b'9<\\ \n\n\n\n,Sf> \n\n\n\nSweet friends, in heaven, or on the earth, \nTo-day for us there is no dearth \nOf love. My soul is full of song ; \nI would the harmony prolong ; \n\nFor friends, I\'d pray; \n\nIf foes, I\'d say \n\n\'\'\'Requiescat.^\' \n\nThis little requiem is sung \n\nWhen hopes are crushed, and hearts are wrung; \nWhen weeping friends close tearless eyes \nThat ope so soon in Paradise. \n\nNo need to pray \n\nFor them and say \n\n\'^ Requiescat." \n\nSome that are dead, to me still live; \nWhile some that live no earnest give ; \nThe living dead \xe2\x80\x94 so dear, so dear ; \nThough not a tear has dropped on bier, \n\nFor them I pray; \n\nFor them I say \n\n\'"\' Requiescat." \n\n\n\ni6 \n\n\n\nI see eternal depths of blue \nWithout a fleck. See heaven through ; \nTo all amid that shining throng, \nSuperfluous seems such soothing song. \n\nWhat need to pray \n\nFor them, and say \n\n*\'\'Requiescat" \n\nMy father there, my mother, too ; \nI know I see, or hope I do : \nOne died so lonely; weary one, \nWith care and work forever done. \n\nIn life, I\'d pray, \n\nNot death, I\'d say \n\n\'^Requiescaty \n\nI love you, that you gave me birth, \nAlbeit to stay awhile on earth, \nThat\'s tottering with its weight of sin ; \nFor, here, we life indeed begin, \nWhere none need say. \nWhere none need pray \n\'^ Requiescat" \n\nn \n\n\n\nI love you with an aching heart ; \nBroken, I think ; at birth in part : \nThough never here I feel heart whole, \nThis life is matrix for the soul. \n\nThen, sorrow, cease ; \n\nIn heaven there\'s peace ; \n\'\'Requiescaty \n\nMy brothers, sisters, are you there, \nAfter a life of moil and care? \nGod grant that we united stand, \nAt last, in heaven, at His right hand. \n\nCan we now pray. \n\nCan we now say, \n\n\'\xe2\x96\xa0\'\xe2\x96\xa0 Requiescat?" \n\nOne sister did herself enshroud : \n\'Tis pitiful ; the heart is bowed ; \nIn thinking of her loneliness : \nSweet grass or flowers in wilderness. \n\nWhen winds do blow, \n\nOh ! whisper low, \n\n" Reqidescat." \n\n\n\ni8 \n\n\n\nFor baby brother, all alone, \n\nWhere piteous forests make a moan ; \n\nThe earth upon thy bosom lies \n\nSo deep, thou couldst not hear my cries. \n\nThy mother wings \n\nHer flight, and sings, \n\n"" Requiescat." \n\nAnd thou, who promised once to wait, \nAnd watch for me at heaven\'s gate, \nI know I\'ll find thee there above. \nWhere all is peace and joy and love. \n\nWe\'ll meet again ; \n\nFor me, say, then, \n\n^*Requiescat." \n\nThe flowers you gave with dying hand ; \nThose that none else could understand. \nWhen, as you plucked them one by one, \nAnd gave them me, when day was done ; \nThe light gone out \xe2\x80\x94 but love alone, \nSupernal light, within that shone ; \nTo me they sigh, \n" Heart rest is nigh ;" \n\n*^ Requiescat" \n\n19 \n\n\n\nAnd thou, my friend, and more than friend, \nWho found true peace before the end, \nAnd tried to teach me all thy lore ; \nI missed thee, when at heaven\'s door \nWe parted ; and I miss thee more. \nAnd con thy love and lessons o\'er. \n\nFor me, still pray ; \n\nAsk Christ to say \n\n"" Requiescat." \n\nOh ! hopes that die, and griefs that live, \nAnd joys that life will never give ; \nShadows, that fall from light unseen. \nSo dark, we stumbling walk between \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nHence, hence away \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nLeave me to pray \n\n\'\'Requiescaty \n\nAnd now, my heart, we, two, can rest ; \nWe, two, can fill an empty nest, \nIf God so will ; and sing away ; \nLike tired children worn with play \nSing to themselves some little lay ; \nTill soothing sleep will hush for aye. \nWe\'ll sob our broken notes, and say. \nDear heart, to me, \nAnd I to thee, \nA II Saints\' Day. "\xe2\x96\xa0Requiescat. \' \' \n\n\n\nThe Old and the New \n\n\n\nThe King is Dead! Long Live the King!\' \n\n\n\nI heard the Old Year moan and sigh, \nI heard the Old Year groan and die, \nWhile wailing winds went soughing by, \n\nOut in the sobbing rain \xe2\x80\x94 \nOld Year, why art thou moaning so? \nWe are content that thou shouldst go ; \nWe tired of years long, long ago ; \n\nTo die must be a gain. \n\nOut of the death grows life anew ; \nOut of the false there comes the true ; \nOut of the Old Year springs the new; \n\nThou\'lt come again, Old Year. \nInto the dark alone thou\'lt go, \xe2\x80\x94 \nWhy art thou sighing, sobbing so? \nThe One above keeps watch below. \n\nHe lives \xe2\x80\x94 need never fear. \n\n\n\nA rest and change ; all things anew ; \nThey\'ll live again, the false and true. \nIf only good lived in the new, \n\nOur many derelictions \nWould count but little in the end ; \nAnd truth from error would forefend ; \nIn life or death, sweet heaven would send \n\nUs many benedictions. \n\nOut of the night will come the day; \n\nOut of the dust, out of decay. \n\nWill come the buds and blooms of May ; \n\nOnly a change, remember \xe2\x80\x94 \nWhen every flow\'ret censer swings, \nAnd warbling bird its anthem sings. \nAnd to the heart such gladness brings. \n\nIt soon forgets December. \n\nHark ! on the air, I hear a bell \xe2\x80\x94 \nTis "twelve o\'clock, and all is well!" \nThe watchman\'s cry \xe2\x80\x94 Old Year farewell. \n\nOut in the sobbing rain ; \nNo passer-by I see on street ; \nHark ! now I hear the tramping feet. \nBut cannot see for storm and sleet, \n\nWith face against the pane. \n\n\n\nThe year is dead, Oh, no ! Oh, no ! \nThe year still lives, Oh, ho ! Oh, ho ! \nThe rain and wind have ceased, and so, \n\nLong life, New Year, to you ! \nAll sounds are hushed, above, below ; \nSoft, on the pane, the snow! the snow! \nA winding sheet that husheth all, \nIn lowly hut or lordly hall \xe2\x80\x94 \nA winding sheet for the Old Year, no ! \n\nA mantle for the New. \n\nOh ! bright New Year, with snow-white train, \nOh ! glad New Year, you\'ve come again : \nCovering the earth, its every stain. \nWith snow-white train from mount to main \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nMay good live on in you. \n\nThe beautiful and true ! \n\nLong life, long life to you ! \nOh ! bright New Year, Oh ! glad New Year, \n\'Tis not too soon for hearty cheer. \nOur requiem for the dying year, \n\nReveille for the new! \n\nThe beautiful, the true ! \n\nLong life, long life to you I \n\n\n\n23 \n\n\n\nLife out of death, Oh ! crown of thorn ! \nOh! sacred brow, all bleeding, torn; \nThou Man of many sorrows, born \n\nTo give us life eternal. \nGrant to us life indeed, we pray ; \nKeep us along this death-life way, \nTill death is dead in life, we pray ; \n\nOh love, oh joy supernal ! \n\n\n\nThe master of music and art. \n\nCaught the refrain \n\nOf a heavenly strain ; \n\nAnd it echoed again \n\nFrom the soul to the brain, \n\nTill it broke the sweet chords of his heart. \n\n^ ^ yf \n\nOh ! aching heart ! \n\nOh ! breaking heart ! \n\nLife we can not understand ; \n\nBut the vision will be clearer. \n\nIf we hold the Father\'s hand. \n\n^ ^ ^ \n\nSeek to be happy, by making others so ! \n24 \n\n\n\nVictors on the Other Shore \n\n\n\n(Lines Read at the Decoration of the Confederate Graves \nAT Nashville, Tenn., 186-.) \n\n\n\nNot the vanquished \xe2\x80\x94 No, for victors \nBring I laurel wreaths to-day ; \n\nNot the living \xe2\x80\x94 but the deathless \nHeroes who have passed away. \n\nHail my brothers marching onward, \nOnward on the other shore ! \n\nMay ye scale the walls of heaven ! \nVictors then for evermore. \n\nList ! your deeds are not forgotten ; \n\nAge and youth meet here to-day; \nSome to bring you wreaths of roses, \n\nSome to bring you crowns of bay. \n\nLaurel wreaths from distant mountain, \nWaving palms from ocean\'s shore \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nEmblems meet, I bring for heroes \xe2\x80\x94 \nHeroes are ye evermore. \n\n\n\nTrue, ye heard no shouts of triumph ; \n\nOnly wailing \xe2\x80\x94 only woe \xe2\x80\x94 \nAs ye watched the blood-red sunset ; \n\nBut we see the afterglow. \n\nAnd, my brothers, now we hail you \nVictors on the other shore ! \n\nMay ye scale the walls of heaven ! \nVictors then for evermore. \n\n\n\nBe strong, ye Tennesseans, \n\nWhenever in the right ; \nLike our immortal Jackson, \n\nBe valiant in the fight ; \nAnd give the oppressed your succor : \n\nMake ever Right your might. \n\n\n\nBring a broken life to the "Light of Light" \xe2\x80\x94 and \nGod\'s prism lets the glory through. \n\n\n\na6 \n\n\n\nCarol at Sunrise \n\n\n\nI know, I know, \n\nWhere zephyrs blow, \nAnd the teeming turf upheaves; \n\nOur Mother Earth \n\nIs giving birth \nTo violets under the leaves. \n\nSilent and shy, \n\nNo human eye \nWill discover her charm, I ween ; \n\nThe full-blown rose \n\nIn secret grows. \nAnd bursts from the bud unseen. \n\nI see, I see \n\nOn bush and tree \nThe tiny leaflets quiver ; \n\nAnd the shimmering light \n\nIn a dance of delight \nA-gleaming across the river, \n\nLighting the spire \n\nA ball of fire- \nGlancing from turret and tower ; \n\nAnd gilding the spray \n\nWhere the dew-drops lay, \nIt shivers in golden shower. \n\n27 \n\n\n\nI feel, I feel \n\nThat woe and weal \nIn life must be allied ; \n\nThe shades of night, \n\nThe bright sunlight, \nAre lying side by side. \n\nAway, away \n\nThey seem to play \n" Hide and seek," on yonder hill \n\nAlway, alway, \n\nTill perfect day. \nWe\'ll find them together still. \n\nI hear, I hear \n\nThe sweet notes clear \n\nOf a bonny bird that sings \nTo her little brood \nAs they take their food \n\nTwittering under her wings. \nAh, mother bird. \nYour song I\'ve heard ; \n\nAnd I sang it once \xe2\x80\x94 my best ; \nSome bright, bright day \nThey\'ll fly away, \n\nAnd leave you the empty nest. \n\n\n\nI pray, I pray, \n\nBy night, by day, \nFor my nestlings, where they be. \n\nDear God above, \n\nI know such love \nShould alone belong to thee ; \n\nAnd so I pray \n\nBy night, by day, \nThat Thy many gifts of love \n\nMay not alway \n\nLure me away \nFrom the Giver of Good above. \n\nRhythm imitated from Bishop Cox\'s hymn . \n\n\n\nWe now can see the dawn of better days : \nLook at the South from shore to shore, \nHer night of darkness almost gone. \nThe master, who the thralldom felt far more \nThan slave, is now more free than e\'er before. \nUntrammeled men and women will aspire. \nWith minds and hearts and souls set free, \nTo soar to heights unknown, and ardently desire. \nWith every height attained, the strength to go still \nhigher 1 \n\n\n\n39 \n\n\n\nSweet Symphonies \n\n\n\nLines Addressed to the Mother of My Dear Friend, \nMrs. M. L. C, on Her Eighty-First Birthday. \n\n\n\nI. \n\nSweet symphonies, I\'d sing to-day; \nCome, now, my heart\xe2\x80\x94 a tuneful lay! \nI love the truth \xe2\x80\x94 she loves it too; \nAnd, though I pierce the empyrean blue, \nMy spirit surely seeks the True \nAnd Beautiful. Artist Supreme, \nOn Thee I call: a poet\'s dream, \nA painter\'s skill, a workman\'s art. \nCome all from Thee: Thou art the Heart \nOf all this breathing, toiling world. \nThough Thou, for pride, archangel hurled. \nThe lowliest look to Thee for light, \nAnd claim from Thee the children\'s right \nTo call on Father, Maker, Friend \xe2\x80\x94 \nOr hope, or faith, or aid to send. \n30 \n\n\n\nII. \n\nSweet symphonies, I\'d sing to-day, \n\nTo her, the subject of my lay. \nMy friend \xe2\x80\x94 I hail thee now four score; \nNot far, I ween, from the heavenly shore; \n\nThe voyage was long, the barque is frail: \n\nSeems life to thee a brief, swift sail? \n\nI left the port two scores and more, \n\nAnd yet it seems so long before \nI reach the haven; watching drearily, \nWeeping, working, waiting wearily, \n\nTo hear the Boatman boat his oar \n\nIn silent seas \xe2\x80\x94 on the silent shore. \nSeems life to thee but short and swift? \nClouds in the evening speedily rift \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nDown suddenly drops the sinking sun : \n\nThe years go liesurely, one by one ; \n\nThe shadows grow long at set of sun ; \n\nThen swift and rapid \xe2\x80\x94 work is done ; \nHeart-sick and home-sick, wistful we glide, \n\'Till we "catch the light on the other side." \n\nIs it not so? I hail thee now ! \n\nI envy thee on the life-ship\'s prow. \nWhat say I? The Boatman may boat his oar \nAnd land me first on the heavenly shore. \n\n31 \n\n\n\nIII. \n\nSweet symphonies I\'d sing to-day, \n\nTrue and beautiful if I may, \n\nFor her, who well deserves the praise \n\nOf loving hearts and tuneful lays. \n\nShe lived her life both well and wise; \n\nAnd now, behold, "her children rise \n\nAnd call her blessed." Is not this \n\nA boon for earth ; for heaven a bliss? \n\nRevered, respected, honored, loved \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nMy friend, \'tis true, that thou hast proved \n\nThy life no failure ; right is right : \n\nAs truth is true, thy right is might ; \n\nAnd down the ages yet to be, \n\nThy influence, like a wave at sea. \n\nWill widen ever, more and more. \n\nTill broken on the eternal shore. \n\nThou art growing young, thou art not old ; \n\nWhen more than four score years are told, \nThou wilt still be young, working cheerily, \nSmiling, it may be, or waiting wearily, \n\nThy birth into life \xe2\x80\x94 the true Life given \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nImmortal youth, in the mansions of Heaven ! \n\n\n\n32 \n\n\n\nLittle Robin\'s Palm Tree \n\n\n\nIn the tangled sun and shade, \nUnderneath a palm tree played \nLittle Robin, fairest child. \n\nWhen the winds began to blow, \nWith the falling of the snow. \nWhen the birds of passage go ; \n\nLittle Robin too one day, \nFrom her northern home away, \nWent where orange trees and bay \n\nSnowy blossoms proudly show ; \nRoses rare and jasmines blow ; \nWhere the stately palm trees grow. \n\nLeaving large ancestral hall, \nSoon beyond the garden wall, \nShe would find her playmates all, \n\nCaroling their sweetest lays ; \nAnd her antiphone of praise \nMade for her those happy days. \n\n\n\n33 \n\n\n\nHappy, under whispering trees; \nHappy, hearing humming bees ; \nHappy, dancing in the breeze. \n\nHere, a butterfly to chase ; \nThere, to kiss the upturned face \nOf a pansy with sweet grace, \n\nOr, of rosebuds and sweet pinks \nMaking chains ; the flower links \nIncense breathing what she thinks. \n\nBuds and blossoms, rosary beads. \nCounting on them what she needs ; \nPraying truly, prayer succeeds. \n\nBut of all she loved the best \nUnderneath the palm to rest ; \nRoyal palm tree\'s royal guest. \n\nWatching shadows as they pass, \nWeaving lace work on the grass, \nDreaming day dreams, and, alas ! \n\nClaiming kinship with the sky. \nLike the azure of her eye ; \nAnd as clouds went floating by \n34 \n\n\n\nShe went sailing on them too ; \nOn the inverted sea of blue, \nFar beyond all human view ; \n\nDreaming fancies false and true, \n\nAs maturer minds will do, \n\nTill the stars came peeping through : \n\nBeacon lights in heaven, to show \nWhere man\'s soundings cannot go ; \nFinite minds must ever know \n\nSomething is beyond man\'s reach, \nSomething science cannot teach, \nSomething science to appeach. \n\nWould the Almighty condescend. \nAnd the finite comprehend, \nThen infinity would end. \n\nSo the little Robin played \n\nIn the tangled sun and shade ; \n\nLittle Endogens waylaid. \n\nAs the stately palms enroll \nInward life, her growth of soul \nDid her growing life control. \n\n35 \n\n\n\nWonder did she grow apace, \nWith such beauty and such grace, \nWith the soul -light in her face? \n\nWhen the winter on the wane. \nStronger grown, she went again \nTo her home ; she went, full fain, \n\nGreeting one than life more dear ; \nShe had known her mortal fear ; \nShe had seen the unwept tear \n\nBroken, glistening in the smile \nMothers\' hearts will try awhile \nSorest anguish to beguile. \n\nAnd the child, with sweetest grace. \nShowed how she had grown apace ; \nBut the soul -light in her face \n\nChild nor mother understood : \nIn such brightness no one could \nShadow o\'er this motherhood. \n\nFriends, beloved and left behind. \nMissed the child with wondering mind. \nAnd the palm tree in the wind \n\n36 \n\n\n\nSighed for her at night and morn ; \nStretched her arms in grief forlorn \nFor the child forever gone. \n\nWhen the winds again did blow, \nAnd the falling of the snow \nMade the birds of passage go, \n\nLittle Robin too had flown. \n\nO, the hearts that ache and moan \n\nIn the cold world, left alone. \n\nAnd the palm tree bowed her head, \nBowed her royal, crowned head ; \nMoaning, wailing for the dead, \n\nSighing for the maiden fair : \nThrenody, " O, where ? O, where ? " \nWith her last breath, "Where, O, where?" \n\nAngels bright, beyond our ken, \nTook her to her home again ; \nGod ! \'Tis hard to say \xe2\x80\x94 Amen ! \n\nSee her with the angel band ! \nPalms of victory in her hand, \nPointing upward to that land \n\n37 \n\n\n\nWhich but seems so far away ; \nWhen the mists are cleared away \nWe shall see in perfect day. \n\nNear the old ancestral hall \nJust beyond the garden wall, \nWhere they saw the Palm Tree fall, \n\nIn the Southland, Easter tide. \nOne that loved the child espied \nThere a little Palm, aside \n\nOf the old one, not apart. \nSpringing from the other\'s heart ; \nSweetest lesson to impart. \n\nAt Mt. Olivet is found \nKindred dust in sacred ground, \nAnd one precious little mound \n\nHas this Palm tree at its head, \nSighing still with bowed head, \nWhispering to the sleeping dead \n\nThat again \'tis Easter tide ! \n\nMother, may this thought abide. \nLift your heart, \'tis Eastertide ! \n\n\n\nHome- Coming \n\n\n\n[Inscribed to Col. Frank Cheatham, on Home-Coming of First \nTennessee Regiment from the Philippines] \n\n\n\nRing out, proud bells, a gladsome peal ! \n\nYe bugles, blow a joyous blast ; \nShout, all, huzzahs for the soldiers\' weal \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nTo welcome them home at last ; \nThey were the bravest of the brave ; \n\nThey were true Tennesseans ; \nThey risked their lives their honor to save ; \n\nAnd we must sing their peans. \n\nA welcome to the "Boys in Blue" \xe2\x80\x94 \n\nGlad welcome from the "Gray:" \nThe Blue and Gray wear hearts as true \n\nAs ever fought in any fray ; \nTruth is \xe2\x80\x94 in that most dreadful strife. \n\nWhen brother met his brother \xe2\x80\x94 \nAbove the embattled host in life, \n\nUnseen, there was another; \nAnd those who fought on either side. \n\nFought for the right, " as they saw it ; " \nThey were the victors \xe2\x80\x94 side by side ; \n\nGod-crowned \xe2\x80\x94 as the angels saw it. \n\n39 \n\n\n\nUN 29 1904 \n\n\n\nMen say the valiant Southrons failed; \n\nThat Northern Arms o\'er them prevailed, \nBut wrong went down for both that day; \n\nAnd heroes wore the Blue and Gray. \n\nWhile bells for Tennesseans ring, \n\nWhene\'er, where\'er they meet us ; \nTo-day, for the "Boys in Blue" we sing \n\nA welcome when they greet us. \nAnd we, the mothers of the Gray, \n\nThe mothers of the Blue, \nNow, for another campaign, pray \n\nFor soldiers tried and true. \n\nAh ! boys, fight the battle of life as well ; \n"Make ready," "take aim" at the hosts of hell, \nWhenever assailed \xe2\x80\x94 they strike in the dark ; \nWith the armor of Light, you\'ll not miss your mark ; \nAnd when "Taps" are sounded, and "Lights are out," \nReveille will greet you, with joyful shout. \nFrom the angels who wait at the Golden Gate \xe2\x80\x94 \n(Your battles all fought ; your last voyage o\'er). \nTo bear you in triumph to the other shore, \nAnd welcome you home, forevermore. \n\n\n\n40 \n\n\n\nLIBRARY OF CONGRESS \n\n\n\n018 603 012 6 \xe2\x80\xa2^ \n\n\n\n'