WINTER IN MAY.
THE SOLITARY.
|
Aweary of his worldly life, The tempter to elude, The hermit flies from work and strife To desert solitude. But there, alas! finds no repose From Fancy's Comus crew, Since dream he must, where'er he goes, With nothing else to do. Would'st drive such imps from heart and brain, Take, then, the ancient way, Prescribed in many a holy strain, And work as well as pray. |
THE GOLDEN MEAN.
|
All inaccessible a Tree arose Amid the shining mountains of Cathay, Its head was capp'd with numbing mists and snows, Around its root a fiery whirlpool lay; But midway 'twixt the furnace and the cloud Bright fruits were by the keen-eyed watchers seen; "There," cried the sage to the excited crowd, "Behold the treasures of the Golden Mean." Then girt he some with wings, and won to skill Through many a fall between the earth and sun, The wings bore names—th' indomitable Will, And Faith—by these the glorious prize they won. |
AUTUMN.
JUSTISSIMA TELLUS.
THE FLINTY FIELD.
|
You scorn our hill of glittering flints As though 'twere sown with dragon's teeth, For that the surface gives no hints, No hopes of genial growth beneath. Judge not the surface, bide the hour When He, whose grace can melt the rock, Shall bid o'er every flint to tower A hundred-headed golden shock. |
HOME AND ABROAD.
DISTANT SOUNDS.
|
The children at their evening play Shout from the village street; The wind blows all that's rude away, The rest is gay and sweet. So from our garden seat on high, We love the sound to hear, For distance that enchants the eye Can fascinate the ear. Trills that distract us from the cage Were in the woods a joy; Who scans too narrowly life's page Will many a boon destroy. |
THE FRIENDLY THORN.
|
I thought an asp had stung my hand While thridding Narnis' fragrant wood, When lo! in purpling blushes grand, As if my homage to command, The queen of all wild roses stood. The captive beauty soon I bound My lady's bosom to adorn,— Beauty whose joy I ne'er had found, Upon that tangled briery mound, But for the sharp and friendly thorn. So hearts that slept from hour to hour, Pierced to the quick by sorrow's cry, Awake to fresh inspiring power, And clasp Faith's brightest purest flower, The rose divine of Charity. |
HAPPINESS.
|
To figure true felicity This picture doth intend, A pleasant road, sweet company, And God's house at the end. |
BRIDEGROOM TO BRIDE.
To the happy all things are heavenly.
|
Where'er I turn this blessed day, 'Tis heaven and sunshine every way; With heavenly songs and heavenly hues, Mingle the birds, and flowers, and dews. Lo! here within the crystal moat Heaven's clouds like radiant islands float, And high above the golden hill Smiles heavenly summer blue and still. I gaze into thy loving eyes, Heaven there in twofold azure lies; And when I glance into my heart, 'Tis heaven indeed—for there thou art! |
THE EAR-RING.
|
An ear-ring you devise For your affianced girl; No diamond will suffice, Nor wealth of lustrous pearl, But call her "dearest dear," Swear nought your love shall sever, If true, you deck her ear With gems that shine for ever. |
THE GARDEN POOL.
|
Charmed by the lily's golden eye, I rest upon this margin cool, And think what leagues of azure sky Are mirrored in the tiny pool. Delicious emblem of the mind Whose fancy rules this bright parterre, Ever 'mid sweetest flowers I find The depths of heaven reflected there. |
THE SCARECROW.
WE JUDGE OTHERS BY OURSELVES.
|
Here within this golden grove, Paved with many a purple flower, Here I sit and wait my love Through the May-day's parting hour. Where the budding gnomons throw Lengthening shadows far and near, Mute I sit as man of snow, Till my darling's voice I hear. Ah! your mirth my passion stirs, Mine who am so old and frail; Bear with me, O lusty sirs! For my love's the nightingale. |
THE LAY FIGURE.
Vanità che par persona.—Dante, Inf. 6.
|
There smirks in many a painter's room, With padded limbs and varnished face, A quaint machine that can assume Each attitude that art would trace. This doll adult, when featly tired, Can all that's great or fair display, Warrior, or dame, or saint inspired, Prince, troubadour, or lovely may. And far beyond the studio's bound, In court and camp, in church or mart, Living machines like this are found, Which lure the eye but mock the heart. On wooden-headed soulless guys We see such draping splendours thrust; But raise the robe, and all surprise Closes in pity and disgust. |
THE WINDMILL.
FAIRIES AND FACTORIES.
|
They crush with piles and tear with thundering wheel The rainbow arches from the torrent's spray; The frightened Fairies, sure of no appeal, Pair off in mournful minuets away. So drudging life stamps out with daily pain Our brightest, lightest fancies one by one; Oh, may we hope to see them shine again Beyond this working world, beyond the sun! |
RIGHTEOUS OVERMUCH.
|
The youthful Furius sped so fast Before his folly's roaring wind, His wildest mates he overpass'd, And health and sense were left behind. Now turned fanatic devotee He deems his mother church too slow, So charters some new craft that he A readier way to Heaven may go. Take heed, my Furius, lest you sail For love and patience all too fast, Without their convoy faith may quail A prey to pirate pride at last. |
INEXPERIENCE.
Eye of stranger magnifies danger.
THE SUNKEN IRON-CLAD.
|
O concentration of brute force! Rhinoceros of the deeps! O ugly Delos on whose shores No soft Latona sleeps! Scant room in thee for birth or love 'Mid monsters furnace-born, The iron-throated guns above, Below, the ripping horn. Heaven grant ere long we find in thee An emblem of all war Beneath the waves of Time's deep sea Buried for evermore! |
THE MASTER'S WILL.
|
Two Caravels to sea were gone, Two striplings passed the city gate; A shattered hull returns alone, A brother wails a brother's fate. But who elects for good or ill? Distrust not mercy though bereft; Though storm winds shriek the Master's will, One taken and the other left. |
NOW OR NEVER.
He who loses luck abuses.
LABOUR LOST.
|
The roads were rock, the sky was flame, The seething mob filled strand and quay, Where came an ancient curious dame Three leagues afoot the launch to see. Now as she stooped amid the crowd, Stooped to remove a galling stone, She heard a shouting rash and loud; She raised her head—the launch was gone. O dame! as thou art such are they Who after years of care and cost, The burning hope of many a day By one ignoble stoop have lost. |
THE LOST FISH.
|
"Ah!" cries the boy, "was never seen A fish like that which broke my rod, Such weight, such breadth of scaly sheen, A sucking whale he might have been, A grampus or Newfoundland cod." Thus in our aims we all are boys, And Fortune's present grace abuse; For, ever of all earthly toys, Love, honours, triumph, gain, or joys, The richest is the one we lose. |
STRIKING THE TENT.
THE TURKISH BRIDGE.
|
Whene'er we saw the arches gleam, We shouted trending down the ridge, "Better by far to ford the stream, Than trust the doubtful Turkish bridge." Such, are false promises believed; Such, confidence and love betrayed; Such those who having once deceived A warning offer, not an aid. |
THE CROCODILE.
|
This monstrous Effet on the solid ground Right on and on can work his easy way, But in his cramping plates of armour bound, Slowly and sorely wheels his length around, And so eludes him every nimble prey. So have we known through prejudice and use, A mind that crawls in one pernicious groove, A dreary tunnel with the narrowest views, A cumbrous mind inflexibly obtuse, Which reason cannot turn nor feeling move. |
THE MOUNTAINS OF EL TIH.
DAMASCUS IN THE EVENING.
THE TWO GOATS.
|
Two goats met on an Alpine ridge, Sharp, sheer, and horrible to see; One crouched and formed a living bridge, And so they passed unscathed and free. That both might prosper one must bend, Oh, learn the lesson, reader mine! So shalt thou compass mercy's end, And so conform to love divine. |
THE ARAB WELL.
THE DEAD CROCODILE.
THE HYÆNA.
|
I saw a foul hyæna led, Two slaves his snout had bound, Captured within a tomb they said, And showed his jaws still reeking red With blood from holy ground. Vile scribblers in their greed of gold, Thus through death's cerements thrust, 'Mid scandals there obscene and old, And tales of darkness best untold, Battening on filthy dust. |
GRATITUDE.
THE NUBIAN BOATMEN.
|
These bronze-armed slaves so lithe and strong, Row on for many a glassy mile Through burning hours, and all the while They praise in sweet recurring song, "The Lord that brings the Nile." O thou, recumbent traveller, note Approval of their simple ways, Who lighten toil with pious lays; 'Twere ill adown life's stream to float Without or work or praise. |
THE CHRISTIAN PILGRIM.
|
Now the Christian pilgrim wanders 'Mid ravines of sin and care; On the craggy ledge he ponders, Probing all with staff of prayer. Freshened by the wayside fountain With the flag of peace still furled, Lo! he hails the shining mountain O'er the ruins of the world. There upon the heights of glory, Lettered on the golden clay, He shall read Earth's complex story And his banner float for aye. |
THE FORGET-ME-NOT.
TEXTS ON TOMBSTONES.
|
Where round our church the pious stones Watch the green pillows of the dead, Pass not, but read in reverent tones The silent Scripture overhead. From desert peak the storm-cloud poured Light on the tables of the Law, But sunshine here o'er flowers and sward Reveals the grace that softens awe. And faith will greet on many a tomb An emblem of His loving speech Who said, if every mouth were dumb The very stones His truth would teach. |
ROSE GARDEN AT ASHRIDGE.
|
Softly at noontide one reposes When sunshine melts the thought to dream, Within this labyrinth of roses Whose centre is the fountain's gleam. We match our mortal life and beauty, With this ineffable array Of creatures free from sin and duty, Delicious even in decay; And love, in you, O blooms and fountain, A brilliant emblem here to own Of souls upon the shining mountain, Exulting round the Mercy throne, Where, lovelier than the loveliest flowers, And all like you in God's employ, They shine their everlasting hours, And shed around a glorious joy. |