Part 4
Scorning such human accidents, Broadening their green circumference, Each year made taller, statelier still, The pine trees topped the wind-swept hill, And surged responsive melodies Like simulated sounds of seas.
Till yesterday their century long Companionship held firm and strong, Then a wild bolt of lightning sped And smote their leader’s lofty head, Plunging a ghastly deep-scarred line Down the brown trunk of the old pine.
Still does he rear his head on high, Still stanchly fronts the sun and sky, Still do his needles in soft tunes Make sea songs for the summer moons, Veiling the deadly wound and blight; But all the same he died last night.
For a brief space his stricken form May bide the buffet of the storm, While the deep rift within his heart Widens and tears his trunk apart, Then, with a crash from overhead, He falls, and all men know him dead.
Ah, gallant heart, so firm to bear, So resolute to face despair, Hiding the grievous hurt away Which saps thy being day by day, And simulating with hard strife The bearing and the look of life.
Patience is strong, and strong is faith, But mightier still the power of death; Thy flesh is weaker than thy pain, Vain is the struggle, all in vain. Heaven’s bolt of doom was surely sped, And even to-day we count thee dead.
IN THE FOREFRONT
ONCE a small, childish dancing company, We ran behind the ranks of older ones Half seen, half noticed, very proud to be Part of the grown procession with the drums; Each manly stride they covered cost us three Of our small steps,—that was small price to pay For sharing in the glory of the day.
Where are the ranks that seemed to us so tall, So full of fire and force and valor brave, So full of wisest wisdom, knowing all That man can know, or children dumbly crave To understand with their weak powers, and small? It seems a little time since thus we ran, Yet we, the children then, now lead the van.
The stately forms which towered like forest trees, The limbs which never tired, (as we supposed!) The wills which ruled our infant destinies, The strength beneath whose shadow we reposed, Authority, love, shelter,—all of these, Yielding like straws in tempest to the brunt Of Time’s fierce wind, have left us in the front.
’Tis we who are the stalwart leaders now (Or seem so to the little ones behind), The tireless marchers whom the gods endow With the keen vision, the all-judging mind, The will, which questions not of why or how, But rules and dominates all lesser fates, Regardless of their puny loves or hates!
How strange it seems to lead, who once were led! To feel the pressure of the quick young race Following and urging on behind our tread, Ready and eager to usurp our place, Crowding us forward,—though no word be said! ’Tis but the natural law which stars obey, Following in order due through night, through day.
O march which seemed so long and is so brief! Whether by rough ways led or smooth greensward, Under clear sun or hovering clouds of grief, What matter, so they end in thee, O Lord! Who art of mortal toils the full reward? We will keep on content and fearlessly, Nor seek for rest until we rest in Thee.
INTERRUPTED
I PLANNED a plan, and duly made A plan to fill one little day. Pleasure and toil were gauged and weighed, This hour for work and that for play, And each for each made room and way.
I set my wilful feet to tread The wilful path self-chosen as right, Resolved to walk unhinderèd, Nor turn to left, nor turn to right, Until the coming of the night.
But interruptions all day long, And little vexing hindrances, Each weak, but all together strong, Came one by one to fret and tease, And balk my purpose, and displease.
Friendship laid fetters on the noon, And fate threw sudden burdens down, And hours were short and strength failed soon, And darkness came the day to drown, Hope changed to grief and smile to frown.
Then I said sadly: “All is vain; No use there is in planning aught, Labor is wasted once again, And wisdom is to folly brought, And all the day has gone for naught.”
Then spoke a voice within my soul: “The day was yours, and will was free, And self was guide and self was goal, Each hour was full as hour could be— What space was left, my child, for _Me_?
“Where was the moment in your plan For work of Mine which might not wait? The need, the wish of fellow man, The little threads of mutual fate Which touch and tangle soon or late?
“These ‘hindrances’ which made you fret, These ‘interruptions,’ one by one, They were but sudden tasks I set, My errands for your feet to run, Will you disdain them, child, or shun?”
Oh, blind of heart and dull of soul! I only felt, the long day through, That I was thwarted of my goal, And chafed rebelliously, nor knew The Lord had aught for me to do!
Forgive me, Lord, my selfish day, Touch my sealed eyes, and bid them wake To see Thy tasks along the way, Thy errands, which my hands may take, And do them gladly for Thy sake.
SAINT CHRISTOPHER
Not only in the legend does he stand Beside the river current rushing fast, A dim-drawn giant figure, strong and vast, His staff within his hand;
But in our own day visible, beside The darker stream of human pain and sin, Our eyes have watched him, battling hard to win For weaker souls a pathway through the tide.
Upheld by him and safely carried o’er The waves which else had overwhelmed and drowned, How many a faint and doubting heart hath found Glad footing on the unhoped-for, distant shore!
And still as his strong, tireless arm again And yet again their burden raised and took, You read in the deep reverence of his look He did the work for God and not for men.
Christophorus our saint, named now with tears. The deeds he did were Christ’s, the words he said, All his strong, vital, splendid strength he laid At the Lord’s feet through the unstinting years.
And now beside that Lord in highest Heaven, Past the dark stream of Death, which all must tread, He rests secure, with joy upon his head, And a “New Name” which hath to him been given.
But still to memory’s eye he stands the same, A stalwart shape where the deep waters run, Upbearing, aiding, strengthening every one, Carrying them onward in his Lord’s dear name.
CONQUEROR
J. S. W.
THE voice of Duty, low, but clarion clear, Found her, safe seated in the golden haze Of youth and ease, living luxurious days. She roused to listen; her enchanted ear Heard nevermore the music of the earth— The dancing measure, or the reveler’s call, Or flute note of Apollo, nor the fall Of Orphic melodies. As nothing worth She counted them; in vain her ear to please They rang their varied changes, urged and wooed, Following swift Duty, leader to all good, She went thenceforward;—so she conquered Ease.
Then fell her tender feet on harder road, With stones beset and briers and many a thorn; And there, her woman’s strength all overborne, She sank at length, fainting beneath her load. And time went by, while helpless still she lay, Shackled by weakness, vexed with hopes and fears, Watching the long and tantalizing years Built from the salt sands of her every day; But still she bravely smiled through loss and gain; Through the slow ebb of cheer and fortune’s frown, Her quenchless soul no chilling waves could drown, No fires exhaust;—and so she conquered Pain.
And, last, the dim, mysterious shape drew near, Whom men name “Death,” with pale, averted eyes; (But whom the Heavenly ones call otherwise!) She met his hovering presence without fear. Long time they strove; and as the Patriarch cried, “Except thou bless, I will not let thee go”! So she; until at dawn the vanquished foe Utterly blessed, and left her satisfied. Oh, sweet to her the first, long, rapturous breath Of Heaven, after life’s pent and prisoning air; Freedom unstinted, power to will and dare The victory won from Life and over Death.
THE YEAR AND THE CENTURY
THE New Year came surrounded with Hope and Joy and Song, And he smiled like dawning sunrise as he stood amid the throng. The hopeful months they followed expectantly and slow; But the Old Year went companionless, as all the Old Years go.
All sad and stern the Old Year went, along the unknown way; His heart was full of bitterness, he had no word to say. Then wonder seized upon his heart, for he was not alone; A mighty shadow step by step was gliding by his own!
He turned to face a vast dark shape with eyes like clouded day, And, “Who art thou, O wondrous one?” the Old Year, awed, did say. “I am thy fellow pilgrim up the pathway of the sky; Together bound, thou the dead year, I the dead century.”
The Old Year bared his forehead, and bent his feeble knee. “I am unworthy of such grace, such august company.” The other raised him gently. “Kneel not to me,” he said; “The less, the larger, are as one when numbered with the dead.
“A hundred of thy fellows have gone to swell my tale; A hundred centuries such as I, poured in the mighty scale In which God swings eternity, shall count for nothing more Than the dust borne by the wind away, the fleet foam on the shore.
“Centuries or years or cycles, we fleet and disappear; But the Lord who is the source of time, and builds each growing year, Abides. Within His sight you and I are shadows dim; Yet He made us both, He loves us both, and now we go to Him.”
The Old Year shivered as he heard these words of lofty cheer; Then light came to his faded eyes, and courage chased his fear. He felt a strong hand clasp his own, and, held and guided so, He went forth with the Century to where the dead Years go.
A. V. C.
[JUNE, 1898]
IT did not seem unmeet that she whose heart Had doors wide open always for each friend, And held no lonely corners set apart, Should go, companioned closely, to the end.
It was not strange she left without farewell; That was a word she never loved to say. Her gentle lips, whatever fate befell, Parted more readily for glad “Good-day.”
Heart of the home wherein her presence made Perpetual sunshine for each shady place, Centre of kindly thought, of kindly aid, And hospitality’s long practised grace.
Dear friend, who did not tarry for good-byes But swiftly trod the heavenward path of air, God keep thee in His safe, sure Paradise, And let us, following, find thy welcome there.
“THE LAND THAT IS VERY FAR OFF”
SO far! Is it so far then, that dear country Which homesick hearts expectant claim as theirs, Chiding the years as slow which patient come and go, And make no answer to reproach or prayers?
Is it so far then? For at times it seemeth More dear, familiar, close than aught beside, Bounding our mortal day, lying beside our way, Only the little veil of flesh to hide.
Is it so far? When those who have gone thither Seem so near always, always near and sure, Loving and aiding still, sharing our joy and ill, Lifting our burdens, helping to endure.
Is it so far then? I cannot believe it. When the veil parts and rends and lets us through, The first surprise of bliss, I think, will be in this, That the far off was nearer than we knew;
That what we mourned as lost was close beside us, Touching us every day in every spot, While, blinded with dull tears, groping through faithless years, We were upheld and led and knew it not.
Let us not call it far—the heavenly country; It bounds our little space like viewless air, And while we sorrowing say that it is far away We touch it, all unknowing, everywhere.
THE HEAVENLY AIRS
WORK is the fresh air of the soul! It clears the heavy brain, Quickens the pulses of the mind, Warms thought to action, and the blind And sluggish will sunk into ease Of ineffective lethargies It stirs to life again.
Grief is the cold air of the soul! It chills and blights the flowers, In urgent gusts it sways and smites, Freezing the source of all delights; But roots grow strong by dint of storm, And, when the spring awakes, they form The growth of happier hours.
Love is the warm air of the soul! It reacheth far and wide, Clasping all life with healing touch, Wooing the little into much, Making brown branch and buried root To bud and blossom and bear fruit Like the sweet summer-tide.
Blow, heavenly winds, on every soul! And stir them constantly; Sting us and quicken us and bless, Relax not in thy urgent stress, Till out of toil and love and pain Full strength and stature we attain, And are led home by thee.
IN THE FOG
VEILS of pallid mist and gray Wrap the world of yesterday; Fir-fringed island, rocky cape, Yellow sands, and mountain shape, Sun and sky, and waters blue, All are blotted from the view. Out to sea we blindly stare; Did we dream that such things were?
No; untouched, and safe and sure, All these lovely things endure; Underneath that hovering mist, All the blue and amethyst, All the rocky cliffs and sea, All the surf-lines rippling free, Mountain forms and islands green,— All are there, although unseen.
If we bravely bide and wait Through this brief eclipse of Fate, Smile through the unsmiling noon, Keeping heart and hope in tune,— Shadow shall give place to sun, And, out-stealing, one by one, All the fair things mourned in vain Shall be made our own again.
Dear heart, faint heart, who in shade Sitteth, pale, perplexed, afraid, At the brief evanishment Of thy yesterday’s content,— Courage take; for hope endures, Though a little mist obscures, And behind the fog-wreaths dun Brightens the eternal sun.
THE PORCH OF LIFE
WITHIN the Porch of Life we sit, The access to the heavenly door, The shadowy porch where cold rains pour, And every bleak wind blows on it. And those who crowd to stand thereon Smiling with youth grow grave anon.
We sit among our fellows so, Shivering a little in the wind, And still our eyes reach out to find The faint beam of an inward glow— A home-like ray, which through the door Steals, softly beckoning, evermore.
There in sure comfort, safe and warm; They sit who have an entrance won, Smiling and glad; each dearest one Who once endured the bitter storm, And shared our patience and our pain, But come not forth to share again.
Dear door, which never is shut tight, And knows no bolt and needs no bar, But through all ages stands ajar To bless the eyes which yearn for sight, And keep the souls that wait without From the slow desolate death of doubt!
The Porch of Life is hard and bare, And long the waiting sometimes seems. But while we catch the out-reaching beams, Making the darkness subtly fair, And know the door is open still, We can endure it with goodwill.
THE LIGHTHOUSE
HIGH lifted on the island cliff Its lantern fronts the sea, And sendeth forth a fine, straight ray Of dazzling light to me— A slender line of shimmering shine Across night’s mystery.
It is the path set for my eyes To travel to the light, And warm their darkness in the blaze, And be made glad and bright. None other may catch just that ray, Or have the self-same sight.
And yet, a hundred other eyes, Bent on that central blaze, Find each its separate, shining path, Its line of guiding rays; And all eyes meet in concord sweet By all these differing ways.
No voice shall say: “The Light is mine, All other eyes are dim!” No hand the glory hold or hide Which streams to ocean’s rim, None claim or seize one ray as his More than belongs to him.
O Light of Truth, which lighteneth all, And shineth all abroad, What favored soul or souls shall say, “Mine is the only road?” Each hath his own, to him made known, And all lead up to God.
ONCE AND FOREVER
OUR own are our own forever, God taketh not back his gift. They may pass beyond our vision, but our souls shall find them out, When the waiting is all accomplished, and the deathly shadows lift, And glory is given for grieving, and the surety of God for doubt.
We may find the waiting bitter, and count the silence long, God knoweth we are dust, and he pitieth our pain; And when faith has grown to fulness, and the silence changed to song, We shall eat the fruit of patience, and shall hunger not again.
So sorrowing hearts who dumbly in darkness and all alone Sit missing a dear lost presence and the joy of a vanished day, Be comforted with this message that our own are forever our own, And God, who gave the gracious gift, he takes it never away.
LIGHTS
A LITTLE lamp can send but a brief and feeble ray, The great lights bravely beam, and their radiance far away Is the comfort of the nations and the furtherance of the day.
All men remember when the great lights were lit, The day is kept in honor, and they name it as they sit And watch the guiding flame, thanking and blessing it.
But the small and struggling lights which a breath of storm might kill, Each fain to light a continent, but doomed to smallness still, Is there no one to praise them for their service of goodwill?
Yes, one, the Lord of all, who is the source of Light; He sees them where they burn in the blackness of Earth’s night, And the larger and the less alike are precious in his sight.
He is the secret source by which their flames are fed, From the beacon’s wide, white ray which flashes overhead, To the intermittent ray which the half-spent tapers shed;
And to each he says, “Well done,” which has bravely sought to burn. And when the dawn ariseth, and each is quenched in turn, Absorbed into the perfect day for which pure spirits yearn;—
Each little flame that struggled to make the night more fair Shall find its place in Paradise and burn in heavenly air, And the Father of all Lights shall be its welcome there.
ON THE LAWN
ON the half-frozen lawn, where the early grass was springing, In the sunny days just over, and where now the frost is lying, I hear a happy chorus of little voices singing, A hopeful, cheery call and a hopefuller replying.
’Tis the bluebird and the robin,—what brings them back so early From the sunny southern meadows, and the fields of honeyed clover, From the stately tall magnolias, hung with blossoms sweet and pearly, And the starry yellow jasmine which the wood-bee hovers over?
And now that they have come, beguiled and led a-straying By Mother Nature, who would seem to joy in such deceiving, How can they sing so blithely, with frost and famine playing, As if the world were never meant to be a place for grieving? What is the secret of the hope that bears them up so bravely In the shelterless unfed to-day, the unprovided morrow? Oh, would that I might learn it,—I who sit here looking gravely With an apprehensive shiver for the shape of coming sorrow!
Say, bluebird, and say, robin? They answer but by singing, As with a whirr of fluttering wings the small shapes dart and fly; But my sadness rises with them, and all my cares seem winging, And leaving me as glad as they, but I cannot tell you why.
IF ONLY
IF only—shadow did not follow sun, If only—tempests lurked not in blue weather, If only—life did not so swiftly run And dreams need not be waked from altogether.
If only—hearts were not attuned to ache, If only—joy and mirth turned not to grieving, If only—we could seize and overtake The rainbow Hope which lures us on deceiving!
If only—love were not poured out to waste, If only—discord spared sweet music’s closes, If only—blight and canker did not haste To mar the lily’s white, the stainless roses!
If only—sentinels beside the ways, Death, suffering, and sin stood not to daunt us, If shadows from the vanished yesterdays And fears for the to-morrows did not haunt us.
If only!—human grief unceasingly Repeats in myriad tongues the wistful sighing. Mighty and mournful is the mingled cry, But never comes there any full replying,
Except when, o’er the tumult and the pain, Above the upraised, questioning, tear-stained faces, We catch at times a half heard, answering strain, An antiphone from the high, heavenly places.
“If only, Lord,” the happy voices sing, “If only—we have Thee, who faileth never, Nor life, nor death, nor any other thing Can hurt our joy forever and forever.
“If men could know how quickly pain is spent, What compensations heaven has in keeping, What home means after earth’s bleak banishment, If only—they would smile instead of weeping.”
Sing louder, radiant host, wake our dull ears, Till, though the path be hard and the day lonely, We, too, shall answer through the mists of tears, “If only—we have Thee, Lord, have Thee only.”
PRELUDE
A FEW notes, half harmonious And half discordant, subtly blent, The master sounds and touches, thus To test and try his instrument.
Not music’s self, but its presage; Not tune, but hint of tune it is; Of better things the pledge and gage, And prized for what it promises.
Just so the sweet musician, Spring, ’Mid blowing winds and dropping rains, Tightens and sounds each vagrant string, In odd, capricious, sudden strains.
It is not music she essays, But just a hint of what shall be When earth and sky and nights and days Join in the summer harmony.
And do we dream, or is it true, The grass so brown but yester-morn Has caught a subtly greener hue In sheltered corners of the lawn?
Can there be buds upon the hedge— Wee, starry pointlets half unrolled? And were we blind to read the pledge Written in the willow’s pencilled gold?
And is it fancy that there breathes A vagrant perfume in the air, A scent of freshly opened leaves? There are no leaves yet anywhere.
Ah, dear Spring, stay thy flying feet; Try all thy chords; play leisurely; Though if thy preludes are so sweet What will the finished music be?
WHOM NO MAN HATH HIRED
EACH soul must serve some master. Everywhere, Alike in wilderness and market places, They stand and wait all the long hours of day. They wait with expectation in their faces And mutely question each new wayfarer, And “Art thou he?” their asking glances say.
Then some with downcast aspect take their wage And follow after shapes of darksome mien, Evil and doubtful, leading from the light; And some with radiant eyes alight are seen, Crowding, as bound on common pilgrimage, Behind a peaceful Leader robed in white.
And Pain calls one to serve him at his will, And cloudy Doubt another claims for slave, And wingéd Riches offer specious fees And brightly gild a pathway to the grave, And Patience, with a forehead veiled and still, Enrols a few, making no promises.
Some at the early dawning go their way, Some when the suntides wave the morning sky, And some at heat of noon and harvest-tide, While others with dull, disappointed eyes Watch the long shadows creep and dim the day, And still unhired and unemployed abide.
Lord of the vintage, recompensing Lord, Behold these waiting ones and call them in, Let them not choose another Lord than Thee, Made the despairing thralls of self and sin, Losing the joy of toil and full reward Which make Thy service perfect liberty.