The Project Gutenberg eBook of Stray Pebbles from the Shores of Thought
Title: Stray Pebbles from the Shores of Thought
Author: Elizabeth Porter Gould
Release date: February 21, 2014 [eBook #44973]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Garcia, Charlie Howard, and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
STRAY PEBBLES
FROM THE
Shores of Thought
BY
ELIZABETH PORTER GOULD
BOSTON
Press of T. O. Metcalf & Co.
1892
COPYRIGHT 1892
BY
ELIZABETH PORTER GOULD
CONTENTS.
| Poems of Nature: | |
| PAGE | |
| To Walt Whitman | 11 |
| To Summer Hours | 12 |
| A True Vacation | 13 |
| A Question | 14 |
| To a Butterfly | 16 |
| In a Hammock | 18 |
| O rare, sweet summer day | 20 |
| An Old Man's Reverie | 22 |
| On Jefferson Hill | 26 |
| On Sugar Hill | 28 |
| At "Fairfield's," Wenham | 29 |
| Blossom-time | 31 |
| The Primrose | 33 |
| Joy, all Joy | 35 |
| Among the Pines | 37 |
| Conscious or Unconscious | 39 |
| Poems of Love: | |
| Love's How and Why | 43 |
| Love's Guerdon | 44 |
| A Birthday Greeting | 45 |
| Three Kisses | 48 |
| If I were only sure | 50 |
| Absence | 52 |
| A Love Song | 53 |
| In Her Garden | 55 |
| Love's Wish | 56 |
| Is there anything purer | 58 |
| Longing | 60 |
| Young Love's Message | 61 |
| A Diary's Secret | 63 |
| A Monologue | 65 |
| A Priceless Gift | 66 |
| The Ocean's Moan | 67 |
| Love's Flower | 70 |
| Renunciation | 71 |
| Love Discrowned | 74 |
| A Widow's Heart Cry | 76 |
| Together | 78 |
| Shadowed Circles | 80 |
| Miscellaneous Poems: | |
| A Song of Success | 85 |
| The Under World | 87 |
| She Knows | 88 |
| At Pittsford, Vermont | 90 |
| Childhood's Days | 92 |
| An Answer | 94 |
| Where, What, Whence | 96 |
| Heroes | 98 |
| A Magdalen's Easter Cry | 100 |
| For the Anniversary of Mrs. Browning's Death | 103 |
| Robert Browning | 105 |
| To Neptune, in behalf of S. C. G. | 107 |
| To the Pansies growing on the grave of A. S. D. | 109 |
| A Broken Heart | 111 |
| My Release | 113 |
| The god of music | 115 |
| To Wilhelm Gericke | 118 |
| For E. T. F. | |
| 1.—After the birth of her son | 119 |
| 2.—Upon the death of her son | 121 |
| To C. H. F. | 123 |
| An Anniversary Poem | 126 |
| A Comfort | 128 |
| An Anniversary | 129 |
| To Miss Elizabeth P. Peabody | 131 |
| At Life's Setting | 133 |
| Grandma Waiting | 136 |
| Does it Pay | 144 |
| Auxilium ab Alto | 145 |
| Limitations | 147 |
| The Muse of History | 148 |
| An Impromptu to G. H. T. | 151 |
| To Mrs. Partington | 153 |
| Lines for the Seventieth Birthday Anniversary of Walt Whitman | 156 |
| Sonnets: | |
| The Known God | 161 |
| To Phillips Brooks | 163 |
| At the "Porter Manse" | 165 |
| Our Lady of the Manse | 167 |
| To B. P. Shillaber | 169 |
| To Our Mary | 171 |
| A Birthday Remembrance | 173 |
| Josef Hofmann | 175 |
| After the Denial | 177 |
| Gethsemane | 179 |
| On Lake Memphremagog | 181 |
| Luke 23: 24 | 183 |
| To Members of my Home Club | 185 |
| For my little Nephews and Nieces: | |
| Mamma's Lullaby | 189 |
| Warren's Song | 190 |
| Baby Mildred | 192 |
| Rosamond and Mildred | 194 |
| 'Chilla | 196 |
| Childish Fancies | 197 |
| What little Bertram did | 199 |
| "Dear little Mac" | 202 |
| Willard and Florence on Mt. Wachusett | 207 |
| A little Brazilian | 210 |
| The little doubter | 213 |
| Our Kitty's Trick | 217 |
| A Message | 220 |
POEMS OF NATURE.
TO WALT WHITMAN.
And what do I feel?
An influx of life from the great central power
That generates beauty from seedling to flower.
And what do I hear?
Original harmonies piercing the din
Of measureless tragedy, sorrow, and sin.
And what do I see?
The temple of God in the perfected man
Revealing the wisdom and end of earth's plan.
August, 1891.
TO SUMMER HOURS.
DAY.
While Day her heart reveals.
Such wealth from secret bowers
King Time himself ne'er steals.
O joy, King Time ne'er steals!
NIGHT.
While Night in beauty sleeps.
Hold back e'en softest showers,—
Enough that mortal weeps.
Ah me, that my heart weeps!
A TRUE VACATION.
IN A HAMMOCK.
Under the trees,
(Oh what ease.)
Nature full of joyous greeting;
Dancing, singing, naught secreting,
Ever glorious thoughts repeating—
Pause, O Time,
I'm satisfied!
Now all life
Is glorified!
Porter Manse, Wenham, Mass.
A QUESTION.
Tell me, O breeze,
Bearing the perfume of flowers and trees,
While gaily decked birds
Pour forth their gladness in songs beyond words,
And cloudlets coquette in the fresh summer air
Rejoicing in everything being so fair—
Is life a farce?
When Nature at heart
Is but the great spirit of love and of art
Eternally saying, "I must God impart."
Tell me, O soul,
Struggling to act out humanity's whole
'Midst Error and Wrong,
And failure in sight of true victory's song;
With Wisdom and Virtue at times lost to view,
And love for the many lost in love for the few—
Is life a farce?
When humanity's heart
Is but the great spirit of love and of art
Eternally crying, "I must God impart."
TO A BUTTERFLY.
Through the air,
So glad to share
The freedom of new living,
Come, tell me my heart's seeking.
Shall I too know
After earth's throe
Full freedom of my being?
Shall I, as you,
Through law as true,
Know life of fuller meaning?
If here on earth
A second birth
Can so transform a being,
Why may not I
In worlds on high
Be changed beyond earth's dreaming?
IN A HAMMOCK.
The breezes sighing round me,
A network glimpse of bluest sky
To meet the upturned seeing eye,
The greenest lawn beneath me,
Loved flowers and birds to greet me,
A well-kept house of ancient days
To tell of human nature's ways,—
Oh happy, happy hour!
Porter Manse, Wenham, Mass.
O RARE, SWEET SUMMER DAY.
To a lingering motion bound,
Like a river in its flowing—
Can there be a softer sound?"
Could'st thou not longer stay?
The soothing, whispering wind's caress
Was bliss to weary brain,
The songs of birds had power to bless
As in fair childhood's reign.
The sky was wondrous clear,
The precious incense of rare flowers
Made sweet the atmosphere;
The shimmering haze of mid-day hour
Was balm to restlessness,
While thought of silent hidden power
Was strength for helplessness—
O rare, sweet summer day,
Could'st thou not longer stay?
Porter Manse.
AN OLD MAN'S REVERIE.
And bear her the message my heart dares to sing.
Pause not on the highways where gathers earth's dust,
Nor in the fair heavens, though cloudlets say must.
But blow through the valleys where flowers await
To give of their essence ere yielding to fate;
Or blow on the hill tops where atmospheres lie
Imbued with the health which no money can buy.
But fail not, O breezes, on Love's swiftest wing
To bear her the message my heart dares to sing.
As, cradled in hammock, I sang in delight,
On that blest summer day in the years long ago,
When life was all sunshine and youth all aglow.
The sweets of the valleys, the breath of the hills
Were gathered—the best that our loved earth distills—
As, obedient still to my wish, on they flew
To the home of my darling they now so well knew.
Alas for my message, so full of love's art!
If only the breezes had followed their will,
And loitered among the pure cloudlets so still,
They'd have met a fair soul from the earth just set free
In search of their help for its message to me;
The message my darling, with last fleeting breath,
In vain tried to utter, o'ertaken by death.
ON JEFFERSON HILL.
(BEFORE THE PRESIDENTIAL RANGE.)
The valleys rest in peace;
The lingering clouds melt into twilight haze,
The birds their warbling cease;
The villagers' hour of welcome sleep is near,
The cattle wander home,
While wrapped in summer-scented atmosphere,
Calm evening comes to roam
With gentle pace
Through star-lit space,
Till moon-kissed Night holds all in her embrace,
And Morning waits to show her dawn-flushed face.
ON SUGAR HILL.
TO F. B. F.
Of glorious mountain peaks;
The purple tint of sunset hour, and charms
The evening hour bespeaks;
The monarch peak kissed by the rising sun,
While clouds keep guard below;
Grand, restful views, with foliage autumn-won,
And Northern lights rare glow,—
Will e'er recall,
In memory's hall,
The happy days when on fair "Look-Off's" height,
Sweet friendship cast her hues of golden light.
Hotel Look-Off, September, 1891.
AT FAIRFIELDSA, WENHAM.
June, 1890.
Clover red and white,
Ferns and crown-topped grasses
Waving with delight,
Dainty locust-blossoms,
All that glad June yields,
Welcome me with gladness
To dearly-loved "Fairfields."
But where's my happy collie dog,
My Rosa?
The butterflies come near,
The hens cease not their cackling,
The horses neigh "I'm here,"
The cows nod "I have missed you,"
The pigs' eyes even shine,
And from the red-house hearth-stone
Comes pet cat Valentine.
But where's my happy collie dog,
My Rosa?
Her handsome, high-bred face,
Her vigorous, playful action
In many a fair field chase.
Not even lively Sancho
Can fill for me her place.
Gone where the good dogs go,
Dost find such fields as "Fairfields,"
More love than we could show?
A "Fairfields" is but another name for "Porter Manse."
BLOSSOM-TIME.
Bearing perfumes rich and rare,
Free from trouble, toil, and care.
Would I were a blossom!
Feeling every velvet breeze,
Free from knowledge that bereaves.
Would I were a robin!
Telling each its happy tale,
Free from worldly noise and sale.
Would I were a violet!
Wafting only purity,
Or like robins, singing free
'Midst the deepening mystery,
Or like violets, caring naught
Only to reflect God's thought."
Porter Manse.
THE PRIMROSE.
After dreaming all day?
Who changes so quickly your sombre green dress
To the yellow one gay,
And makes you the pet of the twilight's caress,
And of poet's sweet lay?
Who does, primrose, pray?
Looked up quickly to say,
"A dear lovely fairy glides down from his throne
In the sun's golden ray,
And with a sweet kiss opens wide all our eyes,
Saying, 'Now is your day.'
And lo! when he's gone we are filled with surprise
At our wondrous array,
So fresh and so gay.
Do tell us the name of this fairy, I pray,
Who gives of his beauty, and then hies away
Without thanks, without pay.
Does he linger your way?"
JOY, ALL JOY.
On a summer day,
With no care to weigh,
Or a bitter thought to stay all that sense might yield—
What a joy to have alway!
Birdlings on the wing
Ere they pause to sing
On the top of bush or tree, or on sweet hay-mound—
Restful joy in everything!
Cows in pastures near,
Wondering why I'm here,
Chipmunks now and then in sight, bees in clover-flower—
Added joy when these appear!
Running here and there.
Farmer's work to share,
Skipping, shouting loud and clear, full of daring play—
Children's joy! Joy everywhere!
AMONG THE PINES.
Love songs sweet and low,
With a rhythmic flow,
Worthy of the glad sun's glow.
Captured by the sound
Of such pleasure found
In a playful daily round.
Wondering all the while
How the trees can smile
Rooted so to earthly guile.
Perfumed from below
By the flowers that show
They, too, murmuring love songs know.
Oh, that I could hear
Love songs once so dear
Death has hushed forever here!
Intervale Woods, North Conway.
CONSCIOUS OR UNCONSCIOUS?
The lightning's vivid chain,
The ocean's strength, the deluge's pour,
The wildest hurricane,
To man who boasts his birth
From conscious force she could not know
Because denied soul-worth.
A knowledge in God's plan?
Must not she His own secret bear
To so touch soul of man?
Into the heart of things;
For how could otherwise God here
Reveal His wanderings?