The Project Gutenberg eBook of A "booklet of verse"
Title: A "booklet of verse"
Author: Rozelle V. Myers-Funnell
Release date: July 27, 2020 [eBook #62770]
Most recently updated: October 18, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Charlene Taylor, Chuck Greif and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
....A....
BY
———
Ottawa:
C. J. A. Birkett, Publisher,
73 Florence Street.
1897.
Entered according to Act of the Parliament of Canada in the year 1897, by
Rozelle V. Funnell, M.D., at the Department of Agriculture.
TO
Her Majesty’s Representative
in Canada,
and
The Countess of Aberdeen.
(By Permission.)
Contents.
PRESS OF PAYNTER & ABBOTT,
48 Rideau St. and 68 Bank St.,
Ottawa, Can.
Jubilee Song.
(Air—National Anthem.)
Bring forth some worthy lay
Straight from thy heart.
To Her who brooks no wrong
Anthems of praise belong—
Do thou, in Earth’s glad song
Bear noble part.
When in thy forests vast
Watch fires were seen:
Brave hearts beat strongly then
In breasts of gallant men,
Struggling with sword and pen
For home and Queen!
When on thy calm pure brow
Peace laurels twine.
Tell of the hearts that thrill
Ready to do Her will—
All undivided still
Her hopes and thine.
As to thy view appears
The glorious day,
When Truth alone shall stand;
Justice rule every land;
Right, with impartial hand,
All men shall sway!
Quinte.
Nor spot on earth
Than the sunny wave-washed strand,
Place of our birth;
No vision half so dear
To us can come,
As the mem’ries clustering near
Our dear old home.
(Song).
Now dancing and gleaming,
Your weird echoes haunt me,
When waking or dreaming;
Your murmur, at even,
An angel-voice seemeth,
Low whisp’ring of Heaven,
When soft moonlight beameth.
When dashing and sparkling,
Half charm, and half daunt me,
Now flashing, now darkling;
The moan of your surges,
’Neath white foam wreaths sounding
Like sad fun’ral dirges
Mid snow-flakes resounding.
No longer beguiling,
Ye mock me, and taunt me,
Though glinting and smiling;
Of all that I cherished,
The years have bereft me—
All! All else have perished,
Ye only are left me.
(Set to Music by Cecil J. A. Birkett).
Hope.
(Song).
I choose from the harbor there;
Not a thought give I to wintry gales,
Nor weary waves of care.
I only dream of skies of blue,
And a shimmering, summer sea;
I only think of a friendship true,
And a loved one waiting for me.
Thou Art Near.
(Song).
Autumn zephyrs fan my brow,
Strange weird fancies flit before me,
Surely I am dreaming now!
Woodland echoes could not whisper
Gentle words for mortal ear;
Still I hear them, sweetly, clearly,
And I know that thou art near.
Chorus:
Oh! the joy that thought affords.
Darling, thou art come to cheer me
With thy gentle loving words.
As I mingle with the throng;
Whisper softly, I will hear thee
When strange voices tempt to wrong.
Life for me hath hours of sorrow,
Weary days of anxious fear;
But I’ll meet them, strongly, bravely,
If I feel that thou art near.
Chorus:
Farewell to the Old School-House.
The dear old house is condemned;
Let us go and say a sad farewell,
As we would to a cherished friend.
Let us stand for a last, last time, Allie,
In the shade of the grey stone wall,
And dream one dream of the joyous past,
As the twilight shadows fall.
From the beautiful long ago,
When life was a cloudless summer morn,
Aflush with a crimson glow.
And down through the golden years, Allie,
Comes floating a faultless chime,
A drifting of sweetest memories
From the happy childhood time.
Smile on us again, as of yore;
And voices, silent for many a year,
Ring in through the open door.
Anon to our listening ears, Allie,
In silvery tones, they bring
Even the old familiar rhymes,
And the songs we used to sing.
With a well-remembered grace,
Come back once more to our out-stretched arms,
And are held in a close embrace,
Small, dimpled hands clasp ours, Allie,
That long we have sought in vain;
They lead us o’er many a well-known path,
Down many a moss-grown lane.
The blue dome above as fair,
The air as fragrant with dewy flowers,
And our hearts as free from care
As when, with our child-eyes veiled, Allie,
From sin, and sorrow and woe,
We could see the flashing of Angels’ wings
And hear their whispers low.
At Clinics.
(An Hospital Incident.)
Death-doomed!
With all of life’s bright hopes
Entombed;
Beautiful, unforgetable face!
So pale and calm in its trusting grace,
With the shadow stealing on apace,
Death-doomed.
O’ercome,
With a steadfast light within
Their gloom,
Like unto those of a martyred saint,
Patient, enduring, without complaint,
The pain-flash by a gentle restraint
O’ercome.
Stood by,
Knowing the gentle one
Must die,
Watching the face in its sweet content,
Noting the smile of glad assent,
As he spake of life as nearly spent,
Death-nigh.
* * * * * *
Only an unknown name
Enrolled
On the death-list there—none knew,
Or told
Her story—but, surely a Presence came
Into their midst, as the dear Christ’s name
Was murmured by lips, with love aflame,
Though cold.
That day,
Young, and joyous, and brave
And gay,
To note, with critical gaze, a case,
Silently passed from the hallowed place,
Bearing rememberance of heaven-lit face
Away.
Beyond.
“But reckon the years of your life once again,
“Not a thousand, one day,
“But one day, as a thousand years!” Then
How clear it all seemed!
I had lived, and I knew it not—Lived!
And I thought I but dreamed,
So brief a time-space I had lived.
* * * * * *
And the Angel said “Read!”
And the story of life op’ed before me;
Wakened Soul! Small the need,
Swift mem’ry the page will restore thee;
“But read! Now thou darest,
“There is nothing that thou would’st amend,
“For that hour was life’s rarest,
“When a Soul did’st thine own comprehend.”
Introspection.
(Suggested by a sermon delivered by the late Rev. Doctor W. W. Carson.)
If I have trod the narrow way,
Nor let my footsteps from it stray,
Then shall I have reward.
If self has conquered me to-day,
Has beckoned to the broader way,
And I have chosen thence to stray,
Have pity on me, Lord!
Within my breast the judgment throne;
Thy dear voice whispers there “Well done,”
And perfect peace I gain:
Or prone I lie, and sob “Unclean,”
Thy presence felt, though all unseen;
I dare not look—Thy sad, stern mien
Would rend my heart in twain.
May flood my soul with Heaven’s own light,
Yet men may doubt, and count all night
Of gloom and guilt within.
Or, when the temple doors should close
Against me, I may find repose
In Sacred Courts, and even those
Who welcome, guess no sin.
When lowly sitting at Thy feet,
My spirit shares the Angels’ meat,
And I am satisfied.
Thou knowest, too, when I would fill
The soul’s deep void with husks—and still
For lack of them I faint—Oh! will
I ne’er with Thee abide?
Our Friendships.
As unbidden Guest to festal board,
Ere the jests pass round and the wine is poured;
When the hostess’ plan is disarranged,
And the place of each is slightly changed
To make room for the Guest unbidden.
Bric-a-Brac.
Of rare old china of classic design;
We find them when least we expect them in store,
In pawn-broker shop, and in dainty boudoir.
Oh those delicate hearts, full of love’s priceless wine,
In their beauty and fulness of grace half divine;
When cherished with reverent caring, they stand;
Or lie shattered at touch of the World’s ruthless hand.
As the thrice-heated metal in yon golden ewer;
Within them may seethe the wild passions of time,
E’en passion in such hearts must needs grow sublime.
Love may falter—then duty shall stand in its place;
Ease vanish—stern action must win in the race;
Earth’s sorrows o’erwhelm—life’s tempests sweep by—
The Soul’s beacon light still gleams brightly on high!
Of necessity chosen for use every day
By those in whose hard lives the gold would grow dim,
And the Sevres unfit for the draught at its brim.
But the Potter—He knoweth! He fashioned each one,
His the care for the vessel, the final “Well done”—
Nor fineness of texture, nor beauty, nor grace,
But fitness for service, determines its place.
Indifference.
When the flood-gates are open, and doubt waves loom high;
And you, in your white-canvassed, well balanced barque,
Should unfurl its strong sails, and calmly pass by;
And that soul be o’erwhelmed, borne ruthlessly down
’Neath the pitiless waves—what gladness or cheer
Could come to your soul, when the darkness has flown,
Though the bright golden morning, break ever so clear?
Autumn.
Wherefore are ye singing?
Know ye not, care ye not
That the wild-wood, ringing
With your songs, joyous songs,
Autumn’s shroud is weaving?
Better far, better far,
Were ye silent grieving.
Why through brown boughs peeping?
Know ye not; heed ye not,
That the flowers are sleeping?
Northern blasts, wintry blasts,
Pitilessly brake them.
Ye are come all too late,
Ever more to wake them.
Photographed.
Just as I promised; long ago,
Don’t look so astonished—Welcome me!
I’ve had a weary journey, you know.
The Artist has done his best to please,
Touched, and retouched, and polished well;
Chosen a posture of perfect ease,
Chattered of more than I can tell.
For I need not be told that my face is plain;
And when photos are starting ‘over the Sea’
I feel in my heart I’m a trifle vain.
He smiled, then said to my strange request,
“Beauty ’bove that of the face, for me;
“Nature has given a richer bequest
“Than perfect form of feature, to thee.”
“He gives me credit for mental worth,”
And fancy led me on, until
I stood by the noble and true of Earth.
Said I, “Thought is better than monarch’s crown,
“Better be great and good, than fair;”
But alas! My castles came tumbling down
When I found he was talking about—my hair.
At Even.
Too languid to pray,
Though with dreams and with prayers
I would fill the whole day;
For I love to dream,
And I fain would pray;
But I work the whole day,
And dream when I may,
And scarcely have ever
A moment to pray.
A Woman’s “Because.”
And consider one moment a woman’s “Because,”
Than to smile in a high supercilious way,
As though all were said, she could possibly say.
I think, if a miracle were to disclose
The thoughts, that behind this one word arose,
And marshalled themselves, each bearing its part,
Some straight from the head, some straight from the heart;
That you who can glibly and easily speak,
For utterance-word having seldom to seek,
Sometimes saying more than you mean; and again
Speaking carelessly, heedless to whom you give pain;
If such insight were granted unto you, I say
You would hush your heart in a startled way,
For behind the brief word, to your great surprise,
Reason and logical thinking would rise.
Impulses, springing from Truth’s hidden laws,
Oft underlying a woman’s “Because”!
That she fails to express herself clearly and well;
And the Age is so new wherein candor and grace
Dare acknowledge themselves from the selfsame place.
Adolphus is trained in the Art of Expression,
While the virtue impressed on Aileen is Repression,
Through childhood and maidenhood, taught to conceal,
The woman oft finds it hard to reveal
Most earnest conviction, and loftiest thought,
With opinions of weightiest import inwrought.
While in this New Age there are questions, involving
The fate of the race, which await her resolving,
She dare not yet speak, untutored and callow,
Lest her speaking appear pedantic or shallow.
None so keen as herself, in herself to find flaws,
Thus, though feeling and knowing, she answers—“Because!”
As though books alone revealed true erudition;
—What ’tis called, matters not—it exists—and its naming
Is unworthy alike either praising or blaming;
By its light, woman’s gaze pierces clouds strangely riven;
And a clearer perception unto her is given
Of all that is noble and worthily leal,
Than you have beheld in your fairest ideal.
Thus, even if language were hers, to express
Just what her soul sees, nothing more, nothing less;
It were useless to speak, for none would commend,
The many would scoff, and few comprehend!
Not till “Cause and Effect” have recognised laws,
Can you possibly fathom a woman’s “Because!”
Content.
A world of waters stretching before,
A moonbeam-path down the starry reach;
And no other soul along the shore.