The hymn-book.
Almost the first decided taste
in my life was the love of hymns. Committing
them to memory was as natural to me as breathing.
I followed my mother about with the hymn-book ("Watts’
and Select"), reading or repeating them to her, while
she was busy with her baking or ironing, and she was
always a willing listener. She was fond of devotional
reading, but had little time for it, and it pleased
her to know that so small a child as I really cared
for the hymns she loved.
I learned most of them at meeting.
I was told to listen to the minister; but as I did
not understand a word he was saying, I gave it up,
and took refuge in the hymn-book, with the conscientious
purpose of trying to sit still. I turned the
leaves over as noiselessly as possible, to avoid the
dreaded reproof of my mother’s keen blue eyes;
and sometimes I learned two or three hymns in a forenoon
or an afternoon. Finding it so easy, I thought
I would begin at the beginning, and learn the whole.
There were about a thousand of them included in the
Psalms, the First, Second, and Third Books, and the
Select Hymns. But I had learned to read before
I had any knowledge of counting up numbers, and so
was blissfully ignorant of the magnitude of my undertaking.
I did not, I think, change my resolution because there
were so many, but because, little as I was, I discovered
that there were hymns and hymns. Some of them
were so prosy that the words would not stay in my
memory at all, so I concluded that I would learn only
those I liked.
I had various reasons for my preferences.
With some, I was caught by a melodious echo, or a
sonorous ring; with others by the hint of a picture,
or a story, or by some sacred suggestion that attracted
me, I knew not why. Of some I was fond just because
I misunderstood them; and of these I made a free version
in my mind, as I murmured them over. One of my
first favorites was certainly rather a singular choice
for a child of three or four years. I had no
idea of its meaning, but made up a little story out
of it, with myself as the heroine. It began with
the words
“Come, humble sinner, in whose breast
A thousand thoughts revolve.”
The second stanza read thus:
“I’ll go to Jesus, though
my sin
Hath like a mountain rose.”
I did not know that this last line
was bad grammar, but thought that the sin in question
was something pretty, that looked “like a mountain
rose.” Mountains I had never seen; they
were a glorious dream to me. And a rose that
grew on a mountain must surely be prettier than any
of our red wild roses on the hill, sweet as they were.
I would pluck that rose, and carry it up the mountain-side
into the temple where the King sat, and would give
it to Him; and then He would touch me with his sceptre,
and let me through into a garden full of flowers.
There was no garden in the hymn; I suppose the “rose”
made me invent one. But it did read
“I know his courts; I’ll enter
in,
Whatever may oppose;”
and so I fancied there would be lions
in the way, as there were in the Pilgrim’s,
at the “House Beautiful”; but I should
not be afraid of them; they would no doubt be chained.
The last verse began with the lines,
“I can but perish if I go:
I am resolved to try:”
and my heart beat a brave echo to
the words, as I started off in fancy on a “Pilgrim’s
Progress” of my own, a happy little dreamer,
telling nobody the secret of my imaginary journey,
taken in sermon-time.
Usually, the hymns for which I cared
most suggested Nature in some way, flowers,
trees, skies, and stars. When I repeated,
“There everlasting spring abides,
And never-withering flowers,”
I thought of the faintly flushed anémones
and white and blue violets, the dear little short-lived
children of our shivering spring. They also would
surely be found in that heavenly land, blooming on
through the cloudless, endless year. And I seemed
to smell the spiciness of bay berry and sweet-fern
and wild roses and meadow-sweet that grew in fragrant
jungles up and down the hillside back of the meeting-house,
in another verse which I dearly loved:
“The hill of Zion yields
A thousand sacred sweet,
Before we reach the heavenly fields,
Or walk the golden streets.”
We were allowed to take a little nosegay
to meeting sometimes: a pink or two (pinks were
pink then, not red, nor white, nor even double) and
a sprig of camomile; and their blended perfume still
seems to be a part of the June Sabbath mornings long
passed away.
When the choir sang of
“Seas of heavenly rest,”
a breath of salt wind came in with
the words through the open door, from the sheltered
waters of the bay, so softly blue and so lovely, I
always wondered how a world could be beautiful where
“there was no more sea.” I concluded
that the hymn and the text could not really contradict
other; that there must be something like the sea in
heaven, after all. One stanza that I used to
croon over, gave me the feeling of being rocked in
a boat on a strange and beautiful ocean, from whose
far-off shores the sunrise beckoned:
“At anchor laid, remote from home,
Toiling I cry, Sweet Spirit, come!
Celestial breeze, no longer stay!
But spread my sails, and speed my way!”
Some of the chosen hymns of my infancy
the world recognizes among its noblest treasures of
sacred song. That one of Doddridge’s, beginning
with
“Ye golden lamps of heaven, farewell!”
made me feel as if I had just been
gazing in at some window of the “many mansions”
above:
“Ye stars are but the shining dust
Of my divine abode-”
Had I not known that, ever since I
was a baby? But the light does not stream down
even into a baby’s soul with equal brightness
all the time. Earth draws her dark curtains too
soon over the windows of heaven, and the little children
fall asleep in her dim rooms, and forget their visions.
That majestic hymn of Cowper’s,
“God moves in a mysterious way,”
was one of my first and dearest.
It reminded me of the rolling of thunder through the
sky; and, understood as little as the thunder itself,
which my mother told me was God’s voice, so that
I bent my ear and listened, expecting to hear it shaped
into words, it still did give me an idea of the presence
of One Infinite Being, that thrilled me with reverent
awe. And this was one of the best lessons taught
in the Puritan school, the lesson of reverence,
the certainty that life meant looking up to something,
to Some One greater than ourselves, to a Life far
above us, which yet enfolded ours.
The thought of God, when He was first
spoken of to me, seemed as natural as the thought
of my father and mother. That He should be invisible
did not seem strange, for I could not with my eyes
see through the sky, beyond which I supposed he lived.
But it was easy to believe that He could look down
and see me, and that He knew all about me. We
were taught very early to say “Thou, God, seest
me”; and it was one of my favorite texts.
Heaven seemed nearer, because somebody I loved was
up there looking at me. A baby is not afraid of
its father’s eyes.
The first real unhappiness I remember
to have felt was when some one told me, one day, that
I did not love God. I insisted, almost tearfully,
that I did; but I was told that if I did truly love
Him I should always be good. I knew I was not
that, and the feeling of sudden orphanage came over
me like a bewildering cloud. Yet I was sure that
I loved my father and mother, even when I was naughty,
Was He harder to please than they?
Then I heard of a dreadful dark Somewhere,
the horror of which was that it was away from Him.
What if I should wake some morning, and find myself
there? Sometimes I did not dare to go to sleep
for that dread. And the thought was too awful
to speak of to anybody. Baby that I was, I shut
my lips in a sort of reckless despair, and thought
that if I could not be good, I might as well be naughty,
and enjoy it. But somehow I could not enjoy it.
I felt sorry and ashamed and degraded whenever I knew
that I had been cross or selfish.
I heard them talk about Jesus as if
He were a dead man, one who died a great while ago,
whose death made a great difference to us, I could
not understand how. It seemed like a lovely story,
the loveliest in the world, but it sounded as if it
were only a story, even to those who repeated it to
me; something that had happened far away in the past.
But one day a strange minister came
into the Sabbath-school in our little chapel, and
spoke to us children about Him, oh! so differently!
“Children,” he said, “Jesus
is not dead. He is alive: He loves you, and
wants you to love Him! He is your best Friend,
and He will show you how to be good.”
My heart beat fast. I could hardly
keep back the tears. The New Testament, then,
did really mean what it said! Jesus said He would
come back again, and would always be with those who
loved Him.
“He is alive! He loves
me! He will tell me how to be good!” I said
it over to myself, but not to anybody else. I
was sure that I loved Him. It was like a beautiful
secret between us two. I felt Him so alive and
so near! He wanted me to be good, and I could
be, I would be, for his sake.
That stranger never knew how his loving
word had touched a child’s heart. The doors
of the Father’s house were opened wide again,
by the only hand that holds the key. The world
was all bright and fresh once more. It was as
if the May sun had suddenly wakened the flowers in
an overshadowed wayside nook.
I tried long afterward, thinking that
it was my duty, to build up a wall of difficult doctrines
over my spring blossoms, as if they needed protection.
But the sweet light was never wholly stifled out, though
I did not always keep my face turned towards it:
and I know now, that just to let his lifegiving smile
shine into the soul is better than any of the theories
we can invent about Him; and that only so can young
or old receive the kingdom of God as a little child.
I believe that one great reason for
a child’s love of hymns, such as mine was, is
that they are either addressed to a Person, to the
Divine Person, or they bring Him before
the mind in some distinct way, instead of being written
upon a subject, like a sermon. To make Him real
is the only way to make our own spirits real to ourselves.
I think more gratefully now of the
verses I learned from the Bible and the Hymn-Book
than of almost anything that came to me in that time
of beginnings. The whole Hymn-Book was not for
me then, any more than the whole Bible. I took
from both only what really belonged to me. To
be among those who found in the true sources of faith
and adoration, was like breathing in my native air,
though I could not tell anything about the land from
which I had come. Much that was put in the way
of us children to climb by, we could only stumble
over; but around and above the roughnesses of the
road, the pure atmosphere of worship was felt everywhere,
the healthiest atmosphere for a child’s soul
to breathe in.
I had learned a great many hymns before
the family took any notice of it. When it came
to the knowledge of my most motherly sister Emilie, I
like to call her that, for she was as fond of early
rising as Chaucer’s heroine:
“Up rose the sun, and up rose Emilie;”
and it is her own name, with a very
slight change, she undertook to see how
many my small memory would contain. She promised
me a new book, when I should have learned fifty; and
that when I could repeat any one of a hundred hymns,
she would teach me to write. I earned the book
when I was about four years old. I think it was
a collection of some of Jane Taylor’s verses.
“For Infant Minds,” was part of the title.
I did not care for it, however, nearly so much as
I did for the old, thumb-worn “Watts’
and Select Hymns.” Before I was five I bad
gone beyond the stipulated hundred.
A proud and happy child I was, when
I was permitted to dip a goose quill into an inkstand,
and make written letters, instead of printing them
with a pencil on a slate.
My sister prepared a neat little writing-book
for me, and told me not to make a mark in it except
when she was near to tell me what to do. In my
self-sufficient impatience to get out of “pothooks
and trammels” into real letters and words I
disobeyed her injunction, and disfigured the pages
with numerous tell-tale blots. Then I hid the
book away under the garret eaves, and refused to bring
it to light again. I was not allowed to resume
my studies in penmanship for some months, in consequence.
But when I did learn to write, Emilie was my teacher,
and she made me take great pains with my p’s
and q’s.
It is always a mistake to cram a juvenile
mind. A precocious child is certainly as far
as possible from being an interesting one. Children
ought to be children, and nothing else. But I
am not sorry that I learned to read when so young,
because there were years of my childhood that came
after, when I had very little time for reading anything.
To learn hymns was not only a pastime,
but a pleasure which it would have been almost cruel
to deprive me of. It did not seem to me as if
I learned them, but as if they just gave themselves
to me while I read them over; as if they, and the
unseen things they sang about, became a part of me.
Some of the old hymns did seem to
lend us wings, so full were they of aspiration and
hope and courage. To a little child, reading them
or hearing them sung was like being caught up in a
strong man’s arms, to gaze upon some wonderful
landscape. These climbing and flying hymns, how
well I remember them, although they were among the
first I learned! They are of the kind that can
never wear out. We all know them by their first
lines,
“Awake, our souls! away, our fears!”
“Up to the hills I lift mine eyes.”
“There is a land of pure delight.”
“Rise, my soul, and stretch thy
wings,
Thy better portion trace!”
How the meeting-house rafters used
to ring to that last hymn, sung to the tune of “Amsterdam!”
Sometimes it seemed as if the very roof was lifted
off, nay, the roof of the sky itself as
if the music had burst an entrance for our souls into
the heaven of heavens.
I loved to learn the glad hymns, and
there were scores of them. They come flocking
back through the years, like birds that are full of
the music of an immortal spring!
“Come, let us join our cheerful
songs
With angels round the throne.”
“Love divine, all love excelling;
Joy of heaven, to earth come down.”
“Joy to the world! the Lord is come!”
“Hark! the song of jubilee,
Loud as mighty thunders’ roar,
Or the fullness of the sea
When it breaks upon the shore!
“Hallelujah! for the Lord
God Omnipotent shall reign!
Hallelujah! let the word
Echo round the earth and main.”
Ah, that word “Hallelujah!”
It seemed to express all the joy of spring mornings
and clear sunshine and bursting blossoms, blended with
all that I guessed of the songs of angels, and with
all that I had heard and believed, in my fledgling
soul, of the glorious One who was born in a manger
and died on a cross, that He might reign in human hearts
as a king. I wondered why the people did not
sing “Hallelujah” more. It seemed
like a word sent straight down to us out of heaven.
I did not like to learn the sorrowful
hymns, though I did it when they were given to me
as a task, such as
“Hark, from the tombs,” and
“Lord, what a wretched land is this,
That yields us no supply.”
I suppose that these mournful strains
had their place, but sometimes the transition was
too sudden, from the outside of the meeting-house to
the inside; from the sunshine and bobolinks and buttercups
of the merry May-day world, to the sad strains that
chanted of “this barren land,” this “vale
of tears,” this “wilderness” of distress
and woe. It let us light-hearted children too
quickly down from the higher key of mirth to which
our careless thoughts were pitched. We knew that
we were happy, and sorrow to us was unreal. But
somehow we did often get the impression that it was
our duty to try to be sorrowful; and that we could
not be entirely good, without being rather miserable.
And I am afraid that in my critical
little mind I looked upon it as an affectation on
the part of the older people to speak of life in this
doleful way. I thought that they really knew better.
It seemed to me that it must be delightful to grow
up, and learn things, and do things, and be very good
indeed, better than children could possibly
know how to be. I knew afterwards that my elders
were sometimes, at least, sincere in their sadness;
for with many of them life must have been a hard struggle.
But when they shook their heads and said, “Child,
you will not be so happy by and by; you are seeing
your best days now,” I still doubted. I
was born with the blessing of a cheerful temperament;
and while that is not enough to sustain any of us through
the inevitable sorrows that all must share, it would
have been most unnatural and ungrateful in me to think
of earth as a dismal place, when everything without
and within was trying to tell me that this good and
beautiful world belongs to God.
I took exception to some verses in
many of the hymns that I loved the most. I had
my own mental reservations with regard even to that
glorious chant of the ages,
“Jerusalem, my happy home,
Name ever dear to me.”
I always wanted to skip one half of
the third stanza, as it stood in our Hymn-Book:
“Where congregations ne’er
break up,
And Sabbaths have no end.”
I did not want it to be Sabbath-day
always. I was conscious of a pleasure in the
thought of games and frolics and coming week-day delights
that would flit across my mind even when I was studying
my hymns, or trying to listen to the minister.
And I did want the congregation to break up some time.
Indeed, in those bright spring days, the last hymn
in the afternoon always sounded best, because with
it came the opening of doors into the outside air,
and the pouring in of a mingled scent of sea winds
and apple blossoms, like an invitation out into the
freedom of the beach, the hillsides, the fields and
gardens and orchards. In all this I felt as if
I were very wicked. I was afraid that I loved
earth better than I did heaven.
Nevertheless I always did welcome
that last hymn, announced to be sung “with the
Doxology,” usually in “long metre,”
to the tune of “Old Hundred.” There
were certain mysterious preliminaries, the
rustling of singing-book leaves, the sliding of the
short screen-curtains before the singers along by
their clinking rings, and now and then a premonitory
groan or squeak from bass-viol or violin, as if the
instruments were clearing their throats; and finally
the sudden uprising of that long row of heads in the
“singing-seats.”
My tallest and prettiest grown-up
sister, Louise, stood there among them, and of all
those girlish, blooming faces I thought hers the very
handsomest. But she did not open her lips wide
enough to satisfy me. I could not see that she
was singing at all.
To stand up there and be one of the
choir, seemed to me very little short of promotion
to the ranks of cherubim and seraphim. I quite
envied that tall, pretty sister of mine. I was
sure that I should open my mouth wide, if I could
only be in her place. Alas! the years proved
that, much as I loved the hymns, there was no music
in me to give them voice, except to very indulgent
ears.
Some of us must wait for the best
human gifts until we come to heavenly places.
Our natural desire for musical utterance is perhaps
a prophecy that in a perfect world we shall all know
how to sing. But it is something to feel music,
if we cannot make it. That, in itself, is a kind
of unconscious singing.
As I think back to my childhood, it
seems to me as if the air was full of hymns, as it
was of the fragrance of clover-blossoms, and the songs
of bluebirds and robins, and the deep undertone of
the sea. And the purity, the calmness, and the
coolness of the dear old Sabbath days seems lingering
yet in the words of those familiar hymns, whenever
I bear them sung. Their melody penetrates deep
into my life, assuming me that I have not left the
green pastures and the still waters of my childhood
very far behind me.
There is something at the heart of
a true song or hymn which keeps the heart young that
listens. It is like a breeze from the eternal
hills; like the west wind of spring, never by a breath
less balmy and clear for having poured life into the
old generations of earth for thousands of years; a
spiritual freshness, which has nothing to do with time
or decay.