Dedication
To F. L. P.
As one who wanders in a lonely land,
Through all the blackness of a stormy
night,
Now stumbling here, now falling there
outright,
And doubts if it be worse to stir or stand,
Not knowing what abysses yawn at hand,
What torrents roar beyond some beetling
height;
Yet scales the top to find the dawn in
sight,
And Earth kissed into radiance with its
wand:
So, wandering hopeless in the darkness,
I,
Scarce recking whither led my painful
way,
Or whether I should faint or strive to
prove
If ’yond the mountain-top some path
might lie,
Climbed boldly up the steep, and lo! the
Day
Broke into pearl and splendor in thy love.
The coast of Bohemia
There is a land not charted on all charts;
Though many mariners have touched its
coast,
Who far adventuring in those distant parts,
Meet ship-wreck there and are forever
lost;
Or if they e’er return, are soon
once more
Borne far away by hunger for that magic
shore.
Its mystic mountains on the horizon piled,
Some mariners have glimpsed when driven
far
Out of life’s measured course by
tempests wild,
Or lured therefrom by the erratic star
They chose as pilot, till their errant
guide
Drew them resistlessly within its witching
tide.
For oft, they tell, who know its sapphire
strand
The golden haze enfolding it hangs low,
And those who careless steer may miss
the land,
Embosomed in the sunset’s purple
glow,
Its lights mistaken for the evening stars,
Its music for the surf-beat on its golden
bars.
Young Jason found it when he dauntless
sought
The golden fleece by Colchis’ perilous
stream,
And in his track full many an argonaut
Hath found the rare fleece of his golden
dream,
And at the last, Ulysses-like, surcease
From Sorrow’s dole and Labor’s
heavy prease.
One voyager charted it for every age,
From azure rim to starry mountain core.
A nameless player on the World’s
great stage,
He spread his sails, adventured to that
shore
And reared a pharos with his art sublime,
Like Ilion’s song-wrought towers,
to beacon every clime.
The great adventurers reached it when
they brake
Columbus-led into the unknown West,
And those who followed in their shining
wake,
But left no trace of where their keels
have pressed;
Yet have through stress of storm and tempests’
rage
Won by his quenchless light a happy anchorage.
There rest the heroes of lost causes lorn,
On their calm brows more fadeless chaplets
far
Than all their conquerors’ could
e’er adorn,
When shone effulgent Fame’s ascendant
star;
There fallen patriots reap the glorious
prize
Of deathless memory of their precious
sacrifice.
There many a dream-faced maid and matron
dwells,
From Argive Helen on through gliding time;
There drink the poets draughts from crystal
wells,
And choir high music to their harps sublime:
And there the great philosophers discourse
Divine Philosophy in due and tranquil
course.
There not alone the great and lofty sing;
But silent poets too find there the song
They only sang in dreams when wandering
Amazed and lost amid the earthly throng;
Their hearts unfettered all from worldly
fears.
Attuned to meet the spacious music of
the spheres:
Gray, wrinkled men, the sea-salt in their
hair,
Their eyes set deep with peering through
the gloom,
Their voices low with speaking ever, where
The surges break beneath the mountains’
loom;
But deep within their yearning, burning
eyes
The light reflected ever from those radiant
skies.
There fadeless Youth, unknowing of annoy,
Walks aye with changeless Love; and Sorrow
there
Is but a memory to hallow Joy,
With chastened Happiness so deep and rare,
Well-nigh the Heart aches with its rich
content,
And Hope with full fruition evermore is
blent.
Constant Penelope, her web complete,
Rests there content at last and smiling
down
On worn Ulysses basking at her feet;
Calm Beatrice wears joyously the crown
Bestowed by exiled Dante in his grief,
And Laura, kind, gives Petrarch’s
tuneful heart relief.
’Mid bloomy meadows laved by limpid
streams,
Repose the Muses and the Graces sweet;
There kiss we lips we only kissed in dreams
Meshed in the grosser world; and there
we meet
The fair and flower-like lost loves of
our Youth,
When unafraid we trod the ways with radiant
Truth.
Those who return have pressed alone the
coast;
But tell of some lost in that charmed
strond:
Aspiring souls who loving Honor most,
Have sought the crystal mountain-tops
beyond,
And striven upward, heedless of their
scars,
To where all paths lead ever to the shining
stars.
The voice of the sea
Thus spake to Man the thousand-throated
Sea;
Words which the stealing winds caught
from its lips:
Thou thinkest thee and thine, God’s
topmost crown.
But hearken unto me and humbly learn
How infinite thine insignificance.
Thou boastest of thine age thy
works thyself:
Thine oldest monuments of which thou prat’st
Were built but yesterday when measured
by
Yon snow-domed mountains of eternal rock:
The Earth, thy mother, from whose breast
thou draw’st,
The sweat-stained living which she wills
to give,
And in whose dust thine own must melt
again,
Was aged cycles ere thine earliest dawn;
But they to me are young: I gave
them birth.
Climb up those heaven-tipt peaks thy dizziest
height,
Thou there shalt read, graved deep, my
name and age;
Dig down thy deepest depth, shalt read
them still.
Before the mountains sprang, before the
Earth,
Thy cradle and thy tomb, was made, I was:
God called them forth from me, as thee
from Earth.
Thou burrow’st through a mountain,
here and there,
Work’st all thine engines, cutting
off a speck;
I wash their rock-foundations under; tear
Turret from turret, toppling thundering
down,
And crush their mightiest fragments into
sand:
Thou gravest with thy records slab and
spar,
And callest them memorials of thy Might;
Lo! not a stone exists, from yon black
cliff
To that small pebble at thy foot, but
bears
My signature graved there when Earth was
young,
To teach the mighty wonders of the Deep.
Thy deeds thyself are
what? A morning mist!
But I! I face the ages. Dost
not know
That as I gave the Earth to spread her
fair
And dew-washed body in the morning light,
So, still, ’t is I that keep her
fair and fresh?
That weave her robes and nightly diamond
them?
I fill her odorous bowers with perfumes
rare;
Strew field and forest with bee-haunted
stars;
I give the Morn pearl for her radiant
roof,
And Eve lend glory for her rosy dome;
I build the purple towers that hold the
West
And guard the passage of Retiring Day.
Thy frailest fabric far outlasts thyself:
The pyramids rise from the desert sands,
Their builders blown in dust about their
feet.
The winged bull looms mid an alien race,
Grim, silent, lone. But whither
went the King?
I cool the lambent air upon my breast,
And send the winds forth on mine embassies;
I offer all my body to the Sun,
And lade our caravans with merchandise,
To carry wealth and plenty to all climes.
Yon fleecy continents of floating snow,
That dwarf the mountains over which they
sail,
Are but my bales borne by my messengers,
To cheer and gladden every thirsty land.
The Arab by his palm-girt desert pool,
The Laplander above his frozen rill,
The Woodsman crouched beside his forest
brook,
The shepherd mirrored in his upland spring,
Drink of my cup in one great brotherhood.
’T is, nay, not man alone thou
art but one
Of all the myriads of life-holding things,
Brute, beast, bird, reptile, insect, thing
unnamed,
Whose souls find recreation in my breath:
Nay, not a tree, flower, sprig of grass
or weed,
But lives through me and hymns my praise
to God:
I feed, sustain, refresh and keep them
all:
Mirror and type of God that giveth life.
I sing as softly as a mother croons
Her drowsy babe to sleep upon her breast.
On quiet nights when all my winds are
laid,
I wile the stars down from their azure
home
To sink with golden footprints in my depths:
I show the silvered pathway to the moon,
All paved with gems the errant Pleiad
lost,
That night she strayed from her sisters
wan;
But I sing other times strains from that
song
Before whose awfulness my waters sank,
And at whose harmony the mountains rose,
I heard that morning when the breath of
God
Moved on my face, and said, Let there
be light!
I thrill and tremble since but at the
thought
Of that great wonder of that greatest
dawn,
When at God’s word the brooding
darkness rose,
Which veiled my face from all the birth
of things
And rolled far frighted from its resting-place,
To bide henceforth beyond Day’s
crystal walls,
While all the morning stars together sang,
And on the instant God stood full revealed!
Long roll at NAPOLEON’S
tomb
’Twas the marble crypt where the
Emperor lay,
His mighty marshals on either side,
Guarding his couch since the solemn day
France brought him home in her chastened
pride,
To sleep on her heart, from the sea-girt
cage
Where the Eagle pined and died in his
rage.
I thought of the long, red carnival
Death held in the track of his sword,
amain,
From Toulon’s bloom to the crimsoned
pall
He spread upon Waterloo’s ripened
grain;
I thought of the long black years of dread
When the nations quaked at his armies’
tread.
A-sudden above as the twilight fell
The deathly silence around was shocked
By the roll of a drum. At the throbbing
swell
The vaulted dome of the Heavens rocked,
Till it seemed that the mighty conqueror’s
soul
Was shaking the earth in that drum’s
long roll.
In the purple glooming the spell was wrought;
And forth from their tomb the legions
sprang:
A Cadmus-brood of a Master’s thought;
The long-roll beat and the bugles sang;
The tattered standards again unfurled,
And Napoleon once more bestrid the world.
I heard that instant the self-same drum
Which beat at his call when France arose
From her ashes and blood when he bade
her come
In Liberty’s name to face her foes;
I saw her invincible armies arise,
The light of Liberty in their eyes.
O’er Tyranny’s pyre her standards
flew;
I felt the thrill of the new-born life:
As cleansed from Terror, France the true,
Sprang forth rejoicing amid the strife,
As a woman rejoiceth travail-torn
At the living voice of her own first-born.
From the ruddy morning on Egypt’s
sands,
When her eagles rose in their terrible
flight
To stretch their shadow across the lands
Till it perished in Russia’s frozen
night,
When th’ insatiable conqueror’s
reckoning came
And his Empire melted away in flame:
When there at Moscow the Lord God spoke
And said, “Thine end is at hand:
prepare,”
As at Kadesh once, from amid the smoke,
To the prophet who led His People there;
“I set thee up, I will cast thee
down,
For that thou claimedst thyself the crown.
“Thine eyes have seen; but thou
shalt not stand
On the promised shore of a world set free;
The People shall pass alone to the Land
Of Promise and Light and Liberty:
Of Peace enthroned in a Nation’s
trust,
When thou and thy throne alike are dust.”
The princess’ progress
Across the dusky land
The Gracious Goddess, Spring,
In vernal robes arrayed,
Last night her royal progress made,
Scattering with lavish hand
Her fragrant blossoming.
Along the wold,
In spendthrift glee,
She strewed her gold
And gilded all the lea.
The dandelions’ yellow coin
Lie scattered in the tangled grass,
And buttercup and crocus join
To tell the way she chose to pass.
In lavish wealth the gleaming daffodil
Shines on the cloudy April hill,
And many a yellow marigold
Marks where her brazen chariot rolled;
The slender-necked narcissus bends
His dewy head, and leaning down,
Looks deep to find within a dew-drop’s
lens
A mirrowing pool where Love may drown.
No cranny deep nor nook
But felt her tender look;
No secret leafy place
But warmed before her face
And blossomed with her grace.
The woodland, sombre yesterday,
Hath in her presence donned a brave array,
And in a night grown gay.
Her purple cloak, all careless flung,
Upon the red-bud hung;
And on the forest trees,
Her richest laceries.
While sprinkled deep with dust of gold
The tender, flowery branches hold
Her verdant robe blown fold on fold.
Her queenly figure clad
In broidered raiment glad,
Complete and passing sweet,
Hath set the sylvan zéphyrs mad.
About her breathed rare odors sweet,
Of roses blowing neath her feet:
About her breathed sweet odors rare,
Of violets shaken from her hair,
As though unseen of mortal eyes,
She ’d jarred the gates of Paradise.
Her crystal horn in passing by she wound,
And at the witching sound,
As by the enchanter’s stroke,
The fields in music broke,
And every silent grove in melody awoke.
Responsive to her charmed lyre
The dewy-throated choir
Carol in every brake and brier,
And flood with golden song
The verdant reaches ranged along
Where drinking deep from fountains clear
Their inspiration,
They hymn their jubilation
That Spring again is here;
And all together sing
The Goddess of the Year,
The Spring: the gracious Spring.
Youth
I once might hear the fairies sing
Upon the feathery grass a-swing,
Or in the orchard’s blossoming:
Their melody so fine and clear,
One had to bend his ear to hear,
Or else the music well might pass
For zéphyrs whispering in the grass.
I once might see the fairies dance
A-circle in their meadow-haunts,
Soft-tapered by the new-moon’s glance:
Their airy feet in crystal shoon
Made twinklings neath the silver moon.
Such witchery, but that ’t was seen,
Might well have been the dew-drops’
sheen.
I’ve wandered far yond summer seas,
Where Music dwells mid harmonies
That well the Seraphim might please;
But never more I catch, ah me!
The fairies’ silvery melody
Their crystal twinkling on the moonlit
lea.
America: Greeting
I have journeyed the spacious world over,
And here to thy sapphire wide gate,
America, I, thy True Lover
Return now, exalted, elate,
As an heir who returns to recover
His forefathers’ lofty estate.
I ’ve seen visions of castle
and palace
Up-soaring to sun-flooded skies,
Where men have drunk deep of Death’s
chalice,
In infinite soul-agonies
Where Tyranny glutted her malice
And battened on Liberty’s cries.
Where splendor of palace and tower
Cried up unto God with men’s blood;
Where th’ emblems of Tyranny’s
Power
Imperial and brazen have stood,
With faggot and sword to devour,
And the rack scowling hard by God’s
Rood.
And now at thy fair, open portal,
I stand as I stood in my Youth,
Amazed at the vision immortal
Of naked and unashamed Truth:
The Truth that the Fathers have taught
all
Their children: their birth-right
in sooth.
I greet thee: thy purple, large reaches,
From the snow-mantled, spire-pointed pine,
To thy golden, long, low-lying beaches,
Awash with thy tropical brine,
And thine infinite bosom that teaches
How God hath made Freedom divine.
God dowered thee fair mid the Oceans:
He bulwarked thee strong with the seas,
That Man might preserve here the motions
He gave Freedom’s bold processes:
That Man in his loftiest devotions
Might serve Freedom’s altars in
Peace.
How crude then and rude then soever
Thy struggles to lift from the sod,
Thy Freedom is strong to dissever
The Shackles, the Yoke, and the Rod;
Thy Freedom is Mighty forever,
For men who kneel only to God.
Dawn
Who hath not heard in dusky summer dawns,
Ere winds Aurora’s horn, the dreamy
spell
Just rippled by some drowsy sentinel.
Who from his leafy outpost on the lawns
Chimes sleepily his call that all is well?
A moment pipes another silvery
note:
Aurora’s crystal wheels flash up
the sky;
The sentries cry the Dawn and joyously
Glad Welcome peals from every dewy throat,
And every leafy bough chimes melody.
So, in the gloom and silence of the night,
My heart in slumber steeped, unheeding
lay,
Not recking how the hours might fleet
away;
When on my Heavens dawned a radiant light,
And straight I wakened to a shining day.
The poet on AGRADINA
The spacious cities hummed with toil:
The monarch reared his towers to the skies;
Men delved the fruitful soil
And studied to be wise;
Along the highway’s rocky coil
The mailed legions rang;
Smiling unheeded ’mid the moil,
The Poet sang.
The glittering cities long are heaps:
The starry towers lie level with the plain;
The desert serpent sleeps
Where soared the marble fane;
The stealthy, bead-eyed lizard creeps
Where gleamed the tyrant’s throne;
The grandeur dark oblivion steeps:
The song sings on.
The shepherd of the
seas
From Raleigh’s Devon hills the misty
sea
Climbs ever westward till it meets the
sky,
And silently the white-fleeced ships go
by,
And mount and mount up the long azure
lea,
Peaceful as sheep at night that placidly
Climb the tall downs to quiet pastures
high,
Assured no foes dare lurk, no dangers
lie
Where still abides their shepherd’s
memory.
Well did men name him “Shepherd
of the Seas,”
Who knew so well his shepherd’s
watch to keep,
Driving the Spanish wolves with noble
rage:
Forsaking Pomp and Power and Beds-of-ease
To herd his mighty flock through every
Deep
And make of every sea their common pasturage.
Sleep
In memoriam: A. B. P.
Thou best of all: God’s choicest
blessing, Sleep;
Better than Earth can offer Wealth,
Power, Fame:
They change, decay; thou always
art the same;
Through all the years thy freshness thou
dost keep;
Over all lands thine even pinions sweep.
The sick, the worn, the blind,
the lone, the lame,
Hearing thy tranquil footsteps,
bless thy name;
Anguish is soothed, Sorrow forgets to
weep.
Thou ope’st the captive’s
cell and bid’st him roam;
Thou giv’st the hunted
refuge, free’st the slave,
Show’st the outcast
pity, call’st the exile home;
Beggar and king thine equal blessings
reap.
We for our loved ones Wealth,
Joy, Honors crave;
But God, He giveth his beloved Sleep.
To A lady at A spring
Long aeons since, in leafy woodlands sweet,
Diana, weary with the eager
chase,
Was wont to seek full oft
some trysting-place
Loved of her rosy train; some cool retreat
Of crystal springs, deep-verdured from
the heat
Of sultry noon, wherein each
subtle grace
Of snowy form and radiant
flower-face,
Narcissus-like, goddess and nymph might
greet.
Diana long hath fleeted ’yond the
main;
The founts which erst she
loved are all bereft;
No more ’mid violet-banks
her feet are set;
Silent her silvern bugle, fled her train;
One spot alone of all she
loved is left:
This poplar-shaded spring
is Goddess-haunted yet.
Unforgotten
Oh! do not think that thee I can forget:
Though all the Centuries should o’er
me roll
Though Space should spread more far than
Pole from Pole,
Or star from furthest star betwixt us;
yet,
I still would hold thee in my heart’s
core set:
More rare than rarest Queens whom Kings
extol
When Death hath throned them high above
regret.
Through endless Time when Memory the stone
Rolls back from silent years long sepulchred,
To call the Past forth from the sullen
tomb,
Howe’er far ’yond her voice
all else hath flown,
Shalt thou appear her living
summons heard
Fresh as Eternal Spring in all thy radiant
bloom.
The old Lion
“The WHELPS of the
Lion answer him”
The Old Lion stood in his lonely lair:
The sound of the hunting had broken his
rest:
He scowled to the Eastward: Tiger
and Bear
Were harrying his Jungle. He turned
to the west;
And sent through the murk and mist of
the night
A thunder that rumbled and rolled down
the trail;
And Tiger and Bear, the Quarry in sight,
Crouched low in the covert to cower and
quail;
For deep through the midnight like surf
on a shore,
Pealed Thunder in answer resounding with
ire.
The Hunters turn’d stricken:
they knew the dread roar:
The Whelp of the Lion was joining his
Sire.
The Dragon of the
seas
April, 1898
They say the Spanish ships are out
To seize the Spanish Main;
Reach down the volume, Boy, and read
The story o’er again:
How when the Spaniard had the might,
He drenched the Earth, like rain,
With Saxon blood and made it Death
To sail the Spanish Main.
With torch and steel; with stake and rack
He trampled out God’s Truce
Until Queen Bess her leashes slip’t
And let her sea-dogs loose.
God! how they sprang and how they tore!
The Gilberts, Hawkins, Drake!
Remember, Boy, they were your sires:
They made the Spaniard quake.
Dick Grenville with a single ship
Struck all the Spanish line:
One Devon knight to the Spanish Dons:
One ship to fifty and nine.
When Spain in San Ulloa’s Bay
Her sacred treaty broke,
Stout Hawkins fought his way through fire
And gave her stroke for stroke.
A bitter malt Spain brewed that day,
She drained it to the lees:
The thunder of her guns awoke
The Dragon of The Seas.
From coast to coast he ravaged far,
A scourge with flaming breath:
Where’er the Spaniard sailed his
ships,
Sailed Francis Drake and Death.
No coast was safe against his ire;
Secure no furthest shore;
The fairest day oft sank in fire
Before the Dragon’s roar.
He made th’ Atlantic surges red
Round every Spanish keel,
Piled Spanish decks with Spanish dead,
The noblest of Castile.
From Del Fuego’s beetling coast
To sleety Hebrides
He hounded down the Spanish host
And swept the flaming seas.
He fought till on Spain’s inmost
lakes
’Mid Orange bowers set,
La Mancha’s maidens feared to sail
Lest they the Dragon met.
King Philip, of his ravin’ reft,
Called for “the Pirate’s”
head;
The great Queen laughed his wrath to scorn
And knighted Drake instead.
And gave him ships and sent him forth
To sweep the Spanish Main,
For England and for England’s brood,
And sink the fleets of Spain.
And well he wrought his mighty work,
Till on that fatal day
He met his only conqueror,
In Nombre Dios Bay.
There in his shotted hammock swung
Amid the surges’ sweep,
He waits the look-out’s signal cry
Across the quiet deep,
And dreams of dark Ulloa’s bar,
And Spanish treachery,
And how he tracked Magellan far
Across the unknown sea.
But if Spain fire a single shot
Upon the Spanish Main,
She ’ll come to deem the Dragon
dead
Has waked to life again.
Note. It is related that King
Philip one day invited a lady to sail with him on
a lake, and she replied that she was afraid they might
meet “the Dragon.”
The bent monk
Ever along the way he goes,
With eyes cast down as in
despair,
And shoulders stooped with weight of woes
And lips from which unceasing flows
An agonized prayer.
His form is bent; his step is slow;
His hands with fasting long
are thin;
And wheresoe’er his footsteps go,
Men hear his muttered prayer and know
He weeps for deadly sin.
This monk was once the knightliest
Of knights who ever sat in
hall:
With wondrous might and beauty blest;
And whoso met him lance-in-rest
Had need on Christ to call.
Men say this monk with hair so hoar,
And eye where grief hath quenched
the flame,
Once loved a maiden fair and pure,
And for she would not wed him swore
He ’d bring her down
to Shame.
They say he wooed her long and well;
And splendid spoils both eve
and morn
Of song and tourney won, they tell,
He gave her till at last she fell,
Then drave her forth
with scorn.
The world was cold; her father’s
door
Was barred they
thus the tale repeat
Her name was heard in jousts no more;
And so, one day the river bore
And laid her at his feet.
Her brow was calm, the sunny hair
Lay tangled in the snowy breast,
And from the face all trace of care
And sin was cleansed away, and there
Shone only utter rest.
The old men say that when the wave
That burden brought, then
backward fled,
He stooped, no sign nor groan he gave,
As mourners by an open grave;
But fell as one struck dead.
He seemed, when from that swound he woke,
A man already touched by Death,
As when the stalwart forest oak,
Blasted beneath the lightning’s
stroke
Lives on, yet languisheth.
And ever since he tells his beads,
And sackcloth lieth next his
skin,
And nightly his frail body bleeds
With knotted cord that intercedes
With Christ for deadly sin.
For his own soul he hath no care,
By penance purged as if by
flame:
Men know that agonized prayer
He prays is for the maiden fair
Whom he brought down to Shame.
And still along the way he goes,
With eyes cast down as in
despair,
And shoulders stooped with weight of woes,
And lips from which forever flows
An agonized prayer.
The message
An ancient tome came to my hands:
A tale of love in other lands:
Writ by a Master so divine,
The Love seems ever mine and thine.
The volume opened at the place
That sings of sweet Francesca’s
grace:
How reading of Fair Guinevere
And Launcelot that long gone year,
Her eyes into her lover’s fell
And there was nothing more
to tell.
That day they op’ed that book no
more:
Thenceforth they read a deeper lore.
Beneath the passage so divine,
Some woman’s hand had traced a line,
And reverently upon the spot
Had laid a blue forget-me-not:
A message sent across the years,
Of Lovers’ sighs and Lovers’
tears:
A messenger left there to tell
They too had loved each other well.
The centuries had glided by
Since Love had heaved that tender sigh;
The tiny spray that spoke her trust,
Had like herself long turned to dust.
I felt a sudden sorrow stir
My heart across the years for her,
Who, reading how Francesca loved,
Had found her heart so deeply moved:
Who, hearing poor Francesca’s moan,
Had felt her sorrow as her own.
I hope where e ’er her grave may
be,
Forget-me-nots bloom constantly:
That somewhere in yon distant skies
He who is Love hath heard her sighs:
And her hath granted of His Grace,
Ever to see her Lover’s face.
The needle’s eye
They bade me come to the House of Prayer,
They said I should find my Saviour there:
I was wicked enough, God wot, at best,
And weary enough to covet rest.
I paused at th’ door with a timid
knock:
The People within were a silken flock
By their scowls of pride it was plain
to see
Salvation was not for the likes of me.
The Bishop was there in his lace and lawn,
And the cassocked priest, I
saw him yawn,
The rich and great and virtuous too,
Stood smug and contented each in his pew.
The music was grand, the service
fine,
The sermon was eloquent, nigh
divine.
The subject was, Pride and the Pharisee,
And the Publican, who was just like me.
I smote my breast in an empty pew,
But an usher came and looked me through
And bade me stand beside the door
In the space reserved for the mean and
poor.
I left the church in my rags and shame:
In the dark without, One called my name.
“They have turned me out as well,”
quoth He,
“Take thou my hand and come fare
with me.
“We may find the light by a narrow
gate,
The way is steep and rough and strait;
But none will look if your clothes be
poor,
When you come at last to my Father’s
door.”
I struggled on where ’er He led:
The blood ran down from His hand so red!
The blood ran down from His forehead torn.
“’Tis naught,” quoth
He, “but the prick of a thorn!”
“You bleed,” I cried, for
my heart ’gan quail.
“’Tis naught, ’tis naught
but the print of a nail.”
“You limp in pain and your feet
are sore.”
“Yea, yea,” quoth He, “for
the nails they were four.”
“You are weary and faint and bent,”
I cried.
“’Twas a load I bore up a
mountain side.”
“The way is steep, and I faint.”
But He:
“It was steeper far upon Calvary.”
By this we had come to a narrow door,
I had spied afar. It was locked
before;
But now in the presence of my Guide,
The fast-closed postern opened wide.
And forth there streamed a radiance
More bright than is the noon-sun’s
glance;
And harps and voices greeted Him
The music of the Seraphim.
I knew His face where the light did fall:
I had spat in it, in Herod’s Hall,
I knew those nail-prints now, ah, me!
I had helped to nail Him to a tree.
I fainting fell before His face,
Imploring pardon of His grace.
He stooped and silencing my moan,
He bore me near to His Father’s
throne.
He wrapt me close and hid my shame,
And touched my heart with a cleansing
flame.
“Rest here,” said He, “while
I go and try
To widen a little a Needle’s Eye.”
The closed door
Lord, is it Thou who knockest at my door?
I made it fast and ’t will not open
more;
Barred it so tight I scarce can hear Thy
knock,
And am too feeble now to turn the lock,
Clogged with my folly and my grievous
sin:
Put forth Thy might, O Lord, and burst
it in.
Convention
At the Judgment-bar stood spirits three:
A thief, a fool and a man of degree,
To whom spake the Judge in his Majesty.
To the shivering thief: “Thy
sins are forgiven,
For that to repent thou hast sometime
striven;
There be other penitent thieves in Heaven.”
To the fool: “Poor fool, thou
art free from sin;
To My light thou, too, mayest enter in,
Where Life and Thought shall for thee
begin.”
To the mirror of others, smug and neat,
With the thoughts and sayings of others
replete,
This Judgment rolled from the Judgment-seat:
“Remain thou thyself, a worm to
crawl.
Thou, doubly damned, canst not lower fall
Than ne’er to have thought for thyself
at all.”
The Magdalen
He flaunted recklessly along,
With hollow laugh and mocking song;
In tawdry garb and painted mirth,
The sorrowfulest thing on earth.
Time runs apace: the fleeting years
Left but her misery and her tears.
The very brothel-door was barred
Against a wretch so crook’d and
marred.
She knocked at every gate in vain,
The cast-out harlot black with stain
At all save one, when this
she tried,
’T was His, the High Priest crucified.
He heard her tears, flung wide His door
And said, “Come in, and sin no more.”
The requirement
To the Steward of his vineyard spake the
Lord,
When he handed him over His Keys and Sword:
“See that you harken unto my word:
“There be three chief things that
I love,” quoth He,
“That bear a sweet savor up to me:
They be Justice, Mercy and Purity.”
Justice was sold at a thief’s behest;
Purity went for a harlot’s jest,
And Mercy was slain with a sword in her
breast.
The listener
A sparrow sang on a weed,
Sprung from an upturned sod,
And no one gave him heed
Or heard the song, save God.
Contradiction
A bishop preached Sunday on Dives forsaken:
How he was cast out and Lazarus taken;
The very next day he rejoiced he was able
To dine that evening at Dives’ table.
While wretched Lazarus, sick and poor,
Was called an impostor and turned from
the door.
The question
Why may I not step from this empty room,
Where heavy round me hangs the curtained
gloom,
And passing through a little darkness
there,
Even as one climbs to bed an unlit stair,
Find that I know is but one step above,
And that I hunger for: my Life:
my Love?
’T is but a curtain doth our souls
divide,
A veil my eager hand might tear aside
One step to take, one thrill, one throb,
one bound,
And I have gained my Heaven, the Lost
have found
Have solved the riddle rare, the secret
dread:
The vast, unfathomable secret of the Dead.
It seems but now that as I yearning stand,
I might put forth my hand and touch her
hand;
That I might lift my longing eyes and
trace
But for the darkness there the gracious
face;
That could I hush the grosser sounds,
my ear
The charmed music of her voice might hear.
She may not come to me, Alas! I know,
Else had she surely come, long, long ago.
The Conqueror Death, who save One conquers
all,
Had never power to hold that soul in thrall;
No narrowest prison-house; no piled up
stone
Had held her heart a captive from my own.
No, ’t is not these: Hell’s
might nor Heaven’s charms,
Had never power to hold her from my arms;
’T is that by some inscrutable,
fixed Law,
Vaster than mortal vision ever saw,
Whose sweep is worlds; whose track Eternity,
Somewhere her soul angelic waits for me:
Waits patiently His Wisdom, whose decree
Is Wisdom’s self veiled in Infinity:
Who gives us Life divine with mortal breath,
Yet in its pathway, lo! hath planted Death;
Who grants us Love our dull souls to uplift
Nearer to Him; yet tears away His Gift;
Crowns us with Reason in His image made,
Yet blinds our eyes with never lifting
shade.
Who may the mystery solve? ’T
is His decree!
Can Mortal understand Infinity?
Prostrate thyself before His feet, dull
clod,
Who saith, “Be still, and know that
I am God.”
Ah! did we surely know the joys that wait
Beyond the portal of the silent gate,
Who would a moment longer here abide,
The spectre, Sorrow, stalking at his side?
Who would not daring take the leap and
be
Unbound, unfettered clean, a slave set
free!
Our dead
We bury our dead,
We lay them to sleep
With the earth for their bed,
With stones at their head:
We leave them and weep
When we bury our dead.
We bury our dead,
We lay them to sleep,
On our Mother’s calm breast
We leave them to rest
To rest while we weep.
We bury our dead,
We lay them to sleep
They reck not our tears,
Though the sad years creep
Through our tears, through the years
They tranquilly sleep.
We bury our dead,
We lay them to sleep;
We bury the bloom
Of our life, all our bloom
In the coffin we fold:
We enfold in the tomb:
We reenter the room
We left young, we are old.
We bury our dead,
We lay them to sleep;
The cold Time-tides flow
With winter and spring,
With birds on the wing,
With roses and snow,
With friends who beguile
Our sorrow with pity
With pity awhile.
Then weary and smile,
Then chide us, say, “Lo!
How the sun shines, ’t
is May.”
But we know ’t is not so
That the sun died that day
When we laid them away,
With the earth for a bed
When we buried our dead.
We bury our dead,
We lay them to sleep;
We turn back to the world;
We are caught, we are whirled
In the rush of the current
The rush and the sweep
Of the tide, without rest.
But they sleep they the blest
The Blessed dead sleep:
They tranquilly rest
On our Mother’s calm breast.
My mother
I knew her in her prime,
Before the seal of Time
Was graven on her brow,
As Age hath graved it now:
When radiant Youth was just subdued
To yield to gracious womanhood.
And as an inland lake
Lies tranquil mid the hills,
Unruffled by the storms that break
Beyond, and mirrors Heaven;
So, to her spirit, freed from ills,
A blessed calm was given.
Encircled by War’s strife
Peace ruled her life.
Christ’s teachings were her constant
guide,
And naught beside,
Christ’s Death and Passion were
her plea
None needed she;
For that amid earth’s fiercest strife
Her life was patterned on His life.
Now when her eyes grow dim
She lives so close to Him,
The radiance of His smile
Envelops her the while.
As when the Prophet’s figure shone
With light reflected from the Throne,
So, ever in her face
Shines Heaven’s divinest grace.
Her soul is fresh and mild
As is a little child.
And as the fleshly tenement
With age grows worn and bent,
Her Spirit’s unabated youth
Is aye to me
The mind-compelling truth
Of Immortality.
Her voice is, as it were,
A silver dulcimer,
Tuned like the seraph’s lays
Eternally to praise.
The blessings of Christ’s chosen
friends
Are doubly hers, whose mind,
To charity inclined,
No selfish ends
Have ever for an instant moved:
Who served like Martha
And like Mary loved.
Her influence
The tender Earth that smiles when kissed
by Spring;
The flowers; the budding woods; the birds
that sing
The Summer’s song her spirit to
me bring.
The meadows cool that breathe their fragrant
myrrh;
Deep, placid pools that little breezes
blur;
Soft-tinkling springs speak to my heart
of her.
Heaven’s purple towers upon the
horizon’s rim;
The dove that mourns upon his lonely limb,
Fill my soul’s cup with memories
to its brim.
In evening’s calm when in the quiet
skies,
The lustrous, silent, tender stars uprise,
I feel the holy influence of her eyes.
That deeper hour when Night with Dawn
is blent,
And Silence stirs, its languors well-nigh
spent,
I hear her gently sigh with sweet content.
I hear young children laughing in the
street:
Catch rays of sunshine from them as we
meet,
And smile content to know what makes them
sweet.
Yea, everywhere, in every righteous strife,
I find her spirit’s fragrant influence
rife,
Like Mary’s precious spikenard sweetening
Life.
Matthew Arnold
He challenged all that came within his
ken,
And Error held with steadfast mind aloof.
E’en Truth itself he put upon the
proof:
Holding that Light was God’s first
gift to men.
The Stranger
Straying one day amid the leafy bowers,
A Presence passed, masked in a sunny ray,
Tossing behind him carelessly the hours,
As one shakes blossoms from a ravished
spray,
Strewing them far and wide.
Nor glanced to either side.
A-sudden as he strolled he chanced upon
A flower which full within his pathway
blew,
White as a lily, modest as a nun,
Sweeter than Lilith’s rose in Eden
grew
Her beauty he espied,
Approached and softly sighed.
His breath the blossom stirred and all
the air
Grew fragrant with a subtle, rich perfume;
The spiced alleys glowed, the while a
rare
And crystal radiance did illume
All the adjacent space
As ’t were an angel’s
face.
Kneeling, he gently laid his glowing lips,
Like softest music on her lips, when came
A thrill that trembled to her petal-tips,
And on the instant, with a sudden flame,
Leaped forth the shining sun,
And Earth and Heaven were
one.
“Who art thou?” queried she,
“Tell me thy name,
To whom Godlike this Godlike power is
given,
That thus for me, without or fear or shame,
But by thy lips’ soft touch Greatest
Heaven?”
Whilst to his heart she clove,
He whispered, “I am
Love.”
Love
(After Anacreon)
Astray within a garden bright
I found a tiny winged sprite:
He scarce was bigger than a sparrow
And bore a little bow and arrow.
I lifted him up in my arm,
Without a thought of guile or harm;
But merely as it were in play,
With threats to carry him away.
The sport he took in such ill part,
He stuck an arrow in my heart.
And ever since, I have such pain,
I cannot draw it out again.
And yet, the strangest part is this:
I love the pain as though ’t were
bliss.
An old refrain
It seems to me as I think of her,
That my youth has come again:
I hear the breath of summer stir
The leaves in the old refrain:
“Oh! my Lady-love!
Oh! my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
I will seek my Love, with the wings of
a dove,
And pray her to love but me.”
The flower-kissed meadows all once more
Are green with grass and plume;
The apple-trees again are hoar
With fragrant snow of bloom.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
The meadow-brook slips tinkling by
With silvery, rippling flow,
And blue-birds sing on fences nigh,
To dandelions below.
Oh! my Lady-love, Oh, my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
I hear again the drowsy croon
Of honey-laden bees,
And catch the poppy-mellowed rune
They hum to locust trees.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady-love
be? etc.
Far off the home-returning cows
Low that the Eve is late,
And call their calves neath apple-boughs
To meet them at the gate.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
Once more the Knights and ladies pass
In visions Fancy-wove:
I lie full length in summer grass,
To choose my own True-Love.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
I know not how, I know not
where,
I dream a fairy-spell:
I know she is surpassing fair,
I know I love her well.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
I know she is as pure as snow:
As true as God’s own Truth:
I know, I know I love her so,
She must love me, in sooth!
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
I know the stars dim to her eyes;
The flowers blow in her face:
I know the angels in the skies
Have given her of their grace.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be?
etc.
And none but I her heart can move,
Though seraphs may have striven;
And when I find my own True-love,
I know I shall find Heaven.
Oh! my Lady-love! Oh!
my Lady-love!
Oh! where can my Lady be!
I will seek my Love with the wings of
a dove
And pray her to love but me.
To Claudia
It is not, Claudia, that thine eyes
Are sweeter far to me,
Than is the light of Summer skies
To captives just set free.
It is not that the setting sun
Is tangled in thy hair,
And recks not of the course to run,
In such a silken snare.
Nor for the music of thy words,
Fair Claudia, love I thee,
Though sweeter than the songs of birds
That melody to me.
It is not that rich roses rare
Within thy garden grow,
Nor that the fairest lilies are
Less snowy than thy brow.
Nay, Claudia, ’t is that every grace
In thy dear self I find;
That Heaven itself is in thy face,
And also in thy mind.
The apple-trees at
even
Ah! long ago it seems to me,
Those sweet old days of summer,
When I was young and fair was she,
And sorrow only rumor.
And all the world was less than naught
To me who had her favor;
For Time and Care had not then taught
How Life of Death hath savor.
And all the day the roving bees
Clung to the swinging clover,
And robins in the apple-trees
Answered the faint-voiced
plover.
And all the sounds were low and sweet;
The zéphyrs left off
roaming
In curving gambols o’er the wheat,
To kiss her in the gloaming.
The apple-blossoms kissed her hair,
The daisies prayed her wreathe
them;
Ah, me! the blossoms still are there,
But she lies deep beneath
them.
I now have turned my thoughts to God,
Earth from my heart I sever;
With fast and prayer I onward plod
With prayer and fast forever.
Yet, when the white-robed priest speaks
low
And bids me think of Heaven,
I always hear the breezes blow
The apple-trees at even.
My true-love’s wealth
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
For she hath wealth of golden hair,
Shot through with shafts from Delos’
bow,
That shines about her shoulders rare,
Like sunlight on new driven snow.
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
For she hath eyes so soft and bright,
So deep the light that in them lies,
That stars in heaven would lose their
light
Ashine beside my True-love’s eyes.
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
For oh! she hath such dainty hands,
So snowy white, so fine and small,
That had I wealth of Ophir’s lands,
For one of them I ’d give it all.
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
For oh! she hath a face so fair,
Such winsome light about it plays,
For worldly wealth I nothing care,
So I can look upon her face.
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
For endless wealth of mind hath she,
Her heart so stored with precious lore
Her riches they as countless be
As shells upon the ocean’s shore.
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
The wild-brier bough hath less of grace
And on wild violets when she treads
They turn to look into her face
And scarcely bow their azure heads.
My True-love hath no wealth they say;
But when they do, I tell them nay,
For oh! she hath herself, in fee,
And this is more than worlds to me.
A valentine
My patron saint, St. Valentine,
Why dost thou leave me to repine,
Still supplicating at her shrine?
But bid her eyes to me incline,
I ’ll ask no other sun to shine,
More rich than is Golconda’s mine.
Range all that Woman, Song, or Wine
Can give; Wealth, Power, and Fame combine;
For her I ’d gladly all resign.
Take all the pearls are in the brine,
Sift heaven for stars, earth’s flowers
entwine,
But be her heart my Valentine.
A portrait
A mouth red-ripened like a warm, sweet
rose,
Wherein are gleaming pearls all pure and
bright
As dewdrops nestled where the zephyr blows
With pinion soft across the humid night;
A cheek not ruddy, but soft-tinged and
fair,
Where whiles the rich patrician blood
is seen,
As though it knew itself a thing too rare
For common gaze, yet did its high demean;
A brow serene and pure as her white soul,
By which the sifted snow would blackened
seem
That sleeps untrodden where the Northern
pole
Rests calm, unscanned save by the Moon’s
chaste beam;
Eyes gray as Summer twilight skies are
gray,
And deep with light as deep, still waters
are,
Tender as evening’s smile when kissing
day,
Yet bright and true as is her lustrous
star.
These all unite and with accordant grace
Make heaven mirrored ever in her face.
Felice
You are very fair, Felice, wondrous fair,
And the light deep in your eyes
Is more soft than summer skies,
And rare roses in your cheek
Play with lilies hide-and-seek,
Play as Pleasure plays with Care.
And your throat is white, Felice, wondrous
white,
White as sifted snow, I wis,
Ere the sun hath stol’n a kiss,
High up starry mountain-heights,
Or as in rich moonful nights
Parian baths in Cynthia’s light.
And, Felice, your rippling waves of soft
hair,
In their mystic depths aye hold
Shade and shimmer of red gold,
Like a halo round your face,
Lending you another grace
From the sunbeams shining there.
And your voice is sweet, Felice, wondrous
sweet,
As the murmur of the sea,
After long captivity,
To a sailor far inland,
Or as summer flowers fanned
By soft zéphyrs blown o’er
wheat.
But so stony, fair Felice, is your heart,
That I wonder oft, I own,
If you ’re not mere carven stone
While my soul your charms enthrall
Just some chiseled Goddess tall:
Merely Beauty, Stone, and Art.
Love song
Love ’s, for Youth, and not for
Age,
E’en though Age should
wear a crown;
For the Poet, not the Sage;
Not the Monarch, but the Clown.
Love ’s for Peace, and not for War,
E’en though War bring
all renown;
For the Violet, not the Star;
For the Meadow, not the Town.
Love ’s for lads and Love ’s
for maids,
Courts a smile and flees a
frown;
Love ’s for Love, and saucy jades
Love Love most when Love has
flown.
Love a cruel tyrant is:
Slays his victims with a glance,
Straight recovers with a kiss,
But to slay again, perchance.
Wouldst thou know where Love doth bide?
Whence his sharpest arrows
fly?
In a dimple Love may hide,
Or the ambush of an eye.
Wert thou clad in triple mail,
In some desert far apart,
Not a whit would this avail:
Love would find and pierce
thy heart.
The Harbour-light
Oh, the Harbour-light and the Harbour-light!
And how shall we come to the Harbour-light?
’Tis black to-night and the foam
is white,
And would we might win to the Harbour-light!
Oh, the Harbour-bar and the Harbour-bar!
And how shall we pass o’er the Harbour-bar?
The sea is tost and the ship is lost,
And deep is the sleep ’neath the
Harbour-bar.
Faded spray of mignonette
Faded spray of mignonette,
Can you ever more forget
How you lay that summer night,
In the new moon’s silvery light,
Dreaming sweet in tranquil rest
On my true-love’s snowy breast?
Since her rosy finger-tips
Bore you to her fragrant lips,
Blessed you with a shadowy kiss,
Nestled you again in bliss,
(Envied of the Gods above)
All is faded save my love.
Lost roses
I stood beside the laughing, shining river,
And shook the roses down upon its breast,
I watched them whirl away with gleam and
quiver,
As ’t were a merry jest.
I stood beside the silent, sombre river,
As creepingly the tide came from the sea,
I watched for my fair roses, but ah! never
Did they come back to me.
De name of Olé Virginia
Song
De old place on de Ches’peake Bay
Is in my heart to-night
I hopes to git back d’yar some day,
An’ hongers for de sight.
Dee come an’ tole me I was free,
An’ all my work was done;
I left dem whar was good to me,
An’ now I ’se all alone.
De name of olé
Virginia
Is sweet as rain
in drouf
Oh! Master,
say, has you been dy’ar?
Hit ’s way
down in de Souf.
De grass dat grows ’pon top de hill
De ones I love does hide,
I pray de Lord to spyah me still
To sleep dyar by dee side.
De olé plantation ‘s sole
an’ all,
But sometime dee will come,
An’ I will hear Brer Gabrull call,
To fetch de olé man home.
De name ob
olé Virginia
Is sweet as rain
in drouf
Oh! Master,
say, has you been dy’ar?
Hit ’s way
down in de Souf.
The Dancer
From one who knows one of the muses
You say the gods and muses all
From earth now banished be?
Will you believe that yester-eve
I saw Terpsichore?
Her robe of snow and gossamer
Enclad a form most neat;
Such sandals green were never seen
As shod her twinkling feet.
Her every step was melody,
Her every motion grace,
That one might prize a thousand eyes
To note both form and face.
The motes that dance in sunny beams
Tripped never in such wise;
This lovely sprite danced in the light
That beamed from her own eyes.
A man’s head once was danced away
You know how it befell?
My dainty fay danced yesterday
Men’s hearts away as
well.
What ’s that? ’Twas
but a graceful girl
That took the hearts for pelf?
Nay, I was there, and ’t was, I
swear,
Terpsichore herself.
The April-face
An old IDYL of A Richmond street-car
All up the street at a stately pace
The maiden passed with her April-face,
And the roses I ’d paid for, on
her breast
Were white as the eggs in a partridge-nest,
While behind her driver upon
his stool
Tinkled the bell of the street-car mule.
“Going to walk up the street?”
I said;
She graciously bowed her beautiful head.
“Then I ’ll walk, too; ’t
is a lovely day.”
Thus I opened the ball in my usual way.
“Do you see the car anywhere?”
inquired
The April-face, “I ’m a trifle
tired.”
I urged a walk; ’twas a useless
suit!
She wildly waved her parachute;
The stub-tailed mule stopped quick enow;
I handed her in with a stately bow;
And the bell rang out with a jangled quirk,
As the stub-tailed mule went off with
a jerk.
Three men as she entered solemnly rose,
And quietly trampled their neighbors’
toes;
A dudish masher left his place,
And edged near the girl with the April-face,
Who sat on the side you ’d call
“the lee,”
(With the same sweet smile she ’d
sat on me).
The day it was lovely; mild the air;
The sky, like the maiden’s face,
was fair;
The car was full, and a trifle stale
(Attached to the mule with the stubbly
tail);
Yet the maiden preferred the seat she
hired,
To the stroll with me; for I made her
tired.
And now when the maiden walks the street
With another’s flowers, and smile so sweet,
I wave to the driver upon his stool, And
stop the stub-tailed street-car mule, While I purchase
a seat with half my pelf; For it makes me a trifle
tired myself.
Come back to us, Davie
So, Davie, you ‘re gaeing to tak
yo’ a wife
To halve a’ yo’ sorrows,
an’ sweeten yo’ life;
An’ Davie, my laddie, I wish you
enow
Of joy and content on your shiny auld
pow.
She ’s feat and she ’s brightsome,
I ken, as the day
When sinshine is whispering its luve to
the May;
Her cheeks are like blossoms, her mouth
is a rose,
And her teeth are the pearlies its petals
enclose.
Of her voice, her ain music, I dinna’
say mair,
Than that ’tis a strain might a
bogle ensnare,
And her een they are stars beaming forth
a bright flame
To cheer a puir wanderer and lead him
safe hame.
Yes, Davie, ye villain, ye ’re sleekit
and slee,
Ye ’ve lift the door sneck
and looped in afore me;
Ye ’ve steek it ahint ye and
lea’ed me alain,
Like a dowie auld cat blinkin’ by
the hearth-stane.
Yet Davie, belyve, should you mind in
your joy
The puir lonely carlies you lo’ed
as a boy,
The memories of canty auld days we have
spent
Will come like the harp-tones o’er
still waters sent.
Then come to me, Davie, auld days we ’ll
renew;
We ’ll heap the bit-ingle and bouse
the auld brew;
We ’ll smoke the auld pipe, till
we freshen your life,
And send you back young as a boy to your
wife.
The witch
Celia, before her mirror bends,
Inquiring how to please her friends.
The mystery is solved apace:
The mirror but reflects her grace.
Her mirror Celia now defies,
She sees herself in all men’s eyes.
Celia ’s a witch, and hath such
arts,
Her image is in all men’s hearts.
Humanity
A lover left his new-made bride
And shot a dove with her mate at her side.
Aspiration
I have stood and watched the Eagle soar
into the Sun,
And envied him his swift light-cleaving
pinion;
And, though I may not soar, at least I
may
Lift up my feet above the encumbering
clay.
Reality
There be three things real in all the
earth:
Mother-love, Death, and a Little Child’s
mirth.
Little Dolly dimple
Little Dolly Dimple,
In her green wimple,
Knows all the philosophers know:
That fire is hot
And ice is not,
And that sun will melt the snow.
She has heard that the moon is made of
green cheese;
But she ’s not quite certain of
this.
She knows if you tickle your nose you
will sneeze,
And a hurt is made well by a kiss.
I wish I were wise as Dolly is wise,
For mysteries lie in her deep, clear eyes.
A valentine
To M. F. And F. F.
“The Fourteenth Day of February
fine:
I choose you for my Valentine.”
Thus ran the first of the sweet old rhymes
On the Lovers’-Day in the old, sweet
times:
And so, I follow closely along
To tell my love in the words of the song.
“Roses are red; violets are blue;
Pinks are sweet, and so are you.”
Roses are red in my sweetheart’s
cheeks,
Deepening tints whenever one speaks;
Violets are blue in the eyes of one;
In the eyes of the other smileth the sun;
But never were roses half so rare
And never were pinks a tithing as fair
And never have they in their garden-bed
A hundredth part of the fragrance shed,
As my two flowers in their sweet home-frame,
Both flowers by nature and one by name.
So as sure as the bloom grows on the vine
I ’ll choose them for my valentine:
My sweet-heart one and my sweet-heart
two,
Both little sweet-hearts sweet and true
To love and to cherish forever mine:
To cherish and love as my valentine.