University of Virginia Library

MY CREED.—MY HEART AND I.

I have a creed, a simple creed,
Which guided me in youth,
And on the mire of earthly greed
Flashed its heroic truth;—
That every man should be the knight
Of every woman born,

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To beauty and the love her right,
Or shame and cruel scorn;
Whatever be her form or face,
To make her sorrows mine,
And mark (though hidden in disgrace)
A dignity Divine.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
Whereby I learned to live,
And to this heart by suffering freed
A saintly service give;—
That woman, if she be a slave
To whom dishonour clings,
Hath in the gutter worse than grave,
A crown of better things;
And claims of me the kindly tear,
The glory of defence,
The ministry of holy fear,
The robe of reverence.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
A tender one and true,—
That every woman's bitter need
Should be her brother's due;
That she, of finer texture wrought.
And swayed to sweeter ends,
Should be girt round by kindly thought,
And stumbling stones find friends;
And, if she fret in prison bands,
Feel them the conqueror's wreath,
While leap a hundred helping hands
Like sword-blades from the sheath.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
For which I fearless fight,
Which sheds a halo on each deed,
Done for a sister's right;—
The very harlot fallen and low,
Whom ruin cannot kill,
Hath yet not lost her heavenly glow,
And is an angel still;
And may once more, by pious love
Be cleanséd of her stain,
And raiséd to the realms above,
To rank with stars again.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
By which I ever trod,
And living it is all the meed
I covet of my God;—
That woman is a precious gift,
If but in homespun clad,

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To teach us gentler ways, and lift
Beyond this turmoil mad;
And we should stand—and nothing spare—
Between her and the strife.
To cherish her with awful care,
As one would cherish life.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
Inspiring all my aims,
To which my inmost heart gives heed,
When deaf to other claims;—
That woman was not made the fool
Of man, however high,
To be mere passion's fleeting tool,
Then hopeless left to sigh;
And her sweet purity was meant
To triumph over fate—
While generations on it leant—
A bulwark of the State.
I have a creed, a simple creed—
Deny it, if you dare—
The oak should shield the bruised reed,
And stay in stormy care;
That every man who is a man
Should be the spoiler's foe,
And link as part of every plan
The aid of woman's woe;
And, in her midnight hour of stress,
Should never leave her lone,
But with the lighting of redress
Rear up her radiant throne.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
Which all my work invests
With godlike splendour, and a speed
Which sordid acts arrests;—
That woman was not shaped to drudge,
And freedom idly crave,
The prey of every passing grudge,
The toy of every knave;
But, humbly served and fondly named,
Should sit at man's own side,
Plucked from the shadow, unashamed,
His comrade and his pride.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
A manly one and good,
Which hath transformed the wayside weed,
And battle shocks withstood;—
That woman is, for clown or king,
The wellspring of all dearth,

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The fairest, noblest, sweetest thing,
God ever formed on earth;
And it is Christlike toil, to win
From evil's hateful hold,
The leper with her loathsome sin,
Who sells herself for gold.
I have a creed, a simple creed,
With many a sacred tie,
For which this heart hath chosen to bleed
And gladly even would die;—
That woman, veiled with glorious tears,
Is beautiful in all,
The unknown goddess of the years,
From whom the veil must fall;
And every man her fame should screen
From perjured lust or line,
Till every woman is a Queen,
Crowned by a right divine.