University of Virginia Library


33

POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 1862 AND 1867

THE RUBY HEART

A CHILD'S STORY

Under a fragrant blossom-bell
A tiny Fairy once did dwell.
The moss was bright about her feet,
Her little face was fair and sweet,
Her form in rainbow hues was clad,
And yet the Fairy's soul was sad;
For, of the Elves that round her moved,
And in the yellow moonlight roved,
There was no Spirit that she loved.
Many a one there was, I ween,
Among the sprites that danced the green,
Whose hands were warm to clasp her own,
And voices kindly in their tone;
But love the fondest and the best
Awaked no answer in her breast:
Her heart unmoved within her slept—
And, “I can never love!” she wept.

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She taught herself a quaint old song
And crooned it over all day long:
“He prayeth best, who loveth best
All things both great and small;
For the dear God who loveth us,
He made and loveth all.”
“But I,” she said, “can never pray,
Nor to His mansions find the way,
For he will suffer not, I know,
A creature unto Him to go
Who has not loved His world below.”
Slow-wandering by the brook alone,
She chose a pure white pebble-stone,
And carved it, sitting there apart,
Into a little marble heart;
She hung it by her mossy bed—
“My heart will never love,” she said,
“Till this white stone turn ruby-red.”
One night a moonbeam smote her face
And wakened her, and in its place
There stood an angel, full of grace.
“Dear child,” he said, “from far above
I come to teach thee how to love.
Do every day some little deed
Of kindness, some faint creature feed,

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Make some hurt spirit cease to bleed,
Then carve the record fair, at night,
Upon thy heart of marble white.
Each word shall turn to ruby-red,
And so much of thy task be sped;—
For when the whole is ruddied o'er,
Thy bosom shall be cold no more;
The souls thy careless thoughts contemn
Shall win thee by thy deeds to them.”
Upon the sorrowful Fairy broke
Like sudden sunshine this new hope.
Each day to some one's door she took
A kindly act, or word, or look,
Whose record, fairly carved at night,
Blushed out upon the stony white;
Till, somehow, wondrously there grew
More grace in every one she knew—
Each little ugliness concealed,
Each goodness more and more revealed,—
As, when you watch the twilight through,
The sky seems one pure empty blue,
Till, o'er the paling sunset bars,
Suddenly 't is one sweep of stars!
So day by day she found herself
Grow kindlier to each little elf:
Yea, even to the birds and bees,
And slender flowerets round her knees;

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The very moss-buds at her feet
She came with warmer smile to greet,
Till now, at last, her marble heart
Was ruddy, save one little part
That gleamed all snowy as of old
In the still moonbeams, white and cold.
Her task was almost done—she knelt,
And hid her glad wet eyes, and felt
Her soul's first prayer steal up to God,
Like Spring's first violet from the sod.
Through all her being softly stole
Such joy of gratitude, her soul
Brimmed over like a brimming cup—
And then a voice said, “Child, look up!”
And lo! the stone above her head
Was a pure ruby, starry-red;
And down among the flowers there flew,
Brushing aside the moonlit dew,
A little snowy elfin dove,
And nestled on her breast, to prove
Sweet trust in one whose heart was love.

37

TO CHILD ANNA

As in the Spring, ere any flowers have come,
A vague and blossomy smell
Pervades the woods, all odors mixed in one,
As if to tell
That they are mustering in each sunny dell,
So round your childish form there seems to cling
A sense of nameless grace,
A sweet confusion—budding hints of Spring
Just giving place
To graver woman-shadows in your face.
I see no longer the mere child you are—
The woman you might be
Stands in your place, with eyes that gaze afar:
Her face I see,
And it is very beautiful to me.
The little soft white hands you lay in mine
I touch with reverent care;
I see them wrinkled into many a line,
But fair—more fair
For every weary deed they do and bear.

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The fresh young mouth, all careless purity,
Has faded from my gaze,
And all the tender looks, which charity
And many patient days
Leave round the lips, seem now to take its place.
Therefore I stroke so tenderly your head,
Or watch your steps afar,
Praying that God His love on you will shed—
More faithful far
Than our blind human love and watching are.

39

A FABLE

TO CHILD ANNA

One morning, in a Prince's park,
Before the rising of the lark
Or the first glimmering twilight beam,
A Lily blossomed by a stream;
Just at the chillest, darkest hour,
When frowning clouds in heaven lower,
When shadows crouch all gaunt and grim,
And every little star is dim.
“O dreary world!” the Lily sighed:
Only the dreary wind replied.
Soon, in the East uprising slow,
A cold gray dawn began to grow.
The Lily watched where all around
The mist came creeping o'er the ground,
And listened, while with sadder tone
The morning-wind began to moan:
But all the more the light drew on,
Her tear-dewed cheek was deathlier wan,—
Each streak of daylight, as it grew,
Revealed a world so strange and new.
Slowly the dawn crept up the sky
Like a cold, cruel, watching eye.

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Once from some little wakened bird
A twittering note of joy she heard:
The chill dew fell upon her head—
She almost wished that she were dead;
“There comes no joy for me,” she said.
A gnarled and wisdom-wrinkled Oak
Which overheard, in answer spoke:
“O foolish little Lilybell,
Why do you weep, when all is well?
Look up! Have faith! For by and by
The sun is coming up the sky;
All golden red the heavens will glow,
All golden green the earth below;
The birds their rippling songs will sing,
And wooing winds their spices bring:
And then the Prince will hither come
To wander 'mid his flowers, and some
(Ah, favored blossoms!), bending down,
He plucks and places in his crown.
Look up, O foolish Lilybell!
A little while, and all is well.”
The Lily drooped and trembled still:
“The dawn,” she sobbed, “is dim and chill;
And if the Prince should come, alas!
He will not stoop among the grass;
I surely cannot please his eyes,
For I am neither fair nor wise:
He'll choose some tall and stately tree,
He surely will not care for me!”

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But now the sunrise was at hand,
Lighting with splendor all the land;
As if a seraph stood below
With lifted pinions all aglow,
Whose tips of fire still nearer came
In feathery plumes of floating flame;
While from his hidden face the rays
Shot up and set the heavens ablaze.
They warmed the old Oak's wrinkled face,
And touched it with a mellow grace;
Then dancing downward to his feet
They kissed the Lily's face so sweet,
And laughed away her foolish fear
And lit a gem in every tear;
Then flew to greet the Master's eye,
Who even now was drawing nigh.
He saw the Lily's fragile cup
With dew and sunlight brimming up,
And, as he marked each beauty well,
The petals pure as pearliest shell,
And on the lowly bending stem
The tear-drop sparkling like a gem,
The Prince was glad, and stooping down
Plucked it, and set it in his crown;
And 'mid the jewels glittering there
None shone so royally and rare,
For none was half so pure and fair.
Dear child, 't is our ingratitude,
And faithless fear, and sullen mood,

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Darken a world so bright and good!
There 's nothing beautiful and true—
There 's not a rift of heaven's blue,
And not a flower, or dancing leaf,
But shames our selfish-hearted grief.
His hand that feels the sparrow's fall,
And builds the bee his castle-wall,
And spreads the tiniest insect's sail,
And tints the violet's purple veil,
Will never let His children stray
Or wander from His arms away.
To-day may seem all cold and dim—
Trust the To-morrow unto Him.
'T is slander that we often hear,
“Hope whispers falsehoods in our ear,”—
There 's no such lying voice as Fear.
Hope is a prophet sent from Heaven,
Fear is a false and croaking raven.
The dawn that buds all gray and cold
Will blossom to a sky of gold;
God's love shall like a sunrise stay
To lighten all the future way—
Still brighter to the Perfect Day.

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THE CREATION

A Fountain rusheth upward from God's throne;
Its streaming stem we name Eternal Power:
Its tossing drops are worlds, that spin and fall,
While on their spheres our little human lives
Like gleams and shadows swiftly glance and go.

44

THE FIRST CAUSE

Doubtless the linnet, shut within its cage,
Thinks the fair child that loves it, brings it seed,
And hangs it, chirping to it, in the sun,
Is the preserver of its little world.
Doubtless the child, within her nursery walls,
Thinks her kind father is the father of all
Those happy children, chattering on the lawn—
Keeps yonder town as well as this bright room,
And pours the brook that sparkles past the door.
Doubtless we think the Being who made man,
The visible world, space powdered thick with stars,
The golden fruit whose core is curious life,
Created all things—love, and law, and death;
Fate, the crowned forehead; Will, the sceptred hand.
Perchance—perchance: yet need it be that He
Who planted us is the Head-gardener? What
If beyond Him rose rank on rank, as the bulb
Is higher than the crystals of its food,
And he who sets it, higher than the flower,
And he that owns the garden, more than all?
The great Cause works through lesser ones; permits
The plant to bear dead buds on dying stems;
The beaver to weave dams that the stream snaps;
The workman to make watches that lose time,

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Or organ pipes all jarred and out of tune.
Did not I build a playhouse for my boys,
And made it ill, and that loose plank fell down
And hurt the children? And did not I learn,
After three trials, how to make it well?
Know we the limit of the power He gives
To lesser Wills to will imperfectly?
Is earth that limit? Is the last link man,
Between the finite and the infinite?
When that new star flared out in heaven, and died,
Who knows what Spirit, failing in his plan,
Dashed out his work in wrath, to try anew?
O mother world! we stammer at thy knee
Vainly our childish questions. 'T is enough
For such as we to know, that on His throne,
Nearer than we can think, and farther off
Than any mind can fathom, sits the One,
And sees to it—though pain and evil come,
And all may not be good—that all is well.

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SEMELE

What were the garden-bowers of Thebes to me?
What cared I for their dances and their feasts,
Whose heart awaited an immortal doom?
The Greek youths mocked me, since I shunned in scorn
Them and their praises of my brows and hair.
The light girls pointed after me, who turned
Soul-sick from their unending fooleries.
Apollo's noon-glare wrathfully beat down
Upon the head that would not bend to him—
Him in his fuming anger!—as the highest.
In every lily's cup a venomous thing
Crooked up its hairy limbs; or, if I bent
To pluck a blue-eyed blossom in the grass,
Some squatted horror leered with motionless eyes.
I think the very earth did hate my feet,
And put forth thistles to them, since I loathed
Her bare brown bosom; and the scowling pines
Menaced me with dark arms, and hissed their threats
Behind me, hurrying through their gloom, to watch
(Blurred in unsteady tears till all their beams
Dazzled, and shrank, and grew) that oval ring
Of shining points that rift the Milky Way,

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Revealing, through their gap in the dusted fire,
The hollow awfulness of night beyond.
There came a change: a glory fell to me.
No more 't was Semele, the lonely girl,
But Jupiter's Beloved, Semele.
With human arms the god came clasping me:
New life streamed from his presence; and a voice
That scarce could curb itself to the smooth Greek
Now and anon swept forth in those deep nights,
Thrilling my flesh with awe; mysterious words—
I knew not what; hints of unearthly things
That I had felt on solemn summer noons,
When sleeping earth dreamed music, and the heart
Went crooning a low song it could not learn,
But wandered over it, as one who gropes
For a forgotten chord upon a lyre.
Yea, Jupiter! But why this mortal guise,
Wooing as if he were a milk-faced boy?
Did I lack lovers? Was my beauty dulled,
The golden hair turned dross, the lithe limbs shrunk,
The deathless longings tamed, that I should seethe
My soul in love like any shepherd girl?
One night he sware to grant whate'er I asked;
And straight I cried, “To know thee as thou art!
To hold thee on my heart as Juno does!

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Come in thy thunder—kill me with one fierce
Divine embrace! Thine oath!—Now, Earth, at last!”
The heavens shot one swift sheet of lurid flame:
The world crashed: from a body scathed and torn
The soul leapt through, and found his breast, and died.
“Died?”—So the Theban maidens think, and laugh,
Saying, “She had her wish, that Semele!”
But sitting here upon Olympus' height
I look down, through that oval ring of stars,
And see the far-off Earth, a twinkling speck—
Dust-mote whirled up from the Sun's chariot-wheel—
And pity their small hearts that hold a man
As if he were a god; or know the god—
Or dare to know him—only as a man!
—O human love, art thou forever blind?

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CLASS SONG

1864
As through the noon the reapers rest,
Till sinks the sun adown the west,
From morning toil an hour we come
To dream beneath the trees of home.
O gentle elms, within your shade
Ye keep the vows that we have made:
Your bending boughs, in tender tone,
Are whispering still of Sixty-One.
Like drowsy murmurs of the noon,
Our noisy futures melt in tune,
And all the past, like ocean shell,
Still echoing, sighs—farewell, farewell!
Pure as the evening's pearly star,
And sweet as songs that float afar,
Our olden love comes back to-night,
In music soft, and starry light.
O summer wind, on pinions strong,
Waft to the absent ones our song;
And tell them, wander as they will,
We love them still,—we love them still!

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THE GAME OF LIFE

We are living a game of chess, dear May—
For the prize of the Better Life we play.
The wonderful world is our chequered board,
And our hearts the box where the pieces are stored.
The evil one has ever been
Our foe, and uses our faults for men.
There 's the Black King Fear and the Black Queen Pride
With her bishops Envy and Spite beside,
And his knights are Malice and Deceit,
His castles Stubbornness and Hate,
And for pawns each little idle sin,
That trusts to its smallness to creep, creeps in.
But on our side the white King, Will,
And the white Queen Love, march conquering still.
Her bishops are Honor and Purity,
Her knights are Kindness and Charity,
And for castles staunch and strong and fair,
Courage and Constancy are there,
And the little pawns to be given away
Are our little kindly acts each day.
Sometimes a wily foe is met
And the wavering will is sore beset;

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But we do not fight quite all alone—
There comes a quiet whispered tone,
An unseen touch that seems to fall
In answer to the faintest call,
And lifts our fingers tired and lame,
And points the move that wins the game.
In dazzling day or blinding night
God ne'er forgets us in the fight;
His glorious angels will abide
If we but clasp them at our side;
The hand that beckons them is Prayer,
And Faith the clasp that holds them there.

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MAN, THE SPIRIT

A small, swift planet, glimmering round a star,—
A molten drop with thinnest crusted shell
Of lime and flint, roofed-in with azure air,—
A winding stair of life, from Trilobite
And Saurian up to one who walks their king,
Drawing the lime and flint up through themselves
And kindling them to spirit, till on him,
Whose limbs are clay, there flames a lambent crown
Of fire from heaven,—these make our world.
What then
Is this wild creature, wandering up and down,
Seeking a thousand things, but keeping still
A thought of God in his heart? Why is he here,
Feet in the sod and thoughts among the stars,
Bewildered for some watchword or command,
As a battalion wavering on the field
Without a leader? In the march of worlds
Is Earth alone forgotten?
Who are we,
Clustered to-day with eyes and hands that clasp
As by some secret oath of brotherhood,
Out of the mass that jostles to and fro

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Forever, without aim or hope? We are pledged
To UNDERSTAND, to live the truth we know,
And help men so to live and understand.
A handful 'gainst a host, we make our stand,
Nailing this thesis on the golden gate
Of the new Mammon-temples—that the souls—
The striving, praying, hoping, human souls—
Alone on earth are valuable—their end
To will God's will, because their will belongs
To him, the maker and the giver, so
Dilating to the broader destiny
Whose shadowy gateway opens from our world.
Out of the wrinkled bosom of the Old,
New England once was born; a rock-hewn race,
Puritan pilgrims, splendidly pure and grim.
Flint-set against all sham, they rose to say
'T was sunrise and the ghosts must vanish now
Before the living Fact: that a king's crowned head
Was but a man's head, and it must come off
Like any beggar's, when it wrought a wrong.
They freed society, the individual man
We must emancipate; they stripped all masks,
And knocked the fool's-caps off the venerable heads
Of church and state, and tore their pompous robes
To strings for children to fly kites with.
Here
Upon a coast whose calmer-blossoming surf
Beats not with such an iron clang as theirs,

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We plant the Newer England; this our word,
That man is no mere spider-like machine
To spin out webs of railroads after him
In all earth's corners, nor a crafty brain
Made to knit cunning nets of politics
Or sharpen down to insignificance
On the grinding wheels of business, but a Soul,
That travelling higher worlds in upper light
Dips down through bodily contact into this;
As a hand trails over a boat's side through the waves,
And seems to the sea-creatures, eyed alone
For their own element, a thing of the sea.
Whether he wear the purple or the serge,
Whether he worship under frescoed pomp
Or bare-hewn rafters, it is still the man,
The individual spirit, something far
Beyond earth's chemistry, to whom all else
Are only foot-lights, scene, accessory,
Or nothing—or a farce, a mockery.
In this fair land, whose fields lie robed in bloom,
A living poem bound in blue and gold,
With azure flowers like little flecks of sky
Fallen, tangled in the dew-drops, to the grass,
And orange ones—as if the wealth below
Had blossomed up in beaten flakes of gold;
Where all the baser elements of earth,
Aspiring up through root, and stalk, and leaf,

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Stand stretching delicate petal-wings toward heaven,
Poised on their slender feet for flying; here
Nature, like amorous Cleopatra, plots
To hold her Cæsar, brimming every sense
With perfume, song, and gorgeous coloring,
Throws softly wooing winds about his neck,
With sparkling air (as tho' not pearls alone,
But diamonds were dissolved in it), still fires
His brain to seek new dalliance, fresh delight,
Forgetful of his throne beyond the Sea.
Content with the golden Present, now, they say,
We must pore in the past no longer; our old books,
And antique, moss-grown system must give way
To the new patent methods for the mind;
New patent lives to lead, with no more dreams
And superstitions, only practical work.
A callow-winged philosophy breaks shell
And cackles prematurely loud that we
Are mummied, gone behind the times; no more
Dead languages, nor cloister-life—the lore
That will not take the harness for their use,
To weave, or grind, or burrow-out the mine,
Smells mouldy to their noses—Sophomores,
And parvenus of the intellectual world!
Who would brush down from heaven the olden stars,
To set new, self-adjusting spangles there,
Would mow the everlasting mountains off,
And build up straight, right-angled ones instead.

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What is our training—what do colleges give
To men, which makes that feared and sneered-at thing,
A culture through the classics? Do we dare
Reveal the Eleusinian mysteries
Which leave such impress on these white boy-brows,
That the world, recognizing kingship, says,
“Here is a soul that knows itself, has touched
The centre, and radiates the broadening beams
Of influence straight to the point he means”?
We cannot, if we would, tell all; we hold
Some things there are that never can be told.
Articulate speech is but a coarse-woven sieve
That drops the fine gold through; some subtile chords
Of swift and ravishing music lurk between
The written notes. This only we can tell:
The boy, clear-eyed and beautiful-browed, is led
To a quiet spot arched over by great trees,
And this seal set upon him,—for four years
Sacred from all the tarnishing touch of men;
Shut from the jangling of the brazen bells
That strike the hours of the Present noisily,
He is bid to listen—and along the years
Float up the echoes of the Past, the world's
Birth-songs and marching-music, requiems and prayers.
He learns the languages that we call “dead”
(The only living ones, whose fire still glows
Beneath the ash of every modern tongue),

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The scrolls that men have dabbled with heart's blood,
Blotted with tears, are his, to learn that all
Is accident and flying form except the soul.
The outer husk, the crown, the robes, or rags
Signify nothing; Roman, Greek, and Goth,
Ate, slept, and dreamed, and died, like modern men.
The audible word is nothing—if the lips
Prayed Zeus or Allah, Elohim or Lord,
The heart said still the same. He learns to choose
The changeless from the changing, as sole good.
Only the trivial chaff is fanned away,
As Time's broad wings go sweeping over earth.
The futile acquisitions of to-day
Tempt him but little, so the heart grow full
With inner force and outward-burning fire.
No surface buckling-on of glittering facts
His mind would have, but weapons that can make
The sinewy arm to wield them; for the sword
And shield will moulder, but the sinewy arm
Has many a field to fight beyond this earth.
Stretched under some cathedral-roof of elm,
Frescoed in flickering sunlights, with far eyes
That watch and do not see the summer sky—
A cloudy opal, veined as when a wave
Leaps up, and breaks, and leaves the milk-white foam
Streaking its meshes over the blue sea—
Flat to the ground, where he can seem to feel

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The great earth heave beneath him like a ship
Plunging its course along the tideless space,
He whispers with his heart in thoughts like these:

THE FUTURE

What may we take into the vast Forever?
That marble door
Admits no fruit of all our long endeavor,
No fame-wreathed crown we wore,
No garnered lore.
What can we bear beyond the unknown portal?
No gold, no gains
Of all our toiling, in the life immortal
No hoarded wealth remains,
Nor gilds, nor stains.
Naked from out that far abyss behind us
We entered here:
No word came with our coming to remind us
What wondrous world was near,
No hope, no fear.
Into the silent, starless Night before us,
Naked we glide:
No hand has mapped the constellations o'er us,
No comrade at our side,
No chart, no guide.

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Yet fearless toward that midnight, black and hollow,
Our footsteps fare:
The beckoning of a father's hand we follow,
His love alone is there,
No curse, no care.
And so we learn our world, finding how time
Is an illusion—the perspective all
But a mere trick of shadow, which can make
That misty peak seem far beyond the hill
In the foreground—touch it, and you see
'T is all one whole: The Greek stands at our side,
Toga and sandals shielding the same flesh
That coat and shoes do now, the same hot brain
Throbbing beneath the helmet as the hat.
As one who hums a tune about his work,
And hears a friend's voice from another room
Strike in an alto, so we hear afar
The sound of voices all along the past
Chording with ours. 'T was only yesterday
That Plato stood and talked with Socrates;
'T was last night Paul was here, and on the desk
He left his letters, which the air has turned
From parchment into paper for our use.
In the next room they wait; 't is but a step
Over the threshold to them there, yet since
The shadow of the tree of life lies dark
Across the doorway, like a faltering child

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We dread the passage through the cold dark hall,
To where the Father calls, and they have gone.
What is the visible, tangible world all worth,
Except for symbols, somewhat coarse and large,
Like the raised letters for the blind to feel?
The shadowy domes serenely lifted up,
The soundless depths that deepen down in thought,
Make one small world draw dwindling to a point.
The little earth! Think, that the same bright sun,
Which rises there from the familiar hill
And laughs its level joy straight to our eyes,
Is wrapping half the globe in morning light,
Kindling dew-diamonds on the tropic palm,
Tipping the white gull's wing o'er Northern seas
And striking frozen fire from the iceberg's towers
At either pole.
The brisk and dapper minds
Are doubtless those which have had the practical
And not the philosophic training, yet
When the world wants a great man for great deeds,
Who ever took the modern-fashioned one,
Who had learned the useful only and eschewed
Dead languages or dreaming in the woods?
The great man ever has sought the sacred fire
From olden books, or from the older stars
In solitudes, away from the bustling streets
And babbling men.

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Ah, who can speak of great
Nor think of him who was our greatest one?
Let us wait here, and lay a wreath of song
Upon our grave.

THE DEAD PRESIDENT

Were there no crowns on earth,
No evergreen to weave a hero's wreath,
That he must pass beyond the gates of death,
Our hero, our slain hero, to be crowned?
Could there on our unworthy earth be found
Naught to befit his worth?
The noblest soul of all!
When was there ever, since our Washington,
A man so pure, so wise, so patient—one
Who walked with this high goal alone in sight,
To speak, to do, to sanction only Right,
Though very heaven should fall!
Ah, not for him we weep;
What honor more could be in store for him?
Who would have had him linger in our dim
And troublesome world, when his great work was done?
Who would not leave that worn and weary one
Gladly to go to sleep?
For us the stroke was just;
We were not worthy of that patient heart;

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We might have helped him more, not stood apart,
And coldly criticised his works and ways—
Too late now, all too late—our little praise
Sounds hollow o'er his dust.
Be merciful, O our God!
Forgive the meanness of our human hearts,
That never, till a noble soul departs,
See half the worth, or hear the angel's wings
Till they go rustling heavenward as he springs
Up from the mounded sod.
Yet what a deathless crown
Of Northern pine and Southern orange-flower,
For victory, and the land's new bridal hour,
Would we have wreathed for that beloved brow!
Sadly upon his sleeping forehead now
We lay our cypress down.
O martyred one, farewell!
Thou hast not left thy people quite alone,
Out of thy beautiful life there comes a tone
Of power, of love, of trust, a prophecy,
Whose fair fulfillment all the earth shall be,
And all the Future tell.
Earth's greatest ones ever have gone so far
Out on life's borderland, that they have caught
The sound of an infinite ocean, far away,

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Rounding our island-world. But now appear
These new philosophers, practical, well-informed,
Assuring us there is no ocean-sound—
'T is but the roaring in our feverish ears.
They carry the glimmering lantern of conceit
Swinging along their path, and see no Night,
No fathomless, sombre glory of the dark,
But their own shadows, that seem giant forms,
Stalking across the fields and fences—they
That are stumbling pygmies!
They will show you God
And all his universe in a nutshell: see!
Pinched in our little theory like a vice,
We cleave the nut with a keen hypothesis,
Whisk off the top—there 't is convenient
For logical handling. “Cannot see?” Oh, then
You have spoiled your eyes with gazing at the sun.
Hard, angular, and dry, they pish and pooh
At all ideas they cannot measure off
And pack into their iron-bound, narrow brain.
They'll not admit the existence of a truth
Which cannot be expressed in x and y,
And solved by their quadratics. Well, they serve
To show a new phenomenon in the world:
That a mind, if taken in time, can be transformed
To a machine of clockwork, cogs and wheels
Wound up with useful facts, and set away
On a shelf to go its narrow round of thought

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And tell us when 't is noon or supper time,
If we get careless through abstraction. So
All men, even these, have uses. Some to go
Whirling around the circumference
Spinning out sparks into the darkling space,
While some sit staidly at the safe, slow hub
And swear there are no radii and no rim,
No winged steeds far at the chariot's pole,
No Power that rides, triumphant, terrible.
What has this new, pert century done for man,
That it affords to sneer at all before,
Because it rides its aimless jaunts by steam
And blabs its trivial talk by telegraph?
What of it? Are not babes born naked now,
As ever, and go naked from the world?
If I am the ape's cousin, what to me
Are steam and harnessed lightning, art and law?
If the night comes on so soon, what matters it
If the short day be foul or fair—if Fate
Rain thunderbolts or roses on our heads?
Yea, even 't were some satisfaction then
To stand and take the thunderbolts, and think
We are large enough at least to serve as marks
For gods to hurl at.
If there is no key,
Why puzzle longer with the scribbled scroll
We blur our eyes on? But, O merciful God,
If our souls are immortal, O forgive

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That we still creep on dusty hands and knees,
Face downward to the ground, when we might walk
Erect, and face the heavens, and see thy stars!
We gaze from our separate windows on the Night
And find our own small faces imaged there
In the glass, nor ever see the shadowy plain
Stretching out through the dimness, on and on.
Splendid beginners, still we toil and fill
The vestibule of our lives with useless plans,
With noise of hammer, scaffolding and dust
And rubbish, building some imagined fane
To worship in through years that never come.
For life is like the legendary bird
The Christ-child's hands were moulding out of clay:
While we are shaping it with eager care,
We look up startled, for the bird has flown!
Ah, if the mind could sometimes be content
To cease from its male madness, its desire
To radiate outward, and in passive rest
Receive from Nature's ever-waiting arms
Energy, fire, and life! We blind ourselves
With briny sweat-drops, even more than tears.
Ever with burning haste we scorch our souls,
And set their compass-needles whirring round

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So they can never keenly point to the pole.
There 's such a clash and jar kept up within,
Hissing of nerve-steam, iron purposes
Clanging on one another, who can hear
The sweet, sweet silver voices from afar?
Ah, let a man but listen! Have we not
Two ears for silence, one small mouth for noise?
Listen until we catch the key, and know
Our note, and then chime in—not rave and run,
And shout our frantic orders, just as though
We were the leader of the orchestra,
Not little separate voices; could we wait,
Each in his corner, conning quietly
His part, the chords would be the sweeter for it.

A PARADOX

Haste, haste, O laggard—leave thy drowsy dreams!
Cram all thy brain with knowledge; clutch and cram!
The earth is wide, the universe is vast:
Thou hast infinity to learn. Oh, haste!
Haste not, haste not, my soul! “Infinity”?
Thou hast eternity to learn it in.
Thy boundless lesson through the endless years
Hath boundless leisure. Run not like a slave—
Sit like a king, and see the ranks of worlds
Wheel in their cycles onward to thy feet.

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HOME

I know a spot beneath three ancient trees,
A solitude of green and grassy shade,
Where the tall roses, naked to the knees,
In that deep shadow wade,
Whose rippled coolness drips from bough to bough,
And bathes the world's vexation from my brow.
The gnarléd limbs spring upward airy-free,
And from their perfect arch they scarcely swerve,
Like spouted fountains from a dark, green sea
So beautiful they curve,—
Motionless fountains, slumbering in mid-air,
With spray of shadows falling everywhere.
Here the Sun comes not like the king of day,
To rule his own, but hesitant, afraid,
Forbears his sceptre's golden length to lay
Across the inviolate shade,
And wraps the broad space like a darkened tent,
With many a quivering shaft of splendor rent.
Seclusion, as an island still and lone,
Round which the ocean-world may ebb and flow,
Unheeded, following fruitlessly the moon,
And where the soul may go
Naked of all its vanities and cares,
To meet the bounteous grace that Nature bares.

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Here stretched at morn I watch the sunrise ray
That sweeps across the earth like minstrel's hand,
Waking from all the birds a song of day,
Caught up from land to land,
And earth is beautiful and hearts are brave,
Ere busy Life has waked to claim her slave.
Each day a pure and velvet-petal'd flower,
Blooms fresh at dawn, with trembling light bedewn,
But dull and tarnished at the mid-day hour—
The noisy, trampling noon,
Its beauty soiled with handling. Ever choose
The virgin morning for the soul to use.
The wind comes hushing, hushing through the trees
Like surf that breaks on an invisible beach
And sends a spray of whispers down the breeze,
Whispers that seem to reach
From some far inner land where spirits dwell,
And hint the secret which they may not tell.
No garrulous company is here, but books—
Earth's best men taken at their best—books used,
With dark-edged paths, and penciled margin-strokes,
Where friends have paused and mused,
And here and there beneath the noticed lines,
Faint zigzag marks like little trailing vines.

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Here what to me are all the childish cares
That make a Bedlam of the busy world?
Each hour that flies some quiet message bears
Beneath its moments furled,
Like a white dove, that, under her soft wings,
Kind thoughts from far-off home and kindred brings.
So let us live, not pent in noisy towns,
But in calm places, watching all things fair—
The months following in waves across the fields,
Each stranding there new flowery pearls and shells;
The flocks of shadows nestled 'neath the trees;
The laughing brooks, like mischievous children still
Tangling the silver thread of the motherly moon.
So shall Earth be no more a theatre,
In which a tragic comedy is played—
A horrible farce with too real murder in it—
But a fair field where till the break of day
Man wrestles with the Angel of his fate
For an immortal blessing.
If we knew,
O Father, if we knew we die not, but
Live on, we should live worthier of thy love:
So help thy little ones to know and live:
That as a shadow which goes reaching forth
Longer and longer as the sun goes down,
The soul may stretch forth toward the great Unseen,
Until the sacred, solemn starlight comes
Gathering our individual shadows in its own.

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THE CHOICE

Only so much of power each day—
So much nerve-force brought in play;
If it goes for politics or trade,
Ends gained or money made,
You have it not for the soul and God—
The choice is yours, to soar or plod.
So much water in the rill:
It may go to turn the miller's wheel,
Or sink in the desert, or flow on free
To brighten its banks in meadows green,
Till broadening out, fair fields between,
It streams to the moon-enchanted sea.
Only so little power each day:
Week by week days slide away;
Ere the life goes, what shall it be—
A trade—a game—a mockery,
Or the gate of a rich Eternity?

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WISDOM AND FAME

A wilderness, made awful with the night—
Great glimmering trunks whose tops were hid in gloom,
Vast columns in the blackness broken off,
Between whose ghostly forms, slow-wandering,
A company of lost men sought a path.
Some groped among the dead leaves and fallen boughs
For footprints; but the rattle of the leaves
And crook of stems seemed serpents coiled to strike
Some took the momentary sparks that rode
Upon their straining eyeballs, for far lights,
And followed them.
Some stood apart, in vain
Searching, with horror-widened eyes, for stars.
So, stumbling on, they circled round and round
Through the same mazes.
Then they singled one
To climb a pinnacled height, and see from thence
The landmarks, and to shout from thence their course.
With aching sinews, bleeding feet, bruised hands,
He gained the height; but when they cried to him
They got but maudlin answers,—he had found,
Slaking hot thirst, a fruit that maddened him.

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Another, and another still they sent;
But every one that climbed found the ill fruit
And maddened, and gave back but wild replies:
And still in darkness they go wandering, lost.

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SERENITY

Brook,
Be still,—be still!
Midnight's arch is broken
In thy ceaseless ripples.
Dark and cold below them
Runs the troubled water,—
Only on its bosom,
Shimmering and trembling,
Doth the glinted star-shine
Sparkle and cease.
Life,
Be still,—be still!
Boundless truth is shattered
On thy hurrying current.
Rest, with face uplifted,
Calm, serenely quiet;
Drink the deathless beauty—
Thrills of love and wonder
Sinking, shining, star-like;
Till the mirrored heaven
Hollow down within thee
Holy deeps unfathomed,
Where far thoughts go floating,
And low voices wander
Whispering peace.