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The Sermon Of St. Francis
Up soared the lark into the air,A shaft of song, a winged prayer,As if a soul, released from pain,Were flying back to heaven again.St. Francis heard; it was to himAn emblem of the Seraphim;The upward motion of the fire,The light, the heat, the heart's desire.Around Assisi's convent gateThe birds, God's poor who cannot wait,From moor and mere and darksome woodCame flocking for their dole of food."O brother birds," St. Francis said,"Ye come to me and ask for bread,But not with bread alone to-dayShall ye be fed and sent away."Ye shall be fed, ye happy birds,With manna of celestial words;Not mine, though mine they seem to be,Not mine, though they be spoken through me."O, doubly are ye bound to p...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
A Good Woman.
Her eyes are the windows of a soul Where only the white thoughts spring, And they look, as the eyes of the angels look, For the good in everything. Her lips can whisper the tenderest words That weary and worn can hear, Can tell of the dawn of a better morn Till only the cowards fear. Her hands can lift up the fallen one From an overthrow complete, Can take a soul from the mire of sin And lead it to Christ's dear feet. And she can walk wherever she will - She walketh never alone. The work she does is the Master's work, And God guards well His own.
Jean Blewett
Paris Name. - Book Of The Parsees.
THE BEQUEST OF THE ANCIENT PERSIAN FAITH.Brethren, what bequest to you should comeFrom the lowly poor man, going home,Whom ye younger ones with patience tended,Whose last days ye honour'd and defended?When we oft have seen the monarch ride,Gold upon him, gold on ev'ry side;Jewels on him, on his courtiers all,Thickly strewed as hailstones when they fall,Have ye e'er known envy at the sight?And not felt your gaze become more bright,When the sun was, on the wings of morning,Darnawend's unnumber'd peaks adorning,As he, bow-like, rose? How each eye dweltOn the glorious scene! I felt, I felt,Thousand times, as life's days fleeted by,Borne with him, the coming one, on high.God upon His throne then to proclaim,...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Fragments On Nature And Life - Life
A train of gay and clouded daysDappled with joy and grief and praise,Beauty to fire us, saints to save,Escort us to a little grave.No fate, save by the victim's fault, is low,For God hath writ all dooms magnificent,So guilt not traverses his tender will.Around the man who seeks a noble end,Not angels but divinities attend.From high to higher forcesThe scale of power uprears,The heroes on their horses,The gods upon their spheres.This shining moment is an edificeWhich the Omnipotent cannot rebuild.Roomy EternityCasts her schemes rarely,And an aeon allowsFor each quality and partOf the multitudinousAnd many-chambered heart....
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Arbiter, The Almoner, And The Hermit.
Three saints, for their salvation jealous,Pursued, with hearts alike most zealous,By routes diverse, their common aim.All highways lead to Rome: the sameOf heaven our rivals deeming true,Each chose alone his pathway to pursue.Moved by the cares, delays, and crossesAttach'd to suits by legal process,One gave himself as judge, without reward,For earthly fortune having small regard.Since there are laws, to legal strifeMan damns himself for half his life.For half? - Three-fourths! - perhaps the whole!The hope possess'd our umpire's soul,That on his plan he should be ableTo cure this vice detestable. -The second chose the hospitals.I give him praise: to solace painIs charity not spent in vain,While men in part are animals.The...
Jean de La Fontaine
The Spirit of freedom is Born of the Mountains.
The spirit of freedom is born of the mountains,In gorge and in cañon it hovers and dwells;Pervading the torrents and crystalline fountains, Which dash through the valleys and forest clad dells.The spirit of freedom, so firm and impliant, Is borne on the breeze, whose invisible wavesDescend from the mountain peaks, stern and defiant-- Created for freemen, but never for slaves.
Alfred Castner King
The New Year.
ROSH-HASHANAH, 5643.Not while the snow-shroud round dead earth is rolled,And naked branches point to frozen skies, -When orchards burn their lamps of fiery gold,The grape glows like a jewel, and the cornA sea of beauty and abundance lies, Then the new year is born.Look where the mother of the months upliftsIn the green clearness of the unsunned West,Her ivory horn of plenty, dropping gifts,Cool, harvest-feeding dews, fine-winnowed light;Tired labor with fruition, joy and rest Profusely to requite.Blow, Israel, the sacred cornet! CallBack to thy courts whatever faint heart throbWith thine ancestral blood, thy need craves all.The red, dark year is dead, the year just bornLeads on from anguis...
Emma Lazarus
Anniversary Poem
Once more, dear friends, you meet beneathA clouded skyNot yet the sword has found its sheath,And on the sweet spring airs the breathOf war floats by.Yet trouble springs not from the ground,Nor pain from chance;The Eternal order circles round,And wave and storm find mete and boundIn Providence.Full long our feet the flowery waysOf peace have trod,Content with creed and garb and phrase:A harder path in earlier daysLed up to God.Too cheaply truths, once purchased dear,Are made our own;Too long the world has smiled to hearOur boast of full corn in the earBy others sown;To see us stir the martyr firesOf long ago,And wrap our satisfied desiresIn the singed mantles that our siresH...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Light Shining Out Of Darkness.
God moves in a mysterious wayHis wonders to perform;He plants his footsteps in the sea,And rides upon the storm.Deep in unfathomable minesOf never-failing skill,He treasures up his bright designs,And works his sovereign will.Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take,The clouds ye so much dreadAre big with mercy, and shall breakIn blessings on your head.Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,But trust him for his grace:Behind a frowning providenceHe hides a smiling face.His purposes will ripen fast,Unfolding every hour;The bud may have a bitter taste,But sweet will be the flower.Blind unbelief is sure to err,[1]And scan his work in vain:God is his ...
William Cowper
An Ode - In Commemoration of the Founding, of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the Year 1623.
I.They who maintained their rights,Through storm and stress,And walked in all the waysThat God made known,Led by no wandering lights,And by no guess,Through dark and desolate daysOf trial and moan:Here let their monumentRise, like a wordIn rock commemorativeOf our Land's youth;Of ways the Puritan went,With soul love-spurredTo suffer, die, and liveFor faith and truth.Here they the corner-stoneOf Freedom laid;Here in their hearts' distressThey lit the lightsOf Liberty alone;Here, with God's aid,Conquered the wilderness,Secured their rights.Not men, but giants, they,Who wrought with toilAnd sweat of brawn and brainTheir freehold here;Who, with their blood, each day...
Madison Julius Cawein
Youth
When life begins anew,And Youth, from gathering flowers,From vague delights, rapt musings, twilight hours,Turns restless, seeking some great deed to do,To sum his foster'd dreams; when that fresh birthUnveils the real, the throng'd and spacious Earth,And he awakes to those more ample skies,By other aims and by new powers possess'd:How deeply, then, his breastIs fill'd with pangs of longing! how his eyesDrink in the enchanted prospect! Fair it liesBefore him, with its plains expanding vast,Peopled with visions, and enrich'd with dreams;Dim cities, ancient forests, winding streams,Places resounding in the famous past,A kingdom ready to his hand!How like a bride Life seems to standIn welcome, and with festal robes array'd!He feels her ...
Robert Laurence Binyon
The Poet
(See Note 72)The poet does the prophet's deeds;In times of need with new life pregnant,When strife and suffering are regnant,His faith with light ideal leads.The past its heroes round him posts,He rallies now the present's hosts, The future opes Before his eyes, Its pictured hopes He prophesies. Ever his people's forces vernal The poet frees, - by right eternal.He turns the people's trust to doubtOf heathendom and Moloch-terror;'Neath thought of God, cold-gray with error,He sees grow green each fresh, new sprout.Set free, these spread abroad, above,Bear fruit of power and of love In each man's soul, And make it warm And make it whole, I...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Failure
No ray, no will-o'-wisp, no firefly gleam;Nothing but night aroundThe only sound the sobbing of a streamWithin the hush profound.Then suddenly the chanting of a bird,Plaintive, appealing, farAnd in my heart the murmur of a word,And high in heaven a star.A star, that shone out suddenly and seemedA herald of the light,The dawn, that cried within me, "Lo! you dreamedThat 'twould be always night!"If night be here, dawn is not far away,However dark the sky.And in the heart whatever doubts betray,Faith still stands smiling by."Put trust in God, and hold to your one aim.And though it is to beFailure at last, then let it seem the sameAs victory."
Joy And Peace In Believing.
Sometimes a light surprisesThe Christian while he sings;It is the Lord who risesWith healing in his wings:When comforts are declining,He grants the soul againA season of clear shining,To cheer it after rain.In holy contemplation,We sweetly then pursueThe theme of Gods salvation,And find it ever new.Set free from present sorrow,We cheerfully can say,Een let the unknown to-morrow[1]Bring with it what it may.It can bring with it nothing,But he will bear us through;Who gives the lilies clothing,Will clothe his people too;Beneath the spreading heavensNo creature but is fed;And he who feeds the ravens,Will give his children bread.The vine nor fig-tree nei...
The Martyrs.
Through the straight pass of sufferingThe martyrs even trod,Their feet upon temptation,Their faces upon God.A stately, shriven company;Convulsion playing round,Harmless as streaks of meteorUpon a planet's bound.Their faith the everlasting troth;Their expectation fair;The needle to the north degreeWades so, through polar air.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Of Recreation. From Proverbial Philosophy
To join advantage to amusement, to gather profit with pleasure,Is the wise man's necessary aim, when he lieth in the shade of recreation.For he cannot fling aside his mind, nor bar up the floodgates of his wisdom;Yea, though he strain after folly, his mental monitor shall check him:For knowledge and ignorance alike have laws essential to their being, The sage studieth amusements, and the simple laugheth in his studies.Few, but full of understanding, are the books of the library of God,And fitting for all seasons are the gain and the gladness they bestow:The volume of mystery and Grace, for the hour of deep communings,When the soul considereth intensely the startling marvel of itself:The book of destiny and Providence, for the time of sober study,When the mind gleaneth wisd...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
The Vision Of Echard
The Benedictine EchardSat by the wayside well,Where Marsberg sees the bridalOf the Sarre and the Moselle.Fair with its sloping vineyardsAnd tawny chestnut bloom,The happy vale Ausonius sunkFor holy Treves made room.On the shrine Helena buildedTo keep the Christ coat well,On minster tower and kloster cross,The westering sunshine fell.There, where the rock-hewn circlesOerlooked the Romans game,The veil of sleep fell on him,And his thought a dream became.He felt the heart of silenceThrob with a soundless word,And by the inward ear aloneA spirits voice he heard.And the spoken word seemed writtenOn air and wave and sod,And the bending walls of sapphireBlazed with the thought ...
Charity.
("Je suis la Charité.")[February, 1837.]"Lo! I am Charity," she cries,"Who waketh up before the day;While yet asleep all nature lies,God bids me rise and go my way."How fair her glorious features shine,Whereon the hand of God hath setAn angel's attributes divine,With all a woman's sweetness met.Above the old man's couch of woeShe bows her forehead, pure and even.There's nothing fairer here below,There's nothing grander up in heaven,Than when caressingly she stands(The cold hearts wakening 'gain their beat),And holds within her holy handsThe little children's naked feet.To every den of want and toilShe goes, and leaves the poorest fed;Leaves wine and bread, and genial oil,<...
Victor-Marie Hugo