <p>Until the publican and harlot stand nearer heaven than the Pharisee:</p>
- <p>Or daily strife against their ill, in subtleness may irritate thy soul,</p>
- <p>And in that struggle thou shall fail, even through infirmity of goodness;</p>
- <p>Or, callous by continuance of injuries, thou wilt cease to pardon,</p>
- <p>Cease to feel, and cease to care, a cold case-hardened man.</p>
- <p>Beware of their example,&mdash;and thine own; beware the hazards of the battle;</p>
- <p>But chiefly be thou ware of this, an unforgiving spirit.</p>
- <p>Many are the dangers and temptations compassing a bad man's presence;</p>
- <p>The upas hath a poisonous shade, and who would slumber there?</p>
- <p>Wherefore, avoid them if thou canst; only, under providence and duty,</p>
- <p>If thy lot be cast with Kedar, patiently and silently live to their rebuke.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">How</span> beautiful thy feet, and full of grace thy coming,</p>
- <p>O better kind companion, that art well for either world!</p>
- <p>There is an atmosphere of happiness floating round that man,</p>
- <p>Love is throned upon his heart, and light is found within his dwelling:</p>
- <p>His eyes are rayed with peacefulness, and wisdom waiteth on his tongue;</p>
- <p>Seek him out, cherish him well, walking in the halo of his influence:</p>
- <p>For he shall be fragrance to thy soul, as a garden of sweet lilies,</p>
- <p>Hedged and apart from the outer world, an island of the blest among the seas.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> is an outer world, and there is an inner centre;</p>
- <p>And many varying rings concentric round the self.</p>
- <p>For, first, about a man,&mdash;after his communion with Heaven,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Is found the helpmate even as himself, the wife of his vows and his affections:</p>
- <p>See then that ye love in faith, scorning petty jealousies,</p>
- <p>For Satan spoileth too much love, by souring it with doubts;</p>
- <p>See that intimacy die not to indifference, nor anxiety sink into moroseness,</p>
- <p>And tend ye well the mutual minds bound in a copartnership for life.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Next</span> of those concentric circles, radiating widely in circumference,</p>
- <p>Wheel in wheel, and world in world,&mdash;come the band of children:</p>
- <p>A tender nest of soft young hearts, each to be separately studied,</p>
- <p>A curious eager flock of minds, to be severally tamed and tutored.</p>
- <p>And a man, blest with these, hath made his own society,</p>
- <p>He is independent of the world, hanging on his friends more loosely:</p>
- <p>For the little faces round his hearth are friends enow for him,</p>
- <p>If he seek others, it is for sake of these, and less for his own pleasure.</p>
- <p>What companionship so sweet, yea, who can teach so well</p>
- <p>As these pure budding intellects, and bright unsullied hearts?</p>
- <p>What voice so musical as theirs, what visions of elegance so comely,</p>
- <p>What thoughts and hopes and holy prayers, can others cause like these?</p>
- <p>If ye count society for pastime,&mdash;what happier recreation than a nurseling,</p>
- <p>Its winning ways, its prattling tongue, its innocence and mirth?</p>
- <p>If ye count society for good,&mdash;how fair a field is here,</p>
- <p>To guide these souls to God, and multiply thyself for heaven!</p>
- <p>And this sweet social commerce with thy children groweth as their growth,</p>
- <p>Unless thou fail of duty, or have weaned them by thine absence.</p>
- <p>Keep them near thee, rear them well, guide, correct, instruct them;</p>
- <p>And be the playmate of their games, the judge in their complainings.</p>
- <p>So shall the maiden and the youth love thee as their sympathizing friend,</p>
- <p>And bring their joys to share with thee, their sorrows for consoling:</p>
- <p>Yea, their inmost hopes shall yearn to thee for counsel,</p>
- <p>They will not hide their very loves, if thou hast won their trust;</p>
- <p>But, even as man and woman, shall they gladly seek their father,</p>
- <p>Feeling yet as children feel, though void of fear in honour:</p>
- <p>And thou shall be a Nestor in the camp, the just and good old man,</p>
- <p>Hearty still, though full of years, and held the friend of all;</p>
- <p>No secret shall be kept from thee; for if ill, thy wisdom may repair it;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">{352}</a></span>
- <p>If well, thy praise is precious; and they would not miss that prize.</p>
- <p>O the blessing of a home, where old and young mix kindly,</p>
- <p>The young unawed, the old unchilled, in unreserved communion!</p>
- <p>O that refuge from the world, when a stricken son or daughter</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">{353}</a></span>
- <p>May seek, with confidence of love, a father's hearth and heart;</p>
- <p>Sure of a welcome, though others cast them out; of kindness, though men scorn them;</p>
- <p>And finding there the last to blame, the earliest to commend.</p>
- <p>Come unto me, my son, if sin shall have tempted thee astray,</p>
- <p>I will not chide thee like the rest, but help thee to return;</p>
- <p>Come unto me, my son, if men rebuke and mock thee,</p>
- <p>There always shall be one to bless,&mdash;for I am on thy side!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="221" height="257" alt="" src="images/image97ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Alas</span>,&mdash;and bitter is their loss, the parents, and the children,</p>
- <p>Who, loving up and down the world, have missed each other's friendship.</p>
- <p>Haply, it had grown of careless life, for years go swiftly by;</p>
- <p>Or sprang of too much carefulness, that drank up all the streams:</p>
- <p>Haply, sullen disappointment came and quenched the fire;</p>
- <p>Haply, sternness, or misrule, crushed or warped the feelings.</p>
- <p>Then, ill-combined in tempers, they learnt not each the other;</p>
- <p>The growing child grew out of love, and drew the breath of fear;</p>
- <p>The youth, ill-trained, renounced his fears, and made a league with cunning;</p>
- <p>And so those hardened men were foes, that should have been chief friends.</p>
- <p>Where was the cause, the mutual cause? O hunt it out to kill it:</p>
- <p>And what the cure, the simple cure?&mdash;A mutual flash of love.</p>
- <p>For dull estrangement's daily air froze up those early sympathies</p>
- <p>By cold continuance in apathy, or cutting winds of censure;</p>
- <p>It was a slow process, which any fleeting hour could have melted;</p>
- <p>But every hour duly came, and passed without the sun.</p>
- <p>Caution, care, and dry distrust, obscured each other's minds,</p>
- <p>Till both those gardens, rich to yield, were rank with many weeds:</p>
- <p>And doubt, a hidden worm, gnawed at the root of their Society,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">{354}</a></span>
- <p>They lacked of mutual confidence, and lived in mutual dread.</p>
- <p>Judge me, many fathers; and hearken to my counsel, many sons;</p>
- <p>I come with good in either hand, to reconcile contentions;</p>
- <p>For better friends can no man have, than those whom God hath given,</p>
- <p>And he that hath despised the gift, thought ill of that he knew not.</p>
- <p>Be ye wiser,&mdash;(I speak unto the sons,)&mdash;and win paternal friendships,</p>
- <p>Cultivate their kindness, seek them out with honour, and be the screening Japhet to their failings:</p>
- <p>And be ye wiser,&mdash;(I speak unto the fathers)&mdash;gain those filial comrades,</p>
- <p>Cherish their reasonable converse, and look not with coldness on your children.</p>
- <p>For the friendship of a child is the brightest gem set upon the circlet of Society,</p>
- <p>A jewel worth a world of pains&mdash;a jewel seldom seen.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">The</span> third cycle on the waters, another of those rings upon the onyx,</p>
- <p>A further definite broad zone, holdeth kith and kin:</p>
- <p>A motley band of many tribes, and under various banners;</p>
- <p>The intimate and strangers, the known and loved, or only seen for loathing:</p>
- <p>Some, dear for their deserts, shall honour and have honour of relationship,</p>
- <p>Some, despising duties, will add to it both burden and disgrace.</p>
- <p>A man's nearest kin are oftentimes far other than his dearest,</p>
- <p>Yet in the season of affliction those will haste to help him.</p>
- <p>For, note thou this, the providence of God hath bound up families together,</p>
- <p>To mutual aid and patient trial; yea, those ties are strong.</p>
- <p>Friends are ever dearer in thy wealth, but relations to be trusted in thy need,</p>
- <p>For these are God's appointed way, and those the choice of man:</p>
- <p>There is lower warmth in kin, but smaller truth in friends,</p>
- <p>The latter show more surface, and the first have more of depth:</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">{355}</a></span>
- <p>Relations rally to the rescue, even in estrangement and neglect,</p>
- <p>Where friends will have fled at thy defeat, even after promises and kindness;</p>
- <p>For friends come and go, the whim that bound may loose them,</p>
- <p>But none can dissever a relationship, and Fate hath tied the knot.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Wide,</span> and edged with shadowy bounds, a distant boulevard to the city,</p>
- <p>The common crowd of social life is buzzing round about:</p>
- <p>That is as the outer court, with all defences levelled,</p>
- <p>Ranged around a man's own fortress, and his father's house.</p>
- <p>For many friends go in and out, and praise thee, finding pasture,</p>
- <p>And some are honeycomb to-day, who turn to gall to-morrow:</p>
- <p>And many a garrulous acquaintance with his frequent visit</p>
- <p>Will spend his leisure to thy cost, selling dulness dearly:</p>
- <p>For the idle call is a heavy tax, where time is counted gold,</p>
- <p>And even in the day of relaxation, haply he may spare his presence,&mdash;</p>
- <p>He found himself alone, and came to talk,&mdash;till they that hear are tired;</p>
- <p>Let the man bethink him of an errand, that his face be not unwelcome.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">But</span> many friends there be, both well and wisely greeted,</p>
- <p>Gladly are they hailed upon the hills, and are chidden that they come so seldom.</p>
- <p>Of such are the early recollections, school friendships that have thriven to grey hairs,</p>
- <p>And veteran men are young once more, and talk of boyish pranks:</p>
- <p>And such, yet older on the list, are those who loved thy father,</p>
- <p>Thy father's friend, and thine, who tendereth thee tried love:</p>
- <p>Such also, many gentle hearts, whom thou hast known too lately,</p>
- <p>Hastening now to learn their worth, and chary of those minutes:</p>
- <p>And such, thy faithful pastor, coming to thy home with peace;&mdash;</p>
- <p>Greet the good man heartily,&mdash;and bid thy children bless him!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">{356}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Many</span> thoughts, many thoughts,&mdash;who can catch them all?</p>
- <p>The best are ever swiftest winged, the duller lag behind:</p>
- <p>For, behold, in these vast themes, my mind is as a forest of the West,</p>
- <p>And flocking pigeons come in clouds, and bend the groaning branches;</p>
- <p>Here for a rest, then off and away,&mdash;they have sped to other climes,</p>
- <p>And leave me to my peace once more, a holiday from thoughts.</p>
- <p>I dare not lure them back, for the mighty subject of Society</p>
- <p>Would tempt to many a hackneyed note in many a weary key:</p>
- <p>Sage warnings, stout advice, experiences ever to be learned,</p>
- <p>The foolish floatiness of vanity, and solemn trumperies of pride,&mdash;</p>
- <p>Economy, the poor man's mint,&mdash;extravagance, the rich man's pitfall,</p>
- <p>Harmful copings with the better, and empty-headed apings of the worse,</p>
- <p>Circumstance and custom, sympathies, antipathies, diverse kinds of conversation,</p>
- <p>Vapid pleasures, the weariness of gaiety, the strife and bustle of the world,</p>
- <p>Home comforts, the miseries of style, the cobweb lines of etiquette,</p>
- <p>The hollowness of courtesies, and substance of deceits,&mdash;idleness, business, and pastime,&mdash;</p>
- <p>The multitude of matters to be done, the when, and where, and how,</p>
- <p>And varying shades of character, to do, undo, or miss them,&mdash;</p>
- <p>All these, and many more alike, thick converging fancies,</p>
- <p>Flit in throngs about my theme, as honey-bees at even to their hive.</p>
- <p>Find an end, or make one: these seeds are dragon's teeth:</p>
- <p>Sown thoughts grow to things, and fill that field, the world:</p>
- <p>Many wise have gone before, and used the sickle well;</p>
- <p>Who can find a corner now, where none have bound the sheaves?</p>
- <p>So, other some may reap: I do but glean and gather:</p>
- <p>My sorry handful hath been culled after the ripe harvest of Society.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">{357}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>OF SOLITUDE.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="76" height="93" alt="" src="images/image98cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Who</span>
- hath known his brother,&mdash;or found him in his freedom unrestrained?</p>
- <p>Even he, whose hidden glance hath watched his deepest Solitude.</p>
- <p>For we walk the world in domino, putting on characters and habits,</p>
- <p>And wear a social Janus mask, while others stand around:</p>
- <p>I speak not of the hypocrite, nor dream of meant deceptions,</p>
- <p>But of that quick unconscious change, whereof the best know most.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> mind hath its influence on mind; and no man is free but when alone;</p>
- <p>Yea, let a dog be watching thee, its eye will tend to thy restraint:</p>
- <p>Self-possession cannot be so perfect, with another intellect beside thee,</p>
- <p>It is not as a natural result, but rather the educated produce:</p>
- <p>The presence of a second spirit must control thine own,</p>
- <p>And throw it off its equipoise of peace, to balance by an effort.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">{358}</a></span>
- <p>The common minds of common men know of this but little;</p>
- <p>What then? they know nothing of themselves: I speak to those who know.</p>
- <p>The consciousness that some are hearing, cometh as a care,</p>
- <p>The sense that some are watching near, bindeth thee to caution;</p>
- <p>And the tree of tender nerves shrinketh as a touched mimosa,</p>
- <p>Drooping like a plant in drought, with half its strength decayed.</p>
- <p>There are antipathies warning from the many, and sympathies drawing to the few,</p>
- <p>But merchant-minds have crushed the first, and cannot feel the latter:</p>
- <p>Whereas to the quickened apprehension of a keen and spiritual intellect,</p>
- <p>Antipathies are galling, and sympathies oppress, and solitude is quiet.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">He</span> that dwelleth mainly by himself, heedeth most of others,</p>
- <p>But they that live in crowds, think chiefly of themselves.</p>
- <p>There is indeed a selfish seeming, where the anchorite liveth alone,</p>
- <p>But probe his thoughts,&mdash;they travel far, dreaming for ever of the world:</p>
- <p>And there is an apparent generosity, when a man mixeth freely with his fellows;</p>
- <p>But prove his mind, by day and night, his thoughts are all of self:</p>
- <p>The world, inciting him to pleasures, or relentlessly provoking him to toil,</p>
- <p>Is full of anxious rivals, each with a difference of interest;</p>
- <p>So must he plan and practise for himself, even as his own best friend;</p>
- <p>And the gay soul of dissipation never had a thought unselfish.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">{359}</a></span>
- <p>The hermit standeth out of strife, abiding in a contemplative calmness;</p>
- <p>What shall he contemplate,&mdash;himself? a meagre theme for musing:</p>
- <p>He hath cast off follies, and kept aloof from cares; a man of simple wants;</p>
- <p>God and the soul, these are his excuse, a just excuse, for solitude:</p>
- <p>But he carried with him to his cell the half-dead feelings of humanity;</p>
- <p>There were they rested and refreshed; and he yearned once more on men.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="182" height="225" alt="" src="images/image99ar.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">{360}</a></span>
- <p><span class="smcap">Where</span> is the wise, or the learned, or the good, that sought not solitude for thinking,</p>
- <p>And from seclusion's secret vale brought forth his precious fruits?</p>
- <p>Forests of Aricia, your deep shade mellowed Numa's wisdom,</p>
- <p>Peaceful gardens of Vaucluse, ye nourished Petrarch's love;</p>
- <p>Solitude made a Cincinnatus, ripening the hero and the patriot,</p>
- <p>And taught De Staël self-knowledge, even in the damp Bastile;</p>
- <p>It fostered the piety of Jerome, matured the labours of Augustine,</p>
- <p>And gave imperial Charles religion for ambition:</p>
- <p>That which Scipio praised, that which Alfred practised,</p>
- <p>Which fired Demosthenes to eloquence, and fed the mind of Milton,</p>
- <p>Which quickened zeal, nurtured genius, found out the secret things of science,</p>
- <p>Helped repentance, shamed folly, and comforted the good with peace,&mdash;</p>
- <p>By all men just and wise, by all things pure and perfect,</p>
- <p>How truly, Solitude, art thou the fostering nurse of greatness!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Enough</span>;&mdash;the theme is vast; sear me these necks of Hydra:</p>
- <p>What shall drive away the thoughts flocking to this carcase?</p>
- <p>Yea,&mdash;that all which man may think, hath long been said of Solitude:</p>
- <p>For many wise have proved and preached its evils and its good.</p>
- <p>I cannot add,&mdash;I will not steal; enough, for all is spoken:</p>
- <p>Yet heed thou these for practice, and discernment among men.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">There</span> are pompous talkers, solemn, oracular, and dull:</p>
- <p>Track them from society to solitude; and there ye find them fools.</p>
- <p>There are light-hearted jesters, taking up with company for pastime;</p>
- <p>How speed they when alone?&mdash;serious, wise, and thoughtful.</p>
- <p>And wherefore? both are actors, saving when in solitude,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">{361}</a></span>
- <p>There they live their truest life, and all things show sincere:</p>
- <p>But the fool by pomposity of speech striveth to be counted wise,</p>
- <p>And the wise, for holiday and pleasance, playeth with the fool's best bauble.</p>
- <p>The solemn seemer, as a rule, will be found more ignorant and shallow</p>
- <p>Than those who laugh both loud and long, content to hide their knowledge.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">For</span> thee; seek thou Solitude, but neither in excess, nor morosely;</p>
- <p>Seek her for her precious things, and not of thine own pride.</p>
- <p>For there, separate from a crowd, the still small voice will talk with thee,</p>
- <p>Truth's whisper, heard and echoed by responding conscience;</p>
- <p>There, shalt thou gather up the ravelled skeins of feeling,</p>
- <p>And mend the nets of usefulness, and rest awhile for duties;</p>
- <p>There, thou shalt hive thy lore, and eat the fruits of study,</p>
- <p>For Solitude delighteth well to feed on many thoughts:</p>
- <p>There, as thou sittest peaceful, communing with fancy,</p>
- <p>The precious poetry of life shall gild its leaden cares:</p>
- <p>There, as thou walkest by the sea, beneath the gentle stars,</p>
- <p>Many kindling seeds of good will sprout within thy soul;</p>
- <p>Thou shalt weep in Solitude,&mdash;thou shalt pray in Solitude,</p>
- <p>Thou shalt sing for joy of heart, and praise the grace of Solitude.</p>
- <p>Pass on, pass on!&mdash;for this is the path of wisdom:</p>
- <p>God make thee prosper on the way; I leave thee well with Solitude.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">{362}</a></span></div>
-
-<h3>RECAPITULATION.</h3>
-
-<div class="image-left">
- <img width="81" height="184" alt="" src="images/image100cr.jpg" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Every</span>
- beginning is shrouded in a mist, those vague ideas beyond,</p>
- <p>And the traveller setteth on his journey, oppressed with many thoughts,</p>
- <p>Balancing his hopes and fears, and looking for some order in the chaos,</p>
- <p>Some secret path between the cliffs, that seem to bar his way:</p>
- <p>So, he commenceth at a clue, unravelling its tangled skein,</p>
- <p>And boldly speedeth on to thread the labyrinth before him.</p>
- <p>Then as he gropeth in the darkness, light is attendant on his steps,</p>
- <p>He walketh straight in fervent faith, and difficulties vanish at his presence;</p>
- <p>The very flashing of his sword scattereth those shadowy foes;</p>
- <p>Confident and sanguine of success, he goeth forth conquering and to conquer.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Every</span> middle is burdened with a weariness,&mdash;to have to go as far again,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And Diligence is sick at heart, and Enterprise foot-sore:</p>
- <p>That which began in zeal, bursting as a fresh-dug spring,</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">{363}</a></span>
- <p>Goeth on doggedly in toil, and hath no help of nature:</p>
- <p>Then, is need of moral might, to wrestle with the animal re-action,</p>
- <p>Still to fight, with few men left, and still though faint pursuing.</p>
- <p>The middle is a marshy flat, whereon the wheels go heavily,</p>
- <p>With clouds of doubt above, and ruts of discouragement below:</p>
- <p>Press on, sturdy traveller, yet a league, and yet a league!</p>
- <p>While every step is binding wings on thy victorious feet.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Every</span> end is happiness, the glorious consummation of design,</p>
- <p>The perils past, the fears annulled, the journey at its close:</p>
- <p>And the traveller resteth in complacency, home-returned at last:</p>
- <p>Work done may claim its wages, the goal gained hath won its prize:</p>
- <p>While the labour lasted, while the race was running,</p>
- <p>Many-times the sinews ached, and half refused the struggle:</p>
- <p>But now, all is quietness, a pleasant hour given to repose;</p>
- <p>Calmness in the retrospect of good, and calmness in the prospect of a blessing.</p>
- <p>Hope was glad in the beginning, and fear was sad midway,</p>
- <p>But sweet fruition cometh in the end, a harvest safe and sure.</p>
- <p>That which is, can never not have been: facts are solid as the pyramids:</p>
- <p>A thing done is written in the rock, yea, with a pen of iron.</p>
- <p>Uncertainty no more can scare, the proof is seen complete,</p>
- <p>Nor accident render unaccomplished, for the deed is finished.</p>
- <p>Thus the end shall crown the work, with grace, grace, unto the top-stone,</p>
- <p>And the work shall triumph in its crown, with peace, peace, unto the builder.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">I have</span> written, as other some of old, in quaint and meaning phrase,</p>
- <p>Of many things for either world, a crowd of facts and fancies:</p>
- <p>And will ye judge me, men of mind?&mdash;judge in kindly calmness;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">{364}</a></span>
- <p>For bitter words of haste or hate have often been repented.</p>
- <p>Deep dreaming upon surface reading; imagery crowded over argument;</p>
- <p>Order less considered in the multitude of thoughts: this witnessing is just.</p>
- <p>Scripture gave the holier themes, the well-turned words and wisdom;</p>
- <p>While Fancy on her swallow's wing skimmed those deeper waters.</p>
- <p>And wilt thou say with shrewdness,&mdash;He hath burnished up old truths,</p>
- <p>But where he seemed to fashion new, the novelty was false?</p>
- <p>Alas, for us in these last days, our elders reaped the harvest:</p>
- <p>Alas, for all men in all times, who glean so many tares!</p>
- <p>That which is true, how should it be new? for time is old in years:</p>
- <p>That which is new, how should it be true? for I am young in wisdom:</p>
- <p>Nevertheless, I have spoken at my best, according to the mercies given me,</p>
- <p>Of high, and deep, and famous things, of Evil, or of Good.</p>
- <p>I have told of Errors near akin to Truth, and wholesomes linked with poison;</p>
- <p>Of subtle Uses in the humblest, and the deep laid plots of Pride:</p>
- <p>I have praised Wisdom, comforted thy Hope, and proved to thee the folly of Complainings;</p>
- <p>Hinted at the hazard of an Influence, and turned thee from the terrors of Ambition.</p>
- <p>I have shown thee thy captivity to Law: yet bade thee hide Humilities;</p>
- <p>I have lifted the curtains of Memory; and smoothed the soft pillow of Rest.</p>
- <p>Experience had his sober hour; and Character its keen appreciation;</p>
- <p>And holy Anger stood sublime, where Hatred fell condemned.</p>
- <p>Prayer spake the mind of God, even in His own good words:</p>
- <p>And Zeal, with kindness warmly mixt, allied him to Discretion.</p>
- <p>I taught thee that nothing is a Trifle, even to the laugh of Recreation;</p>
- <p>I led thee with the Train of Religion, to be dazzled at the name of the Triune.</p>
- <p>Thought confessed his unseen fears; and Speech declared his triumphs;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">{365}</a></span>
- <p>I sang the blessedness of books; and commended the prudence of a letter:</p>
- <p>Riches found their room, either unto honour&mdash;or despising:</p>
- <p>Inventions took their lower place, for all things come of God.</p>
- <p>I scorned Ridicule; nor would humble me for Praise; for I had gained Self-knowledge;</p>
- <p>And pleaded fervently for Brutes, who suffer for man's sin.</p>
- <p>Then, I rose to Friendship; and bathed in all the tenderness of Love;</p>
- <p>Knew the purity of Marriage; and blest the face of Children.</p>
- <p>And whereas, by petulance or pride, I had haply said some evil,</p>
- <p>Mine after-thought was Tolerance, to bear the faults of all:</p>
- <p>Many faults, ill to bear, bred the theme of Sorrow;</p>
- <p>Many virtues, dear to see, induced the gush of Joy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Thus,</span> for awhile, as leaving thee in joy, was I loth to break that spell;</p>
- <p>I roamed to other things and thoughts, and fashioned other books.</p>
- <p>But in a season of reflection, after many days,</p>
- <p>A thought stood before me in its garment of the past,&mdash;and lo, a legion with it!</p>
- <p>They came in thronging bands,&mdash;I could not fight nor fly them,&mdash;</p>
- <p>And so they took me to their tent, the prisoner of thoughts.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Then,</span> I bade thee greet me well, and heed my cheerful counsels;</p>
- <p>For every day we have a Friend, who changeth not with time.</p>
- <p>Gladly did I speak of my commission, for I felt it graven on my heart,</p>
- <p>And could not hold my wiser peace, but magnified mine office.</p>
- <p>Mystery had left her echoes in my mind, and I discoursed her secret:</p>
- <p>And thence I turned aside to man, and judged him for his Gifts.</p>
- <p>Beauty, noble thesis, had a world of sweets to sing of,</p>
- <p>And dated all her praise from God, the birthday of the soul.</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">{366}</a></span>
- <p>Thence grew Fame; and Flattery came like Agag;</p>
- <p>But this was as the nauseous dregs, of that inspiring cup:</p>
- <p>Forth from Flattery sprang in opposition harsh and dull Neglect;</p>
- <p>And kind Contentment's gentle face to smile away the sadness.</p>
- <p>Life, all buoyancy and light, and Death, that sullen silence,</p>
- <p>Sped the soul to Immortality, the final home of man.</p>
- <p>Then, in metaphysical review, passed a triple troop,</p>
- <p>Swift Ideas, sounding Names, and heavily armed Things:</p>
- <p>Faith spake of her achievements even among men her brethren;</p>
- <p>And Honesty, with open mouth, would vindicate himself:</p>
- <p>The retrospect of Social life had many truths to tell of,</p>
- <p>And then I left thee to thy Solitude, learning there of Wisdom.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
- <p><span class="smcap">Friend</span> and scholar, lover of the right, mine equal kind companion,&mdash;</p>
- <p>I prize indeed thy favour, and these sympathies are dear:</p>
- <p>Still, if thy heart be little with me, wot thou well, my brother,</p>
- <p>I canvass not the smiles of praise, nor dread the frowns of censure.</p>
- <p>Through many themes in many thoughts, have we held sweet converse;</p>
- <p>But God alone be praised for mind! He only is sufficient,</p>
- <p>And every thought in every theme by prayer had been established:</p>
- <p>Who then should fear the face of man, when God hath answered prayer?&mdash;</p>
- <p>I speak it not in arrogance of heart, but humbly as of justice,</p>
- <p>I think it not in vanity of soul, but tenderly, for gratitude,&mdash;</p>
- <p>God hath blest my mind, and taught it many truths:</p>
- <p>And I have echoed some to thee, in weakness, yet sincerely:</p>
- <p>Yea, though ignorance and error shall have marred those lessons of His teaching,</p>
- <p>I stand in mine own Master's praise, or fall to His reproof.</p>
- <p>If thou lovest, help me with thy blessing; if otherwise, mine shall be for thee;</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">{367}</a></span>
- <p>If thou approvest, heed my words; if otherwise, in kindness be my teacher.</p>
- <p>Many mingled thoughts for self have warped my better aim;</p>
- <p>Many motives tempted still, to toil for pride or praise:</p>
- <p>Alas, I have loved pride and praise, like others worse or worthier;</p>
- <p>But hate and fear them now, as snakes that fastened on my hand:</p>
- <p>Scævola burnt both hand and crime; but Paul flung the viper on the fire:</p>
- <p>He shook it off, and felt no harm: so be it! I renounce them.</p>
- <p>Rebuke then, if thou wilt rebuke,&mdash;but neither hastily nor harshly;</p>
- <p>Or, if thou wilt commend, be it honestly, of right: I work for God and good.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img width="208" height="133" alt="" src="images/image101ar.jpg" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p>The End of the Second Series</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="gap-above center x-small">BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="tnote">
-
-<p>Transcriber's Note.</p>
-
-<p>Apparent typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-<p>Hyphenation has been made consistent.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
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@@ -1,9752 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Proverbial Philosophy, by Martin F. Tupper
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Proverbial Philosophy
- The First and Second Series
-
-
-Author: Martin F. Tupper
-
-
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2015 [eBook #50064]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Chris Pinfield, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 50064-h.htm or 50064-h.zip:
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- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/50064/50064-h.zip)
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Small capitals have been replaced by full capitals.
-
- A transliterated Greek phrase is enclosed by equal signs
- (=THEO DOXA=)
-
- The illustrations sometimes include the title of a section
- of the poem, lines from the section (not reproduced), text
- not forming part of the poem, or the initial letter of the
- following stanza. Initial letters are placed in quotation
- marks.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: Proverbial Philosophy]
-
-
-PROVERBIAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-(THE FIRST AND SECOND SERIES.)
-
-by
-
-MARTIN F. TUPPER, M.A., D.C.L., F.R.S.,
-
-Of Christchurch, Oxford.
-
-Illustrated.
-
-A New Edition.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-London:
-Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street.
-1867.
-
-London:
-Bradbury, Evans, and Co., Printers, Whitefriars.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-_FIRST SERIES._
- PAGE
-
- PREFATORY 1
- THE WORDS OF WISDOM 4
- OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE 8
- OF ANTICIPATION 12
- OF HIDDEN USES 14
- OF COMPENSATION 21
- OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES 27
- OF MEMORY 33
- THE DREAM OF AMBITION 38
- OF SUBJECTION 41
- OF REST 51
- OF HUMILITY 55
- OF PRIDE 59
- OF EXPERIENCE 62
- OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER 65
- OF HATRED AND ANGER 74
- OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL 76
- OF PRAYER 81
- THE LORD'S PRAYER 86
- OF DISCRETION 88
- OF TRIFLES 92
- OF RECREATION 95
- THE TRAIN OF RELIGION 100
- OF A TRINITY 103
- OF THINKING 107
- OF SPEAKING 115
- OF READING 119
- OF WRITING 121
- OF WEALTH 125
- OF INVENTION 130
- OF RIDICULE 134
- OF COMMENDATION 137
- OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE 142
- OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS 150
- OF FRIENDSHIP 153
- OF LOVE 158
- OF MARRIAGE 161
- OF EDUCATION 167
- OF TOLERANCE 177
- OF SORROW 181
- OF JOY 184
-
-_SECOND SERIES._
-
- INTRODUCTORY 189
- OF CHEERFULNESS 192
- OF YESTERDAY 197
- OF TO-DAY 203
- OF TO-MORROW 207
- OF AUTHORSHIP 210
- OF MYSTERY 219
- OF GIFTS 227
- OF BEAUTY 233
- OF FAME 250
- OF FLATTERY 258
- OF NEGLECT 266
- OF CONTENTMENT 275
- OF LIFE 281
- OF DEATH 288
- OF IMMORTALITY 297
- OF IDEAS 317
- OF NAMES 321
- OF THINGS 327
- OF FAITH 331
- OF HONESTY 341
- OF SOCIETY 348
- OF SOLITUDE 357
- RECAPITULATION 362
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
-_FIRST SERIES._
- DESIGNER. ENGRAVER. PAGE
-
- Title Page GUSTAVE DORE. _W. J. Linton._
- Floral Title H. N. HUMPHREYS. _J. Swain._
- Prefatory J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 1
- " " " 3
- The Words of Wisdom H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 4
- Memory and Diligence M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 5
- Of Truth in Things False J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 7
- Of Anticipation T. DALZIEL. " 12
- Of Hidden Uses E. DUNCAN. " 14
- " B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 18
- Of Compensation J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 20
- " " " 25
- Of Indirect Influences E. H. CORBOULD. " 26
- " G. DODGSON. " 29
- " W. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 32
- Of Memory W. L. LEITCH. _Dalziel Brs._ 33
- " B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 36
- The Dream of Ambition M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 38
- Of Subjection E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 48
- Of Subjection E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 49
- Of Rest M. F. TUPPER. _W. J. Green._ 53
- Of Humility J. C. HORSLEY. _J. Thompson._ 55
- Of Pride J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 59
- " " " 61
- Of Experience T. DALZIEL. " 62
- Of Estimating Character J. TENNIEL. " 65
- " " " 71
- Of Hatred and Anger C. W. COPE, R.A. _S. Williams._ 74
- Of Good in Things Evil J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 76
- Of Prayer J. C. HORSLEY. " 81
- The Lord's Prayer C. W. COPE, R.A. _S. Williams._ 86
- Of Discretion E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 88
- Of Recreation E. DUNCAN. " 95
- " E. H. CORBOULD. " 99
- The Train of Religion J. TENNIEL. " 100
- Of Thinking " " 107
- Of Speaking G. DODGSON. " 114
- Of Writing J. TENNIEL. " 121
- Of Wealth J. GILBERT. " 125
- Of Invention B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 132
- Of Ridicule J. GODWIN. _Dalziel Brs._ 134
- Of Self-Acquaintance J. GILBERT. " 142
- Of Cruelty to Animals W. HARVEY. " 149
- Of Love H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 158
- Of Marriage J. SEVERN. " 161
- Of Education J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 167
- " J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 176
- Of Sorrow C. W. COPE, R.A. _W. J. Green._ 181
- Of Joy J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 184
-
- _SECOND SERIES._
-
- Title Page J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 187
- Introductory H. N. HUMPHREYS. _H. Vizetelly._ 189
- Of Yesterday B. FOSTER. " 198
- Of To-morrow F. R. PICKERSGILL, A.R.A. _Dalziel Brs._ 206
- Of Mystery J. GILBERT. " 218
- Of Beauty B. FOSTER. _H. Vizetelly._ 237
- " J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 239
- Of Fame F. R. PICKERSGILL, A.R.A. " 249
- Of Neglect E. H. CORBOULD. _H. Vizetelly._ 266
- Of Contentment B. FOSTER. " 275
- Of Death J. TENNIEL. _Dalziel Brs._ 288
- " J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 291
- Of Names J. GILBERT. _Dalziel Brs._ 321
- Of Faith J. TENNIEL. " 331
- " W. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 333
- Of Society E. H. CORBOULD. _Dalziel Brs._ 352
- Of Solitude J. SEVERN. _H. Vizetelly._ 359
- Initial Letters H. N. HUMPHREYS. { _H. Vizetelly_
- { _and_
- { _J. Swain._
-
-
-
-
-FIRST SERIES.
-
-
-[Illustration: Prefatory "T"]
-
-PREFATORY.
-
- Thoughts, that have tarried in my mind, and peopled its inner chambers,
- The sober children of reason, or desultory train of fancy;
- Clear running wine of conviction, with the scum and the lees of
- speculation;
- Corn from the sheaves of science, with stubble from mine own garner:
- Searchings after Truth, that have tracked her secret lodes,
- And come up again to the surface-world, with a knowledge grounded deeper;
- Arguments of high scope, that have soared to the key-stone of heaven,
- And thence have swooped to their certain mark, as the falcon to its
- quarry;
- The fruits I have gathered of prudence, the ripened harvest of my musings,
- These commend I unto thee, O docile scholar of Wisdom,
- These I give to thy gentle heart, thou lover of the right.
-
- What, though a guilty man renew that hallowed theme,
- And strike with feebler hand the harp of Sirach's son?
- What, though a youthful tongue take up that ancient parable,
- And utter faintly forth dark sayings as of old?
- Sweet is the virgin honey, though the wild bee have stored it in a reed,
- And bright the jewelled band, that circleth an Ethiop's arm;
- Pure are the grains of gold in the turbid stream of Ganges,
- And fair the living flowers, that spring from the dull cold sod.
- Wherefore, thou gentle student, bend thine ear to my speech,
- For I also am as thou art; our hearts can commune together:
- To meanest matters will I stoop, for mean is the lot of mortal;
- I will rise to noblest themes, for the soul hath an heritage of glory:
- The passions of puny man; the majestic characters of God;
- The feverish shadows of time, and the mighty substance of eternity.
-
- Commend thy mind unto candour, and grudge not as though thou hadst a
- teacher,
- Nor scorn angelic Truth for the sake of her evil herald;
- Heed not him, but hear his words, and care not whence they come;
- The viewless winds might whisper them, the billows roar them forth,
- The mean unconscious sedge sigh them in the ear of evening,
- Or the mind of pride conceive, and the mouth of folly speak them.
- Lo now, I stand not forth laying hold on spear and buckler,
- I come a man of peace, to comfort, not to combat;
- With soft persuasive speech to charm thy patient ear,
- Giving the hand of fellowship, acknowledging the heart of sympathy:
- Let us walk together as friends in the shaded paths of meditation,
- Nor Judgment set his seal until he hath poised his balance;
- That the chastenings of mild reproof may meet unwitting error,
- And Charity not be a stranger at the board that is spread for brothers.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: The Words of Wisdom]
-
-THE WORDS OF WISDOM.
-
- Few and precious are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter:
- To what shall their rarity be likened? What price shall count their worth?
- Perfect and much to be desired, and giving joy with riches,
- No lovely thing on earth can picture all their beauty.
- They be chance pearls, flung among the rocks by the sullen waters of
- Oblivion,
- Which Diligence loveth to gather, and hang around the neck of Memory;
- They be white-winged seeds of happiness, wafted from the islands of the
- blessed,
- Which Thought carefully tendeth, in the kindly garden of the heart;
- They be sproutings of an harvest for eternity, bursting through the tilth
- of time,
- Green promise of the golden wheat, that yieldeth angels' food;
- They be drops of the crystal dew, which the wings of seraphs scatter,
- When on some brighter sabbath, their plumes quiver most with delight:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Yet more, for the half is not said, of their might, and dignity, and
- value;
- For life-giving be they and glorious, redolent of sanctity and heaven:
- As fumes of hallowed incense, that veil the throne of the Most High;
- As beaded bubbles that sparkle on the rim of the cup of immortality;
- As wreaths of the rainbow spray, from the pure cataracts of truth:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
- Yet once again, loving student, suffer the praises of thy teacher,
- For verily the sun of the mind, and the life of the heart is Wisdom:
- She is pure and full of light, crowning grey hairs with lustre,
- And kindling the eye of youth with a fire not its own;
- And her words, whereunto canst thou liken them? for earth cannot show
- their peers:
- They be grains of the diamond sand, the radiant floor of heaven,
- Rising in sunny dust behind the chariot of God;
- They be flashes of the dayspring from on high, shed from the windows of
- the skies;
- They be streams of living waters, fresh from the fountain of Intelligence:
- Such, and so precious, are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter.
-
- For these shall guide thee well, and guard thee on thy way;
- And wanting all beside, with these shalt thou be rich:
- Though all around be woe, these shall make thee happy;
- Though all within be pain, these shall bring thee health:
- Thy good shall grow into ripeness, thine evil wither and decay,
- And Wisdom's words shall sweetly charm thy doubtful into virtues:
- Meanness shall then be frugal care; where shame was, thou art modest;
- Cowardice riseth into caution, rashness is sobered into courage;
- The wrathful spirit, rendering a reason, standeth justified in anger;
- The idle hand hath fair excuse, propping the thoughtful forehead.
- Life shall have no labyrinth but thy steps can track it,
- For thou hast a silken clue, to lead thee through the darkness:
- The rampant Minotaur of ignorance shall perish at thy coming,
- And thine enfranchised fellows hail thy white victorious sails.
- Wherefore, friend and scholar, hear the words of Wisdom;
- Whether she speaketh to thy soul in the full chords of revelation;
- In the teaching earth, or air, or sea; in the still melodies of thought;
- Or, haply, in the humbler strains that would detain thee here.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF TRUTH IN THINGS FALSE.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Error is a hardy plant; it flourisheth in every soil;
- In the heart of the wise and good, alike with the wicked and foolish.
- For there is no error so crooked, but it hath in it some lines of truth:
- Nor is any poison so deadly, that it serveth not some wholesome use:
- And the just man, enamoured of the right, is blinded by the speciousness
- of wrong;
- And the prudent, perceiving an advantage, is content to overlook the harm.
- On all things created remaineth the half-effaced signature of God,
- Somewhat of fair and good, though blotted by the finger of corruption:
- And if error cometh in like a flood, it mixeth with streams of truth;
- And the Adversary loveth to have it so, for thereby many are decoyed.
- Providence is dark in its permissions; yet one day, when all is known,
- The universe of reason shall acknowledge how just and good were they;
- For the wise man leaneth on his wisdom, and the righteous trusteth to his
- righteousness,
- And those, who thirst for independence, are suffered to drink of
- disappointment.
- Wherefore?--to prove and humble them; and to teach the idolaters of Truth,
- That it is but the ladder unto Him, on whom only they should trust.
-
- There is truth in the wildest scheme that imaginative heat hath
- engendered,
- And a man may gather somewhat from the crudest theories of fancy:
- The alchymist laboureth in folly, but catcheth chance gleams of wisdom,
- And findeth out many inventions, though his crucible breed not gold;
- The sinner, toying with witchcraft, thinketh to delude his fellows,
- But there be very spirits of evil, and what if they come at his bidding?
- He is a bold bad man who dareth to tamper with the dead;
- For their whereabout lieth in a mystery--that vestibule leading to
- Eternity,
- The waiting-room for unclad ghosts, before the presence-chamber of their
- King:
- Mind may act upon mind, though bodies be far divided;
- For the life is in the blood, but souls communicate unseen:
- And the heat of an excited intellect, radiating to its fellows,
- Doth kindle dry leaves afar off, while the green wood around it is
- unwarmed.
- The dog may have a spirit, as well as his brutal master;
- A spirit to live in happiness: for why should he be robbed of his
- existence?
- Hath he not a conscience of evil, a glimmer of moral sense,
- Love and hatred, courage and fear, and visible shame and pride?
- There may be a future rest for the patient victims of the cruel;
- And a season allotted for their bliss, to compensate for unjust suffering.
- Spurn not at seeming error, but dig below its surface for the truth;
- And beware of seeming truths, that grow on the roots of error:
- For comely are the apples that spring from the Dead Sea's cursed shore,
- But within are they dust and ashes, and the hand that plucked them shall
- rue it.
-
- A frequent similar effect argueth a constant cause:
- Yet who hath counted the links that bind an omen to its issue?
- Who hath expounded the law that rendereth calamities gregarious,
- Pressing down with yet more woes the heavy-laden mourner?
- Who knoweth wherefore a monsoon should swell the sails of the prosperous,
- Blithely speeding on their course the children of good luck?
- Who hath companied a vision from the horn or ivory gate?
- Or met another's mind in his, and explained its presence?
- There is a secret somewhat in antipathies; and love is more than fancy;
- Yea, and a palpable notice warneth of an instant danger;
- For the soul hath its feelers, cobwebs floating on the wind,
- That catch events in their approach with sure and apt presentiment;
- So that some halo of attraction heraldeth a coming friend,
- Investing in his likeness the stranger that passed on before;
- And while the word is in thy mouth, behold thy word fulfilled,
- And he of whom we spake can answer for himself.
- O man, little hast thou learnt of truth in things most true,
- How therefore shall thy blindness wot of truth in things most false?
- Thou hast not yet perceived the causes of life or motion,
- How then canst thou define the subtle sympathies of mind?
- For the spirit, sharpest and strongest when disease hath rent the body,
- Hath welcomed kindred spirits in nightly visitations,
- Or learnt from restless ghosts dark secrets of the living,
- And helped slow justice to her prey by the dreadful teaching of a dream.
-
- Verily, there is nothing so true, that the damps of error have not warped
- it;
- Verily, there is nothing so false, that a sparkle of truth is not in it.
- For the enemy, the father of lies, the giant Upas of creation,
- Whose deadly shade hath blasted this once green garden of the Lord,
- Can but pervert the good, but may not create the evil;
- He destroyeth, but cannot build; for he is not antagonist deity:
- Mighty is his stolen power, yet is he a creature and a subject;
- Not a maker of abstract wrong, but a spoiler of concrete right:
- The fiend hath not a royal crown; he is but a prowling robber,
- Suffered, for some mysterious end, to haunt the King's highway;
- And the keen sword he beareth, once was a simple ploughshare;
- Yea, and his panoply of error is but a distortion of the truth:
- The sickle that once reaped righteousness, beaten from its useful curve,
- With axe, and spike, and bar, headeth the marauder's halbert.
- Seek not further, O man, to solve the dark riddle of sin;
- Suffice it, that thine own bad heart is to thee thine origin of evil.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF ANTICIPATION.
-
- Thou hast seen many sorrows, travel-stained pilgrim of the world,
- But that which hath vexed thee most hath been the looking for evil;
- And though calamities have crossed thee, and misery been heaped on thy
- head,
- Yet ills, that never happened, have chiefly made thee wretched.
- The sting of pain and the edge of pleasure are blunted by long
- expectation,
- For the gall and the balm alike are diluted in the waters of patience:
- And often thou sippest sweetness, ere the cup is dashed from thy lip;
- Or drainest the gall of fear, while evil is passing by thy dwelling.
- A man too careful of danger liveth in continual torment,
- But a cheerful expecter of the best hath a fountain of joy within him:
- Yea, though the breath of disappointment should chill the sanguine heart,
- Speedily gloweth it again, warmed by the live embers of hope;
- Though the black and heavy surge close above the head for a moment,
- Yet the happy buoyancy of Confidence riseth superior to Despair.
- Verily, evils may be courted, may be wooed and won by distrust:
- For the wise Physician of our weal loveth not an unbelieving spirit;
- And to those giveth He good, who rely on His hand for good;
- And those leaveth He to evil, who fear, but trust Him not.
- Ask for good, and hope it, for the ocean of good is fathomless;
- Ask for good, and have it, for thy Friend would see thee happy;
- But to the timid heart, to the child of unbelief and dread,
- That leaneth on his own weak staff, and trusteth the sight of his eyes,
- The evil he feared shall come, for the soil is ready for the seed,
- And suspicion hath coldly put aside the hand that was ready to help him.
- Therefore look up, sad spirit; be strong, thou coward heart,
- Or fear will make thee wretched, though evil follow not behind:
- Cease to anticipate misfortune; there are still many chances of escape;
- But if it come, be courageous; face it, and conquer thy calamity.
- There is not an enemy so stout, as to storm and take the fortress of the
- mind,
- Unless its infirmity turn traitor, and Fear unbar the gates.
- The valiant standeth as a rock, and the billows break upon him;
- The timorous is a skiff unmoored, tost and mocked at by a ripple:
- The valiant holdeth fast to good, till evil wrench it from him;
- The timorous casteth it aside, to meet the worst half way:
- Yet oftentimes is evil but a braggart, that provoketh and will not fight;
- Or the feint of a subtle fencer, who measureth his thrust elsewhere:
- Or perchance a blessing in a masque, sent to try thy trust,
- The precious smiting of a friend, whose frowns are all in love:
- Often the storm threateneth, but is driven to other climes,
- And the weak hath quailed in fear, while the firm hath been glad in his
- confidence.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF HIDDEN USES.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The sea-wort floating on the waves, or rolled up high along the shore,
- Ye counted useless and vile, heaping on it names of contempt:
- Yet hath it gloriously triumphed, and man been humbled in his ignorance,
- For health is in the freshness of its savour, and it cumbereth the beach
- with wealth;
- Comforting the tossings of pain with its violet-tinctured essence,
- And by its humbler ashes enriching many proud.
- Be this, then, a lesson to thy soul, that thou reckon nothing worthless,
- Because thou heedest not its use, nor knowest the virtues thereof.
- And herein, as thou walkest by the sea, shall weeds be a type and an
- earnest
- Of the stored and uncounted riches lying hid in all creatures of God:
- There be flowers making glad the desert, and roots fattening the soil,
- And jewels in the secret deep, scattered among groves of coral,
- And comforts to crown all wishes, and aids unto every need,
- Influences yet unthought, and virtues, and many inventions,
- And uses above and around, which man hath not yet regarded.
- Not long to charm away disease hath the crocus yielded up its bulb,
- Nor the willow lent its bark, nor the nightshade its vanquished poison;
- Not long hath the twisted leaf, the fragrant gift of China,
- Nor that nutritious root, the boon of far Peru,
- Nor the many-coloured dahlia, nor the gorgeous flaunting cactus,
- Nor the multitude of fruits and flowers, ministered to life and luxury:
- Even so, there be virtues yet unknown in the wasted foliage of the elm,
- In the sun-dried harebell of the downs, and the hyacinth drinking in the
- meadow,
- In the sycamore's winged fruit, and the facet-cut cones of the cedar;
- And the pansy and bright geranium live not alone for beauty,
- Nor the waxen flower of the arbute, though it dieth in a day,
- Nor the sculptured crest of the fir, unseen but by the stars;
- And the meanest weed of the garden serveth unto many uses,
- The salt tamarisk, and juicy flag, the freckled orchis, and the daisy.
- The world may laugh at famine, when forest-trees yield bread,
- When acorns give out fragrant drink, and the sap of the linden is as
- fatness:
- For every green herb, from the lotus to the darnel,
- Is rich with delicate aids to help incurious man.
-
- Still, Mind is up and stirring, and pryeth in the corners of contrivance,
- Often from the dark recesses picking out bright seeds of truth:
- Knowledge hath clipped the lightning's wings, and mewed it up for a
- purpose,
- Training to some domestic task the fiery bird of heaven;
- Tamed is the spirit of the storm, to slave in all peaceful arts,
- To walk with husbandry and science; to stand in the vanguard against
- death:
- And the chemist balanceth his elements with more than magic skill,
- Commanding stones that they be bread, and draining sweetness out of
- wormwood.
- Yet man, heedless of a God, counteth up vain reckonings,
- Fearing to be jostled and starved out, by the too prolific increase of
- his kind;
- And asketh, in unbelieving dread, for how few years to come
- Will the black cellars of the world yield unto him fuel for his winter.
- Might not the wide waste sea be pent within narrower bounds?
- Might not the arm of diligence make the tangled wilderness a garden?
- And for aught thou canst tell, there may be a thousand methods
- Of comforting thy limbs in warmth, though thou kindle not a spark.
- Fear not, son of man, for thyself nor thy seed:--with a multitude is
- plenty;
- God's blessing giveth increase, and with it larger than enough.
-
- Search out the wisdom of nature, there is depth in all her doings;
- She seemeth prodigal of power, yet her rules are the maxims of frugality:
- The plant refresheth the air, and the earth filtereth the water,
- And dews are sucked into the cloud, dropping fatness on the world:
- She hath, on a mighty scale, a general use for all things;
- Yet hath she specially for each its microscopic purpose:
- There is use in the prisoned air, that swelleth the pods of the laburnum;
- Design in the venomed thorns, that sentinel the leaves of the nettle;
- A final cause for the aromatic gum, that congealeth the moss around a
- rose:
- A reason for each blade of grass, that reareth its small spire.
- How knoweth discontented man what a train of ills might follow,
- If the lowest menial of nature knew not her secret office?
- If the thistle never sprang up to mock the loose husbandry of indolence,
- Or the pestilence never swept away an unknown curse from among men?
- Would ye crush the buzzing myriads that float on the breath of evening?
- Would ye trample the creatures of God that people the rotting fruit?
- Would ye suffer no mildew forest to stain the unhealthy wall,
- Nor a noisome savour to exhale from the pool that breedeth disease?
- Pain is useful unto man, for it teacheth him to guard his life,
- And the fetid vapours of the fen warn him to fly from danger:
- And the meditative mind, looking on, winneth good food for its hunger,
- Seeing the wholesome root bring forth a poisonous berry;
- For otherwhile falleth it out that truth, driven to extremities,
- Yieldeth bitter folly as the spoilt fruit of wisdom.
- O, blinded is thine eye, if it see not just aptitude in all things:
- O, frozen is thy heart, if it glow not with gratitude for all things:
- In the perfect circle of creation not an atom could be spared,
- From earth's magnetic zone to the bindweed round a hawthorn.
-
- The sage, and the beetle at his feet, hath each a ministration to perform:
- The briar and the palm have the wages of life, rendering secret service.
- Neither is it thus alone with the definite existences of matter;
- But motion and sound, circumstance and quality, yea, all things have
- their office.
- The zephyr playing with an aspen-leaf,--the earthquake that rendeth a
- continent;
- The moon-beam silvering a ruined arch,--the desert-wave dashing up a
- pyramid;
- The thunder of jarring icebergs,--the stops of a shepherd's pipe;
- The howl of the tiger in the glen,--and the wood-dove calling to her mate;
- The vulture's cruel rage,--the grace of the stately swan;
- The fierceness looking from the lynx's eye, and the dull stupor of the
- sloth:
- To these, and to all, is there added each its USE, though man considereth
- it lightly;
- For Power hath ordained nothing which Economy saw not needful.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- All things being are in concord with the ubiquity of God;
- Neither is there one thing overmuch, nor freed from honourable servitude.
- Were there not a need-be of wisdom, nothing would be as it is;
- For essence without necessity argueth a moral weakness.
- We look through a glass darkly, we catch but glimpses of truth;
- But, doubtless, the sailing of a cloud hath Providence to its pilot,
- Doubtless, the root of an oak is gnarled for a special purpose,
- The foreknown station of a rush is as fixed as the station of a king,
- And chaff from the hand of the winnower, steered as the stars in their
- courses.
- Man liveth only in himself, but the Lord liveth in all things;
- And His pervading unity quickeneth the whole creation.
- Man doeth one thing at once, nor can he think two thoughts together;
- But God compasseth all things, mantling the globe like air:
- And we render homage to His wisdom, seeing use in all His creatures,
- For, perchance, the universe would die, were not all things as they are.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Compensation]
-
-OF COMPENSATION.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Equal is the government of heaven in allotting pleasures among men,
- And just the everlasting law, that hath wedded happiness to virtue:
- For verily on all things else broodeth disappointment with care,
- That childish man may be taught the shallowness of earthly enjoyment.
- Wherefore, ye that have enough, envy ye the rich man his abundance?
- Wherefore, daughters of affluence, covet ye the cottager's content?
- Take the good with the evil, for ye all are pensioners of God,
- And none may choose or refuse the cup His wisdom mixeth.
- The poor man rejoiceth at his toil, and his daily bread is sweet to him:
- Content with present good, he looketh not for evil to the future:
- The rich man languisheth with sloth, and findeth pleasure in nothing,
- He locketh up care with his gold, and feareth the fickleness of fortune.
- Can a cup contain within itself the measure of a bucket?
- Or the straitened appetites of man drink more than their fill of luxury?
- There is a limit to enjoyment, though the sources of wealth be boundless:
- And the choicest pleasures of life lie within the ring of moderation.
-
- Also, though penury and pain be real and bitter evils,
- I would reason with the poor afflicted, for he is not so wretched as he
- seemeth.
- What right hath an offender to complain, though others escape punishment,
- If the stripes of earned misfortune overtake him in his sin?
- Wherefore not endure with resignation the evils thou canst not avert?
- For the coward pain will flee, if thou meet him as a man:
- Consider, whatever be thy fate, that it might and ought to have been
- worse,
- And that it lieth in thy hand to gather even blessing from afflictions:
- Bethink thee, wherefore were they sent? and hath not use blunted their
- keenness?
- Need hope, and patience, and courage, be strangers to the meanest hovel?
- Thou art in an evil case, it were cruel to deny to thee compassion,
- But there is not unmitigated ill in the sharpest of this world's sorrows:
- I touch not the sore of thy guilt; but of human griefs I counsel thee,
- Cast off the weakness of regret, and gird thee to redeem thy loss:
- Thou hast gained, in the furnace of affliction, self-knowledge, patience,
- and humility,
- And these be as precious ore, that waiteth the skill of the coiner:
- Despise not the blessings of adversity, nor the gain thou hast earned so
- hardly,
- And now thou hast drained the bitter, take heed that thou lose not the
- sweet.
-
- Power is seldom innocent, and envy is the yoke-fellow of eminence;
- And the rust of the miser's riches wasteth his soul as a canker.
- The poor man counteth not the cost at which such wealth hath been
- purchased;
- He would be on the mountain's top, without the toil and travail of the
- climbing.
- But equity demandeth recompense: for high-place, calumny and care;
- For state, comfortless splendour eating out the heart of home;
- For warrior fame, dangers and death; for a name among the learned, a
- spirit overstrained;
- For honour of all kinds, the goad of ambition; on every acquirement, the
- tax of anxiety.
- He that would change with another, must take the cup as it is mixed:
- Poverty, with largeness of heart; or a full purse, with a sordid spirit;
- Wisdom, in an ailing body; or a common mind, with health:
- Godliness, with man's scorn; or the welcome of the mighty, with guilt:
- Beauty, with a fickle heart; or plainness of face, with affection.
- For so hath Providence determined, that a man shall not easily discover
- Unmingled good or evil, to quicken his envy or abhorrence.
- A bold man or a fool must he be, who would change his lot with another;
- It were a fearful bargain, and mercy hath lovingly refused it:
- For we know the worst of ourselves, but the secrets of another we see not,
- And better is certain bad, than the doubt and dread of worse.
-
- Just, and strong, and opportune is the moral rule of God;
- Ripe in its times, firm in its judgments, equal in the measure of its
- gifts:
- Yet men, scanning the surface, count the wicked happy,
- Nor heed the compensating peace, which gladdeneth the good in his
- afflictions.
- They see not the frightful dreams that crowd a bad man's pillow,
- Like wreathed adders crawling round his midnight conscience;
- They hear not the terrible suggestions, that knock at the portal of his
- will,
- Provoking to wipe away from life the one weak witness of the deed;
- They know not the torturing suspicions that sting his panting breast,
- When the clear eye of penetration quietly readeth off the truth.
- Likewise of the good what know they? The memories bringing pleasure,
- Shrined in the heart of the benevolent, and glistening from his eye;
- The calm self-justifying reason that establisheth the upright in his
- purpose;
- The warm and gushing bliss that floodeth all the thoughts of the
- religious.
- Many a beggar at the cross-way, or grey-haired shepherd on the plain,
- Hath more of the end of all wealth, than hundreds who multiply the means.
-
- Moreover, a moral compensation reacheth to the secrecy of thought;
- For if thou wilt think evil of thy neighbour, soon shalt thou have him
- for thy foe:
- And yet he may know nothing of the cause that maketh thee distasteful to
- his soul,--
- The cause of unkind suspicion, for which thou hast thy punishment:
- And if thou think of him in charity, wishing or praying for his weal,
- He shall not guess the secret charm that lureth his soul to love thee.
- For just is retributive ubiquity: Samson did sin with Dalilah,
- And his eyes and captive strength were forfeit to the Philistine:
- Jacob robbed his brother, and sorrow was his portion to the grave:
- David must fly before his foes, yea, though his guilt is covered:
- And He who, seeming old in youth, was marred for others' sin,
- For every special crime must bear its special penalty:
- By luxury, or rashness, or vice, the member that hath erred suffereth,--
- And therefore the Sacrifice for all was pained at every pore.
-
- Alike to the slave and his oppressor cometh night with sweet refreshment,
- And half of the life of the most wretched is gladdened by the soothings
- of sleep.
- Pain addeth zest unto pleasure, and teacheth the luxury of health;
- There is a joy in sorrow, which none but a mourner can know:
- Madness hath imaginary bliss, and most men have no more;
- Age hath its quiet calm, and youth enjoyeth not for haste:
- Daily, in the midst of its beatitude, the righteous soul is vexed;
- And even the misery of guilt doth attain to the bliss of pardon.
- Who, in the face of the born-blind, ever looked on other than content?
- And the deaf ear listeneth within to the silent music of the heart.
- There is evil poured upon the earth from the overflowings of corruption,--
- Sickness, and poverty, and pain, and guilt, and madness, and sorrow;
- But, as the water from a fountain riseth and sinketh to its level,
- Ceaselessly toileth justice to equalize the lots of men:
- For, habit and hope and ignorance, and the being but one of a multitude,
- And strength of reason in the sage, and dulness of feeling in the fool,
- And the light elasticity of courage, and the calm resignation of meekness,
- And the stout endurance of decision, and the weak carelessness of apathy,
- And helps invisible but real, and ministerings not unfelt,
- Angelic aid with worldly discomfiture, bodily loss with the soul's gain,
- Secret griefs, and silent joys, thorns in the flesh, and cordials for the
- spirit,
- (--Short of the insuperable barrier dividing innocence from guilt,--)
- Go far to level all things, by the gracious rule of Compensation.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Indirect Influences]
-
-OF INDIRECT INFLUENCES.
-
-[Illustration: "F"]
-
- Face thy foe in the field, and perchance thou wilt meet thy master,
- For the sword is chained to his wrist, and his armour buckled for the
- battle;
- But find him when he looketh not for thee, aim between the joints of his
- harness,
- And the crest of his pride will be humbled, his cruelty will bite the
- dust.
- Beard not a lion in his den, but fashion the secret pitfall;
- So shall thou conquer the strong, thyself triumphing in weakness.
- The hurricane rageth fiercely, and the promontory standeth in its might,
- Breasting the artillery of heaven, as darts glance from the crocodile:
- But the small continual creeping of the silent footsteps of the sea
- Mineth the wall of adamant, and stealthily compasseth its ruin.
- The weakness of accident is strong, where the strength of design is weak:
- And a casual analogy convinceth, when a mind beareth not argument.
- Will not a man listen? be silent; and prove thy maxim by example:
- Never fear, thou losest not thy hold, though thy mouth doth not render a
- reason.
- Contend not in wisdom with a fool, for thy sense maketh much of his
- conceit;
- And some errors never would have thriven, had it not been for learned
- refutation:
- Yea, much evil hath been caused by an honest wrestler for truth,
- And much of unconscious good, by the man that hated wisdom:
- For the intellect judgeth closely, and if thou overstep thy argument,
- Or seem not consistent with thyself, or fail in thy direct purpose,
- The mind that went along with thee, shall stop and return without thee,
- And thou shalt have raised a foe, where thou mightest have won a friend.
-
- Hints, shrewdly strown, mightily disturb the spirit,
- Where a bare-faced accusation would be too ridiculous for calumny:
- The sly suggestion toucheth nerves, and nerves contract the fronds,
- And the sensitive mimosa of affection trembleth to its root;
- And friendships, the growth of half a century, those oaks that laugh at
- storms,
- Have been cankered in a night by a worm, even as the prophet's gourd.
- Hast thou loved, and not known jealousy? for a sidelong look
- Can please or pain thy heart more than the multitude of proofs:
- Hast thou hated, and not learned that thy silent scorn
- Doth deeper aggravate thy foe than loud-cursing malice?--
- A wise man prevaileth in power, for he screeneth his battering engine,
- But a fool tilteth headlong, and his adversary is aware.
-
- Behold those broken arches, that oriel all unglazed,
- That crippled line of columns bleaching in the sun,
- The delicate shaft stricken midway, and the flying buttress
- Idly stretching forth to hold up tufted ivy:
- Thinkest thou the thousand eyes that shine with rapture on a ruin,
- Would have looked with half their wonder on the perfect pile?
- And wherefore not--but that light hints, suggesting unseen beauties,
- Fill the complacent gazer with self-grown conceits?
- And so, the rapid sketch winneth more praise to the painter,
- Than the consummate work elaborated on his easel:
- And so, the Helvetic lion caverned in the living rock
- Hath more of majesty and force, than it upon a marble pedestal.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Tell me, daughter of taste, what hath charmed thine ear in music?
- Is it the laboured theme, the curious fugue or cento,--
- Nor rather the sparkles of intelligence flashing from some strange chord,
- Or the soft melody of sounds far sweeter for simplicity?
- Tell me, thou son of science, what hath filled thy mind in reading?
- Is it the volume of detail where all is orderly set down,
- And they that read may run, nor need to stop and think;
- The book carefully accurate, that counteth thee no better than a fool,
- Gorging the passive mind with annotated notes;--
- Nor rather the half-suggested thoughts, the riddles thou mayst solve,
- The fair ideas, coyly peeping like young loves out of roses,
- The quaint arabesque conceptions, half cherub and half flower,
- The light analogy, or deep allusion, trusted to thy learning,
- The confidence implied in thy skill to unravel meaning mysteries?
- For ideas are ofttimes shy of the close furniture of words,
- And thought, wherein only is power, may be best conveyed by a suggestion:
- The flash that lighteth up a valley, amid the dark midnight of a storm,
- Coineth the mind with that scene sharper than fifty summers.
-
- A worldly man boasteth in his pride, that there is no power but of money;
- And he judgeth the characters of men by the differing measures of their
- means:
- He stealeth all goodly names, as worth, and value, and substance,
- Which be the ancient heritage of Virtue, but such an one ascribeth unto
- Wealth:
- He spurneth the needy sage, whose wisdom hath enriched nations,
- And the sons of poverty and learning, without whom earth were a desert:
- Music, the soother of cares, the tuner of the dank discordant
- heart-strings,
- It is nought unto such an one but sounds, whereby some earn their living:
- The poem, and the picture, and the statue, to him seem idle baubles,
- Which wealth condescendeth to favour, to gain him the name of patron.
- But little wotteth he the might of the means his folly despiseth;
- He considereth not that these be the wires which move the puppets of the
- world.
- A sentence hath formed a character, and a character subdued a kingdom;
- A picture hath ruined souls, or raised them to commerce with the skies:
- The pen hath shaken nations, and stablished the world in peace;
- And the whole full horn of plenty been filled from the vial of science.
- He regardeth man as sensual, the monarch of created matter,
- And careth not aught for mind, that linketh him with spirits unseen;
- He feedeth his carcase and is glad, though his soul be faint and famished,
- And the dull brute power of the body bindeth him a captive to himself.
-
- Man liveth from hour to hour, and knoweth not what may happen;
- Influences circle him on all sides, and yet must he answer for his
- actions:
- For the being that is master of himself, bendeth events to his will,
- But a slave to selfish passion is the wavering creature of circumstance.
- To this man temptation is a poison, to that man it addeth vigour;
- And each may render to himself influences good or evil.
- As thou directest the power, harm or advantage will follow,
- And the torrent that swept the valley, may be led to turn a mill;
- The wild electric flash, that could have kindled comets,
- May by the ductile wire give ease to an ailing child.
- For outward matter or event fashion not the character within,
- But each man, yielding or resisting, fashioneth his mind for himself.
-
- Some have said, What is in a name?--most potent plastic influence;
- A name is a word of character, and repetition stablisheth the fact:
- A word of rebuke, or of honour, tending to obscurity or fame;
- And greatest is the power of a name, when its power is least suspected.
- A low name is a thorn in the side, that hindereth the footman in his
- running;
- But a name of ancestral renown shall often put the racer to his speed.
- Few men have grown unto greatness whose names are allied to ridicule,
- And many would never have been profligate, but for the splendour of a
- name.
- A wise man scorneth nothing, be it never so small or homely,
- For he knoweth not the secret laws that may bind it to great effects.
- The world in its boyhood was credulous, and dreaded the vengeance of the
- stars,
- The world in its dotage is not wiser, fearing not the influence of small
- things:
- Planets govern not the soul, nor guide the destinies of man,
- But trifles, lighter than straws, are levers in the building up of
- character.
- A man hath the tiller in his hand, and may steer against the current,
- Or may glide down idly with the stream, till his vessel founder in the
- whirlpool.
-
- [Illustration:
- Helvetiorum Fidei ac Virtuti
- Die X Augusti II et III
- Septembris MDCCXCII]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF MEMORY.
-
- Where art thou, storehouse of the mind, garner of facts and fancies,--
- In what strange firmament are laid the beams of thine airy chambers?
- Or art thou that small cavern, the centre of the rolling brain,
- Where still one sandy morsel testifieth man's original?
- Or hast thou some grand globe, some common hall of intellect,
- Some spacious market-place for thought, where all do bring their wares,
- And gladly rescued from the littleness, the narrow closet of a self,
- The privileged soul hath large access, coming in the livery of learning?
- Live we as isolated worlds, perfect in substance and spirit,
- Each a sphere, with a special mind, prisoned in its shell of matter?
- Or rather, as converging radiations, parts of one majestic whole,
- Beams of the Sun, streams from the River, branches of the mighty Tree,
- Some bearing fruit, some bearing leaves, and some diseased and barren,--
- Some for the feast, some for the floor, and some--how many--for the fire?
- Memory may be but a power of coming to the treasury of Fact,
- A momentary self-desertion, an absence in spirit from the Now,
- An actual coursing hither and thither, by the mind, slipped from its
- leash,
- A life, as in the mystery of dreams, spent within the limits of a moment.
-
- A brutish man knoweth not this, neither can a fool comprehend it,
- But there be secrets of the Memory, deep, wondrous, and fearful.
- Were I at Petra, could I not declare, My soul hath been here before me?
- Am I strange to the columned halls, the calm dead grandeur of Palmyra?
- Know I not thy mount, O Carmel! Have I not voyaged on the Danube,
- Nor seen the glare of Arctic snows,--nor the black tents of the Tartar?
- Is it then a dream, that I remember the faces of them of old,
- While wandering in the grove with Plato, and listening to Zeno in the
- porch?
- Paul have I seen, and Pythagoras, and the Stagyrite hath spoken me
- friendly,
- And His meek eye looked also upon me, standing with Peter in the palace.
- Athens and Rome, Persepolis and Sparta, am I not a freeman of you all?
- And chiefly can my yearning heart forget thee, O Jerusalem?--
- For the strong magic of conception, mingled with the fumes of memory,
- Giveth me a life in all past time, yea, and addeth substance to the
- future.
- Be ye my judges, imaginative minds, full-fledged to soar into the sun,
- Whose grosser natural thoughts the chemistry of wisdom hath sublimed,
- Have ye not confessed to a feeling, a consciousness strange and vague,
- That ye have gone this way before, and walk again your daily life,
- Tracking an old routine, and on some foreign strand,
- Where bodily ye have never stood, finding your own footsteps?
- Hath not at times some recent friend looked out an old familiar,
- Some newest circumstance or place teemed as with ancient memories?
- A startling sudden flash lighteth up all for an instant,
- And then it is quenched, as in darkness, and leaveth the cold spirit
- trembling.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Memory is not wisdom; idiots can rote volumes:
- Yet, what is wisdom without memory? a babe that is strangled in its birth,
- The path of the swallow in the air, the path of the dolphin in the waters,
- A cask running out, a bottomless chasm: such is wisdom without memory.
- There be many wise, who cannot store their knowledge;
- Yet from themselves are they satisfied, for the fountain is within:
- There be many who store, but have no wisdom of their own,
- Lumbering their armoury with weapons their muscles cannot lift:
- There be many thieves and robbers, who glean and store unlawfully,
- Calling in to memory's help some cunningly devised Cabala:
- But to feed the mind with fatness, to fill thy granary with corn,
- Nor clog with chaff and straw the threshing-floor of reason,
- Reap the ideas, and house them well; but leave the words high stubble:
- Strive to store up what was thought, despising what was said.
- For the mind is a spirit, and drinketh in ideas, as flame melteth into
- flame;
- But for words it must pack them as on floors, cumbrous and perishable
- merchandize.
- To be pained for a minute, to fear for an hour, to hope for a week--how
- long and weary!
- But to remember fourscore years, is to look back upon a day.
- An avenue seemeth to lengthen in the eyes of the wayfaring man,
- But let him turn, those stationed elms crowd up within a yard;
- Pace the lamp-lit streets of some sleeping city,
- The multitude of cressets shall seem one, in the false picture of
- perspective;
- Even so, in sweet treachery, dealeth the aged with himself,
- He gazeth on the green hill-tops, while the marshes beneath are hidden;
- And the partial telescope of memory pierceth the blank between,
- To look with lingering love at the fair star of childhood.
- Life is as the current spark on the miner's wheel of flints;
- Whiles it spinneth there is light; stop it, all is darkness:
- Life is as a morsel of frankincense burning in the hall of Eternity;
- It is gone, but its odorous cloud curleth to the lofty roof:
- Life is as a lump of salt, melting in the temple-laver;
- It is gone,--yet its savour reacheth to the farthest atom:
- Even so, for evil or for good, is life the criterion of a man,
- For its memories of sanctity or sin pervade all the firmament of being.
- There is but the flitting moment, wherein to hope or to enjoy,
- But in the calendar of Memory, that moment is all time.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE DREAM OF AMBITION.
-
- I left the happy fields that smile around the village of Content,
- And sought with wayward feet the torrid desert of Ambition.
- Long time, parched and weary, I travelled that burning sand,
- And the hooded basilisk and adder were strewed in my way for palms;
- Black scorpions thronged me round, with sharp uplifted stings,
- Seeming to mock me as I ran; (then I guessed it was a dream,--
- But life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- So I toiled on, doubting in myself, up a steep gravel cliff,
- Whose yellow summit shot up far into the brazen sky;
- And quickly, I was wafted to the top, as upon unseen wings
- Carrying me upward like a leaf: (then I thought it was a dream,--
- Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- So I stood on the mountain, and behold! before me a giant pyramid,
- And I clomb with eager haste its high and difficult steps;
- For I longed, like another Belus, to mount up, yea, to heaven,
- Nor sought I rest until my feet had spurned the crest of earth.
-
- Then I sat on my granite throne under the burning sun,
- And the world lay smiling beneath me, but I was wrapt in flames;
- (And I hoped, in glimmering consciousness, that all this torture was a
- dream,--
- Yet life is oft so like a dream, we know not where we are.)
- And anon, as I sat scorching, the pyramid shuddered to its root,
- And I felt the quarried mass leap from its sand foundations:
- Awhile it tottered and tilted, as raised by invisible levers,--
- (And now my reason spake with me; I knew it was a dream:
- Yet I hushed that whisper into silence, for I hoped to learn of wisdom,
- By tracking up my truant thoughts, whereunto they might lead.)
- And suddenly, as rolling upon wheels, adown the cliff it rushed,
- And I thought, in my hot brain, of the Muscovites' icy slope;
- A thousand yards in a moment we ploughed the sandy seas,
- And crushed those happy fields, and that smiling village,
- And onward, as a living thing, still rushed my mighty throne,
- Thundering along, and pounding, as it went, the millions in my way:
- Before me all was life, and joy, and full-blown summer,
- Behind me death and woe, the desert and simoom.
- Then I wept and shrieked aloud, for pity and for fear;
- But might not stop, for, comet-like, flew on the maddened mass
- Over the crashing cities, and falling obelisks and towers,
- And columns, razed as by a scythe, and high domes, shivered as an
- egg-shell,
- And deep embattled ranks, and women, crowded in the streets,
- And children, kneeling as for mercy, and all I had ever loved,
- Yea, over all, mine awful throne rushed on with seeming instinct,--
- And over the crackling forests, and over the rugged beach,
- And on with a terrible hiss through the foaming wild Atlantic
- That roared around me as I sat, but could not quench my spirit,--
- Still on, through startled solitudes we shattered the pavement of the sea,
- Down, down, to that central vault, the bolted doors of hell;
- And these, with horrid shock, my huge throne battered in,
- And on to the deepest deep, where the fierce flames were hottest,
- Blazing tenfold as conquering furiously the seas that rushed in with me,--
- And there I stopped: and a fearful voice shouted in mine ear,
- "Behold the home of Discontent; behold the rest of Ambition!"
-
-
-OF SUBJECTION.
-
-[Illustration: "L"]
-
- Law hath dominion over all things, over universal mind and matter;
- For there are reciprocities of right, which no creature can gainsay.
- Unto each was there added by its Maker, in the perfect chain of being,
- Dependencies and sustentations, accidents, and qualities, and powers:
- And each must fly forward in the curve, unto which it was forced from the
- beginning;
- Each must attract and repel, or the monarchy of Order is no more.
- Laws are essential emanations from the self-poised character of God,
- And they radiate from that sun to the circling edges of creation.
- Verily, the mighty Lawgiver hath subjected Himself unto Laws,
- And God is the primal grand example of free unstrained obedience;
- His perfection is limited by right, and cannot trespass into wrong,
- Because He hath established Himself as the fountain of only good,
- And in thus much is bounded, that the evil hath He left unto another,
- And that dark other hath usurped the evil which Omnipotence laid down.
- Unto God there exist impossibilities; for the True One cannot lie,
- Nor the Wise One wander from the track which He hath determined for
- Himself:
- For His will was purposed from eternity, strong in the love of order;
- And that will altereth not, as the law of the Medes and Persians.
- God is the origin of order, and the first exemplar of His precept;
- For there is subordination of His Essence, self-guided unto holiness;
- And there is subordination of His Persons, in due procession of dignity;
- For the Son, as a son, is subject; and to Him doth the Spirit minister:
- But these things be mysteries to man, he cannot reach nor fathom them,
- And ever must he speak in paradox, when labouring to expound his God;
- For, behold, God is alone, mighty in unshackled freedom;
- And with those wondrous Persons abideth eternal equality.
-
- So then, start ye from the fountain, and follow the river of existence;
- For its current is bounded throughout by the banks of just subordination:
- Thrones, and dominions, and powers, Archangels, Cherubim, and Seraphim,
- Angels, and flaming ministers, and breathing chariots and harps.
- For there are degrees in heaven, and varied capabilities of bliss,
- And steps in the ladder of Intelligence, and ranks in approaches to
- Perfection:
- Doubtless, reverence is given, as their due, to the masters in wisdom;
- Doubtless, there are who serve; or a throne would have small glory.
- Regard now the universe of matter, the substance of visible creation,
- Which of old, with well-observing truth, the Greek hath surnamed, Order:
- Where is there an atom out of place? or a particle that yieldeth not
- obedience?
- Where is there a fragment that is free? or one thing the equal of
- another?--
- The chain is unbroken down to man, and beyond him the links are perfect:
- But he standeth solitary sin, a marvel of permitted chaos.
-
- And shall this seeming error in the scale of due subordination
- Be a spot of desert unreclaimed, in the midst of the vineyard of the Lord?
- Shall his presumptuous pride snap the safe tether of connexion,
- And his blind selfish folly refuse the burden of maintenance?
- O man, thou art a creature; boast not thyself above the law:
- Think not of thyself as free: thou art bound in the trammels of
- dependence.
- What is the sum of thy duty, but obedience to righteous rule;
- To the great commanding Oracle, uttered by delegated organs?
- Thou canst not render homage to abstract Omnipresent Power,
- Save through the concrete symbol of visible ordained authority.
- Those who obey not man, are oftenest found rebels against God;
- And seldom is the delegate so bold, as to order what he knoweth to be
- wrong.
- Yet mark me, proud gainsayer! I say not, obey unto sin;
- But, where the Principal is silent, take heed thou despise not the Deputy:
- And He that loveth order, will bless thee for thy faith,
- If thou recognize His sanction in the powers that fashion human laws.
-
- Thou, the vicegerent of the Lord, His high anointed image,
- Towards whom a good man's loyalty floweth from the heart of his religion,
- Thou, whose deep responsibilities are fathomed by a nation's prayers,
- Whom wise men fear for while they love, and envy thee nothing but thy
- virtues,
- From thy dizzy pinnacle of greatness, remember thou also art a subject,
- And the throne of thine earthly glory is itself but the footstool of thy
- God.
- The homage thy kingdoms yield thee, regard thou as yielded unto Him;
- And while girt with all the majesty of state, consider thee the Lord's
- chief servant:
- So shalt thou prosper, and be strong, grafted on the strength of Another;
- So shall thy royal heart be happy, in being humble.
- And thou shalt flourish as an oak, the monarch of thine island forests,
- Whose deep-dug roots are twisted around the stout ribs of the globe,
- That mocketh at the fury of the storm, and rejoiceth in summer sunshine,
- Glad in the smiles of heaven, and great in the stability of earth.
-
- A ruler hath not power for himself, neither is his pomp for his pride;
- But beneath the ermine of his office should he wear the rough hair-cloth
- of humility.
- Nevertheless, every way obey him, so thou break not a higher commandment;
- For Nero was an evil king, yet Paul prescribeth subjection.
- If the rulers of a nation be holy, the Lord hath blessed that nation;
- If they be lewd and impious, chastisement hath come upon that people:
- For the bitterest scourge of a land is ungodliness in them that govern it,
- And the guilt of the sons of Josiah drove Israel weeping into Babylon.
- Yet be thou resolute against them, if they change the mandates of thy God,
- If they touch the ark of His covenant, wherein all His mercies are
- enshrined:
- Be resolute, but not rebellious; lest thou be of the company of Korah:
- Set thy face against them as a flint: but be not numbered with Abiram.
- Daniel nobly disobeyed; but not from a spirit of sedition:
- And Azarias shouted from the furnace,--I will not bow down, O KING.
- If truth must be sacrificed to unity, then faithfulness were folly;
- If man must be obeyed before God, the martyrs have bled in vain:
- Yet none of that blessed army reviled the rulers of the land,
- They were loud and bold against the sin, but bent before the ensign of
- authority.
- Honesty, scorning compromise, walketh most suitably with Reverence;
- Otherwise righteous daring may show but as obstinate rebellion:
- Therefore, suffer not thy censure to lack the savour of courtesy,
- And remember, the mortal sinneth, but the staff of his power is from God.
-
- Man, thou hast a social spirit, and art deeply indebted to thy kind:
- Therefore claim not all thy rights; but yield, for thine own advantage.
- Society is a chain of obligations, and its links must support each other;
- The branch can not but wither, that is cut from the parent vine.
- Wouldst thou be a dweller in the woods, and cast away the cords that bind
- thee,
- Seeking, in thy bitterness or pride, to be exiled from thy fellows?
- Behold, the beasts shall hunt thee, weak, naked, houseless outcast,
- Disease and Death shall track thee out, as bloodhounds in the wilderness:
- Better to be vilest of the vile, in the hated company of men,
- Than to live a solitary wretch, dreading and wanting all things;
- Better to be chained to thy labour, in the dusky thoroughfares of life,
- Than to reign monarch of Sloth, in lonesome savage freedom.
-
- Whence then cometh the doctrine, that all should be equal and free?--
- It is the lie that crowded hell, when Seraphs flung away subjection.
- No man is his neighbour's equal, for no two minds are similar,
- And accidents, alike with qualities, have every shade but sameness:
- The lightest atom of difference shall destroy the nice balance of
- equality,
- And all things, from without and from within, make one man to differ from
- another.
- We are equal and free! was the watchword that spirited the legions of
- Satan;
- We are equal and free! is the double lie that entrappeth to him
- conscripts from earth:
- The messengers of that dark despot will pander to thy licence and thy
- pride,
- And draw thee from the crowd where thou art safe, to seize thee in the
- solitary desert.
- Woe unto him whose heart the syren-song of Liberty hath charmed;
- Woe unto him whose mind is bewitched by her treacherous beauty;
- In mad zeal flingeth he away the fetters of duty and restraint,
- And yieldeth up the holocaust of self to that fair Idol of the Damned.
- No man hath freedom in aught, save in that from which the wicked would be
- hindered,
- He is free toward God and good; but to all else a bondman.
-
- Thou art in a middle sphere, to render and receive honour;
- If thy king commandeth, obey; and stand not in the way with rebels:
- But if need be, lay thy hand upon thy sword, and fear not to smite a
- traitor,
- For the universe acquitteth thee with honour, fighting in defence of thy
- king.
- If a thief break thy dwelling, and thou take him, it were sin in thee to
- let him go;
- Yea, though he pleadeth to thy mercy, thou canst not spare him and be
- blameless:
- For his guilt is not only against thee, it is not thy moneys or thy
- merchandize,
- But he hath done damage to the Law, which duty constraineth thee to
- sanction.
- Feast not thine appetite of vengeance, remembering thou also art a man,
- But weep for the sad compulsion, in which the chain of Providence hath
- bound thee:
- Mercy is not thine to give; wilt thou steal another's privilege?
- Or send abroad, among thy neighbours, a felon whom impunity hath hardened?
- Remember the Roman father, strong in his stern integrity,
- And let not thy slothful self-indulgence make thee a conniver at the
- crime.
- Also, if the knife of the murderer be raised against thee or thine,
- And through good providence and courage, thou slay him that would have
- slain thee,
- Thou losest not a tittle of thy rectitude, having executed sudden justice;
- Still mayst thou walk among the blessed, though thy hands be red with
- blood.
- For thyself, thou art neither worse nor better; but thy fellows should
- count thee their creditor:
- Thou hast manfully protected the right, and the right is stronger for thy
- deed.
- Also, in the rescuing of innocence, fear not to smite the ravisher;
- What though he die at thy hand? for a good name is better than the life;
- And if Phineas had everlasting praise in the matter of Salu's son,
- With how much greater honour standeth such a rescuer acquitted?
- Uphold the laws of thy country, and fear not to fight in their defence:
- But first be convinced in thy mind; for herein the doubter sinneth.
- Above all things, look thou well around, if indeed stern duty forceth thee
- To draw the sword of justice, and stain it with the slaughter of thy
- fellows.
-
- She, that lieth in thy bosom, the tender wife of thy affections,
- Must obey thee, and be subject, that evil drop not on thy dwelling.
- The child that is used to constraint, feareth not more than he loveth;
- But give thy son his way, he will hate thee and scorn thee together.
- The master of a well-ordered home knoweth to be kind to his servants;
- Yet he exacteth reverence, and each one feareth at his post.
- There is nothing on earth so lowly, but duty giveth it importance;
- No station so degrading, but it is ennobled by obedience:
- Yea, break stones upon the highway, acknowledging the Lord in thy lot,
- Happy shalt thou be, and honourable, more than many children of the
- mighty.
- Thou that despisest the outward forms, beware thou lose not the inward
- spirit;
- For they are as words unto ideas, as symbols to things unseen.
- Keep then the form that is good; retain, and do reverence to example;
- And in all things observe subordination, for that is the whole duty of
- man.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A horse knoweth his rider, be he confident or timid,
- And the fierce spirit of Bucephalus stoopeth unto none but Alexander;
- The tigress, roused in the jungle by the prying spaniels of the fowler,
- Will quail at the eye of man, so he assert his dignity;
- Nay, the very ships, those giant swans breasting the mighty waters,
- Roll in the trough, or break the wave, to the pilot's fear or courage:
- How much more shall man, discerning the Fountain of authority,
- Bow to superior commands, and make his own obeyed.
- And yet, in travelling the world, hast thou not often known
- A gallant host led on to ruin by a feeble Xerxes?
- Hast thou not often seen the wanton luxury of indolence
- Sullying with its sleepy mist the tarnished crown of headship?
- Alas! for a thousand fathers, whose indulgent sloth
- Hath emptied the vial of confusion over a thousand homes:
- Alas! for the palaces and hovels, that might have been nurseries for
- heaven,
- By hot intestine broils blighted into schools for hell:
- None knoweth his place, yet all refuse to serve,
- None weareth the crown, yet all usurp the sceptre;
- And perchance some fiercer spirit, of natural nobility of mind,
- That needed but the kindness of constraint to have grown up great and
- good,
- Now--the rich harvest of his heart choked by unweeded tares,--
- All bold to dare and do, unchecked by wholesome fear,
- A scoffer about bigotry and priestcraft, a rebel against government and
- God,
- And standard-bearer of the turbulent, leading on the sons of Belial,
- Such an one is king of that small state, head tyrant of the thirty,
- Brandishing the torch of discord in his village home:
- And the timid Eli of the house, yon humble parish-priest,
- Liveth in shame and sorrow, fearing his own handywork;
- The mother, heart-stricken years agone, hath dropped into an early grave;
- The silent sisters long to leave a home they cannot love;
- The brothers, casting off restraint, follow their wayward wills;
- And the chance-guest, early departing, blesseth his kind stars,
- That on his humbler home hath brooded no domestic curse!
- Yet is that curse the fruit; wouldest thou the root of the evil?
- A kindness--most unkind, that hath always spared the rod;
- A weak and numbing indecision in the mind that should be master;
- A foolish love, pregnant of hate, that never frowned on sin;
- A moral cowardice of heart, that never dared command.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- A kingdom is a nest of families, and a family a small kingdom;
- And the government of whole or part differeth in nothing but extent.
- The house, where the master ruleth, is strong in united subjection,
- And the only commandment with promise, being honoured, is a blessing to
- that house:
- But and if he yieldeth up the reins, it is weak in discordant anarchy,
- And the bonds of love and union melt away, as ropes of sand.
- The realm, that is ruled with vigour, lacketh neither peace nor glory,
- It dreadeth not foes from without, nor the sons of riot from within:
- But the meanness of temporizing fear robbeth a kingdom of its honour,
- And the weakness of indulgent sloth ravageth its bowels with discord.
- The best of human governments is the patriarchal rule;
- The authorized supremacy of one, the prescriptive subjection of many:
- Therefore, the children of the East have thriven from age to age,
- Obeying, even as a god, the royal father of Cathay:
- Therefore, to this our day, the Rechabite wanteth not a man,
- But they stand before the Lord, forsaking not the mandate of their sire:
- Therefore shall Magog among nations arise from his northern lair,
- And rend, in the fury of his power, the insurgent world beneath him:
- For the thunderbolt of concentrated strength can be hurled by the will of
- one,
- While the dissipated forces of many are harmless as summer lightning.
-
-
-OF REST.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- In the silent watches of the night, calm night that breedeth thoughts,
- When the task-weary mind disporteth in the careless play-hours of sleep,
- I dreamed; and behold, a valley, green and sunny and well watered,
- And thousands moving across it, thousands and tens of thousands:
- And though many seemed faint and toil-worn, and stumbled often, and fell,
- Yet moved they on unresting, as the ever-flowing cataract.
- Then I noted adders in the grass, and pitfalls under the flowers,
- And chasms yawned among the hills, and the ground was cracked and
- slippery:
- But Hope and her brother Fear suffered not a foot to linger;
- Bright phantoms of false joys beckoned alluringly forward,
- While yelling grisly shapes of dread came hunting on behind:
- And ceaselessly, like Lapland swarms, that miserable crowd sped along
- To the mist-involved banks of a dark and sullen river.
- There saw I, midway in the water, standing a giant fisher,
- And he held many lines in his hand, and they called him Iron Destiny.
- So I tracked those subtle chains, and each held one among the multitude:
- Then I understood what hindered, that they rested not in their path:
- For the fisher had sport in his fishing, and drew in his lines
- continually,
- And the new-born babe, and the aged man, were dragged into that dark
- river:
- And he pulled all those myriads along, and none might rest by the way,
- Till many, for sheer weariness, were eager to plunge into the drowning
- stream.
-
- So I knew that valley was Life, and it sloped to the waters of Death.
- But far on the thither side spread out a calm and silent shore,
- Where all was tranquil as a sleep, and the crowded strand was quiet:
- And I saw there many I had known, but their eyes glared chillingly upon
- me,
- As set in deepest slumber; and they pressed their fingers to their lips.
- Then I knew that shore was the dwelling of Rest, where spirits held their
- Sabbath,
- And it seemed they would have told me much, but they might not break that
- silence;
- For the law of their being was mystery: they glided on, hushing as they
- went.
- Yet further, under the sun, at the roots of purple mountains,
- I noted a blaze of glory, as the night-fires on northern skies;
- And I heard the hum of joy, as it were a sea of melody;
- And far as the eye could reach, were millions of happy creatures
- Basking in the golden light; and I knew that land was Heaven.
- Then the hill whereon I stood split asunder, and a crater yawned at my
- feet,
- Black and deep and dreadful, fenced round with ragged rocks;
- Dimly was the darkness lit up by spires of distant flame:
- And I saw below a moving mass of life, like reptiles bred in corruption,
- Where all was terrible unrest, shrieks and groans and thunder.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- So I woke, and I thought upon my dream; for it seemed of Wisdom's
- ministration.
- What man is he that findeth Rest, though he hunt for it year after year?
- As a child he had not yet been wearied, and cared not then to court it;
- As a youth he loved not to be quiet, for excitement spurred him into
- strife;
- As a man he tracketh rest in vain, toiling painfully to catch it,
- But still is he pulled from the pursuit, by the strong compulsion of his
- fate:
- So he hopeth to have peace in old age, as he cannot rest in manhood,
- But troubles thicken with his years, till Death hath dodged him to the
- grave.
- There remaineth a rest for the spirit on the shadowy side of life;
- But unto this world's pilgrim no rest for the sole of his foot.
- Ever, from stage to stage, he travelleth wearily forward,
- And though he pluck flowers by the way, he may not sleep among the
- flowers.
- Mind is the perpetual motion; for it is a running stream
- From an unfathomable source, the depth of the Divine Intelligence:
- And though it be stopped in its flowing, yet hath it a current within,
- The surface may sleep unruffled, but underneath are whirlpools of
- contention.
- Seekest thou rest, O mortal?--seek it no more on earth,
- For destiny will not cease from dragging thee through the rough
- wilderness of life;
- Seekest thou rest, O immortal?--hope not to find it in heaven,
- For sloth yieldeth not happiness: the bliss of a spirit is action.
- Rest dwelleth only on an island in the midst of the ocean of existence,
- Where the world-weary soul for a while may fold its tired wings,
- Until, after short sufficient slumber, it is quickened unto deathless
- energy,
- And speedeth in eagle flight to the Sun of unapproachable Perfection.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Humility]
-
-OF HUMILITY.
-
- Vice is grown aweary of her gawds, and donneth russet garments,
- Loving for change to walk as a nun, beneath a modest veil:
- For Pride hath noted how all admire the fairness of Humility,
- And to clutch the praise he coveteth, is content to be drest in
- hair-cloth;
- And wily Lust tempteth the young heart, that is proof against the bravery
- of harlots,
- With timid tears and retiring looks of an artful seeming maid;
- And indolent Apathy, sleepily ashamed of his dull lack-lustre face,
- Is glad of the livery of meekness, that charitable cloak and cowl;
- And Hatred hideth his demon frown beneath a gentle mask;
- And Slander, snake-like, creepeth in the dust, thinking to escape
- recrimination.
- But the world hath gained somewhat from its years, and is quick to
- penetrate disguises,
- Neither in all these is it deceived, but divideth the true from the false.
-
- Yet there is a meanness of spirit, that is fair in the eyes of most men,
- Yea, and seemeth fair unto itself, loving to be thought Humility.
- Its choler is not roused by insolence, neither do injuries disturb it:
- Honest indignation is strange unto its breast, and just reproof unto its
- lip.
- It shrinketh, looking fearfully on men, fawning at the feet of the great;
- The breath of calumny is sweet unto its ear, and it courteth the rod of
- persecution.
- But what! art thou not a man, deputed chief of the creation?
- Art thou not a soldier of the right, militant for God and good?
- Shall virtue and truth be degraded, because thou art too base to uphold
- them?
- Or Goliath be bolder in blaspheming for want of a David in the camp?
- I say not, avenge injuries; for the ministry of vengeance is not thine:
- But wherefore rebuke not a liar? wherefore do dishonour to thyself?
- Wherefore let the evil triumph, when the just and the right are on thy
- side?
- Such Humility is abject, it lacketh the life of sensibility,
- And that resignation is but mock, where the burden is not felt:
- Suspect thyself and thy meekness: thou art mean and indifferent to sin;
- And the heart that should grieve and forgive, is case-hardened and
- forgetteth.
-
- Humility mainly becometh the converse of man with his Maker,
- But oftentimes it seemeth out of place in the intercourse of man with man:
- Yea, it is the cringer to his equal, that is chiefly seen bold to his God,
- While the martyr, whom a world cannot brow-beat, is humble as a child
- before Him.
- Render unto all men their due, but remember thou also art a man,
- And cheat not thyself of the reverence which is owing to thy reasonable
- being.
- Be courteous, and listen, and learn: but teach and answer if thou canst:
- Serve thee of thy neighbour's wisdom, but be not enslaved as to a master.
- Where thou perceivest knowledge, bend the ear of attention and respect;
- But yield not further to the teaching, than as thy mind is warranted by
- reasons.
- Better is an obstinate disputant, that yieldeth inch by inch,
- Than the shallow traitor to himself, who surrendereth to half an argument.
-
- Modesty winneth good report, but scorn cometh close upon servility;
- Therefore, use meekness with discretion, casting not pearls before swine.
- For a fool will tread upon thy neck, if he seeth thee lying in the dust;
- And there be companies and seasons where a resolute bearing is but duty.
- If a good man discloseth his secret failings unto the view of the profane,
- What doeth he but harm unto his brother, confirming him in his sin?
- There is a concealment that is right, and an open-mouthed humility that
- erreth;
- There is a candour near akin to folly, and a meekness looking like shame.
- Masculine sentiments, vigorously holden, well become a man;
- But a weak mind hath a timorous grasp, and mistaketh it for tenderness of
- conscience.
- Many are despised for their folly, who put it to the account of their
- religion,
- And because men treat them with contempt, they look to their God for
- glory;
- But contempt shall still be their reward, who betray their Master unto
- ridicule,
- Reflecting on Him in themselves, meanness and ignorance and cowardice.
- A Christian hath a royal spirit, and need not be ashamed but unto One:
- Among just men walketh he softly, but the world should see him as a
- champion.
- His humbleness is far unlike the shame that covereth the profligate and
- weak,
- When the sober reproof of virtue hath touched their tingling ears;
- It is born of love and wisdom, and is worthy of all honour,
- And the sweet persuasion of its smile changeth contempt into reverence.
-
- A man of a haughty spirit is daily adding to his enemies:
- He standeth as the Arab in the desert, and the hands of all men are
- against him:
- A man of a base mind daily subtracteth from his friends,
- For he holdeth himself so cheaply, that others learn to despise him:
- But where the meekness of self-knowledge veileth the front of
- self-respect,
- There look thou for the man, whom none can know but they will honour.
- Humility is the softening shadow before the stature of Excellence,
- And lieth lowly on the ground, beloved and lovely as the violet:
- Humility is the fair-haired maid, that calleth Worth her brother,
- The gentle silent nurse, that fostereth infant virtues:
- Humility bringeth no excuse; she is welcome to God and to man:
- Her countenance is needful unto all, who would prosper in either world:
- And the mild light of her sweet face is mirrored in the eyes of her
- companions,
- And straightway stand they accepted, children of penitence and love.
- As when the blind man is nigh unto a rose, its sweetness is the herald of
- its beauty,
- So when thou savourest Humility, be sure thou art nigh unto merit.
- A gift rejoiceth the covetous, and praise fatteneth the vain,
- And the pride of man delighteth in the humble bearing of his fellow;
- But to the tender benevolence of the unthanked Almoner of good,
- Humility is queen among the graces, for she giveth Him occasion to bestow.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Pride]
-
-OF PRIDE.
-
- Deep is the sea, and deep is hell, but Pride mineth deeper;
- It is coiled as a poisonous worm about the foundations of the soul.
- If thou expose it in thy motives, and track it in thy springs of thought,
- Complacent in its own detection, it will seem indignant virtue;
- Smoothly will it gratulate thy skill, O subtle anatomist of self,
- And spurn at its very being, while it nestleth the deeper in thy bosom.
- Pride is a double traitor, and betrayeth itself to entrap thee,
- Making thee vain of thy self-knowledge; proud of thy discoveries of Pride.
- Fruitlessly thou strainest for humility, by darkly diving into self;
- Rather look away from innate evil, and gaze upon extraneous good:
- For in sounding the deep things of the heart, thou shalt learn to be vain
- of its capacities,
- But in viewing the heights above thee, thou shalt be taught thy
- littleness:
- Could an emmet pry into itself, it might marvel at its own anatomy,
- But let it look on eagles, to discern how mean a thing it is.
- And all things hang upon comparison; to the greater, great is small:
- Neither is there anything so vile, but somewhat yet is viler:
- On all sides is there an infinity: the culprit at the gallows hath his
- worse,
- And the virgin martyr at the stake need not look far for a better.
- Therefore see thou that thine aim reacheth unto higher than thyself:
- Beware that the standard of thy soul wave from the loftiest battlement:
- For Pride is a pestilent meteor, flitting on the marshes of corruption,
- That will lure thee forward to thy death, if thou seek to track it to its
- source:
- Pride is a gloomy bow, arching the infernal firmament,
- That will lead thee on, if thou wilt hunt it, even to the dwelling of
- despair.
- Deep calleth unto deep, and mountain overtoppeth mountain,
- And still shalt thou fathom to no end the depth and the height of Pride:
- For it is the vast ambition of the soul, warped to an idol object,
- And nothing but a Deity in Self can quench its insatiable thirst.
-
- Be aware of the smiling enemy, that openly sheatheth his weapon,
- But mingleth poison in secret with the sacred salt of hospitality:
- For Pride will lie dormant in thy heart, to snatch his secret opportunity,
- Watching, as a lion-ant, in the bottom of his toils.
- Stay not to parley with thy foe, for his tongue is more potent than his
- arm;
- But be wiser, fighting against Pride in the simple panoply of prayer.
- As one also of the poets hath said, let not the Proteus escape thee;
- For he will blaze forth as fire, and quench himself in likeness of water;
- He will fright thee as a roaring beast, or charm thee as a subtle reptile.
- Mark, amid all his transformations, the complicate deceitfulness of Pride,
- And the more he striveth to elude thee, bind him the closer in thy toils.
- Prayer is the net that snareth him; prayer is the fetter that holdeth him:
- Thou canst not nourish Pride, while waiting as an almsman on thy God,--
- Waiting in sincerity and trust, or Pride shall meet thee even there;
- Yea, from the palaces of Heaven, hath Pride cast down his millions.
- Root up the mandrake from thy heart, though it cost thee blood and groans,
- Or the cherished garden of thy graces will fade and perish utterly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Experience]
-
-OF EXPERIENCE.
-
- I knew that age was enriched with the hard-earned wages of knowledge,
- And I saw that hoary wisdom was bred in the school of disappointment:
- I noted that the wisest of youth, though provident and cautious of evil,
- Yet sailed along unsteadily, as lacking some ballast of the mind:
- And the cause seemed to lie in this, that while they considered around
- them,
- And warded off all dangers from without, they forgat their own weakness
- within.
- So steer they in self-confidence, until, from the multitude of perils,
- They begin to be wary of themselves, and learn the first lesson of
- Experience.
- I knew that in the morning of life, before its wearisome journey,
- The youthful soul doth expand, in the simple luxury of being;
- It hath not contracted its wishes, nor set a limit to its hopes;
- The wing of fancy is unclipt, and sin hath not seared the feelings:
- Each feature is stamped with immortality, for all its desires are
- infinite,
- And it seeketh an ocean of happiness, to fill the deep hollow within.
- But the old and the grave look on, pitying that generous youth,
- For they also have tasted long ago the bitterness of hope destroyed:
- They pity him, and are sad, remembering the days that are past,
- But they know he must taste for himself, or he will not give ear to their
- wisdom.
- For Experience hath another lesson, which a man will do well if he learn,
- By checking the flight of expectation, to cheat disappointment of its
- pain.
-
- Experience teacheth many things, and all men are his scholars:
- Yet is he a strange tutor, unteaching that which he hath taught.
- Youth is confident, manhood wary, and old age confident again:
- Youth is kind, manhood cold, and age returneth unto kindness.
- For youth suspecteth nought, till manhood, bitterly learned,
- Mistrusteth all, overleaping the mark; and age correcteth his excess.
- Suspicion is the scaffold unto faith, a temporary needful eyesore,
- By which the strong man's dwelling is slowly builded up behind;
- But soon as the top-stone hath been set to the well-proved goodly edifice,
- The scaffold is torn down, and timely trust taketh its long leave of
- suspicion.
-
- A thousand volumes in a thousand tongues enshrine the lessons of
- Experience,
- Yet a man shall read them all, and go forth none the wiser:
- For self-love lendeth him a glass, to colour all he conneth,
- Lest in the features of another he find his own complexion.
- And we secretly judge of ourselves as differing greatly from all men,
- And love to challenge causes to show how we can master their effects:
- Pride is pampered in expecting that we need not fear a common fate,
- Or wrong-headed prejudice exulteth, in combating old Experience;
- Or perchance caprice and discontent are the spurs that goad us into
- danger,
- Careless, and half in hope to find there an enemy to joust with.
- Private Experience is an unsafe teacher, for we rarely learn both sides,
- And from the gilt surface reckon not on steel beneath:
- The torrid sons of Guinea think scorn of icy seas,
- And the frostbitten Greenlander disbelieveth suns too hot.
- But thou, student of Wisdom, feed on the marrow of the matter:
- If thou wilt suspect, let it be thyself; if thou wilt expect, let it not
- be gladness.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Estimating Character]
-
-OF ESTIMATING CHARACTER.
-
- Rashly, nor ofttimes truly, doth man pass judgment on his brother;
- For he seeth not the springs of the heart, nor heareth the reasons of the
- mind.
- And the world is not wiser than of old, when justice was meted by the
- sword,
- When the spear avenged the wrong, and the lot decided the right,
- When the footsteps of blinded innocence were tracked by burning
- plough-shares,
- And the still condemning water delivered up the wizard to the stake:
- For we wait, like the sage of Salamis, to see what the end will be,
- Fixing the right or the wrong, by the issues of failure or success.
- Judge not of things by their events: neither of character by providence;
- And count not a man more evil, because he is more unfortunate:
- For the blessings of a better covenant lie not in the sunshine of
- prosperity,
- But pain and chastisement the rather show the wise Father's love.
-
- Behold that daughter of the world: she is full of gaiety and gladness;
- The diadem of rank is on her brow, uncounted wealth is in her coffers:
- She tricketh out her beauty like Jezebel, and is welcome in the courts of
- kings:
- She is queen of the fools of fashion, and ruleth the revels of luxury:
- And though she sitteth not as Tamar, nor standeth in the ways as Rahab,
- Yet in the secret of her chamber, she shrinketh not from dalliance and
- guilt.
- She careth not if there be a God, or a soul, or a time of retribution;
- Pleasure is the idol of her heart: she thirsteth for no purer heaven.
- And she laugheth with light good humour, and all men praise her
- gentleness;
- They are glad in her lovely smile, and the river of her bounty filleth
- them.
- So she prospered in the world: the worship and desire of thousands;
- And she died even as she had lived, careless and courteous and liberal.
- The grave swallowed up her pomp, the marble proclaimed her virtues,
- For men esteemed her excellent, and charities soundeth forth her praise:
- But elsewhere far other judgment setteth her--with infidels and harlots!
- She abused the trust of her splendour: and the wages of her sin shall be
- hereafter.
-
- Look again on this fair girl, the orphan of a village pastor
- Who is dead, and hath left her his all,--his blessing, and a name
- unstained.
- And friends, with busy zeal, that their purses be not taxed,
- Place the sad mourner in a home, poor substitute for that she hath lost.
- A stranger among strange faces she drinketh the wormwood of dependence;
- She is marked as a child of want: and the world hateth poverty.
- Prayer is not heard in that house; the day she hath loved to hallow
- Is noted but by deeper dissipation, the riot of luxury and gaming:
- And wantonness is in her master's eye, and she hath nowhere to flee to;
- She is cared for by none upon earth, and her God seemeth to forsake her.
- Then cometh, in fair show, the promise and the feint of affection,
- And her heart, long unused to kindness, remembereth her father, and
- loveth.
- And the villain hath wronged her trust, and mocked, and flung her from
- him,
- And men point at her and laugh; and women hate her as an outcast:
- But elsewhere, far other judgment seateth her--among the martyrs!
- And the Lord, who seemed to forsake, giveth double glory to the fallen.
-
- Once more, in the matter of wealth: if thou throw thine all on a chance,
- Men will come around thee, and wait, and watch the turning of the wheel:
- And if, in the lottery of life, thou hast drawn a splendid prize,
- What foresight hadst thou, and skill! yea, what enterprize and wisdom!
- But if it fall out against thee, and thou fail in thy perilous endeavour,
- Behold, the simple did sow, and hath reaped the right harvest of his
- folly:
- And the world will be gladly excused, nor will reach out a finger to help;
- For why should this speculative dullard be a whirlpool to all around him?
- Go to, let him sink by himself: we knew what the end of it would be:--
- For the man hath missed his mark, and his fellows look no further.
-
- Also, touching guilt and innocence: a man shall walk in his uprightness
- Year after year without reproach, in charity and honesty with all:
- But in one evil hour the enemy shall come in like a flood;
- Shall track him, and tempt him, and hem him,--till he knoweth not whither
- to fly.
- Perchance his famishing little ones shall scream in his ears for bread,
- And, maddened by that fierce cry, he rusheth as a thief upon the world;
- The world that hath left him to starve, itself wallowing in plenty,--
- The world, that denieth him his rights,--he daringly robbeth it of them.
- I say not, such an one is innocent; but, small is the measure of his guilt
- To that of his wealthy neighbour, who would not help him at his need;
- To that of the selfish epicure, who turned away with coldness from his
- tale;
- To that of unsuffering thousands, who look with complacence on his fall.
-
- Or perchance the continual dropping of the venomed words of spite,
- Insult and injury and scorn, have galled and pierced his heart;
- Yet, with all long-suffering and meekness, he forgiveth unto seventy
- times seven:
- Till, in some weaker moment, tempted beyond endurance,
- He striketh, more in anger than in hate; and, alas! for his heavy chance,
- He hath smitten unto instant death his spiteful life-long enemy!
- And none was by to see it; and all men knew of their contentions:
- Fierce voices shout for his blood, and rude hands hurry him to judgment.
- Then man's verdict cometh,--Murderer, with forethought malice;
- And his name is a note of execration; his guilt is too black for devils.
- But to the Righteous Judge, seemeth he the suffering victim;
- For his anger was not unlawful, but became him as a Christian and a man;
- And though his guilt was grievous when he struck that heavy bitter blow,
- Yet light is the sin of the smiter, and verily kicketh the beam,
- To the weight of that man's wickedness, whose slow relentless hatred
- Met him at every turn, with patient continuance in evil.
- Doubtless, eternal wrath shall be heaped upon that spiteful enemy.
-
- It is vain, it is vain, saith the preacher; there be none but the
- righteous and the wicked,
- Base rebels, and staunch allies, the true knight, and the traitor:
- And he beareth strong witness among men, There is no neutral ground,
- The broad highway and narrow path map out the whole domain;
- Sit here among the saints, these holy chosen few,
- Or grovel there a wretched condemned, to die among the million.
- And verily for ultimate results, there be but good and bad;
- Heaven hath no dusky twilight; hell is not gladdened with a dawn.
- Yet looking round among his fellows, who can pass righteous judgment,
- Such an one is holy and accepted, and such an one reprobate and doomed?
- There is so much of good among the worst, so much of evil in the best,
- Such seeming partialities in providence, so many things to lessen and
- expand,
- Yea, and with all man's boast, so little real freedom of his will,--
- That, to look a little lower than the surface, garb or dialect or fashion,
- Thou shalt feebly pronounce for a saint, and faintly condemn for a sinner.
- Over many a good heart and true, fluttereth the Great King's pennant;
- By many an iron hand, the pirate's black banner is unfurled:
- But there be many more besides, in the yacht and the trader and the
- fishing-boat,
- In the feathered war-canoe, and the quick mysterious gondola:
- And the army of that Great King hath no stated uniform;
- Of mingled characters and kinds goeth forth the countless host;
- There is the turbaned Damascene, with his tattooed Zealand brother,
- There the slim bather in the Ganges, with the sturdy Russian boor,
- The sluggish inmate of a Polar cave, with the fire-souled daughter of
- Brazil,
- The embruted slave from Cuba, and the Briton of gentle birth.
- For all are His inheritance, of all He taketh tithe:
- And the church, His mercy's ark, hath some of every sort.
- Who art thou, O man, that art fixing the limits of the fold?
- Wherefore settest thou stakes to spread the tent of heaven?
- Lay not the plummet to the line: religion hath no landmarks:
- No human keenness can discern the subtle shades of faith:
- In some it is as earliest dawn, the scarce diluted darkness;
- In some as dubious twilight, cold and grey and gloomy:
- In some the ebon east is streaked with flaming gold:
- In some the dayspring from on high breaketh in all its praise.
- And who hath determined the when, separating light from darkness?
- Who shall pluck from earliest dawn the promise of the day?
- Leave that care to the Husbandman, lest thou garner tares;
- Help thou the Shepherd in His seeking, but to separate be His:
- For I have often seen the noble erring spirit
- Wrecked on the shoals of passion, and numbered of the lost;
- Often the generous heart, lit by unhallowed fire,
- Counted a brand among the burning, and left uncared for in his sin:
- Yet I waited a little year, and the mercy thou hadst forgotten
- Hath purged that noble spirit, washing it in waters of repentance;
- That glowing generous heart, having burnt out all its dross,
- Is as a golden censer, ready for the aloes and cassia:
- While thou, hard-visaged man, unlovely in thy strictness,
- Who turned from him thy sympathies with self-complacent pride,
- How art thou shamed by him! his heart is a spring of love,
- While the dry well of thine affections is choked with secret mammon.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Sometimes at a glance thou judgest well; years could add little to thy
- knowledge:
- When charity gloweth on the cheek, or malice is lowering in the eye,
- When honesty's open brow, or the weasel-face of cunning is before thee,
- Or the loose lip of wantonness, or clear bright forehead of reflection.
- But often, by shrewd scrutiny, thou judgest to the good man's harm:
- For it may be his hour of trial, or he slumbereth at his post,
- Or he hath slain his foe, but not yet levelled the stronghold,
- Or barely recovered of the wounds, that fleshed him in his fray with
- passion.
- Also, of the worst, through prejudice, thou loosely shalt think well:
- For none is altogether evil, and thou mayst catch him at his prayers:
- There may be one small prize, though all beside be blanks;
- A silver thread of goodness in the black serge-cloth of crime.
-
- There is to whom all things are easy; his mind, as a master-key,
- Can open, with intuitive address, the treasuries of art and science:
- There is to whom all things are hard; but industry giveth him a crow-bar,
- To force, with groaning labour, the stubborn lock of learning:
- And often, when thou lookest on an eye, dim in native dulness,
- Little shalt thou wot of the wealth diligence hath gathered to its gaze;
- Often, the brow that should be bright with the dormant fire of genius,
- Within its ample halls, hath ignorance the tenant.
- Yet are not the sons of men cast as in moulds by the lot?
- The like in frame and feature have much alike in spirit;
- Such a shape hath such a soul, so that a deep discerner
- From his make will read the man, and err not far in judgment:
- Yea, and it holdeth in the converse, that growing similarity of mind
- Findeth or maketh for itself an apposite dwelling in the body:
- Accident may modify, circumstance may bevil, externals seem to change it,
- But still the primitive crystal is latent in its many variations:
- For the map of the face, and the picture of the eye, are traced by the
- pen of passion;
- And the mind fashioneth a tabernacle suitable for itself.
- A mean spirit boweth down the back, and the bowing fostereth meanness;
- A resolute purpose knitteth the knees, and the firm tread nourisheth
- decision;
- Love looketh softly from the eye, and kindleth love by looking;
- Hate furroweth the brow, and a man may frown till he hateth:
- For mind and body, spirit and matter, have reciprocities of power,
- And each keepeth up the strife; a man's works make or mar him.
-
- There be deeper things than these, lying in the twilight of truth;
- But few can discern them aright, from surrounding dimness of error.
- For perchance, if thou knewest the whole, and largely with comprehensive
- mind
- Couldst read the history of character, the chequered story of a life,
- And into the great account, which summeth a mortal's destiny,
- Wert to add the forces from without, dragging him this way and that,
- And the secret qualities within, grafted on the soul from the womb,
- And the might of other men's example, among whom his lot is cast,
- And the influence of want or wealth, of kindness or harsh ill-usage,
- Of ignorance he cannot help, and knowledge found for him by others,
- And first impressions, hard to be effaced, and leadings to right or to
- wrong,
- And inheritance of likeness from a father, and natural human frailty,
- And the habit of health or disease, and prejudices poured into his mind,
- And the myriad little matters none but Omniscience can know,
- And accidents that steer the thoughts, where none but Ubiquity can trace
- them;--
- If thou couldst compass all these, and the consequents flowing from them,
- And the scope to which they tend, and the necessary fitness of all things,
- Then shouldst thou see as He seeth, who judgeth all men equal,--
- Equal, touching innocence and guilt; and different alone in this,
- That one acknowledged his evil, and looketh to his God for mercy;
- Another boasteth of his good, and calleth on his God for justice;
- So He, that sendeth none away, is largely munificent to prayer,
- But, in the heart of presumption, sheatheth the sword of vengeance.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF HATRED AND ANGER.
-
- Blunted unto goodness is the heart which anger never stirreth,
- But that which hatred swelleth, is keen to carve out evil.
- Anger is a noble infirmity, the generous failing of the just,
- The one degree that riseth above zeal, asserting the prerogatives of
- virtue:
- But hatred is a slow continuing crime, a fire in the bad man's breast,
- A dull and hungry flame, for ever craving insatiate.
- Hatred would harm another; anger would indulge itself:
- Hatred is a simmering poison; anger, the opening of a valve:
- Hatred destroyeth as the upas-tree; anger smiteth as a staff:
- Hatred is the atmosphere of hell; but anger is known in heaven.
- Is there not a righteous wrath, an anger just and holy,
- When goodness is sitting in the dust, and wickedness enthroned on Babel?
- Doth pity condemn guilt?--is justice not a feeling but a law
- Appealing to the line and to the plummet, incognizant of moral sense?
- Thou that condemnest anger, small is thy sympathy with angels,
- Thou that hast accounted it for sin, cold is thy communion with heaven.
-
- Beware of the angry in his passion; but fear not to approach him
- afterward;
- For if thou acknowledge thine error, he himself will be sorry for his
- wrath:
- Beware of the hater in his coolness; for he meditateth evil against thee:
- Commending the resources of his mind calmly to work thy ruin.
- Deceit and treachery skulk with hatred, but an honest spirit flieth with
- anger:
- The one lieth secret, as a serpent; the other chaseth, as a leopard.
- Speedily be reconciled in love, and receive the returning offender,
- For wittingly prolonging Anger, thou tamperest unconsciously with Hatred.
- Patience is power in a man, nerving him to rein his spirit:
- Passion is as palsy to his arm, while it yelleth on the coursers to their
- speed:
- Patience keepeth counsel, and standeth in solid self-possession,
- But the weakness of sudden passion layeth bare the secrets of the soul.
- The sentiment of anger is not ill, when thou lookest on the impudence of
- vice,
- Or savourest the breath of calumny, or hast earned the hard wages of
- injustice;
- But see that thou curb it in expression, rendering the mildness of rebuke,
- So shall thou stand without reproach, mailed in all the dignity of virtue.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF GOOD IN THINGS EVIL.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- I heard the man of sin reproaching the goodness of Jehovah,
- Wherefore, if He be Almighty Love, permitteth He misery and pain?
- I saw the child of hope vexed in the labyrinth of doubt,
- Wherefore, O holy One and just, is the horn of Thy foul foe so high
- exalted?
- And, alas! for this our groaning world, for that grief and guilt are here;
- Alas! for that Earth is the battle-field, where good must combat with
- evil:
- Angels look on and hold their breath, burning to mingle in the conflict,
- But the troops of the Captain of Salvation may be none but the soldiers
- of the cross:
- And that slender band must fight alone, and yet shall triumph gloriously,
- Enough shall they be for conquest, and the motto of their standard is,
- ENOUGH.
- Thou art sad, O denizen of earth, for pains and diseases and death,
- But remember, thy hand hath earned them; grudge not at the wages of thy
- doings:
- Thy guilt, and thy fathers' guilt, must bring many sorrows in their
- company,
- And if thou wilt drink sweet poison, doubtless it shall rot thee to the
- core.
- What art thou but the heritor of evil, with a right to nothing good?
- The respite of an interval of ease were a boon which Justice might deny
- thee:
- Therefore lay thy hand upon thy mouth, O man much to be forgiven,
- And wait, thou child of hope, for time shall teach thee all things.
-
- Yet hear, for my speech shall comfort thee: reverently, but with boldness,
- I would raise the sable curtain, that hideth the symmetry of Providence.
- Pain and sin are convicts, and toil in their fetters for good;
- The weapons of evil are turned against itself, fighting under better
- banners:
- The leech delighteth in stinging, and the wicked loveth to do harm,
- But the wise Physician of the Universe useth that ill tendency for health.
- Verily, from others' griefs are gendered sympathy and kindness;
- Patience, humility, and faith, spring not seldom from thine own:
- An enemy, humbled by his sorrows, cannot be far from thy forgiveness;
- A friend, who hath tasted of calamity, shall fan the dying incense of thy
- love:
- And for thyself, is it a small thing, so to learn thy frailty,
- That from an aching bone thou savest the whole body?
- The furnace of affliction may be fierce, but if it refineth thy soul,
- The good of one meek thought shall outweigh years of torment.
- Nevertheless, wretched man, if thy bad heart be hardened in the flame,
- Being earth-born, as of clay, and not of moulded wax,
- Judge not the hand that smiteth, as if thou wert visited in wrath:
- Reproach thyself, for He is Justice; repent thee, for He is Mercy.
-
- Cease, fond caviller at wisdom, to be satisfied that everything is wrong:
- Be sure there is good necessity, even for the flourishing of evil.
- Would the eye delight in perpetual noon? or the ear in unqualified
- harmonics?
- Hath winter's frost no welcome, contrasting sturdily with summer?
- Couldst thou discern benevolence, if there were no sorrows to be soothed?
- Or discover the resources of contrivance, if nothing stood opposed to the
- means?
- What were power without an enemy? or mercy without an object?
- Or truth, where the false were impossible? or love, where love were a
- debt?
- The characters of God were but idle, if all things around Him were
- perfection,
- And virtues might slumber on like death, if they lacked the opportunities
- of evil.
- There is One all-perfect, and but one; man dare not reason of His essence:
- But there must be deficiencies in heaven, to leave room for progression
- in bliss:
- A realm of unqualified BEST were a stagnant pool of being,
- And the circle of absolute perfection, the abstract cipher of indolence.
- Sin is an awful shadow, but it addeth new glories to the light;
- Sin is a black foil, but it setteth off the jewelry of heaven:
- Sin is the traitor that hath dragged the majesty of mercy into action;
- Sin is the whelming argument, to justify the attribute of vengeance.
- It is a deep dark thought, and needeth to be diligently studied,
- But perchance evil was essential, that God should be seen of His
- creatures:
- For where perfection is not, there lacketh possible good,
- And the absence of better that might be, taketh from the praise of it is
- well:
- And creatures must be finite, and finite cannot be perfect:
- Therefore, though in small degree, creation involveth evil,
- He chargeth His angels with folly, and the heavens are not clean in His
- sight:
- For every existence in the universe hath either imperfection or Godhead:
- And the light that blazeth but in One, must be softened with shadow for
- the many.
- There is then good in evil; or none could have known his Maker;
- No spiritual intellect or essence could have gazed on His high
- perfections,
- No angel harps could have tuned the wonders of His wisdom,
- No ransomed souls have praised the glories of His mercy,
- No howling fiends have shown the terrors of His justice,
- But God would have dwelt alone, in the fearful solitude of holiness.
-
- Nevertheless, O sinner, harden not thine heart in evil;
- Nor plume thee in imaginary triumph, because thou art not valueless as
- vile;
- Because thy dark abominations add lustre to the clarity of Light;
- Because a wonder-working alchemy draineth elixir out of poisons;
- Because the same fiery volcano that scorcheth and ravageth a continent,
- Hath in the broad blue bay cast up some petty island;
- Because to the full demonstration of the qualities and accidents of good
- The swarthy legions of the Devil have toiled as unwitting pioneers.
- For sin is still sin; so hateful Love doth hate it;
- A blot on the glory of creation, which Justice must wipe out.
- Sin is a loathsome leprosy, fretting the white robe of innocence;
- A rottenness, eating out the heart of the royal cedars of Lebanon;
- A pestilential blast, the terror of that holy pilgrimage;
- A rent in the sacred veil, whereby God left His temple.
- Therefore, consider thyself, thou that dost not sorrow for thy guilt:
- Fear evil, or face its Enemy: dread sin, or dare Justice.
-
- Yea, saith the Spirit: and their works do follow them;
- Habits, and thoughts, and deeds, are shadows and satellites of self.
- What! shall the claimant to a throne stand forward with a rabble rout,--
- Meanness, impiety, and lust; riot and indolence and vanity?
- Nay, man! the train wherewith thou comest attend whither thou shalt go:
- A throne for a king's son, but an inner dungeon for the felon.
- For a man's works do follow him: bodily, standing in the judgment,
- Behold the false accuser, behold the slandered saint;
- The slave, and his bloody driver; the poor, and his generous friend;
- The simple dupe, and the crafty knave: the murderer, and--his victim!
- Yet all are in many characters; the best stand guilty at the bar;
- And he that seemed the worst may have most of real excuse.
- The talents unto which a man is born, be they few or many,
- Are dropped into the balance of account, working unlooked-for changes;
- And perchance the convict from the galleys may stand above the hermit in
- his cell,
- For that, the obstacles in one outweigh the propensions in the other.
- There be, who have made themselves friends, yea, by unrighteous mammon,--
- Friends, ready waiting as an escort to those everlasting habitations;
- Embodied in living witnesses, thronging to meet them in a cloud,
- Charity, meekness and truth, zeal, sincerity and patience,
- There be, who have made themselves foes, yea, by honest gain,
- Foes, whose plaint must have its answer, before the bright portal is
- unbarred:
- Pride, and selfishness, and sloth, apathy, wrath and falsehood,
- Bind to their everlasting toil many that must weary in the fires.
- Love hath a power and a longing to save the gathered world,
- And rescue universal man from the hunting hell-hounds of his doings:
- Yet few, here one and there one, scanty as the gleaning after harvest,
- Are glad of the robes of praise which Mercy would fling around the naked;
- But wrapping closer to their skin the poisoned tunic of their works,
- They stand in self-dependence, to perish in abandonment of God.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF PRAYER.
-
- A wicked man scorneth prayer, in the shallow sophistry of reason,
- He derideth the silly hope that God can be moved by supplication:--
- Shall the Unchangeable be changed, or waver in His purpose?
- Can the weakness of pity affect Him? Should He turn at the bidding of a
- man?
- Methought He ruled all things, and ye called His decrees immutable,
- But if thus He listeneth to words, wherein is the firmness of His will?--
- So I heard the speech of the wicked, and, lo, it was smoother than oil;
- But I knew that his reasonings were false, for the promise of the
- Scripture is true:
- Yet was my soul in darkness, for his words were too hard for me;
- Till I turned to my God in prayer: for I know He heareth always.
- Then I looked abroad on the earth, and, behold, the Lord was in all
- things;
- Yet saw I not His hand in aught, but perceived that He worketh by means;
- Yea, and the power of the mean proveth the wisdom that ordained it,
- Yea, and no act is useless, to the hurling of a stone through the air.
- So I turned my thoughts to supplication, and beheld the mercies of
- Jehovah,
- And I saw sound argument was still the faithful friend of godliness;
- For as the rock of the affections is the solid approval of reason,
- Even so the temple of Religion is founded on the basis of Philosophy.
-
- Scorner, thy thoughts are weak, they reach not the summit of the matter;
- Go to, for the mouth of a child might show thee the mystery of prayer:
- Verily, there is no change in the counsels of the Mighty Ruler:
- Verily, His purpose is strong, and rooted in the depths of necessity:
- But who hath shown thee His purpose, who hath made known to thee His will?
- When, O gainsayer! hast thou been schooled in the secrets of wisdom?
- Fate is a creature of God, and all things move in their orbits,
- And that which shall surely happen is known unto Him from eternity;
- But as, in the field of nature, He useth the sinews of the ox,
- And commandeth diligence and toil, Himself giving the increase;
- So, in the kingdom of His grace, granteth He omnipotence to prayer,
- For He knoweth what thou wilt ask, and what thou wilt ask aright.
- No man can pray in faith, whose prayer is not grounded on a promise:
- Yet a good man commendeth all things to the righteous wisdom of his God:
- For those, who pray in faith, trust the immutable Jehovah,
- And they, who ask blessings unpromised, lean on uncovenanted mercy.
-
- Man, regard thy prayers as a purpose of love to thy soul;
- Esteem the providence that led to them as an index of God's good will;
- So shalt thou pray aright, and thy words shall meet with acceptance.
- Also, in pleading for others, be thankful for the fulness of thy prayer:
- For if thou art ready to ask, the Lord is more ready to bestow.
- The salt preserveth the sea, and the saints uphold the earth;
- Their prayers are the thousand pillars that prop the canopy of nature.
- Verily, an hour without prayer, from some terrestrial mind,
- Were a curse in the calendar of time, a spot of the blackness of darkness.
- Perchance the terrible day, when the world must rock into ruins,
- Will be one unwhitened by prayer,--shall He find faith on the earth?
- For there is an economy of mercy, as of wisdom, and power, and means;
- Neither is one blessing granted, unbesought from the treasury of good:
- And the charitable heart of the Being, to depend upon whom is happiness,
- Never withholdeth a bounty, so long as His subject prayeth;
- Yea, ask what thou wilt, to the second throne in heaven,
- It is thine, for whom it was appointed; there is no limit unto prayer:
- But and if thou cease to ask, tremble, thou self-suspended creature,
- For thy strength is cut off as was Samson's: and the hour of thy doom is
- come.
-
- Frail art thou, O man, as a bubble on the breaker,
- Weak and governed by externals, like a poor bird caught in the storm;
- Yet thy momentary breath can still the raging waters,
- Thy hand can touch a lever that may move the world.
- O Merciful, we strike eternal covenant with thee,
- For man may take for his ally the King who ruleth kings:
- How strong, yet how most weak, in utter poverty how rich,
- What possible omnipotence to good is dormant in a man!
- Behold that fragile form of delicate transparent beauty,
- Whose light-blue eye and hectic cheek are lit by the bale-fires of
- decline:
- All droopingly she lieth, as a dew-laden lily,
- Her flaxen tresses, rashly luxuriant, dank with unhealthy moisture;
- Hath not thy heart said of her, Alas! poor child of weakness?
- Thou hast erred; Goliah of Gath stood not in half her strength:
- Terribly she fighteth in the van as the virgin daughter of Orleans,
- She beareth the banner of Heaven, her onset is the rushing cataract,
- Seraphim rally at her side, and the captain of that host is God,
- And the serried ranks of evil are routed by the lightning of her eye;
- She is the King's remembrancer, and steward of many blessings,
- Holding the buckler of security over her unthankful land:
- For that weak fluttering heart is strong in faith assured,
- Dependence is her might, and behold--she prayeth.
-
- Angels are round the good man, to catch the incense of his prayers,
- And they fly to minister kindness to those for whom he pleadeth;
- For the altar of his heart is lighted, and burneth before God continually,
- And he breatheth, conscious of his joy, the native atmosphere of heaven:
- Yea, though poor, and contemned, and ignorant of this world's wisdom,
- Ill can his fellows spare him, though they know not of his value.
- Thousands bewail a hero, and a nation mourneth for its king,
- But the whole universe lamenteth the loss of a man of prayer.
- Verily, were it not for One, who sitteth on His rightful throne,
- Crowned with a rainbow of emerald, the green memorial of earth,--
- For One, a mediating man, that hath clad His Godhead with mortality,
- And offereth prayer without ceasing, the royal priest of Nature,
- Matter and life and mind had sunk into dark annihilation,
- And the lightning frown of Justice withered the world into nothing.
-
- Thus, O worshipper of reason, thou hast heard the sum of the matter:
- And woe to his hairy scalp that restraineth prayer before God.
- Prayer is a creature's strength, his very breath and being;
- Prayer is the golden key that can open the wicket of Mercy:
- Prayer is the magic sound that saith to Fate, So be it;
- Prayer is the slender nerve that moveth the muscles of Omnipotence.
- Wherefore, pray, O creature, for many and great are thy wants;
- Thy mind, thy conscience, and thy being, thy rights commend thee unto
- prayer,
- The cure of all cares, the grand panacea for all pains,
- Doubt's destroyer, ruin's remedy, the antidote to all anxieties.
-
- So then, God is true, and yet He hath not changed:
- It is He that sendeth the petition, to answer it according to His will.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE LORD'S PRAYER.
-
- Inquirest thou, O man, wherewithal may I come unto the Lord?
- And with what wonder-working sounds may I move the majesty of Heaven?
- There is a model to thy hand; upon that do thou frame thy supplication;
- Wisdom hath measured its words; and redemption urgeth thee to use them.
- Call thy God thy Father, and yet not thine alone,
- For thou art but one of many, thy brotherhood is with all:
- Remember His high estate, that He dwelleth King of Heaven;
- So shall thy thoughts be humbled, nor love be unmixed with reverence:
- Be thy first petition unselfish, the honour of Him who made thee,
- And that in the depths of thy heart His memory be shrined in holiness:
- Pray for that blessed time, when good shall triumph over evil,
- And one universal temple echo the perfections of Jehovah:
- Bend thou to His good will, and subserve His holy purposes,
- Till in thee, and those around thee, grow a little heaven upon earth:
- Humbly, as a grateful almsman, beg thy bread of God,--
- Bread for thy triple estate, for thou hast a trinity of nature:
- Humility smootheth the way, and gratitude softeneth the heart,
- Be then thy prayer for pardon mingled with the tear of penitence;
- Yea, and while, all unworthy, thou leanest on the hand that should smite,
- Thou canst not from thy fellows withhold thy less forgiveness.
- To thy Father thy weaknesses are known, and thou hast not hid thy sin,
- Therefore ask Him, in all trust, to lead thee from the dangers of
- temptation;
- While the last petition of the soul, that breatheth on the confines of
- prayer,
- Is deliverance from sin and the evil one, the miseries of earth and hell.
- And wherefore, child of hope, should the rock of thy confidence be sure?
- Thou knowest that God heareth and promiseth an answer of peace;
- Thou knowest that He is King, and none can stay His hand;
- Thou knowest His power to be boundless, for there is none other:
- And to Him thou givest glory, as a creature of His workmanship and favour,
- For the never-ending term of thy saved and bright existence.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Discretion]
-
-OF DISCRETION.
-
- For what then was I born?--to fill the circling year
- With daily toil for daily bread, with sordid pains and pleasures?--
- To walk this chequered world, alternate light and darkness,
- The day-dreams of deep thought followed by the night-dreams of fancy?--
- To be one in a full procession?--to dig my kindred clay?--
- To decorate the gallery of art?--to clear a few acres of forest?
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- Is then that noble end to feed this mind with knowledge,
- To mix for mine own thirst the sparkling wine of wisdom,
- To light with many lamps the caverns of my heart,
- To reap, in the furrows of my brain, good harvest of right reasons?--
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- Is it to grow stronger in self-government, to check the chafing will,
- To curb with tightening rein the mettled steeds of passion,
- To welcome with calm heart, far in the voiceless desert,
- The gracious visitings of heaven that bless my single self?--
- For more than these, my soul, thy God hath lent thee life.
- To aim at thine own happiness, is an end idolatrous and evil;
- In earth, yea in heaven, if thou seek it for itself, seeking thou shalt
- not find.
- Happiness is a road-side flower, growing on the highway of Usefulness;
- Plucked, it shall wither in thy hand; passed by, it is fragrance to thy
- spirit:
- Love not thine own soul, regard not thine own weal,
- Trample the thyme beneath thy feet; be useful, and be happy!
-
- Thus unto fair conclusions argueth generous youth,
- And quickly he starteth on his course, knight-errant to do good.
- His sword is edged with arguments, his vizor terrible with censures;
- He goeth full mailed in faith, and zeal is flaming at his heart.
- Yet one thing he lacketh, the Mentor of the mind,
- The quiet whisper of Discretion--Thy time is not yet come.
- For he smiteth an oppressor; and vengeance for that smiting
- Is dealt in doubled stripes on the faint body of the victim:
- He is glad to give and to distribute; and clamorous pauperism feasteth,
- While honest labour, pining, hideth his sharp ribs:
- He challengeth to a fair field that subtle giant Infidelity,
- And, worsted in the unequal fight, strengtheneth the hands of error;
- He hasteth to teach and preach, as the war-horse rusheth to the battle,
- And to pave a way for truth, would break up the Apennines of prejudice:
- He wearieth by stale proofs, where none looked for a reason,
- And to the listening ear will urge the false argument of feeling.
- So hath it often been, that, judging by results,
- The hottest friends of truth have done her deadliest wrong.
- Alas! for there are enemies without, glad enough to parley with a traitor,
- And a zealot will let down the drawbridge, to prove his own prowess:
- Yea, from within will he break away a breach in the citadel of truth,
- That he may fill the gap, for fame, with his own weak body.
-
- Zeal without judgment is an evil, though it be zeal unto good;
- Touch not the ark with unclean hand, yea, though it seem to totter.
- There are evil who work good, and there are good who work evil,
- And foolish backers of wisdom have brought on her many reproaches.
- Truth hath more than enough to combat in the minds of all men,
- For the mist of sense is a thick veil, and sin hath warped their wills;
- Yet doth an officious helper awkwardly prevent her victory,--
- These thy wounded hands were smitten in the house of friends:--
- To point out a meaning in her words, he will blot those words with his
- finger;
- And winnow chaff into the eyes, before he hath wheat to show:
- He will heap sturdy logs on a faint expiring fire,
- And with a room in flames, will cast the casement open;
- By a shoulder to the wheel down hill harasseth the labouring beast,
- And where obstruction were needed, will harm by an ill-judged
- thrusting-on.
-
- A vessel foundereth at sea, if a storm hath unshipped the rudder;
- And a mind with much sail shall require heavy ballast.
- Take a lever by the middle, thou shalt seem to prove it powerless,
- Argue for truth indiscreetly, thou shalt toil for falsehood.
- There is plenty of room for a peaceable man in the most thronged assembly;
- But a quarrelsome spirit is straitened in the open field:
- Many a teacher, lacking judgment, hindereth his own lessons;
- And the savoury mess of pottage is spoiled by a bitter herb:
- The garment woven of a piece is rashly torn by schism,
- Because its unwise claimants will not cast lots for its possession.
-
- Discretion guide thee on thy way, noble-minded youth,
- Help thee to humour infirmities, to wink at innocent errors,
- To take small count of forms, to bear with prejudice and fancy:
- Discretion guard thine asking, discretion aid thine answer,
- Teach thee that well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech,
- Whisper thee, thou art Weakness, though thy cause be Strength,
- And tell thee, the key-stone of an arch can be loosened with least labour
- from within.
- The snows of Hecla lie around its troubled smoking Geysers;
- Let the cool streams of prudence temper the hot spring of zeal:
- So shalt thou gain thine honourable end, nor lose the midway prize:
- So shall thy life be useful, and thy young heart happy.
-
-
-OF TRIFLES.
-
-[Illustration: "Y"]
-
- Yet once more, saith the fool, yet once, and is it not a little one?
- Spare me this folly yet an hour, for what is one among so many?
- And he blindeth his conscience with lies, and stupifieth his heart with
- doubts;--
- Whom shall I harm in this matter? and a little ill breedeth much good;
- My thoughts, are they not mine own? and they leave no mark behind them;
- And if God so pardoneth crime, how should these petty sins affect Him?--
- So he transgresseth yet again, and falleth by little and little,
- Till the ground crumble beneath him, and he sinketh in the gulf
- despairing.
- For there is nothing in the earth so small that it may not produce great
- things,
- And no swerving from a right line, that may not lead eternally astray.
- A landmark tree was once a seed; and the dust in the balance maketh a
- difference;
- And the cairn is heaped high by each one flinging a pebble:
- The dangerous bar in the harbour's mouth is only grains of sand;
- And the shoal that hath wrecked a navy is the work of a colony of worms:
- Yea, and a despicable gnat may madden the mighty elephant;
- And the living rock is worn by the diligent flow of the brook.
- Little art thou, O man, and in trifles thou contendest with thine equals,
- For atoms must crowd upon atoms, ere crime groweth to be a giant.
- What, is thy servant a dog?--not yet wilt thou grasp the dagger,
- Not yet wilt thou laugh with the scoffers, not yet betray the innocent;
- But, if thou nourish in thy heart the reveries of injury or passion,
- And travel in mental heat the mazy labyrinths of guilt,
- And then conceive it possible, and then reflect on it as done,
- And use, by little and little, thyself to regard thyself a villain,
- Not long will crime be absent from the voice that doth invoke him to thy
- heart,
- And bitterly wilt thou grieve, that the buds have ripened into poison.
-
- A spark is a molecule of matter, yet may it kindle the world:
- Vast is the mighty ocean, but drops have made it vast.
- Despise not thou a small thing, either for evil or for good;
- For a look may work thy ruin, or a word create thy wealth:
- The walking this way or that, the casual stopping or hastening,
- Hath saved life, and destroyed it, hath cast down and built up fortunes.
- Commit thy trifles unto God, for to Him is nothing trivial;
- And it is but the littleness of man that seeth no greatness in a trifle.
- All things are infinite in parts, and the moral is as the material,
- Neither is anything vast, but it is compacted of atoms.
- Thou art wise, and shalt find comfort, if thou study thy pleasure in
- trifles,
- For slender joys, often repeated, fall as sunshine on the heart:
- Thou art wise, if thou beat off petty troubles, nor suffer their stinging
- to fret thee;
- Thrust not thine hand among the thorns, but with a leathern glove.
- Regard nothing lightly which the wisdom of Providence hath ordered;
- And therefore, consider all things that happen unto thee or unto others.
- The warrior that stood against a host, may be pierced unto death by a
- needle;
- And the saint that feareth not the fire, may perish the victim of a
- thought:
- A mote in the gunner's eye is as bad as a spike in the gun;
- And the cable of a furlong is lost through an ill-wrought inch.
- The streams of small pleasures fill the lake of happiness:
- And the deepest wretchedness of life is continuance of petty pains.
- A fool observeth nothing, and seemeth wise unto himself;
- A wise man heedeth all things, and in his own eyes is a fool:
- He that wondereth at nothing hath no capabilities of bliss:
- But he that scrutinizeth trifles hath a store of pleasure to his hand.
- If pestilence stalk through the land, ye say, This is God's doing;
- Is it not also His doing when an aphis creepeth on a rosebud?
- If an avalanche roll from its Alp, ye tremble at the will of Providence:
- Is not that will concerned when the sear leaves fall from the poplar?--
- A thing is great or little only to a mortal's thinking,
- But abstracted from the body, all things are alike important:
- The Ancient of Days noteth in His book the idle converse of a creature,
- And happy and wise is the man to whose thought existeth not a trifle.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF RECREATION.
-
- To join advantage to amusement, to gather profit with pleasure,
- Is the wise man's necessary aim, when he lieth in the shade of recreation.
- For he cannot fling aside his mind, nor bar up the flood-gates of his
- wisdom;
- Yea, though he strain after folly, his mental monitor shall check him:
- For knowledge and ignorance alike have laws essential to their being,--
- The sage studieth amusements, and the simple laugheth in his studies.
- Few, but full of understanding, are the books of the library of God,
- And fitting for all seasons are the gain and the gladness they bestow:
- The volume of mystery and Grace, for the hour of deep communings,
- When the soul considereth intensely the startling marvel of itself:
- The book of destiny and Providence, for the time of sober study,
- When the mind gleaneth wisdom from the olive grove of history:
- And the cheerful pages of Nature, to gladden the pleasant holiday,
- When the task of duty is complete, and the heart swelleth high with
- satisfaction.
- The soul may not safely dwell too long with the deep things of futurity;
- The mind may not always be bent back, like the Parthian, straining at the
- past;
- And, if thou art wearied with wrestling on the broad arena of science,
- Leave awhile thy friendly foe, half vanquished in the dust,
- Refresh thy jaded limbs, return with vigour to the strife,--
- Thou shalt easier find thyself his master, for the vacant interval of
- leisure.
-
- That which may profit and amuse is gathered from the volume of creation,
- For every chapter therein teemeth with the playfulness of wisdom.
- The elements of all things are the same, though nature hath mixed them
- with a difference,
- And Learning delighteth to discover the affinity of seeming opposites:
- So out of great things and small draweth he the secrets of the universe,
- And argueth the cycles of the stars, from a pebble flung by a child.
- It is pleasant to note all plants, from the rush to the spreading cedar,
- From the giant king of palms, to the lichen that staineth its stem;
- To watch the workings of instinct, that grosser reason of brutes,--
- The river horse browsing in the jungle, the plover screaming on the moor,
- The cayman basking on a mud-bank, and the walrus anchored to an iceberg,
- The dog at his master's feet, and the milch-kine lowing in the meadow;
- To trace the consummate skill that hath modelled the anatomy of insects,
- Small fowls that sun their wings on the petals of wild flowers;
- To learn a use in the beetle, and more than a beauty in the butterfly;
- To recognize affections in a moth, and look with admiration on a spider.
- It is glorious to gaze upon the firmament, and see from far the mansions
- of the blest,
- Each distant shining world, a kingdom for one of the redeemed;
- To read the antique history of earth, stamped upon those medals in the
- rocks
- Which Design hath rescued from decay, to tell of the green infancy of
- time;
- To gather from the unconsidered shingle mottled starlike agates,
- Full of unstoried flowers in the bubbling bloom-chalcedony:
- Or gay and curious shells, fretted with microscopic carving,
- Corallines, and fresh seaweeds, spreading forth their delicate branches.
- It is an admirable lore, to learn the cause in the change,
- To study the chemistry of Nature, her grand, but simple secrets,
- To search out all her wonders, to track the resources of her skill,
- To note her kind compensations, her unobtrusive excellence.
- In all it is wise happiness to see the well-ordained laws of Jehovah,
- The harmony that filleth all His mind, the justice that tempereth His
- bounty,
- The wonderful all-prevalent analogy that testifieth one Creator,
- The broad arrow of the Great King, carved on all the stores of His
- arsenal.
- But beware, O worshipper of God, thou forget not Him in His dealings,
- Though the bright emanations of His power hide Him in created glory;
- For if, on the sea of knowledge, thou regardest not the pole-star of
- religion,
- Thy bark will miss her port, and run upon the sand-bar of folly:
- And if, enamoured of the means, thou considerest not the scope to which
- they tend,
- Wherein art thou wiser than the child, that is pleased with toys and
- baubles?
- Verily, a trifling scholar, thou heedest but the letter of instruction:
- For, as motive is spirit unto action, as memory endeareth place,
- As the sun doth fertilize the earth, as affection quickeneth the heart,
- So is the remembrance of God in the varied wonders of creation.
-
- Man hath found out inventions, to cheat him of the weariness of life,
- To help him to forget realities, and hide the misery of guilt.
- For love of praise, and hope of gain, for passion and delusive happiness,
- He joineth the circle of folly, and heapeth on the fire of excitement;
- Oftentimes sadly out of heart at the tiresome insipidity of pleasure,
- Oftentimes labouring in vain, convinced of the palpable deceit:
- Yet a man speaketh to his brother, in the voice of glad congratulation,
- And thinketh others happy, though he himself be wretched:
- And hand joineth hand to help in the toil of amusement,
- While the secret aching heart is vacant of all but disappointment.
- The cheapest pleasures are the best; and nothing is more costly than sin;
- Yet we mortgage futurity, counting it but little loss:
- Neither can a man delight in that which breedeth sorrow,
- Yet do we hunt for joy even in the fires that consume it.
- Whoso would find gladness may meet her in the hovel of poverty,
- Where benevolence hath scattered around the gleanings of the horn of
- plenty;
- Whoso would sun himself in peace, may be seen of her in deeds of mercy,
- When the pale lean cheek of the destitute is wet with grateful tears.
- If the mind is wearied by study, or the body worn with sickness,
- It is well to lie fallow for a while, in the vacancy of sheer amusement;
- But when thou prosperest in health, and thine intellect can soar untired,
- To seek uninstructive pleasure is to slumber on the couch of indolence.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration: The Train of Religion.]
-
-The Train of Religion.
-
- Stay awhile, thou blessed band! be entreated, daughters of heaven!
- While the chance-met scholar of Wisdom learneth your sacred names:
- He is resting a little from his toil, yet a little on the borders of
- earth,
- And fain would he have you his friends, to bid him glad welcome hereafter.
- Who among the glorious art thou, that walkest a Goddess and a Queen,
- Thy crown of living stars, and a golden cross thy sceptre?
- Who among flowers of loveliness is she, thy seeming herald,
- Yet she boasteth not thee nor herself, and her garments are plain in
- their neatness?
- Wherefore is there one among the train, whose eyes are red with weeping,
- Yet is her open forehead beaming with the sun of ecstasy?
- And who is that bloodstained warrior, with glory sitting on his crest?
- And who that solemn sage, calm in majestic dignity?
- Also, in the lengthening troop see I some clad in robes of triumph,
- Whose fair and sunny faces I have known and loved on earth:
- Welcome, ye glorified Loves, Graces, and Sciences, and Muses,
- That, like sisters of charity, tended in this world's hospital;
- Welcome, for verily I knew, ye could not but be children of the light,
- Though earth hath soiled your robes, and robbed you of half your glory;
- Welcome, chiefly welcome, for I find I have friends in heaven,
- And some I might scarce have looked for, as thou, light-hearted Mirth;
- Thou also, star-robed Urania; and thou, with the curious glass,
- That rejoicedst in tracking wisdom where the eye was too dull to note it:
- And art thou too among the blessed, mild, much-injured Poetry?
- Who quickenest with light and beauty the leaden face of matter,
- Who not unheard, though silent, fillest earth's gardens with music,
- And not unseen, though a spirit, dost look down upon us from the stars,--
- That hast been to me for oil and for wine, to cheer and uphold my soul,
- When wearied, battling with the surge, the stunning surge of life:
- Of thee, for well have I loved thee, of thee may I ask in hope,
- Who among the glorious is she, that walketh a Goddess and a Queen?
- And who that fair-haired herald, and who that weeping saint?
- And who that mighty warrior, and who that solemn sage?
-
- Son, happy art thou that Wisdom hath led thee hitherward:
- For otherwise never hadst thou known the joy-giving name of our Queen.
- Behold her, the life of men, the anchor of their shipwrecked hopes:
- Behold her, the shepherdess of souls, who bringeth back the wanderers to
- God.
- And for that modest herald, she is named on earth, Humility:
- And hast thou not known, my son, the tearful face of Repentance?
- Faith is yon time-scarred hero, walking in the shade of his laurels:
- And Reason, the serious sage, who followeth the footsteps of Faith:
- And we, all we, are but handmaids, ministers of minor bliss,
- Who rejoice to be counted servants in the train of a Queen so glorious:
- But for her name, son of man, it is strange to the language of heaven,
- For those who have never fallen need not and may not learn it:
- Ligeance we swear to our God, and ligeance well have we kept;
- It is only the band of the redeemed who can tell thee the fulness of that
- name;
- Yet will I comfort thee, my son, for the love wherewith thou hast loved
- me,
- And thou shalt touch for thyself the golden sceptre of Religion.
-
- So that blessed train passed by me; but the vision was sealed upon my
- soul;
- And its memory is shrined in fragrance, for the promise of the Spirit was
- true:
- I learn from the silent poem of all creation round me,
- How beautiful their feet, who follow in that train.
-
-
-OF A TRINITY.
-
-[Illustration: "D"]
-
- Despise not, shrewd reckoner, the God of a good man's worship,
- Neither let thy calculating folly gainsay the unity of three:
- Nor scorn another's creed, although he cannot solve thy doubts;
- Reason is the follower of faith, where he may not be precursor:
- It is written, and so we believe, waiting not for outward proof,
- Inasmuch as mysteries inscrutable are the clear prerogatives of godhead.
- Reason hath nothing positive, faith hath nothing doubtful;
- And the height of unbelieving wisdom is to question all things.
- When there is marvel in a doctrine, faith is joyful and adoreth;
- But when all is clear, what place is left for faith?
- Tell me the sum of thy knowledge,--is it yet assured of anything?
- Despise not what is wonderful, when all things are wonderful around thee.
- From the multitude of like effects, thou sayest, Behold a law:
- And the matter thou art baffled in unmaking, is to thy mind an element.
- Then look abroad, I pray thee, for analogy holdeth everywhere,
- And the Maker hath stamped His name on every creature of His hand:
- I know not of a matter or a spirit, that is not three in one,
- And truly should account it for a marvel, a coin without the image of its
- Caesar.
-
- Man talketh of himself as ignorant, but judgeth by himself as wise:
- His own guess counteth he truth, but the notions of another are his scorn;
- But bear thou yet with a brother, whose thought may be less subtle than
- thine own,
- And suffer the passing speculation suggested by analogies to faith.
- Like begetteth like, and the great sea of Existence
- In each of its uncounted waves holdeth up a mirror to its Maker:
- Like begetteth like, and the spreading tree of being
- With each of its trefoil leaves pointeth at the Trinity of God.
- Let him whose eyes have been unfilmed, read this homily in all things,
- And thou, of duller sight, despise not him that readeth:
- There be three grand principles; life, generation, and obedience;
- Shadowing in every creature, the Spirit, and the Father, and the Son.
- There be three grand unities, variously mixed in trinities,
- Three catholic divisors of the million sums of matter:
- Yea, though science hath not seen it, climbing the ladder of experiment,
- Let faith, in the presence of her God, promulgate the mighty truth;
- Of three sole elements all nature's works consist:
- The pine, and the rock to which it clingeth, and the eagle sailing around
- it:
- The lion, and the northern whale, and the deeps wherein he sporteth;
- The lizard sleeping in the sun; the lightning flashing from a cloud;
- The rose, and the ruby, and the pearl; each one is made of three;
- And the three be the like ingredients, mingled in diverse measures.
- Thyself hast within thyself body, and life, and mind:
- Matter, and breath, and instinct, unite in all beasts of the field;
- Substance, coherence, and weight, fashion the fabrics of the earth;
- The will, the doing, and the deed, combine to frame a fact:
- The stem, the leaf, and the flower; beginning, middle, and end;
- Cause, circumstance, consequent: and every three is one.
- Yea, the very breath of man's life consisteth of a trinity of vapours,
- And the noonday light is a compound, the triune shadow of Jehovah.
-
- Shall all things else be in mystery, and God alone be understood?
- Shall finite fathom infinity, though it sound not the shallows of
- creation?
- Shall a man comprehend his Maker, being yet a riddle to himself?
- Or time teach the Lesson that eternity cannot master?
- If God be nothing more than one, a child can compass the thought;
- But seraphs fail to unravel the wondrous unity of three.
- One verily He is, for there can be but one who is all mighty;
- Yet the oracles of nature and religion proclaim Him three in one.
- And where were the value to thy soul, O miserable denizen of earth,
- Of the idle pageant of the cross, where hung no sacrifice for thee?
- Where the worth to thine impotent heart, of that stirred Bethesda,
- All numbed and palsied as it is, by the scorpion stings of sin?
- No, thy trinity of nature, enchained by treble death,
- Helplessly craveth of its God, Himself for three salvations:
- The soul to be reconciled in love, the mind to be glorified in light,
- While this poor dying body leapeth into life.
- And if indeed for us all the costly ransom hath been paid,
- Bethink thee, could less than Deity have owned so vast a treasure?
- Could a man contend with God, and stand against the bosses of His buckler,
- Rendering the balance for guilt, atonement to the uttermost?
- Thou art subtle to thine own thinking, but wisdom judgeth thee a fool,
- Resolving thou wilt not bow the knee to a Being thou canst not comprehend:
- The mind that could compass perfection were itself perfection's equal;
- And reason refuseth its homage to a God who can be fully understood.
-
- Thou that despiseth mystery, yet canst expound nothing,
- Wherefore rejectest thou the fact that solveth the enigma of all things?
- Wherefore veilest thou thine eyes, lest the light of revelation sun them,
- And puttest aside the key that would open the casket of truth?
- The mind and the nature of God are shadowed in all His works,
- And none could have guessed of His essence, had He not uttered it Himself.
- Therefore, thou child of folly, that scornest the record of His wisdom,
- Learn from the consistencies of nature the needful miracle of Godhead:
- Yea, let the heathen be thy teacher, who adoreth many gods,
- For there is no wide-spread error that hath not truth for its beginning.
- Be content; thine eye cannot see all the sides of a cube at one view,
- Nor thy mind in the self-same moment follow two ideas:
- There are now many marvels in thy creed, believing what thou seest,
- Then let not the conceit of intellect hinder thee from worshipping
- mystery.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Thinking.]
-
-OF THINKING.
-
- Reflection is a flower of the mind, giving out wholesome fragrance,
- But reverie is the same flower, when rank and running to seed.
- Better to read little with thought, than much with levity and quickness;
- For mind is not as merchandize, which decreaseth in the using,
- But liker to the passions of man, which rejoice and expand in exertion:
- Yet live not wholly on thine own ideas, lest they lead thee astray;
- For in spirit, as in substance, thou art a social creature;
- And if thou leanest on thyself, thou rejectest the guidance of thy
- betters,
- Yea, thou contemnest all men,--Am I not wiser than they?--
- Foolish vanity hath blinded thee, and warped thy weak judgment:
- For, though new ideas flow from new springs, and enrich the treasury of
- knowledge,
- Yet listen often, ere thou think much; and look around thee ere thou
- judgest.
- Memory, the daughter of Attention, is the teeming mother of Wisdom,
- And safer is he that storeth knowledge, than he that would make it for
- himself.
-
- Imagination is not thought, neither is fancy reflection:
- Thought paceth like a hoary sage, but imagination hath wings as an eagle:
- Reflection sternly considereth, nor is sparing to condemn evil,
- But fancy lightly laugheth, in the sun-clad gardens of amusement.
- For the shy game of the fowler the quickest shot is the surest;
- But with slow care and measured aim the gunner pointeth his cannon:
- So for all less occasions, the surface-thought is best,
- But to be master of the great take thou heavier metal.
- It is a good thing, and a wholesome, to search out bosom sins,
- But to be the hero of selfish imaginings, is the subtle poison of pride:
- At night, in the stillness of thy chamber, guard and curb thy thoughts,
- And in recounting the doings of the day, beware that thou do it with
- prayer,
- Or thinking will be an idle pleasure, and retrospect yield no fruit.
- Steer the bark of thy mind from the syren isle of reverie,
- And let a watchful spirit mingle with the glance of recollection:
- Also, in examining thine heart, in sounding the fountain of thine actions,
- Be more careful of the evil than of the good; and humble thyself in thy
- sin.
-
- The root of all wholesome thought is knowledge of thyself,
- For thus only canst thou learn the character of God toward thee.
- He made thee, and thou art; He redeemed thee, and thou wilt be:
- Thou art evil, yet He loveth thee; thou sinnest, yet He pardoneth thee.
- Though thou canst not perceive Him, yet is He in all His works,
- Infinite in grand outline, infinite in minute perfection:
- Nature is the chart of God, mapping out all His attributes;
- Art is the shadow of His wisdom, and copieth His resources.
- Thou knowest the laws of matter to be emanations of His will,
- And thy best reason for aught is this,--Thou, Lord, wouldst have it so.
- Yea, what is any law but an absolute decree of God?
- Or the properties of matter and mind, but the arbitrary fiats of Jehovah?
- He made and ordained necessity; He forged the chain of reason;
- And holdeth in His own right hand the first of the golden links.
- A fool regardeth mind as the spiritual essence of matter,
- And not rather matter as the gross accident of mind.
- Can finite govern infinite, or a part exceed the whole,
- Or the wisdom of God sit down at the feet of innate necessity?
- Necessity is a creature of His hand: for He can never change;
- And chance hath no existence where everything is needful.
-
- Canst thou measure Omnipotence, canst thou conceive Ubiquity,
- Which guideth the meanest reptile, and quickeneth the brightest seraph,
- Which steereth the particle of dust, and commandeth the path of the comet?
- To Him all things are equal, for all things are necessary.
- The smith was weary at his forge, and welded the metal carelessly,
- And the anchor breaketh in its bed; and the vessel foundereth with her
- crew:
- A word of anger is muttered, engendering the midnight murder:
- The sun bursteth from a cloud, and maddeneth the toiling husbandman.
- Shall these things be, and God not know it?
- Shall He know, and not be in them? shall He see, and not be among them?
- And how can they be otherwise than as He knoweth?
- Truly, the Lord is in all things; verily, He worketh in all.
- Think thus, and thy thoughts are firm, ascribing each circumstance to Him;
- Yet know surely, and believe the truth, that God willeth not evil;
- For adversities are blessings in disguise, and wickedness the Lord
- abhorreth:
- That He is in all things is an axiom, and that He is righteous in all:
- Ascribe holiness to Him, while thou musest on the mystery of sin,
- For infinite can grasp that, which finite cannot compass.
-
- In works of art, think justly: what praise canst thou render unto man?
- For he made not his own mind, nor is he the source of contrivance.
- If a cunning workman make an engine that fashioneth curious works,
- Which hath the praise, the machine or its maker,--the engine, or he that
- framed it?
- And could he frame it so subtly as to give it a will and freedom,
- Endow it with complicated powers, and a glorious living soul,
- Who, while he admireth the wondrous understanding creature,
- Will not pay deeper homage to the Maker of master minds?
- Otherwise, thou art senseless as the pagan, that adoreth his own
- handywork;
- Yea, while thou boastest of thy wisdom, thy mind is as the mind of the
- savage,
- For he boweth down to his idols, and thou art a worshipper of self,
- Giving to the reasoning machine the credit due to its creator.
-
- The key-stone of thy mind, to give thy thoughts solidity,
- To bind them as in an arch, to fix them as the world in its sphere,
- Is to learn from the book of the Lord, to drink from the well of His
- wisdom.
- Who can condense the sun, or analyse the fulness of the Bible,
- So that its ideas be gathered, and the harvest of its wisdom be brought
- in?
- That book is easy to the man who setteth his heart to understand it,
- But to the careless and profane it shall seem the foolishness of God;
- And it is a delicate test to prove thy moral state;
- To the humble disciple it is bread, but a stone to the proud and
- unbelieving:
- A scorner shall find nothing but the husks, wherewith to feed his hunger,
- But for the soul of the simple, it is plenty of full-ripe wheat.
- The Scripture abideth the same, in the sober majesty of truth;
- And the differing aspects of its teaching proceed from diversity in minds.
- He that would learn to think may gain that knowledge there;
- For the living word, as an angel, standeth at the gate of wisdom,
- And publisheth, This is the way, walk ye surely in it.
- Religion taketh by the hand the humble pupil of repentance,
- And teacheth him lessons of mystery, solving the questions of doubt;
- She maketh man worthy of himself, of his high prerogative of reason,
- Threadeth all the labyrinths of thought, and leadeth him to his God.
-
- Come hither, child of meditation, upon whose high fair forehead
- Glittereth the star of mind in its unearthly lustre:
- Hast thou nought to tell us of thine airy joys,--
- When, borne on sinewy pinions, strong as the western condor,
- The soul, after soaring for a while round the cloud-capped Andes of
- reflection,
- Glad in its conscious immortality, leaveth a world behind,
- To dare at one bold flight the broad Atlantic to another?
- Hast thou no secret pangs to whisper common men,
- No dread of thine own energies, still active day and night,
- Lest too ecstatic heat sublime thyself away,
- Or vivid horrors, sharp and clear, madden thy tense fibres?
- In half-shaped visions of sleep hast thou not feared thy flittings,
- Lest reason, like a raking hawk, return not to thy call:
- Nor waked to work-day life with throbbing head and heart,
- Nor welcomed early dawn to save thee from unrest?
- For the wearied spirit lieth as a fainting maiden,
- Captive and borne away on the warrior's foam-covered steed,
- And sinketh down wounded, as a gladiator on the sand,
- While the keen faulchion of Intellect is cutting through the scabbard of
- the brain.
- Imagination, like a shadowy giant looming on the twilight of the Hartz,
- Shall overwhelm judgment with affright, and scare him from his throne:
- In a dream thou mayst be mad, and feel the fire within thee;
- In a dream thou mayst travel out of self, and see thee with the eyes of
- another;
- Or sleep in thine own corpse: or wake as in many bodies;
- Or swell, as expanded to infinity; or shrink, as imprisoned to a point;
- Or among moss-grown ruins mayst wander with the sullen disembodied,
- And gaze upon their glassy eyes until thy heart-blood freeze.
-
- Alone must thou stand, O man! alone at the bar of judgment;
- Alone must thou bear thy sentence, alone must thou answer for thy deeds:
- Therefore it is well thou retirest often to secresy and solitude,
- To feel that thou art accountable separately from thy fellows:
- For a crowd hideth truth from the eyes, society drowneth thought,
- And being but one among many, stifleth the chidings of conscience.
- Solitude bringeth woe to the wicked, for his crimes are told out in his
- ear;
- But addeth peace to the good, for the mercies of his God are numbered.
- Thou mayst know if it be well with a man,--loveth he gaiety or solitude?
- For the troubled river rusheth to the sea, but the calm lake slumbereth
- among the mountains.
- How dear to the mind of the sage are the thoughts that are bred in
- loneliness;
- For there is as it were music at his heart, and he talketh within him as
- with friends:
- But guilt maddeneth the brain, and terror glareth in the eye,
- Where, in his solitary cell, the malefactor wrestleth with remorse.
- Give me but a lodge in the wilderness, drop me on an island in the desert,
- And thought shall yield me happiness, though I may not increase it by
- imparting:
- For the soul never slumbereth, but is as the eye of the Eternal,
- And mind, the breath of God, knoweth not ideal vacuity:
- At night, after weariness and watching, the body sinketh into sleep,
- But the mental eye is awake, and thou reasonest in thy dreams:
- In a dream, thou mayst live a lifetime, and all be forgotten in the
- morning:
- Even such is life, and so soon perisheth its memory.
-
-
-OF SPEAKING.
-
-[Illustration: "S"]
-
- Speech is the golden harvest that followeth the flowering of thought;
- Yet oftentimes runneth it to husk, and the grains be withered and scanty:
- Speech is reason's brother, and a kingly prerogative of man,
- That likeneth him to his Maker, who spake, and it was done:
- Spirit may mingle with spirit, but sense requireth a symbol;
- And speech is the body of a thought, without which it were not seen.
- When thou walkest, musing with thyself, in the green aisles of the forest,
- Utter thy thinkings aloud, that they take a shape and being:
- For he that pondereth in silence crowdeth the storehouse of his mind,
- And though he hath heaped great riches, yet is he hindered in the using.
- A man that speaketh too little, and thinketh much and deeply,
- Corrodeth his own heart-strings, and keepeth back good from his fellows:
- A man that speaketh too much, and museth but little and lightly,
- Wasteth his mind in words, and is counted a fool among men:
- But thou, when thou hast thought, weave charily the web of meditation,
- And clothe the ideal spirit in the suitable garments of speech.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Uttered out of time, or concealed in its season, good savoureth of evil;
- To be secret looketh like guilt, to speak out may breed contention:
- Often have I known the honest heart, flaming with indignant virtue,
- Provoke unneeded war by its rash ambassador the tongue:
- Often have I seen the charitable man go so slily on his mission,
- That those who met him in the twilight, took him for a skulking thief:
- I have heard the zealous youth telling out his holy secrets
- Before a swinish throng, who mocked him as he spake;
- And I considered, his openness was hardening them that mocked,
- Whereas a judicious keeping-back might have won their sympathy:
- I have judged rashly and harshly the hand, liberal in the dark,
- Because in the broad daylight, it hath holden it a virtue to be close;
- And the silent tongue have I condemned, because reserve hath chained it,
- That it hid, yea from a brother, the kindness it had done by comforting.
- No need to sound a trumpet, but less to hush a footfall:
- Do thou thy good openly, not as though the doing were a crime.
- Secresy goeth cowled, and Honesty demandeth wherefore?
- For he judgeth--judgeth he not well?--that nothing need be hid but guilt.
- Why should thy good be evil spoken of, through thine unrighteous silence?
- If thou art challenged, speak, and prove the good thou doest.
- The free example of benevolence, unobtruded, yet unhidden,
- Soundeth in the ears of sloth, Go, and do thou likewise:
- And I wot the hypocrite's sin to be of darker dye,
- Because the good man, fearing, thereby hideth his light:
- But neither God nor man hath bid thee cloak thy good,
- When a seasonable word would set thee in thy sphere, that all might see
- thy brightness.
- Ascribe the honour to thy Lord, but be thou jealous of that honour,
- Nor think it light and worthless, because thou mayst not wear it for
- thyself:
- Remember, thy grand prerogative is free unshackled utterance,
- And suffer not the flood-gates of secresy to lock the full river of thy
- speech.
-
- Come, I will show thee an affliction, unnumbered among this world's
- sorrows,
- Yet real and wearisome and constant, embittering the cup of life.
- There be, who can think within themselves, and the fire burneth at their
- heart,
- And eloquence waiteth at their lips, yet they speak not with their tongue:
- There be, whom zeal quickeneth, or slander stirreth to reply,
- Or need constraineth to ask, or pity sendeth as her messengers,
- But nervous dread and sensitive shame freeze the current of their speech;
- The mouth is sealed as with lead, a cold weight presseth on the heart,
- The mocking promise of power is once more broken in performance,
- And they stand impotent of words, travailing with unborn thoughts;
- Courage is cowed at the portal; wisdom is widowed of utterance;
- He that went to comfort is pitied; he that should rebuke, is silent:
- And fools who might listen and learn, stand by to look and laugh;
- While friends, with kinder eyes, wound deeper by compassion:
- And thought, finding not a vent, smouldereth, gnawing at the heart,
- And the man sinketh in his sphere, for lack of empty sounds.
- There be many cares and sorrows thou hast not yet considered,
- And well may thy soul rejoice in the fair privilege of speech;
- For at every turn to want a word,--thou canst not guess that want;
- It is as lack of breath or bread: life hath no grief more galling.
-
- Come, I will tell thee of a joy, which the parasites of pleasure have not
- known,
- Though earth and air and sea have gorged all the appetites of sense.
- Behold, what fire is in his eye, what fervour on his cheek!
- That glorious burst of winged words! how bound they from his tongue!
- The full expression of the mighty thought, the strong triumphant argument,
- The rush of native eloquence, resistless as Niagara,
- The keen demand, the clear reply, the fine poetic image,
- The nice analogy, the clenching fact, the metaphor bold and free,
- The grasp of concentrated intellect wielding the omnipotence of truth,
- The grandeur of his speech in his majesty of mind!
- Champion of the right,--patriot, or priest, or pleader of the innocent
- cause,
- Upon whose lips the mystic bee hath dropped the honey of persuasion,
- Whose heart and tongue have been touched, as of old, by the live coal
- from the altar,
- How wide the spreading of thy peace, how deep the draught of thy
- pleasures!
- To hold the multitude as one, breathing in measured cadence,
- A thousand men with flashing eyes, waiting upon thy will;
- A thousand hearts kindled by thee with consecrated fire,
- Ten flaming spiritual hecatombs offered on the mount of God:
- And now a pause, a thrilling pause,--they live but in thy words,--
- Thou hast broken the bounds of self, as the Nile at its rising,
- Thou art expanded into them, one faith, one hope, one spirit,
- They breathe but in thy breath, their minds are passive unto thine,
- Thou turnest the key of their love, bending their affections to thy
- purpose,
- And all, in sympathy with thee, tremble with tumultuous emotions:
- Verily, O man, with truth for thy theme, eloquence shall throne thee with
- archangels.
-
-
-OF READING.
-
-[Illustration: "O"]
-
- One drachma for a good book, and a thousand talents for a true friend;--
- So standeth the market, where scarce is ever costly:
- Yea, were the diamonds of Golconda common as shingles on the shore,
- A ripe apple would ransom kings before a shining stone:
- And so, were a wholesome book as rare as an honest friend,
- To choose the book be mine: the friend let another take.
- For altered looks and jealousies and fears have none entrance there:
- The silent volume listeneth well, and speaketh when thou listest:
- It praiseth thy good without envy, it chideth thine evil without malice,
- It is to thee thy waiting slave, and thine unbending teacher.
- Need to humour no caprice, need to bear with no infirmity;
- Thy sin, thy slander, or neglect, chilleth not, quencheth not, its love:
- Unalterably speaketh it the truth, warped nor by error nor interest;
- For a good book is the best of friends, the same to-day and for ever.
-
- To draw thee out of self, thy petty plans and cautions,
- To teach thee what thou lackest, to tell thee how largely thou art blest,
- To lure thy thought from sorrow, to feed thy famished mind,
- To graft another's wisdom on thee, pruning thine own folly,
- Choose discreetly, and well digest the volume most suited to thy case,
- Touching not religion with levity, nor deep things when thou art wearied.
- Thy mind is freshened by morning air, grapple with science and philosophy;
- Noon hath unnerved thy thoughts, dream for a while on fictions:
- Grey evening sobereth thy spirit, walk thou then with worshippers:
- But reason shall dig deepest in the night, and fancy fly most free.
-
- O books, ye monuments of mind, concrete wisdom of the wisest;
- Sweet solaces of daily life; proofs and results of immortality;
- Trees yielding all fruits, whose leaves are for the healing of the
- nations;
- Groves of knowledge, where all may eat, nor fear a flaming sword:
- Gentle comrades, kind advisers; friends, comforts, treasures:
- Helps, governments, diversities of tongues; who can weigh your worth?--
- To walk no longer with the just; to be driven from the porch of science;
- To bid long adieu to those intimate ones, poets, philosophers, and
- teachers;
- To see no record of the sympathies which bind thee in communion with the
- good;
- To be thrust from the feet of Him who spake as never man spake;
- To have no avenue to heaven but the dim aisle of superstition;
- To live as an Esquimaux, in lethargy; to die as the Mohawk, in ignorance:
- O what were life, but a blank? what were death, but a terror?
- What were man, but a burden to himself? what were mind, but misery?
- Yea, let another Omar burn the full library of knowledge,
- And the broad world may perish in the flames, offered on the ashes of its
- wisdom!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF WRITING.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The pen of a ready writer, whereunto shall it be likened?
- Ask of the scholar, he shall know,--to the chains that bind a Proteus:
- Ask of the poet, he shall say,--to the sun, the lamp of heaven:
- Ask of thy neighbour, he can answer,--to the friend that telleth my
- thought:
- The merchant considereth it well, as a ship freighted with wares;
- The divine holdeth it a miracle, giving utterance to the dumb.
- It fixeth, expoundeth, and disseminateth sentiment;
- Chaining up a thought, clearing it of mystery, and sending it bright into
- the world.
- To think rightly, is of knowledge; to speak fluently, is of nature;
- To read with profit, is of care; but to write aptly, is of practice.
- No talent among men hath more scholars, and fewer masters:
- For to write is to speak beyond hearing, and none stand by to explain.
- To be accurate, write; to remember, write; to know thine own mind, write;
- And a written prayer is a prayer of faith: special, sure, and to be
- answered.
- Hast thou a thought upon thy brain, catch it while thou canst;
- Or other thoughts shall settle there, and this shall soon take wing:
- Thine uncompounded unity of soul, which argueth and maketh it immortal,
- Yieldeth up its momentary self to every single thought;
- Therefore, to husband thine ideas, and give them stability and substance,
- Write often for thy secret eye; so shalt thou grow wiser.
- The commonest mind is full of thoughts; some worthy of the rarest:
- And could it see them fairly writ, would wonder at its wealth.
-
- O precious compensation to the dumb, to write his wants and wishes;
- O dear amends to the stammering tongue, to pen his burning thoughts!
- To be of the college of Eloquence, through these silent symbols;
- To pour out all the flowing mind without the toil of speech;
- To show the babbling world how it might discourse more sweetly;
- To prove that merchandize of words bringeth no monopoly of wisdom;
- To take sweet vengeance on a prating crew, for the tongue's dishonour,
- By the large triumph of the pen, the homage rendered to a writing.
- With such, that telegraph of mind is dearer than wealth or wisdom,
- Enabling to please without pain, to impart without humiliation.
-
- Fair girl, whose eye hath caught the rustic penmanship of love,
- Let thy bright brow and blushing cheek confess in this sweet hour,--
- Let thy full heart, poor guilty one, whom the scroll of pardon hath just
- reached,--
- Thy wet glad face, O mother, with news of a far-off child,--
- Thy strong and manly delight, pilgrim of other shores,
- When the dear voice of thy betrothed speaketh in the letter of
- affection,--
- Let the young poet, exulting in his lay, and hope (how false) of fame,
- While watching at deep midnight, he buildeth up the verse,--
- Let the calm child of genius, whose name shall never die,
- For that the transcript of his mind hath made his thoughts immortal,--
- Let these, let all, with no faint praise, with no light gratitude, confess
- The blessings poured upon the earth from the pen of a ready writer.
-
- Moreover, their preciousness in absence is proved by the desire of their
- presence:
- When the despairing lover waiteth day after day,
- Looking for a word in reply, one word writ by that hand,
- And cursing bitterly the morn ushered in by blank disappointment:
- Or when the long-looked-for answer argueth a cooling friend,
- And the mind is plied suspiciously with dark inexplicable doubts,
- While thy wounded heart counteth its imaginary scars,
- And thou art the innocent and injured, that friend the capricious and in
- fault:
- Or when the earnest petition, that craveth for thy needs,
- Unheeded, yea, unopened, tortureth with starving delay:
- Or when the silence of a son, who would have written of his welfare,
- Racketh a father's bosom with sharp-cutting fears.
- For a letter, timely writ, is a rivet to the chain of affection,
- And a letter, untimely delayed, is as rust to the solder.
- The pen, flowing with love, or dipped black in hate,
- Or tipped with delicate courtesies, or harshly edged with censure,
- Hath quickened more good than the sun, more evil than the sword,
- More joy than woman's smile, more woe than frowning fortune;
- And shouldst thou ask my judgment of that which hath most profit in the
- world,
- For answer take thou this, The prudent penning of a letter.
-
- Thou hast not lost an hour, whereof there is a record;
- A written thought at midnight shall redeem the livelong day.
- Idea is as a shadow that departeth, speech is fleeting as the wind,
- Reading is an unremembered pastime; but a writing is eternal:
- For therein the dead heart liveth, the clay-cold tongue is eloquent,
- And the quick eye of the reader is cleared by the reed of the scribe.
- As a fossil in the rock, or a coin in the mortar of a ruin,
- So the symbolled thoughts tell of a departed soul:
- The plastic hand hath its witness in a statue, and exactitude of vision
- in a picture,
- And so, the mind that was among us, in its writings is embalmed.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF WEALTH.
-
- Prodigality hath a sister Meanness, his fixed antagonist heart-fellow,
- Who often outliveth the short career of the brother she despiseth:
- She hath lean lips and a sharp look, and her eyes are red and hungry;
- But he sloucheth in his gait, and his mouth speaketh loosely and maudlin.
- Let a spendthrift grow to be old, he will set his heart on saving,
- And labour to build up by penury that which extravagance threw down:
- Even so, with most men, do riches earn themselves a double curse;
- They are ill-got by tight dealing: they are ill-spent by loose
- squandering.
- Give me enough, saith Wisdom;--for he feareth to ask for more;
- And that by the sweat of my brow, addeth stout-hearted Independence:
- Give me enough, and not less, for want is leagued with the tempter;
- Poverty shall make a man desperate, and hurry him ruthless into crime:
- Give me enough, and not more, saving for the children of distress;
- Wealth ofttimes killeth, where want but hindereth the budding:
- There is green glad summer near the pole, though brief and after long
- winter,
- But the burnt breasts of the torrid zone yield never kindly nourishment.
- Wouldst thou be poor, scatter to the rich,--and reap the tares of
- ingratitude;
- Wouldst thou be rich, give unto the poor; thou shalt have thine own with
- usury:
- For the secret hand of Providence prospereth the charitable all ways,
- Good luck shall he have in his pursuits, and his heart shall be glad
- within him;
- Yet perchance he never shall perceive, that, even as to earthly gains,
- The cause of his weal as of his joy, hath been small givings to the poor.
-
- In the plain of Benares is there found a root that fathereth a forest,
- Where round the parent banian-tree drop its living scions;
- Thirstily they strain to the earth, like stalactites in a grotto,
- And strike broad roots, and branch again, lengthening their cool arcades:
- And the dervish madly danceth there, and the faquir is torturing his
- flesh,
- And the calm brahmin worshippeth the sleek and pampered bull:
- At the base lean jackals coil, while from above depending
- With dull malignant stare watcheth the branch-like boa.
- Even so, in man's heart is a sin that is the root of all evil;
- Whose fibres strangle the affections, whose branches overgrow the mind:
- And oftenest beneath its shadow thou shalt meet distorted piety,--
- The clenched and rigid fist, with the eyes upturned to heaven,
- Fanatic zeal with miserly severity, a mixture of gain with godliness,
- And him, against whom passion hath no power, kneeling to a golden calf:
- The hungry hounds of extortion are there, the bond, and the mortgage, and
- the writ,
- While the appetite for gold, unslumbering, watcheth to glut its maw:--
- And the heart, so tenanted and shaded, is cold to all things else;
- It seeth not the sunshine of heaven, nor is warmed by the light of
- charity.
-
- For covetousness disbelieveth God, and laugheth at the rights of men;
- Spurring unto theft and lying, and tempting to the poison and the knife;
- It sundereth the bonds of love, and quickeneth the flames of hate;
- A curse that shall wither the brain, and case the heart with iron.
- Content is the true riches, for without it there is no satisfying,
- But a ravenous all-devouring hunger gnaweth the vitals of the soul.
- The wise man knoweth where to stop, as he runneth in the race of fortune,
- For experience of old hath taught him, that happiness lingereth midway;
- And many in hot pursuit have hasted to the goal of wealth,
- But have lost, as they ran, those apples of gold,--the mind and the power
- to enjoy it.
-
- There is no greater evil among men than a testament framed with injustice:
- Where caprice hath guided the boon, or dishonesty refused what was due.
- Generous is the robber on the highway, in the open daring of his guilt,
- To the secret coward, whose malice liveth and harmeth after him;
- Who smoothly sank into the tomb, with the smile of fraud upon his face,
- And the last black deed of his existence was injury without redress:
- For deaf is the ear of the dead, and can hear no palliating reasons;
- The smiter is not among the living, and Right pleadeth but in vain.
- Yet shall the curse of the oppressed be as blight upon the grave of the
- unjust;
- Yea, bitterly shall that handwriting testify against him at the judgment.
- I saw the humble relation that tended the peevishness of wealth,
- And ministered, with kind hand, to the wailings of disease and discontent:
- I noted how watchfulness and care were feeding on the marrow of her youth,
- How heavy was the yoke of dependence, loaded by petty tyranny;
- Yet I heard the frequent suggestion,--It can be but a little longer,
- Patience and mute submission shall one day reap a rich reward.
- So, tacitly enduring much, waited that humble friend,
- Putting off the lover of her youth until the dawn of wealth:
- And it came, that day of release, and the freed heart could not sorrow,
- For now were the years of promise to yield their golden harvest:
- Hope, so long deferred, sickly sparkled in her eye,
- The miserable past was forgotten, as she looked for the happier future,
- And she checked, as unworthy and ungrateful, the dark suspicious thought
- That perchance her right had been the safer, if not left alone with
- honour:
- But, alas, the sad knowledge soon came, that her stern task-master's will
- Hath rewarded her toil with a jibe, her patience with utter destitution!--
- Shall not the scourge of justice lash that cruel coward,
- Who mingled the gall of ingratitude with the bitterness of disappointment?
- Shall not the hate of men, and vengeance, fiercely pursuing,
- Hunt down the wretched being that sinneth in his grave?
- He fancied his idol self safe from the wrath of his fellows,
- But Hades rose as he came in, to point at him the finger of scorn;
- And again must he meet that orphan-maid to answer her face to face,
- And her wrongs shall cling around his neck, to hinder him from rising
- with the just:
- For his last most solemn act hath linked his name with liar,
- And the crime of Ananias is branded on his brow!
-
- A good man commendeth his cause to the one great Patron of innocence,
- Convinced of justice to the last, and sure of good meanwhile.
- He knoweth he hath a Guardian, wise and kind and strong,
- And can thank Him for giving, or refusing, the trust or the curse of
- riches:
- His confidence standeth as a rock; he dreadeth not malice nor caprice,
- Nor the whisperings of artful men, nor envious secret influence;
- He scorneth servile compromise, and the pliant mouthings of deceit;
- He maketh not a show of love, where he cannot concede esteem;
- He regardeth ill-got wealth, as the root most fruitful of wretchedness,
- So he walketh in straight integrity, leaning on God and his right.
-
- No gain, but by its price: labour, for the poor man's meal,
- Ofttimes heart-sickening toil, to win him a morsel for his hunger:
- Labour, for the chapman at his trade, a dull unvaried round,
- Year after year, unto death; yea, what a weariness is it!
- Labour, for the pale-faced scribe, drudging at his hated desk,
- Who bartereth for needful pittance the untold gold of health;
- Labour, with fear, for the merchant, whose hopes are ventured on the sea;
- Labour, with care, for the man of law, responsible in his gains;
- Labour, with envy and annoyance, where strangers will thee wealth;
- Labour, with indolence and gloom, where wealth falleth from a father;
- Labour unto all, whether aching thews, or aching head, or spirit,--
- The curse on the sons of men, in all their states, is labour.
- Nevertheless, to the diligent, labour bringeth blessing:
- The thought of duty sweeteneth toil, and travail is as pleasure;
- And time spent in doing hath a comfort that is not for the idle,
- The hardship is transmuted into joy by the dear alchemy of Mercy.
- Labour is good for a man, bracing up his energies to conquest,
- And without it life is dull, the man perceiving himself useless:
- For wearily the body groaneth, like a door on rusty hinges,
- And the grasp of the mind is weakened, as the talons of a caged vulture.
- Wealth hath never given happiness, but often hastened misery:
- Enough hath never caused misery, but often quickened happiness:
- Enough is less than thy thought, O pampered creature of society,
- And he that hath more than enough, is a thief of the rights of his
- brother.
-
-
-OF INVENTION.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Man is proud of his mind, boasting that it giveth him divinity,
- Yet with all its powers can it originate nothing;
- For the Great God into all His works hath largely poured out Himself,
- Saving one special property, the grand prerogative,--Creation.
- To improve and expand is ours, as well as to limit and defeat;
- But to create a thought or a thing is hopeless and impossible.
- Can a man make matter?--and yet this would-be god
- Thinketh to make mind, and form original idea:
- The potter must have his clay, and the mason his quarry,
- And mind must drain ideas from everything around it.
- Doth the soil generate herbs, or the torrid air breed flies,
- Or the water frame its monads, or the mist its swarming blight?--
- Mediately, through thousand generations, having seed within themselves,
- All things, rare or gross, own one common Father.
- Truly spake Wisdom, There is nothing new under the sun:
- We only arrange and combine the ancient elements of all things.
- Invention is activity of mind, as fire is air in motion;
- A sharpening of the spiritual sight, to discern hidden aptitudes:
- From the basket and acanthus, is modelled the graceful capital;
- The shadowed profile on the wall helpeth the limner to his likeness;
- The footmarks, stamped in clay, lead on the thoughts to printing;
- The strange skin garments cast upon the shore suggest another hemisphere:
- A falling apple taught the sage pervading gravitation;
- The Huron is certain of his prey, from tracks upon the grass:
- And shrewdness, guessing out the hint, followeth on the trail;
- But the hint must be given, the trail must be there, or the keenest sight
- is as blindness.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Behold the barren reef, which an earthquake hath just left dry;
- It hath no beauty to boast of, no harvest of fair fruits:
- But soon the lichen fixeth there, and, dying, diggeth its own grave,
- And softening suns and splitting frosts crumble the reluctant surface;
- And cormorants roost there, and the snail addeth its slime,
- And efts, with muddy feet, bring their welcome tribute;
- And the sea casteth out her dead, wrapped in a shroud of weeds;
- And orderly nature arrangeth again the disunited atoms;
- Anon, the cold smooth stone is warm with feathery grass,
- And the light sporules of the fern are dropt by the passing wind,
- The wood-pigeon, on swift wing, leaveth its crop-full of grain,
- The squirrel's jealous care planteth the fir-cone and the filbert:
- Years pass, and the sterile rock is rank with tangled herbage;
- The wild-vine clingeth to the briar, and ivy runneth green among the corn,
- Lordly beeches are studded on the down, and willows crowd around the
- rivulet,
- And the tall pine and hazel-thicket shade the rambling hunter.
- Shall the rock boast of its fertility? shall it lift the head in pride?--
- Shall the mind of man be vain of the harvest of its thoughts?
- The savage is that rock; and a million chances from without,
- By little and little acting on the mind, heap up the hot-bed of society;
- And the soul, fed and fattened on the thoughts and things around it,
- Groweth to perfection, full of fruit, the fruit of foreign seeds.
- For we learn upon a hint, we find upon a clue,
- We yield an hundred-fold; but the great sower is Analogy.
- There must be an acrid sloe before a luscious peach,
- A boll of rotting flax before the bridal veil,
- An egg before an eagle, a thought before a thing,
- A spark struck into tinder to light the lamp of knowledge,
- A slight suggestive nod to guide the watching mind,
- A half-seen hand upon the wall, pointing to the balance of Comparison.
- By culture man may do all things, short of the miracle,--Creation;
- Here is the limit of thy power,--here let thy pride be stayed:
- The soil may be rich, and the mind may be active, but neither yield
- unsown;
- The eye cannot make light, nor the mind make spirit.
- Therefore it is wise in man to name all novelty Invention;
- For it is to find out things that are, not to create the unexisting:
- It is to cling to contiguities, to be keen in catching likeness,
- And with energetic elasticity to leap the gulphs of contrast.
- The globe knoweth not increase, either of matter or spirit;
- Atoms and thoughts are used again, mixing in varied combinations;
- And though, by moulding them anew, thou makest them thine own,
- Yet have they served thousands, and all their merit is of God.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF RIDICULE.
-
- Seams of thought for the sage's brow, and laughing lines for the fool's
- face;
- For all things leave their track in the mind; and the glass of the mind
- is faithful.
- Seest thou much mirth upon the cheek? there is then little exercise of
- virtue;
- For he that looketh on the world, cannot be glad and good:
- Seest thou much gravity in the eye? be not assured of finding wisdom;
- For she hath too great praise, not to get many mimics.
- There is a grave-faced folly; and verily, a laughter-loving wisdom;
- And what, if surface-judges account it vain frivolity?
- There is indeed an evil in excess, and a field may lie fallow too long;
- Yet merriment is often as a froth, that mantleth on the strong mind:
- And note thou this for a verity,--the subtlest thinker when alone,
- From ease of thoughts unbent, will laugh the loudest with his fellows:
- And well is the loveliness of wisdom mirrored in a cheerful countenance,
- Justly the deepest pools are proved by dimpling eddies;
- For that, a true philosophy commandeth an innocent life,
- And the unguilty spirit is lighter than a linnet's heart:
- Yea, there is no cosmetic like a holy conscience;
- The eye is bright with trust, the cheek bloomed over with affection,
- The brow unwrinkled by a care, and the lip triumphant in its gladness.
-
- And for yon grave-faced folly, need not far to look for her;
- How seriously on trifles dote those leaden eyes,
- How ruefully she sigheth after chances long gone by,
- How sulkily she moaneth over evils without cure!
- I have known a true-born mirth, the child of innocence and wisdom,
- I have seen a base-born gravity, mingled of ignorance and guilt:
- And again, a base-born mirth, springing out of carelessness and folly;
- And again, a true-born gravity, the product of reflection and right fear.
- The wounded partridge hideth in a furrow, and a stricken conscience would
- be left alone;
- But when its breast is healed, it runneth gladly with its fellows:
- Whereas the solitary heron, standing in the sedgy fen,
- Holdeth aloof from the social world, intent on wiles and death.
-
- Need but of light philosophy to dare the world's dread laugh;
- For a little mind courteth notoriety, to illustrate its puny self:
- But the sneer of a man's own comrades trieth the muscles of courage,
- And to be derided in his home is as a viper in the nest:
- The laugh of a hooting world hath in it a notion of sublimity,
- But the tittering private circle stingeth as a hive of wasps.
- Some have commended ridicule, counting it the test of truth,
- But neither wittily nor wisely; for truth must prove ridicule:
- Otherwise a blunt bulrush is to pierce the proof armour of argument,
- Because the stolidity of ignorance took it for a barbed shaft.
- Softer is the hide of the rhinoceros, than the heart of deriding unbelief,
- And truth is idler there, than the Bushman's feathered reed:
- A droll conceit parrieth a thrust, that should have hit the conscience,
- And the leering looks of humour tickle the childish mind;
- For that the matter of a man is mingled most with folly,
- Neither can he long endure the searching gaze of wisdom.
- It is pleasanter to see a laughing cheek than a serious forehead,
- And there liveth not one among a thousand whose idol is not pleasure.
- Ridicule is a weak weapon, when levelled at a strong mind:
- But common men are cowards, and dread an empty laugh.
- Fear a nettle, and touch it tenderly, its poison shall burn thee to the
- shoulder;
- But grasp it with a bold hand,--is it not a bundle of myrrh?
- Betray mean terror of ridicule, thou shalt find fools enough to mock thee;
- But answer thou their laughter with contempt, and the scoffers will lick
- thy feet.
-
-
-OF COMMENDATION.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- The praise of holy men is a promise of praise from their Master;
- A fore-running earnest of thy welcome,--Well done, faithful servant;
- A rich preludious note, that droppeth softly on thine ear,
- To tell thee the chords of thy heart are in tune with the choirs of
- heaven.
- Yet is it a dangerous hearing, for the sweetness may lull thee into
- slumber,
- And the cordial quaffed with thirst may generate the fumes of presumption.
- So seek it not for itself, but taste, and go gladly on thy way,
- For the mariner slacketh not his sail, though the sandal-groves of Araby
- allure him;
- And the fragrance of that incense would harm thee, as when, on a summer
- evening,
- The honied yellow flowers of the gorse oppress thy charmed sense:
- And a man hath too much of praise, for he praiseth himself continually;
- Neither lacketh he at any time self-commendation or excuse.
-
- Praise a fool, and slay him: for the canvas of his vanity is spread;
- His bark is shallow in the water, and a sudden gust shall sink it:
- Praise a wise man, and speed him on his way; for he carrieth the ballast
- of humility,
- And is glad when his course is cheered by the sympathy of brethren ashore.
- The praise of a good man is good, for he holdeth up the mirror of Truth,
- That Virtue may see her own beauty, and delight in her own fair face:
- The praise of a bad man is evil, for he hideth the deformity of Vice,
- Casting the mantle of a queen around the limbs of a leper.
- Praise is rebuke to the man whose conscience alloweth it not:
- And where conscience feeleth it her due, no praise is better than a
- little.
- He that despiseth the outward appearance, despiseth the esteem of his
- fellows;
- And he that overmuch regardeth it, shall earn only their contempt:
- The honest commendation of an equal no one can scorn, and be blameless,
- Yet even that fair fame no one can hunt for, and be honoured:
- If it come, accept it and be thankful, and be thou humble in accepting;
- If it tarry, be not thou cast down; the bee can gather honey out of rue:
- And is thine aim so low, that the breath of those around thee
- Can speed thy feathered arrow, or retard its flight?
- The child shooteth at a butterfly, but the man's mark is an eagle;
- And while his fellows talk, he hath conquered in the clouds.
- Ally thee to truth and godliness, and use the talents in thy charge;
- So shall thou walk in peace, deserving, if not having.
- With a friend, praise him when thou canst; for many a friendship hath
- decayed,
- Like a plant in a crowded corner, for want of sunshine on its leaves:
- With another, praise him not often--otherwise he shall despise thee;
- But be thou frugal in commending; so will he give honour to thy judgment:
- For thou that dost so zealously commend, art acknowledging thine own
- inferiority,
- And he, thou so highly hast exalted, shall proudly look down on thy
- esteem.
-
- Wilt thou that one remember a thing?--praise him in the midst of thy
- advice;
- Never yet forgat man the word whereby he hath been praised.
- Better to be censured by a thousand fools, than approved but by one man
- that is wise;
- For the pious are slower to help right, than the profane to hinder it:
- So, where the world rebuketh, there look thou for the excellent,
- And be suspicious of the good, which wicked men can praise.
- The captain bindeth his troop, not more by severity than kindness,
- And justly, should recompense well doing, as well as be strict with an
- offender;
- The laurel is cheap to the giver, but precious in his sight who hath won
- it,
- And the heart of the soldier rejoiceth in the approving glance of his
- chief.
- Timely given praise is even better than the merited rebuke of censure,
- For the sun is more needful to the plant than the knife that cutteth out
- a canker.
- Many a father hath erred, in that he hath withheld reproof,
- But more have mostly sinned, in withholding praise where it was due:
- There be many such as Eli among men; but these be more culpable than Eli,
- Who chill the fountain of exertion by the freezing looks of indifference:
- Ye call a man easy and good, yet he is as a two-edged sword;
- He rebuketh not vice, and it is strong: he comforteth not virtue, and it
- fainteth.
- There is nothing more potent among men than a gift timely bestowed;
- And a gift kept back where it was hoped, separateth chief friends:
- For what is a gift but a symbol, giving substance to praise and esteem?
- And where is a sharper arrow than the sting of unmerited neglect?
-
- Expect not praise from the mean, neither gratitude from the selfish;
- And to keep the proud thy friend, see thou do him not a service:
- For, behold, he will hate thee for his debt: thou hast humbled him by
- giving;
- And his stubbornness never shall acknowledge the good he hath taken from
- thy hand:
- Yea, rather will he turn and be thy foe, lest thou gather from his
- friendship
- That he doth account thee creditor, and standeth in the second place.
- Still, O kindly feeling heart, be not thou chilled by the thankless,
- Neither let the breath of gratitude fan thee into momentary heat:
- Do good for good's own sake, looking not to worthiness nor love;
- Fling thy grain among the rocks, cast thy bread upon the waters,
- His claim be strongest to thy help, who is thrown most helplessly upon
- thee,--
- So shalt thou have a better praise, and reap a richer harvest of reward.
-
- If a man hold fast to thy creed, and fit his thinkings to thy notions,
- Thou shalt take him for a man right-minded, yea, and excuse his evil:
- But seest thou not, O bigot, that thy zeal is but a hunting after praise,
- And the full pleasure of a proselyte lieth in the flattering of self?
- A man of many praises meeteth many welcomes,
- But he, who blameth often, shall not keep a friend;
- The velvet-coated apricot is one thing, and the spiked horse-chestnut is
- another,
- A handle of smooth amber is pleasanter than rough buck-horn.
- Show me a popular man; I can tell thee the secret of his power;
- He hath soothed them with glozing words, lulling their ears with flattery,
- The smile of seeming approbation is ever the companion of his presence,
- And courteous looks, and warm regards, earn him all their hearts.
-
- Nothing but may be better, and every better might be best;
- The blind may discern, and the simple prove, fault or want in all things;
- And a little mind looketh on the lily with a microscopic eye,
- Eager and glad to pry out specks on its robe of purity;
- But a great mind gazeth on the sun, glorying in his brightness,
- And taking large knowledge of his good, in the broad prairie of creation:
- What, though he hatch basilisks? what, though spots are on the sun?
- In fulness is his worth, in fulness be his praise!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF SELF-ACQUAINTANCE.
-
-[Illustration: "K"]
-
- Knowledge holdeth by the hilt, and heweth out a road to conquest;
- Ignorance graspeth the blade, and is wounded by its own good sword:
- Knowledge distilleth health from the virulence of opposite poisons;
- Ignorance mixeth wholesomes, unto the breeding of disease:
- Knowledge is leagued with the universe, and findeth a friend in all
- things;
- But ignorance is everywhere a stranger; unwelcome, ill at ease, and out
- of place.
- A man is helpless and unsafe up to the measure of his ignorance,
- For he lacketh perception of the aptitudes commending such a matter to
- his use,
- Clutching at the horn of danger, while he judgeth it the handle of
- security,
- Or casting his anchor so widely, that the granite reef is just within the
- tether.
- Untaught in science, he is but half alive, stupidly taking note of
- nothing,
- Or listening with dull wonder to the crafty saws of an empiric:
- Simple in the world, he trusteth unto knaves; and then to make amends for
- folly,
- Dealeth so shrewdly with the honest, they cannot but suspect him for a
- thief;
- With an unknown God, he maketh mock of reason, fathering contrivance on
- chance,
- Or doting with superstitious dread on some crooked image of his fancy:
- But ignorant of Self, he is weakness at heart; the key-stone crumbleth
- into sand,
- There is panic in the general's tent, the oak is hollow as hemlock;
- Though the warm sap creepeth up its bark, filling out the sheaf of leaves,
- Though knowledge of all things beside add proofs of seeming vigour,
- Though the master-mind of the royal sage feast on the mysteries of wisdom,
- Yet ignorance of self shall bow down the spirit of a Solomon to idols;
- The storm of temptation, sweeping by, shall snap that oak like a reed,
- And the proud luxuriance of its tufted crown drag it the sooner to the
- dust.
-
- Youth, confident in self, tampereth with dangerous dalliance,
- Till the vice his heart once hated hath locked him in her foul embrace:
- Manhood, through zeal of doing good, seeketh high place for its occasions,
- Unwitting that the bleak mountain-air will nip the tender budding of his
- motives:
- Or painfully, for love of truth, he climbeth the ladder of science,
- Till pride of intellect heating his heart, warpeth it aside to delusion:
- The maiden, to give shadow to her fairness, plaiteth her raven hair,
- Heedlessly weaving for her soul the silken net of vanity:
- The grey-beard looketh on his gold, till he loveth its yellow smile,
- Unconscious of the bright decoy which is luring his heart unto avarice:
- Wrath avoideth no quarrel, jealousy counteth its suspicions,
- Pining envy gazeth still, and melancholy seeketh solitude,
- The sensitive broodeth on his slights, the fearful poreth over horrors,
- The train of wantonness is fired, the nerves of indecision are unstrung;
- Each special proneness unto harm is pampered by ignorant indulgence,
- And the man, for want of warning, yieldeth to the apt temptation.
-
- A smith at the loom, and a weaver at the forge, were but sorry craftsmen;
- And a ship that saileth on every wind never shall reach her port:
- Yet there be thousands among men who heed not the leaning of their
- talents,
- But cutting against the grain, toil on to no good end;
- And the light of a thoughtful spirit is quenched beneath the bushel of
- commerce,
- While meaner plodding minds are driven up the mountain of philosophy:
- The cedar withereth on a wall, while the house-leek is fattening in a
- hot-bed,
- And the dock with its rank leaves hideth the sun from violets.
- To everything a fitting place, a proper honourable use;
- The humblest measure of mind is bright in its humble sphere:
- The glow-worm, creeping in the hedge, lighteth her evening torch,
- And her far-off mate, on gossamer sail, steereth his course by that star:
- But ignorance mocketh at proprieties, bringing out the glow-worm at noon;
- And setteth the faults of mediocrity in the full blaze of wisdom.
- Ravens croaking in darkness, and a skylark trilling to the sun,
- The voice of a screech-owl from a ruin, and the blackbird's whistle in a
- wood,
- A cushion-footed camel for the sands, and a swift rein-deer for the snows,
- A naked skin for Ethiopia, and rich soft furs for the Pole:
- In all things is there a fitness: discord with discord hath its music;
- And the harmony of nature is preserved by each one knowing his place.
-
- The blind at an easel, the palsied with a graver, the halt making for the
- goal,
- The deaf ear tuning psaltery, the stammerer discoursing eloquence,--
- What wonder if all fail? the shaft flieth wide of the mark
- Alike if itself be crooked, or the bow be strung awry;
- And the mind which were excellent in one way, but foolishly toileth in
- another,
- What is it but an ill-strung bow, and its aim a crooked arrow?
- By knowledge of self, thou provest thy powers: put not the racer to the
- plough,
- Nor goad the toilsome ox to wager his slowness with the fleet:
- Consider thy failings, heed thy propensities, search out thy latent
- virtues,
- Analyze the doubtful, cultivate the good, and crush the head of evil;
- So shalt thou catch with quick hand the golden ball of opportunity,
- The warrior armed shall be ready for the fray, beside his bridled steed;
- Thou shall ward off special harms, and have the sway of circumstance,
- And turn to thy special good the common current of events;
- Choosing from the wardrobe of the world, thou shalt suitably clothe thy
- spirit,
- Nor thrust the white hand of peace into the gauntlet of defiance:
- The shepherd shall go with a staff, and conquer by sling and stone;
- The soldier shall let alone the distaff, and the scribe lay down the
- sword;
- The man unlearned shall keep silence, and earn one attribute of wisdom,
- The sage be sparing of his lessons before unhearing ears:
- Calm shalt thou be, as a lion in repose, conscious of passive strength,
- And the shock that splitteth the globe, shall not unthrone thy
- self-possession.
-
- Acquaint thee with thyself, O man! so shalt thou be humble:
- The hard hot desert of thy heart shall blossom with the lily and the rose;
- The frozen cliffs of pride shall melt, as an iceberg in the tropics;
- The bitter fountains of self-seeking be sweeter than the waters of the
- Nile.
- But if thou lack that wisdom,--thy frail skiff is doomed,
- On stronger eddy whirling to the dreadful gorge;
- Untaught in that grand lore, thou standest, cased in steel,
- To dare with mocking unbelief the thunderbolts of heaven.
- For look now around thee on the universe, behold how all things serve
- thee;
- The teeming soil, and the buoyant sea, and undulating air,
- Golden crops, and bloomy fruits, and flowers, and precious gems,
- Choice perfumes and fair sights, soft touches and sweet music:
- For thee, shoaling up the bay, crowd the finny nations,
- For thee, the cattle on a thousand hills live, and labour, and die:
- Light is thy daily slave, darkness inviteth thee to slumber;
- Thou art served by the hands of Beauty, and Sublimity kneeleth at thy
- feet:
- Arise, thou sovereign of creation, and behold thy glory!
- Yet more, thou hast a mind; intellect wingeth thee to heaven,
- Tendeth thy state on earth, and by it thou divest down to hell;
- Thou hast measured the belts of Saturn, thou hast weighed the moons of
- Jupiter,
- And seen, by reason's eye, the centre of thy globe;
- Subtly hast thou numbered by billions the leagues between sun and sun,
- And noted in thy book the coming of their shadows;
- With marvellous unerring truth, thou knowest to an inch and to an instant,
- The where and the when of the comet's path that shall seem to rush by at
- thy command:
- Arise, thou king of mind, and survey thy dignity!
- Yet more,--for once believe religion's flattering tale;
- Thou hast a soul, yea, and a God,--but be not therefore humbled;
- Thy Maker's self was glad to live and die--a man;
- The brightest jewel in His crown is voluntary manhood:
- By deep dishonour, and great price, bought He that envied freedom,
- But thou wast born an heir of all, thy Master scarce could earn.
- O climax unto pride, O triumph of humanity,
- O triple crown upon thy brow, most high and mighty Self!
- Arise, thou Lord of all, thou greater than a God!--
- How saidst thou, wretched being?--cast thy glance within;
- Regard that painted sepulchre, the hovel of thy heart:
- Ha! with what fearful imagery swarmeth that small chamber;
- The horrid eye of murder, scowling in the dark,
- The bony hand of avarice, filching from the poor,
- The lurid fires of lust, the idiot face of folly,
- The sickening deed of cruelty, the foul fierce orgies of the drunken,
- Weak contemptible vanity, stubborn stolid unbelief,
- Envy's devilish sneer, and the vile features of ingratitude,--
- Man, hast thou seen enough? or are these full proof
- That thou art a miracle of mercy, and all thy dignity is dross?
-
- Well, said the wisdom of earth, O mortal, know thyself;
- But better the wisdom of heaven, O man, learn thou thy God:
- By knowledge of self thou art conusant of evil, and mailed in panoply to
- meet it;
- By knowledge of God cometh knowledge of good, and universal love is at
- thy heart.
- Every creature knoweth its capacities, running in the road of instinct,
- And reason must not lag behind, but serve itself of all proprieties:
- The swift to the race, and the strong to the burden, and the wise for
- right direction;
- For self-knowledge filleth with acceptance its niche in the temple of
- utility:
- But vainly wilt thou look for that knowledge, till the clue of all truth
- is in thy hand,
- For the labyrinth of man's heart windeth in complicate deceivings:
- Thou canst not sound its depths with the shallow plumb-line of reason,
- Till religion, the pilot of the soul, have lent thee her unfathomable
- coil:
- Therefore, for this grand knowledge, and knowledge is the parent of
- dominion,
- Learn God, thou shalt know thyself; yea, and shalt have mastery of all
- things.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Cruelty to Animals]
-
-OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS.
-
-[Illustration: "S"]
-
- Shame upon thee, savage Monarch-Man, proud monopolist of reason;
- Shame upon Creation's lord, the fierce ensanguined despot:
- What, man! are there not enough, hunger, and diseases, and fatigue,--
- And yet must thy goad or thy thong add another sorrow to existence?
- What! art thou not content thy sin hath dragged down suffering and death
- On the poor dumb servants of thy comfort, and yet must thou rack them
- with thy spite?
- The prodigal heir of creation hath gambled away his all,--
- Shall he add torment to the bondage that is galling his forfeit serfs?
- The leader in nature's paean himself hath marred her psaltery,
- Shall he multiply the din of discord by overstraining all the strings?
- The rebel hath fortified his stronghold, shutting in his vassals with
- him,--
- Shall he aggravate the woes of the besieged by oppression from within?
- Thou twice deformed image of thy Maker, thou hateful representative of
- Love,
- For very shame be merciful, be kind unto the creatures thou hast ruined;
- Earth and her million tribes are cursed for thy sake,
- Earth and her million tribes still writhe beneath thy cruelty:
- Liveth there but one among the million that shall not bear witness
- against thee,
- A pensioner of land or air or sea, that hath not whereof it will accuse
- thee?
- From the elephant toiling at a launch, to the shrew-mouse in the
- harvest-field,
- From the whale which the harpooner hath stricken, to the minnow caught
- upon a pin,
- From the albatross wearied in its flight, to the wren in her covered nest,
- From the death-moth and lace-winged dragon-fly, to the lady-bird and the
- gnat,
- The verdict of all things is unanimous, finding their master cruel:
- The dog, thy humble friend, thy trusting, honest friend;
- The ass, thine uncomplaining slave, drudging from morn to even;
- The lamb, and the timorous hare, and the labouring ox at plough;
- The speckled trout, basking in the shallow, and the partridge, gleaning
- in the stubble,
- And the stag at bay, and the worm in thy path, and the wild bird pining
- in captivity,
- And all things that minister alike to thy life and thy comfort and thy
- pride,
- Testify with one sad voice that man is a cruel master.
-
- Verily, they are all thine: freely mayst thou serve thee of them all:
- They are thine by gift for thy needs, to be used in all gratitude and
- kindness;
- Gratitude to their God and thine,--their Father and thy Father,
- Kindness to them who toil for thee, and help thee with their all:
- For meat, but not by wantonness of slaying: for burden, but with limits
- of humanity;
- For luxury, but not through torture; for draught, but according to the
- strength:
- For a dog cannot plead his own right, nor render a reason for exemption,
- Nor give a soft answer unto wrath, to turn aside the undeserved lash;
- The galled ox cannot complain, nor supplicate a moment's respite;
- The spent horse hideth his distress, till he panteth out his spirit at
- the goal;
- Also, in the winter of life, when worn by constant toil,
- If ingratitude forget his services, he cannot bring them to remembrance;
- Behold, he is faint with hunger; the big tear standeth in his eye;
- His skin is sore with stripes, and he tottereth beneath his burden;
- His limbs are stiff with age, his sinews have lost their vigour,
- And pain is stamped upon his face, while he wrestleth unequally with toil;
- Yet once more mutely and meekly endureth he the crushing blow;
- That struggle hath cracked his heart-strings,--the generous brute is dead!
- Liveth there no advocate for him? no judge to avenge his wrongs?
- No voice that shall be heard in his defence? no sentence to be passed on
- his oppressor?
- Yea, the sad eye of the tortured pleadeth pathetically for him;
- Yea, all the justice in heaven is roused in indignation at his woes;
- Yea, all the pity upon earth shall call down a curse upon the cruel;
- Yea, the burning malice of the wicked is their own exceeding punishment.
- The Angel of Mercy stoppeth not to comfort, but passeth by on the other
- side,
- And hath no tear to shed, when a cruel man is damned.
-
-
-OF FRIENDSHIP.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- As frost to the bud, and blight to the blossom, even such is
- self-interest to Friendship:
- For Confidence cannot dwell where Selfishness is porter at the gate.
- If thou see thy friend to be selfish, thou canst not be sure of his
- honesty;
- And in seeking thine own weal, thou hast wronged the reliance of thy
- friend.
- Flattery hideth her varnished face when Friendship sitteth at his board:
- And the door is shut upon Suspicion, but Candour is bid glad welcome.
- For Friendship abhorreth doubt, its life is in mutual trust,
- And perisheth, when artful praise proveth it is sought for a purpose.
- A man may be good to thee at times, and render thee mighty service,
- Whom yet thy secret soul could not desire as a friend;
- For the sum of life is in trifles, and though, in the weightier masses,
- A man refuse thee not his purse, nay his all in thine utmost need,
- Yet if thou canst not feel that his character agreeth with thine own,
- Thou never wilt call him friend, though thou render him a heartful of
- gratitude.
- A coarse man grindeth harshly the finer feelings of his brother;
- A common mind will soon depart from the dull companionship of wisdom;
- A weak soul dareth not to follow in the track of vigour and decision;
- And the worldly regardeth with scorn the seeming foolishness of faith.
- A mountain is made up of atoms, and friendship of little matters,
- And if the atoms hold not together, the mountain is crumbled into dust.
-
- Come, I will show thee a friend; I will paint one worthy of thy trust:
- Thine heart shall not weary of him: thou shalt not secretly despise him.
- Thou art long in learning him, in unravelling all his worth;
- And he dazzleth not thine eyes at first, to be darkened in thy sight
- afterward,
- But riseth from small beginnings, and reacheth the height of thine esteem.
- He remembereth that thou art only man; he expecteth not great things from
- thee:
- And his forbearance toward thee silently teacheth thee to be considerate
- unto him.
- He despiseth not courtesy of manner, nor neglecteth the decencies of life:
- Nor mocketh the failings of others, nor is harsh in his censures before
- thee:
- For so, how couldst thou tell, if he talketh not of thee in ridicule?
- He withholdeth no secret from thee, and rejecteth not thine in turn;
- He shareth his joys with thee, and is glad to bear part in thy sorrows.
- Yet one thing, he loveth thee too well to show thee the corruptions of
- his heart:
- For as an ill example strengthened the hands of the wicked,
- So to put forward thy guilt, is a secret poison to thy friend:
- For the evil in his nature is comforted, and he warreth more weakly
- against it,
- If he find that the friend whom he honoureth, is a man more sinful than
- himself.
- I hear the communing of friends; ye speak out the fulness of your souls,
- And being but men, as men, ye own to all the sympathies of manhood:
- Confidence openeth the lips, indulgence beameth from the eye,
- The tongue loveth not boasting, the heart is made glad with kindness:
- And one standeth not as on a hill, beckoning to the other to follow,
- But ye toil up hand in hand, and carry each other's burdens.
- Ye commune of hopes and aspirations, the fervent breathings of the heart,
- Ye speak with pleasant interchange the treasured secrets of affection,
- Ye listen to the voice of complaint, and whisper the language of comfort,
- And as in a double solitude, ye think in each other's hearing.
-
- Choose thy friend discreetly, and see thou consider his station,
- For the graduated scale of ranks accordeth with the ordinance of Heaven.
- If a low companion ripen to a friend, in the full sunshine of thy
- confidence,
- Know, that for old age thou hast heaped up sorrow;
- For thou sinkest to that level, and thy kin shall scorn thee,
- Yea, and the menial thou hast pampered haply shall neglect thee in thy
- death:
- And if thou reachest up to high estates, thinking to herd with princes,
- What art thou but a footstool, though so near a throne?
- O rush among the lilies, be taught thou art a weed,
- O briar among the cedars, hot contempt shall burn thee.
- But thou, friend and scholar, select from thine own caste,
- And make not an intimate of one, thy servant or thy master;
- For only friendship among men is the true republic,
- Where all have equality of service, and all have freedom of command.
- And yet, if thou wilt take my judgment, be shy of too much openness with
- any,
- Lest thou repent hereafter, should he turn and rend thee:
- For many an apostate friend hath abused unguarded confidence,
- And bent to selfish ends the secret of the soul.
-
- Absence strengthened friendship, where the last recollections were kindly;
- But it must be good wine at the last, or absence shall weaken it daily.
- A rare thing is faith, and friendship is a marvel among men,
- Yet strange faces call they friends, and say they believe when they doubt.
- Those hours are not lost that are spent in cementing affection;
- For a friend is above gold, precious as the stores of the mind.
- Be sparing of advice by words, but teach thy lesson by example:
- For the vanity of man may be wounded, and retort unkindly upon thee.
- There be some that never had a friend, because they were gross and
- selfish;
- Worldliness, and apathy, and pride, leave not many that are worthy:
- But one who meriteth esteem, need never lack a friend:
- For as thistle-down flieth abroad, and casteth its anchor in the soil,
- So philanthropy yearneth for a heart, where it may take root and blossom.
-
- Yet I hear the child of sensibility moaning at the wintry cold,
- Wherein the mists of selfishness have wrapped the society of men:
- He grieveth, and hath deep reasons; for falsehood hath wronged his trust,
- And the breaches in his bleeding heart have been filled with the briars
- of suspicion.
- For, alas, how few be friends, of whom charity hath hoped well!
- How few there be among men who forget themselves for other!
- Each one seeketh his own, and looketh on his brethren as rivals,
- Masking envy with friendship, to serve his secret ends.
- And the world, that corrupteth all good, hath wronged that sacred name,
- For it calleth any man friend, who is not known for an enemy:
- And such be as the flies of summer, while plenty sitteth at thy board:
- But who can wonder at their flight from the cold denials of want?
- Such be as vultures round a carcase, assembled together for the feast;
- But a sudden noise scareth them, and forthwith are they specks among the
- clouds.
- There be few, O child of sensibility, who deserve to have thy confidence;
- Yet weep not, for there are some, and such some live for thee:
- To them is the chilling world a drear and barren scene,
- And gladly seek they such as thou art, for seldom find they the occasion:
- For, though no man excludeth himself from the high capability of
- friendship,
- Yet verily the man is a marvel whom truth can write a friend.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Love]
-
-Of Love.
-
- There is a fragrant blossom, that maketh glad the garden of the heart;
- Its root lieth deep: it is delicate, yet lasting, as the lilac crocus of
- autumn:
- Loneliness and thought are the dews that water it morn and even;
- Memory and Absence cherish it, as the balmy breathings of the south:
- Its sun is the brightness of Affection, and it bloometh in the borders of
- Hope;
- Its companions are gentle flowers, and the briar withereth by its side.
- I saw it budding in beauty; I felt the magic of its smile;
- The violet rejoiced beneath it, the rose stooped down and kissed it;
- And I thought some cherub had planted there a truant flower of Eden,
- As a bird bringeth foreign seeds, that they may flourish in a kindly soil.
- I saw, and asked not its name; I knew no language was so wealthy,
- Though every heart of every clime findeth its echo within.
- And yet what shall I say? Is a sordid man capable of Love?
- Hath a seducer known it? Can an adulterer perceive it?
- Or he that seeketh strange women, can he feel its purity?
- Or he that changeth often, can he know its truth?
- Longing for another's happiness, yet often destroying its own;
- Chaste, and looking up to God, as the fountain of tenderness and joy:
- Quiet, yet flowing deep, as the Rhine among rivers;
- Lasting, and knowing not change--it walketh with Truth and Sincerity.
-
- Love:--what a volume in a word, an ocean in a tear,
- A seventh heaven in a glance, a whirlwind in a sigh,
- The lightning in a touch, a millennium in a moment,
- What concentrated joy or woe in blest or blighted love!
- For it is that native poetry springing up indigenous to Mind,
- The heart's own-country music thrilling all its chords,
- The story without an end that angels throng to hear,
- The word, the king of words, carved on Jehovah's heart!
- Go, call thou snake-eyed malice mercy, call envy honest praise,
- Count selfish craft for wisdom, and coward treachery for prudence,
- Do homage to blaspheming unbelief as to bold and free philosophy,
- And estimate the recklessness of license as the right attribute of
- liberty,--
- But with the world, thou friend and scholar, stain not this pure name;
- Nor suffer the majesty of Love to be likened to the meanness of desire:
- For love is no more such, than seraphs' hymns are discord,
- And such is no more Love, than Etna's breath is summer.
-
- Love is a sweet idolatry enslaving all the soul,
- A mighty spiritual force, warring with the dulness of matter,
- An angel-mind breathed into a mortal, though fallen yet how beautiful!
- All the devotion of the heart in all its depth and grandeur.
- Behold that pale geranium, pent within the cottage window;
- How yearningly it stretcheth to the light its sickly long-stalked leaves,
- How it straineth upward to the sun, coveting his sweet influences,
- How real a living sacrifice to the god of all its worship!
- Such is the soul that loveth; and so the rose-tree of affection
- Bendeth its every leaf to look on those dear eyes,
- Its every blushing petal basketh in their light,
- And all its gladness, all its life, is hanging on their love.
-
- If the love of the heart is blighted, it buddeth not again:
- If that pleasant song is forgotten, it is to be learnt no more:
- Yet often will thought look back, and weep over early affection;
- And the dim notes of that pleasant song will be heard as a reproachful
- spirit,
- Moaning in Aeolian strains over the desert of the heart,
- Where the hot siroccos of the world have withered its one oasis.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF MARRIAGE.
-
- Seek a good wife of thy God, for she is the best gift of His providence;
- Yet ask not in bold confidence that which He hath not promised:
- Thou knowest not His good will:--be thy prayer then submissive there-unto;
- And leave thy petition to His mercy, assured that He will deal well with
- thee.
- If thou art to have a wife of thy youth, she is now living on the earth;
- Therefore think of her, and pray for her weal; yea, though thou hast not
- seen her.
- They that love early become like-minded, and the tempter toucheth them
- not:
- They grow up leaning on each other, as the olive and the vine.
- Youth longeth for a kindred spirit, and yearneth for a heart that can
- commune with his own;
- He meditateth night and day, doting on the image of his fancy.
- Take heed that what charmeth thee is real, nor springeth of thine own
- imagination;
- And suffer not trifles to win thy love; for a wife is thine unto death.
- The harp and the voice may thrill thee,--sound may enchant thine ear,
- But consider thou, the hand will wither, and the sweet notes turn discord:
- The eye, so brilliant at even, may be red with sorrow in the morning;
- And the sylph-like form of elegance must writhe in the crampings of pain.
-
- O happy lot, and hallowed, even as the joy of angels,
- Where the golden chain of godliness is entwined with the roses of love:
- But beware thou seem not to be holy, to win favour in the eyes of a
- creature,
- For the guilt of the hypocrite is deadly, and winneth thee wrath
- elsewhere.
- The idol of thy heart is, as thou, a probationary sojourner on earth;
- Therefore be chary of her soul, for that is the jewel in her casket:
- Let her be a child of God, that she bring with her a blessing to thy
- house,--
- A blessing above riches, and leading contentment in its train:
- Let her be an heir of Heaven; so shall she help thee on thy way:
- For those who are one in faith, fight double-handed against evil.
- Take heed lest she love thee before God; that she be not an idolater:
- Yet see thou that she love thee well: for her heart is the heart of woman;
- And the triple nature of humanity must be bound by a triple chain,
- For soul and mind and body--godliness, esteem, and affection.
-
- How beautiful is modesty! it winneth upon all beholders:
- But a word or a glance may destroy the pure love that should have been
- for thee.
- Affect not to despise beauty: no one is freed from its dominion;
- But regard it not a pearl of price:--it is fleeting as the bow in the
- clouds.
- If the character within be gentle, it often hath its index in the
- countenance:
- The soft smile of a loving face is better than splendour that fadeth
- quickly.
- When thou choosest a wife, think not only of thyself,
- But of those God may give thee of her, that they reproach thee not for
- their being:
- See that He hath given her health, lest thou lose her early and weep:
- See that she springeth of a wholesome stock, that thy little ones perish
- not before thee:
- For many a fair skin hath covered a mining disease,
- And many a laughing cheek been bright with the glare of madness.
-
- Mark the converse of one thou lovest, that it be simple and sincere;
- For an artful or false woman shall set thy pillow with thorns.
- Observe her deportment with others, when she thinketh not that thou art
- nigh,
- For with thee will the blushes of love conceal the true colour of her
- mind.
- Hath she learning? it is good, so that modesty go with it:
- Hath she wisdom? it is precious, but beware that thou exceed;
- For woman must be subject, and the true mastery is of the mind.
- Be joined to thine equal in rank, or the foot of pride will kick at thee;
- And look not only for riches, lest thou be mated with misery:
- Marry not without means; for so shouldst thou tempt Providence;
- But wait not for more than enough; for Marriage is the DUTY of most men:
- Grievous indeed must be the burden that shall outweigh innocence and
- health,
- And a well-assorted marriage hath not many cares.
- In the day of thy joy consider the poor; thou shall reap a rich harvest
- of blessing;
- For these be the pensioners of One who filleth thy cup with pleasures:
- In the day of thy joy be thankful: He hath well deserved thy praise:
- Mean and selfish is the heart that seeketh Him only in sorrow.
- For her sake who leaneth on thine arm, court not the notice of the world,
- And remember that sober privacy is comelier than public display.
- If thou marriest, thou art allied unto strangers; see they be not such as
- shame thee:
- If thou marriest, thou leavest thine own; see that it be not done in
- anger.
-
- Bride and bridegroom, pilgrims of life, henceforward to travel together,
- In this the beginning of your journey, neglect not the favour of Heaven:
- Let the day of hopes fulfilled be blest by many prayers,
- And at eventide kneel ye together, that your joy be not unhallowed:
- Angels that are round you shall be glad, those loving ministers of mercy,
- And the richest blessings of your God shall be poured on His favoured
- children.
- Marriage is a figure and an earnest of holier things unseen,
- And reverence well becometh the symbol of dignity and glory.
- Keep thy heart pure, lest thou do dishonour to thy state;
- Selfishness is base and hateful; but love considereth not itself.
- The wicked turneth good into evil, for his mind is warped within him;
- But the heart of the righteous is chaste: his conscience casteth off sin.
- If thou wilt be loved, render implicit confidence;
- If thou wouldst not suspect, receive full confidence in turn:
- For where trust is not reciprocal, the love that trusted withereth.
- Hide not your grief nor your gladness; be open one with the other;
- Let bitterness be strange unto your tongues, but sympathy a dweller in
- your hearts:
- Imparting halveth the evils, while it doubleth the pleasures of life,
- But sorrows breed and thicken in the gloomy bosom of Reserve.
-
- Young wife, be not froward, nor forget that modesty becometh thee:
- If it be discarded now, who will not hold it feigned before?
- But be not as a timid girl,--there is honour due to thine estate;
- A matron's modesty is dignified: she blusheth not, neither is she bold.
- Be kind to the friends of thine husband, for the love they have to him:
- And gently bear with his infirmities: hast thou no need of his
- forbearance?
- Be not always in each other's company; it is often good to be alone;
- And if there be too much sameness, ye cannot but grow weary of each other:
- Ye have each a soul to be nourished, and a mind to be taught in wisdom,
- Therefore, as accountable for time, help one another to improve it.
- If ye feel love to decline, track out quickly the secret cause;
- Let it not rankle for a day, but confess and bewail it together:
- Speedily seek to be reconciled, for love is the life of marriage;
- And be ye co-partners in triumph, conquering the peevishness of self.
-
- Let no one have thy confidence, O wife, saving thine husband:
- Have not a friend more intimate, O husband, than thy wife.
- In the joy of a well-ordered home be warned that this is not your rest;
- For the substance to come may be forgotten in the present beauty of the
- shadow.
- If ye are blessed with children, ye have a fearful pleasure,
- A deeper care and a higher joy, and the range of your existence is
- widened:
- If God in wisdom refuse them, thank Him for an unknown mercy:
- For how can ye tell if they might be a blessing or a curse?
- Yet ye may pray, like Hannah, simply dependent on His will:
- Resignation sweeteneth the cup, but impatience dasheth it with vinegar.
- Now this is the sum of the matter:--if ye will be happy in marriage,
- Confide, love, and be patient: be faithful, firm, and holy.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF EDUCATION.
-
- A babe in a house is a well-spring of pleasure, a messenger of peace and
- love:
- A resting place for innocence on earth; a link between angels and men:
- Yet is it a talent of trust, a loan to be rendered back with interest;
- A delight, but redolent of care; honey-sweet, but lacking not the bitter.
- For character groweth day by day, and all things aid it in unfolding,
- And the bent unto good or evil may be given in the hours of infancy:
- Scratch the green rind of a sapling, or wantonly twist it in the soil,
- The scarred and crooked oak will tell of thee for centuries to come;
- Even so mayst thou guide the mind to good, or lead it to the marrings of
- evil,
- For disposition is builded up by the fashioning of first impressions:
- Wherefore, though the voice of instruction waiteth for the ear of reason,
- Yet with his mother's milk the young child drinketh Education.
- Patience is the first great lesson; he may learn it at the breast:
- And the habit of obedience and trust may be grafted on his mind in the
- cradle:
- Hold the little hands in prayer, teach the weak knees their kneeling;
- Let him see thee speaking to thy God; he will not forget it afterward:
- When old and grey will he feelingly remember a mother's tender piety,
- And the touching recollection of her prayers shall arrest the strong man
- in his sin.
-
- Select not to nurse thy darling one that may taint his innocence,
- For example is a constant monitor, and good seed will die among the tares.
- The arts of a strange servant have spoiled a gentle disposition:
- Mother, let him learn of thy lips, and be nourished at thy breast.
- Character is mainly moulded by the cast of the minds that surround it:
- Let then the playmates of thy little one be not other than thy judgment
- shall approve:
- For a child is in a new world, and learneth somewhat every moment,
- His eye is quick to observe, his memory storeth in secret,
- His ear is greedy of knowledge, and his mind is plastic as soft wax.
- Beware then that he heareth what is good, that he feedeth not on evil
- maxims,
- For the seeds of first instructions are dropped into the deepest furrows.
- That which immemorial use hath sanctioned, seemeth to be right and true;
- Therefore, let him never have to recollect the time when good things were
- strangers to his thought.
- Strive not to centre in thyself, fond mother, all his love;
- Nay, do not thou so selfishly, but enlarge his heart for others;
- Use him to sympathy betimes, that he learn to be sad with the afflicted;
- And check not a child in his merriment,--should not his morning be sunny?
- Give him not all his desire, so shalt thou strengthen him in hope;
- Neither stop with indulgence the fountain of his tears, so shall he fear
- thy firmness.
- Above all things graft on him subjection, yea, in the veriest trifle;
- Courtesy to all, reverence to some, and to thee unanswering obedience.
-
- Read thou first, and well approve, the books thou givest to thy child;
- But remember the weakness of his thought, and that wisdom for him must be
- diluted:
- In the honied waters of infant tales, let him taste the strong wine of
- truth:
- Pathetic stories soften the heart; but legends of terror breed midnight
- misery;
- Fairy fictions cram the mind with folly, and knowledge of evil tempteth
- to like evil:
- Be not loth to curb imagination, nor be fearful that truths will depress
- it;
- And for evil, he will learn it soon enough; be not thou the devil's envoy.
- Induce not precocity of intellect, for so shouldst thou nourish vanity;
- Neither can a plant, forced in the hot-bed, stand against the frozen
- breath of winter.
- The mind is made wealthy by ideas, but the multitude of words is a
- clogging weight:
- Therefore be understood in thy teaching, and instruct to the measure of
- capacity.
- Analogy is milk for babes, but abstract truths are strong meat;
- Precepts and rules are repulsive to a child, but happy illustration
- winneth him:
- In vain shalt thou preach of industry and prudence, till he learn of the
- bee and the ant;
- Dimly will he think of his soul, till the acorn and the chrysalis have
- taught him;
- He will fear God in thunder, and worship His loveliness in flowers;
- And parables shall charm his heart, while doctrines seem dead mystery:
- Faith shall he learn of the husbandman casting good corn into the soil;
- And if thou train him to trust thee, he will not withhold his reliance
- from the Lord.
- Fearest thou the dark, poor child? I would not have thee left to thy
- terrors;
- Darkness is the semblance of evil, and nature regardeth it with dread:
- Yet know thy father's God is with thee still, to guard thee:
- It is a simple lesson of dependence; let thy tost mind anchor upon Him.
- Did a sudden noise affright thee? lo, this or that hath caused it:
- Things undefined are full of dread, and stagger stouter nerves.
- The seeds of misery and madness have been sowed in the nights of infancy;
- Therefore be careful that ghastly fears be not the night companions of
- thy child.
-
- Lo, thou art a landmark on a hill; thy little ones copy thee in all
- things:
- Let, then, thy religion be perfect: so shalt thou be honoured in thy
- house.
- Be instructed in all wisdom, and communicate that thou knowest,
- Otherwise thy learning is hidden, and thus thou seemest unwise.
- A sluggard hath no respect; an epicure commandeth not reverence;
- Meanness is always despicable, and folly provoketh contempt.
- Those parents are best honoured whose characters best deserve it;
- Show me a child undutiful, I shall know where to look for a foolish
- father:
- Never hath a father done his duty, and lived to be despised of his son:
- But how can that son reverence an example he dare not follow?
- Should he imitate thee in thine evil? his scorn is thy rebuke.
- Nay, but bring him up aright, in obedience to God and to thee;
- Begin betimes, lest thou fail of his fear; and with judgment, that thou
- lose not his love:
- Herein use good discretion, and govern not all alike,
- Yet, perhaps, the fault will be in thee, if kindness prove not all
- sufficient:
- By kindness, the wolf and the zebra become docile as the spaniel and the
- horse;
- The kite feedeth with the starling, under the law of kindness:
- That law shall tame the fiercest, bring down the battlements of pride,
- Cherish the weak, control the strong, and win the fearful spirit.
- Be obeyed when thou commandest; but command not often:
- Let thy carriage be the gentleness of love, not the stern front of
- tyranny.
- Make not one child a warning to another; but chide the offender apart:
- For self-conceit and wounded pride rankle like poisons in the soul.
- A mild rebuke in the season of calmness, is better than a rod in the heat
- of passion;
- Nevertheless, spare not, if thy word hath passed for punishment;
- Let not thy child see thee humbled, nor learn to think thee false;
- Suffer none to reprove thee before him, and reprove not thine own
- purposes by change;
- Yet speedily turn thou again, and reward him where thou canst,
- For kind encouragement in good cutteth at the roots of evil.
-
- Drive not a timid infant from his home, in the early spring-time of his
- life,
- Commit not that treasure to an hireling, nor wrench the young heart's
- fibres:
- In his helplessness leave him not alone, a stranger among strange
- children,
- Where affection longeth for thy love, counting the dreary hours;
- Where religion is made a terror, and innocence weepeth unheard;
- Where oppression grindeth without remedy, and cruelty delighteth in
- smiting.
- Wherefore comply with an evil fashion? Is it not to spare thee trouble?
- Can he gather no knowledge at thy mouth? Wilt thou yield thine honour to
- another?
- What can he gain in learning, to equal what he loseth in innocence?
- Alas! for the price above gold, by which such learning cometh!
- For emulative pride and envy are the specious idols of the diligent,
- Oaths and foul-mouthed sin burn in the language of the idle:
- Bolder in that mimic world of boys stareth brazen-fronted vice,
- Than thereafter in the haunts of men, where society doth shame her into
- corners.
- My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thy timid infant unto
- sorrows.
- There be many that say, We were happiest in days long past,
- When our deepest care was an ill-conned book,
- And when we sported in that merry sunshine of our life,
- Sadness a stranger to the heart, and cheerfulness its gay inhabitant.
- True, ye are now less pure, and therefore are more wretched:
- But have ye quite forgotten how sorely ye travailed at your tasks,
- How childish griefs and disappointments bowed down the childish mind?
- How sorrow sat upon your pillow, and terror hath waked you up betimes,
- Dreading the strict hand of justice, that would not wait for a reason,
- Or the whims of petty tyrants, children like yourselves,
- Or the pestilent extract of evil poured into the ear of innocence?
- Behold the coral island, fresh from the floor of the Atlantic,
- It is dinted by every ripple, and a soft wave can smooth its surface;
- But soon its substance hardeneth in the winds and tropic sun,
- And weakly the foaming billows break against its adamantine wall:
- Even thus, though sin and care dash upon the firmness of manhood,
- The timid child is wasted most by his petty troubles;
- And seldom, when life is mature, and the strength proportioned to the
- burden,
- Will the feeling mind, that can remember, acknowledge to deeper anguish,
- Than when, as a stranger and a little one, the heart first ached with
- anxiety,
- And the sprouting buds of sensibility were bruised by the harshness of a
- school.
- My soul, look well around thee, ere thou give thine infant unto sorrows.
- Yet there be boisterous tempers, stout nerves, and stubborn hearts,
- And there is a riper season, when the mind is well disciplined in good,
- And a time, when youth may be bettered by the wholesome occasions of
- knowledge,
- Which rarely will he meet with so well, as among the congregation of his
- fellows.
- Only for infancy, fond mother, rend not those first affections;
- Only for the sensitive and timorous, consign not thy darling unto misery.
-
- A man looketh on his little one, as a being of better hope;
- In himself ambition is dead, but it hath a resurrection in his son:
- That vein is yet untried,--and who can tell if it be not golden?
- While his, well nigh worked out, never yielded aught but lead:
- And thus is he hurt more sorely, if his wishes are defeated there,
- He has staked his all upon a throw, and lo! the dice have foiled him.
- All ways, and at all times, men follow on in flocks,
- And the rife epidemic of the day shall tincture the stream of education.
- Fashion is a foolish watcher posted at the tree of knowledge,
- Who plucketh its unripe fruit to pelt away the birds;
- But, for its golden apples,--they dry upon the boughs,
- And few have the courage or the wisdom to eat in spite of fashion.
- One while, the fever is to learn, what none will be wiser for knowing,
- Exploded errors in extinct tongues, and occasions for their use are small;
- And the bright morning of life, for years of misspent time,
- Wasted in following sounds, hath tracked up little sense,
- Till at noon a man is thrown upon the world, with a mind expert in
- trifles,
- Having yet everything to learn that can make him good or useful:
- The curious spirit of youth is crammed with unwholesome garbage,
- While starving for the mother's milk the breasts of nature yield;
- And high-coloured fables of depravity lure with their classic varnish,
- While truth is holding out in vain her mirror much despised.
-
- Of olden time, the fashion was for arms, to make an accomplished slayer,
- And set gregarious man a-tilting with his fellows;
- Thereafter, occult sciences, and mystic arts, and symbols,
- How to exorcise a wizard, and how to lay a ghost;
- Anon, all for gallantry and presence, the minuet, the palfrey, and the
- foil,
- And the grand aim of education was to produce a coxcomb;
- Soon came scholastical dispute with hydra-headed argument,
- And the true philosophy of mind confounded in a labyrinth of words;
- Then the Pantheon, and its orgies, initiating docile childhood,
- While diligent youth strove hard to render his all unto Caesar;
- And now is seen the passion for utility, when all things are accounted by
- their price,
- And the wisdom of the wise is busied in hatching golden eggs:
- Perchance, not many moons to come, and all will again be for abstrusity,
- Unravelling the figured veil that hideth Egypt's gods;
- Or in those strange Avatars seeking benignant Vishnu,
- Kali, and Kamala the fair, and much invoked Ganesa.
-
- The mines of knowledge are oft laid bare through the forked hazel wand of
- chance,
- And in a mountain of quartz we find a grain of gold.
- Of a truth, it were well to know all things, and to learn them all at
- once,
- And what, though mortal insufficiency attain to small knowledge of any?
- Man loveth exclusions, delighting in the sterile trodden path,
- While the broad green meadow is jewelled with wild flowers:
- And whether is it better with the many to follow a beaten track,
- Or by eccentric wanderings to cull unheeded sweets?
-
- When his reason yieldeth fruit, make thy child thy friend;
- For a filial friend is a double gain, a diamond set in gold.
- As an infant, thy mandate was enough, but now let him see thy reasons;
- Confide in him, but with discretion: and bend a willing ear to his
- questions.
- More to thee than to all beside, let him owe good counsel and good
- guidance;
- Let him feel his pursuits have an interest, more to thee than to all
- beside.
- Watch his native capacities; nourish that which suiteth him the readiest;
- And cultivate early those good inclinations wherein thou fearest he is
- most lacking:
- Is he phlegmatic and desponding? let small successes comfort his hope:
- Is he obstinate and sanguine? let petty crosses accustom him to life:
- Showeth he a sordid spirit? be quick, and teach him generosity:
- Inclineth he to liberal excess? prove to him how hard it is to earn.
- Gather to thy hearth such friends as are worthy of honour and attention;
- For the company a man chooseth is a visible index of his heart:
- But let not the pastor whom thou hearest be too much a familiar in thy
- house,
- For thy children may see his infirmities, and learn to cavil at his
- teaching.
- It is well to take hold on occasions, and render indirect instruction;
- It is better to teach upon a system, and reap the wisdom of books:
- The history of nations yieldeth grand outlines: of persons, minute
- details:
- Poetry is polish to the mind, and high abstractions cleanse it.
- Consider the station of thy son, and breed him to his fortune with
- judgment:
- The rich may profit in much which would bring small advantage to the poor.
- But with all thy care for thy son, with all thy strivings for his welfare,
- Expect disappointment, and look for pain: for he is of an evil stock, and
- will grieve thee.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF TOLERANCE.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- A wise man in a crowded street winneth his way with gentleness,
- Nor rudely pusheth aside the stranger that standeth in his path;
- He knoweth that blind hurry will but hinder, stirring up contention
- against him,
- Yet holdeth he steadily right on, with his face to the scope of his
- pursuit:
- Even so, in the congress of opinions, the bustling highway of
- intelligence,
- Each man should ask of his neighbour, and yield to him again, concession.
- Terms ill-defined, and forms misunderstood, and customs, where their
- reasons are unknown,
- Have stirred up many zealous souls to fight against imaginary giants:
- But wisdom will hear the matter out, and often, by keenness of perception,
- Will find in strange disguise the precious truth he seeketh;
- So he leaveth unto prejudice or taste the garb and the manner of her
- presence,
- Content to see so nigh the mistress of his love.
- There is no similitude in nature that owneth not also to a difference,
- Yea, no two berries are alike, though twins upon one stem;
- No drop in the ocean, no pebble on the beach, no leaf in the forest, hath
- its counterpart,
- No mind in its dwelling of mortality, no spirit in the world unseen:
- And therefore, since capacity and essence differ alike with accident,
- None but a bigot partizan will hope for impossible unity.
- Wilt thou ensue peace, nor buffet with the waters of contention,
- Wilt thou be counted wise and gain the love of men,
- Let unobtruded error escape the frown of censure,
- Nor lift the glass of truth alway before thy fellows:
- I say not, compromise the right, I would not have thee countenance the
- wrong,
- But hear with charitable heart the reasons of an honest judgment;
- For thou also hast erred, and knowest not when thou art most right,
- Nor whether to-morrow's wisdom may not prove thee simple to-day:
- Perchance thou art chiding in another what once thou wast thyself;
- Perchance thou sharply reprovest what thou wilt be hereafter.
- A man that can render a reason, is a man worthy of an answer;
- But he that argueth for victory, deserveth not the tenderness of Truth.
-
- Whiles a man liveth he may mend: count not thy brother reprobate;
- When he is dead his chance is gone: remember not his faults in bitterness.
- A man, till he dieth, is immortal in thy sight; and then he is as nothing:
- Make not the living thy foe, nor take weak vengeance of the dead.
- For life is as a game of chess, where least causeth greatest,
- And an ill move bringeth loss, and a pawn may ensure victory.
- Dost thou suspect? seek out certainty: for now, by self-inflicted pain,
- Or ill-directed wrath, thou wrongest thyself or thy neighbour:
- Suspicion is an early lesson, taught in the school of experience,
- Neither shalt thou easily unlearn it, though charity ply thee with her
- preaching;
- Yet look thou well for reasons, or ever mistrust hath marred thee,
- Or fear curdled thy blood, or jealousy goaded thee to madness;
- For a look, or a word, or an act, may be taken well or ill
- As construed by the latitude of love, or the closeness of cold suspicion.
-
- Better is the wrong with sincerity, rather than the right with falsehood:
- And a prudent man will not lay siege to the stronghold of ignorant
- bigotry.
- To unsettle a weak mind were an easy inglorious triumph,
- And a strong cause taketh little count of the worthless suffrage of a
- fool:
- Lightly he held to the wrong, loosely will he cling to the right;
- Weakness is the essence of his mind, and the reed cannot yield an acorn.
- Dogged obstinacy is oftentimes the buttress that proppeth an unstable
- spirit,
- But a candid man blusheth not to own, he is wiser to-day than yesterday.
- A man of a little wisdom is a sage among fools;
- But himself is chief among the fools, if he look for admiration from them.
- A heresy is an evil thing, for its shame is its pride:
- Its necessary difference of error is the character it most esteemeth:
- Give a man all things short of liberty, thou shalt have no thanks,
- And little wilt thou speed with thine opponent, by proving points he will
- concede.
- The tost sand darkeneth the waves; and clear had been the pages of truth,
- Had not the glosses of men obscured the simplicity of faith.
- In all things consider thine own ignorance, and gladly take occasion to
- be taught;
- But suffer not excess of liberality to neutralize thy mental independence.
-
- The faults and follies of most men make their deaths a gain:
- But thou also art a man, full of faults and follies:
- Therefore sorrow for the dead, or none shall weep for thee,
- For the measure of charity thou dealest, shall be poured into thine own
- bosom.
- That which vexeth thee now, provoking thee to hate thy brother,
- Bear with it; the annoyance passeth, and may not return for ever:
- The same combinations and results which aggravate thy soul to-day,
- May not meet again for centuries in the kaleidoscope of circumstance;
- For men and matters change, new elements mixing in continually,
- And, as with chemical magic, the sour is transmuted into sweetness:
- A little explained, a little endured, a little passed over as a foible,
- And lo, the jagged atoms fit like smooth mosaic.
- Thou canst not shape another's mind to suit thine own body,
- Think not, then, to be furnishing his brain with thy special notions.
- Charity walketh with a high step, and stumbleth not at a trifle:
- Charity hath keen eyes, but the lashes half conceal them:
- Charity is praised of all, and fear not thou that praise,
- God will not love thee less, because men love thee more.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF SORROW.
-
- I said, I will seek out Sorrow, and minister the balm of pity;
- So I sought her in the house of mourning; but peace followed in her train.
- Then I marked her brooding silently in the gloomy cavern of Regret;
- But a sunbeam of heavenly hope gleamed on her folded wing.
- So I turned to the cabin of the poor, where famine dwelt with disease:
- But the bed of the sick was smoothed, and the ploughman whistled at his
- labour.
- So I stopt, and mused within myself, to remember where Sorrow dwelt,
- For I sought to see her alone, uncomforted, uncompanioned.
- I went to the prison, but penitence was there, and promise of better
- times;
- I listened at the madman's cell, but it echoed with deluded laughter.
- Then I turned me to the rich and noble; I noted the sons of fashion:
- A smile was on the languid cheek, that had no commerce with the heart;
- Unhallowed thoughts, like fires, gleamed from the window of the eye;
- And sorrow lived with those whose pleasures add unto their sins.
-
- His infancy wanted not guilt; his life was continued evil:
- He drew in pride with his mother's milk, and a father's lips taught him
- cursing.
- I marked him as the wayward boy; I traced the dissolute youth:
- I saw him betray the innocent, and sacrifice affection to his lust;
- I saw him the companion of knaves, and a squanderer of ill-got gain;
- I heard him curse his own misery, while he hugged the chains that galled
- him:
- For well had experience declared the bitterness of guilty pleasure,
- But habit, with its iron net, involved him in its folds.
- Behind him lowered the thunder-storm, which the caldron of his wickedness
- had brewed;
- Before him was the smooth steep cliff, whose base is ruin and despair.
- So he rushed madly on, and tried to forget his being:
- The noisy revel and the low debauch, and fierce excitement of play,
- With dreary interchange of palling pleasures, filled the dull round of
- existence:
- Memory was to him as a foe, so he flew for false solace to the wine-cup,
- And stunned his enemy at even; but she rent him as a giant in the morning.
-
- I turned aside to weep; I lost him a little while:
- I looked, and years had past; he was hoar with the winter of his age.
- And what was now his hope? where was the balm for his sadness?
- The memory of the past was guilt: the feeling of the present, remorse.
- Then he set his affections on gold, he worshipped the shrine of Mammon,
- And to lay richer gifts before his idol, he starved his own bowels;
- So, the youth spent in profligacy ended in the gripings of want:
- The miser grudged himself husks to take deeper vengeance of the prodigal.
- And I said, this is Sorrow, but pity cannot reach it;
- This is to be wretched indeed, to be guilty without repentance.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Joy]
-
-OF JOY.
-
- My soul was sickened within me, so I sought the dwelling place of Joy:
- And I met it not in laughter; I found it not in wealth or power;
- But I saw it in the pleasant home, where religion smiled upon content,
- And the satisfied ambition of the heart rejoiced in the favour of its God.
- Behold the happy man, his face is rayed with pleasure,
- His thoughts are of calm delight, and none can know his blessedness.
- I have watched him from his infancy, and seen him in the grasp of death,
- Yet, never have I noted on his brow the cloud of desponding sorrow.
- He hath knelt beside his cradle; his mother's hymn lulled him to sleep:
- In childhood he hath loved holiness, and drank from that fountain-head of
- peace.
- Wisdom took him for her scholar, guiding his steps in purity:
- He lived unpolluted by the world; and his young heart hated sin.
- But he owned not the spurious religion engendered of faction and
- moroseness,
- Neither were the sproutings of his soul seared by the brand of
- superstition.
- His love is pure and single, sincere, and knoweth not change;
- For his manhood hath been blest with the pleasant choice of his youth:
- Behold his one beloved, she leaneth on his arm,
- And he looketh on the years that are past, to review the dawn of her
- affection.
- Memory is sweet unto him, as a perfect landscape to the sight;
- Each object is lovely in itself, but the whole is the harmony of nature.
- Behold his little ones around him, they bask in the warmth of his smile,
- And infant innocence and joy lighten their happy faces;
- He is holy, and they honour him: he is loving, and they love him:
- He is consistent, and they esteem him: he is firm, and they fear him.
- His friends are the excellent among men; and the bands of their
- friendship are strong:
- His house is the palace of peace: for the Prince of Peace is there.
- As the wearied man to his couch, as the thoughtful man to his musings,
- Even so, from the bustle of life, he goeth to his well-ordered home.
- And though he often sin, he returneth with weeping eyes:
- For he feeleth the mercies of forgiveness, and gloweth with warmer
- gratitude.
-
- Thus did he walk in happiness, and sorrow was a stranger to his soul;
- The light of affection sunned his heart, the tear of the grateful bedewed
- his feet,
- He put his hand with constancy to good, and angels knew him as a brother,
- And the busy satellites of evil trembled as at God's ally:
- He used his wealth as a wise steward, making him friends for futurity:
- He bent his learning to religion, and religion was with him at the last:
- For I saw him after many days, when the time of his release was come,
- And I longed for a congregated world, to behold that dying saint.
- As the aloe is green and well-liking, till the last best summer of its
- age,
- And then hangeth out its golden bells, to mingle glory with corruption;
- As a meteor travelleth in splendour, but bursteth in dazzling light;
- Such was the end of the righteous: his death was the sun at its setting.
-
- Look on this picture of joy, and remember that portrait of sorrow:
- Behold the beauty of holiness, behold the deformity of sin!
- How long, ye sons of men, will ye scorn the words of wisdom?
- How long will ye hunt for happiness in the caverns that breed despair?
- Will ye comfort yourselves in misery, by denying the existence of delight,
- And from experience in woe, will ye reason that none are happy?
- Joy is not in your path, for it loveth not that bleak broad road,
- But its flowers are hung upon the hedges that line a narrower way;
- And there the faint travellers of earth may wander and gather for
- themselves,
- To soothe their wounded hearts with balm from the amaranths of heaven.
-
-=THEO DOXA=.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Proverbial philosophy; Second Series.]
-
-SECOND SERIES.
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY.
-
-[Illustration: Introductory "C"]
-
- Come again, and greet me as a friend, fellow-pilgrim upon life's highway,
- Leave awhile the hot and dusty road, to loiter in the greenwood of
- Reflection.
- Come unto my cool dim grotto, that is watered by the rivulet of truth,
- And over whose time-stained rock climb the fairy flowers of content;
- Here, upon this mossy bank of leisure fling thy load of cares,
- Taste my simple store, and rest one soothing hour.
-
- Behold, I would count thee for a brother, and commune with thy charitable
- soul;
- Though wrapt within the mantle of a prophet, I stand mine own weak
- scholar.
- Heed no disciple for a teacher, if knowledge be not found upon his tongue;
- For vanity and folly were the lessons these lips untaught could give:
- The precious staple of my merchandise cometh from a better country,
- The harvest of my reaping sprang of foreign seed:
- And this poor pensioner of Mercy--should he boast of merit?
- The grafted stock,--should that be proud of apples not its own?
- Into the bubbling brook I dip my hermit shell;
- Man receiveth as a cup, but Wisdom is the river.
-
- Moreover, for this fillagree of fancy, this Oriental garnish of
- similitude,
- Alas, the world is old,--and all things old within it:
- I walk a trodden path, I love the good old ways;
- Prophets, and priests, and kings have tuned the harp I faintly touch.
- Truth, in a garment of the past, is my choice and simple theme;
- No truth is new to-day: and the mantle was another's.
-
- Still, there is an insect swarm, the buzzing cloud of imagery,
- Mote-like steaming on my sight, and thronging my reluctant mind;
- The memories of studious culling, and multiplied analogies of nature,
- Fresh feelings unrepressed, welling from the heart spontaneous,
- Facts, and comparisons, and meditative atoms, gathered on the heap of
- combination,
- Mingle in the fashion of my speech with gossamer dreams of Reverie.
- I need not beat the underwood for game; my pheasants flock upon the lawn,
- And gamboling hares disport fearless in my dewy field;
- I roam no heath-empurpled hills, wearily watching for a covey,
- But thoughts fly swift to my decoy, eager to be caught;
- I sit no quiet angler, lingering patiently for sport,
- But spread my nets for a draught, and take the glittering shoal;
- I chase no solitary stag, tracking it with breathless toil,
- But hunt with Aurung-zebe, and spear surrounded thousands.
-
- What then,--count ye this a boast?--sweet charity, think it other,
- For the dog-fish and poisonous ray are captured in the mullet-haul:
- The crane and the kite are of my thoughts, alike with the partridge and
- the quail,
- And unclean meats as of the clean hang upon my Seric shambles.
- --How saith he? shall a man deceive, dressing up his jackal as a lion?
- Or colour in staid hues of fact the changing vest of falsehood?--
- Brother, unwittingly he may; doubtless, unwillingly he doth:
- For men are full of fault, and how should he be righteous?
- Carefully my garden hath been weeded, yet shall it be foul with thistle;
- My grapery is diligently thinned, and yet many berries will be sour:
- From my nets have I flung the bad away, to my small skill and caution;
- Yet may some slimy snake have counted for an eel.
- The rudder of Man's best hope cannot always steer himself from error;
- The arrow of Man's straightest aim flieth short of truth.
- Thus, the confession of sincerity visit not as if it were presumption:
- Nor own me for a leader, where thy reason is not guide.
-
-
-OF CHEERFULNESS.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Take courage, prisoner of time, for there be many comforts,
- Cease thy labour in the pit, and bask awhile with truants in the sun;
- Be cheerful, man of care, for great is the multitude of chances,
- Burst thy fetters of anxiety, and walk among the citizens of ease:
- Wherefore dost thou doubt? if present good is round thee,
- It may be well to look for change, but to trust in a continuance is
- better;
- Whilst, at the crisis of adversity, to hope for some amends were wisdom,
- And cheerfully to bear thy cross in patient strength is duty.
- I speak of common troubles, and the petty plagues of life,
- The phantom-spies of Unbelief, that lurk about his outposts:
- Sharp suspicion, dull distrust, and sullen stern moroseness
- Are captains in that locust swarm to lead the cloudy host.
- Thou hast need of fortitude and faith, for the adversaries come on
- thickly,
- And he that fled hath added wings to his pursuing foes;
- Fight them, and the cravens flee; thy boldness is their panic;
- Fear them, and thy treacherous heart hath lent the ranks a legion:
- Among their shouts of victory resoundeth the wail of Heraclitus,
- While Democrite, confident and cheerful, hath plucked up the standard of
- their camp.
-
- Not few nor light are the burdens of life; then load it not with
- heaviness of spirit;
- Sicknesses, and penury, and travail,--there be real ills enow:
- We are wandering benighted, with a waning moon; plunge not rashly into
- jungles,
- Where cold and poisonous damps will quench the torch of hope:
- The tide is strong against us; good oarsmen, pull or perish,--
- If your arms be slack for fear, ye shall not stem the torrent.
- A wise traveller goeth on cheerily, through fair weather or foul;
- He knoweth that his journey must be sped, so he carrieth his sunshine
- with him.
- Calamities come not as a curse,--nor prosperity for other than a trial;
- Struggle,--thou art better for the strife, and the very energy shall
- hearten thee.
- Good is taught in a Spartan school,--hard lessons and a rough discipline;
- But evil cometh idly of itself, in the luxury of Capuan holidays:
- And Wisdom will go bravely forth to meet the chastening scourge,
- Enduring with a thankful heart that punishment of Love.
-
- There be three chief rivers of despondency: sin, sorrow, fear;
- Sin is the deepest, sorrow hath its shallows, and fear is a noisy rapid:
- But even to the darkest holes in guilt's profoundest river
- Hope can pierce with quickening ray, and all those depths are lightened.
- So long as there is mercy in a God, hope is the privilege of creatures,
- And so soon as there is penitence in creatures, that hope is exalted into
- duty.
- Verily, consider this for courage; that the fearful and the unbelieving
- Are classed with idolaters and liars, because they trusted not in God:
- For it is none other than selfish sin, a hard and proud ingratitude,
- Where seeming repentance is herald of despair, instead of hope's
- forerunner.
-
- Moreover, in thy day of grief,--for friends, or fame, or fortune,
- Well I wot the heart shall ache, and mind be numbed in torpor;
- Let nature weep; leave her alone; the freshet of her sorrow must run off;
- And sooner will the lake be clear, relieved of turbid floodings.
- Yet see that her license hath a limit; with the novelty her agony is over;
- Hasten in that earliest calm, to tie her in the leash with Reason.
- For regrets are an enervating folly, and the season for energy is come,
- Yea rather, that the future may repair with diligence the ruins of the
- past.
-
- Again, for empty fears, the harassings of possible calamity,
- Pray, and thou shalt prosper; trust in God, and tread them down.
- Yield to the phantasy,--thou sinnest; resist it, He will aid thee:
- Out of Him there is no help, nor any sober courage.
- Feeble is the comfort of the faithless, a man without a God;
- Who dare counsel such an one to fling away his fears?
- Fear is the heritage of him, a portion wise and merciful,
- To drive the trembler into safety, if haply he may turn and flee:
- Nevertheless, let him reckon an he will, that all be counteth casual
- May as well be for him as against him; dice have many sides:
- And, even as in ailments of the body, diseases follow closely upon dreads,
- So, with infirmities of mind, is fear the pallid harbinger of failure.
- It were wise to walk undaunted even in an accidental chaos,
- For the brave man is at peace, and free to get the mastery of
- circumstance.
- The stoutest armour of defence is that which is worn within the bosom,
- And the weapon that no enemy can parry, is a bold and cheerful spirit:
- Catapults in old war worked like Titans, crushing foes with rocks;
- So doth a strong-springed heart throw back every load on its assailants.
-
- I went heavily for cares, and fell into the trance of sorrow;
- And behold, a vision in my trance, and my ministering angel brought it.
- There stood a mountain huge and steep, the awful Rock of Ages;
- The sun upon its summit, and storms midway, and deep ravines at foot.
- And, as I looked, a dense black cloud, suddenly dropping from the thunder,
- Filled, like a cataract with yeasty foam, a narrow smiling valley:
- Close and hard that vaporous mass seemed to press the ground,
- And lamentable sounds came up, as of some that were smothering beneath.
- Then, as I walked upon the mountain, clear in summer's noon,
- For charity I called aloud, Ho! climb up hither to the sunshine.
- And even like a stream of light my voice had pierced the mist;
- I saw below two families of men, and knew their names of old:
- Courage, struggling through the darkness, stout of heart and gladsome,
- Ran up the shining ladder which the voice of Hope had made;
- And tripping lightly by his side, a sweet-eyed helpmate with him,
- I looked upon her face to welcome pleasant Cheerfulness;
- And a babe was cradled in her bosom, a laughing little prattler,
- The child of Cheerfulness and Courage,--could his name be other than
- Success?
- So, from his happy wife, when they both stood beside me on the mountain,
- The fond father took that babe, and set him on his shoulder in the
- sunshine.
-
- Again I peered into the valley, for I heard a gasping moan,
- A desolate weak cry, as muffled in the vapours.
- So down that crystal shaft into the poisonous mine
- I sped for charity to seek and save,--and those I sought fled from me.
- At length, I spied, far distant, a trembling withered dwarf
- Who crouched beneath the cloak of a tall and spectral mourner:
- Then I knew Cowardice and Gloom, and followed them on in darkness,
- Guided by their rustling robes and moans and muffled cries,
- Until in a suffocating pit the wretched pair had perished,--
- And lo, their whitening bones were shaping out an epitaph of Failure.
-
- So I saw that despondency was death, and flung my burdens from me,
- And, lightened by that effort, I was raised above the world;
- Yea, in the strangeness of my vision, I seemed to soar on wings,
- And the names they called my wings were Cheerfulness and Wisdom.
-
-
-OF YESTERDAY.
-
- Speak, poor almsman of to-day, whom none can assure of a to-morrow,
- Tell out, with honest heart, the price thou settest upon yesterday.
- Is it then a writing in the dust, traced by the finger of idleness,
- Which Industry, clean housewife, can wipe away for ever?
- Is it as a furrow on the sand, fashioned by the toying waves,
- Quickly to be trampled then again by the feet of the returning tide?
- Is it as the pale blue smoke, rising from a peasant's hovel,
- That melted into limpid air, before it topped the larches?
- Is it but a vision, unstable and unreal, which wise men soon forget?
- Is it as the stranger of a night,--gone, we heed not whither?
- Alas! thou foolish heart, whose thoughts are but as these,
- Alas! deluded soul, that hopeth thus of Yesterday.
-
- For, behold,--those temples of Ellora, the Brahmin's rock-built shrine,
- Behold--yon granite cliff, which the North Sea buffeteth in vain,--
- That stout old forest fir,--these waking verities of life,
- This guest abiding ever, not strange, nor a servant, but a son,--
- Such, O man, are vanity and dreams, transient as a rainbow on the cloud,
- Weighed against that solid fact, thine ill-remembered Yesterday.
-
- Come, let me show thee an ensample, where Nature shall instruct us;
- Luxuriantly the arguments for truth spring native in her gardens.
- Seek we yonder woodman of the plain; he is measuring his axe to the elm,
- And anon the sturdy strokes ring upon the wintry air:
- Eagerly the village school-boys cluster on the tightened rope,
- Shouting, and bending to the pull, or lifted from the ground elastic;
- The huge tree boweth like Sisera, boweth to its foes with faintness,--
- Its sinews crack,--deep groans declare the reeling anguish of Goliath,
- The wedge is driven home,--and the saw is at its heart,--and lo, with
- solemn slowness,
- The shuddering monarch riseth from his throne,--toppled with a
- crash,--and is fallen!
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Now shall the mangled stump teach proud man a lesson:
- Now, can we from that elm-tree's sap distil the wine of Truth.
- Heed ye those hundred rings, concentric from the core,
- Eddying in various waves to the red bark's shore-like rim?
- These be the gatherings of yesterdays, present all to-day,
- This is the tree's judgment, self-history that cannot be gainsaid:
- Seven years agone there was a drought,--and the seventh ring is narrowed;
- The fifth from hence was half a deluge,--the fifth is cellular and broad.
- Thus, Man, thou art a result, the growth of many yesterdays,
- That stamp thy secret soul with marks of weal or woe:
- Thou art an almanack of self, the living record of thy deeds;
- Spirit hath its scars as well as body, sore and aching in their season:
- Here is a knot,--it was a crime; there is a canker,--selfishness;
- Lo, here, the heart-wood rotten; lo, there, perchance, the sap-wood sound.
- Nature teacheth not in vain; thy works are in thee, of thee;
- Some present evil bent hath grown of older errors:
- And what if thou be walking now uprightly? Salve not thy wounds with
- poison,
- As if a petty goodness of to-day hath blotted out the sin of yesterday:
- It is well, thou hast life and light; and the Hewer showeth mercy,
- Dressing the root, pruning the branch, and looking for thy tardy fruits;
- But, even here as thou standest, cheerful belike and careless,
- The stains of ancient evil are upon thee, the record of thy wrong is in
- thee:
- For, a curse of many yesterdays is thine, many yesterdays of sin,
- That, haply heeded little now, shall blast thy many morrows.
-
- Shall then a man reck nothing, but hurl mad defiance at his Judge,
- Knowing that less than an Omnipotent cannot make the has been, not been?
- He ought,--so Satan spake; he must,--so Atheism urgeth;
- He may,--it was the libertine's thought; he doth,--the bad world said it.
- But thou of humbler heart, thou student wiser for simplicity,
- While Nature warneth thee betimes, heed the loving counsel of Religion.
- True, this change is good, and penitence most precious;
- But trust not thou thy change, nor rest upon repentance:
- For all we are corrupted at the core, smooth as surface seemeth;
- What health can bloom in a beautiful skin, when rottenness hath fed upon
- the bones?
- And guilt is parcel of us all; not thou, sweet nursling of affection,
- Art spotless, though so passing fair,--nor thou, mild patriarch of virtue.
-
- Behold then the better Tree of Life, free unto us all for grafting,
- Cut thee from the hollow root of self, to be budded on a richer Vine.
- Be desperate, O man, as of evil, so of good; tear that tunic from thee;
- The past can never be retrieved, be the present what it may.
- Vain is the penance and the scourge, vain the fast and vigil:
- The fencer's cautious skill to-day, can this erase his scars?
- It is Man's to famish as a faquir, it is Man's to die a devotee,
- Light is the torture and the toil, balanced with the wages of Eternity:
- But, it is God's to yearn in love, on the humblest, the poorest, and the
- worst,
- For He giveth freely, as a king, asking only thanks for mercy.
- Look upon this noble-hearted Substitute; seeing thy woes, He pitied thee,
- Bowed beneath the mountain of thy sin, and perished,--but for Godhead;
- There stood the Atlas in his power, and Prometheus in his love is there,
- Emptying on wretched men the blessings earned from Heaven:
- Put them not away, hide them in thy heart, poor and penitent receiver,
- Be gratitude thy counseller to good, and wholesome fear unto obedience;
- Remember, the pruning-knife is keen, cutting cankers even from the vine;
- Remember, twelve were chosen, and one among them liveth--in perdition.
-
- Yea,--for standing unatoned, the soul is a bison on the prairie,
- Hunted by those trooping wolves, the many sinful yesterdays:
- And it speedeth a terrified Deucalion, flinging back the pebble in his
- flight,
- The pebble that must add one more to those pursuing ghosts.
- O man, there is a storm behind should drive thy bark to haven;
- The foe, the foe is on thy track, patient, certain, and avenging;
- Day by day, solemnly, and silently, followeth the fearful past,--
- His step is lame, but sure; for he catcheth the present in eternity:
- And how to escape that foe, the present-past in future?
- How to avert that fate, living consequence of causes unexistent?--
- Boldly we must overleap his birth, and date above his memories,
- Grafted on the living Tree, that WAS before a yesterday:
- No refuge of a younger birth than one that saw creation
- Can hide the child of time from still condemning Yesterday.
- There, is the Sanctuary-city, mocking at the wrath of thine Avenger,
- Close at hand, with the wicket on the latch; haste for thy life, poor
- hunted one!
- The gladiator, Guilt, fighteth as of old, armed with net and dagger;
- Snaring in the mesh of yesterdays, stabbing with the poignard of to-day:
- Fly, thy sword is broken at the hilt; fly, thy shield is shivered;
- Leap the barriers, and baffle him: the arena of the past is his.
- The bounds of Guilt are the cycles of Time: thou must be safe within
- Eternity;
- The arms of God alone shall rescue thee from Yesterday.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF TO-DAY.
-
-[Illustration: "N"]
-
- Now, is the constant syllable ticking from the clock of time,
- Now, is the watchword of the wise, Now, is on the banner of the prudent.
- Cherish thy to-day and prize it well, or ever it be gulphed into the past,
- Husband it, for who can promise, if it shall have a morrow?
- Behold, thou art,--it is enough; that present care be thine;
- Leave thou the past to thy Redeemer, entrust the future to thy Friend;
- But for To-day, child of man, tend thou charily the minutes,
- The harvest of thy yesterday, the seed-corn of thy morrow.
-
- Last night died its day; and the deeds thereof were judged:
- Thou didst lay thee down as in a shroud, in darkness and death-like
- slumber:
- But at the trumpet of this morn, waking the world to resurrection,
- Thou didst arise, like others, to live a new day's life:
- Fear, lest folly give thee cause to mourn its passing presence,
- Fear, that to-morrow's sigh be not, would God it had not dawned!
-
- For, To-day the lists are set, and thou must bear thee bravely,
- Tilting for honour, duty, life, or death without reproach:
- To-day, is the trial of thy fortitude, O dauntless Mandan chief;
- To-day, is thy watch, O sentinel; To-day, thy reprieve, O captive:
- What more? To-day is the golden chance wherewith to snatch fruition,--
- Be glad, grateful, temperate: there are asps among the figs.
- For the potter's clay is in thy hands,--to mould it or to mar it at thy
- will,
- Or idly to leave it in the sun, an uncouth lump to harden.
-
- O bright presence of To-day, let me wrestle with thee, gracious angel,
- I will not let thee go, except thou bless me; bless me, then, To-day:
- O sweet garden of To-day, let me gather of thee, precious Eden;
- I have stolen bitter knowledge, give me fruits of life To-day:
- O true temple of To-day, let me worship in thee, glorious Zion;
- I find none other place nor time, than where I am To-day:
- O living rescue of To-day, let me run into thee, ark of refuge:
- I see none other hope nor chance, but standeth in To-day:
- O rich banquet of To-day, let me feast upon thee, saving manna;
- I have none other food nor store, but daily bread To-day!
-
- Behold, thou art pilot of the ship, and owner of that freighted galleon,
- Competent, with all thy weakness, to steer into safety or be lost:
- Compass and chart are in thy hand: roadstead and rocks thou knowest;
- Thou art warned of reefs and shallows; thou beholdest the harbour and its
- lights.
- What? shall thy wantonness or sloth drive the gallant vessel on the
- breakers?
- What? shall the helmsman's hand wear upon the black lee shore?
- Vain is that excuse; thou canst escape: thy mind is responsible for wrong:
- Vain that murmur; thou mayst live: thy soul is debtor for the right.
- To-day, in the voyage of thy life down the dark tide of time,
- Stand boldly to thy tiller, guide thee by the pole-star, and be safe;
- To-day, passing near the sunken rocks, the quicksands and whirlpools of
- probation,
- Leave awhile the rudder to swing round, give the wind its heading, and be
- wrecked.
-
- The crisis of man's destiny is Now, a still recurring danger;
- Who can tell the trials and temptations coming with the coming hour?
- Thou standest a target-like Sebastian, and the arrows whistle near thee;
- Who knoweth when he may be hit? for great is the company of archers.
- Each breath is burdened with a bidding, and every minute hath its mission;
- For spirits, good and bad, cluster on the thickly-peopled air:
- Sin may blast thee, grace may bless thee, good or ill this hour:
- Chance, and change, and doubt, and fear, are parasites of all.
- A man's life is a tower, with a staircase of many steps,
- That, as he toileth upward, crumble successively behind him:
- No going back; the past is an abyss; no stopping, for the present
- perisheth;
- But ever hasting on, precarious on the foothold of To-day;
- Our cares are all To-day; our joys are all To-day;
- And in one little word, our life, what is it, but--To-day?
-
-
-[Illustration: Of To-morrow]
-
-OF TO-MORROW.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- There is a floating island, forward on the stream of time,
- Buoyant with fermenting air, and borne along the rapids;
- And on that island is a siren, singing sweetly as she goeth,
- Her eyes are bright with invitation, and allurement lurketh in her cheeks;
- Many lovers, vainly pursuing, follow her beckoning finger,
- Many lovers seek her still, even to the cataract of death.
- To-morrow is that island, a vain and foolish heritage,
- And, laughing with seductive lips, Delusion hideth there:
- Often the precious present is wasted in visions of the future,
- And coy To-morrow cometh not with prophecies fulfilled.
-
- There is a fairy skiff, plying on the sea of life,
- And charitably toiling still to save the shipwrecked crews;
- Within, kindly patient, sitteth a gentle mariner,
- Piloting, through surf and strait, the fragile barks of men:
- How cheering is her voice, how skilfully she guideth,
- How nobly leading onward yet, defying even death!
- To-morrow is that skiff, a wise and welcome rescue,
- And, full of gladdening words and looks, that mariner is Hope:
- Often, the painful present is comforted by flattering the future,
- And kind To-morrow beareth half the burdens of To-day.
-
- To-morrow, whispereth weakness: and To-morrow findeth him the weaker;
- To-morrow, promiseth conscience; and behold, no To-day for a fulfilment.
- O name of happy omen unto youth, O bitter word of terror to the dotard,
- Goal of folly's lazy wish, and sorrow's ever-coming friend;
- Fraud's loophole,--caution's hint,--and trap to catch the honest,--
- Thou wealth to many poor, disgrace to many noble,
- Thou hope and fear, thou weal and woe, thou remedy, thou ruin,
- How thickly swarms of thought are clustering round To-morrow!
- The hive of memory increaseth, to every day its cell;
- There is the labour stored, the honey or corruption;
- Each morn the bees fly forth, to fill the growing comb,
- And levy golden tribute of the uncomplaining flowers:
- To-morrow is their care; they toil for rest to-morrow;
- But man deferreth duty's task, and loveth ease to-day.
-
- To-morrow, is that lamp upon the marsh, which a traveller never reacheth;
- To-morrow, the rainbow's cup, coveted prize of ignorance;
- To-morrow, the shifting anchorage, dangerous trust of mariners;
- To-morrow, the wrecker's beacon, wily snare of the destroyer.
- Reconcile convictions with delay, and To-morrow is a fatal lie;
- Frighten resolutions into action, To-morrow is a wholesome truth:
- I must, for I fear To-morrow; this is the Cassava's food;
- Why should I? let me trust To-morrow,--this is the Cassava's poison.
-
- Lo, it is the even of To-day,--a day so lately a To-morrow;
- Where are those high resolves, those hopes of yesternight?
- O faint fond heart, still shall thy whisper be, To-morrow,
- And must the growing avalanche of sin roll down that easy slope?
- Alas, it is ponderous, and moving on in might, that a Sisyphus may not
- stop it;
- But haste thee with the lever of a prayer, and stem its strength To-day:
- For its race may speedily be run, and this poor hut, thyself,
- Be whelmed in death and suffocating guilt, that dreary Alpine snow-wreath.
-
- Pensioner of life, be wise, and heed a brother's counsel;
- I also am a beadsman, with scrip and staff as thou:
- Wouldest thou be bold against the past, and all its evil memories,
- Wouldest thou be safe amid the present, its dangers and temptations,
- Wouldest thou be hopeful of the future, vague though it be and endless?
- Haste thee, repent, believe, obey! thou standest in the courage of a
- legion.
- Commend the Past to God, with all its irrevocable harm,
- Humbly, but in cheerful trust, and banish vain regrets;
- Come to Him, continually come, casting all the Present at His feet,
- Boldly, but in prayerful love, and fling off selfish cares;
- Commit the Future to His will, the viewless fated future;
- Zealously go forward with integrity, and God will bless thy faith.
- For that, feeble as thou art, there is with thee a mighty Conqueror,
- Thy Friend, the same for ever, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow;
- That Friend, changeless as eternity, Himself shall make thee friends
- Of those thy foes transformed, yesterday, to-day, and to-morrow.
-
-
-OF AUTHORSHIP.
-
-[Illustration: "G"]
-
- Great is the dignity of Authorship: I magnify mine office;
- Albeit in much feebleness I hold it thus unworthily.
- For it is to be one of a noble band, the welfare of the world,
- Whose haunt is on the lips of men, whose dwelling in their hearts,
- Who are precious in the retrospect of Memory, and walk among the visions
- of Hope,
- Who commune with the good for everlasting, and call the wisest, brother,
- Whose voice hath burst the Silence, and whose light is flung upon the
- Darkness,
- --Flashing jewels on a robe of black, and harmony bounding out of chaos,--
- Who gladden empires with their wisdom, and bless to the farthest
- generation,
- Doers of illimitable good, gainers of inestimable glory!--
- We speak but of the Magnates, we heed none humbler than the highest,
- We take no count of sorry scribes, nor waste one thought upon the
- groundlings;
- Our eyes are lifted from the multitude, groping in the dark with candles,
- To gaze upon that firmament of praise, the constellated lamps of learning.
- Ever-during witnesses of Mind, undisputed evidence of Power,
- Goodly volumes, living stones, build up their author's temple;
- Though of low estate, his rank is above princes,--though needy, he hath
- worship of the rich,
- When Genius unfurleth on the winds his banner as a mighty leader.
- Just in purpose, and self-possessed in soul, lord of many talents,
- The mental Croesus goeth forth, rejoicing in his wealth;
- Keen and clear perception gloweth on his forehead like a sunbeam,
- He readeth men at a glance, and mists roll away before him;
- The wise have set him as their captain, the foolish are rebuked at his
- presence,
- The excellent bless him with their prayers, and the wicked praise him by
- their curses;
- His voice, mighty in operation, stirreth up the world as a trumpet,
- And kings account it honour to be numbered of his friends.
-
- Rare is the worthiness of authorship: I justify mine office;
- Albeit fancies weak as mine credit not the calling.
- For it addeth immortality to dying facts, that are ready to vanish away,
- Embalming as in amber the poor insects of an hour;
- Shedding upon stocks and stones the tender light of interest,
- And illumining dark places of the earth, with radiance of classic lustre.
- It hath power to make past things present, and availeth for the present
- in the future,
- Delivering thoughts, and words, and deeds, from the outer darkness of
- oblivion.
- Where are the sages and the heroes, giants of old time?--
- Where are the mighty kings, that reigned before Agamemnon?--
- Alas they lie unwept, unhonoured, hidden in the midnight:
- Alas, for they died unchronicled: their memorial perished with them.
- Where are the nobles of Nineveh, and mitred rulers of Babylon?
- Where are the lords of Edom, and the royal pontiffs of Thebais?
- The golden Satrap, and the Tetrarch,--the Hun, and the Druid, and the
- Celt?
- The merchant princes of Phoenicia, and the minds that fashioned
- Elephanta?
- Alas, for the poet hath forgotten them; and lo! they are outcasts of
- Memory;
- Alas, that they are withered leaves, sapless and fallen from the chaplet
- of fame.
- Speak, Etruria, whose bones be these, entombed with costly care,--
- Tell out, Herculaneum, the titles that have sounded in those thy
- palaces,--
- Lycian Xanthus, thy citadels are mute, and the honour of their architects
- hath died;
- Copan and Palenque, dreamy ruins in the West, the forest hath swallowed
- up your sculptures;
- Syracuse,--how silent of the past!--Carthage, thou art blotted from
- remembrance!
- Egypt, wondrous shores, ye are buried in the sand-hills of forgetfulness!
- Alas,--for in your glorious youth Time himself was young,
- And none durst wrestle with that Angel, iron-sinewed bridegroom of Space;
- So he flew by, strong upon the wing, nor dropped one failing feather,
- Wherewith some hoary scribe might register your honour and renown.
- Beyond the broad Atlantic, in the regions of the setting sun,
- Ask of the plume-crowned Incas, that ruled in old Peru,--
- Ask of grand Caziques, and priests of the pyramids in Mexico,--
- Ask of a thousand painted tribes, high nobility of Nature,
- Who, once, could roam their own Elysian plains, free, generous, and happy,
- Who, now, degraded and in exile, having sold their fatherland for nought,
- Sink and are extinguished in the western seas, even as the sun they
- follow,--
- Where is the record of their deeds, their prowess worthy of Achilles,
- Nestor's wisdom, the chivalry of Manlius, the native eloquence of Cicero,
- The skill of Xenophon, the spirit of Alcibiades, the firmness of a
- Maccabaean mother,
- Brotherly love that Antigone might envy, the honour and the fortitude of
- Regulus?
- Alas, their glory and their praise have vanished like a summer cloud;
- Alas! that they are dead indeed; they are not written down in the Book of
- the living.
-
- High is the privilege of Authorship: I purify mine office;
- Albeit earthy stains pollute it in my hands.
- For it is to the world a teacher and a guide, Mentor of that gay
- Telemachus;
- Warning, comforting, and helping,--a lover and friend of Man.
- Heaven's almoner, Earth's health, patient minister of goodness,
- With kind and zealous pen, the wise religious blesseth:
- Nature's worshipper, and neophyte of grace, rich in tender sympathies,
- With kindled soul and flashing eye, the poet poureth out his heartful:
- Priest of truth, champion of innocence, warder of the gates of praise,
- Carefully with sifting search laboureth the pale historian:
- Error's enemy, and acolyte of science, firm in sober argument,
- The calm philosopher marshalleth his facts, noting on his page their
- principles.
- These pour mercies upon men; and others, little less in honour,
- By cheerful wit and graphic tale refreshening the harassed spirit.
- But, there be other some beside, buyers and sellers in the temple,
- Who shame their high vocation, greedy of inglorious gain;
- There be, who fabricating books, heed of them meanly as of merchandise;
- And seek nor use, nor truth, nor fame, but sell their minds for lucre:
- O false brethren! ye wot indeed the labour, but are witless of the love;
- O lying prophets, chilled in soul, unquickened by the life of
- inspiration!--
- And there be, who, frivolous and vain, seek to make others foolish,
- Snaring youth by loose sweet song, and age by selfish maxim;
- Cleverly heartless, and wittily profane, they swell the river of
- corruption:
- Brilliant satellites of sin,--my soul, be not found among their company.
- And there be, who, haters of religion, toil to prove it priestcraft,
- Owning none other aim nor hope, but to confound the good:
- Woe unto them! for their works shall live; yea, to their utter
- condemnation:
- Woe! for their own handwriting shall testify against them for ever.
-
- Pure is the happiness of Authorship: I glorify mine office;
- Albeit lightly having sipped the cup of its lower pleasures.
- For it is to feel with a father's heart, when he yearneth on the child of
- his affections;
- To rejoice in a man's own miniature world, gladdened by its rare
- arrangement.
- The poem, is it not a fabric of mind? we love what we create:
- That choice and musical order,--how pleasant is the toil of composition!
- Yea, when the volume of the universe was blazoned out in beauty by its
- Author,
- God was glad, and blessed His work; for it was very good.
- And shall not the image of his Maker be happy in his own mind's doing,
- Looking on the structure he hath reared, gratefully with sweet
- complacence?
- Shall not the Minerva of his brain, panoplied and perfect in proportions,
- Gladden the soul and give light unto the eyes, of him the travailing
- parent?
- Go to the sculptor, and ask him of his dreams,--wherefore are his nights
- so moonlit?
- Angel faces, and beautiful shapes, fascinate the pale Pygmalion:
- Go to the painter, and trace his reveries,--wherefore are his days so
- sunny?
- Choice design, and skilful colouring, charm the flitting hours of
- Parrhasius:
- Even so, walking in his buoyancy, intoxicate with fairy fancies,
- The young enthusiast of authorship goeth on his way rejoicing:
- Behold,--he is gallantly attended; legions of thrilling thoughts
- Throng about the standard of his mind, and call his Will their captain;
- Behold,--his court is as a monarch's; ideas, and grand imaginations
- Swell, with gorgeous cavalcade, the splendour of his Spiritual State;
- Behold,--he is delicately served: for oftentimes, in solitary calmness,
- Some mental fair Egeria smileth on her Numa's worship;
- Behold,--he is happy; there is gladness in his eye, and his heart is a
- sealed fountain,
- Bounding secretly with joys unseen, and keeping down its ecstasy of
- pleasure!
-
- Yea: how dignified, and worthy, full of privilege and happiness,
- Standeth in majestic independence the self-ennobled Author!
- For God hath blessed him with a mind, and cherished it in tenderness and
- purity,
- Hath taught it in the whisperings of wisdom, and added all the riches of
- content:
- Therefore, leaning on his God, a pensioner for soul and body,
- His spirit is the subject of none other, calling no man Master.
- His hopes are mighty and eternal, scorning small ambitions:
- He hideth from the pettiness of praise, and pitieth the feebleness of
- envy.
- If he meet honours, well; it may be his humility to take them:
- If he be rebuked, better; his veriest enemy shall teach him.
- For the master-mind hath a birthright of eminence; his cradle is an
- eagle's eyrie:
- Need but to wait till his wings are grown, and Genius soareth to the sun:
- To creeping things upon the mountain leaveth he the gradual ascent,
- Resting his swiftness on the summit only for a higher flight.
- Glad in clear good-conscience, lightly doth he look for commendation;
- What, if the prophet lacketh honour? for he can spare that praise:
- The honest giant careth not to be patted on the back by pigmies;
- Flatter greatness, he brooketh it good-humouredly: blame him,--thou
- tiltest at a pyramid:
- Yet, just censure of the good never can he hear without contrition;
- Neither would he miss one wise man's praise, for scarce is that jewel and
- costly:
- Only for the herd of common minds, and the vulgar trumpetings of fame,
- If aught he heedeth in the matter, his honour is sought in their neglect.
- Slender is the marvel, and little is the glory, when round his luscious
- fruits
- The worm and the wasp and the multitude of flies are gathered as to
- banquet;
- Fashion's freak, and the critical sting, and the flood of flatteries he
- scorneth;
- Cheerfully asking of the crowd the favour to forget him:
- The while his blooming fruits ripen in richer fragrance,
- A feast for the few,--and the many yet unborn,--who still shall love
- their savour.
-
- So then, humbly with his God, and proudly independent of his fellows,
- Walketh, in pleasures multitudinous, the man ennobled by his pen:
- He hath built up, glorious architect, a monument more durable than brass;
- His children's children shall talk of him in love, and teach their sons
- his honour:
- His dignity hath set him among princes, the universe is debtor to his
- worth,
- His privilege is blessing for ever, his happiness shineth now,
- For he standeth of that grand Election, each man one among a thousand,
- Whose sound is gone out into all lands, and their words to the end of the
- world!
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Mystery.]
-
-OF MYSTERY.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- All things being are in mystery; we expound mysteries by mysteries;
- And yet the secret of them all is one in simple grandeur:
- All intricate, yet each path plain, to those who know the way;
- All unapproachable, yet easy of access, to them that hold the key:
- We walk among labyrinths of wonder, but thread the mazes with a clue;
- We sail in chartless seas, but behold! the pole-star is above us.
- For, counting down from God's good will, thou meltest every riddle into
- Him,
- The axiom of reason is an undiscovered God, and all things live in His
- ubiquity:
- There is only one great secret; but that one hideth everywhere;
- How should the infinite be understood in Time, when it stretcheth on
- ungrasped for ever?
- Can a halting Oedipus of earth guess that enigma of the universe?
- Not one: the sword of faith must cut the Gordian knot of nature.
-
- God, pervading all, is in all things the mystery of each;
- The wherefore of its character and essence, the fountain of its virtues
- and its beauties.
- The child asketh of its mother,--Wherefore is the violet so sweet?
- The mother answereth her babe,--Darling, God hath willed it.
- And sages, diving into science, have but a profundity of words;
- They track for some few links the circling chain of consequence,
- And then, after doubts and disputations, are left where they began,
- At the bald conclusion of a clown, things are because they are.
- Wherefore are the meadows green, is it not to gratify the eye?
- But why should greenness charm the eye? such is God's good will.
- Wherefore is the ear attuned to a pleasure in musical sounds,
- And who set a number to those sounds, and fixed the laws of harmony?
- Who taught the bird to build its nest, or lent the shrub its life,
- Or poised in the balances of order the power to attract and to repel?
- Who continueth the worlds, and the sea, and the heart, in motion?
- Who commanded gravitation to tie down all upon its sphere?--
- For, even as a limestone cliff is an aggregate of countless shells,
- One riddle concrete of many, a mystery compact of mysteries,
- So God, cloud-capped in immensity, standeth the cohesion of all things,
- And secrets, sublimely indistinct, permeate that Universe, Himself;
- As is the whole, so are the parts, whether they be mighty or minute,
- The sun is not more unexplained than the tissue of an emmet's wing.
-
- Thus then, omnipresent Deity worketh His unbiassed mind,
- A mind, one in moral, but infinitely multiplied in means:
- And the uniform prudence of His will cometh to be counted law,
- Till mutable man fancieth volition stirring in the potter's clay:
- God, a wise father, showeth not His reasons to His babes;
- But willeth in secresy and goodness: for causes generate dispute:
- Then we, His darkling children, watch that invariable purpose,
- And invest the passive creature with its Maker's energy and skill:
- Therefore, they of old time stopped short of God in idols,
- Therefore, in these latter days, we heed not the Jehovah in His works.
- Mystery is God's great name; He is the mystery of goodness:
- Some other, from the hierarchs of heaven, usurped the mystery of sin.
- God is the King, yea even of Himself; He crowned Himself with holiness;
- The burning circlet of iniquity another found and wore.
- God is separate, even from His attributes; but He willed eternally the
- good;
- Therefore freely, though unchangeably, is wise, righteous, and loving:
- But ambition, open unto angels, saw the evil, flung aside from the
- beginning,
- It was Lucifer that saw, and nothing loathed those black unclaimed
- regalia,
- So he coveted and stole, to be counted for a king, antagonist of God,
- But when he touched the leprous robes, behold! a cheated traitor.
-
- For self-existence, charactered with love, with power, wisdom, and
- ubiquity,
- Could not dwell alone, but willed and worked creation.
- Thus, in continual exhalation, darkening the void with matter,
- Sprang from prolific Deity the creatures of His skill.
- And beings living on His breath, were needfully less perfect than Himself,
- Therefore less capable of bliss, whereat His benevolence was bounded;
- So, to make the capability expand, intensely progressive to eternity,
- He suffered darkness to illustrate the light, and pain to heighten
- pleasure:
- To heap up happiness on souls He loved, allowed He sin and sorrow,
- And then to guilt and grief and shame, He brought unbidden amnesty:
- Sinless, none had been redeemed, nor wrapt again in God:
- Sorrowless, no conflict had been known, and Heaven had been mulcted of
- its comfort:
- Yea, with evil unexhibited, probationary toils unfelt,
- Men had not appreciated good, nor angels valued their security.
- Herein, to reason's eye, is revealed the mystery of goodness,
- Blessing through permitted woe, and teaching by the mystery of sin.
-
- O Christian, whose chastened curiosity loveth things mysterious,
- Accounting them shadows and eclipses of Him the one great light,
- Look now, satisfied with faith, on minds that judge by sense,
- And, dull from contemplating matter, take small heed of spirit.
- Toiling feebly upward, their argument tracketh from below,
- They catch the latest consequent, and prove the nearest cause:
- What is this? that a seed produced a seed, and so for a thousand seasons;
- Ascend a thousand steps, thy ladder leaveth thee in air:
- Thou canst not climb to God, and short of Him is nothing;
- There is no cause for aught we see, but in His present will.
- Begin from the Maker, thou carriest down His attributes to reptiles,
- The sharded beetle and the lizard live and move in Him:
- Begin from the creature, corruption and infirmity mar thy foolish toil,
- Heap Ossa on Olympus, how much art thou nearer to the stars?
- It is easy running from a mountain's top down to the valleys at its foot,
- But difficult and steep the laborious ascent, and feebly shalt thou reach
- it:
- Yet man, beginning from himself, that first deluding mystery,
- Hopeth from the pit of lies to struggle up to truth;
- So, taxing knowledge to its strength, he pusheth one step further,
- And fancieth complacently that much is done by reaching a remote effect:
- Then he maketh answer to himself, as a silly nurse to her little one,
- Evading, in a mist of words, hard things he cannot solve;
- Till, like an ostrich in the desert, he burieth his head in atoms,
- Thinking that, if he is blind, no sun can shine in heaven.
-
- Therefore cometh it to pass, that an atheist is ever the most credulous,
- Snatching at any foolish cause, that may dispel his doubts;
- And, even as it were for ridicule, a spectacle for men and angels,
- The captious and cautious unbeliever is of all men weakest to believe:
- Cut from the anchorage of God, his bark is a plaything of the billows;
- The compass of his principle is broken, the rudder of his faith unshipped:
- Chance and Fate, in a stultified antagonism, govern all for him;
- Truth sprang from the conflict of falsities, and the multitude of
- accidents hath bred design!
- Where is the imposture so gross, that shall not entrap his curiosity?
- What superstition is so abject, that it doth not blanch his cheek?
- Whereof can he be sure, with whom Chaos is substitute for Order?
- How should his silly structure stand, a pyramid built upon its apex?--
- Yea, I have seen grey-headed men, the bastard slips of science,
- Go for light to glow-worms, while they scorn the sun at noon:
- Men, who fear no God, trembling at a gipsy's curse,
- Men, who jest at revelation, clinging to a madman's prophecy!
-
- There is a pleasing dread in the fashion of all mysteries,
- For hope is mixed therein and fear; who shall divine their issues?
- Even the orphan, wandering by night, lost on dreary moors,
- Is sensible of some vague bliss amidst his shapeless terrors;
- The buoyancy of instant expectation, spurring on the mind to venture,
- Overbeareth, in its energy, the cramp and the chill of apprehension.
- There is a solitary pride, when the heart, in new importance,
- Writeth gladly on its archives, the secrets none other men have seen:
- And there is a caged terror, evermore wrestling with the mind,
- When crime hath whispered his confession, and the secrets are written
- there in blood:
- The village maiden is elated at the tenderly confided tale:
- The bandit's wife with sickening fear guessed the premeditated murder:
- The sage, with triumph on his brow, hideth up his deep discovery;
- The idlest clown shall delve all day, to find a hidden treasure.
-
- For mystery is man's life; we wake to the whisperings of novelty:
- And what, though we lie down disappointed? we sleep, to wake in hope.
- The letter, or the news, the chances and the changes, matters that may
- happen,
- Sweeten or embitter daily life with the honey-gall of mystery.
- For we walk blindfold,--and a minute may be much,--a step may reach the
- precipice;
- What earthly loss, what heavenly gain, may not this day produce?
- Levelled of Alps and Andes, without its valleys and ravines,
- How dull the face of earth, unfeatured of both beauty and sublimity:
- And so, shorn of mystery, beggared in its hopes and fears,
- How flat the prospect of existence, mapped by intuitive foreknowledge.
- Praise God, creature of earth, for the mercies linked with secresy,
- That spices of uncertainty enrich the cup of life;
- Praise God, His hosts on high, for the mysteries that make all joy;
- What were intelligence with nothing more to learn, or heaven, in eternity
- of sameness?
-
- To number every mystery were to sum the sum of all things:
- None can exhaust a theme, whereof God is example and similitude.
- Nevertheless, take a garland from the garden, a handful from the harvest,
- Some scattered drops of spray from the ceaseless mighty cataract.
- Whence are we,--whither do we tend,--how do we feel, and reason?
- How strange a thing is man, a spirit saturating clay!
- When doth soul make embryos immortal,--how do they rank hereafter,--
- And will the unconscious idiot be quenched in death as nothing?
- In essence immaterial, are these minds, as it were, thinking machines?
- For, to understand may but rightly be to use a mechanism all possess,
- So that in reading or hearing of another, a man shall seem unto himself
- To be recollecting images or arguments, native and congenial to his mind:
- And yet, what shall we say,--who can arede the riddle?
- The brain may be clockwork, and mind its spring, mechanism quickened by a
- spirit.
-
- Who so shrewd as rightly to divide life, instinct, reason;
- Trees, zoophytes, creatures of the plain, and savage men among them?
- Hath the mimosa instinct,--or the scallop more than life,--
- Or the dog less than reason,--or the brute-man more than instinct?
- What is the cause of health,--and the gendering of disease?
- Why should arsenic kill, and whence is the potency of antidotes?
- Behold, a morsel,--eat and die; the term of thy probation is expired:
- Behold, a potion,--drink and be alive; the limit of thy trial is enlarged.
- Who can expound beauty? or explain the character of nations?
- Who will furnish a cause for the epidemic force of fashion?
- Is there a moral magnetism living in the light of example?
- Is practice electricity?--Yet all these are but names.
- Doth normal Art imprison, in its works, spirit translated into substance,
- So that the statue, the picture, or the poem, are crystals of the mind?
- And doth Philosophy with sublimating skill shred away the matter,
- Till rarefied intelligence exudeth even out of stocks and stones?
-
- O Mysteries, ye all are one, the mind of an inexplicable Architect
- Dwelleth alike in each, quickening and moving in them all.
- Fields, and forests, and cities of men, their woes and wealth and works,
- And customs, and contrivances of life, with all we see and know,
- For a little way, a little while, ye hang dependent on each other,
- But all are held in one right-hand, and by His will ye are.
- Here is an answer unto mystery, an unintelligible God,
- This is the end and the beginning, it is reason that He be not understood.
- Therefore it were probable and just, even to a man's weak thinking,
- To have one for God who always may be learnt, yet never fully known:
- That He, from whom all mysteries spring, in whom they all converge,
- Throned in His sublimity beyond the grovellings of lower intellect,
- Should claim to be truer than man's truest, the boasted certainty of
- numbers,
- Should baffle his arithmetic, confound his demonstrations, and paralyse
- the might of his necessity,
- Standing supreme as the mystery of mysteries, everywhere, yet impersonate,
- Essential One in three, essential Three in one!
-
-
-OF GIFTS.
-
-[Illustration: "I"]
-
- I had a seeming friend;--I gave him gifts, and he was gone:
- I had an open enemy;--I gave him gifts, and won him:
- Common friendship standeth on equalities, and cannot bear a debt;
- But the very heart of hate melteth at a good man's love:
- Go to, then, thou that sayest,--I will give and rivet the links:
- For pride shall kick at obligation, and push the giver from him.
- The covetous spirit may rejoice, revelling in thy largess,
- But chilling selfishness will mutter,--I must give again:
- The vain heart may be glad, in this new proof of man's esteem,
- But the same idolatry of self abhorreth thoughts of thanking.
-
- Nevertheless, give; for it shall be a discriminating test
- Separating honesty from falsehood, weeding insincerity from friendship.
- Give, it is like God; thou weariest the bad with benefits:
- Give, it is like God; thou gladdenest the good by gratitude.
- Give to thy near of kin, for providence hath stationed thee his helper:
- Yet see that he claim not, as his right, thy freewill offering of duty.
- Give to the young, they love it; neither hath the poison of suspicion
- Spoilt the flavour of their thanks, to look for latent motives.
- Give to merit, largely give; his conscious heart will bless thee:
- It is not flattery, but love,--the sympathy of men his brethren.
- Give, for encouragement in good; the weak desponding mind
- Hath many foes, and much to do, and leaneth on its friends.
- Yet heed thou wisely these; give seldom to thy better;
- For such obtrusive boon shall savour of presumption;
- Or, if his courteous bearing greet thy proffered kindness,
- Shall not thine independent honesty be vexed at the semblance of a bribe?
- Moreover, heed thou this; give to thine equal charily,
- The occasion fair and fitting, the gift well chosen and desired:
- Hath he been prosperous and blest? a flower may show thy gladness;
- Is he in need? with liberal love, tender him the well-filled purse:
- Disease shall welcome friendly care in grapes and precious unguents;
- And where a darling child hath died, give praise, and hope, and sympathy.
- Yet once more, heed thou this; give to the poor discreetly,
- Nor suffer idle sloth to lean upon thy charitable arm:
- To diligence give, as to an equal, on just and fit occasion;
- Or he bartereth his hard-earned self-reliance for the casual lottery of
- gifts.
- The timely loan hath added nerve, where easy liberality would palsy;
- Work and wages make a light heart; but the mendicant asked with a heavy
- spirit.
- A man's own self-respect is worth unto him more than money,
- And evil is the charity that humbleth, and maketh man less happy.
-
- There are who sow liberalities, to reap the like again;
- But men accept his boon, scorning the shallow usurer:
- I have known many such a fisherman lose his golden baits:
- And oftentimes the tame decoy escapeth with the flock.
- Yea, there are who give unto the poor, to gain large interest of God,--
- Fool,--to think His wealth is money, and not mind:
- And haply after thine alms, thy calculated givings,
- The hurricane shall blast thy crops, and sink the homeward ship;
- Then shall thy worldly soul murmur that the balances were false,
- Thy trader's mind shall think of God,--He stood not to His bargain!
-
- Give, saith the preacher, be large in liberality, yield to the holy
- impulse,
- Tarry not for cold consideration, but cheerfully and freely scatter.
- So, for complacency of conscience, in a gush of counterfeited charity,
- He that hath not wherewith to be just, selfishly presumeth to be generous:
- The debtor, and the rich by wrong, are known among the band of the
- benevolent;
- And men extol the noble hearts, who rob that they may give.
- Receivers are but little prone to challenge rights of giving,
- Nor stop to test, for conscience-sake, the righteousness of mammon:
- And the zealot in a cause is a receiver, at the hand which bettereth his
- cause;
- And thus an unsuspected bribe shall blind the good man's judgment:
- It is easy to excuse greatness, and the rich are readily forgiven:
- What, if his gains were evil, sanctified by using them aright?
- O shallow flatterer, self-interest is thy thought,
- Hopeless of partaking in the like, thou too wouldst scorn the giver.
-
- Money hath its value; and the scatterer thereof his thanks:
- Few men, drinking at a rivulet, stop to consider its source.
- The hand that closeth on an alm, be it for necessities or zeal,
- Hath small scruple whence it came: Vespasian rejoiceth in his tribute.
- Therefore have colleges and hospitals risen upon orphans' wrongs,
- Chapels and cathedrals have thriven on the welcome wages of iniquity,
- And fraud, in evil compensation, hath salved his guilty conscience,
- Not by restoring to the cheated, but by ostentatious giving to the
- grateful.
-
- So, those who reap rejoice; and reaping, bless the sower:
- No one is eager to discover, where discovery tendeth unto loss:
- Yet, if knowledge of a theft make gainers thereby guilty,
- Can he be altogether innocent, who never asked the honesty of gain?
- Therefore, O preacher, zealous for charity, temper thy warm appeal,--
- Warning the debtor and unjustly rich, they may not dare to give:
- To do good is a privilege and guerdon: how shouldst thou rejoice
- If ill-got gifts of presumptuous fraud be offered on the altar?
- The question is not of degrees; unhallowed alms are evil;
- Discourage and reject alike the obolus or talent of iniquity.
-
- Yet more, be careful that, unworthily, thou gain not an advantage over
- weakness,
- Unstable souls, fervent and profuse, fluttered by the feeling of the
- moment;
- For eloquence swayeth to its will the feeble and the conscious of defect:
- Rashly give they, and afterward are sad,--a gift that doubly erred.
- It was the worldliness of priestcraft that accounted alms-giving for
- charity;
- And many a father's penitence hath steeped his son in penury;
- Yet, considered he lightly the guilt of a death-bed selfishness
- That strove to take with him, for gain, the gold no longer his;
- So he died in a false peace, and dying robbed his kindred;
- The cunning friar at his side having cheated both the living and the dead.
-
- Charity sitteth on a fair hill-top, blessing far and near,
- But her garments drop ambrosia, chiefly, on the violets around her:
- She gladdeneth indeed the map-like scene, stretching to the verge of the
- horizon,
- For her angel face is lustrous and beloved, even as the moon in heaven:
- But the light of that beatific vision gloweth in serener concentration
- The nearer to her heart, and nearer to her home,--that hill-top where she
- sitteth:
- Therefore is she kind unto her kin, yearning in affection on her
- neighbours,
- Giving gifts to those around, who know and love her well.
- But the counterfeit of charity, an hypocrite of earth, not a grace of
- heaven,
- Seeketh not to bless at home, for her nearer aspect is ill-favoured:
- Therefore hideth she for shame, counting that pride humility,
- And none of those around her hearth are gladdened by her gifts:
- Rather, with an overreaching zeal, flingeth she her bounty to the
- stranger,
- And scattered prodigalities abroad compensate for meanness in her home:
- For benefits showered on the distant shine in unmixed beauty,
- So that even she may reap their undiscerning praise:
- Therefore native want hath pined, where foreign need was fattened;
- Woman been crushed by the tyrannous hand that upheld the flag of
- liberality;
- Poverty been prisoned up and starved, by hearts that are maudlin upon
- crime;
- And freeborn babes been manacled by men, who liberate the sturdy slave.
-
- Policy counselleth a gift, given wisely and in season,
- And policy afterwards approveth it, for great is the influence of gifts.
- The lover, unsmiled upon before, is welcome for his jewelled bauble;
- The righteous cause without a fee, must yield to bounteous guilt:
- How fair is a man in thine esteem, whose just discrimination seeketh thee,
- And so, discerning merit, honoureth it with gifts!
- Yea, let the cause appear sufficient, and the motive clear and
- unsuspicious,
- As given to one who cannot help, or proving honest thanks,
- There liveth not one among a million, who is proof against the charm of
- liberality,
- And flattery, that boon of praise, hath power with the wisest.
-
- Man is of three natures, craving all for charity;
- It is not enough to give him meats, withholding other comfort:
- For the mind starveth, and the soul is scorned, and so the human animal
- Eateth his unsatisfying pittance, a thankless heartless pauper:
- Yet would he bless thee and be grateful, didst thou feed his spirit,
- And teach him that thine alms-givings are charities, are loves:
- --I saw a beggar in the street, and another beggar pitied him;
- Sympathy sank into his soul, and the pitied one felt happier:
- Anon passed by a cavalcade, children of wealth and gaiety;
- They laughed, and looked upon the beggar, and the gallants flung him gold;
- He, poor spirit-humbled wretch, gathered up their givings with a curse,
- And went--to share it with his brother, the beggar who had pitied him!
-
-
-OF BEAUTY.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Thou mightier than Manoah's son, whence is thy great strength,
- And wherein the secret of thy craft, O charmer charming wisely?--
- For thou art strong in weakness, and in artlessness well skilled,
- Constant in the multitude of change, and simple amidst intricate
- complexity.
- Folly's shallow lip can ask the deepest question,
- And many wise in many words should answer, what is beauty?--
- Who shall separate the hues that flicker on a dying dolphin,
- Or analyse the jewelled lights that deck the peacock's train,
- Or shrewdly mix upon a palette the tints of an iridescent spar,
- Or set in rank the wandering shades about a watered silk?
-
- For beauty is intangible, vague, ill to be defined;
- She hath the coat of a chameleon, changing while we watch it.
- Strangely woven is the web, disorderly yet harmonious,
- A glistering robe of mingled mesh, that may not be unravelled.
- It is shot with heaven's blue, the soul of summer skies,
- And twisted strings of light, the mind of noonday suns,
- And ruddy gleams of life, that roll along the veins,
- A coat of many colours, running curiously together.
- There is threefold beauty for man; twofold beauty for the animal;
- And the beauty of inanimates is single: body, temper, spirit.
- Multiplied in endless combination, issue the changeable results;
- Each class verging on the other twain, with imperceptible gradation;
- And every individual in each having his propriety of difference,
- So that the meanest of creation bringeth in a tribute of the beautiful.
- Yea, from the worst in favour shineth out a fitness of design,
- The patent mark of beauty, its Maker's name imprest.
- For the great Creator's seal is set to all His works;
- Its quarterings are Attributes of praise, and all the shield is Beauty:
- So, that heraldic blazon is Creation's common signet;
- And the universal family of life goeth in the colours of its Lord:
- But each one, as a several son, shall bear those arms with a difference;
- Beauty, various in phase, and similar in seeming oppositions.
- The coins of old Rome were struck with a diversity for each,
- Barely two be found alike, in every Caesar's image:
- So, note thou the seals, ranged round the charters of the Universe,
- The finger of God is the stamp upon them all, but each hath its separate
- variety.
-
- Beauty, theme of innocence, how may guilt discourse thee?
- Let holy angels sing thy praise, for man hath marred thy visage.
- Still the maimed torso of a Theseus can gladden taste with its
- proportions;
- Though sin hath shattered every limb, how comely are the fragments!
- And music leaveth on the ear a memory of sweet sounds;
- And broken arches charm the sight with hints of fair completeness.
- So, while humbled at the ruin, be thou grateful for the relics;
- Go forth, and look on all around with kind uncaptious eye:
- Freely let us wander through these unfrequented ways,
- And talk of glorious beauty, filling all the world.
-
- For beauty hideth everywhere, that Reason's child may seek her,
- And having found the gem of price, may set it in God's crown.
- Beauty nestleth in the rosebud, or walketh the firmament with planets,
- She is heard in the beetle's evening hymn, and shouteth in the matins of
- the sun;
- The cheek of the peach is glowing with her smile, her splendour blazeth
- in the lightning,
- She is the dryad of the woods, the naiad of the streams;
- Her golden hair hath tapestried the silkworm's silent chamber,
- And to her measured harmonies the wild waves beat in time;
- With tinkling feet at eventide she danceth in the meadow,
- Or, like a Titan, lieth stretched athwart the ridgy Alps;
- She is rising, in her veil of mist, a Venus from the waters,--
- Men gaze upon the loveliness,--and lo, it is beautiful exceedingly;
- She, with the might of a Briareus, is dragging down the clouds upon the
- mountain,--
- Men look upon the grandeur,--and lo, it is excellent in glory.
- For I judge that beauty and sublimity be but the lesser and the great,
- Sublime, as magnified to giants, and beautiful, diminished into fairies.
- It were a false fancy to solve all beauty by desire,
- It were a lowering thought to expound sublimity by dread.
- Cowardly men with trembling hearts have feared the furious storm,
- Nor felt its thrilling beauty; but is it then not beautiful?
- And careless men, at summer's eve, have loved the dimpled waves;
- O that smile upon the seas,--hath it no sublimity?
- Dost thou nothing know of this,--to be awed at woman's beauty?
- Nor, with exhilarated heart, to hail the crashing thunder?
- Thou hast much to learn, that never found a fearfulness in flowers;
- Thou hast missed of joy, that never basked in beauties of the terrible.
-
- Show me an enthusiast in aught; he hath noted one thing narrowly,
- And lo, his keenness hath detected the one dear hiding place of beauty:
- Then he boasteth, simple soul, flattered by discovery,
- Fancying that no science else can show so fair and precious:
- He hath found a ray of light, and cherisheth the treasure in his closet,
- Mocking at those larger minds, that bathe in floods of noon;
- Lo, what a jewel hath he gotten,--this is the monopolist of beauty,--
- And lightly heeding all beside, he poured his yearnings thitherward:
- Be it for love, or for learning, habit, art, or nature,
- Exclusive thought is all the cause of this particular zeal.
- But like intensity of fitness, kind and skilful beauty,
- So pleasant to his mind in one thing, filleth all beside:
- From the waking minute of a chrysalis, to the perfect cycle of chronology,
- From the centipede's jointed armour to the mammoth's fossil ribs,
- From the kingfisher's shrill note, to the cataract's thundering bass,
- From the greensward's grateful hues, to the fascinating eye of woman,
- Beauty, various in all things, setteth up her home in each,
- Shedding graciously around an omnipresent smile.
-
- There is beauty in the rolling clouds, and placid shingle beach,
- In feathery snows, and whistling winds, and dun electric skies;
- There is beauty in the rounded woods, dank with heavy foliage,
- In laughing fields, and dinted hills, the valley and its lake;
- There is beauty in the gullies, beauty on the cliffs, beauty in sun and
- shade,
- In rocks and rivers, seas and plains,--the earth is drowned in beauty.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Beauty coileth with the watersnake, and is cradled in the shrewmouse's
- nest,
- She flitteth out with evening bats, and the soft mole hid her in his
- tunnel;
- The limpet is encamped upon the shore, and beauty not a stranger to his
- tent;
- The silvery dace and golden carp thread the rushes with her:
- She saileth into clouds with an eagle, she fluttereth into tulips with a
- humming bird;
- The pasturing kine are of her company, and she prowleth with the leopard
- in his jungle.
-
- Moreover, for the reasonable world, its words, and acts, and speculations,
- For frail and fallen manhood, in his every work and way,
- Beauty, wrecked and stricken, lingereth still among us,
- And morsels of that shattered sun are dropt upon the darkness.
- Yea, with savages and boors, the mean, the cruel, and besotted,
- Ever in extenuating grace hide some relics of the beautiful.
- Gleams of kindness, deeds of courage, patience, justice, generosity,
- Truth welcomed, knowledge prized, rebukes taken with contrition,
- All, in various measure, have been blest with some of these,
- And never yet hath lived the man, utterly beggared of the beautiful.
-
- Beauty is as crystal in the torchlight, sparkling on the poet's page;
- Virgin honey of Hymettus, distilled from the lips of the orator;
- A savour of sweet spikenard, anointing the hands of liberality;
- A feast of angels' food set upon the tables of religion.
- She is seen in the tear of sorrow, and heard in the exuberance of mirth;
- She goeth out early with the huntsman, and watcheth at the pillow of
- disease.
- Science in his secret laws hath found out latent beauty,
- Sphere and square, and cone and curve, are fashioned by her rules:
- Mechanism met her in his forces, fancy caught her in its flittings,
- Day is lightened by her eyes, and her eyelids close upon the night.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Beauty is dependence in the babe, a toothless tender nurseling;
- Beauty is boldness in the boy, a curly rosy truant;
- Beauty is modesty and grace in fair retiring girlhood;
- Beauty is openness and strength in pure high-minded youth:
- Man, the noble and intelligent, gladdeneth earth with beauty,
- And woman's beauty sunneth him, as with a smile from heaven.
-
- There is none enchantment against beauty, Magician for all time,
- Whose potent spells of sympathy have charmed the passive world:
- Verily, she reigneth a Semiramis; there is no might against her;
- The lords of every land are harnessed to her triumph.
- Beauty is conqueror of all, nor ever yet was found among the nations
- That iron-moulded mind, full proof against her power.
- Beauty, like a summer's day, subdueth by sweet influences;
- Who can wrestle against Sleep?--yet is that giant, very gentleness.
-
- Ajax may rout a phalanx, but beauty shall enslave him single-handed;
- Pericles ruled Athens, yet he is the servant of Aspasia:
- Light were the labour, and often-told the tale, to count the victories of
- beauty,--
- Helen, and Judith, and Omphale, and Thais, many a trophied name.
- At a glance the misanthrope was softened, and repented of his vows,
- When Beauty asked, he gave, and banned her--with a blessing;
- The cold ascetic loved the smile that lit his dismal cell,
- And kindly stayed her step, and wept when she departed;
- The bigot abbess felt her heart gush with a mother's feeling,
- When looking on some lovely face beneath the cloister's shade;
- Usury freed her without ransom; the buccaneer was gentle in her presence;
- Madness kissed her on the cheek, and Idiotcy brightened at her coming:
- Yea, the very cattle in the field, and hungry prowlers of the forest
- With fawning homage greeted her, as Beauty glided by.
- A welcome guest unbidden, she is dear to every hearth;
- A glad spontaneous growth of friends is springing round her rest:
- Learning sitteth at her feet, and Idleness laboureth to please her,
- Folly hath flung aside his bells, and leaden Dulness gloweth;
- Prudence is rash in her defence; Frugality filleth her with riches;
- Despair came to her for counsel; and Bereavement was glad when she
- consoled;
- Justice putteth up his sword at the tear of supplicating beauty,
- And Mercy, with indulgent haste, hath pardoned beauty's sin.
-
- For beauty is the substitute for all things, satisfying every absence,
- The rich delirious cup to make all else forgotten:
- She also is the zest unto all things, enhancing every presence,
- The rare and precious ambergris, to quicken each perfume.
- O beauty, thou art eloquent; yea, though slow of tongue,
- Thy breast, fair Phryne, pleaded well before the dazzled judge:
- O beauty, thou art wise; yea, though teaching falsely,
- Sages listen, sweet Corinna, to commend thy lips;
- O beauty, thou art ruler; yea, though lowly as a slave,
- Myrrha, that imperial brow is monarch of thy lord;
- O beauty, thou art winner; yea, though halting in the race,
- Hippodame, Camilla, Atalanta,--in gracefulness ye fascinate your umpires;
- O beauty, thou art rich; yea, though clad in russet,
- Attalus cannot boast his gold against the wealth of beauty;
- O beauty, thou art noble; yea, though Esther be an exile,
- Set her up on high, ye kings, and bow before the majesty of beauty!
-
- Friend and scholar, who, in charity, hast walked with me thus far,
- We have wandered in a wilderness of sweets, tracking beauty's footsteps:
- And ever as we rambled on among the tangled thicket,
- Many a startled thought hath tempted further roaming:
- Passion, sympathetic influence, might of imaginary haloes,--
- Many the like would lure aside, to hunt their wayward themes.
- And, look you!--from his ferny bed in yonder hazel coppice,
- A dappled hart hath flung aside the boughs and broke away;
- He is fleet and capricious as the zephyr, and with exulting bounds
- Hieth down a turfy lane between the sounding woods;
- His neck is garlanded with flowers, his antlers hung with chaplets,
- And rainbow-coloured ribbons stream adown his mottled flanks:
- Should we follow?--foolish hunters, thus to chase afoot,--
- Who can track the airy speed and doubling wiles of Taste?
-
- For the estimates of human beauty, dependent upon time and clime,
- Manifold and changeable, are multiplied the more by strange gregarious
- fashion:
- And notable ensamples in the great turn to epidemics in the lower,
- So that a nation's taste shall vary with its rulers.
- Stern Egypt, humbled to the Greek, fancied softer idols;
- Greece, the Roman province, nigh forgat her classic sculpture;
- Rome, crushed beneath the Goth, loved his barbarian habits;
- And Alaric, with his ruffian horde, is tamed by silken Rome.
- Columbia's flattened head, and China's crumpled feet,--
- The civilized tapering waist,--and the pendulous ears of the savage,--
- The swollen throat among the mountains, and an ebon skin beneath the
- tropics,--
- These shall all be reckoned beauty: and for weighty cause.
- First, for the latter: Providence in mercy tempereth taste by
- circumstance,
- So that Nature's must shall hit her creature's liking;
- Second, for the middle: though the foolishness of vanity seek to mar
- proportion,
- Still, defects in those we love shall soon be counted praise;
- Third, for the first: a chief, and a princess, maimed or distorted from
- the cradle
- Shall coax the flattery of slaves to imitate the great in their deformity:
- Hence groweth habit: and habits make a taste,
- And so shall servile zeal deface the types of beauty.
- Whiles Alexander conquered, crookedness was comely:
- And followers learn to praise the scars upon their leader's brow.
- Youth hath sought to flatter age by mimicking grey hairs;
- Age plastereth her wrinkles, and is painted in the ruddiness of Youth.
- Fashion, the parasite of Rank, apeth faults and failings,
- Until the general Taste depraved hath warped its sense of beauty.
-
- Each man hath a measure for himself, yet all shall coincide in much;
- A perfect form of human grace would captivate the world:
- Be it manhood's lustre, or the loveliness of woman, all would own its
- beauty,
- The Caffre and Circassian, Russians and Hindoos, the Briton, the Turk and
- Japanese.
- Not all alike, nor all at once, but each in proportion to intelligence,
- His purer state in morals, and a lesser grade in guilt:
- For the high standard of the beautiful is fixed in Reason's forum,
- And sins, and customs, and caprice, have failed to break it down:
- And reason's standard for the creature pointeth three perfections,
- Frame, knowledge, and the feeling heart, well and kindly mingled;
- A fair dwelling, furnished wisely, with a gentle tenant in it,--
- This is the glory of humanity: thou hast seen it seldom.
-
- There is a beauty for the body; the superficial polish of a statue,
- The symmetry of form and feature delicately carved and painted.
- How bright in early bloom the Georgian sitteth at her lattice,
- How softened off in graceful curves her young and gentle shape:
- Those dark eyes, lit by curiosity, flash beneath the lashes,
- And still her velvet cheek is dimpled with a smile.
- Dost thou count her beautiful?--even as a mere fair figure,
- A plastic image, little more,--the outer garb of woman:
- Yea,--and thus far it is well; but Reason's hopes are higher,--
- Can he sate his soul on a scantling third of beauty?
-
- Yet is this the pleasing trickery, that cheateth half the world,
- Nature's wise deceit to make up waste in life;
- And few be they that rest uncaught, for many a twig is limed;
- Where is the wise among a million, that took not form for beauty?
- But watch it well; for vanity and sin, malice, hate, suspicion,
- Louring as clouds upon the countenance, will disenchant its charms.
- The needful complexity of beauty claimeth mind and soul,
- Though many coins of foul alloy pass current for the true:
- And albeit fairness in the creature shall often co-exist with excellence,
- Yet hath many an angel shape been tenanted by fiends.
- A man, spiritually keen, shall detect in surface beauty
- Those marring specks of evil which the sensual cannot see;
- Therefore is he proof against a face, unlovely to his likings,
- And common minds shall scorn the taste, that shrunk from sin's distortion.
-
- There is a beauty for the reason; grandly independent of externals,
- It looketh from the windows of the house, shining in the man triumphant.
- I have seen the broad blank face of some misshapen dwarf
- Lit on a sudden as with glory, the brilliant light of mind:
- Who then imagined him deformed? intelligence is blazing on his forehead,
- There is empire in his eye, and sweetness on his lip, and his brown cheek
- glittereth with beauty:
- And I have known some Nireus of the camp, a varnished paragon of
- chamberers,
- Fine, elegant, and shapely, moulded as the master-piece of Phidias,--
- Such an one, with intellects abased, have I noted crouching to the dwarf,
- Whilst his lovers scorn the fool, whose beauty hath departed!
-
- And there is a beauty for the spirit; mind in its perfect flowering,
- Fragrant, expanded into soul, full of love and blessed.
- Go to some squalid couch, some famishing death-bed of the poor;
- He is shrunken, cadaverous, diseased;--there is here no beauty of the
- body:
- Never hath he fed on knowledge, nor drank at the streams of science,
- He is of the common herd, illiterate;--there is here no beauty of the
- reason:
- But lo! his filming eye is bright with love from heaven,
- In every look it beameth praise, as worshipping with seraphs;
- What honeycomb is hived upon his lips, eloquent of gratitude and prayer,--
- What triumph shrined serene upon that clammy brow,
- What glory flickering transparent under those thin cheeks,--
- What beauty in his face!--Is it not the face of an angel?
-
- Now, of these three, infinitely mingled and combined,
- Consisteth human beauty, in all the marvels of its mightiness:
- And forth from human beauty springeth the intensity of Love;
- Feeling, thought, desire, the three deep fountains of affection.
- Son of Adam, or daughter of Eve, art thou trapped by nature,
- And is thy young eye dazzled with the pleasant form of beauty?
- This is but a lower love; still it hath its honour;
- What God hath made and meant to charm, let not man despise.
- Nevertheless, as reason's child, look thou wisely farther,
- For age, disease, and care, and sin, shall tarnish all the surface:
- Reach a loftier love: be lured by the comeliness of mind,--
- Gentle, kind, and calm, or lustrous in the livery of knowledge.
- And more, there is a higher grade; force the mind to its perfection--
- Win those golden trophies of consummate love:
- Add unto riches of the reason, and a beauty moulded to thy liking,
- The precious things of nobler grace that well adorn a soul;
- Thus, be thou owner of a treasure, great in earth and heaven,
- Beauty, wisdom, goodness, in a creature like its God.
-
- So then, draw we to an end; with feeble step and faltering,
- I follow beauty through the universe, and find her home Ubiquity:
- In all that God hath made, in all that man hath marred,
- Lingereth beauty, or its wreck, a broken mould and castings.
- And now, having wandered long time, freely and with desultory feet,
- To gather in the garden of the world a few fair sample flowers,
- With patient scrutinizing care let us cull the conclusion of their
- essence,
- And answer to the riddle of Zorobabel, Whence the might of beauty?
-
- Ugliness is native unto nothing, but an attribute of concrete evil;
- In everything created, at its worst, lurk the dregs of loveliness:
- We be fallen into utter depths, yet once we stood sublime,
- For man was made in perfect praise, his Maker's comely image:
- And so his new-born ill is spiced with older good,
- He carrieth with him, yea to crime, the withered limbs of beauty.
- Passions may be crooked generosities; the robber stealeth for his
- children;
- Murder was avenger of the innocent, or wiped out shame with blood.
- Many virtues, weighted by excess, sink among the vices;
- Many vices, amicably buoyed, float among the virtues.
- For, albeit sin is hate, a foul and bitter turpitude,
- As hurling back against the Giver all His gifts with insult,
- Still when concrete in the sinner, it will seem to partake of his
- attractions,
- And in seductive masquerade shall cloak its leprous skin;
- His broken lights of beauty shall illumine its utter black,
- And those refracted rays glitter on the hunch of its deformity.
-
- Verily the fancy may be false, yet hath it met me in my musings,
- (As expounding the pleasantness of pleasure, but no ways extenuating
- licence,)
- That even those yearnings after beauty, in wayward wanton youth,
- When, guileless of ulterior end, it craveth but to look upon the lovely,
- Seem like struggles of the soul, dimly remembering pre-existence,
- And feeling in its blindness for a long-lost god, to satisfy its longing;
- As if the sucking babe, tenderly mindful of his mother,
- Should pull a dragon's dugs, and drain the teats of poison.
- Our primal source was beauty, and we pant for it ever and again;
- But sin hath stopped the way with thorns; we turn aside, wander, and are
- lost.
-
- God, the undiluted good, is root and stock of beauty,
- And every child of reason drew his essence from that stem.
- Therefore, it is of intuition, an innate hankering for home,
- A sweet returning to the well, from which our spirit flowed,
- That we, unconscious of a cause, should bask these darkened souls
- In some poor relics of the light that blazed in primal beauty,
- And, even like as exiles of idolatry, should quaff from the cisterns of
- creation
- Stagnant draughts, for those fresh springs that rise in the Creator.
-
- Only, being burdened with the body, spiritual appetite is warped,
- And sensual man, with taste corrupted, drinketh of pollutions:
- Impulse is left, but indiscriminate; his hunger feasteth upon carrion;
- His natural love of beauty doateth over beauty in decay.
- He still thirsteth for the beautiful; but his delicate ideal hath grown
- gross,
- And the very sense of thirst hath been fevered from affection into
- passion.
- He remembereth the blessedness of light, but it is with an old man's
- memory,
- A blind old man from infancy, that once hath seen the sun,
- Whom long experience of night hath darkened in his cradle recollections,
- Until his brightest thought of noon is but a shade of black.
-
- This then is thy charm, O beauty all pervading;
- And this thy wondrous strength, O beauty, conqueror of all:
- The outline of our shadowy best, the pure and comely creature,
- That winneth on the conscience with a saddening admiration:
- And some untutored thirst for God, the root of every pleasure,
- Native to creatures, yea in ruin, and dating from the birthday of the
- soul.
- For God sealeth up the sum, confirmed exemplar of proportions,
- Rich in love, full of wisdom, and perfect in the plenitude of Beauty.
-
-
-[Illustration: Of Fame.]
-
-OF FAME.
-
-[Illustration: "B"]
-
- Blow the trumpet, spread the wing, fling thy scroll upon the sky,
- Rouse the slumbering world, O Fame, and fill the sphere with echo!
- --Beneath thy blast they wake, and murmurs come hoarsely on the wind,
- And flashing eyes and bristling hands proclaim they hear thy message:
- Rolling and surging as a sea, that upturned flood of faces
- Hasteneth with its million tongues to spread the wondrous tale;
- The hum of added voices groweth to the roaring of a cataract,
- And rapidly from wave to wave is tossed that exaggerated story,
- Until those stunning clamours, gradually diluted in the distance,
- Sink ashamed, and shrink afraid of noise, and die away.
- Then brooding Silence, forth from his hollow caverns,
- Cloaked and cowled, and gliding along, a cold and stealthy shadow,
- Once more is mingled with the multitude, whispering as he walketh,
- And hushing all their eager ears, to hear some newer Fame.
- So all is still again; but nothing of the past hath been forgotten;
- A stirring recollection of the trumpet ringeth in the hearts of men:
- And each one, either envious or admiring, hath wished the chance were his
- To fill as thus the startled world with fame, or fear, or wonder.
- This lit thy torch of sacrilege, Ephesian Eratostratus;
- This dug thy living grave, Pythagoras, the traveller from Hades;
- For this, dived Empedocles into Etna's fiery whirlpool;
- For this, conquerors, regicides, and rebels, have dared their perilous
- crimes.
- In all men, from the monarch to the menial, lurketh lust of fame:
- The savage and the sage alike regard their labours proudly:
- Yea, in death, the glazing eye is illumined by the hope of reputation,
- And the stricken warrior is glad, that his wounds are salved with glory.
-
- For fame is a sweet self-homage, an offering grateful to the idol,
- A spiritual nectar for the spiritual thirst, a mental food for mind,
- A pregnant evidence to all of an after immaterial existence,
- A proof that soul is scatheless, when its dwelling is dissolved.
- And the manifold pleasures of fame are sought by the guilty and the good:
- Pleasures, various in kind, and spiced to every palate:
- The thoughtful loveth fame as an earnest of better immortality,
- The industrious and deserving, as a symbol of just appreciation,
- The selfish, as a promise of advancement, at least to a man's own kin,
- And common minds, as a flattering fact that men have been told of their
- existence.
-
- There is a blameless love of fame, springing from desire of justice,
- When a man hath featly won and fairly claimed his honours:
- And then fame cometh as encouragement to the inward consciousness of
- merit,
- Gladdening by the kindliness and thanks, wherewithal his labours are
- rewarded.
- But there is a sordid imitation, a feverish thirst for notoriety,
- Waiting upon vanity and sloth, and utterly regardless of deserving:
- And then fame cometh as a curse; the fire-damp is gathered in the mine:
- The soul is swelled with poisonous air, and a spark of temptation shall
- explode it.
-
- Idle causes, noised awhile, shall yield most active consequents,
- And therefore it were ill upon occasion to scorn the voice of rumour.
- Ye have seen the chemist in his art mingle invisible gases;
- And lo, the product is a substance, a heavy dark precipitate:
- Even so fame, hurtling on the quiet with many meeting tongues,
- Can out of nothing bring forth fruits, and blossom on a nourishment of
- air.
- For many have earned honour, and thereby rank and riches,
- From false and fleeting tales, some casual mere mistake;
- And many have been wrecked upon disgrace, and have struggled with poverty
- and scorn,
- From envious hints and ill reports, the slanders cast on innocence.
- Whom may not scandal hit? those shafts are shot at a venture:
- Who standeth not in danger of suspicion? that net hath caught the noblest.
- Caesar's wife was spotless, but a martyr to false fame;
- And Rumour, in temporary things, is gigantic as a ruin or a remedy:
- Many poor and many rich have testified its popular omnipotence,
- And many a panic-stricken army hath perished with the host of the
- Assyrians.
-
- Nevertheless, if opportunity be nought, let a man bide his time;
- So the matter be not merchandise nor conquest, fear thou less for
- character.
- If a liar accuseth thee of evil, be not swift to answer;
- Yea, rather give him license for awhile; it shall help thine honour
- afterward:
- Never yet was calumny engendered, but good men speedily discerned it,
- And innocence hath burst from its injustice, as the green world rolling
- out of Chaos.
- What, though still the wicked scoff,--this also turneth to his praise;
- Did ye never hear that censure of the bad is buttress to a good man's
- glory?
- What, if the ignorant still hold out, obstinate in unkind judgment,--
- Ignorance and calumny are paired; we affirm by two negations:
- Let them stand round about, pushing at the column in a circle,
- For all their toil and wasted strength, the foolish do but prop it.
- And note thou this; in the secret of their hearts, they feel the taunt is
- false,
- And cannot help but reverence the courage, that walketh amid calumnies
- unanswering:
- He standeth as a gallant chief, unheeding shot or shell;
- He trusteth in God his Judge: neither arrows nor the pestilence shall
- harm him.
-
- A high heart is a sacrifice to Heaven: should it stoop among the creepers
- in the dust,
- To tell them that what God approved, is worthy of their praise?
- Never shall it heed the thought; but flaming on in triumph to the skies,
- And quite forgetting fame, shall find it added as a trophy.
- A great mind is an altar on a hill: should the priest descend from his
- altitude,
- To canvass offerings and worship from dwellers on the plain?
- Rather, with majestic perseverance will he minister in solitary grandeur,
- Confident the time will come, when pilgrims shall be flocking to the
- shrine.
- For fame is the birthright of genius; and he recketh not how long it be
- delayed;
- The heir need not hasten to his heritage, when he knoweth that his tenure
- is eternal.
- The careless poet of Avon, was he troubled for his fame,
- Or the deep-mouthed chronicler of Paradise, heeded he the suffrage of his
- equals?
- Maeonides took no thought, committing all his honours to the future,
- And Flaccus, standing on his watch-tower, spied the praise of ages.
-
- Smoking flax will breed a flame, and the flame may illuminate a world;
- Where is he who scorned that smoke as foul and murky vapour?
- The village stream swelled to a river, and the river was a kingdom's
- wealth,
- Where is he who boasted he could step across that stream?
- Such are the beginnings of the famous: little in the judgment of their
- peers,
- The juster verdict of posterity shall fix them in the orbits of the Great.
- Therefore dull Zoilus, clamouring ascendant of the hour,
- Will soon be fain to hide his hate, and bury up his bitterness for shame:
- Therefore mocking Momus, offended at the footsteps of Beauty,
- Shall win the prize of his presumption, and be hooted from his throne
- among the stars.
- For, as the shadow of a mountain lengtheneth before the setting sun,
- Until that screening Alp have darkened all the canton,--
- So, Fame groweth to its great ones; their images loom longer in departing;
- But the shadow of mind is light, and earth is filled with its glory.
-
- And thou, student of the truth, commended to the praise of God,
- Wouldst thou find applause with men?--seek it not, nor shun it.
- Ancient fame is roofed in cedar, and her walls are marble;
- Modern fame lodgeth in a hut, a slight and temporary dwelling:
- Lay not up the treasures of thy soul within so damp a chamber,
- For the moth of detraction shall fret thy robe, and drop its eggs upon
- thy motive;
- Or the rust of disheartening reserve shall spoil the lustre of thy gold,
- Until its burnished beauty shall be dim as tarnished brass;
- Or thieves, breaking through to steal, shall claim thy jewelled thoughts,
- And turn to charge the theft on thee, a pilferer from them!
-
- There is a magnanimity in recklessness of fame, so fame be well deserving,
- That rusheth on in fearless might, the conscious sense of merit:
- And there is a littleness in jealousy of fame, looking as aware of
- weakness,
- That creepeth cautiously along, afraid that its title will be challenged.
- The wild boar, full of beechmast, flingeth him down among the brambles;
- Secure in bristly strength, without a watch, he sleepeth:
- But the hare, afraid to feed, croucheth in its own soft form;
- Wakefully with timid eyes, and quivering ears, he listeneth.
- Even so, a giant's might is bound up in the soul of Genius,
- His neck is strong with confidence, and he goeth tusked with power:
- Sturdily he roameth in the forest, or sunneth him in fen and field,
- And scareth from his marshy lair a host of fearful foes.
- But there is a mimic Talent, whose safety lieth in its quickness,
- A timorous thing of doubling guile, that scarce can face a friend:
- This one is captious of reproof, provident to snatch occasion,
- Greedy of applause, and vexed to lose one tittle of the glory.
- He is a poor warder of his fame, who is ever on the watch to keep it
- spotless;
- Such care argueth debility, a garrison relying on its sentinel.
- Passive strength shall scorn excuses, patiently waiting a re-action,
- He wotteth well that truth is great, and must prevail at last;
- But fretful weakness hasteth to explain, anxiously dreading prejudice,
- And ignorant that perishable falsehood dieth as a branch cut off.
-
- Purity of motive and nobility of mind shall rarely condescend
- To prove its rights, and prate of wrongs, or evidence its worth to others.
- And it shall be small care to the high and happy conscience
- What jealous friends, or envious foes, or common fools may judge.
- Should the lion turn and rend every snarling jackal,
- Or an eagle be stopt in his career to punish the petulance of sparrows?
- Should the palm-tree bend his crown to chide the briar at his feet,
- Nor kindly help its climbing, if it hope, and be ambitious?
- Should the nightingale account it worth her pains to vindicate her music,
- Before some sorry finches, that affect to judge of song?
- No: many an injustice, many a sneer, and slur,
- Is passed aside with noble scorn by lovers of true fame:
- For well they wot that glory shall be tinctured good or evil,
- By the character of those who give it, as wine is flavoured by the
- wineskin:
- So that worthy fame floweth only from a worthy fountain,
- But from an ill-conditioned troop the best report is worthless.
- And if the sensibility of genius count his injuries in secret,
- Wisely will he hide the pains a hardened herd would mock:
- For the great mind well may be sad to note such littleness in brethren,
- The while he is comforted and happy in the firmest assurance of desert.
-
- Cease awhile, gentle scholar;--seek other thoughts and themes;
- Or dazzling Fame with wildfire light shall lure us on for ever.
- For look, all subjects of the mind may range beneath its banner,
- And time would fail and patience droop, to count that numerous host.
- The mine is deep, and branching wide,--and who can work it out?
- Years of thought would leave untold the boundless topic, Fame.
- Every matter in the universe is linked in suchwise unto others,
- That a deep full treatise upon one thing might reach to the history of
- all things:
- And before some single thesis had been followed out in all its branches,
- The wandering thinker would be lost in the pathless forest of existence.
- What were the matter or the spirit, that hath no part in Fame?
- Where were the fact irrelevant, or the fancy out of place?
- For the handling of that mighty theme should stretch from past to future,
- Catching up the present on its way, as a traveller burdened with time.
- All manner of men, their deeds, hopes, fortunes, and ambitions,
- All manner of events and things, climate, circumstance, and custom,
- Wealth and war, fear and hope, contentment, jealousy, devotion,
- Skill and learning, truth, falsehood, knowledge of things gone and things
- to come,
- Pride and praise, honour and dishonour, warnings, ensamples, emulations,
- The excellent in virtues, and the reprobate in vice, with the cloud of
- indifferent spectators,--
- Wave on wave with flooding force throng the shoals of thought,
- Filling that immeasurable theme, the height and depth of Fame.
- With soul unsatisfied and mind dismayed, my feet have touched the
- threshold,
- Fain to pour these flowers and fruits an offering on that altar:
- Lo, how vast the temple,--there are clouds within the dome!
- Yet might the huge expanse be filled, with volumes writ on Fame.
-
-
-OF FLATTERY.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Music is commended of the deaf:--but is that praise despised?
- I trow not: with flattered soul the musician heard him gladly.
- Beauty is commended of the blind:--but is that compliment misliking?
- I trow not: though false and insincere, woman listened greedily.
- Vacant Folly talketh high of Learning's deepest reason:
- Is she hated for her hollowness?--learning held her wiser for the nonce.
- The worldly and the sensual, to gain some end, did homage to religion:
- And the good man gave thanks as for a convert, where others saw the
- hypocrite.
-
- Yet none of these were cheated at the heart, nor steadily believed those
- flatteries;
- They feared the core was rotten, while they hoped the skin was sound:
- But the fruits have so sweet fragrance, and are verily so pleasant to the
- eyes,
- It were an ungracious disenchantment to find them apples of Sodom.
- So they laboured to think all honest, winking hard with both their eyes;
- And hushed up every whisper that could prove that praise absurd:
- They willingly regard not the infirmities that make such worship vain,
- And palliate to their own fond hearts the faults they will not see.
- For the idol rejoiceth in his incense, and loveth not to shame his
- suppliants,
- Should he seek to find them false, his honours die with theirs:
- An offering is welcome for its own sake, set aside the giver,
- And praise is precious to a man, though uttered by the parrot or the
- mocking-bird.
-
- The world is full of fools; and sycophancy liveth on the foolish:
- So he groweth great and rich, that fawning supple parasite.
- Sometimes he boweth like a reed, cringing to the pompousness of pride,
- Sometimes he strutteth as a gallant, pampering the fickleness of vanity;
- I have known him listen with the humble, enacting silent marveller,
- To hear some purse-proud dunce expose his poverty of mind;
- I have heard him wrangle with the obstinate, vowing that he will not be
- convinced,
- When some weak youth hath wisely feared the chance of ill success:
- Now, he will barely be a winner,--to magnify thy triumphs afterward;
- Now, he will hardly be a loser,--but cannot cease to wonder at thy skill:
- He laudeth his own worth, that the leader may have glory in his follower;
- He meekly confesseth his unworthiness, that the leader may have glory in
- himself.
- Many wiles hath he, and many modes of catching,
- But every trap is selfishness, and every bait is praise.
-
- Come, I would forewarn thee and forearm thee; for keen are the weapons of
- his warfare;
- And, while my soul hath scorned him, I have watched his skill from far.
- His thoughts are full of guile, deceitfully combining contrarieties,
- And when he doeth battle in a man, he is leagued with traitorous
- Self-love.
- Strange things have I noted, and opposite to common fancy;
- We leave the open surface, and would plumb the secret depths.
- For he will magnify a lover, even to disparaging his mistress;
- So much wisdom, goodness, grace,--and all to be enslaved?
- Till the Narcissus, self-enamoured, whelmed in floods of flattery,
- Is cheated from the constancy and fervency of love by friendship's subtle
- praise.
- Moreover, he will glorify a parent, even to the censure of his child,--
- O degenerate scion, of a stock so excellent and noble!
- Scant will he be in well-earned praise of a son before his father;
- And rarely commendeth to a mother her daughter's budding beauty:
- Yet shall he extol the daughter to her father, and be warm about the son
- before his mother;
- Knowing that self-love entereth not, to resist applause with jealousies.
- Wisely is he sparing of hyperbole where vehemence of praise would humble,
- For many a father liketh ill to be counted second to his son:
- And shrewdly the flatterer hath reckoned on a self still lurking in the
- mother,
- When his tongue was slow to speak of graces in the daughter.
- But if he descend a generation, to the grandsire his talk is of the
- grandson,
- Because in such high praise he hideth the honours of the son;
- And the daughter of a daughter may well exceed, in beauty, love, and
- learning,
- For unconsciously old age perceived--she cannot be my rival.
- These are of the deep things of flattery: and many a shallow sycophant
- Hath marvelled ill that praise of children seldom won their parents.
- This therefore note, unto detection: flattery can sneer as well as smile;
- And a master in the craft wotteth well, that his oblique thrust is surest.
-
- Flattery sticketh like a burr, holding to the soil with anchors,
- A vital, natural, subtle seed, everywhere hardy and indigenous.
- Go to the storehouse of thy memory, and take what is readiest to thy
- hand,--
- The noble deed, the clever phrase, for which thy pride was flattered:
- Oh, it hath been dwelt upon in solitude, and comforted thy heart in
- crowds,
- It hath made thee walk as in a dream, and lifted up the head above thy
- fellows;
- It hath compensated months of gloom, that minute of sweet sunshine,
- Drying up the pools of apathy, and kindling the fire of ambition:
- Yea, the flavour of that spice, mingled in the cup of life,
- Shall linger even to the dregs, and still be tasted with a welcome;
- The dame shall tell her grandchild of her coy and courted youth,
- And the grey-beard prateth of a stranger, who praised his task at school.
-
- Oftimes to the sluggard and the dull, flattery hath done good service,
- Quickening the mind to emulation, and encouraging the heart that failed.
- Even so, a stimulating poison, wisely tendered by the leech,
- Shall speed the pulse, and rally life, and cheat astonished death.
- For, as a timid swimmer ventureth afloat with bladders,
- Until self-confidence and growth of skill have made him spurn their aid,
- Thus commendation may be prudent, where a child hath ill deserved it;
- But praise unmerited is flattery, and the cure will bring its cares:
- For thy son may find thee out, and thou shalt rue the remedy:
- Yea, rather, where thou canst not praise, be honest in rebuke.
-
- I have seen the objects of a flatterer mirrored clearly on the surface,
- Where self-love scattereth praise, to gather praise again.
- This is a commodity of merchandize, words put out at interest:
- A scheme for canvassing opinions, and tinging them all with partiality.
- He is but a harmless fool; humour him with pitiful good-nature:
- If a poetaster quote thy song, be thou tender to his poem:
- Did the painter praise thy sketch? be kind, commend his picture;
- He looketh for a like return; then thank him with thy praise.
- In these small things with these small minds count thou the sycophant a
- courtier,
- And pay back, as blindly as ye may, the too transparent honour.
-
- Also, where the flattery is delicate, coming unobtrusive and in season,
- Though thou be suspicious of its truth, be generous at least to its
- gentility.
- The skilful thief of Lacedaemon had praise before his judges,
- And many caitiffs win applause for genius in their callings.
- Moreover, his meaning may be kind,--and thou art a debtor to his tongue;
- Hasten well to pay the debt, with charity and shrewdness:
- He must not think thee caught, nor feel himself discovered,
- Nor find thine answering compliment as hollow as his own.
- Though he be a smiling enemy, let him heed thee as the fearless and the
- friendly;
- A searching look, a poignant word, may prove thou art aware:
- Still, with compassion to the frail, though keen to see his soul,
- Let him not fear for thy discretion: see thou keep his secret, and thine
- own.
-
- However, where the flattery is gross, a falsehood clear and fulsome,
- Crush the venomous toad, and spare not for a jewel in its head.
- Tell the presumptuous in flattery, that or ever he bespatter thee with
- praise,
- It might be well to stop and ask how little it were worth:
- Thou hast not solicited his suffrage,--let him not force thee to refuse
- it;
- Look to it, man, thy fence is foiled,--and thus we spoil the plot.
- Self-knowledge goeth armed, girt with many weapons,
- But carrieth whips for flattery, to lash it like a slave:
- But the dunce in that great science goeth as a greedy tunny,
- To gorge both bait and hook, unheeding all but appetite:
- He smelleth praise and swalloweth,--yea, though it be palpable and plain,
- Say unto him, Folly, thou art Wisdom,--he will bless thee for thy lie.
-
- Flatterer, thou shalt rue thy trade, though it have many present gains;
- Those varnished wares may sell apace, yet shall they spoil thy credit.
- Thine is the intoxicating cup, which whoso drinketh it shall nauseate:
- Thine is trickery and cheating; but deception never pleased for long.
- And though while fresh thy fragrance seemed even as the dews of charity,
- Yet afterward it fouled thy censer, as with savour of stale smoke.
- For the great mind detected thee at once, answering thine emptiness with
- pity,
- He saw thy self-interested zeal, and was not cozened by vain-glory:
- And the little mind is bloated with the praise, scorning him who gave it,
- A fool shall turn to be thy tyrant, an thou hast dubbed him great:
- And the medium mind of common men, loving first thy music,
- After, when the harmonies are done, shall feel small comfort in their
- echoes;
- For either he shall know thee false, conscious of contrary deservings,
- And, hating thee for falsehood, soon will scorn himself for truth,
- Or, if in aught to toilsome merit honest praise be due,
- Though for a season, belike, his weakness hath been raptured at thy
- witching,
- Shall he not speedily perceive, to the vexing of his disappointed spirit,
- That thine exaggerated tongue hath robbed him of fair fame?
- Thou hast paid in forger's coins, and he had earned true money:
- For the substance of just praise, thou hast put him off with shadows of
- the sycophant:
- Thou art all things to all men, for ends false and selfish,
- Therefore shalt be nothing unto any one, when those thine ends are seen.
-
- Turn aside, young scholar, turn from the song of Flattery!
- She hath the Siren's musical voice, to ravish and betray.
- Her tongue droppeth honey, but it is the honey of Anticyra;
- Her face is a mask of fascination, but there hideth deformity behind;
- Her coming is the presence of a queen, heralded by courtesy and beauty,
- But, going away, her train is held by the hideous dwarf, Disgust.
-
- Know thyself, thine evil as thy good, and flattery shall not harm thee:
- Yea, her speech shall be a warning, a humbling and a guide.
- For wherein thou lackest most, there chiefly will the sycophant commend
- thee,
- And then most warmly will congratulate, when a man hath least deserved.
- Behold, she is doubly a traitor; and will underrate her victim's best,
- That, to the comforting of conscience, she may plead his worse for better.
-
- Therefore, is she dangerous,--as every lie is dangerous:
- Believe her tales, and perish: if thou act upon such counsel.
- Her aims are thine not thee, thy wealth and not thy welfare,
- Thy suffrage not thy safety, thine aid and not thine honour.
- Moreover, with those aims insured, ceaseth all her glozing;
- She hath used thee as a handle,--but her hand was wise to turn it;
- Thus will she glorify her skill, that it deftly caught thy kindness,
- Thus will she scorn thy kindness, so pliable and easy to her skill.
- And then, the flatterer will turn to be thy foe, the bitterest and
- hottest,
- Because he oweth thee much hate to pay off many humblings.
- Thinkest thou now that he is high, he loveth the remembrance of his
- lowliness,
- The servile manner, the dependent smile, the conscience self-abased?
- No, this hour is his own, and the flatterer will be found a busy mocker;
- He that hath salved thee with his tongue, shall now gnash upon thee with
- his teeth;
- Yea, he will be leader in the laugh,--silly one, to listen to thy loss,
- We scarce had hoped to lime and take another of the fools of flattery.
-
- At the last; have charity, young scholar,--yea, to the sycophant
- convicted;
- Be not a Brutus to thyself, nor stern in thine own cause.
- Pardon exaggerated praise; for there is a natural impulse,
- Spurring on the nobler mind, to colour facts by feelings:
- Take an indulgent view of each man's interest in self,
- Be large and liberal in excuses; is not that infirmity thine own?
- Search thy soul and be humble; and mercy abideth with humility;
- So that, yea, the insincere may find thee pitiful, and love thee.
- Mildly put aside, without rudeness of repulse, the pampering hand of
- flattery,
- For courtesy and kindness have gone beneath its guise, and ill shouldst
- thou rebuke them.
-
- Thou art incapable of theft: but flowers in the garden of a friend
- Are thine to pluck with confidence, and it were unfriendliness to
- hesitate:
- Thou abhorrest flattery: but a generous excess in praise
- Is thine to yield with honest heart, and false were the charity to doubt
- it:
- The difference lieth in thine aim; kindliness and good are of charity,
- But selfish, harmful, vile, and bad, is Flattery's evil end.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF NEGLECT.
-
- Generous and righteous is thy grief, slighted child of sensibility;
- For kindliness enkindleth love, but the waters of indifference quench it:
- Thy soul is athirst for sympathy, and hungereth to find affection,
- The tender scions of thy heart yearn for the sunshine of good feeling;
- And it is an evil thing and bitter, when the cheerful face of Charity,
- Going forth gaily in the morning to woo the world with smiles,
- Is met by those wayfaring men with coldness, suspicion, and repulse,
- And turneth into hard dead stone at the Gorgon visage of Neglect.
- O brother, warm and young, covetous of other's favour,
- I see thee checked and chilled, sorrowing for censure or forgetfulness:
- Let coarse and common minds despise--that wounding of thy vanity,
- Alas, I note a sorer cause, the blighting of thy love;
- Let the callous sensual deride thee,--disappointed of thy praise,
- Alas, thou hast a juster grief, defrauded of their kindness:
- It is a theme for tears to feel the soft heart hardening,
- The frozen breath of apathy sealing up the fountain of affection;
- It is a pang, keen only to the best, to be injured well-deserving,
- And slumbering Neglect is injury,--Could ye not watch one hour?
- When God Himself complained, it was that none regarded,
- And indifference bowed to the rebuke, Thou gavest Me no kiss when I came
- in.
-
- Moreover, praise is good; honour is a treasure to be hoarded;
- A good man's praise foreshadoweth God's, and in His smile is heaven:
- But men walk on in hardihood, steeling their sinfulness to censure,
- And when rebuke is ridiculed, the love of praise were an infirmity;
- The judge thou heedest not in fear, cannot have deep homage of thy hope,
- And who then is the wise of this world, that will own he trembleth at his
- fellows?
- Calm, careless, and insensible, he mocketh blame or calumny,
- Neither should his dignity be humbled to some pittance of their praise:
- The rather, let false pride affect to trample on the treasure
- Which evermore in secret strength unconquered Nature prizeth;
- Rather, shall ye stifle now the rising bliss of triumph,
- Lest after, in the world's Neglect, he must acknowledge bitterness.
-
-
- For lo, that world is wide, a huge and crowded continent,
- Its brazen sun is mammon, and its iron soil is care:
- A world full of men, where each man clingeth to his idol;
- A world full of men, where each man cherisheth his sorrow;
- A world full of men, multitude shoaling upon multitude;
- A surging sea, where every wave is burdened with an argosy of self;
- A boundless beach, where every stone is a separate microscopic world:
- A forest of innumerable trees, where every root is independent.
-
- What then is the marvel or the shame, if units be lost among the million?
- Canst thou reasonably murmur, if a leaf drop off unnoticed?
- Wondrous in architecture, intricate and beautiful, delicately tinged and
- scented,
- Exquisite of feeling and mysterious in life, none cared for its growth,
- or its decay:
- None? yea,--no one of its fellows,--nor cedar, palm, nor bramble,--
- None? its twin-born brother scarcely missed it from the spray:
- None?--if none indeed, then man's neglect were bitterness;
- And Life a land without a sun, a globe without a God!
- Yea, flowers in the desert, there be that love your beauty;
- Yea, jewels in the sea, there be that prize your brightness;
- Children of unmerited oblivion, there be that watch and woo you,
- And many tend your sweets, with gentle ministering care:
- Thronging spirits of the happy, and the ever-present Good One
- Yearning seek those precious things, man hath not heart to love,
- Gems of the humblest or the highest, pure and patient in their kind,
- The souls unhardened by ill usage, and uncorrupt by luxury.
-
- And ye, poor desolates unsunned, toilers in the dark damp mine,
- Wearied daughters of oppression, crushed beneath the car of avarice,
- There be that count your tears,--He hath numbered the hairs of thy head,--
- There be that can forgive your ill, with kind considerate pity:
- Count ye this for comfort, Justice hath her balances,
- And yet another world can compensate for all:
- The daily martyrdom of patience shall not be wanting of reward;
- Duty is a prickly shrub, but its flower will be happiness and glory.
-
- Ye too, the friendless, yet dependent, that find nor home nor lover,
- Sad imprisoned hearts, captive to the net of circumstance,--
- And ye, too harshly judged, noble unappreciated intellects,
- Who, capable of highest, lowlier fix your just ambition in content,--
- And chiefest, ye, famished infants of the poor, toiling for your parents'
- bread,
- Tired, and sore, and uncomforted the while, for want of love and learning,
- Who struggle with the pitiless machine in dull continuous conflict,
- Tasked by iron men, who care for nothing but your labour,--
- Be ye long-suffering and courageous: abide the will of Heaven;
- God is on your side; all things are tenderly remembered:
- His servants here shall help you; and where those fail you through
- Neglect,
- His kingdom still hath time and space for ample discriminative Justice:
- Yea, though utterly on this bad earth ye lose both right and mercy,
- The tears that we forgat to note, our God shall wipe away.
-
- Nevertheless, kind spirit, susceptible and guileless,
- Meek uncherished dove, in a carrion flock of fowls,
- Sensitive mimosa, shrinking from the winds that help to root the fir,
- Fragile nautilus, shipwrecked in the gale whereat the conch is glad,
- Thy sharp peculiar grief is uncomforted by hope of compensation,
- For it is a delicate and spiritual wound, which the probe of pity
- bruiseth:
- Yet hear how many thoughts extenuate its pain;
- Even while a kindred heart can sorrow for its presence.
- For the sting of neglect is in this,--that such as we are all, forget us,
- That men and women, kith and kin, so lightly heed of other:
- Sympathy is lacking from the guilty such as we, even where angels
- minister,
- And souls of fine accord must prize a fellow-sinner's love;
- For the worst love those who love them, and the best claim heart for
- heart,
- And it is a holy thirst to long for love's requital:
- Hard it will be, hard and sad, to love and be unloved;
- And many a thorn is thrust into the side of him that is forgotten.
- The oppressive silence of reserve, the frost of failing friendship,
- Affection blighted by repulse, or chilled by shallow courtesy,
- The unaided struggle, the unconsidered grief, the unesteemed
- self-sacrifice,
- The gift, dear evidence of kindness, long due, but never offered,
- The glance estranged, the letter flung aside, the greeting ill received,
- The services of unobtrusive care unthanked, perchance unheeded,
- These things, which hard men mock at, rend the feelings of the tender,
- For the delicate tissue of a spiritual mind is torn by those sharp barbs;
- The coldness of a trusted friend, a plenitude ending in vacuity,
- Is as if the stable world had burst a hollow bubble.
-
- But consider, child of sensibility; the lot of men is labour,
- Labour for the mouth, or labour in the spirit, labour stern and
- individual.
- Worldly cares and worldly hopes exact the thoughts of all,
- And there is a necessary selfishness, rooted in each mortal breast.
- The plans of prudence, or the whisperings of pride, or all-absorbing
- reveries of love,
- Ambition, grief, or fear, or joy, set each man for himself;
- Therefore, the centre of a circle, whereunto all the universe convergeth,
- Is seen in fallen solitude, the naked selfish heart:
- Stripped of conventional deceptions, untrammelled from the harness of
- society,
- We all may read one little word engraved on all we do;
- Other men, what are they unto us? the age, the mass, the million,--
- We segregate, distinct from generalities, that isolated particle, a self:
- It is the very law of our life, a law for soul and body,
- An earthly law for earthly men, toiling in responsible probation.
- For each is the all unto himself, disguise it as we may,
- Each infinite, each most precious; yet even as a nothing to his neighbour.
- O consider, we be crowding up an avenue, trapped in the decoy of time,
- Behind us the irrevocable past, before us the illimitable future:
- What wonder is there, if the traveller, wayworn, hopeful, fearful,
- Burdened himself, so lightly heed the burden of his brother?
- How shouldst thou marvel and be sad, that the pilgrims trouble not to
- learn thee,
- When each hath to master for himself the lessons of life and immortality?
-
- Moreover, what art thou,--so vainly impatient of Neglect,
- Where then is thy worthiness, that so thou claimest honour?
- Let the true judgment of humility reckon up thine ill deserts,
- How little is there to be loved, how much to stir up scorn!
- The double heart, the bitter tongue, the rash and erring spirit,
- Be these, ye purest among men, your passports unto favour?
- It is mercy in the Merciful, and justice in the Just, to be jealous of
- His creature's love,
- But how should evil or duplicity arrogate affection to itself?
- Where love is happiness and duty, to be jealous of that love is godlike,
- But who can reverence the guilty? who findeth pleasure in the mean?
- Check the presumption of thy hopes: thankfully take refuge in obscurity,
- Or, if thou claimest merit, thy sin shall be proclaimed upon the
- housetops.
-
- Yet again: consider them of old, the good, the great, the learned,
- Who have blessed the world by wisdom, and glorified their God by purity.
- Did those speed in favour? were they the loved and the admired?
- Was every prophet had in honour? and every deserving one remembered to
- his praise?
- What shall I say of yonder band, a glorious cloud of witnesses,
- The scorned, defamed, insulted,--but the excellent of earth?
- It were weariness to count up noble names, neglected in their lives,
- Whom none esteemed, nor cared to love, till death had sealed them his.
- For good men are the health of the world, valued only when it perisheth,
- Like water, light, and air, all precious in their absence.
- Who hath considered the blessing of his breath, till the poison of an
- asthma struck him?
- Who hath regarded the just pulses of his heart, till spasm or paralysis
- have stopped them?
- Even thus, an unobserved routine of daily grace and wisdom,
- When no more here, had worship of a world, whose penitence atoned for its
- neglect.
- And living genius is seen among infirmities, wherefrom the commoner are
- free;
- And other rival men of mind crowd this arena of contention;
- And there be many cares; and a man knoweth little of his brother;
- Feebly we appreciate a motive, and slowly keep pace with a feeling:
- And social difference is much; and experience teacheth sadly,
- How great the treachery of friends, how dangerous the courtesy of enemies.
- So, the sum of all these things operateth largely upon all men,
- Hedging us about with thorns, to cramp our yearning sympathies,
- And we grow materialized in mind, forgetting what we see not,
- But, immersed in perceptions of the present, keep things absent out of
- thought:
- Thus, where ingratitude, and guilt, and labour, and selfishness would
- harden,
- Humbly will the good man bow, unmurmuring, to Neglect.
-
- Yet once more, griever at Neglect, hear me to thy comfort, or rebuke:
- For, after all thy just complaint, the world is full of love.
- O heart of childhood, tender, trusting, and affectionate,
- O youth, warm youth, full of generous attentions,
- O woman, self-forgetting woman, poetry of human life,
- And not less thou, O man, so often the disinterested brother,
- Many a smile of love, many a tear of pity,
- Many a word of comfort, many a deed of magnanimity,
- Many a stream of milk and honey pour ye freely on the earth,
- And many a rosebud of love rejoiceth in the dew of your affection.
- Neglect? O liberal world, for thine are many prizes:
- Neglect? O charitable world, where thousands feed on bounty;
- Neglect? O just world, for thy judgments err not often;
- Neglect? O libel on a world where half that world is woman!
- Where is the afflicted, whose voice, once heard, stirreth not a host of
- comforters?
- Where is the sick untended, or in prison, and they visited him not?
- The hungry is fed, and the thirsty satisfied, till ability set limits to
- the will,
- And those who did it unto them, have done it unto God!
- For human benevolence is large, though many matters dwarf it,
- Prudence, ignorance, imposture, and the straitenings of circumstance and
- time.
- And if to the body, so to the mind, the mass of men are generous;
- Their estimate, who know us best, is seldom seen to err;
- Be sure the fault is thine, as pride, or shallowness, or vanity,
- If all around thee, good and bad, neglect thy seeming merit:
- No man yet deserved, who found not some to love him;
- And he, that never kept a friend, need only blame himself:
- Many for unworthiness will droop and die, but all are not unworthy;
- It must indeed be cold clay soil, that killeth every seed.
- Therefore, examine thy state, O self-accounted martyr of Neglect,
- It may be, thy merit is a cubit, and thy measure thereof a furlong;
- But grant it greater than thy thoughts, and grant that men thy fellows,
- For pleasure, business, or interest, misuse, forget, neglect thee,--
- Still be thou conqueror in this, the consciousness of high deservings;
- Let it suffice thee to be worthy; faint not thou for praise;
- For that thou art, be grateful; go humbly even in thy confidence;
- And set thy foot upon the neck of an enemy so harmless as Neglect.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF CONTENTMENT.
-
- Godliness with Contentment,--these be the pillars of felicity,
- Jachin, wherewithal it is established, and Boaz, in the which is strength;
- And upon their capitals is lily-work, the lotus fruit and flower,
- Those fair and fragrant types of holiness, innocence, and beauty;
- Great gain pertaineth to the pillars, nets and chains of wreathen gold,
- And they stand up straight in the temple porch, the house where Glory
- dwelleth.
-
- The body craveth meats, and the spirit is athirst for peacefulness,
- He that hath these, hath enough; for all beyond is vanity.
- Surfeit vaulteth over pleasure, to light upon the hither side of pain;
- And great store is great care, the rather if it mightily increaseth.
- Albeit too little is a trouble, yet too much shall swell into an evil,
- If wisdom stand not nigh to moderate the wishes:
- For covetousness never had enough, but moaneth at its wants for ever,
- And rich men have commonly more need to be taught contentment than the
- poor.
- That hungry chasm in their market-place gapeth still unsatisfied,
- Yea, fling in all the wealth of Rome,--it asketh higher victims;
- So, when the miser's gold cannot fill the measure of his lust,
- Curtius must leap into the pit, and avarice shall close upon his life.
-
- Behold Independence in his rags, all too easily contented,
- Careful for nothing, thankful for much, and uncomplaining in his poverty:
- Such an one have I somewhile seen earn his crust with gladness;
- He is a gatherer of simples, culling wild herbs upon the hills;
- And now, as he sitteth on the beach, with his motherless child beside him,
- To rest them in the cheerful sun, and sort their mints and horehound,--
- Tell me, can ye find upon his forehead the cloud of covetous anxiety,
- Or note the dull unkindled eyes of sated sons of pleasure?--
- For there is more joy of life with that poor picker of the ditches,
- Than among the multitude of wealthy who wed their gains to discontent.
-
- I have seen many rich, burdened with the fear of poverty,
- I have seen many poor, buoyed with all the carelessness of wealth:
- For the rich had the spirit of a pauper, and the moneyless a liberal
- heart;
- The first enjoyeth not for having, and the latter hath nothing but
- enjoyment.
- None is poor but the mean in mind, the timorous, the weak, and
- unbelieving;
- None is wealthy but the affluent in soul, who is satisfied and floweth
- over.
- The poor-rich is attenuate for fears, the rich-poor is fattened upon
- hopes;
- Cheerfulness is one man's welcome, and the other warneth from him by his
- gloom.
- Many poor have the pleasures of the rich, even in their own possessions;
- And many rich miss the poor man's comforts, and yet feel all his cares.
- Liberty is affluence, and the Helots of anxiety never can be counted
- wealthy;
- But he that is disenthralled from fear, goeth for the time a king;
- He is royal, great, and opulent, living free of fortune,
- And looking on the world as owner of its good, the Maker's child and heir:
- Whereas, the covetous is slavish, a very Midas in his avarice,
- Full of dismal dreams, and starved amongst his treasures:
- The ceaseless spur of discontent goaded him with instant apprehension,
- And his thirst for gold could never be quenched, for he drank with the
- throat of Crassus.
-
- Vanity, and dreary disappointment, care, and weariness, and envy;
- Vanity is graven upon all things; wisely spake the preacher.
- For ambition is a burning mountain, thrown up amid the turbid sea,
- A Stromboli in sullen pride above the hissing waves;
- And the statesman climbing there, forgetful of his patriot intentions,
- Shall hate the strife of each rough step, or ever he hath toiled midway:
- And every truant from his home, the happy home of duty,
- Shall live to loathe his eminence of cares, that seething smoke and lava.
- Contentment is the temperate repast, flowing with milk and honey:
- Ambition is the drunken orgy, fed by liquid flames:
- A black and bitter frown is stamped upon the forehead of Ambition,
- But fair Contentment's angel-face is rayed with winning smiles.
-
- There was in Tyre a merchant, the favourite child of fortune,
- An opulent man with many ships, to trade in many climes;
- And he rose up early to his merchandize, after feverish dreaming,
- And lay down late to his hot unrest, overwhelmed with calculated cares.
- So, day by day, and month by month, and year by year, he gained;
- And grew grey, and waxed great: for money brought him all things.
- All things?--verily, not all; the kernel of the nut is lacking,--
- His mind was a stranger to content, and as for Peace, he knew her not:
- Luxuries palled upon his palate, and his eyes were satiate with purple;
- He could coin much gold, but buy no happiness with it.
- And on a day, a day of dread, in the heat of inordinate ambition,
- When he threw with a gambler's hand, to lose or to double his possessions,
- The chance hit him,--he had speculated ill,--and men began to whisper;--
- Those he trusted, failed; and their usuries had bribed him deeply;
- One ship foundered out at sea,--and another met the pirate,--
- And so, with broken fortunes, men discreetly shunned him.
- He was a stricken stag, and went to hide away in solitude,
- And there in humility, he thought,--he resolved, and promptly acted:
- From the wreck of all his splendours, from the dregs of the goblet of
- affluence,
- He saved with management a morsel and a drop, for his daily cup and
- platter:
- And lo, that little was enough, and in enough was competence;
- His cares were gone,--he slept by night, and lived at peace by day;
- Cured of his guilty selfishness,--money's love, envy, competition,--
- He lived to be thankful in a cottage that he had lost a palace:
- For he found in his abasement what he vainly had sought in high estate,
- Both mind and body well at ease, though robed in the russet of the lowly.
-
- Once more; a certain priest, happy in his high vocation,
- With faith, and hope, and charity, well served his village altar;
- As men count riches, he was poor; but great were his treasures in heaven,
- And great his joys on earth, for God's sake doing good:
- He had few cares and many consolations, one of the welcome everywhere;
- The labourer accounted him his friend, and magnates did him honour at
- their table:
- With a large heart and little means he still made many grateful,
- And felt as the centre of a circle, of comfort, calmness, and content.
- But, on a weaker sabbath,--for he preached both well and wisely,--
- Some casual hearer loudly praised his great neglected talents:
- Why should he be buried in obscurity, and throw these pearls to swine?
- Could he not still be doing good,--the whilst he pushed his fortunes?
- Then came temptation, even on the spark of discontent;
- The neighbouring town had a pulpit to be filled; hotly did he canvass,
- and won it:
- Now was he popular and courted, and listened to the spell of admiration,
- And toiled to please the taste, rather than to pierce the conscience.
- Greedily he sought, and seeking found, the patronizing notice of the
- great;
- He thirsted for emoluments and honours, and counted rich men happy:
- So he flattered, so he preached; and gold and fame flowed in;
- They flowed in,--he was reaping his reward, and felt himself a fool.
- Alas, what a shadow was he following,--how precious was the substance he
- had left!
- Man for God, gold for good, this was his miserable bargain.
- The village church, its humble flock, and humbler parish priest,
- Zeal, devotion, and approving Heaven,--his books, and simple life,
- His little farm and flower-beds,--his recreative rambles with a friend,
- And haply, at eventide, the leaping trouts, to help their humble fare,
- All these wretchedly exchanged for what the world called fortune,
- With the harrowing conscience of a state relapsed to vain ambitions.
- Then,--for God was gracious to his soul,--his better thoughts returned,
- And better aims with better thoughts, his holy walk of old.
- Sickened of style, and ostentation, and the dissipative fashions of
- society,
- He deserted from the ranks of Mammon, and renewed his allegiance to God:
- For he found that the praises of men, and all that gold can give,
- Are not worthy to be named, against godliness and calm contentment.
-
-
-OF LIFE.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- A child was playing in a garden, a merry little child,
- Bounding with triumphant health, and full of happy fancies;
- His kite was floating in the sunshine,--but he tied the string to a twig
- And ran among the roses to catch a new-born butterfly;
- His horn-book lay upon a bank, but the pretty truant hid it,
- Buried up in gathered grass, and moss, and sweet wild-thyme;
- He launched a paper boat upon the fountain, then wayward turned aside,
- To twine some fragrant jessamines about the dripping marble:
- So, in various pastime shadowing the schemes of manhood,
- That curly-headed boy consumed the golden hours:
- And I blessed his glowing face, envying the merry little child,
- As he shouted with the ecstasy of being, clapping his hands for
- joyfulness:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is happiness and hope,
- Thy days are bright, thy flowers are sweet, and pleasure the condition of
- thy gift.
-
- A youth was walking in the moonlight, walking not alone,
- For a fair and gentle maid leant on his trembling arm:
- Their whispering was still of beauty, and the light of love was in their
- eyes,
- Their twin young hearts had not a thought unvowed to love and beauty;
- The stars and the sleeping world, and the guardian eye of God,
- The murmur of the distant waterfall, and nightingales warbling in the
- thicket,
- Sweet speech of years to come, and promises of fondest hope,
- And more, a present gladness in each other's trust,
- All these fed their souls with the hidden manna of affection,
- While their faces shone beatified in the radiance of reflected Eden:
- I gazed on that fond youth, and coveted his heart,
- Attuned to holiest symphonies, with music in its strings:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is love and beauty,
- Thy joys are full, thy looks most fair, thy feelings pure and sensitive.
-
- A man sat beside his merchandize, a careworn altered man,
- His waking hope, his nightly fear, were money, and its losses:
- Rarely was the laugh upon his cheek, except in bitter scorn
- For his foolishness of heart, and the lie of its romance, counting Love a
- treasure.
- His talk is of stern Reality, chilling unimaginative facts,
- The dull material accidents of this sensual body;
- Lucreless honour were contemptible, impoverished affection but a pauper's
- riches,
- Duty, struggling unrewarded, the bargain of a cheated fool:
- The market value of a fancy must be measured by the gain it bringeth,
- No man is fed or clothed by fame, or love, or duty:--
- So toiled he day by day, that cold and joyless man,
- I gazed upon his haggard face, and sorrowed for the change:
- For I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is care and weariness,
- Thy soil is parched, thy winds are fierce, and the suns above thee
- hardening.
-
- A withered elder lay upon his bed, a desolate man and feeble:
- His thoughts were of the past, the early past, the bygone days of youth:
- Bitterly repented he the years stolen by the god of this world:
- Remembering the maiden of his love, and the heart-stricken wife of his
- selfishness.
- For the sunshiny morning of life came again to him a vivid truth,
- But the years of toil as a long dim dream, a cloudy blighted noon:
- He saw the nutting schoolboy, but forgat the speculative merchant;
- The callous calculating husband was shamed by the generous lover:
- He knew that the weeds of worldliness, and the smoky breath of Mammon
- Had choked and killed those tender shoots, his yearnings after honour and
- affection;
- So was he sick at heart, and my pity strove to cheer him,
- But a deep and dismal gulf lay between comfort and his soul.
- Then I said, Surely, O Life, thy name is vanity and sorrow,
- Thy storms at noon are many, and thine eventide is clouded by remorse.
-
- Now, when I thought upon these things, my heart was grieved within me:
- I wept, with bitterness of speech, and these were the words of my
- complaining:
- "Wherefore then must happiness and love wither into care and vanity,--
- Wherefore is the bud so beautiful, but flower and fruit so blighted?
- Hard is the lot of man; to be lured by the meteor of romance,
- Only to be snared, and to sink, in the turbid mudpool of reality."
-
- Suddenly, a light,--and a rushing presence,--and a consciousness of
- Something near me,--
- I trembled, and listened, and prayed: then I knew the Angel of Life:
- Vague, and dimly visible, mine eye could not behold Him,
- As, calmly unimpassioned, He looked upon an erring creature;
- Unseen, my spirit apprehended Him; though He spake not, yet I heard:
- For a sympathetic communing with Him flashed upon my mind electric.
-
- Pensioner of God, be grateful; the gift of Life is good:
- The life of heart, and life of soul, mingled with life for the body.
- Gladness and beauty are its just inheritance,--the beauty thou hast
- counted for romance:
- And guardian spirits weep that selfishness and sorrow should destroy it.
- Thou hast seen the natural blessing marred into a curse by man;
- Come then, in favour will I show thee the proper excellence of life.
- Keep thou purity, and watch against suspicion,--love shall never perish;
- Guard thine innocency spotless, and the buoyancy of childhood shall
- remain.
- Sweet ideals feed the soul, thoughts of loveliness delight it,
- The chivalrous affection of uncalculating youth lacketh not honourable
- wisdom.
- Charge not folly on invisibles, that render thee happier and purer,
- The fair frail visions of Romance have a use beyond the maxims of the
- Real.
-
- Behold a patriarch of years, who leaneth on the staff of religion;
- His heart is fresh, quick to feel, a bursting fount of generosity:
- He, playful in his wisdom, is gladdened in his children's gladness,
- He, pure in his experience, loveth in his son's first love:
- Lofty aspirations, deep affections, holy hopes are his delight;
- His abhorrence is to strip from Life its charitable garment of Idea.
- The cold and callous sneerer, who heedeth of the merely practical,
- And mocketh at good uses in imaginary things, that man is his scorn:
- The hard unsympathizing modern, filled with facts and figures,
- Cautious, and coarse, and materialized in mind, that man is his pity.
- Passionate thirst for gain never hath burnt within his bosom,
- The leaden chains of that dull lust have not bound him prisoner:
- The shrewd world laughed at him for honesty, the vain world mouthed at
- him for honour,
- The false world hated him for truth, the cold world despised him for
- affection:
- Still, he kept his treasure, the warm and noble heart,
- And in that happy wise old man survive the child and lover.
- For human Life is as Chian wine, flavoured unto him who drinketh it,
- Delicate fragrance comforting the soul, as needful substance for the body:
- Therefore, see thou art pure and guileless; so shall thy Realities of Life
- Be sweetened, and tempered, and gladdened by the wholesome spirit of
- Romance.
-
- Dost thou live, man, dost thou live,--or only breathe and labour?
- Art thou free, or enslaved to a routine, the daily machinery of habit?
- For, one man is quickened into life, where thousands exist as in a torpor,
- Feeding, toiling, sleeping, an insensate weary round:
- The plough, or the ledger, or the trade, with animal cares and indolence,
- Make the mass of vital years a heavy lump unleavened.
- Drowsily lie down in thy dulness, fettered with the irons of circumstance,
- Thou wilt not wake to think and feel a minute in a month.
- The epitome of common life is seen in the common epitaph,
- Born on such a day, and dead on such another, with an interval of
- threescore years.
- For time hath been wasted on the senses, to the hourly diminishing of
- spirit:
- Lean is the soul and pineth, in the midst of abundance for the body:
- He forgat the worlds to which he tended, and a creature's true nobility,
- Nor wished that hope and wholesome fear should stir him from his hardened
- satisfaction.
- And this is death in life; to be sunk beneath the waters of the Actual,
- Without one feebly-struggling sense of an airier spiritual realm:
- Affection, fancy, feeling--dead; imagination, conscience, faith,
- All wilfully expunged, till they leave the man mere carcase.
- See thou livest, whiles thou art: for heart must live, and soul,
- But care and sloth and sin and self, combine to kill that life.
- A man will grow to an automaton, an appendage to the counter or the desk,
- If mind and spirit be not roused, to raise the plodding groveller:
- Then praise God for sabbaths, for books, and dreams, and pains,
- For the recreative face of nature, and the kindling charities of home;
- And remember, thou that labourest,--thy leisure is not loss,
- If it help to expose and undermine that solid falsehood, the Material.
-
- Life is a strange avenue of various trees and flowers;
- Lightsome at commencement, but darkening to its end, in a distant massy
- portal.
- It beginneth as a little path, edged with the violet and primrose,
- A little path of lawny grass, and soft to tiny feet:
- Soon, spring thistles in the way, those early griefs of school,
- And fruit-trees ranged on either hand show holiday delights:
- Anon, the rose and the mimosa hint at sensitive affection,
- And vipers hide among the grass, and briars are woven in the hedges:
- Shortly, staked along in order, stand the tender saplings,
- While hollow hemlock and tall ferns fill the frequent interval:
- So advancing, quaintly mixed, majestic line the way
- Sturdy oaks, and vigorous elms, the beech and forest-pine:
- And here the road is rough with rocks, wide, and scant of herbage,
- The sun is hot in heaven, and the ground is cleft and parched:
- And many-times a hollow trunk, decayed, or lightning-scathed,
- Or in its deadly solitude, the melancholy upas:
- But soon, with closer ranks, are set the sentinel trees,
- And darker shadows hover amongst Autumn's mellow tints;
- Ever and anon, a holly,--junipers, and cypresses, and yews;
- The soil is damp; the air is chill; night cometh on apace:
- Speed to the portal, traveller,--lo, there is a moon,
- With smiling light to guide thee safely through the dreadful shade:
- Hark,--that hollow knock,--behold, the warder openeth,
- The gate is gaping, and for thee;--those are the jaws of Death!
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF DEATH.
-
-[Illustration: "K"]
-
- Keep silence, daughter of frivolity,--for Death is in that chamber!
- Startle not with echoing sound the strangely solemn peace.
- Death is here in spirit, watcher of a marble corpse,--
- That eye is fixed, that heart is still,--how dreadful in its stillness!
- Death, new tenant of the house, pervadeth all the fabric;
- He waiteth at the head, and he standeth at the feet, and hideth in the
- caverns of the breast:
- Death, subtle leech, hath anatomized soul from body,
- Dissecting well in every nerve its spirit from its substance:
- Death, rigid lord, hath claimed the heriot clay,
- While joyously the youthful soul hath gone to take his heritage:
- Death, cold usurer, hath seized his bonded debtor;
- Death, savage despot, hath caught his forfeit serf;
- Death, blind foe, wreaketh petty vengeance on the flesh;
- Death, fell cannibal, gloateth on his victim,
- And carrieth it with him to the grave, that dismal banquet-hall,
- Where in foul state the Royal Goul holdeth secret orgies.
-
- Hide it up, hide it up, draw the decent curtain:
- Hence! curious fool, and pry not on corruption:
- For the fearful mysteries of change are being there enacted,
- And many actors play their part on that small stage, the tomb.
- Leave the clay, that leprous thing, touch not the fleshly garment:
- Dust to dust, it mingleth well among the sacred soil:
- It is scattered by the winds, it is wafted by the waves, it mixeth with
- herbs and cattle,
- But God hath watched those morsels, and hath guided them in care:
- Each waiting soul must claim his own, when the archangel soundeth,
- And all the fields, and all the hills, shall move a mass of life;
- Bodies numberless crowding on the land, and covering the trampled sea,
- Darkening the air precipitate, and gathered scatheless from the fire;
- The Himalayan peaks shall yield their charge, and the desolate steppes of
- Siberia,
- The Maelstroem disengulph its spoil, and the iceberg manumit its captive:
- All shall teem with life, the converging fragments of humanity,
- Till every conscious essence greet his individual frame;
- For in some dignified similitude, alike, yet different in glory,
- This body shall be shaped anew, fit dwelling for the soul:
- The hovel hath grown to a palace, the bulb hath burst into the flower,
- Matter hath put on incorruption, and is at peace with spirit.
-
- Amen,--and so it shall be:--but now, the scene is drear,--
- Yea, though promises and hope strive to cheat its sadness;
- Full of grief, though faith herself is strong to speed the soul,
- For the partner of its toil is left behind to endure an ordeal of change.
- Dear partner, dear and frail, my loved though humble home,--
- Should I cast thee off without a pang, as a garment flung aside?
- Many years, for joy and sorrow, have I dwelt in thee,
- How shall I be reckless of thy weal, nor hope for thy perfection?--
- This also, He that lent thee for my uses in mortality,
- Shall well fulfil with boundless praise on that returning day:
- Behold, thou shalt be glorified: thou, mine abject friend,
- And should I meanly scorn thy state, until it rise to greatness?
- Far be it, O my soul, from thine expectant essence,
- To be heedless, if indignity or folly desecrate those thine ashes:
- Keep them safe with careful love; and let the mound be holy;
- And, thou that passest by, revere the waiting dead.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Naples sitteth by the sea, key-stone of an arch of azure,
- Crowned by consenting nations peerless queen of gaiety:
- She laugheth at the wrath of Ocean, she mocketh the fury of Vesuvius,
- She spurneth disease and misery and famine, that crowd her sunny streets:
- The giddy dance, the merry song, the festal glad procession,
- The noonday slumber and the midnight serenade,--all these make up her
- Life:
- Her Life?--and what her Death?--look we to the end of life,--
- Solon, and Tellus the Athenian, wisely have ye pointed to the grave.
- For behold yon dreary precinct,--those hundreds of stone wells,
- A pit for a day, a pit for a day,--a pit to be sealed for a year:
- And in the gloom of night, they raise the year-closed lid,--
- Look in,--for gnawing lime hath half consumed the carcases;
- Thus they hurl the daily dead into that horrible pit,
- The dead that only died this day,--as unconsidered offal!
- There, a stark white heap, unwept, unloved, uncared for,
- Old men and maidens, young men and infants, mingle in hideous corruption;
- Fling in the gnawing lime,--seal up the charnel for a year;
- For lo, a morrow's dawn hath tinged the mountain summit.
- O fair false city, thou gay and gilded harlot,
- Woe, for thy wanton heart, woe, for thy wicked hardness:
- Woe unto thee, that the lightsomeness of Life, beneath Italian suns,
- Should meet the solemnity of Death, in a sepulchre so foul and fearful.
-
- For that, even to the best, the wise and pure and pious,
- Death, repulsive king, thine iron rule is terrible:
- Yea, and even at the best, in company of buried kindred,
- With hallowing rites, and friendly tears, and the dear old country church,
- Death, cold and lonely, thy frigid face is hateful,
- The bravest look on thee with dread, the humblest curse thy coming.
- Still, ye unwise among mankind, your foolishness hath added fears;
- The crowded cemetery, the catacomb of bones, the pestilential vault,
- With fancy's gliding ghost at eve, her moans and flaky footfalls,
- And the gibbering train of terror to fright your coward hearts.
- We speak not here of sin, nor the phantoms of a bloody conscience,
- Nor of solaces, and merciful pardon: we heed but the inevitable grave;
- The grave, that wage of guilt, that due return to dust,
- The grave, that goal of earth, and starting-post for Heaven.
-
- Plant it with laurels, sprinkle it with lilies, set it upon yonder dewy
- hill
- Midst holy prayers, and generous griefs, and consecrating blessings:
- Let Sophocles sleep among his ivy, green perennial garlands,
- Let olives shade their Virgil, and roses bloom above Corinne;
- To his foster-mother, Ocean, entrust the mariner in hope;
- The warrior's spirit, let it rise on high from the flaming fragrant pyre.
- But heap not coffins and corruption to infect the mass of living,
- Nor steal from odious realities the charitable poetry of Death:
- It is wise to gild uncomeliness, it is wise to mask necessity,
- It is wise from cheerful sights and sounds to draw their gentle uses:
- Hide the facts, the bitter facts, the foul, and fearful facts,
- Tend the body well in hope, this were praise and wisdom:
- But to plunge in gloom the parting soul, that hath loved its clay
- tenement so long,
- This were vanity and folly, the counsel of moroseness and despair.
- Not thus, the Scythian of old time welcomed Death with songs;
- Not thus, the shrewd Egyptian decorated Death with braveries;
- Not thus, on his funeral tower sleepeth the sun-worshipping Parsee;
- Not thus, the Moslem saint lieth in his arabesque mausoleum;
- Not thus, the wild red Indian, hunter of the far Missouri,
- In flowering trees hath nested up his forest-loving ancestry;
- Not thus, the Switzer mountaineer scattereth ribboned garlands
- About the rustic cross that halloweth the bed of his beloved;
- Not thus, the village maiden wisheth she may die in spring,
- With store of violets and cowslips to be sprinkled on her snow-white
- shroud;
- Not thus, the dying poet asketh a cheerful grave,--
- Lay him in the sunshine, friends, nor sorrow that a Christian hath
- departed!
-
- Yea; it is the poetry of Death, an Orpheus gladdening Hades,
- To care with mindful love for all so dear--and dead;
- To think of them in hope, to look for them in joy, and--but for its
- simple vanity,--
- To pray with all the earnestness of nature for souls who cannot change.
- For the tree is felled, and boughed, and bare, and the Measurer standeth
- with His line;
- The chance is gone for ever, and is past the reach of prayer:
- For men and angels, good and ill, have rendered all their witness;
- The trial is over, the jury are gone in, and none can now be heard;
- Well are they agreed upon the verdict, just, and fixt, and final,
- And the sentence showeth clear, before the Judge hath spoken:
- Now,--while resting matter is at peace within the tomb,
- The conscious spirit watcheth in unspeakable suspense;
- Racked with a fearful looking-forward, or blissfully feeding on the
- foretaste,
- Waiting souls in eager expectation pass the solemn interval:
- They slumber not at death, but awaken, quickened to the terrors of the
- judgment;
- They lie not insensate among darkness, but exult, looking forward to the
- light:
- Idiotcy, brightening on the instant, when that veil is torn,
- Is grateful that his torpor here hath left him as an innocent:
- The young child, stricken as he played, and guileless babes unborn,
- Freed from fetters of the flesh, burst into mind immediate:
- Madness judgeth wisely, and the visions of the lunatic are gone,
- And each hasteneth to praise the mercy that made him irresponsible.
- For the soul is one, though manifold in act, working the machinery of
- brain,
- Reason, fancy, conscience, passion, are but varying phases;
- If, in God's wise purpose, the machine were shattered or confused,
- Still is soul the same, though it exhibit with a difference:
- Therefore, dissipate the brain, and set its inmate free,
- Behold, the maniacs and embryos stand in their place intelligent.
- That solvent eateth away all dross, leaving the gold intact:
- Matter lingereth in the retort, spirit hath flown to the receiver:
- And lo, that recipient of the spirits, it is some aerial world,
- An oasis midway on the desert space, separating earth from heaven,
- A prison-house for essences incorporate, a limbus vague and wide,
- Tartarus for evil, and Paradise for good, that intermediate Hades.
-
- O Death, what art thou? a Lawgiver that never altereth,
- Fixing the consummating seal, whereby the deeds of life become
- established:
- O Death, what art thou? a stern and silent usher,
- Leading to the judgment for Eternity, after the trial-scene of Time:
- O Death, what art thou? an Husbandman, that reapeth always,
- Out of season, as in season, with the sickle in his hand:
- O Death, what art thou? the shadow unto every substance,
- In the bower as in the battle, haunting night and day:
- O Death, what art thou? Nurse of dreamless slumbers
- Freshening the fevered flesh to a wakefulness eternal:
- O Death, what art thou? strange and solemn Alchymist,
- Elaborating life's elixir from these clayey crucibles:
- O Death, what art thou? Antitype of Nature's marvels,
- The seed and dormant chrysalis bursting into energy and glory.
- Thou calm safe anchorage for the shattered hulls of men,--
- Thou spot of gelid shade, after the hot-breathed desert,--
- Thou silent waiting-hall, where Adam meeteth with his children,--
- How full of dread, how full of hope, loometh inevitable Death:
- Of dread, for all have sinned; of hope, for One hath saved;
- The dread is drowned in joy, the hope is filled with immortality!
- --Pass along, pilgrim of life, go to thy grave unfearing,
- The terrors are but shadows now, that haunt the vale of Death.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-OF IMMORTALITY.
-
-[Illustration: "G"]
-
- Gird up thy mind to contemplation, trembling inhabitant of earth;
- Tenant of a hovel for a day,--thou art heir of the universe for ever!
- For, neither congealing of the grave, nor gulphing waters of the
- firmament,
- Nor expansive airs of heaven, nor dissipative fires of Gehenna,
- Nor rust of rest, nor wear, nor waste, nor loss, nor chance, nor change,
- Shall avail to quench or overwhelm the spark of soul within thee!
-
- Thou art an imperishable leaf on the evergreen bay-tree of Existence;
- A word from Wisdom's mouth, that cannot be unspoken;
- A ray of Love's own light; a drop in Mercy's sea;
- A creature, marvellous and fearful, begotten by the fiat of Omnipotence.
- I, that speak in weakness, and ye, that hear in charity,
- Shall not cease to live and feel, though flesh must see corruption;
- For the prison-gates of matter shall be broken, and the shackled soul go
- free,
- Free, for good or ill, to satisfy its appetence for ever:
- For ever,--dreadful doom, to be hurried on eternally to evil,--
- For ever,--happy fate, to ripen into perfectness--for ever!
-
- And is there a thought within thy heart, O slave of sin and fear,
- A black and harmful hope, that erring spirit dieth?
- That primal disobedience hath ensured the death of soul,
- And separate evil sealed it thine--thy curse, Annihilation?
- Heed thou this; there is a Sacrifice; the Maker is Redeemer of His
- creature;
- Freely unto each, universally to all, is restored the privilege of
- essence:
- Whether unto grace or guilt, all must live through Him,
- Live in vital joy, or live in dying woe:
- Death in Adam, Life in Christ; the curse hung upon the cross:
- Who art thou that heedest of redemption, as narrower than the fall?
- All were dead,--He died for all; that living, they might love;
- If living souls withhold their love,--still, He hath died for them.
- Eve stole the knowledge; Christ gave the life:
- Knowledge and life are the perquisites of soul, the privilege of Man:
- Mercy stepped between, and stayed the double theft;
- God gave; and giving, bought; and buying, asketh love:
- And in such asking rendereth bliss, to all that hear and answer,
- For love with life is heaven; and life unloving, hell.
-
- Creature of God, His will is for thy weal, eternally progressing;
- Fear not to trust a Maker's love, nor a Saviour's ransom:
- He drank for all,--for thee, and me,--the poison of our deeds;
- We shall not die, but live,--and, of His grace, we love.
- For, in the mysteries of Mercy, the One fore-knowing Spirit
- Outstrippeth reason's halting choice, and winneth men to Him:
- Who shall sound the depths? who shall reach the heights?
- Freedom, in the gyves of fate; and sovereignty, reconciled with justice.
-
- If then, as annihilate by sin, the soul was ever forfeit,
- Godhead paid the mighty price, the pledge hath been redeemed:
- He from the waters of Oblivion raised the drowning race,
- Lifting them even to Himself, the baseless Rock of Ages.
- None can escape from Adam's guilt, or second Adam's guerdon:
- Sin and death are thine; thine also is interminable being:
- Let it be even as thou wilt, still are we ransomed from nonentity,
- The worlds of bliss and woe are peopled with immortals:
- And ruin is thy blame; for thou, the worst, art free
- To take from Heaven the grace of love, as the gift of life:
- Yet is not remedy thy praise; for thou, the best, art bound
- In self, and sin, and darkling sloth, until He break the chain:
- None can tell, without a struggle, if that chain be broken;
- Strive to-day,--one effort more may prove that thou art free!
- Here is faith and prayer, here is the Grace and the Atonement,
- Here is the creature feeling for its God, and the prodigal returning to
- his Father.
- But, behold, His reasonable children, standing in just probation,
- With ears to hear, neglect; with eyes to see, refuse:
- They will not have the blessing with the life, the blessing that
- enricheth Immortality;
- And look for pleasures out of God, for heaven in life alone:
- So, they snatch that awful prize, existence void of love,
- And in their darkening exile make a needful hell of self.
-
- Therefore fear, thou sinner, lest the huge blessing, Immortality,
- Be blighted in thine evil to a curse,--it were better he had not been
- born:
- Therefore hope, thou saint, for the gift of Immortality is free;
- Take and live, and live in love; fear not, thou art redeemed!
- The happy life, that height of hope, the knowledge of all good,
- This is the blessing on obedience, obedience the child of faith:
- The miserable life, that depth of all despair, the knowledge of all evil,
- This is the curse upon impenitence, impenitence that sprung of unbelief.
- God, from a beautiful necessity, is Love in all He doeth,
- Love, a brilliant fire, to gladden or consume:
- The wicked work their woe by looking upon love, and hating it:
- The righteous find their joys in yearning on its loveliness for ever.
-
- Who shall imagine Immortality, or picture its illimitable prospect?
- How feebly can a faltering tongue express the vast idea!
- For consider the primaeval woods that bristle over broad Australia,
- And count their autumn leaves, millions multiplied by millions;
- Thence look up to a moonless sky from a sleeping isle of the Aegaean,
- And add to these leaves yon starry host, sparkling on the midnight
- numberless;
- Thence traverse an Arabia, some continent of eddying sand,
- Gather each grain, let none escape, add them to the leaves and to the
- stars;
- Afterward gaze upon the sea, the thousand leagues of an Atlantic,
- Take drop by drop, and add their sum, to the grains, and leaves, and
- stars;
- The drops of ocean, the desert sands, the leaves, and stars innumerable,
- (Albeit, in that multitude of multitudes, each small unit were an age,)
- All might reckon for an instant, a transient flash of Time,
- Compared with this intolerable blaze, the measureless enduring of
- Eternity!
-
- O grandest gift of the Creator,--O largess worthy of a God,--
- Who shall grasp that thrilling thought, life and joy for ever?
- For the sun in heaven's heaven is Love that cannot change,
- And the shining of that sun is life, to all beneath its beams:
- Who shall arrest it in the firmament,--or drag it from its sphere?
- Or bid its beauty smile no more, but be extinct for ever?
- Yea, where God hath given, none shall take away,
- Nor build up limits to His love, nor bid His bounty cease;
- Wide, as space is peopled, endless as the empire of heaven,
- The river of the water of life floweth on in majesty for ever!
-
- Why should it seem a thing impossible to thee, O man of many doubts,
- That God shall wake the dead, and give this mortal immortality?
- Is it that such riches are unsearchable, the bounty too profuse?
- And yet, what gift, to cease or change, is worthy of the King Almighty?
- For remember the moment thou art not, thou mightest as well not have been;
- A millennium and an hour are equal in the gulph of that desolate abyss,
- annihilation:
- If Adam had existed till to-day, and to-day had perished utterly,
- What were his gain in length of a life, that hath passed away for ever?
- No tribute of thanks can exhale from the empty censer of nonentity;
- The Giver, with His gift reclaimed, is mulcted of all praise.
-
- Tell me, ye that strive in vain to cramp and dwarf the soul,
- Wherefore should it cease to be, and when shall essence die?
- It is,--and therefore shall be, till just obstacle opposeth:
- Show no cause for change, and reason leaneth to continuance.
- The body verily shall change; this curious house we live in
- Never had continuing stay, but changeth every instant:
- But the spiritual tenant of the house abideth in unalterable
- consciousness,
- He may fly to many lands, but cannot flee himself.
- The soil wherein ye drop the seed, by suns or rains may vary;
- But the seed is the same; and soul is the seed; and flesh but its
- anchorage to earth.
-
- The machine may be broken, and rust corrode the springs: but can rust
- feed on motion?
- Worms may batten on the brain: but can worms gnaw the mind?
- Dynamics are, and dwell apart, though matter be not made;
- Spirit is, and can be separate, though a body were not:
- Power is one, be it lever, screw, or wedge; but it needeth these for
- illustration:
- Mind is one, be it casual or ideal; but it is shown in these.
- The creature is constructed individual, for trial of his reasonable will,
- Clay and soul, commingled wisely, mingled not confused:
- As power is not in the spring, till somewhat give it action,
- So, until spirit be infused, the organism lieth inergetic.
-
- Or shalt thou say that mind is the delicate offspring of matter,
- The bright consummate flower that must perish with its leaf?
- Go to: doth weight breed lightness? is freedom the atmosphere of prisons?
- When did the body elevate, expand, and bud the mind?
- Lo, a red-hot cinder flung from the furnaces of Aetna,--
- There is fire in that ash; but did the pumice make it?
- Nay, cold clod, never canst thou generate a flame,
- Nay, most exquisite machinery, nevermore elaborate a mind:
- Rather do ye battle and contend, opposite the one to the other;
- Till God shall stop the strife, and call the body colleague.
-
- Garment of flesh, and art thou then a vest, so tinged with subtle poison,
- (Maddening tunic of the centaur,) as to kill the soul?
- Not so: fruit of disobedience, rot in dissolution, as thou must,--
- The seed is in the core, its germ is safe, and life is in that germ:
- Moreover, Marah shall be sweetened; and a Good Physician
- Yet shall heal those gangrene wounds, the spotted plague of sin:
- He, through worldly trials, and the separative cleansing of the grave,
- Shall change its corruptible to glory, and wash that garment white.
-
- Still, is the whisper in thy heart, that oftenest the bed of death
- Seemeth but a sluggish ebb, of sinking soul and body?
- Mind dwelling, long-time, sensual in the chambers of the flesh,
- May slumber on in conscious sloth, and wilfully be dulled:
- But is it therefore nigh to dissolution, even as the body of this death?
- Ask the stricken conscience, gasping out its terrors;
- Ask the dying miser, loth to leave his gold;
- Ask the widowed poor, confiding her fatherless to strangers;
- Ask the martyr-maid, a broken reed so strong,
- That weak and tortured frame, with triumph on its brow!--
- O thou gainsayer, the finger of disease may seem to reach the soul,
- But it is a spiritual touch, sympathy with that which aileth:
- Pain or fear may dislocate and shatter this delicate machinery of nerves;
- But madness proveth mind: the fault is in the engine, not the impetus:
- Dissipate the mists of matter, lo, the soul is clear:
- Timour's cage bowed it in the dust; but now it goeth forth a freedman.
-
- Yet more, there is reason in moralities, that the soul must live;
- If God be king in heaven, or have care for earth.
- Can wickedness have triumphed with impunity, or virtue toiled unseen?
- Shall cruelty torture unavenged, and the innocent complain unheard?
- Is there no recompense for woe, must there be no other world for
- justice,--
- No hope in setting suns of good, nor terror for the evil at its zenith?
- How shall ye make answer unto this; a just God prospering iniquity,
- Wisdom encouraging the foolish, and goodness abetting the depraved!
-
- Yet again; mine erring brother, pardon this abundance of my speech,
- Yield me thy candour and thy charity, listening with a welcome:
- For, even now, a thousand thoughts are trooping to my theme;
- O mighty theme, O feeble thoughts! Alas! who is sufficient?
- Judge not so high a cause by these poor words alone,
- For lo, the advocate hath little skill: pardon and pass on:
- Certify thyself with surer proofs; fledge thine own mind for flight;
- Think, and pray; those better proofs shall follow on with holy aspiration.
- Yet in my humbler grade to help thy weal and comfort,
- Thy weal for this and higher worlds, and comfort in thy sickness,
- Suffer the multitude of fancies, walking with me still in love;
- But tread in fear, it is holy ground,--remember, Immortality!
-
- Wilt thou argue from infirmities, thine abject evil state,
- As how should stricken wretched man indeed exist for ever:
- The brutal and besotted, the savage and the slave, the sucking infant and
- the idiot,
- The mass of mean and common minds, and all to be immortal?--
- Consider every beginning, how small it is and feeble:
- Ganges, and the rolling Mississippi sprung of brooks among the mountains;
- The Yew-tree of a thousand years was once a little seed,
- And Nero's marble Rome, a shepherd's mud-built hovel:
- A speck is on the tropic sky, and it groweth to the terrible tornado;
- An apple, all too fair to see, destroyed a world of souls:
- A tender babe is born,--it is Attila, scourge of the nations!
- A seeming malefactor dieth,--it is Jesus, the Saviour of men!
-
- And hive not in thy thoughts the vain and wordy notion
- That nothing which was born in Time can tire out the footsteps of
- Infinity:
- Reckon up a sum in numbers; where shall progression stop?
- The starting-post is definite and fixed, but what is the goal of
- numeration?
- So, begin upon a moment, and when shall being end?
- Souls emanate from God, to travel with Him equally for ever.
- Moreover, thou that objectest the unenterable circle of eternity,
- That none but He from everlasting can endure, as to a future everlasting,
- Consider, may it be impossible that creatures were counted in their Maker,
- And so, that the confines of Eternity are filled by God alone?
- Trust not thy soul upon a fancy: who would freight a bubble with a
- diamond,
- And launch that priceless gem on the boiling rapids of a cataract?
-
- If then we perish not at death, but walk in spirit through the darkness,
- Waiting for a mansion incorruptible, whereof this body is the seed,
- Tell me, when shall be the period? time and its ordeals are done:
- The storms are passed, the night is at end, behold the Sabbath morning.
- Is death to be conqueror again, and claim once more the victory,--
- Can the enemy's corpse awaken into life, and bruise the Champion's head?
- Evil, terrible ensample, that foil to the attributes of Good,
- Is banished to its own black world, weeded out of earth and heaven:
- Shall that great gulf be passed, and sin be sown again?--
- We know but this, the book of truth proclaimeth gladly, Never!
-
- There remaineth the will of our God: when He repenteth of His creature,
- Made by self-suggested mercy, ransomed by self-sacrificing justice,--
- When Truth, that swore unto his neighbour, disappointeth him, and
- cleaveth to a lie,--
- When the counsels of Wisdom are confounded, and Love warreth with
- itself,--
- When the Unchangeable is changed, and the arm of Omnipotence is broken,--
- Then,--thy quenchless soul shall have reached the goal of its existence.
-
- But it seemeth to thy notions of the merciful and just, a false and
- fearful thing,
- To lay such a burden upon time, that eternity be built on its foundation:
- As if so casual good or ill should colour all the future,
- And the vanity of accident, or sternness of necessity, save or wreck a
- soul.
- Were it casual, vain, or stern, this might pass for truth:
- But all things are marshalled by Design, and carefully tended by
- Benevolence.
- O man, thy Judge is righteous,--noting, remembering, and weighing;--
- Want, ignorance, diversities of state, are cast into the balance of
- advantage:
- The poisonous example of a parent asketh for allowance in the child;
- Care, diseases, toils, and frailties,--all things are considered.
- And again, a mysterious Omniscience knoweth the spirits that are His,
- While the delicate tissues of Event are woven by the fingers of Ubiquity.
- Should Providence be taken by surprise from the possible impinging of an
- accident,
- One fortuitous grain might dislocate the banded universe:
- The merest seeming trifle is ordered as the morning light;
- And He, that rideth on the hurricane, is pilot of the bubble on the
- breaker.
-
- Once more, consider Matter, how small a thing is father to the greatest;
- Thou that lightly hast regarded the results of so-called accident.
- A blade of grass took fire in the sun,--and the prairies are burnt to the
- horizon:
- A grain of sand may blind the eye, and madden the brain to murder:
- A careful fly deposited its egg in the swelling bud of an acorn,--
- The sapling grew,--cankrous and gnarled,--it is yonder hollow oak:
- A child touched a spring, and the spring closed a valve, and the
- labouring engine burst,--
- A thousand lives were in that ship,--wrecked by an infant's finger!
- Shall nature preach in vain? thy casualty, guided in its orbit,
- Though less than a mote upon the sunbeam, saileth in a fleet of worlds;
- That trivial cause, watered and observed of the Husbandman day by day,--
- In calm undeviating strength doth work its large effect.
- Thus, in the pettiness of life note thou seeds of grandeur,
- And watch the hour-glass of Time with the eyes of an heir of Immortality.
-
- There still be clouds of witnesses,--if thou art not weary of my speech,--
- Flocks of thoughts adding lustre to the light, and pointing on to Life.
- For reflect how Truth and Goodness, well and wisely put,
- Commend themselves to every mind with wondrous intuition:
- What is this? the recognition of a standard, unwritten, natural, uniform;
- Telling of one common source, the root of Good and True.
- And if thus present soul can trace descent from Deity,
- Being, as it standeth, individual, a separate reasonable thing,
- What should hinder that its hope may not trace gladly forward,
- And, in astounding parallel, like Enoch walk with God?
- Yea, the genealogy of soul, that vivifying breath of a Creator,
- Breath, no transient air, but essence, energy, and reason,
- Is looming on the past, and shadowing the future, sublimely as
- Melchisedek of old,
- Having not beginning, nor end of days, but present in the majesty of
- Peace!
-
- O false scholar, credulous in vanities, and only sceptical of truth,
- Wherefore toil to cheat thy soul of its birthright, Immortality?
- Is it for thy guilt? He pardoneth: Is it for thy frailty? He will help:
- Though thou fearest, He is love; and Mercy shall be deeper than Despair:
- Even for thy full-blown pride, is it much to be receiver of a God?
- And lo, thy rights, He made thee; thy claims, He hath redeemed.
- Hath the fair aspect of affection no beauty that thou shouldst desire it?
- And are those sorrows nothing, to thee that passest by?
- For it is Fact, immutable, that God hath dwelt in Man:
- With gentle generous love ennobling while He bought us.
- What, though thou art false, ignorant, weak and daring,--
- Can the sun be quenched in heaven--or only Belisarius be blind?
-
- But, even stooping to thy folly, grant all these hopes are vain;
- Stultify reason, wrestle against conscience, and wither up the heart:
- Where is thy vast advantage?--I have all that thou hast,
- The buoyancy of life as strong, and term of days no shorter;
- My cup is full with gladness, my griefs are not more galling:
- And thus, we walk together, even to the gates of death:
- There, (if not also on my journey, blessing every step,
- Gladdening with light, and quickening with love, and killing all my
- cares,)
- There,--while thou art quailing, or sullenly expecting to be nothing,--
- There,--is found my gain; I triumph, where thou tremblest.
- Grant all my solace is a lie, yet it is a fountain of delight,
- A spice in every pleasure, and a balm for every pain:
- O precious wise delusion, scattering both misery and sin,--
- O vile and silly truth, depraving while it curseth!
-
- Darkling child of knowledge, commune with Socrates and Cicero,
- They had no prejudice of birth, no dull parental warpings;
- See, those lustrous minds anticipate the dawning day,--
- Whilst thou, poor mole, art burrowing back to darkness from the light.
- I will not urge a revelation, mercies, miracles, and martyrs,
- But, after twice a thousand years, go, learn thou of the pagan:
- It were happier and wiser even among fools, to cling to the shadow of a
- hope,
- Than, in the company of sages, to win the substance of despair;
- But here, the sages hope; despair is with the fools,
- The base bad hearts, the stolid heads, the sensual and the selfish.
-
- And wilt thou, sorry scorner, mock the phrase, despair?
- Despair for those who die and live,--for me, I live and die:
- What have I to do with dread?--my taper must go out;--
- I nurse no silly hopes, and therefore feel no fears:
- I am hastening to an end.--O false and feeble answer:
- For hope is in thee still, and fear, a racking deep anxiety.
- Erring brother, listen: and take thine answer from the ancients:
- Consider every end, that it is but the end of a beginning.
- All things work in circles; weariness induceth unto rest,
- Rest invigorateth labour, and labour causeth weariness:
- War produceth peace, and peace is wanton unto war:
- Light dieth into darkness, and night dawneth into day:
- The rotting jungle reeds scatter fertility around;
- The buffalo's dead carcase hath quickened life in millions:
- The end of toil is gain, the end of gain is pleasure,
- Pleasure tendeth unto waste, and waste commandeth toil.
-
- So, is death an end,--but it breedeth an infinite beginning;
- Limits are for time, and death killed time: Eternity's beginning is for
- ever.
- Ambition, hath it any goal indeed? is not all fruition, disappointment?
- A step upon the ladder, and another, and another,--we start from every
- end?
- Look to the eras of mortality, babe, student, man,
- The husband, the father, the death-bed of a saint,--and is it then an end?
- That common climax, Death, shall it lead to nothing?
- How strong a root of causes flowering a consequence of vapour:
- That solid chain of facts, is it to be snapped for ever?
- How stout a show of figures, weakly summing to nonentity.
-
- Or haply, Death, in the doublings of thy thought, shall seem continuous
- ending;
- A dull eternal slumber, not an end abrupt.
- O most futile chrysalis, wherefore dost thou sleep?
- Dreamless, unconscious, never to awake,--what object in such slumber?
- If thou art still to live, it may as well be wakefully as sleeping:
- How grovelling must that spirit be, to need eternal sleep!
- Or was indeed the toil of life so heavy and so long,
- That nevermore can rest refresh thine overburdened soul?--
- Sleep is a recreance to body, but when was mind asleep?
- Even in a swoon it dreameth, though all be forgotten afterward:
- The muscles seek relaxing, and the irritable nerves ask peace;
- But life is a constant force, spirit an unquietable impetus:
- The eye may wear out as a telescope, and the brain work slow as a machine,
- But soul unwearied, and for ever, is capable of effort unimpaired.
-
- I live, move, am conscious: what shall bar my being?
- Where is the rude hand, to rend this tissue of existence?
- Not thine, shadowy Death, what art thou but a phantom?
- Not thine, foul Corruption, what art thou but a fear?
- For death is merely absent life, as darkness absent light;
- Not even a suspension, for the life hath sailed away, steering gladly
- somewhere.
- And corruption, closely noted, is but a dissolving of the parts,
- The parts remain, and nothing lost, to build a better whole.
- Moreover, mind is unity, however versatile and rapid;
- Thou canst not entertain two coincident ideas, although they quickly
- follow:
- And Unity hath no parts, so that there is nothing to dissolve:
- An element is still unchanged in every searching solvent.
- Who then shall bid me be annulled,--He that gave me being?
- Amen, if God so will; I know that will is love:
- But love hath promised life, and therefore I shall live;
- So long as He is God, I shall be His Creature!
-
- And here, shrewd reasoner, so eager to prove that thou must perish,
- I note a sneer upon thy lip, and ridicule is haply on thy tongue:
- How, said he,--creature of a God, and are not all His creatures,--
- The lion, and the gnat,--yea, the mushroom, and the crystal,--have all
- these a soul?
- Thy fancies tend to prove too much, and overshoot the mark:
- If I die not with brutes, then brutes must live with me?--
- I dare not tell thee that they will, for the word is not in my commission;
- But of the twain it is the likelier; continuance is the chance:
- Men, dying in their sins, are likened unto beasts that perish;
- They are dark, animal, insensate, but have they not a lurking soul?
- The spirit of a man goeth upward, reasonable, apprehending God;
- The spirit of a beast goeth downward, sensual, doting on the creature:
- Who told thee they die at dissolution?--boldly think it out,--
- The multitude of flies, and the multitude of herbs, the world with all
- its beings:
- Is Infinity too narrow, Omnipotence too weak, and Love so anxious to
- destroy,
- Doth Wisdom change its plan, and a Maker cancel His created?
- God's will may compass all things, to fashion and to nullify at pleasure:
- Yet are there many thoughts of hope, that all which are shall live.
- True, there is no conscience in the brute, beyond some educated habit,
- They lay them down without a fear, and wake without a hope:
- Hunger and pain is of the animal: but when did they reckon or compare?
- They live, idealess, in instinct; and while they breathe they gain:
- The master is an idol to his dog, who cannot rise beyond him;
- And void of capability for God, there would seem small cause for an
- infinity.
- Therefore, caviller, my poor thoughts dare not grant they live:
- But is it not a great thing to assume their annihilation--and thine own?
- Would it be much if a speck on space, this globe with all its millions,
- Verily, after its pollution, were suffered to exist in purity?
- Or much, if guiltless creatures, that were cruelly entreated upon earth,
- Found some commensurate reward in lower joys hereafter?
- Or much, if a Creator, prodigal of life, and filled with the profundity
- of love,
- Rejoice in all creatures of His skill, and lead them to perfection in
- their kind?
- O man, there are many marvels; yet life is more a mystery than death:
- For death may be some stagnant life,--but life is present God!
-
- Many are the lurking-holes of evil; who shall search them out?
- Who so skilled to cut away the cancer with its fibres?
- For wily minds with sinuous ease escape from lie to lie;
- And cowards driven from the trench steal back to hide again.
- Vain were the battle, if a warrior, having slain his foes,
- Shall turn and find them vital still, unharmed, yea, unashamed:
- For Error, dark magician, daily cast out killed,
- Quickeneth animate anew beneath the midnight moon:
- Once and again, once and again, hath reason answered wisely;
- But not the less with brazen front doth folly urge her questions.
- It were but unprofitable toil, a stand-up fight with unbelief:
- When was there candour in a caviller, and who can satisfy the faithless?
- Too long, O truant from the fold, have I tracked thy devious paths;
- Too long, treacherous deserter, fought thee as a noble foeman:
- Haply, my small art, and an arm too weakly for its weapon,
- Hath failed to pierce thine iron coat, and reach thy stricken soul:
- Haply, the fervour of my speech, and too patient sifting of thy fancies,
- Shall tend to make thee prize them more, as worthier and wiser:
- Go to: be mine the gain: we measure swords no more;
- Go,--and a word go with thee,--Man, thou ART Immortal!
-
- Child of light, and student in the truth, too long have I forgotten thee:
- Lo, after parley with an alien, let me hold sweet converse with a brother.
- Glorious hopes and ineffable imaginings, crowd our holy theme,
- Fear hath been slaughtered on the portal, and Doubt driven back to
- darkness:
- For Christ hath died, and we in Him; by faith His All is ours;
- Cross and crown, and love, and life; and we shall reign in Him!
- Yea, there is a fitness and a beauty in ascribing immortality to mind,
- That its energies and lofty aspirations may have scope for indefinite
- expansion.
- To learn all things is privilege of reason, and that with a growing
- capability,
- But in this age of toil and time we scarce attain to alphabets:
- How hardly in the midst of our hurry, and jostled by the cares of life,
- Shall a man turn and stop to consider mighty secrets;
- With barely hours, and barely powers, to fill up daily duties,
- How small the glimpse of knowledge his wondering eye can catch!
- And knowledge is a noting of the order wherein God's attributes evolve,
- Therefore worthy of the creature, worthy of an angel's seeking;
- Yea, and human knowledge, meagre though the harvest,
- Hath its roots, both deep and strong; but the plants are exotic to the
- climate;
- All we seem to know demand a longer learning,
- History and science, and prophecy and art, are workings all of God:
- And there are galaxies of globes, millions of unimagined beings,
- Other senses, wondrous sounds, and thoughts of thrilling fire,
- Powers of strange might, quickening unknown elements,
- And attributes and energies of God which man may never guess.
-
- Not in vain, O brother, hath soul the spurs of enterprize,
- Nor aimlessly panteth for adventure, waiting at the cave of mystery:
- Not in vain the cup of curiosity, sweet and richly spiced,
- Is ruby to the sight, and ambrosia to the taste, and redolent with all
- fragrance:
- Thou shalt drink, and deeply, filling the mind with marvels;
- Thou shalt watch no more, lingering, disappointed of thy hope;
- Thou shalt roam where road is none, a traveller untrammelled,
- Speeding at a wish, emancipate, to where the stars are suns!
-
- Count, count your hopes, heirs of immortality and love;
- And hear my kindred faith, and turn again to bless me.
- For lo, my trust is strong to dwell in many worlds,
- And cull of many brethren there, sweet knowledge ever new:
- I yearn for realms where fancy shall be filled, and the ecstasies of
- freedom shall be felt,
- And the soul reign gloriously, risen to its royal destinies:
- I look to recognize again, through the beautiful mask of their perfection,
- The dear familiar faces I have somewhile loved on earth:
- I long to talk with grateful tongue of storms and perils past,
- And praise the mighty Pilot that hath steered us through the rapids:
- He shall be the focus of it all, the very heart of gladness,--
- My soul is athirst for God, the God who dwelt in Man!
- Prophet, priest, and king, the sacrifice, the substitute, the Saviour,
- Rapture of the blessed in the hunted One of earth, the Pardoner in the
- victim;
- How many centuries of joy concentrate in that theme,
- How often a Methusalem might count his thousand years, and leave it
- unexhausted!
- And lo, the heavenly Jerusalem, with all its gates one pearl,
- That pearl of countless price, the door by which we entered,--
- Come, tread the golden streets, and join that glorious throng,
- The happy ones of heaven and earth, ten thousand times ten thousand;
- Hark, they sing that song,--and cast their crowns before Him;
- Their souls alight with love,--Glory, and Praise, and Immortality!--
- Veil thine eyes: no son of time may see that holy vision,
- And even the seraph at thy side hath covered his face with wings.
-
- Doth he not speak parables?--each one goeth on his way,
- Ye that hear, and I that counsel, go on our ways forgetful.
- For the terrible realities whereto we tend, are hidden from our eyes,
- We know, but heed them not, and walk as if the temporal were all things.
- Vanities, buzzing on the ear, fill its drowsy chambers,
- Slow to dread those coming fears, the thunder and the trumpet;
- Motes, steaming on the sight, dim our purblind eyes,
- Dark to see the ponderous orb of nearing Immortality:
- Hemmed in by hostile foes, the trifler is busied on an epigram;
- The dull ox, driven to slaughter, careth but for pasture by the way.
- Alas, that the precious things of truth, and the everlasting hills,
- The mighty hopes we spake of, and the consciousness we feel,--
- Alas, that all the future, and its adamantine facts,
- Clouded by the present with intoxicating fumes,--
- Should seem even to us, the great expectant heirs,
- To us, the responsible and free, fearful sons of reason,
- Only as a lovely song, sweet sounds of solemn music,
- A pleasant voice, and nothing more,--doth he not speak parables?
-
- Look to thy soul, O man, for none can be surety for his brother:
- Behold, for heaven--or for hell,--thou canst not escape from Immortality!
-
-
-OF IDEAS.
-
-[Illustration: "M"]
-
- Mind is like a volatile essence, flitting hither and thither,
- A solitary sentinel of the fortress body, to show himself everywhere by
- turns:
- Mind is indivisible and instant, with neither parts nor organs,
- That it doeth, it doth quickly, but the whole mind doth it:
- An active versatile agent, untiring in the principle of energy,
- Nor space, nor time, nor rest, nor toil, can affect the tenant of the
- brain;
- His dwelling may verily be shattered, and the furniture thereof be
- disarranged,
- But the particle of Deity in man slumbereth not, neither can be wearied:
- However swift to change, even as the field of a kaleidoscope,
- It taketh in but one idea at once, moulded for the moment to its likeness:
- Mind is as the quicksilver, which, poured from vessel to vessel,
- Instantly seizeth on a shape, and as instantly again discardeth it;
- For it is an apprehensive power, closing on the properties of Matter,
- Expanding to enwrap a world, collapsing to prison up an atom:
- As, by night, thine irritable eyes may have seen strange changing figures,
- Now a wheel, now suddenly a point, a line, a curve, a zigzag,
- A maze ever altering, as the dance of gnats upon a sunbeam,
- Swift, intricate, neither to be prophesied, nor to be remembered in
- succession,
- So, the mind of a man, single, and perpetually moving,
- Flickereth about from thought to thought, changed with each idea;
- For the passing second metamorphosed to the image of that within its ken,
- And throwing its immediate perceptions into each cause of contemplation.
- It shall regard a tree; and unconsciously, in separate review,
- Embrace its colour, shape, and use, whole and individual conceptions;
- It shall read or hear of crime, and cast itself into the commission;
- It shall note a generous deed, and glow for a moment as the doer;
- It shall imagine pride or pleasure, treading on the edges of temptation;
- Or heed of God and of His Christ, and grow transformed to glory.
-
- Therefore, it is wise and well to guide the mind aright,
- That its aptness may be sensitive to good, and shrink with antipathy from
- evil:
- For use will mould and mark it, or nonusage dull and blunt it;--
- So to talk of spirit by analogy with substance;
- And analogy is a truer guide, than many teachers tell of,
- Similitudes are scattered round, to help us, not to hurt us;
- Moses, in his every type, and the Greater than Moses, in His parables,
- Preach, in terms that all may learn, the philosophic lessons of analogy:
- And here, in a topic immaterial, the likeness of analogy is just;
- By habits, knit the nerves of mind, and train the gladiator shrewdly:
- For thought shall strengthen thinking, and imagery speed imagination,
- Until thy spiritual inmate shall have swelled to the giant of Otranto.
-
- Nevertheless, heed well, that this Athlete, growing in thy brain,
- Be a wholesome Genius, not a cursed Afrite:
- And see thou discipline his strength, and point his aim discreetly;
- Feed him on humility and holy things, weaned from covetous desires;
- Hour by hour and day by day, ply him with ideas of excellence,
- Dragging forth the evil but to loathe, as a Spartan's drunken Helot:
- And win, by gradual allurements, the still expanding soul,
- To rise from a contemplated universe, even to the Hand that made it.
-
- A common mind perceiveth not beyond his eyes and ears:
- The palings of the park of sense enthral this captured roebuck:
- And still, though fettered in the flesh, he doth not feel his chains,
- Externals are the world to him, and circumstance his atmosphere.
- Therefore tangible pleasures are enough for the animal man;
- He is swift to speak and slow to think, dreading his own dim conscience;
- And solitude is terrible, and exile worse than death,
- He cannot dwell apart, nor breathe at a distance from the crowd.
- But minds of nobler stamp, and chiefest the mint-marked of heaven,
- Walk independent, by themselves, freely manumitted of externals:
- They carry viands with them, and need no refreshment by the way,
- Nor drink of other wells than their own inner fountain.
- Strange shall it seem how little such a man will lean upon the accidents
- of life,
- He is winged and needeth not a staff; if it break, he shall not fall:
- And lightly perchance doth he remember the stale trivialities around him,
- He liveth in the realm of thought, beyond the world of things;
- These are but transient Matter, and himself enduring Spirit:
- And worldliness will laugh to scorn that sublimated wisdom.
- His eyes may open on a prison-cell, but the bare walls glow with imagery;
- His ears may be filled with execration, but are listening to the music of
- sweet thoughts;
- He may dwell in a hovel with a hero's heart, and canopy his penury with
- peace,
- For mind is a kingdom to the man, who gathereth his pleasure from Ideas.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-OF NAMES.
-
- Adam gave the name, when the Lord had made His creature,
- For God led them in review, to see what man would call them.
- As they struck his senses, he proclaimed their sounds,
- A name for the distinguishing of each, a numeral by which it should be
- known:
- He specified the partridge by her cry, and the forest prowler by his
- roaring,
- The tree by its use, and the flower by its beauty, and everything
- according to its truth.
-
- There is an arbitrary name; whereunto the idea attacheth;
- And there is a reasonable name, linking its fitness to idea:
- Yet shall these twain run in parallel courses,
- Neither shall thou readily discern the habit from the nature.
- For mind is apt and quick to wed ideas and names together,
- Nor stoppeth its perception to be curious of priorities;
- And there is but little in the sound, as some have vainly fancied,
- The same tone in different tongues shall be suitable to opposite ideas:
- Yea, take an ensample in thine own; consider similar words:
- How various and contrary the thoughts those kindred names produce:
- A house shall seem a fitting word to call a roomy dwelling,
- Yet there is a like propriety in the small smooth sound, a mouse:
- Mountain, as if of a necessity, is a word both mighty and majestic,--
- What heed ye then of Fountain?--flowing silver in the sun.
-
- Many a fair flower is burdened with preposterous appellatives,
- Which the wiser simplicity of rustics entitled by its beauties;
- And often the conceit of science, loving to be thought cosmopolite,
- Shall mingle names of every clime, alike obscure to each.
- There is wisdom in calling a thing fitly; name should note particulars
- Through a character obvious to all men, and worthy of their instant
- acceptation.
- The herbalist had a simple cause for every word upon his catalogue,
- But now the mouth of Botany is filled with empty sound;
- And many a peasant hath an answer on his tongue, concerning some vexed
- flower,
- Shrewder than the centipede phrase, wherewithal philosophers invest it.
-
- For that, the foolishness of pride, and flatteries of cringing homage,
- Strew with chaff the threshing-floors of science; names perplex them all:
- The entomologist, who hath pried upon an insect, straightway shall endow
- it with his name;
- It had many qualities and marks of note,--but in chief, a vain observer:
- The geographer shall journey to the pole, through biting frost and
- desolation,
- And, for some simple patron's sake, shall name that land, the happy:
- The fossilist hath found a bone, the rib of some huge lizard,
- And forthwith standeth to it sponsor, to tack himself on reptile
- immortalities:
- The sportsman, hunting at the Cape, found some strange-horned antelope,
- The spots are new, the fame is cheap, and so his name is added.
- Thus, obscurities encumber knowledge, even by the vanity of men
- Who play into each other's hand the game of giving names.
-
- Various are the names of men, and drawn from different wells;
- Aspects of body, or characters of mind, the creature's first idea:
- And some have sprung of trades, and some of dignities or office;
- Other some added to a father's, and yet more growing from a place:
- Animal creation, with sciences, and things,--their composites, and near
- associations,
- Contributed their symbollings of old, wherewith to title men:
- And heraldry set upon its cresture the figured attributes as ensigns
- By which, as by a name concrete, its bearer should be known.
-
- Egypt opened on the theme, dressing up her gods in qualities;
- Horns of power, feathers of the swift, mitres of catholic dominion,
- The sovereign asp, the circle everlasting, the crook and thong of justice,
- By many mystic shapes and sounds displayed the idol's name.
- Thereafter, high-plumed warriors, the chieftains of Etruria and Troy,
- And Xerxes, urging on his millions to the tomb of pride, Thermopylae,
- And Hiero with his bounding ships, all figured at the prow,
- And Rome's Praetorian standards, piled with strange devices,
- And stout crusaders pressing to the battle, clad in sable mail;
- These all in their speaking symbols, earned, or wore, a name.
- Eve; the mother of all living, and Abraham, father of a multitude,
- Jacob, the supplanter, and David, the beloved, and all the worthies of
- old time,
- Noah, who came for consolation, and Benoni, son of sorrow,
- Kings and prophets, children of the East, owned each his title of
- significance.
-
- There be names of high descent, and thereby storied honours;
- Names of fair renown, and therein characters of merit:
- But to lend the lowborn noble names, is to shed upon them ridicule and
- evil;
- Yea, many weeds run rank in pride, if men have dubbed them cedars.
- And to herald common mediocrity with the noisy notes of fame,
- Tendeth to its deeper scorn; as if it were to call the mole a mammoth.
- Yet shall ye find the trader's babe dignified with sounding titles,
- And little hath the father guessed the harm he did his child:
- For either may they breed him discontent, a peevish repining at his
- station,
- Or point the finger of despite at the mule in the trappings of an
- elephant:
- And it is a kind of theft to filch appellations from the famous,
- A soiling of the shrines of praise with folly's vulgar herd.
- Prudence hath often gone ashamed for the name they added to his father's,
- If minds of mark and great achievements bore it well before;
- For he walketh as the jay in the fable, though not by his own folly,
- Another's fault hath compassed his misfortune, making him a martyr to his
- name.
-
- Who would call the tench a whale, or style a torch, Orion?
- Yet many a silly parent hath dealt likewise with his nurseling.
- Give thy child a fit distinguishment, making him sole tenant of a name,
- For it were a sore hindrance to hold it in common with a hundred:
- In the Babel of confused identities fame is little feasible,
- The felon shall detract from the philanthropist, and the sage share
- honours with the simple:
- Still, in thy title of distinguishment, fall not into arrogant assumption,
- Steering from caprice and affectations; and for all thou doest, have a
- reason.
- He that is ambitious for his son, should give him untried names,
- For those that have served other men, haply may injure by their evils;
- Or otherwise may hinder by their glories; therefore, set him by himself,
- To win for his individual name some clear specific praise.
- There were nine Homers, all goodly sons of song, but where is any record
- of the eight?
- One grew to fame, an Aaron's rod, and swallowed up his brethren:
- Who knoweth? more distinctly titled, those dead eight had lived;
- But the censers were ranged in a circle to mingle their sweets without a
- difference.
-
- Art thou named of a common crowd, and sensible of high aspirings?
- It is hard for thee to rise,--yet strive: thou mayest be among them a
- Musaeus.
- Art thou named of a family, the same in successive generations?
- It is open to thee still to earn for epithets, such an one, the good or
- great.
- Art thou named foolishly? Show that thou art wiser than thy fathers;
- Live to shame their vanity or sin by dutiful devotion to thy sphere.
- Art thou named discreetly? It is well, the course is free;
- No competitor shall claim thy colours, neither fix his faults upon thee:
- Hasten to the goal of fame between the posts of duty,
- And win a blessing from the world, that men may love thy name:
- Yea, that the unction of its praise, in fragrance well deserving,
- May float adown the stream of time, like ambergris at sea;
- So thy sons may tell their sons, and those may teach their children,
- He died in goodness, as he lived;--and left us his good name.
- And more than these: there is a roll whereon thy name is written;
- See that, in the Book of Doom, that name is fixed in light:
- Then, safe within a better home, where time and its titles are not found,
- God will give thee His new Name, and write it on thy heart:
- A Name better than of sons, a Name dearer than of daughters,
- A Name of union, peace, and praise, as numbered in thy God.
-
-
-OF THINGS.
-
-[Illustration: "T"]
-
- Taken separately from all substance, and flying with the feathered flock
- of thoughts,
- The idea of a thing hath the nature of its Soul, a separate seeming
- essence:
- Intimately linked to the idea, suggesting many qualities,
- The name of a thing hath the nature of its Mind, an intellectual recorder:
- And the matter of a thing, concrete, is a Body to the perfect creature,
- Compacted three in one, as all things else within the universe.
- Nothing canst thou add to them, and nothing take away, for all have these
- proportions,
- The thought, the word, the form, combining in the Thing:
- All separate, yet harmonizing well, and mingled each with other,
- One whole in several parts, yet each part spreading to a whole:
- The idea is a whole; and the meaning phrase that spake idea, a whole;
- And the matter, as ye see it, is a whole; the mystery of true triunity:
- Yea, there is even a deeper mystery,--which none, I wot, can fathom,
- Matter, different from properties whereby the solid substance is
- described;
- For, size and weight, cohesion and the like, live distinct from matter,
- Yet who can imagine matter, unendowed with size and weight?
- As in the spiritual, so in the material, man must rest with patience,
- And wait for other eyes wherewith to read the books of God.
-
- Men have talked learnedly of atoms, as if matter could be ever
- indivisible;
- They talk, but ill are skilled to teach, and darken truth by fancies:
- An atom by our grosser sense was never yet conceived,
- And nothing can be thought so small, as not to be divided:
- For an atom runneth to infinity, and never shall be caught in space,
- And a molecule is no more indivisible than Saturn's belted orb.
- Things intangible, multiplied by multitudes, never will amass to
- substance,
- Neither can a thing which may be touched, be made of impalpable
- proportions;
- The sum of indivisibles must needs be indivisible, as adding many
- nothings,
- And the building up of atoms into matter is but a silly sophism;
- Lucretius, and keen Anaximander, and many that have followed in their
- thoughts,
- (For error hath a long black shadow, dimming light for ages,)
- In the foolishness of men without a God fancied to fashion Matter
- Of intangibles, and therefore uncohering, indivisibles, and therefore
- Spirit.
-
- Things breed thoughts; therefore at Thebes and Heliopolis,
- In hieroglyphic sculptures are the priestly secrets written:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore was the Athens of idolatry
- Set with carved images, frequent as the trees of Academus:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the Brahmin and the Burman
- With mythologic shapes adorn their coarse pantheon:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the statue and the picture,
- Relics, rosaries, and miracles in act, quicken the Papist in his worship:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore the lovers at their parting,
- Interchanged with tearful smiles the dear reminding tokens:
- Things breed thoughts; therefore when the clansman met his foe,
- The bloodstained claymore in his hand revived the memories of vengeance.
-
- Things teach with double force; through the animal eye, and through the
- mind,
- And the eye catcheth in an instant, what the ear shall not learn within
- an hour.
- Thence is the potency of travel, the precious might of its advantages
- To compensate its dissipative harm, its toil and cost and danger.
- Ulysses, wandering to many shores, lived in many cities,
- And thereby learnt the minds of men, and stored his own more richly:
- Herodotus, the accurate and kindly, spake of that he saw,
- And reaped his knowledge on the spot, in fertile fields of Egypt:
- Lycurgus culled from every clime the golden fruits of justice;
- And Plato roamed through foreign lands, to feed on truth in all.
- For travel, conversant with Things, bringeth them in contact with the
- mind;
- We breathe the wholesome atmosphere about ungarbled truth:
- Pictures of fact are painted on the eye, to decorate the house of
- intellect,
- Rather than visions of fancy, filling all the chambers with a vapour.
- For, in Ideas, the great mind will exaggerate, and the lesser extenuate
- truth;
- But in Things the one is chastened, and the other quickened, to equality:
- And in Names,--though a property be told, rather than some arbitrary
- accident,
- Still shall the thought be vague or false, if none have seen the Thing:
- For in Things the property with accident standeth in a mass concrete,
- These cannot cheat the sense, nor elude the vigilance of spirit.
- Travel is a ceaseless fount of surface education,
- But its wisdom will be simply superficial, if thou add not thoughts to
- things:
- Yet, aided by the varnish of society, things may serve for thoughts,
- Till many dullards that have seen the world shall pass for scholars:
- Because one single glance will conquer all descriptions,
- Though graphic, these left some unsaid, though true, these tended to some
- error;
- And the most witless eye that saw, had a juster notion of its object,
- Than the shrewdest mind that heard and shaped its gathered thoughts of
- Things.
-
-
-[Illustration: of faith]
-
-OF FAITH.
-
- Confidence was bearer of the palm; for it looked like conviction of
- desert:
- And where the strong is well assured, the weaker soon allow it.
- Majesty and Beauty are commingled, in moving with immutable decision,
- And well may charm the coward hearts that turn and hide for fear.
- Faith, firmness, confidence, consistency,--these are well allied;
- Yea, let a man press on in aught, he shall not lack of honour:
- For such an one seemeth as superior to the native instability of
- creatures;
- That he doeth, he doeth as a god, and men will marvel at his courage.
- Even in crimes, a partial praise cannot be denied to daring,
- And many fearless chiefs have won the friendship of a foe.
-
- Confidence is conqueror of men; victorious both over them and in them;
- The iron will of one stout heart shall make a thousand quail:
- A feeble dwarf, dauntlessly resolved, will turn the tide of battle,
- And rally to a nobler strife the giants that had fled;
- The tenderest child, unconscious of a fear, will shame the man to danger,
- And when he dared it, danger died, and faith had vanquished fear.
- Boldness is akin to power: yea, because ignorance is weakness,
- Knowledge with unshrinking might will nerve the vigorous hand:
- Boldness hath a startling strength; the mouse may fright a lion,
- And oftentimes the horned herd is scared by some brave cur.
- Courage hath analogy with faith, for it standeth both in animal and moral;
- The true is mindful of a God, the false is stout in self:
- But true or false, the twain are faith; and faith worketh wonders:
- Never was a marvel done upon the earth, but it had sprung of faith:
- Nothing noble, generous, or great, but faith was the root of the
- achievement;
- Nothing comely, nothing famous, but its praise is faith.
- Leonidas fought in human faith, as Joshua in divine:
- Xenophon trusted to his skill, and the sons of Mattathias to their cause:
- In faith Columbus found a path across those untried waters;
- The heroines of Arc and Saragossa fought in earthly faith:
- Tell was strong, and Alfred great, and Luther wise, by faith;
- Margaret by faith was valiant for her son, and Wallace mighty for his
- people:
- Faith in his reason made Socrates sublime, as faith in his science,
- Galileo:
- Ambassadors in faith are bold, and unreproved for boldness:
- Faith urged Fabius to delays, and sent forth Hannibal to Cannae:
- Caesar at the Rubicon, Miltiades at Marathon; both were sped by faith.
- I set not all in equal spheres: I number not the martyr with the patriot;
- I class not the hero with his horse, because the twain have courage;
- But only for ensample and instruction, that all things stand by faith;
- Albeit faith of divers kinds, and varying in degree.
- There is a faith towards men, and there is a faith towards God;
- The latter is the gold and the former is the brass; but both are sturdy
- metal:
- And the brass mingled with the gold floweth into rich Corinthian;
- A substance bright and hard and keen, to point Achilles' spear:
- So shall thou stop the way against the foes that hem thee;
- Trust in God to strengthen man;--be bold, for He doth help.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Yet more: for confidence in man, even to the worst and meanest,
- Hath power to overcome his ill, by charitable good.
- Fling thine unreserving trust even on the conscience of a culprit,
- Soon wilt thou shame him by thy faith, and he will melt and mend:
- The nest of thieves will harm thee not, if thou dost bear thee boldly;
- Boldly, yea and kindly, as relying on their honour:
- For the hand so stout against aggression, is quite disarmed by charity;
- And that warm sun will thaw the heart case-hardened by long frost.
- Treat men gently, trust them strongly, if thou wish their weal;
- Or cautious doubt and bitter thoughts will tempt the best to foil thee.
- Believe the well in sanguine hope, and thou shall reap the better;
- But if thou deal with men so ill, thy dealings make them worse;
- Despair not of some gleams of good still lingering in the darkest,
- And among veterans in crime, plead thou as with their children:
- So, astonied at humanities, the bad heart long estranged,
- Shall even weep to feel himself so little worth thy love;
- In wholesome sorrow will he bless thee; yea, and in that spirit may
- repent;
- Thus wilt thou gain a soul, in mercy given to thy Faith.
-
- Look aside to lack of faith, the mass of ills it bringeth:
- All things treacherous, base, and vile, dissolving the brotherhood of men.
- Bonds break; the cement hath lost its hold; and each is separate from
- other;
- That which should be neighbourly and good, is cankered into bitterness
- and evil.
- O thou serpent, fell Suspicion, coiling coldly round the heart,--
- O thou asp of subtle Jealousy, stinging hotly to the soul,--
- O distrust, reserve, and doubt,--what reptile shapes are here,
- Poisoning the garden of a world with death among its flowers!
- No need of many words, the tale is easy to be told;
- A point will touch the truth, a line suggest the picture.
- For if, in thine own home, a cautious man and captious,
- Thou hintest at suspicion of a servant, thou soon wilt make a thief;
- Or if, too keen in care, thou dost evidently disbelieve thy child,
- Thou hast injured the texture of his honour, and smoothed to him the way
- of lying:
- Or if thou observest upon friends, as seeking thee selfishly for interest,
- Thou hast hurt their kindliness to thee, and shalt be paid with scorn;
- Or if, O silly ones of marriage, your foul and foolish thoughts,
- Harshly misinterpreting in each the levity of innocence for sin,
- Shall pour upon the lap of home pain where once was pleasure,
- And mix contentions in the cup, that mantled once with comforts,
- Bitterly and justly shall ye rue the punishment due to unbelief;
- Ye trust not each the other, nor the mutual vows of God;
- Take heed, for the pit may now be near, a pit of your own digging,--
- Faith abused tempteth unto crime, and doubt may make its monster.
-
- Man verily is vile, but more in capability than action;
- His sinfulness is deep, but his transgressions may be few, even from the
- absence of temptation:
- He is hanging in a gulf midway, but the air is breathable about him:
- Thrust him not from that slight hold, to perish in the vapours underneath.
- For, God pleadeth with the deaf, as having ears to hear,
- Christ speaketh to the dead, as those that are capable of living;
- And an evil teacher is that man, a tempter to much sin,
- Who looketh on his hearers with distrust, and hath no confidence in
- brethren.
- All may mend; and sympathies are healing: and reason hath its influence
- with the worst;
- And in those worst is ample hope, if only thou hast charity, and faith.
-
- Somewhiles have I watched a man exchanging the sobriety of faith,
- Old lamps for new,--even for fanatical excitements.
- He gained surface, but lost solidity; heat, in lieu of health;
- And still with swelling words and thoughts he scorned his ancient
- coldness:
- But, his strength was shorn as Samson's; he walked he knew not whither;
- Doubt was on his daily path; and duties shewed not certain:
- Until, in an hour of enthusiasm, stung with secret fears,
- He pinned the safety of his soul on some false prophet's sleeve.
- And then, that sure word failed; and with it, failed his faith;
- It failed, and fell; O deep and dreadful was his fall in faith!
- He could not stop, with reason's rein, his coursers on the slope,
- And so they dashed him down the cliff of hardened unbelief.
- With overreaching grasp he had strained for visionary treasures,
- But a fiend had cheated his presumption, and hurled him to despair.
- So he lay in his blood, the victim of a credulous false faith,
- And many nights, and night-like days, he dwelt in outer darkness.
- But, within a while, his variable mind caught a new impression,
- A new impression of the good old stamp, that sealed him when a child:
- He was softened, and abjured his infidelity; he was wiser, and despised
- his credulity;
- And turned again to simple faith more simply than before.
- Experience had declared too well his mind was built of water,
- And so, renouncing strength in self, he fixed his faith in God.
-
- It is not for me to stipulate for creeds; Bible, Church, and Reason,
- These three shall lead the mind, if any can, to truth.
- But I must stipulate for faith: both God and man demand it:
- Trust is great in either world, if any would be well.
- Verily, the sceptical propensity is an universal foe;
- Sneering Pyrrho never found, nor cared to find, a friend:
- How could he trust another? and himself, whom would he not deceive?
- His proper gains were all his aim, and interests clash with kindness.
- So, the Bedouin goeth armed, an enemy to all,
- The spear is stuck beside his couch, the dagger hid beneath his pillow.
- For society, void of mutual trust, of credit, and of faith,
- Would fall asunder as a waterspout, snapped from the cloud's attraction.
-
- Faith may rise into miracles of might, as some few wise have shown:
- Faith may sink into credulities of weakness, as the mass of fools have
- witnessed.
- Therefore, in the first, saints and martyrs have fulfilled their mission,
- Conquering dangers, courting deaths, and triumphing in all.
- Therefore, in the last, the magician and the witch, victims of their own
- delusion,
- Have gained the bitter wages of impracticable sins.
- They believed in allegiance with Satan; they worked in that belief,
- And thereby earned the loss and harm of guilt that might not be.
- For, faith hath two hands; with the one it addeth virtue to indifferents;
- Yea, it sanctified a Judith and a Jael, for what otherwise were treachery
- and murder:
- With the other hand it heapeth crime even on impossibles or simples,
- And many a wizard well deserved the faggot for his faith:
- He trusted in his intercourse with evil, he sacrificed heartily to fiends,
- He withered up with curses to the limit of his will, and was vile,
- because he thought himself a villain.
-
- A great mind is ready to believe, for he hungereth to feed on facts,
- And the gnawing stomach of his ignorance craveth unceasing to be filled:
- A little mind is boastful and incredulous, for he fancieth all knowledge
- is his own,
- So will he cavil at a truth; how should it be true, and he not know it?--
- There is an easy scheme, to solve all riddles by the sensual,
- And thus, despising mysteries, to feel the more sufficient;
- For it comforteth the foul hard heart, to reject the pure unseen,
- And relieveth the dull soft head, to hinder one from gazing upon vacancy.
- True wisdom, labouring to expound, heareth others readily;
- False wisdom, sturdy to deny, closeth up her mind to argument.
- The sum of certainties is found so small, their field so wide an universe,
- That many things may truly be, which man hath not conceived:
- The characters revealed of God are a strong mind's sole assurance
- That any strangeness may not stand a sober theme for faith.
- Ignorance being light denied, this ought to show the stronger in its view,
- But ignorance is commonly a double negative, both of light and morals:
- So, adding vanity to blindness, for ease, it taketh refuge in a doubt,
- And aching soon with ceaseless doubt, it finisheth the strife by
- misbelieving.
-
- Faith, by its very nature, shall embrace both credence and obedience:
- Yea, the word for both is one, and cannot be divided.
- For, work void of faith, wherein can it be counted for a duty;
- And faith not seen in work,--whereby can the doctrine be discovered?
- Faith in religion is an instrument; a handle, and the hand to turn it:
- Less a condition than a mean, and more an operation than a virtue.
- A moral sickness, like to sin, must have a moral cure;
- And faith alone can heal the mind, whose malady is sense.
- Ye are told of God's deep love: they that believe will love Him:
- They that love Him, will obey: and obedience hath its blessing.
- Ye are taught of the soul's great price; they that believe will prize it,
- And, prizing soul, will cherish well the hopes that make it happy.
- Effects spring from feelings; and feelings grow of faith:
- If a man conceive himself insulted, will not his anger smite?
- Thus, let a soul believe his state, his danger, destiny, redemption,
- Will he not feel eager to be safe, like him that kept the prison at
- Philippi?
-
- A mother had an only son, and sent him out to sea:
- She was a widow, and in penury; and he must seek his fortunes.
- How often in the wintry nights, when waves and winds were howling,
- Her heart was torn with sickening dread, and bled to see her boy.
- And on one sunny morn, when all around was comfort,
- News came, that weeks agone, the vessel had been wrecked;
- Yea, wrecked, and he was dead! they had seen him perish in his agony:
- Oh then, what agony was like to her's,--for she believed the tale.
- She was bowed and broken down with sorrow, and uncomforted in prayer;
- Many nights she mourned, and pined, and had no hope but death.
- But on a day, while sorely she was weeping, a stranger broke upon her
- loneliness,--
- He had news to tell, that weather-beaten man, and must not be denied:
- And what were the wonder-working words that made this mourner joyous,
- That swept her heaviness away, and filled her world with praise?
- Her son was saved,--is alive,--is near!--O did she stop to question?
- No, rushing in the force of faith, she met him at the door!
-
-
-OF HONESTY.
-
-[Illustration: "A"]
-
- All is vanity that is not honesty;--thus is it graven on the tomb:
- And there is no wisdom but in piety;--so the dead man preacheth:
- For, in a simple village church, among those classic shades
- Which sylvan Evelyn loved to rear, (his praise, and my delight,)
- These, the words of truth, are writ upon his sepulchre
- Who learnt much lore, and knew all trees, from the cedar to the hyssop on
- the wall.
- A just conjunction, godliness and honesty; ministering to both worlds,
- Well wed, and ill to be divided, a pair that God hath joined together.
- I touch not now the vulgar thought, as of tricks and cheateries in trade;
- I speak of honest purpose, character, speech and action.
- For an honest man hath special need of charity, and prudence,
- Of a deep and humbling self-acquaintance, and of blessed commerce with
- his God,
- So that the keennesses of truth may be freed from asperities of censure,
- And the just but vacillating mind be not made the pendulum of arguments:
- For a false reason, shrewdly put, can often not be answered on the
- instant,
- And prudence looketh unto faith, content to wait solutions;
- Yea, it looketh, yea, it waiteth, still holding honesty in leash,
- Lest, as a hot young hound, it track not game, but vermin.
- Many a man of honest heart, but ignorant of self and God,
- Hath followed the marsh-fires of pestilence, esteeming them the lights of
- truth;
- He heard a cause, which he had not skill to solve,--and so received it
- gladly;
- And that cause brought its consequence, of harm to an unstable soul.
- Prudence, for a man's own sake, never should be separate from honesty;
- And charity, for other's good, and his, must still be joined therewith:
- For the harshly chiding tongue hath neither pleasuring nor profit,
- And the cold unsympathizing heart never gained a good.
- Sin is a sore, and folly is a fever; touch them tenderly for healing;
- The bad chirurgeon's awkward knife harmeth, spite of honesty.
- Still, a rough diamond is better than the polished paste,--
- That courteous flattering fool, who spake of vice as virtue:
- And honesty, even by itself, though making many adversaries
- Whom prudence might have set aside, or charity have softened,
- Evermore will prosper at the last, and gain a man great honour
- By giving others many goods, to his own cost and hindrance.
-
- Freedom is father of the honest, and sturdy Independence is his brother;
- These three, with heart and hand, dwell together in unity.
- The blunt yeoman, stout and true, will speak unto princes unabashed:
- His mind is loyal, just and free, a crystal in its plain integrity;
- What should make such an one ashamed? where courtiers kneel, he
- standeth;--
- I will indeed bow before the king, but knees were knit for God.
- And many such there be, of a high and noble conscience,
- Honourable, generous, and kind, though blest with little light:
- What should he barter for his Freedom? some petty gain of gold?
- Free of speech, and free in act, magnates honour him for boldness:
- Long may he flourish in his peace, and a stalwarth race around him,
- Rooted in the soil like oaks, and hardy as the pine upon the mountains!
-
- Yet, there be others, that will truckle to a lie, selling honesty for
- interest:
- And do they gain?--they gain but loss; a little cash, with scorn.
- Behold, the sorrowful change wrought upon a fallen nature:
- He hath lost his own esteem, and other men's respect;
- For the buoyancy of upright faith, he is clothed in the heaviness of
- cringing;
- For plain truth where none could err, he hath chosen tortuous paths;
- In lieu of his majesty of countenance--the timorous glances of servility;
- Instead of Freedom's honest pride,--the spirit of a slave.
-
- Nevertheless, there is something to be pleaded, even for a necessary
- guile,
- Whilst the world, and all that is therein, lieth deep in evil.
- Who can be altogether honest,--a champion never out of mail,
- Ready to break a lance for truth with every crowding error?
- Who can be altogether honest,--dragging out the secresies of life,
- And risking to be lashed and loathed for each unkind disclosure?
- Who can be altogether honest,--living in perpetual contentions,
- And prying out the petty cheats that swell the social scheme?
- For he must speak his instant mind,--a mind corrupt and sinful,
- Exhibiting to other men's disgust its undisguised deformities:
- He must utter all the hatred of his heart, and add to it the venom of his
- tongue;
- Shall he feel, and hide his feelings? that were the meanness of a
- hypocrite:--
- Still, O man, such hypocrisy is better, than this bold honesty to sin:
- Kill the feeling, or conceal it: let shame at least do the work of
- charity.
-
- O charity, thou livest not in warnings, meddling among men,
- Rebuking every foolish word, and censuring small sins;
- This is not thy secret,--rather wilt thou hide their multitude,
- And silence the condemning tongue, and wearisome exhortation.
- But for thee, thy strength and zeal shine in encouragement to good,
- Lifting up the lantern of ensample, that wanderers may find the way:
- That lantern is not lit to gaze on all the hatefulness of evil,
- But set on high for life and light, the loveliness of good.
- The hard censorious mind sitteth as a keen anatomist
- Tracking up the fibres in corruption, and prying on a fearful corpse:
- But the charitable soul is a young lover, enamoured little wisely,
- That saw no fault in her he loved, and sought to see one less;
- So, in his kind and genial light, she grew more worthy of his love;
- Won to good by gentle suns, and not by frowning tempest.
-
- Verily, infirm thyself,--be slow to chide a brother's imperfections;
- For many times the decent veil must hang on faults of nature:
- And the rude hands, that rend it, offend against the modesty of right,
- While seeming zeal, and its effort to do good, is only feigned
- self-praise:
- Often will the meannesses of life, hidden away in corners,
- Prove wisdom; and the generous is glad to leave them unregarded in the
- shade.
- The follies none are found to praise, let them die unblamed;
- Thine honest strife will only tend to make some think them wise:
- And small conventional deceits, let them live uncensured:
- Or if thou war with pigmies, thou shalt haply help the cranes.
- Where to be blind was safety, Ovid had been wise for winking:
- And when a tell-tale might do harm, be sure it is prudent to be dumb;
- That which is just and fit is often found combating with honesty:
- In the cause of good, be wise; and in a case indifferent, keep silence.
-
- Let honesty's unblushing face be shaded by the mantle of humility,
- So shall it shine a lamp of love, and not the torch of strife:
- Otherwise the lantern of Diogenes, presumptuously thrust before the face,
- If it never find an honest man, shall often make an angered.
- Let honesty be companied by charity of heart, lest it walk unwelcome;
- Or the mouthing censor of others and himself, soon shall sink to scorn.
- Let honesty be added unto innocence of life: then a man may only be its
- martyr;
- But if openness of speech be found with secresy of guilt, the martyr will
- be seen a malefactor.
-
- There is a cunning scheme, to put on surface bluntness,
- And cover still deep water, with the clamorous ripples of a shallow.
- For a man, to gain his selfish ends, will make a stalking-horse of
- honesty;
- And hide his poaching limbs behind, that he may cheat the quicker.
- Such an one is loud and ostentatious, full of oaths for argument,
- Boastful of honour and sincerity, and not to be put down by facts:
- He is obstinate, and sheweth it for firmness; he is rude, displaying it
- for truth;
- And glorieth in doggedness of temper, as if it were uncompromising
- justice.
- Be aware of such a man; his brawling covereth designs;
- This specious show of honesty cometh as the herald of a thief:
- His feint is made with awkward clashing on the buckler's boss,
- But meanwhile doth his secret skill ensure its fatal aim.
- This is the hypocrite of honesty; ye may know him by an overacted part;
- Taking pains to turn and twist, where other men walk straight;
- Or walking straight, he will not step aside to let another pass,
- But roughly pusheth on, provoking opposition on the way;
- He is full of disquietude for calmness, full of intriguing for simplicity,
- Valorous with those who cannot fight, and humble to the brave:
- Where brotherly advice were good, this man rudely blameth,
- And on some small occasion, flattereth with coarse praise.
- The craven in a lion's skin hath conquered by his character for courage;
- Sheep's clothing helped the wolf, till he slew by his character for
- kindness.
-
- For honesty hath many gains, and well the wise have known
- This will prosper to the end, and fill their house with gold.
- The phosphorus of cheatery will fade, and all its profits perish,
- While honesty with growing light endureth as the moon.
- Yea, it would be wise in a world of thieves, where cheating were a virtue,
- To dare the vice of honesty, if any would be rich.
- For that which by the laws of God is heightened into duty,
- Ever, in the practice of a man, will be seen both policy and privilege.
- Thank God, ye toilers for your bread, in that, daily labouring,
- He hath suffered the bubbles of self-interest to float upon the stream of
- duty:
- For honesty, of every kind, approved by God and man,
- Of wealth and better weal is found the richest cornucopia.
- Tempered by humbleness and charity, honesty of speech hath honour;
- And mingled well with prudence, honesty of purpose hath its praise:
- Trust payeth homage unto truth, rewarding honesty of action:
- And all men love to lean on him, who never failed nor fainted.
- Freedom gloweth in his eyes, and Nobleness of nature at his heart,
- And Independence took a crown and fixed it on his head:
- So, he stood in his integrity, just and firm of purpose,
- Aiding many, fearing none, a spectacle to angels, and to men:
- Yea,--when the shattered globe shall rock in the throes of dissolution,
- Still, will he stand in his integrity, sublime--an honest man.
-
-
-OF SOCIETY.
-
-[Illustration: "B"]
-
- Better is the mass of men, Suspicion, than thy fears,
- Kinder than thy thoughts, O chilling heart of Prudence,
- Purer than thy judgments, ascetic tongue of Censure,
- In all things worthier to love, if not also wiser to esteem.
- Yea, let the moralist condemn, there be large extenuations of his verdict,
- Let the misanthrope shun men and abjure, the most are rather loveable
- than hateful.
- How many pleasant faces shed their light on every side,
- How many angels unawares have crossed thy casual way!
- How often, in thy journeyings, hast thou made thee instant friends,
- Found, to be loved a little while, and lost, to meet no more;
- Friends of happy reminiscence, although so transient in their converse,
- Liberal, cheerful, and sincere, a crowd of kindly traits.
- I have sped by land and sea, and mingled with much people,
- But never yet could find a spot, unsunned by human kindness;
- Some more, and some less,--but truly all can claim a little;
- And a man may travel through the world, and sow it thick with friendships.
-
- There be indeed, to say it in all sorrow, bad apostate souls,
- Deserted of their ministering angels, and given up to liberty of sin,--
- And other some, the miserly and mean, whose eyes are keen and greedy,
- With stony hearts, and iron fists, to filch and scrape and clutch,--
- And others yet again, the coarse in mind, selfish, sensual, brutish,
- Seeming as incapable of softer thoughts, and dead to better deeds;
- Such, no lover of the good, no follower of the generous and gentle,
- Can nearer grow to love, than may consist with pity.
- Few verily are these among the mass, and cast in fouler moulds,
- Few and poor in friends, and well-deserving of their poverty:
- Yet, or ever thou hast harshly judged, and linked their presence to
- disgust,
- Consider well the thousand things that made them all they are.
- Thou hast not thought upon the causes, ranged in consecutive necessity,
- Which tended long to these effects, with sure constraining power.
- For each of those unlovely ones, if thou couldst hear his story,
- Hath much to urge of just excuse, at least as men count justice:
- Foolish education, thwarted opportunities, natural propensities
- unchecked,--
- Thus were they discouraged from all good, and pampered in their evil;
- And, if thou wilt apprehend them well, tenderly looking on temptations,
- Bearing the base indulgently, and liberally dealing with the froward,
- Thou shalt discern a few fair fruits even upon trees so withered,
- Thou shalt understand how some may praise, and some be found to love them.
-
- Nevertheless for these, my counsel is, Avoid them if thou canst;
- For the finer edges of thy virtues will be dulled by attrition with their
- vice.
- And there is an enemy within thee; either to palliate their sin,
- Until, for surface-sweetness, thou too art drawn adown the vortex;
- Or, even unto fatal pride, to glorify thy purity by contrast,
- Until the publican and harlot stand nearer heaven than the Pharisee:
- Or daily strife against their ill, in subtleness may irritate thy soul,
- And in that struggle thou shall fail, even through infirmity of goodness;
- Or, callous by continuance of injuries, thou wilt cease to pardon,
- Cease to feel, and cease to care, a cold case-hardened man.
- Beware of their example,--and thine own; beware the hazards of the battle;
- But chiefly be thou ware of this, an unforgiving spirit.
- Many are the dangers and temptations compassing a bad man's presence;
- The upas hath a poisonous shade, and who would slumber there?
- Wherefore, avoid them if thou canst; only, under providence and duty,
- If thy lot be cast with Kedar, patiently and silently live to their
- rebuke.
-
- How beautiful thy feet, and full of grace thy coming,
- O better kind companion, that art well for either world!
- There is an atmosphere of happiness floating round that man,
- Love is throned upon his heart, and light is found within his dwelling:
- His eyes are rayed with peacefulness, and wisdom waiteth on his tongue;
- Seek him out, cherish him well, walking in the halo of his influence:
- For he shall be fragrance to thy soul, as a garden of sweet lilies,
- Hedged and apart from the outer world, an island of the blest among the
- seas.
-
- There is an outer world, and there is an inner centre;
- And many varying rings concentric round the self.
- For, first, about a man,--after his communion with Heaven,--
- Is found the helpmate even as himself, the wife of his vows and his
- affections:
- See then that ye love in faith, scorning petty jealousies,
- For Satan spoileth too much love, by souring it with doubts;
- See that intimacy die not to indifference, nor anxiety sink into
- moroseness,
- And tend ye well the mutual minds bound in a copartnership for life.
-
- Next of those concentric circles, radiating widely in circumference,
- Wheel in wheel, and world in world,--come the band of children:
- A tender nest of soft young hearts, each to be separately studied,
- A curious eager flock of minds, to be severally tamed and tutored.
- And a man, blest with these, hath made his own society,
- He is independent of the world, hanging on his friends more loosely:
- For the little faces round his hearth are friends enow for him,
- If he seek others, it is for sake of these, and less for his own pleasure.
- What companionship so sweet, yea, who can teach so well
- As these pure budding intellects, and bright unsullied hearts?
- What voice so musical as theirs, what visions of elegance so comely,
- What thoughts and hopes and holy prayers, can others cause like these?
- If ye count society for pastime,--what happier recreation than a
- nurseling,
- Its winning ways, its prattling tongue, its innocence and mirth?
- If ye count society for good,--how fair a field is here,
- To guide these souls to God, and multiply thyself for heaven!
- And this sweet social commerce with thy children groweth as their growth,
- Unless thou fail of duty, or have weaned them by thine absence.
- Keep them near thee, rear them well, guide, correct, instruct them;
- And be the playmate of their games, the judge in their complainings.
- So shall the maiden and the youth love thee as their sympathizing friend,
- And bring their joys to share with thee, their sorrows for consoling:
- Yea, their inmost hopes shall yearn to thee for counsel,
- They will not hide their very loves, if thou hast won their trust;
- But, even as man and woman, shall they gladly seek their father,
- Feeling yet as children feel, though void of fear in honour:
- And thou shall be a Nestor in the camp, the just and good old man,
- Hearty still, though full of years, and held the friend of all;
- No secret shall be kept from thee; for if ill, thy wisdom may repair it;
- If well, thy praise is precious; and they would not miss that prize.
- O the blessing of a home, where old and young mix kindly,
- The young unawed, the old unchilled, in unreserved communion!
- O that refuge from the world, when a stricken son or daughter
- May seek, with confidence of love, a father's hearth and heart;
- Sure of a welcome, though others cast them out; of kindness, though men
- scorn them;
- And finding there the last to blame, the earliest to commend.
- Come unto me, my son, if sin shall have tempted thee astray,
- I will not chide thee like the rest, but help thee to return;
- Come unto me, my son, if men rebuke and mock thee,
- There always shall be one to bless,--for I am on thy side!
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Alas,--and bitter is their loss, the parents, and the children,
- Who, loving up and down the world, have missed each other's friendship.
- Haply, it had grown of careless life, for years go swiftly by;
- Or sprang of too much carefulness, that drank up all the streams:
- Haply, sullen disappointment came and quenched the fire;
- Haply, sternness, or misrule, crushed or warped the feelings.
- Then, ill-combined in tempers, they learnt not each the other;
- The growing child grew out of love, and drew the breath of fear;
- The youth, ill-trained, renounced his fears, and made a league with
- cunning;
- And so those hardened men were foes, that should have been chief friends.
- Where was the cause, the mutual cause? O hunt it out to kill it:
- And what the cure, the simple cure?--A mutual flash of love.
- For dull estrangement's daily air froze up those early sympathies
- By cold continuance in apathy, or cutting winds of censure;
- It was a slow process, which any fleeting hour could have melted;
- But every hour duly came, and passed without the sun.
- Caution, care, and dry distrust, obscured each other's minds,
- Till both those gardens, rich to yield, were rank with many weeds:
- And doubt, a hidden worm, gnawed at the root of their Society,
- They lacked of mutual confidence, and lived in mutual dread.
- Judge me, many fathers; and hearken to my counsel, many sons;
- I come with good in either hand, to reconcile contentions;
- For better friends can no man have, than those whom God hath given,
- And he that hath despised the gift, thought ill of that he knew not.
- Be ye wiser,--(I speak unto the sons,)--and win paternal friendships,
- Cultivate their kindness, seek them out with honour, and be the screening
- Japhet to their failings:
- And be ye wiser,--(I speak unto the fathers)--gain those filial comrades,
- Cherish their reasonable converse, and look not with coldness on your
- children.
- For the friendship of a child is the brightest gem set upon the circlet
- of Society,
- A jewel worth a world of pains--a jewel seldom seen.
-
- The third cycle on the waters, another of those rings upon the onyx,
- A further definite broad zone, holdeth kith and kin:
- A motley band of many tribes, and under various banners;
- The intimate and strangers, the known and loved, or only seen for
- loathing:
- Some, dear for their deserts, shall honour and have honour of
- relationship,
- Some, despising duties, will add to it both burden and disgrace.
- A man's nearest kin are oftentimes far other than his dearest,
- Yet in the season of affliction those will haste to help him.
- For, note thou this, the providence of God hath bound up families
- together,
- To mutual aid and patient trial; yea, those ties are strong.
- Friends are ever dearer in thy wealth, but relations to be trusted in thy
- need,
- For these are God's appointed way, and those the choice of man:
- There is lower warmth in kin, but smaller truth in friends,
- The latter show more surface, and the first have more of depth:
- Relations rally to the rescue, even in estrangement and neglect,
- Where friends will have fled at thy defeat, even after promises and
- kindness;
- For friends come and go, the whim that bound may loose them,
- But none can dissever a relationship, and Fate hath tied the knot.
-
- Wide, and edged with shadowy bounds, a distant boulevard to the city,
- The common crowd of social life is buzzing round about:
- That is as the outer court, with all defences levelled,
- Ranged around a man's own fortress, and his father's house.
- For many friends go in and out, and praise thee, finding pasture,
- And some are honeycomb to-day, who turn to gall to-morrow:
- And many a garrulous acquaintance with his frequent visit
- Will spend his leisure to thy cost, selling dulness dearly:
- For the idle call is a heavy tax, where time is counted gold,
- And even in the day of relaxation, haply he may spare his presence,--
- He found himself alone, and came to talk,--till they that hear are tired;
- Let the man bethink him of an errand, that his face be not unwelcome.
-
- But many friends there be, both well and wisely greeted,
- Gladly are they hailed upon the hills, and are chidden that they come so
- seldom.
- Of such are the early recollections, school friendships that have thriven
- to grey hairs,
- And veteran men are young once more, and talk of boyish pranks:
- And such, yet older on the list, are those who loved thy father,
- Thy father's friend, and thine, who tendereth thee tried love:
- Such also, many gentle hearts, whom thou hast known too lately,
- Hastening now to learn their worth, and chary of those minutes:
- And such, thy faithful pastor, coming to thy home with peace;--
- Greet the good man heartily,--and bid thy children bless him!
-
- Many thoughts, many thoughts,--who can catch them all?
- The best are ever swiftest winged, the duller lag behind:
- For, behold, in these vast themes, my mind is as a forest of the West,
- And flocking pigeons come in clouds, and bend the groaning branches;
- Here for a rest, then off and away,--they have sped to other climes,
- And leave me to my peace once more, a holiday from thoughts.
- I dare not lure them back, for the mighty subject of Society
- Would tempt to many a hackneyed note in many a weary key:
- Sage warnings, stout advice, experiences ever to be learned,
- The foolish floatiness of vanity, and solemn trumperies of pride,--
- Economy, the poor man's mint,--extravagance, the rich man's pitfall,
- Harmful copings with the better, and empty-headed apings of the worse,
- Circumstance and custom, sympathies, antipathies, diverse kinds of
- conversation,
- Vapid pleasures, the weariness of gaiety, the strife and bustle of the
- world,
- Home comforts, the miseries of style, the cobweb lines of etiquette,
- The hollowness of courtesies, and substance of deceits,--idleness,
- business, and pastime,--
- The multitude of matters to be done, the when, and where, and how,
- And varying shades of character, to do, undo, or miss them,--
- All these, and many more alike, thick converging fancies,
- Flit in throngs about my theme, as honey-bees at even to their hive.
- Find an end, or make one: these seeds are dragon's teeth:
- Sown thoughts grow to things, and fill that field, the world:
- Many wise have gone before, and used the sickle well;
- Who can find a corner now, where none have bound the sheaves?
- So, other some may reap: I do but glean and gather:
- My sorry handful hath been culled after the ripe harvest of Society.
-
-
-OF SOLITUDE.
-
-[Illustration: "W"]
-
- Who hath known his brother,--or found him in his freedom unrestrained?
- Even he, whose hidden glance hath watched his deepest Solitude.
- For we walk the world in domino, putting on characters and habits,
- And wear a social Janus mask, while others stand around:
- I speak not of the hypocrite, nor dream of meant deceptions,
- But of that quick unconscious change, whereof the best know most.
-
- For mind hath its influence on mind; and no man is free but when alone;
- Yea, let a dog be watching thee, its eye will tend to thy restraint:
- Self-possession cannot be so perfect, with another intellect beside thee,
- It is not as a natural result, but rather the educated produce:
- The presence of a second spirit must control thine own,
- And throw it off its equipoise of peace, to balance by an effort.
- The common minds of common men know of this but little;
- What then? they know nothing of themselves: I speak to those who know.
- The consciousness that some are hearing, cometh as a care,
- The sense that some are watching near, bindeth thee to caution;
- And the tree of tender nerves shrinketh as a touched mimosa,
- Drooping like a plant in drought, with half its strength decayed.
- There are antipathies warning from the many, and sympathies drawing to
- the few,
- But merchant-minds have crushed the first, and cannot feel the latter:
- Whereas to the quickened apprehension of a keen and spiritual intellect,
- Antipathies are galling, and sympathies oppress, and solitude is quiet.
-
- He that dwelleth mainly by himself, heedeth most of others,
- But they that live in crowds, think chiefly of themselves.
- There is indeed a selfish seeming, where the anchorite liveth alone,
- But probe his thoughts,--they travel far, dreaming for ever of the world:
- And there is an apparent generosity, when a man mixeth freely with his
- fellows;
- But prove his mind, by day and night, his thoughts are all of self:
- The world, inciting him to pleasures, or relentlessly provoking him to
- toil,
- Is full of anxious rivals, each with a difference of interest;
- So must he plan and practise for himself, even as his own best friend;
- And the gay soul of dissipation never had a thought unselfish.
- The hermit standeth out of strife, abiding in a contemplative calmness;
- What shall he contemplate,--himself? a meagre theme for musing:
- He hath cast off follies, and kept aloof from cares; a man of simple
- wants;
- God and the soul, these are his excuse, a just excuse, for solitude:
- But he carried with him to his cell the half-dead feelings of humanity;
- There were they rested and refreshed; and he yearned once more on men.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Where is the wise, or the learned, or the good, that sought not solitude
- for thinking,
- And from seclusion's secret vale brought forth his precious fruits?
- Forests of Aricia, your deep shade mellowed Numa's wisdom,
- Peaceful gardens of Vaucluse, ye nourished Petrarch's love;
- Solitude made a Cincinnatus, ripening the hero and the patriot,
- And taught De Stael self-knowledge, even in the damp Bastile;
- It fostered the piety of Jerome, matured the labours of Augustine,
- And gave imperial Charles religion for ambition:
- That which Scipio praised, that which Alfred practised,
- Which fired Demosthenes to eloquence, and fed the mind of Milton,
- Which quickened zeal, nurtured genius, found out the secret things of
- science,
- Helped repentance, shamed folly, and comforted the good with peace,--
- By all men just and wise, by all things pure and perfect,
- How truly, Solitude, art thou the fostering nurse of greatness!
-
- Enough;--the theme is vast; sear me these necks of Hydra:
- What shall drive away the thoughts flocking to this carcase?
- Yea,--that all which man may think, hath long been said of Solitude:
- For many wise have proved and preached its evils and its good.
- I cannot add,--I will not steal; enough, for all is spoken:
- Yet heed thou these for practice, and discernment among men.
-
- There are pompous talkers, solemn, oracular, and dull:
- Track them from society to solitude; and there ye find them fools.
- There are light-hearted jesters, taking up with company for pastime;
- How speed they when alone?--serious, wise, and thoughtful.
- And wherefore? both are actors, saving when in solitude,
- There they live their truest life, and all things show sincere:
- But the fool by pomposity of speech striveth to be counted wise,
- And the wise, for holiday and pleasance, playeth with the fool's best
- bauble.
- The solemn seemer, as a rule, will be found more ignorant and shallow
- Than those who laugh both loud and long, content to hide their knowledge.
-
- For thee; seek thou Solitude, but neither in excess, nor morosely;
- Seek her for her precious things, and not of thine own pride.
- For there, separate from a crowd, the still small voice will talk with
- thee,
- Truth's whisper, heard and echoed by responding conscience;
- There, shalt thou gather up the ravelled skeins of feeling,
- And mend the nets of usefulness, and rest awhile for duties;
- There, thou shalt hive thy lore, and eat the fruits of study,
- For Solitude delighteth well to feed on many thoughts:
- There, as thou sittest peaceful, communing with fancy,
- The precious poetry of life shall gild its leaden cares:
- There, as thou walkest by the sea, beneath the gentle stars,
- Many kindling seeds of good will sprout within thy soul;
- Thou shalt weep in Solitude,--thou shalt pray in Solitude,
- Thou shalt sing for joy of heart, and praise the grace of Solitude.
- Pass on, pass on!--for this is the path of wisdom:
- God make thee prosper on the way; I leave thee well with Solitude.
-
-
-RECAPITULATION.
-
-[Illustration: "E"]
-
- Every beginning is shrouded in a mist, those vague ideas beyond,
- And the traveller setteth on his journey, oppressed with many thoughts,
- Balancing his hopes and fears, and looking for some order in the chaos,
- Some secret path between the cliffs, that seem to bar his way:
- So, he commenceth at a clue, unravelling its tangled skein,
- And boldly speedeth on to thread the labyrinth before him.
- Then as he gropeth in the darkness, light is attendant on his steps,
- He walketh straight in fervent faith, and difficulties vanish at his
- presence;
- The very flashing of his sword scattereth those shadowy foes;
- Confident and sanguine of success, he goeth forth conquering and to
- conquer.
-
- Every middle is burdened with a weariness,--to have to go as far again,--
- And Diligence is sick at heart, and Enterprise foot-sore:
- That which began in zeal, bursting as a fresh-dug spring,
- Goeth on doggedly in toil, and hath no help of nature:
- Then, is need of moral might, to wrestle with the animal re-action,
- Still to fight, with few men left, and still though faint pursuing.
- The middle is a marshy flat, whereon the wheels go heavily,
- With clouds of doubt above, and ruts of discouragement below:
- Press on, sturdy traveller, yet a league, and yet a league!
- While every step is binding wings on thy victorious feet.
-
- Every end is happiness, the glorious consummation of design,
- The perils past, the fears annulled, the journey at its close:
- And the traveller resteth in complacency, home-returned at last:
- Work done may claim its wages, the goal gained hath won its prize:
- While the labour lasted, while the race was running,
- Many-times the sinews ached, and half refused the struggle:
- But now, all is quietness, a pleasant hour given to repose;
- Calmness in the retrospect of good, and calmness in the prospect of a
- blessing.
- Hope was glad in the beginning, and fear was sad midway,
- But sweet fruition cometh in the end, a harvest safe and sure.
- That which is, can never not have been: facts are solid as the pyramids:
- A thing done is written in the rock, yea, with a pen of iron.
- Uncertainty no more can scare, the proof is seen complete,
- Nor accident render unaccomplished, for the deed is finished.
- Thus the end shall crown the work, with grace, grace, unto the top-stone,
- And the work shall triumph in its crown, with peace, peace, unto the
- builder.
-
- I have written, as other some of old, in quaint and meaning phrase,
- Of many things for either world, a crowd of facts and fancies:
- And will ye judge me, men of mind?--judge in kindly calmness;
- For bitter words of haste or hate have often been repented.
- Deep dreaming upon surface reading; imagery crowded over argument;
- Order less considered in the multitude of thoughts: this witnessing is
- just.
- Scripture gave the holier themes, the well-turned words and wisdom;
- While Fancy on her swallow's wing skimmed those deeper waters.
- And wilt thou say with shrewdness,--He hath burnished up old truths,
- But where he seemed to fashion new, the novelty was false?
- Alas, for us in these last days, our elders reaped the harvest:
- Alas, for all men in all times, who glean so many tares!
- That which is true, how should it be new? for time is old in years:
- That which is new, how should it be true? for I am young in wisdom:
- Nevertheless, I have spoken at my best, according to the mercies given me,
- Of high, and deep, and famous things, of Evil, or of Good.
- I have told of Errors near akin to Truth, and wholesomes linked with
- poison;
- Of subtle Uses in the humblest, and the deep laid plots of Pride:
- I have praised Wisdom, comforted thy Hope, and proved to thee the folly
- of Complainings;
- Hinted at the hazard of an Influence, and turned thee from the terrors of
- Ambition.
- I have shown thee thy captivity to Law: yet bade thee hide Humilities;
- I have lifted the curtains of Memory; and smoothed the soft pillow of
- Rest.
- Experience had his sober hour; and Character its keen appreciation;
- And holy Anger stood sublime, where Hatred fell condemned.
- Prayer spake the mind of God, even in His own good words:
- And Zeal, with kindness warmly mixt, allied him to Discretion.
- I taught thee that nothing is a Trifle, even to the laugh of Recreation;
- I led thee with the Train of Religion, to be dazzled at the name of the
- Triune.
- Thought confessed his unseen fears; and Speech declared his triumphs;
- I sang the blessedness of books; and commended the prudence of a letter:
- Riches found their room, either unto honour--or despising:
- Inventions took their lower place, for all things come of God.
- I scorned Ridicule; nor would humble me for Praise; for I had gained
- Self-knowledge;
- And pleaded fervently for Brutes, who suffer for man's sin.
- Then, I rose to Friendship; and bathed in all the tenderness of Love;
- Knew the purity of Marriage; and blest the face of Children.
- And whereas, by petulance or pride, I had haply said some evil,
- Mine after-thought was Tolerance, to bear the faults of all:
- Many faults, ill to bear, bred the theme of Sorrow;
- Many virtues, dear to see, induced the gush of Joy.
-
- Thus, for awhile, as leaving thee in joy, was I loth to break that spell;
- I roamed to other things and thoughts, and fashioned other books.
- But in a season of reflection, after many days,
- A thought stood before me in its garment of the past,--and lo, a legion
- with it!
- They came in thronging bands,--I could not fight nor fly them,--
- And so they took me to their tent, the prisoner of thoughts.
-
- Then, I bade thee greet me well, and heed my cheerful counsels;
- For every day we have a Friend, who changeth not with time.
- Gladly did I speak of my commission, for I felt it graven on my heart,
- And could not hold my wiser peace, but magnified mine office.
- Mystery had left her echoes in my mind, and I discoursed her secret:
- And thence I turned aside to man, and judged him for his Gifts.
- Beauty, noble thesis, had a world of sweets to sing of,
- And dated all her praise from God, the birthday of the soul.
- Thence grew Fame; and Flattery came like Agag;
- But this was as the nauseous dregs, of that inspiring cup:
- Forth from Flattery sprang in opposition harsh and dull Neglect;
- And kind Contentment's gentle face to smile away the sadness.
- Life, all buoyancy and light, and Death, that sullen silence,
- Sped the soul to Immortality, the final home of man.
- Then, in metaphysical review, passed a triple troop,
- Swift Ideas, sounding Names, and heavily armed Things:
- Faith spake of her achievements even among men her brethren;
- And Honesty, with open mouth, would vindicate himself:
- The retrospect of Social life had many truths to tell of,
- And then I left thee to thy Solitude, learning there of Wisdom.
-
- Friend and scholar, lover of the right, mine equal kind companion,--
- I prize indeed thy favour, and these sympathies are dear:
- Still, if thy heart be little with me, wot thou well, my brother,
- I canvass not the smiles of praise, nor dread the frowns of censure.
- Through many themes in many thoughts, have we held sweet converse;
- But God alone be praised for mind! He only is sufficient,
- And every thought in every theme by prayer had been established:
- Who then should fear the face of man, when God hath answered prayer?--
- I speak it not in arrogance of heart, but humbly as of justice,
- I think it not in vanity of soul, but tenderly, for gratitude,--
- God hath blest my mind, and taught it many truths:
- And I have echoed some to thee, in weakness, yet sincerely:
- Yea, though ignorance and error shall have marred those lessons of His
- teaching,
- I stand in mine own Master's praise, or fall to His reproof.
- If thou lovest, help me with thy blessing; if otherwise, mine shall be
- for thee;
- If thou approvest, heed my words; if otherwise, in kindness be my teacher.
- Many mingled thoughts for self have warped my better aim;
- Many motives tempted still, to toil for pride or praise:
- Alas, I have loved pride and praise, like others worse or worthier;
- But hate and fear them now, as snakes that fastened on my hand:
- Scaevola burnt both hand and crime; but Paul flung the viper on the fire:
- He shook it off, and felt no harm: so be it! I renounce them.
- Rebuke then, if thou wilt rebuke,--but neither hastily nor harshly;
- Or, if thou wilt commend, be it honestly, of right: I work for God and
- good.
-
-
-[Illustration: The End of the Second Series]
-
-
-
-
-BRADBURY, EVANS, AND CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Apparent typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-Hyphenation has been made consistent.
-
-"OE" and "oe" ligatures have been removed.
-
-
-
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