CJass /S^i^c^nn ^^ — — ^~t- Bonk -/ S^_ "L presp:n'ted by Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/poetscabinetbein01raym -^ %l= Wt^. ^ ^7*^ 7u^'^^/^ A Poet^s Cabinet Being Passages, Mainly Poetical, from the Works of George Lansing Raymond, L.H.D* Author of «*A Life in Song," "Ballads, and Other Poems,'* ** Dante and Collected Verse»** etc. Selected and Arranged According to Subject by- Marion Mills Miller, Litt. D» Editor of "The Classics — Greek and Latin/* etc. nifistrations by Howard Chandler Qiristy G# P» Putnam's Sons New York London Jlbc "ffinicFierbocftci: presg 1914 Gift- im Ube V^nfcKetbocIiec t)Kss, flew ^orft PREFACE Cyclopedias of quotations are many and various, and yet each may have a particular value that fully justifies its existence. The editor may have collected standard quota- tions, in which case his compilation possesses mainly the character of a reference work, giving the golden thoughts of the race in that mintage of artistic expression which has been stamped with approval by the masters of literature and accepted as sterling currency by the people. Such a work requires wide and accurate knowledge in its editor, but this alone; indeed the less literary discrimination he has the better it may be for a book recording confessedly the judgments of the men of the past whose endorsement of particular forms of expression has caused their incorporation into literature. The standards for constructing a work of this sort are identical with those of dictionary-making. Again, there is an order of cyclopedias of quotations in which the editor assumes the function of a connoisseur. He selects from accepted passages those whose form and substance meet with his special approval, and he adds other passages less known which in his opinion seem worthy of a similar incorporation into literature. If his taste and ability are such as to justify his purpose, the work has itself some- thing of the character of the literature with which it deals. It is a true anthology, valuable for inspiration as well as for reference and research. A third form of the cyclopedia of quotations is that in which these are confined to one author, the purpose being to present, in representative extracts from his works, an ordered conspectus of his views, either direct or implicit, on life or nature or art or whatever subject it be upon which he has contributed to the world thoughts of enduring value. Such a work is of a higher class than not only a general dictionary of quotations, but also a general anthology. It is, in fact, the best form of autobiography, the unconscious rather than the self-conscious sort ; in it the essential spirit iv PREFACE of the author is revealed, the obscuring bulk of the body of his work having been eliminated, and only those features retained which reveal the characteristic gestures of the mind and soul that express personality. The present book is a work of this last class. The author, whose intellectual and spiritual portrait it is intended to depict in a synthesis of his ideas and ideals as expressed in literary form, is both a philosopher and a poet. As a teacher of eesthetics, chiefly the artistry of language in both oral and written forms, he has exerted an influence over thousands of young men, in Williams College and Princeton and George Washington Universities, some of whom, among them the writer, who was his pupil and assistant-teacher at Princeton, acknowledge with gratitude the formative inspiration which they received from personal contact with him. A far wider area of influence he has circumscribed by his books, — a long series of works on esthetics comparable only to those of Ruskin for scope of subject, consistency of interrelation, and originality of observation. The writer has had occasion a number of times, in his capacity as literary adviser, to refer authors who thought that they had made original discovery of vital principles in art, especially poetry, to Professor Raymond's series as expressing the substance of their ideas. Among the disciples of his pen are to be found even more enthusiastic admirers than among his former pupils. Professor Raymond has fc5llowed the principles of his aesthetic philosophy, in so far as these apply to literature, in the writing of many poems upon widely varying subjects in many moods and measures. Through them all run the bind- ing threads of a consistent philosophy both of art and life. This causes his work to appeal especially to those who read poetry for intellectual and spiritual inspiration. It is a fundamental principle of his aesthetic philosophy that the most important function of technique is to rid the form of the thought from whatever may make it appear artificial or unnatural; from whatever may prevent a perfectly trans- parent — not to say luminous — expression of the substance of the thought. Consequently those readers who are in- clined to estimate poetry by striking and eccentric effects of phraseology or arrangement irrespective of any noteworthy PREFACE V ideas to which they call attention may not appreciate his writings in the same degree as do those who believe with him that language is a vehicle which derives its chief value from that of the thought which it conveys. Professsor Raymond's verse is simple yet dignified, direct yet graceful, and clear yet, so far as he fulfills his own ideal, invariably imaginative, his conception being that nothing can be expressed according to the methods of art except as, by way either of reproduction or reference, the means or implements of expression are forms that can be seen or heard in natural life. When poetry fulfills this require- ment, its statements of facts affect one like arguments from analogy, e.g.: In form our frames but vehicle the soul; Yet by the vehicle, the world will rate it. When comes the splendor of the monarch's march Men cheer his chariot, not his character. Dante, iii., 2. Mere words are wind, nor all their storm or stress Can pack the air so thought cannot see through it. Idem, II., I. And its records of experience enable the reader to perceive more than the things described, because these are con- stantly being likened to something else, e.g.: As dawn began Erasing all the stars with lines of light A Life in Song: Daring, xiv. While the stars like sparks that linger where the fire of sunset dies. Idem: Dreaming, 11. Moreover, as a man usually refers by way of comparison to effects in nature because these have seemed to him to be attractive or beautiful. Professor Raymond maintains that in poetry beauty should usually characterize the illustration even of subjects that in themselves have little or no beauty; as, for instance, in this reference to hostile footsteps heard through a midnight tempest in a jungle: Hark! There seems human rhythm in this hell. What hot pursuit is it comes burning through These crackling branches? The Aztec God, I. vi PREFACE Or this, suggested by the approach of a blizzard : It came like a boy who whistles first To warn of his form that shall on us burst, As if nature feared to jar the heart By joys too suddenly made to start. The Last Home Gathering. As applied to both thought and description, Professor Raymond holds with Aristotle that the purpose of art is to fulfill and, as it were, to transfigure, nature — not copy her, — to aid her to attain, by her own methods, the ideals toward which she is striving, as these are divined by the artist. Artists in general, and poets in particular, must therefore possess the qualities of reverent observation and spiritual interpretation, be not only lovers and disciples of nature, but prophets of the coming perfection, as well. Professor Raymond is such a poet; he is an idealist whose aim is the attainment of the highest order of reality. This is indicated by one of his titles, "Ideals Made Real" This philosophy of Professor Raymond is so evident in all his writings that there is general agreement among the critics of his books that he has a noble message to impart, and a clear and consonant manner of delivering it. That he will grow in the esteem of lovers of high thinking and fine feeling and inevitably become recognized as one of the truest and best of modern poets, is also a prevalent opinion among those reviewers who, wearied with the ever increas- ing roll of the "idle singers of an empty day," hail with ardor the advent of a poet who can show us the fullness of life, — phases of every part of it — brimming with beauty and saturated with spirituality. It was a critic of this order who said in reviewing "A Life in Song": "Some day, Dr. Raymond will be universally recognized as one of the leaders in the new-thought movement. ... He is a poet in the truest sense. His ideals are ever of the highest, and his interpretation is of the clearest and sweetest. He has richness of genius, intensity of human feeling, and the refiriement of culture. His lines are aHve with action, luminous with thought and passion, and melodious with music." It is with this faith in the enduring value and growing appreciation of Professor Raymond's poetry that the PREFACE VU present book of selections from his works has been com- piled. This has been done with his thorough approval and invaluable assistance. The passages quoted, though abounding in phrases and Hnes characterized by those classic qualities of outer sensuous beauty and inner spiritual truth which invite remembrance and repetition have not been selected mainly for these reasons, but for the impor- tance of the sentiments expressed in them, and the revela- tion that they afford of the author's attitude toward the world without and the world within." Indeed, m many cases it is the paragraph as a whole which will be treasured by the reader, and recalled as much, perhaps, m mood and thought as in form of expression. _ The contents of the volume have been arranged m the alphabetic order of their subjects, thereby rendering them available without an index. The book thus forms m both the subjective and objective senses of the phrase "a poet's cabinet," being an ordered collection of representative specimens of the work of a poet, intendedfor the use and enjoyment of everyone who in spirit if not in rite is himself a votary of the Muses. That the devotees of these divini- ties are increasing rapidly in number is indicated by the recent organization of poetry societies, pubhcation of poetry magazines, and repeated printings of collections of verse by single authors, as well as general anthologies, new It is hoped that the present work will find its share of readers among this select class upon whom the benison still rests which was uttered by Theocritus of Sicily, consecrated priest of the Muses. In solemnly affirming his devotion to these goddesses of Song he said, "Beloved are they by me, for him who is loved by the Muses Circe can never degrade to grovelling uses ^^ With the magical draught she infuses. Marion Mills Miller. The Authors Club, New York. " The artist, the priest, the historian, the philoso- pher, in moments of discouragement when they feel themselves assailed by the temptation to think only of a career or of money, may well find new strength in the idea that each of them is working in his different way to preserve an ideal of perfection in men's souls — ^it may be a perfection of art or of morahty, of the intellect or of the spirit. Let them remember that this ideal, limited as it may seem, serves as a dike to prevent our civilization from being engulfed in an overwhelming flood of riches and from sinking in an orgy of brutality. The task is so great and so noble that those who strive for it ought surely to feel that they do not live in vain." — The conclusion and climax of '^Ancient Rome and Modern America" by Guglielmo Ferrero, page 248. ILLUSTRATIONS I. The Author . . . Frontispiece ^ From a photograph DRAWINGS by Howard Chandler Christy It is only doing justice to Mr. Christy — and it should enhance the in- terest in these illustrations — to state that they represent almost the earliest of his drawings and of the public's recognition of their excellence, having been prepared, twenty years ago, for an edition of " Ideals Made Real," which, owing to the financial depression of the period, was not issued as planned. FACING PAGE II. Caused that our school's head, Ah"eady nodding o'er his noonday pipe, Should beck at sever' d dreams with one nod more, And so consent to our dreams. . . 32 "^ III. How, all its chairs made vacant one by one, Th' applause rose thinner at his bachelor club . . . . . . 96 i' IV. Awake, asleep, throned constant o 'er my heart, I served this image all intangible, This photographic fantasy . . . 128 »' ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGE V. That oft then I recall'd your form, your words ? That then I came to do as you would do, And think as you would think? . .192 '•' VI. Would only crave, When we have so much else in sympathy, That holy state where two souls, else at one, Would both be God's. . . . 224;-' VII. With cravings pale For church and stole and sermons of my own ...... 256/ VIII. " I mean," I breathed out cautiously, " to write A tale of love, and I have planned the tale To open here." 288 IX. When autumn steals the simlight from the flowers ..... 320V X. Storms of swift and full distress May make of mind a wilderness, A flood of anguish bringing. . . 354^' XI. Woman's grief, If there be any manhood left in him. Will rouse his efforts to bespeak her peace ...... 384 A Poet's Cabinet A Poet's Cabinet ACCENT AND LANGUAGE ' We speak One language too, but differ in the accent. The language gives the passwords of the race, The accent keys the culture of the home. The Aztec God, iv., i. ACCEPTED To-night when the sun had sunk below And the moonlight fill'd the sky, Our hearts were beating Hke wings that would go And glow with the stars on high. surely our souls had left the earth; For a vague and mystic light Hung over our hopes, and hush'd our mirth, And hid the world from sight. 1 had touch'd her hand ; but my soul within Felt not the flesh that I press'd; But the flow of currents it knew were akin To the fair dear life of the blest. And then it was all so easy, at last, For me to say what I said; As her full bright eye she downward cast, And turn'd from me her head. She is mine, she is mine; and the years may go; And the worlds may whirl where they will; But heaven is good, and forever I know Our hearts must have their fill. A Life in Song: Loving, xlii. ACCIDENT, INTENTIONAL An accident! — Like that which follows from the rock that falls Where men who lie in wait have loosened it. An accident' — oh yes! — that plots to arm I 2 A POETS CABINET The palsied, shaking, thought- void clutch of rage, And let it loose to raise a hellish storm Just where the good have come for heavenly calm! The lightning of your flashing blades fell not By accident. Dante, li., 2. ACCUSATIONS, DANGER OF PETTY That reminds me of a hunter who pelts a cliff with pebbles that the birds may fly from it, and be shot down. When ills are threatening conscience, petty accusations, that fright from paltry dangers, often prove the surest way to make us fly to great ones. Tuition for her Intuition, i. ACTION AND THOUGHT, MEN OF With him quick action follows on the thought. With me come only talk, and then more thought. He mounts to find success. I prophesy' — ■ Perhaps; but where success is, at my best, Am only of the crowds that cheer it. Columbus, v., 2. Give monks the meed of vague abstraction, But noblest souls find satisfaction. And consciousness of life in action. *T is they that, where they cannot know, Walk on by faith, who strengthen so The faith by which they further go. 'T is they that try what work can earn. Who test their own work's worth, and turn From wrong to right for which they yearn. 'T is they whose thinking aids their kind, Who, while they help their brothers, find The truth that most rules every mind. And, while to this they too adjust Their lives, because they feel they must, Their faith beholds the form august Of God behind each form of dust ; For God's truth only all men trust. And so I hold that work controls The life that blesses most our souls. A Life in Song: Doubting, XLII. ACTRESS AS ACTRESS Real lovers, hand in hand, may fail to see SELECTED QUOTATIONS 3 How she, with feigned famiHarities, Can make more firm my faith in my ideal. Ah, they wot not that Hfe has left to me But dreams of that which might be, not what is; And, while no dream holds her, I feel them real. My Actress. ACTRESS AS SWEETHEART She would live, With faintest smile, to fascinate — ah — crowds! The rabble would be ravish' d but, forsooth, To clap with crazy hands the rarer air Wherein she moved. For them her voice would sound With every trill so swaying all who heard That thronging cheers would thunder in response ! — Her form, so sweet, would plead till foulest lives Would feel how pure were joys beyond their reach, And long for things their touch could never taint ! My sweet, sweet love ! Ideals Made Real, XL. ACTRESS AS WIFE Alas, I could but seem — Beside the gilded glory of the stage, Beside the loud-mouthed suitors of the show, An unwhipt cur, to wait at some backdoor, And jar with signalling bark the echo sweet Of all-the-town's applause. She mine would be But as the sun, whose flaming brow has touch'd The morning sea that flushes far and near, Is thine, O trembling globulet of spray. Because, forsooth, his image, glass'd in all The sea and world, is glass'd, as well, in thee! — Fool, fool! yet dear, dear folly! Idem. ADMIRATION And what if her heart should then find sweet The praise that her nature knows is meet? — A flower may live in its own perfume. And why not a maiden fresh in her bloom In the sweet air shared by all the wise Who follow like fringe her beauty's guise? A Life in Song: Loving, xxxv. 4 A POETS CABINET ADVANCE {see CHANGE and progress) Truth's warriors in a mighty host advance, Whose Hnes with wings of infinite expanse Now rout, and now seem routed by the foe. Smoke-wrapt amid the fight, no man can know If most he should exult in drums that beat For forward movement, or for full retreat. The line near by him may but backward roll To shape the slow sure progress of the whole. If so, surmising where he can not prove How all things toward life's final victory move, His faith need not lose all its confidence, Tho' it surrender every old defence. Heaven's truth were small, if naught it brings could be Outside the mental range of such as we. A Life in Song: Seeking, Liii. advanced thought and action O soul, what earthly crown Is bright as his renown Whose tireless race Outruns the world's too halting pace. To reach, beyond the things men heed, That which they know not of, but need! O soul, what man can be As near to Christ as he Who looks to life Not first for fame and last for strife; But shuns no loss nor pain that brings The world to new and better things ! Columbus, IV., 2. ADVANCE IN ART In_ candor, my friend, you seem too much at home With nymphs of Olympus and gods of old Rome. The world has advanced, and the artist, if sage, Will seek to give form to the thought of his age. The curve of a limb and the pose of a head May be all the same in the living as dead; But she that you woo, must have life and be young, And speak, ere you love her, and speak your own tongue. The Artist's Aim. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 5 ADVICE In every path Experience is the warrant for advice. Haydn, xxvi. ADVICE, SOMETIMES AN ECHO Some people ask advice like boys when shouting to get an echo; and a rock will give it. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. AFFINITY Yes, all through life, whenever come in view Those helper-spirits, always on the quest For moods too like their own moods to rebuff The thought that is to their own thinking true, To know our own twin angel from the rest, One touch, one look, one accent is enough. Our Affinity. Yet at times I deem our souls Are all of them born in pairs ; And a sweet unchangeable law controls The love that each of them shares ; And she, could she only know my mind, Might find a love, so deep, so kind! A Life in Song: Loving, XV. In a single path I see them wend ; With one thought's weight I see them bend. Brought face to face with whispers low From breath to breath their secrets flow, And, as if one stroke the sweet lines drew, The smile of one is the smile of two. Then oft, more swift than a flashing ray Through rifting clouds at the dawn of day, Through lifting lids a glance will fly, All slight yet bright, from eye to eye; While like twin clouds one sunset flushes One feeling fills them both with blushes. Idem, XVI. I have found her face in the crowded room; And strange it arose as a rose in bloom In the depth of a desert of rocks alone. For I never saw then a charm but her own. Idem, XI. 6 A POET'S CABINET I have talk'd with her; and oft has it seem'd As if I had known her long, In a mystic realm of which I have dream'd, In a realm where speech is all song. But what has brought her, and who can she be That reads me through and through, With the eyes of a god that, turn'd on me, Knows all that ever I knew? Idem, x. Ah, did my love but love me well, I scarce could need my love to tell; Out through my every trembling tone Would thrill through her the joy I own. Ah, did my love but love me well. Her soul would need one only spell, My face would come, my voice would call, And these would charm her, all in all. Idem, XXVIII. AFFINITY REVEALED BY AFFLICTION Soon as I show my spirit, Your own sweet spirit which is one with mine, Will recognize it, as we both thank heaven For cloud and storm and flash that struck me down, And heaven in life that followed death in life. Cecil the Seer, ill., i. AFFLICTION {see BEREAVEMENT and TROUBLE) How often love that loses earthly friends. Comes back from all things outward toward itself; And finding self, finds heaven's design within? Haydn, xxix. Such conflicts come but seldom ; storms of spring, Uprooting much, and wracking much the soil. They find it frost-bound, and they leave it green. Alas, if grain or chaff grow then, depends Upon the germs their rains have wrought upon. Idem, xxxv. And He who made man what he is — ah, me ! To make him what he should be, more and more, May send the storms that sweep life's troubled sea To bring from depths the gems that line the shore. Oft spirits, rent within by grief and sighing, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 7 Show each on whom their inward treasures pour A wealth of worth that long has there been l3dng, But not by one about them ever seen before. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxiii. Ah me, to think what all could win, In spite of natures prone to sin, By working well their wealth within! — For it, Hke gems of priceless worth. That fill the mire and mines of earth. Oft gains its dearness from its dearth; Nor oft is got, until, at last, The pick, or flood, or fire, or blast Has rent the place that held it fast. Then wonder not that wreck and woe Should be one's lot on earth below. Kind heaven itself may open so The spirit's depth, its worth to show. Idem: Doubting, xliii. AGE, A HAPPY, VS, UNHAPPPY YOUTH Like other earthly tilings, our lives move on Half Hght, half shadow, and with me The shadows came in youth. .... Your brilliancy Developed late, eh? like a winter's eve — Or lightning from a cloud. But you are right. This life is like a bladder-air-ball. If You press its youth-side in, you, by-and-by, Will bulge its age-side out. Columbus, 11., 2. AGE, CONSERVATISM OF Earth's elders and sages. Far off from the place where the springs all start, Scarce ever can prize A stream that supplies A draft less far from its font than their age is. No deeds can course from as grand a source As the life of which they in their youth form'd a part. Naught sparkles as bright To them as the light Of an old, cold, frozen, and crystallized art. Unveiling the Monument, 8 A POETS CABINET AGITATION My spirit's agitation So wrenched the links of memory that they failed To hold together. Dante, iii., 2. AGITATOR, THE He wanders through the state, And prophesies convulsion and reform To those that feel they have not long to wait, Who heed in him the mutterings of the storm. He spends his years in pleading and in proving, — And every year to more who mind his call, — How life on earth toward life in heaven is moving, And freedom is a gift that God shall yet give all. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxviii. Far his feet Would journey through the land from town to town. The trumpet-blast of truth his lips would blow, Though courting oft maltreatment by his pleas, Roused throngs, erelong, with whom he march'd unarm'd, A champion of that love of man for man Which cannot rest ere all have liberty. Idem, Note vii. AGROUND Deep plow'd the cruiser's prow The broken waves below, So bows a bull whose pride is full To toss a stubborn foe. She plung'd and reel'd and roU'd. Ah, better had she tack'd! The water flew the bulwark through. The mainmast bent and crack' d. The wind, it whistled there; The boatswain whistled here. The captain swore; the mainsail tore; The jib had ript its gear. A flood was on the deck. The crew were floundering round. Then, clean and chill, and safe and still, The cruiser lay aground. The Last Cruise of the Gaspee. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 9 AIM; NOT THE SAME FOR ALL Oh, do not think that heaven moves all alike ! Some minds are sighted for a single aim, And right for others may be wrong for them! West Mountain. AIM IN ART While only the light of a coming ideal Lures those to the good who imagine it real, No work can ever inspire the earth That embodies no promise of unfulfill'd worth, And naught that the world accounts worthy of fame, In art as in act, but is rank'd by its aim. The Artist's Aim. AIMS Our lives are finite, but the aims of life Are infinite, and crowd on every side. Whate'er we strive to reach, in thought, in deed, At last, some one aim surely tips the scales; As it has weight, its rivals are thrown up. Columbus, III., I. AIMS, HIGH I would rather snatch at birds than dig for worms. Dante, I., i. Can it be true that aims too grand, too high, May miss the garden sought, where, hour by hour, The fellow- workers in new Edens meet? Can but the small seed's growing, by-and-by, Engarland all one's path with leaf and flower, And keep the world he lives in fresh and sweet? The Climber. God gives each man One life where kindle feeling, thought, and will; — And bids him hold it Uke a torch on high To light himself and others. Do you claim That he should lower it? .... Why, in form, perhaps ; And forms of different shape hold torches. .... None Can ever plunge the torch beneath earth's mire And keep it burning. Dante, iii., 2. lo A POET'S CABINET AIR You know a man may have an air about him .... Yes, and that which puffs up, makes a swell, is bad air. — No good air in gas ! The Little Twin Tramps, ill., 2. AIR, KEEN AND BRIGHT Every atom of air is as keen and as bright as a dart of a Cupid to tingle one's blood to a glow and make one in love with all things. The Ranch Girl, 11. ALMS What most men want the most, I think, is being let alone; and money enough to buy the privilege. .... Then give us money. .... Give you money? — A true man wants not alms but aid. The Little Twin Tramps, in., 3. ALONE {see COMPANIONSHIP, LONELY, and SELF- conquest) How sad, when thoughts, proud once to roam, Abused and bruised, came mourning home With their young ardor overthrown ! How sad is life that lives alone ! There was a time, when, brave and bare, The little hands, all soft and spare, Claspt all, and hoped that love was there; Not gloved in fear, claspt every thing, With every rose to grasp a sting; Then dropt it, sad and suffering. And what are now those thoughts about? Oh, they have turn'd from deed to doubt: They work within, if not without. A Life in Song: Doubting, viii. In life or death, knights crowned at heaven's high throne, Pass up through paths where each must move alone. Midnight in a City Park. Within himself when fierce the fight is waged, Oh, who can aid the purpose thus engaged! The soul, unheard, in darkness and alone, Can never share a contest all its own. What coward he, then, when the crisis nears SELECTED QUOTATIONS il Who cries for comrades, nor dare face his fears! No comrade's arm or mail can ever screen The coming conqueror in that strife unseen. Idem. Alone, and yet not lonely. Be one true To his own mission, he is in the ranks With all that move toward all good ends that wait. Columbus, v., 2. AMBASSADOR, THE BEST No wise or permanently successful man tries to influence others against their own judgments or interests. The best ambassador is the one who best recognizes that the world is wide enough for all, and, therefore, that what is good for one is good for all. Where Society Leads, ii. AMBITION What an appetite Has man's ambition ! all that gluts to-day But bringing greater hunger for the morrow; A fire consuming all it feeds upon, Still flaming upward and beyond it all. Columbus, IV., I. He 's the happy man who holds his head not higher than his home. T is right hard to stoop forever. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxvi. Let one, who honor craves, be strong In worth, to make dishonor wrong: Or, if he crave a sceptre, find A task that fits a sovereign mind. Their high ambition, do not doubt. Is heaven-directed and devout, Who strive, to plan, and then work out What God has given them souls to will; With thankful heart remembering still That shallow depths the soonest fill, And endless blessings wait in store For those alone who long for more. Idem, Doubting, xvii. A woman wrecked at sea, would better lash The anchor to her throat, than try to breast 12 A POETS CABINET The waves of life in such a world as this, Wed to a man without ambition. She Could not sink sooner. Cecil the Seer, i. AMBITION, AND OTHERS' WELFARE Where thrived ambition yet, but strove to build Itself a monument by heaping up That which, when lost, made hollow all about it! How many castles have I seen in Europe, Where every graceful touch in breadth and height That formed the great hall's pride, seemed underlined As if by shadowy finger-prints of force That snatched all from the hamlet at its base ! Idem. AMERICA Our native land, we love it. 'T is Freedom's own, where reign No tj'-rants throned above it O'er serfs that wear their chain; Where birth and wealth to worth give way, And none in camp or court have sway. Except as all ordain. America, Our Home. AMERICAN WOMEN Our waiting friends, And, grouped with them, some ruddy German maids Whose deeper hues but finely rimmed with shade The subtler beauty of our special hosts. These came from out that western world wherein. By fresher breezes and by brighter suns. The Saxon tissue, sweeten'd and refined, Unfolds, each season, more ethereally. Ideals Made Real, xv. AMIABLE LOVERS It 's strange that the most amiable people are the very ones that you girls seem to like the least. .... Wewant to have people like us not on account of their own good traits, but on account of ours. Where Society Leads, i. ANGELS Ay, ay, as blest as the angels are That over her pathway hover, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 13 Whose heaven is truly sweeter far Because they feel they love her. A Life in Song: Loving, xxi. ANGER {see WORDS PASSIONATE) Were anger wise, The face that would its force disguise Would not so blush to feel it rise. Idem, Doubting, iv. another's None from another's practice gains in skill, ^ Or grows in power of feeling, thought, or will; None with another goes to God in dreams To seek the strength that his lost strength redeems. Midnight in a City Park, ANTICIPATION A coming glory casts a glow before it. Those who shall be the lords of f owldom gobble A gobble at times before their gills are grown. The Aztec God, iv., i. appearance, JUDGING BY Where there are so many who think that eyesight is the spring of thought, our plans for them can be the best made good, when we present them with a good appearance. You see, if we dress up, and they suppose we always keep dressed up, 'tis not our fault. We have but done what everybody does; and they have not had wit enough to know it. On Detective Duty, li. appearance vs. substance in a witness In a witness, one should not forget that words, like wine, are valued less for what they really are than for their fiask and label; and so the best thing one can do for others is in appearance, often, and not substance. The Two Paths, 11. appearances, NOT DECEPTION TO ALL I tell you these men know the world. To them white faces are no signs that show white souls. For them no tears can wash away from cheeks the colors painted on them by the heart. Idem. APPEARANCES PUT ABOVE ESSENTIALS Henceforward, though you know a bush be poison, 14 A POET'S CABINET Bid men come pluck and gorge its pretty berries; And, if all die, expect no blame for it — You have but carried out the kind of thought With which heaven filled the kind of mind Hke yours. Dante, ii., i. APPETITE The worst of prisoners is a soul Severed from its own realm by appetite That lets naught pass that pays no toll to greed. Mere soulless brutes are better than are men With souls that love but that which they can lust for. The Aztec God, iv., i. APPETITE, NEVER SATISFIED Men are never satisfied with things as they are. When their throats are dry, they wet them with a drink; and when they are wet, they dry them with a smoke. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i., 2. APPETITE, TO TEMPTER OF If I gulp not the feast you gorge me on, And bury all my soul beneath the spoils Of foul and glutton appetite — why then I will not prove the bloated beast you wish. The Aztec God, iv., i. APPLAUSE *T is not the accent of this world's applause That marks the rhythm of the songs that fill Heaven's vault, and, with their sweetness, well-nigh still The wings of angels, tempted then to pause. Staking All. .... Ah, yes, as I remember, when I left, I roused a noise too. .... You have roused one now That all the world will hear. .... You never praise A wind, because it makes the sea- waves roar: It may be empty, and it may do harm. A man should judge men's noises at their worth. Columbus, IV., I. APPLAUSE, AS A LIFE's REWARD Her soul had loathed applause, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 15 Had found her nature so belied, misjudged, Her life the embodiment of hollow sound, And all surroundings echoing back but sound, Chill admiration in the place of love. Her friends but flatterers, and herself unknown. Ideals Made Real, LXix. APPRECIATION The sun may find Its image in the dullest pool. Cecil the Seer, i. APPRECIATION, THE WORLD's LACK OF A nation has been made the first on earth. Who made it this, for this deed has been made The last in all that nation — not one shred Of all his property, or power, or rank, Stripped by injustice from him, when well proved To be injustice, has been given back. A new world has been found of boundless wealth ; And he who found it, finds himself a beggar. A king and queen were throned o'er that new world. Who throned them there, they seized and bound in chains. Columbus, v., 2. APRIL-DAY, AN Can I forget That wondrous April day that set me free? At first, as though I own'd no soul at all, I seem'd myself a part of that wide air. And all things else had souls. The very earth Beneath me seem'd alive! its pulse to throb Through every trembling bush! its lungs to heave Where soft-blown wind-sighs thrill' d the wooded hills! And then, this great life broke in many lives, All one through sympathy. In lieu of clouds. The gusty breeze caught up the fluttering lark And shook down showers of trills that made bare rocks More sweet than fount-spray 'd flowers, while all the leaves Went buzzing on their boughs like swarming bees. Haydn, viii. 16 A POET'S CABINET ARGUMENT VS. TESTIMONY It is no one's business, in this world, to pound away with arguments until he has exhausted his own breath, or benumbed the brain of the one who differs from him. It is his business to testify to the truth; and then to have faith enough in it and in God to leave it to do its own perfect work. Art and Morals. ARISTOCRACY Away with all the forms in state or church That aid the aristocracies of earth; And make men rate the bad or good they search By outward accidents of rank or birth. Away with honoring spirit less than station. And crowning men for blood, and not for brain; With testing worth by garb or occupation: And letting vice by might maintain itself, and reign. A Life in Song: Serving, lii. ARMFUL Oh, one could give a world of common men For just one armful of a man like that! Dante, i., 2. ARMS, A child's Her little arms about my neck seem adding to my life as much of beauty and of sweetness, too, as does the vine whose tendrils cling about the mouldering trunk of our old oak. On Detective Duty, i. ART Works of chisel, brush, and pen. Fit to body forth the thoughts breathed into them by Godlike men. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxv. ART AND BEREAVEMENT OGod, To save one's art must love be sacrificed? — Redeem'd at that price, art would be too dear ! Haydn, LV. ART AND NATURE You know there were no art, were there no forms Of nature in which art could frame its tribute. But many an artist, for this reason, fears SELECTED QUOTATIONS 17 To emphasize the part he finds in nature Lest it outdo the part he finds in self; So often that which seems most natural The one thing is that he will not let seem so. Dante, i., i. We read of truth who spell from nature's page ; And art can best make out the meaning there ; For 't is the artist's thought that finds each form A form of thought,' — imagination's glass That views the infinite in the finite fact. Here moves a man, you say. What see you?— man? — Nay, nay; that guise material fashions there The image only of his manliness. And you can only know his hfe within, As from the image you imagine it. Yon Uttle girl that skips beside the porch, — I know her, love her, not, save as I pass Behind that face to reach a region rare Where dolls are sentient babes, and brothers kings. And yonder maidens, musing in delight, I know not, love not, till, in sacrifice, My spirit seems to yield to their desires, To wait a watchful servant unto them. To move with motives that inspire their deeds, To look through their own eyes and see their views, And thrill with rhythm when their ear-drums throb ; Then, joining all with all, imagine thus The movements of their hidden inner moods. . Thus too, through all of life, how know we more? All things are fitful images alone. Reflecting glory from the Absolute; And he who can imagine from the part What marks the whole, walks in the light of heaven. Find then a life where every child becomes Earth's animated toy of manliness. Each man the mass from which to mould a god. And earth the pit whence all heaven's wealth is mined, You find for thought a life worth living for, A life the artist gives us: it is he Discerns a spirit always veil'd in shape, A soul in man, and reason everywhere. Ideals Made Real, xxxi. 18 A POETS CABINET ART AND TRUTH When emotion swells and shrinks, The spirit's wings are moving, . . . And that art moves them most, which mirrors most The life that is, and therefore is the truth. Idem. ART, ITS INFLUENCE ON CHARACTER And things there are that art can do for man To make him manlier. Not the senseless rock Is all it fashions into forms of sense; But senseless manhood, natures hard and harsh, Great classes crush'd, and races driven to crawl Till all their souls are stain' d with smut and soil, — More human seem these when the hands of art Have grasp 'd their better traits and hold them forth. And men who see these better traits, and see The tender touch of art that holds them forth, Behold a beauty never else beheld; And all their hearts beat more humanely while They heed the plea of these humanities. Idem, XLVII. ART, MAKING THE IDEAL REAL The Sistine Babe it was, we spoke of Him. Because I find art's glass, when rightly held, Revealing through the real the truth ideal, I said: "I seem to see not only Him, The Babe, but back of Him, His heavenly home. I seem to enter this — His handmaid there, And there commune until my soul is blest." I said : ' ' From thence my spirit seems to come, And feel its arms to be the throne of Christ. And this," I said, "is wrought for me by art. Some hold that souls transmigrate after death. But art," I said, "makes mine transmigrate here." Idem, XVI. ART, MODELLED UPON NATURE And truth is in nature, nor dealt second-hand Through art, though most artful to fill the demand. So think of the present, its deeds and its dreams. As Raphael thought, but not Raphael's themes; Nor be a Venetian to picture like Titian A woman to worship or goddess to kiss. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 19 You are a new- world's man: model from this. The Artist's Aim. ART, NEW PHASES OF The wants of the present, one never can gauge By the heathenish tastes of a heathenish age. The mummy lived once, and spoke as it ought. We moderns, forgetting its life and its thought, For lost art sighing, too oft re-array What is only a corpse, and ought to decay. E'en if it were living, long centuries fraught With progress in action and feeling and thought Outgrow the old charms, and make the world crave New phases of art that the past never gave. Idem. ART, SUGGESTIVE OF THE HIGHEST TRUTH If the mere forms of nature can suggest the infinite, the eternal, the absolute, and much, also, with refer- ence to the character of the Life of which these are attributes, then the forms of art, even though they be, as is sometimes the case, no more than imitations of those of nature, can do the same. The Representative Significance of Form, 11. ART, THE, OF LIFE The ideal! Henceforth our aim be this, — the art of life. I saw it not before; the stage of spirit So much more broad is than the stage of sense! Comes on the soul now, actor, all divine. At play no longer; nay, but shadowing forth A love complete that personated a God I Ideals Made Real, Lxxiv. ART vs. NATURE, ENDURING INTERESTS OF The works of human art may lose their charm. The picture, statue, building, wear no mail That can resist the subtle shafts of time. Their brightest color fades, their bronze corrodes. Their carving crumbles, and their marble falls. Oft, too, when one has wandered far from home. And craves the things he once thought wrought so well. The soul's enlargement of the treasures missed That each may fit a niche of larger longing Will make all seem, when seen again, but small, 20 A POETS CABINET And, tested by the touch of present fact, But fabrics of a dream conjured by fancy. Not so with works of Nature. Years that pass May make the field more brilliant with more flowers, The ore more precious, and the cave more vast, And every mount, at our renewed return, Soar higher like thick smoke above a flame Fanned into ardor by the panting breath Of fleet-sped winds that rush to its embrace. Greylock. art's proof Art's proof is in the setting. Judge by that. For a Book of Contributions from Authors. ASCETICISM That slattern of the soul. Asceticism, shuffling toward far bliss, Slipshod and snivelling? — Ideals Made Real, xlix. What of those Who deem it wise to keep themselves in shade, Held as a shield to ward away the light With every ray of color that might reach them, As if they thought it their worst enemy? Cecil the Seer, i. ASCETICISM CARICATURED Who ever saw thee decked in vain attire? Or thee not grave and gray? Or heard thee romp? Or thee hilarious? Or found thee once the toj^ of giddy fancy? Or thee, of disconcerted calculation? None ever ! — Yet I fear this path. — I thought I heard — and oh, I dared then listen twice ! — I thought I heard strange singing — .... Birds? — I thought I saw — and oh, I dared then look there twice ! — I thought I saw a wicked, grinning ape. .... Hush, hush! Think not of these things. Nay, but think Of things that God hath made. Idem, ii., 2. The colors on the leaves, the very sky, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 21 Seem sadly gay. .... Oh, do not look at them! They glow to tempt the lusting of the eye. Idem. ASPIRATION A wingless hand Lifts only to a wingless height. A r61e Not past the common reach of common men Cannot incite uncommon aspiration. The Aztec God, iv., i. Our aspirations, which, as grandly they evolve, Light the brow of meek conjecture with the flush of bold resolve. A Life in Song: Dreaming, ii. they know, when aspiration sweeps them onward through the sky. That the outward Hfe could never give the inward life the lie; Know no heaven would draw them on, or give them power to heed its call. If indeed the love and duty due to earth were all in all; Know no soul could ever tremble, touch'd as by an organ's key, If the spirit's life that touch'd it were a life that could not be ; Know no soul could dream a dream set free from all that flesh can bind, If within were naught to vibrate, like to like and kind to kind. Idem, Watching, xxvil. Oh, have you never felt within the soul Desires that search far off in thoughts that steal All rest from sleep through dreams and revery; As if the spirit in its loneliness Were haunted by some long-lost sympathy, And struggling to regain the sunder'd state? — Deem not to end these wants by earthly gains. While seeking them, the boy would be a man, Maids blush for maidenhood, and lovers kneel, Then fiercely strive for wealth and power and fame. But, tho' they know it not, they ever strive For gains that loom beyond their earthly sphere, 22 A POET'S CABINET Until their wasted energies give way, Or mount earth's thrones to feel they rule, alas, Like Alexander, only vanity. For ah, their spirits crave the Infinite, Nor can be sated save by that embrace Which makes them one with God. A Life in Song: Doubting, xli. ASPIRATION AND HUMAN LIMITATIONS The while my soul has longed to rise Successfully as field and clifi and tree To heights where one could dwell above a world Whose common life appeared but all too common, Its aims too low for love to seek and honor. And yet a world in which my own self, too, My body, spirit, all, bore part and share. West Mountain. ASPIRATION OF THE SPIRIT There is one only mission fit for man, — To be a spirit ministering to spirit, What fits for this? — A breath of higher sky, A sight of higher scenes, at times, a strife To mount by means impossible as yet. What then? — Believe me that the spirit-air, Like all the air above the soil we tread, Takes to its own environment of light No growth to burst there into flower and fruit That does not get some start, and root itself Amid this lower world's deep, alien darkness, — No spirit uses wings in heaven that never Has learned of them, or longed for them, on earth. Berlin Mountain. ASPIRING Earth only shoos or shoots a bird ; To draw its wealth, it yokes the herd. — But few are those not tiring Of natures too aspiring. The common leaders of the day Amid the common people stay. Who but confide In those that guide Along the common way. The Idealist. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 23 ASS A grazing ass that kicks but grass Has tricks that yet may kill. How Barton Took the General. ASSOCIATES, EVIL Lay hands on me, not I alone will have A score of masters. Look you to your mates. You pledged yourselves to stand together? What? — Have you, or you, no foe in all this crew? And now you place your life in that foe's hands? When all he needs to raise himself in Spain Is telling truth? — no more? — Humph! Will he not tell? Ay, kill me, drown me, I shall be avenged. When bad men band, then traitors fill the camp; And, if a fair foe fail, the foul will not, For in that fight are God and devil both. Columbus, III., 2. ASSOCIATION Nothing keeps a man from going down like trying to keep side by side with those who are high up. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, 1. ATTIC My attic here That shields me like a soul in clouds. When one has left the grave's white shrouds And crawHng worms that gnaw'd his heart. Ere he and things of earth did part. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxxii. ATTRACTIVE Have you observed which maid it is that proves The most attractive to the most men? • • • • No. Tell which? Yes, tell us. .... Why, of course, the one The most attractive to the most of them. You see that most men are such apes They never know which girl to go for next, Until they see where some one else has gone. The Aztec God, iii. 24 A POETS CABINET AUTUMN (see FALL and mountain view) AWE When we disembark Our hands will plant the cross just where we land. And now — you seem exultant — I confess To awe like that which Moses must have felt When God's own hand had touched him as it passed. I cannot stand — nay, let me kneel with you. Columbus, III., 2. BABES But babes in homes, like buds that bloom in bowers, Keep out the sunlight but with hues that hold it there. A Life in Song: Serving, xv. All men are babies of a larger growth ; and take our good things as these do a bath. They shrink from it, at first, but forced to it, they feel so good they know how good are we who give it to them. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. BACHELOR And I confess that, while this light of love Plays lambent round so many glowing lips, I feel as chill, and lost, and out of place, As one lone dew-drop, prison'd in a shade Of universal noon. Ideals Made Real, v. He was not loath to be left there with the ladies; and, while he was left there, you may rest assured that he did not slight his opportunities. His eyes, as became one fresh from a school in which he had been trained to watch the acts of those each side of him, were working vigorously. He had noticed soon the sizes of these young ladies' hands and arms, and how they used them; the backs of their heads, and how they had done up their hair, as well as many other little arrangements and adjustments, traits and graces, that can be revealed best when a woman is at work, and which, when they have been revealed to a bachelor, are apt to make him feel that he has been placed on a footing of especial intimacy with her. Modern Fishers of Men, II. BACK, TURNING ONE's A generous mind is never loath to face SELECTED QUOTATIONS 25 The object of its benefaction. No ; Had all that they have done been kindly done, They would not thus have turned their backs upon me. The Aztec God, iii. BAD, LET LOOSE When you tap your bad, it flows like tides from flooded dykes — to loose an endless ocean. To be safe, one ought to dam himself up at the start. On Detective Duty, iii. BAD, THE, HARMS MORE THAN THE GOOD HELPS It seems as if our good deeds all are written against the light of heaven in light; and few, and often none, can see them. Bad deeds are written there in black; and one spot makes a blotch of all things. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. BALANCE If off his balance, balance him, ay, ay — Get even with him — no great task for you! Columbus, II., 2. BALANCED CONTRARIES OF MOODS My moods moved on, — life's usual way. The mainspring sped by balanced contraries, And every pulse, whose beating proves we live, Anon with deathlike voids alternating. One hour, my faith in her was like the sun. The next, my doubt was Ughtless as the night. Ideals Made Real, xxiv. BANISHMENT Did you ever dream A fate like mine? — a civic leper, Cino, Turned out of his own home because a pest; And then declared a pest to every home That still would welcome him. This final blow, It snaps the only staff remaining now From which my soul could wave a single signal. Worse off am I, than were a soldier slain, Ay, than a traveler in a tiger's den. If but these limbs were plucked out, one by one, I were not doomed to live on then alone. An alien to all comrades, conscious ever That to oppose the currents coursing round 26 A POET'S CABINET Were vain as efforts of mere spurting spray To still a surging ocean. Oh, my God! — To live, yet be too frail to do the work That makes a life worth living! Dante, III., 2. BARD, COMIC Or when sad souls the wine would quaff Of mirth brimm'd bubbling o'er with laugh, What sparkling draughts in their behalf, The comic bard comes bringing! And ever, round the social board. As full the foaming pledge is pour'd, See how good- will the heart could hoard Is lavish'd with the singing. A Song on Singing. BARKING This devil's cur, abuse, Is ever barking at my heel, Provoking sighs I should conceal, And making all my reason reel. A Life in Song: Doubting, IV. BASHFULNESS You have such awful eyes. They hush him so his inward soul stops thinking: And then his outward mien plays pedagogue And whips himself to make himself behave. Dante, i., i. Just think how hot he must be in his heart To make him warp and shrink up as he does When you come near. Idem. BASHFULNESS OF LOVE Love, like God, So brightly dear is it, that lives like ours. Poor vapory lives, mere dews before the dawn. Dare not to face it lest we melt away? Haydn, xvi. BASHFULNESS, THE SOURCE OF INSULT Because my soulless will has made me brute. And kept me staring like a pointer-cur As if to turn to prey the very one I most revere, must then my voice, forsooth. Bark out an insult in the same direction? Dante, i., I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 27 BATTLE {see war) And not for self, but others, True men to battle go. No longer meek, Where wrong is cruel, right is weak, Or aught has brought the base to band, — They throng to lend a hand. Cecil the Seer, ill., 2. BATTLE WITH BOW AND ARROW We just had drawn otir bows, each arrow aimed To wedge eternal stillness in between Unhinging joints of some affrighted heart, When down upon us burst that thunder-flash. The shock, so sudden, glanced the arrows up As if to shoot them in the face of gods Asail the clouds in yon black gulf. It gave Their men their chance. With one wild yell and bound They closed like smoke about the lightning's fire ; And, all with darts whirled on like sparks before A flame that followed, they came roaring on To fill the gaps their shots had made. The Aztec God, i. BAY And reach the wharves, and watch the water still, Or ships about it sail'd with subtle skill. Long charm 'd he knew not why ; and there would stay Till sunset's fire his glowing heart would thrill. Whose throbs within seem'd felt as far away As bells' whose echoes broke like breakers round the bay. A Life in Song: Daring, lvii. BEAU Some women like a man that truckles to them, — a beau that bends the way that he is pulled. But in a modern camp the thing most needed is not a how, I think, but bayonet. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. BEAUTIFUL Ay, sometimes things may be so beautiful, And fill the spirit with such holy thrills, To doubt their truth were kin to doubting God, 28 A POET'S CABINET When face to face with his own blazing presence. Dante, ii., 2. BEAUTIFUL, THE, SUBJECT TO TEMPTATION Ghouls Hke her can never look on what is beautiful without a strange, unconscious jealousy that turns what, in a pure mind, would be love to morbid hatred, hankering to play hell. Their ways would almost warrant joy in heaven when all were singing impre- catory psalms. The Two Paths, in. BEAUTY (see IDEAL and ideals) Nothing of sweetness can fill the air, Nothing of beauty bloom. Save as visions of life more fair Over the spirit loom. Musician and Moralizer. Ever5rthing in art or nature, robed in rich or rude attire, Gains in beauty while it gains in power to lure a pure desire. Surface claims may charm the senses, but the spirit from its throne Waives away all other suitors for what charms itself alone. A Life in Song: Dreaming, 11. All beauty changes what it brightens. A flower that blooms may merely fall to soil, But, when it does, the soil to which it falls Is never quite the same it was before. Dante, 11., 2. No beauty was ever revealed in art Where rhythm and tone or color and line Did not combine; And beauty of life was never one's own Who, when he had sought it, sought it alone. Love and Life, l. The dim-veiled beauty of God's holiness Looms always through art's holiness of beauty. In the Art Museum. I judged Your spirit by the beauty of its body ; And that seemed so at one with what I fancied I could not doubt that it would prove at one — SELECTED QUOTATIONS 29 Could we but know each other, through and through — With all my soul that had conceived the fancy. Dante, iii., i. Henceforth, let beauty's beams but gleam for me, I shall not shun them, as has been my wont, But make my eyes a sun-glass for my heart, And let them burn it. Ideals Made Real, v. Can her eyes have ever beheld my frame, Transfigur'd by a glow From foot to face Of beauty and grace. As I see her? — Yet the halo came. Or she had not lov'd me so. A Life in Song: Loving, xliv. The hands of beauty when they touch and thrill us All leave their imprint on ideas, and thus We get ideals. ^ Dante, i., i. In realms of right With no such charms is wrong indued ; All beauty is the halo bright, The coming glow of God and good. Her Haughtiness. BEAUTY, THE ULTIMATE, SOUGHT BY ART But, sure As days roll up the sun, an hour must come When blazing blasts again shall shake these peaks. Shall pile them higher, level them to plains, Or melt them back to primal nothingness. Meantime their mission shall be what it is : To teach the world, not rest but, restlessness, — The aspiration and the aim of art That will not bide contented till the law Of thought shall supersede the law of things. And that which in the midnight of this world Is but a dream shall be fulfilled in days Where there is no more matter, only mind. And beauty, born of free imagination, Shall wait but on the sovereignty of spirit. West Mountain. BEAUTY, WHEN COMPLETE AND IDEAL Beauty is complete and ideal in the degree only in 30 A POETS CABINET which those results of it attributable to effects upon the ear or eye are combined with those attributable to effects upon the mind. Art in Theory, xiii. BEES, BUZZING Men swarm'd, like bees, to buzz before, Prepar'd to die, they stung. The Lebanon Boys in Boston. BELGIUM The snappish gales that fret the channel's waves Whirr'd soon the traveller toward the Belgian shore; Whose belfries peal each hour that labor craves Full half an hour before the hour is o'er. What thrift her fields evince! her art what beauty! But would her strong, rough Rubens had but guess'd The joy a wise man finds, as well as duty, In making art portray fair nature at her best. A Life in Song: Serving, XLii. BELLOW, BRAINS THAT These brains that bellow so about their pains, Prove mainly their own lack of brawn to bear them. Dante, i., i. BELLS OF THE TOWN Then, when the morn was breaking. On every hill and plain, In all the towns, we toll'd the bells, That all began with doleful knells, As though for Freedom slain. Anon, they rang out madly What might have peal'd to be The land's alarm-bell — only now They peal'd to hail the new-born vow Of men that would be free. Our First Break with the British. BENEVOLENCE SHOULD NOT BE UNLIMITED .... Why, he's given his property away. .... Given everything away? .... Oh, no; not everything! Not such a fool as that! Not such a sponge, either! To live at the expense of the public in an almshouse makes a man as much of a public nuisance as to live in the same way in a palace. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 31 .... But, in this case, the judgment involves what seems rather compHcated. You are not choosing between povertj^ — or, say, sociaHsm — on the one side, and wealth — or, say, aristocracy — on the other side. You are trying to take a Httle from both sides. .... Yes; because both sides are made up of parts, and I don't think my judgment will have done its perfect work until it has tried to distinguish be- tween some, at least, of these parts. A rational mind discriminates and selects, and discards only what's of no use. Well, I try to be rational. So, on the one hand, I don't accept socialism as a whole; because I believe in personal responsibility. I think every man has a right to the stimulus that comes from knowing that his own diligence and thrift will obtain for him certain possessions that he can call his own ; and can keep as his own; and, by and by, when unable to work, can use for the support of himself and his family. But, pn the other hand, I'm not an aristocrat because I believe in communal responsibility — for others. I think no man has a right to excessive wealth, to put into his own coffers what is needed for the support of his fellowmen and their families. Hoarding up money beyond what one can use is Hke hoarding up fruit in the same way. It tends to rot. It makes the indi- vidual self-centered, inconsiderate, mean, immoral. It_ makes the community lose faith in republican in- stitutions, and fail to practice that love of humanity which underlies these institutions. What Money Can't Buy, iv. BEREAVED Then think not love is mortal, or can die. No floods can flow but it has power to brave, Too near in nature to the heaven on high, To sink resistless in an earthly wave, More strong than death, bereaved of loved ones living, True love will aim anon for all men's good ; For this its thought, time, strength, and substance giving,— Ah, could it find an aim sublimer, if it would? A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxv. 32 A POET'S CABINET BEREAVEMENT (see AFFLICTION and TROUBLE) Whatever the promise of rest or of toil, There never can be an earthly soil, But flood and earthquake tear; There never can be an earthly air, But wind and lightning rend. Vain then to think of an earthly friend Whose love and help can last ! For all, whenever their day be past, The air they breathe, the soil they tread Will close in a coffin and leave them dead. Love and Life, xvi. I brought back not alone what books could give, But in myself a sense of others' wants, — For in my heart a wondrous wealth of love; Ay, wealth it was; though, like the ore in mines, It only proved that that which lived had died. What though my life, complete with her alone, Seem'd always rent? a weight of broken quartz That only gleam'd where it had fractur'd been? That weight was wealth that sparkled back to greet Each glance of sunshine. Ideals Made Real, lxv. BEREAVEMENT, LOSS OF A CHILD (see CHILD) How sad when the one we had led by the hand Who had looked to us for every demand Of body or soul has gone to the grave. And we must live, not die as we crave, But watch him pass to the sunless gloom Beyond that mile-stone mark of the tomb. And, led by those whom never he knew, Go journeying on the darkness through. As, all alone. He makes his quest For a home to own In the land of the best. Love and Life, XLVI. BIAS (see prejudice) Help on no ways nor words that extol The vise of a bias that binds the soul; No rank held up by holding down Caused that our school's head, Already nodding o'er his noonday pipe, Should catch at sever'd dreams with one nod more. And so consent to our dreams. See page i SELECTED QUOTATIONS 33 True worth as an underling stript of his crown; No cause with a He For a party-cry To catch the low or to cotu-t the high; No Hfe with a creed That ends all the need Of knowing or growing in thought or deed. — Weigh well their worth ; true dawnings of light Can abide your waiting and grow more bright. Weigh not, you prove the trend of my thought Yotu" soul is a slave to be sold and bought. Whatever the Mission of Life may be. BIGOTRY {see CHARITY and modern) .... Eyes, they say, Made free to roam round all the world of thought Find views too strange .... To those not free to roam? — Who envy what they cannot see themselves? .... They say such hate what does not aid reHgion. .... Aid whose, and what? — their own? — and are they sure They do not make their own selves lords, forsooth, Because they wish to lord it over others? Cecil the Seer, i. BIG THING, TRYING TO LIFT A No one ever tried to Uft a big thing, who didn't risk its falling back on him. On Detective Duty, I. BIRD, IN A SNOW STORM Whirred like the moulting wings of some vast swan. The snow-blast broods above the landscape drear; But through the wild wind shivers, high and clear, The call of one lone bird that sings anon. Sing on, thou child of warmth and light, sing on! I know thy loneliness, I know thy cheer. Thy call will never bring one comrade near, Nor make the world about less chill and wan. But, oh, no tempest can outblow, sweet bird. Those drafts thine ardent spirit draws to bring The breath of heaven to fill thy trembHng breast. So thrilled to voice the world's Creator's word ! The Solitary Singer. 34 A POETS CABINET BIRDS OF PREY .... Show US, as I think, Birds of another^ s feather — birds of prey. .... In praying they do priest's work. . . . . Yes; in that — And making mortals humble. One with aught To plume himself on, will not go unplucked. Columbus, II., 2. BIRTH {see heredity) When the world began. What gave it light Was the touch of love's electric might. That touch still brings, in the heavenly plan The spark of the spirit that makes man man. His life all starts in a flash of light, A gleam of glory, blessed and bright. The while within him is lighted a fire Where burns forever the soul's desire; And all he owns that gives him worth Is that inward glow that shines for earth. And shows the love that gave it birth. Love and Life, xxxix. BITTERS No fetes are feasts with every course alike; And all fare better who begin with bitters. The Aztec God, i. BLADE Dull not the blade that carves at your own feast. Columbus, I., I. BLIZZARD With a scowling sky blue-black from a blow, And the whur of a giant in skirts of snow. The blizzard came howling ahead. The Blizzard. BLUSH Or blush anon with inward kindled fires To feel the flatteries breath'd from women's lips. A Life in Song, Note v. Why, too, had she flush'd? — What subtle weapon had been used to cut Beneath the surface of her mien, and bring The heart-blood from its core? Ideals Made Real, xxv. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 35 BOARDING And you now — you are living with him here? .... Yes, living! — Did you think that we were boarding? Cecil the Seer, iii., i. BOARDING HOUSE FOR SERVANTS, A RICH MAn's HOME .... I should give up French cooking rather than run the risk every week of having a French revolution in my basement. .... Yes; but John .... John's our old family butler, absolutely honest and faithful. .... But the cook says he '11 leave if John stays. .... But John — why John mM5^ stay. .... Now you see the trouble you make? . . . . / make? Oh, no mother, you make it. — Well, then, perhaps, both of us make it. We do it by trying to run a boarding-house for a lot of half -worked people whose resources of thought or feehng are ex- hausted the moment hands and feet cease pumping in order to fill them. A lazy booby wags his tongue for the same reason that a lazy dog wags his tail; and he lashes mdiscriminately whatever happens to be near. No wonder there are rows in the kitchen. What Money Can't Buy, iii. BOARDING HOUSE IN A COLLEGE TOWN They act like a set of students in a college-town boardmg-house. They are away from home, and feel that they are not responsible if they fail to keep up the home-standard of respectability. Where Society Leads, I. BODIES {see frame) Men may be best as they are; Our bodies may lenses be To focus a light with a source too far For earth its rays to see; And but for the finite forms we love We never might know of the light above. A Life in Song: Loving, xv. BONDSMAN The one that everybody's bid can bind Is everybody's bondsman. Columbus, i., 2. 36 A POETS CABINET BOOKS Again, desires that spurr'd his eager mind Would dash it through the lines of some chance book, Much thought to seize, and much to leave behind. Alas, how many truths did he o'erlook! How many rich-robed lies for guides he took! How dazed grew hope, that follow'd in the track Of forms that vanished ! how his conscience shook. Charged by each innuendo's base attack, Smooth-tongued as knaves are when they stab behind one's back! A Life in Song: Daring, lviii. BOOKS, HYPNOTIC IN EFFECT Some men who always keep their minds on books see only what their writers have described; or when they think, think like hypnotic subjects whose ravished eyes yield sight to breed suggestion. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. BOTTLES, men's BODIES LIKE Men's bodies are like bottles; their heads on top like corks that seal the contents. If you can only fill the body up with what can make the whole thing be light-headed, one little shake will leave the contents stale as popped champagne — with no life left in it except what can be used for your own purposes. On Detective Duty, ii. BOUQUET Only the stalks of an old bouquet, Colorless, faded, gone to decay, — Still they are dear for the joys they bore While they were blooming in days of yore. A Life in Song: Loving, I. For one who would himself be here, And for ourselves who hold you dear. We come, fair maid, to welcome you. For sun-bright eyes like yours we grew. For cheeks like yours, with ardor meet. Would flush, aglow their glow to greet; And up to you, our fragrance rare Is breathed from lips that burst in prayer. Our goddess dear, our sister sweet, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 37 This meeting leaves our lives complete. Now dew may fail, or frost may sear, We fade, we die; but have been here. What the Bouquet Said. BOY {see CHILDREN and youth) But I would blend the purity Of her whom I adore With manly power for mastery And promise yet in store. So I would take the boy who roams Toward life, half understood, From thresholds of those holy homes That face alone the good; — A boy who has not reach'd the brink Where vice will cross his track. Whose wish that loathes the wish to drink Still keeps the tempter back; — A boy who hardly knows of ill, Or ill can apprehend. With cheeks that blush, with eyes that fill, And faith that fears no end. And oh, I know that those who love The purest part of joy, Would choose with me from all above The heaven that held my boy. A Phase of the Angelic. BOY-FRIENDS The kind was new ; Not human, so angelic. Ay, that soul. As pure as loving, and as fine as frank, I half believe to-day, as I did then. Stood strange amid his comrades of the play As dogwood, wedded to the skies of spring, White in a wilderness of wintry pines. Ah me, could all find all on earth so dear, Christ's work were common. I had died for him. In fact, to shield the rogue, I just escap'd That very fate a score of times or more, Bluft, bruis'd, and battling for him on the green. Ideals Made Real, iii. 38 A POET'S CABINET You know boy-friends are shy: is it a trait, Their shielding of their hearts, that fits them thus For life-tilts of their manhood? — How we two Would rasp each other when the world look'd on! In truth, each seem'd to wear his nature's coat The soft side inward, comforting himself, And turn the rough side only toward the world. If strangers chafed against it, yet oneself And friend were saved this. Idem. BOY-LOVERS OF ONE ANOTHER (see MATE) .... Since we two were boys, The only love that I have felt returned, Has been my love for you. .... And yet they say The love of woman .... Could that satisfy And thrill with aught so true, unselfish, pure? — I worship boyhood, thinking what we were. Dante, ii., 2. In truth, I never see to-day a face Where flash the kindling feelings of a boy, But back of it, I seem to feel the warmth Of Elbert's heart. No school-boy past me bounds But his dear presence comes to leap the years, And rush on recollection, with a force That brings from depths of joy, still'd long ago, A spray as fresh as dash'd from them when first They stream 'd in cataracts. With love like his To flood its brim, my soul appear'd so full That, overflowing at each human touch. Its pleasures could not stagnate. Ideals Made Real, iv. I would that the boy whom thus I knew Had been of her kith and kin. And had shared her earthly nature too With that sweet soul within; For if so, I now could be sure as then That all of my hopes were true; And my faith could join with another's again, . And joy in the strength of two. A Life in Song: Loving, xix. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 39 BOY, WHEN IN LOVE Why, a boy, A boy in love, could not more gracefully Let tumble forth from his embarrassed lips The whole sweet burden of his blushing cheeks, Than he did, pelting, helter-skelter, out Those metaphors at us, to vent his joy In welcoming our own! Cecil the Seer, iii., i. BOYS, NOT SOUGHT FOR .... Some man might want to speak to me, and what should I do then? .... Why, run. Then they would know you were a boy. .... He might run after. .... I should smile! — There's none want boys as bad as that. They don't run after them. We boys are thick as paving stones, and used like them to tramp on. There 's no rush for us, except to rush us off. Ah, Miss, you'll have a lark in these. The lark keeps flying and is safe. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. BOYS THAT SMOKE AND DRINK A boy that smokes at your age and drinks whiskey comes carrying all about him like a weed, an air and odor no one can mistake. The shops avoid him, and the sports decoy him. The Two Paths, iii. BRAHMINISM But on a high, broad cliff his quick gait ceast; And thence, the while he pointed toward the east. My eyes could see — upon a greener field. Swept of the cumbering trees, and half conceal'd By clouds of smoke as white as was its own Pure marble hue — an altar; nor alone. Soon, standing near it, where the air had clear'd A white-robed multitude of priests appear'd. And multitudes about them ranged in line, And multitudes of victims, fowl and kine, And, ever and anon, a listening ear Some vagrant fragments of men's praise could hear. Soft interrupted strains that stroked the air As though vibrations from the wings of prayer. Then, as I sought to learn the cause of all, 40 A POETS CABINET The altar-smoke that, ere this, like a pall Had rested o'er it, rose afar and spread, Like Paribanou's tent, o'er every head, Unfolding far past all foretoken'd size. Yet still the fumes unfolded, till the skies Were black as when that drapery thick hung o'er The pyre of dead Pompeii, lit of yore By her fierce executioner, the grim Vesuvius. Like that did this mass dim All things except its own form hovering Above the earth, and swiftly covering The moon and struggling stars : but lo, ere long 'T was limb'd anew, the while a wind-blast strong Rent from its ragged outlines threatening forms, Whirl'd like tornadoes, torn from clouds in storms. These then, that seem'd o'er half the earth to lower, Were seen to be the arms of some vast power That floated on the air: and soon behold Their fingers far seem'd stretching off to mould The yielding texture of the pliant space. " Now watch, " my guide said ; "while on high they place The stars call'd surges, and the earth, mirtlok. And patals of the lower realm, where flock The evil bands of Nardman. This is he, — Great Brahma, who above the Indian sea Once on the lotus lay, when truth began To gild the dreams of youth, and guide the man. A Life in Song: Seeking^ xviii. BRAWN Say what you may of thought, Man's brawn was given him as well as brain, And there are things to tramp for, things to clutch. And days for doing. They are brighter, too. At times, than nights for dreaming. Dante, ill,, 2. BREED The strength that flows from a soulless mould May bring me a breed, to my cost, Thick-skinn'd, thick-limb'd, with brawn that is bold In a world where love is lost. All hell may hail their brawlings loud, Brute-headed, bull-necked, beast-eyed, — SELECTED QUOTATIONS 41 A herd to make the devil proud Of the way God's wish is defied. Accurs'd of God, and a curse to man, As have ever been all of their kin, Whose lives have only fulfill'd a plan To thwart the spirit within. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxi. BRILLIANCY IN ART We sometimes hear it intimated that a foremost characteristic of the artistic mind is brilliancy. Let us accept this word. Brilliants concentrate and disperse the light. The artist gathers in the truth which is manifested through the appearances of nature, truth which is ordinary to an ordinary mind, and, forcing it through his own limiting but also illuminating individuality, makes it flash forth with illustrating wisdom on all the world about him. The Representative Significance of Form, xiv. BRILLIANCY WITHOUT STABILITY I have known of men Whose thought would flash like Hghtning, Hghting up Half heaven besides the whole of earth; and yet A whirlwind, did you trust to its caress. Would never lead you in a madder dance. Columbus,!., I. BRILLIANT CHANCE It were a brilliant chance! Yes, far too brilliant For moths to meet with, and escape a scorching. No wick-light dazzles him. He knows the sun. Cecil the Seer, i. BRINGING UP, OF BOYS .... No boys like him are wholly bad. . . . .But only not brought up well, eh? .... Are not brought up at all. Truth is are kept down badly. You trample on a growing vine, it grows up crooked. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. BROAD His broad desires in broadest fields would roam, Where'er was worth his nature to attract. 42 A POET'S CABINET While ignorance with him smiled and seem'd at home, And wisdom would not know a trait he lack'd. A Life in Song: Serving, iii. Besides, broad views alone give men offense. What tho' on life's wide sea loom stars and shoals, Both theories for thought and facts for sense? Alas for those whose too well-balanced souls Let not the aspect of but one view draw them! Think you that men will yield to such their trust? Most men are curs, and let small brute- will awe them Far more than great-soul'd thought, however wise or just. Idem, vii. BROOK Anon a brook before my vision spread. It seem'd a path that fairy feet could tread, — A path of silver, o'er a jewell'd ground. Which far away toward heaven-like mountains wound. White mists were clinging to the brook's bright side. Like spirit-bands I thought them, whom its tide Lull'd softly, couch'd amid the dark-leaved trees, Awaiting bugles of the morning breeze. And all the rush of daybreak sweeping by, To bear them off in glory to the sky. Idem, Seeking, iii. BROTHER A man alone? — You yet a brother are To many a soul that sails the sea of life. Where oft the horizon trembles with the change Of wind and wave; and hope, too hale, oft mourns Fair promises, like skies that fade in fog. Ideals Made Real, liii. BRUTES AND THINKERS The surest proof we men are not all fools, Is in the way we bruit them when we find them. .... Ay, and the surest we are not all brutes, Is in the way our thinkers make us mind them. Columbus, I., I. BRUTES, HUMAN A bear, you know, has hair upon his cheek. And growls, and, now and then, stands up and hugs. I like men who can prove themselves no brutes. Dante, i., i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 43 BRUTES VS. REASONING BEINGS A man should use his reason. Are we brutes? .... No ; — worse than brutes when he comes. Brutes, at times, To save their lives, will turn upon a man. But we — five score to one, but all afraid To call our souls our own. Let him appear, We fly like cry-girls from a buzzing bug One touch could crush in no time. Idem, III., 2. BUBBLES Outward gains bring only a show Gleaming in bubbles a breath can blow. All the glitter that ever they make, Flashing or dashing away as they break, All is as nothing, unless men find, Within and without them and broader in kind, The light enlightening soul and mind. Love alone is the sun-bright air. Filling the bubbles, and making them fair, And shining on, when they all have burst, As brightly as when it lighted them first. A Life in Song: Loving, v. BURIED Dying as a stranger dies, And buried like a man to be forgot. Idem, Finale. BUSINESS Business Is like a cyclone, fills our paths with dust And bustle; yet men say it comes to clear them And bring us rest and comfort. Humph! Dante, 11., i. BUSINESS SUCCESS The tides when highest fall the soonest. Success in business depends on buying when others want to sell — so buying cheap; and selling when the others want to buy. The Two Paths, 11. CALL, THE spirit's {see SOUL and spirit) For him who hears anon by day or night the spirit's call. Naught is fitting save to be and do and speak the truth to all. 44 A POET'S CABINET Let the world refuse to heed it, — he at least is not to blame; For the truth still rules his action, and the heavens direct his aim. Let the world with force oppose him, — he may lead a worthy life ; And his words may prove prophetic, tho' his works insure him strife. Let him make mistakes in methods, — who can learn these till he tries? And the world that brings him failure, makes him fail to make him wise. He alone can hope to prosper, who has learned to use the light, Ray by ray, that shows the spirit, step by step, the way of right ; — Only he, who, when his dreaming lures him toward ideals rare. Wakes to gird and venture on, to be, to do, at least to dare. A Life in Song: Dreaming, XLiii. And so, when ceaseless calls appeal, One dare not from them turn away. Nay, nay, he must some work essay, However slight, in every fray. Who blows a bugle, beats a drum, Or jingles rhymes, may rouse in some That spirit which, in truth's grand war, Gains all this life is given for ! Idem, Doubting, xxxvi, Let then the Spirit's voice be heard, Tho' warbling only like a bird Vague sounds that hardly hint a word. The men who hear that call on high, I will believe, if toward the sky They turn, and think that love is nigh. Are bless'd tho' they but heave a sigh. Idem, XLiv. CAP AND BELLS, ATTRACTING ATTENTION You think a fool in cap and bells is not so big a fool as he that never wears the cap and bells, yet wants to get the world's attention. Go on, boy, I will listen. The Little Twin Tramps, ii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 45 CAPTIVES, LED So now they held three captives ; And these, by daggers led. They slipt about the camp and out, As needles flit with thread. "^ How Barton Took The General. CAPTURE OF A CRUISER They came to Fenner's dock; And found, awaiting there. Eight yawls, that Brown had lent the town, In Captain Whipple's care. The crews that mann'd the yawls Had muffled every oar; And they, and men who join'd them then. All told, were sixty-four. Their arms were pick'd with care From all their friends could loan ; And all the yawls, for cannon balls, Were stock' d with paving-stone. They battled wind and tide, Three hours amid the gloom. The midnight pass'd. They saw, at last, The cruiser's bulwarks loom. "Who comes?" her watch call'd out. "Who comes!" her captain cried. Then swift alarm'd, in tones that arm'd, Her crew that toward him hied. "Move off!" her captain roar'd. His pistol aiming well; Then fired — alack! fire answer'd back; He started, stagger'd, fell. And then, as dark and fierce As tidal waves, where fleets Are whelm'd and whirl'd and downward hurl'd Till death their deed completes, Our men, at Whipple's cry, "Up, up!" clear'd every check; And dash'd and leapt and slash'd and swept Across the cruiser's deck. 46 A POET'S CABINET But hold ! — her men were gone. Ours held the deck alone; Their work had done, nor fired a gun; The cruiser's crew had flown. "Surrender here!" rang out; And out the cabin glanced At first a few, then all the crew; Then one and all advanced. The Last Cruise of the Gaspee. CARE What joy to feel that now it all is over! .... All never will be over in this world. The great care passes, but trails lesser cares That aggregate no less of worry. Columbus, IV., I. CARE-TAKING, AND A SENSE OF OWNERSHIP ^ Humph, what a fool a fellow is for being envious of the rich ! — They want to seize this house and smash it. One only owns the thing he keeps. A man might think he owned the world, if everything he saw he tried to keep as safe as when he found it. The Little Twin Tramps, ii. CARICATURE {see donkey) A caricature, when popular, is a conclusive proof that what is caricatured is popularly thought to be ridiculous. When this is something to which all have been accustomed all their Hves, it indicates the skepti- cism that may lead to reformation. The Laws of English Orthography. CATCHING You want to free this fox, eh, for the fun of catching hini again? You want to play your game of hell? A sinner saved, you think, may fall once more? The Two Paths, i. CATHEDRAL VS. CHARACTER AS SOURCES OF INFLUENCE You but wander'd as the lamb; My spotless, worldling-mediator, you! — It wander'd?— yes; it cross'd a threshold chill; A proud cathedral enter'd; there found one Too pleased with what he had, to gaze outside. To him those arches low seem'd high as heaven; And all the sweet and sunny air without. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 47 When strain'd through stain'd and smoke-wreathed window-panes, Gleam'd lurid as were hell. This man spied you: He saw you shun him — leave him. He pursued — Out, past the doorway — and he found God's world^^ So much more broad than walls named after Him!" Ideals Made Real, lxxii. CAUSE, THE "Head. You follow. Should I fall, Move on : my corpse may give At least a vantage ground! Move up: The cause, it is, must live!" Ethan Allen. CAUTION A man who lives for others, not for self, Has Httle fear for self; yet care for them May give him caution. Columbus, iii., i. Our nearest friends, In judging us, our works, not wishes, take, — Works oft as far from what the soul intends As dreamland from the Hfe to which we wake. Full oft our traits that temper it may make Impure the coloring of our purest aim. So need we caution, and for truth's own sake; Lest those who watch love's fire within us flame Shall doubt if it from love or something baser came. A Life in Song: Daring, LXix. CAUTIOUS If when one come to pluck a rose, he finds It grows on thorns, he may become more cautious. Dante, i., 2. CAVALRY CHARGE, A HERO IN A You should have seen him when the battle came. He led the last charge, speeding on a steed Wellnigh as white as was the air it sHd through, His form bent down as if to hurl his head Against their lines, and by sheer force of brain, Burst through them. Faster than the following wind He flew, as if the blast that urged him on Were some last trump of Gabriel's, and the soul Could fear no ills, for it had passed beyond them. Idem. 48 A POET'S CABINET CEMETERY, A The live-oak's bending boughs, gray-draped in moss, Like mourning sentinels, guard the winding ways ; But under them each grave the eye surveys Is wreathed with flowers that breezes gently toss. Ah, if the bowed oaks fitly frame our loss. Beneath them crowd, too, symbols of the bays To crown our loved ones in those far, fair days That nights end not and storms can never cross. Though bodies fail, souls need not meet defeat. Nay, let our spirits rise above like these Blithe birds that, winged from out sweet flowery beds, Soar up and sing through clouds of moss-hung trees, Sing as of dreams of beauty, sure to greet The slumber on which God such beauty spreads. Bonaventure Cemetery, Savannah. There are few kindred places on the earth Where rest as many great men as lie here; Or, in proportion, more men to revere Of those whose learning was outweighed by worth. Not strange then that, at many a household-hearth And student desk, our generation fear To change or question aught these men held dear; As if, forsooth, a saint could need new birth! Princeton Cemetery. CHANGE FOR ITS OWN SAKE And times that do not like a cackling hen. And seek to fill their coops with fowl that crow. Will not get many eggs. Cecil the Seer, i. CHANGE IN ASPECTS OF SPIRITUAL TRUTH {see ADVANCE, PROGRESS, and wisdom) So, when life's last grand sunrise gilds our night. And heaven's wide opening gates flash forth their light. Who knows what forms on earth may be the first To catch the glories that shall o'er us burst? With all our boasts, life is not perfect yet ; Nor are all forms within which truth is met Transparent to reveal its hidden worth ; Nor large enough to hold it, when from earth It springs toward heaven. The safeguards fram'd around SELECTED QUOTATIONS 49 The sprout when first it starts to leave the ground, Now that it presses upward and about And from its narrow frame is bursting out, — Can these that held the twig in, hold the tree? Or think you life a force that can endure, And never change, nor ever grow mature? A Life in Song: Seeking, LI. CHARACTER, DETERMINED BY DOING, NOT FEELING Some men there are have murder in their hearts Through all their lives ; and if they murder not .... They may be rightly numbered with the saints. Not what our lower nature makes us feel, But what our higher nature lets us do, Determines what we are. Dante, 11., 2. CHARITY FOR OTHERS* OPINIONS {see MODERN) Ay, when men desire the whole truth, each one's nature like a chart Shall unfold to show what only all together can impart. Till that time, though those about us vie to be the foes of truth, Let it be its own defender; they will learn in time, forsooth. How much more may spring to light, where only won- dering fancies teem, Than where listlessness in stupor slumbers on with- out a dream ; How much more may be discerned, where love too lightly waives distrust. Than where mad intolerance gags a pleading doubt with naught discuss'd. They will learn that wise men find that minds when trusted most, confess Where are hid the springs of thought which he who moves them needs to press. Learn that those who war with words must heed, ere crown'd with victory, Both the right array'd against them, and the wrong; for charity. First in logic as in worship, leads the mind's trium- phant train. 'T is the Christ, not Aristotle, holds the scepter of the brain. A Life in Song: Watching, xix. 50 A POET'S CABINET CHARM, UNCONSCIOUSNESS OF Unconscious of their charm, the wind-swayed trees Their welcomes wave ; and hills with flower-lined ways Rise dawn-like, and, bedimmed with morning haze Like incense visible, make sweet the breeze. And, all unconscious of their charm as these, The fair, sweet children pass me in their plays, Nor dream that seeing them one joy conveys To me whom they feel no desire to please. Ah, thus unconscious, must each human will Inspire enchantment in a fellow-soul? Vain then to hope that our mere toil or skill Can gain our life or art its lordliest rdle. The spirit's touch that stirs the spirit's thrill Starts in a source too deep for man's control. Unconscious Charm. CHARMER A wretch has come, as vile as he is ugly; And if I were the charmer of a snake, I could not shrink from touch more horrible. Cecil the Seer, i. CHEST How broad his chest is! — Look! — and how it heaves! Hard work, I think, but thrilling work as well, To keep inside of it a spirit grand As his! Dante, i.,2. CHILD {see BOY and youth) While a man can doubt The truth within him, nor show it without, The child holds fast, unfetter'd by lies, A faith that he never has dared to despise, Expression that knows no other control Than that of the Maker who moves the soul, A beauty of wisdom that works to obey A holy, because a natural way; And that may he have that a man may not. Of Such Is the Kingdom. The truth is trite that earthly trust can wend Two ways alone in which 't is ne'er beguil'd: When, journeying with it, moves a like train'd friend Or, this impossible, an untrain'd child. A Life in Song: Serving, xxi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 51 CHILD, A DECEASED {see BEREAVEMENT) Oh, surely love must care For child-life everywhere! Kind hands, they must be there, So soft, so fond! They must keep my child for me, Forever a child to be. Where forever a home I see In the life beyond. In the Life Beyond. CHILDREN More sweet than bursting buds and sprouting grain That bring new life to view when spring draws near; More bright than summer suns that gild the plain. Ere autumn crowns with gold the old grown year; More sweet, more bright to me appear the graces That fill the spring of childhood's opening worth; More sweet, more bright the smiles of kindly faces That in the home make ripe the fruits of heaven on earth. A Life in Song: Serving, xvi. Our children that make our houses anon Weird mirrors in which, with scarcely a blur, Our own lost lives we see as we were. The Last Home Gathering. .... Have you children too? .... Oh no. .... Congratulations! Few things make a slower coach than crowds of passengers. .... No, really no! .... Have known a lot of homes that were so loaded down. Some children climb their parent's knees as parasites climb trees — you never see them for the parasites. On Detective Duty, iii. CHILDREN, REPRESENTATIVE The little children of a house, like little drops of dew, not only flash the light about them, but they image, too, the source from which it comes. So one can read a parent's or a teacher's traits through what the children show by thus reflecting them. Idem, I. 52 A POETS CABINET One hates to have her children tagging round. You know some people always judge us by them, as if they advertised us, like the tags that we forget to cut from our new capes. Idem, in. CHILDREN, SCRATCH OR SPONGE All children, too — too sharp, or else too soft. They either scratch you, or they sponge upon you. .... They give a scrubbing, though, that keeps us clean. The Two Paths, in. children's and parent's thoughts Our children, when we feed and dress them well, may trot along contented where our bodies are leading them, but never where our thoughts. These do not walk but fly; and, where they wing, they leave no tracks behind them. Even those who try to follow can not often do it. Tuition for her Intuition, i. children's views of life Lo, feebly rises A voice that wails, As life surprises And lifts the veils From the eyes of a babe that little prizes An unsought birth In a lone chill earth Where it weeps and wonders what life is worth! The eyes draw back from the points of the light That glance from a world that is all in a glitter. The cheeks to mysteries huge look fright. The swaddling chafes and the cups are bitter. The small hands clutch for motes of the air. For plaits of the dress, for folds of the bed; But the marvels move and mingle and tear, Redoubled by every shred. Soon, limbs that balance the tottering brain Fall down in the pathway damp with the rain ; Or fly with shrieks from the boisterous joys, — The barking and bounding of dogs and boys, And wheels incessantly grinding out noise. And if, indeed, the flowers be sweet. The garden is close to the long, wide street, And all the big houses, and who can they be SELECTED QUOTATIONS 53 The smileless people so stern to see? The lone little being, bewildered by needs And thoughts it can speak not, or nobody heeds, Ah, where can it find any respite or rest, Till cradled, anon, on its mother's breast, Its faith a feeling by none withstood; Its hope that of saints in God and in good. Love and Life, iv., V. CHOICE, FOR LIFE {see CONVERSION, PRIEST, REGENERA- TION) There comes a time that none can escape, When each for himself a choice must make. Must turn to a path that is right or is wrong, And the path that he takes is a path life-long. What though some weak, mild memory know Not the hour nor the day that tested it so? What though some shrink from the woes before With a shock that is never forgotten more? — All noted their paths, and thought of the change Till nothing that came seem'd wholly strange. Love and Life, xvii. CHOOSE, LEARNING TO, AT MATURITY Between youth's immature credulity. That dares to think but what some guardian thinks, And manhood's faith mature that thinks for itself, A realm there is where will must learn to act Through doubt and danger; where the character. First wean'd from oversight, must learn to choose. Then, like a tottering child it yearns to cling To one whose greater power can for it act. Its mood determines that to which it clings. Some girls are giddy : — they embrace a lover And some are gloomy: — they beset a priest. Haydn, XL. CHRIST, THE .... But what then of the Christ? .... Did He not say He lived in spirit ere He lived on earth? — .... He said He came for others. . . . . Do you think A spirit such as His would need to come 54 ^ POETS CABINET For His own good? .... And yet that sacrifice? — .... He sacrificed the spirit-Hfe for Hfe On earth, and Ufe on earth for spirit-life. .... And but fulfilled a common r61e? • ' •' Not common, Did He fulfill our spirit's best ideal; For spirits live in thought. How can they know Of any God beyond their thought of him? .... But if they know the Son? .... They know, at best, A "Son of Man," as well, too, as "of God,"— In spirit one with Him, but not in frame. .... And yet a "Saviour" — .... What inspires, but spirit? — Or saves, but inspiration? He — enough — All must move upward would they find the Christ. Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. CHRIST AND HIS FOLLOWERS Ask me not to limit thus the Christ. How dare I? — ^if our churches teach the truth, If He incarnated the sum of life And spirit of all good, — His holiness His wholeness, and His perfectness, the proof Of what He was? Nor dare I limit those Who follow Him. — Why may they not live His, Not aiming here nor there, but everywhere To make the most of all God meant them for. Ideals Made Real, xlvii. CHRISTLIKE "Whatever your churches or priests may claim, When making their worldly rolls, Those made by God for heaven will name The men that have Christlike souls. " The Religion of Rescue. CHURCH {see form and spirit and worship) A church the home of all that hope has taught, Or faith has felt, or love and grace have wrought. On earthly floods the ark that saves the soul. How blest its halls, and its divine control, Where youths' unfolding natures learn to pray, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 55 And move through Hfe in heaven's appointed way! How blest its reverent rites, — the quiet throng, The pealing organ and the mutual song! And, after praises, prayers, and wise advice, The still walk home, and earthly paradise! A Life in Song: Seeking, xliii. Believe me, whatsoe'er has pass'd away, Of temple-service or of priestly sway, 'T is well the church, our synagogue, remains Wherein each soul from other souls obtains Interpretations, varied with each mood. Of truth that else might not be understood. No single man could know, so Israel thought, The whole mind of the Spirit. Hence each sought To supplement his truth by charity Which heeds what all report. How righteously Could we in all that all men know rejoice! They serve the church who serve the Spirit's voice. Idem, XLV. We are few, but what are numbers? — This church may proof supply That right may move to triumph With only one — to die! The Crown's Fight against the Town^s Right. Or church ! — Must it then crucify the soul To save appearances? the body? form? The Christ gave up all these to save the soul. 'T is treason when His churches join the world, And courting smiles from bigotry appeased, And grinning hell that holds the whole its own, Preach up the crucifixion of the soul To save the body, save the outward form. A church is His no more, whose rites or creeds Keep souls untrue to truth within that shows God's tempering there, the touch that makes man man. Ideals Made Real, lxii. CHURCH, CONSERVATISM OF Come, come, the church is wise, perhaps, to put Her brake on wheels that else might whirl us down. But how about those wheels when mounting up ? Columbus, I., I. 56 A POET'S CABINET CHURCH, ITS INFLUENCE The church can but confirm a fact that is, — A love that lives already in the soul. Not outside hands, though reaching down from heaven, Can push inside of it what is not there. Nor keep love inside, would it then pass out, Dante, i., i. CHURCH UNITY When shall men strive to find a wiser way Of warfare, than, with hostile ranks at bay. To turn from these, and with the corps contend That on their own side their own cause defend? What if corps-colors differ? Loyal hearts May cherish and advance through better arts Their church, — the cause of truth. A Life in Song: Seeking, xlvi. He sought to move mankind Through moving unseen springs of love behind Man's thought and deed. His church, assuredly, Were but like Him if seeking unity Not in the mask that hides whatever strife Disturbs the soul, but in the inward life. — Idem, XLiv. CIRCUMSTANCE On earth men cannot choose their soul's relations, But riding toward success must bridle circumstance. A Life in Song: Serving, xxiii. Give blind men sight. At first their new-viewed sun Will stand still in the heaven. But give them time. That sun will set and rise. Then give them space, Lift them a thousand miles above the soil, It may do neither. Columbus, ii., 3. CITY LIFE Your eternal and infernal grind for gold here is about as deafening as mills are when they pound it from the rocks. .... The city is not still, you think, or slow .... Or comfortable. Take your streets and street cars. All clogging up with crowds that pour down out the twenty stories of your sky-scrapers, a man might better risk his breath and body when SELECTED QUOTATIONS 57 slipping down inside a load of wheat just emptying in a great grain elevator. .... You scarcely seem to like our modern im- provements. .... They do not all improve. The Two Paths, iii. Ay, far from pining after city-life, Where things moved not so slowly, as they said, Our folk had found enough of stir and strife In this more quiet life that here we led. We might but watch the seasons as they sped; Yet some new task or sport gave each its leven ; And, whether suns or storms were overhead, Compared with city-air, all stench and steven. Although outside their world, our own seem'd nearer heaven. A Life in Song: Daring, xxiii. CITY LIFE AND AIR I think the rich should be contented when they own the earth; not try to appropriate all the air as well. .... You like the country air the best then, eh? .... There was a time I did. To-day the country is filled with motors shuttling to and fro, and weaving shrouds of dust and gasoline to bury everything that once was fresh and sweet. The Two Paths, iii. CITY LIFE AND CONCEALMENT .... They still are in the city. .... Why stay here? .... To hide, for one thing. For an active frame, a moving screen is better than a fixture; and there is nothing like a crowd to keep an individual incon- spicuous. Idem. CITY LIFE AND OBSERVATION The stories of a city life are printed in types of many different climes and classes ; and those who often meet strange characters get used to not interpreting their meaning. It would not be so in a little village. Idem. CLASSICAL So I fear, when I see men striving to mold The forms of the new after those that are old, 58 A POETS CABINET While all true life grows better and better, That classical models a modern may fetter. Small virtue has one with no hope in his heart, And little of merit, if none in his art. The Artist's Aim. CLASSICS, THE Let stay thy "classics"! No one not a fool To get new learning need forget the old ; And minds, like fruit-trees, bear their best when grafted. Princeton University. CLEARNESS IN EXPRESSION Shell your thoughts before You fling them at us — are so hard to crack! You surely would not have them crack our skulls? Dante, I., i. CLIMBING VS. JUMPING A man who is always content to climb, never gets along as fast as one who risks an occasional jump ; but he is much less likely to miss his aim and fall. Where Society Leads, I. CLINGING NATURE OF GIRLS But we, poor girls, too trusting natures have. Weak parasites at best, each tall stout man Seems just the thing that we should cling about. But, dear, I think that half these trunks give way: — The wonder is we dare to cling at all! Haydn, xx. CLOTHES AND CHARACTER .... A noble race, who live there in a state Almost of Paradise, their wants but few And nature so profuse — I tell you truth — They neither toil nor spin. .... Nor spin? Why how About their clothing? .... Is not needed. .... What? .... Oh, you get used to that ! .... Then how about — Their character? .... Is not so much a thing Of clothes as Europeans think, perhaps. .... But then SELECTED QUOTATIONS 59 .... The Turks keep faces veiled; turn all The body into private parts — what for? If ill-desire be fruit of thinking, germed In curiosity, to clear away Some underbrush, and let in light might help To blight the marsh-weed, and reveal, besides, Part of the beauty that brought bliss to Eden. .... You mean .... That nothing like a length of robe, Material in substance and in sense, Can stole an anti-spirit-ministry. It bags what heaven made that the world may deem The bag well baited for a game of hell. .... You talk in riddles. . . Read a page or two From human nature, they are solved. Columbus, IV., I. A true lady never is civil to one on account of his dress. For my part, I wish that all men, who ever expect to be married, could get into a woman's clothes before they get into her clutches. .... And what would they find, pray, in there? .... Find, first, a good deal of sham. You know what a maid is? .... What? .... Why, what but a thing that is made ? The Ranch Girl, iv. There are some society women who in character often seem just what they are in appearance. Three- fourths of their substance is dress; and all of the soft sleek satin and silk is on the outside. .... And what on the inside, pray? .... Well, very extensively, pins. Idem. CLOUDS The sunset? — Ah, what comes on earth so bright. So beautiful as clouds? — There were no clouds Where one could always look and see the heaven. Haydn, lvii. CLUB Suppose we club together — ay, let fly Our blows at him together — down him sooner! Columbus, I., 3. 6o A POET'S CABINET CO-EDUCATION .... You would not open then our college-doors To women? .... Why not? .... Why, our boys and girls Might think of love! .... That would be no new thing; And, being wont to walk in love, when young. They might be much less prone to fall in love. In ways not wise, when older. Cecil the Seer, i. .... And you would have them like each other? .... Yes. It seems important if they are to marry. Like ought to go with like. And paths that push Young men and maids together, whet their wits And make their weddings wise ones. Idem. A brotherly or sisterly regard Grows up from family relationship. Train boys and girls together, side by side, As in one loyal household, holding all Humanity, and then, perchance, may love's dishonor Seem foul as incest, and imperilers of it, No longer vehicles of life humane, Unsouled of self-control, all flag themselves The death-trucks that they are, and make health scud From their contagion as from carrion. .... You mean .... The young are not so trained in Spain — Not schooled to know each other, soul by soul, And nothing but the soul can outweigh sense. Columbus, n., i. COLLEGE MEN IN NON-COLLEGE SURROUNDINGS I sometimes regret our sending our boy to college. This having in the same family two kinds of products, — one educated and one uneducated, — is risky — is apt to turn out like our planting together in our garden two kinds of corn. The kind meant to be sweet had too much pop in it, and the kind meant to pop had too much sweet. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 6i COLOR-HARMONY IN DRESSING How did you choose that color for your cape, too? Outside the clouds that veil the suns at evening, I never saw such contrasts as between that cape and skirt; and then, inside of it {handling the cape), with these flaps hanging here Hke Httle doors. I say it is a cute thing in us women to make ourselves all bright and tidy here! It seems a fitting gateway then to that which holds the heart ; ay, ay, and homes our love. The Two Paths, ii. COLUMBUS Is from Genoa; A mathematician, studied at Pavia. Since then, till now, for more than twenty years, A sailor and a soldier — in the scrubs At Naples, Tunis, famous for his fights Against the infidel — last year, the man Who clampt his frailer bark against a huge Venetian galley, and, when both took fire. Driven to the waters, holding but an oar, Swam in to Lisbon ; and that oar of his. All that he brought here, may yet prove to be The scepter-symbol of a mightier sway Than your King ever dreamed of. Columbus, i., I. I can wait forever The light is in me. But could you see through These forms that cloak it, worse than worst of rags, Discourtesy, suspicion, and contempt Of those who know Columbus as the fool? Idem, I., 2. COMIC TREATMENT, DUE TO POPULARITY .... Why, mama has been publicly disgraced. They say the soldiers seized her — knocked her hat lop-sided. Think! And how she must have looked! .... Yes, what a picture for the comic papers! .... The comic papers are but incidents. ^ They mainly make the smile a Httle broader with which we greet a popular favorite. .... They hurt .... Why any more so than the tickling that we give to little children, when we like them? Tuition for her Intuition, ii. 62 A POET'S CABINET COMMERCE Soon shall winds that leave the sky arouse the waves of every strand, And the sails of friendly commerce hail the ports of every land. Soon shall throb the tramp of labor, and the whir of work be wheel'd Where a host of emigration camp on every vacant field ; Where shall wise men aid the unwise; and as hand to hand they toil, Train, anon, the fruits of culture in their souls as in the soil. More and more the host advances, though but lower gains it sought. Bridging vales and felling forests for the paths of love and thought, Making earth a human frame, with ribs of steel and nerves of wire, Destin'd soon to thrill responsive at the touch of one desire. Learning, duty, love, are coming. Toil ye on, aspiring souls. On to where unroll before you, grander methods, grander goals. Comes a day in which the sun shall burn the mists upon the hills, Flame against the frozen summits, flash adown from melting rills. Thaw the whited wastes to verdure, flood the plains and quicken dearth. Rout the clouds and all between the man and heaven that gave him birth. A Life in Song: Watching, xvii. COMMISSIONS Places of trust are only for the trusted; And high commissions but for men with missions. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. COMMON SENSE .... Oh, no, not so very strange! The strange things in the world, I am beginning to think, are those that are the most sensible. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 63 .... You hardly believe, then, in common sense. .... No; if sense were common, the devil would lose his kingdom. .... What do you mean? .... Would lose his world. According to the Bible, you know, the world is the thing of which he is prince. .... Elected that, I suppose, by popular suffrage. .... No; by popular sufferance — the method of selecting rulers where people are governed not by constitutional codes but by constitutional cowardice. .... Your hope for those who have to inhabit the world seems rather a dismal one. .... What do you take it to be? .... To get out of the devil's kingdom by dying. . . . . Oh, no; one can sometimes find a foreigner in that kingdom and yet not of it, and then he can know by experience something of a holier subject, and a higher state, even while he is living. .... Oh! .... Don't owe me. You owe me nothing. It is I that owe you. I should like to spend the whole of the rest of my life in paying the debt. Will you let me? Where Society Leads, in. No common system can deprive every agent of it of common sense. Artistic vs. Scientific Education. COMMUNISM, THE HIGHER The world is a ship that sails through space; And men are voyagers journeying where One destiny waits for all the race, One common port for joy or care. Why not, like travelers, launched at sea, Join hands and hearts, and, in every way, If heaven be love, wherever we be, Begin the heaven we seek to-day? Love and Life, li. COMPANIONSHIP {see ALONE and lonely) A foe we meet upon a desert plain. Where we who meet turn back to back, and part, Is better than a friend who brings disdain To greet the utterance of a trusting heart. 64 A POET'S CABINET A slighter cloud above the Christ had hover'd If men had made his flesh their only mark; His woe was love that felt love undiscover'd, The Father's face withdrawn, and dying in the dark. A Life in Song: Serving, Lxxix. COMPARISON {see FANCY and imagination) COMPETENCE VS. WEALTH {see MONEY-MAKING) Why seek for riches, when we have enough? .... Enough! Oh, sluggard! Have we that? .... We have — Enough for comfort, not enough for care; Enough to make us grateful for the wage Rewarding earnest work; but not enough To bind long habit to their fate whose course While serving earth has made them slaves to it. The peace of life crowns competence, not wealth. Cecil the Seer, i. COMPLACENCY So, more to shock her than for sympathy. My thought play'd round the surface of her life: It had been shaped so — to so smooth a thing — I burn'd to warp it of complacency. Ideals Made Real, L. COMPROMISE O, I hail the crackling barriers of expedient compromise. Let them fall, nor more obstruct the pathways of the brave and wise. O, I welcome shouts of war when men defend human- ity; They may die, but right will live, and God, and give the victory. A Life in Song: Watching, ill. CONCEALMENT {see DECEPTION, FRANKNESS, TRUTH) The truth may harm. " How so? " he ask'd. " If one show naked sin, — Who knows? — it then may shame men from the sin. And could the naked good accomplish more? Must not we Christians here confess our faults? Why should we not? Has wrong such lovely smiles And loving tones, that men should long for it? The harm is in the lie that masks the sin. " Haydn, xxvii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 65 Is ill less ill when hid? — Is not the penitent a sinner frank, The hypocrite a sinner not so frank? — Idem. Their aching smiles travest with joy-like arts The throes of grief that rack their trembling hearts. Midnight in a City Park. Who lives not conscious of some inward thought Which out to outward life should not be brought? How many a soul must purchase all its joy With coin one test of ours could prove alloy! Earth owes its faith to men who will not share Distrust with him who now has none to bear. No sighs of theirs give vent to inward strife, Lest weak confession give it voice and life. Idem. CONCEITS, LIGHT, AS AFFECTED BY IRRITATION When minds are filled so full of light conceits. Chipped off like clippings from substantial concepts, They store fit kindling-wood, when comes a friction, To burst in flame. Dante, i., 2. CONCENTRATION OF THOUGHT AND ENERGY We are men; And straight and narrow must our pathways be. If, Adam-like, we would be gods, we fall. Not given to mortal is the life supreme. In naught unbalanced, laden light in naught, Existence evermore at equipoise, Complete with that which on itself depends. Oft, who his worth would double, nothing does Except to break the back of worth that was. While doubled burdens fall to doubled waste. We men should humbler be, and pray to heaven To have horizons hanging nearer us. Our views too broad unfit us for the earth. Yet fit us not for loneliness divine, — The wide chill chaos, back behind the stars. Ideals Made Real, liii. CONCORDANT, ALL LIFE IS When the tunes of life get past their solos, and have reached the chorus, it may be found that all the parts 66 A POET'S CABINET have uses, and equal uses, whether they be played by poor and feeble or by rich and strong. On Detective Duty, ii. CONFIDENCES She was a person of strong prejudices, and, on certain occasions, evidently took delight in displaying them, not only in her words, but also through eccentric little adjustments of her forehead, eyes, lips, head, shoulders, and whole frame. At the same time, with those whom she liked, these traits were not disagreeable. They were interesting; they were charming. There was something so confiding in the spirit that she mani- fested when she told one how she hated other people, something so sympathetic in her bearing, that her pres- ence seemed to act like sunshine on one's intellectual and spiritual energies. Modern Fishers of Men, ii. CONNECTIONS AND CHARACTER .... We have had in our house, this evening, people as well connected in Europe as any who ever visited America. .... What difference does that make? — Your train may have very fine silk in it. Does that fact keep it clean, in case you trail it in the mud. Where Society Leads, ii. CONQUEROR, THE The man who tramples on his country's foes Treads upward toward a height, however gained, Where all his countrymen look up to him. Dante, i., 2. CONSCIENCE Our conscience is the leven of character; And just enough of it may sweeten life. But too much keeps in ferment moods that work, Like brewings, flung to froth and sediment; The froth flies up and off to vex our friends; The rest sinks down in self, embittering Oiu" own experience. Haydn, xxxix. Few can see, beyond their thought, the source whence all that lights them flows ; Few, except the best whose heaven seems bright though earth be dark with foes; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 67 Or the worst who learn that, when uprightness bends to evil's might, Conscience brings the consciousness that souls have lost their spirit-light. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxiii. Does not our conscience come from consciousness? And when, then, are we conscious? When unwell: Hot, swollen blood frets limbs that feel inflamed; A sound man lives unconscious of its flow. And so a morbid train of foul ideas Will vex a soul diseased. But if in health. Its aims all true to God and self, — what call For conscience, which we wear but as the curb Whereby God reins the thought that love reins not? — Haydn, xxxix. Our outward lives will serve truth's inward laws. Unconscious of the conscience that but checks The course of him who moves toward conscious wrong. A Life in Song: Doubting, xli. This too much conscience, overbalancing All wiser judgment, has wrought worse results, Made men crave heaven and fear for hell, so much That, in the gap betwixt the two, was left No charity with which to do good here While on the earth. Haydn, xxxix. But ah, what hell-forged fetters rest Where one's own conscience must attest He would, but dare not, do his best. Because his lust or hunger waives The truth that but the spirit saves! A Life in Song: Doubting, xxi. You, who in bondage feel because your lives Have made your conscience curb you for your sins. Think not your conscious wills can rid your souls Of that which will not mind a mortal will. The law of truth, which is our spirit's law. Is omnipresent as our spirit's Lord. Idem, xli. The next best thing to having a personal con- science, I suppose, is having a parent's conscience, — especially if one believe in heredity. Where Society Leads, 11. 68 A POET'S CABINET CONSCIOUS I was not conscious .... ^ Nay, nor is a child Of aught in her of movement or of form, That, fitting sweet ideals of loveliness, Makes fancied grace and beauty visible. Columbus, I., 2. CONSCIOUSNESS Borne through life, all move in orbits, whose far cycles curve about Circling spirit-light within them, circled by the world's without. What they call their consciousness is but the focus where are brought Rays borne in from all about them burning to a blaze in thought. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxiii. CONSISTENT When into doubtful paths they stray. The wise turn back, tho' fools may stay, Consistent — but that title lacks One word to make it fit the quacks. Where wisdom grows and change attacks. Consistent — monomaniacs . Idem, Doubting, xxiii. CONSTANCY For who that loves can think a human heart Can ever lightly lay its love aside? — The spirit's life, whose gentle thrills impart Each separate ripple of the power supplied For every act, can aught its presence hide? — Ah, sooner might the heaving sea attest Its life, without the movement of the tide; And sooner might the sunlight sink to rest. Nor trail the sunset hues adown the glowing west. Idem, Daring, lxiii. CONTRAST She came : she went : a beam sublime That, straying toward a sunless clime, Trembled along the edge of Time And then in fright sped back amain. Ah, wherefore came she if to go ! SELECTED QUOTATIONS 69 I had not known the half of woe Had I not felt that heavenly glow, And, match'd with it, found earth so vain. My Ideal. CONTROL, DIVINE {see self-control) Thanks to God and adoration, that our minds whose freedom hied In the first vague dread of duty from the sway they had not tried, Ne'er can be, where'er they wander, free from that divine control Which attains its grandest glory in the good of every soul; Nor can find where life is darkest aught that wholly hides from sight Love amid the springs of being imaged in the depths of right. A Life in Song: Watching, xxxiv. conversion {see choice, formalists, priests, and regeneration) The truth converts one oft, if he be true. The true man loves his own, and fights for it ; And, since his own is little and God's is large, He often fights to fall. Yet ranks on high Now throng with heroes, whose too slender blades Were wielded but for slender causes once ; Nor sheathed, ere flying shatter'd from their grasp, Till truth they fought had proven too strong for them. Then, when they knew themselves, and knew the truth. And knew its mercy too, they loved the truth, And came to be its champions, evermore. Ideals Made Real, lxiv. cordiality It seems to me better, in the long run, to be cordial to everybody. .... Why so? .... Because everybody's opinion of us, using the phrase in one sense, doesn't need to wait very long, nor change very much, in order to become everybody's opinion of us in another and more general sense. Where Society Leads, i. 70 A POET'S CABINET Cordialities that make the backward friends But tempt the forward to presumption. Force, Alive to clear its own approaches, flouts A welcome meant for weakness. Columbus, i., 2. CORDOVA, SPAIN, BY NIGHT Night bade me rest. I left the street, Its faces fair and banter sweet; And oh, how human seem'd the town Beside which I had laid me down! But, ere I slept, the rising moon, From skies as blue as if 't were noon, Pour'd forth her light in silvery streams, Eclipsing all my light of dreams. And soon, as if some power would shake My drowsy eyes, and make them wake, The walls were spray'd with showers of light. Whose flickerings left a fountain bright That toss'd the moonbeams in its play. And dash'd and flash'd their gleams away. I just could see the fountain flow Within a marble court below. It seem'd a spirit, clothed in white, But half reveal'd to mortal sight. Whose glancing robes would lift and glide O'er dainty limbs that danced inside. And touched the ground with throbbing sweet As if the tread of fairy feet ; While round about the fount-sent shower. That strung with pearls each grateful flower, Rare fragrance rose from bush and bower. Ere long across the marble court Soft laughter rang and calls of sport. And maidens pass'd the entering gate. Whose voices rose in sweet debate, So clear, so pure, they might have sprung From moonlight, not from mortal tongue. I lay there charm'd, my eyelids closed. My limbs enchain'd; but, ere I dozed. Gave one look more. Alas for me ! The moon had moved, and made me see. In dreamlike light where slept the day. Vague forms that join'd those maids at play. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 71 They linger'd there, half hid by trees And sprawling cactus; now at ease, Now whirling off in shadowy sets Where tirged guitars and castonets. Anon, this music rose and fell. As if, because, all fill'd so well. So laden down with sweets before, The languid air could hold no more. "Ah J how could it or I?" I thought; "This land of lasting spring is fraught With charms that pale by living truth The brightest dreams that lured my youth. '* Then, while the music heaved my breast, The thought it cradled sank to rest. I slept and dreamt. To you it seems No censer, swung to souls in dreams Before the mind's most holy shrine, Rear'd there to memories most divine, Could incense hold whose fumes could rise And dim what bless'd my closing eyes. You think my soul most surely thought Of Cordova in dreams it brought. You think that once again it calms My mood to watch beneath the palms The ancient river freshly lave Rome's ruined bridge that naught could save. You think, once more, my wonder wends Across that orange-court and bends In that cathedral-mosk, in which A thousand shafts with sculptures rich Surround the soul like ghosts of trees Beyond the touch of time or breeze, While all the shafts to all bespeak, In jasper, porphyry, verdantique, The skill that train'd their artist's hand In grand old times that blest this land Before the Moor's glad suns had set On days that earth can ne'er forget. Nay, nay, I dreamt with joy intense, But did not heed a hint from thence. You think my spirit rose to flights, Aspiring past all present sights. 72 A POET'S CABINET Invoking from the grave of time The heroes of that city's prime, — The great Gonsalvo marching on, Or Ferdinand of Aragon? — You think I saw, by camp-fires bright, The turban bow beneath the sight Of chieftains marshall'd, far and near, With drifting plume and flashing spear, Like cloud and lightning sent to sweep Abdillah's Moors across the deep? — You think I trod these lanes in days When Califs vied to sound their praise, And term'd the town that seem'd so blest "The grander Bagdad of the west"; Or trod them, when it gave the Goth His "Home of holiness and troth"; Or, long ere through its children's veins Flow'd Roman blood to richen Spain's, Beheld it named by every mouth, "The matchless gem of all the south"? — Nay, nay, I dreamt with joy intense, But did not heed a hint from thence. My Dream at Cordova. CORSETS AND CRINOLINE .... Corsets and crinoline — traps for women ! .... No — for men. They go around the one; they get around the other. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i., 2. COURTESIES For your sake made and kept a friend By courtesies limbering my stiff limbs of pride Till limp and limping as humility. Columbus, I., 2. COURTESY When courtesy And caution balance in the scales, the heart Is kinder than the head, if not more wise. Idem, in., i. True courtesy shows itself to the least as well as the greatest. If once a lady then always. The Ranch Girl, iv. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 73 COURTING {see FLIRT and suitors) A fool may think that a passing glance, _ Like a spark from a wheel, as he whirls in a dance, A touch of his hand, a word, a sigh, May win the heart that his form flits by. But love is a boon, if wise one be, Too dear to be won by a worthless plea. Wise love has a spirit that craves to find The inward mind, A soul to its own soul so allied That though no more Of flesh two wore Their souls would linger side by side. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxv. In common walks of life the two had met ; And joined in common thought and common speech; And, often, many a common good to get, Had tender'd apt assistance each to each. Placed side by side, their hands had touch'd and trembled. Their eyes glanced at and through each other's eyes. Behind the hands were hearts; nor had dissembled ;_ Behind the eyes were souls ; there had been smiles and sighs. And then, anon, to him this maiden's frame, One mote of many a million in the world, More dear appear 'd than all the gems that flame In all the stars through all heaven's welkin whirl'd. Thus thought the man; and she, the while he thought it. Had found such strength within his frame of dust, Which even winds could waste, that, ere he sought it, Her sold, at rest with his, had felt unending trust. Idem, Serving, xiii., xiv. COURTING, ITS METHOD Most maids love mastery; and the closest cling To those who show the strength to hold them fast. Full many a suitor, when he wins his love. Will treat her merely like some petted puss, Caress, then cuff her, till she yield at last. Won solely through his wondrous wilfulness. 74 A POET'S CABINET If one defer to her, she pities him; And names him friend, because she feels him frail. Her favorite cavalier seems less a friend, At first, than foe who stays the brunt in time To seem to save her when she seems to fall. Ideals Made Real, lvi. COURTING, A SENSITIVE MAN's Once upon a time, I too discovered, by the presence of unwonted flutterings in my bosom, that I also had a similar yearning for the companionship of a similar combination of human flesh and — what I then con- sidered — human coloring. And in that romantic period it often happened that, the evening after I had called upon her, and the next and next and next, I would sit alone, unable utterly to do a thing but face my mirror, and to meditate upon the problem how to arrange to call on her again. At last, upon the fifth night possibly, I would dress myself, pull on a pair of gloves a size too small for me, and, saying "I have waited long enough; to-night I will call," saunter out and down the street, and reach her door-step. But, alas! once there, my heart would fail me. I would say: "I cannot — not to-night; it's soon, too soon. Were I to go in now she really might suppose that I thought something of her ! " So I would stand a while debating with myself, or cross the street and try to look from a distance into her parlor- window, wonder- ing who that fellow was that was with her now, and there I would linger, walking up and down for hours, until aroused at last by a strong conviction that every policeman on the street had marked me out as some suspicious character. And this absurd performance I would repeat for nights and nights, until, perhaps upon the tenth night, I would summon up sufficient pluck to ring her door-bell with a throbbing heart, pass into her parlor with a face as flushed as Daniel's prophets entering into the fiery furnace, and then spend all the evening talking to her sister! for fear still that the girl I fancied really might suppose that I thought something of her! Modern Fishers of Men, ix. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 75 COWARD {see heroism) You never know a coward soul till cowed By gusts out-winding his own self-conceit; And garbs they guise in, never cloud the air In time for us to brace the fence they fell. Columbus, III., I. CRANK, A .... ^ Him? A crank, — and worse, a creaking crank! .... Without Some crank to creak of it, men might forget The wheels of thought. Idem, i., i. CREDITOR No watch-dog keeps a creditor at bay Like well-housed earnings. Columbus, I., 3. CREEDS (see DOUBT, FAITH, PROGRESS and WORDs) The thing that most men worship is themselves. Or, look they upward, then it is the god Most like themselves. You know religion's aim Is bringing gods and men together; so To many men that creed seems best, which best Makes out how mean and small a god can be. The Aztec God, iii. When souls have grown to truth, their nurture needs, Ere growth can pass beyond it, growing creeds. A Life in Song: Seeking, liv. CRIME vs. FAULT .... Do you suppose men punish most the ones that are the most at fault? Why, yes, of course. Oh no. What then? They punish crime. And what is crime? The fault that some one has found out. It grows in low life usually. The seed is dropped from sin in high life. With God, the seed may count for something. Man forms his judgment from the growth. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. 76 A POET'S CABINET CRIMES Great crimes can never their souls allure, Who have kept their moods and memories pure, And so I know, That the souls that hold to the right with ease, Have fought their vice before they fall. The time to stop sinning Is ere its beginning. Love and Life, xvii. CRITIC All this their critic cares not to know. He is nothing if not the dog of his day, Who barks or who licks As his master, the world, may make him obey By throwing him bones or swinging him kicks. Pray, what can he know till all the world know it? Unveiling the Monument. CRITICISM, EXCESSIVE Did we turn Our preferences to pedagogues, and school The souls that came to us for sympathy, Though best of friends, we might seem worst of foes. Dante, i., 2. CRITICS, POPULAR Popular critics, like other popular people, give voice to popular opinion. They are on the crest of its wave for the very reason that they have the full support of the opinion that is about and below them. For this reason, paradoxical as it may seem, those esteemed the best critics of an age are often its worst critics. The Representative Significance of Form, xxvi. CROWDS, COURTING THEM Courting crowds, A soul lives crampt; but if one speak the truth, Crowds leave — good riddance! — place is clear'd for friends. Ideals Made Real, xvii. CULPRIT Anon, awaking, he could hear the sound Of vying voices from a seat behind. And saw two men there, as he turn'd him round. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 77 And one had eyes of that swift glancing kind, Which hint the culprit, whose suspicious mind The secrets of his inner self would shield. Low views of others and himself combined, Had given this man distrust, not all conceal'd In manners taught to stay what should not be reveal'd. A Life in Song: Daring, xxxi. CULTURE, STARTED IN DIFFERENT WAYS The temple of culture is entered by many doors. The instructor who induces a young man to push open one of them will force him to a glimpse that will lure him to as grand an experience as could any of the others. The Literary Artist and Elocution. CUPID Our lips, but parting e'en to speak of love, Infringe on Cupid; and, before they shut, Some tingling arrow of that jealous god Will make them drop all soberness. Ideals Made Real, LV. CURRENT VALUE IN TRUTH .... No truth then, eh? .... Yes; truth enough for all. But truth expressed is coin to use, not hoard. For when it bears the stamp of times too old, It loses current value. Columbus, ii., 2. CURSES .... My curses on you! — To the sacrifice! .... The two things go together. And how kind, When one has curses loaded on him so, To let him load them on another! The Aztec God, iv., i. CUSTOM To most men no disgrace can loom like theirs Who dare do aught save by the grace of custom. Where earth's esteem is what all strive for first, Her customs make them cowards to the call Of conscience; and the foulest crime Seems not a curse, if it be only common. Idem, V. Is it so well For one man to resist what all men wish? — 78 A POET'S CABINET The customs that the centuries have crowned? How many have dared all, to thwart the world, And only thwarted good the world could do them ! Idem, V. CUSTOMS Our lives reflect The light of our surroundings. What are here? — Accursed customs that mistrust the soul, Ay, robe its every feature in their rags. Draped all to hint unshapeliness beneath. Away with earthly habits that can hide God's image framed within! Columbus, ii., i. The world has its encircling customs too. Drawn sharply round the spheres we fill in life. They make one shame-faced, make the soul a slave. We need the truth to free us from the world. A Life in Song: Doubting, XLI. CYNIC Once I saw a mortal sailing toward a lone isle of the sea Where, he thought, no other's will would check his own that would be free. First upon the shore he rested; then, not born to dwell alone, Longing to be loved, his nature broke away from reason's throne. Howled the winds like witches' voices; moved the shades like ghostly forms, While the leaves like footsteps rustled 'twixt the thunders and the storms. Till the cynic, far from manhood, all man's nobler traits forgot. Curst himself and earth and all things, rest or free- dom finding not. Idem, Watching, vii. CYNICISM We lie to our nature; we twit and we laugh; We dare To jeer of a love that was ours, We dare, yet there Through thorns and tares are living the flowers ! Love and Life, xxxvi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 79 DAMN Not far away, a place is waiting those Who wish to damn a soul for doing right, In which that sort of thing is done much better. Dante, iii., 2. DAMNATION {see will-power) Some tell us that the fairest forms on earth, Most full of mirth and softness and caress, Whose mildness tames Hfe's wild, coquettish blood, Leave in the tomb their loveliness and charm. And go thence, fiends. The Aztec God, v. DAMNED, THE Sad, sad, indeed, is the lot of those Whom no one mourns when their coffins close. How lone, when the robes of earth-life fall, Are spirits that hear no welcoming call; Are spirits that see no smile of delight, But, flying in shame from all things bright. And, hiding in horror themselves have made. Live ever in sunshine and dwell in shade. Love and Life, LV. DANCING Ask the leaves The reason why they vibrate in the breeze. Or ask the trees when swaying in the storm; Ask of the spray-drop leaping from the rill, Or up and down amid the waves at sea; Ask of the circling smoke, tornado's cloud. The sun and moon revolving round the world. But when the throb of music beats the air And sets the currents of the breast in motion, Sweeping the bounding rills to rhythmic waves That dash like breakers through the heart and pulse. Ask not why every vein begins to glow. Each nerve to tremble, all the frame to heave, And to and fro to march, to leap, to dance, — Enough — if natural ! — When checking nature. You lay your human hands upon the work Heaven meant for what it is; you are profane. The Aztec God, il. 8o A POET'S CABINET DARK Yet, in the dark, is all so vague and wild. How the whole air is weighted with the gloom! Even to draw it in, my lungs, o'ertaxed. Would rather choose not breathe than bear the burden, These clouds are curtained like a funeral pall, Fit funeral pall, rotmd my dear dying hope. Idem, V. DAWN (see sunrise) Just as dawn began Erasing all the stars with lines of light. A Life in Song: Daring, xiv. They rout the gloom Within the heart sure as the morning sun That spreads new glory o'er the darkened world, The while its fire-sped lances tilt the shades That fly afar, and leave our lives with heaven. The Aztec God, iii. And what a dawn was that ! As if the sun had drawn the earth to itself, I dwelt in central light; and heaven, high heaven — Could feel some rays, perhaps, was touch'd by them, At star-points in the sky, but own'd no more. Haydn, viii. Above his crimson couch, The sun drew back the curtains of the east ; While pale-grown shades began in vales to crouch. Or, hurrying westward, leave the world releast From spells that long had silenced man and beast Then winds, arising, shook the rustling trees, As if they said, " 'T is time your rest had ceast"; And birds that sang soar'd high, as if to seize The last of flickering stars, blown out by morning's breeze. Soon o'er the hills ascends the sun's bright crown And, richly robed, as welcoming thus their king, The dew-deck'd groves and bushes bend low down. Bright limbs o'erladen with rare gems they bring — Rare gifts, borne all too soon, on sunny wing, Toward clouds that in the blue dome o'er them blaze. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 8l Then sounds of labor join with bells that ring ; And one more dawn has heard the prayer and praise Of those who past it see the day of all the days. They see a day, where heaven's bright grain of life Sprouts in the last dark death-urn of the night, And buds of peace burst through the thorns of strife, And souls awake to praise enduring light. Ah, even now, they see, with earthly sight, That men may track the rain-storm by the rose, And make the wake of war the way of right. And learn, as each fresh breath of morning blows, How sweet and fair a life beneath the darkness grows. So might our youth have hail'd this morn; but he. For whom the soft winds whisper'd in their round. For whom the brisk birds chirpt their calls of glee. For whom the bright sun up the heavens wound, And all the world of work awoke to sound. While men moved gladly and the children leapt, — He, dead to hope and happiness profound. His dreams begun, while all his heavens had wept, — Upon the chill, damp ground, through all the dawn had slept. A Life in Song: Daring, lxxviii-lxxxi. So the sun withdrawn Climbs up to a dawn. When, just before it, the night gives way And clouds are hanging like blossoms of light, Presaging the fruit of the day. Idem: Loving, xii. DAY Sworn to ceaseless constancy. Day had come, his fair suite with him, all their armor burnish'd bright. Searching, as they search forever, for the flying forms of night. All the van of early sunbeams shot reflections from the hill. Idem, Dreaming, xlii. Its glancing beams Assail'd the trees, through boughs that draped the streams 82 A POET'S CABINET Like shot-rent banners, where bright shafts of day- Clove through the yielding darkness of the way. Idem, Seeking, xxii. DEAR, MY, ITS MEANING When a man says "my dear" we all know what it means. He thinks the word necessary. He is trying to balance something that he knows to be unkind with something — a mere phrase in this case — that he thinks may seem the opposite. Where Society Leads, ii. DEATH In death's long sleep No more shall weary eyes close but to weep, Nor thoughts keep mining from the darkened brain Fit fuel for the morrow's burning pain. Midnight in a City Park. DEATH, A lover's When I am gone — their ghastly deed been done — I wish you to recall me as I am, — One fit for all things almost, save to die, Each factor, organ, limb of me complete, And, at this moment, hot against the fire Blazed through me by your love-enkindled eyes, No sinew but is trembling with the draft Of that delicious flame; and yet none too Not strengthened by a power divine like that Propelling all creation, — I am god, Not man. Nay, nay! Remember me as god. You must not see that unveiled, writhing frame Weak, color- void, save where the death-blood dyes it. Waloon, you must not be there. I shall writhe More like a god to know you are not there. — But go you where we met first — in the woods — You know the place — to me the holiest place My life has ever known! Waloon, go there. Oh, swear to me you will. — My soul will swear To meet you. .... What? .... By all that makes me god, In form, perchance, in spirit certainly. — The Aztec God, TV., i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 83 DEATH, BETTER THAN LOVELESS LIFE Far better than bodies that rot before The breath has left them, and hold no more, In the haunted hell that is glassed by their eyes, A charm to inspire, a thought to make wise, — Far better than these, the face as white As ashes where dead fires drop their light ; Far better the eyes, all dim and dry, But blind as one's own that can only cry; Far better the crape and the veils that fall ; Far better the living room turned to a pall. All these, whatever the future may give, Have proved that love has a right to live. Love and Life, xxxv. DEATH, BEFORE MAIMING Why Outlive the happy moment for one's death ! A body maimed may mold a spirit maimed. The Aztec God, i. Ope wide the casket that the world has bruised And let the unbruised soul fly out of it. Idem. DECEIT At times, Deceit that spices daintily with doubt The plain-served truth more seasons it to taste. Idem, II. DECEIVED, OWNING ONESELF Wise men who wish to guard their influence are never quick to own themselves deceived. The Two Paths, 11. DECEPTION {see CONCEALMENT, LIES, and TRUTH) When comes a loss of fortune, honor, sway, When threatens death that hope alone can stay, When senile states presume they still have youth, — • Oh, what could curse men worse than words of truth? Midnight in a City Park. Wotdd you deceive them? .... What men have no right To know, one has no right to let them know. Dante, i., i. 84 A POET'S CABINET Social despotism is the mother of deception. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i. DECEPTION THROUGH PERSONALITY .... Deception ! Men deceive as much as women. .... Oh, no, no; not that way! They He, they bribe, they use brute force ; but never think of baiting their hooks with their own personality; suggest — as that man thinks all women do — that he is master of their thought and feeling. We might excuse re- formers their attempt to level woman to the plane of man, did this not carry with it, too, the risk of sinking her to something lower. Tuition for her Intuition, ii. DECORATION, A FOREIGN A foreign decoration on a man's breast has the same effect upon some people as a disk made to glitter by a hypnotizer. Where Society Leads, I. DECORATION DAY With every Spring-time to that region comes A day when all the people, far and near, Recall the warfare waged in former years That from disruption saved their native land, Set free the bondman, and made liberty, Throughout their country's length and breadth, supreme. And ere that day comes, through the week before, The wives whose husbands fell in that sad war, The friends and sweethearts brooding o'er a loss That oft is deepest when 't is least express'd. The mothers mourning sons, and boys and girls, Who think of their dead fathers as of forms That fill'd the twilight of their childhood's dreams, Are forming wreaths of all the greenest leaves, — Of myrtle, ivy, arbor-vits, join'd With all the fairest flowers the season yields. The garden's tulip, pansy, peony. Magnolia, honeysuckle, bleeding-heart, Phlox, lilac, snowball, and wisteria. The forest's bursting glories, chief and first The dogwood, rill'd like mimic drifts of snow, The blue-flag, waving welcomes from the marsh, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 85 The lily of the pond and of the vale, The daisy, violet, and buttercup, The elder-berry and the bridle wreath. From garden, grove or roadside — all are cuU'd And weaved in wreaths to deck the soldiers' graves. At noon the church-bell rings, the organ peals, The hymns and prayers ascend, the orator Recalls once more the virtues of the past. The privilege of the present; then the throng Move slowly toward the place where sleep the dead, And, bending o'er the graves of loved ones lost, And o'er the graves of strangers who no more Have friends they loved on earth to care for them, Kind forms lay one by one their tributes down. No soldier's tomb is pass'd and not enwreath'd With flowers that rest there like embodiments Of fragrant hopes and beautiful desires. And make the grave no type of death's dark night, But of the rosy dawn of life beyond. A Life in Song: Finale. DEEDS {see work) DEEDS OF MAN ARE NATURE'S FLOWERING He must have felt that earth's unconscious growth Could flower alone in conscious deeds of man. And where man wrought with nature, there that both Were working to fulfill a God-formed plan. The American Pioneer. DEEDS REVEALERS OF CHARACTER {see WORDS) Oh, not what life appears to be. Is what in life is true. Inveiled behind the forms we see Are things we cannot view. What but the spirit working through The guise men wear to what they do Reveals the force that, foul or fair. Awakes and makes the nature there? The Aztec God, iv., 2. DEEDS, TRUE, TESTS OF TRUE LIFE The words of men whose deeds have proved them true Are also true. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. 86 A POET'S CABINET DEEDS VS. WHIMS The world is full of brains, and all the brains Of whims, and all that gives the whims more worth Than blood that churns them up to consciousness, Is that they leave the brain and live in deeds. Columbus, II., I. DEFERENCE TO THOSE WELL KNOWN A man is not without honor save in his own house- hold — for the same reason, I suppose, that most of our women prefer French frocks and phrases to homespun and Saxon; or that, in the street, most of our men, when courting a woman, take off their hat to her; but, when married to her, keep it on. Those who are near to us may be very dear, but often we fail to fear them enough to be awed into even decent deference. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, ii. DEFINED The finite only can be well defined. Haydn, xxi. DEFINITION A definition is of value in the degree in which it accords with the undefined conceptions that are in the minds of the largest number of thinkers upon the subject. Art in Theory, xv. DELIRIUM TREMENS .... Ever try to sit up for a night with one who had delirium tremens? .... No. .... You never got as near to hell as I, then. .... Yes, a drunkard can make the very devil of a bed mate. Tuition for her Intuition, ii. DELUSION Alas, must I ever wandering go Where shadows and echoes delude me so? How can one live a life ideal Who fears that love can never be real? A Life in Song: Loving, xxxix. O eyes that had watch'd for the form of delight, O ears that had listen'd the long, long night, O hands that had touch'd what dropp'd from you dead. No looming delusion your faith had misled. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 87 Nay, brighter than suns, love's own true beams Are burning through mists that obscured them in dreams. No cheeks of a phantom had e'er such a glow; No eyes of a phantom such trust could show. Come hither ; lay hold of my spirit, O love. That flutters its wings like a captive-dove. Sweet pain, to be pierc'd by the shaft of thine eye! Sweet prison, in thy warm clasp to lie ! Idem, xli. DEMEANING ONESELF To^ demean oneself is to be mean to oneself; and he that is mean to himself will seldom be not mean to any man. Where Society Leads, i. DEPTHS Though dense the depths around, No high-aimed spirit to them is bound; No heaven-aimed spirit abides in a grave; But surely as air when plunged in a wave. Whatever may try to hinder or stop. There comes a time when it comes to the top. The Last Home Gathering. DESCENT The man who boasts a family tree, And great grandpas that came and went, Which proves to all, the more they see. How great has been his own descent; And who from self-made people shrinks That now do what his grandpas did. Lest other men may see the links That bind to what he wishes hid, — Is just the thing he thinks. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. DESIRE {see AMBITION and aspiration) With no teacher but desire In these hours of stolen study, snatch'd from toil in sweat and mire. A Life in Song: Dreaming, vi. DESPONDENCY Where is hell? Ah me, there is life on earth Torn away from all it is worth. Things are severed by nature allied: Wish and all of its wants divide. 88 A POET'S CABINET Who but the loving are dupes of hate? Who but the faithful are foiled by fate? Who but the seekers of truth can find Half of the falsehood framed for the mind? Who but those with ideals fair Deal with a real life hard to bear? True to an instinct cheating all trust, Flapping white wings that raise but the dust, Stuck like stones in the mire of the earth, What for our souls are the bright stars worth ! Love and Life, xxiv. DESTINY .... One's destiny, you think, is made by talk? . . . . One's destiny was never yet fulfilled By one whose coward conscience dared not give Expression to the spirit that inspired it. Columbus, I., I. DESTRUCTION OF THE WORLD, IN SCANDINAVIAN MYTH But while I gazed upon that scene, behold, A storm arose. Its thunders, while they roll'd, Woke Heimdall, who, anon, on Gulltopp rode Like lightning to Valhalla, the abode Of mighty Odin. Then each hill and plain Seem'd filled with gods, who moved with signs of pain. Here Tyr uplifts, like some vast mountain-side. His heaven-high shield that shakes with wounded pride. There Ullur aims his bow to test his art. And meteors through remotest regions dart. Now Braji leaves his wife, Iduna fair. For Forseti ; and toward them in despair Comes Freyja with her plaintful team of gray, And Vidar, Vali, Njord, all join the fray. While through the north, like an Aurora, gleam The spears of Skadi's troops that nearer stream. Far up in Hlidskjalf, towering o'er the crowds. Like some fair morning sunburst o'er the clouds, Bright Odin stands, and prompt at his command Convulsions dash the sea and shake the land. Where comes great Thor, whose chariot sweeps the sky On wheels of fire far flashing as they fly. Eclipsing all those rival hosts of light As thunder-storms blot out the stars of night. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 89 But what had roused the gods? — I gazed below, And there beheld a mighty waste of woe. — The serpent, Nidhogg, with new _mahce lash'd The sea surrounding all things, till it dash'd O'er all the shores. The great tree's giant form, Amid the waves and winds of that wild storm, Sway'd to and fro, till with a mighty crash Its trunk was rent, the while a bhnding flash Of lightning tore apart the upper sky, And fired the great tree's Hmbs that hung on high, As if an orb of flame, or comet whirl'd Against what might become a bursting world, Tho' yet the crash came not. Its flashing drew Fire-genii from the depths who fiercely flew To tear the bifrost down. More dread than these, Huge giants weeding up the shaken trees. And rending from the earth the crumbling cliffs. Press toward the gods, who through the smoke that lifts, Advance their blazing lines ! Of no avail Is now their show of strength! For once they fail; For once can force more dread than gods' assault; And, almost ere they charge, the columns halt; Then back through many a lengthening league they roll ; Then, wheeling bend their rivals like a scroll. Borne back again, for one more charge they form. As terrible as every earthly storm Concenter'd into one. On, on they bound. And meet — O soul, to have outlived that sound! — Nor heaven nor hell could stand so fierce a shock; But all things, — god and giant, star and rock. And sky and earth, with bursting fires were hurl'd Like lava through the air! then all the world Seem'd smoke, so dense I felt it on me press. Then still was all, and all was nothingness. A Life in Song : Seeking, xxxiii., xxxiv. DETAILS Requesting all details. It took me weeks to draft them, had to turn My methods upside down and inside out. And mass and multiply and magnify, Till truth was large enough for all to see it. Columbus, I., 3. 90 A POET'S CABINET DETECTIVE WORK, AND TEACHING .... You like your occupation, do you? ..... Quite late — your asking that of me! — when I have taught for twenty years. .... Is that detective work? .... Much like it. A teacher must detect, at least, a place inside the brain where thought, when planted, will be apt to grow. He usually finds the place just where some mischief has been weeded out. The Little Twin Tramps, i. DEVICE (see tact) While earth keeps training men to use device, The souls too proud to use it or too pure, Are sure to rouse at last from lips precise The chidings of some wrong-reform'd ill-doer, Whose former vice has foul'd the soul's emotion, Who deems a sight of naked spirit sin. And all love haunted by some carnal notion. And so keeps out the Christ to keep the devil in. A Life in Song: Serving, vi. DEVIL We all of us were loving, were we not? Yet working outward, wisely, as we deem'd. We all have done the thing to doom us all. Alas what power has wrought to thwart us thus? I do believe, though long I doubted it, There lives a Devil! Hell-scorch'd hands alone Could weave such death-black shrouds from thread so bright. Drawn from sleek skeins of love. That spider- fiend. Feeding on our sweet plans, emits this web, To trip and trap us in like flies ! — Ah me, It may be well that one should suffer here Until a wish bereaved shriek prayers for death ; But through what fearful pangs earth peels away This withering flesh from off the worthier soul ! What further shred invests the love so stript ! — Is this, then, being freed from earth? — Yet where Are signs of heaven? — My God, I see them not. Haydn, XLVii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 91 DEVIL, WHEN HE DRIVES The Prince of this World is not nice in choice Of equipages ; where he cannot check, He mounts the car of truth and grasps the rein ; And when the Devil drives, he drives for home. Idem, LI. DEVILISH .... The devil! .... She reminds you of him, eh? .... All pretty things do. .... What a world to live in! — where all the pretty things are devilish pretty. .... And pretty devilish. On Detective Duty, 11. DEVOTION TO IDEALS {see IDEALS) .... Yes, yes, but yet can it be worth the price? .... I know your meaning, — loss of life, perhaps, And all for which some prize life, — ease and love. But, — ah, who would not feel it is worth this? — And others go with me who think the same. .... Some call them fools .... They are fools, if this life be all; And fools, if they but claim that it is all. For, risking dangers thick as mid-sea-mists In war, in wave, men's deeds outdo their words And prove they serve a grander sovereignty, Whose realms outreach all death-lines. Columbus, III., I. DICTATOR, THE RIGHT OF THE Think you God gives to strength of will the right To say what is right? And if not, what then? If one obey then, how can he be sure That he obeys not sin? Haydn, xxvi. DIPLOMATS AND FOREIGN MANNERS .... Do foreigners determine our diplomatic appointments? .... Those are most apt to get them who show that they know how to adapt themselves to foreign requirements. .... I suppose a man then is to fit himself to represent America abroad by showing how un-Ameri- can he can be at home. 92 A POETS CABINET .... You know — you have seen our foreign rep- resentatives. .... Yes. I congratulate you upon the logical workings of your mind. Where Society Leads, i. DISAPPOINTMENT If blind men all were born blind, none Were cursed by losing sight. In nights like this, Not unawakened hope I dread, as much As wakening disappointment. Columbus, ill., 2. DISCERNING The sky contains full half I see. In soil below I live, I love. High in the half that looms above, Oh, is there nothing there for me? The sky's bright sun and stars I see The soil below is guised in green In heaven whose orbs are robed in sheen, Oh, is there nothing there for me? In thoughts within, sweet rest I see; In things without, but dust and toil. Where hang no veils of flesh and soil, Oh, is there nothing there for me? Dante, 11., 2 DISCIPLINE {see pain) Oh, what is the meaning of life like yours? Does heaven mistake the traits that it cures? Or must the mood of a soul when trained Be gauged by the discipline each has gained? And is discipline never in reach of those Whose natures have never been crushed by woes? Do the cheeriest need the weariest strife, Ere broken to bear what blesses our life? Is the test of true metal the blow and the scrape And the time that it takes to bend it in shape? If so, perhaps, it is well that the best Are those to whom earth brings the least of rest. The Last Home Gathering. ^ The pest of tutors, but the students' pet, Who gain'd more discipline than all the school Through working hard to break through every rule. A Life in Song : Daring, L. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 93 DISCONTENT We are not always curst, when born By throes of nature's freak or scorn With moods abnormal and forlorn; We are not curst ere we consent To dam our own development By choking down our discontent. If truth be something sought and learn'd, He most may gain, who most has yearn 'd To fill a need he most discern'd. Idem: Doubting, xviil. .... If none would feel, none would have discontent; And that would cure all evils of the time. .... Yes, that is true. Why, even small boys now, Must have small beer .... For that will pop, you know! Will make a noise! explode monotony! Cecil the Seer, i. DISEASE Disease that roam'd for prey First made his pulse flee fever'd from the shroud, Then clutch'd and check'd and chill'd it, where he lay. A Life in Song: Serving, xxii. DISESTEEM .... It never is one's duty to do what can justly earn the disesteem of others. .... Those never justly earn men's disesteem who have not first earned that of their own conscience. The Two Paths, 11. DISHONESTY I have found dishonesty a species of decay that grows more rank the longer it keeps hidden. The Two Paths, 11. DIVINE GUIDANCE Life divine, what soul succeeds In aught on earth but he Who moves as all desires and deeds Are lured and led by thee ! Columbus, I. DIVORCE {see honor) You deem it wise or good, humane or Godly, 94 A POET'S CABINET To doom a boy for one mistake in mating To everlasting punishment on earth? Dante, i., i. .... Why not assert yourself with her to-day? .... You ask her, she will tell you that I dare not. .... But that would not be true. .... I think it would, although my reasons for it might not be what she would think or understand, if told. .... And what are they? .... What she might do, in case I angered her, — the accompaniments of divorce — for Florence and the whole community. A man should suffer rather than relieve a sore, if doing it might spread contagion. Besides, it was not she proposed our marriage, but I myself; and every man should bear the burden of his own mistakes. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. DOCTORS Large practice that doctor of hers has ! Yes, all the society ladies go to him. All of them? Most of them. Humph! — is an expert in cramps, I sup- pose, which in women seem to be attributable about equally to what is put over the waist and feet, and to what is not put over the spine and shoulders. In the olden time, when a man married, he had to have a doctor of divinity around; now it seems to be a doctor of medicine. In a little while, as divorces multiply, I suppose it will be a doctor of laws. .... No other doctors? .... Oh, yes; when the end of our civilization comes, as it may, after a little, its story will have to be written. Then we shall need a doctor of literature. Where Society Leads, iii. DOG A dog or woman cringing to a man, Because of kicks or curses? Haydn, xxv. DONKEY, DEMOCRATIC What an advertisement it is for one in public life — SELECTED QUOTATIONS 95 to prove both prominent and picturesque — to draw the world's attention in such an interesting way! You know some folks dislike the democratic donkey. But when an artist mounts the candidates upon its back that sets them ofE ! .... Becomes what one might term the office- seeker's asset. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. DOUBT, DOUBTING, and DOUBTS {see faith) And thus they talk'd. Till, welcoming doubt, my faith succumb 'd to it; And all the love once making me so proud, Whose growth, I thought, would be so sweet and fair, Stung like a very thistle in my soul ; Each breath of theirs would blow its prickles keen, And sow its pestering seedlets far and wide O'er every pleasing prospect of my life. Idem, XXX. Doubt on empty nest sits brooding o'er the things that have been done. A Life in Song: Watching, xvi. Introducing dusk to darkness, dodging doubt to crawling night. Idem, Dreaming, xxxv. .... Had you a glimpse of God like no one else's You would not speak of it? .... Why not? .... It might Subject Him to the insult — might it not? — Of human doubt? .... You are a strange soul. Dante, i., i. At last, he learn' d How faith reacts on doubt; if truth be sought. How most for those who most have ask'd and yearn'd Ring echoes from the boundary walls of thought. A Life in Song: Daring, lix. The world keeps rolling on from day to night. None always dwell where always glows the light When darkness comes, and doubt assails the mind. Then light and faith come following swift behind. Dante, 11., 2. 96 A POET'S CABINET Strangely led, Through doubtful ways, he thought, toward doubtful ends, Till doubts had wrought reaction, — as when clouds That course on clouds, at last, bring lightnings forth That clear them off. Ideals Made Real, lxviii. Yet all whose learning brings them fame to last Begin by doubting what earth claims it knows. Why should not their true follower do the same? Think not the present can but phase the past. The fire whose dying brand so steadfast glows Once proved its life through flickerings of its flame. Princeton Cemetery. He lets his own thought lead him ; and you know Men led by thought are often led to doubt. Dante, i., 2. And doubt rose round his growing powers of thought, Like vapors reeking from the refuse heap'd On undevelop'd germs in early June, Perchance his manhood's fruit was ripening then. A Life in Song: Note iii. Where springs from will One wise effect that does not follow doubt? One choice that does not weigh alternatives? Doubt comes with waverings of the balances Before the heavier motive settles down. Let those who feel so sure their views are right. Dissolve my doubt : — I dare to doubt if they Walk not by knowledge rather than by faith. Haydn, xliii. Believe me, there is faith so full and deep That all the surface-doubts that o'er it sweep Are fog-banks to its ocean, — fill the skies Amid inactive hours, but shift and rise With each new change that brings a sun or storm. Our mortal doubts are conjured up by form. Not substance, when weak insight fails to reach Beneath the vapory whiffs of human speech. They come to him whose wars are waged at words, A knight, who at some whirring windmill girds To wound the wind that whirls it, nor will know -f>'?J How, all its chairs made vacant one by one, Th' applause rose thinner at his bachelor club. See page iy6. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 97 That, back of all this realm of sound and show, A subtle, unseen spirit works, which all Material means are far too weak and small To hold or image; that the spirit's life Has power within it to survive all strife Of forms, at best, but fashion'd from the dust, Whose changing creeds are not men's constant trust. A Life in Song: Seeking, xxiv. I read that Jesus answer'd him who pray'd, "Lord, I believe, help thou mine unbelief"; That on the cross itself even He could cry: "My God, O why hast thou forsaken me?" And so I think, at times, these doubts of ours May only rise like minor preludes here. Ere that triumphant cadence, "It is finished." Haydn, xliii. .... The next time that men watch me, they shall think so. .... And why? .... No doubt, no thought! What men conceive They comprehend, they cease to guess about. Dante, i., i. To doubt is charity, where to believe Is to condemn. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. To be true To life, when all the men that have life doubt me I ought to join with them, and doubt myself. ^ Columbus, v., 2. DREAM Such a sight has oft allured me, rous'd by morn's first herald-gleam, Floating up the edge of slumber in a just awaking dream. Angel forms, no man could number, circled in a band of light Round a chariot framed of splendor, drawn by steeds of dazzling white. Softly sped they o'er the vapors; and, with wings of texture rare. Woke low throbs of murmuring music, as they lightly struck the air. 98 A POET'S CABINET And the chariot bore a Being with a smile so sweetly bright, One could better paint, than it, the fragrance of that summer night. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xii. DREAMING A blockhead may take pride In never dreaming. Blocks are n't made for it, — Live not in clouds. Yet clouds not often glide O'er barren soil; nor rich dreams often flit O'er minds too poor to yield the deed such dreams will fit. Idem, Daring, LXVI. Think you 't is by the sword That one can set a soul, while living, free? Ah, not by deeds but dreaming does the spirit, Itself uplifted, lift up those about it. Dante, i., 2. DREAMING MAN A dreaming man is not a dangerous foe; For dreams portend their opposites. Just when He wings his whims to heaven, he wakes in hell. Idem. DREAMLAND My friend, thus widow'd, caused that our school's head. Already nodding o'er his noonday pipe, Should beck at sever'd dreams with one nod more. And so consent to our dreams. Room-mates made, We slamm'd his door and woke him; not ourselves. Our dreamland lasted. Ideals Made Real, iii. But beneath its boughs a dreamland, like a labyrinth, unwove. There were paths like those of Eden. There were mountains high and grand, Hung to wild, fantastic fortunes o'er a dizzy dearth of land. There were lakes all diamond-dappled; there were streams that rushed at meres Arch'd by bridges, rainbow-girdled, where the high spray leapt their piers. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 99 There were flowers that flush'd through vistas, where alternate floods of sheen, Rich as tides of amber, flow'd through shaded banks of evergreen. There were trees whose broad, high branches cradled all the stars o'erhead. There were lawns whose tender grasses could not stand a fairy's tread. Orchards, gardens, halls, and temples fill'd the fields; and in them seem'd Every creature, of which fancy, past or present, e'er had dream'd, — Birds and beasts of all conditions, dancing, dozing, forward, shy, Strown, as if on isles that throng'd an endless ocean in the sky. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xvii. DREAMS Felt as one when streams Upon his waking eyes the morning light That swings the golden goal-gates of his dreams. Idem, Daring, xlix. DRESS {see clothes) In my visits to the city, the one thing that I like the most to see is just the way you city women dress. How do you do it? Take your own gown now — the way your skirts hang — just enough above your feet to make these play at hide and seek, and never let the glance that spies them catch them. You know that nothing so enchains attention as play too deft to lend itself to prey. The Two Paths, 11. .... You and sister seem to think that you must have a new and different hat and gown about every time that you step out of the front door. .... You wouldn't have us going around so people could recognize us a block away, as they do a yellow dog — by the colors we always wear? .... Well, if your set keeps on you'll have to go around that way before long. All the beasts and birds of the world will have been butchered. None of their furs and feathers will be left. What Money Can't Buy, iii. loo A POETS CABINET DRESS, CONCEALMENTS OF Did you see their little sister Mamie's feet and under- pinnings? By Jove! it was worth the whole show just to get a sight of them! What's the use, confound it! of all the grown ones' wearing those flapping, trailing dresses? One wouldn't know that they had any feet if he couldn't judge of them — as we have to do of all of them — by their younger sisters. In a perfect state now " " Well, well, but we're not in a perfect state, you know." "I think I do — yes, yes," said the captain; "but that's no reason — is it? — for rendering half our race — and the prettier half, at that — but little better than deformed? I only meant to say that, with society in a perfect state, the dress would show off natural charms, you know, whatever they might be," "Ah! yes, but, you see, the majority of mortals haven't natural charms; and, as the majority rule, of course they're bound to keep their neighbors covered up; so general ugliness shall lose as little as possible from contrast with exceptional beauty." "Exceptional beauty! Humph! Don't lose your faith; hold on to a God of general goodness, and only issue bans against the exceptional ugliness of those who make the fashions. Modern Fishers of Men, iii. DRESS, OF WOMAN ON A MAN There's one thing, boys, I've found that no man ever can do; and that is — outstrip a woman in her dressing. . . . Not so anxious, perhaps, to be an angel, and put on airs, when these drafts that we feel on earth have drafted us up to heaven. No wonder, the women surpass us in not getting hard or tipsy. Truth is they are tough by nature, and get tight in ways and stays — I wonder if squeezing the blood keeps it warm. That might explain why their arms and necks never freeze. I feel like a turkey-gobbler hung up in front of a shop, with neck and wings and legs all plucked, and what feathers are left, bunched up in a tuft at the middle. The Ranch Girl, iii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS loi DRINKING .... Clear champagne, not so? .... One must drink something on a hot night like this. .... But you can't get away from a hot time outside by getting up a hot time inside. Where Society Leads, i. DRINKING {see smoking) .... You men seem always very thirsty. .... A business man, when not at work, feels Hke a fish when out of water, so he soaks. .... And if his palate be not dry enough to take in all that flows his way, he starts a fire to do the work. {Lighting a cigar.) Tuition for her Intuition, ii. DRONE .... Oh, drone, That I could sting you, as do bees their drones, That make no honey ! .... You do sting at times. Cecil the Seer, i. DUPLEXITY Of all the devils that ever have curst This earth of ours I deem the worst May be a duplex woman, Whose airs are snares that none suspect, And are spread where naught can souls protect From ruin more than is human ; Whose thoughts, when her lover is craving a soul So pure he can yield to her the control Of all his aims and actions, Are weighing the worth of houses and rooms And dresses and diamonds and horses and grooms For which to sell her attractions. A curse to her spirit that makes bright eyes As blind as an owl's, — and with gaze as wise, — To heaven's light sent to assist them. A curse to her fangs from flesh so soft. And her serpent-like grace, far crueller oft Than aught ever stung to resist them. A Life in Song: Loving, xxiv. 102 A POET'S CABINET DUST, OF WHICH MAN IS MADE Did you hear her comment on the sunbeams — how they show the dust? She is a young philosopher. None reaHze the dust that man is made of Hke those that watch the light of heaven shine through it. On Detective Duty, i. DUTY Oh, in worth the deeds of duty Rival all the claims of beauty. Onward world, with steadfast spinning, Learn to turn a perfect day. Work cannot go wrong for aye. Woes but roll to roll away. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xli. DUTY, DEVOTION TO, PROTECTS THE AGENT No mind or soul was ever harmed inside because of its devotion to a duty. One might as well attempt to harm the life that whirls the world, and all the stars about it. On Detective Duty, i. DUTY, GIVING ONE CHANCES .... I did but do my duty. .... That is what But very few do. It gave you your chance. Dante, i., 2. DUTY vs. EXPEDIENCY When they have stripped me of all things besides, I shall have left a clean, clear conscience, death And heaven. Cecil the Seer, i. DUTY vs. LOVE A friend most pleases when, forgetting due, He seems to do his pleasure ; but a foe, — Who does not shrink to feel him near enough To freeze one with a chill though duteous touch? Mere duty forms the body-part of love : Let love be present, and this body seems The fitting vestment of a finer life : Let love be gone, it leaves a hideous corpse! Haydn, xvi. EARLY INTEREST IN LIFE-WORK The best day-laborer is usually one who wakes up early in the morning. The best life-laborer is usually SELECTED QUOTATIONS 103 one who has had something of entertainment and interest to wake up his mind early in Hfe. Music as Related to Other Arts. EARTHLY LIFE, AS VIEWED FROM HEAVENLY I dimly can recall what now appears A troubled, stormy sea, yet not a sea; And in the depth that which I call myself Seemed held and heaved as in some diving bell. But evermore in reveries and dreams. But most in dreams when outward sense would sleep My soul would be released, and rise and reach Fresh air, in which was breathed what gave fresh life ; Then, sinking downward, wake and work again, Till time for rest and fresh refreshment came. But never could my powers at work below Remember aught that blest them when above. .... And now you dream that somehow they came here? .... Oh, do not tell me that I now but dream! — Nay, call it heaven. — Or is the rest of sleep But absence from the body while we draw New drafts of life from that whicti gave us life? Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. EARTHLY LOVE VS. HEAVENLY How safely might one sail the sea of life If all his reckonings were but true to heaven ! Ah, siren-like, a rivalling earthly love May lure to realms whose mountain heights are clouds, Clouds warmly hued above a cold gray shoal, Whose only outlines are the breakers' caps. Whose only stir, the fury of the storm. Ideals Made Real, xxx. Our thoughts of good should learn to separate The heavenly love from its foul earthly nest. To hold the latter's dead impurity At one with spotless life that wings on high. Is often to deserve — I will not judge them. I would I could forget them. Dante, 11., 2. Life is no failure in which earthly love Is grown and ripen'd for the world above. A Life in Song: Loving, lii. I04 A POET'S CABINET EASE There is most for us all to do, I think, When the heart is least at ease. The falls that leap the stoniest brink Fill most with mist the breeze. Idem, XL. ECCENTRIC {see odd) A man I see with blood and brain the kind Earth terms eccentric, since it finds them few; As wise Chinese with half-hiss'd whispers mind A heathen head to which they find no cue. For far extremes his moods were always linking, — The swiftest passions and the strongest will. The maddest fancies and the sanest thinking, A poet's ken and all a plodder's trust in drill. Idem, Serving, ii. I am not one Has lived or worked with other men. My soul Has dwelt alone, and sails the waves of life Like some stray oil-drop lost upon the sea, Refusing still, however wildly tossing, To lose or fuse itself in things about it. I have so craved a mate! but, whoso came, The spirit that is in me would deny My clasping to a heart that might not beat In time to pulses of another's purpose. So what I would caress, I dared not touch. For fear the rhythm throbbing in my veins Would prove discordant and reveal us foes. The Aztec God, i. ECHOES Ere the echoes that rehears'd it learn'd the tones of half the lay. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xii. EDUCATION SHOULD BE UNIVERSAL To be their brightest, minds need burnishing; And earth needs all the light that we can give it. Cecil the Seer, i. EGGS, BOILED .... When travelling, in certain places, there is just one meal I alwavs order. .... Humph! What's that? .... Boiled eggs. I am the first to get inside their shells. On Detective Duty, ii. « SELECTED QUOTATIONS 105 EGOTIST, THE Each to his own conception is a god. Proclaim him this, you but concede a claim Long felt within. He knew it all before. .... The egotist! .... Yes, but we all are that. The spirit, we are told, is made of air. Like air it is in this, — will force its way And feel full right to enter and possess Whatever space a crack or crevice opens The Aztec God, iii. Come wounds! come jeers! where were they miss'd By one who sought the noblest list? Zeal ne'er did sigh, but some drone hiss'd, "Be dunce with me, or egotist." Wise world, that you our due begrudge us You yet, years hence, may understand. If we work out the good, so judge us; If ill, time then to use your brand! A Life in Song: Doubting, vii. Like a great many other people who have read little and thought much — about themselves — and possess, in addition, that susceptibility of temperament which causes one to be easily kindled to enthusiastic ad- miration for the object of his thoughts, he had arrived, after many years of persistent self -culture all tending in the same direction, at the conclusion (than which what could be more satisfactory?) that anything that he himself did not know, wish, or feel, was not worth knowing, wishing, or feeling. Could any conclusion, if communicated to others, prove more beneficial to them than this? Was there any better method of instruction or appeal through which another's soul could become more completely disinthralled from all the petty annoyances that come to one so blind to the conditions of perfect peace as still to study, doubt, and struggle? What more noble aim, then, could thrill his trembling locks, explode his tones, or animate his arms, than to become the prophet of what he acted as if he thoroughly believed to be the kingdom within himself? — the Lord of which, when ruling within so great a man as he was, needed apparently, in his lo6 A POETS CABIXET opinion, to exercise no contemporaneous lordship within the minds or consciences of an}' who surroiinded him. Modern Fishers of Men, \*ii. EMBRACED "Who would let a soul, nor fear it, Be embraced with no love near it, Both to cherish and revere it? A Life in Song: Doubting, xxrv. ENTRAXCHISEMEXT, A WIFE's (see WOMEN') Only wise, As owls thai blink at Hght ! — so blind — nor see "What day dawns with a wife's enfranchisement; Ambitious, but forgetting that the meek Inherit heaven, or that the oppressor dwarfs His own surroundings ; that if pride stoop not, Then must the soul ; that earthly lords must bend, And lift their consorts to their own prized seats, As equals, queens; or else must house with slaves, And make the slavish habits there their own. Ideals Made Real, x. ENGAGEMENT, A COLLEGE .... And what is a college engagement? .... Why, that of a home-sick boy, who wants a mother or sister. The Ranch Girl, i. ENGLAND And then — who could describe in lines of rh\Tne, Nor circumscribe, the joy, so keen yet kind, That England holds for souls of even,' clime, Who honor aught that nobler makes the mind ; Where grand catliedrals throb with chorals breathing Through forms of grace their life of gracious thought ; And ancient towers decay, with ivy wreathing Fair forms of fresher art round aU the ruin wrought. Nor could mere words one's eager wish appease. When striving to depict an Enghsh home. Where no crude care intrudes on ctiltur'd ease. And service vies but to exalt its own, God bless thee long, our own land's mother-nation — Most motherly when proud of England too ! — God bless that loyalty to each relation, Inbred with British bloodfromlord to tenant through ! SELECTED QUOTATIONS 107 Our land's descendants from thee ever boast Of what they first imbibed upon thy knee, — That stalwart Anglo-Saxon sense that most In church and state keeps thought and action free; Who fears a progress, charg'd with freedom's mission, That gives to English genius broader scope? Earth fears far more thy foe, whose politician In tearing thy flag down may lower the whole world's hope. A Life in Song: Serving, xxxix-xli. ENGLISHMEN I think that I should try The court of England. You have seen their men : — White skinned, the spirit just behind the face. Their very faults the proof they are not false; Too impudent for truthlessness, too bold To stab behind one's back, too proud of push To trip with little tricks, too fond of sport To keep one down, when down. Columbus, i., 3. ENJOYMENT Enjoyment is the man's most heartfelt praise To Him that fram'd his being. What shoidd I, A child of God, do here but Hve God's life? — Which is not now, nor then, but evermore. My soul must thrive the best, as best I make My now, eternal; my eternal, now. So when a storm comes, let me bar it out ; And, braced against the present ill, grow strong; And when the sunshine, let me open wide To that which makes all nature grow more sweet. Thus, realizing in my earthly state The aim of heaven, why do I praise Him less Whose life is that of heaven, than those who wear The guises of that slattern of the soul, ' Asceticism, shufiiing toward far good, Slipshod and snivelling? Ideals Made Real, XLix. ENLARGE To think things larger may enlarge one's thought. Dante, i., i. ENLIGHTEN .... You all make too much light of this. .... What better can enlighten dullness, pray, Than making light of it? Columbus, 11., 2. io8 A POET'S CABINET ENLIGHTENMENT Reclined Against the western slope, looked off to give A god-speed to the sun, and half-believed The blue-tint sky-sheet, held to light against The little town of learning that I loved, Could bear away with photographic art That which should give enlightenment to all The western land through which it should be trailed. West Mountain. ENLISTED Tho' he himself may be misunderstood, Gainsaid and thwarted by the very souls With whom his has enlisted, if they yet Press bravely forward, he may feel for them, If less than whole love, more than interest. His lord-like spirit, like the spirit's Lord, Content to work or wait, to do or die. If but the truth he serves may be supreme. A Life in Song: Doubting, XLI. ENTHUSIASM Enthusiasm is The essence of religion — valueless Without its uplift and its oversight. If these it lack, it is a lifeless corpse Not measured by its worth but want of it. Columbus, I., I. Enthusiasm needs a margin. Idem. ENVY (see jealousy) I hate to think it, yet at times one must, That some men deem mere conscious envy conscience ; And seem most zealous when they are but jealous. Cecil the Seer, i. When hunting sometimes, I have found that birds Of brightest plumage are the soonest shot. This is a world where many men go hunting. Columbus, IV., 2. EQUALITY The nearer heaven our view-points be, The more of men's equality we see. A Life in Song: Seeking, xvii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 109 What is one that he should thrive? Ah, though high he be in station, though he nobly aim and strive, — ■ Yet the small man in his cottage and the great man in his hall Here fill equal spheres, the agents of the power at work in all. A Life in Song: Watching, 11. ESPIONAGE Where I hope No mortal will be present to profane Vows fit for only gods to hear, some form, With eyes omniscient as a very devil's Incarnate in an earthly messenger, Outspawns its fouling shadows on the light Like night-shades to the lost who pray for day. The Aztec God, iii. EULOGIES If currents in view Are to crystallize too Like things of the past, the winter will show it. The future must rate The fruit of the present : so shrewd men wait, And but of the dead Are their eulogies read. — Good souls, they never will let one rest Until he is borne to the land of the blest ! Unveiling the Monument. EVEN, GETTING, WITH THE LOW There is no such thing As getting even with a low-lived soul. Without degrading one's own self. Cecil the Seer, ill, 2. EVIL UNIVERSAL The well-made locks and legal barriers By which the best philanthropist avers Distrust in men ; the long sad list of crimes In lawyer's lore ; the armies of all times With men so elate to man them; anarchy Whose brute force prostrates all prosperity Till shot and steel instate it ; toil that schemes For self or steals another's; rest that dreams Of vice and wakes in vileness ; conscience, care, no A POET'S CABINET Disease, and death, — alike one record bear; — All show the trace of evil gone before, Whose trail is clear to all, but clear yet more To those who strive most hard to walk aright. Yet walk misled where but the past sends light. A Life in Song: Seeking, xxi. EXAMPLE All men who try- To glorify the Lord on high Must prove His goodness through their own. They cannot lead one toward His throne, Save through the Godlike traits alone That their transfigured lives have shown. Idem, Doubting, XLIII. Not skill to chide another's pride Can make a wise or welcome guide; But he the best for noble deeds Inspires his kind, who best succeeds In finding what his own soul needs. Though others' need to his be small, He may be less, yet more than all. Nay, God gives each an equal call, With ill to bear and good to share And, whether it be full or spare. Some truth to show the Godlike there. Idem, XLiv. EXAMPLE AND INFLUENCE How can I pray the gods to give me light, if those That have been sent to lead me where it shines Forever stand betwixt my soul and it? The Aztec God, ii. EXAMPLE, IN A LEADER Those are most worth our help on earth Whose eyes look up, and he who stands above them, Would he fulfill their soul's ideal, must show A life worth while their looking up to see. Idem, IV., I. EXCEPTIONAL DEEDS Our deeds that are exceptional appear the rule to those who see us only once. Tuition for her Intuition, I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS iii EXCESS OF SERVICE IN NATURE {see OVERFLOW) Think not that every leaf that sprouts in spring Must be a stem straight-pointed toward a flower; That every bud must bring a blossom-nest In which to hatch and home a future fruit. Full many a leaf can only catch the shower And quench the dry Hmb's thirst; full many a bud Grow bright alone as might a short-lived spark Aglow to show some soiirce of kindled fragrance — Aglow to show itself a part and partner Of that excess of service in which all The starry worlds are joined, as, hung beneath Heaven's dome, like golden censers brimmed with fumes Of smouldering myrrh, their God-enkindled fires Now flash, now fail, while souls, awe-thrilled to thought Both trust and fear their fires' unfaihng Source. Berlin Mountain. EXCITEMENT You hunger for excitement, man. You hail The trump of war, the tramp of onset, all That sweeps you on where drafts of Hfe and love Fan up the flames that flicker in the breast And set the whole form's trembling veins aglow. The Aztec God, i. EXCLUSIVENESS, IN SOCIETY If you want to be "of the few, " you must take care to let people know that you are not "of the many. " Where Society Leads, i. EXPECTATIONS Fresh expectations, Hke fresh eggs, may hatch. Not so with stale ones, though, however white. Columbus, I., 3. EXPECTATIONS, YOUTHFUL Frail, faint heart! And it had so much Hfe! I thought its thrills The riUing of a fount whose brook should flow Out to a sea of Ufe, as wide as earth, And upward to a golden clouded heaven. Why, all my moods — they banner spring-time yet, The buds but just unfolding, scarce a flutter To balm the breeze with their sweet promises! 112 A POET'S CABINET Must all be now cut off? — uprooted? — what? The prickliest cactus clutches, at the last, The flower toward which it grows ; and shall these nerves, All tender to the touch of life, so live Themselves, so hungry to be fed, yet void Of all with which hope pledged them to be filled — Shall they be cheated out of this they craved? Are all the visions of the fancy frauds That fool our faith, anticipating joy That never comes? Is that mysterious power That prompts our lives to be, and pushes on Toward what it promised them, so vilely weak That, like a knave who fears to be outwitted, It needs must lash and lure us with a lie? — Yet now — heaven ! I will not so believe it. I cannot; no. The Aztec God, iv., i. EXPERIENCE, A GUIDE TO TRUTH A man of sense Trusts first his own experience; Nor waives the truth he draws from thence For all mankind's experiments. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxiii. The moonlight guides us, if we have no sun. But forms that loom at midnight lie to those Who know them in the day; and in the day No judgment of the distance can be true Except for him who pushes on to reach it. Columbus, II., 2. It is our trying That turns the latch-key of experience. Whose door swings inward quite as oft as outward. Dante, i., i. EXPERIENCE, ONE's OWN, INDICATED BY HIS CHARACTER Each passing season circling round a tree Leaves, clasping it, a ring; the rings remain, So seasons past remain about the soul : And men can trace its former life far less By tales the tongue may tell, than by the range And reach of that which circumscribes the mood. Including or excluding right or wrong. Haydn, xxix. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 113 EXPERIENCES, UNPLEASANT, ARE TRANSITORY Only have a little faith and patience. Experiences like yours never last forever. They are like bad dreams. Sometimes, the very first hour after one wakes, one feels as well as if he had had no dream. Where Society Leads, in. EXPERT No man who is no expert risks a judgment On questions experts only can decide, Without revealing his own lack of judgment. Dante, 11., 2. EXPRESSION {see REPRESSION and words) A mood but half expressed is all distressed. The Aztec God, 11. Whom God inspires, though they unheeded sing, May be through mere expression wholly blest. The Solitary Singer. When the heart is all aglow With the flame of love's desire, The inward fume must outward flow, Or smother all the fire. A Life in Song: Loving, xx. What can curse one worse Than force that jails expression, whether walled In masonry or flesh! — Though it may be Fit training for a life whose brightest end Is death. If all men die alone, may be They ought to learn, ere death, to live alone. The Aztec God, i. Themes and aims as grand as these Overflow the burden'd words that bear our lesser thoughts with ease. Many guiding views beyond us loom but dimly un- derstood : Many schemes are hatch'd to famish where our im- perfections brood. A Life in Song: Dreaming, ix. He comes on plotting.— That is plain enough. How form and face — mere garments that they are — Will twist and wrinkle to a touch of thought! Columbus, III., 2. 114 A POET'S CABINET EXPRESSION TO FIT THE MOOD Go bid the flowers Keep back their perfume ; then, perchance, may souls, All sweet with blooming love, keep back sweet words. Haydn, i. EYE Shone a light in her dark, deep eye Pure as a star, when shining Far in a sky whose depths defy All but a god's divining. A Life in Song: Loving, il. Ay, oft I hide my eyes apace Beneath my eyelids' awning; Too bright behind each flushing face A holy light seems dawning. Each eye I see appears a lens, Through which, with stolen glances, A realm divine my spirit kens, Which all my hope entrances. Idem, Vlll. EYE, MEN INFLUENCED THROUGH THE Try looking at them, my lady. The men that oppose a man will sometimes yield to a woman. The toughest of them can be wounded like crocodiles through the eye. The Ranch Girl, ii. EYE, STEADY, VS. DODGING He never holds a steady eye to greet The look that rests on him. It seems as if He feared that one might spy within his brain Some secret that a dodging glance could shield. The Aztec God, in. EYE AND EYES, WHEN BLUE Farmer lad, where the herd will drink Waits a maid that bathes by the brink Bare brown feet; and the rill, made sweet. Thrills to touch her who thee would greet. There is more for thee in the blue of her eye Than in all the towns that are under the sky. Farmer Lad. I seem to see him yet, the straight brown hair Toss'd wildly backward from the broad white brow. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 115 The sunburnt cheeks, the deep and wondering eyes, As blue when grand emotion swept within, As autumn skies are in the northwest wind, With just as much of heaven back of them. Dear boy! A Life in Song: Note i. EYES A sight supreme, arousing me : — Two bright eyes only, sparkling in the light, Where fiush'd a face that flared, then hid itself Behind a travelling hood, befleck'd with dust. And fring'd with venturous locks of careless hair. Ideals Made Real, ix. Look up, my love, and let me see Those eyes of thine gaze full on me. One glimpse were heaven, although their light Should blind me to each lesser sight. What though their more than earthly fire Should turn to flame my heart's desire; 'T were sweet to let this life of mine All burn to incense at thy shrine. O could thy power thus make me thine, 'T would all my coarser self refine; For nothing would be left of me. Save what should be a part of thee. A Life in Song: Loving, xliii. EYES, EXPECTANT When His troopers flash in sight here, why, these eyes That have been straining so to see them come Will scratch some blinks to cure their vision's itching. Columbus, v., I. EYES, EXPRESSION OF Her features, while not sufficiently regular to answer all requirements of beauty, were, nevertheless, pecul- iarly fascinating because cast into shade by the peculiar brightness of her eyes. These might have been called blue, but there was in them, more than in any other eyes that I ever saw, that constantly chang- ing color and expression that seems to say, "I trust you — no, I don't," which, because it sets a man to thinking and keeps him at it, is more likely perhaps to Il6 A POET'S CABINET awaken his interest in a woman than any other charm that she can possess. Modern Fishers of Men, ii. EYES vs. SOUL, IN SEEING When their eyes are open, then they see so much besides that they don't care for. It's only when the eyes are shut the soul can wholly live with those it wholly likes to live with. The Little Twin Tramps, ii. FACE, FLAMED My face flamed hot as if its veil of flesh Would burn, and bare the soul. Ideals Made Real, xii. FACING DANGER A man who once begins to swim a current, must face the way it flows — it is never safe to dash heel forward where one needs a head. On Detective Duty, ill. FACTION Now who remembers faction Forgets his Florence. Dante, i., I. The trumpets call to action Through all the threatened land, No more is heard of faction, The time has come to band. What soul can see The state in fear, and fail to be Beneath the flag, enrolled with all That heed the trumpet's call? No patriots are they who can see The state in fear and fail to be Beneath the flag, enrolled with all That heed the trumpet's call. Cecil the Seer, ill., 2. FACTS AND FANCIES Men take too many chances In drawing facts from fancies. Idem, i. FAILED The soul succeeded though its project failed. He lost his outward end, indeed, but gain'd SELECTED QUOTATIONS 117 An inward end that, for his youthful years, Had far more value. A Life in Song: Note iii. FAILURE Failure .... Shows a spirit as it is. It throws one's manhood into full relief, Stript of all circumstance and accident. Columbus, II., I. FAIRNESS If you're fair men, to win your race, you only want fair play, hands off, and elbow room — a clear track, and the right of way. That's what the law gives. The Little Twin Tramps: iii., 2. FAIR PLAY Now, now, fair play! Fair play in argument Will catch our thoughts before it throws them back. Columbus, I., 2. FAITH {see CREEDS, DEEDS, HUMANITY, KNOWLEDGE, PROGRESS, and nature, material as a school) If still for growth in truth we trust, While faith can dare, it cannot die. With facts against it, 't will espy Far distant lights that guide its eye, Snatch hope from talons of despair, And welcome flight vnth. fancies fair. A Life in Song: Doubting, xviii. Foremost of our best possessions, faith fails not that can but feel ; Yet how blest are they who know and can their grounds of faith reveal. They alone, amid the shades, where men who move toward mystery Long to know what joy or woe is yet to be their destiny. They alone, with heaven-lit torches, flashing light the darkness through, Can disclose beyond the gloom the looming outlines of the true. Idem, Dreaming, ix. faith and FACTS His body served the soil, but from the skies He breathed the spirit in with which he wrought. 1 18 A POET'S CABINET In them he saw fair homes and cities rise. No facts can bury faith that Hves in thought. The American Pioneer. FAITH AND REASON To walk by faith and not walk hand in hand with reason also, is to walk to ruin. The Two Paths, iv. FAITH AND THINKING But I was thinking .... Thinking has its dangers. .... Yes, but for it I should have been a priest. At present, am confessor but to you. And my advice is, — not to say to others What you have said to me. .... Why? .... It would make The world suspect you. .... How? — and what? .... Why, say, Your faith. .... Impossible! God knows — they know — The purpose of my life. — . . . . Your life! But faith- Is not a thing to-day of life, but talk; And God — He has not much to do with it. A man of faith, is one whose faith in those To whom he talks will make him talk their thoughts. None here will think that what you say can be. Columbus, IV., I. FAITH IN MAN AS WELL AS GOD, ESSENTIAL {see honor) .... Suppose the women cease to trust the men? .... Suppose they go to hell. They will go there no sooner if they lose their faith in man than if they lose it in divinity. In one regard the Mormon theory is right — though it applies to both the sexes — when faith in man is gone, all chance is gone of being saved oneself, or saving others. Tuition for her Intuition, i. Not all the doubts of the creeds Can shake their faith who find SELECTED QUOTATIONS 119 No selfishness back of the deeds Of one pure sensitive mind. Love and Life, xiii. The world is wide, and wisdom strange ; To find it one must freely range; And, when from this to that we change, We lose our friend, unless his mood Will justly weigh our former good With what is now misunderstood. And though he cannot see our goals, Have faith enough to trust our souls, — Faith man as well as God demands From every soul that near him stands. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxvii. FAITH, TO one's OWN SOUL They are proud Of one who, all his lifetime, has kept faith With his own soul, however left alone. Columbus, v., 2. FAITHFUL, THE, VS. THE WISE • • • • The wise Aim not beyond their reach. • • • • The faithful aim Wherever they are called. Idem, 11., i. FALLEN Look — my soul! — a man has tumbled; Shown himself a beast, and humbled Man and God, at whom he grumbled. — Moans a wife now never sleeping, Babes that her thin hands are keeping: — Waits a grave where none are weeping. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxiv. FALL OUT, WHEN OUR ENEMIES When our enemies fall out, *T is time that we ourselves fall in. For then They fight for their own cause with half their force And with the other half they fight for us. Dante, i., 2. FAME {see MONUMENT and posthumous) Ah, why should one who shrinks from sight Essay to push where fame's clear light I20 A POET'S CABINET Can make him but a target bright, Where every individual mood And all the best he has pursued Is flouted or misunderstood? — ■ Where sense might rather wish to be A wild beast caged for men to see Than be a lion such as he? — With every word he speaks the cause Of public jeering or applause, And every one he loves, in fear That half the world will elbow near; Through life a slave to scrutiny, When dead, a dress 'd-up effigy, A puppet of biography, That dances high or dances low To please the men who make him go — To please the men who strip him bare. To bring him shame, or make him wear A suit striped like a convict's, where. With every hue that helps his fame. Alternate shades insure him blame? Ye fools, who ne'er for wisdom sought. And ne'er for deeds immortal wrought. Ye never knew, nor fancied aught That near'd at all the inward thought Of men of truth, whose footsteps went Through life that was one long ascent: They did not seek a monument. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxxvii. Immortal fame . . And do you think . . that this Could set the heart at ease? — or think you none. If set at ease, can thrill with drum-like throbs That marshal on the spirit to success ? Haydn, iv. FAMILY LOVE How blest is the mother Whose boy is her lover! How blest is the father who seems but a brother ! How blest all the household who all discover That even a babe's life just begun Has a heart and a head that must be won; That the youngest will with a wish has rights For all to respect ! SELECTED QUOTATIONS 121 Ah, what is there human that nature slights, And what in Hfe that love can neglect ! The petty desire of the tenderest tone To God is as great and as dear as one's own. Love and Life, xlvii. FAMILY PRIDE No poison paralyzes thought like pride; No pride as poisonous as family pride. Dante, i., 2. FANATICISM A Moloch, clasping in his arms of fire Desires he kindles, but can never quench. Cecil the Seer, i. FANCY Fancy is the flower of thought. The more of life there is, the more of flower: The more of thought there is, the more of fancy. Dante, i., i. Who think the poets' fancies true? Their brains, Like helmets when their metal is the best, Receive the light of life and flash it back. None take the flash for fire. Idem. FANCY AND FACT A fresh young brain acts like a keg of beer when freshly brewed. You try to tap it, and at first you find the froth of fancy, not the flow of fact. On Detective Duty, v. The world you think in is a world of fancy. The world all live in is a world of fact. Dante, i., 2. Not fact-full only, but a mind that you Deem fanciful, is needed, would a man Put this and that together, and build up The only structure that can make his facts Worth knowing. Columbus, i., i. FANCY AND TRUTH A woman's fancy may be near the truth. .... As near as fire to water. Yonder pool Is truth. The sunbeam it reflects is fancy. One water is, one fire. The Aztec God, iii. 122 A POETS CABINET FANCY AND REALITY Our fancies are the children of the soul, With rights of heritage as true as those Of any other form of thought. If so, Then their relationship may be as true — Though how we never now can understand — To that which mortals term reality. Dante, III., i. FAREWELL Oh, bitter, bitter, bitter word farewell, So bitter when the lips belie the heart That knows too well that life will not fare well. The Aztec God, iv., i. FARMER Brought near the man, he finds his frame is bent, As if by long devotion to his lands ; His arms are brown with heat by sunlight sent To turn red-ripe the fruit served by his hands. His chest is broad, and gratefully expands To feel the generous air his health renew, — A master of his house and farm he stands, Who, fearing no man, dares to all be true. With open eyes and lips that let the soul speak through. A Life in Song: Daring, xv. FASHION Like bodies why should souls, forsooth, Not be well padded, stay'd, and laced To suit the world's prevailing taste, Till through the form no truth is traced? A Life in Song: Doubting, xxix. The most beautiful thing in the world is the human face and form, the most attractive thing the human mind and soul. Your set paint the face and upholster the form till the whole personality comes at one from behind a mask. What sense is there in making life uninteresting? The most charming sight conceivable, I think, is a fresh, pretty girl in a clean, unadorned white gown. What Money Cant Buy, ill. FASHION, AND WOMEN You flaunt the flag of fashion in a crowd And, in the bee-line of their rush to tail SELECTED QUOTATIONS 123 Its leading, one could pick the women out Without their having skirts on. Columbus, ill., i. FAST LIFE Suppose this heart a toy- Wound up to run through just so many ticks .... I see, you mean a fast life is a short life. .... The fleetest foot is first beside the goal. .... But if the goal be high as well as far . . . . The bird of fleetest wing may fly the highest. The Aztec God, i. FATE AND FREE WILL . . . .Must all new growth be planted in the earth? ... .Is any germ that grows not planted there? . . . .What trains it then? .... Some say that where it falls, In age, clime, country, family, fleshly form. The mighty wheels of matter — earth and moon, And sun and planets, all the unseen stars Of all the universe that round it roll — With one unending whirl grind out its fate; Yet only earthly fate. Flung to and fro. And torn by care and toil and pain and loss, The spirit knows in spirit it is free; And, true to its high nature, may pass through The terror of the ordeal with all The finer flour of nature's grain preserved. .... So though careers be fated, souls are free? .... The consciousness of freedom comes from force Which is of heaven; the consciousness of fate From that which is of earth; and both are true; Or that which makes all feel them both is false. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. FATHER, THE HEAVENLY Ah, who that thinks, can yet believe it true That earth has not a common Father? — who Can deem that any soul is wholly driven From light that blesses all. Some ray has given Some glimpse to each one who has heavenward striven. Idem: Seeking, xix. father's vs. mother's influence I think the father starts the tendency, the mother 124 A POET'S CABINET molds it, then they both together, when life has left their handling, and been launched, stand on the shores, like builders of a ship, and hope the storms will not have strength to wreck it. On Detective Duty, i. FAULT-FINDING When you visit your neighbor's garden you ought to judge it by what appears on the surface. If you choose to dig down into the dirt and soil yourself, it is not his fault but yours. What Money Can't Buy, ii. FEARS You fill my soul with fears for you; but, ah, With fears that are so sweet, again I fear That my own soul is what I most should fear. .... The wise fright off their fears by facing them. Cecil the Seer, i. FEEDING IN SOCIETY Most fish that I know of can be caught by bait. Throw overboard enough to keep busy the mouths that are opening to you, and though you seem some distance from the general current, it may prove more difficult to keep out of society than to get into it. Where Society Leads, i. FEELING Who can know Round what conceits our surging fancies foam When depths of feeling rise, and overflow, And swamp the reason in their floods of woe? Alas, one can but feel (while all sweep on, And, flitting through their mist and darkness, show Grim ghosts of buried good with features wan) Sensations too acute for thoughts to poise upon. A Life in Song: Daring, xxxix. The surest way to keep from feeling things Is not to touch them. The Aztec God, ii. FEELING, DEPENDENT ON THOUGHT The soul of feeling is in thought, not so? Then one, to feel refresh'd, must think she bathes In rills that reach her from the freshest springs. Ideals Made Real, xvi. FEELING IN MEN AND WOMEN No one admires a man who yields to feeling. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 125 .... And few a woman who does not yield to it. .... Strong argument against a woman ruler! .... And yet some say the sexes are alike. .... Will never grow alike 'till men grow soft and women sharp. .... And both grow like the devil — the one because they have no strength, the other because they have no sweetness to outwit him. .... You ever note how suffragettes object to have us praise up sweetness in a woman? Tuition for her Intuition, 11. FEELINGS VS. FACTS, IN FELLOWSHIP With outer facts we merely fashion faction, In inner feeling we find fellowship. Dante, 11., i. FEET To and fro the folds of her gown, With fair little feet below them, To and fro and up and down Daintily swung to show them. A Life in Song: Loving, 11. FELLOWSHIP, THAT BRINGS COMPETITION That strange stress Of human fellowship which sometimes makes A fellow-worker, from his very zeal To help another, elbow him aside. Had seemed to force me to a precipice As real as any that my feet could find; And I must fight, or fall; and if I fought Must fight myself and fight my every friend. West Mountain. FEVER How marvellously throng'd with strange weird shapes Deep halls of fancy loom, when lighted up By fires of fever. Haydn, xxii. FIDELITY TO MAN, SAME AS TO GOD You think fidelity to man can grow From germs of infidelity to God? You think that questioning the forms men most Esteem proves high esteem for men themselves? Cecil the Seer, i. 126 A POET'S CABINET FIGURES You speak in figures. We all live in them. What then? Why, they are beautiful. And this Gives life its beauty? .... Ay, and interest. For every time a spirit veiled in them Reveals itself, why, it anticipates The resurrection of the soul, not so? And that brings heaven. .... Then to reveal myself • .... Is very much in such a world as this — When owning so much that is worth revealing. .... You jest. .... I am in earnest. When one needs More strength of spirit, nothing save a spirit Can ever give it. You have given me yours. Columbus, II., I. FIGURES LIKE WORDS SHOULD BE TRUE A figure of a man untrue to the conditions of nature would be no more out of place in painting or sculpture than the words of a man untrue to the same would be in poetry. Painting, Sculp., and Arch, as Rep. Arts, ii. FINE vs. COARSE MEN .... Fine man. .... No; not what I call fine. .... Because the man has risen in life? — If one shake pebbles in a pail, the fine ones fall, the coarse ones rise, you think? The Little Twin Tramps, v. FIRE, PLAYING WITH Dangerous to play with fire! All easy enough beginning it; but when it gets to burning — well, is like a crack there in the dam. Your little finger, when it starts, can check the flood and stop the leak; let go a time, the strongest man who tried to stem it would be drowned. Idem, I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 127 FIRES IN THE HEART Great fires are kindled in a moment only Where hearts are tinder, and a glance a spark. The Aztec God, iii. FISHER You never saw a fisher catch a fish Whose hook would not get tangled in the line. Columbus, I., 3. FIST The fist is fashioned for the use of God In just as true a sense as is the finger, — What grasps a sword as that which guides a pen. Dante, ill., 2. FLAG, THE AMERICAN Hail, all hail, the flag above us. In its blue more bright Shine the stars to guide our way than in the dome of night; Higher aims the hope that sees them, for their spotless white Symbols the pure light of freedom. Hail, all hail, the flag above us. Nature never knew, In the dawn's red ladder-bars where daylight climbs to view. Stripes that brought as fair a day as these anon shall do, When all the world turns to freedom. Hurrah ! Hurrah ! beneath the flag to be ! Hurrah ! Hurrah ! its loyal wards are we ! Where the Stars and Stripes are flying over land or sea. Under the flag there is freedom. Hail the Flag. FLATTERY No friendship that is true Was ever caught or kept by flattery. Dante, i., 2. FLESH Does ever the slightest move of mine With rhythm so fill the air. That her veins all beat With throbs more sweet, Than if she were breathing a breeze divine, And a god were passing there? 128 A POET'S CABINET Can ever my flesh appear so fair, And the blood so warm below That the gentlest touch Is all too much? — Nor her tingling nerves can bear The joys that through them flow? A Life in Song: Loving, XLiv. FLIGHTY They call him flighty. .... So are birds — and so Are — angels .... What? .... And every kind of life Above the common. Columbus, i., 2. FLIGHTY MINDS These flighty minds That cut connection with the world's demands Are sure to have a limping time of it, If ever they get down to useful work, Dante, i., i. FLIRT {see COURTING and suitors) I watch'd a man and maid, to-day: Each dimm'd the other's eyes with spray. He dash'd from his life's dregs unseen What pleased the lady's wistful mien, — A maid not vicious, yet I ween Not loath to be, with open eyes, His mate whom honor could not prize. Ah, lust is lush in flatteries wise! Full well she liked her dash of danger With such a spicy, saucy stranger — But let them pass. For conquest girt, The man a rake, the maid a flirt. Will get, when caught, their own desert; Be prey; and prey is always hurt. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxix. Forsooth, if beauty pleases me, I smile; If gracefulness beguile me, gaze at it ; If wisdom awe me, offer my respect. Good art I laud; with fancy, am a poet; And with emotion, an enthusiast. What then? — Am I a hypocrite? — How so? — Awake, asleep, throned constant o'er my heart, I served this image all intangible, This photographic fantasy. See page i8y. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 129 Must all our sympathy be personal? Must one appropriate all that he would praise? Is beauty such a flower, or is a man So much a beast, that, having taste for it, He needs must go and gorge it down? — Go to! — I watch the fair thing; of its fragrance quaff; Then leave for others. Ideals Made Real, xxxiii. Ah me, but I pity the race If one with his beast of a face Can win a woman like that. By dancing attendance, and holding his hat, And grinning and bowing to see her nod As if he were playing the ape to her god. A Life in Song: Loving, xvii. FLOGGING CHILDREN These children are like eggs — all white outside — ■ but what they are inside you never know till you have cracked them {giving bertha a hex on the ears) . .... Oh, now, please, not that! I want to gain her confidence. .... Her what? You never saw my husband break a colt. He starts by flogging. .... Children, though, have minds; and what controls a mind best is its wish and not our whiplash. That never cuts below the outside skin. I want to reach the soul. .... Well, really, now! — of all the weak old women I But you can train your colt the way you please; for when it kicks, 'twill not be in my circus. On Detective Duty, v. FLOWER O, if as my life began, I had only bloom' d as a flower, A smallest flower in a vine that ran Beneath her feet, or climb 'd to her bower, She might have pluck'd me and held me tight In her warm moist hand, or pour'd the light Of her soul-bright eyes on my wondering view, Till with love they had burn'd me through and through. She might have Hfted, and coil'd me there, Caress'd by a tress of her trembling hair; I30 A POETS CABINET Or let me lie all day on her breast, Where the lace-folds throb like nerves of the blest ; And then if aught I could be in that hour, Or aught I could do with the life of a flower Could add to the store of her charms, and make Her form more fair for my poor sake, My making her sweet life sweeter seem Would bring me a bliss that I could not dream. A Life in Song: Loving, xiv. FLOWERS FOR THE DEAD We mortals eat. But think you that ghosts deem eating a treat? — No hollow within have they to fill, No blood to flow, no nerve to thrill, But get you flowers, all fresh and sweet, Of all things leaving the world at death. There is nothing of which we know but breath. And what but fragrance can they bear The whole of whose bodies are merely air? The Last Home Gathering. FOE, A MAN vs. WOMAN A man-foe is a brute, a shark that whacks The spirit's prow and whirls it from its course. A maid may be a devil seizing on The spirit's helm to turn it where she will. Her victim though — he thinks her will is his. You never knew a man to dodge the touch Of love-like fingers feeling for his heart. That heart held once within a grip so gained, Will take each wrench that wrings its life-blood out To be its own pulsation. The Aztec God, i. FOES, NOT TO BE KILLED Who made me heaven's avenging messenger? Or bade me cull for those high gardeners there What grow in nights of earth to greet their dawn? I should not know them foes but for their guise. And what is all their alien flesh but guise A little nearer to their souls? It gone. What would they be but spirits, freed from space, — From all the need of trampling others down To find a place to stand in for themselves? — Idem. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 131 FOLLY To flay a folly slaj'-s it. A Life in Song: Darings XLV, FOOL To fool With fools is feeding folly. .... Feed a fool On folly, and he grows so fat with it That soon all wisdom's world that he would sit on, Would it not die itself, must make him diet. Columbus, II., 2. FOOLED, IT TAKES A FOOL TO BE All men start Freshmen, and, to learn their places, need hazing. So the Sophomores get their fun — but yet discriminate — put like with like. They never haze where finding nothing hazy. If you uncork men, rid them of their brains, you merely further what, before you came, they, on their part, were at work fermenting. No fun can make a fool of any- body until he makes a fool, first, of himself. On Detective Duty, 11. FOOLS Fools! — Yet without fools, where were sovereignty For wise men? — they would find it harder work To do earth's thinking for it; harder work To string the nerves that center in one's brain Through all the mass, and rein it to one's will. Columbus, III., 2. FOOTFALLS Footfalls, light as dreams', may wake the slumbering soul's activity, Rouse the source whence thought and feeling issue toward their destiny, — Toward the good, if lured by movements where a pathway leads to weal ; Toward the ill, if turning only where the wiles of craft appeal. A Life in Song: Dreaming, i. FOOTSTEPS, IN A WILDERNESS NIGHT-STORM . . . . Hark! There seems human rhythm in this hell. What hot pursuit is it comes burning through These crackling branches? The Aztec God, i. 132 A POET'S CABINET FOP Whose jingling pocket-toys Outweigh'd his brain, a fop and fawning fool, Too mean to join in others' jokes or joys, The gull of all the girls, the butt of all the boys. A Life in Song : Daring, l. FORCE, AND SUCCESS {see TYRANNY) Fanatic ! Do you think in men's mad rush, Each toward his own life's goal, they wrest the power That makes another serve them, without work? — Skill? shrewdness? tact? and forcing to the wall. Or down the precipice, each weaker rival? . . . . I do, if power that crowns them come from God. Cecil the Seer, i. FORCE, APPLIED TO THE SPIRIT Each time you try to mold a spirit's life With fingers grappling from the fist of force, You clutch but at the air, at what is far Too fine for force to handle. The Aztec God, IV., I. Vain souls, Trained on the earth to influence men through force, In realms where spirits have not forms that force Can harm, must find their occupation gone. Cecil the Seer, II., 2. FORCE, WHEN COMMUNICATING TRUTH {see THOUGHT and truth) No fighting of error by force does aught But change the statement not the thought. To ponder and halt Are seldom all fault; A natural smile Has in it no guile; But many a false array of zeal Has frightened from frankness, and so from weal ; And many a blast of pious hate Been blown by the devil to train his mate. Love and Life, xliii. If deeds go astray, no force men know Can check what nature has made to flow. If wrong attract, and right estrange, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 133 Then love must enter, and subtly change What courses forth from the soul below. Idem, XLiv. Naught, forsooth. Thrives less where force restrains it than the truth. A Life in Song: Seeking, XLVi. FORCE TOGETHER WITH CARESSES .... You force the boy, and he will use his fists. The men might do it. .... With ladies? .... When mosquitoes buzz around, the men they sting hit anything in reach. The truth is that your method is at fault. You try to force men's actions, and expect the sort of treatment due to gentleness. 'Tis risky work to ply a whip, with one hand, and to try caressing with the other. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. FORCE vs. LOVE The child is ruled by love ; grown people often must be ruled by force. Love using feeling tends to make love perfect. Force, using feeling, tends to violence. Idem, I. FORCE vs. NATURAL INCLINATION God gave you beauty — to be seen! And grace to bless this dear, sweet home. What power Would snatch you from us? make a very hell Of what might else be heaven? — Think you 'tis love? Not so ; it only hates love ; plays the part — Not of the Christ who yielded up his life. But of the world that made him yield it up; It only trusts in force, in force that lies ; And now that it can hold you with a vow Which but deceit could claim that God enjoin'd, It seizes you to plunge you down, down, down. To feel the full damnation of a faith That can believe the voice within the soul A lying guide which cannot be obey'd Without foul consciousness of inward sin, — To plunge you down, and hold you till the cells Of your pure, guileless heart, all stain'd and steep'd. Drip only dregs of stagnant viciousness! Haydn, LI. 134 A POET'S CABINET FOREIGN HUSBANDS .... Everything will be all right again. Think of it, mother, all right again ! .... Yes ; you will have become a Countess — .... And have gotten rid of the Count ; and then have become an American again with an American husband ! .... You think that last possession particularly desirable? .... You wouldn't ask that, if you knew as much as I do about foreign husbands. Where Society Leads, iii. FOREIGN TRAVEL Friends came and urged him, other aims displacing, To court the favors of a foreign shore, Assuring him that there the airs more bracing Would kindle in his veins the healthful heat of yore. A Life in Song: Serving, xxii. FORGIVENESS, A SENSE OF .... Your faith means faith that God forgives. If he forgive you, why not feel forgiven? .... Though the Lord forgive, In spirit how can spirits feel forgiven Ere they undo the wrong their lives have wrought? Ere this had been undone, not even laws Of Moses let the trespasser receive The benefit of sacrifice; and how Could heavenly joys crown even perfect love Save as it served the soul it once had harmed? .... But how and where can spirits right their wrong? .... Wherever spirits influence the spirit. .... Ah, then, through others' lives they work their work? .... Perchance they may; perchance they may do more. Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. FORM and FORMS (see significance) "Yet none," he soon had said, "could really solve All riddles hidden in the forms outlined By nature's curves and angles, or amid The play of her fair features, made more fair, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 135 Like human faces, by the thoughts beneath, Read all that so has thrill'd in every age The spirits of the wisest and the best. " A Life in Song: Prelude. Yield in form you say? — In form our frames but vehicle the truth ; Yet by its vehicle the world will rate it. When comes the splendor of a monarch's march Men cheer his chariot, not his character. Should I let mine trail, broken, bruised, bemired, The world would hiss both car and occupant. Dante, iii., 2. Only fools have faith In forms they have not wit to find unfrocked. Not sages even see the spirit through them. The Aztec God, i. The ringing strings within his harpsichord Would seem to call toward form that formless force Enrapturing so the spirit. Haydn, x. "Alas, how many a thought," he said at last, "Whose accents reach us through the rustling blast, Or meaning seems inscribed in circling rills, And outHnes of the rocks, the trees, the hills, Is void of purport to the soul whose eyes Have never yet been taught to know and prize The purpose underneath! Forms can impart Their import only to a feeling heart. A Life in Song: Seeking, ix. FORM AND SPIRIT {see DOUBT, REGALIA, RITES, RITUALISM, and spirit) As if, forsooth, a mere material guise Could ever veil the spirit from the eyes Of Him men worship, or, by outward show. Atone for wrong still strong in souls below. Can it be true that sin can disappear From lives made right but to the eye and ear? What can their spirits be but dead, indeed. Who neither feel their faith nor think their creed? Idem, XLix. The Spirit formed the forms To fit the life?— they fitted life that was; 136 A POET'S CABINET But life, if life, will grow; the life of love Has not yet fill'd the scope around, above, Of heavens that for it wait. What form'd the forms Can still be forming them. — If forms exist Wherein no Spirit works, no present life, — The things are hollow. Haydn, li. Our faith in forms may trust a God- void shrine, Where nothing that is worshiped is divine; May look to human systems, made to fit Not all the truth, but only part of it, To finite frames wherein the infinite lies Defined so well that, in the compromise Betwixt the faith and form, whate'er we view, Contracted, clipp'd, and only halfway true, Is wholly harm'd. A Life in Song: Seeking, xlvi. A hollow form The Devil flies for, like a flying squirrel For hollow tree-trunks ; and when once within, But half disguised inside his robes of white, Loud chanting out mere ceremonious cant. He tempts toward his hypocrisy an age That knows too much of Christian life, at last. For heathen life to tempt it. Haydn, li. FORMALISTS, AND THEIR CONVERSION It seems that even formalists like hirn Can see some spirit through a form; but what? — One time upon a mountain top, I saw My own shape magnified on clouds about me. How many men in earth's high places find. Looming on clouds of false regard about them, False forms of self, distorted in their size ! To waken such to their own true position. Thank heaven for precipices ! When they fall. Their views of God and self, turned upside down. May bring, at last, conversion. Cecil the Seer, i. FORTUNES, ACCUMULATING What men term fortune grows like a snowball, slowly at the start, but gathers faster as its weight gets greater. The Two Paths, i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 137 FOUNDATIONS Hard strove the youth, aye feeling, while he wrought, That but from deep foundations, grand in size. Life-structures rose like that for which he sought ; And, tho' he oft would think this ne'er could rise. Anon in visions fair he saw it fill the skies. A Life in Song: Daring, liv. FRAME, HUMAN Ah now, my frame, you are dear to me. What else below or above Could ever appear So deeply dear? What else could I wish to have or be? — For ah, you have won her love. new-found bliss of an earthly birth; This frame may be but sod; But sod or soul She loves the whole That I am, nor another could have such worth; I would rather be man than God. Idem: Loving, xliv. FRANCE But thou, our country's friend, and valor's own, O France, rash champion in all conquests new. Who has not bow'd when dazed before thy throne, Nor feared on it to find a tyrant too? Top- wave, thou art, where flows our civilization; Thy white crest shows the wind that sweeps the sea, A courtier's dress or country's devastation, Whate'er our fashions be, they all are set by thee. And some are wise ones! Would all homes could own The courtesies that grace the Frenchman's pride. Alas, our own forms oft repeat alone What apes and parrots might, as well, have tried. Defects we have, but overdo confession Who shroud our own home-life in foreign ways, And, short of thought, intent on long expression, Curve into devious French each straight-aim'd Saxon phrase. 138 A POET'S CABINET Forgive us, France, if fools or fashion-plates Have made us rank thee foremost but in arts Disguising well a world of worthless traits : True worth hast thou within thy heart of hearts. And hadst thou only wrought us works of beauty Earth's unattractive forms to guise and glove, Still beauty in this world ranks next to duty, And those who make life lovely next to those who love. But grander arts embodying grander thought Amid thine architectural glories throng; And, where the painter's brush so well has wrought, Thine orators have well denounced the wrong. Let them as well renounce all wrong ambition, Lest with some later revolution cursed Their genius, like the lightning, fire its mission By brilHant strokes that but make dire the gloom they burst. Idem : Serving, liv-lvii. FRANK And yet if love must love the soul, What power more lovely can control The men we meet, than words and ways So frank and open all can gaze On thought behind the outward phase! While every eye serene and bright, Transparent with the inward light, Reveals what thrills angelic sight! Idem: Doubting, XXIX. A time there was I thought mankind Had all an inborn right to find ^ How truth appeal'd to every mind. How noble is the task, I thought, When one has wisdom gain'd in aught, To show what he has thus been taught! And this to do, my every nerve I strain'd and pain'd, so all might serve For men to harp on. But the strings I held to them were scarce the things For them to harp on with content. Men guess not oft the whole truth meant By words that voice another's thought. Idem, XXXI. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 139 FRANKNESS {see CONCEALMENT, DECEPTION and truth) When young, not few had found his ways too old ; When older, few had found them not too young. His friends for his reserve oft thought him cold ; His foes thought aU he knew was on his tongue. Yet ever for a true demean ambitious, His greatest virtue proved his greatest fault. Oft men, adepts in vice, would deem him vicious. Because no guile's discretion made his frankness halt. Idem: Serving, v. A man who cannot bear abuse Would better live a mere recluse. Than turn his own soul inside out Because, forsooth, men stand in doubt Of what he thinks the most about. Alas, where foes our souls assail, Not all can conquer, stript of mail, What spurs the firm may wound the frail. Idem: Doubting, xxxii. FRANKNESS, ITS INFLUENCE ON OTHERS If they're so frank with you, you can be frank with them. A little unalloyed truth from the inside of your brain transferred to the inside of theirs might work like leaven, and do them good. .... Why try to force medicine down a throat that's always throwing up! I have as much as I can do trying to dodge the output. What Money Can't Buy, 11. Thank God that lips tell not what hate might say. Midnight in a City Park. If but the truth of love a soul should tell What hearts might break, what homes become a hell! If touched by ardor of one's brightest aims. How black his earth might scorch beside the flames ! Idem. FREEDOM, INDIVIDUAL {see INDEPENDENCE) Ah, when shall mortals learn That truth is grander than the earthly urn To which they would confine it, or conceive 140 A POET'S CABINET That wisest laws in states or churches leave Each man to govern rightly his own soul And thus, through practice, nurture self-control? A Life in Song: Seeking, xlvi. Whate'er old age may need, needs it the most The young who old have grown before their time? — Need sick men nurses pale? — or poor men, those Whose moods have never stored the rich results Mined from a world the world's heir should explore? — Nay, nay, these all would be more ably served By spirits free to live their own love's life. Haydn, xli. Oh you who prate of freedom, In home, in state, in church, If any realm could grant your wish, It would not end your search. The place where most men like to be Is where with most they mingle; And such a place none ever see So long as they keep single; Nay, those, in all they care about, Who always leave their neighbors out. Find life not worth this jingle : — Oh, you may call that being free, But it does not seem free to me. The Little Twin Tramps, v. FREEDOM IN STATE AND CHURCH Not mountain chains, nor streams that cleave the plains, Nor the wide ocean that around them rolls Can bound the realm of Freedom's loyal souls Who serve the Spirit that above it reigns. Not the mean few who snatch for selfish gains Through pathways opening toward the noblest goals Can shake Heaven's children's faith that Heaven controls That life the most which Earth the least enchains. Expansion. Yet oh, how dear thy sons, where'er they stray. Hold thee, our own just Land, in memory! Where every set and sect may have their say, And worth alone insures nobility; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 141 Where thrill the breasts of freedom's humble mothers, Who feel their offspring have but God to serve, And in the race they run with common brothers, May win whatever crown of life their lives deserve. A Life in Song: Serving, lix. But trust me, friend, wherever lifting skies ^ Impel deep slumbering souls to wake and rise And press toward nobler things that then they view, The church or nation that there lets them do Their best to make their best ideals true, Brings forth more worth from every character Than all the rites and codes that ever were. Idem: Seeking, XLiv. God's laws are inward, and they most control Those left most free to serve what moves the soul; But what earth's rulers force men to fulfill Oft flows from but one headstrong himian will. Idem. All in vain men sigh for freedom, heedless where its boons begin; Life is one; and souls are never free without till free within. Men must learn of wiser action; all their aims must nobler be, Love for all mankind must rule them, ere their laws can leave them free. Only when the right impels them, will they cease their long complaints ; Only love for every duty moves unconscious of re- straints. Only when no malice moves them can the fetters clank no more ; Only love in every heart can open every prison-door. A Life in Song: Watching, xi. freedom: the fight for Crowds and shoutings Can never end our strife. But sadder scenes and sounds await Our loss of wealth and life. 142 A POET'S CABINET The structures fair of freedom Men rear beneath the sky, , Press down on deep foundations, Where thousands buried lie. Our course we well may ponder: Hope's rainbow in the cloud May lure a march beneath its arch To flash and bolt and shroud. The Lebanon Boys in Boston. The course of one born humble as themselves. Who yet attained the end of highest aims As grand as any land or age e'er sought, Because his plans when struggling toward the light Emerged where freemen leave to God and heaven The right to rule the spirit though on earth. A Life in Song: Finale. FREE SCHOOLS AND HOMES Our schools are schools where poor men's boys can learn to act like gentlemen. The Little Twin Tramps, v. We love the schools that rear us. Their learning free as light, And laws, if truth loom near us. That let men use their sight; Where each can helm his own soul's thought, When, drawn by Heaven, the Inward Ought Points, compass-like, to right. America, our Home. FREE SPEECH And in a land where speech is free as thought Whoe'er do wrong, erelong, will find their ruin wrought. A Life in Song: Daring, vii. FRESH, IN EXPERIENCE A little rill just starting from a spring Could not be quite so gushing fresh as you are! I love you, boy; but when the rill has rubbed A little more of soil from both its banks 'Twill have more substance if not quite So much transparency. Dante, i., i. FRICTION, AS A SOURCE OF LIGHT The first man in the world who had no light made SELECTED QUOTATIONS 143 it by making friction; and, to-day, when wanting more light, most men do the same. At times, the friction sets their thoughts aglow. At times, it frays thern^ into splinters; but the splinters make choice kindling too; and so the world at large keeps getting more light still, and by that light, men walk. The Two Paths, iv. FRIEND and FRIENDS Amid the traits of multitudes The Maker speaks through many moods Of truths that are not understood By those who by themselves do brood. And better be, in lone despair. Some king's court fool, astride a chair, Who dreams he rules a kingdom there, With stock-still statues his hussars. And scarfs of Knighthood, but the scars Deep-whipt across his bleeding back, Than be a man whose life must lack The love that waits on friendship's throne. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxvi. "What is a friend?" I ask'd. "What else," he said, "But, in a world, where all misjudge one so, A soul to whom one dares to speak the truth?" Haydn, xxvii. For all our worth is crown'd alone. When friends have made our cause their own. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxvi. I, not for future gain, For what he may become, would prize my friend; I prize the thing he is; nor wish him changed. I would not dare disturb for aught besides The poise of traits composing sympathy. Which, as they are, so balance my desires. Ah, did I chiefly prize the profit gain'd Or promised me, where were my present joy? — Nay, nay, that love I, which I find possess'd. Haydn, xxi. But love in heaven is always just; And so I think I would not trust, 144 A POET'S CABINET But fear a friend, by day or night, Whose love contain'd no love of right. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxvii. Why, we were like two arms that limb one frame, Two hands that ply one work, two eyes that trace One onward path, two ears that heed the same Inciting cry, two steeds that lead the race Yoked to one car, twin rivals for one aim, — To think my friend base, I myself were base. The Lost Friend. The same boat floats you both. You pull together. Friends are worth the having Who best can serve themselves when serving us. Cecil the Seer, i. A friend grows grain and chaff. Sift out the first And cultivate it well, some gain may come — Some profit from your friendship. "But," said I, "If you should change yourself who change your friend, Or change but his relations to yourself, Or, some way, make a new, strange man of him?" Haydn, xx. Our friends, at times, are parasites. Who drain our strength, to crawl to heights On which they thrive on others' rights. At times, not made for light, they spring, As fits an upstart underling. Beneath the shade our branches bring. In either case, it scarce would suit Their aims, to bear the best of fruit. The usual yield that fills the stalk Is promissory buds of talk, Or gossip-tales — which spring around. If low-lived friends gain slightest ground. Like toadstools where decay is found. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxx. FRIENDS, PARTING OF And so these friends of mine, so prized of old, And I had parted, — not as friends would part. With love's high zenith fever'd like the skies Where eve has rent from them a fervid sun, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 145 Then cool'd and calm'd in starlight sprinkled thick Until the sun come back. We crack'd apart, Like icebergs drifting southward, join'd no more, And sunn'd alone the while they melt away. Ideals Made Real, xli. FRIENDS AND FOES Nay, light, It trails the shadow. It is those with friends Are sure of foes; and only those with neither Are sure of neither. Columbus, il., I. FRIENDS, AND LOSS It is worth some loss To learn we own some friends. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. FRIENDS, FOOLISH The pull that lifts one by a rotting rope Is far less dangerous than the help that comes From foolish friends. Dante, 11., I. friends' friends I never hope my friends' friends to be my friends. Those we meet all look at us from different points of view. Some like our fronts, and some our sides, and some our backs. Some think our eyes are heavenly; and some our touch ; and some — the most of women — can never look beyond the clothes we wear. The Two Paths, 11. friendship It seem'd a rare and royal friendship, ours, The very sovereignty of sympathy; Begun so early too — mere lads we were — And now I never look back there again But, swept like shading from a hero's face In pictures, — those of Rembrandt, — all the school Appear in hues of dim uncertainty vSurrounding Elbert, shining in relief. Ideals Made Real, 1. 'Tis well to sow the seeds of friendship when the sun is shining on your summer, then, when your fall comes, they bear fruit. The Little Twin Tramps, V. 146 A POETS CABINET Friendship's light Reflects but what is kindled in ourselves. Extinguish it within, and soon without We find our worid in darkness. Columbus, v., I. FRIENDS, OLD When people have been brought up together, they are like two trees that grow near each other in the same forest. You can hardly distinguish the branches and leaves of the one from those of its neighbor. All seem to belong together . So with the thoughts , feelings , actions of these old friends. They can sympathize and help one another, as is impossible for those who have hitherto been strangers. Where Society Leads, iii. FRIEND TO ONESELF No best friend ever seems a friend to one not friendly to himself. The Little Twin Tramps, i. FRIGHT AND FUN It struck us all, I think, as waves do when they splash at parties rowing in a yawl, and seem about to swamp them; but, when passed, seem memories to laugh at. The Two Paths, ii. FRUITAGE . . . . Who knows the fruitage of the seed he plants? — Like seed, like fruit. .... The seed was very small. , . . . The fruitage large? — Yet both were one in kind. The Aztec God, ill. FRUIT OF LOVE You remind me of the fruit we watch in summer, growing rosier the longer we delay in plucking it ! The Two Paths, i. FUGITIVE, A Amid the darkness of the night, Two star-like eyes, a gown-cloud white, And, just above, like phantom rays, Gray, bony fingers met my gaze. What skeleton had sought my side? — "In God's name who are you?" I cried; And, wind-like came a ghostly hiss, "In God's name, let me tell you this. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 147 "Someone did something wrong, — a man. Some thought his color dark. He ran. We heard a tread, a hoot, a song. What of it? — We had done no wrong! "We never dreamed of their attack, For we, we were not very black; And should we flee, someone might say That we were guilty — better stay!" After the Lynching. FUN, RISKY In balancing between the wise and unwise, fun, at times, is risky. If by a jot the joker lose his wit, he plunges into folly. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. FUNDAMENTALS VS. ORNAMENTALS No man can put up a building without laying foundations. My work is in the mud, you think ; but wait a few years. I am useful now. By-and-by, I shall be ornamental. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i. FUSSY, THE In the efforts of art as of all human action, it is important to remember that the fussy is never con- sistent with the dignified. Painting, Sculp., and Arch, as Rep. Arts, xix. GAMBLERS (see MONEY AS A TOY) Beguiled to fling away The hard-earned token-coin of pay, Dishonoring, in the craze of play, The law that blesses work. The Society Leader. GAMBLING, WHEN SEDUCED INTO .... I have charge of money. I might have very little left to have charge of, if it were thought that I am in the habit of playing with what I have. .... Nobody need find it out. .... I shall see that nobody does find it out. The first thing that I do to-morrow will be to tell those for whom I work exactly what I have done to-night, and let them, for themselves, judge of the circumstances. .... And why should you do that? .... So as not to seem a sneak, in case they learn of it from others. Where Society Leads, 11. 148 A POET'S CABINET GAMBLING, TEMPTING ONE INTO .... I know quite a number of gentlemen who gamble ; but not one of them that wouldn't warn off a young fellow who wanted to play at the risk of losing his business situation. .... What do men do at their clubs? .... At most of them of which I know they draw up by-laws forbidding gambling. .... I have played for money myself at the Wood- side Club. .... Yes; but it has lady-members. It wouldn't do to have by-laws that would interfere with their pleasure. .... I thought that you were a member of the Players' Club? .... I am! but do you think that the word player means the same as gambler? A player never can be the latter so long as he is inside that club house. .... You mean to tell me that actors don't gamble? .... Oh, no; only that the majority of this par- ticular set of actors have a sense of responsibility that prevents their allowing conditions that might induce others to gamble. .... What do they do on Sundays, when you are not there? .... Oh, on that day, in that club, they are forbidden to play any games at all. .... Do you suppose that I am taking what you say for truth? The idea ! — Nothing to do on the only day they have for recreation! .... Plenty to do, my dear. The houses of their lady-friends on Fifth and Massachusetts Avenues are wide open; and they are not only welcomed there, they are allured to go to the devil there just as fast as they choose. Idem. GARB Bless'd with beauty's dower, Although her garb was plainer than her neighbors', Her face made this unmark'd as leaves beside a flower. A Life in Song: Serving, xii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 149 GENERAL EFFECTS NOT ACCUMULATIONS OF SPECIFIC ONES {see PARTS and suggestions) .... The little things together make the greater. .... No; hardly that. You never judge one's face by all its features, but by the foremost ones; and not a park by all its blades and bushes ; but by a few things — hills or trees in sunshine that cast the rest in shade. The gods may find all life a sieve, and strain all wisdom through it ; but human beings only get the drops that filter through an opening, here and there. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. GENERALSHIP Hail to the ring of the voice that taught Drumming and roaring the rhythm of thought. Columbus, IV., 2. GENEROSITY WITH THE UNGENEROUS You give to one who never gives to others, He first will recognize you as a dupe, And then prepare to treat you as a prey. Dante, i. , 2 . GENIUS A mind like his Glows like a spark upon a wintry hearth, — The brightest promise that the times afford. Dante, 11., i. Oft in earth's bigot-brotherhood The fools alone are understood. And stupid souls alone seem good. But, while the rest are dozing late, The genius, quick to sight his fate, Will wake and wish, and work, and wait, And fix his aim on looming schemes, Apart from those that earth esteems. Else would he mind but common themes. A Life in Song: Doubting, xviii. The train of genius marshals everywhere Distrust before success, and envy after. Columbus, IV., I. GENTLE A steed we drive, a stream that floods its banks. Has not less force because its gait is gentle. Dante, i., i. 150 A POET'S CABINET GENTLEMAN A gentleman is one Who never does the unexpected. Cecil the Seer, i. GENTLEMANLY LOVE .... Why, you might fall in love with her — compromise her — injure her reputation. .... I think I am too much of a gentleman to injure a woman with whom I fell in love. .... Oh, I didn't mean that exactly. Of course, that would be absurd. I meant that she might fall in love with you. .... Well, if that should happen, I am too much of a gentleman, I hope, to have much to do with a woman with whom I failed to fall in love in return. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, ii. GENTLEMAN THIEF Rather than not be thought a gentleman, you pre- ferred to be a thief. It's the way with a large number of people in this city. Idem, iv. GENTLEMAN VS. AMERICAN No ; he's very straight-laced. And the Count is not? Oh, he's a perfect gentleman. And Bernard is not? Why, not in the same way. You know Bernard is only an American. The Count belongs to one of the oldest families in Europe. All of them have been gentlemen for generations. .... Who told you that? .... Why — mother — everybody knows it. .... I didn't know it. But you — you are an American, and- So are you Winifred; and so is your But you can read about the Count's family mother. in books. .... Every family contains some black sheep. How do you know that he's not one? Where Society Leads, ii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 151 GENTLEMEN No man can tell which curse a country most; — Its gentlemen who feel above all work; Or workmen so far down they feel beneath All obligation to be gentlemen. As for the first, heaven grant they soon find out That this new world is not a place for them. As for the second, if we plan no way To keep them on the other side the sea, Farewell to all the good we hope for here. Columbus, v., I. GENTLEMEN VS. LADIES While learning to be gentlemen, some girls forget how to be ladies. Tuition for her Intuition, i. GENTLENESS Perchance we are wiser for deeds That learn from feelings as much as from creeds, When taught thro' the injuring zeal of our race That gentleness shows a growth in grace. Love and Life, xxxviii. Remember Him, that once men sacrificed, But now rules over souls in every land. The world had long His gentle spirit prized, Ere it had come to heed His each command. Remember Moses : — with his mission grand, His meekness was the trait his race knew best ; Nor can our restless world e'er understand How one can lead it toward a promised rest Whose own soul has not yet this promis'd boon possess'd. A Life in Song: Daring, lxx. A few short leagues, and, calm and sluggish grown, The fickle brook has left the mountain steep ; And now, no more in boisterous torrents thrown, Through fertile fields, flows noiseless, broad, and deep. Alive with sails and lined with those who reap. So may our lives, altho' no more allied To narrow rock-bound brooks that wildly leap, Send forth an influence no less strong and wide, Because a gentler motion moves its growing tide. Idem, XIII. 152 A POETS CABINET GENTLENESS, THE BASIS OF INFLUENCE The wild beast may roar. It is the gentle horse and the faithful dog that make men treat the animals like friends. The goose may hiss. It is the unobtru- sive dove that draws the children to the barnyard, and makes them generous with their grain. Suggestions for the Spiritual Life, ix. GERMANY Our friend now found a land, where, ere their weaning, The children clap their hands to classic airs. And gray-hair'd sires, on canes or crutches leaning, Hear no profounder truths than those which music bears. There flows a genial force from things we see, Which blends with subtlest currents of the mind, And though it leaves each soul's expression free, It forms the motive power that moves mankind. It pleads in music, argues in suggestions ; And bursts to passion in philosophy; In lieu of wielding arms, it merely questions; And in the world it thrives the most in Germany. How blest her sons whose needs appear supplied. When but the spirit's wants their lives possess; And, with its joyous freedom satisfied, Scarce care for what the world would call success! Whoe'er may seek for truth to make inventions That strain all lore through lucre's well-filled sieve, Their souls, content with having high intentions. Rejoice in life because it seems a joy to live, — A joy to be a boy with endless hope, A joy to be a man, mature and strong, By day augmenting labor's widening scope, By night at rest with "wife and wine and song." Let others' thirst at once drain pleasure's glasses, The German's lip first blows from his the foam, And, ere to sip a second glass he passes. The others doze in stupor, or reel raving home. Yet who could not wish here for less that bars The outward action from the inward thought; And more humanity, and less hussars. To further on the progress all have sought? SELECTED QUOTATIONS 153 Who could not wish for faith and aspiration More worldly scope? — for there were times, one reads, When, not content with theories, the nation Led all mankind to truth not more in dreams than deeds. A Life in Song: Serving, xlv-xlix. GETTING AROUND VS. FIGHTING A MAN In paths where men and women go opposite ways and meet, I have seldom known of a woman who could not get around a man; but she seldom could get around a man she began by fighting. The Ranch Girl, iv. GILDING Wherever people prize things mainly for the gilding you may be sure that whatever is under it would look mighty cheap if it were not covered up. What Money Can't Buy, ill. GIRLHOOD, THE LOVE OF Ere I knew of it, In budding girlhood even, he had pluck'd My blushing love, and wore it on his heart ; And all my life took root where sprang his own. Haydn, 11. GIRLS, THAT USE WHISKEY Been drinking, eh? Are fragrant as a living whiskey bottle! Young girls whose kisses bring a breath like that we know are reeking ripe for anything. The Two Paths, in. GLEN, A When first I followed up thy modest brook. And left the northwest road, and came on thee. How grand thy wood-crowned rocks appeared to be Whose high-arched foliage heaven's dim light forsook ! But when, years later, I came back to look On what so awed, I stood amazed to see How small and shrunk, when shorn of every tree, Were all that I for lofty cliffs mistook. Then, in my college-town, I joined, once more, The mates I so had honored in my youth. Alas, in some, no mystery seemed to lurk Where heights of promise had so loomed of yore ! 154 A POET'S CABINET Has life no sphere in which one finds, forsooth, No wrong to nature wrought by man's mean work? Ford's Glen, Williamstown. GLORY Brave souls who in dark times had turn'd them where The light of coming good on earth should burst; Nor knew 't would gild themselves with all its glory- first. A Life in Song: Daring, viii. GLORY, DERIVED Thus lived I, triumph'd over; as are clouds Whereon the sun sits throned ; all bright are they, And bright beneath them is the sunset sea. In splendid serfdom to its love, my soul, That shone with kindling glory, thence beheld A kindling glory shine from all about. Ideals Made Real, xliv. GLORY, HUMAN Who, think you, live in story That live for self alone? Who care to spread his glory That cares not for their own? In every strife That stirs the pulse to nobler life, The man that has the thrilling heart, He plays the thrilling part. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. GOALS OF LIFE Of what do we talk? — Of the goals of life. The freedom and peace to be, When the good shall always gain their strife With truth as their only plea. We talk of the world as it shall be, when Men heed the spirit's call; And the untold worth to bless them then. When heaven shall rule them all. We talk of the world as it is, that strives With forms to hide the heart. Were it made by us, forsooth, no lives, When at one, would dwell apart. A Life in Song: Loving, XL. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 155 GOD Thither thus may all be drawn, and find, at last, that perfect Love, Power, Truth, Wisdom, Justice, Beauty, throned eternally above; Find the Mind that moves creation, Maker, Father, Saviour, Lord. Source and Sum and Destination, Life with which all lives accord. Idem: Watching, xxxiv. The stars that make High aims awake Are but what Thine eye seest. The stroke and stress That earn success 1 Are but what Thou decreest. In all the past Whose blessings last. Thy presence fills the story; And all the gleams That gild our dreams Obtain from Thee their glory. Columbus, III., 2. GOD IN MAN Upon the man we call; But bright behind the gaze we greet, There gleams a glory yet to meet Our souls beholding past the gloom Of toil and trouble, tear and tomb, The god beyond it all. The Aztec God, iii. GOD, LOVE-MADE Why should a soul with faith sublime as yours Fear aught? — Your love alone, if nothing else. Could here create of me the god you think me. Idem, v. GOD, MAN-MADE We never have a God we understand Until we learn to judge Him by ourselves. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. They say they make me god. No, no; they make me devil! — Would they could! 156 A POET'S CABINET What happy hoiirs in hell would heat the hate My heart could hurl at what they call divine! The Aztec God, iv., i. .... How does he seem to take it? .... Just Hke a god when made by man; or, if You like not that, a man when made by a god. — Is there much difference between the two? Idem. GOD, SON OF Yes, God. What voice, or face, or form, or robe, or crown. Or throne attests His Presence? Who can trust And serve mere outward, sensuous things Hke these. And not be all through hfe — ay, out of it And even after death — a slave to sense, No brother of the Christ, no son of God? Columbus, v., 2. GODS, THE Oh, ye that dwell less in the earth and sky Than in the meditations of the mind. The Aztec God, iv., 2. But in the thrills that fill the hush When naught without is passing by, The gods are always nigh. Idem, 11. But in the looks that on us gaze From out the love-Ht human eye The gods are always nigh. Idem. GODWARD Would men look'd Godward more! 'T would save their souls From many a hell that their own hands have made. Haydn, xli. GOLD Why gold? — The best way to hypnotize men is through twirling a metal that glitters. The Ranch Girl, 11. GOLD vs. SPIRITUAL RICHES With men like these, preparing To root their very spirits out from earth. That they may thus transplant them where the world Will reap a richer fruitage, what were Spain, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 157 Were she to grudge a void from which were scraped A paltry heap of gold ! All were too mean To pedestal aright the lasting fame That would be hers, did they attain their end. Columbus, II., 3. GOLDEN RULE We love the life that bears us Toward all that seers can see, And, led by hope, prepares us The whole world's hope to be. When, in the day that war shall cease, Our Golden Rlt^e shall keep the peace, And all mankind be free. America, our Home. GOOD, ACCOMPLISHED IN DIFFERENT WAYS {see CHRIST) However or wherever plied, I said, Real power for good owns good enough to claim Some courtesy from Christian charity. If I but fling a stone in yonder pond. Wherever it may fall, it stirs the whole. So if I throw out thought for mind or heart. Through art or through rehgion, each may move The whole man thus, and move him for his good. Ideals Made Real, xlvii. The earth is not a heaven, nor man a saint; But truths there are to which our faith may cHng, And trace with joy some good in every thing. A Life in Song: Seeking, xiv. And so, I think, although the wilderness. At times, a John in camel's hair may need. There open too, in ways of life less wild, More ways, where love may plead in guise more soft. In short, as long as one may choose his course, 'T is best we do what each can do the best. Ideals Made Real, XLVii. GOOD DEEDS, LEADING TO GOOD LIFE It's always seemed to me that there's enough in people, if you can only get them to doing good once — get them interested in it — to cause most of them to come out in the end all right. Modern Fishers of Men, iv. 158 A POET'S CABINET GOOD, DONE BY SELF Every soul Is proudest of the good itself has fathered. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. GOOD, THE, FIND GOOD IN OTHERS The best effect of being good oneself is finding good in others. Every mind works like a magnet — draws from all about it the thoughts and moods that seem most like its own. On Detective Duty, i. GOODNESS We best can judge of some things by their source, — Of days by daylight, and of good by goodness. Heaven sends the one, and only heavenly traits Can bring the other. Dante, ii., i. GOSSIP Not a chum she knew. For all her hints of news that she might tell,^ Who found out all folks did, and not one doing well. A Life in Song: Daring, li. GOSSIPS These gossips all are scavengers Of nobler people's characters. And how can one of taste or sense Be made, and yet take no offence, The cess-pools of their confidence? Idem, Doubting, xxx. Mean slanderers of characters. These friends that stick to us like burrs, Throng every home, and boast an ear Well hugg'd against one's heart, to hear Each secret throb of hope or fear. Why tell they what they ne'er have known? And force one, since he cannot own. To leave their untrue love alone? Idem, xxxi. GOVERNMENT, FORCE THE FUNCTION OF .... To your conception then the function of the government is force that keeps down outward wrong? .... Precisely, yes. .... And by police and soldiers, I suppose? SELECTED QUOTATIONS 159 .... Of course, .... Then where do women come in? .... You? — a man? — and asking that? — They come in where there is a need of love and sympathy ; or any pubHc good that flows from these. More work in them than women have time for now! .... But how about their rights? ) .... I think the rights of all humanity are more important. Tuition for her Intuition, i. GOWN, A woman's .... The surest place to hide things from a man is in a woman's gown. He doesn't know or understand it, and he dare not search it. .... Oh, no, afraid of being pricked with pins. The Two Paths, il. I had almost been content to have lost My soul itself, nor begrudg'd the cost. Had it brought me as near to her, as were The soulless things that surrounded her. My moods all seem to fit her own, And without her seem so void, so lone, I have learn'd to envy her senseless gown That never knows it is bless'd, Yet all day long moves up and down With the laughing or sighing that heaves her breast, And, clasping tight in its folds embraced The neck so white, and the tender waist, Keeps clinging close to the frame so sweet, And fluttering in and out to meet The dear, dear touch of the dainty feet. A Life in Song: Loving, xil. GRACE He lived, with restless eyes and merry voice And yielding ways, whose yielding gave them grace. Idem: Daring, lvi. ■ Her name was Grace, and gracious was her mien; And graces everywhere attended her Through jars and joys of journeys afterward. Ideals Made Real, xlv. GRATITUDE Gratitude is a spring whose flow is measured, not by i6o A POETS CABINET that which falls upon it from without, but by that which is already stored in the depths within. The Function of Technique. GREAT AND SMALL MEN SIMILARLY CONDITIONED You may think that you are a great man, and that I am a very small one. But if one can't jump on another like an elephant, he can like a flea, and, where the flea goes, there, in this case, at least, will go the flesh he feeds on. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, iv. GREED FOR GOLD Oh, what a worm Is greed for gold ! Did ever human fruitage Turn into rot but this greed gnawed the core? — Cecil the Seer, i. GRIEF You think that veins too heavy weighed with grief May empty then through talk as well as tears. Dante, ii., i. GRIEF, ALTERNATION IN EXPERIENCE OF At times my soul appears a stormy sea, All rage below and rain above ; at times It seems the tears I shed have drained me dry, And left a void too deep for faith in God Or man to fill. Idem, ii., 2. GROUPED, MANKIND ARE .... Do you know,you look so much like an old friend I used to have. Oh, yes, and we were intimate, oh, very! I sometimes think that men — like animals, say, foxes, dogs, and cats .... And jackasses? .... Ha! ha! — ^are grouped; and half the joy of life depends on finding which group is one's own. The Two Paths, iii. GROVE BY MOONLIGHT Thence wandering forth one still clear night I found Beneath the moon that rose up, large and round, Through vistas opening like some temple's aisles. Great trees that arched the moveless air for miles. Their spreading boughs, like shadowy rafters, lined SELECTED QUOTATIONS i6i A Star-filled dome, and oft, where foliage twined In leafy fretwork round each trailing limb, Flash 'd bright with dew. Beneath them, fair though dim. About the trees' wide trunks, in half seen bowers, And pushing up through paths I trod, were flowers. I seem'd their nature's lord; for, when my feet Would crush them as I pass'd, they grew more sweet. A Life in Song: Seeking, ii. With gratitude for each toy-touch of air At play on my knit brow, I rested there. But while I rested, lo, a stranger's form Push'd through the white bars of the moonlight warm. Idem, V. GROW It strikes me, friend, that all things truthful grow. E'en love outgrows the fashion of its youth: — The world whirls on apace ; and different hues Turn toward the noonday-sun. No dawn returns. What form or color robes the infinite? — Ideals Made Real, lv. GROWLING Dogs are not the only brutes that growl when waked. Tuition for her Intuition, i. GUARDIAN SPIRIT, THE You and I have loved supremely, — yet Our love has loved another. — Could this be Of that form which we walked with in our dreams? .... Why .... Did you ever think that all our dreams Are in ourselves; and this form too may be there? They say that human brains, ay, all our frames Are doubled. — If so, why? — For use? — then whose? Who is it twins existence with us here? Can it be our own real, live, better self Which under consciousness we vaguely feel Dreams while we wake and wakes the while we dream, Recalls what we forget, incites and is Less form than spirit, but, because a spirit, Heaven's representative, our guardian, guide, i62 A POETS CABINET And all that tells of God? You know all praise The men dependent only on themselves. Yet why? — Is it so noble to be free From love, or wish for love? Or own these men A subtle consciousness of nobler love Which, in the spirit-life, is all in all? Know they that earthly forms which seem divine But image that within which is divine? Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. GUESSES Men's guesses are like their gifts. I have found they are often bait on a hook and line thrown out to draw inward toward themselves. The Ranch Girl, iii. GUIDING BY FOLLOWING I have learned that most of those that are obscure guide others best when, like a rudder, they are follow- ing them. The Two Paths, iii. GUILT Allow' d to grow, The germs of guilt, like those of disease. Prove deadly because they seem so small. Love and Life, xvii. GUILT, REVEALED BY GOOD TALK The one best proof that men are guilty, friend, comes when they talk as if they were too good. The Two Paths, iii. HALF-HEARTED No weak, half-hearted love can be The noblest love, or the love for me. The power supreme on the spirit's throne If it reign at all, must reign alone. What fills my soul with its claims divine, Like God whose image it forms in mine, Can never clasp to a full-thrill'd heart A love that can only love in part. The pulsing heat of my life's desire Is the glowing light of a growing fire, Whose flames in the form on which they fall Must all be quench'd, or burn it all. A Life in Song: Loving, xxvii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 163 HAND If only a moment I could but stand And hold in my own her soft warm hand, And under her rustling robe could hear The breath that proved that her soul was near, I never could ever have doubts again That God can live in the frames of men. Idem, XIII. HAND-CUFFED A single bracelet is enough, men think, To show a common gratitude. But we, Why, we have two ! They think their debt To us a doubled one! How it will thrill Ambition in the future sons of Spain To learn what badges of true servitude Await the souls that serve her best. We, we, Who made of Spain the Empress of the West, Have weightier honors waiting us, — to be The slaves that, crushed to earth, will pedestal The towering contrast of her sovereignty. Columbus, v., I. HARMONY {see music) This chant as rare in harmony As if all the soiils that sang, had melted into melody. A Life in Song: Dreaming, XL. More sweet than heavenly harps are hearts, When love her low throb in them starts ; More sweet than sweetest songs, when sung. Are harmonies of deed and tongue Where two together think as one. Alas, and what have my moods done To part me so from all my brothers? — Yet how can I accord with others. When all the strings I play, though nerves That every feeblest feeling serves To fill with thrills, oft bear a strain Of stretching fibres wrench 'd with pain That wellnigh snaps them all in twain. Ere fitly strung to sound aright Some highest pitch of scorn or spite? Idem, Doubting, v. i64 A POET'S CABINET HARMONY, UNIVERSAL As in the older advent, so to-day, Would I believe in power behind sweet song To hold the universe in harmony, Expelling evil and impelling good Through all the limits of created life, — A spirit's power ! — What though we mortals here With eyes material cannot see the hosts That issue forth in forms that while they move Awake around us echoes everywhere ! We spring to spy them, but we only hear Their rustle in the trees by which they pass; Or where, with dash of water o'er the rocks. They leave the sea or linger in the rill. At times they rest a moment on the earth, When twilight hides them, sighing gently then, And lull to dreams, with tones in sympathy. The lowly insect and the lowing herd. At times, amid the winds that rise at morn, They sweep across the land and startle sleep From nervous birds that twitter in their track; And, now and then, in clouds that close the sky, They bound adown the rift the lightning cleaves Till sunlight overhead pours through again. A spirit's power has music; and must rule Unrivall'd still as far as ear can heed, Or reason hark behind it. All the chords Of all things true are tuned by hands divine, And thrill to feel the touch! — But sounds may rise In souls untuned, like harp-strings when they snap. Or, though more soft than dreamland breezes are. May fright like forests when the dark leaves blow About the solitary murderer — And sweetest airs to sweetest moods may bring But foretastes vague of harmonies on high. The school-girl hears her comrade's ringing laugh,— 'T is but the key-note trill'd before the tune. The maiden heeds her lover's mellow plea, — 'T is but the gamut rill'd ere surge the chords. The dame is moved by tones that cheer her home, — And they perchance prelude the theme of heaven. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 165 For even blows of toil and battle-guns May be the drum-rolls of the martial strains That rise to greet the glory yet to come. Ay, wait we long enough, we all may hear In all things music; far above, at last, May hear the treble thrilling down from heaven, And e'en from hell no discord in the jar That only thunders back a trembling bass. Ideals Made Real, xxxviii. HARVESTING Every harvesting before thee Shows the vintage is but rain Turn'd to wine the grapes obtain From the floods that fill the plain. A Life in Song: Dreaming, XLI. HAUGHTY LOOKS .... Seen him, eh? — How then does he look? .... Look? — with his eyes — would better ask how he doesn't look — at Hmbs like us ! — has held his head up high so long it has forgotten where it came from. The Little Twin Tramps, v. HAY CART vs. CHARIOT .... I suppose if you were offered, to-morrow, the choice between a chariot and a hay cart, you would take the hay cart. .... It would depend entirely upon who was in it. Where Society Leads, 11. HEADS vs. HEARTS RULING ACTION {see REASON) Thank God, we all have heads above our hearts; And, if we let them reason with us well, They rule us for our best. Ideals Made Real, lxiv. HEADSTRONG The rose that with the fondest care we tend, May grace a bush whose briers but cause distress, And those on whom we most of love expend Give sorrow in return for our caress; Yet need we not despair of their success ; For oft, where others would move on no more, Those who in youth these headstrong wills possess, i66 A POET'S CABINET Their way so push that every check, in store To stop the weak, becomes for them an opening door. A Life in Song: Daring, iv. HEALTH If those blooming looks Hid wormy fruit like that, I ne'er would trust Sound health again ! Haydn , xxxix. HEART, DEAR That dear, dear heart, so eager-sped by love, Whose each pulsation, like a paddle's beat Seemed furthering some canoe's o'erladen prow Where it should rest and empty at my feet ; — That dear, dear heart, so pliant to my wish That, at my lightest breath, the brightening smiles Would open round his lips in hues as fair As rosebuds parted by the breeze of May; That dear, dear heart, the germ of all he was — The sweetest outgrowth of the sweetest life This earth has ever molded into form; To think that even now a heart like that, Its nerve-roots quivering in their agony. Is being torn out from the bleeding breast As if some foulest weed that could pollute A soil that, just to hold it — that alone — Is more than sacred ! Oh, how can the heavens Be so unjust? Far better not to think Than think but of that fearful, bleeding vision. Would, would that I could veil it out — but no ! The Aztec God, v. HEART, woman's You think A woman's heart, if tested through long years. With burdening love would break? You think it kinder To break it at the start? Columbus, i., 2. HEATED BRAIN, NOT INFLUENCED BY WORDS Throwing words at a heated brain is like sprinkling water on a red hot stove. It never goes below the surface; and whatever you get back is a combination of hiss and shot, and if it hits you, it burns. You must wait till he cools off. What Money Can't Buy, ill. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 167 HEAVEN {see IMMORTALITY and love) There, where the sun burns all the view, What sounds there in the boundless blue? Faith — is it more than a meek despair? Truth — than one's own note echoed in air? Hope — than his dawn's bright dew? hush'd Heaven, but what would I give, How would I love, and how would I live, To know the soul's tale to be true ! What Would I Give. Why should we mourn for life's dry leafless vine. Who seek heaven's vintage, and have saved the wine? A Life in Song: Loving, lii. Heaven so very bright must be ! — For even here the past is bright ; and there. Up there, we faith shall have, such perfect faith, That none can longer fear the future. Haydn, vii. Let love light all our pathway, till our days Grow dark with shades of life's departing rays; But O how brightly then shall heaven, at last, Glow like a sunset o'er a loving past ! A Life in Song: Loving, lii. heaven, beyond the influence of hell Heard in heaven. Storms blowing from the mouth of hell make music. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. heaven, near hell .... You are — .... A virgin, yes, but were I the .... Do not say that — .... I could imagine times When one I know would seem divine. • • . . Wait, wait! — How near together heaven and hell may be ! .... Yes; only earth and earthly thinking make It possible for sense to deem them two. Throne God in hell, all heaven would burst the gates And dream of blessed rest, though every foot Were sea'd upon a prostrate seething devil. Columbus, II., I. i68 A POET'S CABINET HEAVEN, THE WORLD AND HELL There is heaven ; and all the world, A world that will the more pollute my soul, The more I try to cross it, lies between Myself and it, and keeps me here in hell. The Aztec God, ill. HEELS, CULTIVATION OF .... Part of everybody's understanding is in his heels. .... And those that cultivate their heels alone are in danger of using them, by and by, mainly in trampling other people down. What Money Can't Buy, i. HELL .... Why, then, here's to hell! .... Not here yet — do you mean it, eh? — is not a pleasant place for one to go to. .... Why not? It is the sort of place you like when here, not so? .... You are a great logician. On Detective Duty, ii. HELL AND HEAVEN In spirit those work most for truth, who most Are true ; for all are led, yet all are leaders. Thus does the line of being bridge the gulf Between the world of worm and fire — the hell As well as home of all not saved from matter — And that eternal rest where souls, made free From longer craving a material frame Through which to signal their vain selfhood, lose Their lower life to find a higher life. Where now their spirits are at one with His Whose love creates but that it may bestow; And, even as the Christ is in the Father, So, too, become joint heirs with Him of all things. Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. HELLISH False and hellish moods Create a false and hellish world to live in. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. HELPING HANDS All men at times have need of helping hands. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 169 .... The hand that helps another most is his Whose own hand would find help. Dante, 11., i. ^ Their outstretched hands may show that love is hidden Behind the mysteries that seem to cloak it. Idem. HENS, OLD We form a body sitting on Columbus. An old hen, even, doing this, I say, Would hatch out something. Wait now. You will find knough old hens here to bring forth, at least, What they will think worth while their cackling over. Columbus, II., 2. HEREDITY {see BIRTH) A flower may blossom, sweet and bright. Though grown in mire where hang but clouds; Her Haughtiness. I blame her not because her veins Contain her foul forefathers' blood, But that her own work now maintains The present spring that taints its flood. Idem. We know not whence came manhood; but we know Whence came the man, — from unfulfilled desire When springs that welled from body quenched the fire That burned to fuse in one two souls aglow. Embodiment of wish, on earth below, For union which no earth-forms can acquire, Man is a spirit, aimed for regions higher, Entrapped and ^ntrailed in a world of woe. What wonder if he wander on and on Through ways that bring no respite and no rest? What wonder if no crown that shines upon His brow can ever sate ambition's quest? What wonder if death only end, anon, A strife that never one deems wholly blest? Heredity. HERESY Your church, That fann'd some whim of his, left smouldering. Some spark of doubt to ardent heresy. Ideals Made Real, xxxvii. I70 A POET'S CABINET HEROISM AND BRUTALITY It is an old saying that barking dogs do not bite; and no one knows much of the world who is not aware that an essentially coarse and brutal character, a braggart boastful chiefly of his independence of the wishes or sympathy of others, is incapacitated by his very nature for deeds involving the grandest heroism. Suggestions for the Spiritual Life, xvi. heroes' homes Yet heroes' homes are human hearts. Ethan Allen. HERO, THE POPULAR And all the people while he lived, They loved his eagle eye; And when he died — ah, friends, you know Such spirits cannot die! To-day, go search those mountain wilds And valleys, humbly trod By souls whose pure, strong faith holds on To country, home, and God; Ask men who own those towering trees, Or plant the hillock steep ; The school-boys, bounding back from school, Or watching well the sheep ; The housewives, where in thrifty homes The generous meals are spread; The sisters, gently handing down The Book when prayers are said; Ask all, who value aught they own, Whose fame all value most? — The flashing eye and flushing cheek Will figure him they boast. Idem. HIGHER LIFE, THE Conceive how barren, cold, and colorless Is life upon the heights. .... Conceive, as well. How far, and broad, and varied, and sublime Are earth and heaven when these are seen from them. Souls oft are driven from our lower life That thus they may explore for us the higher. Dante, iii., 2. ^SELECTED QUOTATIONS 171 HIGH LIFE Man is but man: He cannot scan Too high delights, and highly rate The lowly joys of earth's estate. The Idealist. HIGH POSITION His friends must see he does not get so high That falling far will hurt him. Cecil the Seer, I. HILLS But in the east there lie sky-drifting hills. Their cliffs, cloud-coursed in heights of mystery, Dim dreamy glens, and flash'd surprise of rills. Had train'd in youth his faith and fantasy. He loved them, as a child may love his mother, A simple child who cannot tell you why. Yet something feels he feels not for another, Too near the springs of life for question or reply. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxii. HINT Wit heeds a hint ; 't is dulness questions it. Haydn, xvi. HINTS ABOUT LOVE And thus a habit grew that our two lives Dwelt there like friends, made separate by war, Who out from hostile camps wave now a hand, And now a kerchief, but who never speak. And yet I cannot say love never spoke. — We did not mean it ; but I think that love May tell its tales, unconscious of the fact. For who is conscious when God touches him? — But littlest acts there were; yet spirits read From signs too fine for measurements of space ; Love heeds no measurements. But hints there were ; And yet what words of love yield more than these? They hit the sense of love, but fail of sense Where nothing loving waits to take the hint. Haydn, xxxvii. And kitten-like, at play beside the hearth. We told our secrets, and none knew of them. Idem. 172 A POET'S CABINET HINTS vs. HITS Those who are too stupid to take hints have to be trained at times by getting hits. What Money Can't Buy, i. HISTORY, PHILOSOPHY OF All of history but fulfils the law that rules the single soul. Times there were, near earth's beginning, when im- pell'd but from within, Men but felt the good of goodness and the sinfulness of sin. Then they learn'd of outward right, but still, too dull to probe its cause, Wasted reverence on commandments and the holy text of laws ; Now the times, at last, are coming, when the soul in. clearer light Must amid unfolding learning serve the wisdom of the right. God is Lord through independence. By and by we all shall see How the truth that rules above can rule below, yet leave us free. See through all earth's changing phases whence we come and where we wend, — See the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. A Life in Song: Watching, xv. HOLIDAYS We have our holy days and holidays. I sometimes wonder which are holier. Columbus, II., 2. HOLLAND Of art he also found a heedful school. As cleanly trimm'd as dikes that guard her farms, Where crouching Holland makes the sea her tool, Nor lets one breeze escape her windmills' arms.- This thorough race, what have they ever slighted? — E'en in their church what tireless energy. Where crowds, in chants monotonous united. Praise Him who stretched their plains, in like monotony. A Life in Song: Serving, xliii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 173 HOLY MEN You seem a holy man. .... Nay, none is that. When men seem holy do not think of them, But of the cause that has affected them. Columbus, II., I. HOME Home seems a state. Not place. .... A state of happiness Idem, II., 3. No setting so becomes A jewel of a woman as a home, — A loving home like this. Cecil the Seer, ill., i. So storms that sweep where man in vain contends, When forced unshelter'd through the earth to roam. And trust in those who prove but fair-day friends. Harm not the soul well wall'd within the home. Let false friends go, when those of home stay near one. Privations come that but deprive of ease, No other loss can seem the most severe one; Nor other woe o'erwhelm one toiling still for these. A Life in Song: Serving, xviii. And tho' no more his old home's forms and faces Await him, when his feet no more can roam, In every human form and face he traces A likeness of the lost that makes each house a home. Idem, Lxxxix. HOME, A farmer's In moments when The stress of work is waived, perchance in hours Of sickness or of sorrow, or when storms Have block'd the roadways of accustom'd craft. Or evening shadows hid the daily task, And brought the cattle home, and shut the school And shop and factory; when carts and plows Are in their places, and the horses fed. And stable-doors made fast, and dogs at watch; When in the house the evening meal has pass'd, 174 A POET'S CABINET The lamps been lighted, and the little folk Been put to bed with that last prayer and kiss Which hallows all their dreamland ; when the wife Takes up her sewing, and the maid draws forth Her embroidery work, well folded to conceal Her future gift from him for whom 't is wrought, — Then often comes at last the poet's hour. Idem, Finale. HOME-LIFE IN REVOLUTIONARY TIMES But hist! the cheers were check'd. "Keep mum!" the murmur spread; The crown, to get these men, had set A price on every head. "Five hundred dollars down, For him who tells of one, " Was first proclaim'd : but no one named A man who aught had done. "Five thousand," then were pledged, "To know who took the lead; And half as much to know of such As join'd him in the deed." The King's commission, last, Sat half a year or more; But not a word it ever heard About the sixty-four. Forgotten were they then? They might have pass'd by day, Without a wink to make you think, Or hint that it was they. But, when the night had come; And door and blind were lock'd. And window fast, and blew the blast Till all the chimney rock'd; When, safe from eyes and ears. In homes where all were true, The way those men were feasted then A king, full well, might rue. And when the board was bare; And round the roaring fire, The nuts were crack'd and cider smack'd Till tooth and tongue would tire; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 175 When each his tale would tell About that ship and night, And still the way he dodg'd, each day, The British spy and spite; The boys who husk'd the corn Would forward bend, and spring, And draw the ears, like swords, with cheers, To make the rafters ring ! The host who stirr'd the fire Would stab it through and through : You might have thought the flames he brought Had burn'd a cruiser too. The girls would fancy then It was the cruiser flared; And round the walls would aim like balls The apples red they pared. "To arms!" would cry the men; And each a maid purloin; While mother's yarn would snap, and dam The dance that all would join. Ah, so we hush'd the tale! Yet spies that nigh would roam Could not decoy the smallest boy To tell what pass'd at home. We hush'd it, till the hush Became our countersign To save from those we knew were foes, And make our men combine. We hush'd it, till we learn'd That thousands would be free, And long'd to know which way to go And when the call would be. We hush'd it, till we heard What Concord had to bear; Then shouted loud, a mighty crowd, "Our heroes lead us there!" The Last Cruise of the Gaspee. HOME LIFE WITH LOVE How swiftly sped the hours in happy nights When, after work, he rested there at home! 176 A POET'S CABINET Such winning ways he had to lure my trust! Such sweet pet names would call me, till I felt So fondly small, he well might be my lord! Woiild tease me so, anon to comfort me ! Or rouse my temper that he mild might seem; Or tell such tales, that in my dreams I laugh'd At wit reflecting, though distorting, his. Haydn, xxxviii. HOMES How, all its chairs made vacant one by one, Th' applause rose thinner at his bachelor-club; How, brief as birds', are human mating- times ; How men, mere songs forgot, withdraw to nests — To homes — their worlds, where all the sky is fill'd With sunny smiles they love, and shadowy locks. How sweet were life whose light and shade were these ! Ideals Made Real, v. HOME-SINGING How blest are homes, all fill'd with song, The mother's hum, the choral strong, The hymn that bears great thoughts that throng Where all pure hope is winging! How heaves the breast in air so sweet, How thrills the blood it fills to meet, While all the spirit bounds to greet The joys of life in singing ! A Song on Singing. HONESTY AND WORK When you're older, Miss, you'll find it isn't honest folks that earn their living, cent by cent, that prove dishonest when they deal with you. They're not the kind your father meant. He meant the kind that never work for what they get ; but live by filching what others work to get. Their hands are not like mine ; not hard, but soft. They slip around you like a snake, — the sneaks! I'm not a boy like that. The Little Twin Tramps, ii. HONIED PHRASES The kiss of honied phrases is apt to leave behind them what proves sticky and may sicken us. Idem. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 177 HONIED WORDS Too often 'tis those who bring us honied words whose stings are sharpest when they leave us. Idem. HONOR {see divorce) I honor'd God the more from this, the hour I found His honor so encased in man. Ideals Made Real, lxi. We men who wed incur a debt of honor. .... But should that let one harm himself ? • •.• • Why, honor Is m oneself, and so does not depend On anything another is or does. Dante, iii., i. Had he look'd, in his youth. Fast the shadows of form to the substance of truth? Had he learn'd that all Hfe turns to seasons, and shifts From wmter and spring into summer and fall? Or divmed that eternity, balancing gifts. Grants honor like heaven, a state after strife, And a glorified name to a sacrificed Hfe? Did he know that sighs, when yearning for love, Best open the soul to breathe in from above The air immortal, and make it worth while That art should chisel in marble clear The lines divine that temper a smile Beyond the sway of a mortal's cheer? — Did he know it or not, perchance for his good His work was lonely and misunderstood. Perchance it was well, the best for the soul, Its nature, its nurture, that aught to control The aims inspiring his life or its plan Had gain'd but Httle from earth or man. Unveiling the Monument. HONOR, AT THE EXPENSE OF SYMPATHY ^ For all whose paths Uf honor and of sympathy divide. One choice alone remains — to dwell content With loneliness, and one's ideal, and God. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. HONOR, DESIRABLE ONLY FOR EARNERS OF IT ^T,. - . , . . . A man's best friend Will bid him wait for honor till he earn it. 178 A POET'S CABINET Amid earth's envious crush of frenzied greed, It is no kindness, pushing to the front One who is not a leader. Zealous forms That crowd him there may tramp him under foot. Idem, I. HONOR, ONE woman's SENSE OF .... You really should not touch them. .... ^ No? Why not? .... He would not like it. .... Oh, of course not ! but He need not know it; need he? Columbus, i., 3. HONORS IN OFFICE (see STATION) .... This getting of&ce is like getting married — for better, or for worse. No man can gain its honors, and escape from some dishonors. .... No portraits ever grace a hall of fame with- out suggesting caricatures. .... Our metal may be gold; but beat the gold, as men do when they make a server of it, the plate may prove so thin that every bulge embossed in beauty on its upper side is matched by hideous holes upon its under. Tuition for her Intuition, 1. HOPE And yields not heaven some gleam to thought. Or hope by spirit-whispers brought, To guide toward all our souls have sought? Ay, ay; do not clear skies reveal. At times, to cheer our wavering zeal. Bright realms that mists no more conceal? A Life in Song: Doubting, XV. When lit by hope, rebuffs Are merely clouds aglow where dawn brings light, But when no ray of hope is visible The dark seems full damnation. Columbus, I., 2. Down underneath my deep despair. Where heaved a sigh that loosen'd all my soul, Like some sweet kiss of sudden death that draws To sudden bhss, when men to heaven are snatch'd From all the roar and rage of war, there came One hope. Ideals Made Real, lix. , SELECTED QUOTATIONS 179 HOPE AND FEAR Sweet hope is a bird of light, The pulsing touch of whose aspiring wing Thrills to new life the very air one breathes. In gloom like ours the trembling heart but leaps To dodge the whir of some blind bat of fear. The Aztec God, i. HOPE vs. DESPAIR The brute-despair my soul has housed so long Is trained to bear hard blows, and beat them back; But this frail trembling babe of hope, just born, Oh it were cruel murder, maiming it ! Dante, ill., 2. Oft, while the eyes of hope are looking up, The devil trips the feet. The Aztec God, 11. Impossible! Heaven cannot be malicious. What? build so high a structure for my hope. Then knock the prop from under? All, all gone? Columbus, I., 2. HUDSON RIVER His house was built beside those lordly banks That rise to greet the Hudson's glimmering train; Where man, as if to it were due his thanks. Has decked with art its every hill and plain. Below him flowed that rare and royal river. So white with sails, and waveless tho' so wide, And first of rivers destin'd to deliver To steam and wheel the power to stem their cur- rents' tide. A Life in Song: Serving, lxv. HUMANITARIANISM To wisdom's eyes all paths in life reveal Each man a sentinel of all men's weal. Midnight in a City Park. HUMANITY Believe me, in humanity it is, In charities, and kindly courtesies. In eyes that sparkle, and in cheeks that blush With love and hope and faith, which make them flush, That all the bloom and fruitage of the earth Attain their consummation and their worth. A Life in Song: Seeking, xii. i8o A POETS CABINET HUMANITY, LOVE FOR "Here where nature rules and gives its due to all humanity, Here must be the land, " I thought, "of all the dearest prophecy. His way surely ends in brightness, who is ruled in every plan By a love like God's, not slighting one whom God has made a man. " A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxvi. No pride in man can thrill the mind That treats, like soulless brutes, its kind; No heavenly father seems to cheer Those who see not his children here. The only joy that love can know Dwells in our own hearts when aglow. The only hope that faith can feel Our spirits in themselves reveal. After the Lynching. HUMANITY, OBLIGATION TO .... We are under obligations, as I said before, to society. .... We are under more obligations, I think, to humanity. .... But society's a part of humanity. .... It forms a larger part, I think, of inhumanity. When we follow society's lead, or become leaders in it, we tread a path, and set a pace, that may tumble half of those behind us down a precipice. . . . . If so, it is their own fault. .... Yes and no. It's our fault so far as they are led astray by our example. Our deeds, mother, never end with ourselves . They include what we do to others . .... What others? .... All others — persons or things; yes, all ob- jects that surround us off to the remotest star. No one can think of himself except as the center of the universe with all of which he is connected as a soul with a body, and this with the atmosphere around the body. There is so much truth, at least, in what some call the exploded science of astrology. What Money Can't Buy, iii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS i8i HUMAN NATURE He sought he knew not what : he found mankind. In all the regions where his feet would wend, 'T would thrill his heart in every sphere to find How love reveal'd can always find a friend. Who have not faults? who are not faults regretting? Who wish not much? who ever gain their aim? Who form not plans for all mankind's abetting? And is not human nature in us all the same? A Life in Song: Serving, lxxv. We trust in human nature; The conscience, ruling there, May guard the right, full well as kings With crowns their dearest care. Love rules in human nature, For, all of history through. The slaves have been the many, The tyrants been the few. The Lebanon Boys in Boston. HUMAN, SOME MEN ARE NOT To understand what is humanizing, people have to be human themselves. Some are not so. When you try to train them, they are like dogs. You ask them to lend you a hand, and they can only scratch with a paw. What Money Can't Buy, iii. HUNGRY MAN There's not a fish that's caught by bait as easily as a hungry man. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. HUSBAND She must not thwart me so. Her life's full destiny must she know. When dower'd with mine own, as well, she stands With doubled head and heart and hands. Ah, could she but dream How sweet it would seem For me to give my life for her own, To be her slave and that alone, A willing slave. Who all worth living in life would save. Though I toil'd all day In the weariest way. 182 ALLOWANCE OF CERTAIN CLAIMS. whether the facts so proved are sufficient or insufficieut to excuse the claimant the court makes no finding, that question being exclusively within the judg- ment and discretion of Congress. By the Court. Filed December 5, 1904. A true copy. Test this 13th day of December, 1904. [seal.] John Randolph, Assistant Cleric Court of Claims. O. H. PEREY, ADMINISTRATOR. STATEMENT OP CASE. The claim in the above-entitled case for supplies or stores alleged to have been taken by or furnished to the military forces of the tjnited States for their use during the late war for the suppression of the rebellion was transmitted to the court by resolution of the United States Senate on the 3d day of March, 1903. The case was brought to a hearing on loyalty and merits on the 16th day of February, 1904. Moyers and Consaul, escis., appeared for claimant, and the Attorney-General, by G. M. Anderson, esq. , his assistant, and under his direction, appeared for the defense and protection of the interests of the United States. The claimant in his petition makes the following allegations: That he is now, and at all times hereinafter mentioned has been, a citizen of the United States and a resident of the county of Craven, State of North Carolina; that he is the duly appointed, qualified, and acting administrator of the estate of George W. Perry, deceased; that during the late war for the suppression of the rebellion said decedent resided in said county of Craven, State of North Carolina, and was a citizen of the United States; that during said war the United States military forces under proper authority, took from said decedent and converted to the use of the United States Army quartermaster stores and commissary supplies of the kinds and values below stated, to wit: Taken by troops under command of General Bumside from the farm of said decedent, near Newborn, in said county and State, during the spring of 1862: 1 stallion $150. 00 4 work horses, at 3150 each 600. 00 6 work mules, at $150 eacli 900. 00 200 beef cattle, at |20 each 4, 000. 00 200 sheep, at 12.50 each 500. 00 2,450 bushels of corn, at 75 cents per bushel 1, 837. 50 10 tons of blade fodder, at $20 per ton 200. 00 2 work carts 50. 00 500 pounds smoked meat, at 12 cents per pound , 60. 00 1 ferry flatboat 50. 00 Taken by the same troops in the fall of 1862: 150 bushels of corn from field, at, 75 cents per bushel 112. 50 Total '. 8, 460. 00 The court, upon the evidence and after considering the briefs and arguments of counsel on both sides, makes the following FINDINGS OF FACT. I. It appears from the evidence that claimant's decedent was loyal to the Govern- ment of the United States during the war of the rebellion. II. There was taken from the claimant's decedent, in Craven County, State of North Carolina, during the war of the rebellion by the military forces of the United States, for the use of the Army, property of the kind and character above described, which was then and there reasonably worth the sum of four thousand three hundred and fifty dol- lars (14,350), for which no payment appears to have been made. III. The claim was not presented to the Commissioners of Claims under the act of March 3, 1871, and is consequently barred under the provisions of the act of June 15, ALLOWANCE OF CERTAIN CLAIMS. 183 1878. No evidence has been offered by the claimant under the act of March 3, 1887, "bearing upon the question whether there has been delay or laches in presenting such claim or applying for such grant, gift, or bounty, and any facts bearing upon the ques- tion whether the bar of any statute of limitation should be removed, or which shall be claimed to excuse the claimant for not having resorted to any established legal rem- edy," except the evidence submitted on behalf of the widow and son of the deceased claimant to the effect that soon after the war the claimant placed in the hands of an attorney the papers in this claim for the purpose of prosecuting the same, but what was done by him does not appear. Thereafter the claim was presented to Congress, and in the year 1903 the Senate referred it to this court, as hereinbefore set forth. By the Court. Filed February 29, 1904. A true copy. Test this 5th day of March, 1904. [seal.] ' John Randolph, Assistant Clerk Court of Claims. TRUSTEES OF THE METHODIST CHURCH SOUTH, OF MOREHEAD CITY, N. C. [Court of Claims. Congressional, No. 11S70. Trustees Methodist Episcopal Church South, of More- head City, N. C, V. The United States.] STATEMENT OF CASE. The following bill was referred to the court March 3, 1905, by resolution of the United States Senate under act of Congress approved March 3, 1887, known as the Tucker Act: "fS. 6714, Fitty-eighth Congress, third session.) " Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, author- ized and directed to pay, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, of Morehead City, North Carolina, the sum of one thousand two hundred dollars, for use of and damage to their church property by the military forces of the United States during the late civil war." The trustees of "the Methodist Episcopal Church South, of Morehead City, N. C, appeared and filed their petition in this court July 25, 1905, in which they make the following allegations: That during the late war for the suppression of the rebellion, and on or about the month of March, 1862, the military forces of the United. States, by proper authority, took possession of the church building of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, of Morehead City, N. C, and used and occupied the said building for a period o.f about eighteen months, and at the end of said period tore down and removed the said build- ing and appropriated the material to the use of the United States Army. That the said building was reasonably worth, at the time the said military forces first took pos- session of the same, the sum of §1,200, for which no payment has been made. pIThe case was brought to a hearing on loyalty and merits on the 2d day of January, 1906. G. W. Z. Black, esq., appeared for the claimants, and the Attorney-General, by George M. Anderson, esq., his assistant and under his direction, appeared for the defense and protection of the interests of the United States. The court, upon the evidence and after considering the briefs and arguments of counsel on both sides, makes the following FINDINGS OF FACT. I. It .appears from the evidence that the Methodist Episcopal Church South, of Morehead City, N. C, as a church, was loyal to the Government of the United States throughout the war for the suppression of the rebellion. II. During the war for the suppression of the rebellion the military forces of the United States, by proper authority, for the use of the Army, took possession of the church building of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, of Morehead City, N. C, l84 A POETS CABINET You serve ideals, like all idiots. Idem, XII. idealist's mis judgments A mind with thought forever in the clouds May be excused for stumbling, now and then. At what, if seen through, might appear mere shadow. Dante, ii., i. idealist's view of life What they see Is never in the thing at which they look ; But, Hke a halo when it rings the moon. All in the clouds, and drawn there by themselves. .... Break through the halo, you might find them out. . . . . Or else be found out by them. .... That is it; And by-and-by come tumbling from the hights Where they, not we, have put us, — in a realm Where pebbles all seem palaces, and mounds all mounts. And clouds all continents, and moons have faces, And all the littlest stars that prick the sky Are spear-points of some huge hobgoblin. Idem, I., I. One may excuse a bird, if, when it flies. It fails in seeing everything on earth. Idem, II., I. IDEALITY (see poetry) Oh what were life without the worth Of ideality, — Its home, heaven's halo round the earth; Its language, poetry. The world of deeds whose armor gleams May light the path to right Far less than rays that rise in dreams, And days that dawn at night. God's brightest Hght illumes the soul. That light this life denies Till earth's horizons lift and roll Like lids from opening eyes. The Poet^s Lesson. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 185 IDEALS, INFLUENCE OF MEN's, ON WOMEN It's men's ideals that keep us ladies. I'm sure that men are better pleased with other men that act like women, than women are. When we want women, we take to our own mirrors — thus. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. If men should let the girls do what they choose, we never should have ladies. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. IDEALS LOST At last, we had parted; Nor had ventured one hint, forsooth, Of the light that gave heaven its glory, And earth its worth, in our youth. He had wrought for wealth, I had married; We had both earned board and bed ; But for what had we made a living When all we had lived for was dead? Ideals that Were. IDEALS NOT MARKETABLE But I hardly think fulfilling one's ideal the surest way of filling, too, one's purse. Who want ideals? You ask our merchants; every one will say the finest wares find fewest purchasers. Why not the finest writ- ings fewest readers ? You think men weigh in metal got from mire a fair exchange for what is got from mind? One represents the extractioning of greed, the other something given by the spirit. The Two Paths, 1. IDEALS, THEIR INFLUENCE ON SPIRITUAL LIFE .... They did not see us. . . . . No; For they did not look up. .... I know, but why? — Where all things round them were so new and strange? .... The spirit is the slave of its desire. They did not care to look above themselves. .... Pray tell me who they were. They seemed so near, And yet so many million miles away. They looked like people, too, whom once I knew; Yet moved like cuckoos jointed on a clock, Accenting nothing they have thought themselves, i86 A POET'S CABINET Or have the force to make another think. .... They seemed as if lost souls. .... Lost souls, you say? .... Did you not note them — how they wandered on; Nor knew their destination? .... Heaven forbid! .... Why pray for this? — You think that force rules here, — That spirits are not free to wander where Their own ideals bear them? .... Those they formed On earth you mean? .... Where else could they be formed? .... And whither, think you, will ideals bear Those whom we just have seen? .... Where would you deem These could be realized — save on the earth? .... But some of them seemed looking for their Christ. .... I fear those looking only for their Christ May sometimes fail to find the Christ of God. .... But will they never find Him? .... Do you think That those in search but for a false ideal, Could recognize Him, even should they find Him? .... Is not the Christ of God in all the churches? .... Is he not preached through men? .... And are not men Controlled ? — inspired ? .... And, if so, from what source? Are there no spirits in the line between Divinity and man? — And what of man, — This urn of earth in which the true seed falls? — There was an Arab in Mohammed's time; In Joan of Arc's, there was a maid of France. .... But would you grant their claim? .... Some keen as you Believed it true. And is it charity To deem them dupes? .... But one must rate them thus, Or call upon their prophets. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 187 .... Think you so? One hears of gypsies telling what comes true. Does this truth prove them seers of all the truth? Believe not every spirit; prove .... But how? .... How but by what is told, and character Of him who tells it? To the true soul, truth Appeals to taste, as beauty to the sense; Its test is quality. The truth of Christ Is proved by traits of Christ. The like comes from like. Their inspiration is the nearest God Whose lives and loves are nearest Him. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. ILLNESS How pale he lay! We fear'd for him, lest life should slip its net: The fleshly cords were worn to film so thin ! But how the soul would shine through them ! Haydn, xi. IMAGE Awake, asleep, throned constant o'er my heart, I served this image all intangible, This photographic fantasy of truth, This fairy nothingness of vanish'd fact, A shape to love, minute yet mighty still, To senses nothing, but to spirit all. Ideals Made Real, XLiil. IMAGE, man's, in WOMEN's EYES Give a woman a pair of eyes and bring almost any man near her, he will see his image inside them, an image exceedingly small, an image, too, upside down. But a man never saw any image inside those eyes but his own. The Ranch Girl, iii. IMAGERY .... Men term youth poetic. .... Rightly too. The freshest fires are brightest. But our thoughts, How e'er they burn and melt, not often flow To moulds of nature's rarest imagery. Till life has been well sought to find and store it. Dante, i., i. 1 88 A POET'S CABINET IMAGINATION (see fancy) Unless you wish to think and feel, and thrill To feel, there is a larger world than ours. .... In one's imagination. .... Be it so. Imagination is the soul of thought. Columbus, I., I. Oh, they have turn'd from all the pain That came from earth they served in vain, To that still world within the brain, Where fancy forms it mead and main. There many a fairest vision, sought In clearer light than sunlight brought, Is mirror'd in the wells of thought. But oh, how oft must one surmise. While o'er the soul's wild sea of sighs Imagination's glories rise. That, as at sunset, every form Derives its best from cloud and storm! Oft fancy works but to appease A restlessness that shows disease, A fever that the brain would ease. Oft crimson floods of thought impart Their brilliant hues to speech and art, When thus a pierced and bleeding heart Is drain'd in drawing forth a dart. A Life in Song: Doubting, vill. The power that makes imagination burst Through limits of our world, as you have done. To find this new world, makes it pass beyond them. The glories of that sunset-land may all Be in the land you saw, or in the sky. Columbus, IV., I. IMAGINATION AND KNOWLEDGE Imagine only — not the same as knowing! Imagination dreams : its dreams anon May leap Time's processes, or, keen-eyed, spy The end from the beginning. Yet such dreams Come but to him so stirred in sympathy With nature's courses, or inspired in aim For nature's goals, or swept on by its force, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 189 That sheer inertia of the soul outspeeds The pace of grosser matter. .... And to you At times .... The times come seldom. Ay, not oft Do fancy's flowers foretoken fruit ; not oft Is ripe fruit laden on the limbs that bloom Most brilliant with the flowers. — Yet have I seen It, — Imagination imagining true life, Life true to all its images; and then I found a seer, earth's rarest product. Idem, v., 2. IMAGINATION AND MOUNTAINS When dwelling in a realm of endless plains. Those whom thy shade had haunted pointed out The clouds, and bade me find thine image there, — With what delight my heart first welcomed thee! And then, like one whose form lies prone in sleep, My young imagination woke and rose And strove to climb, and — heaven alone can tell How wisely — has been climbing ever since. Greylock. IMAGINATION, A SOURCE OF TRUTH Then I thought this whole odd vision might be an imagined one; Some had deem'd that half life's fabrics were from mere thin fancy spun. "Is it so?" at last I question'd; "are not things the things they seem? Do souls oft but heed delusions, heeding steps of which they dream?" "Those who think so," said she softly, "overlook, when thinking so, Truths within man's nature deeper than proof's plummets ever go. Souls reflect all life Uke mirrors, and their dreams by day, by night, Though they oft distort, oft image facts too fine for finite sight." A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxiii. IMAGINATION, THE TEMPLE OF We had left that place of fancy, and had reach'd a star-lit sea; igo A POET'S CABINET And across its dark, deep waters, clouds, like smoke where burned the lee, Clung about a crystal temple, rising from the surf below Like a dawn of endless promise o'er a night of ended woe. Everywhere behind the cloud-mist, could we see the temple rise. Everywhere, each side and o'er us, till we lost it in the skies. Then, anon, at pearly steps, before an entrance dim and vast. In some way, but how I knew not, we had left our car at last ; And through gold-mail'd hosts were moving, who would part, and pass us on, Swept, like gods, amid a glory blazed from all we gazed upon. Toward a towering portico, a cliff of shafts that up- ward went. Till the very stars appear'd to trail beneath their pediment. Idem, xxv. Then at once wide doors before us open'd like a dawn- ing day, And disclos'd a hall resplendent, sweeping through long leagues away. All about it clouds of incense floated, fringed with golden haze. And within them lamps, half -hidden, shone like sparks amid a blaze ; While huge caryatic figures, carved on columns tall and white. Filed far off like phantom sentries guarding thus a phantom rite. Idem, xxvii. When, behold, high, high uplifted, I was borne along the air, On and on, with slippery speed, far sliding still to swifter flight. Where strode by us tall, white columns, like gigantic ghosts of night ; Where high arches fell and rose up like an ocean in the sky, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 191 And bright lamps like lines of lightning on the clouded wall flew by. Then more steadfast came a splendor, and, amid the burning air, Checks that gently stay'd our progress, in a domed rotunda there. Idem, xxix. Broad this was and high, heaved heedless of that lavish'd wealth of space, As all else had been, — a marvel even in that marvellous place. Such a sight creation's dawning might have seen, when first arose Morning mists to end the night of an eternity's repose. All the pavement gleam'd as bright as could that first chaotic sea, When it floated all the germs of all the beauty yet to be. And the shafts that held the dome, and seem'd to hold in half the skies, Rose with lines of earthly grace, but wondrous in their hues and size. Far above their hazy flutings burst in blazing capitals, Where amid encircling glory hovered hosts of terminals. Did they live or not, I knew not, but to my confused suspense Their high distance made them holy; and I bow'd in reverence. Uem, xxx. IMAGINATION VS. PERCEPTION .... It's easy enough to see through things if only you keep your eyes open. .... And your imagination at work. That's im- portant. Like working beer, it sometimes doubles one's perceptive powers. What Money Can't Buy, 11. IMITATION , About the lips Found sweet by merely one, all swarm Hke bees. But let that one forsake him all forsake him. The Aztec God, 11. IMITATION, AS A RESULT OF LOVE "Ah, strange was it That oft then I recall'd your form, your words? 192 A POET'S CABINET That then I came to do as you would do, And think as you would think? — or that my tongue Should linger o'er your language, as o'er sweets Re-tasted still again? — or that, anon, Those accents ardent with your own dear aims, Should fire mine own to ardor? — or that then My soul should flash forth light that flamed within, And tracing far the rays that left it so. Should find here — " "One to help you, friend?" I asked — Then let us both thank heaven that made us weak So may a mortal pair bide, each to each. Both priest and partner; like the church, their home; For what are churches here but chosen courts Of One pure Spirit, moving all to love? " Ideals Made Real, Lxxiii. IMITATION IN MANNERS You are spending most of your time now in taking off the manners that suit your own character, in order to put on those that suit theirs. Where Society Leads, i. IMMATURE THEORIES No theory spun for concepts immature Can ever fit their full maturity. Columbus, II., 2. IMMORTALITY (see LIFE AND HEAVEN) Yet, though never mortal vision saw the spirits' torches flame. Or the white of robes ethereal, rustling never when they came; Never prest the hand so sacred from the sacred work it plies; Never watch'd the light of heaven within those peace- ful soul-lit eyes; Never heard that distant music, which can hush the seraph's wings With the pathos all unconscious, which from earth each memory brings; Though no saintly guest ere blest us down amid these vales below ; Or unveil'd for us that beauty which no eyes of earth can know; That oft then I recall 'd your form, your words? That then I came to do as you would do, And think as you would think? See page igi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 193 Still our souls would dream about it, still would feel its endless charm, Drawing all the good within us toward a life no ill can harm. A Life in Song: Watching, xxxiii. Ah, do not deny the soul its hopes of immortality; Where did ever noblest living seek a lesser destiny? Idem, Dreaming, xxxv. IMPATIENCE No jerk Can root out all the wrong in just a trice. Wherever grain can ripen, tares must lurk And grow till harvest-time. 'T was Christ's advice: Impatience cannot force the fruits of Paradise. A Life in Song: Daring, xx. IMPETUOUS {see anger, self-control, and zeal) Too impetuous And stormy was the temper of the youth ; And blustering weather blew about their ears Who cross'd his pathway, like November winds That shake the mad red leaves, turn pale the flowers, But leave the vales as barren as a waste. His zeal wrought little. A Life in Song: Note 2. IMPRESS on THE MIND Nay, no land shows one sunlit scene That rose-like bursts from earth's wide green, But brings an image swept away When eyelids close at close of day. 'T is but the impress mind receives. That, sunn'd or sombre, never leaves. My Dream at Cordova. IMPULSE AND REASON {see REASON) My head would oft, made jealous of my heart, Deny that reason ruled my impulses. And oft my heart, to bear such weight of joy, Would faint from too much feeling. I would ask Could I be sane yet find my life so sweet? — At least I would be sure ; so like a friend Who finds a long-lost friend amid a crowd. And stares, and holds him at arm's length, a time, Ere clasping him with courage to his breast That wellnigh bursts the while, I held her off, 13 194 A POET'S CABINET This long-sought soul that mine had found a friend; And did not dare to trust her as I would. Ideals Made Real, xix. My heart rose up from reason to rebel ; Indignant to have found a theory That dared to hold an innate impulse down ; While will, caught there, betwixt the heart and head, Each charge would bear, and yet forbear to act. Idem, XLii. INARTISTIC EFFECTS, HOW AVOIDED The only sure way of learning how to avoid in- artistic effects, is to learn positively how to produce artistic ones. Rhythm and Harmony, ix. INDEPENDENCE OF NEIGHBORS You and I like to be independent of our neighbors, especially of any whom we think to be particularly self-centered. But one who tries to be independent of even such neighbors, when, by another course, he could make something out of them, is not acting the part of a wise man. National Probity. INDEPENDENCE OF SOCIETY .... I think you women ought to show a little more independence. .... But society — .... I suppose society — some kinds of it — might let you alone. Where Society Leads, i. INDEPENDENCE OF THOUGHT (see FREEDOM) Full many are paths where life can guide us. Whichever we take from some they divide us. Wherever we go, and follow men not, No slight of their leading is ever forgot ; The best of our deeds is quoted as bad ; Once John seem'd a devil; and Jesus a sot. Our toil — what of it? — is lonely and sad. But God made us all, in spite of the throng Who deem us, if not like themselves, made wrong. Love and Life, xxxviii. For God has given you your own moods, friend ; And are you not responsible for them? And if you yield them up too readily. Not meaning wrong, yet may you not mistake? SELECTED QUOTATIONS 195 Our lives, remember, are not sounding-boards,^ Not senseless things, resounding for a world That nothing new can find in what we give. If one but echo back another's note. Can he give forth God's message through his own? Haydn, xvi. INDIANS Weill Take any man who flushes red all over, As they do when I meet them, for a foe. Columbus, v., I. INDIVIDUAL {see SOCIAL, and also society vs. indi- vidual) individuality of thought And when the thought is in one, when it springs, Why, then, not let it spring? The world is not So fill'd with thoughts that it can spare our own. And if we startle folks, jog off the guise Of their deceit, we spy them as they are. Ideals Made Real, xvill. We all when in our noblest moods Crave homage for our souls' nobility. But what our souls are in themselves, who know, Save as our rdles report us outwardly? Did not divine hands form us as we are? Who love us as we are, love higher things Than those who love what earth would make of us. Idem. INDULGENCE, ONE PHASE SUBSTITUTED FOR ANOTHER .... Instead of beer, then, I suppose the women would give us candy. .... And, with it, dyspepsia. .... And with dyspepsia whiskey, as its cure. .... And, if not cured, dyspeptic dispositions that damn one's home life more than drunkenness. .... Make drunkenness in those they drive from ^ovoQ. Tuition for her Intuition, 11, INEFFICIENCY Power and wealth Both loom before you. When I tell it you. And strive to urge you toward them, you, blind loot. 196 A POET'S CABINET Squat, blinking like an owl; or, if you stir, But flutter, blunder, miss your aim, and fall From off the very branch, the topmost branch. You ought to perch upon. Cecil the Seer, i. INFALLIBLE Yet, all may fail of truth ; none fail like those Who deem themselves the most infallible: None more than men who, fallible in proof, Yet flout the failure of a woman's guess. Haydn, xvi. INFERENCE That facts are facts is plain without explaining. To know things grow, we need not know their method. To think things handiwork, we need not see The hand that does the work. Dante, ii., 2. INFERIOR True men are never sent By their inferior. They will face him down ; And not tiu-n tail like driven beasts of burden. Columbus, v., I. INFIDEL The infidel is one who does not trust The power that made and moves the soul within. Cecil the Seer, I. INFIDELITY TO SELF Grand it is, to know that mortals, though their deeds appear their own. When aroused in noblest effort never need to toil alone. When athirst for good, we turn to springs that in the soul well high And within their depths reflected see a fairer earth and sky, ^ Grand it is to feel that visions making all our powers aspire Mirror oft the truth above us imaged thus to bless desire. And if heaven, indeed, have moved us, when our spirit so is awed. Infidelity to self is infidelity to God. A Life in Song: Watching, xiii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 197 INFLUENCE Yet why judge influence by what most men prize? Must that which leads the spirit have recourse To what attracts to station, or to guise? Naught draws life heavenward like the sunlight's force. But sunlight never blest one man with eyes Lured but to gaze upon its blinding source. Influence. INFLUENCE, BEING AN Think not I lived my life To beg men for a badge to brag about! Enough, if I have been an influence. Columbus, v., 2. INFLUENCE, WHEN UNSYMPATHETIC Some minds that try To be in touch with ours but tickle them; Or vex an itching that can merely fret us. Withal, too, they but scratch the brain's outside; And then, as if they took the hair for thought. Exhibit this, when tossed and puffed, as proving How they themselves have thus our brain developed. Dante, i., i. INNER MEANING, THE {see INWARD, OUTWARD, and spiritual) What then remains for Hfe? — If one have aimed For outward profit, nothing. If his thought Have always, through the outer, sought the inner, Then, not alone, the stars that shine on high May all prove beacons, guiding on and on To havens holding glories infinite, But each frail flower that blooms for but an hour May store in memory an ideal of beauty, A sense of sweetness, that shall never leave him. West Mountain. INNOCENT FEARFUL OF SUSPICION If he himself have done what makes him guilty, we shall frighten him; and, if he haven't done it, we shall frighten him still more. It takes the surprising in this world to make the startling. Spiritualists aren't afraid of ghosts, because they have got ready for 198 A POET'S CABINET them; and, ten times to one, the innocent are more afraid of being suspected than the guilty are of being detected. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, iii. INSANE I had a cousin once who went insane, And all his family had to play insane To keep him company. The sport was royal Till, sure that he was royal and they slaves, He ordered off their heads. .... And then? .... And then They left off playing, and made war on him; And so dethroned him. They should do so here. Columbus, I., 3. INSANITY (see madness) Lest, if my cup of fear I fill, Insanity, the glee of ill, Shall rave upon the throne of will. A Life in Song: Doubting, xii. INSENSIBILITY TO SORROW Why, I thought her tears would melt away her very face. Humph! Curse your soul! To see that sight and not grow sentimental, one should be devoid of senses not alone, but sense. On Detective Duty, iii. INSIDE THE SOUL .... You think that any soul can ever see what lies inside another? .... No ; not if it lies. It ought to stand up to be seen. The Two Paths, i. INSIGHT AND INSPIRATION Though no new message may inspire them, insight May often read through oldest form new meaning. Dante, iii., 2. INSPIRATION In the soul's profoundest depth when all without is dim and still, Oft a breath of inspiration lights a flame to guide the will ; And the men who grope in darkness, where the gloom may lead astray, By this flame aglow within them read some signals of the way; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 199 Nor pursue mere flash and shadow; oft for those who still press on, Outward light will dawn far brighter than the soul's it shines upon. Then, when inward love is kindled and the outward doubts dissolve. Safe within a mystic orbit doubly blest our souls revolve, Safe in life's completed orbit, where from faith they move to sight. From the truth within to truth that floods the cosmos with its light. But, alas, outside the orbit only gloom and grief have sway. Heaven preserve us all from straying, guide our wish and guide our way, Join for us the lost connection, where all nature's currents blend With the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. A Ltfe in Song: Watching, xiv. Is mind a deep that wells with most of thought When void the most? I tell you none can draw A truthful inspiration save from truth. The poet's ken may people heaven like clouds, All phantom shaped, and splendid as their sun; But all his fairest forms were vapors first That heaven drew, mist-like, from the earth beneath. Thought decks itself in holiday attire, — Turns fantasy, — to expend the inertia large Of large reserves of philosophic force. Forced into play, the night's dream opening where The day's work closes. Ideals Made Real, liii. The one sure proof of inspiration is That it inspires. Dante, 11., i. INSPIRATIONS The thoughts that live like spirits in the words, And save our own thought through what they incar- nate! Idem, I., I. INSPIRATION vs. IMAGINATION Inspiration is of the depths. It has to do with that which comes from within. Imagination is of the 200 A POETS CABINET surface. It has to do with that which is mirrored from without. In reli^^ion the predominating rela- tionsliip is to a source beyond human control; in art, a source within human control is of equal importance. The Rtpreseniative Sigfiificance of Farm, vii. ixsPiRiXG POWER (see spirit) Deep underneath our nature is a power That pushing forth tlirough soil and seed and flower, Moves on and out tlirough all of sentient life, And struggles most in man ; nor can the strife Be ended ever, till the force controls The last least impulse that impels our souls. E'en then this power, inspiring words and deeds, Though check'd. at times, in customs or in creeds, Anon bluets through all these to sliow the stress Of that behind them which would thus express Through finite forms that it is limitless. A Life in Song: Seeking, xn. INSTINCT What is this instinct, that it should not Ue? If one should feel the instinct of the lamb While skipping to welcome the butcher's knife That waits to slaughter it, would he be wise To foUow instinct? "Why not?" answer'd he: "The lamb was made that it might die for man : It follows instinct and dies easily. The soul was made that it might live for God: It follows instinct and U\'es happily. " Haydn, XLix. May there not be Some d^th, beyond the reach of mortal sight. Within whose grooves unseen our spirits glide Unconscious of the balancings of will? God's touch may be too subtle to be sensed. May it not stir beneath all conscious powers, A spontaneity that moves the soul As instinct mox-es the body? — Ah, to me, Love seems an instinct that impels them both. Idetn. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 201 INTENTIONS {see MEANT) He intended well ; But good intentions, if they be not mail'd In prudence and well train'd to self-control, Are no more fitted to contend with wrong Than half-stripp'd serfs with steel-clad veterans. A Life in Song: Note 2. INTUITION, RULING BY When one rules by intuition, the right is made right by one person's thinking. That is the devil's excuse for deviltry ; and, where a tyrant rules, for tyranny. Tuition for her Intuition, i. INVESTIGATION The time to see the feathers on a wing Is not the while it flies; no, no; and not While playing sleight of hand to see the fingers. Dante, 11., 2. INWARD CONSCIOUSNESS A force conjured From inward consciousness of mind and body. With all the doubts that shadowed thought in one, And nerves that stiired revulsion in the other, As if to make my spirit fly as far From fellow-spirits as those mountain hights Were far from all that shoiild be in one's home? West Mountain. INWARD vs. THE OUTWARD IN HUMAN LIFE Oh, there are views of life that so depend On inward entity at work beneath The whole that has been, or that can be, shown In what men merely see or hear or clutch, That each and all seem hollow as mere husks. To-day a man is young, to-morrow, old; To-day in health, to-morrow in disease; To-day enthroned, to-morrow in his grave; And not alone to man these changes come. The earth, our home, that so enduring seems, The sun and stars that light it from above Belong but to a camp, set up to-day. And, on the morrow, fell'd and flung aside. Idem. 202 A POET'S CABINET Before the day, beyond the day, Above the suns that roll, There was a light, there waits a light That never leaves the soul. Cecil the Seer, ii.,Q. An eye, when seeing the sphere of being. May look out through the senses, or else look in; But looks each way, toward a different goal, Toward hell through senses and heaven through soul. Who searches without, and not within. He thinks the good far off that is near; And sees no heaven tho* heaven be here. If that which he worship be worldly pelf, Oh, he knows not what souls have got Whose God is the God of the inward self. Love and Life, xxxii. IRELAND Too slowly sail'd our friend those waters o'er, Until one sunny morn their outlines bent On purple downs of Ireland's fertile shore. That paradise beyond the ocean, dreary With endless restlessness of roll and spray, — Could any dream relieve the eyelids weary More restful than the hills encircling Queenstown Bay! Or where could fairer bands of fairies arm Than Spenser spied on those fair banks of Lee! Or how could beauty bear one other charm Where Lake Killarney rock'd Kate Kearney's glee! Rare isle! — but ah, were nature's gifts expended Ere here she reach'd the boons the soul demands? Or wast thou left by wealth and rank unfriended, To make thy sons , fled hence, all friends of other lands ? Oh Ireland, Ireland, would some power divine Could point the way to free thy peasantry From all that fetters those proud souls of thine In bonds of ignorance and poverty! Yet still hope on! For thee, tho' progress falters, The light shall come for which thy children pine, Which long on other lands' less favor'd altars Has fanned the brightest life from hearts less warm than thine. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 203 Past leaden Dublin and her silvery bay The traveller trod the lowly banks of Erne; Then dream' d in Londonderry of the day When Walker's breath made hope extinguish'd burn; Then chmb'd the Giant's Causeway, thrill'd with thinking, How round those cliffs like Coliseums grand, Once o'er the ships of Spain's armada sinking, His wave-swept organ roar'd its Irish reprimand! A Life in Song: Serving, xxx-xxxiii. JAIL One should always fear the hand That taps a leaking jail to flood its faction. Who breaks one law may live to break another. Dante, i., 2. You Will have your crew ; for they have found a source Beyond exhausting. .... What is that? .... The jail, Which, like an Arab-shirt turned inside out, Will shake its lice upon you. Columbus, iii., i. JAR OF LIFE {see worry) 'Tis not the rolling of the years that leaves men oldest; but their jar. A few find places made for them; but some are never placed, and all the tally of their score is marked by scratches kept upon them- selves. A boy that life has knocked about is older, sometimes, than a gray-beard. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. JEALOUSIES But soon, like worms that would not wait for death, Fear-fretted jealousies clung round the form Of dying hope. Ideals Made Real, xxv. JEALOUSY {see envy) Love, if shorn of jealousy, Drops half its charms, like maids whose locks are clipped, And better might be boys, or bald-head-babes. The Aztec God, 11. 204 A POET'S CABINET Chewing on the cud of jealousy Is not a pleasant practice for one's friends. For though you give them naught to work upon, So much the more the grinders work away And grind themselves the sharper, — ay, and grind The words that pass them too — made sharp as arrows To pierce the soul they hit. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. You, you have genius, brains; And those without them must get even with you, If not by higher then by lower means. You are original and they derived; And thought full-centered in itself, owns not A parentage that puts another first. Columbus, I., 3. Who wants To blacken Spain with shade from Genoa? Idem, v., I. .... Of all inane performances, the worst is trying to call back a wandering love by sending out a messen- ger disguised in robes of hatred, as the jealous do. The Two Paths, 11. JEW Might not His will, Intent on purposes He would fulfil Through human means, at first selections make, And guard the truth, — not wholly for the sake Of Israel; nor for an exclusive cause, — By one peculiar people's life and laws? And where in all of history, tho' one traces Amid all kinds of castes and clans and races. Is ever found a stabler element? — Of all the men against mutation bent. In spite of court or church or sword or flame, But one, the Jew, forever stays the same. A Life in Song: Seeking, xxvil. If Jews, who read His law and sacrificed. Were saved by faith in Him; the uncircumcised With faith in Him would scarce unheeded go, Because they but the higher law could know. Idem, XXVIII. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 205 JOBS, BAD Bad jobs are near their best When nearest ended. The Aztec God, iv., i . JOKE, RECEIVING ONE There is only one way in which to receive a joke, and not be hurt by it. One must himself be able to make light of it. What Money Can't Buy, i. JOURNEYING, AS REVEALING CHARACTER Our natures are much like buckets — slop over the most when jolted. And what jolts more than a journey? No wise man swallows his physic until he has had it well shaken. The Ranch Girl, i. JOY {see enjoyment) Heaven would let the devil never Rile clear springs that gush and ever Thus refresh our faint endeavor. Our own spirit, when too near it, Taints the good that comes to cheer it : We debase until we fear it, Joy that was not meant to curse us, But to nerve us and to nurse us. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxiv. JOY in great things The great things in the world are very few ; and those that find their joy in them alone can find but little joy in anything. The Two Paths, in. judge A good judge is a man whose judgments you f Approve. Cecil the Seer, i. judgment, men praised for Humph ! I have found The men most praised for judgment are the men Most echoing others' judgments. Thus, forsooth, They make their own appear approved by all. Cecil the Seer, i. justice When mercy fails The cause is lost that does not call on justice. Columbus, v., I. 206 A POET'S CABINET Justice due to each Never can be gain'd, till each is free to claim his due in speech. A Life in Song: Watching, xxi. JUSTICE, NOT INVOLVING PUNISHMENT .... That does not give the guilty their deserts. .... Not punishment that often merely shifts one's load of guilt on shoulders of another; not that, perhaps ; and yet it may give justice — the only justice due from man to man. All justice fails that does not make men better. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. KISS (see lips) One kiss of yours could make the thrilling lips Go fluttering all day long like Cupid's wings To bear sweet words of love to all they meet. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. Yet oh, a fiend too Might deem it sweet To know of a soul to his own soul true; And if their lips were to meet, I think in the swoon that followed that kiss, They might die to wrong, and awake in bliss. Love and Life, xxviii. knaves Some go as far astray through ignorance As through ill-meaning. I would rather have One shrewd knave's ^counsel than ten pious dunces'. Dante, iii., i. If you can call them men, — These creatures, whom a life-long fear of light Has trained for treachery stabbing in the dark; Sneaks, too irresolute and indolent To push by worthy means to worthy ends. But I would trust in waves adrift for hell As much as in a rudder held by knaves. Columbus, III., I. KNOWLEDGE VS. FAITH (sce FAITH) Can aught that leads our souls toward life above Train human worth by knowledge more than love? If but to know, gave souls their victory, Where were the need of faith, hope, charity? A Life in Song: Seeking, xlvii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 207 KNOWLEDGE VS. PROPERTY Wherever gains depend the most on brains, to know may make men richer than to have. The Two Paths, i. KNOWLEDGE VS. STRENGTH Strength speeds the feet, but knowledge aims the bow, And where the one but just begins the race. The arrows of the other cleave the goal. The Aztec God, v. KICKING WOMEN You know, I never like to see a woman kick. Her dress doesn't go with it. It seems as if she ought to trip up ; or, if she doesn't do it of herself, be made to do it by somebody else. What Money Can't Buy, 1. KINDNESS BRINGING PAIN Have you not felt how much more pain it gives, This pain from kindness? Love is like the sun: It brightens life, but yet may parch it too. And wind may blow, and man may screen himself; And rain may fall, and he may shelter find; And frost may chill, and he may clothing wear; But what can ward off sun-stroke? — Love, Its first degree may bring fertility ; Its next one barrenness. It lights; it blights. The flames of heaven, flash'd far and spent, turn smoke To glut the gloom of hell. Haydn, xxviii. KINGS No people crown new kings like Saul, I see, Till, made slaves by men, they fear them more than God who makes all free. A Life in Song: Watching, ix. KINGS AND PRIESTS But what were life without its discipline? And what are kings and priests for but to give it? The Aztec God, i. LABOR {see work) Long will those controlhng labor, loving money more than man, Crush as grapes are crush'd for vintage all the growth of all they can. A Life in Song: Watching, xxi. 208 A POET'S CABINET LABORS Though hard she wrought, her touch made all her labors Like works of art. A Life in Song: Serving, xii. LAKES, THE ENGLISH Then pass'd his feet to where he spied on high Helvellyn's crest wise Wordsworth's haunts an- nounce; Where bright, susceptive lakes like mirrors vie To swell the charms of else unrivall'd mounts; And sudden brooklets, purling each a story. Dash down each ledge, and dodge through every brake. From peaks like broken fragments dropt from glory Whose heaven-trail'd clouds will not their skylike cliffs forsake. A Life in Song: Serving, xxxviii. LANGUAGE VS. ACTIONS {see WORDS) Mere lips can form our words ; our actions are con- formed to head and heart. Men hear our language, but our life they heed. No testimony ever could seem weaker because of cords that bind the soul to it. The Two Paths, ii. LAUGHTER {see RIDICULE) The best of physics For seriousness is laughter. Where is bile, Well tickled throats will throw it up. Columbus, II., 2. A fount of laughter now that sprang within, O'er-rill'd her lips and rippled round her guise, The very train's hem shaken by the flow. Ideals Made Real, xxiv. Charmed at this, I bent me nearer; but dismay! off dodged the toy. Shaken like a note of laughter from the bounding breath of joy. "Cruel thing," I cried, provoked then; "weazen'd witchery of delight, Far too fine for eyes to find you, why should you have crossed their sight!" A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 209 A man who loved a "yes," but dared say "no"; Strict, yet with smiles; and gay yet earnest too. 'T was said his life had weather'd many a blow; Still was it staunch : when gales of laughter blew. To hold one's own with him was more than most could do. Idem, Daring, lii. LAW MADE FOR DEEDS NOT MOTIVES .... We only meant .... The laws are made for what men do, not what they mean to do. No law could ever find that out. The Two Paths, ill. LAW NO CURE FOR DEVILTRY No law Can legislate the devil out of life. The Aztec God, iv., i. LAW, TAKING IT INTO ONE's OWN HANDS The man who tries to take the law into his own hands is tackling what is larger than himself, and it may throw him. The Two Paths, ill. LAWLESSNESS In lands where law supports the right, to seek To rise by breaking legal barriers Is worse than climbing up a dizzy stair By leaning on a broken bannister. Dante, I., 2. LAWS Would God we all could free ourselves from laws; But half our lives we spend in learning them ; And half in learning how to love them then. And but in souls that learn life's laws by heart. Has wisdom, so it seems, a sway complete. Ideals Made Real, xxiii. .... You sent Bill Jones to jail. .... He broke the laws. .... And what of that? .... Why, man, the laws are rails that keep the world's great train of civilization on the track. You break them, and you ditch the train, check progress, baffle enterprise, and maim or kill the passengers. .... It is the laws are maiming us. 14 2IO A POET'S CABINET .... Then change them. You've the right. That's why I Hke this country. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. LAWS, APPLY TO OUTWARD NOT INWARD LIFE .... No cruelty is too incongruous to cap what rests on fundamental error. The error of herself and kind is this, — the notion that a man-made outward law — law made by government — can reach and rule, not outward deeds alone, but inward moods. You grant this, law can be responsible for what men do, and also what they may do. .... Then law could punish both for crimes found out, and for such things as some one had imagined. .... Of course it could; and so could be unjust. The object of a law, when wise and just, is this, — to keep down outward wrong, promote sobriety and honesty .... But how about reforms? .... They flourish when you get the right condi- tion, — outward peace. Get that, and then, in part because of this condition, but never due to law except in part, men's minds can hear and serve that still small voice to which all true advance in home, school, shop, asylum, hospital, or social life is really due. Tuition for her Intuition, i. LAWS, DETERMINED BY PUBLIC SENTIMENT Where did you learn that all the people make the laws; or that the women have no share in making them? All the laws, I know, are made by legislators, or congressmen, who represent the people. Nor do they represent the thoughts alone of men who vote, but public sentiment, including thoughts of mothers, daughters, wives, impressed in home, school, church, society, on men whose interests are the same as theirs, and, touched upon their sympathetic side, may be more loyal than if voted for. Tuition for her Intuition, i. LEADER The wind swept toward him, and the sunlight glanced From his bright armor, but the smoke and dust Hid all his comrades in a train august SELECTED QUOTATIONS 211 Trailed from him, as in splendor he advanced. We deemed him leader, yet he merely chanced To be where all things round him could adjust To his position wind and sun, and thrust On him a prominence naught else enhanced. Oh blame not wind or sun, nor envy him! What though the world too highly rate his worth? Who, who, for this, would choose a r61e so mean, So distant from the clouds that always dim The central fight? — It is one law of earth That godlike leaders work, like God, unseen. The Leader. A leader, if he lead not, shames his birthright. The Aztec God, 11. LEADER IN THE CAUSE OF TRUTH He who leads men up, himself must mount Where he appears above them. .... How and where He mounts, depends on that in which he leads. A leader in the truth would better kneel Upon the footstool of a throne, than sit Upon it, crowned by falsehood. Cecil the Seer, i. LEADERS The greatest victory may be quickest won ; And they who happen to be in the lead Are hailed as leaders, and the rest as led. But, oh, the work, ere fighting had begun! The drill! the foresight! — Well, some men succeed, And some do not, and soon will all be dead. The Chance that Comes to Every Man. LEADING, AND BEING LED BY, A LIFE I fear that, by-and-by, you may become a mere machinist, mesmerized by watching mere wheels that whiz and whirl till you forget the work that they should further. We men talk of leading such and such a life, but life is far too large for any man to lead. He binds himself to it, and it leads him. The Two Paths, i. LEARNING {see KNOWLEDGE) Long will those controlling nations fear, if learning be dispers'd, 212 A POET'S CABINET Men who serve them Hke the brutes will learn "to know themselves accurst. A Life in Song: Watching, xxi. LETTER OF THE LAW .... Did one merely waive The letter of the law, what could be harmed? .... One'sconscience, if he went against the law, — One's heed of right. Cecil the Seer, i. LETTER vs. SPIRIT But I, though yielding to her, as it seem'd, Made loose the letter for the sake of spirit ; Nor promised aught. Ideals Made Real, LX. LIARS {see truth) "The young — the prejudiced" — "For their sake, " said he, "wisdom may be wise In what it screens from folly. — Yet you know The crime of Socrates, — 'corrupting youth'? The tale is old ; this lying world wants liars, But what of that? The Christs lie not: they die." Haydn, xxvii. LIBERTY {see FREEDOM and mob) You fear that skies aglow with liberty Attend some sun that ^ets in anarchy. Alas, too often men mistake the light Of coming day for that of coming night. A Life in Song: Seeking, xliv. Those yet possess heaven's liberty, Whose minds are not in slavery. Idem, Doubting, xxi. Live self, but live not for self. Not for one, For all of us the truth brings liberty; For our own spirits, when we serve the right, Free wishes, hearts, and hands; for others charity. Idem, XLi. LIBERTY, DIVINE Far above I saw a King, whose glory crown'd him like the sun. While, more fair than stars, his people circled round the royal one. Where they moved, as he directed, came no hint of hindrancy. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 213 Every pathway opening outward led along unendingly. There anon, full plenty waited, wells of joy that might be quaff'd, While their depths with scarce a ripple, clos'd above each long deep draft. And the people in the shadow far below that realm of light, Crush'd by burdens, lying prostrate, — this was what had lured their sight ; This was what, from every lip, had roused the cry for "Liberty," Right in deeming its possession would fulfil their destiny. A Life in Song: Watching, xii. LIE {see truth) Every well compounded lie Mixes truth to please the truthful with the false to poison by. Idem, ix. LIFE Life is a mystery, mystery bound. Above or about us no rest is found. Our past is a dream of the soul's dim home; Our future a scheme for the mist and the foam. The winds drive us on; we shudder but steer; We tack for safety, we drift in fear; We cry for help and a helper, but none Will answer our cry; we struggle alone. ^ If our landing, indeed, were near some light To signal the harbor were now in sight. Be alert, my soul, nor ever a ray Let gleam unused when the gloom gives way. No doubt or danger can ever dispense With a sigh or a sign for spirit or sense. Love and Life, i. Life is a mystery, mystery-bound. Above or about us no rest is found; But, center'd in every cycHng change, If one hope draw us, wherever we range, Then must it be that the soul incHned To merely an earthly love must find With each new light That cheers the sight 214 A POET'S CABINET The shaft of a corridor stretched afar To where the glories of all love are, — A shaft to whiten and brighten the way To a hall and home where ends the day, And heaven and earth, life's groom and bride, Shall gather their children, trained and tried, And those that have learned What faith has earned, Shall sleep the sleep of all the blest And dream the dreams of an endless rest. Idem, LX. LIFE BEYOND THIS LIFE {see HEAVENLY and SPIRIT) Oh, if there be laws that faith can trust. High laws that righten all things unjust. What spheres for dreaming and doing must lie In airs not domed by a mortal sky! What fulness of living must life contain Where losing one's life on earth seems gain ! Idem, VIII. LIFE, HUMAN You know What human life is? — all a fight of soul To keep the body sweet, — a fight a bird Or beast knows nothing of. A babe when bom Is dipped in water; every following day Is dipped again. If not, ere long will come Disease and death, and, when a mortal dies, ■ His fellows all thank heaven that they have hands To keep the fight up for him; for, if not, Be he not burned or buried in a jiffy, The air of heaven may find the spirit sweet. But not the air of earth — pugh ! — well he left it ! The Aztec God, iv., i. LIFE, OF THE SPIRIT (see SPIRIT) Life's greatest gain is life itself; And life, though lived in matter, is not of it ; Not of the object that our aims pursue, Not of the body that pursues it, not Of all the world of which itself and us Are parts. Nay, all things that the eye can see Are but vague shadows of reality SELECTED QUOTATIONS 2IS Cast on a frail environment of cloud, — But illustrations of a general trend Which only has enduring entity, And is, and was, and always must be, spirit. Berlin Mountain. LIGHT But once for all Can dawn a day like this. And those who will not use their light Will all life's glory miss. Ethan Allen. Too few were they to brave a fort Well mann'd at every gun; Yet those who slight the light of stars But seldom see their sun. Idem. LIGHT, HUMAN AND DIVINE Let no one take the lamps men hang at night For stars that never leave the upper air; Or think a dawn worth while comes anywhere Except where skies and sunhght bring the sight. Sense and Soul. The worth of a diamond is measured by the quan- tity and quality of the light emitted by it. The worth of an object of perception is measured by the quantity and quality of "that light which never was on sea or land," — in other words, by the amount and character of thought and emotion which it awakens. Painting, Sculp, and Arch, as Rep. Arts, xiii. LIGHT OF LIFE • Like lesser lights this Hght of life is nigh To see by, not to handle, lest we die. And while it makes the paths before us bright 'T is our work to advance from sight to sight. A Life in Song: Seeking, xxxviii. LIGHT, THE, OF CHILDHOOD Were we to lose our little leaping light, with burning cheeks and sparkling eyes, we all of us should be in darkness. ^ On Detective Duty, i. LIGHTS Ah me ! how strange ! — How the lights we carry with us make the scenes about us change ! A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxix. 2i6 A POETS CABINET LIGHTNING Each fearful time this hd of heaven is lifted, The rays pour in and focus here on us. They axle here the foes' near wheeling lines, Ay, draw them like a whirlpool to its vortex. TheAzlecGod,!. There is not a tree Or leaf, or trunk, but what, to point us out. These fiery fingers of the storm would dash Aside to ashes — fume — thin air. Idem. LIKE Men judge of us by standards in themselves; And so like us when they see us like them. Columbus, II., I. LIMBS Note you his graceful limbs, and how He poises at the waist, as if about To leap to some fair realm of beauty which His flesh enrobes but cannot realize ! Dante, i., 2. LIMITATIONS, WOMEN's Women's limitations — children's too, as everybody knows, and men's as well — are just the things that make them most attractive. If it were not for limits, there could be no outlines; if no outlines, then no beauty, in fact no individuality of form or character. What charms in each comes from the bounds in which kind heaven confines it. Tuition for her Intuition, i. .... But mama says by women's limitations men mean our weaknesses. .... What then? We all like best those weak enough to let us help them. Idem. LIMITS FOR HUMAN THOUGHT All brains with limits are what polyps own, You think? — Ours too fit forms whose grasp can never Outreach the touch of short tentacula. Dante, 11. 2. LIMITS IN EXPERIENCE You think that one small man's experience Embraces in its clasp the whole broad earth? — SELECTED QUOTATIONS 217 Nay, it is finite. Every path has Hmits. Climb up to mountain-tops, you turn away From flower and verdure, spring and warmth, to dwell With rock and weariness and thirst and chill. The Aztec God, iii. LINE, army's {see snake) Then, down the hunter's trail, our line Wound on as winds a snake, And, late at night, prep'ared to spring, Lay coil'd beside the lake. Ethan Allen. LINES AND OUTLINES You have your pencil — still can draw .... Yet not The outlines I had hoped. There looms a face With more care-lines upon its wrinkled brow Than e'er I blacked a map with Columbus, I., 2. LIPS {see kiss) And if but once, as I grew more bold, Her lips in the bowl of their beauty should mould A word of love, or should seal my bliss On lips that were burning to feel her kiss, My spirit, I think, would bound so high, 'T would be translated nor need to die. A Life in Song: Loving, xiii. And full red lips, through which flow'd soft and low Words richly color'd by the warmth within. As was the face that flush'd in uttering them. A Life in Song: Note v. And from his lips that have not lost the tint Of daybreak yet, there breathe forth sweeter sighs Than morning air brings when it drinks the dew — Ay, ay, than morning air brings when it rings With all the choruses of all the birds. The Aztec God, iii. A tale, strain 'd sweeter through those lips aglow Than sunset music. Ideals Made Real, ix. LITERATURE AND LEISURE .... What literary men need most is leisure; and what brings leisure in the world is wealth. Had I the wealth for it, I should endow, not colleges, but rather 2i8 A POET'S CABINET college men, and hope that, when relieved from outside pressure, their inward promptings would reveal them- selves. .... Why so? .... Because these promptings are the sources in souls of almost everything on earth that changes what is base because of soil, to what is beautiful because of spirit. The Two Paths, i. LITERATURE AND SOCIETY One has to build up brain work on body work. To give the head heat, you must make the heart beat. To become a social force, our literary outlet must connect with a social inlet. What Money Can't Buy, iii. LITERATURE VS. ORATORY Nor would I bide content with utter'd words. Too often, these, when widest welcomed, wake But echoes brief as breath from which they spring. I craved the mission less of roaring waves Than of the rare wrought shells that, evermore, When storms are gone, suggest their living presence. Ideals Made Real, Lxv. LITTLE STEPS TOWARD WRONG .... That last was but an accident. .... It always is. Yet paths that lead to it are very slippery ; and those that enter them must risk the ending. The little first step in the path of wrong is like the little first step of the fox that springs the trap that catches him. So little, you wouldn't think it could be fatal, no! The Two Paths, ill, LITTLE THINGS, SOURCES OF TROUBLE Usually little things bring the most unexpected trouble. There is nothing except air inside a rubber ball. But if you play with it too recklessly, it is more apt than anything of which I know to bound back and hit yourself. Where Society Leads, i. LITTLEST {see ridicule) The littlest diamond in this ring I wear Is better for my humble, human use, Than a whole world of dust whirled in a star Set in an orbit out beyond my reach. Cecil the Seer^ I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 219 LIVELY AND RISKY VS. SAFE AND PLEASANT .... Old friends are like old horses. When too old, are never very lively. .... When too lively, are never very safe. .... Without its risks, the game of life would not be so exciting. .... Without exciting, it might be more pleasant. The Two Paths, iv. LIVES All lives are summers, veiled at either end In shadows of the spring and autumn storms. We pass from tears of birth to burial; And in the brief, bright interval between There comes anon the fevered flush of life, Then paleness, then the fevered flush of death. Men leap and laugh, and then lie back and cough, Both but hysterical, betwixt the two, Warring for power that more of war must keep, Pushing for place that prisons those who seize it, Kneeling for love to tramp on when they get it, Their little rest is large-brought weariness, And what they wish for most is mainly death. The Aztec God, I. Our lives are vapors forced to roam. Of sun and storm the prey; But cling like mists, with hills their home. Together while they may. Our lives are vapors, whirled through skies, Where some by storms are torn, And some the sunlight glorifies. And some to heaven are borne. Our lives are vapors wrecked and lost. None sail their journey through. Ere long behind some blow that tost, Will naught be left but blue. The Ranch Girl, iv. LIVES, ALIKE .... All lives are much alike. — .... How so? — .... All thorns or roses, if you please. Grown on the self -same bush. 220 A POET'S CABINET .... Do all lives grow Both thorns and roses? .... Yes, we show the thorns To those that try to pluck us for themselves ; The roses to the ones that let us be. The Aztec God, i. LOCKS, WHITE Nor did white locks about his brow attest How rays of ghost-land's light had touch'd its coming guest. A Life in Song: Daring, xi. LOGIC When mortals climb a path to truth unseen, They feel their way along the links of logic. Dante, ii., i. And this man's head and heart were so united, His thought woke passion, and his passion thought, His logic fired his fancy, when excited ; His fancy fann'd the forge wherein his logic wrought. A Life in Song: Serving, viii. .... Logic is a lance that never hits what lies outside its range. .... And is never used by a wise man except on what gets inside his range. What Money Can't Buy, i. LOGIC AND LIGHT Not logic leads the artist on, but light. Ideals Made Real, xxxvii. LONELINESS And there strange faces drove my lonely thoughts Back into memory for companionship ; And there imagination moved anon To fill the void love felt in earth about, Invoking fancies where it found no facts. Beheld an earth about that seemed bewitch'd. Haydn, vii. LONELINESS OF GREAT LEADERS Whoever would seek high aims Must oft forego all lower claims. Not a few there are Move on so far That never a man SELECTED QUOTATIONS 221 Helps on their plan, _ Nor a confidant's voice Confirms their choice. There are years for them, when the loveliest face Seems only a framing wherein to trace A part of an interest felt in the race. But oh. Let us beHeve they grow, The farther that thus they leave behind The common paths of all mankind. The higher the sound of their spirit's call. If the less to one, the more to all. Love and Life, xlviii. LONELY {see ALONE and companionship) All woe is not the loud complaint that pleads Where startled pity weeps in sad surprise; Nor bliss the gorgeous guise that decks the deeds That win wide homage from admiring eyes. Nay, one may weep, despite men's cheers too lonely, Because his inward spirit stays unknown: And smile amid dispraise world-wide, if only One other soul be wending heavenward with his own. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxviii. I pass'd a grove on a lowery day; And out through the trees there rang The deep clear note of a low sweet lay Where a lonely night-bird sang. I watch'd a cloud that floated away; And it seem'd as if bearing along A lark whose trills were filling the day With an endless flood of song. Then the sun burst forth; and the night-bird stopp'd And flew away to his rest; And the lark to the ground in silence dropp'd Where brightly shone his nest. Ah, better I thought to sing in the gloom Than never be stirr'd by the worth Of a beauty that never can seem to bloom Save over a darken'd earth. And better, if like a lark, to soar Than sink to the silent ground, 222 A POET'S CABINET And tune the old sweet songs no more, Because one's mate is found. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxill. LORDS, HUMAN No wonder These human lords combine The masses' rivalling wealth to steal ! Let them be stript, my lord may feel His decency divine. Our First Break with the British. LOSS (see affliction and bereavement) Did not I know that loss and gain are both Sent here to aid the worth of inner traits And change the phases of the spirit's growth? — Haydn, xxix. LOSS MADE GAIN My dear one has driven me off; but I know My heart is hers, and its love will show; And to find a way for this will give My spirit an aim for which to live. My lips will pour into every ear The thought she has waked, and whoever may hear. While hearing an echo of life so fair. Will dream and live in a fairer air. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxiv. LOST, PRIDE IN WHAT IS How much some people do pride themselves on what they have lost ! Perhaps they think it a reason why others should help them to get it back. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i. LOVE, ALLOWING IT EXPRESSION No life could so be cleansed, — by wringing thence The blood that warms the heart ; no face made pure By turning pale the blush of beauty cast By shadows where sweet love goes in and out. Ideals Made Real, LXIII. LOVE, AND FAITH (see FAITH) True love forever fulfils the ideal Of faith, that in loving, can love to kneel. Love and Life, xxxiv. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 223 LOVE AND HEAVEN {see HEAVEN) If heaven indeed have naught to do With love, then let my soul, Accepting earth as its master too, Play out the curse of its r61e; Ay, play for a pawn without a soul Instead of a god-like queen — For the grace of a crafty self-control, Or a face like a painted screen. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxi. LOVE AND SINGING There let sweet love a pair ensnare With dainty dreams of visions fair, Wherein, like wings athrob the air, Rare wedding bells are ringing. Then, stirr'd by moods that move the heart. What tunes upon the lip will start, As if true love could not impart Such sweets except through singing! A Song on Singing. LOVE, AS A RULER {$66 SERVICE) If ever the mind to faith be brought, Is it love that shall rule the inward thought? Is it love that shall rule the outward life And crown both source and sum of strife? — Is it only that which springs from the heart That can ever impart What fills the veins with vigor infused And thrills the limbs with strength to be used? Is it only this that can ever fulfill The way of the world's Creator's will, And thus create That heavenly state For which men work the while they wait? Love omd Life, lviii. LOVE AS THE PRINCE OF ILL The Prince of 111 Came oft robed like an angel of the light; — Why not like love? — Haydn, xxx. LOVE AS THE SOURCE OF LAW {see PRIEST) And what are the laws for word or deed 224 A POET'S CABINET Of the priest whose ministry all will heed? Oh, what but laws of that in the soul Which starts the life that the laws control? Ah me, if to love we owe life's giving, It must be love that rules right living! Love and Life, xliii. LOVE, DEAD YET ALIVE Love at times may prove a treasure even dead, If dead enough in spirits yet alive. Ideals Made Real, lxv. LOVE DECEIVED Should some red thunderbolt from sunlight burst And burn all torturing blindness through my eyes, The night came less foretoken'd! I, who dream'd That here I gazed on truth, here bent these knees Upon the very battlements of heaven, — I to be tript thus from my dear proud trust, Sent reeling down by such foul-aim'd deceit! — Strange is it if my jolted brain should slip The grooves of reason? — if I rave or curse? — You, who had known my heart, and after that, And after I had warn'd you of the thing. And simulating all the while such love, — You, vowing to abjure me! more than this, To-day with such cold-blooded, soulless tact. Soft-stealing, through the door-ways left ajar. Within the inmost chambers of my heart, To snare, — as though the victim of a cat That could be play'd with, trick'dwith,kiird, cast off, — This heart of mine which, as you might have known. Was throbbing but to serve you! — Yes, once more, You gain your end ! Once more, your wish is mine. How can I love? — God help me! — Go you free. Haydn, Lii. LOVE, DREAMING OF Where, like a child and lover both united, He dreamt of love, yet woke and thought real love the best. A Life in Song: Serving, xix. LOVE, DRIVEN Love, if driven, is only driven away. Midnight in a City Park. Would only crave, When we have so much else in sympathy, That holy state where two souls, else at one, Would both be God's. See page 28 g. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 225 LO^'E, EARTHLY If in the spheres of Hfe on high, The fadeless growth of each bright year Unfold but that whose germs are here, What good do they gain on earth" who die, And let the love of earth go by? A Life in Song: Loving^ ix. LOVE, EARTHLY, RENEWED IN HEAVEN Why, when you speak, your voice the echo seems, Of some familiar strain, with which all sounds That ever I thought sweet were in accord. And when my dimmed eyes dare to face your own, Each seems a sky within which is inframed A world that holds my lifetime; and the light Beams like a sun there, scattering doubt and gloom. Cecil the Seer, II., 2. LOVE, ENOUGH FOR Enough to love, — .... What holds enough For that? .... Enough, To make his presence here a boon to me; To make his wishes a behest for me ; To make me feel an instinct seeking him. And, finding him, a consciousness of all. Hadyn, xxi. LOVE, ETERNAL AND INFINITE True love has life eternal, infinite. Complete within itself, and craving naught, It needs no future far, nor outlet vast. Nor aught to feel or touch in time or space. A sense within, itself its own reward. It waits not on return. For it, to love Is better than to be loved, better far To be a God than man. Haydn, xiii. LOVE, ETERNITY OF Love is of eternity, and knows No youth, no age; — is like the air of heaven That tosses in its play the dangling fringe Athrill with grace about our outward guise. And runs its unseen fingers through our hair, 226 A POET'S CABINET And brushes to a glow our flushing cheeks, But has more serious lasting moods than these. It is the substance of the breath we breathe That keeps the blood fresh, and the heart in motion; And, e'en when these give out, it still is there To buoy us up and bear on high the spirit. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. LOVE, EVIDENCES OF Now say you never saw the sea, for waves; Or stars, for twinkling; or the trees, for leaves; But tell me not, you never saw the heart That bosom heaves; nor ever saw the play Of faith and freak within that twinkling eye; Nor ever saw the spirit when the smile That breaks in laughter shakes the form aside. Ideals Made Real, lv. LOVE, EXCLUDING SYMPATHY WITH ONE's AIMS Our youth knew love was no love, that loved not What made his life worth living. A Life in Song: Daring, lxvi. LOVE, EXPRESSED {see WINNING LOVE) Again my arms were round that neck; And cheek to cheek without a check Our souls had met. O Love, long cold. What frame could hope to feel, when old And numb from long bound loads of pain, Such warmth and life thrill every vein ! My Dream at Cordova. LOVE, FIRST There dawns, transfiguring earth and skies, A day in the light of which faith may be sure What power makes all life be and endure. It comes, when, filling with hope, we rise Redeemed in soul by the Spirit of Truth; And it comes with assent that glorifies A soul that has won the love of its youth. Ah, never the trills Of the birds were half so thrillingly sweet; Nor ever the rills Rolled on so clear at the feet. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 227 The leaves are all flowers, And crystal all showers. Through the clouds the green hills loom, as grand As the nearing shores of a spirit-land; And the lights of the stars gleam down thro' a soul That heaves like a wave of the infinite whole. We float and fuse in the fragrant air; We fade from ourselves; we die to all care. Ay, she that is ours in that moment of bliss Brings all immortality, worth not this. Nay, nay, we have gain'd the life above. Who dares to deny it to our first love? Love and Life, xxi. Nothing in the world is so beautiful, so blissful, so life-inspiring, as is love when it first opens in the heart; but, ah, when it appears, it must be plucked by him for whom it ripens. If not, why, then, in a little time it turns to rot — and oh, the loathsomeness of that which might have been so sweet if taken in its prime! Where Society Leads, ill. LOVE IN THE YOUNG I mused of other days ; How once, and at the merest hint of love. My younger blood, like some just conquering host That trembling hope bears on, would bound through veins That thrill'd and thrill'd while shook each trodden pulse ; How, hot as deserts parch'd by swift simoons. And wild as forests fell'd by sudden blasts. My frame would glow and bend at every breath That tidings bore me of the soul I loved. How then had love been tamed! Ideals Made Real, lix. Then, with nobler cause, More nobly moved, I mourn'd that older love. It aye had come from regions far and pure. From sacred heights of dream-land and desire, And traiHng light like Moses from the mount. With one hand clasping mine, one pointing up To something earthly, yet more near the sky. 228 A POETS CABINET It aye had thrill'd the throbbing veins it near'd And made my brow flush proudly as the boor's When king's hands knight him, and he bears away Ennobled blood forever. — My mood though — This lax-limb'd, loitering, sisterly regard. So cold, so calm, so cautious, — what was this? — To call it love my spirit could have swoon'd. Shrunk like some parent's when he first has found His fair babe's brain to be a gibbering blank. Idem. LOVE, IRRADICABLE She thinks my nature water. I did once ; As each new face looked love upon its depths, I thought they might be filled with that ; but, ah, My heart is like a photographer's glass Whereon the image once impressed remains ; And Celia's face is always framed in Faith's. I fear I love the picture for the frame. Cecil the Seer, iii., I. LOVE, ITS DOUBLE SOURCE Love is the flame of a fire divine Lit and fanned on an earthly shrine. Heaven and earth both claim it their own. Why should either let it alone? Why should the earth not strive to show That all of its traits belong below? Why should the heaven be loathe to try To prove that they all belong on high? For the most of us men, betwixt the two, The only things that are left to do Are to grieve that the one has lowered our love, Or to mourn that the other has borne it above. Life and Love, xxv. This love, in morals based on faith in man, And in religion on our faith in God, Seems, in its essence, an experience Not wholly feeling, yet not wholly thought, — Not all of body, yet not all of soul. Of what we are or what we are to be, — But more akin to marriage, within self. Of our two separate natures, form and spirit. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 229 God meant them to be join'd: when wedded thus, One rests content, the other waits in hope. Haydn, xlix. LOVE, ITS ULTIMATE CONSUMATION When souls touch souls, they touch the springs of life; For them the veils of sense are drawn aside, Are burn'd away in radiance divine, The while their spirit's contact starts afresh The electric flash that scores new glory here, And lights the lines of being back to God. Then, with their whole existences renew'd. Far up these Hnes, the souls that thus commune. Discern anon that sacred home on high, Where boundless rest is blest by boundless love And dreams the dreams of bounty absolute.— They find that home, whence issue floods of light Which, flowing forth from white mysterious heights, Flame down and flash and burst anon in sparks That star the dark through all life's firmament ;— They find that home, whence whirl the cycles wide Where all the wastes of nature fuse and form. And all the things that thought can touch take shape, Until the restless wheels of matter, roll'd Through roadways worn to waste by speeding years, At last in fatal friction fire themselves. And light returns to light from whence it sprang. Through all, where souls commune with central love, They stay secure, awaiting birth or death; The Spring that starts the blossom blown to fall, Or Fall that drops the seec* that springs afresh. They watch nor fear whatever change evolve, — The splendor grand of epochs borne to waste, The ruin wild of times that end in law. The monarch mail'd whose lustre dims his folk. The people's guns whose echoes hush their king. What though dark clouds loom up and storms descend? True faith would not bemoan the forms they wreck; For forms if true are formulas of love That still is ardent to consume them all. Though lightnings thunder till they crack the sky, What unroofs rage leaves heaven to dome our peace. 230 A POETS CABINET The more convulsion shakes and fire consumes, The more of love and light may both set free ; The earlier may they end these earthly days That fret our lives with flickerings vague below Of steadfast light in endless day above; The earlier may the power of hate give way, And good awake, and every path be bright. While hope of glory gilds the gloom on high. Ideals Made Real, Lxxiv. LOVE, LOST .... All any life is worth Lies in its possibilities of love. .... But were love's object lost? — . . . . One cannot lose What is eternal. Hearts must always keep, If not their love, what love has made of them. Dante, i., i. LOVE, MANLY My soul was immature Romantic, young. It must be manly now. A man has breadth. I take it manly love Is love that yields most blessing to the most. Haydn, liv. LOVE, man's right TO My heaven holds love. And what thrives there thrives here, and has a right To all things men can rightly let it have. The Aztec God, il. LOVE OF WOMEN AND OF MEN • Do you know, You women always will match thoughts to things? You chat as birds chirp, when their mates grow bright : You love when comes a look that smiles on you. We men are more creative. We love love, Our own ideal long before aught real : Our halo of young fancy circles naught Save empty sky far off. — And yet those rays Fit like a crown, at last, above the face That fortune drives between our goal and us. Haydn, xvi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 231 LOVE, REFINING INFLUENCE OF Love, rarest of passions, with burnings untold, Refines all the being to turn out its gold. One sound of their kindling, wrong hears as a knell, And sinks from that heaven as far as to hell Love and Life, xxvii. LOVE, RENUNCIATION OF Not God, — the devil — he, he rules the world! — Then let me rule it with him. — But no, no! — Oh, what a universe of agencies Are centered in one life that may be both The God and devil of the soul it loves! Yet wits were given one to outwit the world. If Celia be what I have dreamed she is. The world must work its work upon her will Without one touch of mine, or hint, or sigh. To make her life more tempted or less true. — Oh, cursdd world, in which forswearing love Is our best proof that we would foster it ! But wait! — What moves me? — Am I but a fool Controlled by dreams? — No, no; I had a dream; But this, at least, is none, — that each who aids An angel upward for himself prepares Angelic friendship ; and if there be spheres Where spirit can reveal itself to spirit. And sympathy be sovereign, there must be One soul supremely loved. I dreamed no dream. High, knightly chivalry whose love protects. Thy knightly honor is the sacred thing Of which thy pride is conscious. But — oh God! — To be just on the threshold of all bliss : And fail. — Fail? — No. Let Freeman have her now A few brief years. — I dream with her forever. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. LOVE, REPRESENTATIVE Yet wheresoever love is roused in me. Each form I love shall seem a part of thee. No more can man or matron, maid or boy With coming charms excite my spirit's joy, But these must find in thy fair form their birth, But these must gain from thy dear life their worth. 232 A POETS CABINET The light of heaven has biim'd thine image where My soiil must evermore its impress bear. Naught now can come to bless my spirit's view, But, where it comes, thy s mi ling form stands too. Nay more, my true one, thy soul's flowing love Holds in its depths the imaged heavens above; And when 't is quaffed, and floods my being's brim, The draft fits God. I feel akin to Him. A Life in Song: Loving, Lll. LOVE, RIPE Right love is ripe love. Life must be exposed In sun and storm — to frost and bruising too: The fruit grows mellow by and by alone. Haydn, xix. LOVE, SACREDNESS OF The spirit of love is far too rare For ever deceit or doubt to dare, — A hallow'd spirit whom awed delight Must ever worship in robes of white. Too oft by a touch that never was meant The veil of its holy of holies is rent ; Too oft from a heedless impious tone Love's glory has flown. The souls that together hved in light, They weep apart through the long, long night. Love and Life, xxiii. LOVE, SECRETIVENESS OF The friends that in closeted hours confess The faith so dear That both possess, When others are near. Abide contented not to reveal. But merely to feel, In walking Or talking. That some one is nigh With a kindling eye; And some one exults at their well earned p>ride. To tattle of love were suicide. No trumpet or drumming Proclaims the coming SELECTED QUOTATIONS 233 Of God on high to a spirit on earth. Then wherefore of love, if it have any worth? Love and Life, xiv. LOVE, SPIRITUAL {see faith) 'T is time the Spirit of the living force. Whose currents through the frame of nature course. And make the earth about, and stars above, The body and abode of infinite Love, That breathes its own breath through our waiting frames With each fresh breeze that blows, and ever aims Our lesser lives where all we call advance But plays within its lap of circumstance, — 'T is time this Spirit should be known, in truth, Inspiring hope in age and faith in youth. And in us all that charity benign, Which in us all would make us all divine. A Life in Song: Seeking, LV. One talent of which love has full direction Finds heaven, while hate-led genius yet gropes near to hell. Idem, Serving, xx. LOVE, THE, OF A SWEETHEART You ask me why I love my love. Ah, think not love needs proving. She sways me like the breeze above That keeps the tree-top moving. In her fair face I find a bloom Life could not own without it, Which, like a rose that sheds perfume, Makes all earth sweet about it. In her deep eyes I see a light That turns her slightest glances To beams that guide, like stars at night, My life's dark fears and fancies. Through her dear voice there sounds a charm Past music's in attraction. That bids all forms of ill disarm. And nerves to noblest action. She is of all life's hues the sun; Nor whiter could a dove's be 234 ^ POETS CABINET Than hers to me, for all seem one, Because all mean she loves me. A Life in Song: Loving, li. LOVE, THE, OF ONE SWEETHEART (see POLYGAMY) Is his experience then So strangely brilliant who is loved, forsooth, By one maid only? .... It may not be brilliant. But like a star in heaven it fills with light One point — that where the gods have placed it. The Aztec God, in. LOVE, THE SERVICE OF {see TRUTH) How oft I thank' d the Power that gave me power To think and do for him what he could not. I knelt : I gave my body to his needs : Brain, hands, and all things would I yield to him. And was I not paid back? — His dear, sweet heart, Each slightest beat of it, would seem to thrill Through all my veins, twice dear when serving two. And this was love! You know the Master's words, That they alone who lose it find their life. 'T is true. No soul can feel full consciousness Of full existence till it really love, And yield its own to serve another's life. "To serve Christ's life," you say? — But part of that By Christ's humaneness is to serve mankind. I speak a law of life, a truth of God : To heaven I dare as little limit it As to the earth; whatever be our sphere, We know not life therein until we love. Haydn, xii. LOVE, THE TEST OF It seems to me That love, like light, is tested by its rays. The halo crowns the saints, our lights of life. Just as the love they shed surrounds their souls. Where one is God's, the strong soul serves the weak; The mother yields her powers to bless her babes; The man his powers, for her; and Christ for all. Haydn, xxiii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 235 LOVE VS. FRIENDSHIP Love reinforces our own best desires, but friendship often merely leaves us free to work out for ourselves our own salvation. The Two Paths, iv. LOVE, WHEN A CURSE Accursed love, that makes the brightest eye A sunglass through which heaven would wilt the soul, And by the very pleasure beauty gives Mete out the measure of impending doom. The Aztec God, 11. LOVER-FRIEND A sorry end Has the lover-friend. A place akin to a dog's has he. Who, whenever her form may be spied, Deems nothing so meet for him, or sweet, As to snuff the halo of dust at her feet, And to crouch and bound and bark at her side, And, trembling to feel the tap of her hand, Be weary never Of springing to fetch and carry whatever Her face and her voice demand. Full many a man has found to his cost A master made of the maid he had lost. Her lover turn'd friend is one to abuse And cushion her sense of sovereignty, A man to attend her, and flirt with, and use To waken another to jealousy. A Life in Song: Loving, xxvi. LOVER VS. HUSBAND Am I, think you, a man to play A second fiddle to your tune of love — With instnmient aU broke beyond repair. Make discord of the music of your life? I promise you to leave here. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. LOVER, WHEN COMES HIS SWEETHEART All of nature with rhythmic beat Seem'd at one with her swaying, Keeping time to her fair young feet. The beat of her heart obeying. 236 A POET'S CABINET Ah, thought I, since the world was new, All its whirling and humming, All its working, and waiting too, Meant that she was coming. A Life in Song: Loving, ii. LOVERS We look'd in each other's eyes to see Our dearer selves reveal' d; And nothing within each orb saw we Save too much love conceal'd. We rested back in each other's arms. And we heard each other's hearts, With music far sweeter than ever the charms That ever the world imparts. For every throb in the blood of one Would thrill through the other's veins, And the joy of one dispel like a sun The night of the other's pains. Discordant never in smiles or sighs, We wonder' d if it could be — Oh God, to think we were then so wise! — That others could love as we. A Life in Song: Loving, xix. LOVERS, A maid's My mind Had stumbled on the impression that a maid Looks on her lovers as a Toltec brave On scalps : she likes to see them hanging on Her neck — at least in presence of such mates As make no conquests. The Aztec God, iii. LOYAL I care not what to others A loyal feeling brings; To me it still will loyal be • To serve the King of kings. The Lebanon Boys in Boston. LOYAL spirits Nay, theirs are loyal spirits, But when the wrong is great. And forms of law do not deserve SELECTED QUOTATIONS 237 Their soul's allegiance, then they serve The spirit of the state. Our First Break with the British. LOYALTY TO PEOPLE VS. TO RULER In states that free men govern, loyalty may prompt a man, at times, to serve the people and not the per- sonality of one disloyal to the people, though their ruler. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. LUST But am I to waive a life of truth For a lower wish that craves The swine-fiung husks that the world, forsooth, Slings those it has turn'd into slaves? Am I to yield the spirit's claim And grip what has come to thrust The empty hide of a soulless frame At clutches of greed and lust? A Life in Song: Loving, xxxi. And if no love their lust control Whom the rites of earth entice, Alas for churches that prostitute soul, And states that establish vice! Idem. LUST vs. LOVE I turn my back on lust That I may turn my face to love. .... Poor fool, But one life can you live, and yet you lose it ! .... But one love can I keep, and I shall keep it. The Aztec God, iii. What? When I have let Their lustful kisses drain the dew of youth, Give her the parched and lifeless remnant? — No. Go take that wolf -skin from the snarling hounds When all the blood has been sucked out of it, And flesh gnawed off, and fling it, cold and limp. Out to another wolf panting for a mate ; But ask me not to fling love's foul cold carcass Out to her arms to whom I owe my life. — Oh, cursed fate ! Idem. MAD Am I mad? — My sole proof that I am not, 238 A POETS CABINET Lies in my thinking that I may be so. — Humph! I will hold this thinking and keep sane; And if it be a cool head takes the trick, Will find what trick is here. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. MADNESS {see insanity) How near proud reason's realm may be That fierce Charybdis-craving sea, That drags toward madness you and me! We wander toward its misty strand: There swells the wave; here stops the land. How bright the sea! how dull the sand! "Oh Guardian Sense," we cry, "away!" We wade the surf; we feel the spray; We leap ! — and God prolongs our day. Ah, Holy Wisdom, if Thou be The Logos from the Sacred Three, Who all men's good and ill decree; And if the wise above us dwell, The unwise then — but who can tell? — May madness be the mood of hell. Where God, who ruleth, ruleth well? If it be true that death translates To other spheres the self -same traits Our souls acquire in earthly states; If it be true that after death The heat of some accursed breath Can into fever'd action fan All lusts that once inflamed the man, Till life grow one intense desire, A burning in a quenchless fire, A worm that gnaws and cannot die, Since worldly things no more supply What worldly wishes gratify, And flesh and blood no more remain To make a fleshly craving sane; — If then the passions, anger'd sore Because indulged, as once, no more. Rise up, and rave, till reason swerve. And lose command of every nerve, — What state can anarchy preserve? What state? — O Christ, I see them now — Those teeth that gnash! — and see why thou. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 239 To save our souls from future strife, Didst cast out devils in this life. A Life in Song: Doubting, xiv. MAID, A MODEL Her brilliance would not dim a rival's eyes, Nor beauty shade another's face with frowns. One saw in her a modest, model maid, A woman loved by women; and with men A presence, mellow-lighting like the moon. Ideals Made Real, xlv. MAID, AND A BOY .... They were here, alone, together, and in danger. It brought him very near to her. .... And when a boy comes near a maid just in her blushing bloom, she's like a ripe red peach upon a branch. One touch — she tumbles. Humph! The Little Twin Tramps, iv. MAIDEN, DECEASED A maiden of such beauty, grace, and love. It were impossible to think her dead. And not be drawn toward beauty, grace, and love In their diviner aspects. Dante, 11., i. MAIDENS, LOVE FOR "But maidens," cried he, "are not loved like men. Bind beauty to their souls, then weigh the twain. If one weigh naught, he waives his judgment then. We must be practical." Ideals Made Real, v. MAIDS Maids, like flowers. Are sweetest, pluck'd when in the bud? Haydn, xix. Maids, like minnows, rarely show themselves Till, caught and drawn from out the open sea. They frisk in safety in some household pond ! Ideals Made Real, xxiv. The two then moving from their sister-maids. Like petals loos'd from roses when in bloom, Came forth to welcome us. Idem, xv. MAIDS WITH INTELLECT Maids In whose one person love so womanly 240 A POET'S CABINET With intellect so manly has been join'd, Need not to marry for a hand or head. There, hearts alone can win. Bear this in mind ; And fan your fancy till your words grow warm, Ay, glow to flash the white heat of the soul ! Idem, XII. MAN A man alone? — And yet the moods of man May make men love us for our manliness, Who draw them, Christ-like through our sympathy, Toward self, — God's image here, and thus toward Him. Idem, liii. Let ancient lore trace man's ancestral story To mystic loins of superhuman birth. The grandest good in which our times would glory Is merely to inherit, at the last, an earth, — An earth made perfect, where converting love Makes each man share his heritage with each, And prove his faith in heaven's pure life above By bringing heaven within each mortal's reach. For tho' a grander hope the soul confesses. So long as human nature guides its aim. Who learns to be a true man here, possesses The most that He who made man what he is can claim. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxi. MAN-FORCE NOT MERELY BRUTE-FORCE .... When it comes to any traits of body, under them one usually surmises deeper traits. .... And so you see in men? — .... Not brute force merely, but brain force, too. .... It is not always shown. .... Not always found by those whose natures look for brute- force only. When our men are gentle — say like my self -controlled and thoughtful brother — we women ought to thank them, and not act like curs who never hint what hints of courtesy save when they cringe to lick the hand of cruelty. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. MANAGING OTHERS I would not dare to mould another thus; Nay, though I knew that I could model thence SELECTED QUOTATIONS 241 The best-form' d manhood of my best ideal. Who knows? — My own ideal, my wisest aim, May tempt myself, and others, too, astray. ■ If I be made one soul to answer for, And make myself responsible for two, I may be doubly damn'd. How impious, — The will that thus would manage other wills ; As though we men were puppets of a show, Not spirits, restless and irresolute, Poised on a point between the right and wrong From which a breath may launch for heaven or hell ! — • Haydn, xxvi. MANHOOD, EQUALITY OF Now shall all men trust in manhood, knowing all must read the right By the aid of that same spirit giving every soul its light. A Life in Song: Watching, xviii. Now shall no man lord another. God will have His own sweet way, His own Eden, where all souls may work their work and say their say. Idem. Where, O where shall trust in truth that speaks through manhood great and small, Overcome the few's oppression by intrusting power to all? Idem, XXI. manhood's worth Service done For manhood measures manhood's worth. Her Haughtiness. MARRIAGE (see DIVORCE, MATRIMONY and WEDDED) A natural state. Made statelier through authority of law. That, otherwise, might authorize the wrong. Haydn, XL. MARRIAGE, EFFECTS OF A FOREIGN A foreign marriage for an American girl. The one thing that she is sure to do is to break off with the thought to which she has been trained in her own land too late to form connection with the thought to which another has been trained in another land. She is most 16 242 A POET'S CABINET likely to remain through life a stranger in a strange country. Where Society Leads, i. MARRIAGE FOR LOVE .... Does Winifred love him? .... How can I tell? How can she tell? — No- body knows how a suit will fit till it has been tried on. Even then, especially if young, one may outgrow it. Young chickens have down ; old chickens have feathers. The down feels smooth, the feathers may scratch. The chicken is the same, only it has become an old chicken. .... Men have in them what chickens have not, — minds and souls. .... Have they? .... Some of them have, and know it. Others, who overlook the fact, discover it sometimes when it's too late. Idem, ii. MARRIAGE FOR MONEY .... The woman might have money. .... And I might marry her for it, eh? Yes, and I might murder her for it; and, if not found out, or not a spiritualist, have a much more pleasant time in the future — be rid of the embarrassment of my victim's companionship. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i. MARRIAGE WITH THE UNSYMPATHETIC Cursed fate! — This trudging on and on in paths of right, And knowing every pace takes one more stride Away from all one loves! — From all one loves? — No, no ; — from all that, once, one thought he loved. Oh, cruel customs of a cruel world. Which damn us for those dreams that seem to be Our holiest inspirations! Cruel dreams, That never prove delusions, till the world Welds bonds for us that death alone can break! And cruel bonds that make all happiness, In one so bound, impossibility, Unless he live a sneak's life. Cecil the Seer, I. MARRIAGE WITH THE VICIOUS Oh, it's not my fault that I am thinking of, not my SELECTED QUOTATIONS 243 fault ; it's my foulness ! Why, why, if I sent off a boy to act merely as a valet to a man like that, it would frighten me to think of the risk involved in having him come back into my house again; yet I, I, — think of it! — I have been that creature's wife! Ugh, the humiliation of it all ! Where Society Leads, ill. MARRIED WOMEN, AS CONFIDANTES OF MEN Men seldom take off their coats and sit down in the sleeves of their souls with a woman, unless she is married. I may see him without his coating. The Ranch Girl, l. MARTYR Surely, surely, truth and justice rule the worlds; and cares and pains Which the martyr meekly suffers are not all that duty gains. Grand desires are not delusions, though one die before his day, And the soul that plann'd for manhood fall a child amid his play. Trembling through the dying whispers of the men who live for right Comes a call to nobler living than the sleep of endless night. A Life in Song: Watching, xxviii. MASK, A SYMBOL OF THE POET The mask is a fitting symbol for the poet, not only because the classic actors wore one in presenting tragedies and comedies, but because the poet himself appears in one whenever he writes objectively or dramatically — indeed, one could almost say, whenever he writes artistically. Words and deeds that would provoke disesteem and persecution, if employed by a philosopher or an essayist, can be made to fit the characters or situations represented in a poem or a novel, and never raise a protest. The Representative Significance of Form, xi. masses' PRAISE OR BLAME {see APPLAUSE) What care I for the masses' praise or blame? But larger atoms of earth's common dust, If whirled against one or away from one, They cannot fill or empty thus the sphere 244 ^ POET'S CABINET Where dwells the spirit. Let them come or go. Aly soul desires not many things but much — Ah yes, and too much, too much, as it seems ! Dante, i., 2. MATCH, A LO^■E We two souls were fitted so To match each other. Here, where jars the world. And all goes contrary,'-, where every sun That ripes this, withers that; and everj^ storm That brings refreshment here, sends deluge there. We two, exceptions to the general rule, Like H^ing miracles (is love fulfill 'd A miracle indeed?), seem'd bom to draw The self-same tale of weal or woe from each. I saw but last night, darling, in my dreams. Our spirits journeying through this under gloom: And hand in hand they walk'd; and over them. As over limner'd seraphs, did there hang A halo, love reflected. By its glow The gloom about grew brightness : while far off. In clearest Unes, the path passed up and on. Haydn, XLViii. iLA.TCH, T"WO BY TWO We too should walk alone, or else have four. Or six. When two agree thej^ make a match. A third is but a wedge with which to spHt The two apart. Haydn, rv. MATE (see boy-friends) How oft with an old but strange dehght, I awake and turn when the day grows bright; But O, no arm o'er my neck is thrown. No soft, warm breath is fanning my own. I feel but a draft of the passing air That drifts through the window to Hft my hair. I hear but the breeze That is whispering where It plays with the trees. The mate of my boyhood in days long past I loved with a love that coiild not last. He has left me for life; And far away with children and wife, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 245 He shows not, knows not, would not crave The old, old love that sleeps in its grave. A Life in Song: Loving, vii. MATED Souls are not mated when two forms of flesh Join hands, or merely share each other's arms. Cecil the Seer, i. MATERIAL VS. SPIRITUAL AIMS How vain to let afiEections all go forth To things material, hard and heavy foes, Whose mission is to fall at once and crush, Or, through long labor, wear our spirits out! How much more wise, behind the shape, to seek The substance, and, in sympathy with it, Learn of the life that never was created But all things were created to reveal ! West Mountain. MATRIMONY, COMMITTING IT In certain circumstances matrimony is precisely like murder. Once committed, one's committed for life; and to a prison-life at that. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i. MEAN The mean are mean without meaning. The Ranch Girl, iii. MEANING, HIDDEN A friend can heed the meaning of our thought Unhelpt by word or gesture. The Aztec God, in. MEANS OF GOOD TO OTHERS .... Oh, no man in the world can fall so far — can be so weak or poor — in short, so mean — but there are some of us can make of him a means of good to others. .... How? .... Why, we can help him on — or else we can suggest that he help us on. On Detective Duty, 11. MEANT To God with what you meant ! — One who has not His confidence must guess it Dante, 11., i. 246 A POET'S CABINET MEANT RIGHT When we find men saying they meant right, We find most others thinking they went wrong. Idem, I., 2. MELANCHOLY Life has had its fill of pain; But the shade of melancholy clasped me to her breast in vain; Phantom-film of mortal making, why dared she to hide the light? — Scarcely had I dared oppose her, ere her form had fled from sight. A Life in Song: Watching, xxv. MELANCHOLY TEMPERAMENT, THE And some are bom with heavy, sluggish blood, That will not leave the heart but keeps it weighted. The Aztec God, ii. MEMORIES Our homes, as we grow old, are in our memories. We take these with us, wherever we may go, enjoying there less what we see than what we seem to see. On Detective Duty, IV. MEMORIES THAT RETAIN THE UNPLEASANT You know there are people whose memories act like sinks. You may flush and flood and scrub them. They keep on catching and holding what only makes thern a nuisance. The Ranch Girl, iv. MEMORY Behind it there was left a lingering light Pervading moods of memory like the rays Pour'd through a prism, wherein the commonest hues Will spray to uncommon colors when they break. Ideals Made Real, iv. MEMORY, OBLIVIOUS OF THE UNPLEASANT Our memories are kind — would rather drop their pen than blacken joy that is to come with grief that was. They let us tread the present as on a bridge that rests at either end upon a past and future that seem bright. Were this not so, were it not so upheld, 'twould fall through gulfs of bottomless despair. On Detective Duty, IV. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 247 MEN {see man) Earth was Eden till the pair that lived there tried to make ■Gods of men, but only dwarf'd their heirs that curse at their mistake. A Life in Song: Watching, xviii. MEN, WOMEN, AND GODS .... You seemed in anger. • • • • So are gods at times. — They think of men. • . . . Of women too? • • • • Oh yes; Of women: — they are said to be in bliss. The Aztec God, iv., i. MERRIMENT, RESULTING FROM NATURES NEEDING IT The birds that sing most are the birds whose natures the most need singing; and the men that make merry the most are the men whose natures most need a world that appears to be merry. The Ranch Girl, i. MESSENGERS One may judge A message from its messengers. Columbus, v., I. MESSING AND MATING In crowds men crave companionship with men, where all can throw aside, as bathers do, all thought of dress or consequence, and lose a sense of difference in the harmony of superficial but hilarious good fellow- ship. With women — well — most men Hke women best when most alone with them. They like the confi- dences half revealed, half hidden, that show the traits that ^separate souls not ahke, but complementary. Man's love for man may be but secular, for woman, sacred; yet he needs them both — men for a throng, and maids for t^te-^-t^es. To mess is just as usefui as to mate. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. METHODS vs. MODELS Good masters give us methods but not models. Dante, i., i. ^ MILLIONAIRES AND INFLUENCE Your millionaire is like a drop cast up from the sea 248 A POET'S CABINET on a sunny day, reflecting all the colors of the rainbow — so you think; and, to an extent, your thought is true. But besides this, there is something else that's also true. The drop is usually dashed high up onto a cliff, where it stays and expires alone and useless. Meantime the great ocean of humanity, to live and work in which and with which and for which, is all that makes life to other men really worth the living, moves on to accomplish its destiny without perhaps a single serious contribution from himself. What Money Can't Buy, iv. MILLIONAIRES AND LONELINESS It's hard to live in a world where one was meant to go with others and to find himself obliged to live alone — his purest motives misrepresented, his kindest deeds misunderstood, the members of his own family his worst enemies, and everyone to whom he feels that he should most like to look for an exchange of sympathy so situated as to think that it can't and shouldn't be given ; and all this because he's the son of a millionaire. Idem, III. MILLIONAIRES AND PROFLIGACY .... Oh, you're going in with our classmates, Bob Martin and Jack Sharp, eh? .... How so? .... Why, they are millionaires. .... And what have they done? .... Why, you know! Bob has written a play, and Jack a novel, both of them intended to show up the profligate lives of pleasure led by the millionaires. .... I haven't read their effusions. Are they interesting? .... Well, rather! .... I should think they would be. Accounts of profligacy usually are. .... But these, you know, are founded on facts. .... On all the facts? — Anything less than all the truth, you know, is never the whole truth. As a fact, most millionaires that I know are not profligate. If they were, or had been for any length of time, they wouldn't be millionaires. Nor are their pleasures pro- SELECTED QUOTATIONS 249 fligate. If they were, or had been for any length of time, they wouldn't be pleasures. Idem, iv. MILLIONAIRES, HANDICAP OF BEING It's an awful handicap to be the son of a millionaire, — to know you have something inside of you, and yet to know that everybody about supposes that all you have is on the outside, — that you are a make-up not of mind but of money. Money glitters and attracts — glitters for moths and attracts the mercenary; makes one a center of superficiality, brainlessness, selfishness, sordidness, sensuality. What Money Can't Buy, 11. MIND, CHANGING ANOTHER'S .... Have you or I? — has any one the right to turn a mind from that which its own thinking has reckoned wise? .... You would not change my mind? .... I would not love you if I tried to do it; for you yourself are what your mind has made you. The Two Paths, iv. MIND, FUNCTION OF A man who fails to judge the character Of what is promised by the character Of him who promises, reveals no mind; For mind is what connects effect and cause. Dante, 11., i. MIND MOULDED BY ITS OCCUPATION When a man makes anything, he moulds not only it, but moulds, as well, the tool with which he makes it. The sharpest blade was never keen enough to keep its own edge, was it?— nor so dull but that a constant gnnd might sharpen it? It seems the same with minds. The scholar's tools are thinking tools, and usually by merely thinking can unravel what is tangled into knots. But business friction makes the tools too sharp. They cut the knot without unraveling it. Few men who once form habits of not thinking except when thought is absolutely needed can rest content with thinking as a life-work. The Two Paths, i. MINUTES Minutes grow the seeds from which the things that spring may fill eternity. On Detective Duty, i. 250 A POET'S CABINET MIRACLES Few things, when we turn them inside out, Are proved to be the miracles we thought them. Dante, ii., 2. MIRE, FALLING IN A man may fall in such a mire that when he tries to clutch a thing to rise on, he only pulls down what may sink him deeper. The Two Paths, 11. MIRROR Ay , how often, when the light that guided us has gleamed within, We have wish'd that our reflections might enlighten then our kin. But though brighter minds might aid them, ours, at least, were dull as night, Striving ever, failing ever, half our views to mirror right. A Life in Song: Dreaming, ix. MISSION There can be no one, not the least of men, But has his mission. Half a mortal he, And half a spirit ; half the son of earth. And half of heaven ; it is his work divine To mediate for his race between the two; To take the life God gave him at his birth, — Its germ, its growth, and all its varied fruit, — And offer it, like him — that greater priest Who offer'd more — a willing sacrifice Upon life's altar, where the heaven-born soul Is tested and refined by fires of earth. Then must he work with whatsoe'er survives, And show to men his preservations grand Of common things that they profane and slight. And hush their murmurs by sublime appeals That urge their spirits to the spirit's best. Thus can he fill a worthy sphere, and be Earth's humble victim, who, its prophet too, Reveres his life for what his life reveals. A Life in Song: Doubting, XLI. When all sailing is over, the shouts of a state That hail a Columbus may name him great. Before it is over, that isle of the west, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 251 The goal of his quest, Is merely, for most, the point of a jest. Nor a few, the while he turns to his mission, Will deem him moved by a mean ambition. Ay, often indeed, the nobler the claims Inspiring his aims, The more earth deems They are selfish schemes Of a Joseph it hates for having strange dreams. Unveiling the Monument. MISSION, FINDING ONE's With broaden'd means, led on to push Toward broaden'd purposes, I spoke and wrote; And found, anon, while aiding here and there Where aid was rare, wide opening to my view, A worthiest mission. Ideals Made Real, lxvii. I like to think this frame of mine Contains a spark of life divine. Enkindled there with some design. I oft have thought, there ought to be Some light to glow and flow from me, And show what all men long to see. A Life in Song: Doubting, ill. MISSION OF MAN, SPIRITUAL There is one only mission fit for man, — To be a spirit ministering to spirit. What fits for this? — A breath of highersky, A sight of higher scenes, at times, a strife To mount by means impossible as yet. What then? — Believe me that the spirit-air, Like all the air above the soil we tread, Takes to its own environment of light No growth to burst there into flower and fruit That does not get some start, and root itself Amid this lower world's deep, alien darkness, — No spirit uses wings in heaven that never Has learned of them, or longed for them, on earth. Berlin Mountain. MISSION, MAN WITH A The more they knew him, something made of him Still more a stranger. All about his life 252 A POET'S CABINET There hung an atmosphere of mystery. He seem'd through it to see what they saw not; And as their hush would heed the rare reports That reach 'd them through the music of his voice, His thought oft seem'd a spirit's; none could tell From whence it came; nor trace it where it went. A Life in Song: Prelude. MISSION vs. MISTRESS .... A woman craves attention and a home. Her lover's mission, let it oft withdraw His ear or sphere from her, seems then her rival. .... It would not, did she love the man's true self. .... Perhaps, and yet the kinds of love men feel For mistress or for mission are so like! — What, if behind the mission's love should be Some sentient spirit too in realms unseen? These women may be right. They may have rivals. Columbus, II; I. MISSIONS Some souls have missions because misled. Righting a Wrong. .... True missions only serve the higher self. .... Some people always think their own selves higher Than are the selves of those about them. Dante, iii, i. MISSIONS VS. BUSINESS One's mission, as a rule, Is wrought alone; one's business with others. Things done alone may but be done for self. Things done with others may be done, too, for them. Idem. MISTAKE, MADE EXCUSABLE BY MAKING IT WORSE You know when one gets into slippery places, and starts to slide down hill, the safest thing, at times, is not to try to stop himself, but keep on sliding, till he touches bottom. So when a man has made a big mistake, he sometimes makes a bigger one, in case he fails to emphasize the one he made, so all will see how big it was, and what a big excuse he had for making it. Tuition for her Intuition, ii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 253 MISTRESS OF THE HOUSEHOLD I know one household now All radiant through its mistress ! Where she dwells A sweet content pervades the very air, And genial sjmipathy smiles on to make Each whole long year one summer of delight. Ideals Made Real, lxxv. MISUNDERSTOOD {see UNDERSTOOD) All the thoughts That flood the world spring up from single souls ; And some of these may bless it most when made To spend their lives interpreting themselves. Dante, i., 2. I fear that any soul That needs to be interpreted, before It gains the common love of common men — For this alone is all for which I long — Dwells in the doom of some uncommon curse. Idem. MOB Then I saw a wiser instinct, flowing forth unitedly, Where were crowds that came together at the call of liberty. Which, like thunder on the hillside, rousing rills from every spring, When they dash to seas that madly o'er the rocks the breakers fling. Roused, anon, a mass of mortals, who beneath a hissing tide, Quench'd the flaming guns that bellow'd from a tyrant's tower defied. Then anon the wrath subsided; but the mob, ere back it roU'd, Had to havoc swept the good as well as bad that thrived of old. A Life in Song: Watching, viii. MODERN {see progress) Think you, friend that naught Has dimm'd with new alloy the modern phrase, And that it still makes clear thought's ancient phase? Nay, may not one's own thinking, too, debase The soul's pure springs of God's inspiring grace? 254 A POET'S CABINET If so, can one be wise, and take no thought Of what another spirit has been taught? Idem, Seeking, XLV. MODEST The modest may be more unjust to self Than are the egotistic to their fellows. Dante, i., 2. To be - Too modest, is to lag behind, and break God's Hnes, who ranks us right. Cecil the Seer, i. MODESTY, A WOMAN's A woman's modesty is her best treasure-case in which to hide her morals, yes — but if a drunken thief, she probably has lived so long with thieves that the treasiu*e-case is empty. The Two Paths, iii. MOMENTS Life is poised on slender moments; all eternity on time; And the "still small voice" reveals the presence of a power sublime. A Life in Song: Dreaming, i. MONEY {see MARRIAGE FOR WEALTH) The time will come when money Will pay what work is worth; Will buy your task, and none will ask Your station or your birth. The right to earnings will be won By what a man himself has done. The time will come when money Will not seem more than man; But hearts will yearn with all they earn To help all men they can. In rolls of honor in that state, Great love alone will make men great. The time will come when money Will not buy one a crown — To lift a snob above the mob And keep all others down. For men, to inward worth alert. Will only bow to true desert. The Little Twin Tramps, i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 255 MONEY AS A TOY {see GAMBLING) At some time, you know, boys always use up or lose their toys. In the end, the same thing happens to men who begin to play with — make toys of — their money. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, iii. MONEY MAKING (see COMPETENCE) .... Would not make money, then? .... Enough to spend; but not enough for coffers, or for coffins. You gild a living leaf, and it will die. You cover living souls with gold, too often they shine for others but decay for self. Their buried best is never brought to light. The Two Paths, iv. MONOMANIACS (see consistent) MONUMENT (sec FAME, POSTUMOUS, and TOMB) Not oft, nor till ages of suns and storms Have wrought with the verdure in earthly forms, ' Are these turn'd into stone, no more to decay. But often on earth The owners of worth That men image in marble grow stony, that way. Ah, man, whom in hardship you might make a friend And turn from — beware, beware in the end, Lest he whom you harden grow hard unto you. O world, when ready your hero to cheer, How heeds he your welcome? say, what does he do? His eye, does it see? his ear, does it hear? His heart, does it throb? his pulse, does it thrill? Or his touch, is it cold? his clasp, is it chill? — O world, you have waited long ; what have you done? man, you have wrought so long; what have you won? — That monument there, So high, so fair. That throne of light for the man who led. Is only a tomb. They are cheering the dead. Unveiling the Monument. MOOD, EVIL Your evil mood is master of your thought The Aztec God, iv., i. MOODS, LIGHT, RESULTING FROM TROUBLE The lightest of moods, and the brightest as well, are 256 A POET'S CABINET often mere spray flung up from the waves that a serious blow has been tossing. The Ranch Girl, i. MOON, THE, IN A STORM At last, my doubt had made me leave my beads, And, moved as if to cool a feverish faith, Pass out, the night air seeking. There I saw The moon. It soothed me always with strange spells, The moon. But now, as though all things would join To rout my peace, I seem'd this moon to see Caught up behind an angry horde of clouds, Chased by the hot breath of a coming storm That clang'd his thunder-bugle through the west. When once the rude gust hit the moon, it tipt — Or so it seem'd — and with a deafening peal It spilt one blinding flash. Then, where this lit. Just in the path before me gleam' d a knife! Held o'er a form of white! To see the thing I scream'd aloud. It seem'd a ghost! Haydn, xxxi. MORAL EQUAL My soul demands in one whom I obey A moral equal, at the least. Columbus, I., 3. MORBID They call me morbid — if they mean I hate the wrong, wherever seen; And make supreme my own ideal; And grieve to find it not made real ; I hail the name. No titles go From earth to bias heaven, I trow. Men's normal moods may sink and swell At one with tides that drift to hell. A Life in Song: Doubting, ix. MOTHER How oft in the night, 'mid the wind's wild sweep Through the leaf -hung trees, or the spray-flung deep, My eye sees not, but a light will gleam Like an angel-face in an angel-dream ; And back through the years My hush'd soul hears The call of a tone With cravings pale For church and stole and sermons of my own. See page joi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 257 Like the spirit's own; And I feel the press Of a lost caress, And of Hps that bear Both a kiss and a prayer For my cheeks that glow as my ptdses thrill. Ah, is it a wonder my eye should fill? I feel, whatever my life may be, That one in the past had love for me; When, dear as a boon from a realm of the blest. ]\Iy soul was press'd To my mother's breast. Idem, Loving, yi. MOTHERHOOD She hints — not so? — that truest womanhood Is maidenhood? — By Eve and Mary, false! — The mother hves the model of her sex, And not the maid. Haydn, XLII. The tender plant that springs to the air From the small frail urn of youth Is trained, if at all, by a woman's care For the flowering and fruitage of truth. Each home is an Eden that owns an Eve Whose deeds make all Hfe joy or grieve. Love a-nd Life, vii. MOTHS VS. WORMS More blest the short-Hved moths that fly to flame Straight through a pathway Ht by coming Ught Than long-lived worms that crawl thro' endless mire. The Aztec God, i. MOTn'T:S AND THOUGHT What moves me seems beyond all conscious thought; Seems Hke the lure that leads the summer bird Southward when comes the fall. It is enough, It is my destin5^ I weigh it well, And find it rational; yet why I first Conceived it as I do, I cannot tell. Columbus, III., I. If men were manikins they might be moved hv mo- tives not translated into thought. But men have minds, and so they often get what gtddes more wisely 17 258 ALLOWANCE OF CERTAIN CLAIMS. ized and directed to pay, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropri- ated, to the trustees of Loudoun Street Presbyterian Church, of Winchester, Vir- ginia, the sum of seven thousand dollars, for use of and damage to their church prop- erty by the military forces of the United States during the late civil war." The trustees of Loudoun Street Presbyterian Church, of Winchester, Va., appeared and filed their petition in^this court August 28, 1906, in which they make the follow- ing allegations; That during the late war for the suppression of the rebellion, and on or about Sep- tember 20, 1864, the military forces of the United States, under command of Maj. Gen. P. H. Sheridan, took possession of the church building of Loudoun Street Pres- byterian Church, of Winchester, Va., and used and occupied the same for hospital and other purposes until the fall of 1865. That the reasonable rental value of said building during the period it was so occupied, including the repairs necessary to restore the building to the condition in which it was at the time the said military forces took possession, was the sum of $7,000 for which no payment has been made. The case was brought to a hearing on loyalty and merits on the 17th day of Janu- ary, 1906. G. W. Z. Black, esq., appeared for the claimants, and the Attorney-General, by W. W. Scott, esq., his assistant and under his direction, appeared for the defense and protection of the interests of the United States. The court, upon the evidence and after considering the briefs and arguments of counsel on both sides, makes the following FINDINGS OP PACT. I. It appears from the evidence that the Loudoun Street Presbyterian Church, of Winchester, Va., as a church, was loyal to the Government of the United States throughout the war for the suppression of the rebellion. II. "During said war the property described in the petition was taken possession of by the United States troops, the furniture removed, aud the church building occu- pied as a hospital for a period of about two years. The reasonable rental value of said building for such period, together with the damage to same in excess of ordinary wear and tear, was the sum of twenty-six hun- dred dollars (|2,600), no part of which appears to have been paid. III. The foregoing claim was never presented to any department of the Govern- ment prior to its presentation to Congress and reference to this court by resolution of the United States Senate, hereinbefore stated, and no reason is given why such was not done. By the Court. Filed January 21, 1907. A true copy. Test this 16th day of February, 1907. [seal.] John Randolph, Assistant Clerk Court of Claims. TRUSTEES OF LUTHERAN CHURCH OF TOMS BROOK, VA„ AND OTHERS. [Court ol Claims. Congressional, No. 12611. Trustees of Lutheran Church ol Toms Brook, Va., and trastees oJ Reformed Church of Toms Brook Va., successors to the Union Church, of Toms Brook, Va., V. The United States.] STATEMENT OP CASE. On February 1, 1906, Senate bill 4025 was introduced in the Fifty-ninth Congress, which said bill reads as follows: "A BILL For the relief of the trustees of the Union Church, of Toms Brook, Virginia. ' ' Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of the Treasurjr be, and he is hereby, author- ized and directed to pay, out of any money in the Treasury of the United States not otherwise appropriated, to the trustees of the Union Church, of Toms Brook, Virginia, the sum of eight hundred dollars, in full compensation for the use and occupation of and damage to real estate of said church by United States military forces during the late civil war." Said bill,, with accompanying papers, was referred to this court by resolution of the United States Senate on June 13, 1906, for findings of fact under the terms of section 14 of the act approved March 3, 1887. ALLOWANCE OP CERTAIN CLAIMS. 259 , The case was brought to a hearing upon lovaltv and merits on the 9th day of January, 1907. Moyers & Consaul appeared for claimants, and tlie Attorney-General, by John Q. Thompson, esq., his assistant, and under his direction, appeared for the defense and protection of the interests of the United States. The claimants in their petition make the following allegations: That petitioners John H. Bauserman and Abraham Keller are the trustees of the Reformed Church, of Toms Brook, Va.; that petitioners Noah F. Snarr and B. F. Borden, jr., are the trustees of the Lutheran Church, of Toms Brook, Va. That previous to and during the late ci^dl war said two churches were the owner in common of a certain house of worship, known as and called the " Union Church," of Toms Brook, Va. ; that said building was a substantial wooden structure, well finished and furnished, and reasonably worth in the spring of 1862 not less than $1,000; that in the spring of 1862 the United States military forces, under Gen. N. P. Banks, took pos- session of said building and used and occupied the same for military purposes; that during said use of said building the same was greatly damaged, the building when vacated being practically nothing but walls and roof ; that the reasonable rental value of said premises during said period of occupation, with the damages incident to such occupation, amount to the sum of $800. That petitioners as trustees as aforesaid for said Reformed Church, of Toms Brook, Va., and for said Lutheran Church, of Toms Brook, Va., are the owners of this claim. The court, upon the evidence and after considering the briefs and arguments of counsel upon both sides, makes the following FINDINGS OF FACT. I. Throughout the late civil war the Lutheran Church, of Toms Brook, Va., and the Reformed Church, of Toms Brook, Va., remained, as organizations, loyal to the Gov- ernment of the United States. II. During the civil war the Lutheran Church, of Toms Brook, Va. , and the Reformed Church, of Toms Brook, Va., were the owners in common of a certain house of worship used by said two churches, which building was called the "Union Church," of Toms Brook. During said war said building was used and occupied by the United States ■ military forces for military purposes and was incidentally greatly damaged. The reasonable rental value of said premises during the period of said occupation, and for damage to the pulpit, pews, and building was the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars ($250), no part of which appears to have been paid. III. Tills claim was never presented to any Department of the Government prior to its presentation to Congress and reference to this court as aforesaid, and no reason is given why such was not done. By the Court. Filed January 14, 1907. A true copy. Test this 28th day of January, 1907. [seal.] John Randolph, • Assistant Clerh Court of Claims. TRUSTEES OF MACEDONIA METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, STAF- FORD COUNTY, VA. [Court of Claims. Congressional, No. 12420. Trustees of Macedonia Methodist Episcopal Church, of Stafford County, Virginia, v. The United States.] STATEMENT OF CASE. The following bill was referred to the court, June 13, 1906, by resolution of the United States Senate, under act of Congress, approved March 3, 1887, known as the Tucker Act: " A BILL For the rehef of the trustees of Macedonia Methodist Episcopal Church, of Stafford County, Virginia. "Beit enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, author- ized and directed to pay out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated , to the trustees of Macedonia Methodist Episcopal Church, of Stafford County, Virginia, the sum of one thousand dollars, for use and destruction of their church property by the military forces of the United States during the late civil war." 26o A POETS CABINET To shape like this when some primeval frost Chilled, caught and crystallized the storm-swept waves Of chaos that, arrested in their rage. They fitly might portray the power beneath. Stay there, great billows, all your boiilder-drops Held harmless where they hang; and all the spray That might have dashed above them merely leaves Of bush and forest, held to equal pause Save where, perchance, their fluttering, now and then. Reveals a feeling that they once were free; Stay there suspended in the sky ! But sure As days roll up the sun, an hour must come When blazing blasts again shall shake those peaks, Shall pile them higher, level them to plains, Or melt them back to primal nothingness. West Mountain. MOUNTAINS, SUGGESTIONS OF SURROUNDING Did ever yet a form appear on earth Divine in mission that would fail to bless Those, too, who could but touch its garment's hem? As long as thinking can be shaped by things. And that which holds our hfe can mould our love, What soul can seek the skies with wistful gaze And be content with only soil below? Oh, does it profit naught that one should dwell Amid surroundings that no eyes can see Save as they look above, no feet can leave, To seek the outer world, save as they chmb? Where every prospect homes itself on high, And each horizon seems a haunt of heaven? Greylock. MOUNTAINS IN A THUNDER STORM We saw the mountain-summits as before. And soon, upon the highest peak of all. Some clouds appear'd. They seem'd, ere long, to crawl Along the hights, and lengthen out, and show Themselves the first of others gathering so. Which soon closed up behind them. Then we heard The moan of forests that above were stirr'd; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 261 Then nearer trees began to quake and sway; And with good cause! for blackening all the way A storm was coming on, with an array As fierce as hosts of fiends might be, if sent From hell to charge some heavenly battlement. As fiercely, foully, did its forces try To break the Hnes of Hght in earth and sky, With sad success! they carried each redoubt; And, bounding down with thunder-tread and shout, On every side their weapons flash'd, and lash'd The howling waste through which their fury dash'd. A Life in Song: Seeking, xxii. MOUNTAIN VIEW At last we reach'd a dark defile. Through which a river dash'd; but soon the dell Became a precipice, adown which fell The spray-sent stream, then thunder'd its farewell A thousand feet below. From where we stood We watch'd it wind and gleam amid a wood, Whose tree-tops far beneath us waved away, Well swept by winds that made them sigh and sway, Across a sea-Hke space of hills and dales. The high-heaved peaks and all the deep-rent vales Were bright with autumn's tints that end the year Like sunset ending day. "The glories here Bespeak translation and not death," said he. ''These leaves are bright as flowers that lure the bee In orchards. When they fall, the limbs are clear For life's fresh fruitage of the coming year. So find I autumn's hues of gold and red Worn by each season, ere the leaves are shed, A mantle which the old year from the skies Drops like Elijah's, and it prophesies New hfe beyond to which all nature hies." Idem, xvi. MOURNER, EXPERIENCE OF A Last night when darkness fell and veiled my face From those I surely thought it else had frighted, I walked the streets and watched the city dream. In lanes, m inns, in churches, and in homes Each face I gazed at loomed as grim with shadows As those that clung to mine. Her funeral pall 262 A POET'S CABINET Seemed closely hung about my form as her's, Flopping a dangling, dire, bedraggled fringe Of tear-soaked black between myself and all things. Dante, ii., i. MOUTH I would rather risk, Without a disenchanting yell or yolp, Extracting teeth than thought from such a mouth. Idem, I., I. Were I a moth In a rug their crowd came trampling, I should fight — Ay, with my mouth, too, as you seem to ask — And keep on fighting there, until I wrought My way to something that could not be trampled. Idem. .... He talked, at first, of eating and of drinking. .... Quite natural ! The mouth, like other things will buzz the most of what it does the most. On Detective Duty III. MOUTH, KEEPING IT SHUT .... But if you drug him? — .... He himself gave you the chance. Con- founded idiot — should have kept his mouth shut ! .... The same that one could say of most fools. .... Yes; the sooner, too, they find it out the better. Why were our stomachs put inside our bodies, why were our senses put inside our skulls, if we were meant to open up to everything? Idem, ii. MOUTHS, FOR TALKING AS WELL AS EATING Our human mouths are doors that swing in front of souls as well as palates, — where the fun comes out as well as food goes in. To balance the lower use of them in chewing, 'tis better, when we eat, to talk. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. MOVEMENT Nay, as the flush'd and fever'd blood will start About the shot that rends a soldier's breast, As if mere movement could remove the smart. Unrest relieved his pain, each month revealing A milder movement and a firmer eye. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxiii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 263 MURILLO No sweeter Murillo's divine designs, Whose purity rivals each thought it refines, While the dreamy intent of a life-brooding haze Throngs thick with the beauty of immature praise. Conceptions immaculate still may be In the pure white light that he could see, Inspired to incarnate a soul in each plan, The life of a picture as well as of man. The Artist's Aim. MUSE Woe me, I stand, A poet born, who deem'd his Muse had fled; That time and trouble had a stone roll'd up, Her sweet form sealing in their sepulchre. And yet one breath of love could rouse the dead. All day the subtle spirit haunts me now, Thrill'd through and through to sound her sweetness forth. Ideals Made Real, Liii. MUSIC (see harmony) Music throbs with life. The sounds are sentient . . . They make me thrill, as if a power should come. And touch, with hands below these fleshly robes. And clasp, as loving spirits do, the spirit. They woo me as a god might, owning heaven. Haydn, i. music, expressing grief Did ever harpsichord so crave a voice To utter forth a cry of full despair? Did ever aught that human hands could touch So tremble to reveal such agony As wrung the frame of him whose fingers wrought, Along the sympathetic key-board there, The counterpoint still pointing out his woe? Haydn, xlv. I never so had trembled at the peals Of thunder as beneath the chords he struck; Nor felt my cheek so moist by rains as there By tears that flow'd as flow'd his melodies; While all the air about appear' d surcharged 264 A POET'S CABINET With dangerous force electric, touch'd alone To flash keen suffering from his heart to mine. And yet, each day, his music sweeter swell'd. Ere that, it may have lack'd in undertone, The pleading pathos of half -utter 'd grief: Since then, I never hear it but it seems As if the heavens had been bereaved of love, And pour'd their sad complaint on earth beneath; And I who listen to the sweetness of it Can never tell if I should smile or weep To think that it has come so far below, Or feel that it has left so much above. Idem, XLVi. MUSIC FREES THE MIND IT RULES What different moods. These chords, we hear, arouse in different minds! That maid may smile amid sweet dreams of love; Her dark attendant dream of but her wealth; That matron plan some fresh self-sacrifice; And that spare fellow, twirling near her side The soft mustache that downs his pursing lips, Plan only how to hide their stingy look. And thus all listen, musing different things; And all, with conscious freedom, muse of them; And yet one harmony controls them all. Aroused or calm to match its changing flow. What else but music frees the mind it rules? "Good-will to man," was first proclaim'd in song. Ideals Made Real, xxxviii. MUSIC OF LIFE Music round the world is ringing. Sweeter ne'er is heard by man; Music angel hosts were singing. Ere the morning stars began; Sweeter 't is than dreams of music, Music one awakes to hear Trailing on a train of echoes O'er a mild and moonlit meer; More it moves than martial marches, More than gleams of long-lost hope. More than suns to glory lifting SELECTED QUOTATIONS 265 Dew they draw from plain and slope; Music 't is that thrills us only In the art that hearts control, When the breath of ardor holy Softly stirs a sighing soul. The Music of Life. MUSIC OF NATURE At times, mysterious whirs of winds and wings And whisperings rose, with long-drawn echoings. 'T was music, lingering lovingly along The breeze its fragrance freighted, like a song From bay-bound barks in hazy autumn calms ; Nor less it sway'd my soul than slow low psalms, Begun where organ blasts that roar'd and rush'd And made the air-waves roll, are swiftly hush'd, And our thrill' d breasts inhale as well as hear The awe-fiU'd sweetness of the atmosphere. A Life in Song: Seeking, iv. MUSIC OF THE SPHERES The wise who once thought heavenly spheres, As all unroll' d their store of years, Woke music through their atmospheres That soft and far was ringing; Heard subtler music, it may be, Where love rules all, yet all are free, And though not thoughts, yet hearts agree, For all beat time in singing. A Song on Singing. MUSICAL vs. POETIC MOVEMENT Music moves forward like a wheel when its spokes are revolving, the united influence of the tones being far more marked than the significance of separate tones. Poetry moves forward Hke one walking, step by step, the united influence of sentences being scarcely more perceptible than that of separate words. The Representative Significance of Form, xxii. MUSICIAN How could I show more worth, Than as a reed for a breath divine, Blowing from heaven to earth? Musician and Moralizer. 266 A POETS CABINET MYSTERY IN LOVE Do we mention love? Oh, how should we dare? For love one may only harm By stripping its form of the mystery there, Which is oft its holiest charm. A Life in Song: Loving, XL. MYSTERY IN RELIGION Naught can train more truthful piety Than earnest thought, awaiting patiently In heaven's own light each heavenly mystery. Idem, Seeking, xlvii. Could one solve All motives and all means of mystery, There were no sphere for faith. Dante, Ii., 2. Can aught that men serve reverently Be void of deep dark voids of mystery? A Life in Song: Seeking, xlvii. MYTH You, like a myth, Are not inspired, but yet inspiring; not Religion, but could make a man religious. Columbus, II., I. NATURE, AND HUMAN CHARACTER No character, I think, grows wholly ripe Save that which grows as nature guides its growth. Haydn, xli. NATURE AND HUMAN INFLUENCE Earth might have more of beauty, had it had More continence; nor spent, and spawned such crowds Between ourselves and nature. As it is. What tempt our taste appear too often served Like viands one can scarcely see for flies. Or test for spice and pepper. Dante, iii., 2. NATURE, AS A GUIDE TO ACTION What has a man that a child has too. When "of such is the kingdom" on high? He knows that life is better'd by rules. But he knows how split the wise and the fools When judging of rules they apply. He feels that life worth living proceeds SELECTED QUOTATIONS 267 From nature that prompts the bent of deeds; And he lets the reins of his being go, Whenever the soul moves upward so. If he look to God through self or His Book, Or leading the way through a bishop's crook, He welcomes whatever has worth in the new, Though it grew outside of his Timbuctoo. For modest he is, and loves to find Earth blest by minds that differ in kind. In short, to the simple, the frail, and the few He is fill'd with charity through and through; And, waiving your reason its right of control, Trusts God for enough truth left in your soul; And though he may tell you he doubts your way, He has much to love in spite of his "nay"; And that may a man and a child have too. Of Such Is the Kingdom. NATURE, BEING TRUE TO Ah, he who learns of this, and comes to live In close communion with it, finds, at times, When Nature whom he loves has laid aside Her outer guise and clasps him to her heart. That there are mysteries, not vague but clear. Not formless but concrete, which, it must be. That those alone can know, or have a right To know, who always, like a faithful spouse, Have kept their spirits to the spirit true. West Mountain, NATT'RE, INDIVIDUAL In loneliness I wander 'd; When, lo, above me, ringing Amid the breeze That shook the trees, I heard a bird's glad singing. I looked, and through the leaves could see The warbler nod and chirp for me. "One friend is left me yet," thought I, And ventur'd near The song to hear; But when he saw me drawing nigh, Alas, in fright He took to flight! 268 A POETS CABINET Not, not for me had been his care. He sang to greet the sunny air, And serve his own sweet nature. A Misapprehension. We fight the hydra, we. Who war against our nature. Every head That reason clove would rise redoubled there. Ideals Made Real, xiii. Some natures are choice as gems, and every tool men turn against them grinds itself, not them, and all grow brighter from the process. The Two Paths, ill. You know there are some natures that act toward our own as flowers do toward bees. No matter how much we buzz about them, even though we sting them, once in a while, we never get back anything but sweetness. Where Society Leads, iii. NATURE, MATERIAL, AS A SCHOOL And when these mounts, like mighty sheets above Some slumbering giant soon to wake and walk. Fall back to formlessness from whence they came, What wisdom shall be proved the choice of him Whose eyes, in mercy shielded from the blaze On which the soul alone can look and live, Did not mistake mere grossness in the form For the true greatness of the inward force ; Whose mind too slightly taught, as yet, perhaps, To read, beneath the picture, all the text. Has yet surmised its meaning by that faith Which, though its guide be instinct, dares to think. And, though it bow to greet the symbol, yet Lets not its magic cast a spell on sense ! To him the world seems but a transient school; The universe, a university; The blue that homes the sunlight and the stars, A dome above a vast museum built With glens for alcoves, plains for galleries. And mounts for stairways, where he works and waits Till comes the day he takes his last degree, And then goes forth, and leaves all these behind. Yet, in a true sense, holds them his forever. West Mountain. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 269 NATURE, MATERIAL, ITS RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE My mind was turn'd to nature. Where but there Could earth-born trouble find maternal care? How long'd I to be hidden in the shade Which the thick mantlings of her forests made, And stay there undisturb'd by human thought, Till sweet and soothing influences, brought From sources far removed from man's control Should cool the burning fever of my soul. A Life in Song: Seeking, i. Nature is Transparent, and reveals her mysteries To mortals only whose own sympathies Make them transparent, opening all between Themselves and nature, so that naught can screen Her inmost meaning from their inmost mind. Such spirits in earth's round horizon find A glass divine — like that called Claude Lorraine's — A strange, strong lens that deep within contains Heaven's forms for thought, made small in scope to match Man's comprehension. Idem, x. How few so wise That they can look beneath the rustling guise Of Nature's vestments, and perceive below The mind informing them, that makes them glow With Hving truth. Alas, how many souls. As blind to all that might be seen as moles. Live, merely burrowing in earth's dust and gloom To make their whole surroundings but a tomb Wherein dead minds may lie. And yet how grand Might life become, could all but understand The thoughts that flow with brooks in every glade, And grow to strengthen souls with ever blade Of verdure in the spring-time! Could they read And know and use earth rightly, then, indeed. Might heaven too open above them, while they too Would cry like Paul, "What wilt Thou have me do?" Idem. NERVES .... Youneverfeelyour soul here in yournerves? .... No, no. 270 A POETS CABINET .... My nerves are weaker, then, than yours. .... Your soul may then be stronger. Dante, i., 2. NEW, THE (see ADVANCE, CHANGE, and PROGRESS) Ay, let the dead bury their dead, and pursue The aims of a people that push for the new The proudest ambition, the readiest hand, Might wisely embody ideals less grand ; The Artistes Aim. Yet ne'er at daybreak had begun One ray a shining course to run But snakes crawl'd out to hiss the sun; And e'er, if truth then dawn'd in view, Would tongues, whose fangs in fury flew. Cry: "Who have seen the like? Have you?" Ah me! and what, forsooth, is new And strange to men's experience, *T would libel all their own past sense For them to treat wfth reverence ! A Life in Song: Doubting, xviil. NEW YORK MANNERS .... It seemed to me that she was quite familiar with you, Roger. .... That is the New York manner. .... Yes, you know, the roudy-genteel manner of New York. Our students have it, Faith — I mean our Sophomores. .... They always from New York? .... They always are — those that we have to question. They were there the night before. The Two Paths, i. NEW WORLD, VISION OF THE Lo, there dawn'd a light about me and a vision in my sleep Rose above the midnight vapors, and it floated o'er the deep: In a shell like alabaster, by an unseen impulse drawn, There I saw three forms who journey'd softly as the light of dawn. Beautiful, the central figure stood with eyes upon the sky, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 271 As if fiird with faith that siirely heaven would all her need supply. Just above her unbound ringlets gleam'd as 't were the morning star; And within her shining breastplate mirror'd lands appear'd afar. At her right hand, underneath her, crouch'd the aged limbs of War; Yet he fiercely clutch'd his bow as when in youth 't was battled for, Though his eyes were glaring backward, and seem'd anger' d but to find That the storms they sought had linger'd on the shore they left behind. At her right hand, peering forward, knelt the white- robed form of Peace, As a prince might kneel for crowning, or a serf for his release ; While against his brow his palm bent, shielding from the light the glance Of an eye whose pleas for patience were but prayers for swift advance. Thus I saw the forms, when, lo! more forms before them suddenly Sprang from sky and sea like hopes along a path of prophecy. *T was as if a grander people, wash'd of prejudice and pride. Passed a newer, broader Jordan, rose upon a grander side. 'T was as if all earth had caught a glory flash'd on mount and isle ; 'T was as if the heaven had open'd, where all nations throng'd the while. And a fresh wind rose that whisper'd: "Where shall man to man be true? — In the old world old ways triumph; Freedom hies to seek the new." A Life in Song: Watching, xxii. NICHE, FILLING AN EMPTY The surest place of refuge for one out of place is a vacancy. It rids him of the trouble of upsett- 272 A POET'S CABINET ing the plans of others, in order to set up his own. No need of fighting for an empty niche when using eyes can find one. What Money Can't Buy, i. NIGHT Night, too, blesses him who feels 'T is a star in which he kneels. Idem, Dreaming, XLi. Above vague moon-lit forms of mount and vale There lies the haze- wrought mantle of the night. The winds are hush'd; the clouds are still and pale; The stars like drowsy eyes just wink their light. Earth sleeps, except where on the seashore white The tumbled waves are waked by distant gales, Or where the calls of owls and nighthawks fright The startled slumberer of the silent dales With sounds they never make till night their plunder- ing veils. Idem, Daring, i. NIGHT, WHEN ANTICIPATING LOVE "Ah me!" I sigh'd, yet strangely; for there seem'd, While all the way the twilight thicker sank, Sweet silence luring dreamward wind and bird Until the reverent air lay hush'd where came The hallowing influence of holier stars. And, all the way, deep folding round my soul, With every nerve vibrating at its touch, Fell dim delight, through which, as through a veil, Some nearer presence breath'd of holier life. Ah, wandering Heart, and had I had my day? — With closing gates as golden as yon west? And whither was I moving in the dark? — "Who knows?" my spirit ask'd, "who knows or cares? On through the twilight threshold, trustingly! What hast thou. Night, that weary souls need fear? Thou home of love entranced, thou haunt of dreams, Thy halls alone can hoard the truth of heaven ! Thy dome alone can rise to reach the stars!" Ideals Made Real, xiv. NIGHT, WHEN IN TROUBLE What comes as direful as the direful night A spirit spends in trouble? — fill'd with fears SELECTED QUOTATIONS 273 That sleep may bring distressful nightmares now; And now, that morn may come before we sleep ; Until, betwixt the two, distracted quite. Awake one dreams, and dreaming seems awake. And evermore does weep at what he dreams. And then does weep that he should dream no more. Haydn, xxxiii. NOBLE, MAN .... How noble is a man like you .... A pauper and fanatic • • • • No, a man Who, all alone, can stand with but one friend, His own brave soul, and trample underfoot A hissing world that, coiling like a snake. Would clutch him to its clod and hold him there. Columbus, I., 2. NOON When, at noon, 1 ne trees drew m their shade, as birds their wings. A Life in Song: Daring, xxviii. NOTORIETY What he Cares for is notoriety, which means The bulge of contrast. Crush and hush your kind. And you yourself are seen and heard. Columbus, III., 2. NURSE, THE WOMAN IN THE HOSPITAL Let them find Large, sunny, healthful halls; and dwell therein: From thence deal forth that gentle charity So potent coming from a woman's hand. Not strange it were if sickness, tended thus, Enhven'd by her smiles of Hght, should flush Or blush to perfect health! if wickedness. Beneath incrusted woes of years of wrong, Should feel the earlier faith of childhood waked By woman's voice, and thus be born again!— And find a life renew'd within the soul As well as body. Haydn, XLI. OBSCURE SOURCE OF WISDOM It came from an obscure source. Anything very 274 A POETS CABINET sensible usually does. The recognized rulers of the world, like the devil whom the scriptures declare to be the prince of it, generally have more will than wisdom. Fundamentals of Education. OBSCURITY IN POSITION Full many a blaze-mailed knight men's cheers allure To wrong by which mere groundling-praise is won; While serfs, though soil-stained, keep life's record pure Because their dust-hid deeds are wrought for none Save One for whom no life is too obscure To show the spirit in which work is done. Obscurity. OBSCURITY, SAVING FROM TROUBLE My mail has not been gilded yet enough to make myself a mark for blackmail, has it? Heaven never helps us more than when it sends us obscurity. This lets us work our work just as our spirits wish, with none to curse us or cheer us falsely. The Two Paths, iii. ODD {see eccentric) I knew a family Where all the children grew so very odd, — Like fruit when tough to touch and sour to taste. Not ripe nor mellow. Too much spring had they, And not enough of summer in their home. Haydn, xxiv. official, the In Church or State, the official seems the same, — A fist in front with which to threaten one ; A palm behind to beg him for a bribe. Dante, ii., 2. OLD HEADS When young, I, too, saw heights I thought sublime; And tried to drive toward them some older folk; But, boy, 't is only young blood cares to climb. Try it: you cannot drive, and may provoke Old heads, too long ago grown steady to life's yoke. A Life in Song, Daring, xxv. OLD MASTERS I will not think with those who would let none SELECTED QUOTATIONS 275 But some "old master" dictate my new deed, As if a plan to fit the future's need Could all be fashioned on what once was done ! The Final Verdict. OLD PEOPLE, WHY UNINTERESTING We two are old; we should remember that. The thing that makes most people take an interest in us is watching how we grow; and when we cease to grow, of course they lose their interest. The lisping tongue, the tottering gait of childhood, are charming, yes; but not in second childhood. There once were times that, when I walked the street, the boys and girls and all would look at me. Those times have passed. To-day they look away, if there be younger people near me. Why? In me they face no hope. I soon shall die. I can remember well the earliest time I found our daughter drawing hsteners away from me myself. The thing she said was far from wise. What of it? Those we meet care less for sense in us than sympathy ; and when we turn down hill toward waiting graves, what hope of fellow-feeling from the young? On Detective Duty, i. OLD, THE, NEVER RETURNS .... I like to get back where I have been. .... You never can get back there, the world keeps whirling around, and grinding out something new. The Ranch Girl, iv. ONWARD {see progress) Why should mortals be becalm 'd amid the earthly darkness here, While the lights from countless havens throng the heavens far and near ! Surely sails, wide spread to woo them, heaven's fair winds cannot forsake: That which moves to right moves onward, tho' but slowly grows its wake. A Life in Song: Dreaming, vii. OPPORTUNITY She left; and I who wander, fear There comes no more to see or hear; Those walls that ward my paradise 276 A POET'S CABINET Are very high, nor open twice. And I, who had my own design For destiny that should be mine, Can only wait without the gate And sit and sigh — "Too late! too late!" The Destiny- Maker. Life brings day as well as night. When day, the wise will use the sunshine. The Aztec God, i. OPPORTUNITY, USE AND ABUSE OF The same sunshine that ripens one plant, rots another. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, iv. OPPOSITION, REQUIRED AT TIMES Parents gone insane, Or but awry, are saved by opposition. Love uniformed and forced in hatred's pressgang Is only served by those who war against it. Dante, ii., 2. ORDAINING There may be some ordaining grace That priest and prince of every race Have sought through mystic lines to trace; — A something back of sword and gown. Power apostolic, handed down: There are no wise men to the clown: The royal mind in tent or town To loyal genius owes its crown. A Life in Song: Doubting, iii. ORIGINALITY VS. IMITATION You write as one who rests in a ravine Recording but what others have beheld Above where he dare venture. .... ^ You would have me? — . . . . Climb up, or soar — . . . . But how? — . . . . The spirit's wings Are grown, not given, unfold within oneself. But you — you get both word and thought from others. Dante, I., i. OTHERS Who, who that once brute-force enthrone SELECTED QUOTATIONS 277 O'er others' rights can save their own? After the Lynching. OTHERS, A PART OF SELF .... Do I owe you because you worked for others? .... Humph! What are others but a part of you? — This house and all it holds — the roads, the farms, the flocks, the cattle — all that feed and clothe you, the schools, the government, and everything that makes you what you are, are part of you; and if I worked for them, I worked for you. On Detective Duty, 11. OURSELVES What fools we are when we would read ourselves. The Aztec God, 11. The sun gives everything its light ; The mind gives everything its thought ; And what we deem is dark or bright. Reflects but what ourselves have brought. The Little Twin Tramps, il. OUTSIDE vs. INSIDE {see bubbles) Not outside things that men can take away Bring ruin, but the things that stay within, Which would they could take ! Columbus, I., 3. OUTWITTING those OUTWITTING US A man like him, who earns his living by outwitting others, will not be keen to let the whole world know that he himself has been outwitted; see? On Detective Duty, in. OVERBEARING Your overbearing shows us Your underbred ideal. To the Wife of a Public Man. OVERFLOW IN NATURE AND MIND {sCC EXCESS) In every sphere, beyond what merely meets The first demand of need, there issues forth A constant overflow. 'T is this that brings More sunlight than the eye of toil exhausts, More summer rain than clears and cools the air Where smoke and flame the world's too heated axles. 'T is this regales the hunger of fatigue 278 A POETS CABINET By foretastes of refreshment never failing, And shows, beyond the prisons of this earth. Through opening gates, the free expanse of heaven. Without this overflow, no wish could play, No thought could dream, no fancy slip the links Of logic, and wing off with childlike faith And poise o'er mysteries too deep for sight. Without it, not one poet would repeat His empty echoes of life's humdrum work, His rhythmic laughter of disburdened thought. Without it, not one artist would essay To mimic Nature when it molds to gems Its melting worthlessness, or, like a wizard, Waves with its wand to welcome bubbling froth And turn to amber that which aimed for air. Without it, ah, without it, there would be No life of life more grand by far than all That worlds can outline or that minds conceive, — No wings to lift aloft our thrilling souls And bear them on, unconscious how or why. Far past all limits of all earth-moved thought Until, at last, they seem to reach the verge Of heaven's infinity. Berlin Mountain. OWN, one's The things that are seen may all be white. One's own is the sugar; the others' are salt. Love and Life, xxxii. PAIN Though, perchance, it seem Too old a story, weigh it yet, until You think, once more, what men, whom all esteem, The same old story in their lives fulfil. We know them now; but ah, there is no knowing The pain that gave their souls their second birth. When fetters of the flesh fell deathward, showing That love for all one's kind which makes a heaven of earth. A Life in Song: Serving, xc. PAINT ON THE FACE .... Strange that a sensible woman shouldn't recognize that anyone can see through paint. .... You mean can not see through it. That 's the SELECTED QUOTATIONS 279 trouble. It makes everybody wonder what there is there which might be seen, but is not, because it needs to be covered up. Where Society Leads, i. PALACES THAT ARE PRISONS You sometimes build a prison when you think it is a palace. Some men, who start by gilding what they five in, keep scrubbing all their days to keep it bright. The Two Paths, iv. PALMISTRY, ITS PSYCHIC CLAIMS Your future is the fruit of present dreams, The lure that leads the deepest wish within you; The goal that lights the furthest path of hope. A touch that feels the start can point the finish. .... You think so? .... There is nothing stops the flow Of thought betwixt my fingers and my brain, Betwixt your fingers and your brain; not so? — Now join these — what cuts off your brain from mine? .... Our wills. .... Yet if I yield my will to yours .... But can you? .... And if not, what boots the priest His years of fasting and of discipline? The Aztec God, i. PANTHEISTIC VIEW OF LIFE You call them beautiful? When you have seen As much of men as I, you will think more Of greater spirits with their lives enshrined In mountain, valley, forest, bush, and flower Than of these little spirits framed in flesh. Idem. PARASITES A rich man is like a tree in a southern climate — in danger of being overclimbed and over-reached, as people say, by parasites. What Money Can't Buy, iii. PARENT {see FATHER and mother) Behold in the parent the world's first priest, To tender, till childhood's wants have ceast, The flickering fires That fall and rise in rash desires ; 28o A POET'S CABINET To soothe and assuage, In a body that thirsts and soul that aspires, The wishes of youth with the wisdom of age; To kneel or to stand With a mission more grand Than any but His whose touch divine ■ First lit the flame on the human shrine, Then left it alone where all men try To fan its burning or find it die. Love and Life, XLii. PARENTS (see children) What tho' the years that come with drought and frost May bring disaster and may leave distress? The parents' faith can look past harvests lost To where the future shall the harm redress. Their offspring whom their love is fondly training. Show beauty in the bud, and promise more : And if one season blast its best attaining, Oh, has not early life long years of growth in store! A Life in Song: Serving, xvii. parents' laws vs. god's .... But how about the honor due to parents? .... The only parent of the soul is God ; and when our language fails to speak its prompting, think what dishonor we have done to Him? Tuition for her Intuition, i. PARLIAMENT OF MAN The largest hope since time began, For which the whole world waits. Is that for which our statesmen plan, — The coming Parliament of Man, The world's United States, God Bless America. PARROTS The phrases parrots quote are those that charm them. On Detective Duty, iii. PARTING Till out of her lips a parting came Where I waited a welcoming word. She could not have meant to make me sadder, But long, long after good-bye I bade her. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 281 Behind me would flow Like a note of woe That parting word, as if what she had said Were a wail of the wind in a night with the dead. A Life in Song: Loving, xxiii. PARTNER FOR LIFE {see WEDDED) I, all my life, Have served a spirit larger than myself. These limbs but fit it on a single side, Their utmost only half what it would have. And now, athrill with spirit-arms that stretch Up toward the heavens and onward toward heaven's love, My balanced being had embraced in you That other side. We are not two, but one. And — think — to part two factors of one Hfe Is murder — not of body but of spirit. The Aztec God, iv., i. PARTS vs. WHOLE {see suggestions) And then, how would I tear her traits apart; And pluck the petals from each budding grace And hope its naked stem some trace would show, Too void of beauty, to suggest again The bloom and sweetness of the life I loved. Alas, but while I wrought for this alone, How would her virtues but the more unfold! — Like God's own glory flowering in the skies. That those detect who would not flnd it there. But, when they test the stars, have dealt with light. Ideals Made Real, XLii. PASSION {see anger, lust, and impetuous) You and I and all, If passion suddenly o'erflood our will, Should just as quickly our quick words recall. Thus love may seem our life's controller still. A Life in Song: Daring, lxxii. past, our, as influencing our future Ah, if the past must always cope With future joys for which we hope, How vain the aims that make their quest A life that merely shall be blest. 282 A POET'S CABINET And slight earth's meed of lowly sweets For purple heights and golden streets! Faith fails that merely waits below. Dreams after death would bring but woe Without remember' d love that blest The soul before it found its rest. My Dream at Cordova. PATHOS {see MUSIC EXPRESSING GRIEF) PATHS I may not fit The world I live in. Did the Christ fit his? Could any man walk straight in paths of earth, Nor trespass on some crooked paths of others? Dante, III., 1, PATIENT And you, my brother ? Such a patient man ? .... Oh, patient ! When a fire has been kept in For eighteen years, blame not its blazing out, Thank God it did not wholly blast the fool Whose fumbling fouled it — thought it had no life. The villain ! if I only could be sure He would be better for the punishment ! Columbus, III., I. PATRIOT {see progress) The earth's Creator made this earth for man, And promised heaven to those who used it right; And heirs of heaven should follow none whose ban Prevents their moving onward toward the light. Why serve a king preventing this? or nation? The patriot's home is where his duties be. Why serve a church? — God's promise of salvation Is not of peace on earth through fear of priests men see. A Life in Song: Serving, li. PEDANTRY, ARTISTIC Increased intelligence tends to increase not only intellectual activity but also pedantry. The artistic expression of pedantry is imitation. Art in Theory, ill. PENETRATION OF A WOMAN Unfortunate man! he had forgotten that he had been dealing with the members of a sex whose penetra- SELECTED QUOTATIONS 283 tion is so keen as to require alone the glancing of an eye or the waving of a finger in order to detect the inmost secret of the most secretive soul ; from whom the springs of speech may burst and flow unceasingly in answer to a gesture slight as that which, of old, nerved the arm of Moses at Massah. Modern Fishers of Men, x. PENETRATION THROUGH SENSIBILITY There are souls on earth With senses all so fine and penetrant That no thoughts in a kindred soul can lie So deeply hidden that they stand not naked. Dante, 11., i. PENS AND SCRIBBLERS Is a goose, like all those literary cacklers. But he can be plucked ; and a goose's quill {taking a pen from table at left of mantel) may make a useful pen. Only have pens enough in this world, and you can take in all the sheep-heads. If one doesn't belong to them asses who are taken in by the Morning Journal, he belongs to them A stars who are taken in by the Evening Post. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, 1. PEOPLE GUARDED BEST BY PEACE In kingdoms men may fight to guard the king; in states like ours they fight to guard the people. He guards them best who best wards off all fighting. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. PEOPLING, BY THE VICIOUS .... This land needs peopling. .... And will need it more, If Spain send more of those vile wretches here. We all may be killed off. . . . . And rightly so. .... Had I my way, a brute forever kicking Against the law should go in bit and bridle; Ay, ay, to see a surgeon too. A touch Of horse-play — there were cuttings that would cure him And all his kind. The best should let their land Be peopled only by the best. Columbus, v., i. PERQUISITES .... What perquisites? 284 A POET'S CABINET .... The kind that make us call A public man "His Honor," lest the world Might fail to recognize it, if not labeled. Cecil the Seer, i. PERSEVERANCE The deed that best Proves each man's workmanship is what he is. If God be the eternal, he who shows Eternal perseverance falls not far From fellow-craft with Him. Columbus, ii., i. PERSEVERANCE, LACK OF The hand that drops the hoe, when one has merely dropped the seed, may reap no harvest. The Two Paths, IV. PETS, WOMEN AS MEN's .... The world has grown, and women with it. .... Let them — unless they grow away from their own nature ; or, say, from ours. .... A shame to have them grow! A woman wants a pet. She gets a child. A man has like wants, and he gets a wife; and pets, if wives or children, show no sense to keep on growing, if they can avoid it. Tuition for her Intuition, i. PETULANCE What? — you call him great? — Mere bluffer of some baby brawls in Florence? The flimsiest nerve can fret to feel a flea. Dante, i., i. PHILOSOPHY Now shall those of all opinions all each other's truth descry, While philosophy supported by what all who think supply,— Pillars this, and pillars that side, grounded well, and high and wide, — Shall a grander temple rear than all man's art could e'er provide, Where the saint and sage together at the shrine of faith shall bend. And the love that lights their life to all the ends of earth extend. A Life in Song: Watching, xviii. ' SELECTED QUOTATIONS 285 Of late, when I am all alone, I try to make the tests my own That wise Philosophy has known. My questioning thought to satisfy, With eager soul but patient eye, I search in every moving thing, To find, at last, its hidden spring. I fancy it is fire or air Or mind itself so conjuring there. I press against the window pane. Ask — feels my nerve? or feels my brain? What is it joins my sense and soul? Is it the Absolute's control? Or is it faith? or is it aught Beyond the ebb and flow of thought? Am I, who muse thus, made to be — Responsible in no degree The vagrant wave of some vast sea? Or am I more than most men deem, — Are forms that round about me gleam, Things not substantial as they seem, But only phantoms of a dream? If so, if not, can men, forsooth. With all their searching, find the truth? Or do their eyes, approaching near The grandeur sought, with vision blear See all things falsely looming here? — Then flashes right, as lightnings glance? Or dawns it o'er some dozing trance? Shall one know more when earth is done? Reach misery? or oblivion? Or through some mystic, spiral way A Babel mount, and there survey An earth become a heaven for aye? Idem, Doubting, xxxiv. PHRASES {see words) Can human phases fully satisfy Divine requirements? Let men only sigh For God as Father in the home above. Or as the earthly Son whose life was love, Or as the Spirit sent to woo the soul; Still may the truth, though not all known, control, 286 A POETS CABINET Howe'er their lips may limit and confine it, Their whole lives, while they struggle to divine it. Idem, Seeking, liv. PHYSICAL {see BODIES, FLESH, FRAME) PHYSICAL CHARM OF SLEEPING WARRIORS How beautiful ! What flowers To bloom amid the desert of the storm ! What glow of vigor in their fair, round limbs, Ay, how their colors warm this cold-hued air! — Can they be wounded? — dead? — Oh, cruel man. When spirits of the sunlight guise in flesh And fringe the halo of the sunshine round them, Have we so much to cheer us on the earth, We can afford destruction to the frames That form fit settings of a light so dear? The Aztec God, i. PHYSICAL vs. MENTAL PROWESS Praise not the spears that split the foeman's mail, But praise the brain whence came the skill that aimed them. Dante, i., 2. PHYSICIAN Beside him sat another, all whose face Bore marks of patience, train'd by years of care. His glasses, lifted oft with easy grace, Great coat, large pockets, and abundant hair Marked him — "physician," one whose calm, wise air Can bid the raging fever sink to rest ; And turn to smiles his patients' weary stare, While children wonder at his bottle-chest. And how a still pulse tells him just what pill is best. A Life in Song: Daring, xxxii. PICTURE GALLERY All the halls had pictured walls, of brightest hues which, far away, Stream'd like oriflammes of dawn before a march of coming day. Idem, Dreaming, xxxii. PIETY ■ Your tastes are not religious? — Mine are not, If by religion you mean piety, — Religion's brew, froth'd bubbling to be seen. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 287 But how is it beneath the surface? Ideals Made Real, xxxvil. PIGMIES Pigmies, did one plod with them, might give A little common man a chance of greatness. Dante, i., 2. PILGRIM Once I saw a pilgrim, treading o'er a thorny desert wide; And I saw his face grow brighter, as he dash'd his tears aside. On and on, though stumbHng often, with a gaze intent he sped. While behind his path grew plainer from the blood his wounds had shed. Then he fell, and sweetly fainting said he now no more would roam; And with smiles had left his body, sure the soul would journey home. Ah, I felt a joy so cloudless must forebode a coming day, At whose break Hke morning vapors all the shades of life give way. A Life in Song: Watching, xxviii. PIONEER IN THOUGHT He push'd for the light ; and grew old and hoar Ere one whom he knew had begun to explore, Or seek what he sought. Alone in the van. He had fail'd of aid had he thought it in man. Unveiling the Monument. PISA, ITALY We took the train at Florence, we, — The day was warm and pleasant. The town of Pisa would we see. No time was like the present. Anon we climb'd the Leaning Tower, Dropt something down, and sat an hour; And then the grand Baptistry door They swung for us; and, o'er and o'er, We made its domed rotunda roar, To echo back our joking. 288 A POET'S CABINET We set our pockets jingling, we, To make our guide a crony, Saw the cathedral, paid a fee, And ate some macaroni, Then feasted on an outside view Of all three buildings, yet so new; Then bought, in alabaster wrought, Some models of them; then we sought The Campo Santo, where we thought About the dead, while smoking. We took the train at sunset, we. And while we left the station, Extoll'd the land, "How much to see! How grand this Roman nation! Our own, how mean! — no works of art!" We strove to sigh, but check'd a start And cried, "How home-like!" o'er and o'er. — What thrill'd us thus? — alas, it bore No hint from art ; we heard once more A frog, near by us, croaking. Our Day in Pisa. PITY AND LOVE Pity is but a sadder kind of love — .... No love at all. But as a motive to it — A door to open, — why complain of it. If only opening where we wish to go? Cecil the Seer, iii., i. PLAINS vs. MOUNTAINS Oh, some may praise the plain! It has its use For plow and reaper, railway and canal; But all that human hand could ever plant Or thought invent, or energy transport Could never, through long ages, bring together What here were gathered in a few short hours, — A wealth of mound and meadow to suffice For many a county, all rolled up in one, A hundred miles of surface in a score, A score of climates in a single mile, And all the treasury of plant or soil From half a continent arrayed against The slopes that flank a soHtary valley. ' I mean," I breathed out cautiously, " to write A tale of love; and I have planned the tale To open here." See page jog. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 289 Who says there are no wiser views of life Where every view displays a wider range? More blest a decade spent in scenes like this Than ages in some never-ending plain. Greylock. PLANS vs. PERSONALITY I plead, too, for myself; And tell my plans that you may know myself ; Not holding that I stand above you, friend. Nay, nay; I oft feel worthy scarce to touch Your fingers' tips, or stand erect and taint The level of the air you breathe in; nay, I would not judge your life ; would only crave, When we have so much else in sympathy, That holy state where two souls, else at one. Would both be God's. — Ah, could you thus be mine? Ideals Made Real, xxxvi. PLAY, THE, OF LIFE The forms we see are puppets of a play, A dull play too ! Though seek what pulls the string, No longer is it dull. A button breaks, A veil falls off .... Too bad to hope for that ! .... Too bad, if lives be bad! If not, too good! Some things that on the outside seem profane. Upon the inside may be sacred. Cecil the Seer, 1 . All should watch the play, and not forget That they themselves are part of it. Idem. PLAY, OF THOUGHT Our thoughts are children that must play to grow. Dante, i., i. PLAY vs. PAY Oh, happy days of youth ! when empty sport Of mere imagination — fancied game — Could fill the hunter's pouch to overflowing ! Ay, how much better than the days of age — Alas, I fear it, too, of modern youth For whom, so rich in matter, poor in mind, We manufacture implements of play That clip at fancies till they all fit facts. Plane joys to toys, and level games to gain, 19 290 A POETS CABINET Till every pleasure palls that fails to pay In scales that rate life's worth by what it weighs When all the spirit's buoyancy is lost. West Mountain, PLAYS AND PLAYERS My tales, pour'd forth to voice my loneliness In echoing talk and song, were framed in plays, And then were phrased in music; and, in time. Arose like sighings of a human wind Above a human sea, while, all about, There swept, like surgings of a rhythmic surf, The shifting scenes and singers of the stage. Ideals Made Real, Lxvi. PLAYS, THEIR EFFECT ON IMAGINATION Our thoughts are roused far less by what we know than what we fail to know; and once aroused, they are kinetoscopic. The pictures in the play are played again, a thousand times within imagination till all one's world of action, like a film, fills with the impress of the inward image. Humph! nature's life repeats the thoughts of God no more than human life the thoughts of man. The Two Paths, iii. PLAYTHING, NOT A THING TO WORK Most girls about here are American. What difference does that make? They have learned to look out for themselves. Afraid to work here? Not for themselves, but for their reputation. You know that sports and playthings go together. Our men are mostly sports. Few families want a plaything when they want a thing to work. On Detective Duty, ii. PLAYTHINGS, PEOPLE USED AS The women in her set are just as bad as the men. For them all the world is a playground and all the men and women in it only playthings. One fact that they think they know with certainty is this — that the more poor girls they can get a son of theirs to fall in love with, the more likely they are to get him to marry a rich girl that he's not in love with. What Money Can't Buy, III. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 291 PLEAS From such lips pleas, Like fragrance from the flowers upon a shrine, Might bring an answer. I will trust in you. The Aztec God, 1. PLEASURE OF THE VEINS . . . . To think That all this glowing blood within these veins Should be spilled out, before my soul has drunk The pleasure that is in them. .... When thus drunk, The veins will be exhausted, have no stock To treat the sense with longer; and the soul, Intoxicated with the joys of earth. Will be too heavy weighed to rise above them. Idem, IV., I. POEMS True poems hold the truth as gems the light. When rightly polished drawing to their depth All that is luminous in earth or heaven; And thence reflect it not alone but flash it ; And not till all light go, can lose their brilliance. Dante, 11., i. POEMS, THEIR EFFECT ON THE READER To lift the lives of common men, it is. That poems make the common seem uncommon, Their richest boon, believe me, that which brings To him who reads an inward consciousness Of oneness with the spirit that indites them. And its own oneness with the loftiest spirit. Idem, I., I. POEMS, THEIR TESTIMONY IN PAST AND FUTURE. In searching through the pathwaj^-s of the past, What guide men better in their task than poems? .... But how about the future? .... 'T is in them One reads the most of that which is to come. .... And in the present, too? .... In it, not that Which is but should be, is the poet's theme, And he who thinks it thinks the thought of God. Idem, II., I. 292 A POET'S CABINET POEMS, WRITING THEM I "love to write"? You near the truth. I love to talk, as well; And poems breathe a part, forsooth, Of what the soul would tell. — Ay, ay, the soul. For it how meet That those we love should see — Not poems — but the poem sweet That all one's life would be! The Poet*s Reason. POET AND POEM .... A poet like a poem is a product. .... I thought him born, not made. . . . . And why not both? Let nature frame a man to feel. He thinks Of what he feels. He feels what touches him. The substance of his thought and feeling then Is what experience has brought near to him. Dante, i., i. POET, HAS TRAITS OF BOTH SEXES He seemed a woman ; now he seems all man. .... And both are fit in one ordained to be A representative of all things human. If he by nature be a poet, then He should by nature be in substance that Which art demands of him in semblance. .... We should go home. . . . . What for? .... To put on kilts, And show ourselves half women. .... Nay, without that, My Dino, you can prove your womanhood; For who but women take all words to heart, And think each point we make must point toward them? * Idem, i., i. POET, MUST STUDY THE TRUTH When born with souls like harps the Muse would play, What better can men do than toil to keep Their thoughts and feelings close in tune with truth? For this will tax them wholly. They, who try. With those few strings that fate has given to them. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 293 To play all parts of all the orchestra Will help the play of no part. Ideals Made Real, liii. POET, THE {see rhymes) The soldier and the statesman are the state's, And all the pageantry that can augment The dignity of office and of power Befits them, as the king his robe and crown. Not so the poet. He is all mankind's, Akin to both the humble and the high, The weak and strong. Who most would honor him Must find in him a brother. He but strives To make the truth that he would speak supreme, — Truth strongest when the simplest, needing not The intervention of pretentious pomp. Plumed with vain symbols of authority To make men keep their distance. A Life in Song: Prelude. POET, THE DEAD His voice has join'd that choir invisible Of seers and singers who have pass'd away, Which oft, in moments when earth's din is hush'd, Sends back o'er infinite depths a spirit's call, Whose inspiration subtly wakes to life Whatever welling from the soul may swell The stream of truth that flows from each for all Toward that far distant light where heavenly hues Presage the dawning of the perfect day. Idem, Finale. POETRY Oh what were life without the worth Of ideality, — Its home, heaven's halo round the earth; Its language, poetry. The world of deeds whose armor gleams May light the path to right Far less than rays that rise in dreams, And days that dawn at night. God's brightest light illumes the soul. That light this life denies Till earth's horizons lift and roll Like lids from opening eyes. The Foetus Lesson. 294 A POET'S CABINET POETRY, AN INTERPRETER OF SPIRIT You would say- One cannot see the spirit save through forms. Yet who can see through forms, except as these Obscure the spirit? . . . Our king was right to bid us use our eyes, Yet not beHeve that what we saw was all. And what we cannot see, yet feel exists, We cannot think of, save as we imagine. And so the phase that best reports the spirit Is that of poetry, — so said our king. The Aztec God, iv., i. POETRY, EFFECTS OF READING IT At times in silence is the volume read ; At times aloud, by one who while he reads, With cheeks aglow beside the brightest lamp, Charms every listener, e'en the sage whose head Will nod and dream, and then awake again; Nor find within the volume less to praise Because it chiefly spell-bound holds the young. In them the friction of the flying rhymes Oft fires imagination to a glow. Through which the spirit gazes on a world That bright aureolas of circling thoughts Robe in celestial beauty not its own, — A world that makes men wistful, and inspires A purpose in their souls to image forth In their real life a life that is ideal. A Life in Song: Finale. For then the book is open'd, leaf on leaf Unfolding there like petals of a rose, A southern rose far sent to northern vales Not freed from fingers yet of frozen streams, — A rose that with its odor brings a thought Of bright blue skies, and trees deep-draped in green And air so thick with fragrant warmth that all Its thrilling tissues quiver visibly O'er flowers reflecting back the choicest rays That sunlight showers upon them from above. — Ah, like these thoughts more fragrant than itself, Through which this rose recalls another world SELECTED QUOTATIONS 295 Of beauty and delight beyond the haze Of blue horizons walling our world in, Come sweet suggestions opening with the leaves That fill the poet's volume, widening all The spirit's range of sight and sympathy, And making e'en the humblest life appear To be, indeed, the noble thing it is. Idem. POETRY, ITS VALUE The value of the contribution of poetry, in all cases, is exactly proportioned to the light with which it illumines facts in connection with the process of trans- ferring them to the region of fancy. Introduction to The Aztec God. POETRY, MAKING Making poetry is practising The language of the spirit. I should like To learn to speak it altogether. Dante, ill., I. POETRY, WHAT IT CONTAINS There came a volume; and within it, lo. As by-gone glories of the siunmer's life Rest focus'd and imprinted in warm hues Of autumn leaves, so in this volume's leaves Lay all the glory of the poet's life, His imprint of the soul. A Life in Song: Finale. POETS Your humming bees may sip the sweets they need From every flower; and why not humming poets? .... They were not made to sting, nor souls for stinging. The poets are not lesser men but greater; And so should find unworthy of themselves A word or deed that makes them seem less worthy. Dante, i., i. In the vague light of ages old The poets were the first who told The truths to make late logic bold. A Life in Song: Doubting, xviii. 'T was not the first time life has proved that poets Are fools who judge their fancies to be facts. Dante, III., i. 296 A POET'S CABINET POETS AND PRIESTS You know, in ancient times, it was the poets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Hosea, Revealed the truth. The priests could but repeat it. Idem, III., 2. poet's brain I knew him when a boy, a poet then, With brain on fire to learn, aye glowing like A gilder's cauldron, so the crudest thought That reach'd it from a neighbor's lip or book Came from it glittering like a precious thing. A Life in Song: Note, i. poet's meaning, and a maid's Two things a wise man never boasts about, — his probing fully to their depth a poet's meaning, or a maid's, — the sweeter poem of the two. The Little Twin Tramps, ii. poet's models And the poet's models. They bring us dies, when our ideas glow. To leave their impress and remain ideals. Dante, i., i. poets, their ideality You think, You poets, you are called to testify To what incites you from within, and so The less you take from outside life the better? Idem, II., I. POETS, THEIR IRRESPONSIBILITY You poets wing your words Without the least conception where they wend. Like birds with broken feet that keep on flying From simple inability to perch. Idem, i., i. poet's themes Would the poet's themes Themselves were worthier! Then they less might need The lyre of fancy to give charm to fact : Enough of sweetness might attend reports Of footfalls really heard, and deeds perceived. Impelled by sweet desire. A Life in Song: Prelude, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 297 .... And what, pray, is it all about? .... Not hard to guess. I think, — most likely what people all think most about? .... What's that? .... Themselves. .... He said true poets, they always think what most men think. .... Yes, poets of his kind! He meant, they write it out, perhaps. .... Oh, yes. They right it out when wrong. That's what he meant. .... Humph! — Revolutionary? — is meant to turn things round? .... {beginning to dance) . Oh, yes — Turns me. The Little Twin Tramps, i. POLICEMEN When suns begin to rise, the thieves fly down some- where, the angels up; but the policemen keep their places. The watch of their blue forms on earth is constant as the blue in heaven, and, for the just, their stars are just as bright as its are. Idem, iv. POLITE, TOO A man too polite is like a floor too polished, — is aot to make you slip up, unless you can save yourself because, beforehand, you have got hold of something about him. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, 11., 2. POLITENESS AND DISHONESTY In a world of donkeys, all trying to hide their ears in a lion's hide that hides nothing, how can one be wholly honest yet wholly polite? You see dishonesty is to politeness what Latin is to a doctor, or pedantry is to a teacher, or lace to a last year's ball dress. We all see through it; and yet we all say nothing about it. The Ranch Girl, i. POLYGAMY Their sex's claims Are well acknowledged, as I think, by him Who plights his whole soul's faith to one of them. Why, I would not insult these women so As to suggest that love for one alone • 298 A POET'S CABINET Did not fill my whole heart to overflowing. You seek here room for more? — Then you mistake. The Aztec God, ill. POPULAR Oh, to be popular, just let one be Abulge with promise, pledging everything. / Till time present him his protested bills, The world will fawn and paw him like a cur To do his bidding. Promise is a flea : It makes us itch; but fools us, would we catch it. Cecil the Seer, i. POPULARITY To you our suitors all present their best. You get the diamonds as if you were noon; While I, I get but coals. They never touch, Unless to burn or else to blacken me. Haydn, xxi. POSITION, INFLUENCE OF . , . ' . I did not think I had such influence. .... Nor does the sun. It never thinks at all; Yet keeps the whole world whirling — by its light? — No, no, — by its position. Cecil the Seer, i. Truth's position aids its mission, men will serve his voice Who commands what most they treasure. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxiv. One whose position lifts him where the crowd Look up to him should never use the station To drag up low down brutes. Dante, i.,2. POSITION, KEEPING ONE's .... You must remember, dear, what's due to our position. .... What? .... I think your uncle here could tell you,-=-to keep from slipping down from it, to pay it the respect we owe it ; and not let people none respect stand here beside us. .... None respect? .... None in society, I mean — the kind we go in. So, for it, we must be careful. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 299 .... Yes, I see. .... We always must be full of care, — when poor, for fear the rich will harm us ; when rich, for fear 'twill be the poor. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. POSSESSION BY EVIL Why, one might almost visit hell to-day In safety, — so deserted by the fiends Called out to take possession here of you! Dante, 11., 2. POSSESSIONS, HAVING NONE Don't you fear! Men squeeze a lemon for its juice. There's nothing one can ever have that always keeps him quite so safe as having nothing. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. POSTHUMOUS FAME {see FAME and monument) Those heroes of old Rome appear'd not gods Till all were dead and veil'd from mortal eyes. Haydn, vii. power, BEHIND THE DEVIL The power That handles Kraft can make that devil spin Like potter's clay to work out his designs. Cecil the Seer, III., i. PRACTICAL VS. SPECULATIVE If, man, your metaphysics be not yet Beyond all physics, pray you, cure yourself; Be more material; or material powers Will alienated grow, and so forget And count you out in all their reckonings ; And you who are of earth, will earth own not; And you who would be heaven's, will heaven own not. To own yourself and only own yourself, Is worse than serfdom that has earn'd a smile, Though but from wrinkling cheeks of sham good- will. Ideals Made Real, Liv. PRAYER Ay, men feel, that, bow'd in prayer, Not with flesh and blood they wrestle, but with those that rule the air; Nor will vanish thence till vanquish'd by that Spirit, whose control 300 A POET'S CABINET Rolls the star, and waves the sea, and works the most self-govern'd soul; And can send, for rare communion, cloth' d in raiment all too white For the ken of common vision, those who force the wrong to flight. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxiv. PREACHING Who rails at preaching proves his need of it. Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. PREJUDICE Moods, whose range, Is girt by customs past (which could alone Prejudge thought's present range), fit prejudice; Haydn, li. PREJUDICE vs. PROOF There are some things that neither you nor I can explain. One is why people always prefer to be governed by their own prejudices rather than by others' proofs. What Money Can't Buy, 11. PRETENDERS No longer they seek for the right, too vain To ask it, and make their ignorance plain. No longer they struggle for love that lends No more than frailty borrows from friends. No longer they live in the light, but trust Disguises that doom them to garbs of dust. Oh earth, tho' royal the robes you bring. They stifle the spirit to which they cling! Love and Life, xix. PRETENSE When only a boy, To know a little is all our joy. But alas, for a man. His trials begin as Adam's began! Like him, we all would be gods, and boast Of knowledge and power to the uttermost. When comes the day Revealing how small Is the sphere that life has allotted us all, We choose a way To rise or to fall; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 301 We accept from above, And use with love Our partial dower, And learn to master and make it a power; Or we boast of what Our souls have not, And turn from the frank, fair ways of truth To the ways that avoid it, and think, forsooth. That nothing can shatter a sham defense That hides our hollowness in pretense. Idem, XVIII. PRIEST {see LOVE AS SOURCE OF LAW) One time, when, lonely, I to Christ had knelt I rose to seem not lonely; I was His, He mine. I vow'd to live then but for Him, To break away from every cord of Earth, And make my life accordant with his own. Not only would I think the truth, but yield Each grain in all my being to the truth. And sow in wildest wastes, where all should germ In generations growing toward the good. Ideals Made Real, vi. A novice yet, though, like St. Paul, To will was present with me ; to perform I found not how; but, on performance bent. Within a chancel chanting with the choir, I stood before an altar, half the day. And half before my books, with cravings pale For church and stole and sermons of my own. Idem. A priest — a man, forsooth. Who differs from the rest of men in clothes. In wearing worn-out habits, which the need And progress of our times have cast aside ; — Ay, wearing them o'er body, mind, and soul. Haydn, Li. And go you as a student. Nor clad so like a priest, for whom all earth Will don some Sabbath-day demean; go free To find the man, hard by his work, at home. Ideals Made Real, vii. 302 A POET'S CABINET God started man; man's deviltry the priest. For one, I like the thing God started best. Columbus,!., I. PRIEST, WHEN ARBITRARY Priests Are not ordain'd for work in every sphere. A prince dispenses, does not mine, his gold. A priest administers the truth reveal' d; What power has he to delve divine designs, Or minister dictation, in the spheres Where God, to train our reason, leaves us free? Haydn, xxvi. I tell you this is cursed selfishness; I tell you it is downright sacrilege! — To strain the oceans of the Infinite Down through that sieve, man's windpipe, wheezing out, " I deal the voice of God, I, I, the priest. " Idem, xxv. PRIESTESS But I like to unfold to her all my plans For the courage she makes me possess, Like a warrior touch'd by a priestess's hands. Foretelling a sure success. A Life in Song: Loving, XL. PRIESTHOOD I see a portion of the heaven of which The priesthood holds the key, is on the earth. The Aztec God, i PRIESTHOOD AND THE IMAGINATIVE MIND That fancy thin my own true self reveal'd. If spray it were, it left a constant sea That heaves and heaves. With moods that move like mine, So madden'd by traditions, calm'd by dreams, Content scarce ever, till at hazard dash'd Through ways that lead to sheer uncertainty, Where fancy more may seek than matter shows In things that are but matter, — what am I For life-work such as priesthood, sure in creeds And sureties for the soul, whereon may lean All weaker faith, with warrant not to bend? Ideals Made Real, lit. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 303 PRIESTS OF NATURE We mortal men may all be priests, high priests Of nature, who may gather in from beasts And birds and creeping things, and sky, and earth, That which each form reveals of truth or worth, And, in our higher natures, find a speech To voice the praise that thought can frame for each. Can aught on earth give right supremacy, Except this priesthood of humanity? Where burn the altar-fires that can make pure Earth's wrong and dross, and through their flames insure True worship for all forms of life or art. If not enkindled in the human heart? A Life in Song: Seeking, xi. PRIESTS, WHEN MATERIALISTS Nothing like a priest's grip on a form To squeeze the spirit out of it ! The Aztec God, 11. PRIESTS, WHEN MERCENARY I know of priests who judge of gods Like altars by their gilding, to whose greed One god in hand is worth a score in heaven. For every time they kneel to touch their puppet. It shakes to sprinkle gold-dust on them. Idem, IV., I. PRINCE .... A prince .... Is mortal • • • • Is a lord of earth ; And on the earth he sometimes has the power To make a man immortal. Columbus, 1., i. PRINCESHIP I reverence the princeship; not the prince Who doffs his regal robes, and leaves his throne. And lowers his aims and slaves it with mere serfs. Haydn, xxv. PRINCETON Well placed, my Princeton, on the foremost range Where Allegheny uplands first appear Bent down to greet the sea, bent up to rear 304 A POET'S CABINET What walls our continent of rock and grange! If English sires, too loyal to seek change, Their Kingston, Queenston, Princeton founded here. It made no Witherspoon nor Stockton fear A throne that dared their new land's rights estrange. Nor now shall Princeton, welcoming to her school The thought of Europe, find her own less bold Because of that which from abroad is drafted. Princeton University. PROBLEM PLAYS . . . This is a problem play ; and they themselves are problematical. Are mighty few folks in the world, I guess, who wouldn't rush to see their own traits prinked and staged, and everybody staring at them. .... I wish that no one ever saw such plays but those who have already solved the problems. .... Why so? .... If so, they might not try to solve them in their own future. The Two Paths, iii. PROGRESS {see ADVANCE, CHANGE, and modern) Beneath men's outward lives There flows a force whose current, sweeping on, Impels to outward good. But if they start To gain this good, they oft are driven back; And oft must start anew. Through all their lives They thus may struggle forward, then draw back, And move now here, now there, and half believe. Like half the world, that all their deeds are vain; Yet must it be that far above this earth. Where grander progress courses grander paths Than mortals ever dream of, aims that urge Men's hope so vainly to and fro below, Are seen to swing the pendulums that turn The hands on heaven's high dials to better times. A Life in Song: Prelude. Can you deem That all the springs that flow to swell the stream Of ever-living truth are far away As where fair Eden's first clear water lay? Are there no nearer mountain-sides and plains, O'erfiowing with their stores from present rains? SELECTED QUOTATIONS 305 Is there no rock struck now by prophet's hands To meet in barren fields the new demands Of thirsting souls, who find the stream of thought Polluted by the debris caught and brought From long past ages? A Life in Song: Seeking, XLV. Never yet an age progress'd, but something wrought there stronger still In the power that swept it onward than was in a human will. Never yet a deep desire for light aroused a slumbering race, But above the heaven was open'd, and the night to day gave place. Thanks to God for nobler spirits whom the morning breezes wake, When they bear the tidings forward, that the dawn begins to break; When they pierce the gloom of forests, and across the deserts roam. Heralding the truth, enlightening every darkened hu- man home. Idem, Watching, xvi. Now I see the day before me, when the pageantries of lies Which have check'd the march of progress, melt as clouds in summer skies. Come, divines, and seek the limits of a sect whose name ye call — ■ Feel for flying shades of darkness. Love has levell'd every wall. Free in form but bound in feeling, slight in talk but strong in deed. What the Lord has left to manhood man has left out- side his creed. Statesmen, come and seek the boundaries of the land your people fear'd; Phantom-like the foes conjured there in the night, have disappear'd ; Wealth, and rank, and honor, come, and seek the poor, the low, the base, — Where are they? — in all about you now the child of God ye face. 3o6 A POET'S CABINET More and more give way the barriers: one in feeling, one in thought, What remains to hinder aught that all aspiring souls have sought? What are plains and mounts and oceans, what are tongues to unity? Commerce, customs, institutions, have not all one destiny? — When the time shall come, a banner by the right shall be unfurl' d, Where the patriots of the nation shall be patriots of the world ; And the right shall triumph then in spite of selfish men and strong, Gog and Magog or the devil, — or conservers of the wrong. A Life in Song: Watching, xx. PROHIBITION, NOT TRAINING RESISTANCE (see SELF- CONTROL and temptation) .... Ah, just there, my friend, you hint the canker- worm that makes most forms of prohibition rot. The old Greeks used to tell about the hydra — could not be killed by cutting off one head ; it had so many heads — must cut off all. It is not appetites we have to fight, but appetite in general — all of it. .... And what has that to do with prohibition? .... It never can prohibit all that tempts us; and what it does prohibit is prevented from train- ing in us habits of resisting. Tuition for her Intuition, ii. PROMINENCE OBTAINED BY DEPRIVING OTHERS OF IT A king is human ; place is relative ; Down honor, and you boost dishonor up. Make men in common kneel, and common men Stand up like giants. Banish out of sight The bright minds, and the dull ones beam like beacons Columbus, I., 3. PROMISE, A woman's What woman ever cared about her word — Her own word or her husband's? Bless her jaws! They have so many words, why care for one word? Idem, III., I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 307 PROMISE, FULFILLING ONE {see VOW) Honor helping none and harming self, Need never serve the body of a vow From which the life to which it vowed has flown. Cecil the Seer, i. PROMISE, NEEDS A GUARANTEE BEHIND IT But your word- .... Would, like a bank-note, quickly lose its worth "Were nothing stored behind it, to make true The storage it bespeaks. Idem. PROMISE, SECURED BY A LIE A promise made to suit a He but cloaks Untruth that truth should strip and so show naked. Dante, 11., i. PROMISED LAND The poet's is the promised land, — Is always promised, but it never comes. Idem, I., 2. PROMOTION Why blame my soul, because it must be true To higher aims and higher influence? If, seeking these, this world's promotion come, Let come! I take it then by right divine. Cecil the Seer, i. PROPERTY, master's, VS. WORKMAN'S .... The master's property is all the workman's principle. . . . . It is? And who wants principle? .... Yourself— enough at least to have some care for your own interest. The Little Twin Tramps, i. PROPHECY His life was hard, yet seemed a rare romance, The sense in thrall, the soul at Hberty; And, winged beyond his age in its advance. What he saw then, we now term prophecy. The American Pioneer. PROPHET Ay, rare, indeed, in that day is his fate. If the eye of the prophet — so noble a trait — Escape from censure and gibe and hate. For an eye like his will a goal pursue 308 A POET'S CABINET So far in advance of his time and its view, That only the march of an age, forsooth, Can o'ertake the vision he sees in his youth. But, oh! in that age, when it comes, the earth Will live in his light and know of his worth. And many and many will be the men Who move on then, And about them find The scenes that he in his day divined, Who, sure of his presence, will know he is nigh, And feel he is leading, and never can die. Unveiling the Monument. PROPHET, TEST OF A My words come true, eh? — One might think they would; So few regard them ! It is one sure test Of prophets that they prophesy in vain. Columbus, v., 2. PROPHETIC VISION If only once the souls that climb So slowly up this mount of time, Could, with prophetic vision clear, See views that from its peaks appear; Then gaze below, where foul mists creep Along black waters of the deep, Note slippery stones that trip the feet, Or slide beneath the indiscreet, How closely would they watch and tread The narrow, narrow paths ahead! And then, should one a safe way trace O'er some supremely dangerous place. What could he do, except to try, Tho' plains were wide, and hills were high, To make those heed his warning cry. Who in the paths behind him moved? Though means he chose to some but proved His madness and his meanness both Which they must hound with many an oath; Though he were kill'd where loom'd the danger. His corpse might save some coming stranger. Who in the stare of death could trace SELECTED QUOTATIONS 309 The aims that flush' d his Hving face. A Life in Song: Doubting, xix PROPOSAL, FOR MARRIAGE, A For I would say I loved her, not her aims. If then she should prefer her aims to me, It would be proof that she could love me not. But if she should prefer me to her aims. Then surely she could yield her wish to mine. Ideals Made Real, xxxiv. So, near the sunset of a summer's day, While walking by the lake within the park, "I mean," I breathed out cautiously, "to write A tale of love; and I have plann'd the tale To open here. In after time, perchance, Those minds to whom it proves of interest May love to linger here, recalling it. Look now — this lake. To gain the full effect Of palace, park, and yonder heaven unveil'd, One, gazing downward in the water's depth Should note them wash'd of gross reality, And — as in art — reflected. With this view This tale of mine shall open. First of all, Here, in the sunshine near us — at our feet — Ay, in the water; ay, friend, here I mean — Just underneath us, — mark you, mark you, there, The hero, and, beside him, his ideal!" Idem, XXXV. PROPOSING TO A SWEETHEART "And there's another sphere in life," he added hurriedly, as though he feared that, if he should stop, his courage might forsake him — "another sphere, in which a woman can do more for one than in this, and that is — in the home. What might a home not be, could it have you there as its mistress!" They walked a little way in silence. Then the girl, who had not yet looked up, knelt down on the pave- ment of the green-house. They had come to the flower that she had taken him there to see. That flower she plucked, and a leaf or two, and then she rose and reached up to his button-hole — the one in his coat that lay the nearest to his heart — and placed her 3IO A POET'S CABINET gift within it. Then the captain caught her head be- tween his hands, and made her look up toward him ; and it was not the hot flush on her cheeks that dried the tears that trembled in her eyes, nor the smile that was break- ing there that shook them off, but the first embrace in which she buried her blushing face in the bosom of her heart's true love. Modern Fishers of Men, xvi. PROSE A poet has to pose, to prose himself Sufficiently for some companionship. Dante, i., i. PROSPERITY Wharves and ships that fill'd a harbor, busy streets, and market-halls, Fruit-red trees, and yellow corn-fields, open mines that gemm'd a land. And a gay-dress'd throng that drove through winding ways to mansions grand. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxiv. PROTECTOR, MAN AS A A woman never is as much a woman as when she feels that man is her protector ; nor man as much a man as when he feels the same. The law works perfectly for both. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. PROVIDENCE We war with Providence, who war with life. We seek to mould our own existence out; But life, best made, is mainly for us made. Each passing circumstance, a tool of heaven, Grates by to smooth some edge of character, And model manhood into better shape. Ideals Made Real, LXXI. God guided it and us, alas, But how He scorch'd our heaven to pass His finger through the skies! Our First Break with the British. PROVIDENCE, LEAVING TO Why, he had done his duty, sown the seed; Then why not leave the rest with Providence? .... Fling seed to seas, or bid it root in winds; But do not trust your thoughts to Providence. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 311 Their soil is in humanity, nor there Spring, grow, or ripen without husbandry. Columbus, II., 3. PUBLIC SENTIMENT These all but echoed back my own soul's voice; And yet, augmented by the voice of all, In heeding them, I heeded not myself, But something greater, grander than myself. For if a single man may image God, Then many men who join their partial gifts And parted wisdom, — till the whole become Not merely human but humanity's, — May watch our ways and keep them circumspect With eyes that often wellnigh stand for His Who still more fully in mankind than man Rules over truth in each through truth in all. Why term me slave, then, when I serve my kind? — Through serving it, I best may serve, as well. My godlier self! — Let general thought take shape; What better can incarnate sovereignty? What stir to nobler dreams or grander deeds? The soul in reverence may kneel to it, Yield all to it. — So may my neighbors reign, And I may be their slave, yet own myself; And deify, while I defy my pride ! Ideals Made Real, lxiii. PUBLIC SENTIMENT, IN MEN AND WOMEN A man but in his public thought Antiphonals the public sentiment. A woman does it in her private thought; And woe to lovers who dare say their say Without a little clique that, echoing it. Can make it seem, at least, a little public. Columbus, III., I. PUBLICITY, A CURE FOR SOCIAL EVILS And ought to swear To level every wall that can shut out The sun that brings to light man's every act, — The only weapon that can ward off ill From souls allured to wrong through secrecy. The Aztec God, iv., i. 312 A POET'S CABINET PULPIT {see stage) Ah, could they all who plead with men for truth, Meet face to face convictions that are strong, How strong would grow the pleaders, and how wise! No longer, fill'd with fear lest prejudice Should flee the shock of unaccustomed thought, Would coward-caution hush to voiceless death The truth that breathes within. Earth would not hold One pulpit echoing like a parrot-cage The thought- void accents of a rote-learn'd creed ; Nor heed one preacher like a cell-bound monk Who, knowing men as boys in school know flowers, Not as they grow, but pluck'd and press'd in books, Would rather save the pictures of the soul Sketch'd on some small cell wall, than one live soul In whose free thinking God depicts himself. A Life in Song: Note 4. PULL, A Some men, if any matter ever go against them, are always looking for a man behind it. The world to them is just one big machine — a puppet-show; the thing comes out ahead that you or I have given the strongest pull. On Detective Duty, 11 PUNISHMENT, EFFECT OF UNJUST {see JUSTICE) You fail to see the danger? Why, their tribe Will massacre us all; if not, your vices Will bring you hell here, even while you live. .... You know my story — was condemned to death — For nothing, though — and then the court decreed. Instead of this, that I should come out here; And if I make it hell, it seems to me. In hell is where they want me. Columbus, v., i. PURE And coming softly down from above, And crossing a corridor clothed in white, I saw my love, — A form as pure as the moon's pure light, A form so pure that the night's dark air Seem'd the robe most fitting for me to wear ; And I shrank to my gloom, and left her there. A Life in Song: Loving, xii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 313 PURE, IN SPIRIT Oh, nothing of good can life secure Save when the springs of life are pure! When this they be. Their earliest vent, As mad and free As a mount's cascade, may all seem spent In dashing away To spatter and spray, But yet may go In an onward flow To flood wide valleys where buds are elate, And fruit is forming, and harvests wait. Love and Life, XLiv. PURE SOUL, MAKING SURROUNDINGS PURE Your pure soul Breathed such an atmosphere about itself, Your very presence could impart an air Of sacredness to all brought near to you. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. PURITANIC But all began to pray, With eyes to duty open wide — The Puritanic way. The Lebanon Boys in Boston. PURITANS For they forgot, our lords, They dealt with Puritans, True sons of those whom Cromwell led, Whose right means every man's; Who take their individual ill For proof of general pain, And, where one prince has made them wince. Fight all, that man may reign. Ethan Allen. PURPOSES IN LIFE All life's purposes Are held like lenses that a soul may use To gather in heaven's light and flash it round Upon its world illumin'd; or, not so, — If turn'd on self, — to but inflame and dim Its own self-centered vision. Ideals Made Real, lxix. 314 A POET'S CABINET PUZZLES I do not understand this. .... _ ^ No; but half The interest of life is in its puzzles. The Aztec God, ii. RACE-PREJUDICE Clear the air. Stand off a white man's shadow. Columbus, v., I. RAILWAY Escaped from them, his feet approach'd a town From which a railway stretch 'd invitingly; And in its train he soon had sat him down. It moved, and filled his mind with ecstasy. The hum recall'd his favorite melody. The trees wheel'd by like dancers in their flight; And, as they whirl'd with mad rapidity. Spell-bound, he slept and dream'd all wrought for right, And made the world they wrought in, beautiful and bright. A Life in Song: Daring, xxx. RAIN (see harvesting) April's rain is autumn's gain. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xli. RAKE I feign'd a fall in fancied depths of ill, And mock'd that I might hear her call me thence; And learn'd therein to envy some the rake. For what a charm it were to hear — not so? That is, if one were vicious, through and through — Such pleas for love from lips that aye were pure? The very depth of one's unworthiness Would whet such relish for a thing so strange ! Ideals Made Real, L. RANCH EXPERIENCE .... The most of the people out here have to hunt as much for a thing to see as they do for a thing to eat. .... They do? — with the sheep and the cattle that keep up their going and coming; and clouds of grasshoppers flying, and coyotes and partridges dart- ing up out of the rocks and the grasses, and rattle- SELECTED QUOTATIONS 315 snakes turning to life the very sticks at your feet! The most enlivening place I ever set foot in. . . . We went over here three miles to visit a prairie-dog town. We found such a lovely valley; and, at last, we spied three owls. At first I thought they were bird's nests, bushed up on a dead tree's branches; but Foodie called them watchmen — night watchmen, you know, of the dog-town. I wonder whether they guard the dogs the most, or haunt them. Well, then, as we passed the owls, we pounced, full drive, on the town. The dogs were sunning themselves on the tops of their little mounds. When Foodie drove in among them, you ought to have seen them dodging and darting down to their holes. It seemed to me just Hke charging through hills of elephant ants. You do everything here out West on a very big scale. The Ranch Girl, 11. RANK For him who judges manhood by its best There is no noblest rank not won by soul. No throne worth seeking reached on steps of sod, No life that ever can seem wholly blest But feels itself a part of that great whole, At one with which is being one with God. Class and Caste. The work that lets These common laborers wipe their dirty paws Upon one's coat. .... Then take it off. • • • • Ay, ay; And grovel at their level? . . • . Does your rank Depend upon your coat? — pray heaven that you Be bom again, a new man and a true one. Columbus, v., I. RATIONAL ACTION Rational action is to the spirit what self-respect is to the body. Pyschology of Inspiration, xi. RATIONAL, AS THE SOURCE OF RIGHT, ACTION .... Do you expect a girl of my age to be able to live like a philosopher, and go through a process of argumentation every time that I have to do anything? 3l6 A POET'S CABINET .... All the minds in the world have to go through something of that process. If not, they have not attained rationality, which is the one thing that separates a human being from a brute. .... And if they have not attained it? .... To speak plainly, I fail to see why — meta- phorically, at least — they shouldn't go to the devil — either in this world or in the next, and probably in both. Where Society Leads, i. REASON (see HEADS AND HEARTS ) Some things that may go wrong Are righted by the touch of circumstance. .... Most things are righted by the touch of reason. Without it men are but base tools of passion, And all their world here, the abode of brutes. Dante, i., 2. Would reason drop the curtain of the eye, And dwell in darkness, and be proud of it? The Aztec God, 11. If one clear truth have cross'd the world's brink, This truth is clear, — That all learn here Less what to do, than how to think. Less what they ought to gain or lose, Or feel or say, Than how to weigh The worth of what they judge or choose. And if spirit-life be a life in thought, Thought must control The reasoning soul Before to the wisest life 't is brought ; Thought here must learn to know and feel, Yet choose the mean 'Twixt each extreme Of dunce or dreamer, sloth or zeal. Life's problem thus may all be solved, If far above Earth's truth or love Heaven rates high reason's powers evolved. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 31? For good can never be lost when sought; But joy and pain Both turn to gain, If spirit-life be a life in thought. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxii. Life has taught me, — That reason's God must be a God of reason. If so, there lives no right but reason fashions; Nor is there aught that should seem right to man Yet wrong to reasons fashioned by himself. So those who know they own an understanding. And know how all things earthly join to train it. Yet think of God as all misunderstood, Must think with minds whose methods are the devil's. Dante, iii., 2. REASON AND FORCE Beware of strength That, like the brute's, is wielded not by reason. Except by reason thought was never forced For its own good. Idem, i., 2. REASON IN A FRAY A foe deficient in his brain Is quicker vanquished than if so in body; For he whose reason fails him in the fray Fights like a knight unbuckling his own mail. Idem, I., 2. REASON, NOT HELPED BY ANOTHER'S HAND Reason is a weapon never helped by touches of another's hand than his who holds it. The Two Paths, ill. REASON vs. MEMORY Have always heard it, eh? — and most of us Commune with reason through our memory ; And not the work of our own minds we heed. But rote-repeated phrases framed by others. The Aztec God, iv., i. RECEPTIVITY, THE CONDITION OF SPIRITUAL LIFE Though spirit-life be lived in thought. Where thought pervades the atmosphere like air, What can its measure be, for any mind, Save that mind's receptivity? If so. 318 A POET'S CABINET When freed from bounds conditioning human thought, It is a mind not filled so much as open, Where waits not bigotry but charity, Although with Httle learning, that first thrills To tides that flow from infinite resources. Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. RECIPROCATION The sun may fill with clouds the sky; The moon may lift the tide, And winds that blow from heaven wash high The wave-swept ocean side; But all the world keeps whirling round; And always, while it hies, Fair exhalations, heavenward bound, From mead and main arise. The sun and moon and wind above Move not an unmoved sea; The heart that does not heave for love Will not be woo'd by me. A Life in Song: Loving, xxix. REFORMERS, UNSEXED .... And do you then approve, do you admire Lean, short-haired women, and lank, long-haired men. Exchanging shawls and coats, and stripping life Of character to make it caricature? .... I do not much admire the straw in spring That forms the spread of flower-beds; but beneath Sleep summer's fairest offspring. Cecil the Seer, i. REGALIA (see FORM AND SPIRIT, and RITES) When men distrust Their own thought or their thought's authority So they disguise it all in robes of office, Which only men are bid to honor, then I fear they hide what no man ought to honor. Dante, il., I. REGARD, AWAKENED BY SYMPATHY _ None can command regard from those with whom they do not show some sympathy. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 319 REGENERATION {see CHOICE, CONVERSION, FORMALISTS and priest) The graft of all true love regenerates. Those in whom love is born are born anew, And all their family of fancies then Bear family traits; those loving, and those not, Being wide apart as rainbows and the rain. I might be superstitious, but to me The temple of my life's experience Had been less sacred, had it held no shrine Whereon to heap sweet tokens of my love. And all that loom'd around seem'd holier now. Illumed by holy lights of memory. Ideals Made Real, XLIV. reincarnation {see transmigration) • • • • . I thought, That, if a soul must live hereafter, why, Itmust have lived before. — You know the Christ Did not rebuke those who confessed they thought Elias had returned; but, in an age When all believed he might return, confirmed them. And then our creed — Where can it come to pass, — The body's resurrection? • . . . Where? • • • • Where but In that new earth of Hebrew prophecies? — Which would have but misled, had those that heard Not had it in their power themselves to be Restored to Hfe in that restored estate. .... Seems life so bright then? — You would live it over? .... No, no; so sad that I would solve its reason. If we have Hved before, we all are born In spheres to which our own deeds destine us. .... Not Adam's? • • • • Each one may have been an Adam. Cecil the Seer, i. • • • • Who ever Met mortal yet whose memory could recall A former state? • • • • He might recall the state 320 A POETS CABINET Without the circumstance. To know, bespeaks Experience. To be born with intuitions And insight, is to know. To sun new growth, Why should not all be given an equal chance Unshadow'd by dark memories of the past? .... But if the past were bright? .... If wholly so. Would one need progress? or could he be cursed With deeper woe than thought that could recall, Enslaved in flesh, a former liberty? Why lure to suicide, that, breaking through The lines determining development. May plunge the essence down to deeper depths There planted till new growth take root anew? Idem, II., 2. RELIGION, AND REAL ESTATE .... With me religion is the chief Consideration. Think how poor our life Would be without religion. .... Be less rich, You think. .... Just so ; for there is nothing like A church to elevate the character .... Of real estate. Cecil the Seer, i. RELIGION, ATTITUDE OF NATURAL .... Where were you reared to such impiety? .... Where sun, moon, stars rained from the blue above And flowers were fountained through the green below, Where lights we knew not what, but they were heaven's, Looked down on eyes that looked up from the earth, And men, whatever might impel their souls. Were guided onward by a goal to mate it. .... Ay, and by priests and prophets — Tell the truth .... Yes, there were those who dreamed, and those who deemed In darkness they saw forms that had been earth's. And heard their words, and they believed it true That there was life behind the sights we see. But those who stood the highest of the high, .... Sf^EALS 'THE ' ^ See page 327. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 321 And knew our poet-king, were taught to look Upon a God beyond the reach of men. The Aztec God, iv. RELIGION, OF THE SPIRIT Not every man that names the name That is the Lord's can enter here ; But only those whose inward aim Would do his will howe'er made clear. For naught can reach the Spirit's throne Save what in spirit spirits own. A Hymn for all Religions. RELIGION UNTRUE TO LAWS WITHIN His was a vague religion ! .... Not so vague As that religion is whose forms befriend A life to which all laws within the soul Are foes. The Aztec God, iv., i. RELIGIOUS, ACCORDING TO THE ZEALOT What is more religious Than ministering discomfort? Rile folks up, Their dregs appear ; they see their own foul depths. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. RENUNCIATION How many die, or all they live for lose Because of weapons honor cannot use! What hopes men bury that the ghosts which rise May lead the dance of others toward the skies ! Midnight in a City Park. REPETITION, IN THOUGHT The slowest lines of thought are like the lightning's In this, — they never track the same trail twice. Dante, iii.,2. REPRESSION {see expression) The clerk, hard pressed, who holds the coffer's key, The scribe in debt who writes that none can see, The maid in want who fingers gem and dress, — We trust them all for thoughts that all repress. The forests flourish and the sweet flowers blow Because of soil that hides foul roots below; And all fair fruits of human life are grown Above dark moods and motives never shown. 322 A POET'S CABINET Ah, were they shown, did man not rule himself, The world were whelmed in murder, vice, and pelf; As vainly watchmen trod this dreamlike mist As might some weird, unwaked somnambulist. Midnight in a City Park. REPRESSION, OF LOVE My heart, it suffocates. This feeling here. It stifles me. I think that one might die, Forbidden speech. Ah, friend, had you a babe, A little puny thing that needed air, And nursing too ; and now and then a kiss, A mother's kiss, to quiet it; and arms. Warm arms to wrap and rock it so to sleep ; Would you deny it these? And yet there lives A far more tender babe that God calls love; And when He sends it, why, we mortals here, — I would not say we grudge the kiss, the clasp, — We grudge the little heavenling even air. The tears will come. It makes me weep to think Of this poor gentle babe, this heir of heaven, So wronged because men live ashamed of it. Not strange is it that earth knows little love While all so little dare of love to speak. For once (I ask no more) you must permit That I should nurse the stranger, give it air, Ay, ay, and food, if need be; let it grow. God's child alone, I have no fear of it. Haydn, v. REPUBLIC, OUR But our republic here must bring to birth A nobler man than ever lived before; Or else from those who have not grown in worth Will tyrants rise as they have risen of yore. The home, the school, the church, where no crown trains one. Must teach of reverence and of truth supreme. Or many a will, not taught what best restrains one. Will break the free land's peace and end the free- man's dream. A Life in Song: Serving, LX. REPUTATION Good reputation is to good men what Fine perfumes are to flowers. A charm it has SELECTED QUOTATIONS 323 Which lures the sense that heeds it to a search That will not cease till finding its fair source. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. RESPONSIBILITY, INDIVIDUAL FOR INDIVIDUAL PLANS The goal Is not of their discerning. — Why should they Be thought the ones to bring it to the light? .... But they .... To them it seems a madman's whim, A thing to flout ; — to me the one conception Of all that is most rational and holy. Which, then, would give his life that it might live? Columbus, II., 3. RESPONSIBILITY, OF CHILDREN AND FOOLS We never hold a child responsible for laughing out when tickled; nor a fool for falling when some other fool has tripped him. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. REST Rest, the Paradise Of work, is yet the Purgatory, too. Of indolence. Haydn, XLix. Rest enjoys no more than effort earns. The American Pioneer. The spirit of life Is a spirit of strife; And, whatever the thing we may gain or miss, The end of it all is to lie like a knight Whose rest is the weariness won in a fight. Love and Life, iii. REST, DAY OF, IN AMERICA .... If anywhere in the world people need to use their nights, and, at least, one day in the week, for rest, it's in America. .... I didn't know that you were so much of a Puritan. .... Not a Puritan, a patriot. Where Society Leads, i. RESTLESSNESS In life's unending strife, The wrestler the most fit to win the palm 324 A POET'S CABINET May be the strong soul's restlessness, while rest, Like sweetmeats, all too sweet, when served ere meats, But surfeits appetite before it acts. Haydn, iv. RETRIBUTION Each spirit by and in itself. Insures what heaven should bless or brand. Her Haughtiness. REVELATION (see INSPIRATION) .... Is this a revelation? .... Ay, to those Who heed the truth behind the words I use; And yet for those who heed this truth themselves I do not need to term it revelation. Cecil the Seer^ ii., 2. RHETORIC, RHYTHMIC While the wind Would whistle through the trees and round the rocks. Our shouts would join them, now, perchance, intent To tempt the lonely echoes to applaud Our strife to make our ungrown voices fit To bear the burden of the larger thought For which the world beyond our youth seemed waiting ; And now, perchance, though seldom recognized. Nor if, though subtly recognized, confessed. Intent to gain fore-echoes, as it were. Of that which should be college approbation When words that to the air were now rehearsed Should load the breath that carries freight to spirit, And, borne along the clogs of others' pulses. Should start that subtle surging in the veins That proves the presence and completes the work Of what impels to rhythmic rhetoric. West Mountain. RHYMES {see POEMS, POET and poetry) None aid, or deem his aim sublime, For only those who try to climb And reach the far-off heights of rhyme, Can know their distance. A Life in Song: Doubting, XX. A poet is a babe, whose plea Is whined in words. Alas for me, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 325 Can screaming scare away one's pain? The rattlings of a restless brain, What good did ever rhymes obtain? Idem. RIDICULE {see laughter) .... Far better have men point at us and laugh, Than never have them point to us at all. .... Do you say this, who were so sensitive, High-spirited? .... One may have so much sense It holds the spirit down. Besides, our spheres Are stagnant and need movement. Make men take You gravely if you can ; if not, what though They laugh? You move them that way. There are times The tiniest tinkling that can tap the air Rings up life's curtain for its grandest act. Columbus, II., I. RIGHT AND WRONG Strange mixture life is of the right and wrong! Should one be good, or kind? and which is which? How much that seems in line for both is but A ray that falls to form a pathway here From the rent forms of clouds beyond our reach Which, while they let the light in, bring the storm ! Idem. RIGHT APPEARING DIFFERENT TO DIFFERENT PERSONS When we deal with others whose judgment we must influence, what is right depends much less on what seems right to us, than what seems right to them. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. RIGHT, AS DETERMINED BY STATE AND SELF .... But you and I — we know the state is wrong ; and we are helping it to find the right. .... The right to it is what the laws decree, until the state that makes them makes them void. The Two Paths, iii. RIGHT-MINDED VS. WRONG-MINDED AS FRIENDS If you start out to repel even a few right-minded people, you may end by attracting a good many who are wrong-minded. Where Society Leads, i. 326 A POET'S CABINET RIGHT OR WRONG DEPENDENT ON CIRCUMSTANCES The right is right, and wrong is wrong. It is; and when a strife is threatened, that which tends to peace is usually right, and that which tends to strife is wrong. Tuition for her Intuition, ii. RIGHT, PERSONAL AND LEGAL .... Why, it is right to get your paper. .... In one sense yes ; but in another, no. Right toward ourselves, but not right toward the state, whose laws, like its policemen, guard both good and bad, and thus give all security. The Two Paths, iii. RIGHTEOUS, THE, FORCING RECOGNITION FROM FOES Your men that rule When others hold the place that they would fill, Tramp an inferior, and push off an equal ; But if some scheme they basely brew be spoiled By one above them, — they are left no option; But, like a cover, they must lift him higher. [So, by their very righteousness, you see The righteous force their foes to do them justice. Cecil the Seer, I. RISING IN LIFE THROUGH FALLING . . . Why see, my shoe has been unbuttoned. .... Yes; you take me for a shoe shop's clerk? .... I take you for one who wants to rise in life. You know there's nothing like beginning at the foot. .... But some that do it, stay there. I have heard that women like to keep men at their feet. .... And I have heard that some men like to be there. The two things go together — men and women. .... Yes, sometimes! Sometimes, though, they keep apart. The Two Paths, I. RISK No one ever ran a race worth while but ran it at a risk. On Detective Duty, iii. RITES (see FORM AND SPIRIT, and regalia) A publican may use Vain rites that oft the truth of heaven abuse, Yet breathe through each dead body of a prayer Sighs that infuse a living spirit there; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 327 And he whose faith in freest ways may roam Have constant yearnings for some churchly home. Ah, they who trust in God's most sovereign might Find much to do, if they would do the right; And they who trust the power of human will, Oft fail, and feel their need of mercy still. A Life in Song: Seeking, lii. RITUALISM {see FORM AND SPIRIT, REGALIA and rites) With incantations exorcising sin. The white-robed choir and priests have marched and bowed; And pleas, politely phrased to please the crowd, Have flattered those whose coin the coffers win. And thus, forsooth, with lip and eye and ear Men seek to honor him whose one chief call Was ' ' Follow me. ' ' Were they to meet him here. Could those whose faith these outward forms enthrall Trust to the spirit in him, or revere The kind of living for which he gave all? The Faith That Doubts. rival, a, in courtship He flutter'd like her fan at Edith's beck, Her silence fill'd with subtlest flattery. Her vacant hours invaded with himself; Till all my life, at last, appear'd a plot To steal upon his absence, and then pluck Love's fruit. Ideals Made Real, xxxii. He on us burst, and brought a sudden light Illuminating her, and paling me, Blanch'd, ash-like, in the flame of that hot flush That warm'd her welcome. All my heart and breath Seem'd sunk in silence like the buzzing bees When autumn steals the sunlight from the flowers. And frost seals down their sweets. I heard them talk Like one who just has walk'd a glacier path With boist'rous friends; then, stumbling, slips away. Far suck'd through freezing fathoms down to death. Yet hears the cruel laughter crackling still. Idem, xxvi. 328 A POET'S CABINET ROMANCE Romance is a dream That the wise esteem, For none whom it never possest Were ever the bravest or best. The helpers that bend to all need Are sensitive first to heed The calls that are nearest. The loving all learn the art Of opening mind and heart With those that are dearest. And, oh, wherever two souls agree With every mood transparent within, How pure they grow to the eyes that see, How empty themselves of sin ! Love and Life, xxil. Romance is but the day-time of the soul Well sunned by love, beneath which, when we dwell, Each act of duty and each thought of truth Is haloed with a light that seems like heaven's. To spirits rightly moved, the whole of life, Home, school, religion — all lead through romance. Cecil the Seer, i. ROSY If I to you were cold, A certain rosy face with opening lips Could come with power to bring me summer air. Dispelling sweetly my most wintry wish, Haydn, xxiv. ROUGE ON THE FACE (see PAINT) .... I fail to understand why a woman should be blamed for making herself look beautiful. .... Say beautiful and good. Only good people blush, you know. A little rouge can make one seem to be blushing all the time. .... And so prepare her for all the emergencies of good society ! Where Society Leads, i ROUGH, IN CONDUCT You musn't think I have no heart. I've been a little rough with you. But you were rough with me, at first. You know we can't trust strangers always; and have SELECTED QUOTATIONS 329 to give back what we get. This life's an ocean wild with waves ; and every soul that sails upon them must beat and keep them down and off ; or else be swamped and sink in them. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. ROWING THROUGH A HOSTILE FLEET " The roads are block' d by soldiers; We cannot reach him thus. What then? — A way across the bay May yet remain for us. " I know three frigates guard it. But when, some moonless night, By clouds beset, the wind and wet Have swept the sky of light; " And when the breeze and breakers Out-sound a rowlock's beat, Amid the roar a mufHed oar Might safely pass the fleet." His comrades hush'd and heard him; Then swore to try the feat ; And soon with more each held an oar To row him past the fleet. The night was dark and stormy; The bay was wild and wide; And, deftly weigh'd, each paddle-blade Like velvet stroked the tide. They near'd the English frigates, They heard their sentries' feet, They heard a bell, and then "All's well" Re-echo'd through the fleet. They pull'd around a guard-boat; ^They struck the land, and then Filed softly out, and moved about, Like shadows more than men. How Barton Took the General. ROYAL RULE The nobles, while their winnings Like nuggets clog the sieve That ours drop through, would not eschew Their royal rule: "To others do What makes them humbly live. " Our First Break with the British. 330 A POET'S CABINET RULES, WITHOUT AND WITHIN Oh, something surely must be wrong When that which rules without rules not within. The Aztec God, iv., i. RULING That cruel mill Where the wheels that run the ruling grind to dust the people's will. A Life in Song: Watching, xxi. RULING FOR WOMEN BY MEN They merely yield to laws of nature that give wives their way, not through demanding but desiring, while, like willing slaves, men wait on their desiring. You know I think that only when some woman becomes to him a source of love can man, on his part, represent true love's effects. When I was young, men had more courtesy than now. None helped themselves to any- thing before they helped the women ; talked when they were talking, or sat down when they were standing ; or failed to be their champion, if their lives or honor needed. All too had been caused by men's, not women's, ruling. Is it so to-day? I fear not. Tuition for her Intuition, i. RUTS FOR ACTION On earth, our souls are fastened where we find them. Our bodies, families, lands and laws are frames in which we squeeze or slip to failure or success. What then? One thing, at least, is true. If heaven have shaped the ruts we move in here, they move the best who move through them. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. SACRIFICE .... I spoke of sacrifice .... And I have sacrificed low love for higher. .... You call that sacrifice? .... What? Is it not?— To give up what is earthly for the heavenly? — Turn from the serpent coiled within the loins To follow in the flight of that fair dove Whose wings are fluttering within the heart? The Aztec God, iv., i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 331 SACRIFICE, THE LAW OF SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT Were I to tell you that the realm In which the gods dwell could be reached by you In one way only, — in the self-same way That severs in the temple soul from form In him your priests and people choose as god? — .... Then I would thank the force that severed me From all that could weigh down a soul so light That but for them it might soar up to heaven. Idem, v. SAILING "All hands aloft!" he cried; "All sail!" and at the words, The masts were fill'd with sailors drill'd To climb and cling like birds. Wide flew each flapping sheet. And sagg'd and bagg'd the gale, And cloud-like lash'd the waves that dash'd As if they felt a flail. Up toss'd her canvas high; And dipp'd, as round she ran. The saucy way that seems to say Now catch me if you can. The Last Cruise of the Gaspee. SAINT Our home is like a sick bird's nest, Whose fellows' beaks all pierce its breast. Strange cure ! — yet 't is an old complaint, That much of love, when only faint, Is peckt to death to make a saint. " Life in Song: Doubting, xxvil. SAINTS You act like saints we read of in the legends, With holy air about them. As you enter, Our thoughts turn toward religion. Cecil the Seer, I. SANGUINE TEMPERAMENT, THE Some men are born with Hght, aspiring blood That, bounding brainward, keeps the whole frame glowing. The Aztec God, 11. 332 A POET'S CABINET SATISFIED (see discontent) Where so much good is still untried, Our souls must all, if satisfied With what they have or are, abide Untaught, unhonor'd, and unblest; For but to-day what is is best. The morrow's gain is all possess'd By those who journey ere they rest. A Life in Song: Doubting, xviii. If earth held all our souls could wish, no soul Could ever wish for heaven. The Aztec God, ii. SAXON Thus Heaven, where hung the purpose A grander man to mould, Had Saxon hurl'd on Saxon, The new world on the old. The Rally of the Farmers. SCALES, BETWEEN OUTWARD AND INWARD Why are the scales That measure what our world is worth so poised Betwixt the outward and the inward life That what lifts up the one must lower the other? Why, when we reach the highest earthly place Must this be balanced by the spirit's fall? The Aztec God, Iii. SCENT AND SENSE No scent is keen for what it can not sense. You think a hard and loveless thing like her could sense my simple self here in a r61e that did not seem — say — unsophisticated? The Two Paths, ii. SCOLDING THAT IS CHIRPING No; do not rough your feathers. When a bird like you flies in the door, it need not sing to give one pleas- ure. It need only scold ; for when it scolds, it chirps. The Two Paths, Iii. SCOLDING vs. LOVE When a woman blows out at a man she runs about as much chance of not uprooting his love as a cyclone of not uprooting a twig it begins to twist. The Ranch Girl, IV. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 333 SCHOOLS, FREE, AND THEIR EFFECTS .... At school, sir, he has mixed with others. .... Yes, yes, and, in a way not true in our old land across the sea, been given a chance to go with those brought up in our most cultured homes, and come to feel and act as they do. Our schools are schools where every boy can learn to be a gentleman. That's why I love this country, yes, despite the snob I've seemed to be who couldn't root out the old world's weeds. The Little Twin Tramps, v. SCOTLAND But who, that sought historic mounts and lakes, Traced not fair Scotia's image o'er the wave. Toward mounds and meads, where scarce a sunbeam breaks But bounds the ground to star a patriot's grave? Proud land, whose knees have knelt to tyrants never, Whose clans of old have kept their children free, Where thrives an earnest thought, a high endeavor, That would not take deHght, when face to face with thee? Where dwell the pure who would not praise thy name? Thy wrong at home precedence gives to worth, And though in thy chill clime cold greets the flame, Thy light, wherever borne, enlightens earth. For this would truth forget false virtue's features. — Awed still by thoughts of hallow'd Sabbath noons, Ye beggars never doff the cant of preachers ! Nor squeeze through squeaking bagpipes, irreligious tunes ! But who could here note all a stranger's thought That springs to crowd each path where'er he turns, While every scene with new suggestions fraught Recalls a Scott or Wallace, Bruce or Burns? He delved through Bannockburn ; he mounted Stirling, Where half-way up to heaven appear'd his view ; Then, coach-swept, through the cliff-walled Trossachs whirling Came first upon Pitz- James, and then on Roderic Dhu. Nor did a force that seem'd enchantment fail To draw him where the rills of Yarrow gleam; 334 A POET'S CABINET Nor did an echo through its drowsy vale Disturb that haunt of many a wizard-dream. And not a tree beside its bank was leaning, Nor by it there reclined a sheltering rock, But veil'd for him a poet's mien and meaning, From Newark's birchen bowers to bare St. Mary's Loch. A Life in Song: Serving, xxxiv-xxxvii. SEA Yet wrong I thee, thou wide and wave-swept sea, And tireless wheels that whur so ceaselessly. I wrong the skies that, bending down to thee, Yet fail to compass thine immensity. I wrong that mighty breast, whose endless grieving Inspires the wild response of sailors' lays, That bosom where omnipotence is breathing. And wakes in distant isles the heathen's awe-struck praise. Tremendous monarch of all elements Whose broad arms clasp the heavens, their only peer. What age of wrong, what wail of turbulence First hail'd thee tyrant of our trembling sphere? Who bade those winds arise and rouse thy laughter? Those lightnings flash to fret thy fitful reign? That menace fierce to peal in thunder after? Those waves to howl and hiss at life o'erwhelm'd and slain? Say power of dread, is it thy rage or joy That hurls confusion o'er the vessel's way, The while 't is toss'd as lightly as a toy, Or cliff -like driven to sink beneath the spray? Ah, when 't is dash'd along the dark fog under, No eye can pierce the veil of instant doom. Till hidden rock or ice with madden'd wonder Roars at the rising foam, — man's ghost-track and his tomb. No human skill saves here; men work, men weep. Why shouldst thou care, thou omnipresent sea? The blasts that rave and clouds that round thee sweep Owe substance, breath, existence, — all to thee. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 335 They gain their grandeur, when thy waves are hoary ; And when, worn out, their wayward might would rest, No rest they gain, till thou with pardoning glory Dost gather all again on thy resentless breast. Nor when fair skies or shores most beauty show, Can they outrival thee, O, Lord-like deep ! Within, and yet not of, they life below, On thy calm breast, they all in image sleep ! Ay, ay, the peace that follows thy restraining Of storms that rage to vent thy wrath sublime, Crowns thee victorious, every power containing, Thou God in miniature, eternity in time. A Life in Song: Serving, xxv-xxix. SECRETIVENESS {see FRANK and frankness) We men who think have duties due our kind. One duty is, to block their finding out What are our thoughts. Yes, they may learn too much. Columbus, III., 2. The truth is not a plaything for a babe. Truth is a gem, and sometimes needs encasing. Idem. I had a dream — .... And you are blamed for dreaming? .... No; I told it. . . . . Another Joseph ! — indiscreet, I see. You should have known we all at heart are Tartars; And value most the beauty of the spirit. When, like the Tartar's daughter, it is veiled. Cecil the Seer, i. SECTS {see church unity, and unity) Long will sects of darker ages, darker made by man's control, Clog the growth of aim and action, save the form and lose the soul. A Life in Song: Watching, xxi. seduction .... Next to murder there is no sport like it. .... To murder? .... Oh, you never were a soldier? — killed In- dians; or southerner? — killed niggers; or hunted big game in the West? — killed bears? You know the 336 A POET'S CABINET consciousness of mastering a something big enough to master you, and all the risk you run — it makes you thrill; and feel you are an animal all over. On Detective Duty, ii. SEE, THE INFLUENCE OF WHAT WE Our deeds express the thought suggested by the things we see. The Two Paths, ill. SEEMING AND BEING .... There are some things clear. .... And some things only seem clear, like the water inside a glass, because our own dull sight fails to detect the microbes peopling it. The Two Paths, i. SEGREGATION OF VICE RESORTS .... So you would shut us up? .... That doesn't follow. A cess-pool is a nui- sance, but has uses. It catches in a single place, and holds what might be dangerous, if distributed. Be- sides, your poor policeman needs a pond where he can catch what he is fishing for. On Detective Duty, li. SELF O could some Godlike soul look through My outward life, like God, and view And judge my soul, with judgment true, By what I am, not what I do; By what I am, not where I stand, Which souls of low, short sight demand Before they dare give bow or hand ! A Life in Song: Doubting, vii. SELFHOOD AS THE OBJECT OF LOVE I want you; and you are what you are, and think and plan. You are my sun, my source of light and life, and I your satellite, attending you ; you bless me most when you are most yourself. The Two Paths, i. SELF-CENTERED In her the smile that brings life cheer, The tone that faith can understand, The phrase that makes the doubtful clear, The clasp that plights the helping hand, The sympathies that zest infuse, The comradeships that souls ally, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 337 Her heart has never thrilled to use, Her head has never planned to try. Her Haughtiness. SELF-CONCEIT {see EGOTIST and themselves) .... He is a very interesting man. .... You think so? .... To himself. When all one's eyes And ears are turned like his on his own person, He bears about both audience and actor. Dante, i., i. self-confidence Had I but more self-confidence, The men who give me such offence Might yield my thought more reverence. When foes attempt to cow their zeal, Those who would do good work should feel That none can rightly make right kneel. Some men have manners dignified By nature; others learn to stride; But others still, with no less pride. Can never show what will not screen And keep their inner worth unseen. The brute that shakes at these his mane, Lets fly his hoof, nor minds their pain, If only whipp'd from his disdain And broken once, might mind the rein. A Life in Song: Doubting, vi. self-conquest {see alone and lonely) Within himself when fierce the fight is waged. Oh, who can aid the purpose thus engaged! The soul, unheard, in darkness and alone, Can never share a contest all its own. None from another's practice gains in skill. Or grows in power of feeling, thought, or will; None with another goes to God in dreams To seek the strength that his lost strength redeems. What coward he, then, when the crisis nears Who cries for comrades, nor dare face his fears! No comrade's arm or mail can ever screen The coming conqueror in that strife unseen. Midnight in a City Park. 338 A POETS CABINET SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS A man may double up his fist and frown, And make fiend-faces merely at himself. .... Why so? .... Because that self asserts itself; And he keeps fighting it to keep it down. .... That self must then be very strong. .... Itis— In Dante. Dante, i., i. SELF-CONTROL (see IMPETUOUS and prohibition) Strong self-control Has never yet forsaken man or clan Where did not enter the control of others. Dante, iii., 2. Hold friend — the good for which men yearn Makes ill to them provoking; And only zeal on fire to burn First fills its air with smoking. If this be so, some day, your soul A worth world-wide may sunder From those who have — their self-control, But nothing to keep under. Nothing to Keep Under. Ah, self-control. The rest rheumatic of a zest grown old. It came with time; but mine had come from care. Cold self-control, the curse of northern climes, The artful despot of the Arctic heart, — Before my summer scarce had warm'd me yet, Was it to freeze me with its wintry clutch Of colorless indifference? chill and check The springs of love till still'd in ice-like death? Ideals Made Real, lix. SELF-CONTROL AND PERMANENCE IN PLEASURE Men know more pleasures than the brutes, not so? — but why? — The difference lies in self-control. Excite- ment makes men yield this. Say they drink : — a single glass may set their thoughts to glowing ; but one glass more — two glasses — they may lose both senses and sensation — wake with headaches, and sometimes heart- aches ; and some last forever. The Two Paths, iv. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 339 SELF-CONTROL VS. RIGHT FEELING .... Like plants, our natures never can grow strong, if always kept inside of nurseries. .... Some women want to keep us all there, always. .... What they were made to live in — nur- series! .... Yes, what a man conceives that he must fight, most women seem to think that they must fly from. While he seeks virtue in his self-control, they look for theirs in absence of its need. Their aim is not like his, — to do the right despite wrong feeling, but to feel aright. .... And in their habits formed by following feeling you find the reason why a fallen woman is harder to reform than fallen man. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. SELF-DECEPTION .... But surely there are some occasions when the laws within are all we need for guidance. .... And yet if these occasions come to thoughts that once have slipped the track of truthful logic, as now I fear that ours have done, what then? — We risk a wreck. The Two Paths, ill. An eye, made dim, may facts gainsay And see, in fairest forms at bay. But lions fierce that fill the way. When dull to sounds, a man may fear And take the rumbling he may hear Within his own disorder'd ear For footsteps of advancing strife. Whate'er we seek or shun in life, Too often we ourselves conjure The direst foes its veils obscure. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxv. SELFISHNESS, AS A GUIDE TO ACTION Mere selfishness Has been enthroned so long in men's affairs, That naught seems worthy of respect to some Of which it only is not king and guide. Cecil the Seer, ill., 2. 340 A POET'S CABINET SELF-INTEREST Some minds would walk and some would fly . You fear That those that fly all fail to leave a footprint? Dante, i., 2. SELF-KNOWLEDGE When you have read yourself, you may be heard When trying to read others. Cecil the Seer, I. SELF-MADE MEN Yes, all made men are self-made men: We ask too much of friendship then : The soul's best impulse, in the end, Is evermore the soul's best friend. And when truth's whispers all pertain To our souls only, why complain, Tho' none but us their import gain? A Life in Song: Doubting, xvii. SELF-RELIANCE Well for those who kneel in youth. Self-reliance tends to failure, even where it starts with truth. Idem, Dreaming, xxxviii. SELF-RESPECT, A MAN's LOSING IT WITH A WOMAN The worst disrespect that a man can show a woman is to lose, in her presence, his own self-respect. Her influence upon his nature is never what she ought to aim for, unless she is appealing to him as an ideal ; and an ideal is never appealing to a man, except as it is suggesting to him ideas that are his best. Where Society Leads, i. SELF-RULE Oh, would some power Could tell us how to balance, in our lives. The rule of others and the rule of self! How can we, when the two conflict, serve both? And which one should we {serve? — which first? — For me. Till spirit seem no more than matter is, I hold it that which rules me through the spirit. The Aztec God, v. SELF-SACRIFICE Full oft, all ease denying. One's only gain is conscious right, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 341 One's rest comes but from dying. But once a prince here died to give His own good spirit to us; And good for which we, too, would live May work less in than through us. At the Parting of the Ways. The bugle calls the hill to storm. My body thrills ! — I use it As due a spirit's uniform Used best by those who lose it. Idem. SELF-SEEKING Everything that has to do with mind or soul is wrong that involves any impoverishing of others in order to enrich oneself, or any waiving of ideal advantage for all, in order to make real what is termed practical success for a few. Fundamentals in Education. SELF-SURRENDER Ah, loved one, not the dullest nerve In all this form I own But would be thrill'd with bliss to serve And toil for thee alone. So, darling, put thy hand in mine, And let me hear thee call me thine. What canst thou do to seem more dear? — Seem more to own me, soul and form; Nor think they e'er can be too near Thy heart that love keeps warm. O darling, make my whole life be One long sweet dream of pleasing thee. A Life in Song: Loving, XLV SELF THE SOURCE OF MENTAL CHANGE Where did you find these notions? .... In the place from which all better notions well, I think, if we would only heed them, — in myself. The Two Paths, iv. SELF vs. SOCIAL FOLLY Forgive you? — You were merely, for the time being, like almost everybody else, — the mouth-piece of the social folly of the world about you. Now you are yourself; and in this there is nothing to forgive. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, iv. 342 A POET'S CABINET SENSATIONAL .... Does that Make preachers, eh, sensational? You should know. . . . . You think sensations are acquired? .... I know A soul that squeals well, is a soul well squeezed. Sensation is the step-son of depression. Columbus, II., 2. SENSE AND SOUL (see soul) Ours are souls that oft We strip for heaven by flinging sense to hell. Sense and Soul. Unselfish, all ethereal in her thought, A disembodied soul had held less moods Touch'd through the senses. One had sooner snared With tatter'd nets of tow a wind of spring, Or with his own breath warm'd the wintry air. Ideals Made Real, xxii. SENSE AND SPIRIT We mortals are compounded Of sense below, and spirit resting on it. If sense give way, no wonder spirit falls. Dante, ii., i. SENSES without SENSE To see is not to think. The animals all see. It seems a paradox, and yet one may have senses, and but little sense. Tuition for her Intuition, ii. SENSITIVE (see courting and susceptibility) Those modest plants that men term sensitive. If unmolested, show no morbid traits. It is the alien touch which strangers give That shrinks their leaves to sharp and hostile states. Thus find we often shrinking spirits wearing Unfriendly mail, where aught their trust repels; But, when the doubt has pass'd, which caused this bearing. Of what a genial life their loving welcome tells ! A Life in Song: Serving, X. What drug to hearing poured he in her ear SELECTED QUOTATIONS 343 To deaden nerves hereto so sensitive To slightest whispers of my thrilHng love That hands, voice, Hps, and eyeUds, all her frame Went trembling like a willow in a wind? The Aztec God, iii. When men's misjudgments thus have made a man Withdraw from them, nor longer care to live, He oft is forced, as if by nature's plan, To seek new friends, who, too, are sensitive. In these, perchance, the soul may find its brothers; With these, perchance, can life again seem sweet, For these, in seeking charity from others. Have gain'd it, too, to give to those with whom they meet. A Life in Song: Serving, xi. My nerves are sensitive to form and hue, A little flitting of the two but serves To irritate and make me itch for more. But let me once be free to bound and whirl And scratch my gaze upon them in the dance, What cures me will not scar below the surface. Yes; I have better avenues through which These outer visions reach the heart. The Aztec God, ii. Oh, who is he that shall win life's prize? — He may be the least in his comrades' eyes. For the compass that saves when mysteries throng Would better be sensitive first than strong. The triumph of sinew and speed are brief; For the harbor sought is dim and far, Past many a bar. And many a well hid reef. Love and Life, xi. You and I, reader, do not understand a sensitive man if we always attribute his actions to motives that lie within the sphere, or are under the con- trol, of intellect. I have seen a child stand mute before a teacher who was threatening him, and make no effort, apparently, to recite a lesson that he knew perfectly. It was simply a physical impossibility for the child to utter a syllable. Modern Fishers of Men, iii. 344 A POET'S CABINET SENTIMENTAL WHIMS DANGEROUS It would not be the first time men have paid in blood the price of an experiment in courtesy. No microbes undermine the mind like sentimental whims that, when they move inside our fancy, make us think them the promptings of some deep, wise inspiration. Tuition for her Intuition, iii. SENTIMENTALITY Sentiment and sentimentality seem to represent the comparative and superlative degrees in which thought in this world is removed from sense. Art and Morals. SERPENTS, PLAYING WITH No man is such a fool as he who thinks to keep his own soul free to do the right, yet keep in touch with those embodying the serpent traits of him we call the devil. Why, all they live for is to crawl and coil ; and all their coils are wound about ourselves. The Two Paths, ir SERVICE, AN ANTIDOTE FOR TROUBLE .... When the child of our brain gives us trouble, we must send him out into service. .... You mean if people be lazy they forget them- selves the most, when they seem surrounded by work. The Ranch Girl, ii. SERVICE OF LOVE (see love) The world plays tyrant to the soul would serve it. It treats him like a female relative Whose drudgery is deemed supremely paid By her own love. But when the wage one wants Is not within one, love is never paid. Columbus, II., I. Alas, where hate Is a normal state. Who serves the world with a love that is great Is rated a foe by those who refuse it, Nor always a friend by those who use it ; For he, forsooth, he knew of their need In the day they knew not how to succeed! Unveiling the Monument. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 345 SERVITUDE When one's inward sense Of mastership outweighs an outward show Of servitude, why, one but serves herself. Columbus, II., I. SEWING AND ROMANCING It would seem as if the wheels of the sewing ma- chine were always attached to the machinery of the imagination. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, i. SEX {see woman) .... I sometimes think, if I had made mankind, I should have made them all of but one sex. All might be women, up to forty, say ; then — by a sort of tadpole- change — all men. .... That would have rid life of two nuisances, — the small boy, and great women. .... And we all, before we got through living, would have had the same experience. .... Oh, yes, I see; have sung soprano first — and sung it well — and then sung bass. Tuition for her Intuition, i. SEX-DISCRIMINATION NEEDED When listening to a foreign opera, and both the stars upon the stage begin to flush, and fisticate, and make a noise, no matter what they say, you fail to hear it; you wouldn't understand it, if you could. All that you care to know of it is this: It is a part — a strong part — of the play. The sort of thing that I have just been hearing appears to me the very strongest part of that experiment in harmony — in human — yes, in- human, harmony — on which you all seem practicing out here. You see the feature of the plot is this : The men and women love each other so, they both think both of them are just alike. But nature never made them thus. The one is fatter here, the other leaner there: but when they mingle, holding all in common, of course they put on one another's clothes. The clothes most always bag or pinch, and then they start to howl and swear at one another because all seem so meanly selfish when they all want clothes that merely fit themselves. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. 346 A POET'S CABINET SHADE Nothing bright can come, But brings beside it something in the shade. Columbus, IV., I. SHADE vs. HEAVENLY LIGHT There were no shade beside a thing on earth, If heaven's one sun were central over all. Dante, ii., i. SHADOW, A WALKING The sort of man that always plays the walking shadow to some woman; and all he seems to do is done by her! Tuition for her Intuition, iii. SHADOWS .... High noon will come for him when he can see A form like that one shadowing him no more. .... I think it always may seem noon to those Who trample all their shadows underfoot As he does. Cecil the Seer, I. My shadow might shed blackness on yourself. . . . . The blackest shadows fall from brightest forms. Dante,iii.,2. SHAME FOR MISRULE They did not dare to kindle A spark that, should it flame. Would shed no glory round a throne Where prince and peer would flush alone To blush for their own shame. Oiif First Break with the British. SHARING LOVE WITH ANOTHER'S LOVER And then I learn'd — as many a friend has learn'd — Who with them strove my joy for them to share. How much more joy was theirs, when theirs alone. Ideals Made Real, LXii. SHARING PROFITS {see WAGe) .... I am one of those who look for times when all will take more joy in sharing profits than in storing them. .... A long way off! .... I hope not. It would be so pleasant — so much more pleasant in the world — to see around one everywhere employees, all well housed, well clothed, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 347 well fed, well educated! When men learn how pleasant that would seem, the labor-problem will be solved. .... Yes, when .... Oh, men will learn it yet! — but not until both your employers and you yourselves have learned to think — and so to trust in brain instead of brawn. I tell you mind not muscle is that which has the strength to make this old world better; and by mind I mean the whole mind, — thought and love and all that lifts above the brute, and gives one soul and fellow-feeling. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. SHEEP COMING HOME .... I like to watch the sheep coming home — a beautiful sight! At first you notice they look like a low, stone fence on the top of the distant hill; and then flock on till the whole of the hill is gray as a ledge of marble; but when nearer they look like a wedge. Last night I rode out on a donkey; and, when I had met them and turned, they all ran sweeping behind me, like the white and spreading train of a long trailed wedding dress. .... It is not the first time, my lady, that a donkey's bridle has led a wedding train on toward a halter. The Ranch Girl, iii. SHIPS There are ships That still need captains Could one see their sails Like arms, white-surpliced, praying heaven for wind, Yet keep his prow still turned away from that Which he had vowed to heaven that he would seek? Columbus, I., 2. SHIRK To work off whims. The best way, say they, is to work them out ; One hand at work is worth ten heads that shirk. Ideals Made Real, xlix. SHOCKS FROM TRUTH I and all my truth Seem like champagne, — a thing that pops and shocks, 348 A POET'S CABINET But yet enlivens when the hour is dull. Idem, lvi. SHOULD BE Ah, when what should be is, What is will be beyond this earth. Columbus, II., I. SHOULDERS SHRUGGED While her shoulders gently shrugg'd As if to tempt me like two dainty doors. Doors all but swung ajar before a heart That love was dared to enter ! Ideals Made Real, x. SHRIEKS Whose piercing shrieks cut through The fitful surgings of the storm, and maim'd The sever' d thunder. A Life in Song: Daring, Lxxvii. SIDES, TWO What you moot May show two sides. A man may be run down Amid the clash and clangor of a street, Because one ear is deaf. In any path. The rush of life may run down all who hear But on one side. Cecil the Seer, I. SIGH If you sigh'd Your sigh out once, it to the winds would glide. Naught like an airing would you oust a moan! A Life in Song: Daring, XLV. SIGNALS Yet hope not for gleams of wisdom lighting all life holds in store. Finite souls must journey onward, learning ever more and more. Only signals can be given; look to these; and, by and by. Through the pure white air beyond you grander views will greet the eye. Idem, Dreaming, xxxviii. SILENCE The silence of the good Damns more than bad men's curses. Columbus, II., I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 349 None thought on shore to cheer us, Though all had waited there; Their silence match'd the silence. Where souls have flown to prayer. Their silence match'd the silence Of war's reserves, whose breath Is hush'd to hear the order, That orders all to death. Their silence match'd the silence Of heavens, close and warm, Ere, like a shell incasing hell, They burst and free a storm. As hush'd as on a Sabbath, The people homeward went; Their eyes alone transparent. To show their souls' content. The Lebanon Boys in Boston. SIMPLEST When men learn all, and skies that dome earth here Roll back to let the light of heaven stream through. Grand truths may in the simplest things appear. In outlines which before all mortals knew. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxi. SIN {see crimes) But even with sin May rescue begin, And out of a fall Come the safety of all, — Come the knowledge of good as well as of bad; With the knowledge of ill from the shade of the sad, The knowledge of faith which alone can unite A soul to the Infinite source of light. Love and Life, lvi. In natures framed Of spirit, mind, and flesh, the cause may be Some sin that clogs the current of the soul ; But, just as likely, thought that puzzles one; Yes, yes, or indigestion, nerves diseased — No trace of sin whatever; — moods cured best By sunshine, clean clothes, larders full, good cheer. Haydn, xxxix. 350 A POETS CABINET SINGING Let echoes answer, linging To that which lulls the babe at birth, And voices all the good of earth, Gives God His glory, heaven its worth — Eternal sway to singing! A Song on Singing. SIREN And what if over a net so fair The brightest eyes be beaming? O who can know if there A friendly light be gleaming; Or one like a torch on a hostile shore That wreckers are waving where breakers roar? Who knows if the tone that allures his choice Be a seraph's or only a siren's voice, Which, were he to heed it, his hope would be Far safer lured to the stormiest sea? A Life in Song: Loving, xviii. SITUATION, RESULTING FROM ONE's OWN CHOICE A man's worst situation is usually a site of his own selection. He ventures where he knows that there is quicksand, and, after that, feels never free to make a solitary movement — never sure about his ground, as people say. On Detective Duty, iii. SKEPTIC As long as one thing in the world is wrong, Some skeptic should be here to think it so. Dante, ii., i. SKILL Skill, the wage of duty In the Art Museum. SKYLIGHTS, EYES ARE The eyes are skylights of the soul. And I see better things for you, if you will but be true to that which dwells within you, — your better self; and what it wishes, let it do. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. SLEEPISHNESS VS. PERSISTENCE When sleepy most men fail to notice things — the reason why mere blunt persistency succeeds on Wall Street. Men have been tired out. They sleep, they SELECTED QUOTATIONS 351 dream; and we, we stock their dream; they take our stock, and pay us for our pains. The Two Paths, iv. SLEEVES Waved her thanks, With white sleeves fluttering from her shapely sides — Ah me, a wing'd one sent to save my soul Had scarcely stirr'd in me a greater joy. Ideals Made Real, xviii. SLOWNESS, AND SAFETY The floods that rise fast, fall fast. If you wish for safety, slowness is more safe than swiftness. The Two Paths, 11. SLOWNESS AND SURENESS Slowness at the start is often the very best means of securing sureness and swiftness at the finish. It takes much longer to build an automobile than a bicycle. But after the first has been prepared for its work, it can go much faster and further. Fundamentals in Education. SLUR Stop the echo after you have heard the sound that started it, then perhaps you can stop a slur after it has left the throat that uttered it. Modern Fishers of Men, vi. SMOKING AND YOUTH You know how smoking will dry the blood of hams and toughen them? It does the same, too, with the tender brains of boys and girls. You wait till you are older. The Two Paths, iii. SMOKING {see drinking) .... They say that in inebriate asylums they start out first by curing smoking habits. .... Of course. .... And earth would need few such asylums if all should start to keep our growing boys — and not to say our girls — from cigarettes. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. SMUGGLED SPIRITS ARE STRONG No man can smuggle spirits in a keg. The little of it traveling in a bottle must go a long way. So it must be strong. Idem, ill. 352 A POET'S CABINET SNAKE (see: line) Back slunk their line before us, A weary, wounded snake: Up hill, down dale, round river, It wound and bled and brake. The Rally of the Farmers. SNEAK A sneak, like a snake, never moves straight for- ward. If you think it going in one direction, it can prove by its wiggling that it's going in another. It gets on all the same, though. What Money Can't Buy, i. SNOB For our race are too ready to turn with a sneer From arms that are brawny, and hands that smear. While a man is dependent, in need of a friend, The world is a snob, and shuns its own peer. When a man is a master, his need at an end, The world is a sycophant, cringing to cheer. Unveiling the Monument. Mean, cowardly souls, whose natures feel That they were born to cringe and kneel, And heed like dogs a master's heel, — They show a due respect alone For those who fill, if not a throne, At least a station o'er their own. So must one's worth that these despise Press on and up, until it rise And reach a place that all will prize. A Life in Song: Doubting, vii. SNOBISHNESS Me thought you know — .... What right had you to think? And if we know, is it our business To do your errands for you? Columbus, v., I. SNUBBING .... One can't have all sorts of people coming to her house. .... No danger of that — with some of the other people you have coming here. If anybody needs to be SELECTED QUOTATIONS 353 snubbed, why not let them attend to the matter? Why foul your own nest? Leave your dirty work, as the Turks do in the streets of Constantinople, to the dogs that delight to bark and bite. .... You are complimentary to our guests. .... No; truthful and sensible. Let those that want to show their own superiority by exhibiting their ability to hurt the feelings, if not the fortunes, of others, hurt one another, not us. Where Society Leads, i. SOCIAL ADVANCEMENT, PERILS OF If made a member of our family, He might prove ours in all things. Few have brains Too cool and clear to feel a rise in blood And not be fevered and confused by it. Dante, i., 2. SOCIAL BETTERMENT, AN AIM OF RELIGION I know true faith that largely aims to rid Our present life from fears of future ill. To it what need of storms, if sunshine here May best prepare one for the future calm? That future is eternal ; even so How can we gauge th' eternal save by time? How can we judge of joy that will not end, Save by our own, if ours would only last? What is it to be blessed, if not this, — To find our process of becoming blest Made permanent, our young weak wings of faith Full fledged and flying by habit? — and if so. Heaven's habits are form'd here. Suppose a youth, That, by and by, he may enjoy much wealth, Act miserly, — what gains he by and by? — Much wealth, perhaps; but, holding with it, too, The miser's moods, establish'd now as traits, Incorporated modes of all his life. He with them holds what most unfits the soul To use wealth, or enjoy it. So on earth When avarice, aim'd for heaven, makes man a monk, What can he gain thereby, save monkish moods, Become establish'd in him now as traits, Incorporated modes of all his life? SELECTED QUOTATIONS 355 Ah, in our good society, (Where things that gain acceptancy Are fashion's phrases, and an air ■ Which, caught with neither thought nor care, Make wits and fools both equal there). A Life in Song: Doubting, xxviii. SOCIETY, AND FOLLOWING LEADERS .... It's natural I should want to see you fill the place in life that I have gained for you. .... Yes, but .... Don't butt at sheep. Your father means to say society are sheep that always follow leaders. .... Yes. .... And so, if you keep near the leaders, society will follow you. .... The Smiths are just as good as we are. .... Yes, that is true; but are they better? .... We ought to go then with our betters? — What if all others did the same? .... Well, fortunately for the few, the others usually are fools. The truth is others look at you in just the way you look at them. Look up and they look up to you. .... Come, come, now Uncle! — You believe all that? The Little Twin Tramps, 11. SOCIETY, FOREIGN, VS. AMERICAN .... You wouldn't have thought that they would introduce such a man into American society. .... Who would introduce him? .... The foreigners. .... Why not? You can't blame them. The Count and the Baron were well connected. There was no mistake or misrepresentation. Their credentials were correct. .... But they were gamblers who came here to make money ; and the Count to marry for money. .... What of that? He made no secret of it. He did it openly. The fact that a man spends a month or two at Monte Carlo every year ; and, when he runs out of money, marries a girl who has it, never seems to taboo him in the least in American society. A few 356 A POET'S CABINET years ago I was at Aix-les-Bains. Every afternoon, at the Casino, in sight of everybody, a duke sat gam- bling behind a pile of gold as big as a rat-trap. At his side always sat a painted lady, known by everybody to be his mistress. What of that? Every evening, al- most without exception, he was dining, usually in the very next room, with rich Americans who were in- variably scrupulously careful to see that the fact was telegraphed to the Paris edition of the New York Herald. It was quite remarkable what pains they would take to let all the world know in what kind of society they were going. You can't blame foreigners for doing what they can to assist such people to con- tinue to go in the same society. Why should they not assist them? — if that is supposed to be what we Americans want? .... You mean to say that Europeans have no regard for character. .... Not that, no; but that they think — and rightly — that our people have no regard for it. When we get to the border of their social pool, we are like children on the banks of a fishing pond. Anything with scales satisfies the children. Anything that has a scaly glitter — and often the more scaly the better — satisfies us. We forget that the pool has different kinds of occupants, and that we might often make a better haul outside of it than in it. Where Society Leads, iii. SOCIETY, SEGREGATING INFLUENCE OF The sea of life is filled with countless drops, but only those that rise and float the surface where dancing spray leaps flashing into sunlight can constitute society. Its life is never of the many, but the few; and these its influence mainly weans away from common sympathy with common people; — makes even men hold back from contact with these, and much more women. Why should they, forsooth, rub robes, touch hands, with dirt and soil? Tuition for her Intuition, I. SOCIETY, TYRANNY OF I don't object to it. Why should I? What good would that do? We are all members of it, and have to SELECTED QUOTATIONS 357 be. I object merely to the tyranny of society, — to its crushing out individuality. I object to its expecting everybody to become its slave. Where Society Leads, i. > SOCIETY vs. THE INDIVIDUAL AS A SOURCE OF GOOD The truth is that almost everything in the world of pure quality and permanent value has its source in the motives and opinions, not of people in general, but of certain people in particular. In human as in vegetable life — in the leaf and flower, for instance — develop- ment — all that makes for progress and reform — is a process of unfolding that which comes from within the individual. This is the natural way, and, so far as one can judge from nature, God's way. Society seeks to change all this, — to dictate from without not only our modes of dressing and addressing, but of thinking and feeling. If the method of influencing the mind from within be of God, that which seeks to influence it from without is more likely than anything else to be of the devil. Idem. SOCIETY, WHEN IT SHOULD BE DISREGARDED One has to live in the world of society. But even there he can bear about with him a consciousness of living, too, in another world, — the inner world of mind; and whenever the laws of the two worlds con- flict — they by no means always do — then he can remember that it is his first duty to obey the law from within. Idem. SOFT MEN Men half done, like eggs Half boiled, are very soft. I much prefer To have them hard. Dante, i., i. SOIL A little black If mixed with white, may soil the white as much As all black would. Idem, i., 2. SONGS {see music) A shadeless waste, a mist-hid sea, Were earth that knew no songs of glee; And what would heaven beyond it be If anthems ne'er were springing 358 A POET'S CABINET From voices there, where funeral knells Are sweeter far than marriage bells To love call'd hence that ever dwells Within the sound of singing! A Song on Singing. SONGS AND RIGHT How oft, of old, when reign'd the wrong, And rare and regal rose in song, The call sublime that roused the strong From hut and hamlet springing. Like avalanches launch'd in might Where thunder shakes an Alpine height, Resistless down its path of white. Has right been led by singing. Idem. SORDID Life's bright paths hold a sordid fold, — Hold men like cattle bought and sold. Who treat each sky-born child of truth As valiantly as bulls, forsooth. That goar, and tramp, and leave to moan Sweet children caught in pastures lone. A Life in Song: Doubting, xx. SORROW AND SINGING The cares may come that track success, Or storms of swift and full distress May make of mind a wilderness, A flood of anguish bringing; The sorrows of the soul will rise. And pour their woe through weeping eyes, And drain at last the source of sighs. When hearts o'erflow in singing. A Song on Singing. SOUL {see sense and spirit) Is the soul indeed but matter, welded, moulded, multiple, White in snow and green in sunshine, by the storms dissolvable? Or is it a lingering breath that, snared to work these lobes of clay, Soon, like air that shapes the wind-cloud, passes through it and away? — A Life in Song: Watching, xxxi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 359 Warn men not to take Mere earth and sky for that one priceless jewel, The sold, that they encase. With care for it, The men who keep their spirits clean and clear From touch or taint of selfishness or vice. May oft behold in depths of inner life Which nearest lie to nature's inner life, The image and the presence that reveal The power and purposes that are divine. Dante, 111., 2. What is the use of our learning, And toiling to come to the right. If none can know we are yearning To lead their spirits to light? What is an outward attraction, What is a power to control. If men through the guise of our action See nothing of God in the soul? A Life in Song: Loving, iv. He dreams of destiny. His whole soiil in his work. That soul speaks out , And like a sovereign. Souls are sovereign always. Columbus, I., I. Who cares to doubt the tale, when told That seers with second seeing Behind the forms that all behold Discern a spirit's being? Past curtains keeping souls from sight, Who never found a friend there. Transfigured by a purer light Than earthly suns could send there? Who never felt an impulse true, A better self within him, A spirit yearning to break through This life from which 't would win him, Look through his frame and through each frame Of those about who love him, Till soul met soul with joy the same As fills the heaven above him? A Life in Song: Loving, viii. 36o A POET'S CABIXET Until with a strange and thrill 'd surprise, I had found what look'd through her o^^^l deep eyes, And had watch'd hke gestures from God the grace Of her beckoning form; and at last could trace Through coursing hues that would come and go Across the radiant veil of her face, The shade of her soul as it moved below. Idem, XXII. SOUL .4JST) SERVICE .... JM}^ father's maps .... Ay, they confirm twice over all my plan — Not thej' alone, but j^our directions with them. .... ]\Iine? (Sitting with one hand resting on the map.) .... Yes, ^''oirr fingers pointing out the course. It all is there, just there beneath 3^our hand. A sailor steers the way his compass points. .... Is that 3^our compass? .... It might compass me — I mean mv soul. .... ' That Httle hand? Oh, what A little soul! .... Do souls have size? One might Be universed in this; j^et not contained In all the luiiverse outside of it. .... To put yoiu" soul thus in another's hand, — Woiild that be wise? .... Why not? — the hand that serves The soul one loves may serve but selfishly, And 5"et ser^^e best the one who trusts to it. .... But shoiild it fetter him? — . . . . Then would he thrill In every atom of his frame to feel Its fingers' throb and pressure. .... Would not bound Away? .... Away and up, but alwaj'-s back again, Like grains of sand in earthquakes. .... Foolish man! . . . . Why, only God is wholly wise; and I Am but a man — so never quite so manly As when — wh}^ say — made fooHsh. Columbus, i., 2. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 361 SOUL-LIFE, THE CONVERSE OF SENSE-LIFE Why should not those who were the most oppressed Have most that serve them where but souls are served? All things inverted and turned inside out, The last in station may become the first, The lowly lordlike and the high the low. The crown'd the chain'd, the crucified, the crown'd. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. SOUL-LIFE THE RESULT OF NATURAL GROWTH There are no vantage-platforms for the soul framed of mere outside gettings, Hke the logs men cut and wedge together. Soul-Hf e grows ; and as it springs in youth, it sprouts in age. You split a living tree, and splice in limbs from trees around it, you destroy the whole. The Two Paths, iv. SOUL, NECESSARY FOR GREAT ENTERPRISES .... Any man who sails Across that unknown sea must have far more Than enterprise, experience, caution, skill, Knowledge of sail and compass, wind and star. The soul must be embarked upon the voyage With aims outreaching all that but concern The narrow limits of this earthly life. , . . . How few such men! Where would you find your crew? . . . . Wherever minds are subject to ideas. .... And where is that? — You judge men by your- self. .... I would not dare to boast such difference, Or so humiliate my humanity. As to presume it possible that aims Inspiring my own soul, if rightly urged, Would not inspire, too, many another. Columbus, II., 3. SOUL, STATURE OF THE The statiu-e of the soul is measured by The distance of its outgrowth over earth. Dante, iii., i. SOULS, SUBORDINATED TO EARTH One Must be what earth has made him. 362 A POET'S CABINET .... Let me die Before I learn a lesson sad as that ! .... Wise prayer ! Ay it is mercy lets us die Before our souls decay — makes life more sweet To those who have to live it with us here. The Aztec God, iv., i. SOULS, THEIR DEPTHS In our souls, Far down within, are depths, like sunken seas. All dark ! — yet only when concealed from light And from the face of love they else might image. And my soul — you should know its depths to know My coming joy. Cecil the Seer, iii., i, SOULS, WHEN MADE AGENTS OF EVIL If what the priesthood teach us be the truth, Ay, if the gods do everything, themselves, Why should they smut our mortal souls to stoke The fuel of their smoking fires on earth? The Aztec God, iii. SPARK OF GOOD Each slightest spark of good Flies upward, and the heaven returns it where It fires the most. Ideals Made Real, lxx. SPECIAL PLEADER A man for all mankind: — No special pleader for a special class Whose grasping greed crowds out the general good ; — But one who pleads for all fair rights for all. Idem, Lxv. SPECULATION, ENCOURAGING FINANCIAL You rushed the stock upon the market, like a running boy that trails a ruined kite; and by his running keeps it mounting higher. There comes a time that boy grows tired and halts; there comes a time when cheating fails to cheat ; there comes a time when fraud must go to jail. The Two Paths, Ii. SPECULATION, THEOLOGIC These earthly eyes can never spy Beyond where heaven has hung the sky. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxxv. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 363 SPEECH {see TALK and words) At times, I have found no need of speech. A simple wave of the hand, A shrug, a look, so far would reach That her soul could understand. Before my lips had time to frame The feeling that sprang to thought, Up out of her own fair lips there came The answer my soul had sought. I have learn'd from her with a sweet surprise How few are the words they need, Whose dimples and wrinkles of cheeks and eyes Write out what the soul can read. Idem, Loving, x. SPIDER Think how a spider must enjoy its web when thrilling with the misery and music of buzzing flies that it has caught! Here that? A rustling! I be- lieve her coming now. The Two Paths, 11. SPIRIT, THAT OF GOD {seC CALL) Beneath the whir of worldly strife, All undisturb'd, there dwells a Hfe That feels the tender infant-plea • , Of something grander yet to be. There winds do whisper, waves have speech, And shapes and shades have features each That friendly to the soul appear, And bring a Spirit subtly near. And make the truth of heaven seem clear. Perchance, when forced to gaze away • From earth, to find Hfe's perfect day, A soul so yearns for what should be • That God, who always will decree His presence where men bend the knee, •' Trails, through the strange unearthly light, His robes that, while they Wind the sight, • Yet lure men onward toward the right. • A Life in Song: Doubting, xxxiii. Ministers, I ween, Urge none in heathen lands to choose between 364 A POET'S CABINET The good and ill, without attesting so That God's good Spirit strives with all below. Idem, Seeking, xxviii. Might not He Whose good accepts the good where'er it be, And reads the inmost motives of the mind, In "every nation, people, kindred," find Thron'd e'en behind the idols of each race, Ideals that human art could not make base? How sad if not! This world's theology- Scarce blows a trumpet causing piety To kneel, ere out from opening mystery Sweeps forth, full mail'd, the world's idolatry. It is not he of heathen name alone Who bows his knee to gilt and wood and stone. Where live the souls who seek God's living truth Whom priest-craft does not find, and praise, for- sooth, Its own deeds, which it claims must lead the way And meditate for all men while they pray? Alas for man, thus made to look to man! — Just charity with kindlier eye might scan, Amid Athenian gods, a Socrates, Who would not bow in spirit e'en to these. Idem, XXIX. SPIRIT, THAT OF MAN (see TEMPERAMENT) They will have done your spirit so much honor. It will be too much honored for this body. .... You mean the body will be too dishonored For any spirit to remain in it. .... Oh, not dishonored ere the godship leaves. — Then what does flesh devoid of god deserve? .... Damnation, if devoid of godship mean Devoid of spirit to defend the flesh. — The Aztec God, iv., i. So women do not worship those they marry. Not after they have married them. Why not? They get too near them. Humph ! but that depends On what one means. They can not get too near SELECTED QUOTATIONS 365 To any one in spirit. .... What is that? . . . . Thatinus which has least of body in it; And yet, like fire, may glow when bodies meet, And make one's whole life luminous. Dante, iii., i. One fond of friends, who yet sought oft by choice In soulless forms to find a spirit's face, In wordless tones a subtle thought to trace. A Life in Song: Daring, lvi. Next to honoring the holiest spirit one ought to honor spirits that are like it. On Detective Duty, i. A spirit's best is always done just where its love has placed it. The Two Paths, i. A spirit's measure is its outlook. Find A man horizoned by the whole broad world Who sees it all in all, he stands a son Of God! — is here to do his Father's work; And you should join in it, or not join him. Columbus, II., 3. He seems a spirit lured to gates of dawn That, venturing near the clouds when all aflame, Had been snatched up within their ardent arms And borne to earth with all their glow about him. The Aztec God, iii. SPIRIT, THAT IN A MAN WHICH INSPIRES In the end As the beginning, nothing thrives but spirit. If trusted, it survives too, every time. Columbus, I., I. Life grows here like a tree with outer branches Too broad for any handling, but with trunk So small and slender that a single hand Can fix its destiny for earth or heaven. The trunk of all that lives is in the spirit. But find the hand that can be laid on that, You find what brings to all things bloom or blight Dante, 11., i. O could we in our misgivings only see and hear once more 366 A POET'S CABINET What our fathers thought so bless'd them, when the heavens unclosed of yore; Ere men's eyes intent on matter, minding not what o'er them towers. Lost their spirit-sight, if not their right to know and use its powers ; Ere men's wits were ground to tools more sharp than blades, but narrow too, Plied at earth our day makes brighter but to hide the stars from view ! Is it wise, — belief so bounded as to let three hundred years Of the faith of half of Europe give the lie to all the seers? Is it wise, — the mean ideal, whether form'd of man or God, Deeming truth in all religions born and bred in con- scious fraud? Is it wise, — the church, assuming mortals once could hear and see Sounds and shapes from realms immortal, but that now this cannot be? Is it wise, — the coward science, which, when faith its aid requests, Frighten'd still by Salem's witches, does not dare apply its tests? Witchcraft probed, might burst the bubble of the world's religious frauds, — Showing seers themselves deceived, who deem all power beyond them God's ; And, with seers, the seers' disciples, who, with pride of mind and will, Fix belief, prohibit thought, and bid the truth, for- sooth, stand still. Powers beyond us may be finite; nor can ever tell or do Aught that frees the mind that heeds them from its need of reason too. A Life in Song: Watching, xxxii. Why differs it, though they may rise on earth Impelled through emulation to enforce Their wills on others ; or through appetite SELECTED QUOTATIONS 367 May fall, and yield control of reason's reins To that which drives them on to lust and crime? — A spirit that inspires through selfishness To mean success or failure, equally May vex as by a devil made incarnate Oneself and all about him. .... Poor weak man! .... Weak ever — save when conscious of his need. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. spirit, that in a man which survives death {see receptivity) We have left the bounds of matter; here are burst the prison bars, Out from which, with powers contracted and a weary sense of strife, Souls, like convicts through their grating, steal a luring glimpse of life. Here are regions where the spirit, freed from fettering time and space. Wings her flight through scenes eternal, reading thought as face reads face. Here the good reveal their goodness, and the wise their wisdom show ; And from open minds about them souls learn all that souls can know. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xiv. If one's own spirit tempt not astray. But only the senses it fails to sway, Where worth is judged by spirit, I dream That some prove better than here they seem. The Last Home Gathering. In the world brains mould to bodies, but across its border-line Royal_ minds must share their purple. Slaves with kings become divine. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xv. The one that led to the best things here Must be some spirit that heaven holds dear. The Last Home Gathering. .... Can mortals aid immortals? • • • • Life is one. 368 A POET'S CABINET Our daily deeds bring sweeter dreams at night ; And sweeter dreams more strength for daily deeds. If thought may pass from sphere to sphere, why not The benefit of thought? Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. SPIRIT IN NATURE How vain to let affections all go forth To things material, hard and heavy foes, Whose mission is to fall at once and crush, Or, through long labor, wear our spirits out! How much more wise, behind the shape, to seek The substance, and, in sympathy with it, Learn of the life that never was created But all things were created to reveal ! Ah, he who learns of this, and comes to live In close communion with it, finds, at times, When Nature whom he loves has laid aside Her outer guise and clasps him to her heart. That there are mysteries, not vague but clear, Not formless but concrete, which, it must be, That those alone can know, or have a right To know, who always, like a faithful spouse, Have kept their spirits to the spirit true. West Mountain. SPIRITUAL, THE, VS. THE MATERIAL (see WORLDLINESS) Bound down to petty tasks, more useless ye Than ships loosed never from their anchorage, Nor sailed to ports for which they have been freighted. Oh, think ye ends that souls were made to gain Were ever reached by one who never breathed A higher air, or saw a higher sight Than those on which contracted brows are bent In library or laboratory? — what? — Does thought grow broader, whittled down to point At microscopic nuclei of dust, As if the world were by, not with, them built? — As if the game of true success were played By matching parts whose wholes are curios? Nay, nay! Life's greatest gain is life itself; And life, though lived in matter, is not of it; Not of the object that our aims pursue, Not of the body that pursues it, not SELECTED QUOTATIONS 369 Of all the world of which itself and us Are parts. Nay, all things that the eye can see Are but vague shadows of reality Cast on a frail environment of cloud, — But illustrations of a general trend Which only has enduring entity, And is, and was, and always must be, spirit. Berlin Mountain. SPONGE, ANIMAL OR HUMAN That soft thing termed a sponge Will always hug you, when in touch with it. But no one finds the least impression left When you are not in touch with it. Dante, i., 2. SPORT, A FINANCIAL .... The trouble is that you are not a sport — finan- cial sport, I mean. — Is just a danger that sometime you may fail to play the game, and lose. .... I have too much imagination. I sometimes think of — and think with, I fear — the other fellow. .... And to be successful in business a man should think about only himself and his own interests. .... Yes, yes — and no — ^is only true in part. Yet if success to you mean sudden gain, and great gain, and obtained with little work, you may be right. The Two Paths, iv. SPRINGTIME The time of year it was, when nature seems In mood most motherly, with every breath Held in a mild suspense above a world Of just born babyhood, when tiny leaves, Like infant fingers, reach to drain warm dews From palpitating winds, and when small brooks Do babble much, birds chirp, lambs bleat, and then, While all around is one sweet nursery, Not strange it seems that men ape childhood too, And lisp — ah me ! — minute the syllables. Yet still too coarse for love's ethereal sense ! Haydn, ill. Who feel like springing in the Spring? . . . Yet all life may spring on as bodies do 24 370 A POET'S CABINET That draw first back, or down, and then leap up. To feel relax'd, perchance, prepares one best To leap the hedge of each untested year; First action, then reaction — eh, not so? — And think — The same may form the law of souls : They stoop, then rise; they kneel, then know of heaven. Idem, iv. SPY, A MORAL What need that I Play spy here to Monaska and Waloon? — Trail like a reptile's tail to prove them brutes, Where'er the love goes, which but proves them human? The power that makes a man who would stand straight Prostrate and prostitute his nobler nature, Sneak, dodge, crawl, shadow spirits bright as theirs, May come from gods, but, if so, they have lent This part of their dominion to a devil. The Aztec God, iii. SQUEEZING OUT MONEY .... Last night, you seemed too squeamish. In a broker that scarcely does. .... He should not squirm but squeeze; — and wring the water on his customers ? The Two Paths, iv. STAGE AND GALLERIES {see PULPIT ) Did you ever find That ever, when the seers look forth through heaven, They view there pews and pulpits? — Nay, not so: Yet oft they note a stage and galleries. All throng'd with white-robed hosts attendant there. So these, you see, at times may hint of good. Ideals Made Real, xxxi. STAGE OF A THEATER, ALL LIFE IS Ay, whether we may march our frames to greet The cannon's mouth, or duty's commoner call. Go where death threatens, or long seems to tarry, One destiny, at last, awaits us all: Upon life's little stage the play will close, The curtain drop, and leave the actor dead. Yet, soldiers, what care you, or what care I? — The souls that fight for truth, beyond scenes here, Find life that does not end in tragedy ; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 371 For all our world is but a theater Outside whose walls, where shine the stars of heaven, The actors with their rdles and robes laid by May all meet smiling in the open air. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. STAKE one's all Better to stake one's all on some high cause And lose, than never know the spirit's thrill When gates of heaven are seen, past mortal ill, Though light that bursts from them at once withdraws. Staking All. STAR PERFORMER .... But I must practice now. .... Hard work? — Not so? .... Oh yes — down here . . . but higher up, where one can breathe free air, and be a star, I guess it's easy there as it is bright. The Little Twin Tramps, v. STARS The stars like sparks that linger where the fire of sun- set dies. A Life in Song: Dreaming, 11. STARS, MESSAGE OF THE I believe. Though hard the drill that trains the soul to read it, That every message of the stars is written In letters one can learn to spell on earth. Dante, 11., i. STATEMENT, ONE TEST OF ITS TRUTH A statement that confutes a general faith, At risk of reputation ; yet meantime Confirms our natural reasoning, seldom lies. Who would have said this, had it not been true? Yet that it should be, what more natural? Columbus, II., 2. station, troubles of exalted (see honors in office) You know heads crown'd with flowers Nod most for bees that buzz and sting about them. Cecil the Seer, i. STATUES Statues, white robed, such as art redeems 372 A POET'S CABINET From the fate of fellow-fancies, when, too soon, they die in dreams. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxii. Shapes were there of every kind Crystallized to forms of art from flooding thoughts within the mind. Idem. STORM : ITS APPROACH (see thunder) Off through the wild November sky, A storm, was it, that there drew nigh? Or was it a pall-car of the dead With crape-like curtains round it spread? And oh, was a death-doom ever due But lives that were sunny before it flew? Heigh-ho, heigh-ho, as the thing came on, To have seen the hurry and scurry, anon! Heigh-ho, heigh-ho, to have seen the way The breezes before it began to play! — It came like a boy who whistles first To warn of his form that shall on us burst, As if nature feared to jar the heart By joys too suddenly made to start. It came like the peck on the blind by a bird That taps for help when a hawk is heard; It came like the shot of the pickets of rain When sunshine flies from a window-pane. But who of us ever can judge the way A storm will strike from its first felt spray? The walkers without soon found in the sleet A net that was tripping their floundering feet, A veil that was falling as light as lace But snapped as it hit each stinging face. Then shattered to scatter the street below With hail-shot followed by smoke of snow. The snow, it followed and lay like soot Swept down from realms its white could pollute. Or was it, instead, a pure rug spread For the feet that came in that car of the dead? The Last Home Gathering. STRANGE So very strange It seems that when I think it can be true, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 373 I pause to listen for the morning bells To wake me from a dream. Columbus, v., 2. STRANGE IDEAS If more people had strange ideas, fewer would have wrong ones. Where Society Leads, i. STRANGENESS If strangeness were a test of what is false, Most things that are believed would not be true. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. STRANGER {see ALONE) On every side, I see the stranger smile, And hear anon his ringing laughter bound. I heed it, as within some chapel aisle One in his coffin seal'd might hear the sound Of his own burial hymn, when it had drown'd His last faint cry of "murder!" He were blest To have those friends his final woe surround. But who would mourn for me? my soul's unrest The very grave might shrink from, as a worrying guest. A Life in Song: Daring, XLI. I might not then seem whirl'd From a star afar in space, A stranger into a stranger-world, To seek but find no face To tender my soul a welcome home. Where its inward wish would cease to roam. A Life in Song: Loving, xv. STREET LAMPS Hung high above this crape-like dusk of night, The star-lights flicker, and, with star-like light, The street-lamps ranged in order round me glow. What victor's pall was ever lighted so? Midnight in a City Park. STRENGTH VS. SPIRIT And that would bring the whole our city needs, — Not strength so much to fight the force without But spirit to unite the force within. Dante, 11., i. STRIFE AND STORM Never while these years are waiting for a nobler worth in man. 374 A POETS CABINET While the strife for life continues, does the dark hide all the van. Howe'er thickly clouds may gather, howe'er fierce the storm may be, Even down the thunder's pathway trembles light by which to see. A Life in Song: Watching, xxv. STRIKE, A LABOR It's not for theft we strike that want an honest wage for honest work. The Little Twin Tramps, i. The fools! — to seek for favors thus. A man who's struck at will strike back. Idem, ii. STUPIDITY (see knaves) Ah, next to deviltry, the devil himself likes nothing better than stupidity. The Two Paths, I. STYLIST, HIS USE OF FORM We all admit that genius, especially literary genius, is characterized by brilliance. A brilliant concen- trates at a single point all the light of all the horizon, and from thence flashes it forth intensified. This is precisely the way in which a brilliant stylist uses form. In describing anything in nature, he selects that which is typical or representative of the whole, and often not only of the whole substance of a scene, but even of its atmosphere. Art and Education. SUBTLETY, BECAUSE OF SPIRITUALITY Deem not the worthiest art-work wrought by those Whose thoughts and aims are easiest to find. Full oft the purpose that it subtly shows Will long elude the keenest searching mind; And, sometimes, not before this life shall close Can what it means for spirit be divined. The Final Verdict. SUCCEED And oh, how many and many a tomb Of a dead hope, buried and left in gloom. Must mark the path of the man whose need Is taught through failure how to succeed! And oft how long, ere he know of this, Will hard work doom His heart that in sympathy seeks for bliss To a life as lone as death in a tomb, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 375 Where sweetness and light Are all shut out, Nor a flower nor a bird Is heeded or heard, Nor often, if ever, there comes a sight Of a friend who cares what he cares about, Or is willing to soil A finger with even a touch of his toil ! Unveiling the Monument. Ah me, the pilots of sure success Sail not at random, nor steer by guess. The voyage of life is a voyage for naught, If souls keep not to one thing sought, And never forget to give it their thought. Love and Life, xi. What seems to one success, to others may mean mere escape from failure. The Two Paths, i. Awake, my soul, and strain each power That hints of effort. Let the hour Of sleep, that was, watch armor-clad; Calm seem a pest; contentment mad; And slander'd patience onward press Till steadfast force achieve success. A Life in Song: Doubting, vii. SUCCESS, DEPENDENT ON SELF I've been thinking, lately, that success may not depend upon situations as much as on ourselves; not upon conditions as much as on the way in which we meet and master them. What Money Can't Buy, iv. SUCCESS, PROSPECT OF No man, if wise, will waive from what he plans The prospect of success. If you attempt it. Trust me to thwart you. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. SUCCESS, THE EARTHLY SOURCE OF The power that crowns one with success on earth Is earthly. Keen men know this. Not, not God : The devil rules the world. .... God overrules it. .... In far results, but in the near ones never! .... Then look to far results. Transferring there 376 A POETS CABINET These transient whims, — ah you will find them melt, Like summer mist, while, rock-bound under them, Each goal remains that your true nature craves. Cecil the Seer, i. SUGGESTIONS, LITTLEST The littlest bird-track, sometimes, in the sand May make one think of wings flown out of sight. Idem. SUGGESTIONS OF WHOLES FROM PARTS {see GENERAL and parts) Meantime, confined Where only finite form can hint of what Inspires formation, many souls there are — Oh, may I join them! — who, in all things earthly, Behold what evermore transfigures earth. No scene can greet them but it brings to sight Far less than to suggestion ; not a tone Whose harmony springs not from overtones; And not a partial stir but, like a pulse. It registers what heart-beat moves the whole. Berlin Mountain. This world contains two kinds of people, Cino,— The kind who see the whole thing in its parts. And those who see the parts, and not the whole. Dante, ill., i. SUITORS {see courting and flirt) Some men are suitors who offer their hands Like the opening palms Of beggars when kneeling and asking for alms; But the one that pays heed They clutch in their greed. Turning fingers to fists and prayers to commands. Love and Life, xxxiii. SUNSET The sun has touch'd the earth. See how its disk, Red-hot against the river, starts the mist, Like steam, to drive us home. Haydn, iv. Then I turn'd and watch'd the sunset, with emotions vague and wild. Till I seem'd a thing scarce human, strange as mys- tery's very child. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 377 Not of earth nor heaven appear'd I. I was one with that mild light, Which had veil'd in awe the hiUs before the hush'd approach of night ; And through all the clouds that floated rose the forms of angels fair, And I seem'd to heed their whispers in the movements of the air. Far adown the west I track'd them, till there met my wondering gaze Mountains in the sky that fring'd a sky-set sea begirt with haze, — Haze from shore-sand bright as gold-dust blown to clouds by winds of noon; But across the sea's blue depth appear'd to sail the crescent moon. Scarce I saw this, when beyond it I descried with pleasure great Outlines of a heavenly port illimied as for a heavenly f^te. Ah, how wondrous was that city, rear'd amid the cloud-land bright. Where that sunset capt the climax of the day's com- pleted light. How the wall that coil'd around it glow'd along its winding way ! And how flash'd the floods of flame that in the moat before it lay ! What though underneath their splendor stretch'd a storm-cloud black and long? 'T was a bass-note held beneath that sweeter o'er it made the song. For, above, as if aspiring toward the heaven's enkin- dled fires. Toward the sky in countless numbers, press'd the domes and pierc'd the spires ; Domes, high arch'd, with tints to rival rainbows in their every hue, Join'd with spires from darkness pushing, till their peaks effulgent grew ; Spires Hke prayers that start from anguish, aim'd for where all blessings are, 378 A POET'S CABINET Spires like hope that falters never while above it shines a star. Then — and how my gaze profan'd them! — what re- treats for bliss appear'd In those fair illumined mansions that along the streets were rear'd! — Streets like shafts of light far shooting, fading like the sun from view, Back of trees with leaves like autumn's, when life's fires have burned them through. In my soul I half believed I longed to leave this earthly star, Gazing like the seer on Pisgah, toward that promised land afar. A Life in Song: Dreaming, iv and v. SUNSET, THAT OF LIFE Life I watch, like one at sunset, high upon some western hill, Looking eastward while the sunbeams with their light the valleys fill. He beholds a world of beauty, and its darkest shade is cast By his own sun-girded shadow, stretching o'er it, vague and vast. Life to me lies like his view there, when a storm has thunder'd by. And the forests flash with raindrops, and a rainbow bends on high. Brightly gleam the plains below him, where the golden rivers run; Brightly glow the clouds above him, where in glory sets the sun ; And he knows night's curtain, falling o'er the little world he sees. Falls away from heaven to show there worlds of worlds whose light it frees. Thus I watch the earth and air, and find that age like youth is bright, And life's eve and dawn, like day's, are flush'd the most with heavenly light. Idem, Watching, i. SUPERFICIALITY OF THINKING How many people, do you suppose, look beneath the SELECTED QUOTATIONS 379 surface of anything? I am inclined to believe that most men would start out to walk over the quicksands of the bottomless pit if only the sun should happen to strike the surface so as to make it seem, for the time being, a little bright. What Money Can't Buy, iv. SUPERSTITION Who loves not, where all shapes and sounds we test So charm us by the mysteries they suggest, To throw aside, or strive to throw, at least, Beliefs that satisfy our times, and feast On superstition, and half credit freaks With which fair fancy lured those dreamy Greeks. Our older age has dropt the young world's joys, And takes life earnestly ; but it employs Its ardor too much like an o'ergrown boy's, Whose fist and arm so often plied in strife But show his brain is weak. There are in life Deep truths we value not. We rend apart The forms of nature, but have little heart To prize the hints to thought that meet our view. And we forget that mysteries too are true ; And we forget the bourn beyond the blue; And we forget about the silent pall; And faith, which only holds the key of all. A Life in Song: Seeking, vi. SUPPLIANT Wise men do not greet A suppliant with too open hand and heart. Did gentleness not midwife his desires, His cries would sooner die for lack of nursing. And so I think they best refuse requests Who best refuse to hear them. The Aztec God, iii. SUPPOSING Almost all men's failures spring from supposing when one might be sure. Do you suppose your matches are put out before you lock them in your writing desk? On Detective Duty, III. sukE {see DUPLEX and love) O stars of heaven so pure, O buds of earth so sweet, 38o A POETS CABINET What souls can ever be sure, When hues Hke yours they meet, That they move to aught with thrilling breath Except to danger and to death? O maiden eyes more pure, O rose-red lips more sweet, What hearts can ever be sure That thrill with you to meet, That aught awaits the panting breath That does not lure true love to death? A Life in Song: Loving, xxv. SURPRISING BY THOUGHTS Those who suppress their thoughts for fear of surprising others seldom speak the truth. What Money Can't Buy, iii. SURROUNDINGS (see association) This is a world where we must judge of most things, as of souls, by their surroundings. The Two Paths, i. Souls make their own surroundings, moving on Through lights and shadows by their presence cast; And paths, with these all gone, seem changed anon. When seen by those who trod them in the past. A Life in Song: Serving, i. For on this voyage of life, not seas alone. But skies — all things about us — mirror back The souls that they surround. With each to him That hath, is given back more of what he hath: One smiles at aught, it gives him back a smile; He frowns, it gives a frown; he looks with love. He finds love ; but without love, none can find it. Alas, that men should think one secret fault Can hide itself. Their sin will find them out. Before, behind, from every quarter flash Their moods reflected. Let them tell the tale. Nay, let them whisper, glance, or shrug one hint Of what they find in earth about, and lo! In this, their tale of it, all read their own. Haydn, xv. SURROUNDINGS, INFLUENCE OF, ON THOUGHT Oh, does it profit naught that one should dwell Amid surroundings that no eyes can see SELECTED QUOTATIONS 381 Save as they look above, no feet can leave, To seek the outer world, save as they climb? Where every prospect homes itself on high. And each horizon seems a haunt of heaven? Greylock. As long as thinking can be shaped by things, And that which holds our life can mold our love. Idem. Susceptibility {see sensitive.) His mien, like water, imaged life around it ; And, chang'd by each new-comer's wish or whim, A mirror to reflect whatever found it, A man could read some men through what they saw in him. A Life in Song: Serving, iii. No doubt, in youth There were times when the joy in his heart overran At a smile from one who knew him in truth ; There were times, years later, when merely a tear From a grateful eye Would have seem'd more dear Than all the glitter that gold could buy; But, alas! in age, when character stands As fix'd as yon monument, then it demands, Ere aught can move it, far more, far more Than the cheer or the sigh that had stirr'd it of yore. Unveiling the Monument. SUSCEPTIBILITY AND COURAGE Genuine susceptibility is the condition of all true courage. Suggestions for the Spiritual Life, xvi. SUSCEPTIBILITY, WOMAN 's Why, what were woman's nature, void of fine Susceptibility on edge to play Society's deft weather-vane? Columbus, IV., I. SWEET {see HARMONY and music) Sweet it was as if the heavens would all their sweet store shower below ; And by one flood quench forever all the thirst of mortal woe ; And my moods were swept before it in a spell resistless bound. 382 A POETS CABINET As a sailor, sinking softly, where the deep sea laps him round. But can I recall the song now? — Better bid yon meadow nook Hold the whole great rain that blest it on its journey down the brook. A Life in Song: Dreaming, viii. SWEETHEART, HOW TO JUDGE A No man of us knows a sweetheart until he has heard and seen her when not on her guard. The Ranch Girl, i. SWINE Cook soup for swine! They leave you, if they fail to find it swill ; Or else, in greed to get it, trip and tramp you. They harm you for your help ; and still stay swine. Dante, i., 2. SWORD Who, when arbitration once has been submitted to the sword, Dare or care to shield the wrong from shot and shell against it pour'd? A Life in Song: Watching, iii. SWORD AND SENSE .... Now by my sword ! .... Nay, nay ; but by your sense. What fevers both of you is no disease That can be cured by surgery. .... By what then? .... By stimulants. Accurse to cutting down, When one can gulp down! Save your health for me, And, while you sheathe your swords, pledge gratitude For such delicious ways of sheathing spirits. Dante, i., i. SYMPATHY (see REGARD and words) Our human thought, whose efforts, aim'd afar. Have learn'd so much of sun and moon and star, — 'T is time it tell us mortals what we are. 'T is time our wandering world's philosophy Discern life's inward bond of unity, — Not like the Greek in mere material fire, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 383 But in the soul's unquenchable desire. 'T is time it weigh the worth of arguments, That treat each consciousness with reverence; And, starting with the soul's first certainty, Evolve in all its order'd symmetry The universal law of sympathy. A Life in Song: Seeking, lv. Not long a philosophic, loving mind Can well endure aU dearth of sympathy. To seek this kindly, and yet fail to find, Makes lack of welcome seem hostility. Idem, Serving, viii. Like a lake. Whose fogs unfold, when comes a genial sun, Her moods unfolded to my sympathy; And, brightly imaged in her nature's depths, I seem'd, at every turn, to face my own. Ideals Made Real, xix. Nor therefore view with heartless unconcern Each special aim of manhood's general dust; But fan each spark of ardor that may burn In breasts that in their own soul's calling trust. For though to reach their goals men from us sever, Why, in their hearts, may not heave ceaselessly. As in our own, an endless want that never Can free those from ourselves who need our sym- pathy. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxvii. So new to me such views were, that I felt As thrill'd as feels the savage maid, when first She finds her own face in a stranger's glass, Then spell-bound lingers, learning of herself. So wrapt, my wonder hung, all wistfully. About that spirit bright. What meant it all? I could not then beHeve, — I scout it yet, — That rnortals can afford to slight the souls Reflecting theirs, who make them mind themselves And prize the good they own, and dread the ill. Ideals Made Real, xix. Oh what a world is this for souls to live in ! — For spirits whose one deepest wish it is To think at one with others like themselves, 384 A POET'S CABINET And all together think one thought of God! But here one knows no wishes not imprisoned Where all the implements to set him free Are but these clumsy tools of breath and brawn. Dante, i., 2. SYMPATHY IN SORROW Our sorrows are half lifted when the souls Of our true friends have come to bear them with us. Idem, II., I. SYMPATHY, INDIVIDUAL NOT COMMUNAL When the heart Sinks deep as mine, touch deft enough to reach it Requires a single hand, not many. Idem, I., 2. SYMPATHY, LACK OF .... Poor, lonely man ! .... His own fault — would not have A soul go with him. .... Why should he? To minds In which the spirit so subdues the sense, A lack of sympathy itself is absence. Columbus, II., 3. SYMPATHY, RECEIVED WHERE GIVEN Nor long was it ere I had grown to share In all the love of all with whom I met; And oft, too, thus invoking sympathy, My wishes wrought like witches, and conjured The thing they wish'd for : sympathy would come. Ideals Made Real, XLiv. SYMPATHY, WHEN MERELY SUPERFICIAL We all should sympathize. All own one lord; All wait beside one shore; all watch one tide. — So too do snipes and snails! and so do souls That yet shall rule in heaven ten towns and one. Souls differ, . . . John from James, as well As both from Judas. — ^Judas lingers too. Idem, XLVii. When hearts hold secrets, even love that comes, And comes in crowds, will bring the prying soul Full drive to spring them open. How I shrank To meet with those with whom my soul could find Woman's grief, If there be any manhood left in him, Will rouse his efforts to bespeak her peace. See page 426. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 385 No source of sympathy, but parrot-sounds Produced when tongue and teeth and lips combine To mouth one shibboleth ! A fate like this Foretoken'd only, made me wellnigh faint As feels a soldier, falling at his post, With heart shell'd out and emptied of the soul. Idem, XLVi. TABLE, DINING . . . I'll call you when the table's ready. Poor thing, with twice as many feet as you have, it can't walk up stairs. .... It must be very full. .... It will be. You'll find it something like a pigeon, a better carrier than a walker; and you can pluck it all you wish. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. TACT {see device) O how oft when stirr'd to rescue those we love from threaten'd woe. And to point them toward the pathways, where in safety men may go, Our own lack of tact or temper has equipt advice amiss. Frail as truth that veils its features in the guise of prejudice. A Life in Song: Dreaming, ix. The very pack of howling sea winds loosed to drive the skilful pilot from his course he harnesses to his own purposes by turning, twisting, bracing, while he yields, — by not attacking what he thwarts, but tacking. So, too, a man can meet opposing forces with what the world terms tact. The Two Paths, i. TALK vs. ACTION {see DEEDS and words) Oh, to talk the truth Is easy as to breathe. To live the truth. And, mailed in its pure radiance, burn to black The shade its white heat severs, needs a strength To suffer hatred and inspire to love. Half hell's, half heaven's, and wholly Christ's. Columbus, II., 3, TALK, EMOTIONAL The worst disease I know of is the one that breaks out in these running sores of talk; and most contagious 2S 386 A POETS CABINET too. Its victims think they always must express their sentiments — not facts pale white, but ruddy with emotion; and human beings are like bulls — ^you wave a little red at them, or let them see what brings a red flush on yourself, they fight. Tuition for her Intuition, i. TALKATIVENESS Some people's ears and throats are so near together that when you tickle the one you are sure to hear from the other. What Money Can't Buy, ii. TALKING AND THINKING Most men's thoughts are led, you know, In trains of their own talking. Talk them down, They lose their leader. Keep on talking then. They find in you another. Any sound You choose to make, they take for sense. Why not? That course has grown to be their habit. Columbus, III., 2. TALKING VS. THINKING .... With all their talk, one might suppose them thinking now. .... Oh, no; the parrots talk, and men may make most noise because, like engines letting off their steam, their minds are not at work. Tuition for her Intuition, i. TASTE No fish are drawn Except by hooks first baited to their taste. Dante, i., 2. TASTES These dainty despots of desire, our tastes The worst of tyrants are; nor brook offense. Haydn, xxii. TEACHER, THE The autocrat's pride in his haughtier train, The miser's clutch for the glut of his gain. Are as shade to the light. Are as hell to a heaven, compared to their lot • Though humble and poor, whose lives incite And train men's thinking that else were not. Love and Life, X. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 387 TEACHER, QUALITIES OF A GOOD For a teacher A knowledge of mere books does not suffice; He needs a knowledge too of human nature; And sympathy, to make his teaching welcome; And fire, to make it felt; and tact and skill, To aim and temper it for others' needs ; And modesty to keep his own acquirements In strict-held servitude to their demands; And dignity that comes from honoring truth. To crown its bondman as the student's master. Cecil the Seer, i. TEACHERS WITH SNAP When teachers have no snap, they seldom teach their pupils how to snatch; and half the thoughts, as well as things, we need in life are got by snatching. On Detective Duty, v. TEACHING, WHEN FALSE Ah, strange how much would not be thought Were it not taught ! A plague on their presumption Who first began to teach, and teach reHgion! As if, forsooth, the heaven would be all dark Without our great lights of the temple here To thrust their smoking torches toward it ! The Aztec God, iii. TEAM-WORK IN LIFE-WORK .... All our firms must have their secrets; and anyone who starts to play with others — he must support the team. .... Why play with others? .... The very question I have asked. The man who sells himself to harness in a team, be friend or foe the one who tempts him to it, leaves the one place where he may meet with God and starts in paths where he may meet the devil. The Two Paths, iv. TEARS The gem-like tears, pursed in his wrinkled cheeks, Fell like some rich exchange of value due Proved wealth of worth within the soul now gone. A Life in Song: Prelude. 388 A POET'S CABINET Then soon the froth that foam'd o'er reason's cup Dissolv'd in timid tears, flow'd down the side. Idem, Daring, lxviii. TEAS AND MEN When asked to ladies' teas, some men dress up before they go. These think the thing a nuisance before they start; and some do not dress up: — they know that it's a nuisance when they get there. Tuition for her Intuition , iii . TEETH, USED IN TALKING, AS WELL AS EATING Our teeth are white keys of an instrument on which the spirit plays — to sound the music of the speaking voice. 'Tis better when they must move somehow, to keep them at the spirit's work. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. TEMPERAMENT, AS A SOURCE OF LIKES What one likes or dislikes .... depends at times, less on another's tendencies than on one's own tem- perament. Where Society Leads, I. TEMPERAMENTS AS INFLUENCED BY SPIRIT His words and ways have seemed so void of grace, To say not grit! .... In temperaments like his The form is but the signal of the spirit. We never judge a flag by gawky flops Against a wind-forsaken pole; but by Its flying when it feels the breath of heaven. Dante, i., I. TEMPERAMENTS VS. TENDENCIES .... It is not irrational — is it? — to follow one's own tastes? .... Yes, when they prompt one to forget other people's traits. Temperament appeals to us through the body, tendencies through the mind. A rational being ought first to heed the latter. Where Society Leads, i. TEMPTATION AND TRAINING (see PROHIBITION) .... No one can keep a man from being tempted till he has rid him of his human nature, and ills you never can eradicate you ought to try to regulate. If not, take one thing from a man, he finds another; — SELECTED QUOTATIONS 389 for beer finds brandy, and for alcohol finds opium. True reform must aim to make the saints you seem to breed not mere weak sneaks. .... An old plea, yes! .... It is — as old as Eden with trees that gave men knowledge of the evil as well as of the good; — with grains and fruits in which a man could find both food and poison. . You wouldn't keep the poison from his lips? . Would rather make him keep his lips from it. . Could do it? . Not, perhaps, with every man. All training fails with some — is very hard to keep the devil from getting his full quota. But this should not prevent our trust in training; or in the mind we train. Few men are fools, and we shall find them fewest when we treat them not like unthinking brutes which they are not, but like true men who can be reached by reasons. When not reached thus — it may seem harsh to say it ; yet if this life be meant for discipline, both fools and wise must have an equal chance — no man can fight the devil for another. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. Who knows what men can be, Till pierced where tenderest? It was the fleet Achilles could be wounded in the heel ; And some have heads, and some have hearts to hurt. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. TEMPTED The sa^ed think less that they themselves were good Than that they were not tempted overmuch. The First Fascination. You alone . . . When tempted, have not let them drain your veins • Of healthful soul-strength, to inject therein, In place of it, their foul sense-fevering virus. The Aztec God, iv., i. TEMPTER MAY BE AN ANGEL Oh, do not think the tempter, when he comes. Proclaims his presence through acknowledged ill! His most seducing tones may leave the lips 390 A POET'S CABINET Of friends, or those who best may pose as friends; His direst pitfall-paths mount up, nor hint What crumbling crags their garden glories wreathe. You deem that, at the crisis of his life, It was a devil Jacob wrestled with? — Nay, nay ; Hosea's term for him was angel. West Mountain. TENDENCIES, AVOIDING Things may tend where you and I needn't attend them. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, iv. THEMSELVES (see EGOTIST and self-conceit) The men who scan us, as a class, Turn always toward themselves, alas, Their magnifier's largest glass; And small and far seem all who pass. A Life in Song: Doubting, ill. theories (see imagination, philosophy and practical) And what are theories worth, except so far As each can make men better than they are? Idem, Seeking, liv. thieves cowardly A man who fights with thieves has justice to fight beside him. They show their backs to the one and they dare not face the other. The Ranch Girl, ii. thinking as related to acting More is always brew'd in error than befogs the thinking mind. That which moves the springs of action flows to action like in kind. A Life in Song: Watching, iii. THINKING beings, TREATING PEOPLE LIKE And he will find before he dies That men accept one's estimate of them. If he esteem them thinkers, give them thought, They turn to him like thinking beings ; but If he esteem them brutes, and give them force, They turn upon him like a brute. Columbus, III., 2. THINKING, PREVENTING OTHERS FROM .... You seem to have a chronic objection to a woman's thinking a little for herself. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 391 .... No ; I merely object to her thinking entirely for others. Really, you should be more cautious. Young people ought not to get into their heads the idea that everybody can be managed. .... Why not? .... Mainly because it's not true. You convey a false impression. It is about as easy to blow a feather down a boy's throat when he himself keeps blowing as to get a thought into his mind when he himself keeps thinking. .... Yes;except when he stops to breathe! .... And then you can enter in, I suppose, and take possession. Do you remember what the Bible calls those that take possession of other people's minds. It calls them devils. .... Oh, the Bible! .... Wise old book, nevertheless! The truth is that when we try to influence others irrespective of their own thinking, we very soon begin to lose respect for their thinking, and, not only so, but for our own thinking, and for any kind of thinking. As soon as a man does that, he begins to disregard thought and to say and do what misrepresents it; in other words, to deceive. Where Society Leads, i. THINKING MEN, THEIR INFLUENCE One thinking follower might make men believe Your other followers were controlled by thought. Dante, i., 2. THINKING OF OTHERS' NEEDS A man can do a deal of things through thinking how much some one needs them. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. THINKING OUT LOUD A mind that thinks out loud works like a gun dis- charged before it has been fully loaded. It harms itself and does not help its owner. The Two Paths, 11. THINKING THE MOST IMPORTANT OF POSSIBILITIES .... What's the use of having a fortune if you're obliged to live like a farmer? .... The farmer may have as much to think 392 A POET'S CABINET about as if he were always thinking of a fortune; and what one thinks makes up the most of what one needs in life. What Money Can't Buy, i. THOUGHT {see FANCY and imagination) All men's wisdom flows from each man's thought; And every page of progress but records The impress of this thought express'd in deeds. A Life in Song: Note iv. Ah, thought was crystallized when came the world! Idem, Seeking, xix. Oh, not the outward things that may incite Give the true measure of the inward aim ! Our minds are deeper than our deeds proclaim; And only thought can make them move aright. Broadening Ones Outlook. All things created can for thought procure No more than one's creative thoughts conjure. A Life in Song: Seeking, x. THOUGHT, AS INFLUENCED BY FORCE {see FORCE) When you come to deal with thought, The only influence force can have upon it Is to suppress but leave it still possessed. If error be in mind, it seems far better To let it out, and so be rid of it. The Aztec God, iii. THOUGHT, ENTANGLED Ah, why should fate Leave thought entangled like an eagle here Whose wings are bound, and feet can only crawl So slowly, and, when one so longs to fly. So painfully? Berlin Mountain. THOUGHT, HE WHO OCCASIONS He whose words can wake the earth to thought Has heaven's own warrant that he should be heard. Cecil the Seer, ill., 2. THOUGHT, INTERFERING WITH ANOTHER'S Nothing in the world is quite so practically divine as mind; nothing so practically sacred as thought. You and I have no right to interfere with another's thought, in order to prevent a truthful expression of it. Where Society Leads, ii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 393 THOUGHT UNCHECKED And thought uncheck'd, — it oft more danger fronts Than does the uncheck'd steed, whose frenzied flight Defies the rein, and, dashing down a road Straight deathward, trails his luckless driver on, Whirl'd powerless to prevent all as a babe. Haydn, xxix. THOUGHT vs. PERSONAL AFFECTION Be on your guard and think. And think? — I need that caution? — when this beaker all Is brimming to its overflow? — And think? — When all my thoughts are radiant with his form Like surging sea- waves glancing back the sun? Columbus, I., 2. THOUGHT, WHEN OPPOSED Our thought, like light. Opposed, will vaunt itself; and brightest play. Glanced off from things it does not penetrate. Ideals Made Real, l. THOUGHT, WAIVING ONE's OWN No man has the right to waive his own thought for the thoughts of others, except so far as these become his own. Then, like night travelers, led to hghted halls, and sometimes to a dawn the sunrise brings, he can extinguish his own petty lantern. The Two Paths, iv. THRONE A soul that summons all that does one's best To do still better, sits upon a throne Than which none higher is conceivable. Columbus, I., 2. THUNDER All our lives, we start and wonder, In this under world, what blunder Woke in heaven the voice of thunder. Yet it peals; and oh, how sadly, Like the storms that gather madly Over days that dawn so gladly. Burst on heavenliest harmonies Notes from where no music is ! A Life in Song: Doubting, xxiv. 394 A POET'S CABINET THUNDER STORM {see STORM) The night Already shook beneath the threatening tread That brought, anon, a storm. Oh, fearful sight, — That black car of the thunderer overhead ! Those fierce bolts flashing down their track of red, And crashing on amid the shatter'd sleet! And one broad elm, like Cssar, stabb'd and dead, Flung up its robes and tumbled at his feet. While hoarse winds howl'd about, and made his woe complete. A Life in Song: Daring, Lxxv. TIES All ties are right that make true life more bright. Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. TIME AND VITAL FORCE To eyes That scan eternity, time cannot be The measure gauging vital force; nay, nay: Then heavenly lightning were a weaker thing Than earthly smoke. Haydn, i. TIME, ITS WORTH The worth of time is measured like a gem's, Not by its bulk but by its brilliancy. The Aztec God, ii. TIME-SERVER And yet he played no mere time-server's part, Nor waived old truth and friendship for the new. Who judged he waived them would misjudge a heart No more susceptive to them both, than true. But traits like these, because not always blended, Oft made his nature doubted and reviled ; Some deem'd them craft, and such their friendship ended ; Some deem'd them whims, and such would chide him like a child. A Life in Song: Serving, iv. Shall one, when the world Asserts control. Forget the soul? With every flag of a high cause furl'd Give up his fight for virtue and truth, And become a man of the world, forsooth? — SELECTED QUOTATIONS 395 Ay, ay, a coward, who cringed and bow'd, And has grown content to court the crowd? — A mountebank who, in storm or calm, Turns up or down his wilHng palm For a pittance from snobs that he thinks to please With a sneer for those and a smile for these? Love and Life, xxxvii. TIMES, GOOD How much is time here worth, if in it all We live but slaves, and never know of good times? The man who squeezes these all out our life — Wrings our last sweat-drop out to serve himself, — He has .... A vampire's care for us. Columbus, III., 2. TIP-TOP OF SOCIETY They are at the top, the very tip-top, of society. .... Should think so! — like the tip-top house upon Mount Washington. You know 'tis it because, just when you see it, you feel like freezing. The Little Twin Tramps, 11. TITLE, NOT NEEDED IN AMERICA .... You have no title. .... People of sense know enough to prefer a gold cup without a handle to a pewter cup with a handle. .... What an egotistical boy you are? .... Am I? .... No ; but you are very American. Where Society Leads, i. TOGETHER Will never a Magellan sail around This grander globe of truth, till he have found How paths that part most widely sometimes tend To bring two souls together in the end? A Life in Song: Seeking, LV. TOIL {see LABOR and work) No place in life but fills a need. Who tills the soil, he starts the seed; And on his kind of toil below Depends the kind of fruits that grow. After the Lynching. 396 A POET'S CABINET TOMB (see monument) Tread softly. Nothing mortal we revere Within the dwelling that we stand before. No form will come to meet us from the door. Only the spirit of the man is near. Only to spirit do men ever rear These shafts like arms uplifted to implore The world to honor those we see no more, But whose white souls the white tomb symbols here. Ah, what could ever lead earth's dull throngs on To those bright goals, concealed from mortal view In future glory for which good men plan, Except some spirit heaven had shone upon? Our awe for genius is a worship due To that which comes from God and not from man. The Grave of Genius. TONES, MERRY (see VOICE) Whose merry tones Would ring out, if our thoughts turn'd far from her, Like bells that homeward lure the wind-blown bees, And bring our flighty fancies back again. Haydn, iv. tongue, the, and its poetic influence {ses poetry) .... The poet's tool is his poetic tongue. .... 'T is not the tongue that makes the bell ring sweet ; It is the metal of the bell itself. Dante, i., i. TRACK, RIGHT, FOR THOUGHT You place thought on the right track once, you find What moves it on is not what moves it off. They differ. Columbus, I., I. TRADE E'en trade is made by winds from heaven above To join men in the bonds of trust and love. A Life in Song: Seeking, XLI. But let us hope, while knowledge still advances. That men will learn to trust in manhood more; As trade that once crept on with lifted lances Has learn'd, at last, unarm'd to feed each hungry shore. Idem, Serving, lxxx. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 397 TRADES, JUDGING MEN BY My mood, As gloom would gather round again, would grieve To think, in sorting souls, fate bungled so. And let our traits be judged of by our trades, — The dusty imprint of the things we touch. "As well," cried I, "to judge of winds of heaven. By bogs they brush, or fogs they bear away! We two that so could trust each other's hearts, Why should we not join hearts, and leave to them The hands?" Ideals Made Real, LXii. TRAGEDY In every life. The first and final acts are tragedy. The Aztec God, i. TRAINING Do not think that men Can ever change our nature by their training. Nay, clip, abuse, deform it as you may. The weakest bush will bear its own flower still, And every heart the love life made it for. The Aztec God, iii. TRAINING AND WORKING You can't train even a vine, unless it's working all the time itself. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. TRAINING OF THE WORLD {seC WORLD, SOUL and spirit) Oh, he has been train'd by the world and the school To curb his character in by rule Till the rule of his life is a lie. A man like that would spurn to find In God's designs the quest of his mind. He crams and drams for an appetite That nothing on earth can sate or excite. His words are as dry as the words of a book, — Your sentence is ready, wherever you look. His views — he never saw any thing strange: If he did, some fellow might question his range. And all of profit he tests by pelf, And all of manhood measures by self, 398 A POET'S CABINET Forgets that God rules the world he is at, And stars himself as its autocrat. Of Such Is the Kingdom. TRANSMIGRATION .... Who has traced for you The history of spirits? If they came From God, as matter came, why came they not With matter? .... What? — Through beasts and birds, you mean? . . . . Why not? — Why shotdd not these have endless life? Why, if they have it, should their course be checked Ere they attain the highest? — and, if not, Why should their essence not move up through man? .... Is man the son of beasts? .... In flesh why not? — But may be born of flesh and of the Spirit. Devoid of spirit, all the body's nerves Are lifeless as the wires, when rent apart, Which once were thrilling with electric force. But ah! that force, though flown to air, comes back To give new life wherever new forms fit it. So, while the whole creation of the flesh. In groans and travails of successive births, Prepares each new formation for its need, Why should not psychic force, the breath of Him In whom all live and move and have their being, With rhythm mightier than the pulse of lungs, Or day and night, or autumn and the spring, Pass up through all the lower ranks of life. Through birth and on through death, from air to breath. From breath to air, till, last, it reaches man; And, taught the lesson there of human hands Which master matter, and of each man make A fellow worker in creation's work. And, taught the lesson of the human voice, Which for each new conception frames a word To phase and phrase it, and of each man makes A fellow-thinker in creation's thought, — Why should not this force, moulded by the hand And head, attain in man its final end, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 399 And dowered with will and reason, freed at death. From its material framework, hold its mould, And reach the last result of all that is. Where that which served the serpent is the son, — A spirit in the image of the Father? Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. TRAP I am practicing, you see — On criminals. — That man there set a trap. But it takes two to make a trap work. He, He was a genius, this man, played both rdles, He set it and was caught in it. Columbus, III., I. TRAP, SKIRTED You skirted trap, you think all men will tumble when you try to trip them? The Two Paths, i. TREACHERY They think that these will seem our friends; And make an opening through which all can enter. What keener point could treachery find to edge Its wedge of enmity, than tried old friendship? Columbus, v., I. TREADMILL The feet that tread the treadmill no more bind The spirit to their petty task, than do Our brains bind thought whose words, by working through, Not in, this mortal framework, lead their kind. Obscurity. TREASURE, A NATION'S If I be queen, let me be queen Of Spain's rich spirit as of Spain's rich soil. I will — there is a treasure. — What to Spain Are her most precious treasures, that star most The crown that they surround with living light? Mere jewels, think you? — Nay, not these, but men. And if I give the one to gain the other, who Could strike a better bargain? Ay, I will — Columbus, II,, 3. TREASURE, HIDDEN BENEATH APPEARANCES Earth is a field where hidden treasure lies. 400 A POET'S CABINET All search for it ; their searching wakes their thoughts, And draws out their desires, and aims their acts. At last, they look and live for that alone Which lures beneath appearances. Few find it. The few that do, find that which makes the world Worth living in, and worth yon circling dome. The crown God gives it, jeweled all with stars. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. TREES, ON MOUNTAIN TOPS I reached that great right angle where All farms and all things fertile lie below, And only barren slopes of sterile rock And trees that nature struggles to disown Await the climber who would still move on. West Mountain. TRESSES Then, as nearer she drew, her face Clear'd from a shade of tresses. Fair as a dawn that breaks apace Out of a cloud's recesses. A Life in Song: Loving, ii. TROUBLE, AS AFFECTING STRONG CHARACTER {see AFFLICTION and bereavement) Nothing that can come from the world, no matter how much it may irritate or hurt, can really injure or weaken a strong character. It acts like sand when it scratches a gem, giving it a finer polish. Where Society Leads, in. TROUBLE, TREATED LIGHTLY AND SERIOUSLY At times, a trouble like this when coming between old friends, if treated as of serious intent, may, like seed, take root and grow enormously; but treated lightly, as a joke, be quickly brushed aside like seed dropped accidentally. The Ranch Girl, iv. TROUBLE DUE TO SELF {see WORRY) In man as in nature, the outward jar Less brings our trouble than what we are. The wind may but tickle the grass or the tree That lashes to fury the wave of the sea. The Last Home Gathering. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 401 TRUE In all tales true to life Men read a lesson less from man than God. A Life in Song: Finale. TRUE, AND A TRUE SOUL , . . . These words recall an ancient eastern dream; And, in one's waking hours, can it be true? .... Think you a true soul ever served a thought Not souled in truth, whatever were its form? Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. TRUE TO HUMAN NATURE All men, to their own best natures true, Learn soon to let truth rule their fellows too. So here the chains that on the bondmen clank Are loosed, and slaves may reach the noblest rank; And every field grows richer for the toil Of yeomen working well their own-held soil. Their very king, at last, has come to plan The common welfare like a common man. A Life in Song: Seeking, xli. TRUST {see faith) Ah no, for shade no more than light will fall On souls that still in God and man can trust. To him who still has faith in generous action Full many a thankful eye will love confess; And many a hope that thrills life's nobler faction On many a lip assiire his life of sure success. Idem, Serving, Lxxxvi. In God we trust by trusting all In whom His traits are shown. God bless America. TRUTH {see FORCE and words of truth) I give them truth. Truth is for fools. I give it to them. Humph ! it comes from fools. Yes, if they think men want it. I do not. They merely need it. Cecil the Seer, i. Our God is great. I deem Him great enough His truth to save without subverting ours. True sovereignty has truth: 't is not a sham 26 402 A POET'S CABINET That holds high rank because we courteous men, Considerate men, allow it seeming rank. Who lies to save the truth, distrusts the truth, Disowns the soul, and does despite to God. Who strives to save his life thus, loses it, In evil trusting and the Evil One, — Salvation through the Devil, not through Christ ! Haydn, xxvii. With truth, the longer kept, the longer thought of ; And thinking feeds conviction. Columbus, i., 3. .... I never saw a girl like you before. .... Am I so queer? I never thought I was. Some girls, you know, are kind, too kind to say what others never want to have them say. .... And what is that? .... My mother calls it truth. .... Of all the innocents! You know, my girl, you're scarcely fitted for a place like this. .... Why not? .... You are so pretty, and so good. Do you believe in love at first sight? .... What is that? .... The first time you see a fellow you know that, somehow, he was made for you. .... Know somehow — how? .... Because he looks — looks nice. .... Oh, there are many people that look nice! He looks particularly so. He makes you thrill, nice? Why should I be afraid of him, when he is .... I didn't mean just that. .... You looked at me, I thought, as if you did. .... How looked at you? .... Oh, well, I hardly know. I never met a man like you before. .... You never met a man who loved you then. .... Do men like you love all the girls they see? .... No — only you. .... What do you know about me? The only thing that I can think of is that I — I didn't want to SELECTED QUOTATIONS 403 drink; but you — You seem to like this drinking very- much. How can I think that you belong to me? (Then, as he bends over her.) Please, please, sir, point your breath the other way. .... You are so sweet. .... Yes, I would like to keep so. On Detective Duty, 11. TRUTH AND LOVE {see LOVE) Come to the truth, and come as you may, All of love is begun. Whether you feel or think your way, Love and the truth are one. Love is the warmth, and truth the ray; Truth is the light, and love the day; Come to either, you wend your way Under the lasting sun. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxviil. And truth the sovereign is, not speech, nor sect. Who love God's truth love God. Idem, Seeking, xlvii. TRUTH, DEPENDENT ON VIEW-POINTS {see CURRENT) .... Truth can never change. .... We can. . . . . And change it? .... Change Its bearings for us. Truth is of the heaven: The mind regarding it is of the earth. The one is infinite, the other finite: The one expressed in light itself, the other In forms that but reflect light ; and the truth, Made such but by reflection, cannot flash An equal ray to every view-point. Columbus, 11., 2. TRUTH, GROWING OF ITSELF There is too much life In truth of any sort, when sown, to doubt Its growing. I have made a good beginning. .... A very small one. .... So a seed is too. Whose growth is great. When one awaits the dawn. A flush is better than a flash, which oft But bodes a rush-light. Columbus, i., 3. 404 A POET'S CABINET TRUTH, ITS BREATH~ Truth far more includes Than most men deem who would deem all things theirs. Ideals Made Real, xxxvii. TRUTH LIVING THROUGH CONCEALMENT Fact is, the truth in the world, like a fox on a farm, has been forced to hide in order to live; so finding it always involves finding out what has been kept in. The Ranch Girl, i. TRUTH, PEDDLING Whatever be his energy, no man can make a fortune peddling truth. The Two Paths, iii. TRUTH, RULING AND LEADING Where truth moved on, tho' few might know it, To rule by the meek and to lead by the poet. Love and Life, lvii. TRUTH, SEARCH FOR Yes, truth there is — I long have thought — One finds, when he has merely sought. A Life in Song: Doubling, xxxvi. No search for the truth with a willing mind Is a search for what one is willing to find. But a search for the willing of all mankind. Who seek but this, though many may leave them And loss of all in the home may grieve them. At last may slowly learn to trace Fair traits of the spirit in each new face. Love and Life, XLIX. TRUTH SEEKING The truth would seem too cheap, if brought To souls that ne'er for it had sought. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxxi. TRUTH, THE WINE OF MIND It may be late in life for us to get what makes the body young, but not so of the mind. When worn by work, no wine should bring it better cheer than truth. On Detective Duty, i. TRUTH TO MANHOOD Whatever the mission of life may be. Let love keep true, and let thought keep freC; SELECTED QUOTATIONS 405 And never, whatever may cause the plan, Enlarge the calHng to lessen the man. The cut of a coat, Cant chatter'd by rote, A priestly or princely state remote From the ties that bind A man to mankind. Are a clog and a curse to spirit and mind; For God, who made us, made only a man, No arms of a snob, no shield of a clan. Far better a friend that is friendly to God, Than a sycophant kissing a ribbon or rod. Whatever the Mission of Life may he. TRUTH TO SELF {see FRANK and FRANKNESS) Have your say. Whether you blame or applaud, I the behest of my soul obey, Just as it came from God. Musician and Moralizer. TRUTH TO SPIRIT But why should he so suffer! — I half think In truth to spirit there is that which makes All earth its enemy. .... Yet conquers it. Columbus, I., 3. TRUTH vs. COURTESY I fear To court with too much courtesy the truth That but to be truth bids us oft be curt — Dante, 11., i. TWILIGHT Where evening shadows lie reclined at close of day, ^ All the world grows more attractive, veil'd in twi- light's guise of gray; For, in dim relief, its outlines woo our wonder and surmise. A Life in Song: Dreaming, 11. TYRANNY, ITS OWN PERPETUATOR We men ar.e trained in government As well as manners. And the curse of force Is that its own mean methods keep alive Its first excuse for being. Tyranny 406 A POET'S CABINET May make of chaos order; but, when throned, Knows not a subject that is not a slave. Would one of those o'er whom my brother ruled. Have bent the knee to an authority Not ermined in the old familiar guise Of arbitrariness? Columbus, v., 2. TYRANT O ye masters and oppressors, ye who flout what poets do. Keen ye are, to treat as dreams the things these dreamers deem are true. Dreams they are, forsooth, for men, when wide awake to gains of earth. Selfish here and there suspicious, all assail each other's worth. Each a tyrant where he dare be, crowds his neighbor from his path. Whining then for laws to limit and restrain his neigh- bor's wrath. Whining till he find a tyrant, who with acts that goad and bind, Fitly bodies forth the tyrant whom he serves in his own mind. A Life in Song: Watching, x. No tyrant ever triumphed yet But first came cowards cringing to be trod on. Dante, in., 2. UNCONSCIENTIOUS AND UNCONSCIOUS When a man becomes unconscientious, the best thing you can do for him — eh? — is to make him un- conscious? Where Society Leads, i. UNDERSTAND At times, us men who think we understand him He welcomes but like strangers pushing in The front door of one's house before they knock. Dante, i., 2. UNDERSTOOD (see misunderstood) You think I craved their cheering? No, not that. I only want the best I have within To be made better and believed, and then Received by those about me. Idem. UNDRESS OF MEN WHEN WITH WOMEN A house is one thing, and a camp another. In one, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 407 men lay aside their working guise; but in the other they must keep it on. Not strange it shocks a shy man's modesty to meet with ladies in what custom calls undress! He likes to seem to hold them dear; not treat them as if he were cheapening them. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. UNEXPECTED, AN ELEMENT OF ENJOYMENT There is nothing a circus cheers more than a man who, in riding a horse, appears to be thrown, and is not. The Ranch Girl, i. UNIFORMS OF MILITIA . . Why is it that militiamen enlist? . . To wear their uniforms? . . Just for the looks. . . They fight for that? ^ . . Fight well, because of it. It makes them formidable. Dressed alike, they look like one big creature; if they wore no uniforms would look like many small ones. Tuition for her Intuition, ill. UNSOPHISTICATED GIRLS Girls unsophisticated are like bees : They buzz for all, and yet sip all their sweets From the first flowery lips that open to them. Haydn, xix. UPSHOT But now that the hour drew near in which to find out what would be the result of it, there was present to his consciousness a vague and sickening feeling, similar to what a boy has when, for the first time, he has ended loading up a gun, and is about to fire it off. He is not entirely certain whether the gun will hit its aim, kick back at himself, or end in a general explosion ; though, whatever is to be the upshot, he has braced himself for the attempt, and is relieved to think that the time has come to give the experiment vent. Modern Fishers of Men, 1. USE We live our lives for use; if men misuse us, Far better so than that we lose all use! The Aztec God, v. 408 A POET'S CABINET UTILITY Think not that every leaf that sprouts in spring Must be a stem straight-pointed toward a flower; That every bud must bring a blossom-nest In which to hatch and home a future fruit. Full many a leaf can only catch the shower And quench the dry limb's thirst; full many a bud Grow bright alone as might a short-lived spark Aglow to show some source of kindled fragrance. Berlin Mountain. VANITY AND DECEIT Ah, nothing like a she-hand, skill'd in needles, To prick men's vanity, and gown the hurt In vain disguises ! Columbus, iv., i. VERSE {see POEMS, POET and poetry) Where heedless ears Are disenchanted oft of all distaste By words men chant in verse whose music seems To pulse and pant like living blood and breath, Or leave the nervy lines like breezes blown From silence into song-land, as they cross iEolian chords; — who in a world like this Would not wish all the current of his thought To flow to speech amid these waves of rhythm? More swiftly and more surely thus, perchance. The truth that wells from him may clear the space Between his own and other souls, and swell The stream of truth which flows from each for all. A Life in Song: Prelude. VERSE AND LABOR All the measures of your verse may show How sweet can be the echoes waked anon By labor's ringing anvil. Ideals Made Real, Liii. VICE {see CRIMES and sin) At first, I shrank from life so mean; And oft would blush when I had seen How man could boast, yet be unclean; But, oh, I feel, as weeks wear on. Vice, oft unveil'd, appears not wan, And stings of sin wear blunt anon: SELECTED QUOTATIONS 409 One learns to know with little fear How seldom love and life appear Full wedded in this lower sphere. A Life in Song: Doubting, x. VICE, WEAKENING ONE's DEFENSES .... The way to get the better of a man is to attack him at his worst. .... Suppose you fail to find his worst? What happens then? You meet a man who drinks, and you can drug him; or gambles, you can fool him as your dupe; or sports with women, gown them as decoys; but if he have no vices, as a rule, he wears a mail whose every joint is covered. On Detective Duty, ill. VICES, INFLUENCE OF MEN's AND WOMEN's Men's vices, as we know, lead men astray; but, fuse them with a woman's natural charms, and you in- crease their power to tempt ten-fold. A woman doing just the thing that man does can play the devil in a sense impossible for him. Tuition for her Intuition, 11. VICTORY I know how deep and dark the vale Where some, fair fortune's heights to scale, Equipp'd with sword and shield and mail. Have found the power to wound the wrong, And dash aside its lances long. And press between its yielding throng; Till all men wonder' d at the fight Whose brunts had made their mail so bright That older glory shunn'd its light. Anon, triumphant o'er the wrong. And thron'd above earth's cheering throng, As chosen chiefs of all the strong, Behold, they stand where honor dwells, And earth with pride their story tells, Nor envy evermore dispels Their joy that swells at victory's bells. A Life in Song: Doubting, xvi. VIEWS DIVINE The views divine, with which such souls are bless'd, As, always looking up, forget to earn 410 A POET'S CABINET Earth's praise, because of joy in heaven's to which they ttirn. A Life in Song: Daring, xxxvii. VILEST There are times when the vilest of men disguises His foulness in forms that love most prizes; But alas! his gracious and graceful gait The vilest of men takes on too late. It never appears like a natural trait. Nor long, I deem, will his mien cajole Those finding the whole Of the sweet in his coating and not in the soul. Who tastes that dainty, alas, but gnashes At apples of Sodom! — he bites into ashes. As well pursue a will-o'wisp's flare! — His fire of devotion is all in the air. As well touch a carcass! — those pulsings avow'd Are worms that go crawling round under a shroud. No soul is within him our soul to accost. His might, not right, of repentance is lost. The glut of the senses, like vultures above A life that is dead, leaves nothing to love. Love and Life, liv. VILENESS OCCASIONING GOODNESS Do you know that goodness is a growth that springs from seed, and seed grows finest sometimes from a soil when at its vilest? The Two Paths, iii. Nay, tho' my transient look went wrong, my feet. Have followed righteousness. Ah, sire, you know Some think the only harvests heaven can find. Unfold from germs dropped near enough to hell To fear its heat and grow away from it. The Aztec God, iii. VILLAIN, AS COMPANION Such a villain, that his daintiest act Of kindness is a counterfeited coin With which he chaffers and intends to cheat I If I were drowning, I would spurn to grasp His hand, if it would draw me near himself. Better to die at once, when washed and clean, Than catch contagion and live on defiled. Cecil the Seer, i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 411 VIRTUE, ONE This heart of mine were heavy were it not Made Hght and bright by eyes that can detect, Beneath all veils disguising what it is, Its one sole virtue. Columbus, 11., i. VISIONARY A visionary man produces visions; And in the world that is, men want what is. Idem, I., 3. VOICE (see tones) The aged soldier's well kept, youthful voice, The ringing echo of a singing heart, Charm'd all, like chimings of the old church bells. Which, sweet in summer, yet still sweeter seem. When peal'd amid the winter's wind-whirl'd snow. A Life in Song: Note i. No wealth and rank belong to me. But yet, where thought and word are free, The voice alone a power may be. And rule the world by singing. A Song on Singing. VOICE, QUALITY OF And such a voice, too, ugh, ugh ! One would fancy her bom and cradled out here on a ranch, and forever asleep on it, catching cold, and every night growing hoarser by snoring. The Ranch Girl, ill. VOICE, TREMOR IN That tremor in the voice That seems to make the soul's pulse audible. A Life in Song: Note iii. VOICE vs. APPEARANCE Mere sheep Would not be driven by another sheep Though clothed in bear-skin, could they only hear His old familiar bleat. Columbus, iii., 2. VOTES, GETTING In getting votes, like getting fish at sea, no one can hope to know what fills the net, or leave out anything, however foul, 'till all the catch has been drawn in, not so? Tuition for her Intuition, 11. 412 A POET'S CABINET VOTES, GIVEN FOR EXPECTED FAVORS When men give us votes, They lie in wait to have their gifts returned, — To wrest from us an undeserved reward, Or brand us ingrates whom all friends desert. Dante, ii., 2. vow (see promise) The soul should conquer nature; but this means That spirits all should claim their rights, — be lords Of forms that spring from earth. But are they so When by a vow they swear to serve a form, And don the life and livery of a slave? Haydn, xli. voyage of life {see lives) On the scenes my gaze I fix'd then. — In the first, there met my eye Figures of a youth, and angel pointing out the head- lands high Of a land of peerless grandeur past an ocean wide and lone. In the next, near harbors lured the youth to shores where wrecks were strown. Next, he sail'd o'er rough seas bravely; next, did drift becalm'd awhile; Next, flew on where fairest breezes blew toward many a flowery isle. Next, great clouds were sweeping toward him, and his frame was bent with fear ; But the last scene show'd a port with heaven-high mounts that he drew near. A Life in Song: Dreaming, xxxi. voyager How far his views Reach'd round the world, tho' ne'er a voyager! For one may see this life and stay at home. Between two walls imagination oft Finds truth that world-wide travellers never know; Nor does it always make men wise, I deem. That they have napp'd in Nice or roam'd in Rome. A Life in Song : Note vi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 413 WAGE VS. SHARE {see SHARING PROFITS) This new reform That seeks to make the server and the served Walk hand in hand, while wage gives way to share, And, furthering all men to their furthest due, Thus lifts the low and lost. Ideals Made Real, Lxvii. WAITING A seer should know that truth, like morn, comes on By slow degrees, enlightening every sight; And, tho' he wakes the world it dawns upon. His faith should wait till souls can see the light. 'T is he that waves his own torch in the night Who feels that he must force on men its glare ; And, though, ere dawn, this seems the one thing bright, If taken for the sun, it leads men where Their leader's oil bums out, and they themselves despair. A Life in Song: Daring, lxxi. WALKING I have walk'd with her ; and my nerves have sway 'd As if each were the chord of a harp she play'd. And every pulse were a note to greet The soft low beat of her firm young feet. Idem, Loving, xi. WAR Oh, what a whirlwind's wave-lashed sea is war! Then hate breaks loose to over-flood the world, Hurling all love-built order upside down Till weal is drowned in darkness of the deep, And wreckage rides the crest. — They might have known They would be tricked. War's tactics all are acts Of treachery — the one sole sphere where he Who does the worst thing does the best, here faith Falls crushed beneath the trampling foot of force; And fair means trip, trailed mireward after foul. The Aztec God, i. When sounds of war awoke. And wide as earth a vision broke Of sword and gun in flash and smoke, And flags o'er freemen springing, A Song on Singing. 414 A POET'S CABINET WAR FOR FREEDOM These clouds of war break like a thunder-clap Amid clear skies of summer; but will bring Our plant of freedom to a finer fruitage. Cecil the Seer, ill., 2. O ye who see but lust for wealth or rule Where love would end one more wrong'd people's thrall, As your sires ended yours, how blind are ye! Who says there is no God is no more fool Than he who hears not God's voice in each call To loose man's bonds and let the oppress'd go free. Expansion. WARFARE ON EARTH PERPETUAL To men whose purposes, like ours, push on To work out high designs, all life on earth Is girt with warfare, where the light of heaven That brings us each new day's enlightenment, Contends with darkness, and there is no peace. Our very bodies are but phantoms formed Of that same darkness that we must oppose, And we must fight, if nothing else, ourselves. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. WEAKLING A weakling soon to die, Who, if train'd in-doors, might fail to make my friend- ship with the sky ! A Life in Song: Dreaming, vi. WEAKNESS Your weakness is your wickedness. Haydn, xxxix. WEALTH, ARISTOCRACY OF .... Has she been trying to sit down on you again? .... Yes; and I never realized before how heavy a lot of money in one's pocket can make a person. .... A chance for you to do missionary work, then! Did you try to give her an uplift? .... Missionary work! I felt like a butterfly in a bog trying to teach a worm to use wings. The more you get the worm to wiggling the deeper down it sinks. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 415 .... There's one blessed thing about it — for her. She never thinks of you as the butterfly or of herself as the worm, but vice versa. What Money Can't Buy, iii. WEAPON Wise men, when they fear a fight, Will never lend one weapon to a foe. Cecil the Seer, i. WED Some women, once wed, Drop the smile from their face with the veil they have shed. Love and Life, xxxiii. Men do not often wed their own ideals. .... I know it. I have thought it through; and yet, Without that, life can have some brightness left. Cecil the Seer, iii., i. WEDDED {see MARRIAGE and matrimony) And one would be the shelter' d tree Whose roots resist the blast ; And one the fruitful vine would be That lives to clasp it fast. A Life in Song: Loving, xix. O darling, can it be this frame Is mine in truth as well as name? My heart is trembling, love, to share. And make thy trembling hope its care. What is it brims these lips of thine? Is it a draft of wine divine? O surely never earthly gains Could thrill so sweetly through the veins. Come near me, love, for I would be Forever still more near to thee; And while our lips and arms entwine Let all I am or own be thine. A Life in Song: Loving, XLIX. When birds at morn are singing, And wake me from my rest. All heaven above me ringing Seems echoed in my breast; Yet not to answer back the birds, 4i6 A POET'S CABINET Nay, love, but thy warm touch and words, Which truly bring the heaven to me Because I wake to live with thee. At noontime, when my labor That toils from height to height Has distanced many a neighbor, And all my skies are bright; All, all seem nothing, till I find Myself within thine arms entwined, And thy dear lips assuring me That all I gain is gain'd for thee. When night falls dark and dreary, Or loss has check' d anon My powers that worn and weary Refuse to labor on. E'en then I ne'er can mourn the cost Of toilsome days and labor lost. While night and weariness to me Bring dreams that all are fill'd with thee. Idem, L. Twin lives have we, both rooted in one soil. And growing toward one hope for which we toil ; Twin lives have we, both branches of one vine, And all that threatens thy life threatens mine. A Life in Song: Loving, Lil. You true Pygmalion, make a maid ! — But all maids grow to us, when wedded once; For practical, they are, far more than men, And bow to powers that be. Though caught, like fish Through bait they crave not ere men tender it. They cleave to love once offer'd them; nor turn. Like male-friends, clinging — true as iron, forsooth — To each new stronger magnet ! Were they thus, Our homes might hardly hold our rivals there. Ideals Made Real, LVI. WEDDED, INFIDELITY IN THE Soon, bird-like, flitting from homes unblest. Their singing is all outside of their nest. Love and Life, xxxiii. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 417 WEDDING-DAY O wedding-day, thou flower most rare Of all that burst from bulbs of night, Lift o'er my eyes thy petals fair, ■ Nor shed for aye thy leaves of light, Nor let them e'er decay. A Life in Song: Loving, XLVii. WEDDING JOURNEY It often might turn out as well to take one's wedding journey before, not after, the church has shut one out from hearing, till he or his mate are dead, any more of the wedding music. The Ranch Girl, i. WEDGE, AS A SYMBOL OF INTERFERENCE .... Strange world this! One could know it whirled without the scientists — it jars life so! You draw your plan, you build, you put together two things that seem just fitted to each other; a third drops like a wedge between them — ugh! .... At times the wedge seems brought there by the builder. .... A wedge is part of all who push themselves successfully. .... Some think to reach his aims, half earth's as well as heaven's, a man should be in part, at least, a partner of the devil. The Two Paths, 11. WEEDS vs. ROSES If when we walk, we bring our weeds with us, We cannot hope our air will smell of roses. Dante, i., i. WEEST Then I saw a stranger marvel: — smaller than each mate so small. Floated near the weest wonder one could ever see at all. First it seem'd a passing snow-flake; then repaid my steadfast gaze With the outlines of a skiff there, fill'd with cheery, film-like fays; And up through the shifting atoms of the air that parted us Oozed in tiny tones a ditty, and the lines were worded thus : A Life in Song: Dreaming, xx. 27 4i8 A POET'S CABINET WEST, THE MIDDLE He left the south, and wander'd through the west, Where, Hke some Eden's garden form'd anew, The Mississippi's plains reward man's rest With boons that elsewhere to his toil are due. There sods are flower-beds, needing not a florist; There every field a vale where moisture flows; And every barren swamp, or cliff, or forest, A mere mirage in clouds where labor finds no foes. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxi. WHIM His brain seems like a bat's at blazing noon That works but to work out some inward whim And aims at nothing. Dante, i., 2. WHIMS {see deeds) Our wishes and ways are heirs of our whims, And our footsteps follow our eyes. Love and Life, xvii. We both stood round, scarce loath To note his own wild set inflating him With well-blown whims that swell'd his empty pride. Forsooth, the better bubble he could be. The better hope we two could have of what Should blow him from us. Ideals Made Real, 11. WHITTLED The problem wore me thin. My very wits, indeed, seem'd whittled off To point and probe it. Ideals Made Real, lx. WHY Within our souls is much of yearning That patient thoughts are slowly turning To deepest and to broadest learning That cannot answer back a "why?" Like sailors, when they watch a sky Where fogs, offscourings of the sea, Becloud their sight, so often we Must guess our reckonings, it may be. Then ye who with us onward sail. And watch our ways, with faces pale, And, hissing fiercely as the gale, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 419 Our right of reticence deny, Ye force us, if we must reply, To make your fears increase or lie. A Life in Song: Doubting, xxvill. WICKEDNESS VS. WISDOM Whatever wisdom leaves wickedness in some form has entered. Fundamentals of Education. WIFE, THE Ah, like the sky encircling the sea. Embracing his thoughts wherever they be, She rests above His life with a love That binds him fast, yet leaves him free. Toward her his thoughts in fancies rise, Like mists aglow in the sunset skies, And like nights here When the stars appear. His gloom gives way at the glance of her eyes. Would God her heart could ever abide, A heaven for his heart's heaving tide, Still calm above His restless love, And all the storms that over it glide! The Wife. WILL (see broad) Like wrecks that up and down are toss'd. Till plunged beneath the waves and lost. How aimlessly, through blame and praise. Through depths of nights and heights of days, We men are swept along our ways ! But have our lives no nobler state Than drifting thus with tides of fate? — No power to stem them, while they feel The filling sail, the whirling wheel. The steadfast helm that guides the keel? Tho' oft our course be turn'd about By wind and wave of hope and doubt, Come all our motives from without? Does not some impulse oft begin With mind's propelling power within? 420 A POET'S CABINET Is not the soul, whose low depths thrill, An offspring of perfection still; And Godlike by creative will? A Life in Song: Doubting, xv. WILLOW SWITCH .... You never break a boulder with a willow switch. .... A switch might crawl beneath the boulder, and dislodge it, and make it fall. Then it would break itself. On Detective Duty, i. WILL-POWER There is not The littlest finger of the littlest nerve In all my frame here, that could summon power To move where you moved not. .... Ah, then your will Is mightier than you deemed it? You can rise But when you wish to rise? The haunts of heaven Need not have walls to keep you out of them? Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. WILL-POWER MUST BE APPARENT IN TRAINING You know the danger for a man who trains wild beasts, if accident give them a chance to taste his blood. So sometimes with the man who trains, in school or camp or factory, those animals that we term men. His will is what directs this training ; and when he lets what fills his heart leak out, they note his loss of will-power far more than presence of his love. A wise man never lets his veins be drained of life-force to augment another's force till sure that this will not be turned against himself. The Little Twin Tramps, i. WINDOW-BLINDS You do not fear Insulting nature when it comes to bless you With window-blinds barred tight, as if the day Had brought not light but lances? Dante, ii., i. WINE, WHITE White, not so? Its hue Will fit the sunny air, and make us think Of drinking-in the sunshine! Columbus, I., I. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 421 WING, ON THE A spirit conscious of a higher mission Is usually on the wing. Columbus, 11., 3. WINNING LOVE But whenever the good of all good comes, That most is worth possessing, The feast of which all else are crumbs, The viand of which the dressing; When comes true love that to gain, after all, Is the one thing in life worth doing, Men think it will yield to a beck or a call. And does not need pursuing. Ah, fools, as little of good we earn By ease on earth as by sinning; A love for which we are wise to yearn • Can only be won by the winning. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxvi. WISDOM Wisdom is not that knowledge of the world which the eye receives, which can be pictured upon its pupil. It is the methods of the world fused into thought, often with untold sufferings, — the image of the actual as photographed — amid the glowing fervor of experience, burnt in upon the living tissues of the soul, and then kept there after the transient din and smoke of words and deeds have vanished. Suggestions for the Spiritual Life, v. He paused the sober vineyard's toil to see. If wisdom came, let go what came before it : 'T is no aristocrat to need a pedigree. A Life in Song: Serving, lviii. WISH AND WISDOM Thus, like two cowards, clinging each to each. Weak wish nudged wisdom, and weak wisdom wish. Who gets on better? Ideals Made Real, xiii. WIT and WITS How much of good is often slain By small, sharp shafts of wit, without restraint Shot forth in sport, and lodged where one hears no complaint. A Life in Song: Daring, xxxviii. 422 A POETS CABINET The light mind is the bright mind. Wit and wits Are twins ; without the other each is lacking. Columbus, II., 2. A student of human nature, or lunacy — much the same thing — finds out that those whose wits bubble over the first are the first to lose their wits; that the mind whose thought comes first as a joke to be cracked, is the mind that is first to be cracked itself. The Ranch Girl, i. WITHIN It is within that love's warm springs begin, Whose genial flow makes fertile all about. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxvii. WOE Men meet woe As moaning orchards meet an April blast ; Their wounded limbs that first sway to and fro Are red with blossoms, when the storm has past. So sometimes trouble keeps the feelings younger Than ever joy could. Many souls they say. Deprived of light, for simple sunbeams hunger, And robb'd of rest, contract no mildew of decay. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxxiv. WOES, DEADLIEST Those watching death-beds, mark That souls, when dying, ere above they spring,^ Breathe deep, then pass away. And so with minds. When come the deadliest woes. Down deep in thought I scarce had deem'd that aught from hell could roil Such dregs of bitterness long undisturb'd. Ideals Made Real, xxix. WOMAN .... What, pray, is a woman? .... What Is made to woo a man. The Aztec God, iv., I. .... That woman's gowns Are always clinging to you — look as if She thought to make a woman of yourself. Confound their sex ! .... Be not so hard on them. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 423 .... No, they are soft, More soft than cats, and mew, too, ay and scratch. Have seen their bHsters! ay, have seen a man Whose very soul had been scratched out by one. Columbus, III., I. WOMAN AND WAR My throbbing heart Would spend its blood in blushes for my shame Till it forgot to give my being life, If, by a single sigh, I durst keep back One soldier from the ranks of this just war. Cecil the Seer, iii., 2. WOMAN AS A man's FOE A man need not have vices of his own to make him squeal when squeezed in a woman's vise. Remember Sampson. Strength and steel count little against the subtle weapons of a woman. On Detective Duty, iii. WOMAN, AS A RULER {see FEELING) It is not In nature that a man obey a woman. And human ways, when not in nature, bode Inhuman tampering somewhere. He should know That none can turn to she the pronoun he Without an 5 that puts a hiss before it. Columbus, III., I. WOMAN, HER ELECTRIC TOUCH That in men which yields to the electric touch of a woman is in their metal. No ordinary tempering saves it. On Detective Duty, in. WOMAN, HER FUNCTION .... What can woman do? — what starts with her? .... No matter what. Men sow the seed, you think. How could it grow, were it to find no soil? Cecil the Seer, i. WOMAN, HER MIND VS. MAN's "And what," she sigh'd, "is this "That men-minds do so well? — discriminate? Yet even I, dull woman, I can see Brains differ in their grain. But men, forsooth, jFeel so much matter lodged in their brains — eh? — 424 A POET'S CABINET That they weigh mind like matter in the lump, And judge of character, as if 't were clay: — This forms a man — has wisdom, firmness, power; And that, a maid — is foolish, fickle, frail, And never can be wholly safe, forsooth, Except when subject to a man, her lord!" Ideals Made Real, x. WOMAN SUPERFLUOUS WHERE NOT NEEDED A woman, like a merchant's wares, can never seem too dear where she is wanted. But in a place where there is no demand for her — well, one might say she might be shelved. Tuition for her Intuition, i. WOMAN, WHAT A MAN LIKES IN .... Is it kind in him to get you to do things that Bernard wouldn't like? .... Why should everything I do be determined by what Bernard likes or dislikes? .... Because he's such a good fellow! — so fine grained! — such a clear complexion! — such white teeth! — Why, a moment ago, when he came in here, and was standing next to me, his breath was just as sweet, just as free from the smell of whiskey or to- bacco, as a man always likes to find a girl's when he comes near her, and dreams that, possibly, in certain circumstances, he might dare to kiss her ! .... {snatching the cigarette from her mouth and throwing it into the fireplace) . Bah ! — It's mean of you, all the same. Where Society Leads, ii. WOMAN, WHEN REJECTING A MAN I swore 't was ever so With all her sex. Worth never weigh'd a straw. A very satyr could outwoo a sage. — Weak woman ! — yet she must be weak — ^in brain Or body. Better to be weak in brain! She then, perchance, might serve a husband's thought. And wisdom's voice might rule the family! But were her moods too strong to serve his thought. She might serve that in him which could not think. — To wed she-brains, a man should seek to be Commended as a fool! Ideals Made Real, xxxix. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 425 WOMANHOOD Faith always waits On perfect womanhood. Show men a form Whose outward symmetry of nature frames A symmetry of soul, whose pure-hued face Complexions pureness of the character, Whose clear, sweet accents outlet clear, sweet thought, Whose burning eyes flash flame from kindled love, And all whose yielding gracefulness of mien But fitly robes all grace-moved sympathy, — Ay, find a soul whose beauty of the shield But keeps more bright the blade of brain because Of what seems merely ornament, — to her All men will yield a spirit's loyalty. The fairy-goddess of the world of fact, Dream-sister of the brotherhood of deed, An angel minister as well as queen. The splendor of her station Hfts her high But like the sun that she may light us all. Columbus, II., 3. For that so gentle, babelike sufferer, I lost all fear; and, true to womanhood, I loved him more for low and helpless moans Than ever I had loved him when in health. Haydn, xi. woman's absorption when in love .... What a fire divine Must blaze within a woman's heart, who deems That her one form illumined by its light Casts all things else in shade! .... Do men love less? .... Nay, but have eyes for things they do not love. The Aztec God, 11. woman's assurance True to her sex, unanswer'd yet assured, The woman left. Ideals Made Real, xii. woman's character revealed in private Strong character that can convert and use another's thought and feeling for one's own, is often shown by women more in private than in public. Tuition for her Intuition, i. 426 A POETS CABINET woman's grief, and man You know no man can flinch it : woman's grief, If there be any manhood left in him, Will rouse his efforts to bespeak her peace. Ideals Made Real, xviii. woman's influence And she, a queen; alas, but, like a queen. Was doom'd to hold a throne where rivals came, To spy her weakness out, and wrest away A power that could be kept by power alone. — How sad for woman when her hopes were based On practice that must all her heart conceal. That must be conquering ever or be crush'd! Ideals Made Real, LXix. woman's influence on life There are a thousand things that life has need of that only women have the brains to bring it — the comforts of the home, its furnishings, its food, the training of the children there, the tempering of the household atmosphere to be congenial to the neigh- bors' households. Let men control in business; only women can rule the social circle. Man may make a fortune, but it is the woman makes the fortune for- tunate in furthering friendship. Tuition for her Intuition, i. woman's influence on men's manners We men are so polite that, in that f^te called life, we serve what might be termed deserts to women more often than to men. Their temperament seems apter to assert the subtle law that like attracts the like. We men may have the strength of steel, but women have a magnetism stronger than all steel and draw from us the thing we get from them. If they be gentle, we are gentlemen. If they be rude, why, we are rude ourselves. Would be discourtesy, forsooth, to meet them on terms that might not meet their approbation ! Humph , all our lives they keep us in our places as planets do their satellites. Idem, woman's love True flames, these women flicker with the wind. But use you breath enough, their natures yield. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 427 Yet blow for their sakes, not for your ideals. One seldom finds a sweetheart sweet enough To love her suitor's pinings for mere whims. Nay, they alone our all-in-all would be; And so are jealous of our male ideals. Then, too, they are creative less than we, And cling more to the creature, love and serve Embodied life that may be seen and felt. You doubt me? — Test it, — Read that rhyme you wrote. Inspired by fancy. — Say so ; — still they hint "Ah, this was she, or she, whom once he loved." Ideals Made Real, lvi. woman's thoughts A woman's thoughts are echoes, and she echoes The thoughts that have been nearest his heart too To whom she stands the nearest. Cecil the Seer, i. WOMEN AS CONFIDANTES .... No third is needed where one starts ex- changing confidences with women. .... Not unless he wants to have a witness in some future blackmail suit. The Two Paths, iii. WOMEN AS SLAVES AND MASTERS How women love their fetters! — Best, perhaps! They make sweet slaves, but very bitter masters. Cecil the Seer, i. WOMEN, BEST ENJOYED WHEN NOT TOO TALKATIVE Most of US who have to pitch our tones against a woman's prefer to catch them, as when playing ball, one at a time. Tuition for her Intuition, i. WOMEN, EDUCATION OF You know the crystal globes clairvoyants look in, And think they see as heaven sees then? — Some women Have crystal souls. One faces them to find His thoughts divine, himself akin to God. .... If that be woman's nature • • • • It is not, Till polished in the friction of the schools. Which some think needless ; but where woman's mind Has never been made bright, the thoughts of men Will never flash for it. Cecil the Seer, i. 428 A POETS CABINET Heaven preserve The world from women rear'd to feel but weak, Whose whole experience, nurtur'd not to think, Unfolds in passions pert of wishes dwarf 'd, Afraid of truth and dodging to deceit ! Let loose from home, their thing that ought to think Is dry and hollow as a sounding-board Behind a tongue that, like a weather vane, Creaks with the windy scandal of the town Till endless malice make one's ear-drum ache. At one spot hammer'd sore, and o'er and o'er, With humdrum gossip of surrounding naught. Small gain are they, to crown our courtships grand, Prinked out with flowers and flattery! Wise man: Flowers draw the bee, and flattery the fool. One stings; the other — Laugh not. Ideals Made Real, lvi. WOMEN, FASHIONABLE, AND CIVILIZATION .... If you have so poor an opinion of women, why did you marry one — or two for that matter? — why not marry a man? .... It was not the fashion; but, if things keep on as they have been going, it may become so. One might be able to control an obstreperous boy! .... What things keep on? .... The processions that some of you women — but, thank God, not all of you nor the most of you — are leading. .... Leading where? .... At the top and bottom of society, where, at both ends, our civilization seems going to rot. Where Society Leads, ii. WOMEN, FRIENDSHIP OF You know it well, what friendship craves ; and these Light, simpering women, testing manhood's woof By worthless nap that tickles their vanity, — O I shall wait some coming woman, I, Who needs no suing since in soul we suit ; Nor ruling either. — Love shall rule us both. Ideals Made Real, lvi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 429 WOMEN, LOST .... A pretty girl like that out here at night! — She might get into trouble. ..... Why?— Who with? .... With anyone who knows what life is worth. .... What is it worth? .... When you have bought an orange, you suck its juice. The rest you throw away. .... I knew you New York people did that sort of thing in business. .... And New York people — they make a busi- ness of everything, .... Get out of men, first, all that they are worth, then throw, or let them throw themselves, away? And when once thrown away, are lost forever? .... Not men, not always — women, though, most always ! .... Why so? .... The more a thing is worth, the more it usually weighs ; the more it weighs the more it sinks ; the more it sinks, the less its likelihood to rise itself, or to be lifted up by others. The Two Paths, iii. WOMEN MUST BE MADE AMENABLE TO LAW The men who let a woman start stripping them of property, and not protect themselves, would be about as shameless as if they let her strip them of their clothing. Tuition for her Intuition, i. WOMEN, POLITICAL INFLUENCE OF {see ENFRANCHISE- MENT) What we want to know is how most wisely to obtain the thought that comes from women. It may not be true that suffrage is the only, or the best, way. One half the energy now spent in pushing for theoretic suffrage might bring women the practical results of laws they need; nor could obtaining suffrage do with- out the energy that needs expending now. For years, I lived in Washington, a place where no one votes; and did I want to vote? Not I. Why not? I felt my rights more safe entrusted to representatives of others than of those, myself included, who would have formed the voting population. The principle applies 430 A POET'S CABINET to all our suffrage. Subtract the women well versed and refined, who find the polls distasteful; then add up the numbers, just the opposite, of women inclined to move in flocks, with feeling swayed as party-friend or foe may urge or force, and what would follow? — You would lessen vastly what now is much too small here, — the proportion of well-informed and indepen- dent voters. You think it wise to risk results like that? Idem,i. WOMEN, RUNNING AWAY FROM Alone? Alone? — With all those maidens praying for your presence? .... I dodged behind a tree, then, when they left, Came here. .... A valiant warrior! . . . . Yes — with men. .... With women? .... He with her I think is valiant Who waives what would be force. . . . . And runs away? .... Why, yes, if elsewise he might be ungentle. The A ztec God, iii . WONDERS Who search the world, most wonder there to see How few the wonders are, where'er they stray. Behold, the same fair children, wild with glee; The same proud parent, watching where they play ; The same strong men, bent downward by life's troubles ; The same sad dames with tired eyes turn'd above ; The same small graves where drop life's bursted bubbles. Made dark by fears of ill, and bright by hopes of love. A Life in Song: Serving, lxxvi. WOODS {see music of nature) Away from ways where human wills outwit The wisdom that has made earth what it is, To where, in that true temple of the spirit. The winds are whispering what men know not of. And flower and leaf are trembling like the heart That feels the presence of the power divine. — The Aztec God, iv., i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 431 WORD Where thought appeals to thought The only sovereign is the wisest word, Which sometimes is the last word ; — any way, Is always of the spirit, and needs not Accoutrements and courtesies of form To prove its prestige. We can waive them, then. And let the spirit prompt us as it may. Columbus, II., 2. WORDS (see CALL, SPEECH and talk) Words are like wrinkles, external marks of internal moods. Sometimes by tracing back the derivation of a word, one may find out the mental condition that originated it. Art in Theory, xvii. More to them all than any one of these Is he whose words, confined not by the grave. Still cheer their thoughts, and guide them in their deeds, And, oft repeated to each other, keep As bright his memory as do stars by night The light of suns that long have sunk to rest. A Life in Song: Finale. Mere words are wind ; nor all their storm or stress Can pack the air so thought cannot see through it. Dante, 11., i. When sworn to enter honor's list. Of which his fellows could or would not know. His frank soul merely thought the truth to show, But he had stopt at words ; and earth, that yells To cheer the gold-laced swaggerers, who but go Unwhipt before their trump to onset swells. Will stand no words in protest — better cap-and-bells ! A Life in Song: Daring, lxvii. Let thought-built systems fail each modern test; On truth beneath all systems faith may rest. On truth unshaken by earth's changing facts. Inspiring pure desires and generous acts. Where spirit reigns alone, and through all creeds Impels all good men toward the self -same deeds, Who learn that though their words be contrary, All worthy souls have inward sympathy. Idem, Seeking, liv. 432 A POET'S CABINET Without a word We walk'd at first, like pilgrims near a shrine They much revere, who, fill'd with thrills too fine To throb through words accented, satisfy Their souls by feeling that the god is nigh. Idem, IX. WORDS, AS ELEMENTS OF BELIEF The walls were always echoing back the words You spoke; and no one else was let to speak. .... All heard what they believed, .... Could they do else Than to believe what they were always hearing? — Dear words, how we must thank them for our faith ! Cecil the Seer, ii., 2. WORDS OF TRUTH Clear as light, come proofs to show How the breath of truth is keener than the bayonets of its foe; How the gentlest words can waken consternation and despair ; Though they leave no track behind them; nor with shadows dim the air; Do not glisten in the sunshine ; do not thunder o'er the plain ; Do not flash the cannon's lightning; leave no smoke to shroud the slain ; — Words of truth, re-echoed like the words of Christ, that everywhere, When they summon powers that lurk in forms pos- sess'd of evil there, Make them rend the form that held them, leave it writhing on the ground. While their spirits fly to darkness and forgetfulness profound. A Life in Song: Watching, iv. WORDS, PASSIONATE (see ANGER, IMPETUOUS and passion) Those words were but a whiff, whiff light as breath One blows at flies that come to trouble him. And can it be that they? — I half believe (My words have conjured cursed deeds before) The very atoms of the air, like pools, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 433 Hold spawn-strown vermin-eggs ! If one but speak, But break the silence ; if his breath but bear One faintest puff from passionate heat within, Lo, breaking open some accursed shell, It hatches forth foul broods of venomous life That come, blown backward by the changing wind, To haunt him who provok'd their devilish birth! By day they sting our eyes, and make us weep; By night steal through unguarded gates of sense, And sting our souls in dreams ! — My heart ! and you? — How could you deem my thoughtless words to be The voice of so deform'd a wish as this? Haydn, xxxvi. WORDS THAT ARE WEAPONS True words alone are weapons of true thought. If I be free to use these, I am free To be truth's champion. If, to gain the place You wish me, or to hold it, being gained, I let my tongue be tied, I live a slave. Idem. Trust not in words with wind alone to back them. Nothing is quite so empty as the sky Behind a blow, when once it has blown by. Cecil the Seer, i. WORDS THAT HURT • • • . We exchanged some words .... And flung them hard to make them hurt the thing They hit, not so? — They made your faces red. Dante, i., 2. WORDS vs. DEEDS {see DEEDS and talk) Not how men Can fight the air with words, but how their frames Can back their words with deeds that free their air Of all that blocks right doing, this is that By which a man reveals his worth in life. Idem, II., I. Wise men don't trust the words of those whose works deceive. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., i. WORDS, WHEN INFLUENTIAL Words are a currency that owe their worth Less to their substance, often, than their source. Cecil the Seer, i. s8 434 A POET'S CABINET WORK (see FAITH and knowledge) The air of heaven to-day is full of sunshine. Shut in here do you feel it? No; none do But those who journey forth to do Hfe's work. Dante, ii., i. WORK MAKES MEN VALUE THINGS It's those whose work has earned them homes who prize them, and will work to keep them. The Little Twin Tramps, ill., 2. WORK, UNDERTAKEN TO DROWN GRIEF I strove to drown my grief in work. The work Was but a worm's that eats from day to day The morrow's bed, at morning dragging on A soulless trunk, through troubles void of hope. Ideals Made Real, lxii. WORK vs. RECREATION (see REST) Men measure all a day is worth by work that they can do in it. Just think! — One might as well say skies were made for clouds, and not for suns, or years for winter, not for summer; or plants for thorns, and not for roses; or life for men, and not for women; or lips for drinking; not — tut, tut! — A day's worth measured by its work ! — As if a man's day were a donkey's. Our donkey takes his pleasure on the farm exactly once a year; so papa. The Little Twin Tramps, I. WORKING FOR A LIVING A few centuries ago, both the souls and bodies of those who worked for a living, whether men or women, were supposed to belong to those for whom they worked. To-day this sort of thing is played out. Those who work for themselves are the most likely to be independent, — to belong to nobody but themselves, and therefore the most worthy of respect for what they are in themselves. The Snob and the Sewing Girl, ii. WORKING WOMEN VS. ARISTOCRATIC (see ARISTOCRACY) .... A woman of the working classes .... Is not of the aristocratic classes. I know it. They do not work. They expect others to work for them. Humph! — I know plenty of them, who go in the very best society, — ay, in our society, too — who, SELECTED QUOTATIONS 435 rather than lift one finger to do any work for themselves, would prefer to have others steal for them. Idem. WORLD The world for every man Holds but his own world, be it large or small. A Life in Song: Serving, xv. WORLD, LEAVING THE God made our nature. Who make way with it, Make way with manhood, turn to suicide. He made the world where works His Providence To train our life. Who leave the world, leave Him — Haydn, XLii. WORLD, THE NEW, DESCRIBED BY COLUMBUS You see what we have brought: — These birds and animals unknown to Spain, All promising vast wealth in plumes and furs ; These trees and plants that grow like reeds in swamps, And covered thick as leaves with ready food ; These aromatic herbs, in which all forms Of sickness find a sure and natural cure; This gold that lies upon the soil like dust, Or else like pebbles tumbling from the cliffs, And easily moulded into ornaments ; These pearls and gems that Une the river-beds. Columbus, IV., 2. But what that land contains is in supply As far beyond the treasure here, as is A whole vast continent beyond the store That can be packed in one small vessel. Yes, That realm of boundless wealth in rock and soil And boundless progress for the state and soul. Past all that human fancy can conceive, Lies there, embed in crystal seas and skies, A wondrous gift, fresh from the hand of God, As if untarnished by the touch of man. Awaiting your most Christian Majesties. Idem. Add these brave people, sons of God like us. With generous natures and compliant wills. Who met us kneeling, as we knelt on shore. With reverent souls prepared by heaven itself To welcome us as heavenly messengers. Idem. 436 A POET'S CABINET They thought us fresh from heaven: Our flesh was fair; that wide, wild sea our slave. Oh, what a race to be made Christians of ! Idem, IV., I. Out there, Except with chiefs — it is the same, you know, With our high classes — people live in pairs. As birds do; and, myself, I saw no hint Of lust or competition. They all seem To love their neighbors as themselves, and own All things in common. Why, to us they gave Whatever we could ask ; and often too Without the dimmest prospect of return. Idem, WORLD, THE TRUTH ABOUT THIS ■ You villain, to say that ! .... Humph! I have seen the world, and tell you truth. You deem the truth is villainy? — it is — The truth about this world. The Aztec God, iv., i. WORLD, THE, VS. THE CHURCH {see CHURCH, FORM AND SPIRIT, and training) .... Poor youth, when you know more about the world . . . . I shall know more about such men as you ; Know how the dust of earth can make one blind, And din can make one deaf, till skies can blaze And heaven's voice thunder, yet no sight nor sound Reach .... What?— . . . . What was a soul ! But there are souls Are stolen too when stoled. The devil's hand Outdoes the deacon's. There is nothing left But vestment. All the barterer's priceless birthright Goes for the mess of pottage that he feeds on. Not strange such like to limit other's joys, Turn nature inside out and upside down. Claim spirit rules where all are slaves of sense, And heaven their realm though all is rimmed by hell. Cecil the Seer, i. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 437 " The world," what means this, but the world alone, — The mass, devoid of mind, truth, spirit, love? — But holds no Church the same? — A mass? — ay, ay. Devoid of mind? — Why not? — But show the place It crowds not reason out to edge in faith. — But "faith," say you, "is reasonable"?— Ay, When in it there is reason; when the thing In which it trusts is truth. But, ah, too oft, Just prick the forms, and back of them you find — What? — truth? — nay, nay, a priest — a man. Haydn, Li. WORLDLINESS {see spiritual) Some more, some less, with little to love. We all to the sky oft leave the dove. We delve away in the depth of our trade; And all get dusty before well paid. Some like the dust; some mourn its need; And some are only intent to succeed. Too may grow prostitutes, hugging to all, Good, bad, or indifferent, beauty or scall, Till all wishes that worth would have kept Die out of the man unwept. No pride or shame for himself or his kind Brings up to the cheek one blush. Whatever is there is a counterfeit flush, — Mere paint on the surface of sham behind. Love and Life, Liii. Ah, now, I know how Adam grieved that Eve could fall; How Eve herself, when round her soul first crept The serpent's cautious coils of smooth deceit, To strap her inch by inch! I read it now. That tale: 't is all an allegory, ay; — That serpent means the world. The world steals round. Intent to seize and own each heir of heaven. Not long are souls allow'd ideal life, Not long unfetter'd sense or hearts unbound: Our smiles grow stiffer, till, some fatal day. The last is clutch'd and held, a hideous grin. Then, when the body stirs not with the soul. 438 A POET'S CABINET The last nerve wrested from the Spirit's rule, Naught in us left of love, the world unwinds: Our capturer dissolves in mist or dust : — And we, for its embrace, have lost our God! Haydn, L. WORLDLY (see LUST, SOUL and spirit) This world has ways where far we roam From the purer light That our souls deem bright, And yet this world is now our home; And planted here for some good cause Like seed to grow In a soil below, The laws of our lives are worldly laws. We cannot live the life on high, We cannot be In all things free, Till the flower shall bloom and its fragrance fly. Till then, hemm'd in from heaven by earth, 'T is ours to reach For the good in each ; Nor waive the higher for lower worth. A Life in Song: Loving, xxxii. WORLDLY WAYS If wiser than the world we were, Why should we act, forsooth, in worldly ways? What need that all should don the uniform That fits men for the social march of fools? Ideals Made Real, lxii. WORMS, CRUSHING The corner stones of monumental deeds Must always crush some worms. Cecil the Seer, i. WORRY (see JAR OF life) Does not the world, then, worry life enough, — That one should crave for more to worry him? Do I so lack for exercise? Ah me! Some nervous mothers — bless them! — shake their babes. I never deem'd it wise; oh, no — am sure SELECTED QUOTATIONS 439 The friction frets the temper of the child. — Not natural, you see: God never shakes The ground with earthquakes when we wish for spring. He does not drive life from its germ, He draws By still, bright warmth. Haydn, xvi. WORSHIP OF GOD {see FORM AND SPIRIT, and RITUALISM) How vain is worship, when its grandeur calls Regard away from heaven to human skill ! Far better level all our temples' walls Than hide the thought of Him who rear'd the hill! Ay, better hush the praise that stirs the senses. Than have it drown the still small voice within; And better have no church for our offenses Than splendid rites that daze the soul made blind to sin. A Life in Song: Serving, xliv. And, think you, writ or vestment, art or arch, Can image Him, or His domain unbound? Nay, trust my word, we worship Him the best, When two or three together, loving truth And one another, thus repeat, once more, An incarnation, imitating Christ. Ideals Made Real, lxxiii. As men's lives are, so their thoughts are; groping in the dark they feel Forms of flesh or robes that wrap them, and forget what both conceal. Clouds hang low, and hide the sky, and make men think that heaven is low. Till they kiss the dust, half hoping God is dust, and worshipt so. A Life in Song: Watching, iv. In a sense, All worship . . . springs from what is true. For if to sin it ever could be due. Could grafts of true religion flourish now Upon the old religious nature's bough? But if, in spite of tendencies to sin. We still believe men's motives pure within, Then all that God has made appears to be — Be leaf, limb, flower, or fruit the part we see — Some perfect part still of life's perfect tree. Idem, Seeking, xxiv. 440 A POETS CABINET WORSHIP OF MEN Worship is the interest men pay For worth when they can get it — justly due To men of principle. Cecil the Seer, i. If any idol's niche be tenantless, The one all worship is the one all want there. Idem. WORTH Too often in the judgments of this world Worth yields to weight. Columbus, i., 3. WORTH, ETERNAL The force that keeps eternal worth from light Is but of time — a thing short-lived. Idem, v., 2. WRECKED, A LIFE How fast he fails ! If there were once a time We feared he might be wrecked, a time has come When his firm spirit reels, the prey of waves Far worse than waves that sweep the sea alone. Such havoc has fierce envy wrought in him, What wonder if soon nature, in revolt. Should doff the guise this world has torn to rags And give him something richer? Idem. WRECKED AND RESCUED Then soon, as a coJEfin falls to a grave, The yawl sank down, but alack! Like fingers white the crests of the wave Were clutching and flinging it back. Then, whirled, as it were, in a drunkard's dance, It staggered, anon, and lunged. Then, tilted aside, like a hostile lance, At the hull of the wreck it plunged. Three times, in vain, that helpless yawl Toward the deck of the wreck was tost. Three times the wrecked, as it back would fall. Looked down with the look of the lost. Then shouts came snapping like whips the blast, The yawl to the boom had clung ; And, one by one, from the wreck, at last, Black forms like bales were flung. The Religion of Rescue. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 441 WRINKLE {see words) A wrinkle shows the will. How Barton Took the General. WRINKLED "Brows always knit grow wrinkled in their prime. A Life in Song: Daring, xxx. WRITING {see LITERATURE, POEMS and POETS) WRITING ABOUT VS. RIGHTING EVILS .... I don't believe in writing about evils and, at the same time, not trying to right them, .... But Dick and Jack say that's what they are trying to do. ■« .... They could do it much more effectively. .... How? .... If they think that it's the millionaires that cause society to be corrupt, it's their first duty to cease to be millionaires. What Money Can't Buy, iv WRITING, AND FEELING .... How do you feel when you write that sort of thing? .... Feel? .... Yes ; a man can't be inspired without feeling it, can he? .... I should think you would feel like a balloon when it has lost its ballast, and gone bounding up into the highest sunshine. .... Or like a hen that has dropped an Qgg, and is trembling into cackles from sheer nervous exhaustion. .... Or like a fellow who has flooded himself with so much beer that he is obliged to belch it over- board — very, very light-headed. Idem, 11. WRITING AS RELATED TO ART A man need not be a genius, in order to write well, and if he be a genius, he cannot write well without developing his gift according to the methods common to every art. The Literary A rtist and Elocution. WRONG, ENDURING CHARACTER OF Who can tell What ages it may take to overtake The wrong one's own wrong lashes into flight ! Cecil the Seer, 11., 2. 442 A POET'S CABINET WRONG, FIGHTING AND RIGHTING .... To yield to wrong, is not to fight it. .... To double wrong, is not to right it. The Little Twin Tramps, iii., 2. WRONG, ONE OVERBALANCING MUCH RIGHT It is not what has been but what is that moves the senses, which, far more than sense, determine human judgments. This is why, I take it, that so often one careless wrong can overbalance a life-long care in doing right. .... But is that just? .... No; true. The Little Twin Tramps, iv. WRONG THAT THRIVES Wrong that thrives, becomes presumption; plans to make the right retreat ; Blows with madden'd lips the trumpet heralding its own defeat, Blows, till righteous indignation hails its opportunity, Glad to break a guilty peace, and crush its foe eter- nally. A Life in Song: Watching, iii. YANKEES In our right merry State of Maryland, No Yankees with their endless reprimand Make men run mad with isms fit to wear Strait-jackets! we their notions will not stand. Idem, Daring, xlviii. YEARS, EFFECTS OF A few short years, how soon their sun and storm And shifting seasons change one's face and frame ; And what one vaguely deems himself, transform To that which friend and foe alike disclaim : How calm the heart, which once those calls to fame Thrill'd through like beatings of a signal drum ! Those throbs, by turns, of hope and fear, how tame ! — Familiar ticks of life's old pendulum, Wound up to vibrate on till hope and fear are dumb. Idem, XII. YGGDRASIL While thus he spoke, I, dead to sight and sound, Had walk'd abstracted, till I mark'd around SELECTED QUOTATIONS 443 Strange shadows quivering over all the ground, The which, anon, far darker would be made. They startled me; for what had caused the shade? No tree nor cliff about us rose between The moon-light and ourselves to form a screen. But when I glanc'd above, there met my sight As high as clouds could be, as wild a light As ever man could see, — light coming not From moon or stars; one could not judge from what. As lightning were, if constant, so it glared Athwart the sky, and tore and cross'd and flared. That strange scene lasted long; but yet the moon In time came forth again. Then cHmbing soon Some mighty ledges, we at last survey'd From distant heights the forms that caused the shade : We saw the giant ash Yggdrasil now That loom'd with many a thick and swaying bough Above the plain through which our feet had pass'd. But think not leaves that had the shadows cast Had bridg'd but our short pathway, and no more. The limbs were leagues in length, and rose to soar Above the earth like mountain-forests wide, Yet cloud-borne, needing not a mountain-side. They cover'd all the north, yet hung as high Above the darkness of the western sky; And far off through the east they stretch'd away Till flushing at the touch of coming day. Ah, where was ever aught like this tree seen! Beside it, a mere wind-bent twig, I ween Was that Aswatha by the Hindoo known, Or Persia's Gogard, or the Zampuh grown In Thibet — figured o'er with mystic signs Which made but little wise its wise divines — Or Eden's too, reputed to have grown The seeds of these through every nation sown. Of them my guide discours'd, the while we scann'd Yggdrasil's roots ; one in the west where band The fiends of darkness in their foul Mistland: And there the serpent lies like lengthen'd night, And gnaws the bark, nor sates his appetite ; And one was in the north where Frost-Kings dwell, 444 A POET'S CABINET And drafts of wisdom drink from Mimir's well, While ever in its crystal depths below The cool brain sees the mirror'd pole-star glow; And one was in the east, hard by the morn And Urdar-fountain, where the patient Norn Perceives the present, future, and the past, Nor slights the small, nor shudders at the vast. Thence, heaved from earth to heaven, bridged o'er the dark, The rainbow-bifrost bends, on which we mark Its warden, Heimdall, who his vigil keeps With marvelous ears, which, even while he sleeps With birdlike lightness, hear the grasses grow And wool on sheep ten thousand miles below! Beyond his place uploom high Asgard-homes Of gods, and Gladsheim with its golden domes. There too, along Idavollr's wondrous fields, Vingolf appears, which hush'd retirement yields For Frigga and her suite, — a wilderness Of lawns and lanes and arbors numberless. Dim nights of groves and glowing days of flowers. And lakes and streams and fairy fountain showers, — A place where wish could every want confess, And all desire be drugged in drowsiness. Idem, Seeking, xxx-xxxii. YIELD Shall we fight? It might be useless ; and it must be wise To keep the right, when with us, with us yet. No ; let us yield. My brother, there are times When wrongs are great that they may be perceived And emphasize the need of their redress. Columbus, v., I. YIELDING So gentle, so yielding, your face all aglow To follow each friend, and never say "No," The skies too cloudless dawned for you. Too sunny and warm — oh, nothing grew! Your golden fields that we fondly saw Were filled with a grainless crop of straw. The Last Home Gathering. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 445 YOUNG VS. OLD MAN You are a young man with a young man's dreams. You are an old man; and an old man schemes. Cecil the Seer, i. YOUTH {see BOY and children) Too young as yet to know How youth alone to human love is dear, Before warm tides of life in veins that glow, Have lost the heat and hue of heaven from which they flow. A Life in Song: Daring, xliii. Ye, as well, with new hearts beating in the ranks of human life ; Ye whose youth itself assures us good will still main- tain the strife ; Ye whose tread is recreation, and whose every breath a joy, Not exhausted yet in paths that earthly smoke and dust annoy; Ye whose cheeks to flame-hue kindle, fired by all the faith ye feel. Not yet frosted by the winters that have chill'd men's older zeal ; Ye whose eyes are skies to spirits, whirl'd as worlds from change to change. Not yet check'd by disappointment, so ye dare not test the strange ; Ye whose wills ne'er cringed in failure nor surrendered flags of hope, But can look for victory still in highest spheres, of broadest scope; Do ye know how old age rallies when it hears your bounding tread? How, in youth's endearing presence, all things else beloved have fled? Angels even see I bending through this thick and troubled air, — But for you so fresh from God, might earth and heaven too both despair. Idem, Watching, xxiv. Ah, those little verst In the codes that are current turn first from them all To the herald that comes to trump a new call. 446 A POET'S CABINET Those nearest their youth Live nearest the breasts that glow with the truth, And welcome it gratefully warm from the heart. Unveiling the Monument. And now he lived for weeks in that bright land Where youth appears in endless dawn to dwell ; Where skies of pearl o'er golden clouds expand ; And every breeze o'erflows with sweets that well From warbling birds, and burst each blossom's bell; Where every thorn that yet shall pave one's way Is strung with dews that coming joys foretell ; And all the glitter of the opening day Still blinds the eye to all that else might cause dismay. A Life in Song: Daring, lv. And fresh little thoughts in tones that tinkle. As dance the dimples that round them wrinkle, More dear to refresh the soul with delight Than all of their elders' reason and right. For the healthful, heartful blush Of youth's fair spring-time's flower and fruit, Is never the autumn's hectic flush Of a life that fades and dies at the root. Love and Life, xii. Alas, how oft in youth's chill morn Their tears alone are the dews that adorn The natures that wake To the light of a day beginning to break! And oft how long, ere the light will btirst, The mists of the valley surround them first ! Unveiling the Monument. Though gray-beards might recall a former time When many an indiscretion marr'd his youth, None blamed him now for any earlier fault. In all completed pictures of this life, Dark tints but give the bright ones rare relief. Defects in youth, because they are defects. But prove more merit in the one who turns His poor resources into rich results. A Life in Song: Note vi. SELECTED QUOTATIONS 447 YOUTH, FORMER AND MODERN Oh, happy days of youth ! when empty sport Of mere imagination — ^fancied game — Could fill the hunter's pouch to overflowing! Ay, how much better than the days of age — Alas, I fear it, too, of modern youth For whom, so rich in matter, poor in mind, We manufacture implements of play That clip at fancies till they all fit facts, Plane joys to toys, and level games to gain, Till every pleasure palls that fails to pay In scales that rate life's worth by what it weighs When all the spirit's buoyancy is lost. West Mountain. ZEAL {see impetuous) Some men there are, whose moods, on fire for truth, Burn Hke that bush that Moses, one time, saw. And never lose the fresh, fair charms of youth. Their souls from heaven itself their ardor draw. Nor biurn according to an earthly law. Their zeal, when kindled, kindles joy in those Whom worldly heat would but repel or awe; Nor ever warps the soul that near them goes. But by its warmth allures to love that through it glows. A Life in Song: Daring, liii. And while he longed to champion this fight His life appear'd a tourney, he a knight. A young Don Quixote, most on guard to dare, He harm'd more good, through zeal in need of light, Than any wrong his efforts could impair; And fill'd with dust the way just where all needed air. Idem, Lx. What love I have, inspires me in my soul ; And, like the soul, it must express itself Through every fibre binding me to life; And like the soul, too, I believe it comes From some far realm divine to make divine Myself, my world, and all that dwell in it. A man who feels like this, and would not fight For church and state and home, would be a devil. Dante, i., i. 448 A POET'S CABINET ZEAL USING FORCE When unselfish zeal Demands investment in the mail of force, He that of old had spirit to inspire Swings but a sword that cleaves a scar for greed. Columbus, IV., I. THE END Ji Selection from the Catalogue of G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Complete Catalogue sent on application PROFESSOR RAYMOND'S POETICAL BOOKS A Life in Song. 16mo, cloth extra, gilt top . . . . $1.25 "An age-worn poet, dying amid strangers in a humble village home, leaves the record of his life in a pile of manuscript poems. These are claimed by a friend and comrade of the poet, but, at the request of the cottagers, he reads them over before taking them away .... This simple but unique plan, . . . forms the outline o( a remarkably fine study of the hopes, aspirations, and disappointments of ... an American modern life. . . . The volume will appeal to a large class of readers by reason of its clear, musical flexible verse, its fine thought, and its intense human interest." — Boston Transcript. "Mr. Raymond is a poet, with all that the name implies. He has the true fire- there is no disputing that. There is thought of an elevated character, the diction is pure, the versification is true, the meter correct, and . . . affords innumerable quota- tions to fortify and instruct one for the struggles of life. " — Hartford Post. " Marked by a fertility and strength of imagination worthy of our first poets. ._ . The versification throughout is graceful and thoroughly artistic, the imagery varied and spontaneous, . . . the multitude of contemporary bardlings may find in its sincerity of purpose and loftiness of aim a salutary inspiration. " — The Literary World (Boston). "Here, for instance, are lines which, if printed in letters of gold on the front cf every pulpit, and practised by every one behind one, would transform the face of the theological world. . . . In short, if you are in search of ideas that are unconven- tional and up-to-date, get a 'Life in Song,' and read it." — Unity. Ballads, and Other Poems. 16mo, cloth extra, gilt top . $1.25 "The author has achieved a very unusual success, a success to which genuine poetic power has not more contributed than wide reading and extensive preparation. The ballads overflow, not only with the general, but the very particular, ^truths of history." — Cincinnati Times. " A work of true genius, brimful of imagination and sweet humanity." — The Fireside (London). "Fine and strong, its thought original and suggestive, while its expression is the very perfection of narrative style. " — The N. Y. Critic. ' Proves beyond doubt that Mr. Raymond is the possessor of a poetic faculty which 5s worthy of the most careful and conscientious cultivation." — A'^. Y. Evening Post. "A very thoughtful study of character. . . great knowledge of aims and motives . . Such as read this poem will derive from it a benefit more lasting than the mere pleasure of the moment." — The Spectator (London). The Aztec God, and Other Dramas. 16mo, cloth extra, gilt top $1.25 "The three dramas included in this volume represent a felicitous, intense, and melodious expression of art both from the artistic and poetic point of view. . . . Mr. Raymond's power is_ above all that of psychologist, and added thereto are the richest products of the imagination both in form and spirit. The book clearly discloses the work of a man possessed of an extremely fine critical poise, of a culture pure and classical, and a sensitive conception of what is sweetest and most ravishing in tone-quality. The most delicately perceptive ear could not detect a flaw in the mellow and rich music of the blank verse. " — Public Opinion. "As fine lines as are to be found anywhere in English. . . . Sublime thought fairly leaps in sublime expression. ... As remarkable for its force of epigram as for its loftiness of conception. " — Cleveland World. "... Colunibus one finds a piece of work which it is difficult to avoid injuring with fulsome praise. The character of the great discoverer is portrayed grandly and greatly. ... It is difficult to conceive how anyone who cares for that which is best in literature . . . could fail to be strengthened and uplifted by this heroic treatment of one of the great stories of the world. " — N. Y. Press. Dante and Collected Verse. 16mo, cloth extra, gilt top . $1.25 "Epigram, philosophy, history; — these are the predominant elements . . . which masterly construction, pure diction, and lofty sentiment unite in making a glowing piece of blank verse." — Chicago Herald. "The poems will be read with keenest enjoyment by all who appreciate literary genius, refined sentiment, and genuine culture. The publication is a gem. through- out. " — New Haven Leader. "The poet and the reformer contend in Professor Raymond. When the latter has the mastery, we respond to the justice, the high ideals, the truth of all he says — and says with point and vigor — but when the poet conquers, the imagination soars . . . . The mountain poems are the work of one with equally high ideals of life and of song. " — Glasgow (Scotland) Herald. "Brother Jonathan can not claim many great poets, but we think he has 'struck oil,' in Professor Raymond." — Western (England) Morning News. "This brilliant composition . . . gathers up and concentrates for the reader more of the reality of the great Italian than is readily gleaned from the author of the Inferno himself." — Oakland Enquirer. G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, New York and London. Publishers PROFESSOR RAYMOND'S WORKS Pictures in Verse. With 20 illustrations by Maud Stumm. Square 8vo, in ornamental cloth covers . $ .75 "Little love poems of a light and airy character, describing pretty rustic scenes. or domestic interiors. ... As charming for its illustrations as for its reading matter." — Detroit Free Press. "Simple songs of human every-day experience . . . with a twinkle of homely humor and a wholesome reflection of domestic cheer. We like his optimistic senti- ments, and unspoiled spirit of boyishness when he strikes the chord of love. It is all very true and good." — The Independent. The Mountains about Williamstown. With an introduction by M. M. Miller, and 35 full-page illustrations from original photographs; oblong shape, cloth, gilt edges. Net $2.00 postpaid "The beauty of these photographs from so many points of vantage would of itself suffice to show the fidelity and affection with which Professor Raymond pursued the theme of his admirably coristructed poems. The introduction by his pupil, friend, and associate is an exhaustive study. No better or more thorough review could be written of the book, or more clearly |3oint out the directness and power of Professor Raymond's work. . . . Arnong his_ many books none justifies more brilliantly the correctness and charm of his rhetorical instruction, or his facility in exemplifying what he commends." — Hartford (Conn.) Courant. " The poems all show Dr. Raymond's perfect art of expression, his deep and relig- ious love of nature, and his profound reverence for the landscape he celebrates. Every New Englander will appreciate the volume, and Williams College men can ill afford not to possess it." — Portland (Me.) Evening Express. "They show a keen ear for rhythm, felicity of phrase, exquisite taste, a polished style, and' often exalted feeling. _Mr. Raymond's students . . . and those who have read his book upon the principles that underlie art, poetry, and music will be interested in this clothing, in concrete form, of his poetic theories. . . . Dr. Miller makes in his Introduction a long and lucid discussion of these. " — New York Times. "The men of Williams College especially owe him a debt of gratitude that can never be paid." — Troy (N. Y.) Record. "The many full-page illustrations give lovely vistas of the Berkshires and of the stream-silvered valleys they guard. Sometimes philosophic, sometimes purely imaginative, through all the verse runs a high patriotism and a love of beauty and humanity which uplifts and strengthens." — Boston Transcript. "Verse that often suggests Bryant in its simplicity and dignity. That is surely a sound rnodel for nature poetry. Large and finely produced photographs bring the mountains vividly before the reader. This is not a book to read in the subway; but lying on the sunny side of a stony wall when the leaves are bursting in spring, it will surely appeal. " — Brooklyn Eagle. Modern Fishers of Men. i2mo, cloth, gilt top . $1.00 '_' This delightful novel is written with charming insight. The rare gift of'character delineation the author can claim in full. . . . Shrewd comments upon life and character add spice to the pages. " — Nashville Tennessean. "Deals with love and religion in a small country town, and under the facile pen and keen humor of the author, the various situations . . . are made the most of . . . true to the life. " — Boston Globe. "Such a spicy, racy, more-truth-than-fiction work has not been placed in our hands for a long time." — Chicago Evening Journal. "A captivating story, far too short . . . just as fresh and absorbing as when the author laid down his pen . . . that was before typewriters. " — Denver Republican. "Essentially humorous, with an undercurrent of satire .... also subtle char- acter delineation, which will appeal strongly to those who have the perceptive facul- ties highly developed." — San Francisco Bulletin. "The book is delightful .... in several ways very remarkable." — Boston Times. "A distinct surprise lies in this little story .... of 1879 .... so strongly does it partake of the outlook and aim of the new church of to-day." — Washington Star "In 'Modern Fishers of Men,' one sees that the Men and Religion Forward Movement existed before it began." — The Watchman, Boston. "Pleasant reading for those whom sad experience has led to doubt the possibility of a real community uplift with lasting qualities. The story is brightened with a quiet but none the less hearty humor. " — Cincinnati Times. G. P. PUTNAM S SONS, New York and London. Publishers ProfessorRayniond'sSystetHofCOIPARATIVEISTHETICS I. — Art in Theory. 8vo, cloth extra $1.75 " Scores an advance upon the many art criticisms extant . . . . Twenty brilliant chapters, pregnant with suggestion." — Popular Science MonlJily. "A well grounded, thoroughly supported, and entirely artistic conception of art that will lead observers to distrust the charlatanism that imposes an idle and super- ficial mannerism upon the public in place of true beauty and honest workmanship. " • — The New York Times. "His style is good, and his logic sound and . . . of the greatest possible service to the student of artistic theories." — Art Journal (London). II, — The Representative Significance of Form. 8vo, cloth extra $3.00 "A valuable essay. . . . Professor Raymond goes so deep into causes as to explore the subconscious and the unconscious mind for a solution of his problems, and eloquently to range through the conceptions of religion, science and metaphysics in order to find fixed principles of taste. ... A highly interesting discussion. " — The Scotsman (Edinburgh). "Evidently the ripe fruit of years of patient and exhaustive study on the part of a man singularly fitted for his task. It is profound in insight, searching in analysis, broad in spirit, and thoroughly modern in method and sympathy. " — llie Universalist Leader. "Its title gives no intimation to the general reader of its attractiveness for him, or to curious readers of its widely discursive range of interest. . . . Its broad range may remind one of those scythe-bearing chariots with which the ancient Persians used to mow down hostile files." — The Outlook. III. — Poetry as a Representative Art. 8vo, cloth extra . $1,75 "I have read it with pleasure, and a sense of instruction on many points." — Francis Turner Palgrave,^ Professor of Poetry, Oxford University. "Dieses ganz vortreffliche Werk. " — Englischen Studien, Universitiii Breslau. "An acute, interesting, and brilliant piece of work. ... As a whole the essay deserves unqualified praise." — N. Y. Independent. IV, — Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture as Representative Arts. With 225 illustrations. Svo $2.50 "The artist will find in it a wealth of profound and varied learning; of original, suggestive, helpful thought . . . of absolutely inestimable value. " — The Looker-on. "Expression by means of extension or size, . . . shape, . . . regularity in outlines . . . the human body . . . posture, gesture, and movement, . . . are all considered. ... A specially interesting chapter is the one on color." — Current Literature. "The whole book is the work of a man of exceptional thoughtfulness, who says what he has to say in a remarkably lucid and direct manner. " — Philadelphia Press. v.— The Genesis of Art Form. Fully illustrated. Svo . . $J.25 "In a spirit at once scientific and that of the true artist, he pierces through the manifestations of art to their sources, and shows the relations intimate and essential, between painting, sculpture, poetry, music, and architecture. A book that possesses not only singular value, but singular charm." — N. Y. Times. ' ' A help and a delight. Every aspirant for culture in any of the liberal arts, includ- ing music and poetry, will find something in this book to aid him. " — Boston Times. "It is impossible to withhold one's admiration from a treatise which exhibits in . such a large degree the qualities of philosophic criticism." — Philadelphia Press. VI. — Rhythm and Harmony in Poetry and Music. Together with Music as a Representative Art. Svo, cioth extra , $1.75 "Professor Raymond has chosen a delightful subject, and he treats it with all the charm of. narrative and high thought and profound study." — New Orleans States. "The reader must be, indeed, a person either of supernatural stupidity or of marvelous erudition, who does not discover much information in Prof. Raymond's exhaustive and instructive treatise. From page to page it is full of suggestion." — The Academy (London). VII. — Proportion and Harmony of Line and Color in Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture. Fully illustrated. Svo. $3.50 " Marked by profound thought along lines unfamiliar to most readers and thinkers. . . . When grasped, however, it becomes a source of great enjoyment and exhil- aration. . . . No critical person can afford to ignore so valuable a contribution to the art-thought of the day. " — The Art Interchange (N. Y.). "One does not need to be a scholar to follow this scholar as he teaches while seeming to entertain, for he does both. " — Burlington Hawkeye. " The artist who wishes to penetrate the mysteries of color, the sculptor who desires to cultivate his sense of proportion, or the architect whose ambition is to reach to a high standard will find the work helpful and inspiring." — Boston Transcript. G, P. PUTNAM'S SONS, New York and London, Publishers TEXT-BOOKS BY PROFESSOR RAYMOND The Essentials of Esthetics. 8vo. Illustrated. Net, $2.50 This work, which is mainly a compendium of the author's system of Comparative ^Esthetics, previously published in seven volumes, was prepared, by request, for a text-book and for readers whose time is too limited to study the minutis of the subject. " We consider Professor Raymond to possess something like an ideal equipment. . . . His own poetry is genuine and delicately constructed, his appreciations are true to high ideals, and his power of scientific analysis in unquestionable, . . . He was known , when a student at Williams, as a musician and a poet — the latter because of taking, in his freshman year, a prize in verse over the whole college. After graduating in this country, he went through a course of sesthetics with Professor Vischer of the University of Tiibingen, and also with Professor Curtius at the time when that historian of Greece was spending several hours a week with his pupils among the inarbles of the Berlin Museum. Subsequently, believing that all the arts are, primarily, developments of different forms of expression through the tones and movements of the body. Professor Raymond made a thorough study, chiefly in Paris, of methods of cultivating and using the voice in both singing and speaking, and of representing thought and emotion through postures and gestures. It is a result of these studies that he afterwards developed, first, into his methods of teaching elocution and literature (as embodied in his ' Orator's Manual ' and ' The Writer') and later into his ssthetic system .... A Princeton man has said of him that he has as keen a sense for a false poetic element as a bank expert for a counterfeit note, and a New York model who posed for him, when preparing illustrations for one of his books, said that he was the only man that he had ever met who could invariably, without experiment, tell him at once what posture to assume in order to represent any required sentiment. " — New YorkTimes. _ "So lucid in expression and rich in illustration that every page contains matter of deep interest even to the general reader." — Boston Herald. "Dr. Raymond's book will be invaluable. He shows a knowledge both extensive and exact of the various fine arts, and accompanies his ingenious and suggestive theories by copious illustrations. "—The Scotsman (Edinburgh). "The whole philosophy underlying this intelligent art-criticism should be given the widest possible publicity." — Boston Globe. The Orator's Manual. i2mo . . $1.20 A Practical and Philosophic Treatise on Vocal Culture, Emphasis, and Gesture, together with Hints for the Composition of Orations and Selections for Declamation and Reading, designed as a Text-book for Schools and Colleges, and for Public Speakers and Readers who are obliged to Study without an Instructor, fully revised with irnportant Additions after the Fifteenth Edition. "It is undoubtedly the most complete and thorough treatise on oratory for the practical student ever published." — The Educational Weekly, Chicago. "I consider it the best American book upon technical elocution. It has also leanings toward a philosophy of expression that no other book written by an Amer- ican has presented." — Moses True Brown, Head of the Boston School of Oratory. "The work is evidently that of a skilful teacher bringing before students of oratory the results of philosophical thinking and successful experience in an admirable form and a narrow compass." — J. W. Churchill, Professor of Homiletics, Andover Theo- logical Seminary. " I have long wished for just such a book. It is thoroughly practical, and descends into details, really helping the speaker." — J. M. Happin, D.D., Professor of Homiletics, Yale. " The completeness, exactness, and simplicity of this manual excite my admira- tion. It is so just and full of nature." — A. T. McGill, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Homiletics, Princeton. The Writer (with Post Wheeler, Litt.D.) i2mo. $1.00 A Concise, Complete, and Practical Text-book of Rhetoric, designed to aid in the Appreciation, as well as Production of All Forms of Literature, Explaining, for the first time, the Principles of Written Discourse by correlating them to those of Oral Discourse. Former editions fully revised. "A book of unusual merit. A careful examination creates the impression that the exercises have been prepared by practical teachers, and the end in view is evidently to teach rather than to give information." — The Pacific Educational Journal. "The pupil will forget he is studying rhetoric, and will come to express himself for the pure pleasure he has in this most beautiful art." — Indiana School Journal. "It reaches its purpose. While especially valuable as a text-book in schools, it is a volume that should be in the hands of every literary worker." — State Gazette, Trenton, N. J. "The treatment is broader and more philosophical than in the ordinary text-book. Every species of construction and figure is considered. The student has his critical and literary sense further developed by . . . the best writings in the language used to illustrate certain qualities of style." — The School Journal. G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS. New York and London. Publishers Other Books by Professor Raymond The Psychology of Inspiration. 8vo, cloth. Net, $1.40; by mail, $1.53. The book founds its conclusions on a study of the action of the human mind when obtaining and expressing truth, as this action has been revealed through the most recent investigations of physiological, psychological, and psychic research; and the freshness r.nd originality of the presentation is acknowledged and commended hy such authorities as Dr. J. Mark Baldwin, Professor of Psychology in Johns Hopkins University, who says that its psychological position is "new and valuable"; Dr. W. T. Harris, late United States Commissioner of Education and the foremost metaphysician in the country, who says it is sure "to prove helpful to manjr who find themselves on the border line between the Christian and the non-Christian beliefs"; and Dr. Edward Everett Hale, who says that "no one has approached the subject from this point of view." He characterizes it, too, as an "endeavor to formulate conceptions that almost every Christian to-day believes, but without know- ing why he does so. "_ As thus intimated by Dr. Hale, the book is not a mere con- tribution to apologetics — not a mere defense of Christianity. It contains a formula- tion of principles that underlie all rational interpretation of all forrns of revealed religion. These principles are applied in the book to Christian doctrine, faith, and conduct; to the services, discipline, and unity of the church; and to the methods of insuring successin missionary enterprise. It strives to reveal both the truth and the error that are in such systems of thought as are developed in AGNOSTICISM, PRAGMATISM, MODERNISM, THEOSOPHY, SPIRITUALISM, AND CHRIS- TIAN SCIENCE. The first and, perhaps, the most important achievement of the book is to show that the fact of inspiration can be demonstrated scientifically; in other words, that the inner subconscious mind can be influenced irrespective of influences exerted through the eyes and the ears, i. e., by what one sees or hears. In connection with this fact it is also shown that, when the mind is thus inwardly or inspirationally influenced, as, for example, in hypnotism, the influence is suggestive and not dicta- torial. As a result, the inspired person presents the truth given him not according to the letter, but according to the spirit. His object is not to deal with facts and impart knowledge, as science does. This would lead men to walk by sight. His object is to deal with principles, and these may frequently be illustrated just as accurately by apparent, or, as in the case of the parable, by imagined circumstances, as by actual ones. For this reason, many of the scientific and historical so-called "objections" to the Bible need not be answered categorically. Not only so, but such faith as it is natural and right that a rational being should exercise can be stimulated and devel- oped in only the degree in which the text of a sacred book is characterized by the very vagueness and variety of meaning and statement which the higher criticism of the Bible has brought to light. The book traces these to the operation and re- (juirements of the human mind through which inspiration is received and to which it is imparted. Whatever inspires must appear to be, in some way, beyond the grasp of him who communicates it, and can make him who hears it think and train him to think, in the degree only in which it is not comprehensive or complete;^ but merely, like everything else in nature, illustrative of that portion of truth which the mind needs to be made to find out for itself. "A book that everybody should read . . . medicinal for profest Christians, and full of guidance and encouragement for those finding themselves somewhere between the desert and the town. The sane, fair, kindly attitude taken gives of itself a profitable lesson. The author proves conclusively that his mind — andif his, why not another's? — can be at one and the same time sound, sanitary, scientific, and essentially religious. " — The Examiner, Chicago. "The author writes with logic and a 'sweet reasonableness' that will doubtless convince many halting minds. It is an inspiring hook."— Philadelphia Inquirer. "It is, we think, difficult to overestimate the value of this volume at the present critical pass in the history of Christianity." — The Arena, Boston. " The author has taken up a task calling for heroic effort, and has given us a volume worthy of careful study. . . . The conclusion is certainly very reasonable." — Christian Intelligencer, New York. "Interesting, suggestive, helpful," — Boston Congregationalist. "Thoughtful, reverent, suggestive." — Lutheran Observer, Philadelphia. "Professor Raymond is a clear thinker, an able writer, and an earnest Christian, and his book is calculated to be greatly helpful to those in particular who, brought up in the Christian faith, find it impossible longer to reconcile the teachings of the Church with the results of modern scientific thought." — Newark ( N. J.) Evening News. FUNK & W4GNALLS COMPANY, Pubs., New York and London OTHER BOOKS BY PROFESSOR RAYMOND Fundamentals in Education, Art, and Civics : Essays and Addresses. 8vo, cloth. Net, $1.40; by mail, $1.53 "Of fascinating interest to cultured readers, to the student, the teacher, the poet, the artist, the musician, in a word to all lovers of sweetness and light. The author has a lucid and vigorous style, and is often strikingly original. What impresses one is the personality of a profound thinker and a consummate teacher behind every paragraph." — Dundee Courier, Scotland. "The articles cover a wide field and manifest a uniformly high culture in every field covered. It is striking how this great educator seems to have anticipated the educational tendencies of our times some decades before they imprest the rest of us. He has been a pathfinder for many younger men, and still points the way to higher heights. The book is thoroughly up-to-date." — Service, Philadelphia. "Clear, informing, and delightfully readable. Whether the subject is art and morals, technique in expression, or character in a republic, each page will be found interesting and the treatment scholarly, but simple, sane, and satisfactory , . . the story of the Chicago fire is impressingly vivid. " — Chicago Standard. "He is a philosopher, whose encouraging idealism is well grounded in scientific study, and who illuminates points of psychology and ethics as well as of art when they come up in the course of the discussion. " — The Scotsman, Edinburgh, Scotland. "A scholar of wide learning, a teacher of experience, and a writer of entertaining and convincing style." — Chicago Examiner. "'The Mayflower Pilgrims' and 'Individual Character in Our Republic' call for unstinted praise. They are interpenetrated by a splendid patriotism." — Rochester Post-Express. "Agreeably popularizes much that is fundamental in theories of life and thought. The American people owe much of their progress, their optimism, and we may say their happiness to the absorption of just such ideals as Professor Raymond stands for." — Minneapolis Book Review Digest. "They deal with subjects of perennial interest, and with principles of abiding importance, and they are presented with the force and lucidity which his readers have come to look for in Dr. Raymond. " — Living Age, Boston. Suggestions for the Spiritual Life — College Chapel Talks. 8 vo., cloth. Net$i.4o;by mail, $1.53 "Sermons of more than usual worth, full of thought of the right kind, fresh, strong, direct, manly. . . . Not one seems to strain to get a young man's_ atten- tion by mere popular allusions to a student environment. They are spiritual, scriptural, of straight ethical import, meeting difficulties, confirrning cravings, amplifying tangled processes of reasoning, and not forgetting the emotions. " — Hart- ford Theological Seminary Record (CongregationalistJ. "The clergyman who desires to reach young men especially, and the teacher of men's Bible Classes may use this collection of addresses to great advantage. . . . The subjects are those of every man's experience in character building . . . such a widespread handling of God's word would have splendid results in the production of men." — The Living Church (Episcopalian). "Great themes, adequately considered. . . . Surely the young men who listened to these sermons must have been stirred and helped by them as we have been stirred and helped as we read them. " — Norihfield (Mass.) Record of Christian Work (Evangelical). "They cover a wide range. They are thoughtful, original, literary, concise, condensed, pithy. They deal with subjects in which the young mind will be inter- ested." — Western Christian Advocate (Methodist). "Vigorous thought, vigorously expressed. One is impressed by the moderation and sanity of the teachings here set forth and scholarly self-restraint in statement. Back of them is not only a believing mind, but genuine learning and much hard thinking." — Lutheran Observer. " Though most of the addresses were prepared over forty years ago ... no chapter in the book seems to be either 'old-fogyish' or 'unorthodox.' " — The Watch- man (Boston, Baptist). "The preacher will find excellent models for his work and stimulating thought . . . attractively presented and illustrated. . . . The addresses are scholarly and especially adapted to cultivated minds. They show evidence of intimate acquamt- ance with modern science and sympathy with modern ideas. " — Springfield (Mass.) Republican. _ _ . " Beautiful and inspiring discourses . . . embody the ripe conviction of a mind of exceptional refinement, scholarship, and power ... a psychologist, a phil- osopher, and a poet. " — N . Y . Literary Digest. " Never was such a book more needed by young men than just now." — Philadel- phia Public Ledger. 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