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The Cross
The cross, if rightly borne, shall beNo burden, but support to thee;"So, moved of old time for our sake,The holy monk of Kempen spake.Thou brave and true one! upon whomWas laid the cross of martyrdom,How didst thou, in thy generous youth,Bear witness to this blessed truth!Thy cross of suffering and of shameA staff within thy hands became,In paths where faith alone could seeThe Master's steps supporting thee.Thine was the seed-time; God aloneBeholds the end of what is sown;Beyond our vision, weak and dim,The harvest-time is hid with Him.Yet, unforgotten where it lies,That seed of generous sacrifice,Though seeming on the desert cast,Shall rise with bloom and fruit at last
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Gods
Last night, as one who hears a tragic jest,I woke from dreams, half-laughing, half in tears;Methought that I had journeyed in the spheresAnd stood upon the Planet of the Blest!And found thereon a folk who prayed with zestExceeding, and through all their painful years,Like strong souls struggled on, mid hopes and fears;Where dwell the gods, they said, we shall find rest.The gods? What gods, I thought, are these who soInspire their worshippers with faith that flowersImmortal, and who make them keep aglowThe flames for ever on their altar-towers?Where dwell these gods of yours? I asked, and lo!They pointed upward to this earth of ours!
Victor James Daley
Sonnet. About Jesus. XI.
The eye was shut in men; the hearing earDull unto deafness; nought but earthly thingsHad credence; and no highest art that flingsA spirit radiance from it, like the spearOf the ice-pointed mountain, lifted clearIn the nigh sunrise, had made skyey springsOf light in the clouds of dull imaginings:Vain were the painter or the sculptor here.Give man the listening heart, the seeing eye;Give life; let sea-derived fountain well,Within his spirit, infant waves, to tellOf the far ocean-mysteries that lieSilent upon the horizon,--evermoreFalling in voices on the human shore.
George MacDonald
Dedication
To Thee, whose cheering words have urged me onWhen fainting heart advised me to stayMy halting pen, and leave my task undone:To Thee, I humbly dedicate this lay.Strong, womanly heart! whose long-enduring painHas not sufficed to rend thy faith in twain,But rather teaches thee to sympathiseWith those whose path through pain and darkness liesThyself forgetting, if but thou canst beOf aid to others in adversity;The helpful word, the approbative smileFrom thee have ever greeted me, the whileNone other cheered. Then let this tribute beA token of my gratitude to Thee.
Wilfred Skeats
In February
Now in the dark of February rains, Poor lovers of the sunshine, spring is born, The earthy fields are full of hidden corn,And March's violets bud along the lanes;Therefore with joy believe in what remains. And thou who dost not feel them, do not scorn Our early songs for winter overworn,And faith in God's handwriting on the plains."Hope" writes he, "Love" in the first violet, "Joy," even from Heaven, in songs and winds and trees; And having caught the happy words in theseWhile Nature labours with the letters yet, Spring cannot cheat us, though her hopes be broken, Nor leave us, for we know what God hath spoken.
Not In The Lucid Intervals Of Life
Not in the lucid intervals of lifeThat come but as a curse to party-strife;Not in some hour when Pleasure with a sighOf languor puts his rosy garland by;Not in the breathing-times of that poor slaveWho daily piles up wealth in Mammon's caveIs Nature felt, or can be; nor do words,Which practiced talent readily affords,Prove that her hand has touched responsive chords;Nor has her gentle beauty power to moveWith genuine rapture and with fervent loveThe soul of Genius, if he dare to takeLife's rule from passion craved for passion's sake;Untaught that meekness is the cherished bentOf all the truly great and all the innocent.But who is innocent? By grace divine,Not otherwise, O Nature! we are thine,Through good and evil thine, in just deg...
William Wordsworth
The Informing Spirit
IThere is no great and no smallTo the Soul that maketh all:And where it cometh, all things are;And it cometh everywhere.III am owner of the sphere,Of the seven stars and the solar year,Of Caesar's hand, and Plato's brain,Of Lord Christ's heart, and Shakspeare's strain.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Beauty And Art
The gods are dead; but still for meLives on in wildwood brook and treeEach myth, each old divinity.For me still laughs among the rocksThe Naiad; and the Dryad's locksDrop perfume on the wildflower flocks.The Satyr's hoof still prints the loam;And, whiter than the wind-blown foam,The Oread haunts her mountain home.To him, whose mind is fain to dwellWith loveliness no time can quell,All things are real, imperishable.To him whatever facts may sayWho sees the soul beneath the clay,Is proof of a diviner day.The very stars and flowers preachA gospel old as God, and teachPhilosophy a child may reach;That cannot die; that shall not cease;That lives through idealitiesOf Beauty, ev'n as Rome and...
Madison Julius Cawein
Plus Ultra
Far beyond the sunrise and the sunset risesHeaven, with worlds on worlds that lighten and respond:Thought can see not thence the goal of hope's surmisesFar beyond.Night and day have made an everlasting bondEach with each to hide in yet more deep disguisesTruth, till souls of men that thirst for truth despond.All that man in pride of spirit slights or prizes,All the dreams that make him fearful, fain, or fond,Fade at forethought's touch of life's unknown surprisesFar beyond.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Speranza.
Her younger sister, that Speranza hight.England puts on her purple, and pale, pale With too much light, the primrose doth but waitTo meet the hyacinth; then bower and dale Shall lose her and each fairy woodland mate.April forgets them, for their utmost sumOf gift was silent, and the birds are come.The world is stirring, many voices blend, The English are at work in field and way;All the good finches on their wives attend, And emmets their new towns lay out in clay;Only the cuckoo-bird only doth sayHer beautiful name, and float at large all day.Everywhere ring sweet clamours, chirrupping, Chirping, that comes before the grasshopper;The wide woods, flurried with the pulse of spring, Shake out their wrink...
Jean Ingelow
Madonna With Two Angels
Under the sky without a stainThe long, ripe, rippling of the grain;Light, broadcast from the golden oatsOver the blackberry fences floats.Madonna sits in a cedar chairTranquillized by the warm, still air;One of the angels asleep on her kneeUnder the shade of an apple tree.The other angel holds a doll,Covered warm in a tiny shawl;The toy is supposed to be fast asleepAs the sister angel: in dimples deepThe grave, sweet charm on the baby faceRepeats the look of maturer graceThat hovers about Madonna's eyes,One of the heavenly mysteriesFrom far ethereal latitudesWhere neither doubt nor trouble intrudes.Ponder here in the orchard nestOn the truth of life made manifest:The struggle and effort was all to proveThat the bes...
Duncan Campbell Scott
A Vision Of Beauty
Where we sat at dawn together, while the star-rich heavens shifted,We were weaving dreams in silence, suddenly the veil was lifted.By a hand of fire awakened, in a moment caught and ledUpward to the wondrous vision: through the star-mists overheadFlare and flaunt the monstrous highlands; on the sapphire coast of nightFall the ghostly froth and fringes of the ocean of the light.Many coloured shine the vapours: to the moon-eye far away'Tis the fairy ring of twilight mid the spheres of night and day,Girdling with a rainbow cincture round the planet where we go,We and it together fleeting, poised upon the pearl glow;We and it and all together flashing through the starry spacesIn a tempest dream of beauty lighting up the place of places.Half our eyes behold the glory: h...
George William Russell
The Monastery.
Beyond the wall the passion flower is blooming, Strange hints of life along the winds are blown;Within, the cowled and silent men are kneeling Before an image on a cross of stone,And on their lifted faces, wan as death,I read this simple message of their faith: "The trail of flame is ashen, And pleasure's lees are gray, And gray the fruit of passion Whose ripeness is decay; The stress of life is rancor, A madness born to slay; They only miss its canker Who live with God and pray."Beyond the wall lies Babylon, the mighty; Faint echoes of her songs come drifting by;Within there is a hymn of consecration, A psalm that lif...
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The Lost Occasion
Some die too late and some too soon,At early morning, heat of noon,Or the chill evening twilight. Thou,Whom the rich heavens did so endowWith eyes of power and Jove's own brow,With all the massive strength that fillsThy home-horizon's granite hills,With rarest gifts of heart and headFrom manliest stock inherited,New England's stateliest type of man,In port and speech Olympian;Whom no one met, at first, but tookA second awed and wondering look(As turned, perchance, the eyes of GreeceOn Phidias' unveiled masterpiece);Whose words in simplest homespun clad,The Saxon strength of Caedmon's had,With power reserved at need to reachThe Roman forum's loftiest speech,Sweet with persuasion, eloquentIn passion, cool in argument...
An Ode To The Hills
'I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.' - PSALM CXXI. 1.Æons ago ye were,Before the struggling changeful race of manWrought into being, ere the tragic stirOf human toil and deep desire began:So shall ye still remain,Lords of an elder and immutable race,When many a broad metropolis of the plain,Or thronging port by some renownèd shore,Is sunk in nameless ruin, and its placeRecalled no more.Empires have come and gone,And glorious cities fallen in their prime;Divine, far-echoing, names once writ in stoneHave vanished in the dust and void of time;But ye, firm-set, secure,Like Treasure in the hardness of God's palm,Are yet the same for ever; ye endureBy virtue of an old slow-ripening word,...
Archibald Lampman
Behind The Bars
I am a pilgrim far from home, A wanderer like Mars,And thought my wanderings ne'er should come, So fixed behind the bars!I left my sunny Southern home Beneath the silver stars;A northward path began to roam, Not seeking prison bars.I sought a higher, holier life, Which never virtue mars;But Fate had spun a net of strife For me behind the bars!My mother's lowly thatched-roofed cot My nobler senses jars;And so I seek to aid her lot, But not behind the bars!'Tis said, forsooth, the poet learns Through sufferings and warsTo sing the song which deepest burns Behind the prison bars!Thus I resign myself to Fate, Regardless of her scars;For soon she'll op...
Edward Smyth Jones
By A Blest Husband Guided, Mary Came
By a blest Husband guided, Mary cameFrom nearest kindred, Vernon her new name;She came, though meek of soul, in seemly prideOf happiness and hope, a youthful Bride.O dread reverse! if aught 'be' so, which provesThat God will chasten whom he dearly loves.Faith bore her up through pains in mercy given,And troubles that were each a step to Heaven:Two Babes were laid in earth before she died;A third now slumbers at the Mother's side;Its Sister-twin survives, whose smiles affordA trembling solace to her widowed Lord.Reader! if to thy bosom cling the painOf recent sorrow combated in vain;Or if thy cherished grief have failed to thwartTime still intent on his insidious part,Lulling the mourner's best good thoughts asleep,Pilfering regrets ...
The Waterfall
A patch of meadow uplandReached by a mile of road,Soothed by the voice of waters,With birds and flowers bestowed.Hither I come for strengthWhich well it can supply,For Love draws might from terrene forceAnd potencies of sky.The tremulous battery EarthResponds to the touch of man;It thrills to the antipodes,From Boston to Japan.The planets' child the planet knowsAnd to his joy replies;To the lark's trill unfolds the rose,Clouds flush their gayest dyes.When Ali prayed and lovedWhere Syrian waters roll,Upward the ninth heaven thrilled and moved;At the tread of the jubilant soul.