PS 35/3 .,^mmvs3sa Class 1^S bsi3 . Book_^AllG5. GoRTightN^. \903 COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. By anna reading GAZXAM AVTHOR OF NIGHT ETCHINaS o WITH WOOD ENGRAVINGS FROM DRAWINGS DY EMINENT -ARTISTS '■J LIBRARY of CONGRESS Two Copies rtevtaveu JUL 6 iyo5 UUtSS CL AAc. Nui S33 Z & COPY B. COPTRIGHT, 190;^, UV ANNA KEADINU GAZZAM, Printed by J. S. Ogxlvik PuBLisiriNG Compant, 37 Rose Street, New York. CTXCj^^Lg-^^^i^J^iLg:^? LIST Of • ••or Illvstrations • •••ore • cr>^<:j>^ (^^CC7^ c SWEET FERN. SOUL ESSENCE. Drawn by C. Y. Turner. Engraved by G. P. Williams. Dra7un by H. Bolton Jones. Engraved by G. P. Williams. MY SECRET. Drawn by F. B. Schell. Engraved by A. E. Anderson. RAMBLING. WILD ROSE. Drawn by B. West Clinedinst. Engraved by G. P. Williams. Drawn by Frederick Dielman, Engraved by Q, H. Reed. BEYOND. Drawn by W. H. Lippincott. Engraved by C. H. Reed. GLEAMS AND EGH0ES. PROLOGUE. PROLOGUE. Sweet, sad sounds that thrill us from the past And echo in the empty spaces. With voices faint and rare. Reverberating in life's deeper places So long as life and earth are bound ; — Vibrating still with long, low sound While hearts shall love and lose, the low earth 'round; O voices ! with faint sound so low, so long. Blend ye not triumph in your minor song? Sing ye not highest, O loves of long ago, Of that which dieth not? Art thou, O Memory, not swiftest, surest. With love and loss inwrought, Swiftest and surest, thy roots deep-struck below. To reach and catch the spirit's after-glow? SWEET FERN. "^ ^ 1'^ J^' ■-^J 1*1"'. t »"T ^ i ri^.iirici5.LiiiiiaiaiD0iiiii;':iii(i:i.iJ:;»aiiiiii]iuia^ If, on the banks of that other shore, Or pressed in some tome of spirit-lore. SWEET FERN. 'Tis the scent of a leaf, again, That brings me back the days of Then, Once, when my eyes were clear and blue, And my thought was always a thought of you ; When my heart was white without a stain. And yours had nothing dreamed of death. Nor of love with its parted pain; Then — when you stood by the little stream, Your eves far off, like an angel's dream — You gathered the fern of spicy breath : Ah, then — in the passionate years of then — In the pure, white, truthful years of then — You gathered this fern of the glen. 'Tis years since I smelled a sweet fern's breath. Till now, when the lost page open falls. Now 1 am darkened and sad and sere With the weights and the wrongs of many a year; Now 1 scarcely dare to think If a fern might grow on that farther brink ; If, on the banks of that other shore. Or pressed in some tome of spirit-lore, A spicy breath might call to her A memory of the days that were ; And 1, shame-faced, would shrinking stand. Too soiled to touch the radiance of her hand. And yet I press this little broken thing, Fain, with my lips, and press it yet again. Even its fragile, gray-worn, crumbling mould, A scent of unforgotten days can hold ; Should 1, at last, after dark doubt and dull despair. Drift to her feet, like some dead fern-leaf there. And if, from out the yellow-leafed decay. Should float some essence of that other day ; — Oh. Angel Soul, with love of heavenly measure, On thee 1 lean, to count it. hold it, treasure ; To hear thee, bending, say, "This outward-faded life, Weary and worn with failure and with strife, Brings odor from the past through years of loss and pain; 1 press the deathless spirit to my own again." SOUL ESSENCE. So, from the heart of tlie wood-thrush. SOUL ESSENCE. They look at the lovelv picture ; They say, " 'Tis moon on the sea;' But from the shimmering silver A face looks up to me. Od^ in spiced glooms of forest Haunts an aroma rare ; And 1 know the tiail of her spirit is leaving: its fragrance there. So, from the heart of the wood-thrush Quivers on heart of mine An echo of buried music, — Gone — in the lost lang-svne. MY SECRET. ■i>':-. Ay, beyond the purple of far sunset summits. MY SECRET. 1 WILL leave it with the mountains, — They will not tell. 1 will leave it with the grass-bugs; In their light, harmonious ringing. Like some atmospheric singing ; Like some hidden fairy, bringing Back a dream of summer gone. While they ring in rhythmic measure Still will lie my little treasure, Hidden in their song. But the mountains wiU forget it When I am gone. On their far-off, silent heights, In their tender, pensive lights. There will be no lingering guerdon Of my heart-intrusted burden. On their summits soft will sleep Other secrets in their keep : Mine will go with me, they say ; Others come another day. And the whirring grass-bugs, blurring All the sunny, autumn silence With ethereal sound ; In their cheery, light vibration Calling, "There is compensation," — To the red leaves fluttering to the ground ; — They will follow when the frost comes, Leave their haunts of field and hollow, Go, and leave the little secret Yet unkept, — unfound. So, my heart, to you I trust it Till death shall part. Brooding, you will cherish, keep it. In field or mart. Faithful, though all else should fail it. Will you prove : Ay. beyond the purple of far sunset summits^ Beyond the waving lines of earth's best Ever» into golden depths of the Forever Will you clasp it : Death — shall not part. RAMBLING. A glint seems to shine down the valley And creep toward my feet. RAMBLING. 'Tis the gleam of one scarlet berry Half hidden among some gold, Only this, vet my dim old eyes See a picture fair unfold ; And I travel silently backward Past long graves of years, Past the cypress-trees and the shadows, And the urns that are filled with tears Back, past the long, sad valley. To mountains sunny and fair, The mountains of the morning. Pink-tipped with sunrise there. As my thoughts look back to that high land. Where the sunlight rose so sweet, A glint seems to shine down the valley And creep toward my feet. Now, a scent of long-withered blossoms Floats over the plains of pain, And I fall to wondering — for I'm old — If they'll bloom — up There — again. But they say I am always croaking, For 1 am old, you know. Always croaking of something That's gone, in the long-ago. So I sit, and I think my old thoughts, And poor I know they must be, For the others, a score of years younger. Don't care much to listen to me : And 1 sit, and I walk, without talking, My heart among the old ways. Where the pinks and the larkspurs blossomed, And youth and love brightened the days. And so I wander and lose myself About what 1 was going to say ; But no one heeds, so it matters not,— My head is old and gray : I can't do things as 1 used to do Nor talk what I used to say. Sometimes I think the baby boy 1 lost so long ago, — Sometimes 1 think h' listens, — Maybe, — I do not know WILD ROSE. ',» h But over the years, I remember. WILD ROSE. Wild rose, — wild rose of the wood, — Rose of the road-side, and of by-path hid. Rose of frank smiles and childlike grace. Fair with innocence upon its face: The young spring gathered to her heart This child of the roses, dearer than the rest ; 'Twined it among her tresses fresh and fair, Wore the pink thing, with woodbine, in her hair. One day, I mind me, sunnier than the rest, A sweet wild rose was gathered for my breast. Back to the spring will wander Autumns heart, For life's as fresh when the old leaves fall As when the young buds start; And life's as dear when the leaves are sere As in the spring's first thrall. Believe you, November, in mournful gown, Walking with sad eyes looking down Into the graves of flowers dead. Will press to her heart the seed-pods red. hi the dead days of November I twine no bloom in my hair, But over the years 1 remember A rose that withered there. BEYOND. ^"m ■■^' t '•'4^*' And smiles again steal on those fading faces. BEYOND. How dark the pines! The woods stand dank and drear With shadows only, all the light to blear; And sad, low whisperings, in a minor key, Murmur, "The lost, lone dead lie here; The universe is brooded o'er with clouding trouble. Time, nor eternity have aught of light:" Like lost heart-courage, sighing low, "The sun lies only on the long-ago. " But just beyond, with lifted face, full free, The sea lies broad and bright. Under the gold expanse of heaven's light. So on my heart. In hidden, silent places The shades fall dark ; And sad, faint glimpses of half-fading faces Flit through the gloom, nor smile; And death alone seems regnant. Pale and cold and grim, Enthroned in shadows dim. And then 1 lift my eyes, and, lo, broad, sunny places; And smiles again steal on those fading faces; And still beyond, with grand God-patience, Waiting to caress, Stands that which out-crowns death ; And Love, bending above all shadow, Waits to bless. fiEVinW5. "Gleams and Echoes" is well named. It is tull of a sobered •sunlight which falls through opening clouds, and glints among the autumnal of grief. But it is still genuine sunlight, and with its sympathetic glow will help to assuage the hearts of those who have themselves come to a mellow harbor of experience. Nothing •could be sweeter than the minor-chorded verse of Sweet Fern, . . . and of Beyond. They leave a pleasant, wistful music in the ears, . . . which will make them favored companions through the year. — Lippincotfs Magazine. " Gleams and Echoes " reinforces the good op.'nion which we formed through an examination of "Night Etchings." It is cer- tainly evidence of the poetic gift when fancy creates her own world — in this case a world of half hidden pathos — and dreams'of it in musical metres. Each of the six poems is accompanied by a beautiful engraving. — ^^'T'/i'tt' of Revieivs. The poems rank among the better efforts of our poets. — Com- mercial Gazette, Pittsburg. Full of feeling and graceful in structure. — Evening Bulletin. A beautiful holiday volume ... by the author of " Night Etchings." Each poem is accompanied by an illustration from drawings by such eminent artists as Turner, Jones, Dielman and others. — The Transcript, Boston. Sweet, sad echoes of the past, vibrating with feeling. — Public Ledger, Philadelphia. The poet and artist, combined, give us fine sentiment and '"'^autiful delineations. — Christian Register, Boston. JUL 6 1905 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 020 994 396 7