The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Cornflower and Other Poems, by Jean Blewett.
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Title: The Cornflower, and Other Poems
Author: Jean Blewett
Release date: April 6, 2011 [eBook #35779]
Most recently updated: January 7, 2021
Language: English
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CORNFLOWER, AND OTHER POEMS ***
Cover
The Cornflower
and Other Poems
BY
JEAN BLEWETT
Author of "Heart Songs,"
etc.
TORONTO WILLIAM BRIGGS 1906
Entered according to Act of the
Parliament of Canada, in the year
one thousand nine hundred and six,
by JEAN BLEWETT, at the Department
of Agriculture.
TO
Lillian Massey Treble
A woman with a heart of gold I heard her called before I knew How noble was that heart and true, How full of tenderness untold.
Her sympathies both broad and sure, Her one desire to do the right— Clear visioned from the inner light God gives to souls unworldly, pure.
A heart of gold that loves and gives, God's almoner from day to day, Of her there is but this to say: The world is better that she lives.
The day she came we were planting corn,The west eighty-acre field,—These prairie farms are great for size,And they're sometimes great for yield.
"The new school-ma'am is up to the house,"The chore-boy called out to me;I went in wishing anyone elseHad been put in chief trustee.
I was to question that girl, you see,Of the things she ought to know;As for these same things, I knew right wellI'd forgot them long ago.
I hadn't kept track of women's ways,'Bout all I knew of the sexWas that they were mighty hard to please,And easy enough to vex.
[16]My sister Mary, who ruled my house—And me—with an iron hand,Was all the woman I knew real well—Her I didn't understand.
But I'd no call to grumble at fate,Fifty, well off, and unwed;Young as a lad in spite of the dustOld Time had thrown on my head.
I engaged the school-ma'am on the spot,And the reason, I surmise,Was this, she didn't giggle or blush,But looked me fair in the eyes.
The planting over, why, every ladIn a space of ten good mileWas off for the school with a sudden zealThat made all us old folks smile.
How she took to our wide prairieAfter towns with narrow streets!To watch that west eighty-acre fieldWas one of her queer conceits.
"You planted that corn the day I came,"She said, "and I love to goAnd watch the sun-mother kiss and coaxEach slim green stalk to grow."
[17]I called her "Cornflower" when she tookTo wearing 'em in her belt.The young chaps were all in love with her—And I knew just how they felt.
Oh, I tell you that was a summer,Such sunshine, such dew, such rain;Never saw crops grow so in my life—Don't expect I will again.
To watch that west eighty-acre field,When the fall came clear and cold,Was something like a sermon to me—Made me think of streets of gold.
But about that time the new school-ma'amHad words with the first trustee;A scholar had taken the feverAnd she was for blaming me.
That schoolhouse should be raised from the ground—Grave reason there for alarm;A new coat of plaster be put onThat the children be kept warm.
A well—a good one—should take the placeOf the deathtrap that was there."This should all be done at once," she said.Cost five hundred dollars clear!
[18]I told her I couldn't think of it,But, when all my work was through,If the taxes came in middling good,I would see what I could do.
"Remember you're only the steward,"She said, "of your acres broad,And that the cry of a little childGoes straight to the ears of God."
I remarked that it wasn't her placeTo dictate to the trustee,And Cornflower lifted her eyes of blueAnd looked what she thought of me.
That night as we came up from the fields,And talked of the threatened frost,The chore-boy called out, half pleased, half scared:"The school-ma'am's got herself lost."
I turned me about and spoke no word;I'd find her and let her seeI held no spite 'gainst a wayward girlFor lecturing a trustee.
For I knew before I found the knotOf ribbon that she had worn,That somehow Betty had lost her wayIn the forest of ripened corn.
[19]The sun went down and left the worldBeautiful, happy and good;True, the girl and myself had quarrelled,But when I found her and stood
With silver stars mistily shiningThrough the deep blue of the skies,Heard somebody sob like a baby,Saw tears in somebody's eyes.
Why, I just whispered, "Betty, Betty,"Then whispered "Betty" some more;Not another word did I utter—I'll stick to this o'er and o'er.
You needn't ask me to explain, friends,I don't know how 'twas myself,That first "Betty" said I was ashamedOf my greedy love of pelf.
The second one told her I'd be gladTo raise the old schoolhouse up,And be in haste to put down a well,With a pump and drinking cup.
The third "Betty" told her I would actA higher and nobler part;The fourth "Betty" told her I loved her—Loved her with all my heart.
[20]"Ah, well! there's no fool like an old fool,"Was what sister Mary said;"No fool in the world like an old fool,You'll find that out, brother Ned."
"Mary," I said, "there's a better thingThan land, or dollar, or dime;If being in love is being a foolHere's one till the end of time."
I should think so, I'm a married manFour years come this Christmastide,And autumn now is flinging her goldO'er the fields on every side.
My wife called out as I drove the cowsTo the pasture-field this morn,"Ned, please go look for your son and heir,He toddled off in the corn."
And sister Mary must make a joke;"Go find him at once," said she,"You know to get lost in a field of cornRuns in that boy's family."
When Mary found fault with me that day the trouble was well begun.No man likes being found fault with, no man really thinks it funTo have a wisp of a woman, in a most obnoxious way,Allude to his temper as beastly, and remark that day by dayHe proves himself so careless, so lacking in love, so mean,Then add, with an air convincing, she wishes she'd never seenA person who thinks so little of breaking a woman's heart,And since he is—well, what he is—'tis better that they
should part.
Now, no man enjoys this performance—he has his faults, well and
good,He doesn't want to hear them named—this ought to be understood.[22]Mary was aggravating, and all because I'd forgotTo bring some flowers I'd promised—as though it mattered a lot;But that's the way with a woman, your big sins she may forgive,But little things, not worth mention, you hear of as long as you live.
A few sweet peas and carnations to start a tempest, forsooth!For Mary got in a temper—I did the same, of a truth.I said things that weren't gentle; she pretended not to mind—But answered back in a manner that left me away behind.
It ended up in our saying good-bye for the rest of our days,Both vowing we'd be happier going our different ways.And I strode out in the garden where the trees were pink and white,Where bobolinks scolded sparrows, and robins, wild with delight,Chirped and called and fluttered in the blossoming trees above,Where Nature was busy teaching her lessons of joy and love.[23]I made a bed of the soft, warm earth, stretched me out in the sun.Vext and weary, I fell asleep, and slept till the day was done.The voice of my brother waked me, crying, "Quickly arise and come;Bear up like a man, Heaven help you! Death has suddenly entered your
home!"
'Twas Mary, my own sweet Mary! The eyelashes slept on her cheek,The lips had a half-smile on them, as though they were going to speakSome of the old-time tender words, witty rejoinder or jest,Or ask the question they'd asked so oft, "Jim, who do you love the
best?"
But the small hands gave no pressure when I took them in my own,And bending down to kiss her face, I found it cold as a stone.And it came to me I could never—never, since Mary was dead—Say, "Dear one, I didn't mean them, the bitter words that I said."Never see the tears go from her sweet, dark eyes, and the brightness
take their place,Never watch the joy and gladness come back to my darling's face.[24]Not a fault could I remember—she'd been perfect all her days,With her sweetness and her laughter, her tender womanly ways.Dead—dead in her fresh young beauty—oh, I had an anguished heartAt thought of the quarrel ending in our agreeing to part!
When two people love each other, I'll tell you the wisest way,'Tis to think before speaking harshly, for there surely will come a dayWhen one will sleep on so soundly that he or she will not wake,The other sit in the stillness and cry with a great heart-break.It is to ears all unheeding our tenderest words are said—The love that the living long for we waste it upon the dead.We say this life is so dreary, talk much of heaven, I know,But if we were good to each other we'd have our heaven below."Mary," I whispered, "my Mary, no flowers to you I gave,But I'll heap them on your coffin and plant them over your grave."[25]A bird sang sweetly and shrilly in the blossoms over-head,And I awoke, awoke, awoke—I'd dreamed that Mary was dead!I woke in the golden sunshine, the birds were singing aloud.There was no still form beside me, nor any coffin or shroud,But just a slip of a woman with her brown eyes full of tears—Oh, that blessed, blessed waking I've remembered through all the years.I told the story to Mary, who hasn't let me forgetThat dream in the blossoming orchard—I hear of it often yet.If I neglect to bring flowers, it's: "Oh, you're going to saveYour roses to heap on my coffin, your pansies to plant on my grave?"
And if I lose my temper—a common weakness of men—The sweetest voice in the world says: "You'll have to get dreaming
again."
Joe lives on the farm, and Sam lives in the city,I haven't a daughter at all—more's the pity,For girls, to my mind, are much nicer and neater;Not such workers as boys, but cuter and sweeter.Sam has prospered in town, has riches a-plenty,Big house, fine library—books written by Henty,And Kipling, and Cooper, and all those big writers—Swell pictures and busts of great heroes and fighters.His home is a fine one from cellar to garret,But not to my notion—in fact, I can't bear it.I'm not hard to please, but of all things provokingIs a woman around who sniffs when you're smoking.
Last springtime Sam said: "Now, Father, how is itI can't coax you oftener up on a visit?"I couldn't think up any plausible reason,So off I went with him to stop for a season.Sam said with a laugh as we stepped from the ferry,"You won't mind my wife; she's particular, very."It wasn't like home, that house in the city,Our Sam took his fun at the club—more's the pity.
[40]It is in his own house, when he has the leisure,A man should find comfort and freedom and pleasure.It wasn't so bad for me in the daytime,Sam took me all over and made it a playtime;But evenings were awful—we sat there so proper,While Sam's wife, if nobody came in to stop her,Read history to us, or, column by column,A housekeeping journal, or other dry volume.I used to wish someone would give me a prodding,My eyes would go shut and head fall a-nodding.She's an awful good housewife, nothing gets musty,Or littered about, or untidy, or dusty;But a little disorder never did fret me,And these perfect women they always upset me.I can stand her dusting, her shining, her poking,But wilt like a leaf when she sniffs when I'm smoking.
I got so blamed homesick I couldn't be jolly;I wanted our Joe, and his little wife, Molly,My old corner at home, and all the old places;I wanted the youngsters—who cared if their facesWere smeared up a trifle? I didn't, a penny.Molly tends to 'em, though she has so many.I was tickled to death when I got a letterFrom Joe, which ran: "Dear Dad, I think you had betterGet back to the farm in pretty short order.Molly's papered your room and put on a border;The baby, she says, has two new teeth to show you—If you don't hustle back the dear thing won't know you.[41]She says to inform you that Bob, Sue, and MaryAre good as can be, but your namesake's contrary,Wants granddaddy's story, and granddaddy's ditty—And granddaddy off on a trot to the city."I packed my belongings. They tried to dissuade me—Sam's wife said so proper: "I'm really afraid weHave not succeeded in our entertaining.""Oh, yes!" said I—some things won't stand much explaining.She really meant well, but of all things provokingIs a woman so perfect she sniffs when you're smoking.
I was glad to get home; it made me quite sillyTo hear the loud whinny of Starling and Billy;And here was the farm with its orchards and meadows,The big maple trees all throwing their shadows,The stubble-fields yellow, the tall stacks of clover,The wag of the stub of a tail on old Rover.And here came dear Mary, her hat on her shoulder,With Sue trying hard to catch her and hold her;Here came Tommy and Joe, always foot in their classes,And Bob, with his features all crumbs and molasses,Carrying a basin with fishworms and dirt in—Oh, that scalawag, Bob, I'm morally certainIs a chip of the old block—it just seemed to strike meThey'd named the boy rightly, for he was so like me—All laughing and calling: "Here's grandpa to play with!"And Bob supplementing: "And sleep 'ith and stay 'ith!"[42]And then such a hugging, with Molly behind me,The tears came so fast that they threatened to blind me.My heart overflowed with sorrow and pityFor the boy I had left back there in the city.His lot is a hard one—indeed, I'm not joking—He lives with a woman who sniffs when he's smoking.
The supper we had, sir, and when it was overThe walk round the homestead close followed by Rover,Who's most like a human. You'd fancy him saying:"See those stacks? Oh, yes, we have finished the haying!That colt should be broken. Old friend, I'd just mentionThis farm stands in need of our closest attention."And when, the lamp lighted, with Mary's beside me,The boys at my feet, and Bob up astride me,I felt like a king—I really can't write it—Molly must take my pipe and fill it and light it,Then plump herself down in her own little rockerFor a visit with me. Oh, she is a talkerWorth the listening to. The threshing was over,Joe had got ten dollars a ton for the clover,Deacon Hope had had a sharp tiff with the preacherOver immersion, and the pretty school-teacherIntended to marry—resigned her position.Yes, most of the church folks had signed the petitionAgainst granting a license to Baker's saloon,The Thanksgiving service would be coming on soon,[43]The neighbors were hearty, had every one missed me—Right here Molly stood on her tip-toes and kissed me.Sho! Sam's wife is handsome and cultured and clever,But she's not the woman that Molly is—never.Molly's smile is so kind, and her hair is so glossy,Her brown eyes look at you so sweet and so saucy!Yes, Joe's richer than Sam, though Joe's but a farmer,For his home atmosphere is brighter and warmer.Sam has lots of money, there's no use denying;Has made himself wealthy, and that without trying;But what chance has a man—indeed, I'm not joking—Who lives with a woman who sniffs when he's smoking!
Jack's dead an' buried; it seems odd,A deep hole covered up with sodLyin' out there on the hill,An' Jack, as never could keep still,A sleepin' in it. Jack could race,And do it at a good old pace,Could sing a song, an' laugh so hardThat I could hear him in our yardWhen he was half a mile away.Why, not another boy could playLike him, or run, or jump so high,Or swim, no matter how he'd try;An' I can't get it through my headAt all, at all, that Jack is dead.
Jack's mother didn't use to beSo awful good to him and me,For often when I'd go down thereOn Saturdays, when it was fair,To get him out to fish or skate,She'd catch me hangin' round the gate[45]And look as cross as some old hen,An' tell me, "Go off home again.It's not the thing for boys," she'd say,"A hangin' round the creek all day;You go off home and do your task—No, Jack can't go, you needn't ask."And when he got in scrapes, why, sheWould up and lay it on to me,An' wish I lived so far awayJack couldn't see me every day.
But last night when I'd done the choresIt seemed so queer-like out of doors,I kept a listenin' all the while,An' looking down the street a mile;I couldn't bear to go inside,The house is lonesome since he died.The robber book we read by turnsIs lyin' there—an' no boy learnsAll by himself, 'cause he can't tellHow many words he'll miss or spell,Unless there's some one lookin' onTo laugh at him when he gets done.
An' neighbor women's sure to comeA visitin' a feller's home,An' talkin', when they look at me,'Bout how thick us two used to be,A stealin' off from school, an' such,An' askin' do I miss him much,[46]'Till I sneak off out doors—you see,They just can't let a feller be!Well, I walked down the road a bit.Smith's dog came out. I throwed at it,An', do you know, it never howledSame as it always did, or growled;It seemed to say, "Why, Jim's alone!I wonder where's that other one?"
Afore I knew it I was down'Way at the other end of town,A hangin' round in the old wayFor someone to come out and play.There wasn't no one there to look,So I slipped into our old nook.I found his knife down in the grassWhere we'd been Zulus at the pass.The can of bait, the hook and lineWere lyin' with the ball of twine,An' "Jim," I seemed to hear him say,"The fish will suffer some to-day."
'Twas more than I could stand just then;I got up to go off home, whenSomeone kissed me on the cheek,An' hugged me so I couldn't speak.You wouldn't believe it, like as not,But 'twas Jack's mother, an' a lotOf great big tears came stealin' downRight on my face. She didn't frownA single bit—kept sayin' low,"My blue-eyed boy, I loved you so!"[47]Of course, I knew just right awayThat she meant Jack. My eyes are gray,But Jack, he had the bluest eyes,Blue like you see up in the skies,An' shine that used to come and go—One misses eyes like his, you know.
An' by-an'-by she up an' triedTo tell me that she'd cried an' criedA thinkin' of the times that sheHad scolded Jack an' scolded me,An' other things that I won't tellTo anyone, because—Oh, well,Boys can't do much, but they can holdTight on to secrets till they're old.She's Jack's relation, that's why sheFeels kind of lovin' like to me.But when she called me her own lad,Oh, say, I felt just awful bad;My head it went round in a whirl—I up an' cried just like a girl.
But say, if Jack could see us twoHe'd laugh a little, don't you know;For if I'd ever brag aroundThat I'd lick some one safe an' sound,He'd laugh an' say, "Jim, hold your jaw!You know you're scared to death of maw."Oh, I'd give all this world awayIf I could hear him laugh to-day![48]I get so lonesome, it's so still,An' him out sleepin' on that hill;There's nothin' seems just worth the whileA doin' up in the old style;'Cause everything we used to doSeemed allus just to need us two.My throat aches till I think 'twill crack—I don't know why—it must be Jack.There ain't no fun, there ain't no stir.His mother—well, it's hard on her,But she can knit an' sew, an' such—Oh, she can't miss him half as much!
A little crippled figure, two big pathetic eyes,A face that looked unchildish, so wan it was and wise;I watched her as the homesick tears came chasing down each cheek."I had to come," she whispered low, "I was so tired and weak.My spine, you know! I used to be so strong, and tall, and straight!I went to school and learned to read and write upon a slate,And add up figures—such a lot, and play with all my might,Until I hurt my back—since then I just ache day and night.'Tis most a year since I could stand, or walk around at all;[50]All I am good for now, you see, is just to cry and crawl."Poor, pale-faced thing! there came to us the laughter gay and sweetOf little ones let out from school, the sound of flying feet.She listened for a moment, then turned her to the wallTo hide the tears. "Oh, me!" she cried, "I'm tired of it all.I feel so hurt and useless, why can't I run aboutAs others do?" "Some day, please God, you will," I said, but doubtWas in the eyes she turned on mine, and doubt was in her tone."Perhaps," she faltered, then the pain grew harsh; the plaintive moanSmote sharply on my heart. I knew she had but lately comeFrom mother's care and father's love, and all the joys of home."I wished I'd lived on earth," she sobbed, "a long, long time ago,When Jesus came at eventide, because He loved folks so,And just by stretching out His hand made all the sick folks well.If it were now, oh, wouldn't I creep close to Him, and tellAll that I wanted Him to do. I'd kneel down low and say:[51]'It is my back, dear Jesus, please cure it right away.I'm tired of being weak and sick, I want to jump and run,And play at games, and laugh out loud, and have such heaps of fun!Be good to your poor crippled girl,' and He would touch me—so—And every atom of the pain and crookedness would go."I held her close, and kissed her, and soothed her off to rest,So frail she was, so homesick for the ones she loved the best!But yesterday I saw her, and would have passed her byHad I not caught the greeting smile, the glance so bright and shy."Can this be you?" I questioned. She laughed, "O yes, I thoughtYou'd hardly know me when you came, I've changed, oh, such a lot!For see how tall and straight I am! My back don't hurt at all,And I can stand and I can walk—I never have to crawl.I'll tell you, it's a secret, I raced with nurse last night.[52]Just think of it! I raced and won," and then, in sheer delight,She laughed so loudly and so long the nurse looked in to say,"Is not this little girl of ours quite boisterous to-day?""They are so good to me," she said, "I know I'll want to cryWhen I start off for home next week, and have to say good-bye.What if I hadn't come at all?"—the sweet blue eyes grew wet—"My back would ache and throb and hurt—I'd be a cripple yet.For folks as poor as my folks are, they haven't much to spareFor nurse's bills, and doctor's bills, and all—but won't they stareWhen I go home, red-cheeked and straight, and fat as I can be?My daddy, he will never take his dear eyes off of me;My mamma, she will cry some tears, and bend her head and pray,While all the others kiss and hug; then I can hear her say:'Give me my girlie, she's been gone so many long months—five,'And hold me close—oh, I will be the gladdest thing alive!"
'Twas a score of years since I'd heard the pipes,But the other night I heard them;There are sweet old memories in my heart,And the music woke and stirred them.
In the armories, at the big paradeThe highland regiment was giving,A half-dozen pipers piping away—Ah! 'twas music, as sure as your living.
Donald's lowland, he shook his head at me,And glowered with every feature,And a pretty young lassie just behindSaid: "Oh, what a funny old creature!"
But the skirl o' the pipes got in my ears,In my eyes, and made them misty;I laughed and I cried, and Donald said low:"Dinna act so daft, noo, Christy!"
[54]"Do ye no see the elder sitting there?Dinna act sae daft, my wooman.Can ye no hear the airs o' auld lang syneWi'oot fashin' yersel' sae, wooman?"
But the skirl o' the pipes got in my heart,It got in my throat and choked me,It got in my feet, and tapped my toes,And my shame-faced Donald poked me.
"But isn't it grand? O, isn't it grand?""Ay, a fine auld player is Mylands,But the pipes' wild sound disna stir my bluid"—He was not born in the highlands.
Do you know what I saw as I sat there?I saw the hills and the heather,The green, and the lads and the lassies thereAll dancing the reels together.
I saw our glen, half hid, and the rocksStanding guard like grim old watchmen.Oh, the land o' heather and hill and lochMust e'en be dear to a Scotchman.
And I saw, too, the soldiers blithe and braveTheir flag to the breeze unfurling,As they marched away on a morning fairTo the bagpipes' merry skirling.
[55]My brother was one. As he kissed my cheek,I could hear him proudly saying:"Ho! you'll know when we come marching home,For you'll hear our pipers playing."
Oh, the bonniest lads in kilt and hose—Braver men, you cannot find them—And few, so few, came marching homeTo the loved ones left behind them.
'Twas a loyal heart, and a strong right arm,With a stubborn foe before them;A soldier's grave in a far off land,And God's blue sky bending o'er them.
As I hearkened to sweet old martial airsI could hear my brother saying:"Ho! you'll know when we come marching home,For you'll hear our pipers playing."
There are only harps in heaven, I'm told,And maybe I shouldn't say it,For a harp of gold's a wondrous thingIn a hand that's skilled to play it.
But those highland lads, 'twas the pibroch's callThey heard morning, noon, and even,And the pibroch's call, I believe in my heart,They will hear in the streets of heaven.
They marched to the old belovèd airs[56]'Mid the bullets' hail and rattle;'Twas the last sweet sound that fell on their ears'Mid the clamor and clang of battle.
O a harp when an angel strikes the stringsIs softer and sweeter, but tryAs I will, I cannot fancy a harpIn the hands of, say, Peter MacKay.
And were an angel to proffer him one,Methinks I can hear him saying:"'Twas not on an instrument like the sameThat Pete MacKay will be playing,
"For she neffer set eyes on it before,Isn't quick to learn, or cleffer;She'd break the strings if she took it in hand,She couldn't do it, whateffer.
"So please be excusing old Pete MacKay—But hark! bring the chanter to me,I'll play the 'March o' the Cameron Men,'And afterward 'Bonnie Dundee.'"
I told this to Donald late that night;He said, as he sipped his toddy,"Do ye ken ye shocked the elder the night?Yersel' is the doited body.
"And are ye speaking o' bagpipes in Heaven?[57]Ah, Christy, I'm that astoondedI'll hae the guid meenister speak tae ye,For, Christy, ye're no weel groonded."
Well, if it is heresy to believeIn the promise of the Father,"Eye hath not seen, ear hath not heard,"I am heretical, rather.
I believe when the last loud trump shall sound,The old flag again unfurling,My highland lads will come marching homeTo the bagpipes grandly skirling.
The Wise Men came to the inn that night,"Now open to us," they cried,"We have journeyed far that we might kneelTo One who doth here abide."
The door was opened with eager haste."Of whom do ye come in quest?Can it be that a lord of high degreeIs with us this night as guest?"
The Wise Men answered: "The eastern skyIs luminous still, and clear,With the radiance of a golden starThat hath led our footsteps here.
"Blessed, O keeper, this inn of thine,Both thatch and foundation stone,For the open door and hearth-fire warm[59]When the King came to His own!"
"The King! the King!" loud the keeper's cry,"The King in this house of mine!Lights ho! lights ho! set the place aglow,Bring forth the meat and the wine!
"The King! let the guest-room be prepared—Honor and homage we payTo royal son of a royal lineWho tarries with us to-day!"
From room to room of the inn they went,The Wise Men and keeper proud,But not a trace of the One they soughtFound they in that motley crowd.
"You have other guests?" the Wise Men asked,And the keeper's face flamed red;"But a straggling pair who came so lateThey found neither room nor bed."
"My masters," a lad said timidly,"As I gave the cattle feed,Came creeping down to the stable doorA woman in sorest need.
"I made her a bed in the manger low,At head of the oxen mild,[60]And, masters, I heard a moan of pain,Then the cry of a new-born child."
"A prince shalt thou be!" the Wise Men cried,"For hearkening to that moan,A prince shalt thou be for succor givenWhen the King came to His own!"
"Nay, I'm but a stable-boy," he smiled,With his eager eyes aglow;"No King, but a little naked child,Sleeps out in my manger low."
Hast come to these homes of ours, O Christ,In quest of a meal or bed,And found no welcoming cheer set forth,Nor place to pillow thine head?
Give us a heart aflame with love,Filled with a pity divine,Then come Thou as beggar, or babe, or king,The best that we have is Thine.
They're praying for the soldier lads in grim old London town;Last night I went, myself, and heard a bishop in his gownConfiding to the Lord of Hosts his views of this affair."We do petition Thee," he said, "to have a watchful careOf all the stalwart men and strong who at their country's callWent sailing off to Africa to fight, perchance to fall!""Amen!" a thousand voices cried. I whispered low: "Dear Lord,A host is praying for the men, I want to say a wordFor those who stay at home and wait—the mothers and the wives.Keep close to them and help them bear their cheerless, empty lives!"
The Bishop prayed: "Our cause is good, our quarrel right and just;[62]The God of battles is our God, and in His arm we trust."He never got that prayer of his in any printed book,It came straight from the heart of him, his deep voice, how it shook!And something glistened in his eye and down his flushed cheek ran.I like a Bishop best of all when he is just a man.
"Amen!" they cried out louder still, but I bent low my head;"Dear Christ, be kind to hearts that break for loved ones dying—dead;Keep close to women folk who wait beset with anxious fears,The wan-faced watchers whose dim eyes are filled with bitter tears!I know, dear Christ, how hard it is," I whispered as I kneeled,"For long ago my bonnie boy fell on the battlefield.Find comfort for the broken hearts of those weighed down to-dayWith love and longing for the ones in danger far away."
"They will not shrink," the Bishop prayed, "nor fear a soldier's grave;Nay, each man will acquit himself like Briton true and brave.[63]God of battles, march with them, keep guard by day and night,And arm them with a trust in Thee when they go up to fight!"
"Amen!" a sound of muffled sobs. The deep voice trembled some,But I, with hot tears on my face, prayed hard for those at home:"Keep watch and ward of all that wait in fever of unrest,Who said good-bye and let them go, the ones they loved the best!O comfort, Christ! Above the din of martial clamor, hark!The saddest sound in all God's world—a crying in the dark."
Oh, a big broad-shouldered fellow was Ben,And homely as you would see,Such an awkward walker and stammering talker,And as bashful as he could be.
The son of a lone, widowed mother was he,And right well did he act his part,A giant at sowing and reaping and mowing—His farm was the pride of his heart.
His mother depended on his strong arm;In the cottage so neat and trimHe kept the fires burning, did sweeping and churning—Oh, the odd jobs saved up for him!
"My Ben's a comfort," she said every day,With pride that made his head whirl,"As handy at sweeping as he is at reaping—Ben is just as good as a girl!"
[65]"A six-foot fellow to work round the house!We'll call him 'Miss Ben,'" said the girls;But Ben, heaven bless him, never let this distress himTill there came a day when the curls
And blue eyes of Gladys, the prettiest girl,And the proudest in all the place,His young heart set beating at every chance meeting—Though she only laughed in his face.
"I'll have none but a gay and a gallant man"—Her lips took a scornful curl—"Your pride is in hearing your mother declaring,'Ben is just as good as a girl!'"
But sweet little Marjory laughed not at Ben;He was homely, awkward, shy,But she liked the fellow whose voice was so mellow,And she smiled as she passed him by.
He went to the front when the war broke out,And filled his post like a man;The good-natured giant was bold and defiantAs soon as the battle began.
You'd never have thought of the broom and the churn,Nor of the nickname "Miss Ben,"Had you heard his voice cheering, seen his arm clearingA path for his own gallant men.
[66]Capt. Benjamin Brooks he came riding homeWhen the war was over and done,As homely and backward, as shy and as awkward,As tender and loyal a son.
Now Gladys gave him her sunniest smile—On heroes she ever did dote—And the proud little beauty felt it her dutyTo be kind to this young man of note.
But Ben, wise fellow, liked Marjory best;He knew her lips did not curlWhen mother said sweetly, "Ben does work so neatly—He is just as good as a girl!"
So he wooed and won this Marjory true,And made her his loving bride,While Gladys she fretted, bemoaned and regrettedThe goal she had missed by her pride.
To-day Ben is filling a prominent place,A statesman, honest and bold;He frees the opprest, and he helps the distrest,Wins love, which is better than gold.
For the very grandest men you can findIn this great world's busy whirlAre men like my farmer—no praise need be warmerThan "he's just as good as a girl."
The Allans o' Airlie they set muckle storeOn ancestry, acres, and siller,Nor cared to remember the good days of yore,Nor grandfather Allan, the miller—The honest old miller.
"We're wealthy fowk now, tak' oor place wi' the best,"Said the heid o' the Allans, one Dougal,A man whom Dame Fortune had royally blest,Of sensible habits, and frugal—Uncommonly frugal.
"We're honored by great fowk and wise fowk, now min',O' the kirk each Allan's a pillar—What more could we spier o' a providence kin',Unless 'twere a little more siller—A little more siller.
[68]"For it's get what ye can, and keep what ye get;Ye'll fin' this an unco' guid motto,We chose it lang syne, and we stick to it yet,Altho' not sae close as we ought to—Not nearly sae close as we ought to.
"There is ane o' the name is a spendthrift, an ass;The reason tae ye I'll discover:Oor gran'faither marrit an Inverness lass,Juist because he happened to luve her—Foolish mon, he happened to luve her!
"And the wild Highland strain is still i' the bluid—'Tis i' Colin, as sure's you're leeving;Ye ken how it is wi' the whole Highland brood—'Tis a' for spending and geeving.
"Gin ye're freen' o' the clan, why, ask what ye may,Ye'll get o' the best, ay, get double;Gin ye're foe o' the clan, weel, juist gang your wayIf so be ye're no hunting trouble.
"Brither Colin was daft when a lad at the school,Wi' ways and wi' morals improper,Had high flowing notions—poor family fool,His notions ha' made him a pauper.
"What owns he? Bare acres a few, and a house,Yet when we, last year, were expectingTwa relatives, ane puir as ony church mouse,Ane freighted wi' wealth, unreflecting,
[69]"He spat oot graun' like, 'Sin' ye're ower fond o' pelf'Ye can hae,' said he, 'the rich pairty,But I'll tak' the mon that is puir as mysel'And gie him a welcome right hearty'—A welcome right hearty.
"Gosh! I had tae lauch at the feckless auld monAs he stood there, his bonnet-strings twirling;Ye'd think he was chief o' a whole Highland clanThat marched to the pibroch's mad skirling.
"Ah! hot-headed, high-handed, go as you please,These Highlanders no worth a copper,Wi' their kilt and hose, and their uncovered knees—A bold dress, and highly improper!
"Oor Colin's the same; hark ye, Davy and Jock,Go no to the hills for your mating;Twa weel dowered lassies o' guid lowland stock,'Tis for such I'd hae ye both waiting.
"Ho! it's get what ye can, and keep what ye get,—What is it ye whisper amang ye?What! oor rich uncle's deid—weel, weel, dinna fret,Ah'm certain that he wouldna wrang me.
"He promised to leave everything he possest—Before witness promised it fairly— To the most deserving, the noblest and bestO' a' the Allans o' Airlie.
[70]"Ye ken I'm the mon. Here's the lawyer at hand,(I'm richer a'ready and prooder)Hark ye! 'Give and bequeath my gowd and my land'—Mr. Grant, I pray ye, speak looder.
"I'll buy me the laird's castle doon by the park—Oh, me! but I'll step aboot rarely.'To my nephew, Colin'—it canna' be—hark!'To the grandest Allan o' Airlie.'
"To Colin! I'd ficht, but I've no got the pluck,I'm auld, and I'm broken, I tell ye;I ca'd him a fool—he has had a fool's luck,And noo he can buy me and sell me.
"Now hearken ye, lads, frae the morn till the nichtIt pays best tae act quite sincerely;Get what ye can—aweel, the motto's a'richt,But some things are gotten too dearly.Ay, some things are gotten too dearly.
"I'm thinkin' o' gran'faither's Inverness wife,Nor cattle nor siller she brought him,Juist a hairt fu' o' luve—some queer views o' life—How runs that auld ballad she taught him?
"I've a lowly cot and a wide open door,Neither old nor young need pass by, sir;A piece of red gold for the brother that's poor—Ho, a rich, happy man am I, sir!"
[71]"Aweel! there be lessons ye'll no learn in school,It tak's my breath away fairly—The ne'er-do-weel Colin, the family fool,And the graundest Allan o' Airlie!"
J. Thomas Gordon left home one day,Left home for good and all—A boy has a right to have his own wayWhen he's nearly six foot tall;At least, this is what J. Thomas thought,And in his own young eyesThere were very few people quite so good,And fewer still quite so wise.
What! tie as clever a lad as heDown to commonplace toil?Make J. Thomas Gordon a farmer lad,A simple son of the soil?Not if he knew it—'twould be a sin;He wished to rise and soar.For men like himself who would do and dareDame Fortune had much in store.
The world was in need of brains and brawn,J. Thomas said modestly,[73]The clever young man was in great demand—They would see what they would see.He would make his mark in the busy world,Some day the daily pressWould herald the glad news forth to the throng,J. Thomas is a SUCCESS.
Then would the doubters and sceptics allSay, with regret sincere,"To think that we gave his hopes and his aimsBut an unbelieving sneer!"As for him, he would kiss his mother,And give her wealth galore,Shake the hand of his father—maybe—Then back to the world once more.
With big ambition and high conceitWas young J. Thomas filled;The warning of friends and their argumentsHis eloquence quickly stilled."You may go," said the irate father,"I'll not urge you to stay;You will learn your lesson, you headstrong fool,Be glad to come back some day."
So J. Thomas Gordon left the farm,As boys have done before,And his mother began to count the hoursTill he would be home once more.
[74]The father wearied as time went on—Missed the boy from his side;But all through the years the fond mother keptHer love, her hope, and her pride.With a mother's beautiful faith, she said:"I know my boy will comeSo wealthy, so honored, noble and great,Proudly come marching home."
And ever she looked at eventideInto the glowing westFor the dust of the carriage bringing herThe one that she loved the best.Ah! how she longed to look on his face,Her stalwart lad and true,With his sunburned cheek, and his ruddy hair,And his eyes so bright and blue.
To those who said 'twas cruel of himNever a line to send,She had but one answer, with eyes ashine:"It will all come right in the end;He's busy making a name and place,And I must patient beTill this clever, ambitious lad of mineFinds time to come back to me."
Important and wealthy and famous,Honored and wise and great!But look you, who can that ragged tramp be,Down there by the garden gate,[75]Pale as if hunger had pressed him sore,Trembling because so weak,Pushed on by his longing, held back by shame—A tear on his poor pale cheek?
'Tis he! Had he come back rich and greatShe'd have met him at the door,But she's down the path with her arms outspread,Because he has come back poor.Gone, gone are her day-dreams sweet and fair—Gone in the swift glad shockOf folding a ragged tramp in her arms,But love stands firm as a rock.
She rang the dinner bell long and loud,The father came with speed;The welcome he gave the prodigalWas a tender one indeed."The young fool has learned his lesson,"J. Thomas whispered low."So he has—God bless him!" the father cried,"He'll make a good man, I know.
"Honest, unselfish, and true as steel,Our boy will stand the test;Kindly of thought and word and deed—The homely virtues are best.I knew when you went, and you know it now,That all this pride and style,This yearnin' to fill up the public eye,Isn't really worth the while."
[76]Oh, the happy face of the motherThat night as, kneeling low,Tom said the prayer that he used to sayAt her knee so long ago.A new J. Thomas had this to add—With his bonnie blue eyes wet—"Thank God for the home, for the faithful heartsThat never change or forget."
Though far and wide on the world's rough seaThe children, reckless, roam,The boldest thanks God in some stress of stormFor the harbor lights of home.
He was not especially handsome, he was not especially smart,A great big lumbering fellow with a soft and tender heart.His eyes were gray and honest, his smile a friendly one,He wore his parson's suit of black on days of state alone;At other times he went around in clothes the worse of wear,A blue cloth cap set jauntily upon his thick gray hair.He cared so little how he looked, so little how he drest,That he tired the patience sorely of the ones he loved the best.For a preacher, so they argued, should be dressed like one, of course,But in the winter it was tweeds, in summer it was worse;Ducks and flannels would be grimy, if the sad truth must be told,[78]For he spaded up the gardens of the people who were old,And he ran down dusty highways at unministerial rate,Going errands for the people who really could not wait.His coat-sleeves would be short an inch, his trousers just the same,For the washerwoman had them every week that ever came.He cared so little how he looked, and never paused to thinkThat linen, duck, and flannel were such awful things to shrink.
His wife, she was the primmest thing, as neat as any doll,And looked like one when walking by her husband big and tall.It almost broke her heart that he refused to give a thoughtTo how he looked, or do the thing, or say the thing he ought.Sometimes, though well she loved him, quite high her temper ran,For 'tis hard on any woman to have such a careless man.
Think! when the conference president came visiting the place,The preacher down at Coles he had a badly battered face—[79]One eye was black as black could be; he looked, so we've been told,More like a fierce prize-fighter than a shepherd of the fold."How did it happen?" questioned him the visitor so wise,With hint of laughter on his lips, and in his twinkling eyes."Old Betty Brown," the preacher said—his wife broke in just here,"A cross-grained spinster of the place who hates him, that is clear;And never did a woman have a meaner tongue than hers—The slighting things she says of him, the mischief that she stirs!""Fields have we," said the president, "in country and in town;Believe me, Madam, most of them can boast a Betty Brown."
The preacher stroked his blackened eye, and laughed good-naturedly."She doesn't like me very well, but what of that?" said he."The other night I found the poor old creature sick in bed,She 'didn't want no prayin' done,' she very quickly said,[80]So, seeing that she was so ill and worn she could not stir,I thought with care and patience I could milk the cow for her.I stroked old Spot caressingly, and placed my little can,But Spot she knew, and I came home a sadder, wiser man."
The preacher down at Coles he was no orator at all,But sick, and sad, and sinful were glad to have him call.Not that he ever found a host of happy things to say;In fact, as far as talking went, he might have stayed away.But oh, the welcome that he got! I think his big right handGave such a grip that all the rest they seemed to understand.
Some of the congregation would have liked a different man,He couldn't hope to please them all—few ministers that can.Once, at the district meeting, the good old farmer BowlesStood up and spoke his mind about the preacher down at Coles.
"There's not," he said, "you know it, too, a better man than he;An' you fault-findin', carpin' folk—I say this reverently—[81]If the Lord 'd take an angel and gently turn him looseTo preach down here, do you suppose he'd please the hull caboose?Not much! It's human nature to quarrel with what we've got,An' this man is a better man than we deserve, a lot."
But he did preach curious sermons, just as dry as they could be,And the old folks slumbered through them every Sabbath, peacefully;But they all woke up the moment the singing would begin,And not an ear was found too dull to drink the music in.For though the preacher could not boast an orator's smooth tongue,He could reach the people's heart-strings when he stood up there and sung.
O the wondrous power and sweetness of the voice that filled the place!Everyone that heard it swelling grew the purer for a space.And men could not choose but listen to the singer standing there,Till their worldliness slipped from them, and their selfishness and care.[82]Mourners turned their eyes all misty from the crosses tall and whiteWhere their loved ones slumbered softly all the day and all the night;Listening, faith rose triumphant over sorrow, loss, and pain,Heaven was not a far-off country, they would meet their own again.And the white-haired men and women wished the singing need not cease,For they seemed to see the beauty of the longed for Land of Peace.Upward soared that voice, and upward, with a sweetness naught could stem,Till each dim eye caught the glory of the new Jerusalem.
He was such a curious fellow, the preacher down at Coles!One winter day the word was brought to town by Farmer BowlesThat in a little shanty, in the hollow by the mill,Were children gaunt with hunger, a mother sad and ill,The father just a drunkard, a vagabond who leftHis family for long, long weeks of love and care bereft.The squire talked of taking a big subscription up,And talked, and talked, while in that house was neither bite nor sup.[83]O, these talking folks! these talking folks! the poor would starveand freezeIf the succoring and caring were done by such as these.
The preacher down at Coles he had not very much to say;He harnessed up the old roan horse and hitched it to the sleigh,And piled in so much provisions that his wife said, tearfully,She didn't have a cake or pie left in the house for tea.He filled the sleigh with baskets, and with bundles—such a pile!Heaps of wood, and clothes, and victuals—everybody had to smileAs they watched the old roan canter down the crossroad, o'er the hill,To the little cheerless shanty in the hollow by the mill.The preacher built a fire and bade the children warm their toesWhile he heard the worn-out mother's tale of miseries and woes.He brought in a bag of flour, and a turkey big and fat—His dainty wife had meant to dine the Ladies' Aid on that.He brought in ham and butter, and potatoes in a sack,A pie or two, a loaf of cake, and doughnuts, such a stack![84]Ah! his wife and her good handmaid had been baking many a day,For the Ladies' Aid would dine there—he had lugged it all away.He brought in a pair of blankets, and a heavy woollen quilt;Betty Brown, who happened in there, said she thought that she would wilt,For these things the active members of the Missionary BandHad gathered for the heathen in a far-off foreign land."These belong unto the Lord, sir," Betty said, "I think you'll find."But he answered her quite gently, "Very well, He will not mind.""To see him making tea for the woman in the bedMade me wish I had been kinder to the preacher," Betty said.Though he was so big and clumsy he could step around so light,And to see him getting dinner to the children's huge delight!It was not till he had warmed them, and had fed them there, that day,That he whispered very softly: "Little children, let us pray."Then he gave them to the keeping of a Father kind and wiseIn a way that brought the tear-drops into hard old Betty's eyes.[85]She felt an aching in her throat, and when she cried, "Amen!"Other folks might flout the preacher, Betty never would again.
He took up the fresh air movement, but the people down at ColesShook their head—a preacher's work, they said, was saving precious souls,Not worrying lest the waifs and strays that throng the city streetShould pine for want of country air, and country food to eat.Lawyer Angus, at the meeting, spoke against new-fangled things;"Seems to me our preacher's bow, friends, has a muckle lot of strings."Merchant Jones said trade was failing, rent was high and clerks to pay;Not a dollar could he give them, he was very grieved to say.Old Squire Hays was buying timber, needed every cent and more;Doctor Blake sat coldly smiling—then the farmer took the floor.
"Wish," he said, "our hearts were bigger, an' our speeches not so long;I would move right here the preacher tunes us up a little song."[86]Sing? I wish you could have heard him—simple songs of long ago,Old familiar things that held us—warm that golden voice and low—Songs of summer in the woodlands, cowslips yellow in the vale;Songs of summer in the city, and the children wan and pale,Till we saw the blist'ring pavement pressed by tired little feet,Heard the baby voices crying for the meadows wide and sweet.
"Now we'll take up the collection," said the wily farmer Bowles,And they showered in their money, did the people down at Coles."Here's a cheque," said lawyer Angus, "'tis the best that I can do;Man, you'd have us in the poorhouse if you sang your sermons through!"
The very careless fellow still goes his cheery wayUnmindful of what people think or of what people say.Some still are finding fault with him—he doesn't mind it much—Laughs when they make remarks about his clothes and shoes and such,[87]Declare his sermons have no point, and quarrel with his text,As people will, but oh, it makes his pretty wife so vext!"I think," she says, "as much of him as any woman can,But 'tis most aggravating to have such a careless man."
There are those who think him perfect, shout his praises with a will.He has labored for the Master, he is laboring for Him still;And the grumbling does not move him, nor the praises sung abroad—Things like these seem only trifles to the man who works for God.Farmer Bowles summed up the total in his own original wayWhen he spoke at the Convention that was held the other day."Never knew a better worker, never knew a kinder man;Lots of preachers are more stylish, keep themselves so spic-and-spanYou could spot 'em out for preachers if you met 'em walkin' roundOver on the Fejee Islands, silk hat, long coat, I'll be bound.[88]Our man's different, but, I tell you, when it comes to doing goodThere's not one can beat him at it, an' I want this understood.Ask the sad folks and the sinful, ask the fallen ones he's raised,Ask the sick folks and the poor folks, if you want to hear him praised.Orator? Well, maybe not, friends, but in caring for men's soulsThere stand few men half so faithful as the preacher down at Coles."
When I'm at gran'dad's on the farm,I hear along 'bout six o'clock,Just when I'm feelin' snug an' warm,"Ho, Bobby, come and feed your stock."
I jump an' get into my clothes;It's dark as pitch, an' shivers runAll up my back. Now, I supposeNot many boys would think this fun.
But when we get out to the barnThe greedy pigs begin to squeal,An' I throw in the yellow corn,A bushel basket to the meal.
Then I begin to warm right up,I whistle "Yankee Doodle" through,An' wrastle with the collie pup—And sometimes gran'dad whistles too.
[90]The cow-shed door, it makes a dinEach time we swing it open wide;I run an' flash the lantern in,There stand the shorthorns side by side.
Their breathin' makes a sort of cloudAbove their heads—there's no frost here."My beauties," gran'dad says out loud,"You'll get your breakfasts, never fear."
When up I climb into the loftTo fill their racks with clover hay,Their eyes, all sleepy like and soft,A heap of nice things seem to say.
The red ox shakes his curly head,An' turns on me a solemn face;I know he's awful glad his shedIs such a warm and smelly place.
An' last of all the stable big,With harness hanging on each door,I always want to dance a jigOn that old musty, dusty floor.
It seems so good to be alive,An' tendin' to the sturdy grays,The sorrels, and old Prince, that's five—An' Lightfoot with her coaxing ways.
[91]My gran'dad tells me she is mine,An' I'm that proud! I braid her mane,An' smooth her sides until they shine,An' do my best to make her vain.
When we have measured oats for all,Have slapped the grays upon the flanks,An' tried to pat the sorrels tall,An' heard them whinny out their thanks,
We know it's breakfast time, and goOut past the yellow stacks of straw,Across the creek that used to flow,But won't flow now until a thaw.
Behind the trees the sky is pink,The snow drifts by in fat white flakes,My gran'dad says: "Well, Bob, I thinkThere comes a smell of buckwheat cakes."
In powdered wig and buckled shoe,Knee-breeches, coat and waistcoat gay,The wealthy squire rode forth to wooUpon a first of April day.
He would forget his lofty birth,His spreading acres, and his pride,And Betty, fairest maid on earth,Should be his own—his grateful bride.
The maid was young, and he was old;The maid was good to look upon.Naught cared she for his land or gold,Her love was for the good squire's son.
He found her as the noonday hushLay on the world, and called her name.She looked up, conscious, and her blushA tender interest did proclaim.
[96]For he was Hubert's sire, and sheTo keep a secret tryst did go.He said: "Methinks she cares for me"—That April fool of long ago.
The flattered squire his suit did pressWithout delay. "Say, wilt thou come,"He said, with pompous tenderness,"And share my wealth and grace my home?"
"Kind sir," the lovely Betty cried,"I'm but a lass of low degree.""The love that is controlled by prideIs not true love at all," quoth he.
"I hold a man should woo and wedWhere'er he wills—should please himself.""There is the barrier strong," she said,"Of pedigree, and place, and pelf.
"Could one so lowly hope to graceYour home?" Right proud his air and tone:"You're pure of heart and fair of face;Dear Betty, you would grace a throne!"
"Since you so highly think of me"—Her tears and laughter were at strife—"You will not mind so much, maybe,That I am Hubert's promised wife."
[97]Pale went the good squire's florid cheek,His wrath flamed out—but Betty stood,Brown-haired, red-lipped, blue-eyed and meek,A sight to make a bad man good.
She won on him. "But why this guile—This secrecy?" His voice was rough."We feared," she whispered, with a smile,"You would not think me good enough."
"An April fool am I. Come, come—My offer stands. As Hubert's wife,"He laughed, "you'll share my wealth and homeAnd brighten up a lonely life."
He kissed her cheek and rode away.Unbroken was his heart, I wist,For he was thinking of a day—A day back in youth's rosy mist—
And of a form and of a face."My dear, dead love," he whispered low,The while he rode at sober pace,That April fool of long ago.
They were a couple well contentWith what they earned and what they spent,Cared not a whit for style's decree—For he was Scotch, and so was she.
And oh, they loved to talk of Burns—Dear blithesome, tender Bobby Burns!They never wearied of his song,He never sang a note too strong.One little fault could neither see—For he was Scotch, and so was she.
They loved to read of men who stoodAnd gave for country life and blood,Who held their faith so grand a thingThey scorned to yield it to a king.Ah, proud of such they well might be—For he was Scotch, and so was she.
[99]From neighbors' broils they kept away;No liking for such things had they,And oh, each had a canny mind,And could be deaf, and dumb, and blind.With words or pence was neither free—For he was Scotch, and so was she.
I would not have you think this pairWent on in weather always fair,For well you know in married lifeWill come, sometimes, the jar and strife;They couldn't always just agree—For he was Scotch, and so was she.
But near of heart they ever kept,Until at close of life they slept;Just this to say when all was past,They loved each other to the last!They're loving yet, in heaven, maybe—For he was Scotch, and so was she.
Two men were born the self-same hour:The one was heir to untold wealth,To pride of birth and love of power;The other's heritage was health.
A sturdy frame, an honest heart,Of human sympathy a store,A strength and will to do his part,A nature wholesome to the core.
The two grew up to man's estate,And took their places in the strife:One found a sphere both wide and great,One found the toil and stress of life.
Fate is a partial jade, I trow;She threw the rich man gold and frame,The laurel wreath to deck his brow,High place, the multitude's acclaim.
[104]The common things the other had—The common hopes to thrill him deep,The common joys to make him glad,The common griefs to make him weep.
No high ambitions fired his breast;The peace of God, the love of friend,Of wife and child, these seemed the best,These held and swayed him to the end.
The two grew old, and death's clear callCame to them both the self-same day:To him whose name was known to all,To him who walked his lowly way.
Down to his grave the rich man went,With cortege long, with pomp and pride,O'er him was reared a monumentThat told his virtues far and wide;
Told of his wealth, his lineage high,His statesmanship, his trophies won,How he had filled the public eye—But empty praise when all was done.
The other found a narrow bedWithin God's acre, peaceful, lone;The throng cared not that he was dead,A man uncultured and unknown.
[105]But in the house that he had leftA woman whispered through her tears:"Christ, comfort me, who am bereftOf love that failed not through the years."
And oft his stalwart sons and tallWould murmur as their eyes grew dim:"A useful life is best of all;God grant we pattern after him!"
A sick man sighed: "I'll miss his smile;"A shrivelled crone did shake her headAnd mutter to herself the whileHow oft his hand had given bread.
A maimed child sobbed: "He carried meTo gather blossoms in the wood,"And more than one said, brokenly:"A man who always did me good."
One came at twilight to the grave,And knelt and kissed the fresh-turned sod."Oh, faithful soul," she cried, "and brave,'Twas you that led me back to God!
"Back from the sin, the shame, the snare—Forget your trust and faith?—not I;Each helpful word, each tender prayer,I will remember till I die!"
[106]Two men that sleep: above the oneThe monument an artist's handHas fashioned from the block of stone,A thing of beauty, tall and grand;
Above the other naught—what then?Ere he did fold his hands for rest,He builded in the hearts of menThe fairest monument and best.
He would go, they could not keep him, for he came of fighting stock;Though his widowed mother pleaded, he was firm as any rock.Well he loved the patient woman who had nursed him on her breast,Been quite blind to all his follies,—but he loved his country best."I'll come home again," he told her; " I'll come home again some day,"Laid his face to her's and kissed her, said good-bye and marched away.Stronger than the voice that pleaded, "Laddie, laddie, bide at home,"Was the shrill voice of the bugle and the deep voice of the drum,Calling to him all the day, calling to him in his dreams:"Come, lad! Come, lad! Come! Come! Come!"
[117]His face was like a maiden's face, so smooth it was, and fair;The laughter in his eyes of gray, the sunshine in his hair;But a man's heart, true and gallant, beat beneath the tartan plaid,And a strong right arm he boasted, did this bonnie Highland lad.Oh, the battlefield is gruesome, with its dying and its dead,But 'twas to the field of battle that the drum and bugle led—Magersfontein—and the bullets biting fiercely left and right,And the lad in kilt and hose there in the thickest of the fight.Fearful odds, and none to help them, fight they boldly, undismayed,Gallant clansmen of the north land! Brave old Highlander brigade!Someone blundered, this we know,When you met the ambushed foe,But you fought as heroes fight, and died as heroes die;This we know, this we know.
Where the fighting had been fiercest, as the sun sank in the west,Did they find the widow's laddie, with a bullet in his breast,[118]And his smiling face turned upward. Did he dream at last—who knows—Of the far-off hills of Scotland? Lying there in kilt and hose,With the gold hair gleaming brightly underneath the bonnet blue,And the tartan plaid laid gently o'er the heart so brave and true.Stilled forever! With death's coming did there fall upon his earMusic that he loved to list to, bugle call so high and clear,Thrilling, stirring, sweeter, shriller, and the deep voice of the drum,Calling to him through the shadows, calling softly through the shadows,"Come, lad! Come, lad! Come! Come! Come!"
The teacher was wise and learned, I wis,All nonsense she held in scorning,But you never can tell what the primmest missWill do of a bright spring morning.
What this one did was to spread a snareFor feet of a youth unheeding,As March, with a meek and lamb-like air,To its very last hour was speeding.
Oh, he was the dullard of his class,For how can a youth get learningWith his eyes aye fixed on a pretty lassAnd his heart aye filled with yearning?
"Who finds 'mong the rushes which fringe a pool,"She told him, "the first wind blossom,May wish what he will"—poor April fool,With but one wish in his bosom.
[120]Her gray eyes danced—on a wild-goose chaseHe'd sally forth on the morrow,And, later, she'd laugh in his sombre face,And jest at his words of sorrow.
But penitence and a troubled mindWere fruits of the night's reflection;After all, he was simple, and strong, and kind—'Twas wrong to flout his affection.
They met on the hill as she walked to school;He said, unheeding her blushes,"Here's the early flower your April foolFound growing among the rushes.
"Take it or leave it as you will"—His voice ringing out so clearlyAwoke in her heart a happy thrill—"You know that I love you dearly."
Day-dreams indulged as she taught the schoolHeld lovers kneeling and suing;"Take it or leave it"—her April foolWas masterful in his wooing.
He gave her the flower—she gave him a kiss—His suit she had long been scorning;But you never can tell what the primmest missWill do of a bright spring morning.
O! He was the boy of the house, you know,A jolly and rollicking lad;He never was sick, he never was tired,And nothing could make him sad.
If he started to play at sunrise,Not a rest would he take at noon;No day was so long from beginning to end,But his bed-time came too soon.
Did someone urge that he make less noise,He would say, with a saucy grin:"Why, one boy alone doesn't make much stir—O sakes! I wish I was a twin.
"There's two of twins, and it must be funTo go double at everything;To holler by twos, and whistle by twos,To stamp by twos, and to sing!"
[122]His laugh was something to make you glad,So brimful was it of joy;A conscience he had, perhaps, in his breast,But it never troubled the boy.
You met him out on the garden path,The terrier at his heels,And knew by the shout he hailed you withHow happy a youngster feels.
The maiden auntie was half distraughtWith his tricks as the days went by;"The most mischievous child in all the world!"She said with a shrug and a sigh.
His father owned that her words were true,His mother declared each dayHe was putting wrinkles into her face,And turning her brown hair gray.
His grown-up sister referred to himAs "a trouble," "a trial," "a grief";The way he ignored all rules, she said,Was something beyond belief!
It never troubled the boy of the house,He revelled in racket and din,Had only one regret in the world—He hadn't been born a twin!
*****
[123]There's nobody making a noise to-day,There's nobody stamping the floor,'Tis strangely silent upstairs and down—White ribbons upon the door.
The terrier's whining out in the sun:"Where's my comrade?" he seems to say.Turn your plaintive eyes away, little dog,There's no frolic for you to-day.
The freckle-faced girl from the house next doorIs sobbing her young heart out.Don't cry, little girl, you'll soon forgetThe laugh and the merry shout.
The grown-up sister is kissing his face,And calling him "angel" and "sweet,"And the maiden aunt is nursing the bootsHe wore on his restless feet.
So big, so solemn the old house seems—No uproar, no racket, no din,No shrill peal of laughter, no voice shrieking out,"O sakes! I wish I was a twin!"
A man and a woman white with griefWatch the wearisome moments creep—Oh! the loneliness touches everything,The boy of the house is asleep!
The sunshine streaming through the stainèd glassTouched her with rosy colors as she stood,The maiden Queen of all the British realm,In the old Abbey on that soft June day.Youth shone within her eyes, where God had setAll steadfastness, and high resolve, and truth;Youth flushed her cheek, dwelt on the smooth white browWhereon the heavy golden circlet lay.
The ashes of dead kings, the history ofA nation's growth, of strife, and victory,The mighty past called soft through aisle and nave:"Be strong, O Queen; be strong as thou art fair!"A virgin, white of soul and unafraid,Since back of her was God, and at her feetA people loyal to the core, and strong,And loving well her sweetness and her youth.
Upon her woman's head earth's richest crownHath sat with grace these sixty years and more.Her hand, her slender woman's hand, hath heldThe weightiest sceptre, held it with such powerAll homage hath been hers, at home, abroad,Where'er hath dwelt a chivalrous regardFor strength of purpose and for purity,For grand achievement and for noble aim.
To-day the cares of State no longer vex;To-day the crown is laid from off her brow.
Dead! The great heart of her no more will beatWith tenderness for all beneath her rule.Dead! The clear eyes of her no more will guardThe nation's welfare. Dead! The arm of herNo more will strike a mighty blow for rightAnd justice; make a wide world stand amazedThat one so gentle as old England's QueenCould be so fearless and so powerful!
Full wearily the sense of grief doth pressAnd weight us down. The good Queen is no more;And we are fain to weep as children weepWhen greedy death comes to the home and bearsFrom thence the mother, whose unfailing loveHath been their wealth, their safeguard, and their pride.[131]O bells that toll in every zone and clime!There is a sound of sobbing in your breath.East, west, north, south, the solemn clamor goes,Voicing a great, a universal grief!
THANKFULNESS.
I thank Thee, Lord,For every joyous hourThat has been mine!For every strengthening and helpful word,For every tender sound that I have heard,I thank Thee, Lord!
I thank Thee, Lord,For work and wearinessThat have been mine!For patience toward one groping toward the light,For mid-day burden and for rest of night,I thank Thee, Lord.
There's a thing we love to think of when the summer days are long,And the summer winds are blowing, and the summer sun is strong,When the orchards and the meadows throw their fragrance on the air,When the grain-fields flaunt their riches, and the glow is everywhere.Something sings it all the day,Canada, fair Canada,And the pride thrills through and through us,'Tis our birthplace, Canada!
There's a thing we love to think of when the frost and ice and snowHold high carnival together, and the biting north winds blow.There's a thing we love to think of through the bitter winter hours,For it stirs a warmth within us—'tis this fair young land of ours.[133]Something sings it all the day,Canada, fair Canada,And the pride thrills through and through us,'Tis our birthplace, Canada!
Ours with all her youth and promise, ours with all her strength and might,Ours with all her mighty waters and her forests deep as night.Other lands may far outshine her, boast more charms than she can claim,But this young land is our own land, and we love her very name.Something sings it all the day,Canada, fair Canada,And the pride thrills through and through us,'Tis our birthplace, Canada!
Let the man born in old England love the dear old land the most,For what spot a man is born in, of that spot he's fain to boast;Let the Scot look back toward Scotland with a longing in his eyes,And the exile from old Erin think her green shores paradise,Native born are we, are we,Canada, fair Canada,And the pride thrills through and through us,'Tis our birthplace, Canada!
[134]Well we love that sea-girt island, and we strive to understandAll the greatness, all the grandeur, of the glorious Mother Land;And we cheer her to the skies, cheer her till the echoes start,For the old land holds our homage, but the new land holds our heart!Native born are we, are we,Canada, fair Canada!And the pride thrills through and through us,'Tis our birthplace, Canada!
THE KING'S GIFT.
TO E. S. R.
The new year coming to us with swift feetIs the King's gift,And all that in it liesWill make our lives more rounded and complete.It may be laughter,May be tear-filled eyes;It may be gain of love,Or loss of love;It may be thorns, or bloom and breath of flowers,The full fruition of these hopes that move—It may be what will break these hearts of ours,What matter? 'Tis the great gift of the King—We do not need to fear what it may bring.
O soul on God's high seas! the way is strange and long,Yet fling your pennons out, and spread your canvas strong;For though to mortal eyes so small a craft you seem,The highest star in heaven cloth lend you guiding gleam.
O soul on God's high seas! look to your course with care,Fear most when winds are kind and skies are blue and fair.Your helm must sway at touch of no hand save your own—The soul that sails on God's high seas must sail alone.
O soul on God's high seas! sail on with steady aim,Unmoved by winds of praise, untouched by seas of blame.Beyond the lonely ways, beyond the guiding star,There stretches out the strand and golden harbor bar.
I built a castle in the air—A radiant thing made out of dreams;Love's dear desire its golden stair—Naught heavier than a hope was there—A thing of mist and rainbow gleams.
But when it fell—ah! when it fell,Though made o' dreams and mist and shine,The mystery of it who can tell?Its falling shook both heaven and hell,And ground to dust this heart of mine.
YOUTH AND JUNE.
I was your lover long ago, sweet June,Ere life grew hard; I am your lover still,And follow gladly to the wondrous tuneYou pipe on golden reeds to vale and hill.I am your lover still—to me you seemTo hold the fragrance of the joys long dead—The brightness and the beauty of the dreamWe dreamed in youth—to hold the tears we shed,The laughter of our lips—the faith that liesBack in that season dear to every heart,Life's springtime, when God's earth and God's blue skiesAre, measured by our glance, not far apart.
As "Peace on earth!" the glad world sings one glorious Christmas morn,"Peace, peace on earth! Good-will to men! Peace, peace! the Christ
is born!"As through the courts, the wondrous courts, of heaven hosannas ring,As harpers strike their harps of gold and "Glory! Glory!" sing,Upon the City's threshold fairA woman steps, and lingers there.
The eyes she turns on Peter's face with unshed tears are dim,"Tell Christ," she says, "a mother waits who fain would speak with Him."Through all the music, far above the highest, grandest noteOf triumph, and of joy and praise, her soft voice seems to float;And hearing it, straight from His throneComes down to her the Kingly One[138]With shining face and eyes that holdSuch wealth of love and peace,She feels her trembling heart grow bold,Her doubt and grieving cease."Dear Lord!" she cries, and lowly kneels, "I have a prayer to make;O do Thou hear and answer it for Thine own mercy's sake,Since heaven will not seem fair to meIf one dear face I may not see.
"Dear Christ, a mother's love is greatTo shield, to guide, to watch, to wait.The last kiss that I gave on earth was to my wayward son,Whose soul, though deeply stainèd by sin, may yet by love be wonTo penitence, to higher walk, to purer, holier way;O wilt Thou let me to go to him and guard him night and day?
"Thou wert a babe in Bethlehem, a mother guarded Thee.I pray Thee now, for her dear sake, to hearken unto me!Remember how she held Thee close, and crooned Thee, sweet and low,The lullabies that mothers sang long centuries ago,And bared her snowy breast to Thee,And stroked Thy forehead tenderly.
[139]"And kissed Thee oft, and told herself, again and yet again,To hold Thee thus one hour outweighed the travail and the pain!Dear Christ, this city is most fair; its glories thrill and move;O doth it grieve Thee that my heart cleaves to an earthly love?That on mine eyes heaven's beauties dimBecause my heart is back with him?
"With him—the wandering son of mine, the wayward one—whose needOf patient love and guiding hand is very great indeed!Think not I love Thee not, dear Lord, nor long for heaven's rest;'Tis only that the mother-heart throbs fiercely in my breast.On this glad morning of Thy birth,O grant me leave to visit earth!"
Lo! on her head she feels the touch of tender wounded hand,"Fear not," she hears, "a love like thine the Christ can understand.No mother prays in vain to Me on this day of the year,For when the faltering words she speaks fall on My waiting ear,I do remember that My cheekLay on a bosom warm,I do remember Bethlehem,And Mary's cradling arm."
The fluttering leaves above his grave,The grasses creeping toward the light,The flowers fragile, sweet, and brave,That hide the earth clods from our sight,
The swelling buds on shrub and tree,The golden gleam of daffodil,The violet blooming fair and freeWhere late the winds blew harsh and chill,
The lily lifting up its breathWhere snowdrifts spread but yesterday—All cry: "Where is thy sting, O death?O grave, where is thy victory?"
Each Eastertide the old world singsHer anthem sweet and true and strong,And all the tender growing thingsJoin in her resurrection song.
AUGUST.
God in His own right hand doth take each day—Each sun-filled day—each rare and radiant night,And drop it softly on the earth and say:"Touch earth with heaven's own beauty and delight."
Praise God for blessings great and small,For garden bloom and orchard store,The crimson vine upon the wall,The green and gold of maples tall,For harvest-field and threshing-floor!
Praise God for children's laughter shrill,For clinging hands and tender eyes,For looks that lift and words that thrill,For friends that love through good and ill,For home, and all home's tender ties!
Praise God for losses and for gain,For tears to shed, and songs to sing,For gleams of gold and mists of rain,For the year's full joy, the year's deep pain,The grieving and the comforting!
Fate says, and flaunts her stores of gold,"I'll loan you happiness untold.What is it you desire of me?"A perfect hour in which to beIn love with life, and glad, and good,The bliss of being understood,Amid life's cares a little spaceTo feast your eyes upon a face,The whispered word, the love-filled tone,The warmth of lips that meet your own,To-day of Fate you borrow;In hunger of the heart, and pain,In loneliness, and longing vain,You pay the debt to-morrow!
Prince, let grim Fate take what she willOf treasures rare, of joys that thrill,Enact the cruel usurer's part,Leave empty arms and hungry heart,Take what she can of love and trust,Take all life's gladness, if she must,Take meeting smile and parting kiss—The benediction and the bliss.What then? The fairest thing of allIs ours, O Prince, beyond recall—Not even Fate would dare to seizeOur store of golden memories.
Love met a worldling on the way,And softly crept into his breast.Straight Self and Greed refused to stayWhere Love had dared to make his nest.
Love met a mourner on the road,And said: "I'll bear thee company."Full soon the mourner lost his loadOf grief, and care, and misery.
Into a grim and cheerless homeLove forced his way through barriers tall;Fled wretchedness, and chill, and gloom—The golden sunshine flooded all.
PEACE.
Unbroken peace, I ween, is sweeter farThan reconciliation. Love's red scar,Though salved with kiss of penitence, and tears,Remains, full oft, unhealed through all the years.
What is the greatest work of all?The work that comes every day;The work that waits us on ev'ry handIs work that, for us, is truly grand,And the love of work is our pay.
What is the highest life of all?It is living, day by day,True to ourselves and true to the right,Living the truth from dawn till the night,And the love of truth for our pay.
What is the grandest thing of all—Is it winning Heaven some day?No, and a thousand times say no;'Tis making this old world thrill and glowWith the sun of love till each shall knowSomething of Heaven here below,And God's well done for our pay.
Write on Life's tablet all things tender, great and good,Uncaring that full oft thou art misunderstood.Interpretation true is foreign to the throngThat runs and reads; heed not its praise or blame. Be strong!Write on with steady hand, and, smiling, say, "'Tis well!"If when thy deeds spell HeavenThe rabble read out Hell.
THE TIME AND THE DEED.
Art going to do a kindly deed?'Tis never too soon to begin;Make haste, make haste, for the moments speed,The world, my dear one, has pressing needOf your tender thought and kindly deed.'Tis never too soon to begin.
But if the deed be a selfish one,'Tis ever too soon to begin;If some heart will be sorer when all is done,Put it off! put it off from sun to sun,Remembering always, my own dear one,'Tis ever too soon to begin.
A prayer of love, O Father!A fair and flowery wayLife stretches out before theseOn this their marriage day.O pour Thy choicest blessing,Withhold no gift of Thine,Fill all their world with beautyAnd tenderness divine!
A prayer of love, O Father!This holy love and pure,That thrills the soul to rapture,O may it e'er endure!The richest of earth's treasures,The gold without alloy,The flower of faith unfading,The full, the perfect joy!
[150]No mist of tears or doubting,But in their steadfast eyesThe light divine, the light of love,The light of Paradise.A prayer of love, O Father!A prayer of love to Thee,God's best be theirs for life, for death,And all Eternity!
WILD STRAWBERRIES.
The glad, glad days, and the pleasant ways—Ho! for the fields and the wildwood!The scents, the sights, and the dear delights—Ho! for our care-free childhood!
Heavy the air with a fragrance rare,Strawberries ripe in the meadow,Luscious and red where the vines are spreadThickly in sun and shadow.
The glad, glad days, and the pleasant ways,Chorus of wild birds calling:"Strawberry ripe! Ho! strawberry ripe!"From dawn till the dew is falling.
O the frozen valley and frozen hill make a coffin wide and deep,And the dead river lies, all its laughter stilled within it, fast
asleep.
The trees that have played with the merry thing, and freighted its
breast with leaves,Give never a murmur or sigh of woe—they are dead— no dead
thing grieves.
No carol of love from a song-bird's throat; the world lies naked and
still,For all things tender, and all things sweet, have been touched by the
gruesome chill.
Not a flower—a blue forget-me-not, a wild rose, or jasmine soft—To lay its bloom on the dead river's lips, that have kissed them all so oft.
[152]But look! a ladder is spanning the space 'twixt earth and the sky beyond,A ladder of gold for the Maid of Grace—the strong, the subtle, the fond!
Spring, with the warmth in her footsteps light, and the breeze and the
fragrant breath,Is coming to press her radiant face to that which is cold in death.
Spring, with a mantle made of the gold held close in a sunbeam's heartThrown over her shoulders bonnie and bare—see the sap in the great
trees start!
Where the hem of this flowing garment trails, see the glow, the color
bright,A stirring and spreading of something fair—the dawn is chasing the
night!
Spring, with all love and all dear delights pulsing in every vein,The old earth knows her, and thrills to her touch, as she claims her
own again.
Spring, with the hyacinths filling her lap and violet seeds in her hair,With the crocus hiding its satin head in her bosom warm and fair;
[153]Spring, with the daffodils at her feet and pansies abloom in her eyes,Spring, with enough of God in herself to make the dead to arise!
For see, as she bends o'er the coffin deep—the frozen valley and hill—The dead river stirs,—ah, that ling'ring kiss is making its heart to
thrill!
And then as she closer and closer leans, it slips from its snowy shroud,Frightened a moment, then rushing away, calling and laughing aloud!
The hill where she rested is all abloom, the wood is green as of old,And wakened birds are striving to send their songs to the Gates of Gold.
MADAM GRUNDY.
Madam, they say, has lost her way.Tell me, has she passed thither?Let her alone and she'll come home,And bring her tales all with her.
Sweet and shrill the crickets hiding in the grasses brown and leanPipe their gladness—sweeter, shriller—one would think the
world was green.O the haze is on the hilltops, and the haze is on the lake!See it fleeing through the valley with the bold wind in its wake!Mark the warm October haze!Mark the splendor of the days!And the mingling of the crimson with the sombre brown and grays!
See the bare hills turn their furrows to the shine and to the glow;If you listen you can hear it, hear a murmur soft and low—"We are naked," so the fields say, "stripped of all our golden dress.""Heed it not," October answers, "for I love ye none the less.[155]Share my beauty and my cheerWhile we rest together here,In these sun-filled days of languor, in these late days of the year."
All the splendor of the summer, all the springtime's light and grace,All the riches of the harvest, crown her head and light her face;And the wind goes sighing, sighing, as if loath to let her pass,While the crickets sing exultant in the lean and withered grass.O the warm October haze!O the splendor of the days!O the mingling of the crimson with the sombre brown and grays!
GOD'S WARMTH IS SHE.
O glad sun, creeping through the casement wide,A million blossoms have you kissed since morn,But none so fair as this one at my side—Touch soft the bit of love, the babe new born.
Towards all the world my love and pity flow,With high resolves, with trust, with sympathy.This happy heart of mine is all aglow—This heart that was so cold—God's warmth is she.[156]
HER PRAYER.
Low in the ivy-covered church she kneeled,The sunshine falling on her golden hair;The moaning of a soul with hurt unhealedWas her low-breathed and broken cry of prayer.
"Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, Thy wounded hand!I pray Thee, lay it on this heart of mine—This heart so sick with grief it cannot standAught heavier than this tender touch of Thine.
"Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, O let it pressHere, where the hurt is hardest, where the painThrobs fiercest, and the utter emptinessMocks at glad memories and longings vain!
"Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, who long agoSlept by Thy mother's side in Bethlehem!Think of her cradling arms, her love-song low,And pity me when Thou dost think of them.
[157]"My baby girl, my pretty dear, I missMorning and noon and night—her ways so wise,The patting of her soft, warm hands, the kiss,The cooing voice, the sunshine of her eyes.
"I sleep, and dream she nestles close, my own,Her red mouth on my breast; I wake and cry.She sleeps out yonder in the dark, alone—My arms are empty and my bosom dry.
"Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, will surely bringHealing for this great anguish that I bear!A nursing babe, a little dimpled thing,God might have left her to her mother's care!
"Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, O let me feelIts touch to-day, and past all doubting proveThou hast not lost Thine ancient power to heal—Press out the bitterness, fill up with love!
"O Babe that in the manger rude did sleep!O Prince of Peace, Thy tender wounded palmStill holds the oil of joy for those that weep!Still holds the comforting, the Gilead's balm!"
Gray old gardener, what do you bring?"Laurel and ivy and bay,With palms for the crowning of a King—The morrow is Christmas Day.
"Holly with thorns, and berries like bloodOn its shiny greenness flung.O the piercèd side, and the thorny crown,And the cross whereon He hung!
"The mistletoe, meaning All-healing,Hangs close to the holly's thorn,Lest we forget that on Christmas DayThe Healer of Souls was born.
"Ivy's for faith; on the altar railLet it creep where all may see;It crept till it kissed a cheek so paleThat night in Gethsemane.
[159]"Bay's for remembrance, full and sweet;It speaks with its fragrant breathOf manger and cross and a lowly tomb,And a love that conquered death.
"And laurel leaves for the wreath I bring,The laurel for victory,And palms for the crowning of a King—The morrow is Christmas Day."
ENVY.
When Satan sends—to vex the mind of manAnd urge him on to meanness and to wrong—His satellites, there is not one that canAcquit itself like envy. Not so strongAs lust, so quick as fear, so big as hate—A pigmy thing, the twin of sordid greed—Its work all noble things to underrate,Decry fair face, fair form, fair thought, fair deed,A sneer it has for what is highest, best,For love's soft voice, and virtue's robe of white;Truth is not true, and pity is not kind,A great task done is but a pastime light.Tormented and tormenting is the mindThat grants to envy room to make its nest.
He frowned and shook his snowy head."Those clanging bells! they deafen quiteWith their unmeaning song," he said."I'm weary of it all to-night—The gladness, sadness. I'm so oldI have no sympathy to spare,My heart has grown so hard and cold,So full of self, I do not careHow many laugh, or long, or grieveIn all the world this Christmas eve.
"There was a time long, long ago—They take our best, the passing years—For the old life, and faith, and glow.I'd give—what's on my cheek? Not tears!I have a whim. To-night I'll spendTill eyes turn on me gratefully—An old man's whim, just to pretendThat he is what he used to be;For this one night, not want nor painShall look to me for help in vain."
[161]"A foolish whim!" he muttered oft,The while he gave to those in need;But strangely warm and strangely softHis old face grew, for self and greedSlipped from him. Ah, it made him glowTo hear the blessing, thanks, the prayer.He looked into his heart, and lo!The old-time faith and love were there."Ring out, old bells, right gladly ring!"He said, "Full sweet the song you sing."
QUEBEC.
Quebec, the gray old city on the hill,Lies, with a golden glory on her head,Dreaming throughout this hour so fair, so still,Of other days and her belovèd dead.The doves are nesting in the cannons grim,The flowers bloom where once did run a tideOf crimson when the moon rose pale and dimAbove a field of battle stretching wide.Methinks within her wakes a mighty glowOf pride in ancient times, her stirring past,The strife, the valor of the long agoFeels at her heart-strings. Strong and tall, and vastShe lies, touched with the sunset's golden grace,A wondrous softness on her gray old face.
The harvest sun lay hot and strongOn waving grain and grain in sheaf,On dusty highway stretched along,On hill and vale, on stalk and leaf.
The wind which stirred the tasseled cornCame creeping through the casement wide,And softly kissed the babe new bornThat nestled at its mother's side.
That mother spoke in tones that thrilled:"My firstborn's cradled in my arm,Upon my breast his cry is stilled,And here he lies so dear, so warm."
To her had come a generous shareOf worldly honors and of fame,Of hours replete with gladness rare,But no one hour seemed just the same.
[165]As that which came when, white and spentWith pain of travail great, she lay,Thrilled through with rapture and content,And love and pride, that August day.
The fairest picture of the past—Life's tenderest page till all is done—A glad young mother holding fastGod's wondrous gift—her little son.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY.
There's an Isle, a green Isle, set in the sea,Here's to the Saint that blessed it!And here's to the billows wild and freeThat for centuries have caressed it!
Here's to the day when the men that roamSend longing eyes o'er the water!Here's to the land that still spells homeTo each loyal son and daughter!
Here's to old Ireland—fair, I ween,With the blue skies stretched above her!Here's to her shamrock warm and green,And here's to the hearts that love her!
From the little bald head to the two little feet,You are winsome, and bonnie, and tender, and sweet,But not for this do I love you.
You're wilful, cajoling, not fond of restraint,A creature of moods—no tiresome saint—You're wise and you're wistful, and oh, you are quaint,But not for this do I love you.
You're a rose of a maiden, the pink and the whiteOf your face is to me a rare thing of delight,But not for this do I love you.
That "agoo" on your lips is the tenderest thing,And the eyes smiling at me, ye bonnie wee thing,Are violets washed with the dewdrops of spring,But not for this do I love you.
[167]Come, nestle down close on my bosom, you dear,The secret I'll whisper right into your ear,Because you are you do I love you,
Because you are you, just you, oh, my own,Because you are Lesley, this reason aloneWill do for us, darling, until you are grown,Because you are you do I love you.
THE TRYST.
The harvest moon in yellow hazeIs steeping all the sea and land,Is kindling paths and shining waysAround the hills, across the sand.
And there are only thou and I—O sweetheart, I've no eyes to noteThe glory of the sea and sky,I see a softly rounded throat,
A face uplifted, pure and sweet,Two blue eyes filled with trust and love;Enough, the sea sings at our feet,The harvest moon sails just above.
We catch a glimpse of it, gaunt and gray,When the golden sunbeams are all abroad;We sober a moment, then softly say:The world still lies in the hand of God.
We watch it stealthily creeping o'erThe threshold leading to somebody's soul;A shadow, we cry, it cannot be moreWhen faith is one's portion and Heaven one's goal.
A ghost that comes stealing its way along,Affrighting the weak with its gruesome air,But who that is young and glad and strongFears for a moment to meet Despair?
To this heart of ours we have thought so boldAll uninvited it comes one day—Lo! faith grows wan, and love grows cold,And the heaven of our dreams lies far away.
Day of battle and day of bloodFound you steady and strong, I ween;Sons of the land of the Maple Leaf,Face to the foe, you died for the Queen.
Brave boys, our boys, filling to-dayNameless graves upon veldt and plain,Here's to your mem'ry gallant and true,Sons of our soil, who thought it gain
To fight and win, or to fight and fall!Strong of purpose, you took your stand,Proved with your life-blood red and warmCanada's faith in the Motherland!
Brave boys, our boys, this have you done,Drawn us closer, and bound us fast;One are we with the Isle in the sea,One in the future, the present, the past.
[171]Brave boys, our boys, honor we owe,Honor and homage a mighty debt—You proved our love and our loyalty—The land that bore you will not forget!Canada's soldiers, Canada's sons,The land that bore you will not forget!
THE BARLEY FIELDS.
The sunset has faded, there's but a tinge,Saffron pale, where a star of whiteHas tangled itself in the trailing fringeOf the pearl-gray robe of the summer night.
O the green of the barley fields grows deep,The breath of the barley fields grows rare;There is rustle and glimmer, sway and sweep—The wind is holding high revel there,
Singing the song it has often sung—Hark to the troubadour glad and bold:"Sweet is the earth when the summer is youngAnd the barley fields are green and gold!"
Did you send your song to the gates of goldIn the days of long ago?A song of sweetness and gladness untold,Till fain was my lady to have and to hold—Ah! my lady did not know.
'Tis love and joy make the soul of a song,If we only understood.Can each strain be tender, and true, and strong,When the days stretch out so weary and long,Dear little bird of the wood?
The sun came so boldly into your cell—'Tis the springtime, pretty bird—And full sweet the story he had to tellOf doings in meadow and wood and dell,Till your longing grew and stirred.
[173]This cage of my lady's has silver bars,And my lady's voice is mild,But oh, to sail 'twixt the earth and stars,Forget the hurt of the prison barsIn the gladness of freedom wild!
To soar and circle o'er shadowy gladeWhere dewdrops hide from the sun!O fields where the blossoming clover swayed!O voices familiar that music madeTill the full, glad day was done!
Ah, then you sang, little bird of the wood,And you stilled the laughing throng.To make passionate longing understoodYou took the height and depth of your moodAnd flung them into a song!
These guests of my lady's did listen, I know,When out through the silver barsYou sent forth a measure, liquid and lowAs laughter of waters that ebb and flowUnder the shimmering stars.
You sang of the sweetest, gladdest, and bestYour longing heart held in store,Till into the careless listener's breastThere flashed a sudden and vague unrest,That grew into something more.
[174]Eyes saw for a few brief moments' spaceThe heights that were never trod,And, seeing, grew dim for the swift, bold raceThat was planned in the hours when youth and graceCame fresh from the hand of God.
Only a homesick bird of the fieldTrilling a glorious note!Only a homesick bird of the woodWith heaven in your full throat!
WOMAN.
Not faultless, for she was not fashioned so,A mingling of the bitter and the sweet;Lips that can laugh and sigh and whisper lowOf hope and trust and happiness complete,Or speak harsh truths; eyes that can flash with fire,Or make themselves but wells of tendernessWherein is drowned all bitterness and ire—Warm eyes whose lightest glance is a caress.Heaven sent her here to brighten this old earth,And only heaven fully knows her worth.
Down in the mullein meadowThe lusty thistle springs,The butterflies go criss-cross,The lonesome catbird sings,
The alderbush is flauntingHer blossoms white as snow—The same old mullein meadowWe played in long ago.
The waste land of the homestead,The arid sandy spot,Where reaper's song is never heard,Where wealth is never sought,
But where the sunshine lingers,And merry breezes comeTo gather pungent perfumesFrom the mullein-stalks abloom.
[176]There's a playground on the hillside,A playhouse in the glade,With mulleins for a garden,And mulleins for a shade.
And still the farmer grumblesThat nothing good will growIn this old mullein meadowWe played in long ago!
LIVING FRESHNESS.
O freshness, living freshness of a dayIn June! Spring scarce has gotten out of sight,And not a stain of wear shows on the grassBeneath our feet, and not a dead leaf calls,"Our day of loveliness is past and gone!"I found the thick wood steeped in pleasant smells,The dainty ferns hid in their sheltered nooks;The wild-flowers found the sunlight where they stood,And some hid their white faces quite away,While others lifted up their starry eyesAnd seemed right glad to ruffle in the breeze.
"Life's day is too brief," he said at dawn,"I would it were ten times longer,For great tasks wait for me further on."At noonday the wish was stronger.
His place was in the thick of the strife,And hopes were nearing completeness,While one was crowning the joys of lifeWith love's own wonderful sweetness.
"Life's day is too brief for all it contains,The triumphs, the fighting, the proving,The hopes and desires, the joys and the pains—Too brief for the hating and loving."
To-night he sits in the shadows gray,While heavily sorrow presses.O the long, long day! O the weary day,With its failures and successes!
[178]He sits in the shadows and turns his eyesOn the years that lie behind him."I am tired of all things now," he cries,And the hot tears rise and blind him.
"Rest and stillness is all that I crave,Such robbing of strength has grief done.Make room, dear love, in your lowly grave—Life's day, thank God, is a brief one!"
MORNING.
The eastern sky grew all aglow,A tinted fleet sailed just below.
The thick wood and the clinging mistSlow parted, wept good-bye, and kissed.
To primrose, tulip, daffodil,The wind came piping gay and shrill:
"Wake up! wake up! while day is new,And all the world is washed with dew!"
With an angel flower-laden, every day a dimpled maidenSails away from off my bosom on a radiant sea of bliss;I can see her drifting, drifting, hear the snowy wings upliftingAs he woos her into Dreamland with a kiss.
Blissful hour, my pretty sleeper, guarded by an angel keeper,List'ning to the words he brings thee from a fairer world than this;Sweet! thy heart he is beguiling, I can tell it by thy smiling,As he woos thee into Dreamland with a kiss.
Could there come to weary mortals such a glimpse through golden portals,Would we not drift on forever toward the longed-for land of peace,Would we not leave joys and sorrows,Glad to-days and sad to-morrows,For the sound of white wings lifting, and the kiss?
She is so winsome and so wiseShe sways me at her will,And oft the question will arise,What mission does she fill?O then I say with pride untold,And love beyond degree,This woman with the heart of gold,She just keeps house for me—For me,She just keeps house for me!
A full content dwells on her face,She's quite in love with life,And for a title wears with graceThe sweet old-fashioned "wife."Our children climb upon her knee,And nestle on her breast,And ah! her mission seems to meThe grandest and the best.
O then I say with pride untold,And love beyond degree,This woman with the heart of gold,She just keeps house for me—For me,She just keeps house for me!
There's a man I know—A likeable man—Whom you meanly woundWhenever you can,Remark with maliceHis task is done ill,He's poor of judgmentAnd weak of will.I implore you, now,As that poor man's friend,Let persecutionHave speediest end.
Cease taunting the manWith blunders he makes,Cease harping alwayOn wrongs and mistakes.Come, be his good friend—Hail fellow, well met—[184]His failures forgive,And his faults forget.Who is the man you'veDiscouraged and blamed?The man is yourself—Are you not ashamed?
For faults of the pastMake ample amends,And you and yourselfBe the best of friends.
THE HIGHLAND SHEPHERD.
O the hills of purple heather,And the skies so warm and gray!O the shimmer of the sea-mistIn the sea-wind far away!O the calling of the torrent,Sweeping down Ben Vorlich's side,And my white flocks faring foldwardIn the hush of eventide!
We met her on the hillside greenBelow old Castle Blarney;Her name, she whispered, was Eileen,Her home it was Killarney.
I see her yet, her Irish eyesBlue gray as seas in summer,And hear her welcome, on this wise,Vouchsafed to each new-comer:
"I'll guide ye up the stairway steep,And naught will ye be missingO' battlement or donjon keep,Or blarney stone for kissing.
"The tower that was McCarthy's pride,The scene o' battles thrilling,And where the Desmond kept his bride—Me fee is but a shilling.
[188]"Here's for ye, now, a keepsake charm"—Her low tones grow caressing—"A bit o' shamrock green and warm,To bring ye luck and blessing."
The "keepsake charm"—I have it yet—A thing of guile and blarney;Each green leaf dares me to forgetFair Eileen o' Killarney.
SLANDER.
He does the devil's basest work, no less,Who deals in calumnies—who throws the mireOn snowy robes whose hem he dare not pressHis foul lips to. The pity of it! Liar,Yet half believed by such as deem the goodOr evil but the outcome of a mood.That one who, with the breath lent him by Heaven,Speaks words that on some white soul do reflect,Is lost to decency, and should be drivenOutside the pale of honest men's respect.O slanderer, hell's imps must say of you:"He does the work we are ashamed to do!"
You sing of winter gray and chill,Of silent stream and frozen lake,Of naked woods, and winds that wakeTo shriek and sob o'er vale and hill.
And straight we breathe the bracing air,And see stretched out before our eyesA white world spanned by brooding skies,And snowflakes drifting everywhere.
You sing of tender things and sweet,Of field, of brook, of flower, of bush,The lilt of bird, the sunset flush,The scarlet poppies in the wheat.
Until we feel the gleam and glowOf summer pulsing through our veins,And hear the patter of the rains,And watch the green things sprout and grow.
[190]You sing of joy, and we do markHow glad a thing is life, and dear;Of sorrow, and we seem to hearThe sound of sobbing in the dark.
The subtle power to sway and move,The stamp of genius strong and true,This, friend, was heaven's gift to you,This made you great and won you love.
Your song goes ringing clear and sweet—Though on earth's bosom, bare and brown,All willingly you laid you down,The music is not incomplete.
Sleep on, it is not by the yearsWe measure life when all is done;Your rest is earned, your laurels won;Sleep, softly sleep, we say with tears.
A HINT.
Among the vivid green I seeA yellow leaf,And yonder in the basswood treeAn empty nest swings lonesomely—The wheat's in sheaf.
Do you remember that June day amongThe hills, the high, far-reaching Sussex hills?Above, the straggling flocks of fleecy cloudsThat skipped and chased each other merrilyIn God's warm pasturage, the azure sky;Below, the hills that stretched their mighty headsAs though they fain would neighbor with that sky.Deep, vivid green, save where the flocks showed white;The wise ewes hiding from the glow of noonIn shady spots, the short-wooled lambs at play,And over all the stillness of the hills,The sweet and solemn stillness of the hills.
The shepherds gave us just such looks of mildSurprise as did the sheep they shepherded."Ye are not of the hills," so said the looks,"Not of our kind, but strangers come from out[198]The busy, bustling world to taste the sweetsOf silence and of peace. We wish you well."In eager quest of what the hills might hide,Some valley of content, some spring of youth,Some deep, enchanted dell filled to the brimWith subtle mysteries, allurement rare,We followed down a path, a little crooked,Wand'ring path that lost itself and found itselfSo oft we knew it for the playmate of the streamThat went with us and sang a clamorous song—A never-ending song of flock and foldOf sea-mist and of sun—until at lengthWe came into a valley warm and wide,A cradle 'mong the hills. In it there layNo infant hamlet, but one gray and oldThat dozed and dreamed the soft June hours away.
Gardens there were with fragrant wall-flowers filled,And daffodils, and rhododendrons pale,And sweet, old-fashioned pinks, phlox, rosemary;An avenue of elms, with cottages,And barefoot children sporting on the green."'Tis Poynings," said the rustic, "see, the churchLies yonder, and the graveyard just beyond;This path will lead you straight to it."
Do you remember—rather, will you e'er forget?—That gray church built, how many centuriesAgo? The worn stone steps, the oaken door,[199]The crumbling walls, the altar carved,The stories told by stained-glass windows setDeep in the walls; the ivy, thick and green,Which crept and hid the grayness quite from sight.Within, the smell of roses from the sheafOf scarlet bloom before the altar laid,Close mingled with the mould and must of age;On wall and floor memorials to the dead,Who, unafraid, had slumbered there so long.
And then the graveyard out among the trees—No graveyard, but a garden, flower filled—Moss roses white as moth wings in the night,And lilies sorrowful but very sweet,Low-growing violets in grasses hid,And rue which spoke of some heart's bitterness.Old Time had decked the stones with lichens rare,Rubbed out with careless hand the lettering:In memory of someone's life and loveEach stood, but whose we might not know.
And while we lingered in the perfumed gloom,And watched the golden sunshine smite the hills,An English blackbird straight began a songSo sweet, so high, so shrill, so wondrous clear,That! listening, our eyes grew dim the whileOur hearts did thrill. Whoe'er has heard the songAn English blackbird carols forth in JuneKnows well the power it has, the wondrous charm![200]Strangers were we within the gates, and soHe gave us welcome, clearer, warmer still,A welcome to the beauty and the bloom,The silence of the churchyard old and gray,A welcome to the grasses and the brook,The shade of feathery elm trees, and the glowOf sunlight quivering, golden on the sward,A welcome to the valley dim, and toThe hills, the high, far-reaching Sussex hills.
I cannot echo the old wish to die at morn, as darkness strays!We have been glad together greeting some new-born radiant days,The earth would hold me, every day familiar thingsWould weigh me fast,The stir, the touch of morn, the bird that on swift wingsGoes flitting past.Some flower would lift to me its tender tear-wet face, and send its
breathTo whisper of the earth, its beauty and its grace,And combat death.It would be light, and I would see in thy dear eyesThe sorrow grow.Love, could I lift my own, undimmed, to paradiseAnd leave thee so!A thousand cords would hold me down to this low sphere,When thou didst grieve;[203]Ah! should death come upon morn's rosy breast, I fearI'd crave reprieve.But when, her gold all spent, the sad day takes her flight,When shadows creep,Then just to put my hand in thine and say, "Good-night,"And fall asleep.
O the gayest of musicians! O the gladdest thing on earth,With its piping and its chirping, is the cricket on the hearth!There is magic in the music that he flings us with such zest:"Love's the only wealth that's lasting—who cares aught for all
the rest?Never mind though ill-luck dog you, never mind though times are hard,Have you not the wife and bairns?" chirps the sweet, insistent
bard—Chirps and chirps, until you heed him, till your heart is all
aglow—"Love's the only wealth that's lasting, home's a bit of heaven below."O the gayest of musicians! O the gladdest thing on earth,With his piping and his chirping, is the cricket on the hearth!
You cannot take from out my heart the growing,The green, sweet growing, and the vivid thrill."O Earth," you cry, "you should be old, not glowingWith youth and all youth's strength and beauty still!"
Old, and the new hopes stirring in my bosom!Old, and my children drawing life from me!Old, in my womb the tender bud and blossom!Old, steeped in richness and fertility!
Old, while the growing things call to each other,In language I alone can understand:"How she doth nourish us, this wondrous motherWho is so beautiful and strong and grand!"
Old, while the wild things of the forest hide themIn my gray coverts, which no eye can trace!Hunted or hurt, 'tis my task to provide themHealing and soothing and a hiding place.
[206]And then, my human children, could you listenTo secrets whispered in the stillness deepOf noonday, or when night-dews fall and glisten—'Tis on my bosom that men laugh and weep.
Some tell me moving tales of love and passion,Of gladness all too great to be pent in—The sweet, old theme which does not change its fashion—Another cries out brokenly of sin.
While others filled with sorrow, fain to share it,Hide tear-wet faces on my soft brown breast,Sobbing: "Dear Mother Earth, we cannot bear it,Grim death has stolen all that we loved best!"
The old familiar cry of loss and sorrowI hear to-day—I heard it yesterday—Ay, and will hear in every glad to-morrowThat ye may bring to me, O Century.
I answer mourner, penitent, and lover,With quick'ning stir, with bud and leaf and sap:"Peace, peace," I say, "when life's brief day is overYe shall sleep soundly in your mother's lap."
The loss, the longing of mankind I'm sharing,The hopes, the joys, the laughter and the tears,And yet you think I should be old, uncaring,The barren, worn-out plaything of the years!
[207]Past centuries have not trodden out my greennessWith all their marches, as you well can see,Nor will you bring me withered age or leanness.March on—what are your hundred years to me.
While life and growth within me glow and flourish,While in the sunshine and the falling rainI, the great Mother, do bring forth and nourishThe springtime blossom and the harvest grain?
March on, O Century, I am safe holdenIn God's right hand, the garner-house of truth—The hand that holds the treasure rare and goldenOf life, and sweetness, and eternal youth!
The river is a ribbon wide,The falls a snowy feather,And stretching far on ilka sideAre hills abloom wi' heather.The wind comes loitering frae the westBy weight o' sweets retarded;The sea-mist hangs on Arran's crest,A Golden Fleece unguarded.
We ken ye weel, ye fond young pair,That hand in hand do tarry;The youth is Burns, the Bard o' Ayr,The lass is Highland Mary.He tells her they will never pairt—'Tis life and luve taegither—The world has got the song by hairtHe sang among the heather.
'Twas lang ago, lang, lang ago,Yet all remember dearlyThe eyes, the hair, the brow o' snowO' her he luved sae dearly.And lads still woo their lassies dear,I' cot and hall and dairy,By words he whispered i' the earO' his ain Highland Mary.
'Tis noon, the meadow stretches in the sun,And every little spear of grass uplifts its slimness to the glowTo let the heavy-laden bees pass out.
A stream comes at a snail's pace through the gloomOf shrub and fern and brake,Leaps o'er a wall, goes singing on to findThe coolness of the lake.
A wild rose spreads her greenness on a hedge,And flings her tinted blossoms in the air;The sweetbriar neighbors with that porcupineOf shrubs, the gooseberry; with parasolOf white the elderberry shades her headAnd dreams of purple fruit and wine-press chill.
From off her four warm eggs of mottled shade,A bird flies with a call of love and joyThat wins an answer straightFrom that brown thing of gladness on a bough,Too slight to hold him and his weight of song,The proud and watchful mate.
The wind comes heavy freighted from the wood,With jasmine, honeysuckle, iris, phlox,And lilies red and white;The blue lake murmurs, and the world seems allA garden of delight.
A woman in her youth, but lost to allThe joys of innocence. Love she had known,Such love as leaves the soul filled full of shame.Passion was hers, hate and impurity,The gnawing of remorse, the longing vainTo lose the mark of sin, the scarlet flushOf fallen womanhood, the envy ofThe spotless, the desire that they might sinkLow in the mire as she.Oh, what a soulShe carried on that day! The women drewTheir robes back from her touch, men leered,And children seemed afraid to meetThe devilish beauty of her form and face.Shunned and alone,Till One came to her side,And spake her name, and took her hand in His.And what He saidIs past the telling. There are things the heartKnows well, but cannot blazon to the world;And when He went His way,Upon her brow, where shame had lain,Was set the one sweet word:Forgiveness.
Who is it says May is the crown of the year?Who is it says June is the gladdest?Who is it says Autumn is withered and sere,The gloomiest season and saddest?
You shut to your doors as I come with my train,And heed not the challenge I'm flinging,The ruddy leaf washed by the fresh falling rain,The scarlet vine creeping and clinging!
Come out where I'm holding my court like a queen,With canopy rare stretching over;Come out where I revel in amber and green,And soon I may call you my lover!
Come out to the hillside, come out to the vale,Come out ere your mood turns to blaming,Come out where my gold is, my red gold and pale,Come out where my banners are flaming!
Come out where the bare furrows stretch in the glow,Come out where the stubble fields glisten,Where the wind it blows high, and the wind it blows low,And the lean grasses dance as they listen!
Would you be glad of heart and good?Would you forget life's toil and care?Come, lose yourself in this old woodWhen May's soft touch is everywhere.
The hawthorn trees are white as snow,The basswood flaunts its feathery sprays,The willows kiss the stream belowAnd listen to its flatteries:
"O willows supple, yellow, green,Long have I flowed o'er stock and stone,I say with truth I have not seenA rarer beauty than your own!"
The rough-bark hickory, elm, and beechWith quick'ning thrill and growth are rife;Oak, maple, through the heart of eachThere runs a glorious tide of life.
[217]Fresh leaves, young buds on every hand,On trunk and limb a hint of red,The gleam of poplars tall that standWith God's own sunshine on their head.
The mandrake's silken parasolIs fluttering in the breezes bold,And yonder where the waters brawlThe buttercups show green and gold.
The slender grape-vine sways and weaves,From sun-kissed sward and nook of gloomThere comes the smell of earth and leaves,The breath of wild-flowers all abloom.
Spring's gleam is on the robin's breast,Spring's joy is in the robin's song:"My mate is in yon sheltered nest;Ho! love is sweet and summer long!"
While full and jubilant and clear,All the long day, from dawn till dark,The trill of bobolink we hear,Of hermit thrush and meadowlark.
Sit here among the grass and fernUnmindful of the cares of life,The lessons we have had to learn,The hurts we've gotten in the strife.
[218]There's youth in every breath we take,Forgetfulness of loss and tears,Within the heart there seems to wakeThe gladness of the long past years.
Peace keeps us company to-dayIn this old fragrant, shadowy wood;We lift our eyes to heaven and say:The world is fair and God is good.
If but one spark of honest zealFlashes to life within his breast—A feeble, flick'ring spark at best;If for a moment he doth feelA dim desire to throw asideThe bonds that idleness has wrought,To do, to be the man he ought,The tyrant thing he calls his pride—
The curse of all things good on earth—Takes on the cruel midwife's role,And each high impulse of the soulIs strangled in the hour of birth."To dig I am ashamed," quoth he;"Mine is the pride of name and raceThat scorns to fill such humble space—Life's lowly tasks are not for me."
Oh, he can flatter with his tongue,Can toady to the rich and great,Can fawn on those he feels to hate,Until from out his nature's wrungEach shred of honesty and zeal,Each impulse independent, strong,Till truth and honor's but a song,And naught is beautiful or real.
We steal the brawn, we steal the brain;The man beneath us in the fightSoon learns how helpless and how vainTo plead for justice or for right.We steal the youth, we steal the health,Hope, courage, aspiration high;We steal men's all to make for wealth—We will repent us by and by.
Meantime, a gift will heaven appease—Great God, forgive our charities!
We steal the children's laughter shrill,We steal their joys e'er they can taste,"Why skip like young lambs on a hill?Go, get ye to your task in haste."No matter that they droop and tire,That heaven cries out against the sin,The gold, red gold, that we desireTheir dimpled hands must help to win.
[222]A cheque for missions, if you please—Great God, forgive our charities!
We steal the light from lover's eyes,We hush the tale he has to tellOf pure desire, of tender ties—No man can serve two masters well.So loot his treasury of pride,His holy hopes and visions steal,His hearth-fire scatter far and wide,And grind the sparks beneath your heel.
A cheque will cover sins like these—Great God, forgive our charities!
"Dawn!" laughs the bow, and we straight see the sky,Crimson, and golden, and gray,See the rosy cloudlets go drifting by,And the sheen on the lark as, soaring high,He carols to greet the day.
Fast moves the bow o'er the wonderful strings—We feel the joy in the air—'Tis alive with the glory of growing things,With wild honeysuckle that creeps and clings,Rose of the briar bush—queen of the springs—Anemones frail and fair!
We listen, and whisper with laughter low,"It voices rare gladness, that ancient bow!"
Then, sad as the plaint of a child at night—A child aweary with play—The falling of shadows, a lost delight,The moaning of watchers counting the flightOf hours 'twixt the dark and day.
[224]It echoes the cry of a broken heart,It grieves o'er a "might have been,"It holds all the passionate tears that startWhen our heaven and our earth drift far apart,And the way lies dark between.
It stills all our laughter, and whispers low—'Tis heart-strings it plays on, that ancient bow!
You lifted eyes pain-filled to me,Sad, questioning eyes that did demandWhy I should thrust back, childishly,The friendship warm you offered me—Ah, sweet, to-day you understand!
'Twas that my heart beat rapturouslyAt word of thine, at touch of hand,At tender glance vouchsafed to meThe while I knew it must not be—Ah, sweet, to-day you understand!
There's neither pain nor mysteryIn that far-off and fragrant landTo which you journeyed fearlessly;By gates of pearl and jasper sea—Ah, sweet, to-day you understand!
"And behold, a woman in the city, which was a sinner, when she
knew that Jesus sat at meat in the Pharisee's house, brought an
alabaster box of ointment and stood at his feet behind him
weeping, and began to wash his feet with tears, and did wipe them
with the hairs of her head."
The eyes He turned on her who kneeling weptWere filled with tenderness and pity rare;But looking on the Pharisee, there creptA sorrow and a hint of sternness there.
"Simon, I have somewhat to say to thee,"The Master's voice rang clearly out, and stirred,With its new note of full authority,The list'ning throng, who pressed to catch each word.
"Master, say on," self-righteous Simon said,And muttered in his beard, "A sinner, she!"Marvelling the while that on the drooping headThe hand of Jesus rested tenderly.
[227]"Seest thou this woman, Simon?" Scornful eyesDid Simon bend upon the woman's face,The while the breath of love's sweet sacrificeRose from the broken box and filled the place.
Self-righteousness, the slimy thing that growsUpon a fellow-creature's frailty,That waxes fat on shame of ruined lives,Swelled in the bosom of the Pharisee.
"Into thine house I came at thy request,Weary with travel, and thou gavest notTo me the service due the humblest guest,No towel, no water clear and cold was brought
"To wash my feet; but she, whom you despise,Out of the great affection she doth bearHath made a basin of her woman's eyes,A towel of her woman's wealth of hair.
"Thou gavest me no kiss"—O Simon, shame,Thus coldly and unlovingly to greetThe Prince of Peace!—"but ever since I cameThis woman hath not ceased to kiss my feet.
"He loveth most who hath been most forgiven."O Simon, hearken, learn the great truth well,No soul on faith's glad wings mounts nearer heavenThan that which hath been prisoned deep in hell.
[228]Methinks I hear her say: "Thou who forgivestMy many sins, this off'ring, sweet of breath,I pour on Thee, dear Lord, while yet thou liv'st,For love is ever swift to outrun death."
Upon her are the eyes of Jesus turned,With gaze which seems to strengthen and to bless.Who knows how long the soul of Him hath yearnedFor some such token of rare tenderness?
The flush of shame flaunts red on Simon's cheeks,About the table idle babblings cease,A deep, full silence, then the Master speaks:"Thy faith hath saved thee, go in peace—in peace."
Do you know what I will love best of allTo do when I'm old? At the close of dayWhen the dusk comes down and the shadows play,And the wind sings loud in the poplars tall,I will love to get into my corner here—The curtains drawn, and never a oneTo break the stillness—to sit here aloneAnd dream of these good old times, my dear.
In fancy you'll come and sit by my side—I can see your face with my eyes close shut,With the pride and the softness clearly cut,The obstinate chin and the forehead wide,The oval cheek and the smile so warm,The dark eyes full of their fun and power,With the tender light for the tender hour,And the flash of fire that was half their charm.
I'll whisper: 'Twas sweet when youth was our own—The laughter, the nonsense, the freedom from care,The castles we built high up in the air,The secrets told to each other alone!Not all of laughter; the world went wrong,And the shadows pressed till my heart was sore.I'll never be glad, I said, any more,Never be happy, or gay, or strong.
[230]O the sweetest thing in the hour of painIs to have one near us who understands,To touch us gently and hold our hands,Till our strength and courage come back again.At love's swift pace you hurried to me—Your tender words they will ring in my earsWhen I sit and dream after long, long years—The shine in your eyes through the mists I'll see.
Our lives will be lying so far apart,And time, no doubt, will have given us muchOf weary wisdom; put many a touchOf his withering hand on face and heart.But I know what I will love best of allTo do at the end of the busy day,When the dusk comes down and the shadows play,And the wind sings low in the poplars tall.
I will love to get into my corner here,With the curtains drawn, and never a oneTo break the stillness—to sit here aloneAnd dream of these happy days, my dear,And take my treasures from memory's hold—The tears, the laughter, the songs that were sung—O the friends we love when the heart is youngAre the friends we love when the heart grows old!
When we were children, long ago,And crept to bed at close of day,With backward glance and footstep slow,Though all aweary with our play,Do you remember how the room—The little room with window deep—Would fill with shadows and with gloom,And fright us so we could not sleep?
For O! the things we see at night—The dragons grim, the goblins tall,And, worst of all, the ghosts in whiteThat range themselves along the wall!
We could but cover up our head,And listen to our heart's wild beat—Such dreadful things about our bed,And no protection save a sheet!Then slept, and woke quite unafraid.The sun was shining, and we foundOur shadows and our ghosts all laid,Our world a glorious playing-ground.
[232]For O! the things we see at night—The dragons grim, the goblins tall,And, worst of all, the ghosts in whiteThat range themselves along the wall!
We are but children still, the yearsHave never taught us to be bold,For mark our trembling and our fearsWhen sometimes, as in days of old,We in the darkness lie awake,And see come stealing to our sideA ghostly throng—the grave Mistake,The Failure big, the broken Pride.
For O! the things we see at night—The dragons grim, the goblins tall,And, worst of all, the ghosts in whiteThat range themselves along the wall!
How close they creep! How big they loom!The Task which waits, the Cares which creep;A child, affrighted in the gloom,We fain would hide our head and weep.When, lo! the coward fear is gone—The golden sunshine fills the air,And God has sent us with the dawnThe strength and will to do and dare.
[233]For O! the things we see at night—The dragons grim, the goblins tall,And, worst of all, the ghosts in whiteThat range themselves along the wall!
THE LONG AGO.
O life has its seasons joyous and drear,Its summer sun and its winter snow,But the fairest of all, I tell you, dear,Was the sweet old spring of the long ago—The ever and ever so long ago—
When we walked together among the flowers,When the world with beauty was all aglow.O the rain and dew! O the shine and showersOf the sweet old spring of the long ago!The ever and ever so long ago.
A hunger for all of the past delightIs stirred by the winds that softly blow.Can you spare me a thought from heaven to-nightFor the sweet old spring of the long ago?—The ever and ever so long ago.
I'll tell you the sweetest thing, dear heart,I'll tell you the sweetest thing—'Tis saying to one that we love: "ForgiveThe careless words and the sting;Forgive and forget, and be friends once more,For the world is an empty placeWithout the light of your warm, true eyes,And the smile of your tender face."
O the kissing and making up again,And the tender whispering!I'll tell you the sweetest thing, dear heart,I'll tell you the sweetest thing.
I'll tell you the saddest thing, dear heart,I'll tell you the saddest thing:'Tis coming to one that we love full well,Some tender message to bring.
[235]And loitering, loitering, by the way—Held back by a foolish pride—Till it's all too late to say "Forgive!"When at length we reach her side.
For the ears are heavy and cannot hear,And the chill lips cannot moveTo whisper "Peace," though our hearts may breakWith longing, and pain, and love,
O this coming too late with our tenderness!O the passionate tears that spring!I'll tell you the saddest thing, dear heart,I'll tell you the saddest thing!
Then let us make haste to be friends again,Make haste to fold to our breastThe one we have hurt by word and deed,Though we loved that one the best."Forgive and forget! Forgive and forget!"O warm in the tear-wet eyesIs the glow and the gleam of a golden lightFrom the shores of Paradise.
O the kissing and making up again,And the tender whispering!I'll tell you the sweetest thing, dear heart,I'll tell you the sweetest thing.
"As friend," she said, "I will be kind,My sympathy will rarely fail,My eyes to many faults be blind—As wife, I'll lecture, scold, and rail,
"Be full of moods, a shrew one day,A thing of tenderness the next,Will kiss and wound—a woman's wayThat long the soul of man has vext.
"You've been a true, unselfish man,Have thought upon my good alway,Been strong to shield, and wise to plan,But ah! there is a change to-day.
"There's mastery in your 'Be my wife!'For self stands up and eagerlyClaims all my love, and all my life,The body and the soul of me.
[237]"Come, call me friend, and own me such,Nor count it such a wondrous thingTo hold me close, thrill at my touch—A lord and master!—there's the sting.
"'Tis all or naught with you, you plead,And he is blest who boldly wins;These words," she said, "are proof, indeed,That love and selfishness are twins.
"Yet, had you let my wisdom sway,Would it have pleased me, who can tell?I might have said regretfully:'Methinks I reasoned far too well!'"
"O last days of the year!" she whispered low,"You fly too swiftly past. Ah, you might stayA while, a little while. Do you not knowWhat tender things you bear with you away?
"I'm thinking, sitting in the soft gloom here,Of all the riches that were mine the dayThere crept down on the world the soft New Year,A rosy thing with promise filled, and gay.
"But twelve short months ago! a little spaceIn which to lose so much—a whole life's wealthOf love and faith, youth and youth's tender grace—Things that are wont to go from us by stealth.
"Laughter and blushes, and the rapture strong,The clasp of clinging hands, the ling'ring kiss,The joy of living, and the glorious songThat drew its sweetness from a full heart's bliss.
[240]"O wealth of tenderness! O gladness great!That crowned me, covered me a year ago!A bankrupt, I—gone faith, gone warm caressGone love, gone youth, gone all!"She whispered low.
"Oh, last days of the year, you take awayThe riches that I held so close and dear.Go not so swiftly, stay a little, stayWith one poor bankrupt,Last days of the year."
I asked Aunt Persis yester-eve, as twilight fell,If she had things of value hidden safe away—Treasures that were her very own? And did she loveTo bring them forth, and feast her eyes upon their worth,And finger them with all a miser's greed of touch?
She smiled that slow, warm smile of hers, and drew me downBeside her in the inglenook. The rain beat hardAgainst the panes, without the world was doubly grayWith twilight and with cloud. The room was full of shadeTill Persis stirred the slumbering grate fire wide awake,And made it send its flickering shafts of light intoEach corner dim—gay shafts that chased the shadows forth[242]And took their place, then stole away and letThe shadow back, and then gave chase again,The maddest and the stillest game!
To music ofThe raindrops on the pane, and wind that softly shrilledAbout the eaves, the treasure box was opened wideAnd its contents exposed to the rude gaze of oneToo young, too worldly-wise to know their value great.I thought to see pearls, corals, quaint, old-fashioned gems,Or lace like gossamer creamed by the hand of time—Real treasures worthy of the hoarding.
Lo! I sawA leather-covered book, a worn and musty thingWith ragged leaves and many marks. "What is it?" I asked;"To me it looks the school-book that some stupid childHas learned its lesson from.""And so it is," she smiled. "My father's testament,And at his knee I conned the Golden Rule, and allThe wondrous truths that teach us how to live. 'Tis dearTo me, you may suppose."
A knot of ribbon thatHad once been blue, a braid of dark brown hair, a spray[243]Of lily o' the valley, withered, sere, yet holding still a breathOf sweetness indescribable; some letters tiedWith silk, a broken fan, some verses scribbled onA yellow page, a baby's shoe, more letters, and,What think you, friend? A string of amber beads, withoutA trace of value—beads of glass strung on a bitOf twine. Aunt Persis took them in her hand and letThe firelight play on them. "My grandmother's first gift,"She said, and slipped them round her neck. "I love them bestOf all my ornaments—each amber bead holds fastA joy caught in the childhood days of pleasantness,And when I sit here with the sparkling things held closeThe joys they gathered long ago slip from them toMy heart, and ere I know, I am a child once more.
"Treasures! Nay, dear one, in your clear young eyes I seeThe disappointment grow—no treasures these, you say;These faded things, and poor, these musty, ragged things—But some day in the gloaming of your life you'll opeYour treasure box, and find a hoard of just such thingsAs these—a few rare trifles wrapped in memories.
My Marjorie doth hold in her white handsA spray of lilies plucked below the brookWhere the old ruin of a chapel stands—A ruin tenanted by many a nook,And all the grayness of it hid from sightBy gracious draping of the ivy green.Sweet lilies, 'tis your glorious fate to-nightTo lie upon her breast, to send betweenHer silken bodice and the heart beneathThe fragrance given you by sun and shower.Speak subtly with your warm, sweet-scented breathTill, 'mid the dance and music of the hour,She turn you love-filled eyes and glowing face,With: "Ah, ye grew in that old trysting place!"
"It is good-bye," she said; "the world is wide,There's space for you and me to walk apart.Though we have walked together side by side,My thoughts all yours, my resting-place your heart,We now will go our different ways. ForgetThe happy past. I would not have you keepOne thought of me. Ah, yes, my eyes are wet;My love is great, my grief must needs be deep.
"Yet I have strength to look at you, and say:Forget it all, forget our souls were stirred,Forget the sweetness of each dear, dead day,The warm, impassioned kiss, the tender word,The clinging handclasp, and the love-filled eyes—Forget all these; but, when we walk apartRemember this, though wilful and unwise,No word of mine did ever hurt your heart."
One summer's morning I heard a larkSinging to heaven, a sweet-throated bird;One winter's night I was glad in the darkBecause of the wondrous song I had heard.
The joy of life, I have heard you say,Is my love, my laughter, my smiles and tears;When I have gone on the long, strange way,Let these stay with you through all the years—
These be the lark's song. What is love worthThat cannot crowd, in the time that's givenTo two like us on this gray old earth,Such bliss as will last till we reach heaven?
Dear one, think oft of the full, glad years,And, thinking of them, forget to weep.Whisper: "Remembrance holds no tears!"And kiss my mouth when I fall on sleep.
The girl's a slender thing and fair,With dimpled cheek and eyes ashine;The youth is tall, with bashful air.Heigho! a fond and foolish pair—The day is yours, St. Valentine.
He says: "My heart will constant prove,Since every beat of it is thine;The sweetest joy of life is love."The birds are mating in the grove—The day is yours, St. Valentine.
What matter that the wind blows chillThrough leafless tree and naked vine,That snowdrifts linger on the hill,When warm love makes the pulses thrill?The day is yours, St. Valentine.
A red rose in my lady's hair,A white rose in her fingers,A wild bird singing low, somewhere,A song that pulses, lingers.The sound of dancing and of mirth,The fiddle's merry chiming,A smell of earth, of fresh, warm earth,And honeysuckle climbing;My lady near, yet far away—Ah, lonely June of yesterday!
A big white night of velvet sky,And Milky Way a-gleaming,The fragrant blue smoke drifting byFrom camp-fire brightly beaming;The stillness of the Northland far—God's solitudes of splendor—My road a trail, my chart a star.Wind, 'mong the balsams slender,Sing low: O glad June of to-day,My lady's near, though far away!
"Once they were lovers," says the world, "with young hearts all aglow;They have forgotten," says the world, "forgotten long ago."Between ourselves—just whisper it—the old world does not know.
They walk their lone, divided ways, but ever with them goesRemembrance, the subtle breath of love's sweet thorny rose.
Though long, long leagues of land and seaStretch out between Braemar and me,I'll win home late or soon,Will take the old familiar wayPast Isla Glen, up bold Glenshee,By sun-kissed hill and valley gray—These feet of mine will find their wayAt midnight or at noon.
The hearth-fire, and the cot of stoneSet 'mong the fir trees tall and lone,I'll see before my eyes;Hear rough winds kiss the heath-clad hill,The murmur gay of loch and rill,The mavis singing sweet and shrill,Hear, warm and soft as notes that thrillThe souls in paradise.
A voice all tremulous and gladCries out: "A welcome home, my lad!"
Your presence is a psalm of praise,And as its measure grandly ringsGod's finger finds my heart and playsA te deum upon its strings.I never see you but I feelThat I in gratitude must kneel.
Your head down-bent, the brow of snowCrowned with the shining braids of hair,To me, because I love you so,Is in itself a tender prayer,All faith, all meekness, and all trust—"Amen!" I cry, because I must.
Your clear eyes hold the text apart,And shame my love of place and pelfWith, "Love the Lord with all thine heart,And love thy neighbor as thyself!"Dear eyes and true,—I sorely needMore knowledge of your gracious creed.
[253]About your lips the summer lies—Who runs may read each subtle lureTo draw me nearer to the skies,And make me strong, and keep me pure.I loathe my worldliness and guileEach time your red lips on me smile.
The benediction of your face—Your lifted face—doth make a roadFor white-robed peace and golden graceTo reach my heart and take its load.Dear woman saint, I bow the knee,And give God thanks for love and thee!
The Golden Rule—the blessed creedThat shelters frail humanity,The tender thought for those in need,The charity of word and deed,Without which all is vanity—
This, friend, you made your very own,And yours the satisfying partTo pluck the rose of love full blown,To reap the gladness you had sownWith open hand and kindly heart.
Simplicity, the jewel rare,Whose gleam is ever true and warm—That thing of worth beyond compareWhich none but truly great may wear—Adorned your life with power and charm.
[256]Yours the sincerity that gripsFast hold of natures strong and wise;It thrilled you to your finger-tips,It set its seal on brow and lips,And shone within your dark, true eyes.
The throng knew not how rich the storeOf sympathy and trust you had;Knew not you were, till life was o'er,God's almoner among His poor,God's comforter to sick and sad.
Too soon you went—we miss the cheer,The kindliness vouchsafed to all;The world seems strangely lone and drearWhen one whom many hearts hold dearFares heavenward ere the shadows fall.
Too soon you went, and yet, maybe,Your work well done, your task complete,The soul of you turned longinglyToward gates of pearl and jasper seaAnd fields of Eden rarely sweet.
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