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Brown leaves and other verses

Chapter 28: TREES
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About This Book

A compact collection of lyrical poems that employ seasonal and floral imagery to meditate on love, loss, memory, and faith. Several pieces draw parallels between nature's cycles—spring renewal, autumn decay, winter's hush—and human consolation and hope. Occasional lyrics address lovers, family, and childhood in a domestic, nostalgic voice, while devotional and reflective tones underscore trust in providence and moral order. Language is plainspoken and observant, favoring intimate reverie and steady formal rhythms over dramatic invention.

The chariot of the dawn rolls in
And, far above all care,
As freely as the gladsome lark
My thought finds upper air.
My thought finds upper air with thee:
O fear thou not, I pray,
That such rare visions of the soul
Unfit us for the way,
Our feet must journey. ’Tis not so:
For look thou—as we soar
Is there not glory in the vale
We never saw before?
Yet was there glory in the vale
And you and I were there—
The same blue sky was over head,
The same fond, brooding care
Was over us: yet we were blind
Till Love, like him of old,
Laid on our eyes his healing hand,
And lo, we now behold
Life as it is. Yet more and more,
As time shall roll away,
I trow new glories will unfold,
We dream not of to-day.
My thought finds upper air, my love,
And thou art with me there—
The glory of the mountain heights
We’ll carry everywhere.

DREAMS

Like beams of light to darkness,
Is fancy, to the real;
Lifting the down-cast spirit
Unto its high ideal.
Dreamers are all about us,
On mountain or by sea,
And had we no such visions,
Less bright this world would be.
The aged man is dreaming
Of merry boyhood days;
Of favorite haunts, and schoolmates,
And of their wonted plays.
His life was then all sunshine,
He roamed about at will;
And years passed on as smoothly,
As glides a laughing rill.
But time has brought her burdens
Of mingled pain and care;
They’ve bent his manly figure,
And silvered o’er his hair.
Stately is now his bearing,
He breathes a freer air;
Then call him not from dreamland,
For he is happy there.
O, may such glorious visions
Oft to his spirit come;
For, surely, they are gateways
Unto that “Heavenly Home.”
The future to the youthful
Diffuses brightest beams;
All wants and wishes granted,
In golden future dreams.
O, many fairy castles
The youthful fancy rears!
But when the air dissolves them,
Oft come the bitter tears.
Still, chide them not for building,
Burdens will lighter seem;
And life, with all its shadows,
Be brighter for the dream.
Of what the infant dreameth,
The wisest ne’er may know;
Yet, they must be in dreamland,
When the dimples come and go.
Over a faded blossom,
Or shining curl, we dream,
Till absent forms, through memory,
E’en almost present seem.
Yes, dreams are fraught with blessings,
In love and mercy given;
And oft are golden stairways,
Which draw us nearer heaven.

THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW

As at sea the eager voyager
Thoughtfully from shore to shore,
Waves farewell to scenes behind him,
Welcomes scenes that rise before;
So I stand upon Time’s ocean,
And, as from my outer view
Fades the old year’s face in glory,
Dawns the new in roseate hue.
Dear old year, forever loyal,
Listen to my thought of thee,
All thou hast been, all thou now art
Wilt thou be in memory.
Summing up my gain and losses,
Do I find my gain is more,
Wider vision, richer friendships
Have been added to my store.
Dear Old Year—Lo! thou art vanished,
And here, standing in thy place,
Is the New Year, full of promise,
With the self-same care-free face
Thou did’st wear, when first I knew thee.
Welcome New Year! Hear my vow:
I will trust in all thy future,
And will do thy bidding, now.
As ye enter with the new year,
Young or old, be brave at heart—
Life hath need of faithful service,
And each soul must bear its part;
Sweeter than a nation’s praises
For high deeds of valor done
Is the simple joy of duty,
Is the peace from victory won.

COLUMBUS

A Fragment

LOST DAYS

MOTHER’S PRAYER

EXPECTATION

THE SILENCE OF THE ROSEBUD

SEED-TIME AND HARVEST

TO A BLUE-FRINGED GENTIAN

A FRAGMENT

MY CHRISTMAS WISH

TO A ROSEBUD

TREES

How helpful to my life are forest trees!
Their beauty charms me, while their strength sustains
My weakness, and to be a day with them
Is as a sweet communion-day with God.
How, like a strong man, stands the sturdy oak,
Mightier than all his fellows; yet he seems
To boast, not strength inherited, so much
As from fierce battling with the elements,
Relying not on Providence alone,
But on himself—remembering the past,
And how from feebleness he grew to strength.
Was ever king in purple and in gold
So grand as they in autumn’s coloring?
A most inspiring lesson to my life
Their beauty teacher. In it, I behold
A type of what this human life should be
When the end cometh.
Faces, I have seen,
That speak to me, e’en as these autumn leaves,
Of a rich harvest safely garnered in.
Would autumn leaves be just as richly dyed,
Did only sunshine and warm summer showers
Fall on them, and the dreary days come not?
But e’en as glory of the king may fade,
Or he be robbed of all his rich attire,
So fade and pass away their glories all,
While ever and anon the drear winds sigh
A requiem of sadness. Yet, above
The dead leaves rustling, do the days go on,
And spring-time gladness will return again.
O, in their hours of calm, do trees not dream
Of the bright days to come of bud and bloom?

Thus do they speak to me, and seem to teach
The wondrous mystery of life and death.
The first spring dandelion’s bloom is more
To me than all the written word; it speaks
Directly to the soul, and seem to be
The voice of God. It is a thing of life,
And what can better solve the mystery?
It is a proof of promises fulfilled,
And bids us trust, unfalteringly, when
Again the dead leaves rustle ’neath our feet,
And the cold snow-flakes cover all we love.
O God, so many paths lead unto Thee,
’Twere strange if any soul should miss the way!