LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Shelf ^i .......I UNITED STATES OP AMERICA. ■iy. Photographed from the Author' Pen and Jnk Sketch. -t) © f^VPS SX© q°^; OR, fAITtt'S BEFEf $£. I N FOU R PA RTS ZAVARR WILMSHURST. NEW YORK : ^OPYRIG^-^ > 1879. ^ CRICHTON & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, 221, 223 4 225 Fulton Strhbt. 1871 *1 «l?3 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S79, BY ZAVAEE WILMSHUEST, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington . Crichton & Co., Printkbs, 221, 223 A 225 Fulton St., N. Y. THIS LITTLE BOOK IS INSCRIBED TO THE CHURCH OF CHRIST, WHEREVER FOUNDED, WITH PROFOUND LOVE AND REVERENCE BY THE AUTHOR. PART FIRST. SPRING. SPRING ORDINARY MIRACLES. I. . Earth every Spring is born again, And Eden rises from her tomb ; While Love melts Beauty's icy chain, And weds her in a world of bloom — Sun, flowers, stars, and cherubs shedding Their souls in rapture on that wedding. Away, cold reign of rigor ! Welcome youth, sport, and vigor ! The forest throbs with sighs and cooing, And twittering, warbling, fluttering rush The very air is given to wooing, And kisses every maiden's blush And dewy, glowing, ruby lips That her twin rows of pearls eclipse, 8 RALPH AND ROSE ; Filling her life with health and soundness, Stealing beneath her white neck's muffling To soft, warm, throbbing marble roundness, And, at a saucy parting, Her head of sunny ringlets ruffling. At this all- joy ward starting, The gentle gladnesses revive, With freshest fragrance, hues and songs, And, in Spring's laughing sunshine, wive To fill the earth with fairy throngs. II. The greatest wonders are the nearest; The loveliest flowers everywhere ; The treasures we should hold the dearest Are cheapest to our thought and care : The grandest truth is most neglected ; Life's meanest prize -man's proudest boast ; Of all the joys by him neglected, Eternal bliss is spurned the most. # * * * Are these antitheses of gages Affecting contrasts and wise gloom, Or the experience of the ages, Whose truth will stand the crash of doom 8 OR, FAITH'S DEFENSE. 9 That common things are most astounding; Life's highest prizes those that woo, And greatest blessings most abounding, Are truths forever old and new, Which we should publish, chaunt and cherish, Lest in the memory they die, For countless human millions perish, Like blind men, with salvation nigh. III. Ha ! comes of ghastliness the form, Withered like blanched pine, lightning cleft, Or hoary wreck of sleety storm, Long outside of existence left. Behold the aspen trembler pass In age's totter o'er Time's glass, Gasping and shrinking from the blast As his next moment were his last! Why does he still the daylight haunt ? Because Death shuddering cries "Avaunt!" 'Tis Winter, father of distress, The shrivelled slave of cold and barrenness. 10 RALPH AND ROSE ; IV. What marvel follows glad and bright, And lovely as the birth of light ? The year turned young and heavenly fair, Like rosy child with golden hair, Nestling amid earth's blossomings Where only angel joys allure And only sweetness breathes and sings, Drinking delight as fresh and pure As from God's fount it gushes clear Ere mingled with a sigh or tear, — Spring treading on old Winter's heels With living green and love-song peals, And bounding in the pulse as high As hope that lifts the spirit to the sky. Y. Though Age grow young again to tell The thousandth time this miracle Which sereness with fresh blisses drowns From deep vales to bald mountain crowns, Whelming with wealth of sweet surprises — As joys' throng in the soul arises, Caught from death's shades which most appal OR, FAITH'S DEFENSE. 11 To heaven's glorious festival — It will as dust to life compare With that grand miracle I next declare. VI. Gaze with thy spirit on the soul Who loves the darkness like the mole, And ever grubs in earth for pelf, And turns all heart and thought to self; Who thinks all goodness weak and vain, Unless it turn to sordid gain; — The highest wisdom deems to be His own successful trickery, And holds his life's and glory's prize Some shrewd old friend to victimize. VII Heaven of grace has boundless stores But none for him who self adores — To whose bleak being loving glow, Sweet Pity's thrill for want or woe — Bliss — pain — hope — fear — ne'er find access Save for his own dear littleness — Whose lust and greed and hate would urge To darker crimes did not the scourge 12 RALPH AND ROSE; Of man and law his malice check To save his lucre or his neck : What can yon do with such a knave You scorn to crush, despair to save, — Humanity's monstrosity Masked in external decency, — A wintry soul, a heart of ice, Without one virtue or one generous vice ? VIII. But Grace, although the gentlest power Born of God's love to man, When he must face his darkest hour And fellest danger scan, Proves mightiest, even in the strife Which endless Death and endless Life- like tides that clash and loam and roll- Wage for possession of the soul. In holy league with Providence, That right arm of Ommpotence^ Grace watching sleepless in her part . To melt and win the human heart, Never omits the moment true Oil FAITH'S DEFENSE. 13 The greatest sinner to subdue, To lead him contrite to her throne To trust in Mercy's God alone. IX. The wretch we drew is born again ! What else could cleanse so vile a clod, A nature change, so foul in grain, Into the likeness of his God ? Make one whom countless crimes defiled, Pure, meek and trustful as a child, — Drive the black legion from his breast, And render love divine its guest, — Take Winter from his soul away And fill it with the bloom of May, — Torn him from self-idolatry To deeds of bounteous charity, — Transform his spirit lost so long, Into an angel fair and strong, — And earth, that led to hell's abyss, Into the threshold of eternal bliss? 14 RALPH AND ROSE; George's Adventure. X. With monotone and bagpipe drone Are bees the woodland flowers lulling, While George sings merrily alone, A busy rhier beauties culling. 'Tis sweet to hear the infant lisping The soul of April, May and June, With voice as free as breezes crisping The brook whose song-sighs join in tune, Wrapping in murmurs his joy notes As leaves bright flowers in cool moss coats ; The words are all his sister Rose 's; The air just what his heart composes. The Song of Spring. 1. "Spring is coming in its beauty, Buds are stealing forth to view ; Nature wakes to life and duty, Drenched with sunshine and with dew: Let us take the sweet example Of the hosts that bloom and sing: Heaven has ever freshness ample Souls that love to clothe with Spring. OR, FAIT1PS DEFENSE. 15 2. " Mark yon little peering flower, Trembling in the Zephyr's arms ! How she pays back sim and shower With the richness of her charms ! Wondrous far her breathing reaches That our souls with fragrance feeds, And the while as sweetly preaches 1 Make earth lovely with your deeds.' " Through the wood the wild bird trilling With but trees and rocks to hear, E'en to burst his heart is willing, If the waste his rapture cheer. Let us from his song deriving For the soul a guiding spark, Never cease from noble striving Though there be but God to mark." XL His arms and bosom flowing over With choice love-breathing, dewy tints, George marks his pathway through the clover And wild ways wilder fancy hints, 16 RALPH AND ROSE ; With the sweet rainbow wealth he squanders, As from the beaten track he wanders, Whence he hath vowed not to be tempted Till Rose comes back with basket emptied For the relief of widow Bland, And homeward they can saunter hand in hand. XII. His surfeit has the urchin taken, And now he seeks the path forsaken : Chill is the clutch of his dismay To learn that he has lost his way. His wanton joys are drowned in fears And April smiles in April tears: Troubled his face as rosebud blenching From its first thunder shower's drenching : He runs and calls and further strays As echo with his fancy plays, And leads him through shagg'd darksome [walks, As those through which Death homeward [stalks, All ending in a frightful bed With rocks and blasted trees o'erspread, Like some inferno all outworn OR, FAIT IPS DEFENSE. 17 And e'en for demons too forlorn. An adder springs np in his path, And hardly lias he 'scaped its wrath Ere a gaunt wolf before him flees Till in the lone stray child he sees A delicate and welcome prize Which he devours with hungry eyes, — As ice-breathed Winter in retreat Turns back to blast an April sweet. " Rose ! Rose !" George shouts as terrors seize His senses and life's currents freeze. XIII. That morning Ralph woods, hills and glens Roams in keen search of specimens — Hungry for stones and ores and weeds On which omnivorous science feeds — Such as the million would contemn But each to him a precious gem, Kindling a flame that doubt consumes And nature's heights and depths illumes With light of light till sings this hymn His heart in logic of earth's seraphim. 18 RALPH AND ROSE ; Design. 1. "On everything in heaven and earth I mark a stamp divine, Revealing Him who gave it birth ; What is that stamp ? Design. Whether it sprang an honr ago, Or grew some million years, The hand that made it well I know, For there his stamp appears! 2. "Let skeptics seek the first great cause In Nature's boundless mine, And give hard names to all her laws ; What proves them blind? Design; Whose traces to a child reveal Truth love joys most to know, The impress deep, the Maker's seal Is there God's hand to show. 3. "No sages can that stamp efface From aught in earth and skies ; On atoms and on suns each trace Their reasoning defies : OR, FAITH'S DEFENSE. 10 The simplest floweret breathing sweet, Clods bearing golden grain, And man himself, a world complete, — All, all God's stamp retain. 4. " Yet not in fragrance of the flower Or stars on midnight's brow, Or mountain's height or ocean's power, Or warbling birds, dost Thou, O'er charms and miracles of sense, Thy gracious presence prove So clear as in thy Providence And hearts Thou breakst with love." XIV, Ralph heard a piteous cry for help, Which shrilly through the old wood rang ; As lioness to save her whelp He to the infant's rescue sprang. 'Twas George, the wolf's pugnacious prey, Grasping his little pocket knife, And standing manfully at bav, To save or dearly sell his life : 20 RALPH AND ROSE; At sight of Ralph with well-plied staff, The boy's despair, in triumph's laugh, And lowering death as quickly sank As spectres in the churchyard dank When sun gush swallows gloom: the beast Fled his anticipated feast As, met by faith and prayer's defense, The devil flees from innocence, — With looks of flame in tremor sunk And quickly in the thicket slunk. XV. Catching the boy up in his arms, Ralph kisses his hot tears away; Freed from the torture of alarms, His heart leaps up elate and gay, And his red pouting lips exclaim, 'Mid dimpling laughter's overflow, " How lucky for the wolf you came ! He did not stop to thank you though." " You rogue," cries Ralph, " I am a sinner To rob his Grimness of a dinner: With mischief you more hearts will rack Than he and all his prowling pack. OR, FAITWS DEFENSE. 21 You scrap of spirit lightning cast Like Eros, born to bless or blast E'en with yonr cherub looks and charm Which would Suspicion's self disarm, Frail hearts, but yet not mine beguile, Although a sister in your style, Some ten years older, well might be, If we should meet, my destiny." XVI. " Oh, you mean Rose. Hark ! 'tis her cry." The urchin shouted in reply. Soon Ralph beheld a shape of air With bounding step and streaming hair, Like angel truant nigh too late To enter heaven's closing gate, Or Love that must o'ertake or die, Or, with the classic strain to vie, — Like wood nymph from the amorous breeze In panting flight among the trees. Now down the rocky glen she flies Like Rescue swooping from the skies With lightning in her limbs and azure eyes. 22 RALPH AND ROSE ; XVII. Breathless the beauty ends her race And stands before them with the grace Of life's love form, fresh, sweet and pure, Making heaven present, near and sure And Ralph's heart her delighted slave In love unbounded by the grave, And growing of its bliss so fond, Fancy could dream of naught beyond. " Oh, George !" she cries, " you heartless elf, How dare you stray and lose yourself In woods roamed by the loup-garou Who feeds on wicked boys like you ? When hunted to this glen he ran — "