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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by Julia C. R. (Caroline Ripley) Dorr
-
-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: Poems
-
-Author: Julia C. R. (Caroline Ripley) Dorr
-
-Release Date: June 15, 2017 [EBook #54912]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Paul Marshall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
- Underscores "_" before and after a word or phrase indicate _italics_
- in the original text.
- Small capitals have been converted to SOLID capitals.
- Old or antiquated spellings have been preserved.
- Typographical errors have been silently corrected but other variations
- in spelling and punctuation remain unaltered.
- Where double quotes have been repeated at the beginnings of
- consecutive stanzas, they have been omitted for clarity.
-
-
-
-
- POEMS BY JULIA C. R. DORR
-
-
- [Illustration: Julia C. R. Dorr.]
-
- POEMS
-
- BY JULIA C. R. DORR
-
- COMPLETE EDITION
-
- NEW YORK
-
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- MDCCCXCII
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1879, 1885, 1892, BY
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-
- TROW DIRECTORY
- PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY
- NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-_TO S. M. D._
-
-
- _Let us go forth and gather golden-rod!
- O love, my love, see how upon the hills,
- Where still the warm air palpitates and thrills,
- And earth lies breathless in the smile of God,
- Like plumes of serried hosts its tassels nod!
- All the green vales its golden glory fills;
- By lonely waysides and by mountain rills
- Its yellow banners flaunt above the sod.
- Perhaps the apple-blossoms were more fair;
- Perhaps, dear heart, the roses were more sweet,
- June’s dewy roses, with their buds half blown;
- Yet what care we, while tremulous and rare
- This golden sunshine falleth at our feet
- And song lives on, though summer birds have flown?
- August, 1884._
-
- _Let the words stand as they were writ, dear heart!
- Although no more for thee in earthly bowers
- Shall bloom the earlier or the later flowers;
- Although to-day ’tis springtime where thou art,
- While I, with Autumn, wander far apart,
- Yet, in the name of that long love of ours,
- Tested by years and tried by sun and showers,
- Let the words stand as they were writ, dear heart!_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
- DEDICATION. TO S. M. D. v
-
- EARLIER POEMS.
- THE THREE SHIPS, 3
- MAUD AND MADGE, 6
- A MOTHER’S QUESTION, 8
- OVER THE WALL, 9
- OUTGROWN, 11
- A SONG FOR TWO, 14
- A PICTURE, 15
- HYMN TO LIFE, 16
- THE CHIMNEY SWALLOW, 18
- HEIRSHIP, 20
- HILDA, SPINNING, 22
- HEREAFTER, 25
- WITHOUT AND WITHIN, 27
- VASHTI’S SCROLL, 29
- WHAT MY FRIEND SAID TO ME, 37
- HYMN. For the Dedication of a Cemetery, 38
- YESTERDAY AND TO-DAY, 39
- LYRIC. For the Dedication of a Music-Hall, 41
- WHAT I LOST, 43
- ONCE! 45
- CATHARINE, 47
- THE NAME, 48
- UNDER THE PALM-TREES, 49
- NIGHT AND MORNING, 51
- AGNES, 53
- “INTO THY HANDS,” 55
- IDLE WORDS, 56
- THE SPARROW TO THE SKYLARK, 58
- THE BELL OF ST. PAUL’S, 60
- DECEMBER 26, 1910.
- A Ballad of Major Anderson, 62
- FROM BATON ROUGE, 66
- IN THE WILDERNESS, 68
- CHARLEY OF MALVERN HILL, 70
- SUPPLICAMUS, 73
- THE LAST OF SIX, 75
- THE DRUMMER BOY’S BURIAL, 79
- EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY-FIVE, 82
- OUR FLAGS AT THE CAPITOL, 84
- MY MOCKING-BIRD, 86
- COMING HOME, 88
- WAKENING EARLY, 90
- BLEST, 92
- HELEN, 94
-
- “PRO PATRIA.”
- THE DEAD CENTURY, 97
- THE RIVER OTTER, 106
- PAST AND PRESENT, 109
- VERMONT, 114
- GETTYSBURG. 1863-1889. 126
- “NO MORE THE THUNDER OF CANNON,” 133
- GRANT, 135
-
- FRIAR ANSELMO, AND OTHER POEMS.
- FRIAR ANSELMO, 141
- THE KING’S ROSEBUD, 146
- SOMEWHERE, 147
- PERADVENTURE, 148
- RENA. A Legend of Brussels, 150
- A SECRET, 159
- THIS DAY, 161
- “CHRISTUS!” 163
- THE KISS, 167
- WHAT SHE THOUGHT, 168
- WHAT NEED? 170
- TWO, 172
- UNANSWERED, 175
- THE CLAY TO THE ROSE, 178
- AT THE LAST, 180
- TO THE “BOUQUET CLUB,” 181
- EVENTIDE, 182
- MY LOVERS, 184
- THE LEGEND OF THE ORGAN-BUILDER, 186
- BUTTERFLY AND BABY BLUE, 190
- KING IVAN’S OATH, 192
- AT DAWN, 199
- IN MEMORIAM, 201
- WEAVING THE WEB, 203
- THE “CHRISTUS” OF OBERAMMERGAU, 205
- RABBI BENAIAH, 206
- A CHILD’S THOUGHT, 209
- “GOD KNOWS,” 211
- THE MOUNTAIN ROAD, 213
- ENTERING IN, 215
- A FLOWER FOR THE DEAD, 217
- THOU KNOWEST, 219
- WINTER, 220
- FIVE, 221
- UNSOLVED, 223
- QUIETNESS, 226
- THE DIFFERENCE, 227
- MY BIRTHDAY, 229
- A RED ROSE, 231
- TWENTY-ONE, 233
- SINGING IN THE DARK, 235
- THOMAS MOORE, 236
- A LAST WORD, 238
-
- SONNETS.
- THE SONNET. I. To a Critic. 241
- " " II. To a Poet. 241
- AT REST, 243
- TOO WIDE! 244
- MERCÉDÈS, 245
- GRASS-GROWN, 246
- TO ZÜLMA, I., II., 247
- SLEEP, 249
- IN KING’S CHAPEL, 250
- TO-DAY, 251
- F. A. F., 252
- DAY AND NIGHT, I., II., 253
- THY NAME, 255
- RESURGAMUS, 256
- AT THE TOMB, 257
- THREE DAYS, I., II., III., 258
- DARKNESS, 260
- SILENCE, 261
- SANCTIFIED, 262
- A MESSAGE, 263
- WHEN LESSER LOVES, 264
- GEORGE ELIOT, 265
- KNOWING, 266
- A THOUGHT, 267
- TO-MORROW, I., II., 268
- “O EARTH! ART THOU NOT WEARY?” 270
- ALEXANDER, 271
- THE PLACE, I., II., III., 272
- TO A GODDESS, 274
- O. W. H., 275
- GIFTS FOR THE KING, 276
- RECOGNITION, I., II., 277
- SHAKESPEARE, 279
- TO E. C. S., 280
- A CHRISTMAS SONNET, 281
- POVERTY, 282
- SURPRISES, I., II., 283
- C. H. R., 285
- A NEW BEATITUDE, 286
- COMPENSATION, I., II., 287
- QUESTIONINGS, 289
- REMEMBRANCE, 290
- IN THE HIGH TOWER, 291
-
- AFTERNOON SONGS.
- FOUR O’CLOCKS, 295
- A DREAM OF SONGS UNSUNG, 296
- QUESTIONING A ROSE, 304
- THE FALLOW FIELD, 306
- OUT AND IN, 309
- HER FLOWERS, 310
- THREE LADDIES, 312
- SUMMER, 314
- THORNLESS ROSES, 315
- TREASURE-SHIPS, 316
- CHOOSING, 318
- NOT MINE, 320
- THE CHAMBER OF SILENCE, 322
- THREE ROSES, 325
- FOUR LETTERS, 326
- VALDEMAR, 328
- JUBILATE! 338
- EASTER LILIES, 339
- “O, WIND THAT BLOWS OUT OF THE WEST,” 340
- A SUMMER SONG, 342
- THE URN, 344
- THE PARSON’S DAUGHTER, 345
- MARCH FOURTH, 1881-1882, 348
- ROY, 350
- THE PAINTER’S PRAYER, 351
- FROM EXILE, 354
- A MOTHER-SONG, 358
- EASTER MORNING, 359
- SEALED ORDERS, 363
- AN ANNIVERSARY, 365
- MARTHA, 367
- THE HOUR, 368
- THE CLOSED GATE, 369
- CONTENT, 371
- MY WONDERLAND, 373
- THE GUEST, 375
- AN OLD-FASHIONED GARDEN, 377
- DISCONTENT, 380
- THE DOVES AT MENDON, 383
- A LATE ROSE, 386
- PERIWINKLE, 387
- AFTERNOON, 389
- THE LADY OF THE PROW, 392
- THOU AND I, 395
-
- LATER POEMS.
- THE LEGEND OF THE BABOUSHKA.
- A Christmas Ballad, 399
- DAYBREAK. An Easter Poem, 405
- THE APPLE-TREE, 411
- THE COMFORTER, 413
- SANTA-CLAUS, 415
- THE ARMORER’S ERRAND, 417
- FORESHADOWINGS, 423
- WON, 425
- BAPTISM OF FIRE, 427
- AT THE FEAST, 429
- OVER AND OVER, 430
- A LISTENING BIRD, 432
- THE FIRST FIRE, 433
- MIDNIGHT CHIMES, 436
- MY LADY SLEEP, 438
- THE KING’S TOUCH, 440
- “BY DIVERS PATHS,” 442
- THE BLIND BIRD’S NEST, 444
- TWO PATHS, 446
- ST. JOHN’S EVE, 447
- A LITTLE SONG, 449
- THE PRINCES’ CHAMBER, 450
- WONDERLAND, 453
- IN A GALLERY, 455
- IN MARBLE PRAYER, 457
- NOCTURNE, 459
- COME WHAT MAY, 460
- NUREMBERG, 462
- A MATER DOLOROSA, 464
- AFTER LONG WAITING, 470
-
-
-
-
-EARLIER POEMS
-
-
-THE THREE SHIPS
-
- Over the waters clear and dark
- Flew, like a startled bird, our bark.
-
- All the day long with steady sweep
- Seagulls followed us over the deep.
-
- Weird and strange were the silent shores,
- Rich with their wealth of buried ores;
-
- Mighty the forests, old and gray,
- With the secrets locked in their hearts away.
-
- Semblance of castle and arch and shrine
- Towered aloft in the clear sunshine;
-
- And we watched for the warder, stern and grim,
- And the priest with his chanted prayer and hymn.
-
- Over that wonderful northern sea,
- As one who sails in a dream, sailed we,
-
- Till, when the young moon soared on high,
- Nothing was round us but wave and sky.
-
- Up in the tremulous space it swung,—
- A crescent dim in the azure hung;
-
- While the sun lay low in the glowing west,
- With bars of purple across his breast.
-
- The skies were aflame with the sunset glow,
- The billows were all aflame below;
-
- The far horizon seemed the gate
- To some mystic world’s enchanted state;
-
- And all the air was a luminous mist,
- Crimson and amber and amethyst.
-
- Then silently into that fiery sea—
- Into the heart of the mystery—
-
- Three ships went sailing, one by one,
- The fairest visions under the sun.
-
- Like the flame in the heart of a ruby set
- Were the sails that flew from each mast of jet;
-
- While darkly against the burning sky
- Streamer and pennant floated high.
-
- Steadily, silently, on they pressed
- Into the glowing, reddening west;
-
- Until, on the far horizon’s fold,
- They slowly passed through its gate of gold.
-
- You think, perhaps, they were nothing more
- Than schooners laden with common ore?
-
- Where Care clasped hands with grimy Toil,
- And the decks were stained with earthly moil?
-
- Oh, beautiful ships, that sailed that night
- Into the west from our yearning sight,
-
- Full well I know that the freight ye bore
- Was laden not for an earthly shore!
-
- To some far realm ye were sailing on,
- Where all we have lost shall yet be won;
-
- Ye were bearing thither a world of dreams,
- Bright as that sunset’s golden gleams;
-
- And hopes whose tremulous, rosy flush,
- Grew fairer still in the twilight hush.
-
- Ye were bearing hence to that mystic sphere
- Thoughts no mortal may utter here,—
-
- Songs that on earth may not be sung,—
- Words too holy for human tongue,—
-
- The golden deeds that we would have done,—
- The fadeless wreaths that we would have won!
-
- And hence it was that our souls with you
- Traversed the measureless waste of blue,
-
- Till you passed under the sunset gate,
- And to us a voice said, softly, “Wait!”
-
-
-MAUD AND MADGE
-
- Maud in a crimson velvet chair
- Strings her pearls on a silken thread,
- While, lovingly lifting her golden hair,
- Soft airs wander about her head.
- She has silken robes of the softest flow,
- She has jewels rare and a chain of gold,
- And her two white hands flit to and fro,
- Fair as the dainty toys they hold.
-
- She has tropical birds and rare perfumes;
- Pictures that speak to the heart and eye;
- For her each flower of the Orient blooms,—
- For her the song and the lute swell high;
- But daintily stringing her gleaming pearls
- She dreams to-day in her velvet chair,
- While the sunlight sleeps in her golden curls,
- Lightly stirred by the odorous air.
-
- Down on the beach, when the tide goes out,
- Madge is gathering shining shells;
- The sea-breeze blows her locks about;
- O’er bare, brown feet the white sand swells.
- Coarsest serge is her gown of gray,
- Faded and torn her apron blue,
- And there in the beautiful, dying day
- The girl still thinks of the work to do.
-
- Stains of labor are on her hands,
- Lost is the young form’s airy grace;
- And standing there on the shining sands
- You read her fate in her weary face.
- Up with the dawn to toil all day
- For meagre fare and a place to sleep;
- Seldom a moment to dream or play,
- Little leisure to laugh or weep.
-
- Beautiful Maud, you think, maybe,
- Lying back in your velvet chair,
- There is naught in common with her and thee,—
- You scarce could breathe in the self-same air.
- But the warm blood in her girlish heart
- Leaps quick as yours at her nature’s call,
- And ye, though moving so far apart,
- Must share one destiny after all.
-
- Love shall come to you both one day,
- For still must be what aye hath been;
- And under satin or russet gray
- Hearts will open to let him in.
- Motherhood with its joy and woe
- Each must compass through burning pain,—
- You, fair Maud, with your brow of snow,
- Madge with her brown hands labor-stained.
-
- Each shall sorrow and each shall weep,
- Though one is in hovel, one in hall;
- Over your gold the frost shall creep,
- As over her jet the snows will fall.
- Exquisite Maud, you lift your eyes
- At Madge out yonder under the sun;
- Yet know ye both by the countless ties
- Of a common womanhood ye are one!
-
-
-A MOTHER’S QUESTION
-
- What mother-angel tended thee last night,
- Sweet baby mine?
- Cradled upon what breast all soft and white
- Didst thou recline?
-
- Who took thee, frail and tender as thou art,
- Within her arms?
- And shielded thee, close claspéd to her heart,
- From all alarms?
-
- Surely that God who lured thee from the breast
- That hoped to be
- The softest pillow and the sweetest rest
- Thenceforth to thee,
-
- Sent thee not forth into the dread unknown
- Without a guide,
- To grope in darkness, treading all alone
- The path untried.
-
- Compassionate is He who called thee, child;
- And well I know
- He sent some Blessed One of aspect mild
- With thee to go
-
- Through the dark valley, where the shadows dim
- Forever brood,
- That the low music of an angel’s hymn
- Might cheer the solitude!
-
-
-OVER THE WALL
-
- I know a spot where the wild vines creep,
- And the coral moss-cups grow,
- And where, at the foot of the rocky steep,
- The sweet blue violets blow.
- There all day long, in the summer-time,
- You may hear the river’s dreamy rhyme;
- There all day long does the honey-bee
- Murmur and hum in the hollow tree.
-
- And there the feathery hemlock makes
- A shadow cool and sweet,
- While from its emerald wing it shakes
- Rare incense at your feet.
- There do the silvery lichens cling,
- There does the tremulous harebell swing;
- And many a scarlet berry shines
- Deep in the green of the tangled vines.
-
- Over the wall at dawn of day,
- Over the wall at noon,
- Over the wall when the shadows say
- That night is coming soon,
- A little maiden with laughing eyes
- Climbs in her eager haste, and hies
- Down to the spot where the wild vines creep,
- And violets bloom by the rocky steep.
-
- All wild things love her. The murmuring bee
- Scarce stirs when she draws near,
- And sings the bird in the hemlock-tree
- Its sweetest for her ear.
- The harebells nod as she passes by,
- The violet lifts its tender eye,
- The low ferns bend her steps to greet,
- And the mosses creep to her dancing feet.
-
- Up in her pathway seems to spring
- All that is sweet or rare,—
- Chrysalis quaint, or the moth’s bright wing,
- Or flower-buds strangely fair.
- She watches the tiniest bird’s-nest hid
- The thickly clustering leaves amid;
- And the small brown tree-toad on her arm
- Quietly hops, and fears no harm.
-
- Ah, child of the laughing eyes, and heart
- Attuned to Nature’s voice!
- Thou hast found a bliss that will ne’er depart
- While earth can say, “Rejoice!”
- The years must come, and the years must go;
- But the flowers will bloom, and the breezes blow,
- And bird and butterfly, moth and bee,
- Bring on their swift wings joy to thee!
-
-
-OUTGROWN
-
- Nay, you wrong her, my friend, she’s not fickle; her love she has
- simply outgrown;
- One can read the whole matter, translating her heart by the light
- of one’s own.
-
- Can you bear me to talk with you frankly? There is much that my
- heart would say,
- And you know we were children together, have quarreled and “made up”
- in play.
-
- And so, for the sake of old friendship, I venture to tell you the
- truth,
- As plainly, perhaps, and as bluntly, as I might in our earlier
- youth.
-
- Five summers ago, when you wooed her, you stood on the self-same
- plane,
- Face to face, heart to heart, never dreaming your souls could be
- parted again.
-
- She loved you at that time entirely, in the bloom of her life’s
- early May,
- And it is not her fault, I repeat it, that she does not love you
- to-day.
-
- Nature never stands still, nor souls either. They ever go up or go
- down;
- And hers has been steadily soaring,—but how has it been with your
- own?
-
- She has struggled, and yearned, and aspired,—grown stronger and
- wiser each year;
- The stars are not farther above you, in yon luminous atmosphere!
-
- For she whom you crowned with fresh roses, down yonder, five
- summers ago,
- Has learned that the first of our duties to God and ourselves is
- to grow.
-
- Her eyes they are sweeter and calmer, but their vision is clearer
- as well;
- Her voice has a tenderer cadence, but it rings like a silver bell.
-
- Her face has the look worn by those who with God and his angels have
- talked;
- The white robes she wears are less white than the spirits with whom
- she has walked.
-
- And you? Have you aimed at the highest? Have you, too, aspired and
- prayed?
- Have you looked upon evil unsullied? have you conquered it
- undismayed?
-
- Have you, too, grown stronger and wiser, as the months and the years
- have rolled on?
- Did you meet her this morning rejoicing in the triumph of victory
- won?
-
- Nay, hear me! The truth cannot harm you. When to-day in her presence
- you stood,
- Was the hand that you gave her as white and clean as that of her
- womanhood?
-
- Go measure yourself by her standard. Look back on the years that
- have fled;
- Then ask, if you need, why she tells you that the love of her
- girlhood is dead!
-
- She cannot look down to her lover; her love, like her soul, aspires;
- He must stand by her side, or above her, who would kindle its holy
- fires.
-
- Now, farewell! For the sake of old friendship I have ventured to
- tell you the truth,
- As plainly, perhaps, and as bluntly, as I might in our earlier
- youth.
-
-
-A SONG FOR TWO
-
- Not for its sunsets burning clear and low,
- Its purple splendors on the eastern hills,
- Bless I the Year that now makes haste to go
- While sad Earth listens for its dying thrills.
-
- Not that its days were sweet with sun and showers;
- Its summer nights all luminous with stars:
- Not that its vales were studded thick with flowers;
- Not that its mountains pierced the azure bars;
-
- Not that from our dear land, by slow degrees,
- Some mists of error it hath blown away;
- Not for its noble deeds—ah! not for these—
- Fain would I twine this wreath of song to-day.
-
- But for one gift that it has brought to me
- My grateful heart would crown the dying Year:
- Because, O best-beloved, it gave me thee,
- I drop this garland on the passing bier!
-
-
-A PICTURE
-
- A lovely bit of dappled green
- Shut in the circling hills between,
- While farther off blue mountains stand
- Like giant guards on either hand.
-
- The quiet road in still repose
- Follows where’er the river flows;
- And in and out it glides along,
- Enchanted by the rippling song.
-
- Afar, I see the steepled town
- From yonder hillside looking down;
- And sometimes, when the south wind swells,
- Hear the faint chiming of its bells.
-
- But under these embowering trees,
- Lulled by the hum of droning bees,
- The old brown farmhouse seems to sleep,
- So calm its rest is and so deep.
-
- Yonder, beside the rustic bridge,
- From which the path climbs yonder ridge,
- The lazy cattle seek the shade
- By the umbrageous willows made.
-
- The sky is like a hollow pearl,
- Save where warm sunset clouds unfurl
- Their flaming colors. Lo! a star,
- Even as I gaze, gleams forth afar!
-
-
-HYMN TO LIFE
-
- Ah, Life, dear Life, how beautiful art thou!
- All day sweet, chiming voices in my heart
- Have hymned thy praises joyfully as now,
- Telling how fair thou art!
-
- This morn, while yet the dew was on the flowers,
- They sang like skylarks, soaring while they sing;
- This noon, like birds within their leafy bowers,
- Warbled with folded wing.
-
- Slow fades the twilight from the glowing west,
- And one pale star hangs o’er yon mountain’s brow;
- With deeper joy, that may not be repressed,
- O Life, they hail thee now!
-
- And not alone from this poor heart of mine
- Do these glad notes of grateful love ascend;
- Voices from mount and vale and woodland shrine
- In the full chorus blend.
-
- The young leaves feel thy presence and rejoice
- The while they frolic with the happy breeze;
- And pæans sweeter than a seraph’s voice
- Rise from the swaying trees.
-
- Each flower that hides within the forest dim,
- Where mortal eye may ne’er its beauty see,
- Waves its light censer, while it breathes a hymn
- In humble praise of thee.
-
- Through quivering pines the gentle south winds stray,
- Singing low songs that bid the tear-drops start;
- And thoughts of thee are in each trembling lay,
- Thrilling the listener’s heart.
-
- Old Ocean lifts his solemn voice on high,
- Thy name, O Life, repeating evermore,
- While sweeping gales and rushing storms reply
- From many a far-off shore.
-
- The stars are gathering in the darkening skies,
- But our dull ears their music may not hear,
- Though, while we list, their swelling anthems rise
- Exultingly and clear!
-
- O Earth is beautiful! She weareth still
- The golden radiance of life’s early day;
- Still Love and Hope for me their chalice fill,—
- Life, turn not thou away!
-
-
-THE CHIMNEY SWALLOW
-
- One night as I sat by my table,
- Tired of books and pen,
- With wandering thoughts far straying
- Out into the world of men;—
- That world where the busy workers
- Such magical deeds are doing,
- Each one with a steady purpose
- His own pet plans pursuing;
-
- When the house was wrapt in silence,
- And the children were all asleep,
- And even the mouse in the wainscot
- Had ceased to run and leap,
- All at once from the open chimney
- Came a hum and a rustle and whirring,
- That startled me out of my dreaming,
- And set my pulses stirring.
-
- What was it? I paused and listened;
- The roses were all in bloom,
- And in from the garden floated
- The violet’s rich perfume.
- So it could not be Kriss Kringle,
- For he only comes, you know,
- When the Christmas bells are chiming,
- And the hills are white with snow.
-
- Hark! a sound as of rushing waters,
- Or the rustle of falling leaves,
- Or the patter of eager raindrops
- Yonder among the eaves!
- Then out from the dark, old chimney,
- Blackened with soot and smoke,
- With a whir of fluttering pinions
- A startled birdling broke.
-
- Dashing against the window;
- Lighting a moment where
- My sculptured angel folded
- Its soft white wings in prayer;
- Swinging upon the curtains;
- Perched on the ivy-vine;
- At last it rested trembling
- In tender hands of mine.
-
- No stain upon its plumage;
- No dust upon its wings;
- No hint of its companionship
- With darkly soiling things!
- O, happy bird, thou spirit!
- Stretch thy glad plumes and soar
- Where breath of soil or sorrow
- Shall reach thee nevermore!
-
-
-HEIRSHIP
-
- Little store of wealth have I;
- Not a rood of land I own;
- Nor a mansion fair and high
- Built with towers of fretted stone.
- Stocks, nor bonds, nor title-deeds,
- Flocks nor herds have I to show;
- When I ride, no Arab steeds
- Toss for me their manes of snow.
-
- I have neither pearls nor gold,
- Massive plate, nor jewels rare;
- Broidered silks of worth untold,
- Nor rich robes a queen might wear.
- In my garden’s narrow bound
- Flaunt no costly tropic blooms,
- Ladening all the air around
- With a weight of rare perfumes.
-
- Yet to an immense estate
- Am I heir, by grace of God,—
- Richer, grander than doth wait
- Any earthly monarch’s nod.
- Heir of all the Ages, I—
- Heir of all that they have wrought,
- All their store of emprise high,
- All their wealth of precious thought.
-
- Every golden deed of theirs
- Sheds its lustre on my way;
- All their labors, all their prayers,
- Sanctify this present day!
- Heir of all that they have earned
- By their passion and their tears,—
- Heir of all that they have learned
- Through the weary, toiling years!
-
- Heir of all the faith sublime
- On whose wings they soared to heaven;
- Heir of every hope that Time
- To Earth’s fainting sons hath given!
- Aspirations pure and high—
- Strength to dare and to endure—
- Heir of all the Ages, I—
- Lo! I am no longer poor!
-
-
-HILDA, SPINNING
-
- Spinning, spinning, by the sea,
- All the night!
- On a stormy, rock-ribbed shore,
- Where the north winds downward pour,
- And the tempests fiercely sweep
- From the mountains to the deep,
- Hilda spins beside the sea,
- All the night!
-
- Spinning, at her lonely window,
- By the sea!
- With her candle burning clear,
- Every night of all the year,
- And her sweet voice crooning low,
- Quaint old songs of love and woe,
- Spins she at her lonely window,
- By the sea.
-
- On a bitter night in March,
- Long ago,
- Hilda, very young and fair,
- With a crown of golden hair,
- Watched the tempest raging wild,
- Watched the roaring sea—and smiled
- Through that woeful night in March,
- Long ago!
-
- What though all the winds were out
- In their might?
- Richard’s boat was tried and true;
- Stanch and brave his hardy crew;
- Strongest he to do or dare.
- Said she, breathing forth a prayer,
- “He is safe, though winds are out
- In their might!”
-
- But at length the morning dawned,
- Still and clear!
- Calm, in azure splendor, lay
- All the waters of the bay;
- And the ocean’s angry moans
- Sank to solemn undertones,
- As at last the morning dawned,
- Still and clear!
-
- With her waves of golden hair
- Floating free,
- Hilda ran along the shore,
- Gazing off the waters o’er;
- And the fishermen replied,
- “He will come in with the tide,”
- As they saw her golden hair
- Floating free!
-
- Ah! he came in with the tide—
- Came alone!
- Tossed upon the shining sands—
- Ghastly face and clutching hands—
- Seaweed tangled in his hair—
- Bruised and torn his forehead fair—
- Thus he came in with the tide,
- All alone!
-
- Hilda watched beside her dead,
- Day and night.
- Of those hours of mortal woe
- Human ken may never know;
- She was silent, and his ear
- Kept the secret, close and dear,
- Of her watch beside her dead,
- Day and night!
-
- What she promised in the darkness,
- Who can tell?
- But upon that rock-ribbed shore
- Burns a beacon evermore!
- And beside it, all the night,
- Hilda guards the lonely light,
- Though what vowed she in the darkness,
- None may tell!
-
- Spinning, spinning by the sea,
- All the night!
- While her candle, gleaming wide
- O’er the restless, rolling tide,
- Guides with steady, changeless ray
- The lone fisher up the bay,
- Hilda spins beside the sea,
- Through the night!
-
- Fifty years of patient spinning
- By the sea!
- Old and worn, she sleeps to-day,
- While the sunshine gilds the bay;
- But her candle, shining clear,
- Every night of all the year,
- Still is telling of her spinning
- By the sea!
-
-
-HEREAFTER
-
- O land beyond the setting sun!
- O realm more fair than poet’s dream!
- How clear thy silver rivers run,
- How bright thy golden glories gleam!
-
- Earth holds no counterpart of thine;
- The dark-browed Orient, jewel-crowned,
- Pales as she bows before thy shrine,
- Shrouded in mystery profound.
-
- The dazzling North, the stately West,
- Whose waters flow from mount to sea;
- The South, flower-wreathed in languid rest—
- What are they all, compared with thee?
-
- All lands, all realms beneath yon dome,
- Where God’s own hand hath hung the stars,
- To thee with humblest homage come,
- O world beyond the crystal bars!
-
- Thou blest Hereafter! Mortal tongue
- Hath striven in vain thy speech to learn,
- And Fancy wanders, lost among
- The flowery paths for which we yearn.
-
- But well we know that fair and bright,
- Far beyond human ken or dream,
- Too glorious for our feeble sight,
- Thy skies of cloudless azure beam.
-
- We know thy happy valleys lie
- In green repose, supremely blest;
- We know against thy sapphire sky
- Thy mountain-peaks sublimely rest.
-
- For sometimes even now we catch
- Faint gleamings from thy far-off shore,
- While still with eager eyes we watch
- For one sweet sign or token more.
-
- The loved, the deeply loved, are there!
- The brave, the fair, the good, the wise,
- Who pined for thy serener air,
- Nor shunned thy solemn mysteries.
-
- There are the hopes that, one by one,
- Died even as we gave them birth;
- The dreams that passed ere well begun,
- Too dear, too beautiful for earth.
-
- The aspirations, strong of wing,
- Aiming at heights we could not reach;
- The songs we tried in vain to sing;
- The thoughts too vast for human speech;
-
- Thou hast them all, Hereafter! Thou
- Shalt keep them safely till that hour
- When, with God’s seal on heart and brow,
- We claim them in immortal power!
-
-
-WITHOUT AND WITHIN
-
- Softly the gold has faded from the sky,
- Slowly the stars have gathered one by one,
- Calmly the crescent moon mounts up on high,
- And the long day is done.
-
- With quiet heart my garden-walks I tread,
- Feeling the beauty that I cannot see;
- Beauty and fragrance all around me shed
- By flower, and shrub, and tree.
-
- Often I linger where the roses pour
- Exquisite odors from each glowing cup;
- Or where the violet, brimmed with sweetness o’er,
- Lifts its small chalice up.
-
- With fragrant breath the lilies woo me now,
- And softly speaks the sweet-voiced mignonette,
- While heliotropes, with meekly lifted brow,
- Say to me, “Go not yet.”
-
- So for awhile I linger, but not long.
- High in the heavens rideth fiery Mars,
- Careering proudly ’mid the glorious throng,
- Brightest of all the stars.
-
- But softly gleaming through the curtain’s fold,
- The home-star beams with more alluring ray,
- And, as a star led sage and seer of old,
- So it directs my way;
-
- And leads me in where my young children lie,
- Rosy and beautiful in tranquil rest;
- The seal of sleep is on each fast-shut eye,
- Heaven’s peace within each breast.
-
- I bring them gifts. Not frankincense nor myrrh—
- Gifts the adoring Magi humbly brought
- The young child, cradled in the arms of her
- Blest beyond mortal thought;
-
- But love—the love that fills my mother-heart
- With a sweet rapture oft akin to pain;
- Such yearning love as bids the tear-drops start
- And fall like summer rain.
-
- And faith—that dares, for their dear sakes, to climb
- Boldly, where once it would have feared to go,
- And calmly standing upon heights sublime,
- Fears not the storm below.
-
- And prayer! O God! unto thy throne I come,
- Bringing my darlings—but I cannot speak.
- With love and awe oppressed, my lips are dumb:
- Grant what my heart would seek!
-
-
-VASHTI’S SCROLL
-
- Dethroned and crownless, I so late a queen!
- Forsaken, poor and lonely, I who wore
- The crown of Persia with such stately grace!
- But yesterday a royal wife; but now
- From my estate cast down, and fallen so low
- That beggars scoff at me! Men toss my name
- Backward and forward on their mocking tongues.
- In all the king’s broad realm there is not one
- To do poor Vashti homage. Even the dog
- My hand had fondled, in the palace walls
- Fawns on my rival. When I left the court,
- Weeping and sore distressed, he followed me,
- Licking my fingers, leaping in my face,
- And frisking round me till I reached the gates.
- Then with long pauses, as of one perplexed,
- And frequent lookings backward, and low whines
- Of puzzled wonder—that had made me smile
- If I had been less lorn—with drooping ears,
- Dropt eyes, and downcast forehead he went back,
- Leaving me desolate. So went they all
- Who, when Ahasuerus on my brow
- Set his own royal crown and called me queen,
- Made the air ring with plaudits! Loud they cried,
- “Long live Queen Vashti, Persia’s fairest Rose,
- Mother of Princes, and the nation’s Hope!”
- The rose is withered now; the queen’s no more.
- To these lorn breasts no princely boy shall cling
- Or now, or ever. Yet on this poor scroll
- I will rehearse the story of my woes,
- And bid them lay it in the grave with me
- When I depart to join the unnumbered dead.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Oh, thou unknown, unborn, who through the gloom
- And mists of ages in my vaulted tomb
- Shalt find this parchment, and with reverent care
- Shalt bear it outward to the sun and air:
- Oh, thou whose patient fingers shall unroll
- With slow, persuasive touch this little scroll:
- Oh, loving, tender eyes that, like twin stars,
- I seem to see through yonder cloudy bars:
- Read Vashti’s story, and I pray ye tell
- The whole wide world if she did ill or well!
-
- Ahasuerus reigned. On Persia’s throne,
- Lord of a mighty realm, he sat alone,
- And stretched his sceptre from the farthest slope
- Of India’s hills, to where the Ethiop
- Dwelt in barbaric splendor. Kinglier king
- Never did poet praise or minstrel sing!
- He had no peers. Among his lords he shone
- As shines a planet, single and alone;
- And I, alas! I loved him, and we two
- Such bliss as peasant lovers joy in, knew!
- No lowly home in all our wide domain
- Held more of peace than ours, or less of pain.
- But one dark day—O, woeful day of days,
- Whose hours I number now in sad amaze,
- Thou hadst no prophet of the ills to be,
- Nor sign nor omen came to succor me!—
- That day Ahasuerus smiled and said,
- “Since first I wore this crown upon my head
- Thrice have the emerald clusters of the vine
- Changed to translucent globes of ruby wine;
- And thrice the peaches on the loaded walls
- Have slowly rounded into wondrous balls
- Of gold and crimson. I will make a feast.
- Princes and lords, the greatest and the least,
- All Persia and all Media, shall see
- The pomp and splendor that encompass me.
- The riches of my kingdom shall be shown,
- And all my glorious majesty made known
- Where’er the shadow of my sceptred hand
- Sways a great people with its mute command!”
- Then came from far and near a hurrying throng
- Of skilled and cunning workmen. All day long
- And far into the startled night, they wrought
- Most quaint and beautiful devices—still
- Responsive to their master’s eager will,
- And giving form to his creative thought—
- Till Shushan grew a marvel!
- Never yet
- Yon rolling sun on fairer scene has set:
- The palace windows were ablaze with light;
- And Persia’s lords were there, most richly dight
- In broidered silks, or costliest cloth of gold,
- That kept the sunshine in each lustrous fold,
- Or softly flowing tissues, pure and white
- As fleecy clouds at noonday. Clear and bright
- Shone the pure gold of Ophir, and the gleam
- Of burning gems, that mocked the pallid beam
- Of the dim, wondering stars, made radiance there,
- Splendor undreamed of, and beyond compare!
- Up from the gardens floated the perfume
- Of rose and myrtle, in their perfect bloom;
- The red pomegranate cleft its heart in twain,
- Pouring its life blood in a crimson rain;
- The slight acacia waved its yellow plumes,
- And afar off amid the starlit glooms
- Were sweet recesses, where the orange bowers
- Dropt their pure blossoms down in snowy showers,
- And night reigned undisturbed.
- From cups of gold
- Diverse one from another, meet to hold
- The king’s most costly wines, or to be raised
- To princely lips, the gay guests drank, and praised
- Their rich abundance. Rapturous music swept
- Through the vast arches and the secret kept
- Of its own joy; while in slow, rhythmic time
- To clash of cymbal and the lute’s clear chime,
- The dancing-girls stole through the fragrant night
- With wreathéd arms, flushed cheeks and eyes alight,
- And softly rounded forms that rose and fell
- To the voluptuous music’s dreamy swell,
- As if the air were pulsing waves that bore
- Them up and onward to some longed-for shore!
-
- Wild waxed the revel. On an ivory throne
- Inlaid with ebony and gems that shone
- With a surpassing lustre, sat my lord,
- The King Ahasuerus. His great sword,
- Blazing with diamonds on hilt and blade,—
- The mighty sword that made his foes afraid,—
- And the proud sceptre he was wont to grasp,
- With all the monarch in his kingly clasp,
- Against the crouching lions (guard that kept
- On either side the throne and never slept),
- Leaned carelessly. And flowing downward o’er
- The ivory steps even to the marble floor,
- Swept the rich royal robes in many a fold
- Of Tyrian purple flecked with yellow gold.
- The jewelled crown his young head scorned to wear,
- More fitly crowned by its own clustering hair,
- Lay on a pearl-wrought cushion by his side,
- Mute symbol of great Persia’s power and pride;
- While on his brow some courtier’s hand had placed
- The fairest chaplet monarch ever graced,
- A wreath of dewy roses, fresh and sweet,
- Just brought from out the garden’s cool retreat.
-
- Louder and louder grew the sounds of mirth;
- Faster and faster flowed the red wine forth;
- In high, exulting strains the minstrels sang
- The monarch’s glory, till the great roof rang;
- And flushed at length with pride and song and wine,
- The king rose up and said, “O nobles mine!
- Princes of Persia, Media’s hope and pride,
- Stars of my kingdom, will ye aught beside?
- Speak! and I swear your sovereign’s will shall be
- On this fair night to please and honor ye!”
- Then rose a shout from out the glittering throng
- Drowning the voice of merriment and song,
- Humming and murmuring like a hive of bees—
- What would they more each charmèd sense to please?
-
- Out spoke at last a tongue that should have been
- Palsied in foul dishonor there and then.
- “O great Ahasuerus! ne’er before
- Reigned such a king so blest a people o’er!
- What shall we ask? What great and wondrous boon
- To crown the hours that fly away too soon?
- There is but one. ’Tis said that mortal eyes
- Never yet gazed, in rapturous surprise,
- Upon a face like that of her who wears
- Thy signet-ring, and all thy glory shares,—
- Thy fair Queen Vashti, she who yet shall be
- Mother of him who reigneth after thee!
- Show us that face, O king! For nought beside
- Can make our cup of joy o’erflow with pride.”
-
- A murmur ran throughout the startled crowd,
- Swelling at last to plaudits long and loud.
- Maddened with wine, they knew not what they said.
- Ahasuerus bent his haughty head,
- And for an instant o’er his face there swept
- A look his courtiers in their memory kept
- For many a day—a look of doubt and pain,
- They scarcely caught ere it had passed again.
- “My word is pledged,” he said. Then to the seven
- Lord chamberlains to whom the keys were given:
- “Haste ye, and to this noble presence bring
- Vashti, the Queen, with royal crown and ring;
- That all my lords may see the matchless charms
- Kind Heaven has sent to bless my kingly arms.”
-
- They did their errand, those old, gray-haired men,
- Who should have braved the lion in his den,
- Or ere they bore such message to their queen,
- Or took such words their aged lips between.
- What! I, the daughter of a royal race,
- Step down, unblushing, from my lofty place,
- And, like a common dancing-girl, who wears
- Her beauty unconcealed, and, shameless, bares
- Her brow to every gazer, boldly go
- To those wild revellers my face to show?
- I—who had kept my beauty pure and bright
- Only because ’twas precious in his sight,
- Guarding it ever as a holy thing,
- Sacred to him, my lover, lord, and king,—
- Could I unveil it to the curious eyes
- Of the mad rabble that with drunken cries
- Were shouting “Vashti! Vashti?”—Sooner far,
- Beyond the rays of sun, or moon, or star,
- I would have buried it in endless night!
- Pale and dismayed, in wonder and affright,
- My maidens hung around me as I told
- Those seven lord chamberlains, so gray and old,
- To bear this answer back: “It may not be.
- My lord, my king, I cannot come to thee.
- It is not meet that Persia’s queen, like one
- Who treads the market-place from sun to sun,
- Should bare her beauty to the hungry crowd,
- Who name her name in accents hoarse and loud.”
- With stern, cold looks they left me. Ah! I knew
- If my dear lord to his best self were true,
- That he would hold me guiltless, and would say,
- “I thank thee, love, that thou didst not obey!”
- But the red wine was ruling o’er his brain;
- The cruel wine that recked not of my pain.
- Up from the angry throng a clamor rose;
- The flattering sycophants were now my foes;
- And evil counsellors about the throne,
- Hiding the jealous joy they dared not own,
- With slow, wise words, and many a virtuous frown,
- Said, “Be the queen from her estate cast down!
- Let her not see the king’s face evermore,
- Nor come within his presence as of yore;
- So disobedient wives through all the land
- Shall read the lesson, heed and understand.”
- Up spoke another, eager to be heard,
- In royal councils fain to have a word,—
- “Let this commandment of the king be writ,
- In the law of the Medes and Persians, as is fit,—
- The perfect law that man may alter not
- Nor of its bitter end abate one jot.”
- Alas! the king was wroth. Before his face
- I could not go to plead my piteous case;
- But, pitiless, with scarce dissembled sneers,
- And poisoned words that rankled in his ears,
- My wily foes, afraid to let him pause,
- Brought the great book that held the Persian laws,
- And ere the rising of the morrow’s sun,
- My bitter doom was sealed, the deed was done!
-
- Scarce had two moons passed when one dreary night
- I sat within my bower in woeful plight,
- When suddenly upon my presence stole
- A muffled form, whose shadow stirred my soul
- I knew not wherefore. Ere my tongue could speak,
- Or with a breath the brooding silence break,
- A low voice murmured “Vashti!”
- Pale and still,
- Hushing my heart’s cry with an iron will,
- “What would the king?” I asked. No answer came,
- But to his sad eyes leaped a sudden flame;
- With clasping arms he raised me to his breast
- And on my brow and lips such kisses pressed
- As one might give the dead. I may not tell
- All the wild words that I remember well.
- Oh! was it joy or was it pain to know
- That not alone I wept my weary woe?
- Alas! I know not. But I know to-day—
- If this be sin, forgive me, Heaven, I pray!—
- That though his eyes have never looked on mine
- Since that dark night when stars refused to shine,
- And fair Queen Esther sits, a beauteous bride,
- In stately Shushan at the monarch’s side,
- The king remembers Vashti, even yet
- Breathing her name sometimes with vain regret,
- Or murmuring, haply, in a whisper low,—
- “O pure, proud heart that loved me long ago!”
-
-
-WHAT MY FRIEND SAID TO ME
-
- Trouble? dear friend, I know her not. God sent
- His angel Sorrow on my heart to lay
- Her hand in benediction, and to say,
- “Restore, O child, that which thy Father lent,
- For He doth now recall it,” long ago.
- His blessed angel Sorrow! She has walked
- For years beside me, and we two have talked
- As chosen friends together. Thus I know
- Trouble and Sorrow are not near of kin.
- Trouble distrusteth God, and ever wears
- Upon her brow the seal of many cares;
- But Sorrow oft hast deepest peace within.
- She sits with Patience in perpetual calm,
- Waiting till Heaven shall send the healing balm.
-
-
- HYMN
- FOR THE DEDICATION OF A CEMETERY
-
- Ye Pines, with solemn grandeur crowned,
- Put on your priestly robes to-day;
- Henceforth ye stand on holy ground,
- Where Love and Death hold equal sway.
-
- Lift up to Heaven each crested head,
- And raise your giant arms on high,
- And swear that o’er our slumbering dead
- Ye will keep watch and ward for aye.
-
- For month by month, and year by year,
- While shine the stars, and rolls the sea,
- Our silent ones shall gather here,
- To rest beneath the greenwood tree.
-
- Here no rude sight nor sound shall break
- The calmness of their last, long sleep,
- And Earth and Heaven, for Love’s sweet sake,
- Shall o’er them ceaseless vigils keep.
-
- Our silent ones! Their very dust
- Is precious in our longing eyes;
- O, guard ye well the sacred trust,
- Till God’s own voice shall bid them rise!
-
-
-YESTERDAY AND TO-DAY
-
- But yesterday among us here,
- One with ourselves in hope and fear:
- Joying like us in little things,
- The sheen of gorgeous insect wings,
- The song of bird, the hum of bee,
- The white foam of the heaving sea.
-
- But yesterday your simplest speech,
- Your lightest breath, our hearts could reach;
- Your very thoughts were ours. Our eyes
- Found in your own no mysteries.
- Your griefs, your joys, your prayers, we knew,
- The hopes that with your girlhood grew.
-
- But yesterday we dared to say,
- “’Twere better you should walk this way
- Or that, dear child! Do thus or so;
- Older and wiser we, you know.”
- We gave you flowers and curled your hair,
- And brought new robes for you to wear.
-
- To-day how far away thou art!
- In all thy life we have no part.
- Hast thou a want? We know it not;
- Utterly parted from our lot,
- The veriest stranger is to thee
- All those who loved thee best can be.
-
- Deaf to our calls, our prayers, our cries,
- Thou dost not lift thy heavy eyes;
- Nor heed the tender words that flow
- From lips whose kisses thrilled thee so
- But yesterday! To-day in vain
- We wait for kisses back again.
-
- To-day no awful mystery hid
- The dark and mazy past amid
- Is half so great as this that lies
- Beneath the lids of thy shut eyes,
- And in those frozen lips of stone,
- Impassive lips, that smile nor moan.
-
- But yesterday with loving care
- We petted, praised thee, called thee fair;
- To-day, oppressed with awe, we stand
- Before that ring-unfettered hand,
- And scarcely dare to lift one tress
- In mute and reverent caress.
-
- But yesterday with us. To-day
- Where thou art dwelling, who can say?
- In heaven? But where? Oh for some spell
- To make thy tongue this secret tell!
- To break the silence strange and deep,
- That thy sealed lips so closely keep!
-
-
- LYRIC
- FOR THE DEDICATION OF A MUSIC-HALL
-
- No grand Cathedral’s vaulted space
- Where, through the “dim, religious light,”
- Gleam pictured saint and cross and crown,
- We consecrate with song to-night;
-
- No stately temple lifting high
- Its dome against the starlit skies,
- Where lofty arch and glittering spire
- Like miracles of beauty rise.
-
- Yet here beneath this humbler roof
- With reverent hearts and lips we come;
- Hail, music! Song and Beauty, hail!
- Henceforth be these poor walls your home.
-
- Here speak to hearts that long have yearned
- Your presence and your spells to know;
- Here touch the lips athirst to drink
- Where your perennial fountains flow.
-
- Here, where our glorious mountain-peaks
- Sublimely pierce the ether blue,
- Lift ye our souls, and bid them rise
- In aspirations grand and true!
-
- O Music, Art, and Science, hail!
- We greet you now with glad acclaims;
- Ye bay-crowned ones! the listening air
- Waits to re-echo with your names;
-
- Waits for your voices ringing clear
- Above this weary, work-day world;
- Waits till ye bid fair Truth arise,
- While Error from her throne is hurled!
-
-
-WHAT I LOST
-
- Wandering in the dewy twilight
- Of a golden summer day,
- When the mists upon the mountains
- Flushed with purple splendor lay:
- When the sunlight kissed the hilltops
- And the vales were hushed and dim,
- And from out the forest arches
- Rose a holy vesper hymn—
- I lost something. Have you seen it,
- Children, ye who passed that way?
- Did you chance to find the treasure
- That I lost that summer day?
-
- It was neither gold nor silver,
- Orient pearl nor jewel rare;
- Neither amethyst nor ruby,
- Nor an opal gleaming fair;
- ’Twas no curious, quaint mosaic
- Wrought by cunning master-hands,
- Nor a cameo where Hebe,
- Crowned with deathless beauty, stands.
- Yet have I lost something precious;
- Children, ye who passed that way—
- Tell me, have you found the treasure
- That I lost one summer day?
-
- Then, you say, it was a casket
- Filled with India’s perfumes rare,
- Or a tiny flask of crystal
- Meet the rose’s breath to bear;
- Or a bird of wondrous plumage,
- With a voice of sweetest tone,
- That, escaping from my bosom,
- To the greenwood deep has flown.
- Ah! not these, I answer vainly;
- Children, ye who passed that way,
- Ye can never find the treasure
- That I lost that summer day!
-
- You may call it bird or blossom;
- Name my treasure what you will;
- Here no more its song or fragrance
- Shall my soul with rapture fill.
- But, thank God! our earthly losses
- In no darksome void are cast;
- Safely garnered, some to-morrow
- Shall restore them all at last.
- Somewhere in the great hereafter,
- Children, ye who pass this way,
- I shall find again the treasure
- That I lost one summer day!
-
-
-ONCE!
-
- Once in your sight,
- As May buds swell in the sun’s warm light,
- So grew her soul,
- Yielding itself to your sweet control.
-
- Once if you spoke,
- Echoing strains in her heart awoke,
- Sending a thrill
- All through its chambers sweet and still.
-
- Once if you said,
- “Sweet, with Love’s garland I crown your head,”
- Ah! how the rose
- Flooded her forehead’s pale repose!
-
- Once if your lip
- Dared the pure sweetness of hers to sip,
- Softly and meek
- Dark lashes drooped on a white rose cheek!
-
- Once if your name
- Some one but whispered, a sudden flame
- Burned on her cheek,
- Telling a story she would not speak!
-
- You do but wait
- At a sepulchre’s sealed gate!
- Her love is dead,
- Bound hand and foot in its narrow bed.
-
- Why did it die?
- Ask of your soul the reason why!
- Question it well,
- And surely the secret it will tell.
-
- But if your heart
- Ever again plays the lover’s part,
- Let this truth be
- Blent with the solemn mystery:
-
- Pure flame aspires;
- Downward flow not the altar fires;
- And skylarks soar
- Up where the earth-mists vex no more.
-
- Now loose your hold
- From her white garment’s spotless fold,
- And let her pass—
- While both hearts murmur, “Alas! alas!”
-
-
-CATHARINE
-
- O wondrous mystery of death!
- I yield me to thine awful sway,
- And with hushed heart and bated breath
- Bow down before thy shrine to-day!
-
- But yesterday these pallid lips
- Breathed reverently my humble name;
- These eyes now closed in drear eclipse
- Brightened with gratitude’s soft flame.
-
- These poor, pale hands were swift to do
- The lowliest service I might ask;
- These palsied feet the long day through
- Moved gladly to each wonted task.
-
- O faithful, patient, loving one,
- Who from earth’s great ones shrank afar,
- Canst bear the presence of The Son,
- And dwell where holy angels are?
-
- Dost thou not meekly bow thine head,
- And stand apart with humblest mien,
- Nor dare with softest step to tread
- The ranks of shining Ones between?
-
- Dost thou not kneel with downcast eyes
- The hem of some white robe to touch,
- While on thine own meek forehead lies
- The crown of her who “lovèd much?”
-
- O vain imaginings! To-day
- Earth’s loftiest prince is not thy peer.
- Come, Sage and Seer! mute homage pay
- To this Pale Wonder lying here!
-
-
-THE NAME
-
- I know not by what name to call thee, thou
- Who reignest supreme, sole sovereign of my heart!
- Thou who the lode-star of my being art,
- Thou before whom my soul delights to bow!
- What shall I call thee? Teach me some dear name
- Better than all the rest, that I may pour
- All that the years have taught me of love’s lore
- In one fond word. “Lover?” But that’s too tame,
- And “Friend”’s too cold, though thou art both to me.
- Art thou my King? Kings sit enthroned afar,
- And crowns less meet for love than reverence are,
- While both my heart gives joyfully to thee.
- Art thou—but, ah! I’ll cease the idle quest:
- I cannot tell what name befits thee best!
-
-
-UNDER THE PALM-TREES
-
- We were children together, you and I;
- We trod the same paths in days of old;
- Together we watched the sunset sky,
- And counted its bars of massive gold.
- And when from the dark horizon’s brim
- The moon stole up with its silver rim,
- And slowly sailed through the fields of air,
- We thought there was nothing on earth so fair.
-
- You walk to-night where the jasmines grow,
- And the Cross looks down from the tropic skies;
- Where the spicy breezes softly blow,
- And the slender shafts of the palm-trees rise.
- You breathe the breath of the orange-flowers,
- And the perfumed air of the myrtle-bowers;
- You pluck the acacia’s golden balls,
- And mark where the red pomegranate falls.
-
- I stand to-night on the breezy hill,
- Where the pine-trees sing as they sang of yore;
- The north star burneth clear and still,
- And the moonbeams silver your father’s door.
- I can see the hound as he lies asleep,
- In the shadow close by the old well-sweep,
- And hear the river’s murmuring flow
- As we two heard it long ago.
-
- Do you think of the firs on the mountain-side
- As you walk to-night where the palm-trees grow?
- Of the brook where the trout in the darkness hide?
- Of the yellow willows waving slow?
- Do you long to drink of the crystal spring,
- In the dell where the purple harebells swing?
- Would your pulses leap could you hear once more
- The sound of the flail on the threshing-floor?
-
- Ah! the years are long, and the world is wide,
- And the salt sea rolls our hearts between;
- And never again at eventide
- Shall we two gaze on the same fair scene.
- But under the palm-trees wandering slow,
- You think of the spreading elms I know;
- And you deem our daisies fairer far
- Than the gorgeous blooms of the tropics are!
-
-
-NIGHT AND MORNING
-
-
-I.
-
- Night and darkness over all!
- Nature sleeps beneath a pall;
- Not a ray from moon or stars
- Glimmers through the cloudy bars;
- Huge and black the mountains stand
- Frowning upon either hand,
- And the river, dark and deep,
- Gropes its way from steep to steep.
- Yonder tree, whose young leaves played
- In the sunshine and the shade,
- Stretches out its arms like one
- Sudden blindness hath undone.
- Pale and dim the rose-queen lies
- Robbed of all her gorgeous dyes,
- And the lily bendeth low,
- Mourner in a garb of woe.
- Never a shadow comes or goes,
- Never a gleam its glory throws
- Over cottage or over hall—
- Darkness broodeth over all!
-
-
-II.
-
- Lo! the glorious morning breaks!
- Nature from her sleep awakes,
- And, in purple pomp, the day
- Bids the darkness flee away.
- Crowned with light the mountains stand
- Royally on either hand,
- And the laughing waters run
- In glad haste to meet the sun.
- Stately trees, exultant, raise
- Their proud heads in grateful praise;
- Flowers, dew-laden, everywhere
- Pour rich incense on the air,
- And the ascending vapors rise
- Like the smoke of sacrifice.
- Birds are trilling, bees are humming,
- Swift to greet the new day coming,
- And earth’s myriad voices sing
- Hymns of grateful welcoming.
- Bursting from night’s heavy thrall,
- Heaven’s own light is over all!
-
-
-AGNES
-
- Agnes! Agnes! is it thus
- Thou, at last, dost come to us?
- From the land of balm and bloom,
- Blandest airs and sweet perfume,
- Where the jasmine’s golden stars
- Glimmer soft through emerald bars,
- And the fragrant orange flowers
- Fall to earth in silver showers,
- Agnes! Agnes!
- With thy pale hands on thy breast,
- Comest thou here to take thy rest?
-
- Agnes! Agnes! o’er thy grave
- Loud the winter winds will rave,
- And the snow fall fast around,
- Heaping high thy burial mound;
- Yet, within its soft embrace,
- Thy dear form and earnest face,
- Wrapt away from burning pain,
- Ne’er shall know one pang again.
- Agnes! Agnes!
- Nevermore shall anguish vex thee,
- Nevermore shall care perplex thee.
-
- Agnes! Agnes! wait, ah! wait
- Just one moment at the gate,
- Ere your pure feet enter in
- Where is neither pain nor sin.
- Thou art blest, but how shall we
- Bear the pang of losing thee?
- List! _we love thee!_ By that word
- Once thy heart of hearts was stirred.
- Agnes! Agnes!
- By that love we bid thee wait
- Just one moment at the gate!
-
- Agnes! Agnes! No! Pass on
- To the heaven that thou hast won!
- By thy life of brave endeavor,
- Up the heights aspiring ever,
- Whence thy voice, like clarion clear,
- Rang out words of lofty cheer;
- By thy laboring not in vain,
- By thy martyrdom of pain,
- Our Saint Agnes—
- From our yearning sight pass on
- To the rest that thou hast won!
-
-
-“INTO THY HANDS”
-
- Into thy hands, O Father! Now at last,
- Weary with struggling and with long unrest,
- Vext by remembrances of conflicts past
- And by a host of present cares opprest,
-
- I come to thee and cry, Thy will be done!
- Take thou the burden I have borne too long.
- Into thy hands, O mighty, loving One,
- My weakness gives its all, for thou art strong!
-
- For life—for death. I cannot see the way;
- I blindly wander on to meet the night;
- The path grows steeper, and the dying day
- Soon with its shadows will shut out the light.
-
- Hold thou my hand, O Father! I am tired
- As a young child that wearies of the road;
- And the far heights toward which I once aspired
- Have lost the glory with which erst they glowed.
-
- Take thou my life, and mold it to thy will;
- Into thy hands commit I all my way;
- Fain would I lift each cup that thou dost fill,
- Nor from its brim my pale lips ever stay.
-
- Take thou my life. I lay it at thy feet;
- And in my death my sure support be thou;
- So shall I sink to slumber calm and sweet,
- And wake at morn before thy face to bow!
-
-
-IDLE WORDS
-
-
-I.
-
- Once I said,
- Seeing two soft, starry eyes
- Darkly bright as midnight skies,—
- Eyes prophetic of the power
- Sure to be thy woman’s dower,
- When the years should crown thee queen
- Of the realm as yet unseen,—
- “Some time, sweet, those eyes shall make
- Lovers mad for their sweet sake!”
-
-
-II.
-
- Once I said,
- Seeing tresses, golden-brown,
- In a bright shower falling down
- Over neck and bosom white
- As an angel’s clad in light—
- Odorous tresses drooping low
- O’er a forehead pure as snow,—
- “Some time, sweet, in thy soft hair
- Love shall set a shining snare!”
-
-
-III.
-
- Once I said,
- Seeing lips whose crimson hue
- Mocked the roses wet with dew,—
- Warm, sweet lips, whose breath was balm,—
- Pure, proud lips, serenely calm,—
- Tender lips, whose smiling grace
- Lit with splendor all the face,—
- “Sweet, for kiss of thine some day
- Men will barter souls away!”
-
-
-IV.
-
- Idly said!
- God hath taken care of all
- Joy or pain that might befall!
- Lover’s lip shall never thrill
- At thy kisses, soft and still;
- Lover’s heart shall never break
- In sore anguish for thy sake;
- Lover’s soul for thee shall know
- Nor love’s rapture, nor its woe;—
- All is said!
-
-
-THE SPARROW TO THE SKYLARK
-
- O skylark, soaring, soaring,
- Ere day is well begun,
- Thy full, glad song outpouring
- To greet the rising sun,—
- So high, so high in heaven
- Thy swift wing cleaves the blue,
- We sparrows in the hedges
- Can scarcely follow you!
-
- O strong, unwearied singer!
- By summer winds caressed,
- Among the white clouds floating
- With sunshine on thy breast,
- We hear thy clear notes dropping
- In showers of golden rain,
- A glad, triumphant music
- That hath no thought of pain!
-
- We twitter in the hedges;
- We chirp our little songs,
- Whose low, monotonous murmur
- To homeliest life belongs;
- We perch in lowly places,
- We hop from bough to bough,
- While in the wide sky-spaces,
- On strong wing soarest thou!
-
- Yet we—we share the rapture
- And glory of thy flight—
- Thou’rt still a bird, O skylark,—
- Thou spirit glad and bright!
- And ah! no sparrow knoweth
- But its low note may be
- Part of earth’s joy and gladness
- That finds full voice in thee!
-
-
-THE BELL OF ST. PAUL’S
-
-“The great bell of St. Paul’s, which only sounds when the King is dead.”
-
-
- Toll, toll, thou solemn bell!
- A royal head lies low,
- And mourners through the palace halls
- Slowly and sadly go.
- Lift up thine awful voice,
- Thou, silent for so long!
- Say that a monarch’s soul has passed
- To join the shadowy throng.
-
- Toll yet again, thou bell!
- Mutely thine iron tongue,
- Prisoned within yon lofty tower,
- For many a year has hung.
- But now its mournful peal
- Startles a nation’s ear,
- And swells from listening shore to shore,
- That the whole world may hear.
-
- A whisper from the past
- Blends with each solemn tone
- That from those brazen lips of thine
- Upon the air is thrown.
- Never had trumpet’s peal,
- On clarion sounding shrill,
- Such power as that deep undertone
- The listener’s heart to thrill.
-
- Come, tell us tales, thou bell,
- Of those of old renown,
- Those sturdy warrior kings who fought
- For sceptre and for crown.
- Tell of the lion-hearts
- Whose pulses moved the world;
- Whose banners flew so swift and far,
- O’er land and sea unfurled!
-
- From out the buried years,
- From many a vaulted tomb,
- Whence neither pomp nor power could chase
- The dim, sepulchral gloom,
- Lo, now, a pale, proud line,
- They glide before our eyes!—
- Art thou a wizard, mighty bell,
- To bid the dead arise?
-
- But toll, toll on, thou bell!
- Toll for the royal dead;
- Toll—for the hand now sceptreless;
- Toll—for the crownless head;
- Toll—for the human heart
- With all its loves and woes;
- Toll—for the soul that passes now
- Unto its long repose!
-
-
- DECEMBER 26, 1910
- A BALLAD OF MAJOR ANDERSON
-
-
- Come, children, leave your playing this dark and stormy night,
- Shut fast the rattling window-blinds, and make the fire burn bright;
- And hear an old man’s story, while loud the fierce winds blow,
- Of gallant Major Anderson and fifty years ago.
-
- I was a young man then, boys, but twenty-nine years old,
- And all my comrades knew me for a soldier brave and bold;
- My eye was bright, my step was firm, I measured six feet two,
- And I knew not what it was to shirk when there was work to do.
-
- We were stationed at Fort Moultrie, in Charleston harbor, then,
- A brave band, though a small one, of scarcely seventy men;
- And day and night we waited for the coming of the foe,
- With noble Major Anderson, just fifty years ago.
-
- Were they French or English, ask you? Oh, neither, neither, child!
- We were at peace with other lands, and all the nations smiled
- On the stars and stripes, wherever they floated far and free,
- And all the foes we had to meet we found this side the sea.
-
- But even between brothers bitter feuds will sometimes rise,
- And ’twas the cloud of civil war that darkened in the skies;
- I have not time to tell you how the quarrel first began,
- Or how it grew, till o’er our land the strife like wildfire ran.
-
- I will not use hard words, my boys, for I am old and gray,
- And I’ve learned it is an easy thing for the best to go astray;
- Some wrong there was on either part, I do not doubt at all;
- There are two sides to a quarrel—be it great or be it small!
-
- You scarce believe me, children. Grief and doubt are in your eyes,
- Fixed steadily upon me in wonder and surprise;
- Don’t forget to thank our Father, when to-night you kneel to pray,
- That an undivided people rule America to-day.
-
- We were stationed at Fort Moultrie—but about a mile away,
- The battlements of Sumter stood proudly in the bay;
- ’Twas by far the best position, as he could not help but know,
- Our gallant Major Anderson, just fifty years ago.
-
- Yes, ’twas just after Christmas, fifty years ago to-night;
- The sky was calm and cloudless, the moon was large and bright;
- At six o’clock the drum beat to call us to parade,
- And not a man suspected the plan that had been laid.
-
- But the first thing a soldier learns is that he must obey,
- And that when an order’s given he has not a word to say;
- So when told to man the boats, not a question did we ask,
- But silently, yet eagerly, began our hurried task.
-
- We did a deal of work that night, though our numbers were but few;
- We had all our stores to carry, and our ammunition too;
- And the guard-ship—’twas the Nina—set to watch us in the bay,
- Never dreamed what we were doing, though ’twas almost light as day.
-
- We spiked the guns we left behind, and cut the flag-staff down,—
- From its top should float no colors if it might not hold our own,—
- Then we sailed away for Sumter as fast as we could go,
- With our good Major Anderson, just fifty years ago.
-
- I never can forget, my boys, how the next day, at noon,
- The drums beat and the band played a stirring martial tune,
- And silently we gathered round the flag-staff, strong and high,
- Forever pointing upward to God’s temple in the sky.
-
- Our noble Major Anderson was good as he was brave,
- And he knew without His blessing no banner long could wave;
- So he knelt, with head uncovered, while the chaplain read a prayer,
- And as the last amen was said, the flag rose high in air.
-
- Then our loud huzzas rang out, far and widely o’er the sea!
- We shouted for the stars and stripes, the standard of the free!
- Every eye was fixed upon it, every heart beat warm and fast,
- As with eager lips we promised to defend it to the last!
-
- ’Twas a sight to be remembered, boys—the chaplain with his book,
- Our leader humbly kneeling, with his calm, undaunted look;
- And the officers and men, crushing tears they would not shed,—
- And the blue sea all around us, and the blue sky overhead!
-
- Now, go to bed, my children, the old man’s story’s told,—
- Stir up the fire before you go, ’tis bitter, bitter cold;
- And I’ll tell you more to-morrow night, when loud the fierce winds
- blow,
- Of gallant Major Anderson and fifty years ago.
-
-
-FROM BATON ROUGE
-
- From the fierce conflict and the deadly fray
- A patriot hero comes to us this day.
-
- Greet him with music and with loud acclaim,
- And let our hills re-echo with his name.
-
- Bring rarest flowers their rich perfume to shed,
- Like sweetest incense, round the warrior’s head.
-
- Let heart and voice cry “welcome,” and a shout,
- Upon the summer air, ring gayly out,
-
- To hail the hero, who from fierce affray
- And deadly conflict comes to us this day.
-
- Alas! alas! for smiles ye give but tears,
- And wordless sorrow on each face appears.
-
- And for glad music, jubilant and clear,
- The tolling bell, the muffled drum, we hear.
-
- Woe to _us_, soldier, loyal, tried, and brave,
- That we have naught to give thee but a grave.
-
- Woe that the wreath that should have decked thy brow,
- Can but be laid upon thy coffin now.
-
- Woe that thou canst not hear us when we say,—
- “Hail to thee, brother, welcome home to-day!”
-
- O God, we lift our waiting eyes to Thee,
- And sadly cry, how long must these things be?
-
- How long must noble blood be poured like rain,
- Flooding our land from mountain unto main?
-
- How long from desolated hearths must rise
- The smoke of life’s most costly sacrifice?
-
- Our brothers languish upon beds of pain,—
- Father, O Father, have they bled in vain?
-
- Is it for naught that they have drunken up
- The very dregs of this most bitter cup?
-
- How long? how long? O God! our cause is just,
- And in Thee only do we put our trust.
-
- As Thou didst guide the Israelites of old
- Through the Red Sea, and through the desert wold,
-
- Lead Thou our leaders, and our land shall be
- For evermore, the land where all are free!
-
- * * * * *
-
- Hail and farewell,—we whisper in one breath,
- As thus we meet thee, hand in hand with death!
-
- God give thy ashes undisturbed repose
- Where drum-beat wakens neither friend nor foes;
-
- God take thy spirit to eternal rest,
- And, for Christ’s sake, enroll thee with the blest!
-
-
- IN THE WILDERNESS
- MAY 6, 1864
-
-
- How beautiful was earth that day!
- The far blue sky had not a cloud;
- The river rippled on its way,
- Singing sweet songs aloud.
-
- The delicate beauty of the spring
- Pervaded all the murmuring air;
- It touched with grace the meanest thing
- And made it very fair.
-
- The blithe birds darted to and fro,
- The bees were humming round the hive,
- So happy in that radiant glow!
- So glad to be alive!
-
- And I? My heart was calmly blest.
- I knew afar the war-cloud rolled
- Lurid and dark, in fierce unrest,
- Laden with woes untold.
-
- But on that day my fears were stilled;
- The very air I breathed was joy;
- The rest and peace my soul that filled
- Had nothing of alloy.
-
- I took the flower he loved the best,
- The arbutus,—fairest child of May,—
- And with its perfume half oppressed,
- Twined many a lovely spray
-
- About his picture on the wall;
- His eyes were on me all the while,
- And when I had arranged them all
- I thought he seemed to smile.
-
- O Christ, be pitiful! That hour
- Saw him fall bleeding on the sod;
- And while I toyed with leaf and flower
- His soul went up to God!
-
- For him one pang—and then a crown;
- For him the laurels heroes wear;
- For him a name whose long renown
- Ages shall onward bear.
-
- For me the cross without the crown;
- For me the drear and lonely life;
- O God! My sun, not his, went down
- On that red field of strife.
-
-
-CHARLEY OF MALVERN HILL
-
- A war-worn soldier, bronzed and seamed
- By weary march and battle stroke;
- ’Twas thus, while leaning on his crutch,
- The wounded veteran spoke,—
-
- “The blue-eyed boy of Malvern Hill!
- A hero every inch was he,
- Though scarcely larger than the child
- You hold, sir, on your knee.
-
- Some mother’s darling! On that field
- He seemed so strangely out of place,
- With his pure brow, his shining hair,
- His sweet, unconscious grace.
-
- But not a bearded warrior there
- Watched with a more undaunted eye
- The blackness of the battle-cloud,
- As the fierce storm rose high.
-
- That morn—ah! what a morn was that!—
- We thought to send him to the rear;
- We loved the lad—and love, you know,
- Is near akin to fear.
-
- We knew that many a gallant soul
- Must pass away in one long sigh,
- Ere nightfall. On that bloody field,
- ’Twas not for boys to die.
-
- But he—could you have seen him then,
- As, with his blue eyes full of fire,
- He poured forth tears and pleadings, half
- Of shame and half of ire!
-
- ‘Oh! do not bid me go!’ he cried;
- ‘I love yon flag as well as you!
- I did not join your ranks to run
- When there is work to do!
-
- I did not come to beat my drum
- Only upon some gala day.’
- The colonel shook his head, but said,
- ‘Well, Charley, you may stay.’
-
- Ah! then his tears were quickly dried,
- A few glad words he strove to say;
- But there was little time to talk,
- And hardly time to pray.
-
- For bitter, bitter was the strife
- That raged that day on Malvern Hill;
- Blue coats and gray in great heaps lay,
- Ere that wild storm grew still.
-
- At length we charged. My very heart
- Sank down within me, cold and dumb,
- When to the front, and far ahead,
- Rushed Charley with his drum!
-
- Above the cannon’s thundering boom,
- The din and shriek of shot and shell,
- We heard its clear peal rolling out
- Right gallantly and well.
-
- A moment’s awful waiting! Then
- There came a sullen, angry roar,—
- O God! An empty void remained
- Where Charley stood before.
-
- What did we then? With souls on fire
- We swept upon the advancing foe,
- And bade good angels guard the dust
- O‘er which no tears might flow!”
-
-
- SUPPLICAMUS
- 1864
-
-
- O laggard Sun! make haste to wake
- From her long trance the slumbering earth;
- Make haste this icy spell to break,
- That she may give new glories birth!
-
- O April rain! so soft, so warm,
- Bounteous in blessing, rich in gifts,
- Drop tenderly upon her form,
- And bathe the forehead she uplifts.
-
- O springing grass! make haste to run
- With swift feet o’er the meadows bare;
- O’er hill and dale, through forest dun,
- And where the wandering brooklets are!
-
- O sweet wild flowers! the darksome mould
- Hasten with subtle strength to rift;
- Serene in beauty, meek yet bold,
- Your fair brows to the sunlight lift!
-
- O haste ye all! for far away
- In lonely beds our heroes sleep,
- O’er which no wife may ever pray,
- Nor child nor mother ever weep.
-
- No quaintly carved memorial stone
- May tell us that their ashes lie
- Where southern pines make solemn moan,
- And wailing winds give sad reply.
-
- But deep in dreary, lonesome shades,
- On many a barren, sandy plain,
- By rocky pass, in tangled glades,
- And by the rolling, restless main;
-
- By rushing stream, by silent lake,
- Uncoffined in their lowly graves,
- Until the earth’s last morn shall break,
- Must sleep our unforgotten braves!
-
- O sun! O rain! O gentle dew!
- O fresh young grass, and opening flowers!
- With yearning hearts we leave to you
- The holy task that should be ours!
-
- Light up the darkling forest’s gloom;
- Cover the bare, unsightly clay
- With tenderest verdure, with the bloom,
- The beauty and perfume of May!
-
- O sweet blue violets! softly creep
- Beside the slumbering warrior’s bed;
- O roses! let your red hearts leap
- For joy your rarest sweets to shed;
-
- O humble mosses! such as make
- New England’s woods and pastures fair,
- Over each mound, for Love’s sweet sake,
- Spread your soft folds with tender care.
-
- Dear Nature, to your loving breast
- Clasp our dead heroes! In your arms
- Sweet be their sleep, serene their rest,
- Unmoved by Battle’s loud alarms!
-
-
-THE LAST OF SIX
-
- Come in; you are welcome, neighbor; all day I’ve been alone,
- And heard the wailing, wintry wind sweep by with bitter moan;
- And to-night beside my lonely fire, I mutely wonder why
- I, who once wept as others weep, sit here with tearless eye.
-
- To-day this letter came to me. At first I could not brook
- Upon the unfamiliar lines by strangers penned, to look;
- The dread of evil tidings shook my soul with wild alarm—
- But Harry’s in the hospital, and has only lost an arm.
-
- He is the last—the last of six brave boys as e’er were seen!
- How short, to memory’s vision, seem the years that lie between
- This hour and those most blessed ones, when round this hearth’s
- bright blaze
- They charmed their mother’s heart and eye with all their pretty
- ways!
-
- My William was the eldest son, and he was first to go.
- It did not at all surprise me, for I knew it would be so,
- From that fearful April Sunday when the news from Sumter came,
- And his lips grew white as ashes, while his eyes were all aflame.
-
- He sprang to join the three months’ men. I could not say him nay,
- Though my heart stood still within me when I saw him march away;
- At the corner of the street he smiled, and waved the flag he bore;
- I never saw him smile again—he was slain at Baltimore.
-
- They sent his body back to me, and as we stood around
- His grave, beside his father’s, in yonder burial-ground,
- John laid his hand upon my arm and whispered, “Mother dear,
- I have Willy’s work and mine to do. I cannot loiter here.”
-
- I turned and looked at Paul, for he and John were twins, you know,
- Born on a happy Christmas, four-and-twenty years ago;
- I looked upon them both, while my tears fell down like rain,
- For I knew what one had spoken, had been spoken by the twain.
-
- In a month or more they left me—the merry, handsome boys,
- Who had kept the old house ringing with their laughter, fun, and
- noise.
- Then James came home to mind the farm; my younger sons were still
- Mere children, at their lessons in the school-house on the hill.
-
- O days of weary waiting! O days of doubt and dread!
- I feared to read the papers, or to see the lists of dead;
- But when full many a battle-storm had left them both unharmed,
- I taught my foolish heart to think the double lives were charmed.
-
- Their colonel since has told me that no braver boys than they
- Ever rallied round the colors, in the thickest of the fray;
- Upon the wall behind you their swords are hanging still—
- For John was killed at Fair Oaks, and Paul at Malvern Hill.
-
- Then came the dark days, darker than any known before;
- There was another call for men—“three hundred thousand more;”
- I saw the cloud on Jamie’s brow grow deeper day by day;
- I shrank before the impending blow, and scarce had strength to pray.
-
- And yet at last I bade him go, while on my cheek and brow
- His loving tears and kisses fell; I feel them even now,
- Though the eyes that shed the tears, and the lips so warm on mine
- Are hidden under southern sands, beneath a blasted pine!
-
- He did not die in battle-smoke, but for a weary year
- He languished in close prison walls, a prey to hope and fear;
- I dare not trust myself to think of the fruitless pangs he bore,
- My brain grows wild when in my dreams I count his sufferings o’er.
-
- Only two left! I thought the worst was surely over then;
- But lo! at once my school-boy sons sprang up before me—men!
- They heard their brothers’ martyr blood call from the hallowed
- ground;
- A loud, imperious summons that all other voices drowned.
-
- I did not say a single word. My very heart seemed dead.
- What could I do but take the cup, and bow my weary head
- To drink the bitter draught again? I dared not hold them back;
- I would as soon have tried to check the whirlwind on its track.
-
- You know the rest. At Cedar Creek my Frederick bravely fell;
- They say his young arm did its work right nobly and right well;
- His comrades breathe the hero’s name with mingled love and pride;
- I miss the gentle blue-eyed boy, who frolicked at my side.
-
- For me, I ne’er shall weep again. I think my heart is dead;
- I, who could weep for lighter griefs, have now no tears to shed.
- But read this letter, neighbor. There is nothing to alarm,
- For Harry’s in the hospital, and has only lost an arm!
-
-
-THE DRUMMER BOY’S BURIAL
-
- All day long the storm of battle through the startled valley swept;
- All night long the stars in heaven o’er the slain sad vigils kept.
-
- Oh, the ghastly, upturned faces, gleaming whitely through the night!
- Oh, the heaps of mangled corses in that dim, sepulchral light!
-
- One by one the pale stars faded, and at length the morning broke;
- But not one of all the sleepers on that field of death awoke.
-
- Slowly passed the golden hours of the long bright summer day,
- And upon the field of carnage still the dead unburied lay;
-
- Lay there stark and cold, but pleading with a dumb, unceasing
- prayer,
- For a little dust to hide them from the staring sun and air.
-
- Once again the night dropped round them—night so holy and so calm
- That the moonbeams hushed the spirit, like the sound of prayer or
- psalm.
-
- On a couch of trampled grasses, just apart from all the rest,
- Lay a fair young boy, with small hands meekly folded on his breast.
-
- Death had touched him very gently, and he lay as if in sleep;
- Even his mother scarce had shuddered at that slumber, calm and deep.
-
- For a smile of wondrous sweetness lent a radiance to the face,
- And the hand of cunning sculptor could have added naught of grace
-
- To the marble limbs so perfect in their passionless repose,
- Robbed of all save matchless purity by hard, unpitying foes.
-
- And the broken drum beside him all his life’s short story told;
- How he did his duty bravely till the death-tide o’er him rolled.
-
- Midnight came with ebon garments and a diadem of stars,
- While right upward in the zenith hung the fiery planet Mars.
-
- Hark! a sound of stealthy footsteps and of voices whispering low—
- Was it nothing but the young leaves, or the brooklet’s murmuring
- flow?
-
- Clinging closely to each other, striving never to look round
- As they passed with silent shudder the pale corses on the ground,
-
- Came two little maidens—sisters—with a light and hasty tread,
- And a look upon their faces, half of sorrow, half of dread.
-
- And they did not pause nor falter till, with throbbing hearts, they
- stood
- Where the Drummer-Boy was lying in that partial solitude.
-
- They had brought some simple garments from their wardrobe’s scanty
- store,
- And two heavy iron shovels in their slender hands they bore.
-
- Then they quickly knelt beside him, crushing back the pitying tears,
- For they had no time for weeping, nor for any girlish fears.
-
- And they robed the icy body, while no glow of maiden shame
- Changed the pallor of their foreheads to a flush of lambent flame.
-
- For their saintly hearts yearned o’er it in that hour of sorest
- need,
- And they felt that Death was holy and it sanctified the deed.
-
- But they smiled and kissed each other when their new, strange task
- was o’er,
- And the form that lay before them its unwonted garments wore.
-
- Then with slow and weary labor a small grave they hollowed out,
- And they lined it with the withered grass and leaves that lay about.
-
- But the day was slowly breaking ere their holy work was done,
- And in crimson pomp the morning again heralded the sun.
-
- And then those little maidens—they were children of our foes—
- Laid the body of our Drummer-Boy to undisturbed repose.
-
-
-1865
-
- O darkest Year! O brightest Year!
- O changeful Year of joy and woe,
- To-day we stand beside thy bier,
- Still loth to let thee go!
-
- We look upon thy brow, and say,
- “How old he is,—how old and worn!”
- Has but a twelvemonth passed away
- Since thou wert newly born?
-
- So long it seems since on the air
- The joy-bells rang to hail thy birth—
- And pale lips strove to call thee fair,
- And sing the songs of mirth!
-
- For dark the heavens that o’er thee hung;
- By stormy winds thy couch was rocked;
- Thy cradle-hymn the Furies sung,
- While sneering Demons mocked!
-
- We held our very breath for dread;
- Shadowed by clouds, that, like a pall,
- Darkened the blue sky overhead,
- And night hung over all.
-
- But thou wert better than our fears,
- And bade our land’s long anguish cease;
- And gave us, O thou Year of years,
- The costly pearl of Peace!
-
- So dearly bought! By precious blood
- Of patriot heroes—sire and son—
- And that of him, the pure and good,
- Our wearied, martyred One;
-
- Who bore for us the heavy load—
- The cross our hands upon him laid;
- Who trod for us the toilsome road
- Meekly, yet undismayed!
-
- And for that gift—although thy graves
- Lie thick beneath December’s snow,
- Though every hamlet mourns its braves,
- And bears its weight of woe—
-
- We bless thee! Yet, O bounteous year,
- For more than Peace we thank thee now,
- As bending o’er thine honored bier,
- We crown thy pallid brow!
-
- We bless thee, though we scarcely dare
- Give to our new-born joy a tongue;
- O mighty Year, upon the air
- Thy voice triumphant rung,
-
- Even in death! and at the sound,
- From myriad limbs the fetters fell
- Into the dim and vast profound,
- While tolled thy passing bell!
-
- Farewell, farewell, thou storied Year!
- Thou wondrous Year of joy and gloom!
- With grateful hearts we crown thee, ere
- We lay thee in thy tomb!
-
-
-OUR FLAGS AT THE CAPITOL
-
- Remove them not! Above our fallen braves
- Nature not yet her perfect work hath wrought;
- Scarce has the turf grown green upon their graves,
- The martyr graves for whose embrace they fought.
-
- The wounds of our long conflict are not healed;
- Our land’s fair face is seamed with many a scar;
- And woeful sights, on many a battle-field,
- Show ghastly grim beneath the evening star.
-
- Still does the sad Earth tremble with affright,
- Lest she the tread of armèd hosts should feel
- Once more upon her bosom. Still the Night
- Hears, in wild dreams, the cannon’s thundering peal.
-
- Still do the black-robed mothers come and go;
- Still do lone wives by dreary hearth-stones weep;
- Still does a Nation, in her pride and woe,
- For her dead sons a mournful vigil keep.
-
- Ah, then, awhile delay! Remove ye not
- These drooping banners from their place on high;
- They make of each proud hall a hallowed spot,
- Where Truth must dwell and Freedom cannot die.
-
- Now slowly waving in this tranquil air,
- What wondrous eloquence is in their speech!
- No prophet “silver tongued,” no poet rare,
- Even in dreams may hope such heights to reach.
-
- They tell of Life that calmly looked on Death—
- Of peerless valor and of trust sublime—
- Of costly sacrifice, of holiest faith,
- Of lofty hopes that ended not with Time.
-
- Oh! each worn fold is hallowed! set apart
- To minister unto us in our needs—
- To bear henceforth to many a fainting heart,
- The cordial wine of noble thoughts and deeds.
-
- Then leave them yet awhile where, day by day,
- The lessons that they teach, your souls may learn;
- So shall ye work for righteousness alway,
- And for its faithful service ever yearn.
-
- Now may God bless our land for evermore!
- And from all strife and turmoil grant surcease;
- While from the mountains to the farthest shore
- Accordant voices softly whisper—Peace!
-
-
-MY MOCKING-BIRD
-
- Mocking-bird! mocking-bird! swinging high
- Aloft in your gilded cage,
- The clouds are hurrying over the sky,
- The wild winds fiercely rage.
- But soft and warm is the air you breathe
- Up there with the tremulous ivy wreath,
- And never an icy blast can chill
- The perfumed silence sweet and still.
-
- Mocking-bird! mocking-bird! from your throat
- Breaks forth no flood of song,
- Nor even one perfect golden note,
- Triumphant, glad, and strong!
- But now and then a pitiful wail,
- Like the plaintive sigh of the dying gale,
- Comes from that arching breast of thine
- Swinging up there with the ivy-vine.
-
- Mocking-bird! mocking-bird! well I know
- Your heart is far away,
- Where the golden stars of the jasmine glow,
- And the roses bloom alway!
- For your cradle-nest was softly made
- In the depth of a blossoming myrtle’s shade;
- And you heard the chant of the southern seas
- Borne inland by the favoring breeze.
-
- But, ah, my beautiful mocking-bird!
- Should I bear you back again,
- Never would song of yours be heard
- Echoing through the glen.
- For once, ah! once at the dawn of day,
- You waked to the roar of the deadly fray,
- When the terrible clash of armèd foes
- Startled the vale from its dim repose.
-
- At first you sat on a swaying bough,
- Mocking the bugle’s blare,
- Fearless and free in the fervid glow
- Of the heated, sulphurous air.
- Your voice rang out like a trumpet’s note,
- With a martial ring in its upward float,
- And stern men smiled, for you seemed to be
- Cheering them on to victory!
-
- But at length, as the awful day wore on,
- You flew to a tree-top high,
- And sat like a spectre grim and wan,
- Outlined against the sky;
- Sat silently watching the fiery fray
- Till, heaps upon heaps, the Blue and Gray
- Lay together, a silent band,
- Whose souls had passed to the shadowy land.
-
- Ah, my mocking-bird! swinging there
- Under the ivy-vine,
- You still remember the bugle’s blare,
- And the blood poured forth like wine.
- The soul of song in your gentle breast
- Died in that hour of fierce unrest,
- When like a spectre grim and wan,
- You watched to see how the strife went on.
-
-
-COMING HOME
-
- When the winter winds were loud,
- And Earth wore a snowy shroud,
- Oft our darling wrote to us,
- And the words ran ever thus—
- “I am coming in the spring!
- With the mayflower’s blossoming,
- With the young leaves on the tree,
- O my dear ones, look for me!”
-
- And she came. One dreary day,
- When the skies were dull and gray,
- Softly through the open door
- Our belovèd came once more.
- Came with folded hands that lay
- Very quietly alway—
- Came with heavy-lidded eyes,
- Lifted not in glad surprise.
-
- Not a single word she spoke;
- Laugh nor sigh her silence broke
- As across the quiet room,
- Darkening in the twilight gloom,
- On she passed in stillest guise,
- Calm as saint in Paradise,
- To the spot where—woe betide!—
- Four years since she stood a bride.
-
- Then, you think, we sprang to greet her—
- Sprang with outstretched hands, to meet her;
- Clasped her in our arms once more,
- As in happy days of yore;
- Poured warm kisses on her cheek,
- Passive lips and forehead meek,
- Till the barrier melted down
- That had thus between us grown.
-
- Ah no!—Darling, did you know
- When we bent above you so?
- When our tears fell down like rain,
- And our hearts were wild with pain?
- Did you pity us that day,
- Even as holy angels may
- Pity mortals here below,
- While they wonder at their woe?
-
- Who can tell us? Word nor sign
- Came from those pale lips of thine;
- Loving hearts and yearning breast
- Lay in coldest, calmest rest.
- Is thy Heaven so very fair
- That thou dost forget us there?
- Speak, belovèd! Woe is me
- That in vain I call on thee!
-
-
-WAKENING EARLY
-
- In loving jest you wrote—“Ah, me!
- My babe’s blue eyes are fair to see;
- And sweet his cooing love-notes be
- That waken me too early!”
-
- Oh! would to God, beloved, to-day
- That merry shout or gleeful play
- Might drive your heavy sleep away,
- And bid you waken early.
-
- But vain are all our prayers and cries;
- From your low bed you will not rise;
- No kisses falling on your eyes,
- Can waken you right early.
-
- Bright are the skies above your bed,
- And through the elm-boughs overhead
- Are golden sunbeams softly shed,
- That wake you late nor early.
-
- Beside you through these summer days
- The murmuring fountain, as it plays,
- Fills the soft air with diamond sprays,
- But does not wake you early!
-
- We bring the flowers you loved so well,
- The pure white rose and lily bell;
- Their sweets break not this fearful spell;
- They do not wake you early!
-
- We sing your songs; we pause to hear
- Your bird-like voice rise full and clear;
- Ah! dull and heavy is your ear;
- We cannot wake you early.
-
- You will not wake? Then may your sleep,
- If it be long, be calm and deep;
- Thank God, the eyes forget to weep
- That do not waken early!
-
-
- BLEST
- Dec. 1865
-
-
- Sinking to thine eternal rest,
- O dying Year! I call thee blest;
- Blest as no coming year may be
- This side of vast Eternity!
-
- Thy cheek is pale, thy brow is worn;
- Thine arms are weary, that have borne
- The heaviest burdens ever laid
- On any, since the world was made.
-
- But thou didst know her whom to-day
- My fond heart mourns, and must alway;
- She loved thee, claimed thee, called thee dear,
- Hailing with joy the glad New Year!
-
- Thou didst behold her, fair and good,
- The perfect flower of womanhood;
- Simple and pure in thought and deed,
- Yet strong in every hour of need.
-
- Ah! other years shall come and go,
- Bidding the sweet June roses blow;
- But never on their yearning eyes
- Shall her fair presence once arise!
-
- The Spring shall miss her, and the long,
- Bright Summer days hear not her song;
- And hoary Winter, draped in snow,
- Finding her not, shall haste to go!
-
- Therefore, Old Year, I call thee blest,
- Thus sinking to eternal rest;
- Blest as no other Year may be
- This side of vast Eternity!
-
-
-HELEN
-
- Dear Helen, if thine earnest eyes,
- So deeply blue, so darkly bright,
- Look downward from the azure skies
- That hide thee from my yearning sight:
-
- Think not, because my days go on
- Just as they did when thou wert here,
- Sometimes in shade, sometimes in sun,
- From month to month, from year to year,
-
- That I forget thee! Fresh and green
- Over each grave the grass must grow
- In God’s good time, and, all unseen,
- The violets take deep root below.
-
- But yet the grave itself remains
- Beneath the verdure and the bloom;
- And all kind Nature’s loving pains
- Can but conceal the enduring tomb.
-
- I work, I read, I sing, I smile,
- I train my vines and tend my flowers;
- But under thoughts of thee, the while,
- Haunt me through all the passing hours.
-
- And still my heart cries out for thee,
- As it must cry till life is past,
- And in some land beyond the sea
- I meet thy clasping hand at last!
-
-
-
-
-“PRO PATRIA”
-
-
-THE DEAD CENTURY
-
-
-I.
-
- Lo! we come
- Bearing the Century, cold and dumb!
- Folded above the mighty breast
- Lie the hands that have earned their rest;
- Hushed are the grandly speaking lips;
- Closed are the eyes in drear eclipse;
- And the sculptured limbs are deathly still,
- Responding not to the eager will,
- As we come
- Bearing the Century, cold and dumb!
-
-
-II.
-
- Lo! we wait
- Knocking here at the sepulchre’s gate!
- Souls of the ages passed away,
- A mightier joins your ranks to-day;
- Open your doors and give him room,
- Buried Centuries, in your tomb!
- For calmly under this heavy pall
- Sleepeth the kingliest of ye all,
- While we wait
- At the sepulchre’s awful gate!
-
-
-III.
-
- Yet—pause here,
- Bending low o’er the narrow bier!
- Pause ye awhile and let your thought
- Compass the work that he hath wrought;
- Look on his brow so scarred and worn;
- Think of the weight his hands have borne;
- Think of the fetters he hath broken,
- Of the mighty words _his_ lips have spoken
- Who lies here
- Dead and cold on a narrow bier!
-
-
-IV.
-
- Ere he goes
- Silent and calm to his grand repose—
- While the Centuries in their tomb
- Crowd together to give him room,
- Let us think of the wondrous deeds
- Answering still to the world’s great needs,
- Answering still to the world’s wild prayer,
- He hath been first to do and dare!
- Ah! he goes
- Crowned with bays to his last repose.
-
-
-V.
-
- When the earth
- Sang for joy to hail his birth,
- Over the hill-tops, faint and far,
- Glimmered the light of Freedom’s star.
- Only a poor, pale torch it seemed—
- Dimly from out the clouds it gleamed—
- Oft to the watcher’s eye ’twas lost
- Like a flame by fierce winds rudely tossed.
- Scarce could Earth
- Catch one ray when she hailed his birth!
-
-
-VI.
-
- But erelong
- His young voice, like a clarion strong,
- Rang through the wilderness far and free,
- Prophet and herald of good to be!
- Then with a shout the stalwart men
- Answered proudly from mount and glen,
- Till in the brave, new, western world
- Freedom’s banners were wide unfurled!
- And ere long
- The Century’s voice, like a clarion strong,
-
-
-VII.
-
- Cried, “O Earth,
- Pæans sing for a Nation’s birth!
- Shout hosannas, ye golden stars,
- Peering through yonder cloudy bars!
- Burn, O Sun, with a clearer beam!
- Shine, O Moon, with a softer gleam!
- Join, ye winds, in the choral strain!
- Swell, rolling seas, the glad refrain,
- While the Earth
- Pæans sings for a Nation’s birth!”
-
-
-VIII.
-
- Ah! he saw—
- This young prophet, with solemn awe—
- How, after weary pain and sin,
- Strivings without and foes within,
- Fruitless prayings and long suspense,
- And toil that bore no recompense—
- After peril and blood and tears,
- Honor and Peace should crown the years!
- This he saw
- While his heart thrilled with solemn awe.
-
-
-IX.
-
- His clear eyes,
- Gazing forward in glad surprise,
- Saw how our land at last should be
- Truly the home of the brave and free!
- Saw from the old world’s crowded streets,
- Pestilent cities, and close retreats,
- Forms gaunt and pallid with famine sore
- Flee in hot haste to our happy shore,
- Their sad eyes
- Widening ever in new surprise.
-
-
-X.
-
- From all lands
- Thronging they come in eager bands;
- Each with the tongue his mother spoke;
- Each with the songs her voice awoke;
- Each with his dominant hopes and needs,
- Alien habits and varying creeds.
- Bringing strange fictions and fancies they came,
- Calling old truths by a different name,
- When the lands
- Sent their sons hither in thronging bands.
-
-
-XI.
-
- But the Seer—
- This dead Century lying here—
- Rising out of this chaos, saw
- Peace and Order and Love and Law!
- Saw by what subtle alchemy
- Basest of metals at length should be
- Transmuted into the shining gold,
- Meet for a king to have and hold.
- Ah! great Seer!
- This pale Century lying here!
-
-
-XII.
-
- So he taught
- Honest freedom of speech and thought;
- Taught that Truth is the grandest thing
- Painter can paint, or poet sing;
- Taught that under the meanest guise
- It marches to deeds of high emprise;
- Treading the paths the prophets trod
- Up to the very mount of God!
- Truth, he taught,
- Claims full freedom of speech and thought.
-
-
-XIII.
-
- Bearing long
- Heavy burdens of hate and wrong,
- Still has the arm of the Century been
- Waging war against crime and sin.
- Still has he plead humanity’s cause;
- Still has he prayed for equal laws;
- Still has he taught that the human race
- Is one in despite of hue or place,
- Even though long
- It has wrestled with hate and wrong.
-
-
-XIV.
-
- And at length—
- A giant arising in his strength—
- The fetters of serf and slave he broke,
- Smiting them off by a single stroke!
- Over the Muscovite’s waste of snows,
- Up from the fields where the cotton grows,
- Clearly the shout of deliverance rang,
- When chattel and serf to manhood sprang,
- As at length
- The giant rose up in resistless strength.
-
-
-XV.
-
- Far apart—
- Each alone like a lonely heart—
- Sat the Nations, until his hand
- Wove about them a wondrous band;
- Wrought about them a mighty chain
- Binding the mountains to the main!
- Distance and time rose dark between
- Islands and continents still unseen,
- While apart
- None felt the throb of another’s heart.
-
-
-XVI.
-
- But to-day
- Time and space hath he swept away!
- Side by side do the Nations sit
- By ties of brotherhood closer knit;
- Whispers float o’er the rolling deep;
- Voices echo from steep to steep;
- Nations speak, and the quick replies
- Fill the earth and the vaulted skies;
- For to-day
- Time and distance are swept away.
-
-
-XVII.
-
- If strange thrills
- Quicken Rome on her seven hills;
- If afar on her sultry throne
- India wails and makes her moan;
- If the eagles of haughty France
- Fall as the Prussian hosts advance,
- All the continents, all the lands,
- Feel the shock through their claspèd hands.
- And quick thrills
- Stir the remotest vales and hills.
-
-
-XVIII.
-
- Yet these eyes,
- Dark on whose lids Death’s shadow lies,
- Let their far-reaching vision rest
- Not alone on the mountain’s crest;
- Nor did these feet with stately tread
- Follow alone where the Nations led;
- Nor these pale hands, so weary-worn,
- Minister but where States were born!—
- These clear eyes,
- Soft on whose lips Death’s slumber lies,
-
-
-XIX.
-
- Turned their gaze,
- Earnest and pitiful, on the ways
- Where the poor, burdened sons of toil
- Earned their bread amid dust and moil.
- Saw the dim attics where, day by day,
- Women were stitching their lives away,
- Bending low o’er the slender steel
- Till heart and brain began to reel,
- And their days
- Stretched on and on in a dreary maze.
-
-
-XX.
-
- Then he spoke;
- Lo! at once into being woke
- Muscles of iron, arms of steel,
- Nerves that never a thrill could feel!
- Wheels and pulleys and whirling bands
- Did the work of the weary hands,
- And tireless feet moved to and fro
- Where the aching limbs were wont to go,
- When he spoke
- And all his sprites into being woke.
-
-
-XXI.
-
- Do you say
- He was no saint who has passed away?
- Saint or sinner, he did brave deeds
- Answering still to humanity’s needs!
- Songs he hath sung that shall live for aye;
- Words he hath uttered that ne’er shall die;
- Richer the world than when the earth
- Sang for joy to hail his birth,
- Even though you say
- He was no saint whom we sing to-day.
-
-
-XXII.
-
- Lo! we wait
- Knocking here at the sepulchre’s gate!
- Souls of the Ages passed away,
- A mightier joins your ranks to-day;
- Open your doors, ye royal dead,
- And welcome give to this crownèd head!
- For calmly under this sable pall
- Sleepeth the kingliest of ye all,
- While we wait
- At the sepulchre’s awful gate!
-
-
-XXIII.
-
- Give him room
- Proudly, Centuries! in your tomb.
- Now that his weary work is done,
- Honor and rest he well hath won.
- Let him who is first among you pay
- Homage to him who comes this day,
- Bidding him pass to his destined place,
- Noblest of all his noble race!
- Make ye room
- For the kingly dead in the silent tomb!
-
-
- THE RIVER OTTER
- A FRAGMENT
-
- A hundred times the Summer’s fragrant blooms
- Have laden all the air with sweet perfumes;
- A hundred times, along the mountain-side,
- Autumn has flung his crimson banners wide;
- A hundred times has kindly Winter spread
- His snowy mantle o’er the violet’s bed;
- A hundred times has Earth rejoiced to hear
- The Spring’s light footsteps in the forest sere,
- Since on yon grassy knoll the quick, sharp stroke
- Of the young woodman’s axe the silence broke.
- Not then did these encircling hills look down
- On quaint old farmhouse, or on steepled town.
- No church-spires pointed to the arching skies;
- No wandering lovers saw the moon arise;
- No childish laughter mingled with the song
- Of the fair Otter, as it flowed along
- As brightly then as now. Ah! little recked
- The joyous river, when the sunshine flecked
- Its dancing waters, that no human eye
- Gave it glad welcome as it frolicked by!
- The long, uncounted years had come and flown,
- And it had still swept on, unseen, unknown,
- Biding its time. No minstrel sang its praise,
- No poet named it in immortal lays.
- It played no part in legendary lore,
- And young Romance knew not its winding shore.
- But in her own loveliness Nature is glad,
- And little she cares for man’s smile or his frown;
- In the robes of her royalty still she is clad,
- Though his eye may behold not her sceptre or crown!
- And over our beautiful Otter the trees
- Swayed lightly as now in the frolicsome breeze;
- And the tremulous violet lifted an eye
- As blue as its own to the laughing blue sky.
- The harebell trembled on its stem
- Down where the rushing waters gleam,
- A sapphire on the broidered hem
- Of some fair Naiad of the stream.
- The buttercups, bright-eyed and bold,
- Held up their chalices of gold
- To catch the sunshine and the dew,
- Gayly as those that bloom for you.
- And deep within the forest shade,
- Where broadest noon mere twilight made,
- Ten thousand small, sweet censers swung,
- And tiny bells by zephyrs rung,
- Made tinkling music till the day
- In solemn splendor died away.
- The woods were full of praise and prayer,
- Although no human tongue was there;
- For every pine and hemlock sung
- The grand cathedral aisles among,
- And every flower that gemmed the sod
- Looked up and whispered, “Thou art God.”
- The birds sung as they sing to-day,
- A song of love and joy alway.
- The brown thrush from its golden throat
- Poured out its long, melodious note;
- The pigeons cooed; the veery threw
- Its mellow thrill from spray to spray;
- The wild night-hawk its trumpet blew,
- And the owl cried, “Tu whit, tu whoo,”
- From set of sun to break of day.
- The partridge reared her fearless brood
- Safe in the darkling solitude,
- And the bald eagle built its nest
- High on the tall cliff’s craggy crest.
- And often, when the still moonlight
- Made all the lonely valley bright,
- Down from the hills its thirst to slake,
- The deer trod softly through the brake;
- While far away the spotted fawn
- Waited the coming of the dawn,
- And trembled when the panther’s scream
- Startled it from a troubled dream.
- The black bear roamed the forest wide;
- The fierce wolf tracked the mountain-side;
- The wild-cat’s silent, stealthy tread
- Was, even there, a fear and dread;
- The red fox barked—a strange, weird sound,
- That woke the slumbering echoes round;
- And the burrowing mink and otter hid
- In their holes the tangled roots amid.
- Lords of their limitless domain,
- Of hill and dale, of mount and plain,
- The wild things dreamed not of the hour
- When they should own their Master’s power!
-
-
- PAST AND PRESENT
- (DRIFTWOOD)
-
- . . . Grand, heroic, true,
- Faithful and brave thine earnest work to do,
- O glorious present! we rejoice in thee,
- Thou noble nurse of great deeds yet to be!
- Hast thou not shown us that our mother Earth
- Still, in exultant joy, gives heroes birth?
- Do not the old romances that our youth,
- Revered and honored as the truest truth,
- Grow pale and dim before the facts sublime
- Thy pen has written on the scroll of Time?
- Ah! never yet did poet’s tongue,
- Though like a silver bell it rung;
- Or minstrel, o’er his sounding lyre
- Breathing the old, prophetic fire;
- Or harper, in the storied walls
- Of Scotia’s proud, baronial halls—
- Where mail-clad men with sword and spear
- Waited entranced the song to hear,
- That through the stormy midnight hour
- Fast held them in its spell of power—
- Ah! never yet did they rehearse,
- In flowing rhyme or stately verse,
- The praise of deeds more nobly done,
- Or tell of fields more grandly won!
- We laud thee, we praise thee, we bless thee to-day!
- At thy feet, lowly bending, glad homage we pay!
- Thou hast taught us that men are as brave as of yore;
- That the day of great deeds and great thought is not o’er;
- That the courage undaunted, the far-reaching faith,
- The strength that unshaken looks calmly on death,
- The self-abnegation that hastens to lay
- Its all on the altar, have not passed away.
- Thou hast taught us that “country” is more than a name;
- That honor unsullied is better than fame;
- Thou hast proved that while man can still battle for truth,
- Even boyhood can give up the promise of youth,
- And, yielding its life with a smile and a sigh,
- Say, “’Tis sweet for my God and my country to die.”
- O heart-searching Present, thy sons have gone down
- To the night of the grave in their day of renown!
- Thy daughters have watched by the hearth-stone in vain
- For the loved and the lost that returned not again.
- No Spartans were they—yet with tears falling fast,
- Their faith and their patience endured to the last;
- And God gave them strength to their dearest to say,
- “Go ye forth to the fight, while we labor and pray!”
- Thou hast opened thy coffers on land and on sea,
- And broad-handed Charity, noble and free,
- Has lavished thy bounties on friend and on foe,
- Like the rain that, descending, falls softly and slow
- On the just and the unjust, and never may know
- The one from the other. When thy story is told
- By some age that looks backward and calls thee “the old,”
- It shall puzzle its sages, all great as thou art,
- To tell which was greatest, thy head or thy heart!
- Mighty words thy lips have spoken—
- Strongest fetters thou hast broken—
- And in tones like those of thunder,
- When the clouds are rent asunder,
- Thou hast made the Nations hear thee—
- Thou hast bade the Tyrants fear thee—
- And our hearts to-day proclaim thee,
- As they oft have done before,
- Fit to lead the glorious legions
- Of the glorious days of yore!
- Yet still, we pray thee, veil awhile
- Thy splendor from our dazzled eyes
- And hide the glory of thy smile,
- Lest our souls wake to new surprise!
- Bear with us while our feet to-day
- Retrace a dim and shadowy way,
- In search of what, it well may be,
- Shall help to make us worthier thee!
-
- * * * * *
-
- And now, O, spirit of the Past, draw near,
- And let us feel thy blessed presence here!
- With reverent hearts and voices hushed and low,
- We wait to hear thy garments’ rustling flow!
- From all the conflicts of our busy life,
- From all its bitter and enduring strife,
- Its eager yearnings and its wild turmoil,
- Its cares, its joys, its sorrows and its toil,
- Its aspirations, that too often seem
- Like the remembered phantoms of a dream,
- We turn aside. This hour is thine alone,
- And none shall share the grandeur of thy throne.
- Ah! thou art here! Beneath these whispering trees
- Thy breath floats softly on the passing breeze;
- We feel the presence that we cannot see,
- And every moment draws us nearer thee.
- Could we but see thee with thy solemn eyes,
- In whose rare depths such wondrous meaning lies—
- Thy dark robes sweeping this enchanted ground—
- Thy midnight hair with purple pansies crowned—
- Thy lip so sadly sweet, thy brow serene!
- There is no expectation in thy mien,
- For thou hast done with dreams. Nor joy nor pain
- Can e’er disturb thy placid calm again.
- What is this veil that hides thee from our sight?
- Breathe it away, thou spirit darkly bright!
- It may not be! Our eyes are dim,
- Perhaps with age, perhaps with tears;
- We hear no more the choral hymn
- The angels sing among the spheres.
- Weary and worn and tempest-tossed,
- Much have we gained—and something lost—
- Since in the sunbeams golden glow,
- The rippling river’s silvery flow,
- The song of bird or murmuring bee,
- The fragrant flower, the stately tree,
- The royal pomp of sunset skies,
- And all earth’s varied harmonies,
- We saw and heard what nevermore
- Can Earth or Heaven to us restore,
- And felt a child’s unquestioning faith
- In childhood’s mystic lore!
-
- * * * * *
-
- Yet could our voices reach the slumbering dead
- Who rest so calmly in yon grass-grown bed,
- This truth would seem with greatest wonder fraught—
- _That they are heroes to our eyes and thought_.
- For they were men who never dreamed of fame:
- They did not toil to make themselves a name;
- They little fancied that when years had passed,
- And the long century had died at last,
- Another age should make their graves a shrine,
- And humble chaplets for their memory twine.
- They simply strove, as other men may strive,
- Full, earnest lives in sober strength to live;
- They did the duty nearest to their hand;
- Subdued wild nature as at God’s command;
- Laid the broad acres open to the sun,
- And made fair homes in forests dark and dun;
- Built churches, founded schools, established laws,
- Kindly and just and true to freedom’s cause;
- Resisted wrong, and with stout hands and hearts,
- In war, as well as peace, played well their parts.
- Their men were brave; their women pure and true;
- Their sons ashamed no honest work to do;
- And while they dreamed no dreams of being great,
- They did great deeds, and conquered hostile Fate.
- We laud them, we praise them, we bless them to-day;
- At their graves, as their right, tearful homage we pay!
- And the laurel-crowned Present comes humbly at last,
- And bends by our side at the shrine of the Past.
- With the hands that such burdens unshrinking have borne,
- From the brow weary cares have so furrowed and worn,
- She takes off the chaplet, and lays it with tears,
- That she cares not to hide, at the feet of the Years.
- Hark! a breath of faint music, a murmur of song!
- A form of strange beauty is floating along
- On the soft summer air, and the Future draws near,
- With a light on her young face, unshadowed and clear.
- Two garlands she bears in the arms that not yet
- Have toiled ’neath the burden and heat of the day;
- Lo! both are of amaranth, fragrant and wet
- With the dew of remembrance, and fadeless alway.
- Oh! well may we hush our vain babblings—and wait!
- He who merits the crown, wears it sooner or late!
- On the brow of the Present, the grave of the Past,
- The wreaths they have earned shall rest surely at last!
-
-
-VERMONT
-
-(WRITTEN FOR THE VERMONT CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION, AT BENNINGTON,
-AUGUST 15, 1877.)
-
-
-I.
-
- O woman-form, majestic, strong and fair,
- Sitting enthroned where in upper air
- Thy mountain-peaks in solemn grandeur rise,
- Piercing the splendor of the summer skies—
- Vermont! Our mighty mother, crowned to-day
- In all the glory of thy hundred years,
- If thou dost bid me sing, how can I but obey?
- What though the lips may tremble, and the verse
- That fain would grandly thy grand deeds rehearse
- May trip and falter, and the stammering tongue
- Leave all unrhymed the rhymes that should be sung?
- I can but do thy bidding, as is meet,
- Bowing in humble homage at thy feet—
- Thy royal feet—and if my words are weak,
- O crownèd One, ’twas thou didst bid me speak!
-
-
-II.
-
- Yet what is there to say,
- Even on this proud day,
- This day of days, that hath not oft been said?
- What song is there to sing
- That hath not oft been sung?
- What laurel can we bring
- That ages have not hung
- A thousand times above their glorious dead?
- What crown to crown the living
- Is left us for our giving,
- That is not shaped to other brows
- That wore it long ago?
- Our very vows but echo vows
- Breathed centuries ago!
- Earth has no choral strain,
- No sweet or sad refrain,
- No lofty pæan swelling loud and clear,
- That Virgil did not know,
- Or Danté, wandering slow
- In mystic trances, did not pause to hear!
- When gods from high Olympus came
- To touch old Homer’s lips with flame,
- The morning stars together sung
- To teach their raptures to his tongue.
- For him the lonely ocean moaned;
- For him the mighty winds intoned
- Their deep-voiced chantings, and for him
- Sweet flower-bells pealed in forests dim.
- From earth and sea and sky he caught
- The spell of their divinest thought,
- While yet it blossomed fresh and new
- As Eden’s rosebuds wet with dew!
- Oh! to have lived when earth was young,
- With all its melodies unsung!
- The dome of heaven bent nearer then
- When gods and angels talked with men—
- When Song itself was newly born,
- The Incarnation of the Morn!
- But now, alas! all thought is old,
- All life is but a story told,
- And poet-tongues are manifold;
- And he is bold who tries to wake,
- Even for God or Country’s sake,
- In voice, or pen, or lute, or lyre,
- Sparks of the old Promethean fire!
-
-
-III.
-
- And yet—O Earth, thank God!—the soul of song
- Is as immortal as the eternal stars!
- O trembling heart! take courage and be strong.
- Hark! to a voice from yonder crystal bars:
-
- _“Did the roses blow last June?
- Do the stars still rise and set?
- And over the crests of the mountains
- Are the light clouds floating yet?
- Do the rivers run to the sea
- With a deep, resistless flow?
- Do the little birds sing north and south
- As the seasons come and go?_
-
- _Are the hills as fair as of old?
- Are the skies as blue and far?
- Have you lost the pomp of the sunset,
- Or the light of the evening star?
- Has the glory gone from the morning?
- Do the wild winds wail no more?
- Is there now no thunder of billows
- Beating the storm-lashed shore?_
-
- _Is Love a forgotten story?
- Is Passion a jester’s theme?
- Has Valor thrown down its armor?
- Is Honor an idle dream?
- Is there no pure trust in woman?
- No conquering faith in God?
- Are there no feet strong to follow
- In the paths the martyrs trod?_
-
- _Did you find no hero graves
- When your violets bloomed last May—
- Prouder than those of Marathon,
- Or ‘old Platea’s day’?
- When your red and white and blue
- On the free winds fluttered out,
- Were there no strong hearts and voices
- To receive it with a shout?
- Oh! let the Earth grow old!
- And the burning stars grow cold!
- And, if you will, declare man’s story told!
- Yet, pure as faith is pure,
- And sure as death is sure,
- As long as love shall live, shall song endure!_”
-
-
-IV.
-
- When, one by one, the stately, silent Years
- Glide like pale ghosts beyond our yearning sight,
- Vainly we stretch our arms to stay their flight,
- So soon, so swift they pass to endless night!
- We hardly learn to name them,
- To praise them or to blame them,
- To know their shadowy faces,
- Ere we see their empty places!
- Only once the glad Spring greets them;
- Only once fair Summer meets them;
- Only once the Autumn glory
- Tells for them its mystic story;
- Only once the Winter hoary
- Weaves for them its robes of light!
- Years leave their work half-done; like men, alas!
- With sheaves ungathered to their graves they pass,
- And are forgotten. What they strive to do
- Lives for a while in memory of a few;
- Then over all Oblivion’s waters flow—
- The Years are buried in the long ago!
- But when a Century dies, what room is there for tears?
- Rather in solemn exaltation let us come,
- With roll of drum
- (Not muffled as in woe),
- With blare of bugles, and the liquid flow
- Of silver clarions, and the long appeal
- Of the clear trumpets ringing peal on peal;
- With clash of bells, and hosts in proud array,
- To pay meet homage to its burial day!
- For its proud work is done. Its name is writ
- Where all the ages that come after it
- Shall read the eternal letters, blazoned high
- On the blue dome of the impartial sky.
- What ruthless fate can darken its renown,
- Or dim the lustre of its starry crown?
- On mountain-peaks of Time each Century stands alone;
- And each, for glory or for shame, hath reaped what it hath sown!
-
-
-V.
-
- But this—the one that gave thee birth
- A hundred years ago, O beauteous mother!
- This mighty Century had a mightier brother,
- Who from the watching earth
- Passed but last year! Twin-born indeed were they—
- For what are twelve months to the womb of time
- Pregnant with ages?—Hand in hand they climbed
- With clear, young eyes uplifted to the stars;
- With great, strong souls that never stopped for bars,
- Through storm and darkness up to glorious day!
- Each knew the other’s need; each in his breast
- The subtle tie of closest kin confessed;
- Counted the other’s honor as his own;
- Nor feared to sit upon a separate throne;
- Nor loved each other less when—wondrous fate!—
- One gave a Nation life, and one a State!
-
-
-VI.
-
- Oh! rude the cradle in which each was rocked,
- The infant Nation, and the infant State!
- Rough nurses were the Centuries, that mocked
- At mother-kisses, and for mother-arms
- Gave their young nurslings sudden harsh alarms,
- Quick blows and stern rebuffs. They bade them wait,
- Often in cold and hunger, while the feast
- Was spread for others, and, though last not least,
- Gave them sharp swords for playthings, and the din
- Of actual battle for the mimic strife
- That childhood glories in!
- Yet not the less they loved them. Spartans they,
- Who could not rear a weak, effeminate brood.
- Better the forest’s awful solitude,
- Better the desert spaces, where the day
- Wanders from dawn to dusk and finds no life!
-
-
-VII.
-
- But over all the tireless years swept on,
- Till side by side the Centuries grew old,
- And the young Nation, great and strong and bold,
- Forgot its early struggles, in triumphs later won!
- It stretched its arms from East to West;
- It gathered to its mighty breast
- From every clime, from every soil,
- The hunted sons of want and toil;
- It gave to each a dwelling-place;
- It blent them in one common race;
- And over all, from sea to sea,
- Wide flew the banner of the free!
- It did not fear the wrath of kings,
- Nor the dread grip of deadlier things—
- Gaunt Famine with its ghastly horde,
- Dishonor sheathing its foul sword,
- Nor faithless friend, nor treacherous blow
- Struck in the dark by stealthy foe;
- For over all its wide domain,
- From shore to shore, from main to main,
- From vale to mountain-top, it saw
- The reign of plenty, peace, and law!
-
-
-VIII.
-
- Thus fared the Nation, prosperous, great, and free,
- Prophet and herald of the good to be;
- And on its humbler way, in calm content,
- The lesser State, the while, serenely went.
- Safe in her mountain fastnesses she dwelt,
- Her life’s first cares forgot, its woes unfelt,
- And thought her bitterest tears had all been shed,
- For peace was in her borders, and God reigned overhead.
-
-
-IX.
-
- But suddenly over the hills there came
- A cry that rent her with grief and shame—
- A cry from the Nation in sore distress,
- Stricken down in the pride of its mightiness!
- With passionate ardor up she sprang,
- And her voice like the peal of a trumpet rang—
- “What ho! what ho! brave sons of mine,
- Strong with the strength of the mountain pine!
- To the front of the battle, away! away!
- The Nation is bleeding in deadly fray,
- The Nation, it may be, is dying to-day!
- On, then, to the rescue! away! away!”
-
-
-X.
-
- Ah! how they answered let the ages tell,
- For they shall guard the sacred story well!
- Green grows the grass to-day on many a battle-field;
- War’s dread alarms are o’er; its scars are healed;
- Its bitter agony has found surcease;
- A re-united land clasps hands in peace.
- But, oh! ye blessed dead, whose graves are strown
- From where our forests make perpetual moan,
- To those far shores where smiling Southern seas
- Give back soft murmurs to the fragrant breeze—
- Oh! ye who drained for us the bitter cup,
- Think ye we can forget what ye have offered up?
- The years will come and go, and other centuries die,
- And generation after generation lie
- Down in the dust; but, long as stars shall shine,
- Long as Vermont’s green hills shall bear the pine,
- As long as Killington shall proudly lift
- Its lofty peak above the storm-cloud’s rift,
- Or Mansfield hail the blue, o’erarching skies,
- Or fair Mount Anthony in grandeur rise,
- So long shall live the deeds that ye have done,
- So deathless be the glory ye have won!
-
-
-XI.
-
- Not with exultant joy
- And pride without alloy,
- Did the twin Centuries rejoice when all was o’er.
- What though the Nation rose
- Triumphant o’er its foes?
- What though the State had gained
- The meed of faith unstained?
- Their mighty hearts remembered the dead that came no more!
- Remembered all the losses,
- The weary, weary crosses,
- Remembered earth was poorer for the blood that had been shed,
- And knew that it was sadder for the story it had read!
- So, clasping hands with somewhat saddened mien,
- And eyes uplifted to the Great Unseen
- That rules alike o’er Centuries and men,
- Onward they walked serenely toward—the End!
-
-
-XII.
-
- One reached it last year. Ye remember well—
- The wondrous tale there is no need to tell—
- How the whole world bowed down beside its bier;
- How all the Nations came, from far or near,
- Heaping their treasures on its mighty pall—
- Never had kingliest king such funeral!
- Old Asia rose, and, girding her in haste,
- Swept in her jewelled robes across the waste,
- And called to Egypt lying prone and hid
- Where waits the Sphinx beside the pyramid;
- Fair Europe came with overflowing hands,
- Bearing the riches of her many lands;
- Dark Afric, laden with her virgin gold,
- Yet laden deeper with her woes untold;
- Japan and China in grotesque array,
- And all the enchanted islands of Cathay!
-
-
-XIII.
-
- To-day the other dies.
- It walked in humbler guise,
- Nor stood where all men’s eyes
- Were fixed upon it.
- Earth may not pause to lay
- A wreath upon its bier,
- Nor the world heed to-day
- Our dead that lieth here!
-
- Yet well they loved each other—
- It and its greater brother.
- To loftiest stature grown,
- Each earned its own renown;
- Each sought of Time a crown,
- And each has won it;
-
-
-XIV.
-
- But what to us are Centuries dead,
- And rolling Years forever fled,
- Compared with thee, O grand and fair
- Vermont—our Goddess-mother?
- Strong with the strength of thy verdant hills,
- Fresh with the freshness of mountain-rills,
- Pure as the breath of the fragrant pine,
- Glad with the gladness of youth divine,
- Serenely thou sittest throned to-day
- Where the free winds that round thee play
- Rejoice in thy waves of sun-bright hair,
- O thou, our glorious mother!
- Rejoice in thy beautiful strength and say
- Earth holds not such another!
- Thou art not old with thy hundred years,
- Nor worn with toil, or care, or tears:
- But all the glow of the summer-time
- Is thine to-day in thy glorious prime!
- Thy brow is fair as the winter-snows,
- With a stately calm in its still repose;
- While the breath of the rose the wild bee sips,
- Half-mad with joy, cannot eclipse
- The marvellous sweetness of thy lips;
- And the deepest blue of the laughing skies
- Hides in the depths of thy fearless eyes,
- Gazing afar over land and sea
- Wherever thy wandering children be!
- Fold on fold,
- Over thy form of grandest mould
- Floweth thy robe of forest green,
- Now light, now dark, in its emerald sheen.
- Its broidered hem is of wild flowers rare,
- With feathery fern-fronds light as air
- Fringing its borders. In thy hair
- Sprays of the pink arbutus twine,
- And the curling rings of the wild grape vine.
- Thy girdle is woven of silver streams;
- Its clasp with the opaline lustre gleams
- Of a lake asleep in the sunset beams;
- And, half concealing
- And half revealing,
- Floats over all a veil of mist
- Pale-tinted with rose and amethyst!
-
-
-XV.
-
- Arise, O noble mother of great sons,
- Worthy to rank among earth’s mightiest ones,
- And daughters fair and beautiful and good,
- Yet wise and strong in loftiest womanhood—
- Rise from thy throne, and, standing far and high
- Outlined against the blue, adoring sky,
- Lift up thy voice, and stretch thy loving hands
- In benediction o’er the waiting lands!
- Take thou our fealty! at thy feet we bow,
- Glad to renew each oft-repeated vow!
- No costly gifts we bring to thee to-day;
- No votive wreaths upon thy shrine we lay;
- Take thou our hearts, then!—hearts that fain would be
- From this day forth, O goddess, worthier thee!
-
-
- GETTYSBURG
- 1863-1889
-
-
-I.
-
- Brothers, is this the spot?
- Let the drums cease to beat;
- Let the tread of marching feet,
- With the clash and clang of steel
- And the trumpet’s long appeal
- (Cry of joy and sob of pain
- In its passionate refrain)
- Cease awhile,
- Nor beguile
- Thoughts that would rehearse the story
- Of the past’s remembered glory;
- Thoughts that would revive to-day
- Stern War’s rude, imperious sway;
- Waken battle’s fiery glow
- With its ardor and its woe,
- With its wild, exulting thrills,
- With the rush of mighty wills,
- And the strength to do and dare—
- Born of passion and of prayer!
-
-
-II.
-
- Let the present fade away,
- And the splendors of to-day;
- For our hearts within us burn
- As our glances backward turn.
- What rare memories awaken
- As the tree of life is shaken,
- And its storied branches blow
- In the winds of long ago!
- Do ye not remember, brothers,
- Ere the war-days how ’twas said
- Grand, heroic days were over
- And proud chivalry was dead?
- Still we saw the glittering lances
- Gleaming through the old romances,
- Still beheld the watch-fires burning
- On the cloudy heights of Time;
- And from fields that they had won,
- When the stormy fight was done,
- Saw victorious knights returning
- Flushed with triumph’s joy sublime!
- For the light of song and story
- Kindled with supernal glory
- Plains where ancient heroes fought;
- And illumined, with a splendor
- Rare and magical and tender,
- All the mighty deeds they wrought.
- But we thought the sword of battle,
- Long unused, had lost its glow,
- And the sullen war-gods slumbered
- Where their altar-fires burned low!
-
-
-III.
-
- _Was_ the nation dull and sodden,
- Buried in material things?
- ’Twas the chrysalis, awaiting
- The sure stirring of its wings!
- For when rang the thrilling war-cry
- Over all the startled land,
- And the fiery cross of battle,
- Flaming, sped from hand to hand,
- Then how fared it, O my brothers?
- Were men false or craven then?
- Did they falter?
- Did they palter?
- Did they question why or when?
- Oh, the story shall be told
- Until earth itself is old,
- How, from mountain and from glen,
- More than thrice ten thousand men
- Heard the challenge of the foe,
- Heard the nation’s cry of woe,
- Heard the summoning to arms,
- And the battle’s loud alarms!
- In tumultuous surprise,
- Lo, their answer rent the skies;
- And its quick and strong heart-thrills
- Rocked the everlasting hills!
- Forth from blossoming fields they sped
- To the fields with carnage red!
- Left the plowshare standing still;
- Left the bench, the forge, the mill;
- Left the quiet walks of trade
- And the quarry’s marble shade;
- Left the pulpit and the court,
- Careless ease and idle sport;
- Left the student’s cloistered halls
- In the old, gray college walls;
- Left young love-dreams, dear and sweet,
- War’s stern front, unblenched, to meet!
- Oh, the strange and sad amaze
- Of those unforgotten days,
- When the boys whom we had guided,
- Nursed and loved, caressed and chided,
- Suddenly, as in a night,
- Sprang to manhood’s proudest height;
- And with calmly smiling lips,
- As who life’s rarest goblet sips,
- Dauntless, with unhurried breath,
- Marched to danger and to death!
-
-
-IV.
-
- Soldiers, is this the spot?
- Fair the scene is, calm and fair,
- In this still October air;
- Far blue hills look gently down
- On the happy, tranquil town,
- And the ridges nearer by
- Steeped in autumn sunshine lie.
- Laden orchards, smiling fields,
- Rich in all that nature yields;
- Bright streams winding in and out
- Fertile meadows round about,
- Lowing herds and hum of bee,
- Birds that flit from tree to tree,
- Children’s voices ringing clear,
- All we touch or see or hear—
- Fruit of gold in silver set—
- Tell of joy and peace. And yet—
- Soldiers, is this the spot
- That can never be forgot?
- Was it here that shot and shell
- Poured as from the mouth of hell,
- Drenched the shrinking, trembling plain
- With a flood of fiery rain?
- Was it here the awful wonder
- Of the cannon’s crashing thunder
- Shook the affrighted hills, and made
- Even the stolid rocks afraid?
- Was it here an armèd host,
- Like two clouds where lightnings play,
- Or two oceans, tempest tost,
- Clashed and mingled in the fray?
- Here that, ’mid the din and smoke,
- Roar of guns and sabre stroke,
- Tramp of furious steeds, where moan
- Horse and rider, both o’erthrown,
- Lurid fires and battle yell,
- Forty thousand brave men fell?
-
-
-V.
-
- O brothers, words are weak!
- What tongue shall dare to speak?
- Even song itself grows dumb
- In this high presence.—Come
- Forth, ye whose ashes lie
- Under this arching sky!
- Speak ye in accents clear
- Words that we fain would hear!
- Tell us when your dim eyes,
- Holy with sacrifice,
- Looked through the battle smoke
- Up to the skies;
- Tell us, ye valiant dead,
- When your souls starward fled,
- How from the portals far
- Where the immortals are,
- Chieftains and vikings old,
- Heroes and warriors bold,
- Men whom old Homer sung,
- Men of each age and tongue,
- Knights from a thousand fields
- Bearing their blazoned shields
- Thronged forth to meet ye!
- Tell us how, floating down,
- Each with a martyr’s crown,
- They who had kept the faith,
- Grandly defying death;
- They who for conscience’ sake
- Felt their firm heartstrings break;
- They who for truth and right
- Unshrinking fought the fight;
- They who through fire and flame
- Passed on to deathless fame,
- Hastened to greet ye!
- Tell how they welcomed ye,
- Hailed and applauded ye,
- Claimed ye as comrades true,
- Brave as the world e’er knew;
- Led your triumphant feet
- Up to the highest seat,
- Crowned ye with amaranth,
- Laurel and palm.
-
-
-VI.
-
- Alas, alas! They speak not!
- The silence deep they break not!
- Heaven keeps its martyred ones
- Beyond or moon or suns;
- And Valhalla keeps its braves,
- Leaving to us their graves!
- Then let these graves speak for them
- As long as the wind sweeps o’er them!
- As long as the sentinel ridges
- Keep guard on either hand;
- As long as the hills they fought for
- Like silent watch-towers stand!
-
-
-VII.
-
- Yet not of them alone
- Round each memorial stone
- Shall the proud breezes whisper as they pass,
- Rustling the faded leaves
- On chilly autumn eves,
- And swaying tenderly the sheltering grass!
- O ye who on this field
- Knew not the joy to yield
- Your young, glad lives in glorious conflict up;
- Ye who as bravely fought,
- Ye who as grandly wrought,
- Draining with them war’s darkly bitter cup,
- As long as stars endure
- And God and Truth are sure;
- While Love still claims its own,
- While Honor holds its throne
- And Valor hath a name,
- Still shall these stony pages
- Repeat to all the ages
- The story of your fame!
-
-
-VIII.
-
- O beautiful one, my Country,
- Thou fairest daughter of Time,
- To-day are thine eyes unclouded
- In the light of a faith sublime!
- No thunder of battle appals thee;
- From thy woe thou hast found release;
- From the graves of thy sons steals only
- This one soft whisper,—“PEACE!”
-
-
-“NO MORE THE THUNDER OF CANNON”
-
- No more the thunder of cannon,
- No more the clashing of swords,
- No more the rage of the contest,
- Nor the rush of contending hordes;
- But, instead, the glad reunion,
- The clasping of friendly hands,
- The song, for the shout of battle,
- Heard over the waiting lands.
-
- O brothers, to-night we greet you
- With smiles, half sad, half gay—
- For our thoughts are flying backward
- To the years so far away—
- When with you who were part of the conflict,
- With us who remember it all,
- Youth marched with his waving banner,
- And his voice like a bugle call!
-
- We would not turn back the dial,
- Nor live over the past again;
- We would not the path re-travel,
- Nor barter the “now” for the “then.”
- Yet, oh, for the bounding pulses,
- And the strength to do and dare,
- When life was one grand endeavor,
- And work clasped hands with prayer!
-
- But blessed are ye, O brothers,
- Who feel in your souls alway
- The thrill of the stirring summons
- You heard but to obey;
- Who, whether the years go swift,
- Or whether the years go slow,
- Will wear in your hearts forever
- The glory of long ago!
-
-
- GRANT
- AUGUST 8, 1885
-
-
- God sends his angels where he will,
- From world to world, from star to star;
- They do his bidding as they fly,
- Whether or near or far!
-
- Whither it went, or what its quest,
- I know not; but one August day
- A great white angel through the far
- Dim spaces took its way;
-
- Until below it our fair earth,
- Like a rich jewel fitly hung—
- An emerald set with silver gleams—
- In the blue ether swung.
-
- The angel looked; the angel paused;
- Then down the starry pathway swept,
- Till mount and valley, hill and plain,
- Beneath its vision slept.
-
- Poised on a far blue mountain peak,
- It saw the land, from sea to sea,
- Lifting in veilèd splendor up
- The banner of the free!
-
- From tower and turret, spire and dome,
- From stately halls, and cabins rude,
- Where crag and cliff and forest meet
- In awful solitude,
-
- It saw strange, sombre pennants float,
- Black shadows on the summer breeze
- That bore, from shore to shore, the wail
- Of solemn symphonies.
-
- It saw long files of armèd men,
- Clad in a garb of faded blue,
- Pass up and down the sorrowing land
- As if in grand review.
-
- It saw through crowded city streets,
- Funereal trains move to and fro,
- With tolling bells, and muffled drums,
- And trumpets wailing low.
-
- Descending then the angel sought
- A stern, sad man of many cares—
- Ah, oft before have mortals talked
- With angels, unawares!
-
- The angel spake, as man to man—
- “What does it mean, O friend?” it cried,
- “These sad-browed hosts, these weeds of woe,
- This mourning far and wide?”
-
- The stranger answered in amaze—
- “Know you not what the whole world knows?
- To his long home, thus grandly borne,
- Earth’s greatest warrior goes.
-
- The foremost soldier of his age,
- The victor on full many a field—
- Who saw the bravest of the brave
- To his stern prowess yield.”
-
- The angel sighed. “That means,” it said,
- “Tumult and anguish, pain and death,
- And countless sons of men borne down
- By the fierce cannon’s breath!”
-
- Then passed from sight the heavenly guest,
- And from the mountain-top again
- Took its far flight from North to South,
- Above the homes of men.
-
- But still, where’er it went, it saw
- The starry banners half mast high,
- And tower and turret hung with black
- Against the reddening sky!
-
- Still saw long ranks of armèd men
- Who for the blue had worn the gray—
- Still saw the sad processions pass,
- Darkening the summer day!
-
- “Was this _their_ conqueror whom you mourn?”
- The angel said to one who kept
- Lone watch where, deep in grass-grown graves,
- Young Southern soldiers slept.
-
- “Victor, yet friend,” the answer came,
- “Even theirs who here their life-blood poured!
- He, when the bitter field was won,
- Was first to sheathe the sword,
-
- And cry: ‘O brothers, take my hand—
- Brave foemen, let us be at peace!
- O’er all the undivided land
- Let clash of conflict cease!’”
-
- The wondering angel went its way
- From world to world, from star to star,
- Where planet unto planet turned,
- And suns blazed out afar.
-
- “Learn, learn, O universe,” it cried,
- “How great is he whose foemen lay
- Their love and homage at his feet,
- On this—his burial day!”
-
-
-
-
-FRIAR ANSELMO AND OTHER POEMS
-
-
-FRIAR ANSELMO
-
- FRIAR ANSELMO for a secret sin
- Sat bowed with grief the convent cell within;
- Nor dared, such was his shame, to lift his eyes
- To the low wall whereon, in dreadful guise,
- The dead CHRIST hung upon the cursèd tree,
- Frowning, he thought, upon his misery.
- What was his sin it matters not to tell.
- But he was young and strong, the records say:
- Perhaps he wearied of his narrow cell;
- Perhaps he longed to work, as well as pray;
- Perhaps his heart too warmly beat that day!
- Perhaps—for life is long—the weary road
- That he must travel, bearing as a load
- The slow, monotonous hours that, one by one,
- Dragged in a lengthening chain from sun to sun,
- Appalled his eager spirit, and his vow
- Pressed like an iron hand upon his brow.
- Perhaps some dream of love, of home, of wife,
- Had stirred this tumult in his lonely life,
- Tempting his soul to barter heavenly bliss,
- And sell its birthright for a woman’s kiss!
- At all events, the struggle had been hard;
- And as a bird from the glad ether barred,
- So had he beat his wings till, bruised and torn,
- He wished that night he never had been born!
- And still the dead CHRIST on the cursèd tree
- Seemed but to mock his hopeless misery;
- Still Mary mother turned her eyes away,
- Nor saint nor angel bent to hear him pray!
-
- The calm, cold moonlight through the casement shone;
- Weird shadows darkened on the floor of stone;
- Without, what solemn splendors! and within
- What fearful wrestlings with despair and sin!
- Sudden and loud the cloister bell outrang;
- Afar a door swung to with sullen clang;
- And overhead he heard the rhythmic beat,
- The measured monotone of many feet
- Seeking the chapel for the midnight prayer.
- Black wings seemed hovering round him in the air,
- Beating him back when with a stifled moan
- He would have sought the holy altar stone.
- Then with a swift, sharp cry, prostrate he fell
- Before the crucifix. “The gates of hell
- Shall not prevail against me!” loud he cried,
- Stretching his arms to CHRIST, the crucified.
- “By Thy dread cross, Thy dying agony,
- Thine awful passion, LORD, deliver me!”
-
- Was it a dream? The taunting demons fled;
- Through the dim cell a wondrous glory spread;
- And all the air was filled with rare perfumes
- Wafted from censers rich with heavenly blooms.
- Transfigured stood the CHRIST before his eyes,
- Clothed in white samite, woven in Paradise,
- And from the empty cross upon the wall
- Streamed a wide splendor that encompassed all!
- Was it a dream? Anselmo’s sight grew dim;
- The cloistered chamber seemed to reel and swim;
- Yet well his spirit knew the glorious guest,
- And all his manhood rose to meet the test.
- “What wilt Thou have me, LORD, to do?” he cried
- With pallid lips, and kissed the sacred feet.
- And then in accents strangely calm, yet sweet,
- These words he heard from CHRIST, the crucified,
- The pitying CHRIST his inmost soul who read,
- With all its wild unrest, its doubt and dread:
- “MAKE THOU A COPY OF MY HOLY WORD!”
- Then mystic presences about him stirred;
- The vision faded. At the dawn of day
- Prostrate and pallid in the dusk he lay.
- Was it a dream? GOD knows! The narrow cell
- Wore the old aspect he had learned so well,
- And from the crucifix upon the wall
- No glory streamed illuminating all!
- Yet still a subtile fragrance filled the room;
- And looking round him in the soft, gray gloom,
- Anselmo saw upon the fretted floor
- An eagle’s quill that this grave legend bore:
- “He works most nobly for his fellow-men
- Who gives My word to them, by tongue or pen!”
-
- Henceforth Anselmo prayed, but worked as well,
- Nor felt the bondage of his cloister cell;
- For all his soul was filled with high intent,
- He had no dream since its accomplishment—
- To make a copy of the Holy Word,
- Fairer than eye had seen, or ear had heard,
- Or heart conceived of! Day by day he wrought,
- His fingers guided by a single thought;
- Forming each letter with the tenderest care,
- With points of richest color here and there;
- With birds on swaying boughs, and butterflies
- Poised on gay wings o’er sprays of eglantine;
- With tangled tracery of flower and vine
- Through which gleamed cherub faces, half divine;
- With fading leaves that drift when summer dies,
- And angels floating down the evening skies—
- Each word an orison, each line a prayer!
- Slowly the work went on from day to day;
- The seasons came and went; May followed May;
- Year after year passed by with stately tread
- To join the countless legions of the dead,
- Till Fra Anselmo, wan and bowed with age,
- Bent, a gray monk, above the parchment page.
- Death waited till he wrote the last fair line,
- Then touched his hand and closed the Book Divine!
-
- * * * * *
-
- The world has grown apace since then.
- He who would give GOD’S word to men,
- In cloistered cell, o’er parchment page,
- No longer bends from youth to age.
- Countless as leaves by autumn strewn
- The leaves of His great Book are blown
- Over the earth as wide and far
- As seeds by wandering breezes are!
- Yet none the less He speaks to-day
- As to Anselmo in his cell;
- Bidding men speed upon their way
- His later messages as well.
- For not alone in Holy Book,
- In revelations dim and old,
- In sweetest stories simply told,
- In grand, prophetic strains that reach
- The loftiest heights of human speech,
- In martial hymn, or saintly psalm,
- In fiery threat, or logic calm,
- GOD’S messages are writ to-day—
- And He whose voice Mount Sinai shook
- Still bids men hearken and obey!
- He writes His name upon the hills;
- He whispers in the mountain rills;
- He speaks through every flower that blows,
- In breath of lily, tint of rose;
- In sultry calms; in furious beat
- Of the wild storm’s tempestuous feet;
- In starlit night, and dewy morn,
- And splendor of the day new-born!
- He uttereth His thunders where
- The shock of battle rends the air;
- He guides the fiery steeds of War;
- He rules unseen the maddening jar,
- The hate and din of party strife,
- And bids it serve the nation’s life;
- He leads fair Science, where she walks
- With stately tread among the stars,
- Or where, with reverent voice, she talks
- With Nature through the eternal bars!
- His Word is uttered wheresoe’er
- A human soul has ears to hear.
- The royal message never errs;
- GOD send it true interpreters!
-
-
-THE KING’S ROSEBUD
-
- Only a blushing rosebud, folding up
- Such wealth of sweetness in its dewy cup
- That the whole air was like rare incense flung
- From golden censers round high altars swung!
- One day the king passed by with stately tread,
- And, reaching forth his hand, he lightly said,
- “All sweets are mine; therefore this rose I take,
- And wear it in my bosom for Love’s sake.”
- Then, while the king passed on with smiling face,
- The sweet rose gloried in its pride of place.
-
- But ah! the deeds that in Love’s name are done!
- The woeful wrack wrought underneath the sun!
- Still with that smile upon his lip, the king
- Laid his rash hand upon the beauteous thing;
- In hot haste tore the crimson leaves apart,
- And drained the sweetness from its glowing heart;
- Seared the soft petals with its fiery breath,
- Then tossed it from him to ignoble death!
- When next with idle steps I passed that way,
- Prone in the mire the king’s fair rosebud lay.
-
-
-SOMEWHERE
-
- How can I cease to pray for thee? Somewhere
- In God’s great universe thou art to-day:
- Can He not reach thee with His tender care?
- Can He not hear me when for thee I pray?
-
- What matters it to Him, who holds within
- The hollow of His hand all worlds, all space,
- That thou art done with earthly pain and sin?
- Somewhere within His ken thou hast a place.
-
- Somewhere thou livest and hast need of Him:
- Somewhere thy soul sees higher heights to climb;
- And somewhere still there may be valleys dim
- That thou must pass to reach the hills sublime.
-
- Then all the more, because thou canst not hear
- Poor human words of blessing, will I pray,
- O true, brave heart! God bless thee, whereso’er
- In His great universe thou art to-day!
-
-
-PERADVENTURE
-
- I am thinking to-night of the little child
- That lay on my breast three summer days,
- Then swiftly, silently, dropped from sight,
- While my soul cried out in sore amaze.
-
- It is fifteen years ago to-night;
- Somewhere, I know, he has lived them through,
- Perhaps with never a thought or dream
- Of the mother-heart he never knew!
-
- Is he yet but a babe? or has he grown
- To be like his brothers, fair and tall,
- With a clear, bright eye, and a springing step,
- And a voice that rings like a bugle call?
-
- I loved him. The rose in his waxen hand
- Was wet with the dew of my falling tears;
- I have kept the thought of my baby’s grave
- Through all the length of these changeful years.
-
- Yet the love I gave him was not like that
- I give to-day to my other boys,
- Who have grown beside me, and turned to me
- In all their griefs and in all their joys.
-
- Do you think he knows it? I wonder much
- If the dead are passionless, cold, and dumb;
- If into the calm of the deathless years
- No thrill of a human love may come!
-
- Perhaps sometimes from the upper air
- He has seen me walk with his brothers three;
- Or felt in the tender twilight hour
- The breath of the kisses they gave to me!
-
- Over his birthright, lost so soon,
- Perhaps he has sighed as the swift years flew;
- O child of my heart! you shall find somewhere
- The love that on earth you never knew!
-
-
- RENA
- (A LEGEND OF BRUSSELS)
-
-
-I.
-
- St. Gudula’s bells were chiming for the midnight, sad and slow,
- In the ancient town of Brussels, many and many a year ago,
-
- And St. Michael, poised so grandly on his lofty, airy height,
- Seemed transfigured in the glory of the full moon’s tender light,
-
- When, a fair and saintly maiden crowned with locks of palest gold,
- Rena stood beside her lover, son of Hildebrand the Bold.
-
- She with grief and tears was pallid; but his face was hard and
- stern:
- All the passion of his being in his dark eyes seemed to burn.
-
- “Never dream that I will give thee back thy plighted faith,” he
- cried,
- “By St. Michael’s sword I swear it, thou, my love, shalt be my
- bride!”
-
- “Nay, but hear me,” she responded; “hear the words that I must
- speak;
- I must speak, and thou must hearken, though my heart is like to
- break.
-
- Yestermorn, as I sat spinning blithely at my cottage door,
- Straightway fell a stately shadow in the sunshine on the floor;
-
- And a figure stood before me, so majestic and so grand,
- That I knew it in a moment for the mighty Hildebrand—
-
- Stood and gazed on me till downward at my feet the distaff dropped,
- And in all my veins the pulsing of the swift life-current stopped.
-
- ‘Thou art Rena,’ then he uttered, and he swore a dreadful oath,
- And the tempest of his anger beat on me and on us both.
-
- ‘She who thinks to wed with Volmar must have lands and gold,’ said
- he,
- ‘Or must come of noble lineage, fit to mate with mine and me!
-
- Thou art but a peasant maiden, empty-handed, lowly born;
- All the ladies of my castle would look down on thee with scorn.
-
- Even he will weary of thee when his passion once is spent,
- Vainly cursing her who doomed him to an endless discontent!’
-
- Then I, trembling, rose up slowly, and I looked him in the face,
- Though the dreadful frown it wore seemed to darken all the place.
-
- ‘Sir, I thank you for this warning,’ said I, speaking low and clear,
- ‘But the laughter of your ladies I must teach my heart to bear.
-
- For the rest—your son is noble—and my simple womanhood
- He will hold in loving honor, as a saint the holy rood!’
-
- Oh! then his stern face whitened, and a bitter laugh laughed he:
- ‘Truly this my son is noble, and he shall not wed with thee.
-
- Hear my words now, and remember! for by this good sword I swear,
- And by Michael standing yonder, watching us from upper air,
-
- If he dares to place a wedding-ring upon your dowerless hand,
- On his head shall fall a father’s curse—the curse of Hildebrand!’
-
- O, my Volmar! Then the earth rocked, and I fell down in a swoon;
- When I woke the room was silent; it was past the hour of noon;
-
- And I waited for thy coming, as the captive waits for death,
- With a mingled dread and longing, and a half-abated breath!”
-
- Straight the young man bowed before her, as before a holy shrine:
- “Never hand of high-born lady was more richly dowered than thine!
-
- What care I for gold or honors, or—my—father’s—curse?” he said;
- But the words died out in shudders, and his face grew like the dead.
-
- Then she twined her white arms round him, and she murmured, sweet
- and low,
- As the night wind breathing softly over banks where violets blow:
-
- “‘He who is accursed of father, he shall be accursed of God,’
- Long ago said one who followed where the holy prophets trod.
-
- Kiss me once, then, O my Volmar! just once more, my Volmar dear,
- Even as you would kiss my white lips if I lay upon my bier!
-
- For a gulf as dark as death has opened wide ’twixt thee and me;
- Neither thou nor I can cross it, and thy wife I may not be!”
-
-
-II.
-
- Once again the bells of midnight chimed from St. Gudula’s towers,
- While St. Michael watched the city slumbering through the ghostly
- hours.
-
- But no slumber came to Rena where she moaned in bitter pain,
- For the anguish of that parting wrought its work on heart and brain.
-
- Suddenly the air grew heavy as with magical perfume,
- And a weird and wondrous splendor filled the dim and silent room.
-
- In the middle of the chamber stood a lady fair and sweet,
- With bright tresses falling softly to her small and sandalled feet.
-
- Flushed her cheeks were as a wild rose, and the glory of her eyes
- Was the laughing light and glory of the kindling morning skies.
-
- Airy robes of lightest tissue from her white arms floated free;
- They seemed woven of the mist that curls above the azure sea,
-
- Wrought in curious devices, star and wheel and leaf and flower,
- That, like frost upon a window-pane, might vanish in an hour.
-
- In her hands she bore a cushion, quaintly fashioned, strangely set
- With small silver pins that spanned it like a branching coronet;
-
- And from threads of finest texture swung light bobbins to and fro,
- As the lady stood illumined in the weird and wondrous glow.
-
- Not a single word she uttered; but, as silent as a shade,
- Down the room she swiftly glided and beside the startled maid
-
- Knelt, a radiant vision, smiling into Rena’s wondering eyes,
- Giving arch yet gracious answer to her tremulous surprise.
-
- Then she laid the satin cushion on the wondering maiden’s knee,
- And to all her mute bewilderment, no syllable spake she.
-
- But, as in and out and round about, the silver pins among,
- Flashed the white hand of the lady, and the shining bobbins swung,
-
- Lo! a web of fairy lightness like the misty robe she wore,
- Swiftly grew beneath her fingers, drifting downward to the floor!
-
- And as Rena looked and wondered, inch by inch the marvel grew,
- Till the eastern windows brightened as the gray dawn struggled
- through.
-
- Then the lady’s hand touched Rena’s, and she pointed far away,
- Where the palace towers were gleaming in the first red light of day.
-
- But when once again the maiden turned her glance within the room,
- With the lady fair had vanished all the splendor and perfume.
-
- Still the satin cushion lay there, quaintly fashioned, strangely set
- With the silver pins that spanned it like a branching coronet;
-
- Still the light web she had woven lay in drifts upon the floor,
- Like the mist wreaths resting softly on some lone, enchanted shore!
-
-
-III.
-
- Slowly Rena raised the cushion, with her sweet eyes shining clear,
- Lightly tossed the fairy bobbins, half in gladness, half in fear.
-
- Ah! not vain had been her watching as the lovely lady wrought;
- All the magic of her fingers her own cunning hand had caught!
-
- Many a day above the cushion Rena’s peerless head was bent,
- And through many a solemn night she labored on with sweet intent.
-
- For, mayhap, the mystic marvels that she wove might bring her gold—
- A fair dowry fit to match the pride of Hildebrand the Bold!
-
- Then she braided up her long hair, and put on her russet gown,
- And with wicker basket laden passed she swiftly through the town,
-
- To the palace where Queen Ildegar, with dames of high degree,
- In a lofty oriel window sat, the beauteous morn to see.
-
- In the door-way she stood meekly, till the queen said, “Maiden fair,
- What have you in yonder basket that you carry with such care?”
-
- Eagerly she raised her blue eyes, hovering smiles and tears between,
- Then across the room she glided, and knelt down before the queen.
-
- Lifting up the wicker cover, “Saints in heaven!” cried Ildegar,
- “Here are tissues fit for angels, wrought with wreath and point and
- star,
-
- In most curious devices! Never saw I aught so rare—
- Where found you these frail webs woven of the lightest summer air?”
-
- “Well they may be fit for angels,” said she, underneath her breath;
- “O my lady, hear a story that is strange and true as death.”
-
- But ere yet the tale was ended, up rose good Queen Ildegar,
- And she sent her knights and pages to the castle riding far.
-
- “Bring me Hildebrand and Volmar, ere the sun goes down!” she cried,
- “Ho! my ladies, for a wedding, and your queen shall bless the bride!
-
- I will buy these airy wonders, and this maiden in her hand
- Shall a dowry hold as royal as the noblest in the land.”
-
- So they combed her shining tresses, and they brought her robes of
- silk,
- Broidered thick with gold and silver, on a ground as white as milk.
-
- But she whispered, “Sweetest ladies, let me wear my russet gown,
- That I wore this happy morning walking blithely through the town.
-
- I am but a peasant maiden, all unused to grand estate,
- And for robes of silken splendor, dearest ladies, let me wait!”
-
- Then the good queen, smiling brightly, from the wicker basket took
- Lightest web of quaintest pattern, and its filmy folds out-shook.
-
- With her own white hand she laid it over Rena’s golden hair,
- And she cried, “Oh, look, my ladies! Ne’er before was bride so fair!”
-
-
-A SECRET
-
-
- It is your secret and mine, love!
- Ah, me! how the dreary rain
- With a slow persistence, all day long
- Dropped on the window-pane!
- The chamber was weird with shadows
- And dark with the deepening gloom
- Where you in your royal womanhood,
- Lay waiting for the tomb.
-
- They had robed you all in white, love;
- In your hair was a single rose—
- A marble rose it might well have been
- In its cold and still repose!
- O, paler than yonder carven saint,
- And calm as the angels are,
- You seemed so near me, my beloved,
- Yet were, alas, so far!
-
- I do not know if I wept, love;
- But my soul rose up and said—
- “My heart shall speak unto her heart,
- Though here she is lying—dead!
- I will give her a last love-token
- That shall be to her a sign
- In the dark grave—or beyond it—
- Of this deathless love of mine.”
-
- So I sought me a little scroll, love;
- And thereon, in eager haste,
- Lest another’s eye should read them
- Some mystic words I traced.
- Then close in your claspèd fingers,
- Close in your waxen hand,
- I placed the scroll for an amulet,
- Sure you would understand!
-
- The secret is yours and mine, love!
- Only we two may know
- What words shine clear in the darkness,
- Of your grave so green and low.
- But if when we meet hereafter,
- In the dawn of some fairer day,
- You whisper those mystical words, love,
- It is all I would have you say!
-
-
-THIS DAY
-
- I wonder what is this day to you,
- Looking down from the upper skies!
- Is there a pang at your gentle heart?
- Is there a shade in your tender eyes?
- Do you think up there of the whispered words
- That thrilled your soul long years ago?
- Does ever a haunting undertone
- Blend with the chantings sweet and low?
-
- When this day dawned (if where you are
- Skies grow red when the morn is near)
- Did you know that before its close
- The love once yours would be on its bier?
- Did you know that another’s lip
- Would redden with kisses once your own,
- And the golden cup of a younger life
- O’erflow with the wine once yours alone?
-
- Do you remember? Ah, my saint,
- Bend your ear from the ether blue!
- Have you risen to heights so far
- That earth and its loves are nought to you?
- Do you care that your place is filled?
- Does it matter that now at last
- The turf above you has grown so deep
- That its shadow overlies your past?
-
- O, belovèd, I may not know!
- Heaven is afar, and the grave is dumb,
- And out of the silence so profound
- Neither token nor voice may come!
- We try to think that we understand;
- But whether you wake, or whether you sleep,
- Or whether our deeds are aught to you,
- Is still a mystery strange and deep!
-
-
-“CHRISTUS!”
-
- Over the desolate sea-side town
- With a terrible tumult the night came down,
- And the fierce wind swept through the empty street,
- With the drifting snow for a winding-sheet.
- Elsie, the fisherman’s daughter, in bed
- Lay and listened in awe and dread,
- But sprang to her feet in sudden fear
- When over the tempest, loud and clear,
- A voice cried, “Christus!”
-
- “Christus! Christus!” and nothing more.
- Was it a cry at the cottage-door?
- She left her chamber with flying feet;
- She loosened the bolts with fingers fleet;
- She lifted the latch, but only the din
- Of the furious storm and the snow swept in.
- She looked without: not a soul was there,
- But still rang out on the startled air
- The strange cry, “Christus!”
-
- “Christus! Christus!” She slept at last,
- Though the old house rocked in the wintry blast;
- And when she awoke the world was still,
- A wide, white silence from sea to hill.
- No creature stirred in the morning glow;
- There was not a footprint in the snow;
- Yet again through the hush, as faint and far
- As if it came from another star,
- A voice sighed “Christus!”
-
- “Christus! Christus!” Who can it be,
- O Christ our Lord, that is calling Thee
- In a foreign tongue, with a woe as wild
- As that of some lost, forsaken child?
- She turned from the window with a startled gaze:
- She clasped her hands in a pale amaze,
- Hearkening still, till again she heard,
- As in a waking dream, the word—
- That strange word, “Christus!”
-
- Then over the hill with weary feet
- She toiled through the drifts to the village-street.
- The villagers gathered in eager haste,
- And all day long in the snowy waste
- They sought in vain for the one who cried
- To Him who of old was crucified:
- Then, turning away with a laugh, they said,
- “’Twas only the wild wind overhead,
- Your cry of ‘Christus!’”
-
- She watched their going with earnest eyes:
- Hark! what voice to the taunt replies?
- The trees were still as if struck with death;
- The wind was soft as a baby’s breath;
- The sobbing sea was asleep at last,
- Scourged no more by the furious blast;
- Yet, surely as ever from human tongue
- A cry of grief or despair was wrung,
- Some voice sighed, “Christus!”
-
- Burned on her cheek a sudden flame
- As her heart’s strong throbbings went and came,
- And she stood alone on the lonely shore,
- Gazing the wide black waters o’er.
- “Whether it comes from heaven or hell,
- This voice I have learned to know too well—
- Whether from lips alive or dead,
- Or from the hovering air,” she said—
- “Whether it comes from sea or land,
- I will not sleep till I understand
- This cry of ‘Christus!’”
-
- “Christus! Christus!” Faint and slow
- Rose the wail from the drifted snow
- Under a low-browed, beetling rock,
- Strong to withstand the whirlwind’s shock.
- There, in the heart of the snowy mound,
- The buried form of a man she found—
- A Spanish sailor, with beard of brown
- Over his red scarf flowing down,
- And jewelled ears that were strange to see.
- She was bending over it, when—ah me!
- The shrill cry, “Christus!”
-
- Rang out as if from the stony lips
- Whence life had parted in drear eclipse,
- As if the soul of the dead man cried
- Again unto Christ the Crucified.
- The rose had fled from her cheeks so red,
- But still she knelt by his side and said,
- Under her breath, “I must understand
- Whether from heaven or sea or land
- Comes that cry, ‘Christus!’”
-
- She laid her hand on the pulseless breast!
- What fluttered beneath the crimson vest?
- A bird with plumage of green and gold,
- Nestling away from the piercing cold,
- Was folded close to the silent heart
- From which it had felt the life depart;
- And when she held it against her cheek,
- As plainly as ever a bird could speak
- It sobbed out, ‘Christus!’”
-
- And evermore when the winds blew loud,
- And the trees in the grasp of the storm were bowed,
- And the lowering wings of the tempest beat
- The drifting snow in the village-street,
- Just as its master in death had cried
- To Christ, the Holy, the Crucified,
- Pouring his soul in one wild word—
- Pray God that the cry in heaven was heard!—
- The bird cried, “Christus!”
-
-
-THE KISS
-
- When you lay before me dead,
- In your pallid rest,
- On those passive lips of thine
- Not one kiss I pressed!
-
- Did you wonder—looking down
- From some higher sphere—
- Knowing how we two had loved
- Many and many a year?
-
- Did you think me strange and cold
- When I did not touch,
- Even with reverent finger-tips,
- What I had loved so much?
-
- Ah! when last you kissed me, dear,
- Know you what you said?
- “Take this last kiss, my beloved,
- Soon shall I be dead!
-
- Keep it for a solemn sign,
- Through our love’s long night,
- Till you give it back again
- On some morning bright.”
-
- So I gave you no caress;
- But, remembering this,
- Warm upon my lips I keep
- Your last living kiss!
-
-
-WHAT SHE THOUGHT
-
- Marion showed me her wedding-gown
- And her veil of gossamer lace to-night,
- And the orange-blooms that to-morrow morn
- Shall fade in her soft hair’s golden light.
- But Philip came to the open door:
- Like the heart of a wild-rose glowed her cheek,
- And they wandered off through the garden-paths
- So blest that they did not care to speak.
-
- I wonder how it seems to be loved;
- To know you are fair in someone’s eyes;
- That upon someone your beauty dawns
- Every day as a new surprise;
- To know that, whether you weep or smile,
- Whether your mood be grave or gay,
- Somebody thinks you, all the while,
- Sweeter than any flower of May.
-
- I wonder what it would be to love:
- That, I think, would be sweeter far,—
- To know that one out of all the world
- Was lord of your life, your king, your star!
- They talk of love’s sweet tumult and pain:
- I am not sure that I understand,
- Though—a thrill ran down to my finger-tips
- Once when—somebody—touched my hand!
-
- I wonder what it would be to dream
- Of a child that might one day be your own;
- Of the hidden springs of your life a part,
- Flesh of your flesh, and bone of your bone.
- Marion stooped one day to kiss
- A beggar’s babe with a tender grace;
- While some sweet thought, like a prophecy,
- Looked from her pure Madonna face.
-
- I wonder what it must be to think
- To-morrow will be your wedding-day,
- And you, in the radiant sunset glow
- Down fragrant flowery paths will stray,
- As Marion does this blessed night,
- With Philip, lost in a blissful dream.
- Can she feel his heart through the silence beat?
- Does he see her eyes in the starlight gleam?
-
- Questioning thus, my days go on;
- But never an answer comes to me:
- All love’s mysteries, sweet as strange,
- Sealed away from my life must be.
- Yet still I dream, O heart of mine!
- Of a beautiful city that lies afar;
- And there, some time, I shall drop the mask,
- And be shapely and fair as others are.
-
-
-WHAT NEED?
-
- _“What need has the singer to sing?
- And why should your poet to-day
- His pale little garland of poesy bring,
- On the altar to lay?
- High-priests of song the harp-strings swept
- Ages before he smiled or wept!”_
-
- What need have the roses to bloom?
- And why do the tall lilies grow?
- And why do the violets shed their perfume
- When night-winds breathe low?
- They are no whit more bright and fair
- Than flowers that breathed in Eden’s air!
-
- What need have the stars to shine on?
- Or the clouds to grow red in the west,
- When the sun, like a king, from the fields he has won,
- Goes grandly to rest?
- No brighter they than stars and skies
- That greeted Eve’s sweet, wondering eyes!
-
- What need has the eagle to soar
- So proudly straight up to the sun?
- Or the robin such jubilant music to pour
- When day is begun?
- The eagles soared, the robins sung,
- As high, as sweet, when earth was young!
-
- What need, do you ask me? Each day
- Hath a song and a prayer of its own,
- As each June hath its crown of fresh roses, each May
- Its bright emerald throne!
- Its own high thought each age shall stir,
- Each needs its own interpreter!
-
- And thou, O, my poet, sing on!
- Sing on until love shall grow old;
- Till patience and faith their last triumphs have won,
- And truth is a tale that is told!
- Doubt not, thy song shall still be new
- While life endures and God is true!
-
-
-TWO
-
- We two will stand in the shadow here,
- To see the bride as she passes by;
- Ring soft and low, ring loud and clear,
- Ye chiming bells that swing on high!
- Look! look! she comes! The air grows sweet
- With the fragrant breath of the orange blooms,
- And the flowers she treads beneath her feet
- Die in a flood of rare perfumes!
-
- She comes! she comes! The happy bells
- With joyous clamor fill the air,
- While the great organ dies and swells,
- Soaring to trembling heights of prayer!
- Oh! rare are her robes of silken sheen,
- And the pearls that gleam on her bosom’s snow;
- But rarer the grace of her royal mien,
- Her hair’s fine gold, and her cheek’s young glow.
-
- Dainty and fair as a folded rose,
- Fresh as a violet dewy sweet,
- Chaste as a lily, she hardly knows
- That there are rough paths for other feet.
- For Love hath shielded her; Honor kept
- Watch beside her by night and day;
- And Evil out from her sight hath crept,
- Trailing its slow length far away.
-
- Now in her perfect womanhood,
- In all the wealth of her matchless charms,
- Lovely and beautiful, pure and good,
- She yields herself to her lover’s arms.
- Hark! how the jubilant voices ring!
- Lo! as we stand in the shadow here,
- While far above us the gay bells swing,
- I catch the gleam of a happy tear!
-
- The pageant is over. Come with me
- To the other side of the town, I pray,
- Ere the sun goes down in the darkening sea,
- And night falls around us, chill and gray.
- In the dim church porch an hour ago,
- We waited the bride’s fair face to see;
- Now Life has a sadder sight to show,
- A darker picture for you and me.
-
- No need to seek for the shadow here;
- There are shadows lurking everywhere;
- These streets in the brightest day are drear,
- And black as the blackness of despair.
- But this is the house. Take heed, my friend,
- The stairs are rotten, the way is dim;
- And up the flights, as we still ascend,
- Creep stealthy phantoms dark and grim.
-
- Enter this chamber. Day by day,
- Alone in this chill and ghostly room,
- A child—a woman—which is it, pray?—
- Despairingly waits for the hour of doom!
- Ah! as she wrings her hands so pale,
- No gleam of a wedding ring you see;
- There is nothing to tell. You know the tale—
- God help her now in her misery!
-
- I dare not judge her. I only know
- That love was to her a sin and a snare,
- While to the bride of an hour ago
- It brought all blessings its hands could bear!
- I only know that to one it came
- Laden with honor, and joy, and peace;
- Its gifts to the other were woe and shame,
- And a burning pain that shall never cease!
-
- I only know that the soul of one
- Has been a pearl in a golden case;
- That of the other a pebble thrown
- Idly down in a way-side place,
- Where all day long strange footsteps trod,
- And the bold, bright sun drank up the dew!
- Yet both were women. O righteous God,
- Thou only canst judge between the two!
-
-
-UNANSWERED
-
- Where mountain-peaks rose far and high
- Into the blue, unclouded sky,
- And waves of green, like billowy seas,
- Tossed proudly in the freshening breeze,
-
- I rode one morning, late in June.
- The glad winds sang a pleasant tune;
- The air, like draughts of rarest wine,
- Made every breath a joy divine.
-
- With roses all the way was bright;
- Yet there upon that upland height
- The darlings of the early spring—
- Blue violets—were blossoming.
-
- And all the meadows, wide unrolled,
- Were green and silver, green and gold,
- Where buttercups and daisies spun
- Their shining tissues in the sun.
-
- Over its shallow, pebbly bed,
- A sparkling river gayly sped,
- Nor cared that deeper waters bore
- A grander freight from shore to shore.
-
- It sung, it danced, it laughed, it played,
- In sunshine now, and now in shade;
- While every gnarled tree joyed to make
- A greener garland for its sake.
-
- Deep peace was in the summer air,
- A peace all nature seemed to share;
- Yet even there I could not flee
- The shadow of life’s mystery!
-
- A farmhouse stood beside the way,
- Low-roofed and rambling, quaint and gray;
- And where the friendly door swung wide
- Red roses climbed on either side.
-
- And thither, down the winding road
- Near which the sparkling river flowed,
- In groups, in pairs, the neighbors pressed,
- Each in his Sunday raiment dressed.
-
- A sober calm was on each face;
- Sweet stillness brooded o’er the place;
- Yet something of a festal air
- The youths and maidens seemed to wear.
-
- But, as I passed, an idle breeze
- Swept through the quivering maple-trees;
- Chased by the winds in merry rout,
- A fair, light curtain floated out.
-
- And this I saw: a quiet room
- Adorned with flowers of richest bloom—
- A lily here, a garland there—
- Fragrance and silence everywhere.
-
- Then on I rode. But if a bride
- Should there her happy blushes hide,
- Or if beyond my vision lay
- Some pale face shrouded from the day,
-
- I could not tell. O joy and Pain,
- Your voices join in one refrain!
- So like ye are, we may not know
- If this be gladness, this be woe!
-
-
-THE CLAY TO THE ROSE
-
- O beautiful, royal Rose,
- O Rose, so fair and sweet!
- Queen of the garden art thou,
- And I—the Clay at thy feet!
-
- The butterfly hovers about thee;
- The brown bee kisses thy lips;
- And the humming-bird, reckless rover,
- Their marvellous sweetness sips.
-
- The sunshine hastes to caress thee
- Flying on pinions fleet;
- The dew-drop sleeps in thy bosom,
- But I—I lie at thy feet!
-
- The radiant morning crowns thee;
- And the noon’s hot heart is thine;
- And the starry night enfolds thee
- In the might of its love divine;
-
- I hear the warm rain whisper
- Its message soft and sweet;
- And the south-wind’s passionate murmur,
- While I lie low at thy feet!
-
- It is not mine to approach thee;
- I never may kiss thy lips,
- Or touch the hem of thy garment
- With tremulous finger-tips.
-
- Yet, O thou beautiful Rose!
- Queen rose, so fair and sweet,
- What were lover or crown to thee
- Without the Clay at thy feet?
-
-
-AT THE LAST
-
- Will the day ever come, I wonder,
- When I shall be glad to know
- That my hands will be folded under
- The next white fall of the snow?
- To know that when next the clover
- Wooeth the wandering bee,
- Its crimson tide will drift over
- All that is left of me?
-
- Will I ever be tired of living,
- And be glad to go to my rest,
- With a cool and fragrant lily
- Asleep on my silent breast?
- Will my eyes grow weary of seeing,
- As the hours pass, one by one,
- Till I long for the hush and the darkness
- As I never longed for the sun?
-
- God knoweth! Sometime, it may be,
- I shall smile to hear you say:
- “Dear heart! she will not waken
- At the dawn of another day!”
- And sometime, love, it may be,
- I shall whisper under my breath:
- “The happiest hour of my life, dear,
- Is this—the hour of my death!”
-
-
-TO THE “BOUQUET CLUB”
-
- O Rosebud garland of girls!
- Who ask for a song from me,
- To what sweet air shall I set my lay?
- What shall its key-note be?
- The flowers have gone from wood and hill;
- The rippling river lies white and still;
- And the birds that sang on the maple bough,
- Afar in the South are singing now!
-
- O Rosebud garland of girls!
- If the whole glad year were May;
- If winds sang low in the clustering leaves,
- And roses bloomed alway;
- If youth were all that there is of life;
- If the years brought nothing of care or strife,
- Nor ever a cloud to the ether blue,
- It were easy to sing a song for you!
-
- Yet, O my garland of girls!
- Is there nothing better than May?
- The golden glow of the harvest time!
- The rest of the Autumn day!
- This thought I give to you all to keep:
- Who soweth good seed shall surely reap;
- The year grows rich as it groweth old,
- And life’s latest sands are its sands of gold!
-
-
-EVENTIDE
-
- Whenever, with reverent footsteps,
- I pass through the open door
- Of Memory’s stately palace,
- Where dwell the days of yore,
- One scene, like a lovely vision,
- Comes to me o’er and o’er.
-
- ’Tis a dim, fire-lighted chamber;
- There are pictures on the wall;
- And around them dance the shadows
- Grotesque and weird and tall,
- As the flames on the storied hearth-stone
- Wavering rise and fall.
-
- An ancient cabinet stands there,
- That came from beyond the seas,
- With a breath of spicy odors
- Caught from the Indian breeze;
- And its fluted doors and moldings
- Are dark with mysteries.
-
- There’s an old arm-chair in the corner,
- Straight-backed and tall and quaint;
- Ah! many a generation—
- Sinner and sage and saint—
- It hath held in its ample bosom
- With murmur nor complaint!
-
- In the glow of the fire-light playing,
- A tiny, blithesome pair,
- With the music of their laughter
- Fill all the tranquil air—
- A rosy, brown-eyed lassie,
- A boy serenely fair.
-
- A woman sits in the shadow
- Watching the children twain,
- With a joy so deep and tender
- It is near akin to pain,
- And a smile and tear blend softly—
- Sunshine and April rain!
-
- Her heart keeps time to the rhythm
- Of love’s unuttered prayer,
- As, with still hands lightly folded,
- She listens, unaware,
- Through all the children’s laughter,
- For a footfall on the stair.
-
- I know the woman who sits there;
- Time hath been kind to her,
- And the years have brought her treasures
- Of frankincense and myrrh
- Richer, perhaps, and rarer,
- Than Life’s young roses were.
-
- But I doubt if ever her spirit
- Hath known, or yet shall know,
- The bliss of a happier hour,
- As the swift years come and go,
- Than this in the shadowy chamber
- Lit by the hearth-fire’s glow!
-
-
-MY LOVERS
-
- I have four noble lovers,
- Young and gallant, blithe and gay,
- And in all the land no maiden
- Hath a goodlier troupe than they!
- And never princess, guarded
- By knights of high degree,
- Knew sweeter, purer homage
- Than my lovers pay to me!
-
- One of my noble lovers
- Is a self-poised, thoughtful man,
- Gravely gay, serenely earnest,
- Strong to do, and bold to plan.
- And one is sweet and sunny,
- Pure as crystal, true as steel,
- With a soul responding ever
- When the truth makes high appeal.
-
- And another of my lovers,
- Bright and _debonair_ is he,
- Brave and ardent, strong and tender,
- And the flower of courtesie.
- Last of all, an eager student,
- Upon lofty aims intent:
- Manly force and gentle sweetness
- In his nature rarely blent.
-
- But when of noble lovers
- All alike are dear and true,
- And her heart to choose refuses,
- Pray, what can a woman do?
- Ah, my sons! For this I bless ye,
- Even as I myself am blest,
- That I know not which is dearest,
- That I care not which is best!
-
-
-THE LEGEND OF THE ORGAN-BUILDER
-
- Day by day the Organ-Builder in his lonely chamber wrought;
- Day by day the soft air trembled to the music of his thought;
-
- Till at last the work was ended, and no organ voice so grand
- Ever yet had soared responsive to the master’s magic hand.
-
- Ay, so rarely was it builded that whenever groom or bride
- Who in God’s sight were well pleasing in the church stood side by
- side,
-
- Without touch or breath the organ of itself began to play,
- And the very airs of heaven through the soft gloom seemed to stray.
-
- He was young, the Organ-Builder, and o’er all the land his fame
- Ran with fleet and eager footsteps, like a swiftly rushing flame.
-
- All the maidens heard the story; all the maidens blushed and smiled,
- By his youth and wondrous beauty and his great renown beguiled.
-
- So he sought and won the fairest, and the wedding-day was set:
- Happy day—the brightest jewel in the glad year’s coronet!
-
- But when they the portal entered, he forgot his lovely bride—
- Forgot his love, forgot his God, and his heart swelled high with
- pride.
-
- “Ah!” thought he, “how great a master am I! When the organ plays,
- How the vast cathedral arches will re-echo with my praise!”
-
- Up the aisle the gay procession moved. The altar shone afar,
- With its every candle gleaming through soft shadows like a star.
-
- But he listened, listened, listened, with no thought of love or
- prayer,
- For the swelling notes of triumph from his organ standing there.
-
- All was silent. Nothing heard he save the priest’s low monotone,
- And the bride’s robe trailing softly o’er the floor of fretted
- stone.
-
- Then his lips grew white with anger. Surely God was pleased with him
- Who had built the wondrous organ for His temple vast and dim?
-
- Whose the fault, then? Hers—the maiden standing meekly at his side!
- Flamed his jealous rage, maintaining she was false to him—his bride.
-
- Vain were all her protestations, vain her innocence and truth;
- On that very night he left her to her anguish and her ruth.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Far he wandered to a country wherein no man knew his name.
- For ten weary years he dwelt there, nursing still his wrath and
- shame.
-
- Then his haughty heart grew softer, and he thought by night and day
- Of the bride he had deserted, till he hardly dared to pray—
-
- Thought of her, a spotless maiden, fair and beautiful and good;
- Thought of his relentless anger that had cursed her womanhood;
-
- Till his yearning grief and penitence at last were all complete,
- And he longed, with bitter longing, just to fall down at her feet.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Ah! how throbbed his heart when, after many a weary day and night,
- Rose his native towers before him, with the sunset glow alight!
-
- Through the gates into the city on he pressed with eager tread;
- There he met a long procession—mourners following the dead.
-
- “Now, why weep ye so, good people? and whom bury ye to-day?
- Why do yonder sorrowing maidens scatter flowers along the way?
-
- Has some saint gone up to Heaven?” “Yes,” they answered, weeping
- sore:
- “For the Organ-Builder’s saintly wife our eyes shall see no more;
-
- And because her days were given to the service of God’s poor,
- From His church we mean to bury her. See! yonder is the door.”
-
- No one knew him; no one wondered when he cried out, white with pain;
- No one questioned when, with pallid lips, he poured his tears like
- rain.
-
- “’Tis someone whom she has comforted who mourns with us,” they said,
- As he made his way unchallenged, and bore the coffin’s head.
-
- Bore it through the open portal, bore it up the echoing aisle,
- Set it down before the altar, where the lights burned clear the
- while:
-
- When, oh, hark! the wondrous organ of itself began to play
- Strains of rare, unearthly sweetness never heard until that day!
-
- All the vaulted arches rang with the music sweet and clear;
- All the air was filled with glory, as of angels hovering near;
-
- And ere yet the strain was ended, he who bore the coffin’s head,
- With the smile of one forgiven, gently sank beside it—dead.
-
- They who raised the body knew him, and they laid him by his bride;
- Down the aisle and o’er the threshold they were carried side by
- side;
-
- While the organ played a dirge that no man ever heard before,
- And then softly sank to silence—silence kept for evermore.
-
-
-BUTTERFLY AND BABY BLUE
-
- Butterfly and Baby Blue,
- Did you come together
- Floating down the summer skies,
- In the summer weather?
- Seems to me you’re much alike,
- Airy, fairy creatures,
- Though I small resemblance find
- In your tiny features!
-
- Butterfly has gauzy wings,
- Bright with jewelled splendor;
- Baby Blue has pink-white arms,
- Rosy, warm, and tender.
- Butterfly has golden rings,
- Charming each beholder;
- Baby wears a knot of blue
- On each dimpled shoulder.
-
- Butterfly is never still,
- Always in a flutter;
- And of dainty Baby Blue
- The same truth I utter!
- Butterfly on happy wing
- In the sunshine dances;
- Baby Blue for sunshine has
- Mother’s smiles and glances!
-
- Butterfly seeks honey-dew
- In a lily palace;
- Baby Blue finds nectar sweet
- In a snow-white chalice.
- Butterfly will furl its wings
- When the air grows colder;
- While dear Baby Blue will be
- Just a trifle older!
-
- Ah! the days are growing short,
- Soon the birds will leave us,
- And of all the garden flowers
- Cruel frost bereave us.
- Butterfly and Baby Blue,
- Do not go together,
- Sailing through the autumn skies
- In the autumn weather!
-
-
-KING IVAN’S OATH
-
- King Ivan ruled a mighty land
- Girt by the sea on either hand;
- A goodly land as e’er the sun
- In its long journey looked upon!
- His knights were loyal, brave, and true,
- Eager their lord’s behests to do;
- His counsellors were wise and just,
- Nor ever failed his kingly trust;
- The nations praised him, and the state
- Grew powerful, and rich, and great;
- While still with long and loud acclaim,
- His people hailed their monarch’s name!
-
- Fronting the east, a stately pile,
- The palace caught the sun’s first smile;
- Lightly its domes and arches sprung,
- As earth’s glad hills when earth was young;
- And miracles of airy grace,
- Each tower and turret soared in space.
- Within——But here no rhythmic flow
- Of words with light and warmth aglow
- Can tell the story. Not more fair
- Are your own castles hung in air!
- Painter and sculptor there had wrought
- The utmost beauty of their thought;
- There the rich fruit of Persian looms
- Glowed darkly bright as tropic blooms;
- There fell the light like golden mist,
- Filtered through clouds of amethyst;
- There bright-winged birds and odorous flowers
- With song and fragrance filled the hours;
- There Pleasure flung the portals wide,
- And soul and sense were satisfied!
-
- The queen? No fairer face than hers
- E’er smiled upon its worshippers;
- And she was good as fair, ’twas said,
- And loved the king ere they were wed.
- And he? No doubt he loved her, too,
- After a kingly fashion—knew
- She had a right his throne to share,
- And would be mother of his heir.
- But yet, to do him justice, he
- Sometimes forgot his royalty—
- Forgot his kingly crown, and then
- Loved, and made love, like other men!
-
- There seemed no shadow near the throne;
- Yet oft the great king walked alone,
- Hands clasped behind him, head bowed down,
- And on his royal face a frown.
- Sat Mordecai within his gate?
- What scoffing spectre mocked his state?
- What demon held him in a spell?
- Alas! the sweet queen knew too well!
- Apples of Sodom ate he, since
- She had not borne to him a prince,
- Though thrice his hope had budded fair,
- And he had counted on an heir.
- Three little daughters, dainty girls
- With sunshine tangled in their curls,
- Bloomed in the palace; but no son—
- The long-expected, waited one,
- Flower of the state, and pride of all—
- Grew at the king’s side, straight and tall!
-
- The king was angered. It may be
- No worse than other men was he;
- But—a high tower upon a hill—
- His light shone far for good or ill!
- In from the chase one day he rode;
- To the queen’s chamber fierce he strode;
- Where bending o’er her ’broidery frame,
- Her pale cheeks burned with sudden flame
- At his quick coming. Up she rose,
- Stirred from her wonted calm repose,
- A lily flushing when the sun
- Its stately beauty looked upon!
- Alas! alas! so blind was he—
- Or else he did not care to see—
- He had no pity, though she stood
- In perfect flower of womanhood!
- “You bear to me no son,” he said;
- Then flinging back his haughty head:
- “Each base-born peasant has an heir,
- His name to keep, his crust to share,
- While I—the king of this broad land—
- Have no son near my throne to stand!
- Who, then, shall reign when I am dead?
- Who wield the sceptre in my stead?
- Inherit all my pride and power,
- And wear my glory as his dower?
- Give me a man-child, who shall be
- Lord of the realm, himself, and me!”
-
- Then pallid lips made slow reply—
- “God ordereth. Not you nor I!”
- His brow flushed hot; a sudden clang
- As of arms throughout the chamber rang,
- And turning on his heel, he threw
- Back wrathful answer: “That may do
- For puling women—not for me!
- Now, by my good sword, we shall see!
- So help me Heaven, I will not brook
- On a girl’s face again to look!
- And when you next shall bear a child,
- Though fair a babe as ever smiled,
- If it be not a princely heir,
- By all the immortal gods, I swear
- I ne’er will speak to it, nor break
- My soul’s stern silence for Love’s sake!”
-
- Then forth he fared and rode away,
- Nor saw the queen again that day—
- The hapless queen, who to the floor
- Sank prone and breathless, as the door
- Swung to behind him, and his tread
- Down the long arches echoèd.
- In truth she was in sorry plight
- When her maids found her late that night,
- The king learned that which spoiled his rest,
- But kept the secret in his breast!
-
- * * * * *
-
- At length, when months had duly sped,
- High streamed the banners overhead,
- And all the bells rang out at morn
- In jubilant peals—a Prince was born!
- Now let the joyous music ring!
- Now let the merry minstrels sing!
- Now pour the wine and crown the feast
- With fruits and flowers of all the East!
- Now let the votive candles shine
- And garlands bloom on every shrine!
- Now let the young, with flying feet
- Time to bewildering music beat,
- And let the old their joys rehearse
- In stirring tale, or flowing verse!
- Now fill with shouts the waiting air,
- And scatter largess everywhere!
-
- Ah! who so happy as the king?
- Swift flew the hours on eager wing;
- And the boy grew apace, until
- The second summer, sweet and still,
- Dropped roses round him as he played
- Where arched the leafy colonnade.
- How fair he was tongue cannot say,
- But he was fairer than the day;
- And never princely coronet
- On brow of nobler mould was set;
- Nor ever did its jewels gleam
- Above an eye of brighter beam;
- And never yet where sunshine falls,
- Flooding with light the cottage walls,
- ’Mid hum of bee, or song of birds,
- Or tenderest breath of loving words,
- Blossomed a sweeter child than he!
- How the king joyed his strength to see,
- Counting the weeks that flew so fast—
- Each fuller, happier than the last!
- Six months had passed since he could walk;
- Was it not time the prince should talk?
- Ah! baby words with tripping feet!
- Ah! baby laughter, silver sweet!
-
- At length within the palace rose
- Rumor so strange that friends and foes
- Forgot their love, forgot their hate,
- Pausing to croon and speculate.
- Vague whispers floated in the air;
- A hint of mystery here and there;
- A sudden hush, a startled glance,
- Quick silences and looks askance.
- Thus day by day the wonder grew,
- Till o’er the kingdom wide it flew.
- The prince—his father—what was this
- Strange tale so surely told amiss?
- The young prince dumb? Who dared to say
- That nature such a prank could play?
- _Dumb to the king?_ In silence bound,
- With voiceless lips that gave no sound
- When the king questioned?—Yet, no lute,
- Nor chiming bell, nor silver flute,
- Nor lark’s song, high in ether hung,
- Rang clearer than the prince’s tongue!
-
- The court physicians came and went;
- Learned men from all the continent
- Gave wise opinions, talked of laws,
- Stroked their gray beards, nor found the cause.
- Then bribes were tried, and threats. The child,
- As one bewildered, sighed and smiled,
- In a wild storm of weeping broke,
- Moved its red lips, but never spoke.
-
- The changeful years rolled on apace;
- The young prince wore a bearded face;
- The good queen died; the king grew gray;
- A generation passed away.
- Courtiers forgot to tell the tale;
- Gossip itself grew old and stale.
- But never once, in all the years
- That bore such freight of joys and tears,
- Was the spell broken: not one word
- From son to sire was ever heard.
- Mutely his father’s face he scanned—
- Mutely he clasped his agèd hand—
- Mutely he kissed him when at last
- To death’s long slumber forth he passed!
- Come weal or woe, he could not break
- The mystic silence for Love’s sake!
-
-
-AT DAWN
-
- At dawn, when the jubilant morning broke,
- And its glory flooded the mountain side,
- I said, “’Tis eleven years to-day,
- Eleven years since my darling died!”
-
- And then I turned to my household ways,
- To my daily tasks, without, within,
- As happily busy all the day
- As if my darling had never been!—
-
- As if she had never lived, or died!
- Yet when they buried her out of my sight
- I thought the sun had gone down at noon,
- And the day could never again be bright.
-
- Ah, well! As the swift years come and go,
- It will not be long ere I shall lie
- Somewhere under a bit of turf,
- With my pale hands folded quietly.
-
- And then someone who has loved me well—
- Perhaps the one who has loved me best—
- Will say of me as I said of her,
- “She has been just so many years at rest”—
-
- Then turn to the living loves again,
- To the busy life, without, within,
- And the day will go on from dawn to dusk,
- Even as if I had never been!
-
- Dear hearts! dear hearts! It must still be so!
- The roses will bloom, and the stars will shine,
- And the soft green grass creep still and slow,
- Sometime over a grave of mine—
-
- And over the grave in your hearts as well!
- Ye cannot hinder it if ye would;
- And I—ah! I shall be wiser then—
- I would not hinder it if I could!
-
-
-IN MEMORIAM
-
-[Cyrus M. and Mary Ripley Fisher, lost on steamship Atlantic, April 1,
-1873.]
-
-
- Once, long ago, with trembling lips I sung
- Of one who, when the earliest flowers were seen,
- So sweet, so dear, so beautiful and young,
- Came home to sleep where kindred graves were green.
-
- Soft was the turf we raised to give her room;
- Clear were the rain-drops, shining as they fell;
- Sweet the arbutus, with its tender bloom
- Brightening the couch of her who loved it well.
-
- Yet, in our blindness, how we wept that day,
- When the earth fell upon her coffin-lid!
- O, ye beloved whom I sing _this_ day,
- Could we but know where your dear forms lie hid!
-
- Could we but lay you down by her dear side,
- Wrapped in the garments of eternal rest,
- Where the still hours in slow succession glide,
- And not a dream may stir the pulseless breast—
-
- Where all day long the shadows come and go,
- And soft winds murmur and sweet song-birds sing—
- Where all night long the starlight’s tender glow
- Falls where the flowers you loved are blossoming—
-
- Then should the tempest of our grief grow calm;
- Then moaning gales should vex our souls no more;
- And the clear swelling of our thankful psalm
- Should drown the beat of surges on the shore.
-
- But the deep sea will not give up its dead.
- O, ye who know where your belovèd sleep,
- Bid heart’s-ease bloom on each love-guarded bed,
- And bless your God for graves whereon to weep!
-
-
-WEAVING THE WEB
-
- “This morn I will weave my web,” she said,
- As she stood by her loom in the rosy light,
- And her young eyes, hopefully glad and clear,
- Followed afar the swallow’s flight.
- “As soon as the day’s first tasks are done,
- While yet I am fresh and strong,” said she,
- “I will hasten to weave the beautiful web
- Whose pattern is known to none but me!
-
- I will weave it fine, I will weave it fair,
- And ah! how the colors will glow!” she said;
- “So fadeless and strong will I weave my web
- That perhaps it will live after I am dead.”
- But the morning hours sped on apace;
- The air grew sweet with the breath of June;
- And young Love hid by the waiting loom,
- Tangling the threads as he hummed a tune.
-
- “Ah, life is so rich and full!” she cried,
- “And morn is short though the days are long!
- This noon I will weave my beautiful web,
- I will weave it carefully, fine and strong.”
- But the sun rode high in the cloudless sky;
- The burden and heat of the day she bore
- And hither and thither she came and went,
- While the loom stood still as it stood before.
-
- “Ah! life is too busy at noon,” she said;
- “My web must wait till the eventide,
- Till the common work of the day is done,
- And my heart grows calm in the silence wide.”
- So, one by one, the hours passed on
- Till the creeping shadows had longer grown;
- Till the house was still, and the breezes slept,
- And her singing birds to their nests had flown.
-
- “And now I will weave my web,” she said,
- As she turned to her loom ere set of sun,
- And laid her hand on the shining threads
- To set them in order one by one.
- But hand was tired, and heart was weak:
- “I am not as strong as I was,” sighed she,
- “And the pattern is blurred, and the colors rare
- Are not so bright, or so fair to see!
-
- I must wait, I think, till another morn;
- I must go to my rest with my work undone;
- It is growing too dark to weave!” she cried,
- As lower and lower sank the sun.
- She dropped the shuttle; the loom stood still;
- The weaver slept in the twilight gray.
- Dear heart! Will she weave her beautiful web
- In the golden light of a longer day?
-
-
-THE “CHRISTUS” OF THE PASSION PLAY OF OBERAMMERGAU
-
- How does life seem to thee? I long to look
- Into thine inmost soul, and see if thou
- Art even as other men! Oh, set apart
- And consecrate so long to purpose high,
- Canst thou take up again our common lot,
- And live as we live? Canst thou buy and sell,
- Stoop to small needs, and petty ministries,
- Work and get gain, eat, drink, and soundly sleep,
- Sin and repent, as these thy brethren do?
- Unto what name less sacred answerest thou
- Who hast been called the Christ of Nazareth?
- Thou who hast worn the awful crown of thorns,
- Hanging like Him upon the dreadful Tree,
- Canst thou, uncrowned, forget thy royalty?
-
-
-RABBI BENAIAH
-
- Rabbi Benaiah at the close of day,
- When the low sun athwart the level sands
- Shot his long arrows, from far Eastern lands
- Homeward across the desert bent his way.
-
- Behind him trailed the lengthening caravan—
- The slow, weird camels, with monotonous pace;
- Before him, lifted in the clear, far space,
- From east to west the towers of his city ran!
-
- Impatiently he scanned the darkening sky;
- Then girding in hot haste, “What ho!” cried he,
- “Bring the swift steed Abdallah unto me!
- As rode his Bedouin master, so will I!”
-
- Soon like a bird across the waste he flew,
- Nor drew his rein till at the massive gate
- That guards the citadel’s supremest state
- He paused a moment, slowly entering through.
-
- Then down the shadowy, moonlit streets he sped;
- The city slept; but like a burning star,
- Where his own turret-chamber rose afar,
- A clear, strong light its steady radiance shed!
-
- Into his court he rode with sudden clang.
- The startled slaves bowed low, but spake no word;
- By no quick tumult was the midnight stirred,
- No shouts of welcome on the night air rang!
-
- But with slow footsteps down the turret-stairs,
- With trembling lips that hardly breathed his name,
- And sad, averted eyes, his fair wife came—
- The lady Judith—wan with tears and prayers.
-
- Then swift he cried out, less in wrath than fear,
- “Now, by my beard! is this the way ye keep
- My welcome home? Go! wake my sons from sleep,
- And let their glad tongues break the silence here!”
-
- “Not so, my dear lord! Let them rest,” she said.
- “Young eyes need slumber. But come thou with me.
- I have a trouble to make known to thee
- Ere I before thee can lift up my head.”
-
- Into an inner chamber led she him,
- And with her own hands brought him meat and wine,
- A purple robe, and linen pure and fine.
- He half forgot that her sweet eyes were dim!
-
- “Now for thy trouble!” cried he, laughing loud.
- “Hast torn thy kirtle? Are thy pearls astray?
- What! Tears? My camels o’er yon desert way
- Bring treasures that had made Queen Esther proud!”
-
- Slowly she spake, nor in his face looked she.
- “My lord, long years ago a friend of mine
- Left with me jewels, costly, rare, and fine,
- Bidding me guard them carefully till he
-
- Again should call for them. The other day
- He sent his messenger. But I have learned
- To prize them as my own! Have I not earned
- A right to keep them? Speak, my lord, I pray!”
-
- “Strange sense of honor hath a woman’s heart!”
- The rabbi answered hotly. “Now, good lack!
- Where are the jewels? I will send them back
- Ere yet the sun upon his course may start!
-
- Show me the jewels!” Up she rose as white
- As any ghost, and mutely led the way
- Into the turret-chamber whence the ray
- Seen from afar had blessed the rabbi’s sight.
-
- Then with slow, trembling hands she drew aside
- The silken curtain from before the bed
- Whereon, in snowy calm, their boys lay dead.
- “There are the jewels, O, my lord!” she cried.
-
-
-A CHILD’S THOUGHT
-
- Softly fell the twilight;
- In the glowing west
- Purple splendors faded;
- Birds had gone to rest;
- All the winds were sleeping;
- One lone whip-poor-will
- Made the silence deeper,
- Calling from the hill.
-
- Silently, serenely,
- From his mother’s knee,
- In the gathering darkness,
- Still as still could be,
- A young child watched the shadows;
- Saw the stars come out;
- Saw the weird bats flitting
- Stealthily about;
-
- Saw across the river
- How the furnace glow,
- Like a fiery pennant,
- Wavered to and fro;
- Saw the tall trees standing
- Black against the sky,
- And the moon’s pale crescent
- Swinging far and high.
-
- Deeper grew the darkness;
- Darker grew his eyes
- As he gazed around him,
- In a still surprise.
- Then intently listening,
- “What is this I hear
- All the time, dear mother,
- Sounding in my ear?”
-
- “I hear nothing,” said she,
- “Earth is hushed and still.”
- But he hearkened, hearkened,
- With an eager will,
- Till at length a quick smile
- O’er the child-face broke,
- And a kindling lustre
- In his dark eyes woke.
-
- “Listen, listen, mother!
- For I hear the sound
- Of the wheels, the great wheels
- That move the world around!”
- Oh, ears earth has dulled not!
- In your purer sphere,
- Strains from ours withholden
- Are you wise to hear?
-
-
-“GOD KNOWS”
-
- Wild and dark was the winter night
- When the emigrant ship went down,
- But just outside of the harbor bar,
- In the sight of the startled town.
- The winds howled, and the sea roared,
- And never a soul could sleep,
- Save the little ones on their mothers’ breasts,
- Too young to watch and weep.
-
- No boat could live in the angry surf,
- No rope could reach the land:
- There were bold, brave hearts upon the shore,
- There was many a ready hand—
- Women who prayed, and men who strove
- When prayers and work were vain;
- For the sun rose over the awful void
- And the silence of the main.
-
- All day the watchers paced the sands,
- All day they scanned the deep,
- All night the booming minute-guns
- Echoed from steep to steep.
- “Give up thy dead, O cruel sea!”
- They cried athwart the space;
- But only an infant’s fragile form
- Escaped from its stern embrace.
-
- Only one little child of all
- Who with the ship went down
- That night when the happy babies slept
- So warm in the sheltered town.
- Wrapped in the glow of the morning light,
- It lay on the shifting sand,
- As fair as a sculptor’s marble dream,
- With a shell in its dimpled hand.
-
- There were none to tell of its race or kin.
- “God knoweth,” the pastor said,
- When the wondering children asked of him
- The name of the baby dead.
- And so, when they laid it away at last
- In the church-yard’s hushed repose,
- They raised a stone at the baby’s head,
- With the carven words, “God knows.”
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN ROAD
-
- Only a glimpse of mountain road
- That followed where a river flowed;
- Only a glimpse—then on we passed
- Skirting the forest dim and vast.
-
- I closed my eyes. On rushed the train
- Into the dark, then out again,
- Startling the song-birds as it flew
- The wild ravines and gorges through.
-
- But, heeding not the dangerous way
- O’erhung by sheer cliffs, rough and gray,
- I only saw, as in a dream,
- The road beside the mountain stream.
-
- No smoke curled upward in the air,
- No meadow-lands stretched broad and fair;
- But towering peaks rose far and high,
- Piercing the clear, untroubled sky.
-
- Yet down the yellow, winding road
- That followed where the river flowed,
- I saw a long procession pass
- As shadows over bending grass.
-
- The young, the old, the sad, the gay,
- Whose feet had worn that narrow way,
- Since first within the dusky glade
- Some Indian lover wooed his maid;
-
- Or silent crept from tree to tree—
- Spirit of stealthy vengeance, he!
- Or breathless crouched while through the brake
- The wild deer stole his thirst to slake.
-
- The barefoot school-boys rushing out,
- An eager, crowding, roisterous rout;
- The sturdy lads; the lassies gay
- As bobolinks in merry May;
-
- The farmer whistling to his team
- When first the dawn begins to gleam;
- The loaded wains that one by one
- Drag slowly home at set of sun;
-
- Young lovers straying hand in hand
- Within a fair, enchanted land;
- And many a bride with lingering feet;
- And many a matron calm and sweet;
-
- And many an old man bent with pain;
- And many a solemn funeral train;
- And sometimes, red against the sky,
- An army’s banners waving high!
-
- All mysteries of life and death
- To which the spirit answereth,
- Are thine, O lonely mountain road,
- That followed where the river flowed!
-
-
-ENTERING IN
-
- The church was dim and silent
- With the hush before the prayer,
- Only the solemn trembling
- Of the organ stirred the air;
- Without, the sweet, still sunshine;
- Within, the holy calm
- Where priest and people waited
- For the swelling of the psalm.
-
- Slowly the door swung open,
- And a trembling baby girl,
- Brown-eyed, with brown hair falling
- In many a wavy curl,
- With soft cheeks flushing hotly,
- Shy glances downward thrown,
- And small hands clasped before her,
- Stood in the aisle alone.
-
- Stood half abashed, half frightened,
- Unknowing where to go,
- While like a wind-rocked flower,
- Her form swayed to and fro,
- And the changing color fluttered
- In the little troubled face,
- As from side to side she wavered
- With a mute, imploring grace.
-
- It was but for a moment;
- What wonder that we smiled,
- By such a strange, sweet picture
- From holy thoughts beguiled?
- Then up rose someone softly:
- And many an eye grew dim,
- As through the tender silence
- He bore the child with him.
-
- And I—I wondered (losing
- The sermon and the prayer)
- If when sometime I enter
- The “many mansions” fair,
- And stand, abashed and drooping,
- In the portal’s golden glow,
- Our God will send an angel
- To show me where to go!
-
-
-A FLOWER FOR THE DEAD
-
- You placed this flower in her hand, you say?
- This pure, pale rose in her hand of clay?
- Could she but lift her sealèd eyes,
- They would meet your own with a grieved surprise!
-
- She has been your wife for many a year,
- When clouds hung low and when skies were clear;
- At your feet she laid her life’s glad spring,
- And her summer’s glorious blossoming.
-
- Her whole heart went with the hand you won;
- If its warm love waned as the years went on,
- If it chilled in the grasp of an icy spell,
- What was the reason? I pray you tell!
-
- You cannot? I can; and beside her bier
- My soul must speak and your soul must hear.
- If she was not all that she might have been,
- Hers was the sorrow, yours the sin.
-
- Whose was the fault if she did not grow
- Like a rose in the summer? Do you know?
- Does a lily grow when its leaves are chilled?
- Does it bloom when its root is winter-killed?
-
- For a little while, when you first were wed,
- Your love was like sunshine round her shed;
- Then a something crept between you two,
- You led where she could not follow you.
-
- With a man’s firm tread you went and came;
- You lived for wealth, for power, for fame;
- Shut in to her woman’s work and ways,
- She heard the nation chant your praise.
-
- But ah! you had dropped her hand the while;
- What time had you for a kiss, a smile?
- You two, with the same roof overhead,
- Were as far apart as the sundered dead!
-
- You, in your manhood’s strength and prime;
- She, worn and faded before her time.
- ’Tis a common story. This rose, you say,
- You laid in her pallid hand to-day?
-
- When did you give her a flower before?
- Ah, well!—what matter when all is o’er?
- Yet stay a moment; you’ll wed again.
- I mean no reproach; ’tis the way of men.
-
- But I pray you think when some fairer face
- Shines like a star from her wonted place,
- That love will starve if it is not fed;
- That true hearts pray for their daily bread.
-
-
-THOU KNOWEST
-
- Thou knowest, O my Father! Why should I
- Weary high heaven with restless prayers and tears?
- Thou knowest all! My heart’s unuttered cry
- Hath soared beyond the stars and reached Thine ears.
-
- Thou knowest—ah, Thou knowest! Then what need,
- O, loving God, to tell Thee o’er and o’er,
- And with persistent iteration plead
- As one who crieth at some closèd door?
-
- “Tease not!” we mothers to our children say—
- “Our wiser love will grant whate’er is best.”
- Shall we, Thy children, run to Thee alway,
- Begging for this and that in wild unrest?
-
- I dare not clamor at the heavenly gate,
- Lest I should lose the high, sweet strains within;
- O, Love Divine! I can but stand and wait
- Till Perfect Wisdom bids me enter in!
-
-
-WINTER
-
- O my roses, lying underneath the snow!
- Do you still remember summer’s warmth and glow?
- Do you thrill, remembering how your blushes burned
- When the Day-god on you ardent glances turned?
-
- Great tree, wildly stretching bare arms up to heaven,
- Do you think how softly, on some warm June even,
- All your young leaves whispered, all your birds sang low,
- As with rhythmic motion boughs swayed to and fro?
-
- River, lying whitely in a frozen sleep,
- Know you how your pulses used to throb and leap?
- How you danced and sparkled on your happy way,
- In the summer mornings when the world was gay?
-
- Dear Earth, dumbly waiting God’s appointed time,
- Are you faint with longing for the voice sublime?
- Wrapped in stony silence, does your great heart beat,
- Listening in the darkness for the coming of His feet?
-
-
-FIVE
-
- “But a week is so long!” he said,
- With a toss of his curly head.
- “One, two, three, four, five, six, seven!—
- Seven whole days! Why, in six you know
- (You said it yourself—you told me so)
- The great GOD up in heaven
- Made all the earth and the seas and skies,
- The trees and the birds and the butterflies!
- How can I wait for my seeds to grow!”
-
- “But a month is so long!” he said,
- With a droop of his boyish head.
- “Hear me count—one, two, three, four—
- Four whole weeks, and three days more;
- Thirty-one days, and each will creep
- As the shadows crawl over yonder steep.
- Thirty-one nights, and I shall lie
- Watching the stars climb up the sky!
- How can I wait till a month is o’er?”
-
- “But a year is so long!” he said,
- Uplifting his bright young head.
- “All the seasons must come and go
- Over the hills with footsteps slow—
- Autumn and winter, summer and spring;
- Oh, for a bridge of gold to fling
- Over the chasm deep and wide,
- That I might cross to the other side,
- Where she is waiting—my love, my bride!”
-
- “Ten years may be long,” he said,
- Slow raising his stately head,
- “But there’s much to win, there is much to lose;
- A man must labor, a man must choose,
- And he must be strong to wait!
- The years may be long, but who would wear
- The crown of honor, must do and dare!
- No time has he to toy with fate
- Who would climb to manhood’s high estate!”
-
- “Ah! life is not long!” he said,
- Bowing his grand white head.
- “One, two, three, four, five, six, seven!
- Seven times ten are seventy.
- Seventy years! as swift their flight
- As swallows cleaving the morning light,
- Or golden gleams at even.
- Life is short as a summer night—
- How long, O GOD! is eternity?”
-
-
-UNSOLVED
-
- ’Tis the old unanswered question! Since the stars together sung,
- In the glory of the morning, when the earth was fair and young,
-
- Man hath asked it o’er and over, of the heavens so far and high,
- And from out the mystic silence never voice hath made reply!
-
- Yet again to-night I ask it, though I know, O friend of mine,
- There will come, to all my asking, never answering voice of thine.
-
- Ah! how many times the grasses have grown green above thy grave,
- And how many times above it have we heard the cold winds rave!
-
- Thou hast solved the eternal problem that the ages hold in fee;
- Thou dost know what we but dream of; where we marvel, thou dost see.
-
- What is truth, and what is fable; what the prophets saw who trod
- In their rapt, ecstatic visions up the holy mount of God!
-
- Not of these high themes I question—but, O friend, I fain would know
- How beyond the silent river all the long years come and go!
-
- Where they are, our well-belovèd, who have vanished from our sight,
- As the stars fade out of heaven at the dawning of the light;
-
- How they live and how they love there, in the “somewhere” of our
- dreams;
- In the “city lying four-square” by the everlasting streams!
-
- Oh, the mystery of being! Which is better, life or death?
- Thou hast tried them both, O comrade, yet thy voice ne’er answereth!
-
- Hast thou grown as grow the angels? Doth thy spirit still aspire
- As the flame that soareth upward, mounting higher still, and higher?
-
- In the flush of early manhood all thy earthly days were done;
- Short thy struggle and endeavor ere the peace of heaven was won.
-
- But for us who stayed behind thee—oh! our hands are worn with toil,
- And upon our souls, it may be, are the stains of earthly moil.
-
- Hast thou kept the lofty beauty and the glory of thy youth?
- Dost thou see our temples whitening, smiling softly in thy ruth?
-
- But for us who bear the burdens that you dropped so long ago,
- All the cares you have forgotten, and the pains you missed, we know.
-
- Yet—the question still remaineth! Which is better, death or life?
- The not doing, or the doing? Joy of calm, or joy of strife?
-
- Which is better—to be saved from temptation and from sin,
- Or to wrestle with the dragon and the glorious fight to win?
-
- Ah! we know not, but God knoweth! All resolves itself to this—
- That He gave to us the warfare, and to thee the heavenly bliss.
-
- It was best for thee to go hence in the morning of the day;
- Till the evening shadows lengthen it is best for us to stay!
-
-
-QUIETNESS
-
- I would be quiet, Lord,
- Nor tease, nor fret;
- Not one small need of mine
- Wilt Thou forget.
-
- I am not wise to know
- What most I need;
- I dare not cry too loud
- Lest Thou shouldst heed:
-
- Lest Thou at length shouldst say,
- “Child, have thy will;
- As thou hast chosen, lo!
- Thy cup I fill!”
-
- What I most crave, perchance
- Thou wilt withhold,
- As we from hands unmeet
- Keep pearls, or gold;
-
- As we, when childish hands
- Would play with fire,
- Withhold the burning goal
- Of their desire.
-
- Yet choose Thou for me—Thou
- Who knowest best;
- This one short prayer of mine
- Holds all the rest!
-
-
-THE DIFFERENCE
-
- Only a week ago and thou wert here!
- I touched thy hand, I saw thy dear, dark eyes,
- I kissed thy tender lips, I felt thee near,
- I spake, and listened to thy low replies.
-
- To-day what leagues between us! Hill and vale,
- The rolling prairies and the mighty seas;
- Gray forest reaches where the wild winds wail,
- And mountain crests uplifted to the breeze!
-
- So far thou art, who wert of late so near!
- The stars we watched have changed not in the skies;
- Still do thy hyacinth bells their beauty wear,
- Yet half a continent between us lies!
-
- But swift as thought along the “singing wires”
- There flies a message like a bright-winged bird—
- “All’s well! All’s well!” and ne’er from woodland choirs
- By gladder music hath the air been stirred!
-
- * * * * *
-
- But thou, O thou, who but a week ago
- Passed calmly out beyond our yearning gaze,
- As some grand ship, all solemnly and slow,
- Sails out of sight beyond the gathering haze—
-
- Oh, where art _thou_? In what far distant realm,
- What star in yon resplendent fields of light,
- On what fair isle that no rude seas may whelm,
- Dost thou, O brother, find thy home to-night?
-
- Or art thou near us? There are those who say
- That but a breath divides our world from thine;
- A little cloud that may be blown away—
- A gossamer veil than spider’s web more fine.
-
- Dost thou, a shadowy presence, linger near
- The happy paths that thou wert wont to tread,
- Where woods were still, and shining brooks ran clear,
- And waving boughs arched greenly overhead?
-
- Oh! be thou far or near, it is the same!
- From thee there floats no message thro’ the air;
- No glad “All’s well” comes to us in thy name
- That we the joy of thy new life may share!
-
-
-MY BIRTHDAY
-
- My birthday!—“How many years ago?
- Twenty or thirty?” Don’t ask me!
- “Forty or fifty?”—How can I tell?
- I do not remember my birth, you see!
-
- It is hearsay evidence—nothing more!
- Once on a time, the legends say,
- A girl was born—and that girl was I.
- How can I vouch for the truth, I pray?
-
- I know I am here, but when I came
- Let some one wiser than I am tell!
- Did this sweet flower you plucked for me
- Know when its bud began to swell?
-
- How old am I? You ought to know
- Without any telling of mine, my dear!
- For when I came to this happy earth
- Were you not waiting for me here?
-
- A dark-eyed boy on the northern hills,
- Chasing the hours with flying feet,
- Did you not know your wife was born,
- By a subtile prescience, faint yet sweet?
-
- Did never a breath from the south-land come,
- With sunshine laden and rare perfume,
- To lift your hair with a soft caress,
- And waken your heart to richer bloom?
-
- Not one? O mystery strange as life!
- To think that we who are now so dear
- Were once in our dreams so far apart,
- Nor cared if the other were far or near!
-
- But—how old am I? You must tell.
- Just as old as I seem to you!
- Nor shall I a day older be
- While life remaineth and love is true!
-
-
-A RED ROSE
-
- O Rose, my red, red Rose,
- Where has thy beauty fled?
- Low in the west is a sea of fire,
- But the great white moon soars high and higher,
- As my garden walks I tread.
-
- Thy white rose-sisters gleam
- Like stars in the darkening sky;
- They bend their brows with a sudden thrill
- To the kiss of the night-dews soft and still,
- When the warm south wind floats by.
-
- And the stately lilies stand
- Fair in the silvery light,
- Like saintly vestals, pale in prayer;
- Their pure breath sanctifies the air,
- As its fragrance fills the night.
-
- But O, my red, red Rose!
- My Rose with the crimson lips!
- So bright thou wert in the sunny morn,
- Yet now thou art hiding all forlorn,
- And thy soul is in drear eclipse!
-
- Dost thou mourn thy lover dead—
- Thy lover, the lordly Sun?
- Didst thou see him sink in the glowing west
- With pomp of banners above his rest?
- He shall rise again, sweet one!
-
- He shall rise with his eye of fire—
- And thy passionate heart shall beat,
- And thy radiant blushes burn again,
- With the joy of rapture after pain
- At the coming of his feet!
-
-
-TWENTY-ONE
-
- Grown to man’s stature! O my little child!
- My bird that sought the skies so long ago!
- My fair, sweet blossom, pure and undefiled,
- How have the years flown since we laid thee low!
-
- What have they been to thee? If thou wert here
- Standing beside thy brothers, tall and fair,
- With bearded lip, and dark eyes shining clear,
- And glints of summer sunshine in thy hair,
-
- I should look up into thy face and say,
- Wavering, perhaps, between a tear and smile,
- “O my sweet son, thou art a man to-day!”—
- And thou wouldst stoop to kiss my lips the while.
-
- But—up in heaven—how is it with thee, dear?
- Art thou a man—to man’s full stature grown?
- Dost thou count time as we do, year by year?
- And what of all earth’s changes hast thou known?
-
- Thou hadst not learned to love me. Didst thou take
- Any small germ of love to heaven with thee,
- That thou hast watched and nurtured for my sake,
- Waiting till I its perfect flower may see?
-
- What is it to have lived in heaven always?
- To have no memory of pain or sin?
- Ne’er to have known in all the calm, bright days,
- The jar and fret of earth’s discordant din?
-
- Thy brothers—they are mortal—they must tread
- Ofttimes in rough, hard ways, with bleeding feet;
- Must fight with dragons, must bewail their dead,
- And fierce Apollyon face to face must meet.
-
- I, who would give my very life for theirs,
- I cannot save them from earth’s pain or loss;
- I cannot shield them from its griefs or cares;
- Each human heart must bear alone its cross!
-
- Was God, then, kinder unto thee than them,
- O thou whose little life was but a span?—
- Ah, think it not! In all his diadem
- No star shines brighter than the kingly man,
-
- Who nobly earns whatever crown he wears,
- Who grandly conquers, or as grandly dies;
- And the white banner of his manhood bears,
- Through all the years uplifted to the skies!
-
- What lofty pæans shall the victor greet!
- What crown resplendent for his brow be fit!
- O child, if earthly life be bitter-sweet,
- Hast thou not something missed in missing it?
-
-
-SINGING IN THE DARK
-
- O ye little warblers, flying fast and far
- From the balmy south-land, where the roses are,
- Robins red and blue-birds, do ye faint to see
- How the chill snow-blossoms whiten shrub and tree?
-
- Through the snowy valley cold the north winds sweep;
- Mother earth, half-wakened, turns again to sleep;
- Silent lies the river in an icy trance,
- And the frozen meadows wait the sun’s hot glance.
-
- Dull and gray the skies are. Soft and blue were those
- That so late above you bent at daylight’s close;
- Do ye grieve, remembering all the balm and bloom,
- All the warmth and sweetness of the starlit gloom?
-
- Do ye sadly wonder what strange impulse drew
- All your flashing pinions the far ether through?
- Do ye count it madness that so wide ye strayed
- From the starry jasmine and the orange shade?
-
- Yet this morn I heard ye singing in the dark,
- Songs of such rare sweetness that the world might hark!
- O ye blessed minstrels, silent not for pain,
- God is in the heavens, and your sun shall shine again!
-
-
- THOMAS MOORE
- MAY 28, 1779-1879
-
-
- Hush! O be ye silent, all ye birds of May!
- Cease the high, clear trilling of your roundelay!
- Be the merry minstrels mute in vale, on hill,
- And in every tree-top let the song be still!
-
- O ye winds, breathe softly! Let your voices die
- In a low, faint whisper, sweet as love’s first sigh;
- O ye zephyrs, blowing over beds of flowers,
- Be ye still as dews are in the starry hours!
-
- O ye laughing waters, leaping here and there,
- Filling with sweet clamor all the summer air,
- Can ye not be quiet? Hush, ye mountain streams,
- Dancing to glad music from the world of dreams!
-
- And thou, mighty ocean, beating on the shore,
- Bid thy angry billows stay their thunderous roar!
- O ye waves, lapse softly, in such slumberous calm
- As ye know when circling isles of crested palm!
-
- Bells in tower and steeple, be ye mute to-day
- As the bell-flowers rocking in the winds of May!
- Cease awhile, ye minstrels, though your notes be clear
- As the strains that soar in heaven’s high atmosphere!
-
- Earth, bid all thy children hearken—for a voice,
- Sweeter than a seraph’s, bids their hearts rejoice;
- Floating down the silence of a hundred years,
- Lo! its deathless music thrills our listening ears!
-
- ’Tis the voice our fathers loved so long ago,
- Songs to which they listened warbling clear and low;
- Hark, “Ye Disconsolate!” while the minstrel pure
- Sings—“Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot cure!”
-
- Sings of love’s wild rapture triumphing o’er pain,
- Glorying in giving, counting loss but gain;
- Sings the warrior’s passion and the patriot’s pride,
- And the brave, unshrinking, who for glory died—
-
- Sings of Erin smiling through a mist of tears;
- Of her patient waiting all the weary years;
- Sings the pain of parting, and the joy divine
- When the bliss of meeting stirs the heart like wine;
-
- Sings of memories waking in “the stilly night;”
- Of the “young dreams” fading in the morning light;
- Of the “rose of summer” perishing too soon;
- Of the early splendors waning ere the noon!
-
- O thou tender singer! All the air to-day
- Trembles with the burden of thy “farewell” lay;
- Crowns and thrones may crumble, into darkness hurled,
- Yet is song immortal; song shall rule the world!
-
-
-A LAST WORD
-
- Where will it go to reach thine ears
- My father, thou dost wear
- Somewhere beyond the stars to-night
- Thy crown of silver hair.
-
- Somewhere thou _art_. No wandering ghost
- In vast, vague realms of space—
- But thine own self, majestic, fair,
- In thine appointed place.
-
- By one long look thy soul replied
- When last I cried to thee,
- As thou wert drifting out of sight
- Upon the unknown sea;
-
- And well I know that thou wouldst turn
- Even from joys divine,
- If but thy listening ears could hear
- One faltering word of mine.
-
- Yet, knowing this, I cannot lay
- My book upon thy knee,
- Saying, “O father, once again
- I bring my sheaves to thee!”
-
-
-
-
-SONNETS
-
-
-THE SONNET
-
-
-I. TO A CRITIC
-
-
- “It is but cunning artifice,” you say?
- “To it no throb of nature answereth?
- It hath no living pulse, no vital breath,
- This puppet, fashioned in an elder day,
- Through whose strait lips no heart can cry or pray?”
- O deaf and blind of soul, these words that saith!
- If that thine ear is dull, what hindereth
- That quicker ears should hear the bugles play
- And the trump call to battle? Since the stars
- First sang together, and the exulting skies
- Thrilled to their music, earth hath never heard,
- Above the tumult of her worldly jars,
- Or loftier songs or prayers than those that rise
- Where the high sonnet soareth like a bird!
-
-
-II. TO A POET
-
- Thou who wouldst wake the sonnet’s silver lyre,
- Make thine hands clean! Then, as on eagles’ wings,
- Above the soiling touch of sordid things,
- Bid thy soul soar till, mounting high and higher,
- It feels the glow of pure celestial fire,
- Bathes in clear light, and hears the song that rings
- Through heaven’s high arches when some angel brings
- Gifts to the Throne, on wings that never tire!
- It hath a subtile music, strangely sweet,
- Yet all unmeet for dance or roundelay,
- Or idle love that fadeth like a flower.
- It is the voice of hearts that strongly beat,
- The cry of souls that grandly love and pray,
- The trumpet-peal that thrills the battle-hour!
-
-
-AT REST
-
- “‘When Greek meets Greek,’ you know,” he sadly said,
- “‘Then comes the tug of war.’ I deem him great,
- And own him wise and good. Yet adverse fate
- Hath made us enemies. If I were dead,
- And buried deep with grave-mould on my head,
- I still believe that, came he soon or late
- Where I was lying in my last estate,
- My dust would quiver at his lightest tread!”
- The slow years passed; and one fair summer night,
- When the low sun was reddening all the west,
- I saw two grave-mounds, where the grass was bright,
- Lying so near each other that the crest
- Of the same wave touched each with amber light.
- But, ah, dear hearts! how undisturbed their rest!
-
-
-TOO WIDE!
-
- O mighty Earth, thou art too wide, to wide!
- Too vast thy continents, too broad thy seas,
- Too far thy prairies stretching fair as these
- Now reddening in the sunset’s crimson tide!
- Sundered by thee how have thy children cried
- Each to some other, until every breeze
- Has borne a burden of fond messages
- That all unheard in thy lone wastes have died!
- Draw closer, O dear Earth, thy hills that soar
- Up to blue skies such countless leagues apart!
- Bid thou thine awful spaces smaller grow!
- Compass thy billows with a narrower shore,
- That yearning lips may meet, heart beat to heart,
- And parted souls forget their lonely woe!
-
-
- MERCÉDÈS
- (June 27, 1878)
-
-
- O fair young queen, who liest dead to-day
- In thy proud palace o’er the moaning sea,
- With still, white hands that never more may be
- Lifted to pluck life’s roses bright with May—
- Little is it to you that, far away,
- Where skies you knew not bend above the free,
- Hearts touched with tender pity turn to thee,
- And for thy sake a shadow dims the day!
- But youth and love and womanhood are one,
- Though across sundering seas their signals fly;
- Young Love’s pure kiss, the joy but just begun,
- The hope of motherhood, thy people’s cry—
- O thou fair child! was it not hard to die
- And leave so much beneath the summer sun?
-
-
-GRASS-GROWN
-
- Grass grows at last above all graves, you say?
- Why, therein lies the sharpest sting of all!
- To think that stars will rise and dews will fall,
- Hills flush with purple splendor, soft winds play
- Where roses bloom and violets of May,
- Robin to robin in the tree-tops call,
- And all sweet sights and sounds the senses thrall,
- Just as they did before that strange, sad day!
- Does that bring comfort? Are we glad to know
- That our eyes sometime must forget to weep,
- Even as June forgets December’s snow?
- Over the graves where our belovèd sleep,
- We charge thee, Time, let not the green grass grow,
- Nor your relentless mosses coldly creep!
-
-
-TO ZÜLMA
-
-
-I.
-
-
- Sometimes my heart grows faint with longing, dear—
- Longing to see thy face, to touch thy hand.
- But mountains rise between us; leagues of land
- Stretch on and on where mighty lakes lie clear
- In the far spaces, and great forests rear
- Their sombre crowns on many a lonely strand!
- Yet, O my fair child, canst thou understand,
- Thou whose dear place was once beside me here,
- How yet I dare not pray that thou and I
- Again may dwell together as of old?
- There is a gate between us, locked and barred,
- Over which we may not climb; and standing nigh
- Is the white angel Sorrow, who doth hold
- The only key that may unlock its ward!
-
-
-II.
-
- Yet think not I would have it otherwise!
- Our God, who knoweth women’s hearts, knows best—
- And every little bird must build its nest
- From whence it soareth, singing, to the skies.
- What though the one that thou hast builded lies
- Where sinks the sun to its enchanted rest,
- If, on each breeze that bloweth east or west,
- To thee, on swiftest wing, my spirit flies?
- We are not far apart, and ne’er shall be!
- For Love, like God, knoweth not time, nor space,
- And it is freer than the viewless air;
- And well I know, belovèd, that if we
- Trod different planets in yon starry space
- We should reach out, and find each other there!
-
-
-SLEEP
-
- Who calls thee “gentle Sleep?” O! rare coquette,
- Who comest crowned with poppies, thou shouldst wear
- Nettles instead, or thistles, in thine hair;
- For thou ’rt the veriest elf that ever yet
- Made weary mortals sigh and toss and fret!
- Thou dost float softly through the drowsy air
- Hovering as if to kiss my lips and share
- My restless pillow; but ere I can set
- My arms to clasp thee, without sign or speech,
- Save one swift, mocking smile thou ’rt out of reach!
- Yet, sometime, thou, or one as like to thee
- As sister is to sister, shalt draw near
- With such soft lullabies for my dull ear,
- That neither life nor love shall waken me!
-
-
- IN KING’S CHAPEL
- (BOSTON, November 3, 1878)
-
-
- O, Lord of Hosts, how sacred is this place,
- Where, though the tides of time resistless flow,
- And the long generations come and go,
- Thou still abidest! In this holy space
- The very airs are hushed before Thy face,
- And wait in reverent calm, as voices low
- Blend in the prayers and chantings, soft and slow,
- And the gray twilight stealeth on apace.
- Hark! There are whispers from the time-worn walls;
- The mighty dead glide up the shadowy aisle;
- And there are rustlings as of angels’ wings
- While from the choir the heavenly music falls!
- Well may we bow in grateful praise the while—
- In the King’s Chapel reigns the King of Kings!
-
-
-TO-DAY
-
- What dost thou bring to me, O fair To-day,
- That comest o’er the mountains with swift feet?
- All the young birds make haste thy steps to greet,
- And all the dewy roses of the May
- Turn red and white with joy. The breezes play
- On their soft harps a welcome low and sweet;
- All nature hails thee, glad thy face to meet,
- And owns thy presence in a brighter ray.
- But my poor soul distrusts thee! One as fair
- As thou art, O To-day, drew near to me,
- Serene and smiling, yet she bade me wear
- The sudden sackcloth of a great despair!
- O, pitiless! that through the wandering air
- Sent no kind warning of the ill to be!
-
-
-F. A. F.
-
- When upon eyes long dim, to whom the light
- Of sun and stars had unfamiliar grown—
- Eyes that so long in deepening shades had known
- The mystic visions of the inner sight—
- Day broke, at last, after the weary night,
- I cannot think its sudden glory shone
- In pitiless brightness, dazzling, clear, and white—
- A piercing splendor on the darkness thrown!
- Softly as moonlight steals upon the skies,
- Slowly as shadows creep at set of sun,
- Gently as falls a mother’s tender kiss,
- So softly stole the light upon his eyes;
- So slowly passed the shadows one by one;
- So gently dawned the morning of his bliss!
-
-
-DAY AND NIGHT
-
-
-I.
-
- When I awake at morn, refreshed, renewed,
- Glad with the gladness of the jocund day
- And jubilant with all the birds of May,
- My spirit shrinks from Night’s dull quietude.
- With it and Sleep I have a deadly feud.
- I hear the young winds in the maples play,
- The river singing on its happy way,
- The swallows twittering to their callow brood.
- The fresh, fair earth is full of joyous life;
- The tree-tops toss in billowy unrest;
- The very mountain shadows are astir!
- With eager heart I thrill to join the strife;
- Doing, not dreaming, to my soul seems best,
- And I am lordly Day’s true worshipper!
-
-
-II.
-
- But when with Day’s long weariness oppressed,
- With folded hands I watch the sun go down,
- Lighting far torches in the steepled town,
- And kindling all the glowing, reddening west;
- When every sleepy bird has sought its nest;
- When the long shadows from the hills are thrown,
- And Night’s soft airs about the world are blown,
- Thou heart of mine, how sweet it is to rest!
- O, Israfil! Thou of the tuneful voice!
- It will be nightfall when thy voice I hear,
- Summoning me to slumber soft and low!
- Day will be done. Then will I not rejoice
- That all my tasks are o’er and rest is near,
- And, like a tired child, be glad to go?
-
-
-THY NAME
-
- What matters it what men may call Thee, Thou,
- The Eternal One, who reign’st supreme, alone,
- The boundless universe Thy mighty throne?
- When souls before Thee reverently bow,
- Oh, carest Thou what name the lips breathe low
- Jove, or Osiris, or the God Unknown
- To whom the Athenians raised their altar stone,
- Or Thine, O Holiest, unto whom we vow?
- The sun hath many names in many lands;
- Yet upon all its golden splendors fall,
- Where’er, from age to age entreating still,
- The adoring earth uplifts its waiting hands.
- Love knows all names and answereth to all—
- Who worships Thee may call Thee what he will!
-
-
-RESURGAMUS
-
- What though we sleep a thousand leagues apart,
- I by my mountains, you beside your sea?
- What though our moss-grown graves divided be
- By the wide reaches of a continent’s heart?
- When from long slumber we at length shall start
- Wakened to stronger life, exultant, free,
- This mortal clothed in immortality,
- Where shall I find my heaven save where thou art?
- Straight as a bird that hasteth to its nest,
- Glad as an eagle soaring to the light,
- Swift as the thought that bears my soul to thine
- When yon lone star hangs trembling in the west,
- So straight, so glad, so swift to thee my flight,
- Led on through farthest space by love divine!
-
-
-AT THE TOMB
-
- O Soul! rememberest thou how Mary went
- In the gray dawn to weep beside the tomb
- Where one she loved lay buried? Through the gloom,
- Pallid with pain, and with long anguish spent,
- Still pressed she on with solemn, high intent,
- Bearing her costly gifts of rare perfume
- And spices odorous with eastern bloom,
- Unto the Master’s sepulchre! But rent
- Was the great stone from its low door away;
- And when she stooped to peer with startled eyes
- Into the dark where slept the pallid clay,
- Lo, it was gone! And there in heavenly guise,
- So grandly calm, so fair in morn’s first ray,
- She found an angel from the upper skies!
-
-
-THREE DAYS
-
-
-I.
-
- What shall I bring to lay upon thy bier
- O Yesterday! thou day forever dead?
- With what strange garlands shall I crown thy head,
- Thou silent One? For rose and rue are near
- Which thou thyself didst bring me; heart’s-ease clear
- And dark in purple opulence that shed
- Rare odors round; wormwood, and herbs that fed
- My soul with bitterness—they all are here!
- When to the banquet I was called by thee
- Thou gavest me rags and royal robes to wear;
- Honey and aloes mingled in the cup
- Of costly wine that thou didst pour for me;
- Thy throne, thy footstool, thou didst bid me share;
- On crusts and heavenly manna bade me sup!
-
-
-II.
-
- Thou art no dreamer, O thou stern To-day!
- The dead past had its dreams; the real is thine.
- An armored knight, in panoply divine,
- It is not thine to loiter by the way,
- Though all the meads with summer flowers be gay,
- Though birds sing for thee, and though fair stars shine,
- And every god pours for thee life’s best wine!
- Nor friend nor foe hath strength to bid thee stay.
- Gleaming beneath thy brows with smouldering fire
- Thine eyes look out upon the eternal hills
- As forth thou ridest with thy spear in rest.
- From the far heights a voice cries, “Come up higher!”
- And in swift answer all thy being thrills,
- When lo! ’tis night—thy sun is in the west!
-
-
-III.
-
- But thou, To-morrow! never yet was born
- In earth’s dull atmosphere a thing so fair—
- Never yet tripped, with footsteps light as air,
- So glad a vision o’er the hills of morn!
- Fresh as the radiant dawning—all unworn
- By lightest touch of sorrow, or of care,
- Thou dost the glory of the morning share
- By snowy wings of hope and faith upborne!
- O fair To-morrow! what our souls have missed
- Art thou not keeping for us, somewhere, still?
- The buds of promise that have never blown—
- The tender lips that we have never kissed—
- The song whose high, sweet strain eludes our skill—
- The one white pearl that life hath never known!
-
-
-DARKNESS
-
- Come, blessed Darkness, come, and bring thy balm
- For eyes grown weary of the garish Day!
- Come with thy soft, slow steps, thy garments gray,
- Thy veiling shadows, bearing in thy palm
- The poppy-seeds of slumber, deep and calm!
- Come with thy patient stars, whose far-off ray
- Steals the hot fever of the soul away,
- Thy stillness, sweeter than a chanted psalm!
- O blessed Darkness, Day indeed is fair,
- And Light is dear when summer days are long,
- And one by one the harvesters go by;
- But so is rest sweet, and surcease from care,
- And folded palms, and hush of evensong,
- And all the unfathomed silence of the sky!
-
-
-SILENCE
-
- O golden Silence, bid our souls be still,
- And on the foolish fretting of our care
- Lay thy soft touch of healing unaware!
- Once, for a half hour, even in heaven the thrill
- Of the clear harpings ceased the air to fill
- With soft reverberations. Thou wert there,
- And all the shining seraphs owned thee fair—
- A white, hushed Presence on the heavenly hill.
- Bring us thy peace, O Silence! Song is sweet;
- Tuneful is baby laughter, and the low
- Murmur of dying winds among the trees,
- And dear the music of Love’s hurrying feet;
- Yet only he who knows thee learns to know
- The secret soul of loftiest harmonies.
-
-
-SANCTIFIED
-
- A holy presence hath been here, and, lo,
- The place is sanctified! From off thy feet
- Put thou thy shoes, my soul! The air is sweet
- Even yet with heavenly odors, and I know
- If thou dost listen, thou wilt hear the flow
- Of most celestial music, and the beat
- Of rhythmic pinions. It is then most meet
- That thou shouldst watch and wait, lest to and fro
- Should pass the heavenly messengers and thou,
- Haply, shouldst miss their coming. O my soul,
- Count this fair room a temple from whose shrine,
- Led by an angel, though we know not how,
- Thy friend and lover dropped the cup of dole,
- And passed from thy love to the Love Divine!
-
-
-A MESSAGE
-
- I bid thee sing the song I would have sung—
- The high, pure strain that since my soul was born,
- Clearer and sweeter than the bells of morn,
- Through all its chambers hath divinely rung!
- In thee let my whole being find a tongue;
- Pluck thou the rose where I have plucked the thorn,
- Nor leave the perfect flower to fade forlorn.
- Youth holds the world in fee—and thou art young!
- O my glad singer of the tuneful voice,
- Where my wing falters be thou strong to soar,
- Striking the deep, clear notes beyond my reach,
- Beyond the plummet of a woman’s speech.
- Sing my songs for me, and from some far shore
- My happy soul shall hear thee and rejoice!
-
-
-WHEN LESSER LOVES
-
- When lesser loves by the relentless flow
- Of mighty currents from my arms were torn
- And swept, unheeding, to that silent bourn
- Whose mystic shades no living man may know,
- By night, by day, I sang my songs; and so,
- Out of the sackcloth that my soul had worn,
- Weaving my purple, I forgot to mourn,
- Pouring my grief out in melodious woe!
- Now am I dumb, dear heart. My lips are mute.
- Yet if from yonder blue height thou dost lean
- Earthward, remembering love’s last wordless kiss,
- Know thou no trembling thrills of harp or lute,
- Dying soft wails and tender songs between,
- Were half so voiceful as this silence is!
-
-
-GEORGE ELIOT
-
- Pass on, O world, and leave her to her rest!
- Brothers, be silent while the drifting snow
- Weaves its white pall above her, lying low
- With empty hands crossed idly on her breast.
- O sisters, let her sleep! while unrepressed
- Your pitying tears fall silently and slow,
- Washing her spotless, in their crystal flow,
- Of that one stain whereof she stands confessed.
- Are we so pure that we should scoff at her,
- Or mock her now, low lying in her tomb?
- God knows how sharp the thorn her roses wore,
- Even what time their petals were astir
- In the warm sunshine, odorous with perfume.
- Leave her to Him who weighed the cross she bore!
-
-
-KNOWING
-
- One summer day, to a young child I said,
- “Write to thy mother, boy.” With earnest face,
- And laboring fingers all unused to trace
- The mystic characters, he bent his head
- (That should have danced amid the flowers instead)
- Over the blurred page for a half-hour’s space;
- Then with a sigh that burdened all the place
- Cried, “Mamma knows!” and out to sunshine sped.
- O soul of mine, when tasks are hard and long,
- And life so crowds thee with its stress and strain
- That thou, half fainting, art too tired to pray,
- Drink thou this wine of blessing and be strong!
- God knows! What though the lips be dumb with pain,
- Or the pen drops? He knows what thou wouldst say.
-
-
- A THOUGHT
- (SUGGESTED BY READING “A MIRACLE IN STONE”)
-
-
- Oh, thou supreme, all-wise, eternal One,
- Thou who art Lord of lords, and King of kings,
- In whose high praise each flaming seraph sings;
- Thou at whose word the morning stars begun
- With song and shout their glorious course to run;
- Thou unto whom the great sea lifts its wings,
- And earth, with laden hands, rich tribute brings
- From every shore that smiles beneath the sun;
- Thou who didst write thy name upon the hills
- And bid the mountains speak for thee alway,
- Yet gave sweet messages to murmuring rills,
- And to each flower that breathes its life away—
- Oh! dost thou smile, or frown, when man’s conceit
- Seeks in this pile of stone the impress of thy feet?
-
-
-TO-MORROW
-
-
-I.
-
- Mysterious One, inscrutable, unknown,
- A silent Presence, with averted face
- Whose lineaments no mortal eye can trace,
- And robes of trailing darkness round thee thrown,
- Over the midnight hills thou comest alone!
- What thou dost bring to me from farthest space,
- What blessing or what ban, what dole, what grace,
- I may not know. Thy secrets are thine own!
- Yet, asking not for lightest word or sign
- To tell me what the hidden fate may be,
- Without a murmur, or a quickened breath,
- Unshrinkingly I place my hand in thine,
- And through the shadowy depths go forth with thee
- To meet, as thou shalt lead, or life, or death!
-
-
-II.
-
- Then, if I fear not thee, thou veilèd One
- Whose face I know not, why fear I to meet
- Beyond the everlasting hills her feet
- Who cometh when all Yesterdays are done?
- Shall I, who have proved thee good, thy sister shun?
- O thou To-morrow, who dost feel the beat
- Of life’s long, rhythmic pulses, strong and sweet,
- In the far realm that hath no need of sun—
- Thou who art fairer than the fair To-day
- That I have held so dear, and loved so much—
- When, slow descending from the hills divine,
- Thou summonest me to join thee on thy way,
- Let me not shrink nor tremble at thy touch,
- Nor fear to break thy bread and drink thy wine!
-
-
-“O EARTH! ART THOU NOT WEARY?”
-
- O Earth! art thou not weary of thy graves?
- Dear, patient mother Earth, upon thy breast
- How are they heaped from farthest east to west!
- From the dim north, where the wild storm-wind raves
- O’er the cold surge that chills the shore it laves,
- To sunlit isles by softest seas caressed,
- Where roses bloom alway and song-birds nest,
- How thick they lie—like flecks upon the waves!
- There is no mountain-top so far and high,
- No desert so remote, no vale so deep,
- No spot by man so long untenanted,
- But the pale moon, slow marching up the sky,
- Sees over some lone grave the shadows creep!
- O Earth! art thou not weary of thy dead?
-
-
-ALEXANDER
-
- There was a man whom all men called The Great.
- Low lying on his death-bed, we are told,
- He bade his courtiers (when he should be cold,
- Breathless, and silent in his last estate,
- And they who were to bury him should wait
- Outside the palace) that no cerecloth’s fold
- Or winding-sheet should round his hands be rolled:
- Those helpless hands that once had ruled the state!
- Thus spake he: “On the black pall let them lie,
- Empty and lorn, that all the world may see
- How of his riches there was nothing left
- To Alexander when he came to die.”
- Lord of two worlds, as treasureless was he
- As any beggar of his crust bereft!
-
-
- THE PLACE
- “I GO TO PREPARE A PLACE FOR YOU”
-
-
-I.
-
- O Holy Place, we know not where thou art!
- Though one by one our well-beloved dead
- From our close claspings to thy bliss have fled,
- They send no word back to the breaking heart;
- And if, perchance, their angels fly athwart
- The silent reaches of the abyss wide-spread,
- The swift white-wings we see not, but instead
- Only the dark void keeping us apart.
- Where did he set thee, O thou Holy Place?
- Made he a new world in the heavens high hung,
- So far from this poor earth that even yet
- Its first glad rays have traversed not the space
- That lies between us, nor their glory flung
- On the old home its sons can ne’er forget?
-
-
-II.
-
- But what if on some fair, auspicious night,
- Like that on which the shepherds watched of old,
- Down from far skies, in burning splendor rolled,
- Shall stream the radiance of a star more bright
- Than ever yet hath shone on mortal sight—
- Swift shafts of light, like javelins of gold,
- Wave after wave of glory manifold,
- From zone to zenith flooding all the height?
- And what if, moved by some strange inner sense,
- Some instinct, than pure reason wiser far,
- Some swift clairvoyance that annulleth space,
- All men shall cry, with sudden joy intense,
- “Behold, behold this new resplendent star—
- Our heaven at last revealed!—the Place! the Place!”
-
-
-III.
-
- Then shall the heavenly host with one accord
- Veil their bright faces in obeisance meet,
- While swift they haste the Glorious One to greet.
- Then shall Orion own at last his Lord,
- And from his belt unloose the blazing sword,
- While pale proud Ashtaroth with footsteps fleet,
- Her jewelled crown drops humbly at his feet,
- And Lyra strikes her harp’s most rapturous chord.
- O Earth, bid all your lonely isles rejoice!
- Break into singing, all ye silent hills;
- And ye, tumultuous seas, make quick reply!
- Let the remotest desert find a voice!
- The whole creation to its centre thrills,
- For the new light of Heaven is in the sky!
-
-
-TO A GODDESS
-
- Lift up thy torch, O Goddess, grand and fair!
- Let its light stream across the waiting seas
- As banners float upon the yielding breeze
- From the king’s tent, his presence to declare.
- And as his heralds haste to do their share,
- Shouting his praise and sounding his decrees,
- So let the waves in loftiest symphonies
- Proclaim thy glory to the listening air!
- Thou star-crowned one, the nations watch for thee,
- For thee the patient earth has waited long—
- To thee her toiling millions stretch their hands
- From the far hills and o’er the rolling sea.
- Lift up thy torch, O beautiful and strong,
- A beacon-light to earth’s remotest lands.
-
-
- O. W. H.
- (August 29, 1809.)
-
-
- “How shall I crown this child?” fair Summer cried.
- “May wasted all her violets long ago;
- No longer on the hills June’s roses glow,
- Flushing with tender bloom the pastures wide.
- My stately lilies one by one have died:
- The clematis is but a ghost—and lo!
- In the fair meadow-lands no daisies blow;
- How shall I crown this Summer child?” she sighed.
- Then quickly smiled. “For him, for him,” she said,
- “On every hill my golden-rod shall flame,
- Token of all my prescient soul foretells.
- His shall be golden song and golden fame—
- Long golden years with love and honor wed—
- And crowns, at last, of silver immortelles!”
-
-
- GIFTS FOR THE KING
- (H. W. L., February 27th)
-
-
- What good gifts can we bring to thee, O King,
- O royal poet, on this day of days?
- No golden crown, for thou art crowned with bays;
- No jewelled sceptre, and no signet ring,
- O’er distant realms far-flashing rays to fling;
- For well we know thy beckoning finger sways
- A mightier empire, and the world obeys.
- No lute, for thou hast only need to sing;
- No rare perfumes, for thy pure life makes sweet
- The air about thee, even as when the rose
- Swings its bright censer down the garden-path.
- Love drops its fragrant lilies at thy feet;
- Fame breathes thy name to each sweet wind that blows.
- What can we bring to him who all things hath?
-
-
- RECOGNITION
- (H. W. L.)
-
-
-I.
-
- Who was the first to bid thee glad all-hail,
- O friend and master? Who with wingèd feet
- Over the heavenly hills flew, fast and fleet,
- To bring thee welcome from beyond the veil?
- The mighty bards of old?—Thy Dante, pale
- With high thoughts even yet, Virgil the sweet,
- Old Homer, trumpet-tongued, and Chaucer, meet
- To clasp thy stainless hand? What nightingale
- Of all that sing in heaven sang first to thee?
- Through all the hallelujahs didst thou hear
- Spencer still pouring his melodious lays,
- Majestic Milton’s clarion, strong and free,
- Or, golden link between the far and near,
- Bryant’s clear chanting of the eternal days?
-
-
-II.
-
- Nay, but not these! not these! Even though apace,
- Long rank on rank, with swift yet stately tread
- They came to meet thee—the immortal dead—
- Yet Love ran faster! All the lofty place,
- All the wide, luminous, enchanted space
- Glistened with Shining Ones who thither sped—
- The countless host thy song had comforted!
- What light, what love illumed each radiant face!
- The Rachels thou hadst sung to in the dark,
- The Davids who for Absaloms had wept,
- The fainting ones who drank thy balm and wine,
- High souls that soared with thee as soars the lark,
- Children who named thee, smiling, ere they slept—
- These gave thee first the heavenly countersign!
-
-
- SHAKESPEARE
- (April 23, 1664-1889)
-
-
- Nay, Master, dare we speak? O mighty shade,
- Sitting enthroned where awful splendors are,
- Beyond the light of sun, or moon, or star,
- How shall we breathe thy high name undismayed?
- Poet, in royal majesty arrayed,
- Walking with mute gods through the realms afar—
- Seer, whose wide vision time nor death can bar,
- We would but kiss thy feet, abashed, afraid!
- But yet we love thee, and great love is bold.
- Love, O our master, with his heart of flame
- And eye of fire, dares even to look on thee,
- For whom the ages lift their gates of gold;
- And his glad tongue shall syllable thy name
- Till time is lost in God’s unsounded sea!
-
-
- TO E. C. S.
- WITH A ROSE FROM CONWAY CASTLE
-
-
- On hoary Conway’s battlemented height,
- O poet-heart, I pluck for thee a rose!
- Through arch and court the sweet wind wandering goes;
- Round each high tower the rooks, in airy flight,
- Circle and wheel, all bathed in amber light;
- Low at my feet the winding river flows;
- Valley and town, entranced in deep repose,
- War doth no more appall, nor foes affright!
- Thou knowest how softly on the castle walls,
- Where mosses creep, and ivys far and free
- Fling forth their pennants to the freshening breeze,
- Like God’s own benizon this sunshine falls.
- Therefore, O friend, across the sundering seas
- Fair Conway sends this sweet wild rose to thee!
-
-
-A CHRISTMAS SONNET
-
- I wake at midnight from a slumber deep.
- Hark! are the clear stars singing? Sweet and low,
- As from far skies, floats music’s liquid flow,
- Waking earth’s happy children from their sleep.
- Now, from the bells a myriad voices leap,
- And all the brazen lilies are aglow
- With rapturous heart-beats, swinging to and fro
- As the glad chimes their rhythmic pulsing keep.
- O soul of mine, join thou the high refrain
- That rings from shore to shore, from sea to sea,
- Like song of birds that do but soar and sing!
- O heart of mine, what room hast thou for pain?
- With love and joy make holy symphony,
- And keep to-day the birthday of thy King!
-
-
-POVERTY
-
- The city woke. Down the long market-place
- Her sad eyes wandered, but no tears they shed.
- In her bare home a little child lay dead;
- Yet she was here, with white, impassive face,
- And hands that had no beauty and no grace,
- Selling her small wares for a bit of bread!
- Since they who live must eat though sore bestead
- What time had she to weep—what breathing space?
- Poor even in words, she had no fitting phrase
- Wherein to tell the story of her dole,
- But stood, like Niobe, a thing of stone,
- Or mutely went on her accustomed ways,
- Or counted her small gains, while her dumb soul,
- Shut in with grief, could only make its moan!
-
-
-SURPRISES
-
-
-I.
-
- O Earth, that had so long in darkness lain,
- Waiting and listening for the Voice that cried,
- “Let there be light!”—on thy first eventide
- What woe, what fear, wrung thy dumb soul with pain!
- In darkling space down dropt the red sun, slain,
- With all his banners drooping. Far and wide
- Spread desolation’s vast and blackening tide.
- How couldst thou know that day would dawn again?
- But the long hours wore on, till lo! pale gleams
- Of faint, far glory lit the eastern skies,
- Broadening and reddening till the sun’s full beams
- Broke in clear, golden splendor on thine eyes.
- Darkness and brooding anguish were but dreams,
- Lost in a trembling wonder of surprise!
-
-
-II.
-
- Even so, O Life, all tremulous with woe,
- Thou too didst cower when, without sound or jar,
- From the high zenith sinking fast and far,
- Thy sun went out of heaven! How couldst thou know
- In that dark hour, that never tide could flow
- So ebon-black, nor ever mountain-bar
- Breast night so deep, without or moon or star,
- But that the morning yet again must glow?
- God never leaves thee in relentless dark.
- Slowly the dawn on unbelieving eyes
- Breaketh at last. Day brightens—and, oh hark!
- A flood of bird-song from the tender skies!
- From storm and darkness thou hast found an ark,
- Shut in with this great marvel of surprise!
-
-
- C. H. R.
- (LOST OFF HAI-MUN IN THE CHINA SEA)
-
-
- In what wide Wonderland, or near, or far,
- Press on to-day thy swift adventurous feet—
- Thou who wert wont the Orient skies to greet
- With song and laughter, and to climb the bar
- Of mountain ranges where the Cloud-gods are,
- With brave, glad steps, as eager and as fleet
- As a young lover’s, who, on errand sweet,
- Seeks the one face that is his guiding star?
- The far blue seas engulfed thee, oh! my brother,
- But could not quench thy spirit’s lofty fire,
- Nor daunt the soul that knew not how to quail.
- Earth-quest thou didst but barter for another,
- Where Alps on Alps before thee still aspire,
- And where, in God’s name, thou shalt yet prevail!
-
-
- A NEW BEATITUDE
- L. G. W.
-
-
- “A new beatitude I write for thee,
- ‘_Blessed are they who are not sure of things_,’
- Nor strive to mount on feeble, finite wings
- To heights where God’s strong angels, soaring free,
- Halt and are silent.” Ah, the mystery!
- To-day, O friend, beyond earth’s reckonings
- Of time and space, beyond its jars and stings,
- Thou enterest where the eternal secrets be!
- Ay, thou art sure to-day! No more the bars
- Of earth’s poor limitations hold thee back,
- Setting their bounds to thine advancing feet.
- Soar, lofty soul, beyond the farthest stars,
- Where hope nor yearning e’er shall suffer lack,
- Nor knowledge fail to any that entreat!
-
-
-COMPENSATION
-
-
-I.
-
- Life of my life, do you remember how,
- At our fair pleasance gate, a stately tree
- Kept silent watch and ward? Majestic, free,
- Its head reached heaven, while its lowest bough
- Swept the green turf, and all between was row
- On row of crested waves—a sleeping sea—
- Or heaving billows tossed tumultuously,
- When the fierce winds that smote the mountain’s brow
- Lashed it to sudden passion. It was old.
- Storm-rocked for many centuries, it had grown
- One with the hills, the river and the sod;
- Yet young it was, with largess of red gold
- For every autumn, and from stores unknown
- Bringing each springtime treasure-trove to God.
-
-
-II.
-
- Then came a night of terror and dismay,
- Uproar and lightning, with the furious sweep
- Of mighty winds, that raged from steep to steep,
- And ere it passed the great tree prostrate lay!
- Sleepless I mourned until the morning gray;
- Then forth I crept, as one who goes to keep
- Watch by his dead, too heartsick even to weep,
- And hardly daring to behold the day.
- Lo! what vast splendor met my startled eyes,
- What unimagined space, what vision wide!
- Turrets and domes, now blue, now softest green,
- In one unbroken circuit kissed the skies;
- While, veiled in soft clouds, radiant as a bride,
- Shone one far sapphire peak till then unseen!
-
-
-QUESTIONINGS
-
- Forth from earth’s councils thou hast passed, O friend,
- To those high circles where God’s angels are,
- Angels that need no light of sun or star!
- No eye may follow thee as thou dost wend
- Thy lofty way where heaven’s pure heights ascend—
- Above the reach of earthly fret or jar,
- Where no rude touch the blissful peace can mar,
- Where all harsh sounds in one soft concord blend.
- What have ye seen, O beauty-loving eyes?
- What have ye heard, O ears attuned to hear
- And to interpret heaven’s high harmonies?
- What problems hast thou solved, thou who with clear
- Undaunted gaze didst search the farthest skies?
- And dost thou still love on, O heart most dear?
-
-
-REMEMBRANCE
-
- I do remind me how, when, by a bier,
- I looked my last on an unanswering face
- Serenely waiting for the grave’s embrace,
- One who would fain have comforted said: “Dear,
- This is the worst. Life’s bitterest drop is here.
- Impartial fate has done you this one grace,
- That till you go to your appointed place,
- Or soon or late, there is no more to fear.”
- It was not true, my soul! it was not true!
- “Thou art not lost while I remember thee,
- Lover and friend!” I cry, with bated breath.
- What if the years, slow-creeping like the blue,
- Resistless tide, should blot that face from me?
- Not to remember would be worse than death!
-
-
-IN THE HIGH TOWER
-
- Safe in the high tower of thy love I wait,
- Secure and still whatever winds may blow,
- Although no more thy banners, bending low,
- Salute me from afar, when, all elate,
- I haste to meet thee at the postern-gate.
- No more I hear thy trumpet’s eager flow
- Through the far, listening silence come and go
- To greet me where I bide in lonely state.
- Thy King hath sent thee on some high emprise,
- Some lofty embassage, some noble quest,
- To a strange land whence cometh sound nor sign.
- Yet evermore I lift my tranquil eyes,
- Knowing that Love but doeth Love’s behest—
- Afar or near, my dear lord still is mine!
-
-
-
-
-AFTERNOON SONGS
-
-
-FOUR-O’CLOCKS
-
- It is mid-afternoon. Long, long ago
- Each morning-glory sheathed the slender horn
- It blew so gayly on the hills of morn,
- And fainted in the noontide’s fervid glow.
-
- Gone are the dew-drops from the rose’s heart—
- Gone with the freshness of the early hours,
- The songs that filled the air with silver showers,
- The lovely dreams that were of morn a part.
-
- Yet still in tender light the garden lies;
- The warm, sweet winds are whispering soft and low;
- Brown bees and butterflies flit to and fro;
- The peace of heaven is in the o’erarching skies.
-
- And here be four-o’clocks, just opening wide
- Their many colored petals to the sun,
- As glad to live as if the evening dun
- Were far away, and morning had not died!
-
-
-A DREAM OF SONGS UNSUNG
-
- Whence it came I did not know,
- How it came I could not tell,
- But I heard the music flow
- Like the pealing of a bell;
- Up and down the wild-wood arches,
- Through the sombre firs and larches,
- Long I heard it rise and swell;
- Long I lay, with half-shut eyes,
- Wrapped in dreams of Paradise!
-
- Then the wondrous music poured
- Yet a fuller, stronger strain,
- Till my soul in rapture soared
- Out of reach of toil and pain!
- Then, oh then, I know not how,
- Then, oh then, I know not where,
- I was borne, serene and slow,
- Through the boundless fields of air—
- Past the sunset’s golden bars,
- Past long ranks of glittering stars,
- To a realm where time was not,
- And its secrets were forgot!
-
- Land of shadows, who may know
- Where thy golden lilies blow?
- Land of shadows, on what star
- In the blue depths shining far,
- Or in what appointed place
- In the unmeasured realms of space,
- High as heaven, or deep as hell,
- Thou dost lie what tongue can tell?
- Send from out thy mystic portals
- With the holy chrism to-day,
- One of all thy high immortals
- Who shall teach me what to say!
-
- O beloveds, all the air
- Was a faint, ethereal mist
- Touched with rose and amethyst—
- Glints of gold, and here and there
- Purple splendors that were gone,
- Like the glory of the dawn,
- Ere one caught them. Soft and gray,
- Lit by many a pearly ray,
- Were the low skies bending dim
- To the far horizon’s rim;
- And the landscape stretched away,
- Fair, illusive, like a dream
- Wherein all things do but seem!
- There were mountains, but they rose
- O’er the subtile vale’s repose,
- Light as clouds that far and high
- Soar to meet the untroubled sky.
- There were trees that overhead
- Wide their sheltering branches spread,
- Yet were empty as the shade
- By the quivering vine-leaves made.
- There were roses, rich with bloom,
- Swinging censers of perfume
- Sweet as fragrant winds of May
- Blowing through spring’s secret bowers;
- Yet so phantom-like were they
- That they seemed the ghosts of flowers.
-
- Oh, the music sweet and strange
- In that land’s enchanted range!
- Like the pealing of the bells
- When the brazen flowers are swinging
- And the angelus is ringing,
- Soaring, echoing, far and near,
- Through the vales and up the dells—
- Softly on the enraptured ear
- A melodious murmur swells!
- As the rhythm of the river
- Day and night goes on forever,
- So that pulsing stream of song
- Rolls its silver waves along.
- Even silence is but sound,
- Deeper, softer, more profound!
-
- All the portals were thrown wide!
- Stretching far on either side
- Ran the streets, like silver mist,
- By the moon’s pale splendor kissed;
- And adown the shadowy way,
- Forth from many a still retreat,
- One by one, and two by two,
- Or in goodly companies;
- Gliding on in long array,
- Light and fleet, with silent feet,
- One by one, and two by two,
- Phantoms that I could not number,
- Countless as the wraiths of slumber,
- Passed before my wondering eyes!
-
- Then I grew aware of one
- Standing by me in the dun,
- Gray half-twilight. All the place
- Grew softly radiant; but his face,
- Albeit unveiled, I could not see
- For the awe that compassed me.
- Swift I spoke, by longings swayed
- Deeper than my words betrayed:
- “Master,” with clasped hands I prayed,
- “Who are these? Are they the dead?”
- “Nay, they never lived,” he said;
- “Whence art thou? How camest thou here?”
- Low I answered, then, in fear:
- “Sir, I know not; as I lay
- Dreaming at the close of day,
- Wondrous music, thrilling through me,
- To this land of phantoms drew me,
- Though I knew not how or why,
- Even as instinct draws the bird
- Where Spring’s far-off voice is heard.
- Tell me, Master, where am I?”
- “Thou art in the border-land,
- On the farthest, utmost strand
- Of the sea that lies between
- All that is and is not seen.
- Thou art where the wraiths of song
- Come and go, a phantom throng.
- ’Tis their heart’s melodious beat
- Fills the air with whispers sweet!
- These, O child, are songs unsung—
- Songs unbreathed by human tongue;
- These are they that all in vain
- Mightiest masters wooed amain—
- Children of their heart and brain
- That they could not warm to life
- By their being’s utmost strife.
- Every bard that ever sung
- Since the hoary earth was young
- Knew the song he could not sing
- Was his soul’s best blossoming,
- Knew the thought he could not hold
- Shrined his spirit’s purest gold.
- Look!”
- Where rose the city’s gate
- In majestic, sculptured state,
- From a far-off battle-plain,
- Through the javelins’ silver rain
- Bearing buckler, lance, and shield,
- And their standard’s glittering field,
- Eager, yet with shout nor din,
- Came a great host trooping in.
- Burned their eyes with martial fire,
- And the glow of proud desire,
- Such as gods and hero’s filled
- When their mighty souls were thrilled
- By old Homer’s golden lyre!
-
- Under dim cathedral arches
- Pacing sad, pacing slow,
- As to beat of funeral marches
- Or to music’s rhythmic flow—
- With their solemn brows uplifted,
- And their hands upon their breasts,
- Where the deepest shadows drifted,
- One by one pale phantoms pressed.
- Lost in dreams of heights supernal,
- Mystic dreams of Paradise,
- Or of woful depths infernal,
- Slow they passed before mine eyes.
- Oh, the vision’s pallid splendor!
- Oh, the grandeur of their mien—
- Kin, by birthright proud and tender,
- To the matchless Florentine!
- In stately solitude,
- Whereon might none intrude—
- Majestic, grand and calm,
- And bearing each the palm;
- Dwelling, serene and fair,
- In most enchanted air,
- Where softest music crept
- O’er harp-strings deftly swept,
- And organ-thunders rolled
- Like storm-winds through the wold,
- They stood in strength sublime
- Beyond the bounds of time—
- They who had been a part
- Of Milton’s mighty heart!
-
- And where, mysterious ones,
- Are Shakespeare’s princely sons,
- Bearing in lavish hands
- The spoil of many lands?
- From castles lifted far
- Against the evening star,
- Where royal banners float
- O’er rampart, tower, and moat,
- And the white moonlight sleeps
- Upon the Donjon keeps;
- From fairy-haunted dells
- Among the lonely fells;
- From banks where wild thyme grows
- And the blue violet blows;
- From caverns grim, and caves
- Lashed by the deep sea-waves;
- From darkling forest shade,
- From busy haunts of trade,
- From market, court, and camp,
- Where folly rings her bells,
- Or sorrow tolls her knells,
- Or where in cloister cells
- The scholar trims his lamp—
- Wearing the sword, the gown,
- The motley of the clown,
- The beggar’s rags, the dole
- Of the remorseful soul,
- The wedding-robe, the ring,
- The shroud’s white blossoming,
- O myriad-minded man,
- Thus thine immortal clan
- Passed down the endless ways
- Of the eternal days!
-
- Then said I to my spirit:
- “These are they who wore the crown;
- Well the king’s sons may inherit
- All his glory and renown.
- Where are they—the songs unsung
- By the humbler bards whose lyres
- Through earth’s lowly vales have rung,
- Like the notes of woodland choirs?
- They whose silver-sandalled feet
- Never climbed the clouds to meet?”
-
- Where?—The air grew full of laughter
- Low and sweet, and following after
- Came the softest breath of singing
- As if lily bells were ringing;
- And from all the happy closes,
- Crowned with daisies, crowned with roses,
- Bearing woodland ferns for palm-boughs in their hands,
- From the dim secluded places,
- Through the wide enchanted spaces,
- With their song-illumined faces
- Swept the shadowy minstrel bands!
-
- Songs unsung, the high and lowly,
- Songs, the holy and unholy,
- In that purest air grown wholly
- Clean from every spot and stain!
- And I knew as endless ages
- Still were turning life’s full pages,
- Each should find his own again—
- Find the song he could not sing,
- As his soul’s best blossoming!
-
-
-QUESTIONING A ROSE
-
- It was fair, it was sweet,
- And it blossomed at my feet.
- “O thou peerless rose!” I said,
- “Art thou heir to roses dead—
- Roses that their petals shed
- In the winds of long ago?
- Who bequeathed to thee the glow
- Of thy perfect, radiant heart?
- What proud queen of fire and snow
- Lived to make thee what thou art?
-
- Who gave thee thy nameless grace
- And the beauty of thy face,
- Touched thy lips with fragrant wine,
- Pledging thee in cups divine?
- On some long-forgotten day,
- When earth kept glad holiday,
- One bright rose was born, I think,
- Dewy, sweet, and soft and pink—
- Born, more blest than others are,
- To be thy progenitor!
-
- Oh, the roses that have died
- In the unremembered Junes!
- Oh, the roses that have sighed
- Unto long-forgotten runes!
- Dost thou know their secrets dear?
- Have they whispered in thine ear
- Mysteries of the rain and dew,
- And the sunshine that they knew?
- Have they told thee how the breeze
- Wooed them, and the amorous bees?
-
- Silent, art thou? Thy repose
- Mocks me, yet I fain would know
- Art thou kin to one rare rose
- Of a summer long ago?
- It was sweet, it was fair;
- Someone twined it in my hair,
- When my young cheek, blushing red,
- Shamed the roses, someone said.
- Dust and ashes though it be,
- Still its soul lives on in thee.”
-
-
-THE FALLOW FIELD
-
- The sun comes up and the sun goes down;
- The night mist shroudeth the sleeping town;
- But if it be dark or if it be day,
- If the tempests beat or the breezes play,
- Still here on this upland slope I lie,
- Looking up to the changeful sky.
-
- Naught am I but a fallow field;
- Never a crop my acres yield.
- Over the wall at my right hand
- Stately and green the corn-blades stand,
- And I hear at my left the flying feet
- Of the winds that rustle the bending wheat.
-
- Often while yet the morn is red
- I list for our master’s eager tread.
- He smiles at the young corn’s towering height,
- He knows the wheat is a goodly sight,
- But he glances not at the fallow field
- Whose idle acres no wealth may yield.
-
- Sometimes the shout of the harvesters
- The sleeping pulse of my being stirs,
- And as one in a dream I seem to feel
- The sweep and the rush of the swinging steel,
- Or I catch the sound of the gay refrain
- As they heap their wains with the golden grain.
-
- Yet, O my neighbors, be not too proud,
- Though on every tongue your praise is loud.
- Our mother Nature is kind to me,
- And I am beloved by bird and bee,
- And never a child that passes by
- But turns upon me a grateful eye.
-
- Over my head the skies are blue;
- I have my share of the rain and dew;
- I bask like you in the summer sun
- When the long bright days pass, one by one,
- And calm as yours is my sweet repose
- Wrapped in the warmth of the winter snows.
-
- For little our loving mother cares
- Which the corn or the daisy bears,
- Which is rich with the ripening wheat,
- Which with the violet’s breath is sweet,
- Which is red with the clover bloom,
- Or which for the wild sweet-fern makes room.
-
- Useless under the summer sky
- Year after year men say I lie.
- Little they know what strength of mine
- I give to the trailing blackberry vine;
- Little they know how the wild grape grows,
- Or how my life-blood flushes the rose.
-
- Little they think of the cups I fill
- For the mosses creeping under the hill;
- Little they think of the feast I spread
- For the wild wee creatures that must be fed:
- Squirrel and butterfly, bird and bee,
- And the creeping things that no eye may see.
-
- Lord of the harvest, thou dost know
- How the summers and winters go.
- Never a ship sails east or west
- Laden with treasures at my behest,
- Yet my being thrills to the voice of God
- When I give my gold to the golden-rod.
-
-
-OUT AND IN
-
- A ship went sailing out to sea,
- A gallant ship and gay,
- When skies were bright as skies could be,
- One sunny morn in May.
- The light winds blew,
- The white sails flew,
- The pennants floated far;
- No stain I saw,
- Nor any flaw,
- From deck to shining spar!
- And from the prow, with eager eyes,
- Hope gazed afar—to Paradise.
-
- A ship came laboring in from sea,
- One wild December night;
- Ah! never ship was borne to lee
- In sadder, sorrier plight!
- Rent were her sails
- By furious gales,
- No pennants floated far;
- Twisted and torn
- And all forlorn
- Were shuddering mast and spar!
- But from the prow Faith’s steady eyes
- Caught the near light of Paradise!
-
-
-HER FLOWERS
-
- “Nay, nay,” she whispered low,
- “I will not have these buds of folded snow,
- Nor yet the pallid bloom
- Of the chill tuberose, heavy with perfume,
- Nor lilies waxen white,
- To go with her into the grave’s dark night.
-
- But now that she is dead
- Bring ye the royal roses blushing red,
- Roses that on her breast
- All summer long, by these pale hands caressed,
- Have lain in happy calm,
- Breathing their lives away in bloom and balm!”
-
- Roses for all the joy
- Of perfect hours when life had no alloy;
- When hope was glad and gay,
- And young Love sang his blissful roundelay;
- And to her eager eyes
- Each new day oped the gates of Paradise.
-
- But, for that she hath wept,
- And over buried hopes long vigil kept,
- Bring mystic passion-flowers,
- To tell the tale of sacrificial hours
- When, lifting up her cross,
- She bore it bravely on through pain and loss!
-
- Then at her blessèd feet,
- That never more shall haste on errands sweet,
- Lay fragrant mignonette
- And fair sweet-peas in dainty garlands set,—
- Dear humble flowers, that make
- Each passer-by the gladder for their sake!
-
- For she who lieth here
- Trod not alone the high paths shining clear,
- With light of star and sun
- Falling undimmed her lofty place upon;
- But stooped to lowliest ways,
- Filling with fragrance all the passing days!
-
-
-THREE LADDIES
-
- O sailors sailing north,
- Where the wild white surges roar,
- And fierce winds and strong winds
- Blow down from Labrador—
- Have you seen my three brave laddies,
- My merry red-cheeked laddies,
- Three bold, adventurous laddies,
- On some tempestuous shore?
-
- O sailors sailing south,
- Where the seas are calm and blue,
- And light clouds and soft clouds
- Are floating over you,
- Say, have you seen my laddies,
- My three bright, winsome laddies,
- My brown-haired, smiling laddies,
- With hearts so leal and true?
-
- O sailors sailing east,
- Ask the sea-gulls sweeping by;
- O sailors sailing west,
- Ask the eagles soaring high,
- If they have seen my laddies,
- My careless, heedless laddies,
- Three debonair young laddies,
- Beneath the wide, wide sky?
-
- O sailors, if you find them,
- Pray send them back to me;
- For them the winds go sighing
- Through every lonely tree—
- For these three wandering laddies,
- My tender, bright-eyed laddies,
- The laughter-loving laddies,
- Whom they no longer see.
-
- There are three men who love me,
- Three men with bearded lips;
- But oh! ye gallant sailors
- Who sail the sea in ships—
- In elf-land, or in cloud-land,
- Or on the dreamland shore,
- Can you find the little laddies
- Whom I can find no more?
- Three quiet, thoughtful laddies,
- Three merry, winsome laddies,
- Three rollicking, frolicking laddies,
- On any far-off shore?
-
-
- SUMMER, 1882
- R. W. E.
-
-
- O Summer, thou fair laggard, where art thou?
- In what far sunlit land of balm and bloom,
- What slumbrous bowers of beauty and perfume,
- Are roses crowning thine imperial brow?
-
- Where art thou, Summer? We should see thy feet
- Even now upon the mountains. All the hills
- Rise up to greet thee. Nature’s great heart thrills,
- Faint with expectant joy. Where art thou, sweet?
-
- And Summer answered: “Lo! I wait! I wait!
- To the far North I bend my listening ear;
- By day, by night, my soul keeps watch to hear
- One high, clear strain that rises soon nor late!
-
- Why should I haste where light and song have fled?
- The ‘Woodnotes’ wake no more the Master’s lyre;
- The ‘haughty day’ fills no ‘blue urn with fire’
- When its great lover lieth cold and dead!”
-
-
-THORNLESS ROSES
-
- “No rose may bloom without a thorn?”
- Come down the garden paths and see
- How brightly in the scented air
- They bloom for you and me!
-
- See how, like rosy clouds, they lie
- Against the perfect, stainless blue!
- See how they toss their airy heads,
- And smile for me, for you!
-
- No scanty largess, meanly doled—
- No pallid blooms, by two, by three,
- But a whole crowd of pink-white wings
- Fluttering for you and me.
-
- So fair they are I cannot choose;
- I pluck the rich spoils here and there;
- I heap them on your waiting arms;
- I twine them in your hair.
-
- There is no thorn among them all—
- No sharp sting in the heart of bliss—
- No bitter in the honeyed cup—
- No burning in the kiss.
-
- Nay, quote the proverb if you must,
- And mock the truth you will not see;
- Nathless, Love’s thornless roses blow
- Somewhere for you and me.
-
-
-TREASURE-SHIPS
-
- O beautiful, stately ships,
- Ye come from over the seas,
- With every sail full spread
- To the glad, rejoicing breeze!
- Ye come from the dusky East,
- Ye come from the golden West,
- As birds that out of the far blue sky
- Fly each to its sheltered nest.
-
- All spoils of the earth ye bring;
- From the isles of far Cathay,
- From the fabled shores of the Orient,
- The realms of eternal day.
- The prisoned light of a thousand gems,
- The gleam of the virgin gold,
- Lustre of silver, and sheen of pearl,
- Shut up in the narrow hold.
-
- Shawls from the looms of Ispahan;
- Ivory white as milk;
- Shimmer of satin and rare brocade,
- And fold upon fold of silk;
- Gauzes that India’s maidens wear;
- Spices, and rare perfumes;
- Fruits that hold in their honeyed cups
- The wealth of the summer blooms.
-
- The blood of a thousand vines;
- The cotton’s drifted snow;
- The fragrant heart of the precious woods
- That deep in the tropics grow;
- The strength of the giant hills;
- The might of the iron ore;
- The golden corn, and the yellow wheat
- From earth’s broad threshing-floor.
-
- Yet, O ye beautiful ships!
- There are ships that come not back,
- With flying pennant and swelling sail,
- Over yon shining track!
- Who can reckon their precious stores,
- Or measure the might have been?
- Who can tell what they held for us—
- The ships that will ne’er come in?
-
-
-CHOOSING
-
- Meadow-sweet or lily fair—
- Which shall it be?
- Clematis or brier-rose,
- Blooming for me?
- Spicy pink, or violet
- With the dews of morning wet,
- Sweet peas or mignonette—
- Which shall it be?
-
- Flowers in the garden-beds,
- Flowers everywhere;
- Blue-bells and yellow-bells
- Swinging in the air;
- Purple pansies, golden pied;
- Pink-white daisies, starry-eyed;
- Gay nasturtiums, deeply dyed,
- Climbing everywhere!
-
- Oh, the roses darkly red—
- See, how they burn!
- Glows with all the summer heat
- Each crimson urn.
- Bridal roses pure as snow,
- Yellow roses all a-blow,
- Sweet blush-roses drooping low,
- Wheresoe’er I turn!
-
- Life is so full, so sweet—
- How can I choose?
- If I gather _this_ rose,
- _That_ I must lose!
- All are not for me to wear;
- I can only have my share;
- Thorns are hiding here and there;
- How can I choose?
-
-
-NOT MINE
-
- It is not mine to run
- With eager feet
- Along life’s crowded ways,
- My Lord to meet.
-
- It is not mine to pour
- The oil and wine,
- Or bring the purple robe
- And linen fine.
-
- It is not mine to break
- At his dear feet
- The alabaster-box
- Of ointment sweet.
-
- It is not mine to bear
- heavy cross,
- Or suffer, for his sake,
- All pain and loss.
-
- It is not mine to walk
- Through valleys dim,
- Or climb far mountain-heights
- Alone with him.
-
- He hath no need of me
- In grand affairs,
- Where fields are lost, or crowns
- Won unawares.
-
- Yet, Master, if I may
- Make one pale flower
- Bloom brighter, for thy sake,
- Through one short hour;
-
- If I, in harvest-fields
- Where strong ones reap,
- May bind one golden sheaf
- For Love to keep;
-
- May speak one quiet word
- When all is still,
- Helping some fainting heart
- To bear thy will;
-
- Or sing one high, clear song,
- On which may soar
- Some glad soul heavenward,
- I ask no more!
-
-
-THE CHAMBER OF SILENCE
-
- One autumn day we three,
- Who long had borne each other company—
- Grief, and my Heart, and I—
- Walked out beneath a dull and leaden sky.
-
- The fields were bare and brown;
- From the still trees the dead leaves fluttered down;
- There were no birds to sing,
- Or cleave the air on swift, rejoicing wing.
-
- We sought the barren sand
- Beside the moaning sea, and, hand in hand,
- Paced its slow length, and talked
- Of our supremest sorrows as we walked.
-
- Slow shaking each bowed head,
- “There is no anguish like to ours,” we said;
- “The glancing eyes of morn
- Fall on no souls more utterly forlorn.”
-
- But suddenly, across
- A narrow fiord wherein wild billows toss,
- We saw before our eyes,
- High hung above the tide, a temple rise—
-
- A temple wondrous fair,
- Lifting its shining turrets in the air,
- All touched with golden gleams,
- Like the bright miracles we see in dreams.
-
- Grief turned and looked at me.
- “We must go thither, O my friends,” said she;
- Then, saying nothing more,
- With rapid, gliding step passed on before.
-
- And we—my Heart and I—
- Where Grief went, we went, following silently,
- Till in sweet solitude
- Beneath the temple’s vaulted roof we stood.
-
- ’Twas like a hollow pearl—
- A vast white sacred chamber, where the whirl
- Of passion stirred not, where
- A luminous splendor trembled in the air.
-
- “O friends, I know this place,”
- Said Grief at last, “this lofty, silent space,
- Where, either soon or late,
- I and my kindred all shall lie in state.”
-
- “But do Griefs die?” I cried.
- “Some die—not all,” full calmly she replied.
- “Yet all at last will lie
- In this fair chamber, slumbering quietly.
-
- Chamber of Silence, this;
- Who brings his Grief here doth not go amiss.
- Mine hour hath come. We three
- Will walk, O friends, no more in company.”
-
- Then was I dumb. My Heart
- And I—how could we with our dear Grief part,
- Who for so many a day
- Had walked beside us in our lonely way?
-
- But she, with matchless grace,
- And a sweet smile upon her tear-wet face,
- Said, “Leave me here to sleep,
- Where every Grief forgets at last to weep.”
-
- What could we do but go?
- We turned with slow, reluctant feet, but lo!
- The pearly door had closed,
- Shutting us in where all the Griefs reposed.
-
- “Nay, go not back,” she said;
- “Retrace no steps. Go farther on instead.”
- Then, on the other side,
- On noiseless hinge another door swung wide,
-
- Through which we onward passed
- Into a chamber lowlier than the last,
- But, oh! so sweet and calm
- That the hushed air was like a holy psalm.
-
- “Chamber of Peace” was writ
- Where the low vaulted roof arched over it.
- Then knew we Grief must cease
- When sacred Silence leadeth unto Peace.
-
-
-THREE ROSES
-
- “Oh, shall it be a red rose, a red rose, a red rose,
- A deep-tinted red rose?” said she.
- “In the sunny garden closes,
- How they burn, the dark-red roses,
- How they lift up their glowing cups to me!”
-
- “Oh, shall it be a blush rose, a blush rose, a blush rose,
- A dewy, dainty blush rose?” said she.
- “At its heart a flush so tender,
- With what veiled and softened splendor
- Droopeth now its languid head toward me!”
-
- “Oh, shall it be a white rose, a white rose, a white rose,
- A fair and fragrant white rose?” said she.
- “With its pale cheek tinted faintly,
- ’Tis a vestal, pure and saintly,
- Yet its silver lamp is shining now for me!”
-
-
- FOUR LETTERS
- (INSCRIBED TO OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES)
-
-[In an old almanac of the year 1809, against the date August 29th,
-there is this record, “Son b.” The sand that was thrown upon the fresh
-ink seventy years ago can still be seen upon the page.]
-
- Four letters on a yellow page
- Writ when the century was young;
- A few small grains of shining sand
- Across it lightly flung!
-
- A child was born—child nameless yet;
- A son to love till life was o’er;
- But did no strange, sweet prescience stir,
- Teaching of something more?
-
- Thy son! O father, hadst thou known
- What now the wide world knows of him,
- How had thy pulses thrilled with joy,
- How had thine eye grown dim!
-
- Couldst thou, through all the swift, bright years,
- Have looked, with glad, far-reaching gaze,
- And seen him as he stands to-day,
- Crowned with unfading bays—
-
- While Love’s red roses at his feet
- Pour all their wealth of rare perfume,
- And Truth’s white lilies, pure as snow,
- His lofty way illume—
-
- How had thy heart’s strong throbbing shook
- The eager pen, the firm right hand,
- That threw upon this record quaint
- These grains of glittering sand!
-
- O irony of Time and Fate!
- That saves and loses, makes and mars,
- Keeps the small dust upon the scales,
- And blotteth out the stars!
-
- Kingdoms and thrones have passed away;
- Conquerors have fallen, empires died,
- And countless sons of men gone down
- Beneath War’s crimson tide.
-
- The whole wide earth has changed its face;
- Nations clasp hands across the seas;
- They speak, and winds and waves repeat
- The mighty symphonies.
-
- Mountains have bowed their haughty crests,
- And opened wide their ponderous doors;
- The sea hath gathered in its dead,
- Love-wept on alien shores.
-
- Proud cities, wrapped in fire and flame,
- Have challenged all the slumbering land;
- Yet neither Time nor Change has touched
- These few bright grains of sand!
-
-
-VALDEMAR
-
- Within a city quaint and old,
- When reigned King Alcinor the Bold,
- There dwelt a sculptor whose renown
- With pride and wonder filled the town.
- And yet he had not reached his prime;
- The first warm glow of summer-time
- Had but just touched his radiant face,
- And moulded to a statelier grace
- The stalwart form that trod the earth
- As it had been of princely birth.
- So fair, so strong, so brave was he,
- With such a sense of mastery,
- That Alcinor upon his throne
- No kinglier gifts from life could own
- Than those it brought from near and far
- To the young sculptor, Valdemar!
- Mayhap he was not rich—for Fame,
- To lend its magic to his name,
- Had outrun Fortune’s swiftest pace
- And conquered in the friendly race.
- But a fair home was his, where bees
- Hummed in the laden mulberry-trees;
- Where cyclamens, with rosy flush,
- Brightened the lingering twilight hush,
- And the gladiolus’ fiery plume
- Mocked the red rose’s brilliant bloom;
- Where violet and wind-flower hid
- The acacia’s golden gloom amid;
- Where starry jasmines climbed, and where,
- Serenely calm, divinely fair,
- Like a white lily, straight and tall,
- The loveliest flower among them all,
- His sweet young wife, Hermione,
- Sang to the child upon her knee!
-
- Here beauteous visions haunted him,
- Peopling the shadows soft and dim;
- Here the old gods around him cast
- The glamour of their splendors past.
- Jove thundered from the awful sky;
- Proud Juno trod the earth once more;
- Pale Isis, veiled in mystery,
- Her smile of mystic meaning wore;
- Apollo joyed in youth divine,
- And Bacchus wreathed the fragrant vine.
- Here chaste Diana, crescent-crowned,
- With virgin footsteps spurned the ground;
- Here rose fair Venus from the sea,
- And that sad ghost, Persephone,
- Wandered, a very shade of shades,
- Amid the moonlit myrtle glades.
- Nor they alone. The Heavenly Child,
- The Holy Mother, meek and mild,
- Angels on glad wing soaring free,
- Pale, praying saints on bended knee,
- Martyrs with palms, and heroes brave
- Who for their guerdon won a grave,
- Earth’s laughing children, rosy sweet,
- And the soul’s phantoms, fair and fleet—
- All these were with him night and day,
- Charming the happy hours away!
- Oh, who so rich as Valdemar?
- What ill his joyous life can mar?
- With home and glorious visions blest,
- Glad in the work he loveth best!
-
- But Love’s clear eyes are quick to see;
- And one fair spring, Hermione.
- Sitting beneath her mulberry-tree
- With her young children at her knee,
- Saw Valdemar from day to day,
- As one whose thoughts were far away,
- With folded arms and drooping head
- Pace the green aisles with silent tread;
- Saw him stand moodily apart
- With idle hands and brooding heart,
- Or gaze at his still forms of clay,
- Himself as motionless as they!
- “O Valdemar!” she cried, “you bear
- Some burden that I do not share!
- I am your wife, your own true wife;
- Shut me not out from heart and life!
- Why brood you thus in silent pain?”
- As shifts the changing weather-vane,
- So came the old smile to his face,
- Saluting her with courtly grace.
- “Nay, nay, Hermione, not so!
- No secret, bitter grief I know;
- But, haunting all my dreams by night
- And thoughts by day, one vision bright,
- One nameless wonder, near me stands,
- Claiming its birthright at my hands.
- It hath your eyes, Hermione,
- Your tender lips that smile for me;
- It hath your perfect, stately grace,
- The matchless beauty of your face.
- But it hath more! for never yet
- On brow of earthly mould was set
- Such splendor and such light as streams
- From this rare phantom of my dreams!”
-
- Lightly she turned, and led him through
- Under the jasmines wet with dew,
- Into a wide, cool room, shut in
- From the great city’s whirl and din—
- Then, smiling, touched a heap of clay.
- “Dear idler, do thy work, I pray!
- Thy radiant phantom lieth hid
- The mould of centuries amid,
- Waiting till thou shalt bid it rise
- And live beneath the wondering skies!”
-
- Then rose a hot flush to his cheek;
- His stammering lips were slow to speak.
- “Hermione,” he said at length,
- As one who gathers up his strength,
- “Hermione, my wife, I go
- Far from thee on a journey slow
- And long and perilous; for I know
- Somewhere upon the earth there is
- A finer, purer clay than this,
- From which I’ll mould a shape more fair
- Than ever breathed in earthly air!
- I go to seek it!”
-
- “Ah!” she said,
- With smiling lips, but tearful eyes,
- Half lifted in a grieved surprise,
- “How shall I then be comforted?
- Not always do we find afar
- The good we seek, my Valdemar!
- This common, way-side clay thy hand
- Hath been most potent to command.
- Yet I—I will not bid thee stay.
- Go, if thou must, and find thy clay!”
-
- Then his long journeyings began,
- And still his hope his steps outran.
- O’er desert sands he came and went;
- He crossed a mighty continent;
- Plunged into forests dark and lone;
- In jungles heard the panther’s moan;
- Climbed the far mountains’ lofty heights;
- Watched alien stars through weary nights;
- While more than once, on trackless seas,
- His white sails caught the eddying breeze.
- Yet all his labor was for nought,
- And never found he what he sought,
- Or far or near. The finer clay
- But mocked his eager search alway.
-
- Ofttimes he came, with weary feet,
- Back to the home so still and sweet
- Where his fair wife, Hermione,
- Dwelt with her children at her knee;
- But never once his eager hand
- Thrilled the mute clay with high command.
- One day she spoke: “O Valdemar,
- Cease from your wanderings wide and far!
- Life is not long. Why waste it, then,
- Chasing false fires through marsh and fen?
- Mould your fair statue while you may;
- High purpose sanctifies the clay.”
-
- He answered her, “My dream must wait,
- Fortune will aid me, soon or late!
- Perhaps the clay I may not find—
- But a strange tale is in the wind
- Of an old man whose life has been
- Shut up wild solitudes within
- On Alpine mountains. He has found
- What I have sought the world around.
- A learnèd, godly man, he knows
- How the full tide of being flows;
- And he, in some mysterious way,
- Makes, if he cannot find, the clay.
- He will his secret share with me—
- I go to him, Hermione!”
-
- “But, Valdemar,” she cried, “time flies,
- And while you dream, the vision dies!
- And look! Our children suffer lack;
- There is no coat for Claudio’s back;
- Theresa’s little feet, unshod,
- Are torn by shards on which they trod;
- And Marcius cried but yesterday
- When the lads mocked him at their play.
- The very house is crumbling down;
- The broken hearth-stone needs repair;
- The roof is open to the air—
- It wakes the laughter of the town!
- O Valdemar! if you must go
- Up to those trackless fields of snow,
- Mould first from yonder common clay
- Something to keep the wolf away—
- A Virgin for some humble shrine,
- A soldier clad in armor fine,
- Or even such toys as Andrefels
- To laughing, wondering children sells.”
-
- “Now murmur not, Hermione,
- But be thou patient,” answered he.
- “Why mind the laughter of the town?
- It cannot shake my fair renown!
- A touch of hardship, now and then,
- Will never harm our little men;
- And as for this old, crumbling roof,
- Let rude winds put it to the proof,
- And fierce heats gnaw the hearth-stone! I
- Surely the Land of Promise spy,
- Where the fair vision of my dreams,
- Clothed in transcendent beauty, gleams!
- In its white hand it holdeth up
- For us, my love, a brimming cup
- Where wealth and fame and joy divine
- Mingle in life’s most sparkling wine.
- Bid me God-speed, Hermione,
- And kiss me, ere I go from thee!”
-
- So on he sped, from day to day—
- Past wheat-fields yellowing in the sun,
- Where scarlet-coated poppies run,
- Gay soldiers ready for the fray—
- Past vineyards purpling on the hills,
- Past sleeping lakes and dancing rills,
- And homes like dovecotes nestling high
- Midway between the earth and sky!
- Then on he passed through valleys dim
- Crowded with shadows gaunt and grim,
- Up towering heights whence glaciers launch
- Their swift-winged ships for seaward flight,
- Or where, dread messenger of fright,
- Sweeps down the awful avalanche!
- And still upon the mountain side
- To every man he met he cried,
- “Where shall I find, oh! tell me where,
- The hermit of this upper air,
- Who Nature’s inmost secret knows?”
- And, pointing to the eternal snows,
- Each man replied, with wagging head,
- “Up yonder, somewhere, it is said.”
-
- At length one day, as sank the sun,
- He reached a low hut, dark and dun,
- And, entering unbidden, found
- An old man stretched upon the ground:
- A white-haired, venerable man,
- Whose eyes had hardly light to scan
- The face that, blanched with awful fear,
- Bent down, his failing breath to hear.
- “_Pax vobiscum_” he murmured low,
- “Shrive me, O brother, ere I go!”
-
- “No priest am I,” cried Valdemar.
- “Alas! alas! I came from far
- To learn thy secret of the clay—
- Speak to me, sire, while yet you may!”
- But while he wet the parchèd lips,
- The dull eyes closed in death’s eclipse;
- And the old seer in silence lay,
- Himself a thing of pallid clay,
- With all his secrets closely hid
- As Ramses’ in the pyramid.
-
- Long time within that lonely place
- Valdemar lived, but found no trace
- In learnèd book or parchment scroll
- (The ink scarce dry upon the roll)
- Of aught the stars had taught to him.
- Within the wide horizon’s rim,
- Nor earth, nor sky, nor winds at play,
- Knew the lost secret of the clay.
-
- Then sought he, after journeyings hard,
- The holy monks of St. Bernard.
- But they—ah, yes!—they knew him well,
- A man not ruled by book and bell.
- Godly, perhaps—but much inclined
- Some newer road to heaven to find.
- And was he dead? God rest his soul,
- After this life of toil and dole!
-
- And that was all! O Valdemar!
- Fly to thy desolate home afar,
- Where wasted, worn, Hermione,
- With her pale children at her knee,
- Beside the broken hearth-stone weeps!
-
- He finds her, smiling as she sleeps,
- For night more tender is than day,
- And softly wipes our tears away.
- “Oh, wake, Hermione!” he cries,
- As one whose spirit inly dies;
- “Hear me confess that I have been
- False to thee in my pride and sin!
- God give me grace from this blest day
- To do His work in common clay! ”
-
- Next morn, in humble, sweet content,
- Into his studio he went,
- Eager to test his willing hand,
- And rule the clay with wise command.
- But no fair wonder first he wrought,
- No marvel of creative thought,
- Not even a Virgin for a shrine,
- Or soldier clad in armor fine—
- Only such toys as Andrefels
- To laughing, wondering children sells!
-
- One day he knelt him gravely down
- Beside the hearth-stone, rent and brown.
- “And now, my patient wife,” said he,
- “What can be done with this, we’ll see.”
- With straining arm and crimsoned face
- He pried the mortar from its place,
- Lifted the heavy stone aside,
- And left a cavern yawning wide.
- Oh, wondrous tale! At set of sun
- The guerdon of his search was won;
- And where his broken hearth-stone lay
- He found at last the perfect clay!
-
-
-JUBILATE!
-
- Jubilate! Jubilate!
- Christ the Lord is risen to-day!
- Hear the mighty chorus swelling
- Over land and over sea!
- River calls aloud to river,
- Mountain peak to mountain peak—
- Jubilate! Jubilate!
- Christ the Lord is risen to-day!
-
- Waken, roses, from your slumbers!
- Lilies, wake—for he is near!
- Happy bells in wild-wood arches,
- Ring and swing in sweet accord!
- Lift your voices, O ye maples,
- Sing aloud, ye stately pines,
- Jubilate! Jubilate!
- Christ the Lord is risen to-day!
-
- O thou goddess of the springtime,
- Fair Ostera, thou art dead!
- Never more shall priests and vestals
- Weave fresh garlands for thy shrine;
- But the happy voices ringing
- Over land and over sea,
- Swell the mighty jubilate—
- “Christ the Lord is risen to-day!”
-
-
-EASTER LILIES
-
- O ye dear and blessed ones who are done with sighing,
- Do the Easter Lilies blow for you to-day?
- Do the shining angels, through Heaven’s arches flying,
- Bear the snow-white blossoms on your breasts to lay?
-
- For we cannot reach you, O our well belovèd—
- Nothing can we do for you save to hold you dear;
- From our close embraces ye are far removèd,
- And our empty yearnings cannot bring you near.
-
- Once on Easter mornings glad we gave you greeting—
- Gave you fair flowers, singing, “Christ is risen to-day!”
- Hands were clasped together, hearts and lips were meeting—
- Earth and we together sang a roundelay!
-
- Now—yet why repine we?—ye are done with sorrow;
- Life and Lent are over, with their prayers and tears;
- After night of watching came the glad to-morrow,
- Came the blessed sunshine of the eternal years.
-
- Surely in Jerusalem, where the Lord Christ reigneth,
- Ye with saints and martyrs keep this festal day—
- And the holy angels, ere its glory waneth,
- Heaven’s own Easter Lilies on your breasts shall lay!
-
-
-“O WIND THAT BLOWS OUT OF THE WEST”
-
- O wind that blows out of the West,
- Thou hast swept over mountain and sea,
- Dost thou bear on thy swift, glad wings
- The breath of my love to me?
- Hast thou kissed her warm, sweet lips?
- Or tangled her soft brown hair?
- Or fluttered the fragrant heart
- Of the rose she loves to wear?
-
- O sun that goes down in the West,
- Hast thou seen my love to-day,
- As she sits in her beautiful prime
- Under skies so far away?
- Hast thou gilded a path for her feet,
- Or deepened the glow on her cheeks,
- Or bent from the skies to hear
- The low, sweet words she speaks?
-
- O stars that are bright in the West
- When the hush of the night is deep,
- Do ye see my love as she lies
- Like a chaste, white flower asleep?
- Does she smile as she walks with me
- In the light of a happy dream,
- While the night winds rustle the leaves,
- And the light waves ripple and gleam?
-
- O birds that fly out of the West,
- Do ye bring me a message from her,
- As sweet as your love-notes are,
- When the warm spring breezes stir?
- Did she whisper a word of me
- As your tremulous wings swept by,
- Or utter my name, mayhap,
- In a single passionate cry?
-
- O voices out of the West,
- Ye are silent every one,
- And never an answer comes
- From wind, or stars, or sun!
- And the blithe birds come and go
- Through the boundless fields of space,
- As reckless of human prayers
- As if earth were a desert place!
-
-
-A SUMMER SONG
-
- Roly-poly honey-bee,
- Humming in the clover,
- Under you the tossing leaves,
- And the blue sky over,
- Why are you so busy, pray?
- Never still a minute,
- Hovering now above a flower,
- Now half-buried in it!
-
- Jaunty robin-redbreast,
- Singing loud and cheerly,
- From the pink-white apple tree
- In the morning early,
- Tell me, is your merry song
- Just for your own pleasure,
- Poured from such a tiny throat,
- Without stint or measure?
-
- Little yellow buttercup,
- By the way-side smiling,
- Lifting up your happy face,
- With such sweet beguiling,
- Why are you so gayly clad—
- Cloth of gold your raiment?
- Do the sunshine and the dew
- Look to you for payment?
-
- Roses in the garden beds,
- Lilies, cool and saintly,
- Darling blue-eyed violets,
- Pansies, hooded quaintly,
- Sweet-peas that, like butterflies,
- Dance the bright skies under,
- Bloom ye for your own delight,
- Or for ours, I wonder!
-
-
-THE URN
-
- Across the blue Atlantic waves
- She sent a little gift to me:
- A golden urn—a graceful toy
- As one need care to see.
-
- Smiling, I held it in my hand,
- Thinking her message o’er and o’er,
- Nor dreamed her swift feet pressed so near
- The undiscovered shore.
-
- Oh! had it been a funeral urn—
- The gift my darling sent to me
- With loving thoughts and tender words
- Across the heaving sea—
-
- A funeral urn which might have held
- Her sacred ashes, sealed in rest
- Utter as that which holds in thrall
- Some pulseless marble breast!
-
- Where drifts she now? On what far seas
- Floateth to-day her golden hair?
- What stars behold her pale hands, clasped
- In ecstasy of prayer?
-
- Forever in this thought of mine,
- Like the fair Lady of Shalott,
- She drifteth, drifteth with the tide,
- But never comes to Camelot!
-
-
-THE PARSON’S DAUGHTER
-
- “What, ho!” he cried, as up and down
- He rode through the streets of Windham town—
- “What, ho! for the day of peace is done,
- And the day of wrath too well begun!
- Bring forth the grain from your barns and mills;
- Drive down the cattle from off your hills;
- For Boston lieth in sore distress,
- Pallid with hunger and long duress:
- Her children starve, while she hears the beat
- And the tramp of the red-coats in every street!”
-
- “What, ho! What, ho!” Like a storm unspent,
- Over the hill-sides he came and went;
- And Parson White, from his open door
- Leaning bareheaded that August day,
- While the sun beat down on his temples gray,
- Watched him until he could see no more.
- Then straight he strode to the church, and flung
- His whole soul into the peal he rung;
- Pulling the bell-rope till the tower
- Seemed to rock in the sudden shower—
-
- The shower of sound the farmers heard,
- Rending the air like a living word!
- Then swift they gathered with right good-will
- From field and anvil and shop and mill,
- To hear what the parson had to say
- That would not keep till the Sabbath-day.
- For only the women and children knew
- The tale of the horsemen galloping through—
- The message he bore as up and down
- He rode through the streets of Windham town.
-
- That night, as the parson sat at ease
- In the porch, with his Bible on his knees,
- (Thanking God that at break of day
- Frederic Manning would take his way,
- With cattle and sheep from off the hills,
- And a load of grain from the barns and mills,
- To the starving city where General Gage
- Waited unholy war to wage),
- His little daughter beside him stood,
- Hiding her face in her muslin hood.
-
- In her arms her own pet lamb she bore,
- As it struggled down to the oaken floor:
- “It must go; I must give my lamb,” she said,
- “To the children that cry for meat and bread,”
- Then lifted to his her holy eyes,
- Wet with the tears of sacrifice.
- “Nay, nay,” he answered. “There is no need
- That the hearts of babes should ache and bleed.
- Run away to your bed, and to-morrow play,
- You and your pet, through the livelong day.”
-
- He laid his hand on her shining hair,
- And smiled as he blessed her, standing there,
- With kerchief folded across her breast,
- And her small brown hands together pressed,
- A quaint little maiden, shy and sweet,
- With her lambkin crouched at her dainty feet.
- Away to its place the lamb she led,
- Then climbed the stairs to her own white bed,
- While the moon rose up and the stars looked down
- On the silent streets of Windham town.
-
- But when the heralds of morning came,
- Flushing the east with rosy flame,
- With low of cattle and scurry of feet,
- Driving his herd down the village street,
- Young Manning heard from a low stone wall
- A child’s voice clearly yet softly call;
- And saw in the gray dusk standing there
- A little maiden with shining hair,
- While crowding close to her tender side
- Was a snow-white lamb to her apron tied.
-
- “Oh, wait!” she cried, “for my lamb must go
- To the children crying in want and woe.
- It is all I have.” And her tears fell fast
- As she gave it one eager kiss—the last.
- “The road will be long to its feet. I pray
- Let your arms be its bed a part of the way;
- And give it cool water and tender grass
- Whenever a way-side brook you pass.”
- Then away she flew like a startled deer,
- Nor waited the bleat of her lamb to hear.
-
- Young Manning lifted his steel-blue eyes
- One moment up to the morning skies;
- Then, raising the lamb to his breast, he strode
- Sturdily down the lengthening road.
- “Now God be my helper,” he cried, “and lead
- Me safe with my charge to the souls in need!
- Through fire and flood, through dearth and dole,
- Though foes assail me and war-clouds roll,
- To the city in want and woe that lies
- I will bear this lamb as a sacrifice.”
-
-
- MARCH FOURTH
- 1881-1882
-
-
- One year ago the plaudits of the crowd,
- The drum’s long thunder and the bugle’s blare,
- The bell’s gay clamor, pealing clear and loud,
- And rapturous music filling all the air;
-
- One year ago, on roofs and domes and spires,
- Ten thousand banners bursting into bloom
- As the proud day advanced its golden fires,
- And all the crowding centuries gave it room;
-
- One year ago the laurel and the palm,
- The upward path, the height undimmed and far,
- And in the clear, strong light, serene and calm,
- One high, pure spirit, shining like a star!
-
- To-day—for loud acclaims the long lament;
- For shouts of triumph, tears that fall like rain;
- A world remembering, with anguish rent,
- Thy long, unmurmuring martyrdom of pain!
-
- The year moves on; the seasons come and go;
- Day follows day, and pale stars rise and set;
- Oh! in yon radiant heaven dost thou know
- The land that loved thee never can forget?
-
- It doth not swerve—it keeps its onward way,
- Unfaltering still, from farthest sea to sea;
- Yet, while it owns another’s rightful sway,
- It patient grows and strong, remembering thee!
-
-
-ROY
-
- Our Prince has gone to his inheritance!
- Think it not strange. What if, with slight half-smile,
- Some crownèd king to leave his throne should chance,
- And try the rough ways of the world awhile?
-
- Ere he had wearied of its storm and stress,
- Would he not hasten to his own again?
- Why should he bear its labor and duress,
- And all the untold burden of its pain?
-
- Or what if from the golden palace gate
- The king’s fair son on some bright morn should stray?
- Would he not send his lords of high estate
- To lead him back ere fell the close of day?
-
- Even so our King from Heaven’s high portals saw
- The fair young Prince where earth’s dull shades advance,
- And sent his messengers of love and law
- To bear him home to his inheritance!
-
-
- THE PAINTER’S PRAYER
- “NEC ME PRÆTERMITTAS, DOMINE!”
-
-(An incident in the painting of Holman Hunt’s “Light of the World.”)
-
- “Nay,” he said, “it is not done!
- At to-morrow’s set of sun
- Come again, if you would see
- What the finished thought may be.”
- Straight they went. The heavy door
- On its hinges swung once more,
- As within the studio dim
- Eye and heart took heed of Him!
-
- How the Presence filled the room,
- Brightening all its dusky gloom!
- Saints and martyrs turned their eyes
- From the hills of Paradise;
- Rapt in holy ecstasy,
- Mary smiled her Son to see,
- Letting all her lilies fall
- At His feet—the Lord of all!
-
- But the painter bowed his head,
- Lost in wonder and in dread,
- And as at a holy shrine
- Knelt before the form divine.
- All had passed—the pride, the power,
- Of the soul’s creative hour—
- Exaltation’s soaring flight
- To the spirit’s loftiest height.
-
- Had he dared to paint the Lord?
- Dared to paint the Christ, the Word?
- Ah, the folly! Ah, the sin!
- Ah, the shame his soul within!
- Saints might turn on him their eyes
- From the hills of Paradise,
- But the painter could not brook
- On that pictured face to look.
-
- Yet the form was grand and fair,
- Fit to move a world to prayer;
- God like in its strength and stress,
- Human in its tenderness.
- From it streamed the Light divine,
- O’er it drooped the heavenly vine,
- And beneath the bending spray
- Stood the Life, the Truth, the Way!
-
- Suddenly with eager hold,
- Back he swept the curtain’s fold,
- Letting all the sunset glow
- O’er the living canvas flow.
- Surely then the wondrous eyes
- Met his own in tenderest wise,
- And the Lord Christ, half revealed,
- Smiled upon him as he kneeled!
-
- Trembling, throbbing, quick as thought,
- Up he brush and palette caught,
- And where deepest shade was thrown
- Set one sign for God alone!
- Years have passed—but, even yet,
- Where the massive frame is set
- You may find these words: “_Nec me
- Prætermittas, Domine!_”
-
- “Neither pass me by, O Lord!”
- Christ, the Life, the Light, the Word,
- Low we bow before thy feet,
- Thy remembrance to entreat!
- In our soul’s most secret place,
- For no eye but thine to trace,
- Lo! this prayer we write: “_Nec me
- Prætermittas, Domine!_”
-
-
- FROM EXILE
- PARIS, SEPTEMBER 3, 1879
-
-(_A Mother speaks_)
-
- Ah, dear God, when will it be day?
- I cannot sleep, I cannot pray.
- Tossing, I watch the silent stars
- Mount up from the horizon bars:
- Orion with his flaming sword,
- Proud chieftain of the glorious horde;
- Auriga up the lofty arch
- Pursuing still his stately march—
- So patient and so calm are they.
- Ah, dear God! when will it be day?
-
- O Mary, Mother! Hark! I hear
- A cock crow through the silence clear!
- The dawn’s faint crimson streaks the east,
- And, afar off, I catch the least
- Low murmur of the city’s stir
- As she shakes off the dreams of her!
- List! there’s a sound of hurrying feet
- Far down below me in the street.
- Thank God! the weary night is past,
- The morning comes—’tis day at last.
-
- Wake, Rosalie! Awake! arise!
- The sun is up, it gilds the skies.
- She does not stir. The young sleep sound
- As dead men in their graves profound.
- Ho, Rosalie! At last? Now haste!
- To-day there is no time to waste.
- Bring me fresh water. Braid my hair.
- Hand me the glass. Once I was fair
- As thou art. Now I look so old
- It seems my death-knell should be tolled.
-
- Ill? No! (I want no wine.) So pale?
- Like a white ghost, so wan and frail?
- Well, that’s not strange. All night I lay
- Waiting and watching for the day.
- But—there! I’ll drink it; it may make
- My cheeks burn brighter for his sake
- Who comes to-day. My boy! my boy!
- How can I bear the unwonted joy?
- I, who for eight long years have wept
- While happier mothers smiling slept;
- While others decked their sons first-born
- For dance, or fête, or bridal morn,
- Or proudly smiled to see them stand
- The stateliest pillars of the land!
- For he, so gallant and so gay,
- As young and debonair as they,
- My beautiful, brave boy, my life,
- Went down in the unequal strife!
- The right or wrong? Oh, what care I?
- The good God judgeth up on high.
-
- And now He gives him back to me!
- I tremble so—I scarce can see.
- How full the streets are! I will wait
- His coming here beside this gate,
- From which I watched him as he went,
- Eight years ago, to banishment.
- Let me sit down. Speak, Rosalie, when
- You see a band of stalwart men,
- With one fair boy among them—one
- With bright hair shining in the sun,
- Red, smiling lips, and eager eyes,
- Blue as the blue of summer skies.
- My boy! my boy!—Why come they not?
- O Son of God! hast Thou forgot
- Thy Mother’s agony? Yet she,
- Was she not stronger far than we,
- We common mothers? Could she know
- From her far heights such pain and woe?—
- Run farther down the street, and see
- If they’re not coming, Rosalie!
-
- Mother of Christ! how lag the hours!
- What? just beyond the convent towers,
- And coming straight this way? O heart,
- Be still and strong, and bear thy part,
- Thy new part, bravely. Hark! I hear
- Above the city’s hum the near
- Slow tread of marching feet; I see—
- Nay, I can _not_ see, Rosalie;
- Your eyes are younger. Is he there,
- My Antoine, with his sunny hair?
- It is like gold; it shines in the sun:
- Surely you see it? What? Not one—
- Not one bright head? All old, old men,
- Gray-haired, gray-bearded, gaunt? Then—then
- He has not come—he is ill, or dead!
- O God, that I were in thy stead,
- My son! my son! Who touches me?
- Your pardon, sir. I am not she
- For whom you look. Go farther on
- Ere yet the daylight shall be gone.
-
- ‘Mother!’ Who calls me ‘Mother?’ _You?_
- You are not he—my Antoine! You—
- A bowed, gray-bearded man, while he
- Was a mere boy who went from me,
- Only a boy! I’m sorry, sir.
- God bless you! Soon you will find her
- For whom you seek. But I—ah, I—
- Still must I call and none reply!
- You—kiss me? Antoine? O my son!
- Thou art mine own, my banished one!
-
-
-A MOTHER-SONG
-
- Sleep, baby, sleep! The Christmas stars are shining,
- Clear and bright the Christmas stars climb up the vaulted sky;
- Low hangs the pale moon, in the west declining:
- Sleep, baby, sleep, the Christmas morn is nigh!
-
- Hush, baby, hush! For Earth her watch is keeping;
- Watches and waits she the angels’ song to hear;
- Listening for the swift rush of their wings downsweeping,
- Joy and Peace proclaiming through the midnight clear.
-
- Dream, baby, dream! The far-off chimes are ringing;
- Tenderly and solemnly the music soars and swells;
- With soft reverberation the happy bells are swinging,
- While each to each responsive the same sweet story tells!
-
- Hark, baby, hark! Hear how the choral voices,
- All jubilantly singing, take up the glad refrain,
- “Unto you is born a Saviour,” while heaven with earth rejoices,
- And all its lofty battlements re-echo with the strain!
-
- Wake, baby, wake! For, lo! in floods of glory
- The Christmas Day advances over the hills of morn!
- Wake, baby, wake! and smile to hear the story
- How Christ, the Son of Mary, in Bethlehem was born!
-
-
-EASTER MORNING
-
- Dame Margaret spake to Annie Blair,
- To Annie Blair spake she,
- As from beneath her wrinkled hand
- She peered far out to sea.
-
- “Look forth, look forth, O Annie Blair,
- For my old eyes are dim;
- See you a single boat afloat
- Within the horizon’s rim?”
-
- Sweet Annie looked to east, to west,
- To north and south looked she:
- There was no single boat afloat
- Upon the angry sea.
-
- The sky was dark, the winds were high,
- The breakers lashed the shore,
- And louder and still louder swelled
- The tempest’s sullen roar.
-
- “Look forth again,” Dame Margaret cried;
- “Doth any boat come in?”
- And scarce she heard the answering word
- Above the furious din.
-
- “Pray God no boat may put to sea
- In such a gale!” she said;
- “Pray God no soul may dare to-night
- The rocks of Danger Head!”
-
- “This is Good Friday, Annie Blair,”
- Dame Margaret cried again,
- “When Mary’s Son, the Merciful,
- On Calvary was slain.
-
- The earth did quake, the rocks were rent,
- The graves were opened wide,
- And darkness like to this fell down
- When He—the Holy—died.
-
- Give me your hand, O Annie Blair;
- Your two knees fall upon;
- Christ send to you your lover back—
- To me, my only son!”
-
- All night they watched, all night they prayed,
- All night they heard the roar
- Of the fierce breakers dashing high
- Upon the lonely shore.
-
- Oh, hark! strange footsteps on the sand,
- A voice above the din:
- “Dame Margaret! Dame Margaret!
- Is Annie Blair within?
-
- High on the rocks of Danger Head
- Her lover’s boat is cast,
- All rudderless, all anchorless—
- Mere hull and splintered mast.”
-
- Oh, hark! slow footsteps on the sand,
- And women wailing sore:
- “Dame Margaret! Dame Margaret!
- Your son you’ll see no more!
-
- God pity you! Christ comfort you!”
- The weeping women cried;
- But “May God pity Annie Blair!”
- Dame Margaret replied.
-
- “For life is long and youth is strong,
- And it must still bear on.
- Leave us alone to make our moan—
- My son! alas, my son!”
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Easter morning, flushed with joy,
- Saw all the winds at rest,
- And far and near the blue sea smiled
- With sunshine on its breast.
-
- The neighbors came, the neighbors went;
- They sought the house of prayer;
- But on the rocks of Danger Head
- The dame and Annie Blair,
-
- With still, white faces, watched the deep
- Without a tear or moan.
- “I cannot weep,” said Annie Blair—
- “My heart is turned to stone.”
-
- Forth from the church the pastor came,
- And up the rocks strode he,
- Baring his thin white locks to meet
- The salt breath of the sea.
-
- “The rocks shall rend, the earth shall quake,
- The sea give up its dead,
- For Christ our Lord is risen indeed—
- ’Tis Easter morn,” he said.
-
- Oh, hark! oh, hark! A startled cry,
- A rush of hurrying feet,
- The swarming of a hundred men
- Adown the village street.
-
- “Now unto God and Christ the Lord
- Be praise and thanks alway!
- The sea hath given up its dead
- This blessed Easter-day.”
-
-
-SEALED ORDERS
-
- “Oh, whither bound, my captain?
- The wind is blowing free,
- And overhead the white sails spread
- As we go out to sea.”
-
- He looked to north, he looked to south,
- Or ever a word he spake;
- “With orders sealed my sails I set—
- Due east my course I take.”
-
- “But to what port?” “Nay, nay,” he cried,
- “This only do I know,
- That I must sail due eastward
- Whatever wind may blow.”
-
- For many a day we sailéd east.
- “O captain, tell me true,
- When will our good ship come to port?”
- “I cannot answer you!”
-
- “Then, prithee, gallant captain,
- Let us but drift awhile!
- The current setteth southward
- Past many a sunny isle,
-
- Where cocoas grow, and mangoes,
- And groves of feathery palm,
- And nightingales sing all night long
- To roses breathing balm.”
-
- “Nay, tempt me not,” he answered,
- “This only do I know,
- That I must sail due eastward
- Whatever winds may blow!”
-
- Then sailed we on, and sailed we east
- Into the whirlwind’s track.
- Wild was the tempest overhead,
- The sea was strewn with wrack.
-
- “Oh, turn thee, turn thee, captain,
- Thou’rt rushing on to death!”
- But back he answer shouted,
- With unabated breath:
-
- “Turn back who will, I turn not!
- For this one thing I know,
- That I must sail due eastward
- However winds may blow!”
-
- “Oh, art thou fool or madman?
- Thy port is but a dream,
- And never on the horizon’s rim
- Will its fair turrets gleam.”
-
- Then smiled the captain wisely,
- And slowly answered he,
- The while his keen glance widened
- Over the lonely sea:
-
- “I carry sealéd orders.
- This only thing I know,
- That I must sail due eastward
- Whatever winds may blow!”
-
-
-AN ANNIVERSARY
-
- _So long, so short,
- So swift, so slow,
- Are the years of man
- As they come and go!_
-
- O love, it was so long ago!
- So long, so long that we were young,
- And in the cloisters of our hearts
- Hope all her joy-bells rung!
- So long, so long that since that hour
- Full half a lifetime hath gone by—
- How ran the days ere first we met,
- Belovéd, thou and I?
-
- We had our dreams, no doubt. The dawn
- Must still presage the rising sun,
- And rose and crimson flush the east
- Ere day is well begun.
- We had our dreams—fair, shadowy wraiths
- That fled when Day’s full splendor kissed
- Our souls’ high places, and its winds
- Swept the vales clear of mist!
-
- _So long, so short,
- So swift, so slow,
- Are the years of man
- As they come and go!_
-
- O love, it was but yesterday!
- Who said it was so long ago?
- How many times the rose hath bloomed,
- Why should we care to know?
- For it was just as sweet last June,
- As dewy fresh, as fair, as red,
- As when our first glad Eden knew
- The rare perfumes it shed!
-
- O love, it was but yesterday!
- If yesterday is far away,
- As brightly on the hill-tops lies
- The sunshine of to-day.
- Sing thou, my soul! O heart, be glad!
- O circling years, fly swift or slow!
- Your ripening harvests shall not fail,
- Nor autumn’s utmost glow.
-
-
-MARTHA
-
- Yea, Lord!—Yet some must serve.
- Not all with tranquil heart,
- Even at thy dear feet,
- Wrapped in devotion sweet,
- May sit apart!
-
- Yea, Lord!—Yet some must bear
- The burden of the day,
- Its labor and its heat,
- While others at thy feet
- May muse and pray!
-
- Yea, Lord!—Yet some must do
- Life’s daily task-work; some
- Who fain would sing, must toil
- Amid earth’s dust and moil,
- While lips are dumb!
-
- Yea, Lord!—Yet man must earn,
- And woman bake the bread!
- And some must watch and wake
- Early, for others’ sake,
- Who pray instead!
-
- Yea, Lord!—Yet even thou
- Hast need of earthly care.
- I bring the bread and wine
- To thee, O Guest Divine!
- Be this my prayer!
-
-
-THE HOUR
-
- What is the hour of the day?
- O watchman, can you tell?
- Hark! from the tower of Time
- Strikes the alarum-bell!
-
- The strokes I cannot count.
- O watchman, can you see
- On the misty dial-plate
- What hours remain for me?
-
- I know the rosy dawn
- Faded—how long ago!—
- Lost in the radiant depths
- Of morning’s golden glow.
-
- Then all the mountain tops
- Stood breathless at high noon,
- While earth for brief repose
- Put off her sandal shoon.
-
- Now faster fly the hours—
- The afternoon is here;
- O watchman in the tower,
- Tell me, is sunset near?
-
- Yet—why care I to know?—
- Beyond the sunset bars
- Upon the dead day wait
- The brightest of the stars!
-
-
-THE CLOSED GATE
-
- I walked along a narrow way;
- The sun was shining everywhere;
- The jocund earth was glad and gay,
- With morning freshness in the air.
-
- The grass was green beneath my feet;
- The skies were blue and soft o’erhead;
- The robin carolled clear and sweet,
- And flowers their fragrance round me shed.
-
- How shone the great hills far away;
- How clear they rose against the blue;
- How fair the tranquil meadows lay,
- Where the bright river glances through!
-
- But suddenly, as on I pressed,
- Before me frowned a closéd gate;
- Filled with dismay, and sore distressed,
- I strove in vain to conquer fate!
-
- Beyond, the hills for which I sighed—
- Beyond, the valleys still and fair—
- Beyond, the meadows stretching wide,
- And all the shining fields of air!
-
- * * * * *
-
- What does it mean, O Father! when
- Thy children reach some closéd gate,
- Which, though they knock and knock again,
- Will not its watch and ward abate?
-
- Still shall they batter at the walls?
- Or still, like children, cry and fret,
- While the loud clamor of their calls
- Swells high in turbulent regret?
-
- When thou hast barred the door, shall they
- Challenge thy wisdom, God of love?
- Or humbly wait beside the way
- Till thou the barrier shalt remove?
-
- Too oft we cannot hear thee speak,
- So loud our voices and our prayers,
- While to the patient and the meek
- The gate thou openest unawares!
-
-
-CONTENT
-
- Not asking how or why,
- Before thy will,
- O Father, let my heart
- Lie hushed and still!
-
- Why should I seek to know?
- Thou art all-wise;
- If thou dost bid me go,
- Let that suffice.
-
- If thou dost bid me stay,
- Make me content
- In narrow bounds to dwell
- Till life be spent.
-
- If thou dost seal the lips
- That fain would speak,
- Let me be still till thou
- The seal shalt break.
-
- If thou dost make pale Pain
- Thy minister,
- Then let my patient heart
- Clasp hands with her.
-
- Or, if thou sendest Joy
- To walk with me,
- My Father, let her lead
- Me nearer thee!
-
- Teach me that Joy and Pain
- Alike are thine;
- Teach me my life to leave
- In hands divine!
-
-
-MY WONDERLAND
-
- They tell me you have been in Wonderland.
- Why, so have I! No boat’s keel touched the strand,
- No white sails flew, no swiftly gliding car
- Bore me to mystic realms, unknown and far.
-
- And yet I, too, with these same questioning eyes,
- Have seen its mountains and beheld its skies;
- I, too, have been in Wonderland, and know
- How through its secret vales the weird winds blow.
-
- One morn, in Wonderland—one chill spring morn—
- I saw a princess sleeping, pale and lorn,
- Cold as a corse; when, lo! from out the south
- A young knight rode, and kissed her sad, sweet mouth.
-
- She smiled, she woke! Then rang from far and near
- Her minstrels’ voices, jubilant and clear;
- While in a trice, with eager, noiseless feet,
- All the young maiden grasses, fair and fleet,
-
- Ran over hill and dale, to bring to her
- Green robes with wild flowers ’broidered. All astir
- Were the gay, courtier butterflies; the trees
- Flung forth their fluttering banners to the breeze;
-
- The soft airs fanned her; and, in russet dressed,
- Her happy servitors around her pressed,
- Bearing strange sweets, and curious flagons filled
- With life’s new wine, that all her pulses thrilled.
-
- In this same Wonderland, one sweet spring day,
- In a gray casket, deftly hidden away,
- I found two pearls; but as I looked they grew
- To living jewels, that took wing and flew.
-
- And once a creeping worm, within my sight
- Wove its own shroud and coffin, sealed and white
- Then, bursting from its cerements, soared in air,
- A radiant vision, most supremely fair.
-
- Out of the darksome mould, before my eyes
- I saw a shaft of emerald arise,
- Bearing a silver chalice veined with gold,
- And set with gems of splendors manifold.
-
- Once in a vast, pale, hollow pearl I stood,
- When o’er the vaulted dome there swept a flood
- Of lurid waves, and a dark funeral pyre
- Took to its heart a globe of crimson fire.
-
- The pageant faded. Lo! the pearl became
- A liquid sapphire, touched with rosy flame;
- And as I gazed, a silver crescent hung
- In violet depths, a thousand stars among.
-
- I saw a woman, marvellously fair,
- Flushed with warm life, and buoyant as the air;
- Next morn she was a statue, breathless, cold,
- A marble goddess of transcendent mould.
-
- I saw a folded bud, in one short hour,
- Open its sweet, warm heart and be a flower.
- O Wonderland! thou art so near, so far;
- Near as this rose, remote as yonder star!
-
-
-THE GUEST
-
- O thou Guest so long delayed,
- Surely, when the house was made,
- In its chambers wide and free,
- There was set a place for thee.
- Surely, in some room was spread
- For thy sake a snowy bed,
- Decked with linen white and fine,
- Meet, O Guest, for use of thine.
-
- Yet thou hast not kept the tryst.
- Other guests our lips have kissed:
- Other guests have tarried long,
- Wooed by sunshine and by song;
- For the year was bright with May,
- All the birds kept holiday,
- All the skies were clear and blue,
- When this house of ours was new.
-
- Youth came in with us to dwell,
- Crowned with rose and asphodel,
- Lingered long, and even yet
- Cannot quite his haunts forget.
- Love hath sat beside our board,
- Brought us treasures from his hoard,
- Brimmed our cups with fragrant wine,
- Vintage of the hills divine.
-
- Down our garden path has strayed
- Young Romance, in light arrayed;
- Joy hath flung her garlands wide;
- Faith sung low at eventide;
- Care hath flitted in and out;
- Sorrow strewn her weeds about;
- Hope held up her torch on high
- When clouds darkened all the sky.
-
- Pain, with pallid lips and thin,
- Oft hath slept our house within;
- Life hath called us, loud and long,
- With a voice as trumpet strong.
- Sometimes we have thought, O Guest,
- Thou wert coming with the rest,
- Watched to see thy shadow fall
- On the inner chamber wall.
-
- For we know that, soon or late,
- Thou wilt enter at the gate,
- Cross the threshold, pass the door,
- Glide at will from floor to floor.
- When thou comest, by this sign
- We shall know thee, Guest divine:
- Though alone thy coming be,
- Someone must go forth with thee!
-
-
-AN OLD-FASHIONED GARDEN
-
- An old-fashioned garden? Yes, my dear,
- No doubt it is. I was thinking here
- Only to-day, as I sat in the sun,
- How fair was the scene I looked upon;
- Yet wondered still, with a vague surprise,
- How it might look to other eyes.
-
- ’Tis a wide old garden. Not a bed
- Cut here and there in the turf; instead,
- The broad straight paths run east and west,
- Down which two horsemen could ride abreast,
- And north and south with an equal state,
- From the gray stone wall to the low white gate.
-
- And, where they cross on the middle line,
- Virgin’s-bower and wild woodbine
- Clamber and climb at their own sweet will
- Over the latticed arbor still;
- Though since they were planted years have flown,
- And many a time have the roses blown.
-
- To the right the hill runs down to the river,
- Where the willows droop and the aspens shiver,
- And under the shade of the hemlock-trees
- The low ferns nod to the passing breeze;
- There wild flowers blossom, and mosses creep
- With a tangle of vines o’er the wooded steep.
-
- So quiet it is, so cool and still,
- In the green retreat of the shady hill!
- And you scarce can tell, as you look within,
- Where the garden ends and the woods begin.
- But here, where we stand, what a blaze of light,
- What a wealth of color, makes glad the sight!
-
- Red roses burn in the morning glow;
- White roses proffer their cups of snow;
- In scarlet and crimson and cloth-of-gold
- The zinnias flaunt, and the marigold;
- And stately and tall the lilies stand,
- Like vestal virgins, on either hand.
-
- Here gay sweet-peas, like butterflies,
- Flutter and dance under summer skies;
- Blue violets here in the shade are set,
- With a border of fragrant mignonette;
- And here are pansies and columbine,
- And the burning stars of the cypress-vine.
-
- Stately hollyhocks, row on row,
- Golden sunflowers, all aglow,
- Scarlet poppies, and larkspurs blue,
- Asters of every shade and hue;
- And over the wall, like a trail of fire,
- The red nasturtium climbs high and higher.
-
- My lady’s-slippers are fair to see,
- And her pinks are as sweet as sweet can be,
- With gilly-flowers and mourning-brides,
- And many another flower besides.
- Do you see that rose without a thorn?
- It was planted the year my Hal was born.
-
- And he is a man now. Yes, my dear,
- An old-fashioned garden! But, sitting here,
- I think how often lover and maid
- Down these long flowery paths have strayed,
- And how little feet have over them run
- That will stir no more in shade or sun.
-
- As one who reads from an open book,
- On these fair luminous scrolls I look;
- And all the story of life is there—
- Its loves and losses, hope and despair.
- An old-fashioned garden—but to my eyes
- Fair as the hills of Paradise.
-
-
-DISCONTENT
-
-
-I.
-
-(_The Brier Rose speaks._)
-
- I cling to the garden wall
- Outside, where the grasses grow;
- Where the tall weeds flaunt in the sun,
- And the yellow mulleins blow.
- The dock and the thistle crowd
- Close to my shrinking feet,
- And the gypsy yarrow shares
- My cup and the food I eat.
-
- The rude winds toss my hair,
- The wild rains beat me down,
- The way-side dust lies white
- And thick on my leafy crown.
- I cannot keep my robes
- From wanton fingers free,
- And the veriest beggar dares
- To stop and gaze at me.
-
- Sometimes I climb and climb
- To the top of the garden wall,
- And I see her where she stands,
- Stately and fair and tall—
- My sister, the red, red Rose,
- My sister, the royal one,
- The fairest flower that blows
- Under the summer sun!
-
- What wonder that she is fair?
- What wonder that she is sweet?
- The treasures of earth and air
- Lie at her dainty feet;
- The choicest fare is hers,
- Her cup is brimmed with wine;
- Rich are her emerald robes,
- And her bed is soft and fine.
-
- She need not lift her head
- Even to sip the dew;
- No rude touch makes her shrink
- The whole long summer through.
- Her servants do her will;
- They come at her beck and call.
- Oh, rare is life in my lady’s bowers
- Inside of the garden wall!
-
-
-II.
-
-(_The Garden Rose speaks._)
-
- The garden path runs east,
- And the garden path runs west;
- There’s a tree by the garden gate,
- And a little bird in a nest.
- It sings and sings and sings!
- Does the bird, I wonder, know
- How, over the garden wall,
- The bright days come and go?
-
- The garden path runs north,
- And the garden path runs south;
- The brown bee hums in the sun,
- And kisses the lily’s mouth;
- But it flies away, away,
- To the birch-tree, dark and tall.
- What do you find, O brown bee,
- Over the garden wall?
-
- With ruff and farthingale,
- Under the gardener’s eye,
- In trimmest guise I stand—
- Oh, who so fine as I?
- But even the light wind knows
- That it may not play with me,
- Nor touch my beautiful lips
- With a wild caress and free.
-
- Oh, straight is the garden path,
- And smooth is the garden bed,
- Where never an idle weed
- Dares lift its careless head.
- But I know outside the wall
- They gather, a merry throng;
- They dance and flutter and sing,
- And I listen all day long.
-
- The Brier Rose swings outside;
- Sometimes she climbs so high
- I can see her sweet pink face
- Against the blue of the sky.
- What wonder that she is fair,
- Whom no strait bonds enthrall?
- Oh, rare is life to the Brier Rose,
- Outside of the garden wall!
-
-
-THE DOVES AT MENDON
-
- “Coo! coo! coo!” says Arné,
- Calling the doves at Mendon!
-
- Under the vine-clad porch she stands,
- A gentle maiden with willing hands,
- Dropping the grains of yellow corn.
- Low and soft, like a mellow horn,
- While the sunshine over her falls,
- Over and over she calls and calls
- “Coo! coo! coo!” to the doves—
- The happy doves at Mendon.
-
- “Coo! coo! coo!” says Arné,
- Calling the doves at Mendon!
-
- Down they flutter with timid grace,
- Lured by the voice and the tender face,
- Till the evening air is all astir
- With the happy strife and the eager whir.
- One by one, and two by two,
- And then a rush through the ether blue;
- While Arné scatters the yellow corn
- For the gentle doves at Mendon.
-
- “Coo! coo! coo!” says Arné,
- Calling the doves at Mendon!
-
- They hop on the porch where the baby sits,
- They come and go as a shadow flits,
- Now here, now there, while in and out
- They crowd and jostle each other about;
- Till one, grown bolder than all the rest—
- A snow-white dove with an arching breast—
- Softly lights on her outstretched hand
- Under the vines at Mendon.
-
- “Coo! coo! coo!” says Arné,
- Calling the doves at Mendon!
-
- With a rush and a whir of shining wings,
- They hear and obey—the dainty things!
- Dun and purple and snowy white,
- Clouded gray, like the soft twilight,
- Straight as an arrow shot from a bow,
- Wheeling and circling high and low,
- Down they fly from the slanting roof
- Of the old red barn at Mendon.
-
- “Coo! coo! coo!” says Arné,
- Calling the doves at Mendon!
-
- Baby Alice with wide blue eyes
- Watches them ever with new surprise,
- While she and Wag on the mat together
- Joy in the soft midsummer weather.
- Hither and thither she sees them fly,
- Gray and white on the azure sky,
- Light and shadow against the green
- Of the maple grove at Mendon.
-
- “Coo! coo! coo!” says Arné,
- Calling the doves at Mendon!
-
- A sound, a motion, a flash of wings—
- They are gone—like a dream of heavenly things.
- The doves have flown and the porch is still,
- And the shadows gather on vale and hill.
- Then sinks the sun, and the mountain breeze
- Stirs in the tremulous maple-trees;
- While Love and Peace, as the night comes down,
- Brood over quiet Mendon!
-
-
-A LATE ROSE
-
- I sent a little maiden
- To pluck for me a rose,
- The sweetest and the fairest
- That in the garden grows—
- A blush-rose, proud and tender,
- Upon its stem so slender,
- Swaying in dreamy splendor
- Where yellow sunshine glows.
-
- Back came the little maiden
- With drooping, downcast head,
- And slow, reluctant footsteps,
- And this to me she said:
- “I find no sweet blush-roses
- In all the garden closes:
- There are no summer roses;
- It must be they are dead!”
-
- Then bent I to the maiden
- And touched her shining hair—
- Dear heart! in all the garden
- Was nothing half so fair!
- “Nay!” said I, “let the roses
- Die in the garden closes
- Whenever fate disposes,
- If I _this_ rose may wear!”
-
-
-PERIWINKLE
-
- Tinkle, tinkle,
- Periwinkle!
- Soft and clear,
- Far or near,
- Still the mellow notes I hear!
- Up and down the sunny hills,
- Here you go, there you go,
- Where the happy mountain rills
- Tinkle soft, tinkle low;
- Where the willows, all a-quiver,
- Dip their long wands in the river,
- And the hemlock shadows fall
- By the gray rocks, cool and tall—
- In and out,
- And round about,
- Here you go,
- There you go!
-
- Tinkle, tinkle,
- Periwinkle!
- Here and there,
- Everywhere,
- Floats the music on the air!
- Through the pastures wide and free,
- Here you go, there you go,
- Making friends with bird and bee,
- Flying high, flying low;
- In and out, where lilies blowing
- Nod above wild grasses growing,
- Where the sweet-fern and the brake
- All around rich odors make,
- Where the mosses cling and creep
- To the rocks, and up the steep—
- In and out
- You wind about,
- Here and there,
- Everywhere!
-
- Tinkle, tinkle,
- Periwinkle!
- Day is done,
- And the sun
- Now its royal couch hath won!
- Homeward through the winding lane,
- Here you go, there you go,
- While the bell in sweet refrain
- Tinkles clear, tinkles low—
- Tinkles softly through the gloaming,
- “Drop the bars—I’m tired of roaming
- Here and there, everywhere
- Through the pastures wide and fair.
- Home is best,
- Home and rest!”
- Through the bars goes Periwinkle,
- While the bell goes tinkle, tinkle,
- Low and clear,
- Saying, softly, “Night is here!”
-
-
-AFTERNOON
-
- O perfect day,
- I bid thee stay!
- Too fast thy glad hours slip away;
- The morn, the noon,
- Have fled too soon—
- Delay, O golden afternoon!
-
- O peerless Sun,
- Thou radiant one
- Whose dazzling course is half-way run,
- Stay, stay thy flight
- Down yon blue height,
- Nor haste thee to the arms of night!
-
- The west wind blows
- O’er beds of rose,
- But does not stir my deep repose.
- In dreamful guise
- I close mine eyes,
- Borne on its wings to Paradise.
-
- Beneath this tree
- Half consciously.
- I share the life of all things free,
- Hearing the beat
- Of rhythmic feet,
- As the grasses run my hand to meet.
-
- The wild bee’s hum,
- The lone bird’s drum,
- O’er the wide pastures faintly come;
- And soft and clear
- Falls on my ear
- The cow-bell’s tinkle, far and near!
-
- Before my eyes
- Three blue peaks rise,
- Piercing the bright autumnal skies;
- Silent and grand,
- On either hand,
- Far mountain heights majestic stand.
-
- By wreaths of mist
- The vales are kissed—
- Fair, floating clouds of amethyst,
- That follow on,
- Through shade and sun,
- Where’er the river’s course may run.
-
- Here, looking down
- On roof-trees brown,
- I catch fair glimpses of the town.
- There, far away,
- The shadows play
- On crags and bowlders, huge and gray.
-
- All whispering low,
- The breezes go—
- The wandering birds flit to and fro;
- Winged motes float by
- Me as I lie,
- And yellow leaves drop silently.
-
- The morn, the noon,
- Have fled too soon—
- Delay, O golden afternoon,
- While with rapt eyes
- My spirit flies
- From yon blue peaks to Paradise!
-
-
- THE LADY OF THE PROW
- BERMUDA, MAY, 1883
-
-
- The salt tides ebb, the salt tides flow,
- From the near isles the soft airs blow;
- From leagues remote, with roar and din,
- Over the reefs the waves rush in;
- The wild white breakers foam and fret,
- Day follows day, stars rise and set;
- Yet, grandly poised, as calm and fair
- As some proud spirit of the air,
- Unmoved she lifts her radiant brow—
- She, the White Lady of the Prow!
-
- The winds blow east, the winds blow west,
- From woodlands low to the eagle’s nest;
- The winds blow north, the winds blow south.
- To steal the sweets from the lily’s mouth!
- We come and go; we spread our sails
- Like sea-gulls to the favoring gales;
- Or, soft and slow, our oars we dip
- Under the lee of the stranded ship.
- Yet little recks she when or how,
- The grand White Lady of the Prow.
-
- We laugh, we love, we smile, we sigh,
- But never she heeds as we glide by—
- Never she cares for our idle ways
- Nor turns from the brink of the world her gaze!
- What does she see when her steadfast eyes
- Peer into the sunset mysteries,
- And all the secrets of time and space
- Seem unfolded before her face?
- What does she hear when, pale and calm,
- She lists for the great sea’s evening psalm?
-
- Speak, Lady, speak! Thy sealèd lip,
- Thou fair white spirit of the ship,
- Could tell such tales of high emprise,
- Of valorous deeds and counsels wise!
- What prince shall rouse thee from thy trance,
- And meet thy first revealing glance,
- Or what Pygmalion from her sleep
- Bid Galatea wake and weep?
- The wave’s wild passion stirs thee not—
- Oh, is thy life’s long love forgot?
-
- How canst thou bear this trancèd calm
- By sunlit isles of bloom and balm—
- Thou who hast sailed the utmost seas,
- Empress alike of wave and breeze;
- Thou who hast swept from pole to pole,
- Where the great surges swell and roll;
- Breasted the billows white with wrath,
- Rode in the tempest’s fiery path,
- And proudly borne to waiting hands
- The glorious spoil of farthest lands?
-
- How canst thou bear this silence, deep
- And tranquil as an infant’s sleep—
- Thou who hast heard above thy head
- The white sails sing with wings outspread;
- Thou whose strong soul has thrilled to feel
- The swift rush of the ploughing keel,
- The dash of waves, and the wild uproar
- Of ocean lashed from shore to shore?
- How canst thou bear this changeless rest,
- Thou who hast made the world thy quest?
-
- O Lady of the stranded ship,
- Once more our lingering oars we dip
- In the clear blue that round thee lies,
- Fanned by the airs of Paradise!
- Farewell! farewell! But oft when day
- On our far hill-tops dies away,
- And night’s cool winds the pine-trees bow,
- Our eyes will see thee, even as now,
- Waiting—a spirit pale and calm—
- To hear the great sea’s evening psalm!
-
-
-THOU AND I
-
- April days are over!
- O my gay young lover,
- Forth we fare together
- In the soft May weather;
- Forth we wander, hand in hand,
- Seeking an enchanted land
- Underneath a smiling sky,
- So blithely—thou and I!
-
- Soft spring days are over!
- O my ardent lover,
- Many a hill together,
- In the July weather,
- Climb we when the days are long
- And the summer heats are strong,
- And the harvest wains go by,
- So bravely—thou and I!
-
- July days are over!
- O my faithful lover,
- Side by side together
- In the August weather,
- When the swift, wild storms befall us,
- And the fiery darts appall us,
- Wait we till the clouds sweep by,
- And stars shine—thou and I!
-
- Summer days are over!
- O my one true lover,
- Sit we now alone together
- In the early autumn weather!
- From our nest the birds have flown
- To fair dreamlands of their own,
- And we see the days go by,
- In silence—thou and I!
-
- Storm and stress are over!
- O my friend and lover,
- Closer now we lean together
- In the Indian-summer weather;
- See the bright leaves falling, falling,
- Hear the low winds calling, calling,
- Glad to let the world go by
- Unheeding—thou and I!
-
- Winter days are over!
- O my life-long lover,
- Rest we now in peace together
- Out of reach of changeful weather!
- Not a sound can mar our sleeping—
- Breath of laughter, or of weeping,
- May not reach us where we lie
- Uncaring—thou and I!
-
-
-
-
-LATER POEMS
-
-
- THE LEGEND OF THE BABOUSHKA
- A CHRISTMAS BALLAD
-
- “There’s a star in the East!” he cried,
- Jasper, the gray, the wise,
- To Melchior and to Balthazar
- Up-gazing to the skies.
-
- “Last night from my high tower
- I watched it as it burned,
- While all my trembling soul
- In awe and wonder yearned.
-
- For I know the midnight heavens;
- I can call the stars by name—
- Orion and royal Ashtaroth
- And Cimah’s misty flame.
-
- I know where Hesper glows,
- And where, with fiery eye,
- Proud Mars in burning splendor leads
- The armies of the sky.
-
- But never have I seen
- A star that shone like this—
- The star so long foretold
- By sage and seer it is!
-
- When first I, sleepless, saw it
- Slow breaking through the dark—
- Nay, hear me, Balthazar,
- And thou, O Melchior, hark!—
-
- When first I saw the star
- It bore the form of a child,
- It held in its hand a sceptre,
- Or the cross of the undefiled.
-
- Lo! somewhere on the earth
- It shines above His rest—
- The Royal One, the Babe,
- On mortal mother’s breast.
-
- Now haste we forth to find Him—
- To worship at His feet,
- To Him of whom the prophets sang
- Bearing oblations meet!”
-
- Then the Three Holy Kings
- Went forth in eager haste,
- With servants and with camels,
- Toward the desert waste.
-
- Ah! knew they what they bore?
- Gold for the earthly king—
- Frankincense for the God—
- Myrrh for man’s suffering.
-
- With breath of costly spices
- And precious gums of Isis,
- The desert air was sweet,
- As on they fared by day and night
- Judea’s King to greet.
-
- The strange star went before them,
- They followed where it led;
- “’Twill guide us to His presence,”
- Jasper, the holy, said.
-
- They crossed deep-flowing rivers,
- They climbed the mountains high,
- They slept in dreary places
- Under the lonely sky.
-
- One day, where stretched the desert
- Before them far and wide,
- They saw a smoke-wreath curling
- A spreading palm beside;
-
- And from a lowly dwelling,
- On household cares intent,
- A woman gazed upon them,
- In mute bewilderment.
-
- “O come with us!” cried Melchior,
- And ardent Balthazar,
- “We go to find the Christ-child,
- Led by yon blazing star!
-
- Thou knowest how the prophets
- His coming long foretold;
- We go to kneel before Him
- With gifts of myrrh and gold.”
-
- But she, delaying, answered,
- “My lords, your words are good,
- And I your pious mission
- Have gladly understood,
-
- Yet I, ere I can join you,
- Have many things to do:
- I must set my house in order,
- Must spin and bake and brew.
-
- Go ye to find Messiah!
- And when my work is done
- I will your footsteps follow,
- Mayhap ere set of sun.”
-
- Across the shining desert
- The slow train passed from sight;
- She set her house in order,
- She bleached her linen white.
-
- With busy hands she labored
- Till all at last was done—
- But thrice the moon had risen,
- And thrice the lordly sun!
-
- Then bound she on her sandals,
- Her pilgrim staff she took;
- With bread of wheat and barley,
- And water from the brook;
-
- And forth she went to find Him—
- The babe Emmanuel,
- Who should be born in Bethlehem
- By David’s sacred well.
-
- All that long day she journeyed;
- She scanned the desert wide,
- In all its lonely reaches
- There was no soul beside—
-
- No track to guide her onward,
- No footprints in the sand,
- Only the vast, still spaces
- Wide-stretched on either hand!
-
- Night came—but where the Wise Men
- Had seen His burning star,
- No glorious sign beheld she
- Clear beaming from afar,
-
- Though Orion and Arcturus
- Shone bright above her head,
- And up the heavenly arches
- Proud Mars his legions led!
-
- * * * * *
-
- She did not find the Christ-child.
- ’Tis said she seeks Him still,
- Over the wide earth roaming
- With swift, remorseful will.
-
- Her thin white locks the dew-fall
- Of every clime has wet—
- In palace and in hovel
- She seeks Messiah yet!
-
- In every child she fancies
- The Hidden One may be,
- On each bright head she gazes
- The mystic crown to see.
-
- She twines the Christmas garlands,
- She lights the Christmas fires,
- She leads the joyful carols
- Of all the Christmas choirs;
-
- She feeds the poor and hungry,
- And on her tender breast
- She soothes all suffering children
- To softest, sweetest rest.
-
- Attend her, holy Angels!
- Guard her, ye Cherubim!
- For whatsoe’er she does for these
- She does it as to Him!
-
-
- DAYBREAK
- AN EASTER POEM
-
-
- Mary Magdalenè,
- At the break of day,
- Wan with tears and watching
- Hasted on her way;
-
- Bearing costly spices,
- Myrrh, and sweet perfume,
- Through the shadowy garden
- To the Master’s tomb.
-
- Slowly broke the gray dawn:
- On her head the breeze
- Shook a rain of dew-drops
- From the cypress-trees.
-
- Rose and lily parted
- As to let her pass,
- And the violets blessed her
- From the tender grass.
-
- Little heed she paid them;
- Christ, the Lord, was dead;
- All at last was over,
- All at last was said.
-
- What of hope remainèd?
- Black against the sky,
- Calvary’s awful crosses
- Stretched their arms on high!
-
- Mary Magdalenè
- Made her bitter moan:
- “From the sealèd sepulchre
- Who shall roll the stone?”
-
- Swift she ran, her spirit
- Filled with awe and fear;
- Wide the door stood open
- As her feet drew near!
-
- All the place was flooded
- With a radiance bright;
- Forth into the darkness
- Streamed a holy light.
-
- Down she stooped, and peering
- The dread tomb within,
- Saw a great white angel
- Where the Lord had been!
-
- Sore she cried in anguish:
- “Who hath him betrayed?
- They have taken away my Lord!
- Where is he laid?”
-
- “Nay,” the shining angel,
- Calmly smiling, said—
- “Why seek ye the living
- Down among the dead?
-
- He is not here, but risen!”
- All her soul stood still;
- Through her trembling pulses
- Ran a conscious thrill.
-
- “Mary!” said a low voice;
- “Rabboni!” answered she.
- Then life was brought to light
- And immortality!
-
- Mary Magdalenè,
- First of woman born
- To see the clear light streaming
- O’er the hills of morn;
-
- First to hail the Lord Christ,
- Conqueror of Death,
- First to bow before Him
- With abated breath;
-
- First to hear the Master
- Say—“From Death’s dark prison,
- From its bonds and fetters,
- Lo! I have arisen!
-
- Now to God, my Father—
- Mine and yours—I go;
- And because I live
- Ye shall live also!”
-
- Didst thou grasp the meaning?
- Know that Death was dead?
- That the seed of woman
- Had bruised the serpent’s head?
-
- Didst thou know Messiah
- The gates of hell had broken,
- And life unto its captives
- Once for all had spoken?
-
- O! through all the ages,
- Every son of man,
- Be he slave or monarch,
- Born to bliss or ban—
-
- Lord, or prince, or peasant,
- Jester, sage, or seer,
- Wife, or child, or mother,
- Priest, or worshipper—
-
- Through the grave’s lone portals
- Soon or late had passed,
- But no sign or token
- Back to earth had cast!
-
- In Ramah was a voice heard
- Sounding through the years—
- Rachel for her children
- Pouring sighs and tears;
-
- Rizpah for her slain sons
- Woful vigils keeping;
- David for young Absalom
- In the chamber weeping!
-
- All earth’s myriad millions
- To their dead had cried,
- Empty arms outreaching
- In the silence wide,
-
- Yet from out the darkness
- Came nor word, nor sound,
- As the long ranks vanished
- In the black profound—
-
- Came no word till Mary
- Heard the Angel say—
- “Christ the Lord is risen;
- The Lord Christ lives to-day!”
-
- From the empty sepulchre
- Streamed the Light Divine;
- Grave where is thy victory?
- Where, O Death, is thine?
-
- Mary Magdalenè,
- Hope is born again;
- Clear the Day-star rises
- To the eyes of men.
-
- Lo! the mists are fleeing!
- Shine, O Olivet,
- For the crown of promise
- On thy brow is set!
-
- Lift your heads, ye mountains!
- Clap your hands, ye hills!
- Into rapturous singing
- Break, ye murmuring rills!
-
- Shout aloud, O forests!
- Swell the song, O seas!
- Wake, resistless ocean,
- All your symphonies!
-
- Wave your palms, O tropics!
- Lonely isles, rejoice!
- O ye silent deserts,
- Find a choral voice!
-
- Winds, on mighty trumpets,
- Blow the strains abroad,
- While each star in heaven
- Hails its risen Lord!
-
- “Alleluia! Alleluia!”—
- How the voices ring!
- “Alleluia! Alleluia!”
- Earth and heaven sing!
-
- Alleluia! Christ is risen!
- Chant his praise alway!
- From the sealèd sepulchre
- Christ is risen to-day!
-
-
-THE APPLE-TREE
-
- Graceful and lithe and tall,
- It stands by the garden wall,
- In the flush of its pink-white bloom
- Elate with its own perfume.
- Tossing its young bright head
- In the first glad joy of May,
- While its singing leaves sing back
- To the bird on the dancing spray.
- “I’m alive! I’m abloom!” it cries
- To the winds and the laughing skies.
- Ho! for the gay young apple-tree
- That stands by the garden wall!
-
- Sturdy and broad and tall,
- Over the garden wall
- It spreads its branches wide—
- A bower on either side.
- For the bending boughs hang low;
- And with shouts and gay turmoil
- The children gather like bees
- To garner the golden spoil;
- While the smiling mother sings,
- “Rejoice for the gift it brings!
- Ho! for the laden apple-tree
- That stands by our garden wall!”
-
- The strong swift years fly past,
- Each swifter than the last;
- And the tree by the garden wall
- Sees joy and grief befall.
- Still from the spreading boughs
- Some golden apples swing;
- But the children come no more
- For the autumn harvesting.
- The tangled grass lies deep
- Where the long path used to creep;
- Yet ho! for the brave old apple-tree
- That leans o’er the crumbling wall!
-
- Now generations pass,
- Like shadows on the grass.
- What is there that remains
- For all their toil and pains?
- A little hollow place
- Where once a hearthstone lay;
- An empty, silent space
- Whence life hath gone away;
- Tall brambles where the lilacs grew,
- Some fennel, and a clump of rue,
- And this one gnarled old apple-tree
- Where once was the garden wall!
-
-
-THE COMFORTER
-
- How dost thou come, O Comforter?
- In heavenly glory dressed,
- Down floating from the far-off skies,
- With lilies on thy breast?
- With silver lilies on thy breast,
- And in thy falling hair,
- Bringing the bloom and balm of heaven
- To this dim, earthly air?
-
- How dost thou come, O Comforter?
- With strange, unearthly light,
- And mystic splendor aureoled,
- In trances of the night?
- In lone, mysterious silences,
- In visions rapt and high,
- And holy dreams, like pathways set
- Betwixt the earth and sky?
-
- Not thus alone, O Comforter!
- Not thus, thou Guest Divine,
- Whose presence turns our stones to bread,
- Our water into wine!
- Not always thus—for thou dost stoop
- To our poor, common clay,
- Too faint for saintly ecstasy,
- Too impotent to pray.
-
- How does God send the Comforter?
- Ofttimes through byways dim;
- Not always by the beaten path
- Of sacrament and hymn;
- Not always through the gates of prayer,
- Or penitential psalm,
- Or sacred rite, or holy day,
- Or incense, breathing balm.
-
- How does God send the Comforter?
- Perchance through faith intense;
- Perchance through humblest avenues
- Of sight, or sound, or sense.
- Haply in childhood’s laughing voice
- Shall breathe the voice divine,
- And tender hands of earthly love
- Pour for thee heavenly wine!
-
- How will God send the Comforter?
- Thou knowest not, nor I!
- His ways are countless as the stars
- His hand hath hung on high.
- His roses bring their fragrant balm,
- His twilight hush its peace,
- Morning its splendor, night its calm,
- To give thy pain surcease!
-
-
-SANTA CLAUS
-
- A voice from out of the northern sky:
- “On the wings of the limitless winds I fly,
- Swifter than thought over mountain and vale,
- City and moorland, desert and dale!
- From the north to the south, from the east to the west,
- I hasten regardless of slumber or rest;
- Oh, nothing you dream of can fly as fast
- As I on the wings of the wintry blast!
-
- The wondering stars look out to see
- Who he that flieth so fast may be,
- And their bright eyes follow my earthward track
- By the gleam of the jewels I bear in my pack.
- For I have treasures for high and for low:
- Rubies that burn like the sunset glow;
- Diamond rays for the crownèd queen;
- For the princess, pearls with their silver sheen.
-
- I enter the castle with noiseless feet—
- The air is silent and soft and sweet;
- And I lavish my beautiful tokens there—
- Fairings to make the fair more fair!
- I enter the cottage of want and woe—
- The candle is out, and the fire burns low;
- But the sleepers smile in a happy dream
- As I scatter my gifts by the moon’s pale beam.
-
- There’s never a home so low, no doubt,
- But I in my flight can find it out;
- Nor a hut so hidden but I can see
- The shadow cast by the lone roof-tree!
- There’s never a home so proud and high
- That I am constrained to pass it by,
- Nor a heart so happy it may not be
- Happier still when blessed by me!
-
- What is my name? Ah, who can tell,
- Though in every land ’tis a magic spell!
- Men call me that, and they call me this;
- Yet the different names are the same, I wis!
- Gift-bearer to all the world am I,
- Joy-giver, Light-bringer, where’er I fly;
- But the name I bear in the courts above,
- My truest and holiest name, is—LOVE!”
-
-
- THE ARMORER’S ERRAND
- A BALLAD OF 1775
-
-
- Where the far skies soared clear and bright
- From mountain height to mountain height,
- In the heart of a forest old and gray,
- Castleton slept one Sabbath day—
- Slept and dreamed, on the seventh of May,
- Seventeen hundred and seventy-five.
-
- But hark! a humming, like bees in a hive;
- Hark to the shouts—“They come! they come!”
- Hark to the sound of the fife and drum!
- For up from the south two hundred men—
- Two hundred and fifty—from mount and glen,
- While the deep woods rang with their rallying cry
- Of “Ticonderoga! Fort Ti! Fort Ti!”
- Swept into the town with a martial tread,
- Ethan Allen marching ahead!
-
- Next day the village was all astir
- With unwonted tumult and hurry. There were
- Gatherings here and gatherings there,
- A feverish heat in the very air,
- The ominous sound of tramping feet,
- And eager groups in the dusty street.
- To Eben’s forge strode Gershom Beach
- (Idle it stood, and its master away);
- Blacksmith and armorer stout was he,
- First in the fight and first in the breach,
- And first in work where a man should be.
- “I’ll borrow your tools, my friend,” he said,
- “And temper these blades if I lose my head!”
-
- So he wrought away till the sun went down,
- And silence fell on the turbulent town;
- And the flame of the forge through the darkness glowed,
- A square of light on the sandy road.
- Then over the threshold a shadow fell,
- And he heard a voice that he knew right well.
- It was Ethan Allen’s. He cried: “I knew
- Where the forge-fire blazed I must look for you!
- But listen! more arduous work than this,
- Lying in wait for someone is;
- And tempering blades is only play
- To the task I set for him this day—
- Or this night, rather.” A grim smile played
- O’er the armorer’s face as his hand he stayed.
- “Say on. I never have shirked,” said he;
- “What may this wonderful task-work be?”
-
- “To go by the light of the evening star
- On an urgent errand, swift and far—
- From town to town and from farm to farm
- To carry the warning and sound the alarm!
- Wake Rutland and Pittsford! Rouse Neshobè, too,
- And all the fair valley the Otter runs through—
- For we need more men! Make no delay,
- But hasten, hasten, upon your way!”
- He doffed his apron, he tightened his belt,
- To fasten the straps of his leggings he knelt.
- “Ere the clock strikes nine,” said Gershom Beach,
- “Friend Allen, I will be out of reach;
- And I pledge you my word, ere dawn of day
- Guns and men shall be under way.
- But where shall I send these minute-men?”
- “Do you know Hand’s Cove?” said Allen then,
- “On the shore of Champlain? Let them meet me there
- By to-morrow night, be it foul or fair!”
-
- “Good-by, I’m off!” Then down the road
- As if on seven-league boots he strode,
- While Allen watched from the forge’s door
- Till the stalwart form he could see no more.
- Into the woods passed Gershom Beach;
- By nine of the clock he was out of reach.
- But still, as his will his steps outran,
- He said to himself, with a laugh, “Old man,
- Never a minute have you to lose,
- Never a minute to pick or choose;
- For sixty miles in twenty-four hours
- Is surely enough to try your powers.
- So square your shoulders and speed away
- With never a halt by night or day.”
-
- ’Twas a moonless night; but over his head
- The stars a tremulous lustre shed,
- And the breath of the woods grew strangely sweet,
- As he crushed the wild ferns under his feet,
- And trampled the shy arbutus blooms,
- With their hoarded wealth of rare perfumes.
- He sniffed as he went. “It seems to me
- There are May-flowers here, but I cannot see.
- I’ve read of the ‘hush of the silent night’;
- Now hark! there’s a wolf on yonder height;
- There’s a snarling catamount prowling round;
- Every inch of the ‘silence’ is full of sound;
- The night-birds cry; the whip-poor-wills
- Call to each other from all the hills;
- A scream comes down from the eagle’s nest;
- The bark of a fox from the cliff’s tall crest;
- The owls hoot; and the very trees
- Have something to say to every breeze!”
-
- The paths were few and the ways were rude
- In the depths of that virgin solitude.
- The Indian’s trail and the hunter’s tracks,
- The trees scarred deep by the settler’s axe,
- Or a cow-path leading to the creek,—
- These were the signs he had to seek;
- Save where, it may be, he chanced to hit
- The Crown Point road and could follow it—
- The road by the British troops hewn out
- Under General Amherst in fifty-nine,
- When he drove the French from the old redoubt,
- Nor waited to give the countersign!
-
- The streams were many and swift and clear;
- But there was no bridge, or far or near.
- It was midnight when he paused to hear
- At Rutland, the roar of the waterfall,
- And found a canoe by the river’s edge,
- In a tangled thicket of reeds and sedge.
- With a shout and a cheer, on the rushing tide
- He launched it and flew to the other side;
- Then giving his message, on he sped,
- By the light of the pale stars overhead,
- Past the log church below Pine Hill,
- And the graveyard opposite. All was still,
- And the one lone sleeper lying there
- Stirred not either for cry or prayer.
-
- Only pausing to give the alarm
- At rude log cabin and lonely farm.
- From hamlet to hamlet he hurries along,
- Borne on by a purpose deep and strong.
- Look! there’s a deer in the forest glade,
- Stealing along like a silent shade!
- Hark to the loon that cries and moans
- With a living grief in its human tones!
- At Pittsford the light begins to grow
- In the wakening east; and drifting slow,
- From valley and river and wild-wood, rise,
- Like the smoke of a morning sacrifice,
- Clouds of translucent, silver mist,
- Flushing to rose and amethyst;
- While thrush and robin and bluebird sing
- Till the woods with jubilant music ring!
-
- It was day at last! He looked around,
- With a firmer tread on the springing ground;
- “Now the men will be all afield,” said he,
- “And that will save many a step for me.
- Each man will be ready to go; but still,
- I must confess, if I’d had my will,
- I’d have waited till after planting-time,
- For now the season is in its prime.
- The young green leaves of the oak-tree here
- Are just the size of a squirrel’s ear;
- And I’ve known no rule, since I was born,
- Safer than that for planting corn!”
-
- He threaded the valleys, he climbed the hills,
- He forded the rivers, he leaped the rills,
- While still to his call, like minute-men
- Booted and spurred, from mount and glen,
- The settlers rallied. But on he went
- Like an arrow shot from a bow, unspent,
- Down the long vale of the Otter to where
- The might of the waterfall thundered in air;
- Then across to the lake, six leagues and more,
- Where Hand’s Cove lay in the bending shore.
- The goal was reached. He dropped to the ground
- In a deep ravine, without word or sound;
- And Sleep, the restorer, bade him rest
- Like a weary child, on the earth’s brown breast.
-
- At midnight he woke with a quick heart-beat,
- And sprang with a will to his throbbing feet;—
- For armed men swarmed in the dim ravine,
- And Ethan Allen, as proud of mien
- As a king on his throne, smiled down on him,
- While he stretched and straightened each stiffened limb.
- “Nay, nay,” said the Colonel, “take your rest,
- As a knight who has done his chief’s behest!”
-
- “Not yet!” cried the armorer. “Where’s my gun?
- A knight fights on till the field is won!”
- And into Fort Ti, ere dawn of day,
- He stormed with his comrades to share the fray!
-
-
-FORESHADOWINGS
-
- Wind of the winter night,
- Under the starry skies
- Somewhere my lady bright,
- Slumbering lies.
- Wrapped in calm maiden dreams,
- Where the pale moonlight streams,
- Softly she sleeps.
-
- I do not know her face,
- Pure as the lonely star
- That in yon darkling space
- Shineth afar;
- Never with soft command
- Touched I her willing hand,
- Kissed I her lips.
-
- I have not heard her voice,
- I do not know her name;
- Yet doth my heart rejoice,
- Owning her claim;
- Yet am I true to her;
- All that is due to her
- Sacred I keep.
-
- Never a thought of me
- Troubles her soft repose;
- Courant of mine may be
- Lily nor rose.
- They may not bear to her
- This heart’s fond prayer to her,
- Yet—she is mine.
-
- Wind of the winter night,
- Over the fields of snow,
- Over the hill so white,
- Tenderly blow!
- Somewhere red roses bloom;
- Into her warm, hushed room,
- Bear thou their breath.
-
- Whisper—Nay, nay, thou sprite,
- Breathe thou no tender word;
- Wind of the winter night,
- Die thou unheard.
- True love shall yet prevail,
- Telling its own sweet tale:
- Till then I wait.
-
-
-WON
-
- Bird, by her garden gate
- Singing thy happy song,
- Round thee the listening leaves
- Joyously throng.
- Tell them that yesternight
- Under the stars so bright,
- I wooed and won her!
-
- Red rose, rejoice with me!
- Swing all thy censers low,
- Bid each fair bud of thine
- Hasten to blow.
- Lift every glowing cup
- Brimming with sweetness up,
- For—I have won her!
-
- Wind, bear the tidings far,
- Far over hill and dale;
- Let every breeze that blows
- Swell the glad tale.
- River, go tell the sea,
- Boundless and glad and free,
- That I have won her!
-
- Stars, ye who saw the blush
- Steal o’er her lovely face,
- When first her tender lips
- Granted me grace,
- Who can with her compare,
- Queen of the maidens rare?
- Yet—I have won her!
-
- Sun, up yon azure height
- Treading thy lofty way,
- Ruler of sea and land,
- King of the Day—
- Where’er thy banners fly,
- Who is so blest as I?
- I—who have won her!
-
- Oh, heart and soul of mine,
- Make ye the temple clean,
- Make all the cloisters pure
- Seen and unseen!
- Bring fragrant balm and myrrh,
- Make the shrine meet for her,
- Now ye have won her!
-
-
-BAPTISM OF FIRE
-
- Happy birds caroling love-songs, winds in the tree-tops at play,
- Earth, like an Eden, rejoicing in the beautiful gladness of May!
-
- Over the mountains a splendor of crimson and amethyst swept:
- Gray mists stole up from the valley, the dense shadows after them
- crept.
-
- Down the green aisles of the orchard, pink-white with the promise of
- bloom,
- Stood the apple-trees, wooing already the brown bees with wealth of
- perfume.
-
- Then sounded the blast of a trumpet, like the cry of a soul in pain,
- Crashing of thunder-bolts warring with the hosts of the scourging
- rain.
-
- Till when the raging battalions swept on with resistless sway,
- Prone in the path of the tempest the pride of the orchard lay!
-
- “O beautiful buds close folded, that never will bloom!” I cried,
- “Alas for the unfulfilment, alas for the bliss denied!”
-
- But filling my arms with the branches, I carried them in, where the
- fire
- Blazed on the glowing hearth-stone like a sacrificial pyre.
-
- And into the flames I tossed them, when before my startled eyes,
- As in a miraculous vision, shone a marvel, a surprise.
-
- In the heart of the fiery splendor the pale buds, one by one,
- Opened to heat of the burning as to kiss of the summer sun!
-
-
- AT THE FEAST
- “And the Lord of the Castle is Time.”
-
-
- When the hour has come and the servants wait
- The tramp of steeds at the castle gate,
- When the lamps aglow in the banquet-hall
- Like a thousand stars burn over all,
- When the board is spread and the feast is set,
- And the dew on the roses lingers yet,
- Whom shall the Master summon
- To sit at his right hand?
-
- Let the music soar to the vaulted roof,
- Let the flute-notes swell, alow, aloof,
- While chief and retainer alike await
- The Lord of the Castle who cometh late;
- The guests are bidden, the red wine flows,
- But not the wisest among them knows
- Whom the Master shall summon
- To sit at his right hand!
-
- For the Lord of the Castle, who cometh late,
- When he comes, at length, in pomp and state,
- And with glitter of mail, and clang of sword,
- Strides to his place at the head of the board,
- Ofttimes reverses the order set,
- Nor beckons to crown or coronet!
- Whom he will the Master summons
- To sit at his right hand!
-
-
-OVER AND OVER
-
- “Just the same thing over and over!”
- But that is the way of the world, my dear;
- Over and over, over and over,
- Old things repeated from year to year!
-
- Hear what the sun saith: “Patient still,
- The vaulted heavens I climb and climb,
- Over and over with tireless will,
- Day after day till the end of time!
-
- Never a pause and never a rest;
- Yet every morning the earth is new,
- And ever the clouds in the golden west
- Have a fresh glory shining through.”
-
- Hear what the grass saith: “Up the hills
- And through the orchard I creep and creep,
- Over the meadows, and where the rills
- Laugh in the shadows cool and deep.
-
- Every spring it is just the same!
- And because it is, I am sure to see
- The oriole’s flash of vivid flame
- In the pink-white bloom of the apple-tree.”
-
- Hear what dear Love saith: “Ah, I hear
- The same old story over and over;
- Mother and maiden year by year
- Whisper it still to child and lover!
-
- But sweeter it grows from age to age,
- The song begotten so long ago,
- When first man came to his heritage,
- And walked with God in the even-glow.”
-
-
-A LISTENING BIRD
-
- A little bird sat on an apple-tree,
- And he was as hoarse as hoarse could be;
- He preened and he prinked, and he ruffled his throat,
- But from it there floated no silvery note.
- “Not a song can I sing,” sighed he, sighed he—
- “Not a song can I sing,” sighed he.
-
- In tremulous showers the apple-tree shed
- Its pink and white blossoms on his head;
- The gay sun shone, and, like jubilant words,
- He heard the gay song of a thousand birds.
- “All the others can sing,” he dolefully said—
- “All the others can sing,” he said.
-
- So he sat and he drooped. But as far and wide
- The music was borne on the air’s warm tide,
- A sudden thought came to the sad little bird,
- And he lifted his head as within him it stirred.
- “If I cannot sing, I can listen,” he cried;
- “Ho! ho! I can listen!” he cried.
-
-
-THE FIRST FIRE
-
- O Virgin hearth, as chaste and cold
- As one who waits for burial mould,
- Whom shall we summon here to keep
- Watch while thou wakest from thy sleep?
-
- Not from the far sky spaces, blue
- As those that Zeus and Hera knew,
- May Hestia wing her airy flight,
- Bringer of holy warmth and light.
-
- Pan may not come. By stream and shore
- Fair Naiads dry their locks no more;
- No Oread dwells in mount and glen;
- No Dryad flees from gods or men.
-
- Yet still do forest voices clear
- Greet him whose soul hath ears to hear;
- The murmur of the rustling pine
- Is sweet as Hermes’s harp divine.
-
- The winds that rend the mighty oak
- Clash loud as Ares’s battle stroke;
- The maples toss each leafy crown
- Though Dian’s votive wreaths are brown.
-
- Here, as to sacrificial pyre
- Kindled with pure celestial fire,
- Shall hemlock, pine, and maple bring
- The deep wood’s fragrant offering,
-
- As incense to this household shrine.
- O hearth, no richer spoil were thine
- If all Dodona’s oaks had shed
- Their life-blood and for thee lay dead!
-
- Thou waiting one, doth no strange thrill
- Thy quickening veins with wonder fill?
- Have the far-seeing, prescient years
- No presage for thy listening ears?
-
- Life hath its phases manifold,
- Yet still the new repeats the old;
- There is no truer truth than this:
- What was, is still the thing that is.
-
- Therefore we know that thou wilt hear
- Childhood’s light laughter ringing clear;
- The flow of song, the breath of prayer,
- Whisper of love, and sigh of care.
-
- Thou wilt see youth go forth to gauge
- His being’s lofty heritage,
- And manhood in the autumn eves
- Come homeward laden with his sheaves.
-
- O life and death, O joy and woe,
- In mingling streams your tides shall flow,
- While sun and storm alike fulfil
- The mandates of the Eternal Will!
-
- Now bring the torch and light the fire,
- Let the swift flames leap high and higher,
- Let the red radiance stream afar,
- Dearer than glow of moon or star!
-
- Burn, burn, O fire, burn still and clear,
- And fill the house with warmth and cheer!
- Soar, soar, O fire, so brave, so bright,
- And souls shall soar to share thy flight!
-
-
-MIDNIGHT CHIMES
-
- _Noel! Noel! Noel! Noel!_
- Down yon lonely height
- Hear the joyous summons pealing
- Through the starry night.
- _Noel! Noel! Noel! Noel!_
- Ring the Christmas bells;
- From the church-tower on the hill
- Clear the music swells.
-
- Far and near the listening mountains
- Bend to catch the strain,
- Dome, and peak, and shadowy fastness
- Join the glad refrain,—
- _Noel! Noel!_ All the pine-trees
- Feel a subtile thrill,
- And the hemlock groves, responsive,
- Whisper and are still.
-
- _Noel! Noel!_ Through the valley
- Where the river goes
- In and out between the meadows,
- Soft the music flows,
- And the river, dumbly sleeping,
- Feels its cold heart beat
- Answering to the pulsing rhythm
- Of the anthem sweet.
-
- _Noel! Noel!_ Hark! a rustling
- On the frosty air,
- Where the aspens, all a-quiver,
- Bend their branches bare;
- Airy birches, stately maples,
- Black against the sky,
- Wave their leafless boughs like banners
- When a king goes by.
-
- _Noel! Noel!_ Sweet-breathed oxen,
- In the farm-yard close,
- Lift their horned heads to listen,
- Startled from repose;
- Then they sleep as slept the white flocks
- On Judea’s hills,
- While again the olden glory
- Earth with rapture fills.
-
- _Noel! Noel!_ Little children
- In their soft nests smile,
- Dreaming of fair choiring angels
- Floating near the while;
- Voiceless snow-birds, half awakened,
- Stir their drowsy wings
- With, mayhap, a vague, unconscious
- Sense of heavenly things.
-
- _Noel! Noel!_ In the church-yard,
- Where the low graves lie,
- Light winds bear the strains melodious,
- Soft as spirit’s sigh;
- Do ye hear it, O ye sleepers,
- As it dies and swells?
- Hear your ears the mystic music
- Of earth’s Christmas bells?
-
-
-MY LADY SLEEP
-
- In cool gray cloisters walks my Lady Sleep,
- Telling her smooth beads slowly, one by one;
- Along the wall the stealthy shadows creep;
- Night holds the world in thrall, and day is done.
-
- Sometimes, while winds sigh soft above her head,
- Down the long garden path my Lady strays,
- And kneeling by the pansies’ purple bed,
- Counts the small faces in the moonlit haze.
-
- Sometimes she lies upon the silver sands,
- Following the sea-birds, as they wheel and dip;
- Or idly clasps, in still persistent hands,
- The shining grains that through her fingers slip.
-
- Or paces long, with flowing locks all wet,
- Where the low thunder booms forevermore,
- And the great waves no man hath numbered yet,
- Roll, one by one, to break upon the shore.
-
- Sometimes she counts the brightening twilight stars,
- The daisies smiling in the meadow grass,
- The slow kine trailing through the pasture bars,
- The white sheep loitering in the mountain pass.
-
- But evermore her hands are cool and calm—
- Her quiet voice is ever hushed and low;
- And evermore her tranquil lips breathe balm,
- And silent as a dream her garments flow.
-
- She comes, she goes—whence, whither—who can tell?
- Angels of God, do ye her secret keep?
- Know ye the talisman, the sign, the spell,
- The mystic password of my Lady Sleep?
-
-
-THE KING’S TOUCH
-
- “The King’s touch—there is magic in it!
- When the early dawn in the east is red,
- And I hear the song of the lark and linnet,
- I will rise like a wraith from my sleepless bed.
-
- Then wrapped in a cloak of hodden gray
- I will steal like a shadow over the hills,
- And down where the pendulous willows sway,
- And the rich, ripe grape its scent distils—
-
- Till I reach the edge of the forest wide;
- And there will I bide, where the still shades are,
- Till the King and his huntsmen forth do ride,
- And the sweet wild horn rings out afar.
-
- I will wait and listen until I see
- The nodding plumes of the merry men
- And the glancing pennants floating free,
- A gleam of light in the lonely glen.
-
- Then low in the dust at his royal feet
- I will kneel for the touch of his healing hand;
- Perchance he will give ere I entreat,
- Before I cry he may understand!
-
- The King’s proud Leech will be there I trow—
- A wise old man with a reverent air—
- And the laughing courtiers, row on row;
- Yet not unto them will I make my prayer.
-
- ’Tis the King, the King, who will know it all.
- His eye will discover the wound concealed;
- He will bend to hear me before I call.
- Whom the King touches shall be healed!”
-
- Was the maiden cured? Ah, none can tell!
- She was dust and ashes long ago,
- With the proud young king and his leech as well,
- And the smiling courtiers, row on row.
-
- But whether the dawn in the east be red,
- Or whether the stars bloom out afield,
- This truth remaineth, tho’ myths lie dead:
- “Whom the King touches shall be healed!”
-
-
-“BY DIVERS PATHS”
-
- Unknown to me thy name or state,
- Save that a mantle saintly
- Of rare and sweet unworldliness
- Enfolded thee most quaintly.
-
- We came and went by divers paths;
- We planned nor time, nor meeting;
- We spake not, save by nod, or smile,
- Or glance of casual greeting.
-
- Yet, led by some strange chance or fate
- To-day by ruined altars,
- Where, strained through clustering ivy leaves,
- The pitying sunshine falters;
-
- To-morrow where your blue lakes shine,
- And bloom your English daisies;
- Or on Helvellyn’s lofty crest
- The sunset splendor blazes;
-
- Or where deep organ-thunders roll
- Through grand cathedral arches,
- And stately Durham’s triple towers
- Look toward the Scottish marches;
-
- Thus, here and there, we met, nor knew
- Each other’s name nor mission,
- The while a subtile kinship grew
- To silent recognition.
-
- At length where stretched a princely street
- In long, receding splendor,
- Down which the golden sunshine threw
- A radiance warm and tender;
-
- While far above us, frowning, hung
- A castle old and hoary,
- Stern on its battlemented heights
- Renowned in song and story;
-
- And near us, throned in marble state,
- O’er time and death victorious,
- _He_ sat, the magic of whose pen
- Made king and castle glorious—
-
- There, face to face, once more we met,
- Like leaves in autumn weather,
- That blown afar by varying winds,
- Yet drift again together.
-
- A look, a smile, and “Is it thou?”
- A little low, sweet laughter,
- Just one close clasp of meeting hands,
- And then, a moment after,
-
- Between us swept the surging crowd
- And we were borne asunder.
- O, friend unknown, in what far land
- Will we next meet, I wonder?
-
-
-THE BLIND BIRD’S NEST
-
-“The nest of the blind bird is built by God.”—TURKISH PROVERB.
-
- Thou who dost build the blind bird’s nest,
- Am I not blind?
- Each bird that flyeth east or west
- The track can find.
-
- Each bird that flies from north to south
- Knows the far way;
- From mountain’s crest to river’s mouth
- It does not stray.
-
- Not one in all the lengthening land,
- In all the sky,
- Or by the ocean’s silver strand,
- Is blind as I!
-
- And dost Thou build the blind bird’s nest?
- Build Thou for me
- Some shelter where my soul may rest
- Secure in Thee.
-
- Close clinging to the bending bough,
- Bind it so fast
- It shall not loose if high or low
- Blows the loud blast.
-
- If fierce storms break, and the wild rain
- Comes pelting in,
- Cover the shrinking nest, restrain
- The furious din.
-
- At sultry noontide, when the air
- Trembles with heat,
- Draw close the leafy covert where
- Cool shadows meet.
-
- And when night falleth, dark and chill,
- Let one fair star,
- Love’s star all luminous and still,
- Shine from afar.
-
- Thou who dost build the blind bird’s nest
- Build Thou for me;
- So shall my being find its rest
- Forevermore in Thee.
-
-
-TWO PATHS
-
- A Path across a meadow fair and sweet,
- Where clover-blooms the lithesome grasses greet,
- A path worn smooth by his impetuous feet.
-
- A straight, swift path—and at its end, a star
- Gleaming behind the lilac’s fragrant bar,
- And her soft eyes, more luminous by far!
-
- * * * * *
-
- A path across the meadow fair and sweet,
- Still sweet and fair where blooms and grasses meet—
- A path worn smooth by his reluctant feet.
-
- A long, straight path—and, at its end, a gate
- Behind whose bars she doth in silence wait
- To keep the tryst, if he comes soon or late!
-
-
-ST. JOHN’S EVE
-
- The veil is thin between
- The seen and the unseen—
- Thinner to-night than the transparent air;
- All heaven and earth are still,
- Save when from some far hill
- Floateth the nightbird’s unavailing prayer;
- Up from the mountain bars
- Climb the slow, patient stars,
- Only to faint in moonlight white and rare!
-
- Ere earth had grown too wise
- To commerce with the skies,
- On this midsummer night the men of old
- Believed the dead drew near,
- Believed that they could hear
- Voices long silent speaking from the mould,
- Believed whoever slept
- Unearthly vigil kept
- Where his own death-knell should at last be tolled.
-
- In solemn midnight marches
- Beneath dark forest arches
- They fancied that their hungry souls found God;
- His angels clad in light
- Stole softly through the night,
- Leaving no impress on the yielding sod,
- And bore to mortal ears
- Tidings from other spheres,
- The undiscovered way no man hath trod.
-
- Ah! what if it were true?
- Then would I call ye who
- Have one by one beyond my vision flown;
- I would set wide the door
- Ye enter now no more
- Crying, “Come in from out the void unknown!
- Come as ye came of old
- Laden with love untold”—
- Hark! was that nothing but the night wind’s moan?
-
-
-A LITTLE SONG
-
- Little song I fain would sing,
- Why dost thou elude me so?
- Like a bird upon the wing,
- Sailing high, sailing low,
- Yet forever out of reach,
- Thou dost vex me beyond measure,
- Unallured by prayer or speech,
- Waiting thine own time and pleasure!
-
- Well I know thee, tricksy sprite—
- I could call thee by thy name;
- I have wooed thee day and night,
- Yet thou wilt not own my claim.
- Hark! thou’rt hovering even now
- In the soft still air above me—
- Fantasy or dream art thou,
- That my heart’s cry cannot move thee?
-
- Little song I never sang,
- Thou art sweeter than the strain
- That through starry mazes rang,
- First-born child of joy and pain.
- I shall sing thee not; but surely
- From some all-compelling voice
- Swelling high, serenely, purely,
- I shall hear thee and rejoice!
-
-
-THE PRINCES’ CHAMBER
-
- I stood upon Tower Hill,
- Bright were the skies and gay,
- Yet a cloud and a sudden chill
- Passed over the summer day—
- A thrill, and a nameless dread,
- As of one who waits alone
- Where gather the silent dead
- Under the charnel stone.
-
- For before my shrinking eyes
- They glided, one by one,
- The great, the good, the wise,
- Who here to death were done;
- Sinners and saints they came
- With blood-stained garments on,
- Reckless of praise or blame,
- Or battles lost or won.
-
- Then over the moat I passed
- And paused at the Traitors’ Gate;
- Did I hear a trumpet’s blast,
- Forerunner of deadly fate?
- Lo! up the stairs from the river,
- Where the sombre shadows crept,
- With none to help or deliver,
- Kings, queens, and princes swept!
-
- O, some of those royal dames
- Drooped, with dishevelled hair,
- And mien of one who claims
- Close kindred with despair!
- And some were proud and cold,
- With eyes that blazed like stars,
- As under that archway old
- They passed to their prison-bars.
-
- To prison-bars or death!
- Fair, hapless Anne Boleyn;
- That haughty maid, Elizabeth;
- Northumberland’s pale queen;
- Margaret Plantagenet,
- Her gray locks floating wild—
- How the line lengthens yet,
- Knight, prelate, statesman, child!
-
- Fiercely the black portcullis
- Frowned as I onward went;
- The Bloody Tower is this—
- Strong tower of dread portent!
- “Show me the Princes’ Chamber,”
- To the Yeoman Guard I said;
- O, the stairs were steep to clamber,
- And the rough vault dark o’erhead!
-
- No sigh in the sunny room,
- No moan from the groined roof,
- No wail of expectant doom
- Echoed alow, aloof!
- But instead a mother sang
- To a child upon her knee,
- Whose peals of laughter rang
- Like sweet bells mad with glee.
-
- Sunshine for murky air,
- Smiles for the sob of pain,
- Joy for dark despair,
- Hope where sweet hope was slain!
- “Art thou happy here,” I cried,
- “Where once was lonely woe,
- And the royal children died,—
- Murdered so long ago?”
-
- She smiled. “O, lady, yes!
- Earth hath forgotten them;
- See how my roses press,
- Blooming on each fair stem!
- The princes, they sleep sound,
- But love nor joy are dead;
- I fear no haunted ground,
- I have my child,” she said.
-
-
-WONDERLAND
-
- Wonderland is here and there;
- Wonderland is everywhere;
- Fly not then to east or west
- On some far, uncertain quest.
-
- Seek not India nor Japan,
- Nor the city Ispahan,
- Where to-day the shadows brood
- Over lonely Zendarood.
-
- Somewhere smileth far Cathay
- Through the long resplendent day;
- Somewhere, moored in purple seas,
- Sleep the fair Hesperides.
-
- Somewhere, in vague realms remote
- Over which strange banners float,
- Lies, all bathed in silver gleams,
- The dear Wonderland of dreams.
-
- Yet no need to sail in ships
- Where the blue sea dips and dips,
- Nor on wings of cloud to fly
- Where the haunts of faery lie.
-
- For by miracle of morn
- Each successive day is born;
- And wherever shines the sun,
- There enchanted rivers run!
-
- Would you go to Wonderland?
- Lo! it lieth close at hand;
- Wonderland is wheresoe’er
- Eyes can see and ears can hear!
-
-
- IN A GALLERY
- (ANTWERP, 1891)
-
-
- The Virgin floating on the silver moon;
- Madonna Mary with her holy child;
- Pale Christs on shuddering crosses lifted high;
- Sweet angel faces, bending from the blue;
- Saints rapt from earth in ecstasy divine,
- And martyrs all unmindful of their pain;
- Bold, mail-clad knights; fair ladyes whom they loved;
- Brown fisher-boys and maidens; harvest-fields,
- Where patient women toiled; with here and there
- The glint of summer skies and summer seas,
- And the red glow of humble, household fires!
-
- Breathless I stood and silent, even as one
- Who, seeing all, sees nothing. Then a face
- Down the long gallery drew me as a star;
- A winsome, beckoning face, with bearded lips
- Just touched with dawning laughter, and clear eyes
- That kept their own dear secret, smiling still
- With a soft challenge. Dark robes lost in shade,
- Laces at throat and wrist, an ancient chair,
- And a long, slender hand whose fingers held
- Loosely a parchment scroll—and that was all.
- Yet from those high, imperial presences,
- Those lofty ones uplifted from dear earth
- With all its loves and longings, back I turned
- Again and yet again, lured by the smile
- That called me like a voice, “Come hither, friend!”
-
- “Simon de Vos,” thus saith the catalogue,
- And “Painted by himself.”
- Three hundred years
- Thou hast been dust and ashes. I who write
- And they who read, we know another world
- From that thine eyes looked out on. Wouldst thou smile,
- Even as here thou smilest, if to-day
- Thou wert still of us? O, thou joyous one,
- Whose light, half-mocking laughter hath outlived
- So much earth held more precious, let thy lips
- Open and answer me! Whence was it born,
- The radiance of thy tender, sparkling face?
- What manner of man wert thou? For the books
- Of the long generations do not tell!
- Art thou a name, a smile, and nothing more?
- What dreams and visions hadst thou? Other men
- Would pose as heroes; would go grandly down
- To coming ages in the martyr’s _rôle_;
- Or, if perchance they’re poets, set their woes
- To wailing music, that the world may count
- Their heart-throbs in the chanting of a song.
- Immortal thou, by virtue of one smile!
-
-
- IN MARBLE PRAYER
- (CANTERBURY, 1891)
-
-
- So still, so still they lie
- As centuries pass by,
- Their pale hands folded in imploring prayer;
- They never lift their eyes
- In sudden, sweet surprise;
- The wandering winds stir not their heavy hair
- Forth from their close-sealed lips
- Nor moan, nor laughter, slips,
- Nor lightest sigh to wake the entrancèd air!
-
- Yet evermore they pray!
- We creatures of a day
- Live, love, and vanish from the gaze of men;
- Nations arise and fall;
- Oblivion’s heavy pall
- Hides kings and princes from all human ken,
- While these in marble state,
- From age to age await
- The rolling thunder of the last amen!
-
- Not in dim crypts alone,
- Or aisles of fretted stone,
- Where high cathedral altars gleam afar;
- And the red light streams down
- On mitre and on crown,
- Till each proud jewel blazes like a star;
- But where the tall grass waves
- O’er long-forgotten graves,
- Their silent worship no rude sounds can mar!
-
- Dost Thou not hear and heed?
- O, in Earth’s utmost need
- Wilt Thou not hearken, Thou who didst create?
- Not for themselves they pray
- Whose woes have passed for aye;
- For us, for us, before Thy throne they wait!
- Thou Sovereign Lord of All,
- On whom they mutely call,
- Hear Thou and answer from thine high estate!
-
-
-NOCTURNE
-
- O bird beneath the midnight sky!
- As on my lonely couch I lie,
- I hear thee singing in the dark—
- Why sing not I?
-
- No star-gleams meet thy wakeful eye;
- No fond mate answers to thy cry;
- No other voice, through all the dark,
- Makes sweet reply.
-
- Yet never skylark soaring high
- Where sunlit clouds rejoicing lie,
- Sang as thou singest in the dark,
- Not mute as I!
-
- O lone, sweet spirit! tell me why
- So far thy ringing love-notes fly,
- While other birds, hushed by the dark,
- Are mute as I?
-
- No prophecy of morn is nigh;
- Yet as the sombre hours glide by,
- Bravely thou singest in the dark—
- Why sing not I?
-
-
-COME WHAT MAY
-
- Come what may—
- Though what remaineth I may not know,
- Nor how many times the rose may blow
- For my delight, or whether the years
- Shall be set to the chime of falling tears,
- Or go on their way rejoicing—
- Yet, come what may,
- I have had my day!
-
- Come what may—
- The lurid storm or the sunset peace,
- The lingering pain or the swift release,
- Lonely vigils and watchings long,
- Passionate prayer or soaring song,
- Or silence deep and golden—
- Still, come what may,
- I have had my day!
-
- Come what may,
- I have known the fiery heart of youth,
- Its rapturous joy, its bitter ruth;
- I have felt the thrill of the eager doer,
- The quick heart-throb of the swift pursuer,
- The flush of glad possession—
- And, come what may,
- I have had my day!
-
- Come what may,
- I have learned that out of the night is born
- The mystic flower of the early morn;
- I have learned that after the frost of pain
- The lily of peace will bloom again,
- And the rose of consolation.
- Then, come what may,
- I have had my day!
-
-
-NUREMBERG
-
- Over the wide, tumultuous sea
- In trancèd hours I dream of thee,
- Ancient city of song and myth,
- Whose name is a name to conjure with,
- And make the heart throb, Nuremberg!
-
- I see thee fair in the white moonlight;
- The stars are asleep at noon of night,
- Save one that between St. Lawrence’ spires
- Kindles aloft its silver fires—
- A flaming cresset, Nuremberg!
-
- Leaning over thy river’s brim
- Crowd the red roofs and oriels dim,
- While under its bridges glide and gleam
- The rippling waves of a silent stream,
- Sparkling and darkling, Nuremberg!
-
- Oh, the charm of each haunted street,
- Ways where Beauty and Duty meet;
- Sculptured miracles soaring free
- In temple and mart for all to see,
- Wherever the light falls, Nuremberg!
-
- Even thy beggars lift their eyes,
- Finding ever some new surprise;
- Even thy children pause from play,
- To hear what thy graven marbles say,
- Thy myriad voices, Nuremberg!
-
- Other cities for crown and king
- Wide their glorious banners fling,
- Lifting high on the azure field
- Blazoned trophies of sword and shield,
- That pierce the far skies, Nuremberg!
-
- But thou, O city of old renown,
- Thou dost painter and sculptor crown;
- Thou dost give to the poet bays,
- Immortelles for the deathless lays
- Chanted for thee, fair Nuremberg!
-
- They are thy Lords of High Degree,
- Marvels of art who wrought for thee,
- Toiling on with tireless will
- Till the wondrous hands in death were still.
- Being dead, they yet speak, Nuremberg!
-
- They were dust and ashes long ago;
- Over their graves the sweet winds blow;
- Yet they are alive whom men call dead—
- This is thy spell, when all is said;
- This is thy glory, Nuremberg!
-
-
-A MATER DOLOROSA
-
- Then down the street came Giacomo, flushed
- With wine and laughter. I can see him now,
- With Giulio, Florian, and young Angelo,
- Arms interlaced, hands clasped, a roisterous crew
- Of merry, harmless idlers. Ah, so long,
- So long ago it was! Yet I can see
- Just how the campanile shone that night
- Like molten silver, while its carven saints
- Prayed in the moonlight. Then a shadow crept
- Over the moon’s face; and it grew so dark
- That the red star in Giacomo’s cap
- Paled and went out, and Giulio’s shoulder-clasp
- Lost all the lustre of its burnished gold,
- And faded out of sight. Strange, how we lose
- So much we would remember, and yet keep
- Trifles like this until the day of doom!
- They had swept past me where I stood in shade
- When Giacomo turned. Just then the moon
- Shone out again, illumining the place,
- And he paused laughing, catching sight of me
- There by the fountain.—Nay, sweet Signor, nay!
- I was young then, and some said I was fair;
- But I loved not Giacomo, nor he me.—
- Back he came crying, “Little one, take heed!
- Know you Fra Alessandro? He would have
- A model for his picture. Go you then
- To-morrow to his studio and say
- Giacomo sent you. At the convent there,
- Near Santa Croce.”
- So I thither went
- Early next morning, trembling as I stole
- Into the master’s presence. A grave man
- Of most unworldly aspect, with bowed head
- And pale chin resting on his long, thin hand,
- He sat before an easel, lost in thought.
- “Giacomo sent me,” said I, creeping in,
- And then stood breathless. Swift as light he turned,
- But smiled not, spoke not, while his searching eye
- For minutes that seemed hours scanned my face,
- Reading it line by line. Signor, it seemed
- As if the judgment-day had come, and God
- Sat on the great white throne! At length he spoke,
- Nodding as one content—“To-morrow morn
- I pray thee come thou hither. Canst thou bring
- A little child with thee—some fair, sweet child
- Whose eyes are like the morning?”
- Then I said,
- Bethinking me of Beppo’s little boy
- Whose mother died last week—“Yes, I will come
- Surely, my father, and will bring with me
- The fairest child in Florence.” “It is well,”
- Softly he answered, and a sudden light
- Made his pale face all glorious. At the door
- I paused, and looking backward saw him bow
- Before the easel as before a shrine.
- I know not if he prayed, but never saint
- Had aspect more divine.
- Next day I went
- With little Nello to the studio.
- Impatiently the Frate greeted us,
- Palette in hand. “So!—Thou art come at last?”
- But as I drew the cap from Nello’s head
- And the moist tendrils of his golden hair
- Fell softly on his forehead, he cried out:
- “The boy is like an angel! And thy face,
- Thy face, my daughter, I have seen in dreams,
- But in dreams only. So, then, stand thou there,
- And let the boy sit throned upon thine arm,
- As thus, or thus.”
- The child was half afraid;
- And round my neck he clasped his clinging arms,
- Lifting his face to mine, a questioning face,
- Filled with soft, startled wonder. While I held
- Him close and soothed him, Alessandro cried,
- “O, hold him thus forever! Do not stir!
- I paint a virgin for an altar-piece.
- And thou and this fair child——”
- Even while he spoke
- He turned back to the easel; but I sprang
- From the low pedestal, and, with the boy
- Still in my arms, I fell down at his feet.
- “Not that, not that, my father!” swift I cried,
- While my hot forehead touched his garment’s hem;
- “Not that, for God’s sake! Paint me otherwise.
- Paint me as martyr, or as Magdalen,
- As saint, or sibyl—whatsoe’er you will,
- Only not that, not that!”
- Smiling he stooped
- And raised me from the ground, and took the child
- In unaccustomed arms all tenderly,
- Placing his brown beads in the dimpled hand.
- “But why ‘not that,’ my daughter? Nothing else
- Ever paint I! Not saint, nor Magdalen,
- Only the Virgin and her Holy Child.”
- Then suddenly I saw it all—the light
- Dim in cathedral aisles, the kneeling crowds,
- The swinging censers, candles burning clear,
- With flash of jewels, splendor and perfume,
- The high white altar, and above a face,
- _My_ face, pale shining through the scented gloom
- Like a lone star! Then in the hush a voice
- Chanted “Hail, Mary”—and my heart stood still.
- I who had been a sinner, could I dare
- Thus to mock God and man? Low at his feet
- Again I fell, and there I told him all
- As he had been my soul’s confessor, poured
- My very heart out. Signor, life is hard
- And cruel to child-women, when the street
- Is their sole nursing mother. I had had
- No friend, no home, save when old Barbara
- In some rare mood of pity let me creep
- Under her wing for shelter. Then she died,
- And even that poor semblance of a home
- Was mine no longer. Yet, as the years went on,
- Out of the dust and moil I grew as tall
- And fair as lily in a garden plot,
- Shut in by ivied cloisters—Let it pass!—
- God knows how girls are tempted when false love
- Comes with beguiling words and tender lips,
- Promising all things, and their barren lives
- Break into sudden bloom as when a bud
- Unfolds its shining petals in the sun
- And joys to be a rose!
- No word he spake,
- Fra Alessandro, sitting mute and pale.
- But Nello, wondering at my sighs and tears,
- Dropped the brown rosary and thrust his hands
- Into the shining masses of my hair,
- Pulling the bodkin out, and lifted up
- My wet, wan face to kiss it. God is good;
- And even in that dark hour a thrill of joy
- Ran through my soul as the pure lips met mine.
- Still I knelt, waiting judgment, with the child
- Clasped to my bosom, daring not to raise
- My eyes to the face above me. Well I knew
- It was the priest’s face, not the painter’s, now!
- Was it his voice that through the silence stole,
- “A little child shall lead them,” murmuring low?
- Just for one instant on my head a hand
- Fell as in benediction. Then he said
- “Arise, my daughter, and come thou with me
- Where bide the holy sisters of St. Clare,
- Ruled by their abbess, saintliest of all
- The saintly sisterhood. By work and prayer,
- Fasting and penance, thou shalt purge thy soul
- Of all iniquity, and make it clean.”
- Startled I answered him—“But who will care
- For Nello then? His mother died last week,
- And Beppo’s heart is buried in her grave—
- He cares not for the child, nor gives him love.”
- But with a wide sweep of his beckoning arm
- Down the long cloisters strode he, and across
- The heated pavement of the market-place,
- Nor looked to see if we were following him
- Until he paused before the convent gate;
- Then rang the bell, and in the pause I heard
- The sisters chanting, and grew faint with shame.
- “Fear not, my child,” Fra Alessandro said.
- “Here comes Jacinta. Go you in with her,
- And straightway tell the abbess all the tale
- Told unto me this day. Farewell! ”The gate
- Swung to with iron clang, and Nello’s arms
- Half strangled me as round my neck he clung,
- Awed by the holy stillness.
- Since that hour
- I with the humble sisters of St. Clare
- Have given myself to deeds of mercy, works
- Meet for repentance, ministering still
- Unto all souls that suffer, even as now
- I minister to you.
- But what, you ask,
- Of the boy Nello? Beppo died that year—
- God rest his soul!—and the child ’bode with us.
- But when the lad drew nigh to man’s estate—
- Too old for women’s guidance—he was found
- Oftener than elsewhere at the studio
- Of old Fra Alessandro. He became
- A painter, Signor, and men call him great.
- I know not if he is—but you can see
- His pictures yonder in San Spirito.
- You’ve seen them? seen my face there? now you know
- Whence comes the semblance that has puzzled you
- Through all these weeks of languor?
- It may be.
- I am too old to care now, have outlived
- Youth and its petty consciousness. My face
- Is mine no longer. It is God’s alone.
- A Mater Dolorosa?—It is well!
-
-
-AFTER LONG WAITING
-
- After long waiting when my soul puts off
- This mortal vesture and is free to go
- Through all God’s universe in search of thee,
- How shall it find thee, O, beloved and lost?
-
- Through the wide, shadowy spaces, through the deep
- Profound abysses where the dim spheres roll;
- Through starry mazes and through violet seas,
- And purple reaches stretched from world to world;
-
- Beyond the bounds of all it hath conceived,
- Where knowledge falters and where reason fails,
- And only faith’s strong pinion dares to soar,
- How shall it make its lonely way to thee?
-
- In that far realm what myriads abide!
- When I have reached it, wilt thou find me, dear?
- One grain of sand beside the unresting sea—
- One blade of grass where endless prairies roll!
-
- I shall have changed, O love, I shall have changed!
- The face you knew I shall no longer wear;
- For few or many though the years may be,
- My youth fled with thee to the shore unknown.
-
- I have grown older here, whilst thou beneath
- The tree of life hast found thy youth again;
- I have grown faint, while strong, exultant, free,
- Thy swift, glad feet scale the blue heights of God.
-
- O friend and lover, go thou not too far!
- Delay, delay, thine upward soaring flight,
- Lest when I come, all tremulous with joy,
- I fail to find thee on the heavenly hills!
-
-
-
-
-
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