DEATH OF SAUL
As through the waves the freighted argosy
Securely plunges, when the lode star’s
light
Her path makes clear, and as, when angry
clouds
Obscure the guide that leads her on her
way,
She strikes the hidden rock and all is
lost,
So he of whom I sing favoured
of God,
By disobedience dimmed the light divine
That shone with bright effulgence like
the sun,
And sank in sorrow, where he might have
soared
Up to the loftiest peak of earthly joy
In sweet foretaste of heavenly joys to
come.
Called from his flocks and herds in humble
strait
And made to rule a nation; high in Heaven
The great Jéhovah lighting up the way;
On earth an upright Judge and Prophet
wise
Sent by the Lord to bend his steps aright;
Sons dutiful and true; no speck to mar
The noble grandeur of a proud career;
Yet, from the rays that flickered o’er
his path,
Sent for his good, he wove the lightning
shaft
That seared his heart, e’en as the
stalwart oak,
Soaring in pride of pow’r, falls
’neath the flash,
And lies a prostrate wreck. Like
one of old,
Who, wrestling with the orb whose far-off
light
Gave beauty to his waxen wings, upsoared
Where angels dared not go, came to his
doom,
And fell a molten mass; so, tempting Heaven,
Saul died the death of disobedient Pride
And self-willed Folly curses
of mankind!
Sins against God which wrought the Fall,
and sent,
As tempests moan along the listening night,
A wail of mournful sadness drifting down
The annals of the world: unearthly
strains!
Cries of eternal souls that know no rest.
Episode the First.
The Israelites demand
A king, and Saul is given
to rule over them.
“God save the King!” the Israelites
exclaimed, (a)
When, by the aged Prophet summoned forth
To Mizpeh, all the tribes by lot declared
That Saul should be their ruler.
Since they left
The land of Egypt and its galling stripes,
Till then, the only living God had been
Their King and Governor; and Samuel old,
The last of Israel’s Judges, when
he brought
The man they chose to be their future
King,
And said: “Behold the ruler
of your choice!”
Told them of loving mercies they for years
Had from the great Jehovah’s hand
received,
And mourned in sorrowing tones that God
their Judge
Should be by them rejected: and they
cried
“A King! give us a King for
thou art old (b)
“And in those ways thou all thy
life hast walked
“Walk not thy sons: lucre their
idol is
“And Judgment is perverted by the
bribes
“They take to stifle justice:
give us, then,
“A King to judge us. Other
nations boast
“Of such a chief a King,
give us a King!”
So Saul became the crowned of Israel
The first great King of their united tribes.
Episode the Second.
Saul disappoints the expectations
of Jéhovah, and
is visited with the
ALMIGHTY’S displeasure.
Brave is the heart that beats with yearning
throb
Tow’rds highest hopes, when, wandering
in the vale,
Some snowy Alp gleams forth with flashing
crown
Of golden glory in the morning light.
Brave is the heart that lovingly expands
And longs the far-off splendour to embrace.
Thus yearned the heart of Saul, when from
his flocks
The Prophet led him forth, and, pointing
up
Tow’rds Israel’s crown, exclaimed:
“See what the Lord
Hath done for thee!” But Saul upon
the throne
Grew sorely dazed. Though brave the
heart, the brain
Swam in an ecstasy of wildering light
A helmless boat upon a troubled sea.
Men nursed in gloom can rarely brook the
sun;
And many a life to sombre paths inured
The sunshine of Prosperity hath quenched,
As dewdrops glistening on the lowly sward
Like priceless jewels ere the morning
breaks,
Melt into space when light and heat abound,
As though they ne’er had been.
Relentless fate!
This ruthless law the world’s wide
ways hath fringed
With wreckage of a host of peerless lives;
And Saul is numbered ’mongst the
broken drift.
Saul, though the Lord’s anointed,
saw not God:
But curse of life! ingratitude
prevailed.
His faith waxed weak as days of trial
came:
And when, deserted by his teeming hosts
At Gilgal, he the Prophet’s priestly
right
In faithless haste assumed, the Prophet
cried
“The Lord hath said no son of thine
shall reign
O’er Israel!” (c) Yet,
heedless of the voice
Of warning which a patient God vouchsafed,
With disobedience lurking in his heart,
He strove to shield the King of Amalek
He whom the Lord commanded him to kill
Seizing his flocks and herds for selfish
gain
Beneath the garb of sacrificial faith
Sin so distasteful to the Lord that Saul
Sat in the dark displeasure of his God.
(d)
And out from this displeasure, like the
dawn
From dusky night, the youthful David sprang
The Lord’s anointed, yea, the Lord’s
beloved:
Sweet Bard of Bethlehem! whose harp divine,
Tuned to the throbbings of a guileless
heart,
Soothed the dark spirit of the sinful
King,
And woke his life to light and hope again,
(e)
But ah! the sling and stone his envy roused,
And envy hate begat. ’Tis
ever so:
The honest fealty of a noble soul
To all that’s brave, and true, and
good in life,
Will meet malicious hindrance. So
the King
This brave young bard and warrior of the
Lord
In ruthless persecution sought to kill.
Twice, with a true nobility of heart
Which to the noble heart alone belongs,
The slayer of Goliath stayed his hand
When Saul lay at his mercy. “Take
thy life;
“Thou art the Lord’s anointed,
sinful, though,
“And faithless to the truth as shifting
sand!”
Thus David spake, and went his weary way,
An exile from the land he loved so well.
So Saul had steeled his heart and set
his face
Against the living God, and thus he lay
Beneath the great Jehovah’s awful
ban.
Episode the Third
Saul, deserted by the almighty,
consults the witch
of Endor, and his
fall is foretold by the
spirit of the dead
Prophet.
As o’er the earth a darkling cloud
appears,
And grows in blackness till the scathing
shaft
Comes forth with swelling thunder, so
the cloud,
Black unto bursting with the wrath divine,
Hung o’er the head of Israel’s
erring King.
The light of heavenly faith from him was
gone,
And life was full of dreary, dark despair.
Outstretched along the plains of Shunem
lay
The army of the heathen Philistines (f)
A countless horde, at whose relentless
head
Achish, the King of Gath, with stern acclaim
Breathed war against the Israelitish host.
Heedless of help from God, the wretched
Saul
Had called his tribes together, and they
swarmed
Along the plains of Gilboa, whence they
saw
The mighty army of their heathen foe
Lie like a drowsy panther in its lair
With limbs all wakeful for the hungry
leap.
“Enquire me of the Lord!”
the King had said,
Communing with the doubtings of his heart.
But answer came not. Dreams were
dumb and dark
Unfathomed mysteries. No Urim spake;
And Prophets wore the silence of the grave.
So Saul, the King, disheartened and disguised,
Went forth at night.(g) The rival
armies lay
Sleeping beneath the darksome dome of
Heaven,
And all was still, save when the ghostly
wind
Swept o’er the plains with melancholy
moan.
That night the shadowy shape of one long
dead
Stood face-to-face with Saul, in lonely
cave,
The Witch of Endor’s haunt.
Ah, me the fall!
To degradation deep that man hath slid
Who ’gainst the Lord in stiff-necked
folly strives
Choosing the path of cabalistic wiles
The dark and turbid garniture of toads,
And philters rank of necromantic knaves
Who spurns the hand which, by the light
of Heaven,
Points clear and straight along the spacious
road
Which angel feet have trod. Ah,
me the fall!
And sad the fate of him who shuns the
truth:
Who, like the lonely Saul, eschews the
light,
And leagues with darkness listening
for the voice
Of angels in abodes where devils dwell.
So the dead Prophet and the erring King,
By Heaven’s own will, not by the
witch’s craft,
Confront each other in the dark retreat.
The dreamy shadow speaks: “Wherefore,”
it saith,
“Dost thou disquiet me!” (h)
And from the earth
Came the sepulchral tones, which, floating
up,
Joined the weird meanings of the hollow
wind,
And swept in ghostly cadences away
Like exiled souls in pain. And Saul
replied;
“I’m sore distressed:
Alas! the living God
“Averts His face and answers me
no more;
“What” and the
pleading voice, in trembling tones
That might have won a stony heart to tears,
Asks of the shadowy shape “What
shall I do!”
And hollow voices seem to echo back
The anguish-freighted words “What
shall I do!”
’Twas hell’s own mockery!
The blistering heat
Like burning blast, hot and invisible
That scorched the heart of Saul, was but
the breath
Of Satan, gloating o’er the moral
death
Of him who, chosen of Jéhovah, lay
A victim to those foul Satanic wiles
Which the sworn enemy of God had planned
In inmost hate. “I cannot
scale the height
“Of Him ’gainst whom eternal
enmity
“I’ve sworn,” it seemed
to say: “but soothing thought!
“Deep in the hearts of mortals He
hath named
“To do His bidding, will I thrust
my darts,
“And through their wounds, as His
ambassadors,
“The spirit bruise of Him who sent
them thus!”
And then again, as though his breaking
heart
Were cleft with red-hot blade, the voice
of Saul
Is heard in mortal anguish breathing out
The soul-subduing tones “What
shall I do?”
Dead silence intervenes; and then again
The spirit of the Prophet slowly speaks:
“To-morrow thou and thine,”
it faintly said,
“Shalt be with me; and Israel’s
mighty host
“Shall be the captives of the heathen
foe!”
The fateful answer smites the listener
low,
And utter darkness falls upon his life.
Episode the Fourth.
Battle of Gilboa and the
death of Saul.
The morrow came: the bloody fray
began.
The sun shone fierce and hot upon the
scene.
Lashed into fury like a raging sea
The wrestling multitude for vantage strove
With deadly chivalry. On Gilboa’s
mount
The King looked forth and watched the
sanguine strife,
Clothed in the golden panoply of war.
Upon his brow the stately monarch wore
The crown of all the tribes of Israel,
A-fire with jewels flashing in the sun
In bitter mockery of his trampled heart.
Noble in mien, yet, with a sorrowing soul,
Anxious his gaze for in the
sweltering surge
Three sons of Saul were battling with
the rest;
His first-born, Jonathan; Abinadab;
And Melchi-shua idols of his
life!
Around him like a hurricane of hail
The pinioned shafts with aim unerring
sped,
Bearing dark death upon their feathery
wings.
The clashing sword its dismal carnage
made
As foe met foe; and flashing sparks out-flew
As blade crossed blade with murderous
intent.
The outcry rose “They
fly! they fly!” The King
Looked down upon the fray with trembling
heart.
The bloody stream along the valley ran,
And chariots swept like eagles on the
wind
On deathly mission borne. The conflict
fierce
Waxed fiercer fiercer still;
the rain of gore
Wetted the soddened plain, and arrows
flew
Thicker and faster through the darkening
air.
The barbed spear, flung forth with stalwart
arm,
Sped like a whirlwind on its flight of
death.
Along the ranks the warrior’s clarion
call
Inspired to valorous life the struggling
hosts,
And shouts of victory from contending
hordes
Blended with sorrowing moans of dying
men.
“Thy sons, O King!” a breathless
herald cried,
Fresh from the carnage, bowing low his
head,
Where Saul, heart-weary, watched the dreadful
strife
On Gilboa’s height. “Thy
sons, O mighty King!”
The herald cried, and sank upon the ground
By haste exhausted. Saul, with fitful
start,
Upraised the prostrate messenger.
“My sons!
“What of them? Speak!”
he gasped, with startled look,
“Dead!” moaned the herald,
and an echo came,
As though deep down in some sepulchral
vault
The word was spoken. From the heart
of Saul
That mournful echo came so
sad and low!
“Dead! dead! Ah, woe is me!”
he sadly sighed.
“My sons my best beloved!
Woe! Woe alas!”
And as he spake, e’en while his
head, gold-crowned,
Bent low in pain beneath the crushing
blow,
An arrow from the foe his armour smote,
And pierced his breast, already rent with
grief.
Then stepped with hurried tread a servant
forth,
And plucked the arrow from its cruel feast,
Rending his robe to stanch the purple
stream.
“Heed not the wound!” exclaimed
the King. “Too late!
“Where Heaven smites, men’s
blows are light indeed.”
Then bending o’er his breast his
kingly head
He wept aloud: “Rejected of
the Lord;
“My sons among the slain; my valorous
host
“In bondage of the heathen let
me die!”
So sobbed the King, as down the bloody
plain
The chariots of the foe came thundering
on;
And horsemen cleft the air in hot array
A mighty stream of chivalry and life!
The Israelites had fled, and at their
heels
The roaring tumult followed like a storm
That rolls from world to world.
And through the blast
Of warfare came a weak and wailing voice
Moaning in utter anguish “Let
me die!”
’Twas Saul the Anointed Israel’s
fallen King:
Crushed ’neath the hand of an offended
God!
“Lo!” cried the King, and
raised his tearful eyes,
“The Philistines are near, pierce
thou my breast!”
And, turning round, his kingly breast
he bared,
Bidding his armour-bearer thrust his sword
Hilt-deep into his heart. “Better
to die
“By friendly hand,” he cried,
“than owe my death
“To yonder hated victors.
Quick! Thy sword!
“Thrust deep and quickly!”
But the faltering hand
That held the sword fell nerveless.
“Mighty King!
“I dare not!” spake the trembling
armourer.
“Then by my own I die,” exclaimed
the King.
And as he spake he poised the glittering
blade
Point upward from the earth, and moaning
fell
Upon the thirsty steel. The ruddy
gush
Came spurting through the armour that
he wore,
And steamed in misty vapour to the sky
In voiceless testimony to the truth
Of words once spoken by the living God!
Aghast the faithful armour-bearer stood.
“O, mighty King! I die with
thee!” he said,
And, falling on his sword, the blood of
both
Commingled, as from ghastly wounds it
ran
In trickling streamlets down Mount Gilboa’s
side. (i)
As ebbs and flows the sea with troubled
throb
’Twixt shore and shore, or as the
thistle-down
Halts in the eddies of the summer wind
In trembling doubt, so do the flickering
souls
Of dying men float fearingly between
The earth and unseen worlds that lie beyond.
So hung the life of Saul, whose bitter
cup,
Still at his lips, contained its bitterest
dregs.
Prostrate he lay, by bloody sword transfixed;
A corpse his pillow; arms extended out,
And body bent in agony of pain,
The flame of life still fluttering at
his heart
A waning lamp. He heard the tumult
swell.
Bondage was worse than death. “They
come! They come!”
He moaned. “Stand ye upon
my breast,” he said,
To one, a stranger, lingering near the
spot,
“And force the gurgling stream back
on my heart,
“To quench the life within me.
Quick! They come!”
The stranger did the cruel bidding. (j)
Hark!
“The King!” the foemen cry,
and fiercely rusht
Upon the Royal captive, who, till then,
Had lain by them unseen. But while
the shout
Swept like a storm along the swelling
ranks
The soul of Saul went drifting through
the dark,
Like some fair ship with sails and cordage
rent,
Out from the stormy trials of his life,
To tempt the terrors of an unknown sea.
And then the cry of lamentation rose
In Israel, and the Hebrew maidens hung
Their speechless harps upon the willow
branch,
And mourned the loved and lost unceasingly.
(a) Nevertheless the people
refused to obey the voice of Samuel; and they said,
Nay, but we will have a King over us, that we also
may be like all the nations. And Samuel said
to all the people, “See ye him whom the Lord
hath chosen.” And all the people shouted
and said, “God save the King!” I
SAMUEL, viii. and i, 20, 24.
(b) And it came to pass, when
Samuel was old, that he made his sons judges over
Israel. And his sons walked not in his ways,
but turned aside after lucre, and took bribes, and
perverted judgment. I SAMUEL, viii., 1,
2.
(c) And Saul said, “Bring
hither a burnt offering,” and he offered the
burnt offering. And Samuel came, and Saul went
out to meet him. And Samuel said, “What
hast thou done? Thou hast not kept the commandment
of the Lord thy God which he commanded thee, and thy
kingdom shall not continue.” I SAMUEL,
xiii., 10, 14.
(d) And Samuel said, “The
Lord sent thee, and said go and utterly destroy the
sinners, the Amalekites. Wherefore didst thou
not obey the voice of the Lord, but didst fly upon
the spoil?” And Saul said unto Samuel, “The
people took of the spoil, sheep and oxen, to sacrifice
unto the Lord thy God at Gilgal.” And Samuel
said, “Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice,
and to hearken than the fat of rams. For rebellion
is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as
iniquity and idolatry. Because thou hast rejected
the word of the Lord, he hath also rejected thee.” I
SAMUEL, xv,, 18, 23.
(e) And it came to pass, when
the evil spirit from God was upon Saul, that David
took an harp, and played with his hand. So Saul
was refreshed, and was well, and the evil spirit departed
from him. I SAMUEL, xvi., 23.
(f) And the Philistines gathered
themselves together, and came and pitched in Shunem;
and Saul gathered all Israel together, and they pitched
in Gilboa. I SAMUEL, xxviii., 4.
(g) Then said Saul unto his
servants, “Seek me a woman that hath a familiar
spirit, that I may go to her and enquire of her.”
And his servants said to him, “Behold, there
is a woman that hath a familiar spirit at Endor.”
And Saul disguised himself, and came to the woman
by night. And he said, “I pray thee, divine
unto me by the familiar spirit, and bring him up whom
I shall name of thee.” I SAMUEL,
xxviii., 7, 8.
(h) And Samuel said to Saul,
“Why hast thou disquieted me, to bring me up?”
And Saul answered, “I am sore distressed, for
the Philistines make war against me, and God is departed
from me, and answereth me no more. Therefore
I have called thee, that thou mayest make known unto
me what I shall do.” And Samuel said, “Because
thou obeyedst not the voice of the Lord, nor executedst
not his fierce wrath upon Amalek, therefore hath the
Lord done this thing unto thee this day. To-morrow
shalt thou and thy sons be with me; and the Lord also
shall deliver the host of Israel into the hand of
the Philistines.” Then Saul fell straightway
all along on the earth. I SAMUEL, xxviii.,
15, 20.
(i) And the battle went sore
against Saul, and the archers hit him, and he was
sore wounded of the archers. Then said Saul unto
his armour-bearer, “Draw thy sword, and thrust
me through therewith, lest these uncircumcised come
and thrust me through.” But his armour-bearer
would not, therefore Saul took a sword and fell upon
it. And when his armour-bearer saw that Saul
was dead, he fell likewise upon his sword, and died
with him. I SAMUEL, xxxi., 3, 5.
(j) And David said unto the
young man, “How knowest thou that Saul and Jonathan
his son be dead?” And the young man that told
him said: “As I happened by chance upon
Mount Gilboa, behold, Saul leaned upon his spear:
and lo! the chariots and horsemen followed hard after
him. And he said unto me, Stand, I pray thee,
upon me, and slay me; for anguish is come upon me,
because my life is yet whole within me. So I
stood upon him, and slew him, because I was sure that
he could not live, after that he was fallen.” II
SAMUEL, i., 5, 10.
PALM SUNDAY IN WALES
FLOWERING SUNDAY.
PRIZE POEM
WREXHAM NATIONAL EISTEDDFOD, 1876.
Fifteen competed for the prize of
5 pounds, and a silver medal for the best English
poem, never before published, upon any distinctively
Welsh subject. Mr. Osborne Morgan, M.P., Mr.
Trevor Parkins, and the Rev. Ll. Thomas adjudicated.
The latter gave the award.
Out by the hedgerows, along by the steep;
Through the meadows; away
and away,
Where the daisies, like stars, through
the green grass peep,
And the snowdrops and violets,
waking from sleep,
Look forth at the dawning day.
Down by the brooklet by murmuring
rills,
By rivers that glide along;
Where the lark in the heavens melodiously
trills,
And the air the wild blossom
with perfume fills,
The shimmering leaves among.
Through the still valley; along by the
pool,
Where the daffodil’s
bosom of gold
So shyly expands to the breezes cool
As they murmur, like children coming from
school,
In whisperings over the wold.
In the dark coppice, where fairies dwell,
Where the wren and the red-breast
build;
Along the green lanes, through dingle
and dell,
O’er bracken and brake, and moss-covered
fell,
Where the primroses pathways
gild.
Hither and thither the tiny feet
Of children gaily sped,
In the cool grey dawn of the morning sweet,
Plucking wild flowers an offering
meet
To garnish the graves of the
dead.
Out from the beaten pathway, quaint and
white,
The village church a
crumbling pile is seen;
It stands in solitude midst
mounds of green
Like ancient dame in moss-grown cloak
bedight.
The mantling ivy clings around its form
The patient growth of many
and many a year.
As though a gentle hand had
placed it there
To shield the tottering morsel from the
storm.
A sombre cypress rears its mournful head
Above the porch, through which,
in days gone by,
Young men and maidens sped
so hopefully,
That now lie slumbering with the silent
dead:
The silent dead, that round the olden
pile
Crumble to dust as though
they ne’er had been.
Whose graven annals, writ
o’er billows green,
Though voiceless, tell sad stories all
the while.
And as they speak in speechless eloquence,
The waving shadows of the
cypress fall
In spectral patches on the
quaint old wall,
Nodding in wise and ghostly reticence
In silent sanction at the stories told
By each decrepit, wizen-featured
stone,
That seems to muse, like ancient
village crone
Belost in thought o’er memories
strange and old.
Outside the stunted boundary, a row
Of poplars tall beside
whose haughty mien
And silky rustlings of whose
robes of green
The lowly church still humbler seems to
grow.
A-near the lych-gate in the crumbling
wall,
A spreading oak, grotesque
and ancient, stands,
Like aged monk extending prayerful
hands
In silent benediction over all,
’Twas early morn: the red sun
glinted o’er
The hazy sky-line of the far-off
hill:
Below, the valley slept so
calm and still
A misty sea engirt by golden shore.
Out in the dim and dreamy distance rose
A spectral range of alp-like
scenery
Mountain on mountain, far
as eye could see,
Their foreheads white and hoar with wintry
snows.
And as I leaned the low-built wall upon
That shut the little churchyard
from the road,
Children and maidens into
Death’s abode,
With wild flow’rs laden, wandered
one by one.
And in their midst, stooping and white
with age,
Rich in their wealth of quaint
old village lore,
Came ancient dames, with
faces furrowed o’er,
That told of griefs in life’s long
pilgrimage.
The sun is rising now: the poplar
tips
Are touched with liquid light:
the gravestones old,
And hoary church, are flushed
with fringe of gold,
As though embraced by angel’s hallowed
lips.
And with the morning sunshine children
roam
To place wild flowers where
the loved ones slept;
O’er father, mother,
sister long since swept
Away by death with blossoms
sweet they come.
Silent reminders of abiding love!
What tender language from
each petal springs!
Affection’s tribute!
Heart’s best offerings!
Wanderers, surely, from the realms above!
For heart-to-heart, and life-to-life,
had been
The loves of those who were
and those who are;
Till death had severed them O,
cruel bar!
Leaving a dark and unknown stream between.
And on that stream, in loving fancy tossed,
Each faithful heart its floral
tribute threw,
As though the hope from out
the tribute grew
To bridge the gulf the one beloved had
crossed.
Near yonder grave there stands a widowed
life:
Husband and son beneath the
grave-stone rest:
Some laurels tell, by tender
lip caressed,
The changeless love of mother and of wife.
And o’er the bright green leaflets
as they lie
She scatters snowdrops with
their waxen leaves,
And all the while her troubled
bosom heaves
In tenderness, with many a sorrowing sigh.
Out from the light, to where the cypress
shade
In mournful darkness falls,
a figure crept;
And as she knelt, the morning
breezes swept
A cloud of hair about her drooping head.
Her feet were small and slender, bare
and white
White as the daisy-fringe
on which she trod;
Like shimmering snowdrops
in the greening sod,
Or glow-worms glistening in the Summer
night.
And as deep down in gloomy chasms seen
By those up-looking, stars
in daylight shine,
So shone the beauty of her
face divine
In the dark shadows of the cypress green.
Her girlish hands a primrose wreath enwove,
With fingers deft, and eyes
with tears bedimmed:
No lovelier face the painter’s
art e’er limned,
No poet’s thought e’er told
of sweeter love
Than that young mother’s, as, with
tender grace,
She kissed the chaplet ere
she laid it down
Upon a tiny hillock, earthy-brown
Of first and only child the resting place.
And then the few stray blossoms that were
left
She kissed and strewed upon
the little mound
Looked lingering back towards
the sacred ground,
As from the shade she bore her heart bereft.
As gentle ripples, from the side we lave
Of placid lake, will reach
the other side,
So, o’er Death’s
river silent, dark, and wide
Blossoms may bear the kiss that mother
gave.
Or, if in fervent faith she deemed it
so,
The thought to joyless lives
a pleasure brings,
And who shall tell, where
doting fondness clings,
The loss which hearts bereaved can only
know?
And who shall doubt that to such love
is given,
Borne upward, clothed in perfume
to the sky,
The pow’r to reach,
in death’s great mystery,
Lost hearts, and add a bliss to those
of Heaven?
Other sad pilgrims came. A mother
here
A duteous daughter mourns,
whose days had been
A ceaseless blessing an
oasis green
On life’s enfevered plain:
a brooklet clear,
That ran the meadows of glad lives along,
Till, like a stream that meanders
to the sea,
In the dark Ocean of Eternity
Lost was their source of laughter, light,
and song.
And yonder, clothed in darksome silence,
grieves
A loving daughter near a mother’s
tomb
Down by the stunted wall in
willow-gloom
And shadows thrown by sombre cypress leaves:
And as, in life, the waving kerchief speaks
The words of friends departing
which the heart
Is all too full to utter e’re
we part
For ever, so the sorrowing daughter seeks
In thought one recollection more to wave
To one long dead; and asks
in speechless woe
Primrose and snowdrop on the
mound below
To bear love’s messages beyond the
grave!
And in the golden sunshine children come
With prattling tongue and
winsome, rosy face
Like blossoms flowering in
a lonely place
And lay their tributes o’er each
narrow home
Where lies the helpless beacon of their
lives
In darkness quencht gone
ere their infant thought
Could realise the loss which
Death had wrought
The stab the stern Destroying Angel gives.
And o’er each silent grave Love’s
tributes fall
The primrose, cowslip, gentle
daffodil
The snow-drop, and the tender
daisy till
God’s acre sleeps beneath a flowery
pall.
And now the sun in all its glory came
And lit the world up with
a light divine,
Casting fresh beauty o’er
each sacred shrine:
Breathing on all things an inspiring flame.
As if the God of Light had bade it be,
In sweet reward for pious
rite performed;
As if, with human love and
fondness charmed,
The Lord had smiled with love’s
benignity.
For not to this old churchyard where I
stand
Is audience of the dead, through
flow’rs, confined
A nation’s heart a
nation’s love combined,
Make it the sweet observance of the land.
In humble cot in proud patrician
halls,
The Floral Festival fills
every breast;
And o’er the grass,
where’er the loved ones rest,
The lowly flow’r with choice exotic
falls.
And as they fall upon the sacred spot,
Sacred to every heart that
strews them there,
They seem to sing in voices
low and clear:
“Though gone for evermore forgotten
not!
“Though never more still
evermore above
“Eternal will their
deathless spirits reign.
“No more until above
to meet again:
“Till then send up sweet messages
of love.”
So sang the blossoms with their odorous
breath
Or so in fancy sang they unto
me;
“No more yet
evermore, eternally!
“Though lost, alas! remembered still
in death!”
ELEGY
ON THE LATE CRAWSHAY BAILEY, ESQ.,
“THE IRON KING.”
PRIZE POEM:
ABERGAVENNY EISTEDDFOD, 1874.
The programme opened with a competition
for the best English Elegy on the late Crawshay Bailey,
Esq., for which a prize of 10 pounds was given, and
a bardic chair, value 5 pounds, by Mr. William Lewis.
There were twelve competitors, and each composition
was confined to a limit of 200 lines.
Sadly the sea, by Mynwy’s rugged
shore,
Moans for the dead in many
a mournful strain.
A voice from hearts bereft
cries “Come again;”
But wavelets whisper softly, “Never
more!”
The restless winds take up the solemn
cry,
As though an age
of sorrow in each breath
The words, “O, come
again,” could call back Death
From the far-off, unseen Eternity.
“Our dwellings darkened when his
life went out:
“We stand in cold eclipse,
for gone the light
“Which made our cottage-homes
so warm and bright;
“And shadows deepen o’er the
world without.
“Come back come back!”
Upon the mournful wind
These words fall weirdly as
they float along,
Melting the soul to tears:
for lo! the song
Rises from hearts that seek but ne’er
will find:
Save one more billow on the sea of graves;
One joyaunt voice the fewer
in life’s throng;
One hand the less to help
the world along;
One Hero more ’mongst earth’s
departed Braves.
For who that in life’s battle-field
could fight
As he has fought, whose painless
victories
Transcended war’s heroic
chivalries,
Could in his country’s heart claim
nobler height?
None may the niche of glory haplier grace,
None may the crown of greatness
proudlier wear,
Than he upon whose tomb the
silent tear
Falls slowly down from many a drooping
face.
Faces whose hard and rugged outlines show
Life’s daily struggle O,
how bravely fought!
Faces to which the only gladness
brought
Came from the Friend who yonder lieth
low.
Let us in mournful retrospect commune
O’er what that still
cold heart and brain have won:
A hymn of life in lispings
first begun,
Ending in harmony’s most perfect
tune.
As comes the sun from out the darkling-night,
And strikes, as did the patriarch
of old,
Life’s barren rocks,
which flush with green and gold,
And pour out waters glad with living light,
So, crowned with blessings, in the far-off
days,
Like Midas, Mynwy’s
monarch touched the earth,
Wrought golden plenty where
once reigned a dearth,
And raised an empire he alone could raise.
No service his, of slavery, to bind
With tyrant fancy vassals
to his will:
All hearts beat quick with
sympathetic thrill
For one who loved the humblest of their
kind.
His kingdom rang with fealty from the
free
Such blessed faith as faith
itself ensures.
His reign alone that sway
which e’er secures
A subject’s true and trustful sympathy.
So love men’s love begat in bounteous
flow;
It blossomed round his path
as flowers bloom,
Filling his life with such
a rare perfume
Of heart’s devotion kings can seldom
know.
His master-mind, with almost boundless
reach,
Planned work so vast that
mankind, wondering still,
Could scarcely compass his
gigantic will
Which grasped great things as ocean clasps
the beach.
His home of homes was where the Cyclops
forged
Their bolts, as though for
Jove to hold his own:
His fondest study where, through
ages grown,
The silent ores old Cambria’s mountains
gorged.
Mammoth machines that, with incessant
whirl,
Rolled onward ever on their
ponderous way:
Gigantic marvels, deafening
in their play,
And swift, industrious, never-ending swirl.
All these he loved, as men alone can love
The things that win their
love: to him they shone
Instinct with living beauty
all their own,
Touched with a light divine as from above.
For them, and with them,
toiled he day by day
In true companionship:
they were his Friends,
Bound by the tie whose influence
never ends,
By faithful bonds which never pass away.
And as the sunflower looks towards the
light
All through the livelong day,
so did his heart
Ne’er from this bond
of love play recreant part,
But every moment beat that heart aright;
A heart so large and true true
to the core;
So spacious that the great
might enter in;
Yet none too poor its sympathy
to win,
And every throb a pleasure at their door.
And so, through all the toilful hours
of thought,
He reared a world-wide pinnacle
of fame,
Whose summit reached, his
heart was still the same,
Undazed by splendours which his hand had
wrought.
Long stood he on the topmost peak of praise
From tongues of men, as mountains
tipped with snow
Stand with their lofty foreheads
all a-glow,
Lit up with beauty by the sun’s
bright rays.
His life was climaxed by a kinglier dower
Than even kings themselves
can hope to reach;
No grander, prouder lesson
can we teach,
Than win great things by self-inherent
power.
Brighter examples manhood cannot show,
Than with true hand, brave
heart, and sleepless mind,
To build up name and fortune
’midst their kind,
From grains and drops as worlds
and oceans grow.
So, in the rare meridian of his time,
In pride of conscious strength,
he stood alone,
A king of kings upon his Iron
Throne,
Wrought out from humble step to height
sublime,
As shadows lengthen in the setting sun,
So spread the stature of his
later life,
Which, like Colossus, o’er
earth’s busy strife,
Towered grandly till that life’s
last sand was run.
And so he passed away, as meteors die;
Leaving a trail of splendour
here on earth
To mark the road he took in
virtuous worth,
In sterling truth, and rare integrity.
These are the living landmarks he has
left:
Bright jewels in his earthly
sojourn set,
Whose brilliance seen, those
looking ne’er forgot:
A glorious heritage for friends bereft.
Such gems as those who mourn may still
adore,
Whose glistening rays men’s
footsteps lead aright
Through life’s dark
way, like glow-worms in the night,
Or angel-glintings from the eternal shore.
As round decaying flowers perfume clings
In silent tribute to the blossoms
dead,
So memory, brooding o’er
his spirit fled,
Nought but the sweetest recollection brings.
ELEGIES
NASH VAUGHAN EDWARDES VAUGHAN.
(OF RHEOLA.)
DIED SEPTEMBER 18TH, 1868. (a)
I.
Let bard on battle-field, in sounding
verse,
Proclaim to distant time the
warrior-deed
That makes a hero, whose triumphal hearse
Rolls graveward o’er
a thousand hearts that bleed
In widowed agony. Let golden lyre
Of regal Court engaged in
worldly strife
Clothe princely foibles with poetic fire,
And crown with fame a king’s
ignoble life.
Let chroniclers of Camp and Court proclaim
A Warrior’s greatness, and a Monarch’s
fame.
Be mine with verse the tomb of one to
grace
Whose nobler deeds deserve a nobler place.
II.
The lofty fane that cleaves the glowing
sky,
And heavenward points with
golden finger-tip
Structure whence flows the sacred harmony
Of prayer and praise from
Christian heart and lip:
The ranging corridors where blest
the task
’Tis ours to soothe
the fever and the pain
Of wounded natures, who, despairing, ask
For healing touch that makes
them whole again.
These are the monuments that proudly stand
On corner stones fruit of his
princely hand:
Homes for the poor, wound-stricken to
the sod;
And altars for the worship of his God.
III.
The blazing meteor glares along the sky;
The thunder shakes the mountain
with its roar;
But meteors for a moment live then
die:
The thunder peals and
then is heard no more.
The most refreshing rains in silence fall;
The most entrancing tones
are sweet and low;
The greatest, mightiest truths, are simplest
all;
Life’s dearest light
comes forth in voiceless flow;
E’en so his heart and hand were
ever found
Flinging in mute beneficence around
The germs of Truth and Charity combined,
To heal the heart and purify the mind.
(a) The life of Mr. Vaughan
was one daily round of charitable deeds, in furtherance
of religion and social amelioration. His munificent
donation to the Swansea Hospital, offered conditionally,
led to the enlarged foundation of that noble institution,
which stands a silent tribute to his memory.
This Elegy was written at the request of the late
Mr. John Williams, proprietor of the Cambrian,
Swansea, who, in the letter requesting me to write
the verses, said: “Such noble qualities
as Mr. Vaughan possessed deserve everything good which
human tongue can say of them.”
MONODY
ON THE DEATH OF MRS. NICHOLL CARNE. (a)
Down the long vista of historic years
I look, and through the dusky
haze descry
Funereal pomp, and Royal pageantry,
Gracing the tombs of queens, and kings,
and peers.
I see on marble monuments deep hewn
The name and fame of mighty
and of great,
Who lie in granite effigy
and state,
Waiting the summons to the last Tribune.
But ’mongst the hero-host that shrouded
sleep
’Neath purple banner
and engraven stone,
Death hath not numbered one
among his own
More regal-souled than she for whom we
weep.
Though a right Royal lineage she could
claim,
Proudly descendant from a
Cambrian King;
She was content to let her
virtues bring
Something more noble than a Royal name.
Her’s was no sceptered life in queenly
state:
Yet queen she was, in all
that makes a Queen;
No deeds heroic marked her
life serene:
Yet heroine she in all that makes us great.
Through all the phases of a blameless
life
She lingered round the threshold
of the poor:
Where brighter scenes less
noble minds allure,
Her’s was the joy to move ’midst
martyr-strife.
To watch where hearts, by poverty o’ercome,
Lay weak and wailing; and
to point above,
With words of hope, of comfort,
and of love,
Till brighter, happier, grew each cottage
home.
And wine and oil fell plenteous from her
hand,
To cheer the wounded on life’s
weary way:
While, for the human wrecks
that round her lay,
Her beacon-light beamed o’er the
darkling strand.
Her’s was a life of Love; then,
of deep griefs,
We’ll rear a monument
unto her name,
More leal and lasting than
the chiselled fame
Of mighty monarchs or heroic chiefs.
And see! the virtues of the parent stem
Break forth in blossom o’er
the branching tree:
Long may such fair, such bright
fruition be,
Of those bereaved their proudest diadem.
With sheltering arms with hearts
for ever green,
By love united, may they still
unite;
So shall they gladden still
the sainted sight
Of one who is not, but who once has been.
(a) Mrs. Carne, relict of the
late Rev. R. Nicholl Carne, of Dimlands Castle, and
mother of R. C. N. Carne, Esq., Nash Manor, and of
J. W. N. Carne, Esq., Dimlands and St. Donat’s
Castles, died November 28th, 1866, at Dimlands, in
the 94th year of her age. Deceased could claim
a Royal Welsh lineage, being the 34th in unbroken
descent from Ynyr, King of Gwent and Dyfed.
Her long life was distinguished by unostentatious
acts of charity and good works.
ELEGIAC STANZAS
ON THE DEATH OF MRS. PASCOE ST. LEGER GRENFELL,
MAESTEG HOUSE, SWANSEA. DIED JANUARY
8TH, 1868.
This world heroic souls can little spare
That battle bravely with life’s
every ill:
When days are dark that saintly smiles
can wear,
And all around with heavenly
glory fill.
This world can little spare the Christian
heart
That holds with tearful faith
the hand of God
With never-yielding grasp; and takes full
part
In works divine on earth’s
degenerate sod.
This world can little spare the gentle
voice
That woos the sinful from
the dreamy road
Of human frailties, making hearts rejoice,
Relieving souls of many a
bitter load.
This world can little spare the bounteous
hand
That Plenty plants where Want
oft grew before;
Raising the latchet as with angel-wand,
To cheer the darksome cottage
of the poor.
Virtues like these the world can little
spare
That fleck life’s road
like snowdrops in the Spring,
Making it beautiful; and, virtue rare!
Silent and heedless of the
bliss they bring.
But if the world should weep, how must
they mourn
For whom her goodness bloomed
a thousand-fold
More sweet in tender love? E’en
as the dawn
Crowns all it looks on with
a fringe of gold.
So did affection gird in rosy might
The home which by her presence
was adorned,
Where came an aching void: for lo!
their light
Was quencht by death and in
the tomb in-urned.
Not quencht. Ah, no! For Heaven’s
eternal gates
Flew open, and in robes which
angels wear
Her sainted spirit entered; and it waits
For those that were beloved
to join it there.
IN DREAMS
I.
When they carried away my darling
To a kingdom beyond the sky,
I knew what the angels intended,
So I stifled the tear and
the sigh,
But I prayed she might send me a message
Of love from the realms of
the blest,
As to me a whole life of repining
Was the cost of her Heaven
of rest.
II.
Yes: I prayed she might send me a
message;
One word from her mansion
of bliss;
One ray from her features angelic:
From her sweet lips the saintliest
kiss;
And I question the wind, as it wanders
As though from the regions
above,
But it whispers in sadness, and brings
me
From the absent no message
of love.
III.
At night I grow weary with watching
The stars, as I sadly surmise
Which of all those bright jewels resplendent
Borrow light from my lost
one’s eyes:
Then I sleep and a vision approaches;
And again all my own she would
seem:
But on waking my Love has departed,
And my heart aches to find
it a dream.
IV.
Oh, I prayed she might send me a message;
But nought the sweet missive
will bring:
The breath of the morning, the sunlight,
The carol of birds on the
wing,
Come to gladden my heart with their gladness;
But joyless and tuneless each
seems;
And the only sad joy that is left me
Is to live with my dearest
in dreams.
“MEWN COF ANWYL.” (a)
The above words, wrought in imperishable
flowers, were placed on the coffin of the late Mr.
John Johnes, of Dolaucothy, at the time of his interment
at Cayo, by his youngest daughter, to whom the following
elegiac stanzas are respectfully inscribed.
I.
“Mewn
cof anwyl.”
So sings the lorn and lonely nightingale,
Sighing in sombre thicket
all day long,
Weaving its throbbing heartstrings
into song
For absent mate, with sorrowing unavail.
And every warble seems to say “Alone!”
While every pause brings musical
reply:
Sad Philomel! Each sweet
responsive sigh
Is but the dreamy echo of its own.
II.
“Mewn
cof anwyl.”
So sings the West wind through the darkling
eve,
In spirit-wanderings up and
down the wold,
Each mournful sorrow at its
heart untold,
Sighing in secret as the angels
grieve,
“Bring back my love!” sobs
the bereaved wind;
And sleeping flow’rets
waken at the sound,
Shedding their dewy tears
upon the ground:
“She seeks,” they whisper,
“who shall never find!”
III.
“Mewn
cof anwyl.”
So sings all night the never-resting sea;
And stars look down with tender,
loving eyes;
The air is filled with saddening
memories
Of what was once but ne’er
again may be.
“Here lie the lost!” the ocean
seems to moan;
“I yearn to clasp them
to my throbbing heart
“In fond embrace:
The lost myself a part!
So near so near and
yet I mourn alone!”
IV.
“Mewn
cof anwyl.”
As roses, crusht and dead, in silence
leave
Their precious heritage of
perfume rare,
So the good name our dear
departed bear
Reflects in cheering light on those who
grieve;
And memory, brooding o’er the love
thus left,
In tender fancy crowns the
dream with tears,
Till, as the hue that on bright
rain appears,
Peace comes to comfort lonely hearts bereft.
(a) In loving memory.
ELEGIAC
’Tis not with rude, irreverent feet,
I tread where sacred sorrows
lie;
But gently raise, in accents meet,
My voice in earnest sympathy:
In sympathy with one bereaved,
Who mourns a loss which all
deplore:
Whose grief by Hope is unrelieved
For tears bring back the Past
no more.
’Tis not in words the wound to heal
Which tenderest ties, when
broken, make;
’Tis not in language to conceal
The griefs which snapped affection’s
wake
But sorrows, stinging though they be,
In sympathy some sweetness
find,
Which may assuage, though slenderly,
The grief that clouds a manly
mind.
IN MEMORIAM.
The blameless life of her whose grave
I strew
With flow’rs of thought
deep gathered from the heart
Of heavenliest things was
formed the greater part:
No sentiment but love her bosom knew.
Her influence, like the sunlight from
on high,
That flames with splendour
every opening flower,
Stole o’er us silently:
yet O, the power!
Charming our household world resplendently.
And little hearts tow’rds that sweet
influence yearned;
And little voices loved to
lisp her name;
For when, to them, the world
was dark, she came,
Love-bright, and so their lives in beauty
burned.
In beauty burned with pure and happy glow;
Their joys were her’s.
In thought I see her now,
Love prompted, sitting with
a dreamy brow,
Planning the pleasures she might never
know.
Her’s was the hand that wreathed
so daintily
With flow’rs each fissure
Circumstance had formed,
And, by its touch, like snows
by sunsets warmed,
Each rigid thought was softened rosily.
Her’s was the heart, by noblest
impulse moved,
That beat with earnest fondness
all divine;
That filled life’s cup
of joy with rarest wine,
For those who proudly felt they were beloved.
But soft! God’s edict ’twas,
that, from above,
Laden with anguish, came with
cruel blow.
’Twas Heaven’s
gain: the grief those only know
Who lost her just as they had learnt to
love.
Ah, me: the cost to be to Heaven
akin:
The harvest ripens round the
Eternal gate:
The pure in soul and saintliest-hearted
wait:
The Reaper comes and plucks the nearest
in.
Ah, me: the cost life’s fairest
flower to be:
Petal and spray all elegance
and grace:
Each blossom beauteous as
an angel’s face;
And yet, alas! the first to drop and die.
Ah, me: the cost life’s tenderest
chords to wake,
With sweet enchantment breaking
up the air;
To know each tone will call
forth many a tear:
Each tender touch a heart or spirit-ache.
Ah, me: the cost for human hearts
to claim
Where God before His perfect
seal had set,
Like mortals straying into
Heaven unlet,
We perish gazing on celestial flame.
TO CLARA
’Twas a short decade that thou and
I
Walked hand-in-hand through
the world together;
When the cruel clouds obscured our sky,
And bitter and bleak was life’s
daily weather.
But a brave little heart was thine and
so,
Though it might have been
lighter had fortune willed it,
It battled, in boundless faith I know,
And just as the sunshine ’gan to
grow
The hand of Death reached
forth and chilled it.
The blow was unkind; but Heaven knows
best:
I felt that my loss was to
thee a blessing;
For I knew, when I laid thee down to rest,
I was giving an angel to angels’
caressing:
Thy love to my heart was ever dear,
With thy gentle voice and
thy brave endeavour;
Though briefly we wandered together here,
Two souls were cemented with smile and
tear,
That, one on earth, will be
one for ever.
E. H. R.
DIED NOVEMBER 30TH, 1867.
She came in beauty like the sun,
And flusht with hope each
heart and eye,
As roses redden into life
When Summer passes by.
And like the sun she calmly set,
With love’s own golden
glory crown’d,
In light whose rays for evermore
In mem’ry will abound.
A. R
DIED APRIL 21ST, 1865.
In silent grief the blow we’ll bear:
Though gone, with us she’ll
still abide.
Her name a shape of love will wear,
In viewless influence by our
side.
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS
VENUS AND ASTERY
A LEGEND OF THE GODS. (a)
Ah! hapless nymph! Doomed for a
time to bear
The badge which none but fickle lives
should wear.
How oft the envious tongue creates the
dart
That cleaves the saintly soul and breaks
the heart:
How oft the hasty ear full credence gives
To words in which no grain of truth survives:
Were Juno just, her heart would now delight
Turning thy dappled wings to waxen white,
Where jealous Venus and her envious train
By falsehood fixed an undeserved stain.
(a) Astery, one of the most
beautiful of Venus’s nymphs, and, as Spenser
says,
“Excelling
all the crew
In courteous usage and unstained hue,”
Is said to have been instructed “on
a day” by her mistress to go forth with her
companions gathering flowers with which to adorn her
forehead. She did so, and being more industrious
than the rest, gathered more flowers than any of them.
On being praised by Venus, her companions, being
envious of her, told the goddess that Astery had been
assisted by Cupid, Venus’s son, in culling the
blossoms. For this supposed offence she was
immediately turned by Venus into a butterfly, and her
wings, which before were white, were stained with
the colours of all the flowers she had gathered, “for
memory of her pretended crime, though crime none were.” Spenser’s
“Muiopotmos", 1576.
TO A ROYAL MOURNER
1864.
’Twere wise, O Queen, to let thy
features shine
Upon thy faithful people once
again;
As Summer comes to light the
paths of men,
So would thy presence round our hearts
entwine.
It is not meet our Queen of Queens should
stay
Lifelong and tearful in the
sombre glade,
Whither, to hide the wound
which Heaven made,
She shrank, as shrinks the stricken deer
away.
We do not ask thy heart to let us in
With all the freeness of an
early day:
Nor hope to bear thy greatest
grief away,
As though, with thee, that grief had never
been.
But, as the silent chancel leaves the
sun
To shine through mellowing
windows on the floor,
So would we enter thy great
heart once more,
Subdued, in reverence of the sainted one.
We wept with thee when throbbed the passing-bell,
And felt thy great affliction
from afar:
We mourned that such a grief
thy life should mar,
And loved thee more for loving him so
well.
One pearly thought surrounds that sombre
time;
One golden hope enframes the
past regret:
We thank our Father thou art
with us yet,
The more majestic for thy grief sublime.
BEAUTIFUL WALES
There is a little history attached
to the following lines. Twenty years ago, my
friend, Mr. Arthur J. Morris, at that time an accountant
at the Llwydcoed Ironworks, Aberdare, and subsequently
manager at the Plymouth Ironworks, Merthyr Tydfil,
but now deceased, asked me to write a song in praise
of Wales. I did so, and wrote and sent him the
words of “Beautiful Wales,” a Welsh translation
of which was made and forwarded to me by Mr. Daniel
Morgan (Daniel ap Gwilym), of Aberaman, Aberdare.
A short time afterwards I received a request from
Mr. R. Andrews, of Manchester (whom I never saw and
do not know) for permission to set the words to music,
which permission I gave, and the song (English version)
was published by Robert Cocks and Co., London.
It has long since been out of print. I found,
on receiving some copies of the music, that the tune
was merely an adaptation of a well-known dance tune,
and some years ago I wrote to Mr. Brinley Richards
on the subject, who regretted that the words had not
been wedded to more suitable music. The matter,
however, was lost sight of by myself, and I was under
the impression that the song had been forgotten.
To my surprise it suddenly cropped up as a great
favourite of the Sunday schools, and I have myself
heard it sung at school anniversaries to various tunes.
It would seem, therefore, that after playing the
vagrant for goodness knows how long, it became a reformed
character, was taken in hand by school children, and
by them adopted as a pet and made a favourite of.
BEAUTIFUL WALES
I know a land whose sunny shore
The sea’s wild waves
embrace,
Whose heart is full of mystic lore
That flashes from its face;
A land where cloud-kissed mountains are,
And green and flowery vales,
Where Poesy lingers like a star:
That land is sunny Wales.
Wales, the wild the
beautiful,
The
beautiful the free;
My heart and hand
are thine, O land
Of
magic minstrelsy.
And in this mystic land of mine
What dainty maids there be,
Whose faces shine with love divine,
Like sunlight on the sea.
The boasted fair of other climes
That live in songs and tales
Will never be more fair to me
Than those of sunny Wales.
Wales, the wild the
beautiful,
The
beautiful the free;
My heart and hand
are thine, O land
Of
magic minstrelsy.
GWALIA DEG.
Mi wn am wlad, a’i garw draeth
Gofleidir gan y don,
Sy’n orlawn o gyfrinawl ddysg
’R hwn draetha’i
gwyneb llon:
Gwlad yw lle mae mynyddoedd ban,
A glynoedd gwyrdd eu
lliw;
Lle’r erys awenyddiaeth glaer:
Hoff Walia heulawg yw.
Gwalia wyllt,
wyt decaf wlad;
Wyt
decaf wlad wlad rydd!
Dy eiddo i gyd
wyf fi, O dud
Y
swynawl gerdd ddiludd.
Ac yn y wlad gyfrinawl hon,
Ceir merched uchel fri,
Sydd a’u gwynebau’n t’w’nu
fel
Goleuni haul uwch lli.
Prydferthwch ffrostiawl gwledydd pell,
Sy’n byw yn ngerddi’r
byd,
Nis byddant byth brydferthach im
Na rhai fy heulawg dud.
Gwalia wyllt,
wyt decaf wlad;
Wyt
decaf wlad wlad rydd!
Dy eiddo i gyd
wyf fi, O dud
Y
swynawl gerdd ddiludd.
THE WELSH LANGUAGE
My bardic friend “Caradawc,”
of Abergavenny, sent me the following
Englyn, with a request that I would write an English
translation:
ENGLYN I’R IAITH GYMRAEG.
Iaith anwyl y Brythoniaid; Iaith
gywrain
Iaith gara fy Enaid;
Iaith gry, iaith bery heb baid,
Gorenwog Iaith Gwroniaid.
IOAN DAFYDD A’I
CANT.
To which was written and forwarded
the following reply;
ON THE WELSH LANGUAGE.
A language to love when our
tongues in love speak it;
A language to hate when
’tis spoken by fools;
A language to live when the
pure in life seek it,
A language to die when
the lying tongue rules;
A blessing when blessings lead
men to enjoy it;
A curse when for
cursing ’tis used as a rod;
The language of Satan when
devils employ it;
When angels indite it the
language of God.
A FOOLISH BIRD
An ostrich o’er the desert wide,
With upturned beak and jaunty stride,
In stately, self-sufficient pride,
One day was gently roaming.
When dreadful sound to ostrich
ears,
To ostrich mind the worst of fears
Our desert champion thinks he hears
The dreaded hunter coming.
Ill-fated bird! He might have fled:
Those legs of his would soon have sped
That flossy tail that lofty
head
Far, far away from danger.
But fatal error of his race
In sandy bank he hid his face,
And thought by this to evade the chase
Of the ostrich-bagging ranger.
So he who, like the ostrich vain,
Is ign’rant, and would so remain,
Of what folks do, it’s very plain
In folly’s road he’s
walking.
For if in sand you hide your head
Just to escape that which you dread,
And, seeing not, say danger’s fled:
’Tis worse than childish
talking.
“I’D CHOOSE TO BE A NIGHTINGALE.”
Answer to a Poem which appeared in
a daily paper, with the above title, signed “Mary”
(Llandovery.)
Gentle Mary! Do you know
What it is you crave?
Listen! As the flowers grow
O’er the dismal grave,
So, when sweetest sings the bird
Thou would’st like to
be,
When in twilight’s hour is heard
The magic melody,
Harshly comes the cruel thorn
Against the songster’s
breast,
And melting music thus is born
Of pain and sad unrest (a)
So if like Philomel thou’dst sing,
And happiness impart,
Thy breast must bear the cruel sting
That haunts the songster’s
heart.
(a) There is a poetic legend,
which says that when the Nightingale sings the sweetest,
it presses its breast against a thorn.
TRUE PHILANTHROPY
Written on hearing that J. D. Llewelyn,
Esq., of Penllergare, had refused a public Testimonial,
the offer of which was evoked by his unbounded charity
and unostentatious acts of philanthropy, which recognition
it was desired to inaugurate in the shape of a statue
of himself, placed in front of the Swansea hospital an
institution which owes so much to his munificent liberality.
MARCH 6th, 1876.
Friend of the poor, for whom thy ceaseless
thought
Is as the sun, that warms
the earthy clod
Into a flush of blossom beauty-fraught,
Waking in hearts by poverty distraught
Glimpses in life of Heaven
and of God.
And as the sun sends forth his golden
beams
In silence, all unweeting
of their worth,
So from thy life in silent beauty streams
That Heaven-born charity which never seems
To know itself and
blushes at its birth.
No sculptor’s art thy goodness need
proclaim:
The knowledge lives in hearts
that feel its power
A love more lasting than a marbled fame:
Brooding in silence o’er thy cherished
name,
As light is worshipped by
the voiceless flower.
DISRAELI
O’er the Present proudly striding
Like Colossus o’er the
wave,
And a beacon-light high holding,
While the tempests loudly
rave:
Laying bare in truthful teaching
Treach’rous breakers
round the bay,
That the good old barque of England
May in safety sail away:
Though the tongue of fiercest Faction
In its Folly may deride,
Still he stands in lofty learning
Like a giant o’er the
tide,
While the murmuring wavelets passing
Far beneath his kingly hand,
Looking upward, blindly babble
Where they cannot understand.
When his country’s proudest sceptre
He was called upon to sway,
Ruled he with a noble purpose
That will never pass away:
So, the Future, of his striving
With its trumpet-tongue shall
tell:
How he battled for the Bible;
How he loved old England well:
How his nature, though not faultless
(Human nature may not be),
Bore the never-dying impress
Of life’s truest chivalry,
How they wrote upon the marble,
Where he lay beneath the sod:
“Faithfully he served his country,”
“Truthfully he served
his God.”
DOWN IN THE DARK.
A RECOLLECTION OF THE FERNDALE COLLIERY EXPLOSION.
NOVEMBER, 1867.
Down in the dark in the blinding
dark;
Away from the sunshine bright
above:
Away from the gaze of those
they love,
They are lying stony and stark.
Down in the dark deep down
in the dark,
With the terror of death in
each sightless eye,
Which tells how hard ’tis
to burn and die
Down down in the poisonous
dark.
Up in the light in the broad
noon-light
Poor hearts are breaking:
hot tears are shed,
As, tenderly shrouding each
cinder-like head,
It is hid from the aching sight.
Up in the light in the soft
gas-light
Of the draperied room, in
luxurious guise;
In our comfort forgetting
who plods and plies
Far down in eternal night.
Up in the light further up
in the light;
In the pure clear light of
a Queenly crown,
A widowed monarch is looking
down
Tow’rds the dark, with compassion
bedight.
Up in the light further up
in the light
From the dazzling light of
a Maker’s throne
The angel of Pity came down
to zone
Human hearts through that dreadful night.
DAISY MAY
A STORY OF CHRISTMASTIDE LONG AGO.
PART THE FIRST
“Don’t bolt the door, John,”
said the Dame,
Who sat esconced in oaken
chair,
The good man paused, and back he came,
Silent, and with a troubled
air.
“To night ’tis just a year
ago
Since Daisy left,” the
mother sighed.
“Don’t blame the child, I
loved her so;
But better had our darling
died.”
The father spake not. Glistening
bright
A tear stole down the mother’s
cheek.
“A year to-night! A year to-night!
I sometimes think my heart
will break.”
’Tis Christmas-eve, and in that
cot
The good old couple grieve
and yearn
For one, though absent, ne’er forgot:
“Don’t bolt the
door, she may return.”
“She may return.” The
midnight chime
With mystic music fills the
air,
And bears the news, “’Tis
Christmas time,”
In sobbing wavelets everywhere.
PART THE SECOND
Our village pride was Daisy May;
A fairy being, all too good
For earthly thought as bright
as day
Just blooming into womanhood.
The low, sweet music of her voice,
Was like the sound of rippling
rills;
It bade the listening heart rejoice,
And won as with enchanting
spells.
Her eyes, like violets dipt in dew,
The soul enthralled with tender
glance,
That gave to things a brighter hue,
And fringed our lives with
new romance.
And from her forehead, white as pearl,
There hung a cloud of golden
hair,
Whose lustre threw around the girl
A halo such as angels wear.
“Ah, me!” sighed many a village
swain,
“Her love what bliss
’twould be to win
He whom the beauteous prize shall gain
Will open Heaven and enter
in.”
And as she passed with girlish grace
She met the glance of every
eye,
Till blushes fluttered o’er her
face
Like roses when the sun goes
by.
But while in virgin life she walkt;
While sunlight round her footsteps
played,
Abroad unbridled Passion stalked:
She loved, and, trusting,
was betrayed.
And in the city, ’mongst the gay,
Far, far from friends who
mourned her fate,
She flung Love’s precious pearls
away,
And woke, but woke, alas,
too late.
She woke to find herself alone,
Save baby sleeping at her
breast:
In that vast city all unknown,
Unloved, unpitied, and unblest.
Unloved by one who swore to love;
Unpitied by the cruel crowd;
Unblest by all save Him above,
To whom she prayed in grief
aloud.
In fitful dreams she saw, and oft,
That humble cottage by the burn;
And heard a voice, so sweet and soft:
“Don’t bolt the
door, she may return.”
“She may return.” Delicious
dream.
“Then mother loves me
still,” she sighed.
Ah! little knew she of the stream
Of tears that mother shed
and dried.
Of weary watches in the night;
Of aching heart throughout
the day;
Of darkened hours that once were bright,
Made glad by her now far away.
And when, in unforgiving mood,
The father urged his tenets
stern,
How oft that mother tearful stood:
“Don’t bolt the
door, she may return.”
PART THE THIRD
’Tis Christmas Eve: the midnight
chime
With mystic music fills the
air,
And bears the news, “’Tis
Christmas time,”
In sobbing wavelets everywhere.
Without, the weird wind whistles by;
Clothed is the ground with
drifting snow;
Within, the yule logs, piled on high,
Their cheery warmth and comfort
throw.
And in that cottage by the moor,
Where father, mother, mourning
dwell.
The fire is bright, where hearts are sore
The chime to them a mournful
knell.
“What’s that?” the mother
faintly said:
“Methought I heard a
weary sigh.”
The father sadly shook his head:
“Tis but the wind that
wanders by.”
Again the Dame, with drowsy start
“It is no dream I
heard a groan.”
Oh, the misgivings of her heart!
“’Tis but the
music’s murmuring moan.”
They little thought, while thus they sighed,
That at their threshold, fainting,
lay
The child for whom they would have died,
For whom they prayed both
night and day.
’Twas bitter chill! The snowy
fall
Came drifting slowly through
the air,
And gently clothed with ghostly pall
The wasted form that slumbered
there.
And all the live-long night she slept,
While breaking hearts within
grew sore;
While father, mother, mourned and wept,
She lay in silence at the
door.
Till, in the morning, all aglow,
The sun, in looking o’er
the hill,
Like sculptured marble in the snow,
Saw Daisy, stony, stark, and
still.
Then tenderly, in coffined state,
The hapless girl they grave-ward
bore,
And, as they mourned her cruel fate,
Her tomb with flowers scattered
o’er.
Leaving the broken-hearted child
To sleep in peace beneath
the sod,
And he who first her heart beguiled
To cope with conscience and
his God.
LINES:
ACCOMPANYING A PURSE GIVEN TO A FRIEND
ON HIS BIRTHDAY.
The Purse I send to you, my friend,
Is empty, but if wishes warm
Could fill it, ’twould be brimming
o’er
With handfuls of the golden
charm.
The only wealth I have to give
Are words which may be worth
a thought.
Be sure, as you would prosperous live,
While earning sixpence spend
a groat:
Your purse will then grow slowly full,
A friend in need you’ll
always find,
And comforts, which can only flow
From plenty and a peaceful
mind.
FORSAKEN
’Twas a white water-lily I saw that
day,
With its leaves looking up
to the sky,
And baring its breast to the sportive
play
Of the wavelets dancing by.
And O for the music the streamlet made,
As it floated in ripples along;
Round the beautiful blossom it eddied
and played
With a voice full of silvery
song.
So all through the Summer the lily laughed,
And with glances of loving
and light
Drank in fresher beauty with each dainty
draught
Of the water so playful and
bright.
“And is it for ever,” the
floweret sighed,
“That thy vows of affection
will last?”
“For ever and ever!” the streamlet
replied,
And, embracing her, hurried
past.
The Summer days vanished the
Winter came:
Ah! where could the lily be?
The sun still warmed with its golden flame;
But the streamlet had gone
to the sea.
And the blossom that once, with its bosom
of white,
Like a star from the heavens
shone,
Lay frozen and dead. Ah, sorrowful
plight!
It had died in the dark alone.
CHRISTMAS IS COMING.
Christmas is coming with merry laugh,
With a merry laugh and a joyful
shout,
And the tidings are flung with an iron
tongue
From a thousand steeples pealing
out;
Hang up the holly the mistletoe
hang;
Bedeck every nook round the
old fireside;
Make bright every hearth let
the joy-bells clang
With a warm-hearted welcome
to Christmas-tide.
Christmas is coming! But some will
see
By the old fireside a vacant
place;
And a vision will flit through the festive
glee
Of an absent a
never-returning face;
And a voice that was music itself last
year
Will be mournfully missed
in the even-song;
And children will speak, with a gathering
tear,
Of the virtues which now to
the dead belong.
Christmas is coming! Look back o’er
the past:
Is there nought to forgive?
Is there nought to forget?
Have we seized all the chances of life
that were placed
In our path: or in this
have we nought to regret?
Have we fought on life’s battle-ground
manfully true,
While success, like a butterfly,
flew from our reach?
Have we pressed in pursuit of the prize
as it flew?
Has the Past, in its dying,
no lesson to teach?
Christmas is coming! But who shall
say
That at Christmas-time they
again may meet?
For graves lie thick in the crowded way;
And we elbow Death in the
open street
Let Folly embitter the festival hour
With a tongue that would injure a
heart that would hate!
True wisdom is blest with a nobler dower:
In another year it may be
too late.
Christmas is coming! The wealthy
will sit
In purple, fine linen, and
sumptuous state;
’Twere well in their plenty they
should not forget
The poor that stand meek at
the outer gate.
For who can foreshadow the changes of
life?
See! yesterday’s King
is an outcast to-day;
Success comes in time to the strong in
the strife;
And Fortune’s a game
at which paupers can play.
Christmas is coming? The trader
will quail
Over ledgers unsquared and
accounts overdue:
And his pen fain would tell all the sorrowful
tale
Which his heart, full of fear,
has not courage to do!
Had he all that is owing, how happy his
heart;
How buoyant his footstep how
joyous his face;
But his debtors from gold as their life’s
blood will part;
And their hoard lies untouched
o’er a brother’s disgrace.
But Christmas is coming with merry laugh,
Amid pain, amid pleasure,
with joyful shout,
And the tidings are flung with an iron
tongue
From a thousand steeples pealing
out.
Hang up the holly the mistletoe
hang;
Bedeck every nook round the
old fireside:
Let us bury our care: let the joy-bells
clang
With a warm-hearted welcome
to Christmas-tide.
HEART LINKS
The mist that rises from the river,
Evermore evermore,
Tells how hearts are born to sever
As of yore as
of yore.
But the silvery mist returneth
Sparkling dew and blessed
rain;
So the loving heart, though distant,
Comes again comes
again.
The stars that shine in brightness o’er
us
In the sky in
the sky,
Speak of loved ones gone before us
Born to die born
to die,
Who, in days of earthly sadness,
O’er us watch with tender
love,
As the starlight falls around us
From above from
above.
The rose that gives, before it leaves
us,
Fragrance rare fragrance
rare,
Links of love in absence weaves us
Sweet to wear sweet
to wear;
So true hearts in love united
Bound by pure affection’s
chain,
Though in life or death divided,
Meet again meet
again.
THE OAK TO THE IVY.
’Twas in my Spring of palmy gladness
First I met thee, Ivy wife;
Then my brow, untouched by sadness,
Bloomed with regal-foliaged
life;
Proud my arms hung forth in blessing
O’er thy trustful spirit
dear,
And my heart, ’neath thy caressing,
Wore a Spring-dress all the
year!
Time wings on: my strength is fleeing,
And my leafy beauties too;
Still thou clings’t around my being,
Changeless ever
true.
Churlish Autumn hath uncrowned me,
Still I feel thy fond embrace;
Winter sad throws gloom around me:
Sweet! thou smil’st
up in my face;
Spring arrives with flowery treasures,
Summer skips by, sun-caressed;
Yet thou, envying not their pleasures,
Bloom’st upon my rugged
breast.
Time wings on: my strength is fleeing,
And my leafy beauties too;
Still thou cling’st around my being,
Changeless ever
true.
Though my limbs grow old and weary,
Trembling in the wintry air;
And my life be dark and dreary
Still I feel that thou art
near;
Stripped of all my blossoms golden,
’Reft of stalwart forest
pride
Sere and sallow, leafless, olden;
Yet remain’st thou by
my side.
Time wings on: my strength is fleeing,
And my leafy beauties too;
Life-long cling’st thou round my
being,
Changeless ever
true.
EPIGRAM
ON A WELSHWOMAN’S HAT.
“O changeful woman! Constant
man!”
Has been the theme for buried
ages.
But here’s the truth: say “No”
who can
Ye bards, philosophers, and
sages:
Men buy their Hats all kinds of shapes;
Our own Welshwomen change
their’s never;
’Tis with their Hats as with their
loves
Where fancy rests the heart approves,
And, loving once, they love
for ever!
SHADOWS IN THE FIRE
She sat and she gazed in the fire:
In the fire with a dreamy
look:
And she seemed as though she could never
tire
Of reading the fiery book.
She saw, midst the embers bright,
A figure both manly and fair,
Blue eyes that shone with a loving light:
And showers of nut-brown hair.
She saw her own image stand
By that form on a sunny day:
One kiss of the lip: one grasp of
the hand:
And her heart was borne away.
She saw, through the flickering flame,
A bier in a darkened room:
And a coffin that bore her idol’s
name
Was hurried away to the tomb.
She saw, from a distant strand,
A missive sent over the main:
The letter was writ by a stranger’s
hand:
And she sighed for her lover
in vain.
So she sat and she gazed in the fire:
In the fire, with a dreamy
look:
And she seemed as though she could never
tire
Of reading the fiery book.
THE BELFRY OLD.
On a New Year’s Eve, by a belfry
old,
With a sea of solemn graves
around,
While the grim grey tower of the village
church
Kept silent ward o’er
each grassy mound,
With a cloak of ivy about it grown,
Fringed round, like fur, with
a snowy fray;
On a New Year’s Eve I watched alone
The life of the last year
ebbing away.
Anon there came from the belfry out
A strange wild sound as of
pleasure and pain;
For the birth of the new a jubilant shout:
For the death of the old a
sad refrain.
And the voice went throbbingly through
the air,
Went sobbing and sighing,
with laughter blent;
All the echoes awakening everywhere;
A guest that was welcomed
wherever, it went.
I thought, as the sound of each babbling
bell
Came gushing away from the
belfry old,
That stories such as the dying tell
Were up in that belfry being
told:
As the words men mutter in life’s
last fear
Seem to shrink from Eternity
back to Time,
So it seemed to me that each echo clear
Came back from the grave with
a lesson sublime.
“Yet another year!” it seemed
to say;
Gone one more year in the
battle of life;
With its yearnings in gloom for the coming
day,
Its pantings for peace ’mid
the daily strife;
Clay lips that kissed but a year ago
With the fervent warmth of
life and love;
Dear eyes that gladdened bright homes
below
In one short year with the
stars above.
Gone one more year, with its masses that
prayed
For the daily bread that so
seldom came;
With its lives whom sinning could never
degrade,
Till the canker of want brought
guilt and shame.
Gone one more year, with its noble souls
Who raised up the weary in
hours of need;
With its crowds that started for wished-for
goals,
And drooped by the way, broken-hearted
indeed.
Gone one more year, with its wearisome
woes;
Its pleasures hoped for never
seen:
Its swallow-winged friends: its fair-faced
foes:
Its sorrow which happiness
might have been:
Its cant and its cunning: its craft
and crime:
Its loves and its hates:
its hopes and fears:
Its lives that, reaching tow’rds
heights sublime,
Fell short of the mark in
a sea of tears.
Gone one more year, to tell all the rest
How wise the old world had
gotten of late:
How fools still flourish, by wealth caressed:
How the noble of mind meet
a pauper’s fate;
How the infidel heart, accursed, defies
All hopes of Heaven all
fears of hell:
How the saintly preach from the book of
lies,
And scoff at the truths which
Saviours tell.
How the pious who poison the poor man’s
food
In shoddy and shop grow golden
and grand:
How the rent-roll harbours the stolen
rood
The emblazoned escutcheon
the bloody hand:
How women and men to the altar hie,
And swear to the promise they
rarely keep;
How Vice, a shameless and living lie,
Gets honours which Virtue
never can reap.
Gone one more year: there is no return.
Press onward, still onward,
for weal or woe.
Beat heart: throb brain: hot
eyelids burn:
Man’s troubles and trials
who cares to know?
Birth, marriage, and death: death,
marriage, and birth,
Are the treadmill steps of
this wheel of strife;
Cloak, draught, and a crust then
a hole in the earth:
And the struggle for these
is the story of life.
So sang the bells in the belfry old,
Or so it seemed to me they
sang;
And the year died out as the moments rolled,
Still o’er its bier
the joy-bells rang:
’Twas mourning an instant, merriment
then,
And the ghastly shroud where
the old year lay
How like is the humour of bells and men
Became swaddling-clothes for
the New Year’s Day.
BEAUTIFUL BARBARA
Beautiful Barbara Barbara bright,
As bright and as fresh as the dainty dawn,
What is it disturbeth her bosom white,
As the breeze into billows kisseth the corn?
Beautiful Barbara silent and
shy,
Shy as the dove, as the dove
as fond,
What a dreaminess lives in her hazel eye,
As she looketh away through
the valley beyond.
Through the valley beyond, where the daisies
blush,
Where the woodbines bloom
and the rivulets run;
Through the valley beyond, where, in evening’s
hush,
Beautiful Barbara’s
heart was won.
And the maiden Barbara, fair and forlorn,
The grass-green meadow looketh
along;
The morrow was fixed for her wedding morn,
And she vieweth in vision
the bridal throng.
She looketh, and weepeth, and looketh
in vain:
Her heart was trustful; his
heart was untrue;
And beautiful Barbara mingleth amain
Her tears with the daisies
and the dew.
And the harvest moon sat silent and pale,
Silent and pale o’er
the far-off hill:
And the sun in the morning flushing the
vale
Saw beautiful Barbara stark
and still.
Stark and still, with a forehead of white,
Round which the dew-drop coronal
shone;
And the sunbeams came with their laughing
light,
But beautiful Barbara sleepeth
on.
’Twas a trying path for her dainty
feet,
For such dainty feet as her’s
to tread.
So her trampled heart ’gainst its
bars had beat,
Till it bravely broke and
heavenward fled.
SONG OF THE SILKEN SHROUD
Out in Babylon yonder,
By the gas-lights’ dull
red glare,
In a stifling room a living
tomb,
With never a breath of air,
A slender girl is sitting;
At her feet a silken cloud,
Which music makes, while her young heart
aches,
As she stitches the rustling
shroud.
And this is the song the glistening silk
Sings, out in the work-room
yonder:
“Quick!
quick! quick!
“My
lady is waiting to roam.
“If you
wish to die, the needle ply;
“You
can die when you reach your home.”
And while the gas-lights flicker and play
The life of the sempstress ebbs away
In the West End work-room
yonder.
Out in Babylon yonder,
In the blaze of the ball-room
gay,
My lady sits; while round her flits
A skeleton slender and grey.
And the ghastly spectre standeth
By the side of my lady fair
So mournfully bland, and with bony hand
It plays with her costume
rare.
And this is the song the ghostly guest
Sings, out in the ball-room
yonder:
“Look! look!
look!
“Sit
ye scornful and proud.
“Your boddice
a hearse; every stitch a curse;
“Your
skirt a silken shroud.”
For while the gas-lights flickered in
play
The life of the sempstress ebbed away
In the West End work-room
yonder.
A UNIVERSITY FOR WALES.
WRITTEN IN 1867, AND INSCRIBED TO THOSE WHO WERE THEN
ENGAGED IN THE NOBLE AND PATRIOTIC WORK
OF PROVIDING ONE.
In the cause of Education
Let us raise the standard
high,
And in tones of exultation
“Upward onward!”
be the cry.
Let us rear this Fane of Learning
Beauteous Temple of the Mind;
Where true hearts, for knowledge yearning,
May the priceless jewel find.
In the cause of Education
Let the glorious altar stand,
As a bulwark of the nation,
As a blessing in the land.
Let an unsectarian fabric
Grow in grandeur from the
sod,
As a crown upon our manhood,
As a monument to God.
In the cause of Education
Let the wealth which Wisdom
owns
Be out-scattered open-handed
To uprear this Throne of Thrones:
And, like bread upon the waters,
Hearts that give from store
of gold
Will, in never-dying blessings,
Richly reap a thousand-fold.
In the cause of Education,
In the search for simple Truth,
In the proud Confederation
Which ennobles striving youth,
Let each heart’s best pulses quicken,
Patriotic souls up-leap,
Till, mind-freighted, sails the fabric
Like an ark upon the deep.
GRIEFS UNTOLD
In silence blooms the Summer rose,
With damask cheek and odorous
breath,
And ne’er a ruddy leaf that blows
Whispers of canker or of death:
But sweetly smiles the lovely flower
All through the sunshine warm
and gay,
And tells not of the canker-dower
That eats its inmost heart
away.
In gladness rolls the river bright
Down through the meadow grassy-green,
With ripples full of laughing light
That wake with joy the sunny
scene.
From morn till morn, with cheery tread,
The stream walks on with ne’er
a sigh,
Nor tells of pebbles hard and dead
That deep below the surface
lie.
“I WILL.”
It is Christmas Eve, and the dance is
o’er:
“Good night good
night all round!”
And the red light streams through the
open door,
Like a sprite on the snowy
ground.
And faces peer down the glowing dell
From the cottage warm and
bright,
To see the last of the village belle
Who stands in the pale moonlight.
And waving her hand with a last farewell,
Is lost from their yearning
sight.
But not alone is that maiden fair
Of the pearl-white face and the golden
hair.
“Thou knowest I love thee, Blanche,”
he said,
Who walked by the maiden’s
side,
And her cheeks flushed up with a sweeter
red
When he asked her to be his
bride.
Though humble, their love was pure as
light
As pure as the snow they trod;
And the peal from the belfry woke the
night
Like a voice from the Throne
of God:
Or plaudits of angels glad with delight
At their Maker’s approving
nod.
Through a manly bosom it sent a thrill,
For it came with the bells did the girl’s
“I will.”
DAWN AND DEATH
The sobbing winds of winter
Lingered sadly round the door,
Then ran in mystic meanings
Through the dark across the
moor;
The window panes were streaming
With the tears which heaven
wept,
And a mother sat a-dreaming
O’er an infant as it
slept:
Its little hands were folded;
And its little eyes of blue
Were clothed in alabaster
With the azure peeping through:
Its face, so still and star-like,
Was as white as maiden snow:
And it breathed in faintest ripples,
As the wavelets come and go.
The morn in golden beauty
Through the lattice gaily
peept,
But muffled was the window
Of the room where darling
slept:
The mother’s heart was breaking
Into tears like Summer cloud,
For a starry face was circled
With a little lily shroud;
And a soul from sunny features
Like a beam of light had fled:
Before her, like a snowdrop,
Her miracle lay dead!
Ah! ’Twas cruel thus to chasten,
Though her loss was darling’s
gain:
And her heart would rifle Heaven
Could she clasp her babe again.
CASTLES IN THE AIR.
Autumn’s sun was brightly blazing
Like a suit of golden mail;
Flocks along the mead were grazing;
Lambkins frollicked through
the vale.
Brooklets gossipped o’er their beauty;
Leaves came down in whisp’ring showers;
And the vine-trees, lush and fruity,
Climbed and clung in am’rous
bowers:
Beauty gladness
Floated
round me everywhere;
Still in sadness
Built
I castles in the air
In
the soft and dreamy air.
Far above me, like a spirit,
Rose an alp in proud array,
And my heart so yearned to near it
As I in the valley lay.
Ah, thought I, yon summit seemeth
Like a throne, so pure and bright;
Lo! how grandly-great it gleameth,
Crown’d with everlasting
light!
Then I started
From
the valley calm and fair,
Hopeful-hearted,
Tow’rds
the castle in the air
High
up in the dreamy air.
Many a tortuous path and winding
Rid my soul embattle through;
Many a thorn of bitter finding
Choked my way with perils
new:
Upward still, footsore and bleeding,
On with lonesome heart I pressed;
And I heard the chimes receding
In the vale so calm and blest.
Still I wandered
Up
the pathway rough and drear,
Till I pondered
By
the castle in the air
Like
a spirit in the air.
I had reached the lofty glory;
I had gained the alpine peak;
Lowly lay the world before me
Yet my heart was like to break!
Where I stood ’twas cold and dreary –
Crown’d with white and
glistening snow:
“Ah,” I sighed, with heart
a-weary
“Distance lent the golden
glow!”
Thus Fame ever
Woos
men from earth’s valleys fair,
Oft to shiver
Near
life’s castles in the air
In
the far-off wintry air.
THE WITHERED ROSE
I had a silver chalice once
Of exquisite design,
In shape ’twas like the human heart
This little vase of mine.
I plucked a rose and placed the flow’r
Within the shiny cup,
And drank the incense hour by hour
The rosebud offered up.
And as it opened leaf by leaf
Its beauties spreading wide,
I saw no blossom such as mine
In all the world beside.
The sunlight came, but came in vain,
And day succeeded day,
But leaf by leaf my rosebud drooped,
Until it passed away.
And thus in life we look for love
From other loves apart
A gift from Heavenly hand above
And plant it near the heart;
But Death comes forth with chilly touch;
The blossom droops and dies;
And breaking hearts are filled alone
With fragrant memories.
WRECKS OF LIFE.
I sat upon the shingly Beach
One sunny Summer-day,
A-listening to the mystic speech
Of a million waves at play.
And as I watched the flowing flood
I saw a little child,
Who near a mimic fabric stood
Of shells his hands had piled.
And as he turned to go away,
He said, with look of sorrow:
“Build up I cannot more to-day
“I’ll come again
to-morrow!”
The morrow came he thither
hied
Looked for his castle gay;
But while he’d slept the cruel tide
Had washt it all away.
And thus in life we gaily build
Shell castles in the air;
Our hopes the fairy fabrics gild
With colours bright and rare:
But the dark flood of human strife
Rolls onward while we sleep,
And o’er the wrecks, where waves
ran rife,
We waken but to weep.
ELEANOR:
DIED ON HER WEDDING DAY.
Scarce nineteen Summers had breathed their
bloom,
Had breathed their bloom on
her dainty cheek,
When they bore her away to the voiceless
tomb
With hearts so full they were
like to break.
And down in the churchyard old and green,
In the churchyard green where
the yew-tree waves,
A dark little mound of earth is seen
One billow more to the sea
of graves.
Dear heart! How sad, in the gorgeous
light,
In the gorgeous light of a
purple dawn,
With life so hopeful of pure delight,
Away from the world to be
rudely torn!
To be rudely torn in the tender hour,
In the tender hour when her
heart was young;
While the virgin dew on the opening flower
With a trembling joy like
a jewel hung.
Ere the budding soul, so sweetly shy,
Had opened its core to the
coming kiss
Of an earthly love that was born to die
Ere it filled her heart with
its hallowed bliss.
So down in the churchyard old and green,
In the churchyard green where
the yew-tree waves,
A dark little mound of earth is seen
One billow more to the sea
of graves.
Scarce nineteen Summers had breathed their
bloom,
Had breathed their bloom on
her dainty cheek,
And they bore her away to the voiceless
tomb
With hearts so full they were
like to break:
With hearts so full even this belief
Dispelled not a tear from
their aching eyes
Though they saw their beloved through
clouds of grief
An angel beyond in the golden
skies.
NEW YEAR’S BELLS
Hearest thou that peal a-telling
Night-noon stories to the
Sky;
Hark! each wave of sound comes welling
Like a scolded angel’s
cry;
And the voice the belfry flingeth
Sobbing from its brazen breast,
Like a god in trouble singeth,
Waking half the world from
rest;
Now it wails in murmuring sadness,
As a child at words unkind;
Now it comes with merry gladness,
Floating weirdly on the wind.
Ah! ’tis sad; –yet
sprightly-hearted;
Song of Birth and gloomy Bier;
Death-dirge for the Days departed;
Carol for the coming Year.
Is it that the voice reminds thee
Of the wasted moments past?
Saith it that the New Year finds thee
Where it left thee last?
Doth the merry music taunt thee,
How the Palace love had reared
Mocks with echoes now, that haunt thee
Where thou dream’dst
they would have cheered?
Moan the bells with thee in sorrow
O’er a little mound
of green,
Rising up from graveyard furrow
Bleakly blank upon the scene?
Doth the tender language, stealing
O’er the soul with soothing
swell,
Waken thoughts from sweet concealing:
Joyous tale for chimes to
tell;
Reviving dainty hours of gladness,
Fresh as daisies in the spring,
As birds in summer, void of sadness,
Songs, heart-buried, wake
and sing?
Doth the sea of music bear thee
Back again upon the Past,
To show thee that the New Year finds thee
Happier than the last?
Doth it tell of plans laid glowing
On the anvil of thy heart;
Times thou’st raised thy hand for
throwing
In life’s battle many
a dart?
How each plan unstricken lingered
Till the mouldful heat was
gone?
How each dart was faintly fingered,
Resting in the end unthrown;
Of the Faith thou pawn’dst for Fancies
Substance for a fadeful beam?
Doth it taunt with bartered chances
Sterling strength for drowsy
dream?
Doth it brand thee apathetic?
Twit with lost days many a
one?
Doth it chant in words emphatic
“Gone for aye; for ever
gone?”
Is it that the voice reminds thee
Of the wasted moments past?
Saith it that the New Year finds thee.
Wiser than the last?
’Tis not so! and still,
as ever,
Time’s a jewel in its
loss;
But, possessed in plenty, never
Held as ought but worthless
dross.
Like lost truant-boys we linger
Whimpering in Life’s
mazy wood,
Heedless of the silent finger
Ever pointing for our good;
Each, in plodding darkness groping,
Clothes his day in dreamy
night,
’Stead of boldly climbing, hoping,
Up the steeps towards the
light,
Where, as metal plucks the lightning
Flashing from the lofty sky,
Sturdy purpose, ever heightening,
Grasps an Immortality.
Let not future peals remind thee,
Then, of wasted moments passed;
Let not future New Years find thee
Where each left thee last.
THE VASE AND THE WEED:
A PLEA FOR THE BIBLE.
I had a vase of classic beauty,
Rare in richly-carved design;
Memento of an ancient splendour
Was this peerless vase of
mine.
A master-hand of old had graved it:
Hand for many a year inurned:
And out from every line and tracing
Germs of genuine genius yearned.
I took the gem and proudly placed it
On a pillar ’mongst
the flowers,
And watcht how radiance round it hovered,
Bathed with sunlight and with
showers.
A little weed-like plant grew near it,
And anon crept o’er
its face;
Until at length, with stealth insidious,
It quite obscured its classic
grace,
And where was once a noble picture
Of the Beauteous and the True,
There hung a mass of straggling herbage
Flecked with blooms of sickly
hue.
The Summer passed: the plant had
flourished,
As every weed in Summer will;
When Winter came and struck the straggler
To the heart with bitter chill.
It died: the winds of March played
round it,
Laughing at its wretched plight.
Then blew it from its slender holding,
Like a feather out of sight.
But still in undimmed freshness standing,
Reared the vase its classic
face;
Rare in its old, eternal beauty,
Majestic in its pride of place.
A RIDDLE
A riddle of riddles: Who’ll
give it a name?
A portrait of God in a worm-eaten frame.
A mount in his own eye in others’
a mite;
The foot-boy of Wrong, and the headsman
of Right;
A vaunter of Virtue yet dallies
with Vice;
From the cope to the basement bought up
at a price;
A vane in his friendship in
folly a rock;
In custom a time-piece in manners
a mock;
A fib under fashion a fool
under form;
In charity chilly in wealth-making
warm:
In hatred satanic a lambkin
in love;
A hawk in religion with coo of a dove;
A riddle unravelled a story
untold;
A worm deemed an idol if covered with
gold.
A dog in a gutter a God on
a throne:
In slander electric in justice
a drone:
A parrot in promise, and frail as a shade;
A hooded immortal in life’s masquerade;
A sham-lacquered bauble, a bubble, a breath:
A boaster in life-time a coward
in death.
TO A FLY:
BURNED BY A GAS-LIGHT.
Poor prostrate speck! Thou round
and round
With wildering limp dost come
and go;
Thy tale to me, devoid of sound,
Bears the mute majesty of
woe.
In bounding pride of revelry,
Seared by the cruel, burning
blast,
Thy fall instructive is to me
As fall of States and Empires
vast.
No sounding theme from lips of fire,
No marvel of the immortal
quill,
Can teach a moral, sterner higher,
Than thou, so helpless and
so still.
Reft as thou art by blistering burn
Blinded and shorn poor
stricken Fly!
The wise may stoop and lessons learn
From thy unmeasured agony.
It tells how maid, in guileless youth,
Flies tow’rds her Love
with trusting wing,
Bruises her heart ’gainst broken
truth,
And falls, like thee, a crippled
thing.
How man in bacchanalian sphere
Soars to the heat of Pleasure’s
sun,
Then, by gradations dark and drear,
Sinks low as thee, poor wingless
one:
How hearts from proud Ambition’s
height
Have drooped to darkest, lowest
hell
From blazing noon to pitchy night,
With pangs a demon-tongue
may tell:
How aspirations glory-fraught
Have gained the goal in dark
despair;
How golden hopes have come to nought
But wailings in the midnight
air.
There! and the life I ne’er could
give
In pitying tenderness I’ve
ta’en;
Far better thus to die, than live
A life of helpless, hopeless
pain.
Ambitious hearts high-vaulting
pow’rs
That aim to grasp life’s
distant sky,
See through the spirit-blinding hours
What wrought the fall of yonder
Fly.
TO A FRIEND
I fear to name thee. If I were
To do so, I could never tell
What virtues crown thy nature rare;
’Twould pain thy heart I
know it well.
Thou dost not ask for thy reward
In words that all the world
may hear,
For thoughtful acts and kind regard
By thee for others everywhere.
Thou seek’st alone for grateful
thought
From those to whom thy worth
is known;
So for much good thine heart hath wrought
Find gratitude within mine
own.
RETRIBUTION.
A spider once wove a right marvellous
net,
Whose equal no human hand ever wove yet,
So complete in design was each beautiful
fret,
And finished in
every particular.
And the wily old architect, proud of his
craft,
Ensconced in a snug little sanctum abaft,
Laid wait for the flies; and he chuckled
and laughed,
As he pricked
up his organs auricular.
A week had elapsed, and the spider still
wrought
Fell ruin on all the frail flies that
he caught;
All right rules of decency set he at nought:
Each meal made
him much more rapacious.
But his foot got entangled one horrible
hour,
As he rushed forth a poor screaming fly
to devour,
And to get his leg free was far out of
his pow’r,
Secure was our
spider sagacious.
Where now is the beautiful fabric of gauze?
Behold! in the centre, by one of his claws,
A dead spider is hanging surrounded by
flaws
And many a struggle-made
fracture.
’Twas hard, in the height of his
fly-killing fun,
And sad, in the light of a Summer-day
sun,
To die all alone, as that spider had done,
In a mesh of his
own manufacture.
THE THREE GRACES
I.
Her hair is as bright as the sunbeam’s
light,
And she walks with a regal
grace,
And she bares full proud to the empty
crowd
The wealth of her wondrous
face;
And her haughty smile thus speaks the
while:
“Approach me on bended
knee!”
She’s a beautiful star I could worship
afar,
But her love’s
not the love for me.
II.
Her hair is as black as the raven’s
back,
And her face what
a queenly one;
And her voice ripples out like the trembling
shout
Of a Lark when he sings to
the sun;
But her form is filled with a soul self-willed
That would lord o’er
a luckless he;
Pride reigns in her breast, like snow
in a nest,
And her love’s
not the love for me.
III.
Her hair what mind I the tint
of her hair,
When her eyes are the tenderest
blue;
And her loving face bears many a grace
Lit up with a sunny hue?
When I find O I find, that
her heart is kind
That she goes not abroad to
see
The World or be seen.
Her love, I ween,
Is the love that was made
for me.
THE LAST ROSE OF SUMMER.
Where now is the Summer’s last Rose,
That reigned like a queen
on the briar?
’T is faded! and o’er its
grave glows
The glad warmth of Winter’s
first fire.
We welcome the Flame with delight,
As we welcomed the Rose in
the Spring:
But the blossom’s as nought in our
sight
’Mid pleasures which
Firesides bring.
And so with life’s swallow-winged
friends:
The Rose is adored in its
day;
But when its prosperity ends
’T is cast like a puppet
away.
THE STARLING AND THE GOOSE
A FABLE.
A silly bird of waddling gait
On a common once was bred,
And brainless was his addle pate
As the stubble on which he fed;
Ambition-fired once on a day
He took himself to flight,
And in a castle all decay
He nestled out of sight.
“O why,” said he, “should
mind like mine
“Midst gosling-flock
be lost?
“In learning I was meant to shine!”
And up his bill he tossed.
“I’ll hide,” said he,
“and in the dark
“I’ll like an
owl cry out
("In wisdom owls are birds of mark),
“And none shall find
me out!”
And so from turret hooted he
At all he saw and heard;
Hoo-hoo! Hoo-hoo! What melody!
And what a silly bird!
At length a Starling which had flown
Down on the Castle wall
Thus spake: “Why what a simple
drone
“You are to sit and
bawl!
“Though you presume an
Owl to be,
“It’s not a bit
of use!
“Your body though folks cannot see
“They know the diff’rence pardon
me!
“Betwixt the screech of Owl up tree
“And the cackling of
a Goose!”
THE HEROES OF ALMA
OCTOBER, 1854.
Heaven speed you, Braves! Undaunted
lion-hearts
Well have you thus redeemed a solemn trust,
And added, by your bright heroic deeds,
Another lustrous ray to deck the brow,
Of this the good Old Land, whose gladdened
heart
Leaps forth for very joy and thankfulness,
Proud of the gallant sons she calls her
own;
Right nobly have you ta’en the gauntlet
up
Ambition flung before the world, and fought
’Gainst Evil, Might, and hated Despot-law;
Bled, conquered, clipped the wings of
soaring Pride,
And earned in Serf-land such a brilliant
name
Time’s breath can never dim.
But list! a wail
Of sorrowing sadness sweeps across the
Land,
With which the up-sent jubilant psalm
is blent.
‘Reft orphans’ cries, in mournful
cadence soft,
Sobs wrung from widows’ broken,
bleeding hearts;
And fond hoar-headed parents’ sighs
and tears,
Commingling all, merge in a requiem sad
For those brave hearts that fell in Freedom’s
cause.
Then let us plant Fame’s laurels
o’er their graves,
And keep them green with tears of gratitude.
A KIND WORD, A SMILE, OR A KISS.
There’s a word, softly spoken, which
leadeth
The erring from darkness and
night;
There’s an effortless action that
sheddeth
A sun-world of gladdening
light;
There’s a sweet something-nothing
which bringeth
A fore-taste of Paradise bliss:
Full and large is the love that up-springeth
From kind words, a smile,
or a kiss.
Eyes a-plenty with tears have been blinded,
Hearts legion in sadness have
bled,
And many of earth’s angel-minded
In grief have gone down to
the dead,
And the world, with its bright laughing
gladness,
Oft changed to a frowning
abyss,
By vain mortals refusing, in madness,
A kind word, a smile, or a
kiss.
DEAR MOTHER I’M THINKING OF THEE
NEW YEAR’S DAY, 1855.
In the hush of night, when the pale starlight
Through my casement silently
steals;
When the Moon walks on to the bower of
the Sun,
And her beautiful face reveals:
When tranquil’s the scene, and the
mist on the green
Lies calm as a slumbering
sea,
From my lattice I peep, ’ere I lay
down to sleep,
And whisper a prayer for thee:
Mother!
Dear Mother!
O,
blessings on thee!
From my lattice I peep, ’ere I lay
down to sleep,
And think, dear Mother, of
thee.
When the dew goes up from the white lily
cup
In rose-coloured clouds to
the sky;
When the voice of the Lark trembles out
from the dark,
And the winds kiss the flowers
with a sigh;
When the King of Dawn, like a world new-born,
Scatters love-light over the
lea;
From my lattice I peep, when I wake from
sleep,
And whisper a prayer for thee:
Mother!
Dear Mother!
O,
blessings on thee!
From my lattice I peep, when I wake from
sleep,
And think, dear Mother, of
thee.
THE HERON AND THE WEATHER-VANE
A FABLE.
A weather-vane on steeple top
Had stood for many a day,
And every year a coat of gold
Increased his aspect gay.
Subservient to the changing air,
Each puff he’d quickly
learn
To obey with sycophantic twist
And never-failing turn.
A Heron once, from lowly fen,
Soared up in stately flight;
But, striking ’gainst the gilded
vane,
He fell in sorry plight:
And as, with wounded wing, he lay
Down in the marsh below,
He thus addressed the glittering thing,
The cause of all his woe:
“Vain upstart! ’tis from such
as thee
That Merit, lowly born,
In striving oft to win a name,
Wins nought but bitter scorn:
But for such treacherous knaves as thou,
What crowds of souls would
soar
With lofty swoop, that now, like me,
Will mount, Ah! never more!
It fits thee well, that lacquer suit,
Base flunkey as thou art!
Though bright, it never covered brain;
Though gilded, ne’er
a heart!
Rather than wear upon my back
Such livery as thine,
I’d earn an honest crust, and make
The scullion’s calling
mine.”
THE THREE MIRRORS
A FABLE.
Three mirrors of the usual sort
Were gifted once with power of thought;
And as they hung against the wall
They felt that they were prophets all.
The first, a plate-glass o’er the
fire;
The next, a concave, standing higher;
A portly convex ’tother side
Made up the three; and as he eyed
His brother mirrors, brilliant each,
Thus gave to thought the rein of speech:
“Such power as mine who ever saw?
If in my face without a flaw
Men chance to gaze, they taller seem
Than what they are: delightful scheme!
I like to elongate the truth;
What else but flattery pleases youth?
A boy who in my face should scan
Will grow as tall as any man!”
Says convex; “That is not the case
With me; for those who in my face
Should chance to look, themselves will
find
Turned into things of dwarfish kind.
To praise mankind is what I hate:
What says our neighbour, Master Plate?”
The plate-glass then essayed to speak;
Said he: “My friends, I never
seek
So to distort the things I see
That none can tell what things they be.
I find it more convenient far
To show mankind just what they are!”
A table the dispute had heard,
And asked for leave to say a word.
“Agreed,” rejoined the glassy
crowd:
When thus the table spoke aloud:
“The virtues which you each would
claim
As yours, are virtues but in name.
You, Concave, lessen what you see,
Though well you know ’t should larger
be.
While Convex, aye to flattery prove,
Makes mounts of what are mites alone.
Plain-spoken Plate, in wrong the least,
Would tell a beast it was a beast,
Forgetting ’tis not always right
To judge from what appears in sight.
Your faces ought to blush for shame,
And yet you think you’re not to
blame!
You know that men are slow to think,
And will of any fountain drink;
Who fear their brain’s behest to
do,
So frame their faith from such as you!
Judged by the simplest human rules,
You are the knaves and they
the fools.”
THE TWO CLOCKS
A FABLE.
A country dame, to early-rising prone,
Two clocks possessed:
the one, a rattling Dutch,
Seldom aright, though noisy in its tone,
With naughty knack of striking
two too much.
The other was a steady, stately piece,
That rang the hour true as
the finger told:
For many a year ’t had kept its
corner place;
The owner said ’twas
worth its weight in gold!
One washing-eve, the Dame, to rise at
four,
Sought early rest, and, capped
and gowned, did droop
Fast as a church, to judge from nasal
snore,
That broke the silence with
a hoarse hor-hoop:
When all at once with fitful start she
woke;
For that same tinkling Dutchman
on the stair
Had told the hour of four with clattering
stroke,
And waked the sleeper ere
she was aware.
“Odd drat the clock!” she
sighed; but, knowing well
The cackling thing struck
two at least a-head,
She turned; and back to such deep slumber
fell,
But for her snore you might
have thought her dead.
And so she slept till four o’clock
was due,
When t’other time-piece
truly told the tale;
Straightway the drowsy dame to labour
flew,
And soon the suds went flirting
round the pail.
MORAL.
Whoe’er
breaks faith in petty ways
Will
never hold a friend;
While he who ne’er
a trust betrays
Gets
trusted to the end.
SACRIFICIAL
WRITTEN AFTER WITNESSING THE EXECUTION OF TWO
GREEK SAILORS AT SWANSEA, MARCH, 1859.
The morning broke fair, with a florid
light,
And the lark fluttered upward in musical
flight,
As the sun stept over the distant height
In mantle purple
and golden.
The blue bounding billows in waltzing
play
Lookt up in the face of the coming day,
And sang, as they danced o’er the
sandy bay,
Their sea-songs
mystic and olden.
High up, on the gable of yonder jail,
The workmen are plying with hammer and
nail,
And the slow-rising framework hinteth
a tale
Of mournful and
sombre seeming.
’Tis the gibbet that rears its brow
on high,
And the morn-breezes pass it with many
a sigh,
As it stands gazing up to the fair blue
sky
Like a spectre
dumbly dreaming.
Through lane and alley: through alley
and street
The echoes are startled by hurrying feet;
And thousands, in action fitful and fleet,
Press on to the
execution.
The squalid-faced mother her baby bears;
And the father his boy on his shoulder
rears:
The frail and the sinning emerge in pairs
From darkness
and destitution.
Aloft on the gibbet two beings stand,
Whose foreheads are smirched with the
murder-brand,
Whose lives, by the lawgivers bungling
and bland,
Declared are to
justice forfeit.
Below, like a statue stark and still,
A legion of faces, in brutish will,
Gaze up to the gallows with many a thrill,
And thirst for
the coming surfeit.
But one more look at the silvery sea:
One thought of the lark in its musical
glee;
One breath of the sweet breeze, balmy
and free;
One prayer from
two hearts that falter;
And Lo! in reply to a mortal’s
nod,
From the gibbet-tree dangle two pieces
of clod,
Their souls standing face-to-face with
their God,
Each wearing a
hangman’s halter.
Ah! shrink from the murderer; quaint,
wise world
Yea: shudder at sight of him; sanctified
world!
Go: plume him up deftly; clever old
world!
Till he shines
like a gilded excrescence:
Then strangle him dog-like a
civilised plan!
Quick! trample his life out: he’s
not of the clan:
He stinks in the nostrils of saintly man,
Though fit for
the Infinité’s presence!
WALES TO “PUNCH.”
On his milking the amende honourable to Wales and
the Welsh, in
some verses, the last of which was the
following:
“And Punch incarnate
justice,
Intends henceforth
to lick
All who shall scorn and sneer
at you:
You jolly little
brick.”
I’m glad, old friend, that you your
error see,
Of sneering where you cannot
understand:
You’ve owned your fault: let
by-gones by-gones be;
Past blows from Punch
forgetting there’s my hand.
Lick whom you list creation
if you please:
Let those who choose laugh
at me: let them sneer;
I earn, before I eat, my bread and cheese;
I love my language; and I
like my beer.
Content with what I have, so that it come
Through honest sources:
happy at my lot,
I seek not wish not for
a fairer home.
Hard work: my Bible:
children: wife: a cot:
These are my birthright, these I’ll
strive to keep,
And round my humble hearth
affection bind:
From Eisteddfodau untold pleasures reap;
And try to live at peace with
all mankind.
Then glad am I that you your error see,
Of sneering where you cannot
understand:
You’ve owned your fault: let
by-gones by-gones be;
Past blows from Punch
forgetting there’s my hand.
WELCOME!
The following was written as a Prologue,
to be read at the opening of the Wrexham National
Eisteddfod, 1876. It was not successful in taking
the offered prize, but as the adjudicator who made
the award was pleased to say it was “above the
average,” I have thought its publication here
will not be out of place.
Welcome! thrice welcome one
and all,
To this our Nation’s Festival;
Be ’t Peer or peasant; old or young:
Welcome! thrice welcome, friends among.
If Peer no title that he bears
No decoration that he wears
Can the proud name of Bard excel,
Or pale the badge he loves so well.
If Peasant he may here be taught
That none are poor who, rich in thought,
Possess in Mind’s high utterings
A nobler heritage than kings.
If old what once you were you’ll
see:
If young what p’rhaps
one day you’ll be
For youth yearns upward to the sage;
And childhood’s joy delighteth age.
Come rich come poor come
old and young,
And join our Feast of Art and Song.
What forms our banquet all shall know,
And hungry homeward none must go.
We boast not here of knife or platter;
Our feast is of the mind not
matter,
Along our festive board observe
No crystal fruit no rare preserve:
No choice exotic here and there,
With wine cup sparkling everywhere:
No toothsome dish no morsel
sweet
Such savoury things as people eat;
So if for these you yearn refrain!
For these you’ll look and long in
vain.
Our Feast’s composed of dainty dishes
To suit far daintier tastes and wishes.
While for the splendour of our wine
I’ve oftimes heard it called divine:
For who that drinks of Music’s stream,
Or quaffs of Art’s inspiring theme,
Shall say that both are things of earth
That both are not of heavenly birth?
While gathered blossoms fade away,
The Poet’s thoughts for ever stay
E’en as the rose’s perfumed
breath
Survives the faded flow’ret’s
death.
No pleasure human hand can give
Is lasting all things briefly
live.
But sounds which flow from Minstrelsy
Vibrate through all eternity!
Then welcome! welcome! one and all,
To this, our Nation’s Festival.
Come rich come poor: come
old and young
And join our Feast of Art and Song!
CHANGE
In
the Summer golden,
When
the forests olden
Shook their rich tresses gaily in the
morn;
And
the lark upflew,
Sprinkling
silver dew
Down from its light wing o’er the
yellow corn;
When
every blessing
Seem’d
the earth caressing,
As though ’twere fondled by some
love sublime,
Strong
in her youthful hope,
Upon
the sunny slope
A maid sat, dreaming o’er the happy
time
Dreaming what blissful heights were hers
to climb.
In
the Winter dreary,
When
the willow, weary,
Hung sad and silent o’er the frozen
stream;
And
the trembling lark
Murmur’d,
cold and stark,
In wailful pathos o’er its vanish’d
dream;
When
the bleak winds linger’d
And
dead flowerets finger’d,
When all earth’s graces, pale and
coffin’d, slept,
With
joys for ever flown,
In
the wide world alone,
Over a broken faith a maiden wept
Yet, with unswerving love, true vigil
kept.
FALSE AS FAIR.
My heart was like the rosebud
That woos the Summer’s
glance,
And trembles ’neath its magic touch
As breeze-kisst lilies dance:
So, like the faithless Summer,
She kissed me with a sigh,
And woke my life to gladness,
Then passed in beauty by.
My heart was like the blossom
That blooms beside the brook,
And revels in its silvery laugh,
Its bright and sunny look:
So, like the graceful streamlet,
She kissed me with a sigh,
And woke my life to gladness,
Then passed in beauty by.
HEADS AND HEARTS
The Head fell in love one day,
As young heads will oftentimes
do;
What it felt I cannot say:
That is nothing to me nor
to you:
But
this much I know,
It
made a great show
And told every friend it came near
If
its idol should rove
It
could ne’er again love,
No being on earth was so dear.
So Time, the fleet-footed, moved on,
And the Head knew not what
to believe;
A whole fortnight its Love had been gone,
And it felt no desire to grieve.
Its
passion so hot
In
a month was forgot;
And in six weeks no trace could be found;
While,
in two months, the Head,
Which
should then have been dead,
For another was looking around.
The Heart fell in love one day:
The mischief was very soon
done!
It tried all it could to be gay;
But loving, it found, was
not fun.
For
hours it would sit
In
a moping fit,
And could only throb lively and free
When
that one was near
Which
it felt was so dear,
And when that one was absent Ah,
me!
So the days and the nights hurried on;
And the Heart nursed in silence
its thought:
To a distance its idol had gone,
Then it felt how completely
’twas caught:
Other
hearts came to sue:
To
the absent ’twas true
Loving better the longer apart:
Thus
while Love in the head
Is
very soon dead,
It is deathless when once in the heart.
FALL OF SEBASTOPOL.
1855.
“Advance!” was the cry that
shot up to the sky
When the dawn of the day had
begun;
And the steel glistened bright in the
glad golden light
Of a glorious Eastern sun.
And the words rang clear, with no trembling
fear
“Brave Britons! on you
I rely!”
And the answer pealed out with a mighty
shout
“Sebastopol falls, or
we die!”
Advance! Advance! Men
of England and France!
“Sebastopol falls, or
we die!”
Now the death-storm pours, and the smoke
up-soars,
And the battle rages with
furious might,
And the red blood streams, and the fire-flash
gleams,
And the writhing thousands God!
God! what a sight.
The hoarse-throated cannon belch fiery
breath,
And hurl forth the murderous
rain,
Which dances along on its message of death,
And sings o’er the dying
and slain!
Crash! Crash! Then a leap
and a dash!
Hand to hand face
to face, goes the fight;
The bayonets plunge, and the red streams
plash,
And up goes a shout of delight
“The enemy runs! Men
flinch from their guns!
On! Forward! For
God and for Right!
Advance! Advance! Men
of England and France!
Press forward, for Freedom
and Right!
On On On!
Hurrah! the goal’s won;
See! the old colours flutter
and dance,
And proudly they wave over Tyranny’s
grave:
Well done! Men of England
and France Hurrah!
Hurrah! for old England and
France!”
TO LORD DERBY
1877.
As the monarch that grows in the forest,
and rears
Its brow ever green to the
firmament bright,
So, stedfast and sturdy, thy proud form
appears,
Of patriots the hope, and
thy country’s delight.
Through thy heart, firm and true as the
oak trees that stand
In the soil of Old England in
which thou hast grown,
There runs the same life which they
draw from the land,
And the heart of thy country
’s the life of thine own.
With the seal of Nobility set by thy Sire,
Thou tread’st in his
steps as thou bearest his name;
And the glow that he added to Albion’s
fire
Reflects through the Past
and enhances thy fame.
Where Freedom is free’st, thou takest
thy stand:
Where Tyranny threatens, thy
misson is told;
And thy tongue, which we hail as the Voice
of the Land,
Speaks the wish of a nation
heroic and bold.
And bright will the name be of England,
as long
As safe in thy keeping her
honour remains
’Twill stand ’mongst the noblest
in story and song,
And be worthy the purest and
loftiest strains.
UNREQUITED
A beautiful Streamlet went dancing along,
With its bright brow fretted
with flow’rs,
And it leapt o’er the woodland with
many a song,
And laughed through the sunny
hours.
Away
and away!
All
the blue Summer day,
The streamlet
went laughing away.
A willow Tree grew near the light-hearted
brook,
And hung o’er the Beauty
in pride:
And he yearned night and day for a kiss
or a look
From the streamlet that flowed
at his side.
But
away and away,
All
the blue Summer day,
The streamlet
went laughing away.
All his leaves and his blossom he shower’d
on her head,
And would gladly have given
his life:
But to all this affection the streamlet
was dead,
And she laughed at the willow’s
heart-strife.
And
away away,
All
the blue Summer day,
The streamlet
went laughing away.
“Ah, me,” quoth the willow:
“how false was the dream!”
And, drooping, heart-broken
he died;
While his last leaf in love he let fall
on the stream
That so coldly flowed on at
his side.
And
away away,
All
the blue Summer day,
The streamlet went laughing
away.
THE HOUSEHOLD SPIRIT.
A spirit stealeth up and down the stairs
Noiseless as thistle-down
upon the wind:
So calm so sweetly calm the
look it wears:
Meltful as music is its voice and
kind.
Like lustrous violets full of twinkling
life
Two orbs of beauty light its
face divine:
And o’er its cheeks a dainty red
runs rife,
Like languid lilies flusht
with rosy wine.
Its velvet touch doth soothe where dwells
a pain;
Its glance doth angelize each
angry thought;
And, like a rainbow-picture in the rain,
Where tears fall thick its
voice is comfort-fraught.
How like a seraph bright it threads along
Each room erewhile so desolate
and dark,
Waking their slumbering echoes into song
As laughs the Morn when uproused
by the lark.
Methinks a home doth wear its heavenliest
light
When haunted by so good, so fair a sprite.
HAD I A HEART
Had I a heart to give away
As when, in days that now
are o’er,
We watcht the bright blue billows play,
Roaming along the sounding
shore;
When joys like Summer blossoms bloom’d,
When love and hope were all
our own;
I’d bring that heart to
sadness doomed
And let it beat for thee alone.
Had I a heart to give away,
Its daily thought in life
would be,
Like yonder bird, with trembling lay,
To sing sweet songs, dear
love, of thee.
But, ah! the heart that once was mine
Is mine, alas! no more to
give;
And joys that once were joys divine
In mem’ry now alone
can live.
A BRIDAL SIMILE.
Adown the world two grand historic streams
With stately flow moved on
through widening ways,
Rich with the glory of life’s noblest
dreams,
Bright with the halo of life’s
sunniest days.
Out from their depths two blithesome streamlets
ran,
O’er which the smiles
of Heaven hourly shone;
Till, meeting: Ah! then life afresh
began,
For both, embracing, mingled
into one.
From yonder rose two crystal dewdrops
hung
But yestermorn. The
sun came forth and kissed
The gems that to the perfumed blossom
clung,
And clothed them with a robe
of purple mist.
The soft warm wind of Heaven gently breathed
Upon the twain: they
hung no more apart;
But, with the sweetness of a rosebud wreathed,
Blent soul with soul and mingled
heart with heart.
Live on, united pair: with love so
blest
Your pathway ought but sunny
may not be.
Live on, united pair: and be the
breast
Of thornless roses yours unceasingly.
And as the river to the ocean flies
Be yours to pass as gently
from life’s shore:
Then, like sweet fragrance when the blossom
dies,
Leave names to live in mem’ry
evermore.
SONG
They tell me thou art faithless, Love!
That vows thy lips have sworn
The smiles which light thy lovely face
Are false as April morn;
My brightest dreams of happiness
They wish me to forget:
But, No! the spell that won my love
Doth bind my spirit yet.
They tell me thou art faithless, Love!
And changeful as a dream:
They say thou’rt frail as drifts
of sand
That kiss the laughing stream;
They whisper if I wed thee, Sweet!
My heart will know regret:
But, No! the spell that won my love
Doth bind my spirit yet.
I WOULD MY LOVE.
I would my Love were not so fair
In sweet external beauty:
And dreamt less of her charms so rare,
And more of homely duty.
The rose that blooms in pudent pride
When pluckt will pout
most sorely;
P’rhaps she I’m wooing for
my bride
Will grow more self-willed
hourly.
Her form might shame the graceful fay’s;
Her face wears all life’s
graces:
But wayward thoughts and wayward ways
Make far from pretty faces.
I would my Love were not so fair
(I mean it when I breathe
it):
What though each hair be golden hair,
If temper ill dwells ’neath
it?
Her lips would make the red rose blush,
Her voice trolls graceful
phrases,
Her brow is calm as Evening’s hush,
Her teeth as white as daises.
Her cheeks are fresh as infant Day’s,
Round which cling Beauty’s
traces:
But wayward thoughts and wayward ways
Make far from pretty faces.
DEATH IN LIFE:
A TRUE STORY.
The following simple narrative is
founded on fact. A young village couple married,
and soon after their marriage went to live in London.
Success did not follow the honest-hearted husband in
his search for employment, and he and his young wife
were reduced to actual want. In their wretchedness
a child was born to them, which died in the midst of
the desolate circumstances by which the young mother
was surrounded. For three years the mother was
deprived of reason a gloomy period of Death
in Life and passionately mourned the loss
of her first-born. An eminent London practitioner,
to whom her case became known, was of opinion that
reason would return should a second child be born to
the disconsolate mother. This proved to be correct;
and after three years of mental aberration the sufferer
woke as from a dream. For many months after
the awakening she was under the impression that her
second child was her first-born, and only became aware
of the true state of the case when it was gently broken
to her by her husband.
I.
Lovely as a sunbright Spring is,
Yonder trembling maid advances,
Clothed in beauty like the morning
Like the silver-misted morning
With a face of shiny radiance,
Tinted with a tinge of blushes,
Like reflections from a goblet
Filled with wine of richest ruby.
Now she nears the low church
portal
Flickers through the white-washed
portal,
Lighting up the sleepy structure,
As a sunbeam lights the drowsy
Blossom into wakeful gladness.
See! she stands before the
altar,
With the chosen one beside her;
And the holy Mentor murmurs
Words that link their lives like rivets,
Which no force should break asunder.
Now the simple prayer is ended;
And two souls, like kissing shadows,
Mingle so no hand shall part them!
Mingle like sweet-chorded music;
Mingle like the sighs of Summer
Like the breath of fruit and blossom;
Mingle like two kissing raindrops
Twain in one. Thrice happy maiden!
Life to thee is like the morning,
As the fresh-faced balmy morning,
Full of melody and music;
Full of soft delicious fragrance;
Full of Love, as dew-soaked jasmins
Are of sweet and spicy odour;
Full of Love, as leaping streamlets
Are of life. Thrice happy maiden!
II.
Turn we to a lowly dwelling
One amongst a million dwellings
Where a mother silent rocketh
To-and-fro with down-let eyelids,
Gazing on her sleeping infant,
While the just-expiring embers
Smoulder through the gloomy darkness.
On the shelf a rushlight flickers
With a dull and sickly glimmer,
Turning night to ghostly, deathly,
Pallid wretchedness and sadness,
Just revealing the dim outline
Of a pale and tearful mother,
With a babe upon her bosom.
“Thus am I,” she
muttered, wailing,
“Left to linger lorn and lonely
In the morning of my being.
If ’twere not for thee, my sweet
babe,
Lily of my life’s dark waters
Silver link that holds my sad heart
To the earth I fain would lay
me
Down, and sleep death’s calm and
sweet sleep.
Oh! how sweetly calm it must be.
In the green and silent graveyard,
With the moonlight and the daisies!
If ’twere not for thee, my loved
one,
I could lay me down and kiss Death
With the gladness I now kiss thee.
Oh! how cold thy tiny lips
are!
Like a Spring-time blossom frozen.
Nestle, dear one, in my bosom!”
And the mother presst the
sleeper
Closer closer, to her white
breast:
Forward, backward gently rocking;
While the rushlight flickered ghastly.
Hark! a footstep nears the
dwelling;
And the door is flung wide open,
Banging backward ’gainst the table;
And a human being enters,
Flusht with liquor, drencht with water!
For the rain came down in torrents,
And the wind blew cold and gusty.
“Well, Blanche!”
spake the thoughtless husband,
Not unkindly. “Weeping always.”
“Yes, Charles, I could
ne’er have slumbered
Had I gone to bed,” she answered.
Then she rose to shut the
night out,
But the stubborn wind resisted,
And, for spite, dasht through the crevice
Of the window. “Foolish girl,
then,
Thus to wait for me!” he muttered.
When a shriek so wild, so piercing
Weirdly wild intensely piercing
Struck him like a sharp stiletto.
Then another and another!
Purging clear his turbid senses.
“Blanche!” he
cried; and sprang towards her
Just in time to save her falling;
And her child fell from her bosom,
Like a snow-fall from the house-top
To the earth. “Blanche!
Blanche!” he gaspt out;
“Tell me what it is that pains thee.”
But her face was still as marble.
Then he kissed her cheeks her
forehead
Then her lips, and called out wildly:
“Blanche, my own neglected darling,
Look, look up, and say thou livest,
Speak, if but to curse thy husband
Curse thy wretched, heartless husband.”
Then her eyelids slowly opened,
And she gazed up in his white face,
White as paper as her own was!
“Charles!” she
sighed, “I have been dreaming:
Is my child dead?” “No!”
he answered,
“See, ’tis sleeping!”
“Dead!” the mother
Murmured faintly, “Sleeping sleeping!”
In a chair he gently placed
her:
Then he stooped to take the child up,
Kisst and placed it on her bosom.
Frantic then the mother hugged
it;
Gazed a moment; then with laughter
Wild, she made the room re-echo
“They would take my bonny baby
Rob me of my dainty darling,
Would they? Ha! ha! ha!” she
shouted.
And she turned her large blue eyes up
With a strange and fitful gazing,
Laughing till the tears chased madly
Down her cheeks of pallid whiteness.
“Dear, dear Blanche!”
her husband murmured,
Stretching out his hand towards her;
But she started wildly forward,
Crouched down in the furthest corner,
And, with face tear-dabbled over,
And her hair in long, lank tresses,
With a voice so low and plaintive
’Twould have won a brute to lameness,
Faintly sobbed she: “Do not
take it!
Do not take it! do not take
it!”
And she hugged her infant closer,
Sobbing sadly, “Do not take it!”
“Blanche! dear Blanche!”
her husband faltered,
With a voice low, husht, and chokeful,
“I I am thy worthless
husband!”
Then he walkt a step towards
her;
But the girl with ’wildered features
Drew her thin hand o’er her forehead,
And in wandering accents muttered:
“Husband? Husband?
No, not husband!
I am still a laughing maiden;
Yet methought I had been married,
And bore such a sweet, sweet baby
Such a fair and bonny baby!
Baby baby hush;
the wild winds
Sing so plaintive. Hush h!”
And then she
Laid the child upon the cold floor,
And, with hair in wild disorder,
Laughing, crying, sobbing, talking,
O’er it hung, like March a-shivering
O’er the birth of infant April.
Lightly then her husband toucht
her
On the shoulder; but she look’d
not
Spake not moved not.
Slowly rose she
From her kneeling, crouching posture;
And she stood a hopeless dreamer,
With the child a corpse beside her!
III.
In a dry and sun-parch’d graveyard,
In a small corpse-crowded graveyard,
With the lurid sky above it,
With the smoke from chimneys o’er
it,
With the din of life around it
Din of rushing life about it;
Sat a girlish, grief-worn figure,
Croucht up in the darkest corner,
With her pallid face turned upwards;
To and fro in silence rocking
On a little mound of dark dirt.
Like a veiled Nun rose the
pale moon,
Draped about with fleecy vapour;
And the stars in solemn conclave
Came to meet her came to greet
her,
To their convent home to bear her:
She had soared above the dingy
Earth, and left the world behind her.
As she passed she lookt down sadly,
Gazed with silent, noble pity,
At the girlish, grief-worn figure,
Sitting in the darkest corner
Of that small corpse-crowded graveyard,
With her pallid face turned upwards,
On a little mound of dark dirt.
Round about from windows flickered
Lights, which told of inside revels;
Rooms, with mirth and banquets laden,
Sobbing kisses, soft embraces,
Feasts of Love, and feasts of Pleasure,
Ruby lips, and joyous laughter.
Then the buzz of life grew
softer,
Broken only by the tramping
Of a troop of bacchanalians,
Reeling through the streets deserted,
With their loud uproarious language.
Still the girlish, grief-worn figure,
Croucht in dark and dreary corner
Of that small corpse-crowded graveyard,
With her pallid face turned upwards,
On a little mound of dark dirt.
The gray herald of the Morning,
Dapple-clad, came forth to tell the
Sleepy world his Lord was coming.
Straight the drowsy buildings leapt up
Like huge giants from their slumber,
And, with faces flusht and ruddy,
Waited for the King of Morning!
Lo! he comes from far-off mountains,
With a glory-robe about him,
With a robe of gold and purple;
And a buzz of mighty wonder
Rises as, with step majestic,
And with glance sublime, he walks on,
Gathering his robe about him,
To his West-embowered palace,
Still the girlish, grief-worn figure,
Croucht in dark and dreary corner
Of that small corpse-crowded graveyard,
With her pallid face turned upwards,
To and fro in silence rocking,
On a little mound of black dirt!
When the box which held her
treasure
Had been borne from home and buried,
She had followed, undetected;
And when all had left the graveyard
She had crept to that small hillock,
Trembling like a half-crusht lily;
Yearning towards the child beneath her,
Yet, the while, to earth-life clinging
By a link bruised but unbroken.
Whilst at home her frantic
husband
Called aloud in vain for “Blanche!”
IV.
Hours flew by like honey-laden
Bees, with sting and honey laden:
Days, like ghostly shadows, flitted
By; and weeks and months rolled onward
With a never-ceasing rolling,
Like the blue bright waves a-rolling,
Never quiet never ending!
Still the girlish, grief-worn
figure,
Might be seen, with vacant glances,
Threading through life’s rushing
whirlpool
Gliding, like a sunbeam, o’er it
To that small corpse-crowded graveyard;
Where for hours she’d sit and murmur,
With a wild and plaintive wailing;
“Come back, darling! Come
back, darling;
Come, for I am broken-hearted.”
When at home, with nimble
fingers
Oft she’d clothe a doll and call
it
Her sweet babe her darling
baby
Her long-absent, long-lost baby!
Her fair bonny-featured baby!
And her husband would bend o’er
her,
With low words of pure affection
As when first he woo’d and won her.
And her home was not the dungeon
The sad, dark, and dismal dungeon
The cold death-vault of her infant,
With the drear and ghastly rushlight:
But a home of cottage comfort,
Every sweet of love and loving.
Yes! the wan and pallid mother
Found on that dark night, a husband
Found a home; but lost her
reason!
V.
“Do not, for the world, awake her!
’Twere her death-knell to awake
her!”
Urged the old and careful nursewife.
“Let me look but for
a moment
Gaze but for one little moment!”
’Twas the voice of Charles
that pleaded:
Softly, then, he drew the curtain,
Gently, fearful, drew the curtain
“Charles! dear
Charles!” a faint voice murmured,
In a tone so weak and lowly,
Sweetly weak and soul-subduing.
“Blanche! my
sweet one!” gasp’d the husband,
“Dost thou know me? God,
I thank thee!”
Then he threw his arms around her,
And, amidst a shower of kisses,
Truest, purest, grateful kisses,
Drew the loved one to his bosom:
And the babe that nestled near her
Covered he with warm caresses.
Reason, like a golden sunbeam
On a lily-cup, had lightened
Her sweet soul so dark and turbid
For three years so darkly turbid;
Three long years so dark and turbid.
“Charles, my dream has
been a sad one,”
Spake she, like expiring music,
Shadowed with a mournful sadness.
“I have dreamt they stole my baby,
Buried my dear, darling infant!”
Then she took the babe and
kiss’d it,
Presst it to her snowy bosom;
And, with voice low, soft, and grateful,
Murmured, “Charles, I am so
happy!
Do not weep I’m very
happy!”
VI.
Reader! ’tis no idle fiction:
Once a lovely, laughing maiden
Lovely as a Summer morning,
Lived and loved, as I have told thee;
Lost her babe, as I have told thee;
And a mental night came o’er her
Like a ghastly, gaping fissure,
Like a chasm of empty darkness.
As a new-made grave in Summer
Bulges up dark and unsightly,
With the bright blue sky above it,
And the daisies smiling round it,
So, with all its doleful darkness,
Fell the dream of that fair suff’rer
O’er her mind with inward canker,
Like a slug upon the rose-leaf!
Then she woke, as I have told
thee,
After three years’ trance-like sleeping,
Knowing not she had been sleeping;
And for months she never doubted
That the child she loved and fondled
Was lier long-dead darling first-born!
Happy hearts all feared to tell her:
Death in Life again they dreaded.
Now no Death in Life they fear;
Blanche is happy all the year.
SONG OF THE STRIKE
1874.
With features haggard and worn;
With a child in its coffin dead;
With a wife and sons o’er a fireless hearth,
In a hovel with never a bed;
While the wind through lattice and door
Is driving the sleet and rain,
A workman strong, with sinews of steel,
Sits singing this dismal refrain:
Strike! Strike! Strike!
Let the bright wheels of Industry rust:
Let us earn in our shame
A pauper’s name,
Or eat of a criminal crust.
Ah! What though the little
ones die,
And women sink weary and weak;
And the paths of life, with suffering rife,
Be paved with the hearts that break?
While souls, famine-smitten and crusht,
Seek food in the skies away,
This workman strong, with sinews of steel,
Sits singing his terrible lay:
Strike! Strike! Strike!
Let the bright wheels of Industry rust:
Let us earn in our shame
A pauper’s name,
Or eat of a criminal crust.
And while the dark workhouse gate
Is besieged by a famishing crowd,
Forge, hammer, and mine, with their mission divine,
Lie dumb, like a corpse in a shroud.
And Plenty, with beckon and smile,
Points up at the golden rain
That is ready to fall to beautify all,
But is checked by the dread refrain:
Strike! Strike! Strike!
Let the bright wheels of Industry rust:
Let us earn in our shame
A pauper’s name,
Or eat of a criminal crust.
Alas! That a spirit so brave,
That a heart so loyal and true,
Should crouch in the dust with a sightless trust
At the nod of a selfish few.
Alas! That the olden ties
The links binding Master and Man
(a)
Should be broken in twain, and this ghostly refrain
Cloud all with its shadowy ban:
Strike! Strike! Strike!
Let the bright wheels of Industry rust:
Let us earn in our shame
A pauper’s name,
Or eat of a criminal crust.
(a) In a recent address to
his workmen, Mr. Robert Crawshay, the extensive ironmaster,
of Cyfarthfa Castle, said: “The happy time
has passed, and black times have come. You threw
your old master overboard, and took to strangers,
and broke the tie between yourselves and me.
When the deputation came up to me at the Castle, and
I asked them to give me a fortnight to work off an
old order of rails, and they refused, I then told
them the old tie was broken; and from that day to
this it has.”
NATURE’S HEROES
DEDICATED TO THE WELSH MINERS WHO BRAVELY
RESCUED THEIR FELLOWS AT THE INUNDATION
OF THE TYNEWYDD COLLIERY.
FRIDAY, APRIL 20TH, 1877. (a)
Hero from instinct, and by nature brave,
Is he who risks his life a life to save;
Who sees no peril, be it e’er so
great,
Where helpless human lives for succour
wait;
Who looks on death with selfless disregard;
Whose sense of duty brings its own reward.
Such are the Braves who now inspire my
pen:
Pride of the gods and heroes
among men.
The warrior who, on glorious battle plain,
Falls bravely fighting dies
to live again
In fame hereafter: this he, falling,
knows;
And painless hence are War’s most
painful blows.
This is the hope that buoys his latest
breath,
Stanches the wound, and plucks the sting
from death.
But humbler hearts that sally forth to
fight
’Gainst foes unseen, in realms of
pitchy night,
Ne’er dreaming that the chivalrous
affray
Will e’er be heard of more
than heroes they,
And more deserving they their country’s
praise
Than nobler names that wear their country’s
bays.
Duty, which glistens in the garish beam
That makes it beautiful as
jewels gleam
When sunlight pours upon them lacks
the pow’r,
The grandeur, which, in dark and secret
hour,
Crowns lowly brows with bravery more bright
Than fame achieved in Glory’s dazzling
light.
Nature’s heroics need but suns to
shine
To show the world their origin divine:
And as the plant in darksome cave will
grow
Whether warm sunshine bless its face or
no,
A secret impulse yearning day and night
In hourly striving tow’rds the unseen
light,
So lives the hero-germ in every heart
Of earthy life the bright, the heavenly
part:
The pow’r that brings the blossom
from the sod,
And gives to man an attribute of God.
(a) Four men and a boy were
entombed for nine days, from noon on Wednesday, April
11th, to mid-day on Friday, April 20th, in the Tynewydd
Pit, Rhondda Valley. They were at length rescued
by the almost super-human efforts of a band of brave
workers, who, at the risk of their lives, cut through
38 yards of the solid coal-rock in order to get at
their companions, working day and night, and, at times,
regarding every stroke a prelude to almost certain
death. Their heroic exertions were crowned with
success, and they received the recorded thanks of
their Queen and country, having the further honour
bestowed upon them of being the first recipients of
the Albert medal, given by Her Majesty for acts of
exceptional bravery.
ELEGY
ON THE DEATH OF A LITTLE CHILD.
He
came:
As red-lipt rosebuds in the Summer come:
A tiny angel, let from Heav’n to
roam,
With laughing love to clothe our childless
home
The
God-sent cherub came.
He
lived
One little hour; What bliss was in the
space!
Our lives that day were fringed with fresher
grace
And in the casket of our darling’s
face
What
honeyed hopes were hived.
He
droopt:
And o’er our souls a mighty sorrow
swept,
With many fears the night-long watch we
kept,
Tearful and sad: Yet even as we wept
Our
star-faced beauty droopt.
He
died:
And darksome grew our life’s bright
morning sun.
Gloomy the day so radiantly begun.
What joy, what joy, without our darling
one,
Is
all the world beside?
Tis
past:
The perfumed rosebud of our life is dead:
Helpless we bend, and mourn the cherub
fled,
Even as the bruised reed bends low its
head
Before the
cruel blast.
MAGDALENE
Penitent! Penniless!
Where can she go?
Her poor heart is aching
With many a woe.
Repentant though sinning:
Remorseful and sad,
She weeps in the moonlight
While others are glad.
Shrink not away from her,
Stained though she be:
She once, as the purest,
Was sinless and free:
And penitence bringeth
A shroud for her shame:
Hide it forgetfully;
Pity nor blame.
Penniless! Penitent!
Gone every hope:
Warm lights are gleaming
From basement to cope.
Plenty surroundeth her:
Starving and stark,
Lonely she pleadeth
Out in the dark.
The cold moon above her,
The black stream below,
No friendly voice near her:
Where can she go?
Turned every face from her
Closed every door:
Plash in the moonlight!
She pleadeth no more.
LOVE WALKS WITH HUMANITY YET.
Though toilers for gold stain their souls
in a strife
That enslaves them to Avarice
grim,
Though Tyranny’s hand fills the
wine cup of life
With gall, surging over the
brim;
Though Might in dark hatefulness reigns
for a time,
And Right by Wrong’s
frownings be met;
Love lives a guest-angel from
heaven’s far clime,
And walks with humanity yet.
And still the world, Balaam-like, blind
as the night,
Sees not the fair seraph stand
by
That beckons it onward to Morning and
Light,
Lark-like, from the sod to
the sky;
Love, slighted, smiles on, as the Thorn-crown’d
of old,
Sun-featured and Godlike in
might,
Its magic touch changing life’s
dross into gold,
Earth’s darkness to
Paradise bright.
As gems on Death’s fingers flash
up from the tomb
And rays o’er its loneliness
shed;
As flowerets in early Spring tremblingly
bloom
Ere Winter’s cold ice-breath
has fled;
So Love, rainbow-like, smiles through
sadness and tears,
Bridging up from the earth
to the sky;
The grave ’neath its glance a bright
blossom-robe wears,
As the Night smiles when Morn
dances by.
The rich mellow sunshine that kisses the
earth,
The flow’rs that laugh
up from the sod,
The song-birds that psalm out their jubilant
mirth
Heart-rapt in the presence
of God,
The sweet purling brooklet, with voice
soft and low,
The sea-shouts, like peals
from above,
The sky-kissing mountains, the valleys
below,
All tell us to live and to
love.
THE TWO TREES
A FABLE.
Two trees once grew beside a running brook:
An Alder, one, of unassuming
mien:
His mate, a Poplar, who, with lofty look,
Wore, with a rustling flirt,
his robe of green.
With pompous front the Poplar mounted
high,
And curried converse with
each swelling breeze;
While Alder seemed content to live and
die
A lowly shrub among surrounding
trees.
And many a little ragged urchin came
And plucked the juicy berries
from the bough
Of teeming Alder, trading with the same,
Thus earning oft an honest
meal, I trow:
But stuck-up Poplar glanced with pride
supreme
At such low doings such
plebeian ties
Cocked up his nose, and thought oh!
fatal dream!
To grow, and grow, until he
reached the skies.
Each Autumn Alder brought forth berries
bright,
And freely gave to all who
chose to take:
Each Summer, Poplar added to his height,
And wore his robe with loftier,
prouder shake,
One day the woodman, axe on shoulder,
came,
And laid our soaring Poplar
’mongst the dead,
Stripped off his robe, and sent him O
the shame!
To prop the gable of a donkey
shed.
MORAL.
Whoe’er,
like Alder, strives to aid
The
lowly where he can,
Shall win respect
from every soul
That
bears the stamp of man:
But he who, Poplar-like,
o’er-rides
Poor
mortals as they pass,
Will well be used
if used to prop
A
stable for an ass.
STANZAS:
WRITTEN IN THE SHADOW OF A VERY DARK CLOUD.
“Never saw I the righteous forsaken,”
Once sang the good Psalmist
of old;
“Nor his seed for a crust humbly
begging.”
How oft has the story been
told!
But the story would ne’er have been
written,
Had the writer but lived in
our day,
When thousands with hunger are smitten
No matter how plead they or
pray.
They may say there’s a lining of
silver
To the darkest the
dreariest cloud:
That garniture, white fringe, and flowers,
Grace the black pall, the
coffin, and shroud.
But the lining at best is but vapour;
Silk and lacquer to nothingness
fade
After hearts in their sorrow have broken
O’er the wrecks which
Adversity made.
They may say that the box of Pandora
Holds reward in the bottom
at last
For those who strive on in the searching.
And forget the fierce blows
of the Past.
But late comes the voice of approval,
And worthless the cup and
the crust,
When, in striving, by Death overtaken,
We lie lone and low in the
dust.
They may say that right-living and thinking
Will keep the grim wolf from
the door;
But how many Saints are there sinking
Whose crime is to live and
be poor!
Let the knave promulgate the deception,
And dress the world’s
wounds with such salve;
It is false while rank Villainy
prospers,
And Virtue ’s permitted
to starve.
They may say but mankind is
a fiction
That puzzles the wisest to
read;
And life is a vast contradiction
A fable a folly
indeed.
He happy in heart is who careth
No jot for mankind or its
ways,
To defy the world’s frown he who
dareth,
Unconscious of blame or of
praise.
VERSES:
WRITTEN AFTER READING A BIOGRAPHY OF HIS GRACE
THE DUKE OF BEAUFORT, TO WHOM THESE LINES
ARE RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED.
1877.
Like a Sea with its source in the distance
belost,
That upholds on its breast
and contains in its heart
Countless treasures and gems of which
none know the cost
All the brightest achievements
of Science and Art:
So the proud race of Somerset flows down
the Past,
With its Statesmen and Warriors kinsmen
of Kings:
With its learning and culture its
heritage vast
And its virtues which inborn
Nobility brings.
In the Wars of the Roses three Somersets
gave
Up their lives for their Monarch
in danger’s dark hour,
And the rain of their hearts’-blood
that watered each grave
Brought a still brighter flush
to their Destiny’s flow’r.
And when men the fair features of Liberty
smeared
With the stain of Licentiousness
through the dark Past,
’Twas a Somerset England’s
proud Standard upreared
O’er the stronghold
of Raglan and bled to the last:
A stronghold whose name once a Warrior
bore
Who with courage undaunted
chivalrously led
The brave soldiers of England through
carnage and gore;
Where a Czar bade defiance a
Somerset bled.
Long the foremost in loyalty, forum, and
field;
Where the sword wins renown
or where politics grace:
Always first to be doing the
latest to yield:
All these are the virtues,
the pride of thy race.
In the face of thy life like a mirror
we see
All the lives of true Englishmen
shaped as thine own,
For the tastes and pursuits which form
nature in thee
Are the food from whose sustenance
Britons have grown.
When Philanthropy leads, in its fights
for the Poor,
No sincerer heart follows
more keenly than thine;
For there’s nought else in life
hath more pow’r to allure,
Where the soul takes delight
in the mission divine.
All the ages the wild storms of Faction
have raved,
Though alluring the paths
in which traitors have trod,
Not a moment hast thou or thine ancestors
waived
In your love for Old England,
its Throne, and its God.
A SIMILE
In early Morning, tall and gaunt,
Our shadows reach across the
street;
Like giant sprites they seem to haunt
The things we meet.
But at noon-tide more dwarfed they fall
Around about each sun-crown’d
thing;
Yet lengthen out, and grow more tall,
Towards evening.
And thus Dependence among men
Is largely seen in Childhood’s
stage;
At Mid-life hides; but comes again
With hoary age.
THE TWO SPARROWS.
A FABLE.
Two Sparrows, prisoned in a room,
Kept, every now and then,
Dashing against the window-panes,
Which threw them back again:
And many a time, with trembling heart,
They flew towards the light,
But something which they could not see
Still stopped them in their
flight:
A-tired they hopped about the floor,
And watched the sunshine gay,
And each one asked within himself
“Why ca’nt I get
away?”
Another try: another dash,
As though with heart and soul;
And one, by chance, the barrier broke,
And bounded through the hole.
His comrade heard the merry chirp
He gave till out of sight,
Then, fluttering round, to free himself
He tried with all his might.
But at that moment Puss came in,
And on him cast an eye,
Then took the trembler in her claws
And taught him how to die.
MORAL.
How oft in life,
though never meant,
Men gain their
point by Accident,
Or Chance that
foe to ’stablished rules;
The guiding-star
of knaves and fools.
FLOATING AWAY
A maiden sat musingly down by the
side
Of Life’s river that flowed at her feet,
And she watcht the dark stream ’neath the
willows glide
In its voiceless and stately retreat.
’Twas a solemn tide
Deep, dark, and wide,
And fringed with a sedgy fray:
In the morning at night
Through darkness and light,
It floated floated away.
The maid was light-hearted, with
features as fair
As the sunbeams that played o’er her face,
And her bosom was garnisht with flowerets rare
That gave to it many a grace:
And she playfully sung,
As she plucked and flung
Each blossom as bright as the day
From her breast to the stream
That like a drear dream
Went floating floating away.
The sun in its brightness illumined the
sky;
The lark loudly carolled aloft;
The breezes swept onward with many a sigh,
And kissed with caresses soft.
Still,
still the fair maid
By
the dark river strayed,
And flung forth in thoughtless
play
Each
bud from her breast
In
wilful unrest,
And laught as it floated away.
Up the tall pine trees clomb the
shadows of eve
To welcome the coming night;
And the recreant bird in the twilight was heard
Wending nest-ward in plaintive plight;
When, too long delay’d,
In haste rose the maid
Heart-tired of her flirting play.
And she saw the last gleam
Of her flow’rs down the stream
Floating floating away.
The blossoms so chaste that had made
her more fair
With their sweetness, their perfume, and light,
Were gone and her bosom, now cheerless
and bare,
Grew cold in the dewy night.
Thus they who, in youth,
Mistake flirting for truth,
And fritter their love but in play,
Will behold, like the maid,
All their brightest charms fade,
And floating for ever away.
A FLORAL FABLE.
A sweet geranium once, in pride of
place
’Mongst rare exotics in a Palace lived;
With watchful care from tender hands it thrived,
Standing in lofty sphere with odorous grace.
The smiling Sun, each morning making call,
Such tender looks and such
sweet kisses gave,
That in a little time, true
as I live,
He to the tender flow’r was all
in all.
But true love’s course, ’tis
said, ne’er smooth did run:
The pretty flower was sent,
now here, now there,
Until at length she found
more humble sphere,
Far, far removed from kisses of the sun.
Here, with dejected look, she pined anew,
Placed in the lattice of a
lowly cot,
In pent-up alley, fever-fraught
and hot,
And wore from day to day a sicklier hue.
No blessed sunlight flusht her dainty
cheek,
No cooling breeze refreshed
her pallid brow,
Droopful she stood methinks
I see her now,
Nursing the grief of which she might not
speak.
A blinding wall shut out her darling sun,
Tow’rds which, with
prayerful arm, she hourly reached
In mute appeal; and lovingly
beseeched,
As ’twere, to gaze upon the worshipped
one.
No soul e’er panted its dear love
to see
With dreams more tender than
the dying plant
Hoping and yearning, with
a hungering want,
Sun-ward in all her heart’s idolatry.
But Ah! the fickle sun, from flow’r
to flow’r,
In lusty love did revel all
the day,
Nor thought of her, now dying
far away,
Whom he had kissed through many a rosy
hour.
In dead of night, when great hearts die,
the storm
Swept down the barrier that
blocked out the light,
And in the morn, refreshing,
pure, and bright,
The sun came leaping in, so soft and warm.
But sunshine came too late. The
blossom brave,
While yearning for dear light
and warmth, had died.
As men will sometimes die
waiting the tide
That flows at length to eddy round a
grave.
“RING DOWN THE CURTAIN.”
“Ring down the Curtain”
were the last dying words of a young and beautiful
American actress, who died of consumption when in the
zenith of her popularity.
Ring down the curtain;
So ends the play!
Night-time is coming;
Past is the day.
Sang I in sadness
Adorned with a smile;
Pourtraying gladness
And dying the while!
How my brow burneth
With fever oppressed:
How my heart yearneth
For silence and rest.
Soothe me to slumber:
Why should ye sigh?
Ring down the curtain;
’Tis pleasant to die!
Ring down the curtain:
Critics depart!
The end of your blaming
A wearisome heart:
Fame which your praise brought
A Summer-day cloud:
Fruit of my toiling
A coffin and shroud!
Light though, and fitful,
The dreams of my life,
My soul like a vessel
From ocean of strife
Calmly and peaceful
To her haven doth fly:
Ring down the curtain
’Tis pleasant to die!
THE TELEGRAPH POST
A FABLE.
A telegraph post by the roadside stood
In a village humble and fair,
And he raised his head, did this column
of wood,
As high as he could in the
air:
“Oh, Oh!” quoth he, as along
the wire
The news from the wide world
through
Hurried backwards and forwards in words
of fire,
Breathing promises fair, or threatenings
dire,
Never heeding the post as
they flew.
“Oh, Oh!” quoth he: “That
I should stand here
“And bear on my shoulders
high
“Such an upstart lot, who no manners
have got
“To pass me,
who upraises them, by!
“I’ll stand it no longer,” and
thinking, no doubt,
To bring down the wires in
his fall,
He stumbled: but no! for above and
below
The other posts stood the wires
wouldn’t let go:
And our post couldn’t
tumble at all.
And there he hung like a helpless thing,
Till his place by another
was ta’en;
And the foolish post with dry sticks a
host
On the firewood stack was
lain.
“You ignorant dolt!” said
a Raven wise
Who sat on the wall bright
in feather
“You must have been blind.
When to tumble inclined
“You should with your neighbouring
posts have combined
And have all stood or fallen
together.”
MORAL.
Units, as units,
are helpless things
In
the soul-stirring struggles of life;
But Success is
the laurel which Unity brings
To
crown the true heart in the strife.
BREAKING ON THE SHORE
I saw the sunbeams dancing o’er
the ocean
One Summer-time. Bright
was each laughing wave;
I felt a thrill to see their sweet emotion,
Each happy in the kiss the
other gave:
But Winter came with all its storm and
sadness,
And every wave that kissed
and smiled before
Bid long farewell to dreams of sunny gladness
And broke its heart upon the
stony shore.
So like the Summer crown’d with
many a blessing
She dawn’d upon this
lonely heart of mine:
And life grew lovely with her sweet caressing
As blooms the thorn claspt
by the bright woodbine:
But now, Alas! in churchyard bleak she’s
lying,
And dearest joys are gone
to come no more:
Like yonder wave, for absent sunbeam sighing,
My heart with grief is breaking
on life’s shore.
HURRAH FOR THE RIFLE CORPS
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED IN 1856.
The fair Knights of old, with trappings
of gold,
And falchions that gleamed
by their side,
Went forth to the fight with hearts gay
and light
To war ’gainst Oppression
and Pride:
And though long since dead, it must not
be said
That the proud reign of Chivalry
’s o’er
There are many as bold as the brave Knights
of old
To be found in the Rifle Corps.
Hurrah!
Hurrah! for the Rifle Corps;
May
they ever be ready to stand
In defence of
the Right, and be willing to fight
For
the Queen and their native land.
Old England intends with the world to
be friends,
While Honour with Peace is
combined;
But the moment her foe lifts his hand
for a blow,
All friendship she flings
to the wind.
Should an enemy dare e’en as much
as prepare
To bring War’s alarms
to our shore,
He will find every coast bristling o’er
with a host
Of the brave-hearted Rifle
Corps.
Hurrah!
Hurrah! for the Rifle Corps;
May
they ever be ready to stand
In defence of
the Right, and be willing to fight
For
the Queen and their native land.
Let the wine goblet brim with red wine
to the rim
Let Beauty look on all the
while,
As with eyes that approve in the language
of love
She crowns the proud toast
with a smile:
May each Rifle be seen round the Throne
and the Queen
Should danger e’er threaten
our shore:
And with many a shout let the echo ring
out
Three cheers for the Rifle
Corps!
Hurrah!
Hurrah! for the Rifle Corps;
May
they ever be ready to stand
In defence of
the Right, and be willing to fight
For
the Queen and their native land.
CAREFUL WHEN YOU FIND A FRIEND
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED.
O if in life you’d friends obtain,
Be careful how you choose
them;
For real friends are hard to gain,
And trifling things may lose
them.
Hold out your hand to every palm
That reaches forth to greet
you;
But keep your heart for those alone
Who with pure friendship meet
you.
Then if in life a friend you’d find,
Be careful how you choose
one;
True friends are scarce among mankind:
A trifling thing may lose
one.
A friend your heart may now relieve,
And one day want relieving;
So if from others you’d receive
Ne’er shrink from wisely
giving.
Be grateful when you find a friend
The heart that’s thankless spurn
it;
Let conscience guide you to the end
Take friendship and return
it.
Then if in life a friend you’d find,
Be careful how you choose
one;
True friends are scarce among mankind:
A trifling thing may lose
one.
When days grow cold the swallow flies,
Till sunshine bright returneth;
When life grows dark false friendship
dies:
True friendship brighter burneth.
An angel fair, twin-born of Love,
It lights life’s pathway
for us;
And like the stars that shine above,
At night beams brighter o’er
us.
Then if in life a friend you’d find,
Be careful how you choose
one;
True friends are scarce among mankind:
A trifling thing may lose
one.
BROTHERLY LOVE
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED.
There’s a place in this world,
free from trouble and strife,
Which the wise try their hardest to find,
Where the heart that encounters the sharp thorns
of life
Will meet nought that’s harsh or unkind;
Where each tries his best to make joy for the rest
In sunshine or shadow the same;
Where all who assemble in Friendship’s behest
Are Brothers in heart and in name.
Let brotherly love continue
Let the flag of the Craft be unfurled;
We ’ll join hand-in-hand
While united we stand:
’Tis the way to get on in the world.
There’s a pleasure in life
go wherever we may,
’Tis one of all pleasures the best
To meet as we travel by night or by day
One friend that’s more true than the rest.
Whose heart beats responsive to Friendship and Love,
In Faith, Hope, and Charity’s call;
Who, blind to our follies, is slow to reprove,
And friendly whate’er may befal.
Let brotherly love continue
Let the flag of the Craft be unfurled;
We ’ll join hand-in-hand
While united we stand:
’Tis the way to get on in the world.
Then let us, my brothers, through
life’s busy scene,
Should sadness or sorrow appear,
Be true to our promise, as others have been,
And strive the dark pathway to cheer.
Our stay is but short in this valley below;
On all sides we troubles may scan;
Let us help one another wherever we go,
And make them as light as we can.
Let brotherly love continue
Let the flag of the Craft be unfurled;
We ’ll join hand-in-hand
While united we stand:
’Tis the way to get on in the world.
ENGLAND AND FRANCE
WRITTEN DURING THE CRIMEAN WAR.
(FOR MUSIC.)
Let the proud Russian boast of his granite-bound
coast,
And his armies that challenge
the world;
Let him stand in his might against Freedom
and Right,
With his flag of Oppression
unfurled:
Old England and France hand-in-hand will
advance
In the wide path of Progress
and Glory,
That will win them a name on the bright
scroll of Fame,
Everlasting in song and in
story.
Old England and France, then, for ever;
Brave France and Old England
for ever;
And while the world stands may the glorious
Twin-lands
Be united in friendship together.
Both by land and by sea this land of the
free
Britannia, the Queen of the
wave,
Proudly stands side by-side, and in Friendship
allied,
With France, the gallant and
the brave:
Whilst the stern Tyrant raves at his nobles
and slaves,
Old England and France frown
defiance,
And both bravely press on till the goal
shall be won
Then Hurrah! for the glorious
alliance!
Old England and France, then, for ever;
Brave France and Old England
for ever;
And while the world stands may the glorious
Twin-lands
Be united in friendship together.
AGAINST THE STREAM
(FOR MUSIC.)
How oft, in life’s rough battle,
we,
Struck down by hard adversity,
In saddest hour of trial see
No friend with helping hand.
Then in despair beneath the wave
We sink, with none to help or save.
When if we ’d been both bold and
brave
We might have reached the
land.
Should things go wrong this is the plan;
Forget the past as best you can,
Then turn your sleeves up like a man
And pull against the stream.
Yes, pull against the stream, my friends;
That lane is long which never ends;
That bow ne’er made which never
bends
To shoot its arrow home.
If twenty times you miss your aim,
Or ten times twenty lose the game,
Keep up your spirits all the same
Your turn is sure to come.
Should things go wrong this is the plan;
Forget the past as best you can,
Then turn your sleeves up like a man
And pull against the stream.
In love or pleasure, work or play,
Men cannot always win the day,
For mixed among life’s prizes gay
What hosts of blanks are found.
Though skies to-day be overcast
Though bitter blows the wintry blast
The Summer days will come at last
With hope and sunshine crown’d.
Should things go wrong this is the plan;
Forget the past as best you can,
Then turn your sleeves up like a man,
And pull against the stream.
WRECKED IN SIGHT OF HOME
(FOR MUSIC.)
The ship through the sunshine sails over
the sea,
From many a distant clime comes she,
Freighted with
treasure, see how she flies
Cheerily
over the foam.
Hearts are all happy, cheeks are all bright,
The long-absent land appears in sight;
Little they dream
that the beautiful prize
Will
be wrecked in sight of home!
The storm breaks above them, the thunders
roll,
The ship gets aground on the hidden shoal,
And the turbulent
waters dash over the barque,
And
cries from the doomed ship come.
Till nothing is left the tale to tell,
But the angry roar of the surging swell;
So the grand old
vessel goes down in the dark
Wrecked
in sight of home.
And thus as we wander through life’s
rugged way,
Fighting its battles as best we may,
Seeking in fancy
a far-distant spot
To
rest when we’ve ceased to roam:
And just as the haven of comfort appears,
Our hopes are all turned into sadness
and tears,
We droop near
the threshold ne’er enter the cot
Wrecked
in sight of home.
SONNET
I could not love thee more, if life depended
On one more link being fixed
to Affection’s chain;
Nor cease to love thee save
my passion ended
With life; for love and life
were blanks if twain!
I could not love thee less; the flame,
full-statured
Leaps from the soul, and knows
no infancy;
But like the sun majestic,
golden-featured,
Soars like a heav’n
of beauty from life’s sea.
I would not love thee for thy radiant
tresses,
Rich budding mouth, and eyes
twin-born of Light.
No: Charms less fadeful thy dear
heart possesses
Gems that will flash through
life’s noontide and night.
But simple words fall short of what I’ll
prove:
Accept them but as lispings of my love.
SEBASTOPOL IS WON.
1855.
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED.
Dance on! ye vaulting joy-bells, shout
In spirit-gladdening notes,
Whilst mimic thunders bellow out
From cannons’ brazen
throats:
“Tyrant! awake ye, tremblingly;
The advent has begun:
Hark! to the mighty jubilant cry
“Sebastopol is won!”
Ring
out, rejoice, and clap your hands,
Shout,
patriots, everyone!
A
burst of joy let rend the sky:
Sebastopol
is won!
No dream of brilliant conquest ’twas,
Nor selfish hope of gain,
That sent the blood mad-rushing through
And through each Briton’s
vein;
No! such was not the spell that nerved
Old England for the fight,
Her war cry with her brother braves’
Was “Freedom, God, and
Right!”
Ring
out, rejoice, and clap your hands,
Shout,
patriots, everyone!
A
burst of joy let rend the sky:
Sebastopol
is won!
Shame! shame! upon the craven souls
Of those who trembling stood,
And would not dare not lend
a hand
To stay this feast of blood!
Whose cringing spirits lowly bowed
Before the despot-glance
Of him whose star now pales before
Brave England! Mighty
France!
Ring
out, rejoice, and clap your hands,
Shout,
patriots, everyone!
A
burst of joy let rend the sky;
Sebastopol
is won!
Tho’ hoary grows the mother-land
Her enemies may learn
That ’neath her smile so queenly-grand
There lives a purpose stern!
Then Britons chant exulting pæans,
Long pent-up joy release;
From yonder flaming pile upsoars
The Morning Sun of Peace!
(a)
Ring
out, rejoice, and clap your hands,
Shout,
patriots, everyone!
A
burst of joy let rend the sky:
Sebastopol
is won!
(a) I am sorry to find that
the aspiration here embodied has been falsified.
War is now raging (1877), and from precisely the same
causes as those which led to the Crimean war, nearly
a quarter of a century ago.
HOLD YOUR TONGUE
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED.
I’ve often thought, as through the
world I’ve travelled to and fro,
How many folks about me above
me and below
Might make this life more happy, if old
as well as young
Would bear in mind the maxim which bids
them hold their tongue.
Hold your tongue hold your
tongue you’ll ne’er be thought
a dunce:
Hold your tongue and think twice before
you loose it once:
Hold your tongue for quiet
folks are oft reputed wise:
Hold your tongue, but open wide your ears
and your eyes.
How oft we find that words unkind unhappy
lives will make;
That loving hearts through idle words
will bleed and sometimes break;
What mischief have we scattered all our
bosom friends among,
Which might have been avoided had we only
held our tongue.
Hold your tongue hold your
tongue: you’ll ne’er be thought a
dunce:
Hold your tongue and think twice before
you loose it once:
Hold your tongue for quiet
folks are oft reputed wise:
Hold your tongue, but open wide your ears
and your eyes.
The kindly deeds men do in life their
own reward will bring;
But where they come with trumpet-words,
their sweetness bears a sting:
The silent giver ’s most beloved
right-thinking folks among;
So when you do a kindly thing, be sure
you hold your tongue.
Hold your tongue hold your
tongue: you’ll ne’er be thought a
dunce:
Hold your tongue and think twice before
you loose it once:
Hold your tongue for quiet
folks are oft reputed wise:
Hold your tongue, but open wide your ears
and your eyes.
Yes: hold your tongue, except in
life when days of sorrow come;
Then speak to raise a drooping heart,
or cheer a darksome home.
If none of these let silence
be the burden of your song:
He holds his own, nor hurts his friend,
who learns to hold his tongue.
Hold your tongue hold your
tongue; you’ll ne’er be thought a dunce:
Hold your tongue and think twice before
you loose it once:
Hold your tongue for quiet
folks are oft reputed wise:
Hold your tongue, but open wide your ears
and your eyes.
MY MOTHER’S PORTRAIT
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED.
Ah! Well can I remember:
“She’ll come no
more,” they said.
Her last sweet words, they told me,
Were blessings on my head.
Ah! Well can I remember
What sadness all things wore
In childhood, when they told me
“She’ll come she’ll
come no more!”
Awake
or asleep,
Sweet
prize above all other;
Close
to my heart I’ll keep
The
likeness of my mother.
Ah! Well can I remember,
Those eyes were filled with
tears
The face that smiled upon me
Seemed sad with many fears:
“Who’ll care for thee, my
sweet one?”
“Who’ll love thee
now?” she cried:
Then from her arms they bore me
’Twas then, they said,
she died.
Awake
or asleep,
Sweet
prize above all other:
Close
to my heart I’ll keep
The
likeness of my mother.
What though, through cloud and sunshine,
Bright thoughts around me
cling:
Though friends in kindness greet me,
No mother’s love they
bring.
I see her form before me;
I see the sad, sweet smile;
And yet my heart is lonely,
So lonely, all the while.
Awake
or asleep,
Sweet
prize above all other:
Close
to my heart I’ll keep
The
likeness of my mother.
NEVER MORE
FOR MUSIC.
A tear-drop glistened on her cheek,
Then died upon the sand.
With aching heart, as though ’twould
break,
She waved her trembling hand.
And as the vessel cleft the foam
And fled the rocky shore,
She sought alone her cottage home
And murmur’d “Never
more!”
He ne’er returned. She droopt
for him
With all her girlish love;
And oft her thoughts would lightly skim
The sea, like Noah’s
dove.
But every wave that danced along
Like silver to the shore
Brought back the burden of her song,
And murmur’d “Never
more!”
LINES
ON THE DEATH OF THE REV. CANON
JENKINS, VICAR OF ABERDARE.
If the great heart of Lifetime in unison
beats
With Eternity’s throb
through Infinity’s space,
Then our thoughts of thy goodness, which
love oft repeats,
May vibrate in thy bosom,
though lost be thy face.
Thy life was a martyrdom: noble the
part
Of self-abnegation thou playd’st
for the Poor;
Whose gratitude fixes thy name in each
heart,
Where in Memory’s shrine
’twill for ever endure.
FILIAL INGRATITUDE
A FABLE.
An oak tree falling on the mead,
By woodman’s stroke
laid low,
Saw, as a handle to the axe
Which wrought the fatal blow,
A bough that once upon his breast
Drew nurture from his heart,
And as a tender, helpless shoot,
Grew of his life a part.
“Woe! woe!” he sighed, as
on the earth
He drew expiring breath:
“That what I nurtured at its birth
“Should rend my heart
in death!”
THE VINE AND THE SUNFLOWER
A FABLE.
A very young Vine in a garden grew,
And she longed for a lover as
maidens do;
And many a dear little tendril threw
About her in innocent spirit.
For she yearned to climb upward who
is it that don’t?
Only give man a chance, and then
see if he wont:
To rise in the world, though some fail
to own ’t,
Is a weakness we all inherit.
So this very young Vine, with excusable
taste,
And knowing such things for her good were
placed,
Looked all round the garden with glances
chaste
For a something her faith
to pin to.
The fair little wisher had thoughts of
her own,
Nor cared for the pleasure of climbing
alone;
To perhaps the same feeling most ladies
are prone,
But that question we’ll
not now go into.
The first thing that came in her youthful
way
Was a gold-featured Sunflower gaudy
and gay
Who dressed himself up in resplendent
array,
And gazed on the sun as an
equal.
“Look! look!” quoth the Vine:
“He’s a lover of mine:
“And see how the gold round his
face doth shine!”
So at once she began round the stem to
twine;
But mark what befel in the
sequel.
One morning, soon after, a hurricane rose:
And as most people know, when the storm-god
blows,
The hollow of heart is the thing that
goes
To the ground and
the wind sweeps past it.
So the arrogant Sunflower, lofty in pride,
And hollow from root to branch beside,
Soon tumbled before the stormy tide,
And lay where the wind had
cast it.
It was well for the Vine that her tendrils’
hold
Was a clasp that a moment served to unfold;
So she turned from the thing that she
thought was gold
With a heart for the warning
grateful:
And that which had dazzled her youthful
eyes
Which filled her young bosom with sweet
surprise
The flow’r which she took for a
golden prize
Became all to her that was
hateful.
POETIC PROVERBS
I.
“If thou be surety for thy friend,
thou art snared with the words of
thy mouth,” PROVERBS
vi. v. 1, 2.
Think well, my son, before you lend
Your name as bond for any friend;
Or, when the day of reckoning comes,
Come broken hearts and blighted homes.
Think well, my son, before you give
Your trusty word, that knaves may live:
Be not for such the stepping-stone,
But strive to earn and keep thine own.
II.
“A wise son maketh a glad father;
but a foolish son is the heaviness
of his mother.” PROVERBS
x, v. 1.
Be wise, my son, as o’er the earth
Thou walk’st in search
of wealth or fame;
Return her love who gave thee birth
His, who thy youthful guide
became.
That mother’s heart must cease to
beat;
That father’s voice
must cease to guide;
Oh! then what recollections sweet
Will cheer thy life’s
dark eventide.
III.
“Hope deferred maketh the heart
sick; The desire accomplished is
sweet to the soul. PROVERBS
xiii, v. 12, 19.
I am watching I am waiting;
And my heart droops sad and
low.
No glad message brings me comfort
As the moments come and go.
While the flowers bask in sunshine;
While birds sing on every
tree;
I am weary weary, waiting
For a message, love, from
thee.
IV.
“A virtuous woman is a crown to
her husband.” PROVERBS xii, v.
4.
As is the lustre to the lily;
As is the fragrance to the
rose;
As is the perfume to the violet
In sweet humility that grows.
As is the glad warmth of the sunshine
Whene’er the earth is
dark and cold;
So, to the loving heart that wears it,
Is Virtue’s purest crown
of gold.
V.
“Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful,
and the end of that mirth
is heaviness.” PROVERBS
xiv, v. 13.
What though kind friends that gather round
me
Seek to make my heart rejoice?
I miss the face I love so dearly
Miss the music of thy voice;
And though I smile, as if in gladness,
Tis but the phantom of a smile;
My heart, in sorrowing and sadness,
Mourns thy absence all the
while.
CHRISTMAS ANTICIPATIONS.
As the sun looks down on the ice-bound
river
Melting the stream that is
frozen o’er,
So gladness to hearts that the long years
sever
Comes with old Christmas as
of yore.
For the hearth glows bright in the yule-log’s
light,
And we look for the face that
is far away:
’Twill come with the morn with
the wakening dawn,
And our hearts will be happy
on Christmas Day.
The holly-branch laughs with its berries
bright,
As we hang it up high in the
air;
The mistletoe shakes with subdued delight
The leaves that its branches
wear;
The ivy smiles out from its place on the
wall;
And the fire-light gives welcome
cheer;
We have dreamt they are coming and,
one and all,
Are wondering “Will
they be here?”
Christmas bells
are ringing ringing,
Ringing
out the olden chime;
Choristers are
singing singing,
Singing
carols, keeping time;
And my heart is
waiting waiting,
Waiting
for the day so near;
For my Love is
coming coming,
Coming
with the glad New Year.
As flowerets turn
towards the sun,
As
streams run to the sea,
So yearns my heart
for Christmas-time
That
brings my love to me!
GOLDEN TRESSES
Like threads of golden sunshine
By angels’ fingers wove,
Sweet as the scented woodbine,
Are the tresses of my love.
The winds that whisper softly
I’d give my life to
be,
That I might kiss those tresses bright,
And die in ecstasy.
Those threads of golden sunshine
Like bonds my heart enchain,
And when in dreams I wander
They win me back again.
They throw a gleam of glory
O’er the pathway where
I go,
As when of old, in splendour bright,
Heav’n’s angels
walkt below.
HOPE FOR THE BEST.
Hope on for the best; where’s the
use of repining:
Droop not by the way, for
there’s work to be done;
Great ends are attained, not by fretting
and whining
By patience and labour the
goal must be won.
Fear not the world’s frown:
though it spurn the down-falling,
’Twill shrink from a
lamb if in lion-skin dresst;
Whate’er be thy trouble however
enthralling
Press onward, despair not,
and hope for the best.
If sorrow o’ertake thee then
be not faint-hearted;
Life ne’er was ordained
to be shadeless and bright;
One morn from the other by night-time
is parted;
The sun always shines though
we see not the light;
Misfortunes in life, like the nettle,
prove harmless,
If grappled stout-hearted
and fearlessly presst;
Rich sweets, without bitters, soon cloy
and grow charmless,
Then press on, despair not,
and hope for the best.
GONE BEFORE
The silent night is coming on,
The day is gone and past;
The willows waving to and fro
Their mournful shadows cast.
I’m thinking o’er the happy
years
We wandered side by side,
And Oh, my heart is filled with tears,
I’ve lost my darling
bride.
Softly sighs the evening breeze,
And soothes my bosom sore,
While angel voices seem to sing:
“Not lost, but gone
before.”
I think of her whose gentle voice
My drooping spirit cheered;
In fancy see her eyes grow bright,
When prosp’rous days
appeared.
And as like vessels that from
storms
To quiet havens glide
We neared the haven of our hopes,
I lost my darling bride.
Softly sighs the evening breeze,
And soothes my bosom sore,
While angel voices seem to sing:
“Not lost, but gone
before.”
HENRY BATH:
DIED OCTOBER THE 14TH, 1864.
“For the charitable heart is
as a flowing river: it moveth meekly and in silence,
and scattereth abroad its blessings to beautify the
world.”
Ever
the silent river flows
Adown the mead in speechless eloquence,
More telling than the language
of the tongue;
Its heart reflecting Heaven’s own
radiance
In unmarred beauty as it glides
along.
Ever
the silent river flows:
And in its depths, of untold wealth the
source,
What sleeping myst’ries,
hidden and serene,
Lie in their latent, undevelopt force;
Yet on it moves as though
it ne’er had been.
Ever
the silent river flows:
No shadowy nook escapes its placid glance;
Tow’rds cavern dark
with velvet step it steals;
And passing on as though in dreamful trance,
The story of its mission unreveals.
Ever
the silent river flows:
It clothes the meadows with a fleecy mist;
Softens earth’s arid
heart with gentle rain,
Till by the warm and sunny Morning kisst
Nature looks upward fresh
and bright again.
Ever
the silent river flows:
And weeping willows, reaching prayerfully
As though in adoration, droop
to greet
The dreamy river as it passes by;
And throw their leafy blessings
at its feet.
Ever
the silent river flows:
All Nature tells the story of its worth:
A daily miracle morn,
noon, and night
Softly beneficent: of joy the birth:
A voiceless messenger of hope
and light.
Ever
the silent river flows:
And so, in gentle meekness and sweet stealth,
Out from the life of him whose
loss we mourn
There flowed of Charity a boundless wealth,
To cheer the Poor by griefs
and sorrows torn.
Ever
the silent river flows:
For ever and for ever flowing on:
So runs the river of his goodness
rare,
A noble heritage from sire to son;
With grateful hearts abounding
everywhere.
SONG OF THE WORKER
TO BE SUNG IN PRAISE OF THOSE WHO DESERVE IT, BY
THOSE WHO THINK SO.
The strokes of the hammer ring out day
and night,
And the huge wheels whirl
and they spin:
The sky is on fire with the forge’s
light
Oh, Oh! for the roar and the
din.
The sparks fly aloft like a starry cloud,
And the voices of workmen
ring
With a cheery refrain both happy and loud,
And this is the song they
sing:
Bless
thee, my master bless thee;
Prosperity
always be thine.
May
plenty in store ever garnish thy door,
And
each day bring its blessings divine.
The cottage that stands by the mountain
side
Is bright with the cheerful
fire,
And the house-wife gazes with honest pride
On the faces of husband and
sire,
Who, fresh from the forge, with their
brawny hands
The food that they eat have
won,
And this is the wish that each breast
expands
Ere the bountiful meal is
begun:
Bless
thee, my master bless thee;
Prosperity
always be thine.
May
plenty in store ever garnish thy door,
And
each day bring its blessings divine.
’Tis dark in that cottage:
and sorrow is there;
For sickness brings troubles
amain;
The sigh from affliction is heard on the
air,
And sad sounds the mournful
refrain.
But, sun-like in winter, a friend in their
need
Pours the light over lattice
and floor:
And these are the words that emblazon
the deed
From the heart that with love
brimmeth o’er:
Bless
thee, my master bless thee;
Prosperity
always be thine.
May
plenty in store ever garnish thy door,
And
each day bring its blessings divine.
A hand that is princely: the heart
of a king:
All kindness and goodness
combined;
A name that will long, with the virtues
we sing,
Deep deep in our
hearts be enshrined.
And may the strong bond of affection like
this
Be the pledge of good faith
to the end;
For sad will the day be should ever we
miss
From our midst such a true-hearted
friend.
Bless
thee a thousand hearts bless thee:
Prosperity
always be thine.
May
plenty in store ever garnish thy door,
And
each day bring its blessings divine.
THE BROOKLET’S AMBITION
In a sweet little
glen,
Far from footsteps
of men,
Once a bright-featured Brooklet was born,
It could boast
of its birth
From a hole in
the earth
Well protected by bramble and thorn.
For a time ’twas
content,
Nor on wandering
bent,
Till the raindrops fell plenteous and
free,
And disturbed
the sweet rest
Of the rivulet’s
breast,
By whispering tales of the sea.
What the rain
had to tell
Made the rivulet
swell,
And grow large and more large by degrees,
Till it broke
with a bound
From the hole
in the ground,
And was lost in a forest of trees.
But it found its
way out,
And meandered
about
O’er the meadow, the lowland, and
lea,
Till it came,
full of pride,
With a thousand
beside,
And emptied itself in the sea.
But alas for the
stream!
And alas for its
dream
Of ambition! such dreamings were o’er,
When it found
to its cost
As a stream it
was lost
The moment it leapt from the shore.
So like rivulets men,
Humbly born in
life’s glen,
Proudly dream as the lowlands they lave,
That they’re
each one a sea,
Whilst they’re
only ah, me!
Of life’s ocean at best but a wave.
ST. VALENTINE’S EVE.
A dear little name I placed under my pillow
On St. Valentine’s eve,
just to work out a charm,
For ’twas said if I dreamed of the
maiden who owned it,
I should wed her as certain
as sunshine is warm:
And lo! in my sleep, a sweet vision came
o’er me:
A fair-featured maiden and
beauteous as fair
In attitude graceful stood smiling before
me,
With eyes dark and lustrous,
and brown flowing hair:
Her hand I took hold of, and gently endeavoured
The rosiest of rose-coloured
lips to impress;
I whispered her name and the
vision departed:
The name that I whispered
was No: you must guess!
LOST!
A dark form lingers on the lea,
In the moon-lit
night
In the cold white
light,
Beneath the shade of an old oak tree,
Like a dusky sprite,
Or ghost newly
sped
From the voiceless
dead;
And the flowers droop round it weeping,
While the sad
moon streams
Her white-wan
beams
O’er the world as it lieth sleeping.
And ere the morn
A wail forlorn
Will arise from a lost one weeping.
A soft step leaves the cottage door
In the moon-lit
night,
Like a leaflet’s
flight;
A pure heart leaps, full of rich love-lore,
Tow’rds the dusky sprite
That stands like
a shade
From the voiceless
dead,
And the flowers droop round them weeping,
While the sad
moon streams
Her white-wan
beams
O’er the world as it lieth sleeping;
And ere the morn
A wail forlorn
Will arise from a lost one weeping.
LILYBELL.
Little Lily she was fair
O how fair no tongue can tell!
Life was bright beyond compare
Filled with love and Lilybell.
Little Lily came the day
Both our hearts were lorn
and lone.
Oh! what bliss it was to say
“Lilybell is all our
own!”
Little Lily stay’d and smiled
On us for a year or so,
Then they came and took the child
Upward where the angels go.
Little Lily left a mark
Mark of light where e’r
she trod:
Left her footprints in the dark,
Just to guide us up to God.
Upward, then, we look alway:
Pray and shed the silent tear;
Hoping soon will come the day
We shall join our darling
there.
GONE!
SUGGESTED ON HEARING OF THE DEATH, ONLY A FEW
DAYS APART, OF TWO INFANT CHILDREN OF
AN
ESTEEMED FRIEND.
Gone! Like a ray, that came and
kissed some flow’rs,
Charming their loneliness
with many a hue;
But cheering only, as such
marvels do,
A
few short hours.
Gone! Like a dew-drop-jewel of the
mist,
That lives the briefest moment
in the morn;
Sparkling in purity upon a
thorn;
Then
heaven-ward kisst.
Gone! Like a Summer-wind, that woke
a thrill
In every leaf it fondled as
it fled,
Then left each leaflet drooping
low its head
Mournful
and still.
Gone! Like a swelling wail at Autumn
time,
That went with such sad cadences
away,
’Twas thought a God
from Heav’n had come astray
Weeping
sublime.
Gone! Like a dream of beauty in
the night,
That came to tell a fair and
welcome tale,
Then left the wakening dreamer
to bewail
The
dead delight.
LIFE DREAMS
Behold yon truant schoolboy, cap in hand,
Bound o’er the gilded mead with
frantic whoop,
And to each butterfly give ready chase;
Till one more gaudy than the flutt’ring
rest
Starts up before his gaze. Then
darts he forth
To clutch the prize, which ever and anon
Lingers on shiny flow’r till nearly
caught,
Then flickers off with tantalizing flirt.
The youth with hopeful heart keeps up
the chase,
And so intent upon the game, that he
Sees not the yawning slough beneath his
feet,
Until he finds himself o’er head
and ears
In dreary plight. And so it is through
life:
From youth to age man dreams of happiness:
Grasps every gilded bubble that upsoars,
Fondly believing each to be the prize
His fancy pictured. Still the wished-for
joy
Is far beyond his reach as e’er
it was;
Yet, buoyed with hope, he sees, or thinks
he sees,
The coming future bearing in its arms
The smiling Beauty that he pants to grasp.
With palpitating heart and trembling hand
He reaches forth to pluck the prize when
lo!
The treach’rous earth expanding
at his feet,
He finds in place of happiness a
grave.
AEOLUS AND AURORA:
GIVING A LITTLE INFORMATION AS TO
THE MUSIC OF THE GODS. (a)
Said Aurora to Aeolus, as they sat o’er
their bohea,
Surrounded by Zephyruses exactly
three times three
“Olus, dear, a new piano is
the thing of things we want.”
I regret to say Aeolus raised his eyes
and said “We dont!”
So unlike his mournful manner, when his
sweet sad harp he plays;
And he heav’d a sigh regretful as
he thought of other days
As he thought of early moments, ere Aurora’s
heart was won
Ere beefsteak was fifteen pence a-pound,
and coals five crowns a-ton;
Ere nine little West-winds murmured round
his table every meal,
And the tones of a piano nought but sweetness
could reveal,
As his own Aurora played it in the home
of her mamma,
Ere his own Aurora, blushing, had referred
him to papa.
All these feelings moved Aeolus, but to
climax in “We dont!”
As he heard “A new piano is the
thing of things we want.”
It was settled who could help
it? For Aurora, like the rest
Of winning little women, knew that kisses
pleased the best;
It was settled who could help
it? So, the local paper brought,
The quick eye of Aurora these glad words
of comfort caught (b)
“Dear Aeolus,” said Aurora,
“this is quite the thing for me;”
“All is just as it all should be it’s
a lady’s property:
“P’rhaps her husband ’s
short of money;
p’rhaps
the rent they want to pay;
“P’rhaps ”
but cutting short my story, the piano came next day.
Yes the walnut case was
“beautiful” for beeswax made it so;
And the keyboard was by Collard “Collard’s
registered,” you know.
It is true, it was full compass;
but the “richness” wasn’t much;
And a feature felt in vain for was the
“repetition touch.”
Yes it was a “trichord
cottage,” and “but little used” had
been;
And the wood, like those who bought it,
all inside was very green.
It was worth a score of guineas e’en
if really worth a score:
And the “lady” who was “leaving”
ere she left sold three or four,
Piping hot from minor makers, though all
Collard’s make-believe;
And at each recurring victim laughed a
laugh within her sleeve.
Of course no breach of morals to the seller
I impugn,
Although it cost five pounds a-year to
keep the thing in tune.
I rather blame the buyers two for napping
being caught:
And that’s the way “Aeolus
dear” a new piano bought.
(a) The foregoing lines were
written several years ago, and published at the time,
with the view of exposing a fraud too frequently practised
upon people in search of so-called “bargains.”
Aeolus and Aurora are no imaginary characters.
(b) A lady removing from --, is desirous of selling her Piano. A full rich tone, 7 octaves, in beautiful walnut case, trichord cottage, repetition touch, registered keyboard, by Collard, but little used. 27 guineas will be accepted, worth 60. Apply to, &c.
SONNET:
ON BEING ASKED MY OPINION UPON THE
MATTER TO WHICH IT REFERS.
Should’st thou find in thy travels
a maid that is free,
And content to love nought in the wide
world but thee;
With a face that is gentle be
’t dark or be ’t fair;
And a brow that ne’er ceases good-temper
to wear;
With a soul like a rosebud that’s
not yet unfurled
All strange to the tricks and the ways
of the world;
And a mind that would blush at its fanciful
roam,
Should it dream there are spheres more
delightful than home,
With a love that would love thee alone
for thy sake
In bonds which adversity never could break.
Should’st thou find such a treasure then
unlock thy heart,
And place the bright gem in its innermost
part;
Watch over it tenderly love
it with pride;
And gratefully crown it thy heaven-sent
bride.
SLEEPING IN THE SNOW
(FOR MUSIC.)
“O, let me slumber let
me sleep!”
The fair-haired boy in whispers
sighed;
Then sank upon the snowy steep,
While friendly hearts to rouse
him tried.
“O, let me sleep!” and as
he spake
His weary spirit sought its
rest,
And slept, no more again to wake,
Save haply there among
the blest.
Sleep sleep sleeping:
He
sleeps beneath the starry dome;
And
far away his mother, weeping,
Waits
his coming home.
We raised him gently from the snow,
And bore him in our arms away.
The sweet white face is smiling now
Made whiter by the moon’s
pale ray.
And when the sun in beauty rose
We laid him in the silent
tomb,
Where mountains with eternal snows
High up tow’rds Heaven
grandly loom.
Sleep sleep sleeping:
He
sleeps beneath the starry dome;
And
far away his mother, weeping,
Waits
his coming home. (a)
(a) The late Artemus Ward,
in his “American Drolleries,” tells a
pathetic story of a boy, a German, who died from the
severity of the weather, while travelling, in company
with others, in the vicinity of the Rocky Mountains.
He was the only child of a widowed mother. The
intense cold induced drowsiness; and while being forced
along by his companions with the view of counteracting
the effects of the frost, his continued cry, uttered
with soul-stirring plaintiveness, was: “Let
me sleep let me sleep.” Unable
to save him, his companions permitted him to lie down
and “fall asleep in the snow” a
sleep from which he never woke.
WITH THE RAIN
A Dewdrop and a Violet
Were wedded on an April day;
The Dewdrop kisst his pretty pet,
Then by the Sun was called
away.
The drooping flow’r bewailed her
choice;
“My love will never
come again!”
But from the clouds came answering voice:
“I come, my darling,
with the rain!”
The Violet had jealous fears,
And told her sorrow to the
Rose:
“Say is he faithful?”
O those tears!
The blossom whispered “Goodness
knows!”
The recreant dewdrop came at last,
And eased his love of all
her pain:
With kisses sweet her sorrows passed,
And life anew came with the
rain.
ODE:
ON THE DEATH OF A VERY INTIMATE FRIEND, A
YOUNG SURGEON, WHO DIED FROM FEVER, AFTER
ATTENDING A PATIENT.
’Tis sad indeed to chant a dirge
of gloom
To weave the cypress for a
youthful brow:
To moan a requiem o’er an early
tomb,
And sing in sorrow as I’m
singing now.
While men raise mausoleums to die brave
With flimsy flatt’ries
gilded tombs besmear
We need no banner o’er our Brother’s
grave
To tell what wealth of worth
lies buried there.
Gone! and the word re-echoes with a sound
Mournful as muffled bells
upon the wind;
Sad in its influence on all around
Telling of griefs that still
remain behind.
A thousand hearts may throb with tender
swell
Though every soul in deepest
sorrow grieves,
How much he was beloved they only tell;
But who shall gauge the yawning
breach he leaves?
Dark is the social world in which he moved
Lending his aid unmindful
of the cost.
Stilled is the heart the sternest ’mongst
us loved;
Dim is the lustrous jewel
we have lost.
For souls like his, so tender and so great,
Are pearls that stud the earth
like stars the sky:
Above the password at celestial
gate;
Below the germ
of immortality.
Gone! Just as life was breaking,
full of hope
Clothed in the gorgeous beauty
of its morn;
Free in Ambition’s ever-widening
scope,
A pictured prospect exquisitely
drawn.
As void of self as angels are of sin,
What sweet anticipations stirred
his brain:
What heights for others would he strive
to win;
What little for himself he’d
seek to gain.
But while the world was bathed in golden
light;
While beauty breathed from
every opening flower;
While streamlets danced along with gay
delight;
While mellow music filled
each songful bower;
With heart-warm friends whose love ran
brimming o’er
For him who, full of life,
stood with them then;
In such an hour Death led him from the
shore;
And gone the worth we ne’er
may know again.
ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND
She left a mournful void upon our hearts;
Within her home she left a
vacant place:
But, as the setting sun at eve imparts
A holy twilight calm to nature’s
face,
So, chastened, bend we o’er the
early tomb
Of one who to us all was very
dear,
Whose cherished memory, like a fragrant
bloom,
Will live embalmed in recollection’s
tear.
LINES:
WRITTEN IN THE PRAYER BOOK OF A YOUNG LADY
WHO HAD JILTED HER LOVER.
To love unbeloved O how painful
the bliss!
By such passion our heart-strings
we sever:
Like raindrops in rivers, which die with
a kiss,
We are lost in life’s
waters for ever.
VICARIOUS MARTYRS:
WRITTEN AND SENT AS A VALENTINE TO
MY HEN-PECKED SCHOOLMASTER.
I wonder if thy Tyrant knows
That every peck she gives
to thee
Brings down a perfect show’r of
blows
On my companions and on me.
Martyrs vicarious are we all:
Too great a coward thou to
rule
Thy wife, or let thy vengeance fall
On her and
so thou flog’st the school.
STANZAS:
WRITTEN AT TUNBBRIDGE WELLS IN 1854, AFTER HAVING
SEEN LADY NOEL BYRON, WIDOW OF THE POET,
LORD BYRON, WHO WAS STAYING THERE
FOR THE BENEFIT OF HER HEALTH.
Like the Moon that is waning, thou movest
along
Silent, pensive, and pale through
thy sorrow’s dark Night;
For thou draw’st from the rays of
our bright Sun of Song
The white coldness that lives
where reflected ’s the light.
And the stars which in fancy around thee
I see,
As in bright golden fire they
eternally shine,
Seem to cast from their splendour a lustre
on thee,
As of light from thy husband’s
effusions divine.
In the flush of his fame were thy virtues
unseen,
By his blinding effulgence
of genius hid:
Could he now see thy face, with its sorrow
serene,
Much might he unsay undo
much that he did,
For I see in that face all the sorrows
he told
All the sadness he meant in
his marvellous lore;
And the shadows of Memory, silent and
old,
Seem to come with the light
from Eternity’s shore.
And I feel, though the world said his
spirit and thine
Were as wide as the sun and
the moon are apart,
That the beams of his love o’er
thy bosom still shine
That the thought of his passion
still nurtures thy heart.
TO LOUISA:
WHEN A YEAR OLD.
My sweet one, thou art starting now
In life’s heart-saddening
race,
With Innocence upon thy brow
And Beauty in thy face;
A tiny star among the host
That fleck the arc of life;
A tiny barque on ocean tossed,
To brave its billowy strife.
May Virtue reign supremely o’er
And round thy footsteps cling;
While Faith and Hope for evermore
Celestial numbers sing.
O may thy life be one glad dream
Of bright unclouded joy;
Thy love one pure and sunny theme
Of bliss without alloy.
Should Fate or Fortune’s dazzling
rays
Lead thee to other climes,
Then, darling, let this meet thy gaze,
And think of me sometimes.
THE ORATOR AND THE CASK
A FABLE.
INTRODUCING A CHARACTER FROM LIFE.
A speaker of the suasive school,
Who more resembled knave than fool,
His prospects gauged once on a time,
And sought how he might upward climb.
The scheme Political had failed;
The star of Piety had paled;
The Convert Drunkard would not tell
His friends the cheat had learnt to smell.
All things our changeful friend had tried
Had spouted far and shouted wide.
When all at once ah! happy
thought:
The Temp’rance cause in tow was
brought.
And with it, up and down the land,
Our hero roamed with lofty hand,
Consigning to a dreadful place,
Whose name this fable must not grace,
All men the one who touched
a drop,
With him who knew not when to stop.
Arriving in a town one day,
He on his string began to play;
And mounted on a brandy cask
With noisy speech went through his task.
The barrel on whose head he stood
At length gave vent in warmth of blood:
“Ungracious varlet stay
thy hand:
“What! run down those on whom you
stand?”
Then, utterance-choked, he tumbled o’er,
Casting the speaker on the floor.
And as he rolled along the street
“Let me consistent teachers meet!”
He said “or give me none
at all
To teach me how to stand or fall!”
Thus seekers after Truth declaim
’Gainst teachers teachers
but in name
Who live by what they deprecate,
And love the thing they seem to hate
Who like the speaker raised on high
On barrel-top, ’gainst barrels cry:
Who, though of others Temp’rance
ask,
Are slaves themselves to th’ brandy
flask.
THE MAID OF THE WAR
SET TO MUSIC AND PUBLISHED ON THE DEPARTURE OF
MISS FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE AND HER STAFF
OF NURSES FOR THE CRIMEA.
When the cannon’s loud rattle
Told tales of the battle,
And the nations turned pale
at the rout;
When the clarion rang madly,
And maidens wept sadly,
And swords leapt with fire-flashes
out;
One frail girl of beauty
Shrank not from her duty,
But raised her sweet voice
’bove the roar;
Her bright smiles of kindness
Played o’er the dark blindness:
’Twas Florence, the
Maid of the War.
When thousands, down-falling,
For help were out-calling
Neglected, on straw-pallet
cast
A fair form drew near them
To aid and to cheer them;
Her shadow they kissed as
it passed, (a)
When they droopt in their sadness,
Or raved in their madness,
She left her glad home from
afar
To heal up their sorrows,
And tell of bright morrows;
’Twas Florence, the
Maid of the War.
(a) So impressed were some
of the wounded soldiers in the hospital at the kindness
and gentle treatment received at the hands of Miss
Nightingale, that, unable otherwise to testify their
gratitude, they kissed her shadow as it fell upon
the pillow of the pallets, on which they lay.
One poor fellow is said to have done this with his
latest breath.
IMPROMPTU:
ON BEING ASKED BY A LADY TO WRITE
A VERSE IN HER ALBUM.
If I could place my thoughts upon thy
heart
As on this virgin page I now
indite,
What words unspoken would I not impart
Which only on my own I dare
to write?
MARY:
DIED MAY 30TH, 1860.
But
one short hour
She came and tripped it o’er the
rugged earth,
Like a light sunbeam o’er
the troubled wave;
Then shrank in silence to
her little grave,
A rose-bud bitten at its opening birth.
The
hand of death
Had ta’en before her one who loved
her well
With all the fondness of a
Mother’s heart,
Whose darling’s soul
was made of Heav’n a part
E’re sank the echoes of her own
death-knell.
And
so she died:
Before her mind scarce knew the way to
live.
But sorrowing tears ’twere
useless now to shed:
Our hopes must bloom, or mingle
with the dead,
As Heav’n alone deems fit to take
or give!
LINES:
ON THE MARRIAGE OF MISS ELIZABETH MARY NICHOLL
CARNE, FEBRUARY 6TH, 1868.
Oh, blessed Love! that clothes with laughing
flowers
Life’s martyr-crown of thorns, and
raises up
The heart to hold communion with its God,
’Tis thine, this day, with golden
clasp, to bind
The volume of a life, where sterling worth
And beauty go to make the story up.
A maiden, one, who, when on tiptoe, sees
Her history running through a line of
Kings:
In fame how excellent; in life how pure;
As though the virtues of her ancestry
Had found new utterance in her virtuous
self.
As rain-drops, trickling through the hills
of Time,
Commingling gather, till, in sparkling
life,
They come, a streamlet, happy in the sun,
To gladden all with beauty, so the gems
That thickly fleck an old ancestral name
From time how distant, centre in the soul
Of her who comes this day with loving
smile
To crown a husband with such wealth of
worth
As ’tis her own to give. Thrice
happy pair!
May cloudlets never dim the arc of light
That should engirdle all their lives,
and make
Their home a paradise. If such should
come,
May they be transient as a summer cloud
That mars but for a moment, yet to make
The sky more beautiful. May truest
Love
Be with them ever, garnishing their lives
With bliss perpetual, and lighting up
Their footsteps o’er the earth,
as when, of old,
God’s angels walked with men.
So shall they live
A life which loving hearts alone may know.
IMPROMPTU:
ON THE DEATH OF MR. THOMAS KNEATH, A WELL-KNOWN
TEACHER OF NAVIGATION, AT SWANSEA.
He pupils taught to brave the gale
Secure on life’s tempestuous
sea;
Then, pupil he of Death, set sail
To navigate Eternity.
The students taught by him return
In safety to their friends
ashore;
But tutor Death, so cold and stern,
Brings back his pupils never-more.
EXTRACTS FROM SOME UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPT
HUMILITY OPPRESSED.
Blame
not the world:
But blame its law that makes it crime
akin
To be of lowly birth to lack
the gold
Whereby to coat the mask to cheat the
world
Of sterling merit. See yon beauteous
fly
Breaking its plumage ’gainst the
glassy pane,
Till spent and weary, yearning tow’rds
the sun.
E’en so the lowly-born but large
of soul
See not, but feel, the chilling barrier
Set up by Pride to mar their sky-ward
flight
To liberty and life.
UPWARD STRIVINGS.
See, when the simple moth doth blindly
rush
To reach the flame, its life oft pays
the debt
Of folly. Yet ’tis nobler
thus to die
Midst all the brightness of a waking life,
Than from the world ooze out through darkened
ways
By beggarly instalments none
to feel
Thy life but thine own poor ignoble self:
And none to tell the moment of thy death
Save those who profit by it.
TRUTHFULNESS.
Ne’er seek, by artful guise of words,
to taint
The truth with falsehood’s hue.
Poor, trembling Truth!
Trust in her would be boundless, if our
tongues
Uttered the coin as fashioned in the heart.
And then poor Heart would have no need
to send
Her champion blushes to the cheeks to
tell
The world how basely she had been traduced.
LOVE’S INFLUENCE.
O
love sublime!
How thy sweet influence agitates the soul,
Voicing its hidden chords, as breathing
winds
Wake the rude harp to thrilling melody.
All things must pass away; but love shall
live
For ever. ‘Tis th’ immortal
soul of life.
Scathless and beauteous midst th’
incongruous mass
Of desolated hearts and stricken souls,
And spirits faintful ’neath a world
of woe,
And dusky millions in the mine of life;
And all the rank corruption of the earth
Its weeds, its thorns, its sadness-breeding
hate;
Its selfishness, its swallow-pinioned
friends;
Its rottenness of core and lack of truth:
When all have changed, save Nature and
itself,
This Heaven-sent flow’r of Eden peerless
love
Shall blossom in Evangel purity,
And sanctify a host to people Heaven.
VALUE OF ADVERSITY.
Friction with sorrow rubs perception keen;
And dear-bought knowledge makes us prophets
all.
MISGUIDING APPEARANCES.
What! Is the graveyard sod less
fresh and green
The daisies there less like the meadow
flow’r
Because pollution slumbers at their roots?
Judge not thou, then, by what appears
to be,
But what exacting Conscience tells thee
is.
VIRGIN PURITY.
As fair a soul as ever came from God,
And one more gentle never walkt the earth
In mortal guise. Of sweet external,
too:
Fresh as the wakening morn with violet
breath;
And every action, look, thought, word,
and trace,
Were strung to tuneful melody. Her
life
Was music’s echo stealing
o’er the soul
Like dying strains, soft and retiringly.
In childish grace to womanhood she grew,
And like the virgin lily stood and smiled
Flinging around the fragrance of herself
Unweeting of the blessings that she brought.
MAN’S DESTINY.
All human actions are ordained of God,
And for the common good: yet men
see not
The strings that keep earth’s puppets
on the move;
But whine and whimper wondering
at the ways
By which unlook’d-for ends are brought
about:
As blind imprisoned birds bruise out their
lives
Against the cruel bars they cannot see.
LOVE’S INCONGRUITIES.
Experience tells the world it were as
mad
To link the Present with the sluggish
Past,
As wed the ways of winsome, wanton youth,
To lean and laggard age. I pitied
her:
Made her the mistress of my countless
wealth
Loving with doting and uxorious love.
And the ripe graces of her radiant mind
Shone out resplendent. But my withered
life
Woke to her love with sere and sickly
hope;
As some departed June, won with the sighs
Of waning Winter, turns and spends a day
For very pity with the lonely eld,
Who greets her sunny visit with a glance
Of cold inanity, and strives to smile.
O had I known this little hour of time
When life was young or knew
it not at all!
Then my heart’s buoyance, at such
love as her’s,
Had blossom’d brightly as
the merry May
Skips from the golden South with balmy
breath,
Breathing upon the dark and thorn-clad
fields,
Till fragrant buds peep out like love-lit
eyes,
And hedges redden as she walks along.
As these her love and mine.
But now alas!
RETRIBUTION.
O that the wretchedness entailed by sin
Might form the prelude not
the after-piece.
How few there are would brave the hurricane:
How few the crimes mankind would have
to count.
LOVE’S MUTABILITY.
My
heart is dark again.
My tree of life but yestermorn was flusht
With golden fruit: to-day it creaks
in pain,
And wintry winds moan through its leafless
boughs.
Time, some hours younger, saw me clasp
the sky
Of hope with radiant brow: the plodding
churl
May see me now go stumbling in the dark,
And blindly groping for the hand of Death
To lead me hence. O life!
O world! O woman!
A MOTHER’S ADVICE.
Mother. Clarence, my
darling boy, The world to which thou yearn’st
is grey with crime; And glittering Vice will bask
before thy face, As serpents lie in sedgy, o’ergrown
grass, In glossy beauty, whilst Life’s potent
glance Will thrall thy soul as with a spirit-spell:
But hold thy heart, a chalice for the Good And
Beautiful to crush, with pearly hands, The mellow
draught which purifies the thought, And lights the
soul. Thirst after knowledge, child. Thy
face shall shine, then, brightly as a king’s,
As did the prophets’ in the olden time When
holding converse with the living God. As rain-drops
falling from the sky above Upon the mountain-peak
remain not there, But hasten down to voice the simple
rill, So knowledge, born of God, should be attained
By peasant as by peer by king or slave.
Have faith large faith. Some of
life’s mightiest great Have peered out, like
the moon from frowning hills, Then ventured forth,
and walkt their splendour’d night In pale,
cold majesty; while some have dasht On sun-steeds
through the ocean of the world, As comets plough
the shoreless sea of stars, Blinding old Earth with
wreaths of splendid foam And sparkling sprays:
others have strode the world Like a Colossus, and
the glory-light That streamed up from the far, far
end of time, Hath smote their lofty brows, and glinted
down Upon the world they shadowed: some have
lived And cleft their times with such a whistling
swoop That plodding minds seemed reeling ’tother
way Men who had suffering-purified their
souls To angel rarity, that they might scan, Like
old Elijah, e’en the throne of God, And live.
Clarence. Thy voice doth
marshal on my soul To battle, and to dream of noble
things. Thy golden words I’ll graft upon
my heart Like blossoms wedded to the granite rock.
But, Mother, weep not! Why should April tears
Come with the sunshine of thy voice?
Mother. Bless thee,
God bless thee, Clarence! May thy sorrows be
Light and evanescent as vapoury wreaths That fleck
the Summer blue. My dreams shall wing Their
way to thee, as moonbeams pierce the night. And
I will send my soul up in a cloud Of thought to
Heav’n, wreathed with a Mother’s prayer,
For thee. Farewell and be thou blest.
SUNRISE IN THE COUNTRY.
What a sweet atmosphere of melody
And coolness falls upon the troubled heart,
Like oil upon the wave. Dance on dance
on
Ye couriers of the sun full-throated
choir;
And sky-ward fling your sobbing psalmody
A sunrise offering to the coming day.
On on: still higher!
Still rolls the torrent down,
Bearing the soul up in a cloud of sprays,
The world seems deluged with a golden
shower:
Myriads of larks trill out their morning
psalm,
As though the stars were changed to silver
bells
Timbrelling forth their sweet melodious
bursts
In joyous welcome of the maiden Morn.
FAITH IN LOVE.
Man’s
faith in woman’s love
Is all the darken’d earth can boast
of Heaven.
That faith destroyed farewell
to happiness,
And joy, and worldly hope, and all that
goes
To deify mankind.
UNREQUITED AFFECTION.
She
was a simple cottage-girl,
But lovely as a poet’s richest thought
Of woman’s beauty and
as false as fair.
I’ve writhed beneath the witchery
of her voice
As cornfields palpitate beneath the breeze
Have sued with praying hands lavished
my life
Upon her image, as the bright stars pour
Their trembling splendours on the cold-heart
lake
Wounded my manliness upon the rock
Of her too fatal beauty, like a storm
That twines with sobbing fondness round
the neck
Of some sky-kissing hill, bursts in his
love,
Then slowly droops and flows about her
feet
A puling streamlet, whilst
a gilded cloud
Is toying with the brow of his Beloved!
’Twas gold that sear’d the
love-bud of her heart;
To bitter ashes turned my life’s
sweet fruit;
And sent my soul adrift upon the world
A wandering, worthless wreck.
THE POET’S TROUBLES.
To be possess’d of passion’s
ecstasy
Outswelling from the heart; the teeming
brain
Afire with glowing light; as when the
sun
Catches the tall tree-tops with Summer
warmth,
And draws the trembling sap with impulse
sweet
Through every fibre up to th’ glory-crown;
To feel the breath of some rare influence
Of subtle life suck at the throbbing soul
As though into infinity to kiss
The yielding passion subtle as itself;
To see the hand of God in everything;
To hear His voice in every sound that
comes;
To long, and long, with passionate desire,
To speak the language which the dream
divine
Incessantly implies; to live and move
In Fancy’s heav’n yet
know that earth still holds
The fancy captive: these the daily
death
Of many minds that wrestle all in vain
’Gainst that which Heav’n
in cruel kindness sends
To teach mankind humility. Ah, me!
The pow’r to feel the touch of Paradise
And to enjoy it not as hungering
men
Have died ere now, gazing upon the food
By heartless gaolers placed beyond their
reach.
ECHOES FROM THE CITY.
The
modern Babylon
Sleeps like a serpent coil’d up
at my feet.
London huge model of the great
round earth,
The teeming birthplace and the mausoleum
Of millions; where dark graves and drawing-rooms
Gaze from each other into each; where
flow’rs
Of blushing life droop in the grasp of
Vice
Like blossoms in the fingers of a corpse;
Where cank’rous gold sways, millions
with a nod
To abject slavery, buying men up
As toys for knaves to play with in the
game
Of life; where Truth is kicked from foot
to foot,
Till in bewilderment she cries aloud
And swears to save her life she is a lie;
Where Love and Hate, in masquerading guise,
Pell-mell dance on; chameleon Charity,
In all its varying phases, crawls along
Now shrinking up dark courts in russet
tint,
And then, in bold and gaudy colours dresst
Which publish trumpet-tongued its whereabouts,
It takes a garish stand before the world
And calls itself an angel. Thus
for aye
For ever, rolls the dark and turbid stream
In feverish unrest.
LOVE’S WILES.
When Beauty smiles upon thee have
a care.
Kingdoms ere this have hinged upon a kiss
From woman’s lips: and smiles
have won a crown.
Glances from bright eyes of a gentle maid,
Whose cheeks would redden at a mouse’s
glance,
Have hearts befool’d that in their
noble strength
Had shaken Kingdoms down. Have thou
a care.
HAZARD IN LOVE.
My sorrowing heart is like the blasted
oak
That claspt the dazzling lightning to
its breast,
Yielding its life up to the burning kiss.
Springs came along and fondled all in
vain,
And Summers toy’d with warm and
am’rous breath;
But nought in life could e’er again
restore
The greening foliage of its early days.
Man never loves but once then
’tis a cast
For life or death. If death alas
the day!
If life ’twere perfect
Paradise.
A MOTHER’S LOVE.
And friends fell from me all,
save God, and one
Beside and she my mother gentle,
true.
As the bleak wind sweeps o’er the
trembling limbs
Of some fair tree denuded of its dress,
How oft is seen, upon the topmost spray,
One lonely leaf, which braves the passing
storm
Of Winter, and when gladsome Spring arrives,
And blossoms bloom in beauty all around,
It bends its brow and silent falls away.
So droopt that friend, who, through the
livelong day
Of icy cold that chill’d my inmost
life,
Sat like a bird upon the outside branch,
And sweetly sang me songs of coming Spring.
“THE SHADOW OF THE CROSS.”
’Tis everywhere! The babe
that sees with pain
The look of feign’d displeasure
on the face
Of doting mother; and the mother who
Lays down the babe to rest no
more to wake;
The youth and maiden fair who tempt the
stream
Of love that never brings them to the
goal
Their fancy pictured; hearts that droop
and break:
Upon life’s thorny way; old age
that sees
Long-hoped for peace among the silent
dead
And deems it life to die. The shadow
falls
Athwart the sunny hopes of every heart,
And shadowy most when gentle arms extend
For love’s embrace, and find it
not as night
Is darkest near the dawn. Brighter
the flame
Of light celestial ’twixt which
and our hearts
The blessed Cross doth stand, sharper
the shade
That falls upon our lives, as greatest
gains
Involve the pains of great adventurings;
Or, nearer Death, nearer eternal Life.
CURATES AND COLLIERS
ON READING IN A COMIC PAPER VERY ABSURD COMPARISONS
BETWEEN THE WAGES OF CURATES AND COLLIERS.
If colliers were curates, and
curates were colliers,
I wonder what price the best
coal would be then;
Whether meat would be dearer, or Heaven
be nearer,
Or truth be less earnestly
preached among men.
I know that the incomes of curates are
slender;
But curates get luxuries colliers
ne’er see,
Which they don’t have to pay for,
nor work night and day for,
In mines dark and slushy on
back and bent knee.
Keep pulpits for curates but
pay them good stipends:
Keep mines for the colliers but
pay colliers well:
O, the Pit no detraction brings
Pulpit reaction,
For pulpits would sicken if
collieries fell.
Then go, sneering cynic write
nonsense and fiction
On champagne and velvet, on
satin and sin;
Though the joke may be able, ’tis
false as a fable,
And shows what a fog Fleet-street
sometimes gets in.
WANTED: A WIFE
A VOICE FROM THE LADIES.
Being a reply to “M. C.
D.,” who advertised in a Swansea Newspaper for
a wife, 1856.
Deputed by some lady friends,
Who think, with me, when ought offends,
’Tis best to have it out at once,
Not nurse your wrath like moping dunce,
I venture forth (now don’t
be hard,
And sneer, “Dear me, a female bard!”
I’m not the only Bard that’s
seen
Inditing verse in crinoline. (a)
I say deputed by a few
Young ladies: ’tis no matter
who:
I come (of vict’ry little
chance)
With “M. C. D.” to break
a lance;
To intimate our great surprise
To hear ourselves called merchandise,
To be obtained (there’s
no disguising
The fact) obtained by advertising!
Obtained for better or for worse,
Just like a pony, pig, or horse.
And now, Sir, Mister “M. C.
D.,”
Pray, tell us, whomso’er you be,
D’ye think a lady’s heart
you’ll gain
By such a process? O how vain!
(a) These monstrosities I
mean the balloons, not the bards are
now out of date thank goodness!
With us, we hold in blank disgrace
The man who fears to show his face.
A tim’rous heart we all despise:
But we adore the flashing eyes,
The manly form the lofty hand;
The soul created to command.
Love comes to us, no bidden guest,
For him who loves and rules us best.
The rosy god lights not his taper
For him who, in a trading paper,
Behind a printed notice screens,
And fears to tell us what he means.
Why don’t he to the busy marts
Come forth and seige our tender hearts?
’Tis wrong to buy pigs in a poke:
To wed so what a silly joke!
In promenade, church, or bazaar,
At proper moments, there we are,
To be secured by manly hearts,
And, when secured, to do our parts
To temper life with him we love,
And woman’s fondest instincts prove;
To yield submission to his will,
And, faulty though, to love him still.
Then “M. C. D.”
I pray refrain:
By means like these no wife you’ll
gain:
If you’ve no manlier mode to try,
We’ll single live, and single die.
FRAGMENTS AND TRIFLES
SYMPATHY.
A Wit, reduced in means, in Market-place
Hawk’d buns all hot. A chum,
with sorrowing face,
Came up condoled: the
Wit exclaimed “Have done!
“Your sympathy be bothered BUY
A BUN!”
A FRAGMENT.
Once on a time a grimy sweep
Was creeping down the street,
When Quartern Loaf, the biker’s
boy,
Below he chanced to meet:
“Sweep!” sneered the baker:
and the sweep
Gave Puff a sooty flout;
But Puff-crumb did not deal in soot,
So turned his face about;
Nor did he care to soundly drub
The imp of dirty flues:
“Go change your clothes!”
said he, “and then
“I’ll thrash you
when you choose!
“It will not do for me to fight
“With such a sooty elf;
“My jacket’s white, ’twould
soon be black
“By tussling with yourself!”
LAW VERSUS THEOLOGY:
ON AN EMINENT COUNTY COURT JUDGE.
Some pulpit preachers think so very deep
That drowsy listeners find themselves
asleep;
But the deep-thoughted law which
teaches
Makes “wide awake” all those
to whom he preaches.
THE BROKEN MODEL:
TO ONE WHO WELL DESERVED THE STRICTURES WHICH
THESE LINES CONTAIN.
When Nature saw she’d made a perfect
man
She broke the mould and threw
away the pieces,
Which being found by Satan, he began
And stuck the bits together hence
the creases,
The twists, the crooked botches, that
we find
Sad counterfeits of Nature’s
perfect moulding;
Hearts wrongly placed a topsy-turvy
mind
Things that deserve the scorn
of all beholding.
It needs no oracle in Delphic shade
To name the model from which thou
wert made.
IMPROMPTU:
ON AN INVETERATE SPOUTER.
If wealth of words men wealth of wisdom
call’d,
And measured Genius by the way she bawled,
Then would be the
head of all the crew,
The King of Genius and of Wisdom too.
A CHARACTER
In childhood spoilt: a misery at
school;
In wooing, what you might expect a
fool.
In small things honest, and in great a
knave;
At home a tyrant, and abroad a slave.
COUPLET:
ON A PAUPER WHOSE WEALTH GREW FASTER
THAN HIS MANNERS.
Paupers grown rich forget what once they’ve
been,
Though, born a pig the snout is always
seen.
PAUSE!
ON THE HESITATION OF THE CZAR TO FORCE A PASSAGE
OF THE DANUBE, JUNE, 1877.
Aye hesitate! “Soldiers
who stop to think
Are lost.” So
said a soldier (a) ere he died:
Lost, then, art thou thus shivering
on the brink.
Death was thy father’s
cure for humbled pride!
(a) Wellington.
THE TEST OF THE STICK
Mick Malone on the tramp, weary, dusty,
and warm,
Thought a pint of good ale wouldn’t
do him much harm;
But before he indulged just
for Conscience’s sake
He thought he’d the views of Authority
take.
So poising his stick on the ground so
they say,
He resolved on the beer if it fell the
beer way;
If it went the contrary direction why
then
He’d his coppers retain, and trudge
onward again.
The shillalegh, not thirsty, went wrong
way for Mick,
Who again and again tried the Test of
the Stick,
Till, worn out with refusing, the sprig
tumbled right:
“Bring a pint!” sang out Pat,
which he drank with delight;
And smacking his lips as he finished his
beer,
Cried “Success, Mick,
me boy! always persevere!”