<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> BALLADS </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Horatio Alger, Jr. </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> 1875 </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>BALLADS.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> GRAND'THER BALDWIN'S THANKSGIVING </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> ST. NICHOLAS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> BARBARA'S COURTSHIP. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE CONFESSION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> ROSE IN THE GARDEN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> PHOEBE'S WOOING. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE LOST HEART. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> JOHN MAYNARD. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> FRIAR ANSELMO. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> <b>MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE CHURCH AT STRATFORD-ON-AVON. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> MRS. BROWNING'S GRAVE AT FLORENCE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> MY CASTLE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> APPLE-BLOSSOMS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> SUMMER HOURS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> JUNE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> LITTLE CHARLIE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> THE WHIPPOORWILL AND I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> CARVING A NAME. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> <b>IN TIME OF WAR.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> GONE TO THE WAR. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> WHERE IS MY BOY TO-NIGHT? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> A SOLDIER'S VALENTINE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> LAST WORDS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> SONG OF THE CROAKER. (*) </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> KING COTTON. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> OUT OF EGYPT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> THE PRICE OF VICTORY. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> <b>HARVARD ODES.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> OCCASIONAL ODES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> BI-CENTENNIAL ODE. (*) </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> FOR THE CONSECRATION OF A CEMETERY. </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
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<h1> BALLADS. </h1>
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<br/>
<h2> GRAND'THER BALDWIN'S THANKSGIVING </h2>
<p>UNDERNEATH protected branches, from the highway just aloof;<br/>
Stands the house of Grand'ther Baldwin, with its gently sloping roof.<br/>
<br/>
Square of shape and solid-timbered, it was standing, I have heard,<br/>
In the days of Whig and Tory, under royal George the Third.<br/>
<br/>
Many a time, I well remember, I have gazed with Childish awe<br/>
At the bullet-hole remaining in the sturdy oaken door,<br/>
<br/>
Turning round half-apprehensive (recking not how time had fled)<br/>
Of the lurking, savage foeman from whose musket it was sped..<br/>
<br/>
Not far off, the barn, plethoric with the autumn's harvest spoils,<br/>
Holds the farmer's well-earned trophies—the guerdon of his toils;<br/>
<br/>
Filled the lofts with hay, sweet-scented, ravished from the meadows green,<br/>
While beneath are stalled the cattle, with their quiet, drowsy mien.<br/>
<br/>
Deep and spacious are the grain-bins, brimming o'er with nature's gold;<br/>
Here are piles of yellow pumpkins on the barn-floor loosely rolled.<br/>
<br/>
Just below in deep recesses, safe from wintry frost chill,<br/>
There are heaps of ruddy apples from the orchard the hill.<br/>
<br/>
Many a year has Grand'ther Baldwin in the old house dwelt in peace,<br/>
As his hair each year grew whiter, he has seen his herds increase.<br/>
<br/>
Sturdy sons and comely daughters, growing up from childish plays,<br/>
One by one have met life's duties, and gone forth their several ways.<br/></p>
<p>Hushed the voice of childish laughter, hushed is childhood's merry tone,<br/>
the fireside Grand'ther Baldwin and his good wife sit alone.<br/>
<br/>
Turning round half-apprehensive (recking not how time had fled)<br/>
Of the lurking savage foeman from whose musket it was sped.<br/>
<br/>
Not far off, the barn, plethoric with the autumn harvest spoils,<br/>
Holds the farmer's well-earned trophies—the guerdon of his toils;<br/>
<br/>
Filled the lofts with hay, sweet-scented, ravished from the meadows green,<br/>
While beneath are stalled the cattle, with their quiet drowsy mien.<br/>
<br/>
Deep and spacious are the grain-bins, brimming o'er with nature's gold;<br/>
Here are piles of yellow pumpkins on the barn-floor loosely rolled.<br/>
<br/>
Just below in deep recesses, safe from wintry frost and chill,<br/>
There are heaps of ruddy apples from the orchard on the hill.<br/>
<br/>
Many a year has Grand'ther Baldwin in the old house dwelt in peace,<br/>
As his hair each year grew whiter, he has seen his herds increase.<br/>
<br/>
Sturdy sons and comely daughters, growing up from childish plays,<br/>
One by one have met life's duties, and gone forth their several ways.<br/>
<br/>
Hushed the voice of childish laughter, hushed is childhood's merry tone,<br/>
By the fireside Grand'ther Baldwin and his good wife sit alone.<br/></p>
<p>Yet once within the twelvemonth, when the days are short and drear,<br/>
And chill winds chant the requiem of the slowly fading year,<br/>
<br/>
When the autumn work is over, and the harvest gathered in,<br/>
Once again the old house echoes to a long unwonted din.<br/>
<br/>
Logs of hickory blaze and crackle in the fireplace huge anti high,<br/>
Curling wreaths of smoke mount upward to the gray November sky.<br/>
<br/>
Ruddy lads and smiling lasses, just let loose from schooldom's cares,<br/>
Patter, patter, race and clatter, up and down the great hall stairs.<br/>
<br/>
All the boys shall hold high revel; all the girls shall have their way,—<br/>
That's the law at Grand'ther Baldwin's upon each Thanksgiving Day.<br/>
<br/>
From from the parlor's sacred precincts, hark! a madder uproar yet;<br/>
Roguish Charlie's playing stage-coach, and the stage-coach has upset!<br/>
<br/>
Joe, black-eyed and laughter-loving, Grand'ther's specs his nose across,<br/>
Gravely winks at brother Willie, who is gayly playing horse.<br/>
<br/>
Grandma's face is fairly radiant; Grand'ther knows not how to frown,<br/>
though the children, in their frolic, turn the old house upside down.<br/></p>
<p>For the boys may hold high revel, and the girls must have their way;<br/>
That's the law at Grand'ther Baldwin's upon each Thanksgiving Day.<br/>
<br/>
But the dinner—ah! the dinner—words are feeble to portray<br/>
What a culinary triumph is achieved Thanksgiving Day!<br/>
<br/>
Fairly groans the board with dainties, but the turkey rules the roast,<br/>
Aldermanic at the outset, at the last a fleshless ghost.<br/>
<br/>
Then the richness of the pudding, and the flavor of the pie,<br/>
When you've dined at Grandma Baldwin's you will know as well as I.<br/>
<br/>
When, at length, the feast was ended, Grand'ther Baldwin bent his head,<br/>
And, amid the solemn silence, with a reverent voice, he said:—<br/>
<br/>
"Now unto God, the Gracious One, we thanks and homage pay,<br/>
Who guardeth us, and guideth us, and loveth us always!<br/>
<br/>
"He scatters blessings in our paths, He giveth us increase,<br/>
He crowns us with His kindnesses, and granteth us His peace.<br/>
<br/>
"Unto himself, our wandering feet, we pray that He may draw,<br/>
And may we strive, with faithful hearts, to keep His holy law!"<br/></p>
<p>His simple words in silence died: a moment's hush. And then<br/>
From all the listening hearts there rose a solemn-voiced Amen!<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ST. NICHOLAS. </h2>
<p>In the far-off Polar seas,<br/>
Far beyond the Hebrides,<br/>
Where the icebergs, towering high,<br/>
Seem to pierce the wintry sky,<br/>
And the fur-clad Esquimaux<br/>
Glides in sledges o'er the snow,<br/>
Dwells St. Nick, the merry wight,<br/>
Patron saint of Christmas night.<br/>
<br/>
Solid walls of massive ice,<br/>
Bearing many a quaint device,<br/>
Flanked by graceful turrets twain,<br/>
Clear as clearest porcelain,<br/>
Bearing at a lofty height<br/>
Christ's pure cross in simple white,<br/>
Carven with surpassing art<br/>
From an iceberg's crystal heart.<br/>
<br/>
Here St. Nick, in royal state,<br/>
Dwells, until December late<br/>
Clips the days at either end,<br/>
And the nights at each extend;<br/>
Then, with his attendant sprites,<br/>
Scours the earth on wintry nights,<br/>
Bringing home, in well-filled hands,<br/>
Children's gifts from many lands.<br/>
<br/>
Here are whistles, tops and toys,<br/>
Meant to gladden little boys;<br/>
Skates and sleds that soon will glide<br/>
O'er the ice or steep hill-side.<br/>
Here are dolls with flaxen curls,<br/>
Sure to charm the little girls;<br/>
Christmas books, with pictures gay,<br/>
For this welcome holiday.<br/>
<br/>
In the court the reindeer wait;<br/>
Filled the sledge with costly freight.<br/>
As the first faint shadow falls,<br/>
Promptly from his icy halls<br/>
Steps St. Nick, and grasps the rein:<br/>
And afar, in measured time,<br/>
Sounds the sleigh-bells' silver chime.<br/>
<br/>
Like an arrow from the bow<br/>
Speed the reindeer o'er the snow.<br/>
Onward! Now the loaded sleigh<br/>
Skirts the shores of Hudson's Bay.<br/>
Onward, till the stunted tree<br/>
Gains a loftier majesty,<br/>
And the curling smoke-wreaths rise<br/>
Under less inclement skies.<br/>
<br/>
Built upon a hill-side steep<br/>
Lies a city wrapt in sleep.<br/>
Up and down the lonely street<br/>
Sleepy watchmen pace their beat.<br/>
Little heeds them Santa Claus;<br/>
Not for him are human laws.<br/>
With a leap he leaves the ground,<br/>
Scales the chimney at a bound.<br/>
<br/>
Five small stockings hang below;<br/>
Five small stockings in a row.<br/>
From his pocket blithe St. Nick<br/>
Fills the waiting stockings quick;<br/>
Some with sweetmeats, some with toys,<br/>
Gifts for girls, and gifts for boys,<br/>
Mounts the chimney like a bird,<br/>
And the bells are once more heard.<br/>
<br/>
Santa Claus! Good Christmas saint,<br/>
In whose heart no selfish taint<br/>
<br/>
Findeth place, some homes there be<br/>
Where no stockings wait for thee,<br/>
Homes where sad young faces wear<br/>
Painful marks of Want and Care,<br/>
And the Christmas morning brings<br/>
No fair hope of better things.<br/>
<br/>
Can you not some crumbs bestow<br/>
On these Children steeped in woe;<br/>
Steal a single look of care<br/>
Which their sad young faces wear;<br/>
From your overflowing store<br/>
Give to them whose hearts are sore?<br/>
No sad eyes should greet the morn<br/>
When the infant Christ was born.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> BARBARA'S COURTSHIP. </h2>
<p>'Tis just three months and eke a day,<br/>
Since in the meadows, raking hay,<br/>
On looking up I chanced to see<br/>
The manor's lord, young Arnold Lee,<br/>
With a loose hand on the rein,<br/>
Riding slowly down the lane.<br/>
As I gazed with earnest look<br/>
On his face as on a book,<br/>
As if conscious of the gaze,<br/>
Suddenly he turned the rays<br/>
Of his brilliant eyes on me.<br/>
Then I looked down hastily,<br/>
While my heart, like caged bird,<br/>
Fluttered till it might be heard.<br/>
Foolish, foolish Barbara!<br/>
<br/>
We had never met before,<br/>
He had been so long away,<br/>
Visiting some foreign shore,<br/>
I have heard my father say.<br/>
What in truth was he to me,<br/>
Rich and handsome Arnold Lee?<br/>
Fate had placed us far apart;<br/>
Why, then, did my restless heart<br/>
Flutter when his careless glance<br/>
Fell on me by merest chance?<br/>
Foolish, foolish Barbara!<br/>
<br/>
There are faces—are there not?—<br/>
That can never be forgot.<br/>
Looks that seen but once impress<br/>
With peculiar vividness.<br/>
So it was with Arnold Lee.<br/>
Why it was I cannot say<br/>
That, through all the livelong day<br/>
He seemed ever near to me.<br/>
While I raked, as in a dream,<br/>
Now the same place o'er and o'er,<br/>
Till my little sister chid,<br/>
And with full eyes opened wide,<br/>
Much in wonder, gently cried,<br/>
"Why, what ails thee, Barbara?"<br/>
<br/>
I am in the fields again;<br/>
'Tis a pleasant day in June,<br/>
All the songsters are in tune,<br/>
Pouring out their matin hymn.<br/>
All at once a conscious thrill<br/>
Led me, half against my will,<br/>
To look up. Abashed I see<br/>
His dark eyes full fixed on me.<br/>
What he said I do not know,<br/>
But his voice was soft and low,<br/>
As he spoke in careless chat,<br/>
Now of this and now of that,<br/>
While the murmurous waves of sound<br/>
Wafted me a bliss profound.<br/>
Foolish, foolish Barbara!<br/>
<br/>
Am I waking? Scarce I know<br/>
If I wake or if I dream,<br/>
So unreal all things seem;<br/>
Yet I could not well forego<br/>
This sweet dream, if dream it be,<br/>
That has brought such joy to me.<br/>
He has told me that he loves me,—<br/>
He in rank so far above me;<br/>
And when I, with cheeks aglow,<br/>
Told him that it was not meet<br/>
He should wed with one so low,<br/>
He should wed with one so low,<br/>
Then he said, in accents sweet,<br/>
"Far be thoughts of rank or pelf;<br/>
Dear, I love thee for thyself!"<br/>
Happy, happy Barbara!<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> THE CONFESSION. </h2>
<p>I am glad that you have come,<br/>
Arthur, from the dusty town;<br/>
You must throw aside your cares,<br/>
And relax your legal frown.<br/>
Coke and Littleton, avaunt!<br/>
You have ruled him through the day;<br/>
In this quiet, sylvan haunt,<br/>
Be content to yield your sway.<br/>
<br/>
It is pleasant, is it not,<br/>
Sitting here beneath the trees,<br/>
While the restless wind above<br/>
Ripples over leafy seas?<br/>
<br/>
Often, when the twilight falls,<br/>
In the shadow, quite alone,<br/>
I have sat till starlight came,<br/>
Listening to its monotone.<br/>
Yet not always quite alone,—<br/>
Brother, let me take the place<br/>
Just behind you now the moon<br/>
Shines no longer in my face.<br/>
<br/>
It is near two months ago<br/>
Since I met him, as I think,<br/>
By God's mercy, when my horse<br/>
Trembled on the river's brink.<br/>
I had fallen, but his arm<br/>
Firmly seized the bridle-rein,<br/>
And, with one decided grasp,<br/>
Drew me back to life again.<br/>
I was grateful and essayed<br/>
Fitting words my thanks to speak.<br/>
Arthur, when the heart feels most,<br/>
Words, I think, are oftenest weak.<br/></p>
<p>So I stammered and I fear,<br/>
What I said had little grace<br/>
But I knew he understood,<br/>
By the smile upon his face.<br/>
There are faces—his was such—<br/>
That are sealed when in repose;<br/>
Only when a smile floods out,<br/>
All the soul in beauty glows.<br/>
With that smile I grew content,<br/>
And my heart grew strangely calm,<br/>
As with trustful step I walked,<br/>
My arm resting on his arm.<br/>
<br/>
Brother, turn your face away,<br/>
So, dear, I can tell you best<br/>
All that followed; but be sure<br/>
You are looking to the west.<br/>
Arthur, I have seen him since,<br/>
Nearly every day, until<br/>
If I lose him, all my life<br/>
Would grow wan, and dark, and chill.<br/>
Brother, this my love impute<br/>
Not to me for maiden-shame;<br/>
He has sought me for his wife,<br/>
He would crown me with his name.<br/>
Only yesterday he said<br/>
That my love his life would bless:<br/>
Would I grant it? Arthur, dear,<br/>
Was I wrong in saying "Yes"?<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> ROSE IN THE GARDEN. </h2>
<p>THIRTY years have come and gone,<br/>
Melting away like Southern Snows,<br/>
Since, in the light of a summer's night,<br/>
I went to the garden to seek my Rose.<br/>
<br/>
Mine! Do you hear it, silver moon,<br/>
Flooding my heart with your mellow shine?<br/>
Mine! Be witness, ye distant stars,<br/>
Looking on me with eyes divine!<br/>
<br/>
Tell me, tell me, wandering winds,<br/>
Whisper it, if you may not speak—<br/>
Did you ever, in all your round,<br/>
Fan a lovelier brow or cheek?<br/>
<br/>
Long I nursed in my heart the love,<br/>
Love which felt, but dared not tell,<br/>
Till, I scarcely know how or when—<br/>
It found wild words,—and all was well!<br/>
<br/>
I can hear her sweet voice even now—<br/>
It makes my pulses leap and thrill—<br/>
"I owe you more than I well can pay;<br/>
You may take me, Robert, if you will!"<br/>
<br/>
One pleasant summer night,<br/>
the garden walks alone,<br/>
Looking about with restless eyes,<br/>
Wondering whither my Rose had flown,<br/>
<br/>
Till, from a leafy arbor near,<br/>
There came to my ears the sound of speech.<br/>
Who can be with Rose to night?<br/>
Let me hide me under the beach.<br/>
<br/>
It must be one of her female friends,<br/>
Talking with her in the gloaming gray;<br/>
Perchance—I thought—they may speak of me;<br/>
Let me listen to what they say.<br/>
<br/>
This I said with a careless smile,<br/>
And a joyous heart that was free from fears;<br/>
Little I dreamed that the words I heard<br/>
Would weigh on my heavy heart for years.<br/>
<br/>
"Rose, my Rose! for your heart is mine,"<br/>
I heard in a low voice, passion-fraught,<br/>
"In the sight of Heaven we are truly one;<br/>
Why will you cast me away for naught?<br/>
<br/>
"Will you give your hand where your heart goes not<br/>
To a man who is grave and stern and old;<br/>
And whose love compared with my passion-heat,<br/>
As the snow of the frozen North, is cold?"<br/>
<br/>
And Rose—I could feel her cheek grow pale—<br/>
Her voice was tremulous, then grew strong—<br/>
"Richard," she said, "your words are wild,<br/>
And you do my guardian bitter wrong.<br/>
<br/>
"Did you never hear how, years gone by,"—<br/>
She spoke in a tremulous undertone—<br/>
"Bereft of friends, o'er the world's highways,<br/>
I wandered forth as a child alone?<br/>
<br/>
"He opened to me his home and heart—<br/>
He whom you call so stern and cold—<br/>
And my grateful heart I may well bestow<br/>
On him for his kindness manifold."<br/>
<br/>
"Rose," he said, in a saddened tone,<br/>
"I thank him for all he has done for thee;<br/>
He has acted nobly—I did him wrong—<br/>
But is there no voice in your heart for me?"<br/>
<br/>
And Rose—she trembled—I felt it all;<br/>
I heard her quick breath come and go;<br/>
Her voice was broken; she only said,<br/>
"Have pity, Richard, and let me go!"<br/>
<br/>
And then—Heaven gave me strength, I think—<br/>
I stood before them calm and still;<br/>
You might have thought my tranquil breast<br/>
Had never known one passion-thrill.<br/>
<br/>
And they alternate flushed and paled;<br/>
Rose tottered, and I feared would fall;<br/>
I caught her in supporting arms,<br/>
And whispered, "Rose, I heard it all.<br/>
<br/>
"I had a dream, but it is passed,<br/>
That we might journey, hand in hand<br/>
Along the rugged steeps of life,<br/>
Until we reached God's promised land.<br/>
<br/>
"This was my dream;—'tis over now;—<br/>
Thank Heaven, it is not yet too late!<br/>
I pray no selfish act of mine<br/>
May keep two young hearts separate."<br/>
<br/>
I placed her passive hand in his—<br/>
With how much pain God only knows—<br/>
And blessing him for her sweet sake,<br/>
I left him standing with my Rose!<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> PHOEBE'S WOOING. </h2>
<p>"PHOEBE! Phoebe! Where is the chit?<br/>
When I want her most she's out of the way.<br/>
Child, you're running a long account<br/>
Up, to be squared on Judgment-day.<br/>
<br/>
"Where have you been? and what have you there?"<br/>
"To the pasture for buttercups wet with dew."<br/>
"My patience! I think you are out of your wits;<br/>
I wonder what good will buttercups do?<br/>
<br/>
"There's pennyroyal you might have got,—<br/>
It might have been useful to you or me,<br/>
But I never heard, in all my life,<br/>
Of buttercup cordial or buttercup tea.<br/>
<br/>
"I want you to stay and mind the bread,<br/>
I've just put two loaves in the oven to bake;<br/>
When they are clone take them carefully out,<br/>
And put in their place this loaf of cake,<br/>
<br/>
"While I run over to Widow Brown's;<br/>
Her son, from the mines, has just got back.<br/>
I don't believe he's a cent in his purse,<br/>
Young men are so shiftless now, alack!<br/>
<br/>
"It was very different when I was young;<br/>
Young men were prudent, and girls were wise;<br/>
You wouldn't catch them gadding about<br/>
Like so many idle butterflies."<br/>
<br/>
So bustled and scolded the worthy dame,<br/>
Until she had passed the outer sill,<br/>
To do her justice, it seldom chanced<br/>
That her hands were idle, or tongue was still.<br/></p>
<p>So Phoebe gathered her knitting up,<br/>
And sat her down in the chimney niche;<br/>
But her mind was on other thoughts intent,<br/>
And here and there she dropped a stitch.<br/>
<br/>
The yellow kitten purred on the hearth,<br/>
While the kitchen clock, with its frame of oak,<br/>
In the corner stood, like a sentinel,<br/>
And challenged time with its measured stroke.<br/>
<br/>
But Phoebe's mind was on none of these:<br/>
The bread in the oven, her good aunt's frown,<br/>
And the scene before her faded away,<br/>
And blended with thoughts of Reuben Brown:<br/>
<br/>
How they walked together on summer days,<br/>
Or bravely faced the winter's chill,<br/>
And chatted merrily all the way<br/>
To the little school-house on Sligo Hill.<br/>
<br/>
How both grew older, and school-days passed,<br/>
When he was a youth, and a maiden she;<br/>
How often she went with Reuben Brown<br/>
To the rustic dance or the social bee.<br/>
<br/>
The warm flush deepened on Phoebe's cheek,<br/>
And she breathed a low, half-conscious sigh;<br/>
"Ah, well-a-day! they were happy times,<br/>
But he has forgotten, and so must I."<br/>
<br/>
So Phoebe gathered her knitting up,<br/>
Which, while she was thinking, had fallen down,<br/>
When her quick ear caught a strange footfall,<br/>
And there in the doorway stood Reuben Brown,<br/>
<br/>
With the same frank, handsome face she knew,<br/>
A smile as bright, and an eye as black—<br/>
"Phoebe," he said, "I have wandered far;<br/>
Are you glad to see your playmate back?"<br/>
<br/>
The kitten still purred on the kitchen hearth,<br/>
And the ancient clock, with its frame of oak,<br/>
In the corner stood, like a sentinel,<br/>
And challenged time with its measured stroke.<br/>
<br/>
A pleased light shone in the maiden's eyes;<br/>
Ah, love, young love, it is very sweet!<br/>
Reuben had gone, but she sat quite still,<br/>
And the knitting lay untouched at her feet.<br/>
<br/>
Just then the dame came bustling in,<br/>
And went to the oven without ado.<br/>
"Why, Phoebe, child, what have you done?<br/>
The bread is baked as black as my shoe!"<br/>
<br/>
And Phoebe started, and blushed for shame,<br/>
Took up her knitting and dropped it down;<br/>
And when her aunt said, "What ails you, child?"<br/>
She hastily answered, "Reuben Brown."<br/>
<br/>
Ah, love! young love! it is very sweet,<br/>
In field, or hamlet, or crowded mart;<br/>
But it burns with the brightest, purest flame<br/>
In the hidden depths of a young maid's heart.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE LOST HEART. </h2>
<p>One golden summer day,<br/>
Along the forest-way,<br/>
Young Colin passed with blithesome steps alert.<br/>
<br/>
His locks with careless grace<br/>
Rimmed round his handsome face<br/>
And drifted outward on the airy surge.<br/>
<br/>
So blithe of heart was he,<br/>
He hummed a melody,<br/>
And all the birds were hushed to hear him sing.<br/>
<br/>
Across his shoulders flung<br/>
His bow and baldric hung:<br/>
So, in true huntsman's guise, he threads the wood.<br/>
<br/>
The sun mounts up the sky,<br/>
The air moves sluggishly,<br/>
And reeks with summer heat in every pore.<br/>
<br/>
His limbs begin to tire,<br/>
Slumbers his youthful fire;<br/>
He sinks upon a violet-bed to rest.<br/>
<br/>
The soft winds go and come<br/>
With low and drowsy hum,<br/>
And ope for him the ivory gate of dreams.<br/>
<br/>
Beneath the forest-shade<br/>
There trips a woodland maid,<br/>
And marks with startled eye the sleeping youth.<br/>
<br/>
At first she thought to fly,<br/>
Then, timid, drawing nigh,<br/>
She gazed in wonder on his fair young face.<br/>
<br/>
When swiftly stooping down<br/>
Upon his locks so brown<br/>
She lightly pressed her lips, and blushing fled.<br/>
<br/>
When Colin woke from sleep,<br/>
From slumbers calm and deep,<br/>
He felt—he knew not how—his heart had flown.<br/>
<br/>
And so, with anxious care,<br/>
He wandered here and there,<br/>
But could not find his lost heart anywhere.<br/>
<br/>
Then he, with air distraught,<br/>
And brow of anxious thought,<br/>
Went out into the world beyond the wood.<br/>
<br/>
Of each that passed him by,<br/>
He queried anxiously,<br/>
"I prithee, hast thou seen a heart astray?"<br/>
<br/>
Some stared and hurried on,<br/>
While others said in scorn.<br/>
"Your heart has gone in search of your lost wits"<br/>
<br/>
The day is wearing fast,<br/>
Young Colin comes at last<br/>
To where a cottage stood embowered in trees.<br/>
<br/>
He looks within, and there<br/>
He sees a maiden fair,<br/>
Who sings low songs the while she plies her wheel.<br/>
<br/>
"I prithee, maiden bright,"—<br/>
She turns as quick as light,<br/>
And straight a warm flush crimsons all her face.<br/>
<br/>
She, much abashed, looks down,<br/>
For on his locks so brown<br/>
She seems to see the marks her lips have made.<br/></p>
<p>Whereby she stands confest;<br/>
What need to tell the rest?<br/>
He said, "I think, fair maid, you have my heart.<br/>
<br/>
"Nay, do not give it back,<br/>
I shall not feel the lack,<br/>
If thou wilt give to me thine own therefor."<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> JOHN MAYNARD. </h2>
<p>'Twas on Lake Erie's broad expanse<br/>
One bright midsummer day,<br/>
The gallant steamer Ocean Queen<br/>
Swept proudly on her way.<br/>
Bright faces clustered on the deck,<br/>
Or, leaning o'er the side,<br/>
Watched carelessly the feathery foam<br/>
That flecked the rippling tide.<br/>
<br/>
Ah, who beneath that cloudless sky,<br/>
That smiling bends serene,<br/>
Could dream that danger awful, vast,<br/>
Impended o'er the scene,—<br/>
Could dream that ere an hour had sped<br/>
That frame of sturdy oak<br/>
Would sink beneath the lake's blue waves,<br/>
Blackened with fire and smoke?<br/>
<br/>
A seaman sought the captain's side,<br/>
A moment whispered low;<br/>
The captain's swarthy face grew pale;<br/>
He hurried down below.<br/>
Alas, too late! Though quick, and sharp,<br/>
And clear his orders came,<br/>
No human efforts could avail<br/>
To quench the insidious flame.<br/>
<br/>
The bad news quickly reached the deck,<br/>
It sped from lip to lip,<br/>
And ghastly Faces everywhere<br/>
Looked from the doomed ship.<br/>
"Is there no hope—no chance of life?"<br/>
A hundred lips implore,<br/>
"But one," the captain made reply,<br/>
"To run the ship on shore."<br/>
<br/>
A sailor, whose heroic soul<br/>
That hour should yet reveal,<br/>
By name John Maynard, eastern-born,<br/>
Stood calmly at the wheel.<br/>
"Head her south-east!" the captain shouts,<br/>
Above the smothered roar,—<br/>
"Head her south-east without delay!<br/>
Make for the nearest shore!"<br/>
<br/>
No terror pales the helmsman's cheek,<br/>
Or clouds his dauntless eye,<br/>
As, in a sailor's measured tone,<br/>
His voice responds, "Ay! ay!"<br/>
Three hundred souls, the steamer's freight,<br/>
Crowd forward wild with fear,<br/>
While at the stern the dreaded flames<br/>
Above the deck appear.<br/>
<br/>
John Maynard watched the nearing flames,<br/>
But still with steady hand<br/>
He grasped the wheel, and steadfastly<br/>
He steered the ship to land.<br/>
"John Maynard, can you still hold out?"<br/>
He heard the captain cry;<br/>
A voice from out the stifling smoke<br/>
Faintly responds, "Ay! ay!"<br/>
<br/>
But half a mile! a hundred hands<br/>
Stretch eagerly to shore.<br/>
But half a mile! That distance sped<br/>
Peril shall all be o'er.<br/>
But half a mile! Yet stay, the flames<br/>
No longer slowly creep,<br/>
But gather round that helmsman bold,<br/>
With fierce, impetuous sweep.<br/>
<br/>
"John Maynard!" with an anxious voice<br/>
The captain cries once more,<br/>
"Stand by the wheel five minutes yet,<br/>
And we shall reach the shore."<br/>
Through flame and smoke that dauntless heart<br/>
Responded firmly still,<br/>
Unawed, though face to face with death,—<br/>
"With God's good help I will!"<br/>
<br/>
The flames approach with giant strides,<br/>
They scorch his hand and brow;<br/>
One arm, disabled, seeks his side,<br/>
Ah! he is conquered now!<br/>
But no, his teeth are firmly set,<br/>
He crushes down his pain,<br/>
His knee upon the stanchion pressed,<br/>
He guides the ship again.<br/>
<br/>
One moment yet! one moment yet!<br/>
Brave heart, thy task is o'er,<br/>
The pebbles grate beneath the keel.<br/>
The steamer touches shore.<br/>
Three hundred grateful voice rise<br/>
In praise to God that he<br/>
Hath saved them from the fearful fire,<br/>
And from the engulphing sea.<br/>
<br/>
But where is he, that helmsman bold?<br/>
The captain saw him reel,—<br/>
His nerveless hands released their task,<br/>
He sank beside the wheel.<br/>
The wave received his lifeless corpse,<br/>
Blackened with smoke and fire.<br/>
God rest him! Never hero had<br/>
A nobler funeral pyre!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FRIAR ANSELMO. </h2>
<p>Friar Anselmo (God's grace may he win!)<br/>
Committed one sad day a deadly sin;<br/>
<br/>
Which being done he drew back, self-abhorred,<br/>
From the rebuking presence of the Lord,<br/>
<br/>
And, kneeling down, besought, with bitter cry,<br/>
Since life was worthless grown, that he might die.<br/>
<br/>
All night he knelt, and, when the morning broke,<br/>
In patience still he waits death's fatal stroke.<br/>
<br/>
When all at once a cry of sharp distress<br/>
Aroused Anselmo from his wretchedness;<br/>
<br/>
And, looking from the convent window high,<br/>
He saw a wounded traveller gasping lie<br/>
<br/>
Just underneath, who, bruised and stricken sore,<br/>
Had crawled for aid unto the convent door.<br/>
<br/>
The friar's heart with deep compassion stirred,<br/>
When the poor wretch's groans for help were heard<br/>
<br/>
With gentle hands, and touched with love divine,<br/>
He bathed his wounds, and poured in oil and wine.<br/>
<br/>
With tender foresight cared for all his needs,—<br/>
A blessed ministry of noble deeds.<br/>
<br/>
In such devotion passed seven days. At length<br/>
The poor wayfarer gained his wonted strength.<br/>
<br/>
With grateful thanks he left the convent walls,<br/>
And once again on death Anselmo calls.<br/>
<br/>
When, lo! his cell was filled with sudden light,<br/>
And on the wall he saw an angel write,<br/>
<br/>
(An angel in whose likeness he could trace,<br/>
More noble grown, the traveller's form and face),<br/>
<br/>
"Courage, Anselmo, though thy sin be great,<br/>
God grants thee life that thou may'st expiate.<br/>
<br/>
"Thy guilty stains shall be washed white again,<br/>
By noble service done thy fellow-men.<br/>
<br/>
"His soul draws nearest unto God above,<br/>
Who to his brother ministers in love."<br/>
<br/>
Meekly Anselmo rose, and, after prayer,<br/>
His soul was lightened of its past despair.<br/>
<br/>
Henceforth he strove, obeying God's high will,<br/>
His heaven-appointed mission to fulfil.<br/>
<br/>
And many a soul, oppressed with pain and grief,<br/>
Owed to the friar solace and relief.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CHURCH AT STRATFORD-ON-AVON. </h2>
<p>One autumn day, when hedges yet were green,<br/>
And thick-branched trees diffused a leafy gloom,<br/>
Hard by where Avon rolls its silvery tide,<br/>
I stood in silent thought by Shakspeare's tomb.<br/>
<br/>
O happy church, beneath whose marble floor<br/>
His ashes lie who so enriched mankind;<br/>
The many-sided Shakespeare, rare of soul,<br/>
And dowered with an all-embracing mind.<br/>
<br/>
Through the stained windows rays of sunshine fall<br/>
In softened glory on the chancel floor;<br/>
While I, a pilgrim from across the sea,<br/>
stand with bare head in reverential awe.<br/>
<br/>
Churches there are within whose gloomy vaults<br/>
Repose the bones of those that once were kings;<br/>
Their power has passed, and what remains but clay?<br/>
While in his grave our Shakspeare lives and sings.<br/>
<br/>
Kings were his puppets, kingdoms but his stage,—<br/>
Faint shadows they without his plastic art,—<br/>
He waves his wand, and lo! they live again,<br/>
And in his world perform their mimic part.<br/>
<br/>
Born in the purple, his imperial soul<br/>
Sits crowned and sceptred in the realms of mind.<br/>
Kingdoms may fall, and crumble to decay,<br/>
Time but confirms his empire o'er mankind.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MRS. BROWNING'S GRAVE AT FLORENCE. </h2>
<p>FLORENCE wears an added grace,<br/>
All her earlier honors crowning;<br/>
Dante's birthplace, Art's fair home,<br/>
Holds the dust of Barrett Browning.<br/>
<br/>
Guardian of the noble dead<br/>
That beneath thy soil lie sleeping,<br/>
England, with full heart, commends<br/>
This new treasure to thy keeping.<br/>
<br/>
Take her, she is half thine own;<br/>
In her verses' rich outpouring,<br/>
Breathes the warm Italian heart,<br/>
Yearning for the land's restoring.<br/>
<br/>
From thy skies her poet-heart<br/>
Caught a fresher inspiration,<br/>
And her soul obtained new strength,<br/>
With her bodily translation.<br/>
<br/>
Freely take what thou hast given,<br/>
Less her verses' rhythmic beauty,<br/>
Than the stirring notes that called<br/>
Trumpet-like thy sons to duty.<br/>
<br/>
Rarest of exotic flowers<br/>
In thy native chaplet twining,<br/>
To the temple of thy great<br/>
Add her—she is worth enshrining.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MY CASTLE. </h2>
<p>I have a beautiful castle,<br/>
With towers and battlements fair;<br/>
And many a banner, with gay device,<br/>
Floats in the outer air.<br/>
<br/>
The walls are of solid silver;<br/>
The towers are of massive gold;<br/>
And the lights that stream from the windows<br/>
A royal scene unfold.<br/>
<br/>
Ah! could you but enter my castle<br/>
With its pomp of regal sheen,<br/>
You would say that it far surpasses<br/>
The palace of Aladeen.<br/>
<br/>
Could you but enter as I do,<br/>
And pace through the vaulted hall,<br/>
And mark the stately columns,<br/>
And the pictures on the wall;<br/>
<br/>
With the costly gems about them,<br/>
That send their light afar,<br/>
With a chaste and softened splendor<br/>
Like the light of a distant star!<br/>
<br/>
And where is this wonderful castle,<br/>
With its rich emblazonings,<br/>
Whose pomp so far surpasses<br/>
The homes of the greatest kings?<br/>
<br/>
Come out with me at morning<br/>
And lie in the meadow-grass,<br/>
And lift your eyes to the ether blue,<br/>
And you will see it pass.<br/>
<br/>
There! can you not see the battlements;<br/>
And the turrets stately and high,<br/>
Whose lofty summits are tipped with clouds,<br/>
And lost in the arching sky?<br/>
<br/>
Dear friend, you are only dreaming,<br/>
Your castle so stately and fair<br/>
Is only a fanciful structure,—<br/>
A castle in the air.<br/>
<br/>
Perchance you are right. I know not<br/>
If a phantom it may be;<br/>
But yet, in my inmost heart, I feel<br/>
That it lives, and lives for me.<br/>
<br/>
For when clouds and darkness are round me,<br/>
And my heart is heavy with care,<br/>
I steal me away from the noisy crowd,<br/>
To dwell in my castle fair.<br/>
<br/>
There are servants to do my bidding;<br/>
There are servants to heed my call;<br/>
And I, with a master's air of pride,<br/>
May pace through the vaulted hall.<br/>
<br/>
And I envy not the monarchs<br/>
With cities under their sway;<br/>
For am I not, in my own right,<br/>
A monarch as proud as they?<br/>
<br/>
What matter, then, if to others<br/>
My castle a phantom may be,<br/>
Since I feel, in the depths of my own heart,<br/>
That it is not so to me?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> APPLE-BLOSSOMS. </h2>
<p>I sit in the shadow of apple-boughs,<br/>
In the fragrant orchard close,<br/>
And around me floats the scented air,<br/>
With its wave-like tidal flows.<br/>
I close my eyes in a dreamy bliss,<br/>
And call no king my peer;<br/>
For is not this the rare, sweet time,<br/>
The blossoming time of the year?<br/>
<br/>
I lie on a couch of downy grass,<br/>
With delicate blossoms strewn,<br/>
And I feel the throb of Nature's heart<br/>
Responsive to my own.<br/>
Oh, the world is fair, and God is good,<br/>
That maketh life so dear;<br/>
For is not this the rare, sweet time,<br/>
The blossoming time of the year?<br/>
<br/>
I can see, through the rifts of the apple-boughs,<br/>
The delicate blue of the sky,<br/>
And the changing clouds with their marvellous tints<br/>
That drift so lazily by.<br/>
And strange, sweet thoughts sing through my brain,<br/>
And Heaven, it seemeth near;<br/>
Oh, is it not a rare, sweet time,<br/>
The blossoming time of the year?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SUMMER HOURS. </h2>
<p>It is the year's high noon,<br/>
The earth sweet incense yields,<br/>
And o'er the fresh, green fields<br/>
Bends the clear sky of June.<br/>
<br/>
I leave the crowded streets,<br/>
The hum of busy life,<br/>
Its clamor and its strife,<br/>
To breathe thy perfumed sweets.<br/>
<br/>
O rare and golden hours!<br/>
The bird's melodious song,<br/>
Wavelike, is borne along<br/>
Upon a strand of flowers.<br/>
<br/>
I wander far away,<br/>
Where, through the forest trees,<br/>
Sports the cool summer breeze,<br/>
In wild and wanton play.<br/>
<br/>
A patriarchal elm<br/>
Its stately form uprears,<br/>
Which twice a hundred years<br/>
Has ruled this woodland realm.<br/>
<br/>
I sit beneath its shade,<br/>
And watch, with careless eye,<br/>
The brook that babbles by,<br/>
And cools the leafy glade.<br/>
<br/>
In truth I wonder not,<br/>
That in the ancient days<br/>
The temples of God's praise<br/>
Were grove and leafy grot.<br/>
<br/>
The noblest ever planned,<br/>
With quaint device and rare,<br/>
By man, can ill compare<br/>
With these from God's own hand.<br/>
<br/>
Pilgrim with way-worn feet,<br/>
Who, treading life's dull round,<br/>
No true repose hast found,<br/>
Come to this green retreat.<br/>
<br/>
For bird, and flower, and tree,<br/>
Green fields, and woodland wild,<br/>
Shall bear, with voices mild,<br/>
Sweet messages to thee.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> JUNE. </h2>
<p>Throw open wide your golden gates,<br/>
O poet-landed month of June,<br/>
And waft me, on your spicy breath,<br/>
The melody of birds in tune.<br/>
<br/>
O fairest palace of the three,<br/>
Wherein Queen Summer holdeth sway,<br/>
I gaze upon your leafy courts<br/>
From out the vestibule of May.<br/>
<br/>
I fain would tread your garden walks,<br/>
Or in your shady bowers recline;<br/>
Then open wide your golden gates,<br/>
And make them mine, and make them mine.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LITTLE CHARLIE. </h2>
<p>A VIOLET grew by the river-side,<br/>
And gladdened all hearts with its bloom;<br/>
While over the fields, on the scented air,<br/>
It breathed a rich perfume.<br/>
But the clouds grew dark in the angry sky,<br/>
And its portals were opened wide;<br/>
And the heavy rain beat down the flower<br/>
That grew by the river-side.<br/>
<br/>
Not far away in a pleasant home,<br/>
There lived a little boy,<br/>
Whose cheerful face and childish grace<br/>
Filled every heart with joy.<br/>
He wandered one day to the river's verge,<br/>
With no one near to save;<br/>
And the heart that we loved with a boundless love<br/>
Was stilled in the restless wave.<br/>
<br/>
The sky grew dark to our tearful eyes,<br/>
And we bade farewell to joy;<br/>
For our hearts were bound by a sorrowful tie<br/>
To the grave of the little boy.<br/>
The birds still sing in the leafy tree<br/>
That shadows the open door;<br/>
We heed them not, for we think of the voice<br/>
That we shall hear no more.<br/>
<br/>
We think of him at eventide,<br/>
And gaze on his vacant chair<br/>
With a longing heart that will scarce believe<br/>
That Charlie is not there.<br/>
We seem to hear his ringing laugh,<br/>
And his bounding step at the door;<br/>
But, alas! there comes the sorrowful thought,<br/>
We shall never hear them more!<br/>
<br/>
We shall walk sometimes to his little grave,<br/>
In the pleasant summer hours;<br/>
We will speak his name in a softened voice,<br/>
And cover his grave with flowers;<br/>
We will think of him in his heavenly home,—<br/>
In his heavenly home so fair;<br/>
And we will trust with a hopeful trust<br/>
That we shall meet him there.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE WHIPPOORWILL AND I. </h2>
<p>IN the hushed hours of night, when the air quite still,<br/>
I hear the strange cry of the lone whippoorwill,<br/>
Who Chants, without ceasing, that wonderful trill,<br/>
Of which the sole burden is still, "Whip-poor-Will."<br/>
<br/>
And why should I whip him? Strange visitant,<br/>
Has he been playing truant this long summer day?<br/>
I listened a moment; more clear and more shrill<br/>
Rang the voice of the bird, as he cried, "Whip-poor-Will."<br/>
<br/>
But what has poor Will done? I ask you once more;<br/>
I'll whip him, don't fear, if you'll tell me what for.<br/>
I paused for an answer; o'er valley and hill<br/>
Rang the voice of the bird, as he cried, "Whip-poor-Will."<br/>
<br/>
Has he come to your dwelling, by night or by day,<br/>
And snatched the young birds from their warm nest away?<br/>
I paused for an answer; o'er valley and hill<br/>
Rang the voice of the bird, as he cried, "Whip-poor-Will."<br/>
<br/>
Well, well, I can hear you, don't have any fears,<br/>
I can hear what is constantly dinned in my ears.<br/>
The obstinate bird, with his wonderful trill,<br/>
Still made but one answer, and that, "Whip-poor-Will."<br/>
<br/>
But what HAS poor Will done? I prithee explain;<br/>
I'm out of all patience, don't mock me again.<br/>
The obstinate bird, with his wonderful trill,<br/>
Still made the same answer, and that, "Whip-poor-Will."<br/>
<br/>
Well, have your own way, then; but if you won't tell,<br/>
I'll shut down the window, and bid you farewell;<br/>
But of one thing be sure, I won't whip him until<br/>
You give me some reason for whipping poor Will.<br/>
<br/>
I listened a moment, as if for reply,<br/>
But nothing was heard but the bird's mocking cry.<br/>
I caught the faint echo from valley and hill;<br/>
It breathed the same burden, that strange "Whip-poor-Will."<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CARVING A NAME. </h2>
<p>I wrote my name upon the sand,<br/>
And trusted it would stand for aye;<br/>
But, soon, alas! the refluent sea<br/>
Had washed my feeble lines away.<br/>
<br/>
I carved my name upon the wood,<br/>
And, after years, returned again;<br/>
I missed the shadow of the tree<br/>
That stretched of old upon the plain.<br/>
<br/>
To solid marble next, my name<br/>
I gave as a perpetual trust;<br/>
An earthquake rent it to its base,<br/>
And now it lies, o'erlaid with dust.<br/>
<br/>
All these have failed. In wiser mood<br/>
I turn and ask myself, "What then?"<br/>
If I would have my name endure,<br/>
I'll write it on the hearts of men,<br/>
<br/>
In characters of living light,<br/>
Of kindly deeds and actions wrought.<br/>
And these, beyond the touch of time,<br/>
Shall live immortal as my thought.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> IN TIME OF WAR. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> GONE TO THE WAR. </h2>
<p>My Charlie has gone to the war,<br/>
My Charlie so brave and tall;<br/>
He left his plough in the furrow,<br/>
And flew at his country's call.<br/>
May God in safety keep him,—<br/>
My precious boy—my all!<br/>
<br/>
My heart is pining to see him;<br/>
I miss him every day;<br/>
My heart is weary with waiting,<br/>
And sick of the long delay,—<br/>
But I know his country needs him,<br/>
And I could not bid him stay.<br/>
<br/>
I remember how his face flushed,<br/>
And how his color came,<br/>
When the flash from the guns of Sumter<br/>
Lit the whole land with flame,<br/>
And darkened our country's banner<br/>
With the crimson hue of shame.<br/>
<br/>
"Mother," he said, then faltered,—<br/>
I felt his mute appeal;<br/>
I paused—if you are a mother,<br/>
You know what mothers feel,<br/>
When called to yield their dear ones<br/>
To the cruel bullet and steel.<br/>
<br/>
My heart stood still for a moment,<br/>
Struck with a mighty woe;<br/>
A faint as of death came o'er me,<br/>
I am a mother, you know,<br/>
But I sternly checked my weakness,<br/>
And firmly bade him "Go."<br/>
<br/>
Wherever the fight is fiercest<br/>
I know that my boy will be;<br/>
Wherever the need is sorest<br/>
Of the stout arms of the free.<br/>
May he prove as true to his country<br/>
As he has been true to me.<br/>
<br/>
My home is lonely without him,<br/>
My hearth bereft of joy,<br/>
The thought of him who has left me<br/>
My constant sad employ;<br/>
But God has been good to the mother,—<br/>
She shall not blush for her boy.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHERE IS MY BOY TO-NIGHT? </h2>
<p>When the clouds in the Western sky<br/>
Flush red with the setting sun,—<br/>
When the veil of twilight falls,<br/>
And the busy day is done,—<br/>
I sit and watch the clouds,<br/>
With their crimson hues alight,<br/>
And ponder with anxious heart,<br/>
Oh, where is my boy to-night?<br/>
<br/>
It is just a year to-day<br/>
Since he bade me a gay good-by,<br/>
To march where banners float,<br/>
And the deadly missiles fly.<br/>
As I marked his martial step<br/>
I felt my color rise<br/>
With all a mother's pride,<br/>
And my heart was in my eyes.<br/>
<br/>
There's a little room close by,<br/>
Where I often used to creep<br/>
In the hush of the summer night<br/>
To watch my boy asleep.<br/>
But he who used to rest<br/>
Beneath the spread so white<br/>
Is far away from me now,—<br/>
Oh, where is my boy to-night?<br/>
<br/>
Perchance in the gathering night,<br/>
With slow and weary feet,<br/>
By the light of Southern stars,<br/>
He paces his lonely beat.<br/>
Does he think of the mother's heart<br/>
That will never cease to yearn,<br/>
As only a mother's can,<br/>
For her absent boy's return?<br/>
<br/>
Oh, where is my boy to-night?<br/>
I cannot answer where,<br/>
But I know, wherever he is,<br/>
He is under our Father's care.<br/>
May He guard, and guide, and bless<br/>
My boy, wherever he be,<br/>
And bring him back at length<br/>
To bless and to comfort me.<br/>
<br/>
May God bless all our boys<br/>
By the camp-fire's ruddy glow,<br/>
Or when in the deadly fight<br/>
They front the embattled foe;<br/>
And comfort each mother's heart,<br/>
As she sits in the fading light,<br/>
And ponders with anxious heart—<br/>
Oh, where is my boy to-night?<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A SOLDIER'S VALENTINE. </h2>
<p>Just from the sentry's tramp<br/>
(I must take it again at ten),<br/>
I have laid my musket down,<br/>
And seized instead my pen;<br/>
For, pacing my lonely round<br/>
In the chilly twilight gray,<br/>
The thought, dear Mary, came,<br/>
That this is St. Valentine's Day.<br/>
<br/>
And with the thought there came<br/>
A glimpse of the happy time<br/>
When a school-boy's first attempt<br/>
I sent you, in borrowed rhyme,<br/>
On a gilt-edged sheet, embossed<br/>
With many a quaint design,<br/>
And signed, in school-boy hand,<br/>
"Your loving Valentine."<br/>
<br/>
The years have come and gone,—<br/>
Have flown, I know not where,—<br/>
And the school-boy's merry face<br/>
Is grave with manhood's care;<br/>
But the heart of the man still beats<br/>
At the well-remembered name,<br/>
And on this St. Valentine's Day<br/>
His choice is still the same.<br/>
<br/>
There was a time—ah, well!<br/>
Think not that I repine<br/>
When I dreamed this happy day<br/>
Would smile on you as mine;<br/>
But I heard my country's call;<br/>
I knew her need was sore.<br/>
Thank God, no selfish thought<br/>
Withheld me from the war.<br/>
<br/>
But when the dear old flag<br/>
Shall float in its ancient pride,<br/>
When the twain shall be made one,<br/>
And feuds no more divide,—<br/>
I will lay my musket down,<br/>
My martial garb resign,<br/>
And turn my joyous feet<br/>
Toward home and Valentine.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LAST WORDS. </h2>
<p>"DEAR Charlie," breathed a soldier,<br/>
"O comrade true and tried,<br/>
Who in the heat of battle<br/>
Pressed closely to my side;<br/>
I feel that I am stricken,<br/>
My life is ebbing fast;<br/>
I fain would have you with me,<br/>
Dear Charlie, till the last.<br/>
<br/>
"It seems so sudden, Charlie,<br/>
To think to-morrow's sun<br/>
Will look upon me lifeless,<br/>
And I not twenty-one!<br/>
I little dreamed this morning,<br/>
Twould bring my last campaign;<br/>
God's ways are not as our ways,<br/>
And I will not complain.<br/>
<br/>
"There's one at home, dear Charlie,<br/>
Will mourn for me when dead,<br/>
Whose heart—it is a mother's—<br/>
Can scarce be comforted.<br/>
You'll write and tell her, Charlie,<br/>
With my dear love, that I<br/>
Fought bravely as a soldier should,<br/>
And died as he should die.<br/>
<br/>
"And you will tell her, Charlie,<br/>
She must not grieve too much,<br/>
Our country claims our young lives,<br/>
For she has need of such.<br/>
And where is he would falter,<br/>
Or turn ignobly back,<br/>
When Duty's voice cries 'Forward,'<br/>
And Honor lights the track?<br/>
<br/>
"And there's another, Charlie<br/>
(His voice became more low),<br/>
When thoughts of HER come o'er me,<br/>
It makes it hard to go.<br/>
This locket in my bosom,<br/>
She gave me just before<br/>
I left my native village<br/>
For the fearful scenes of war.<br/>
<br/>
"Give her this message, Charlie,<br/>
Sent with my dying breath,<br/>
To her and to my banner<br/>
I'm 'faithful unto death.'<br/>
And if, in that far country<br/>
Which I am going to,<br/>
Our earthly ties may enter,<br/>
I'll there my love renew.<br/>
<br/>
"Come nearer, closer, Charlie,<br/>
My head I fain would rest,<br/>
It must be for the last time,<br/>
Upon your faithful breast.<br/>
Dear friend, I cannot tell you<br/>
How in my heart I feel<br/>
The depth of your devotion,<br/>
Your friendship strong as steel.<br/>
<br/>
"We've watched and camped together<br/>
In sunshine and in rain;<br/>
We've shared the toils and perils<br/>
Of more than one campaign;<br/>
And when my tired feet faltered,<br/>
Beneath the noontide heat,<br/>
Your words sustained my courage,<br/>
Gave new strength to my feet.<br/>
<br/>
"And once,—'twas at Antietam,—<br/>
Pressed hard by thronging foes,<br/>
I almost sank exhausted<br/>
Beneath their cruel blows,—<br/>
When you, dear friend, undaunted,<br/>
With headlong courage threw<br/>
Your heart into the contest,<br/>
And safely brought me through.<br/>
<br/>
"My words are weak, dear Charlie,<br/>
My breath is growing scant;<br/>
Your hand upon my heart there,<br/>
Can you not hear me pant?<br/>
Your thoughts I know will wander<br/>
Sometimes to where I lie—<br/>
How dark it grows! True comrade<br/>
And faithful friend, good-by!"<br/>
<br/>
A moment, and he lay there<br/>
A statue, pale and calm.<br/>
His youthful head reclining<br/>
Upon his comrade's arm.<br/>
His limbs upon the greensward<br/>
Were stretched in careless grace,<br/>
And by the fitful moon was seen<br/>
A smile upon his face.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SONG OF THE CROAKER. (*) </h2>
<p>* Written by request for the Philadelphia Sanitary Fair.<br/>
<br/>
An old frog lived in a dismal swamp,<br/>
In a dismal kind of way;<br/>
And all that he did, whatever befell,<br/>
Was to croak the livelong day.<br/>
Croak, croak, croak,<br/>
When darkness filled the air,<br/>
And croak, croak, croak,<br/>
When the skies were bright and fair.<br/>
<br/>
"Good Master Frog, a battle is fought,<br/>
And the foeman's power is broke."<br/>
But he only turned a greener hue,<br/>
And answered with a croak.<br/>
Croak, croak, croak,<br/>
When the clouds are dark and dun,<br/>
And croak, croak, croak,<br/>
In the blaze of the noontide sun.<br/>
<br/>
"Good Master Frog, the forces of right<br/>
Are driving the hosts of wrong."<br/>
But he gave his head an ominous shake,<br/>
And croaked out, "Nous verrons!"<br/>
Croak, croak, croak,<br/>
Till the heart is full of gloom,<br/>
And croak, croak, croak,<br/>
Till the world seems but a tomb.<br/>
<br/>
To poison the cup of life,<br/>
By always dreading the worst.<br/>
Is to make of the earth a dungeon damp,<br/>
And the happiest life accursed.<br/>
Croak, croak, croak,<br/>
When the noontide sun rides high,<br/>
And croak, croak, croak,<br/>
Lest the night come by and by.<br/>
<br/>
Farewell to the dismal frog;<br/>
Let him croak as loud as he may,<br/>
He cannot blot the sun from heaven,<br/>
Nor hinder the march of day,<br/>
Though he croak, croak, croak,<br/>
Till the heart is full of gloom,<br/>
And croak, croak, croak,<br/>
Till the world seems but a tomb.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> KING COTTON. </h2>
<p>KING COTTON looks from his window<br/>
Towards the westering sun,<br/>
And he marks, with an anguished horror,<br/>
That his race is almost run.<br/>
<br/>
His form is thin and shrunken;<br/>
His cheek is pale and wan;<br/>
And the lines of care on his furrowed brow<br/>
Are dread to look upon.<br/>
<br/>
But yesterday a monarch,<br/>
In the flush of his pomp and pride,<br/>
And, not content with his own broad lands,<br/>
He would rule the world beside.<br/>
<br/>
He built him a stately palace,<br/>
With gold from beyond the sea;<br/>
And he laid with care the corner-stone,<br/>
And he called it Slavery:<br/>
<br/>
He summoned an army with banners,<br/>
To keep his foes at bay;<br/>
And, gazing with pride on his palace walls,<br/>
He said, "They will stand for aye!"<br/>
<br/>
But the palace walls are shrunken,<br/>
And partly overthrown,<br/>
And the storms of war, in their violence,<br/>
Have loosened the corner-stone.<br/>
<br/>
Now Famine stalks through the palace halls,<br/>
With her gaunt and pallid train;<br/>
You can hear the cries of famished men,<br/>
As they cry for bread in vain.<br/>
<br/>
The king can see, from his palace walls.<br/>
A land by his pride betrayed;<br/>
Thousands of mothers and wives bereft.<br/>
Thousands of graves new-made.<br/>
<br/>
And he seems to see, in the lowering sky,<br/>
The shape of a flaming sword;<br/>
Whereon he reads, with a sinking heart,<br/>
The anger of the Lord.<br/>
<br/>
God speed the time when the guilty king<br/>
Shall be hurled from his blood-stained throne;<br/>
And the palace of Wrong shall crumble to dust,<br/>
With its boasted corner-stone.<br/>
<br/>
A temple of Freedom shall rise instead,<br/>
On the desecrated site:<br/>
And within its shelter alike shall stand<br/>
The black man and the white.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> OUT OF EGYPT. </h2>
<p>To Egypt's king, who ruled beside<br/>
The reedy river's flow,<br/>
Came God's command, "Release, O king,<br/>
And let my people go."<br/>
<br/>
The king's proud heart grew hard apace;<br/>
He marked the suppliant throng,<br/>
And said, "Nay, they must here abide;<br/>
The weak must serve the strong."<br/>
<br/>
Straightway the Lord stretched forth his hand,<br/>
And every stream ran blood;<br/>
The river swept towards the sea—<br/>
A full ensanguined flood.<br/>
<br/>
The haughty king beheld the land,<br/>
By plagues afflicted sore,<br/>
But, as God's wonders multiplied,<br/>
Hardened his heart the more;<br/>
<br/>
Until the angel of the Lord<br/>
Came on the wings of Night,<br/>
And smote first-born of man and beast,<br/>
In his destructive flight.<br/>
<br/>
Throughout all Egypt, not a house<br/>
Was spared this crowning woe.<br/>
Then broke the tyrant's stubborn will;<br/>
He bade the people go.<br/>
<br/>
They gathered up their flocks and herds,<br/>
Rejoicing to be free;<br/>
And, going forth, a mighty host,<br/>
Encamped beside the sea.<br/></p>
<p>Then Pharaoh's heart repented him;<br/>
He called a mighty force,<br/>
And swiftly followed on their track,<br/>
With chariot and with horse.<br/>
<br/>
Then Israel's host were sore afraid;<br/>
But God was on their side,<br/>
And, lo! for them a way is cleft,<br/>
The Red-sea waves divide.<br/>
<br/>
At God's command the restless waves<br/>
Obey the prophet's rod;<br/>
And, through the middle of the sea,<br/>
The people marched dry-shod.<br/>
<br/>
But, when the spoilers, following close,<br/>
Would hinder Israel's flight,<br/>
The waters to their course return,<br/>
The parted waves unite,<br/>
<br/>
And Pharaoh's host is swept away,<br/>
The chariots and the horse;<br/>
And not a man is left alive<br/>
Of all that mighty force.<br/>
<br/>
So in these days God looks from heaven,<br/>
And marks his servants' woe;<br/>
Hear ye his voice: "Break every yoke,<br/>
And let my people go!"<br/>
<br/>
For them the Red-sea waves divide,<br/>
The streams with crimson flow;<br/>
Therefore we mourn for our first-born;—<br/>
Then let the people go.<br/>
<br/>
They are not weak whom God befriends,<br/>
He makes their cause His own;<br/>
And they who fight against God's might<br/>
Shall surely be o'erthrown.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PRICE OF VICTORY. </h2>
<p>"A VICTORY!—a victory!"<br/>
Is flashed across the wires;<br/>
Speed, speed the news from State to State,<br/>
Light up the signal fires!<br/>
Let all the bells from all the towers<br/>
A joyous peal ring out;<br/>
We've gained a glorious victory,<br/>
And put the foe to rout!<br/>
<br/>
A mother heard the chiming bells;<br/>
Her joy was mixed with pain.<br/>
"Pray God," she said, "my gallant boy<br/>
Be not among the slain!"<br/>
Alas for her! that very hour<br/>
Outstretched in death he lay,<br/>
The color from his fair, young face<br/>
Had scarcely passed away.<br/>
<br/>
His nerveless hand still grasped the sword.<br/>
He never more might wield,<br/>
His eyes were sealed in dreamless sleep<br/>
Upon that bloody field.<br/>
The chestnut curls his mother oft<br/>
Had stroked in fondest pride,<br/>
Neglected hung in clotted locks,<br/>
With deepest crimson dyed.<br/>
<br/>
Ah! many a mother's heart shall ache,<br/>
And bleed with anguish sore,<br/>
When tidings come of him who marched<br/>
So blithely forth to war.<br/>
Oh! sad for them, the stricken down<br/>
In manhood's early dawn,<br/>
And sadder yet for loving hearts.<br/>
God comfort them that mourn!<br/>
<br/>
Yes, victory has a fearful price<br/>
Our hearts may shrink to pay,<br/>
And tears will mingle with the joy<br/>
That greets a glorious day.<br/>
But he who dies in freedom's cause,<br/>
We cannot count him lost;<br/>
A battle won for truth and right<br/>
Is worth the blood it cost!<br/>
<br/>
O mothers! count it something gained<br/>
That they, for whom you mourn,<br/>
Bequeath fair Freedom's heritage<br/>
To millions yet unborn;—<br/>
And better than a thousand years<br/>
Of base, ignoble breath,<br/>
A patriot's fragrant memory,<br/>
A hero's early death!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HARVARD ODES. </h2>
<p>(SUNG AT ANNUAL DINNERS OF THE HARVARD CLUB<br/>
<br/>
OF New York. NEW YORK.)<br/></p>
<p>HARVARD ODES.<br/>
<br/>
I.<br/>
<br/>
(Feb. 23, 1869.)<br/>
<br/>
Fair Harvard, dear guide of our youth's golden days;<br/>
At thy name all our hearts own a thrill,<br/>
We turn from life's highways, its business, its cares,<br/>
We are boys in thy tutelage still.<br/>
And the warm blood of youth to our veins, as of yore,<br/>
Returns with impetuous flow,<br/>
Reviving the scenes and the hopes that were ours<br/>
In the vanished, but sweet Long Ago.<br/>
<br/>
Once more through thy walks, Alma Mater, we tread,<br/>
And we dream youth's fair dreams once again,<br/>
We are heroes in fight for the Just and the Right,<br/>
We are knights without fear, without stain;<br/>
Its doors in fair prospect the world opens wide,<br/>
Its prizes seem easy to win,—<br/>
We are strong in our faith, we are bold in our might,<br/>
And we long for the race to begin.<br/>
<br/>
Though dimmed are our hopes, and our visions are fled,<br/>
Our dreams were but dreams, it is true;<br/>
Dust-stained from the contest we gather to-night,<br/>
The sweet dreams of youth to renew.<br/>
Enough for to-morrow the cares it shall bring,<br/>
We are boys, we are brothers, to-night;<br/>
And our hearts, warm with love, Alma Mater, to thee,<br/>
Shall in loyal devotion unite.<br/></p>
<p>II.<br/>
<br/>
(Feb. 11, 1870.)<br/>
<br/>
As we meet in thy name, Alma Mater, to-night,<br/>
All our hearts and our hopes are as one,<br/>
And love for the mother that nurtured his youth<br/>
Beats high in the breast of each son.<br/>
The sweet chords of Memory bridge o'er the Past,<br/>
The years fade away like a dream,<br/>
By the banks of Cephissus, beneath the green trees,<br/>
We tread thy fair walks, Academe.<br/>
<br/>
The heights of Hymettus that bound the near view<br/>
Fill the air with an odor as sweet<br/>
As the beautiful clusters of sun-tinted grapes<br/>
From the vineyards that lie at our feet.<br/>
O realm of enchantment, O Wonderful land,<br/>
Where the gods hold high converse with men,<br/>
Come out from the dusk of past ages once more,<br/>
And live in our fancy again.<br/>
<br/>
Let us drink to the Past as our glasses we lift,<br/>
Let eye speak to eye, heart to heart,<br/>
Let the bonds of sweet fellowship bind each to each,<br/>
In the hours that remain ere we part.<br/>
And thou, Alma Mater, grown fairer with age,<br/>
Let us echo the blessing that fell<br/>
From thy motherly lips, as we stood at thy side,<br/>
And thou bad'st us God-speed and Farewell.<br/></p>
<p>III.<br/>
<br/>
(Feb. 21, 1872.)<br/>
<br/>
Fair Harvard, the months have accomplished their round<br/>
And a year stands full-orbed and complete,<br/>
Since last at thy summons, with dutiful hearts,<br/>
Thy children sat here at thy feet.<br/>
Since last in thy presence, grown youthful once more,<br/>
We drank to the past and its joys,<br/>
Shaking off every care that encumbered our years,<br/>
And dreamed that again we were boys.<br/>
<br/>
To-night once again in thy presence we meet<br/>
In the freshness and flush of life's spring;<br/>
We wait but thy blessing, we ask but thy smile,<br/>
As our sails to the free air we fling.<br/>
The winds breathe auspicious that waft us along,<br/>
The sky, undisturbed, smiles serene,<br/>
Hope stands at the prow, and the waters gleam bright<br/>
With sparkles of silvery sheen.<br/>
<br/>
And thy voice, Alma Mater, so potent and sweet,<br/>
Still sounds in our ears as of yore,<br/>
And thy motherly counsel we hear, wisdom-fraught,<br/>
As we push our frail barks from the shore.<br/>
From the foam-crested waves of the mountainous sea<br/>
As backward our glances we strain,<br/>
We see the dear face of our mother benign,<br/>
And bless her again and again.<br/></p>
<p>IV.<br/>
<br/>
(Feb. 21, 1873.)<br/>
<br/>
There's a fountain of Fable whose magical power<br/>
Time's ravages all could repair,<br/>
And replace the bowed form and the tottering step,<br/>
The wrinkles and silvery hair,<br/>
By the brown flowing locks and the graces of youth,<br/>
Its footstep elastic and light,<br/>
Could mantle the cheek with its long-vanished bloom<br/>
And make the dull eye keen and bright.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis only a fable—a beautiful dream,<br/>
But the fable, the dream, shall come true,<br/>
As thy sons, Alma Mater, assemble to-night<br/>
The joys of past years to renew.<br/>
Our eyes shall grow bright with their old wonted light,<br/>
Our spirits untrammelled by care,<br/>
And the Goddess of Hope, with her fresh rainbow tints,<br/>
Shall paint every prospect more fair.<br/>
<br/>
How sweet were the friendships we formed in thy halls!<br/>
How strong were the tendrils that bound<br/>
Our hearts to the mother whose provident care<br/>
Encompassed her children around!<br/>
Now strong in our manhood we cherish her still;<br/>
And if by misfortune brought low,<br/>
Our strength shall support her, our arms bear her up,<br/>
And sustain her through weal and through woe.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> OCCASIONAL ODES. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BI-CENTENNIAL ODE. (*) </h2>
<p>(June 13, 1860.)<br/>
<br/>
* Sung at the bi-centennial celebration of the incorporation<br/>
of Marlboro, Mass.<br/></p>
<p>From the door of the homestead the mother looks forth,<br/>
With a glance half of hope, half of fear,<br/>
For the clock in the corner now points to the hour<br/>
When the children she loves should appear.<br/>
For have they not promised, whatever betide,<br/>
On this their dear mother's birthday,<br/>
To gather once more round the family board,<br/>
Their dutiful service to pay?<br/>
<br/>
From the East and the West, from the North and the South,<br/>
In communion and intercourse sweet,<br/>
Her children have come, on this festival day,<br/>
To sit, as of old, at her feet.<br/>
And our mother,—God bless her benevolent face!—<br/>
How her heart thrills with motherly joys,<br/>
As she stands at the portal, with arms opened wide,<br/>
To welcome her girls and her boys.<br/>
<br/>
And yet, when the first joyful greetings are o'er,<br/>
When the words of her welcome are said:<br/>
A shadow creeps over her motherly face,<br/>
As she silently thinks of the dead,<br/>
Of the children whose voices once rang through her fields,<br/>
Who shared all her hopes and alarms,<br/>
Till, tired with the burden and heat of the day,<br/>
They have fallen asleep in her arms.<br/>
<br/>
They have gone from our midst, but their labors abide<br/>
On the fields where they prayerfully wrought;<br/>
They scattered the seed, but the harvest is ours,<br/>
By their toil and self-sacrifice bought.<br/>
As we scan the fair scene that once greeted their eyes,<br/>
As we tread the same paths which they trod,<br/>
Let us tenderly think of our elders by birth,<br/>
Who have gone to their rest, and their God.<br/>
<br/>
God bless the old homestead! some linger there still,<br/>
In the haunts which their childhood has known,<br/>
While others have wandered to places remote,<br/>
And planted new homes of their own;<br/>
But Time cannot weaken the ties Love creates,<br/>
Nor absence, nor distance, impede<br/>
The filial devotion which thrills all our hearts,<br/>
As we bid our old mother God-speed.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> FOR THE CONSECRATION OF A CEMETERY. </h2>
<p>This verdant field that smiles to Heaven<br/>
In Nature's bright array,<br/>
From common uses set apart,<br/>
We consecrate to-day.<br/>
<br/>
"God's Acre" be it fitly called,<br/>
For when, beneath the sod,<br/>
We lay the dead with reverent hands,<br/>
We yield them back to God.<br/>
<br/>
And His great love, so freely given,<br/>
Shall speak in clearer tones,<br/>
When, pacing through these hallowed walks,<br/>
We read memorial stones.<br/>
<br/>
Here let the sunshine softly fall,<br/>
And gently drop the rain,<br/>
And Nature's countless harmonies<br/>
Blend one accordant strain;<br/>
<br/>
That they who seek this sacred place,<br/>
In mourning solitude,<br/>
In all this gracious company<br/>
May have their faith renewed.<br/>
<br/>
So, lifted to serener heights,<br/>
And purified from dross,<br/>
Their trustful hearts shall rest on God,<br/>
And profit by their loss.<br/></p>
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