"3 - :: -* s ^u-«««~«_ £iMikmh M - : ^Jfc5^ .-HT " J -"J LIBRARY j? CONGRESS. (ilpt}i „ iojnjnglt Jfou Shelf \.@.±S6 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. By the Author of this Volume. VIOLET LEE, AND OTHER POEMS. COME FOR ARBUTUS. DAISIES OF VERSE. HOPE'S HEART BELLS. i2mo. Cloth, $1.25 per vol. J. B. Lippincott Company, Publishers. SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS BY/ SARA LOUISA ; OBERHOLTZER PHILADELPHIA Q 2^7 i J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY 1892 I 75a f *4" ,0 4- S4 Copyright, 1892, BY Sara Louisa Oberholtzer. A II rights reserved. Printed by J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia. TO MY SONS, ELLIS PAXSON AND VICKERS OBERHOLTZER, THE JOY-GIVING, LIVING POEMS OF MY HEART AND LIFE, I TENDER, WITH BLESSINGS, THESE SOUVENIRS OF PASSING DAYS. SARA LOUISA (VICKERS) OBERHOLTZER. CONTENTS. PAGE As I listened in June 9 The Poet's Recompense 10 At the Castle Peel 11 Speeding the Parting Guest 21 On the Longport Ribbon 22 In Memoriam 26 The Lifting of the Mist 31 General Clinton B. Fisk 34 Antietam Bridge 36 The Brooks Reception Poem 42 -Valley Forge Anniversary 45 The Spangled Flags 51 Golden- Wedding Lines 56 The Sons of the River St. John 57 A Burial Hymn 60 Annie 61 polysophonia elongata 62 Yester-morn on Mount Rigi 63 An Unsatisfactory Photograph 63 The Flags of France 64 The Confluence of the Arve and Rhone 65 In Warwick Court 67 A Glimpse of Fairies 69 The Avon's Song . . 72 The White House Guests 73 After reading Alice and Phoebe Cary's Poems ... 74 An Autumn Lesson 75 The Pigeon's Fruitless Search 77 5 6 CONTENTS. PAGE The Glass-Blowers 78 Friends on the Turret 80 A Birthday Jingle 83 Tin-Wedding Lines 84 To the Donor of a Bouquet 85 Life's Consolation 86 Laid to Rest 88 Thanksgiving 89 Last Night's Snow 89 Apropos 91 The " Robert Morgan" 92 - The Washer-Woman „ . 93 My Valentine 95 An Indelible Poster 96 On the Saguenay 97 A Belated Leaf 98 An Invalid's Plaint 99 Sabbath at Ocean Grove 99 The Sentinel Sunflower 100 An Old Woman's Disposition of her Grindstone . 101 Going by the Morning Train 107 A Fragment 112 Walt Whitman (March 30, 1892) 112 Wed among the Lilies 113 W.C.T.U. Occasions 115 Philadelphia's Greeting to Lady Henry Somerset 117 The W. C. T. U. : its Wand of Power . 119 A Response 120 Over the Kinzua Viaduct 121 An Encampment Poem . 122 A Blossom of Mother-Love 125 Free Counsel 128 A Wild-Rose Spray 130 Voices of the Night 131 CONTENTS. 7 PAGE The Kitchen Graces 135 How it is 137 A Calendar 139 January 141 February 142 The Lady March 143 April Courage 144 A May Parable < 145 Days of June 146 A Fourth of July Prophecy 147 An August Lullaby 148 September 149 October Reckoning 150 November 151 December 152 AS I LISTENED IN JUNE. 'Twas the humblebee, the drummer On the honeyed strings of summer, That I heard. 'Twas the maple leaves conversing, And the lullaby rehearsing Of a bird. *Twas the sounds from heaven descending On the fragrant air, and blending With accord In a grand and glorious chorus. 'Twas the rose of song oped for us By the Lord. THE POETS RECOMPENSE. When friendships shout and fan the pile to blaze ; When forks of flame reach up, nor know their height ; When tenderness stoops down to gently praise, And what we value most and least to raise Beyond their equilibrium, we smile. When censures hurl and blaze is lost to sight In the chill bitterness of passing night, And tenderness becomes a rose of thorns, Petals and fragrance gone, again, the while, We all unconscious smile ; the same we feel, Errands of song we joyfully fulfil, Are but half ours. A rare and subtile sense Of what they are, the violets of God's will, Is great and all-sufficient recompense. 10 AT THE CASTLE PEEL. The ruins of Castle Peel are on St. Patrick's Isle, off the Isle of Man. The busy fishing-town of Peel is across the narrow channel which divides this islet from the Isle of Man. A smooth, grass-covered mound, ninety feet long, which is said to be the grave of Giant Three-Leg, is near the castle ruins. The Isle of Man was the home of fairies, giants, and mermaids successively. I have woven into verse but a hint of their legends. Breaks in the red-gray walls reveal Unique views from the Castle Peel. We in the grass-grown door-way stand : Views of the sea, the ships, the land ; Views of the ships and the fisher folk ; Views of the rocks the giant broke On Lehergyhoo, miles away, — Rocks that he tossed from here in play ; The giant's grave by the castle wall (Ninety feet in the sunshine's fall) ; The half-unconscious white-winged gulls Lazily watching for low-tide lulls ii 12 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. On shelves of rock that guard the sea : Unfinished picture though this must be, Fair the isle, in the ruin's shade, I will gather visions that never fade From Manxman's sky. Their voices free Myrtle my ear with legendry. A fisherman, fresh from a fishing-sloop, Soiled and odorous, nears our group. "That is the walled-up passage-way/' He says, and a dead -ripe story may Fall from his lips. I smile and ask The fruit, if it be a willing task. " Closed up because Ghost Mauther Dhoo Allowed nobody to go through. Don't know the ghost? Ah, he was fierce. A spectre hound. His eyes did pierce, As fiery arrows sent from hell, Whoe'er he met. Destruction's spell Darkened the castle as a pall. St. Patrick spoke, from castle hall, Ruler of giants, ghosts, and men : ' Drive out this spectre denizen, Soldiers-at-arms ! ' The troops, dismayed, Drank heavily, then, half afraid, Sent in a picket, blustering, brave, Who volunteered to trouble save. He came out with a demon's cry, Nor ate, nor drank \ of men was shy. AT THE CASTLE PEEL. 13 He screamed his terror out in death, Shrieking, perforce, his latest breath. 1 Close up the passage,' was decreed ; An order rilled with ready speed. Soldiers and people, night and day, Walled each end of the passage-way. Strong the masonry, broad and deep. That's where the spectre hound's asleep." Two little Manx, the fisher's, no doubt, Impatient to hear the story out, Poise on noses, — a trick they know, — Hold hats for pennies and turn to go. " This giant's grave?" "That," laughed the man, " Giant Three-Leg, last of his clan. Bothered St. Patrick ; wasted rocks, Throwing them miles at pasturing flocks. He had thrown this island half away. St. Patrick's anger was roused one day : 1 Go to the Calf! There's rocks to spare. You can in a minute hoof it there,' He said. ' No longer will I agree That you impose on the north and me. ' The giant refused, St. Patrick cursed : The giant fell, an artery burst. Died of rage ; the curse his bane. St. Patrick's regrets were all in vain. Buried, you see, just where he laid. His patron Patrick used the spade. 14 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Eighty-foot man with a ten-foot face ; Last of an early three-legged race. This, the grass-grown mound you see, The giant's length to his memory.' ' Fisher and children seek the town ; Twilight shadows drop softly down. A voice, on the hush of the wind, repeats Rhythmic measures, I catch the beats : " Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, Down in the sea the mermaids dwell. Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, This the spire of our citadel. Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, I am the maid who rings the bell. - Coral, coral-a, Dingle, dingle-a, Cdral-a, ching, Dingle-a, ding, " Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, Out in the twilight, who can tell, Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, Where in the mountain, plain, or dell, Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, Grows the mermaid's asphodel? Coral, coral-a, Dingle, dingle-a, Coral-a, ching, Dingle-a, ding. AT THE CASTLE PEEL. 15 " Coral, coral -a, pearl and shell, Sleep, fair islet, for all is well. Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, Mermaids, rise with the ocean's swell, Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, To brush your hair with the asphodel. Coral, coral-a, Dingle, dingle-a, Coral-a, ching, Dingle-a, ding. " Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, The world is under the slumber spell. Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, This the call of your sentinel, Coral, coral-a, pearl and shell, Rise, with the parting tap of bell. Coral, coral-a, Dingle, dingle-a, Ding, ding, Ching, ching. M A siren hush absorbs all sound. Out in the east a firebrand round Lights up the sky. Transfixed, I hear Hundreds of mermaids trailing near ; Beautiful faces, beautiful hair, Enough to people the everywhere. Coral, coral-a, asphodel, They are here and gone, my senses tell. 1 6 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Only a wandering few remain. " The land's unstable' ' is their refrain ; " One night I met my love, Here, upon the rocks. Here, upon the rocks, I met my love one night. Met him, met him, met him, But I did not get him. " Follow, my love would not, To the ocean deep. To the ocean deep, My love would not follow ; So I went without him, Did not care about him. " Next night, asphodeling, I the biped spied. I the biped spied Asphodeling, next night ; With contempt I hit him. Early death just fit him. " So, although I met him, Yet I did not get him. Gladly went without him ; Did not care about him. With a pearl I hit him, And death seemed to fit him." AT THE CASTLE PEEL. 1J A lower voice records a lay, Close to the ocean, and floats away : " Trust not dreams that may be golden, Trust no smile of sky ; Be not to the land beholden ; Pass chill Mona by. Pass her by, nor touch, nor tarry. Sorrow doth she weave and carry. " Only tears are her's, succeeding Broken sob and sigh ; Gladness knows no interceding. Pass chill Mona by. Pass her by, nor meet the tangles. Pass her by at distant angles. " Coral monument of sorrow, Troubles mountain high. Always, lest it's tears to borrow, Pass chill Mona by. Pass her by. Her mournful weaving Haunts me, and I shudder, leaving. ' ' This the mermaid, floating, fair, The beautiful one with trailing hair, Trapped by fisher in Cromwell's reign And housed three days in cottage plain. She failed to speak, or eat, we read ; At last in pity sweet was freed. Avoiding now, with care, the shore, Her voice may not reach mortal more. 2* 1 8 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Another chant comes, wild and free, Close from the ledge of rocks, to me : " Cherilu, cherilu, Cherilu, lee. My lover, my lover, he waits for me. Down in the depths of the amber sea Waits my lover, He waits for me. " Cherilu, cherilu, Cherilu, lee. Pearl and amethyst laugh in glee, Where, in the depth of the amber sea, Waits my lover, He waits for me. " Cherilu, cherilu, Cherilu, lee. Down where the streets of diamonds be, Softly singing, Cherilu, lee, Waits my lover, He waits for me." Down went Cherilu, through the wave, With light the amber depth to pave. The other mermaids such silence keep, I close my eyes and dream they sleep ; Yet, by a subtiler sense than sound, I feel their presence still around. AT THE CASTLE PEEL, 19 The firebrand wanes to a pale-gold moon ; The lyres of heaven are all in tune. At last, from the ocean's lips, there lifts Words as soft as the wind that drifts : " Come to the billows. Come to your pillows. Gather, my children, Gather you home. " Come from your roaming Out in the gloaming. Gather, my children, Gather you home. " Come, quickly follow. Dive, as the swallow. Gather, my children, Gather you home. " Rest from your roaming Out in the gloaming. Gather, my children, Gather you home. " Haste to your pillows Soft, in the billows. Gather, my children, Gather you home. ' ' Mermaids who waited join in the call : " Gather home, gather home," chorus they all. 20 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Perfect enchantment spans the shore With charm just hinted of before. "Gather you, gather you, Gather you home. Coral-a, ching; Fair maiden, ring Gather you, gather you, Gather you home." The beckoning chime of a bell unites To call the mermaids from their flights. " Coral-a, ching, Gather you, gather you. Dingle-a, ding, Gather you, gather you. " Gather you, gather you pearl and shell, Search no more for the asphodel. Gather you, gather you pearl and shell, Home is home where your kindred dwell. Coral-a, ching, Gather you, gather you. Dingle-a, ding, Gather you, gather you. " Gather you home, Coral-a, ching. Gather you home, Dingle-a, ding." SPEEDING THE PARTING GUEST. 21 "Ding, ding, ding," and a lingering " ching ; n The mermaid's bell has ceased to ring. A whirring musical sound, a toss Of floral odor seems to cross The stretch of green and the ruins gray. A swift descent ; they are all away. SPEEDING THE PARTING GUEST. December 31, 1891. And so you are going to-night, Old Year, Out in your sled and four Into the past ; and the present's cheer Will halo you nevermore. Kindly and sweet you have been, Old Year. How I hate to see you go, Midnight blanket to neck and ear, Out in the cold, cold snow 1 I did not mean to be sad, Old Year, But to give you a parting kiss ; So close together are smile and tear, They blossom hit or miss. But here's to your courage to-night, Old Year ! And a tender grasp of hand ; You won't be lonely I hope, my dear, Out in the gone-by land. 2 2 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. You leave us many mementos, Year, The laurels of life and death. Three hundred and sixty-five days' career Has made you short of breath. Good-by, Old Fellow, you good Old Year ! Good-by ! I'll remember, you know. The voice of the gay New Year I hear, — How winning it is and low ! Good-by. Be off, I say, Old Year ! The town clock strikes. You're through. We speed the parting guest, nor fear To bow before the new. \ ON THE LONGPORT RIBBON. Read at the laying of the corner-stone of the Hall of the Long- port Society of Natural Sciences, at Longport, New Jersey, August 17, 1890. This Society was organized by Sara Louisa Oberholtzer, as the Longport Agassiz Microscopical Society, June, 1884, she being its president for four years thereafter. The sea looks in and the sky looks down ; Upon our labors they smile or frown With stolid sense of their hold secure On space and compass while worlds endure. The sea laughs in at the open bay And flings her arms in a winning way ON THE LONGPORT RIBBON. 23 Around this ribbon of greening land, Edged with the satin of shining sand, That we have caught in a passing lease, And mark to-day with the science crease. This Longport ribbon, with figures set By our restless hands, is Nature's yet; And she lines her treasures upon it free From the gold of sky to the pearls of sea. "Fall sun and shadow/' she says, "and air, Breath of the ocean, with tender care. " Touch this web with the woof of green, This Jersey ribbon that floats between " The past and future. The century's loom Has turned it out from the weaving-room." Indulgent Nature ! her loan is free Of the Longport ribbon to you and me. We crease and embroider its edge to-day With the little pattern our talent may, A laurel wreath, and a memory stone, As thanks and token for this fair loan ; As promise of effort to understand The alphabet of the sea and land. 24 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Chasing each other the moments speed, And the crested billows pause not to heed The passing movement of passing things. The air, a-flutter with waiting wings, Garlands and tosses her roses red To freshest cheeks, while we softly thread The petals of white, which chance to fall, For our own crowning ; nor dream at all It is years that silver our thinning hair While hearts are young and hopes so fair. Why, Grand Old Ocean, cannot we be Like you, the same for eternity ? I have asked so often without reply, When the waves but whispered or thundered high ; I have held my ear to the pulsing breast Of the tireless monarch, a listening guest For six sweet summers, and wooed in vain For an answering word. The endless chain Of the billows clank ; no word beside Has reached me out of the boundless tide. And yet, oh yet, on the silver sea Our dear Lord walked at Galilee. ON THE LONG PORT RIBBON 25 The lesson of faith so plainly writ On the water then is part of it. By a finer sense than sight or sound The query's answer my soul has found. Although we are deaf and blind at best, The lesson of faith to us is blessed. It frills the ribbon with sparkling waves, And wraps our murmurs in early graves. Eternity's work is ours, and we Are part of time and eternity. Each stitch we take on earth's broidered gown, That is chosen well, is handed down To the coming folk, while we retain* Its counterpart upon soul and brain. The labor of love is well repaid ; Faith and God's promises never fade. We bow to science, we lay this stone ; We rear this building as Nature's throne On her fair estate so lately won From the friendly kingdoms of sea and sun. Queen of the centuries, weaving on In the loom of ages from dawn to dawn, 3 26 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Thou hast turned out nothing of late, I ween, To equal this ribbon, afloat between The reaches of water that sway and smile And kiss and beckon the broadening isle. We offer the throne, content the place, If not the fashioning, suits thy grace ; And we sit at thy feet, dear Nature, here As birds of wing, with the warmth of year, Trying to peck from thy volume vast The news that is thine from first to last. IN MEMORIAM. Read at the Memorial Service held in honor of Professor James P. Wickersham, LL.D., at Millers ville State Normal School, Mil- lersville, Pennsylvania, July I, 1891. To vanished days And friends whose ways Were fair as morning, beckon we, Those early Normals, glad and free. The future's hem Sparkled with diamond dust for them. When hearts dance glees And symphonies, Weather and care are far away ; A year is only a short, sweet day. Glad youth, the king, Hears no past phantoms answering. IN MEMORIAM. 27 Glad youth ! ah, well, We may not tell The settled rate of his crown to-night ; Or if the jewels of fate are quite A fair exchange For faith untried. Life has its range. We laugh and cry, Grow strong and die. This is man at his best estate ; This the will of the Great Prelate. On line, in turn, Come the blessings we court and earn. Follow the griefs, Their faint reliefs, Until we call for vanished days, So sweet, so fair with careless ways, So near, so far, — Come, early days, where'er you are ! Lo, they appear ! The dim grows clear, The mists uplift, the lost is found ; Old friends and scenes are close around ; At school again We have the lights and joys of then. 28 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. These Normal halls Are long, there falls A hush solicitous, a glee Of rousing powers on you and me. This chapel new Becomes the earlier to our view, And faces gone We look upon ; From student's stand-point call the roll Of leaders, fellows, note the whole As drill for thought ; Absorbing more than we are taught. One face we scan Closely, the man Whose will is law, whose smile is rest, Whose frown is an unwelcome guest ; The leader kind Of force and conscience, heart and mind. Sedate of mien, Smiles lodged between Firmness and pity. Quick to show Pulsations of a joy or woe. Transparent, true, Noble of purpose through and through. IN MEMORIAM. 29 Of Quaker kin, With zeal to win A record worthy of the line Which Chester County's laurels twine. Daily he reads A Scripture portion for our needs, And from his eye Our morning sky Takes light or color, fair or dim, For the time being, is through him. Our ways divide, We individualize and glide From Normal trust, For each life must Seek blossoming scope, and count its power Of promise to perfect a flower. On higher ground Our leader, honor, duty found. Records of state With pride relate His educational service there, And ages testament will bear Of wreath and palm, To green the name of Wickersham. 3* 30 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. The nation spoke, His answer broke Along the Danish shore with free Resound, and his brief ministry Gave no regret Save that its sun so early set. Friendships were wide, And side by side With public honors walked apace Until the smile stilled on his face, And far across The bridge of time we note our loss. Thought knows her own Full granaries, grown And cared for through a century's half. She guards them well. Gay youth may laugh And flaunt his spring ; The rounded seasons treasures bring Beyond him quite. Memory's delight Cannot be bartered at a breath. Although our friends consort with death, We see and hear What was and is, so far, so near. THE LIFTING OF THE MIST. 31 We give to fame Our leader's name, And follow on the rainbow strand Whither he passed. The promised land, Baptized in light, Has all its gates ajar to-night. THE LIFTING OF THE MIST. Written off the Banks of Newfoundland, September 1, 1888, and read at an entertainment given on board the " Westernland." Loud the fog-horn shrieked and blew Warning blasts the long night through ; Even daylight, born anew, Sat o'ershadowed by the mist That stood plighting endless tryst With the ocean that it kissed. Ours, the good ship's covered space As it sailed with steady grace Through a film of dark-gray lace. Ours, the meshes thick amassed ; Ours, the darkness we have passed ; Ours, a faith that gathered fast With the steamer's steady sway. Not a moment of delay Brooks she to, but spray on spray 32 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. On the misty lace she throws, Till the darkness lifts and goes, And the gold of morning glows On the water's vast expanse. Sunshine with a glittering lance Cuts the meshes. On we dance, And the wreaths of spray set free Blossom full and merrily On the violet of the sea. Hushed the fog-horn's dismal sound ; Stilled the fears that circled round. Blindness full relief has found In the flood of perfect light That restores our mortal sight, Far beyond the lines of light To the glad horizon's rim ; And the ocean's cup-like brim Seems an offering tendered Him Who owneth, knoweth, watcheth all, E'en to the humblest sparrow's fall, And heedeth when His feeblest call. Clad in steel and fully manned, Onward goes the " Westernland." Hundreds on her broad decks stand. THE LIFTING OF THE MIST. 33 All around us, on the sea, Are the white sails fluttering free Of a goodly company, Fishing-craft, of divers speed, Size, and compass, which indeed To our presence pay slight heed. Boats as tiny scallop-shells Rise and fall amid the swells, Charming cod by lines and spells. Little emissaries they Of the fishing-smacks that lay Far and near about our way. Hemmed by dark and mist around, We had gained the fishing-ground, If such point on sea is found. The Great Bank of Newfoundland Now is by our vision spanned, And the view at our command Wakes our wonder, wakes our care, Wakes our questioning thought of where These light craft of sea and air Might have been if our great boat With a blindfold touch had smote Them unconsciously afloat. 34 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Fortune-favored anglers, they Draw the codfish in and sway- Back and forward day by day, Heeding not the dangers past. Happy people ! may they cast Lines afar from fog-horn's blast, And some miracle uplift Mists, when they to dangers drift ; Light, as faith, upon them sift. With us may their trust abide, As we stem life's busy tide. Faith is worth the world beside. GENERAL CLINTON B. FISK. Read at the Memorial Service in the Auditorium, Ocean Grove, New Jersey, July n, 1890. Another worker has laid down The olive-branch and sword, To take commission farther on, By order of the Lord. The glorious leader, Christian man, Has gone beyond our ear. We listen vainly for that voice Of faith and courage clear. GENERAL CLINTON B. FISK. 35 His was no idle life of ease, No folding of the hands. He lived, a general, to pass on The reigning Christ's commands. A doer of the word and will ; Time, means, and talents free He gave for years, with open palms, To stay earth's misery. His efforts were not born to die, His courage to take wing ; They are immortal, and fair bloom From year to year will bring. Though he has gone, his army stands Face front, and marches on Against the enemy of homes Towards victorious dawn. Our thoughts, as grateful memory flowers, Upon love's altar rest ; Tear-bathed, and yet we know " Whatever is is best." 36 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. ANTIETAM BRIDGE. Read for the Fifty-first Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, at the dedication of their monument at Antietam Bridge, Mary- land, October 8, 1887. " The bridge ! the bridge I" McClellan cried. " The bridge !" said Burnside, " though denied To other men who charged it thrice, Shall now be ours, by my advice. " Take to Ferrero's Iron Brigade This order," and his words he weighed, " The Fifty-first is bound to win ; Make them the victors; bless their kin ! M Ferrero, the despatch in hand, Sprang to his saddle with command, "Attention, Second Brigade !" he called. The men were silent, unappalled. " 'Tis Burnside's wish you take the bridge/ ' The soldiers saw upon the ridge The enemy in desperate force, With all advantage, all resource, Look down upon the narrow pass ; Their comrades in the gap amass ; The dead, the dying left and right, Their own flag-staff of colors bright. ANTIETAM BRIDGE. 37 They heard the colonel, breathless, ask, " Men, will you undertake the task?" A moment's thought. Brave hearts were there, And, through the battle-clouded air, A thousand voices spoke as one, The answer " Yes." And what was done We know, you know who suffered here, Men to your country's records dear; Remnant of those who fought and fell, Who stormed the bridge and held it well. Oh, it was fearful ! Carnage dire Fell with the rain of rebel fire. But on you went, through cover slight Of Roemer's guns, to footway fight Across the bridge, and win the day For boys in blue against the gray ; For Union, liberty, and right, For peace in which we all unite, For millions bound in iron chains, For God's own purpose, spurning pains That every moment broke your ranks With volleys fierce as Satan's thanks. Though you had freedom's vantage-ground, A blood- wet pathway there you found. 4 33 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Over the dying and the dead You marched determinedly ahead. You reached and stormed Antietam Bridge ; You took and held Antietam Bridge, — The Pennsylvania Volunteers ; The Fifty- first. Ah ! scalding tears Were shed for those whose lives that day Were given for victory away, While tender, watchful, pleading prayer, Coupled with unremitting care, Nursed back some loved ones, wounded sore, To later comfort. We deplore The heavy cost for glory paid. The stains of blood are slow to fade, And, with a century one-fourth sped, We hourly mourn our noble dead. Soldiers, who keep with breath-beats warm The leaden souvenirs of that storm, Who carry scars indelible, To those who stood and those who fell Be equal honor ! For no space Of buried years such scenes efface. Here, on this bridge across the stream, You see again the tempest gleam ; ANTIETAM BRIDGE. 39 And these calm hills, with sunshine flecked, To you are dark with retrospect. We see the landscape autumn clad, A silver creek that seems half glad To pass the shadow where we stand And ripple on through Maryland ; Arches of stone well set with time, Low parapets, around which climb Some stray and dusty wilding vines ; The simple fields and bound' ry lines ; The turf unbroken, sod and trees Bannered with nature's mysteries. A tranquil prospect, unconcerned By what we of its past have learned. ^Eolian on the autumn air, We hear of common sounds our share, — The hum of labor, twit of birds, The peaceful interchange of words ; The foot-fall of a passing steed, Vibrations that we scarcely heed. You hear again the battle din And Hartranft's " Charge !" to fight and win ; The boom of cannon, burst of shell, Tumult the years cannot dispel ; 40 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. And later, sadder sound than all, The cry of comrades as they fall. You see, what our eyes never may, The scene you thought had passed away. The smoke of battle seems to rise Again beneath these arching skies. The storm repasses, fearful, dire ; You feel again the deadly fire, And with fixed bayonets advance To take of victory the chance ; To take the bridge. But peace is here ; Days of North and South are clear. A reunited nation, free, Compacts anew with liberty ; The tattered colors softly touch. If e'er you loved them overmuch, You still loved right and justice more. Wave, triple flag, from shore to shore ! No North, no South, no East, no West ; We are as one by God's behest. The land, once red with judgments just, Blooms as a rose of perfect trust. Forgiveness opens blossoms wide, Forgetfulness will root beside ; ANTIETAM BRIDGE. 4 1 And we, a nation tried in fire, Will reach a level broader, higher. Longer than bridge or shaft can stand May ours be freedom's favorite land. Men are the implements of fate With which the All-Wise, soon or late, Works out whatever is to be. Blessed are those whom destiny Allows to count their service done, Their bridges taken, victories won. 'Twas yours to act. Our slight refrain Is nothing for your meed of pain ; Although we as a nation lay Our thanks about your feet to-day. God bless you with the best of cheer, And may your last bridge-way be clear ! In the great Battle-King's review May you be near Him, loyal, true ; The Fifty-first at His right hand, Faithful unto His least command ; The soldiers of His august will, Where marshalled hosts no longer drill ; Where heaven and light and peace are one, Your best commission His " Well done ! M 42 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. THE BROOKS RECEPTION POEM. Read at the Reception and Congratulatory Tea given by the Millersville Normal girls to Dr. Edward Brooks, in St. George's Hall, Philadelphia, September 26, 1891. Silently the sweet September Counts her heart-beats as they go ; And the afternoon shades linger, Blushing to the sunset low. Other years of sweet Septembers, Other days of sunset glow Lift their faces from the embers And a halo o'er us throw. Care takes wings and crows-feet vanish ; We are young again and fair, Draughts of Normal lore imbibing With the olden debonair ; Young again, and mirth runs over, Bubbling from the goblet there. Friends, as golden-rod in gladness, Blossom from the everywhere. As the aftermath of glory Comes this halo of the day ; All the tangles of the morning Were unravelled by the way, THE BROOKS RECEPTION POEM. 43 And we girls, though girls no longer, Still are girls, if words may play ; Girls to you, I'm sure, Professor, Golden-rod or silver-gray. Out from homes sweet as September, Out from battle-fields half won, Out from struggles that encumber Or successes scarce begun, We have come, your girls, to greet you. Knowing what the past has done, We congratulate the city, Bless and greet you, all in one. We remember well your precepts, And, with Normal rule in mind, Came to-day without the boys, sir. If perchance we were inclined Once to smile or speak in hallway To the fellows who were kind, We've repented, and consented Now to leave the boys behind. Yes, we meet them in life's classes Daily yet, for school-days last, And the depths we stoop to fathom They poise o'er with soundings cast. 44 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. But with serious, separate notions, Wisdom pickled and amassed, They're not singing, 'neath our windows, All the ditties of the past ; They're not listening at the crossings, Till we dance into the street ; But the Normal boys, Professor, Always have enough to eat. Pickled or preserved their wisdom, Algebraic and complete, Brings the answer ; and their mental Ever to the key is mete. We have strung the sweet Septembers, Amber beads, our memories round. Being girls, we blush to count the Jewel stones, though perfect found. If we dared, ten, twenty, thirty, They would cringe and kiss the ground ; For we're young, though beads of amber Are about our memories bound. Young but strong. The bud, the blossom, Then the fruit of effort tints, Till the hazy days departed Seem but tiny rainbow hints VALLEY FORGE ANNIVERSARY. 45 Of a great and pulsing present. Now, in photographic glints, Comes a fairer, fuller future, Ripening for us perfect prints. Love and honor ; this, Professor, Is our tribute free and true ; These the flowers, perpetual bloomers, In our garden-plot for you ; These the year-round sweet Septembers. May they send their fragrance through All your days. The girls are with you In the best you reach and do. The reception was tendered Dr. Brooks by a committee of women, in honor of his election to the superintendency of the Philadelphia Public Schools. Attendance, one hundred and twenty " Normal Girls," his pupils of from ten to thirty years before. VALLEY FORGE ANNIVERSARY. Read at an anniversary on the old historic ground, June i8, 1887. June roses toss their fragrance out, And fling their velvet leaves about A people who have not forgot The days when liberty was not. 46 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. The grass is greener here than when It struggled up to tell the men That winter's bitter days were done, And victories ripened with the sun. The soldiers, who at Valley Forge Found refuge on this hill and gorge, Have long since laid their armor by And gone beyond the battle-cry. Our memories, filled at history's spring, Can feel the past days' blossoming ; Can see the forces' worn retreat After the Germantown defeat ; And at White Marsh take needed rest Upon the broad earth's passive breast. 'Twas Wissahickon, Sandy Run, Sang lullabies of shelter won. 'Twas Lydia Darrah watched and prayed, And news of danger swift conveyed. She stilly to a key-hole crept And listened, while her family slept, To General Howe, whose conclave sat In her own home. 'Twas after that The general at her chamber door Rapped loudly full three times or more, To waken Lydia, that she close And bar the house for late repose ; VALLEY FORGE ANNIVERSARY. 47 Then in head-quarters quite content The generals rested, while she spent The silent night in plans to reach The White Marsh outposts, and by speech To warn them of the order heard That all the British troops deferred But till a second night should fall To march, surprise, and take them all. Friend Lydia the next morning said, " Fresh flour I need to make my bread ; " From Frankford I myself will bring Such as we used and liked last spring/ ' Howe passed the housewife through the lines, Musing "To prudence she inclines." And yet he never dreamed how she Baffled expected victory. 'Twas Craig, of light horse cavalry, She met and pledged to secrecy. Thus Washington, the tables turned, Welcomed the foe quite unconcerned, Forewarned, forearmed by woman's skill, And saved at White Marsh by her will. The cold winds blew, as winter's guest The valiant army needs must rest. To Valley Forge o'er frozen ground The worn men marched and refuge found. 48 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Ill clad, ill fed, the march was sore ; Their naked feet left prints of gore From White Marsh up to Valley Forge. Ah ! hallowed is this hill and gorge. These soldiers built their city here ; In its intrenchments half a year They suffered, waited, and such gloom As in our glad hearts scarce finds room Fell over them. Their needs were dire, From lack of clothing, food, and fire ; But they were our ancestors, men The world is proud of now as then. They threw a bridge the Schuylkill o'er ; They bodily bore wood and store Into the camp, and murmured not That Congress half their needs forgot. The Revolution's darkest days Were here. We, in memoriam, raise A chorus of our words and notes. The busy world sometimes devotes An hour to its best epochs, friends, And through the circling ages sends A peal of thanks for joys that be ; The paean of a people free. The military camp is gone, And those who built their huts upon VALLEY FORGE ANNIVERSARY. 49 This chosen ground, in lined array, Are far beyond defence or fray. The ancient redoubts, rough and strong, Intrenchments, that kept guard along The patriots' border half a year, Have left us only landmarks here. The tireless river and the run Still meet, as then, in shade and sun. The house where Washington abode Is still upon the river road, Well-kept memento of the past, Dear to our hearts and anchored fast To a great nation's richest store Of memories and battle-lore. Hunger and cold, privations sore, Beset the camp, and doubts hung o'er Those men as clouds ; discouragements Hourly beside them pitched their tents. The way was dark ; but as a guest, Aglow within each loyal breast, The sun of liberty was bright ; Its beautiful, unfailing light Inspired and kept them from despair ; They knew their cause was in God's care, And could not, would not be dismayed. Beneath these trees their leader prayed. 5 5© SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. " O Lord, be merciful ! n he cried, " Thy children have been sorely tried, Yet of Thy justice they are sure ; Grant us fresh courage to endure ! " And give us wisdom day by day To walk as Thou may'st point the way." The ground is hallowed, lightly tread ; 'Twas Washington who bowed his head. 'Twas God who heard the trustful cry, And answered from His throne on high With pitying smile and cheering word, With love divine on hopes deferred. The summer came and June was fair : The troops, encouraged everywhere, Marched on to victory. France was kind, And Lafayette but spoke her mind When he became our country's friend And helped us to the glorious end. Ages and ages yet to be Will untold millions, there made free By faithful heroes in the ranks, Remember Valley Forge with thanks. This camping-ground of liberty, A nation's Mecca I foresee. The Lord as near is now as when He blessed, through Washington, those men; THE SPANGLED FLAGS. S 1 His richest favor we would ask, The while we in the sunshine bask. 'Tis simply that we worthy prove Of our ancestry and His love ; A people grateful, true, sincere, Growing more gladsome every year, Yet, thoughtful ever, pure and just, Prizing the blood-bought freedom trust ; Doing our best each day to win A victory over self and sin. THE SPANGLED FLAGS. Read in Music Hall, Norristown, Pennsylvania, at the flag presentation of the Patriotic Order Sons of America to the Nor- ristown Public Schools, April 17, 1889. These flags, so beautiful and new, Are fresh as flowers kissed by dew. Their colors are our nation's pride, Dearer to her than all beside. They symbolize her liberty, The trials, too, that made us free. This flag, at Cambridge first unfurled, Has now the honor of the world. 52 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Since, as a New Year's banner then, In 1776 the men Flung bars and stripes into the air, Bright stars have waked up everywhere. In '77, the bars down thrown, The stars looked out to claim their own. The numbers deepen with advance, The diamond eyes of progress dance ; It is as though a patch of blue, Grown fairer, clearer, let light through, Until a galaxy complete Perfects at last where star-points meet. For who can tell what numbers yet Upon our freedom flag may set ? The war for independence fought With struggle long and dire was fraught. From Bunker Hill along the line, From Valley Forge and Brandywine We hear the echo, know the price Of our ancestors' sacrifice. We know the stars came at their call ; To them and God we owe it all, — THE SPANGLED FLAGS. 53 This country and this flag that waves Throughout our land, above their graves. If spirits of the past return, Well satisfied are they to learn The flag is spangled more to-day Than when they paused and passed away. Their thirteen stripes to us are dear, We bless and count them every year. Through several raids of border strife And fratricide that threatened life We bore this banner of success, Ensign of strength, of happiness. We cast off shackles, settled lands, Connected seas by railroad bands, Unbound the captives of the ground And in earth's bosom jewels found Our needs supplied, the recompense Nature affords to confidence. The laborer's hand, mechanic's skill, The intellect, the well-trained will Of men, if properly combined, Produce perfection God designed. 5* 54 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. The Union our flag protects, The Union the world respects, Is ours by blood's most sacred ties, Is ours by all that word implies ; Is ours to guard, to guide, to wake To stronger being for truth's sake. The past has blessed us ; rich and free Has been her gift of liberty. The present blossoms bright and fair, The petals tinge the soft spring air With future promises, that play About our nation's heart to-day. We control destiny, master fate, With right and wrong deliberate. We the custodians, keepers are Of every Union stripe and star. The States that make the aggregate Are ours, through God, to regulate. And yet we fully understand Our passing trust is brief with land; That to the men who are to be We must consign it presently. THE SPANGLED FLAGS. 55 'Tis meet this precious flag should rest In every school-room at request Of these, America's true sons, These patriots, through whose warm veins runs A love of country unexcelled. They tender what they have upheld With hearts and hands clasped firm and true, These flags, dear children, unto you. Read daily in their color folds The lesson life for patriots holds ; The thirty-eight plus four count o'er ; We never had such light before. Our country's hopes and gains compute ; Be loyal, brave, and resolute. God bless you in the gift received ! Through you be greater height achieved, Till star on star, with glad increase, Fills the whole firmament of peace. 56 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. GOLDEN-WEDDING LINES. Sent to J. H. and J. E. Stewart, in California, on their Golden- Wedding Anniversary. Beyond the mountain, dell, and plain My vision reaches, and again The friends of one centennial year Are hand in hand, on canvas clear. To them, the husband and the wife, There were no stiff, hard lines in life. The flowing curves of love secure Made blossom-time forever sure. The harvest was no summer guest ; The fruitage of each day was blest. The fragrance of their presence yet To us is rose and mignonette. Though visits and centennials pass As morning dew, and we, alas ! Are transient too and on the wing, Some memories sweet that touch us cling Through change and season, immortelles Of human life, its fragrance bells. And thus, although divided far By landed belt from us, you are A time-lit presence ; and the gold The slender-fingered years unfold THE SONS OF THE RIVER ST. JOHN. 57 For you by the Pacific's edge Glitters on our Atlantic ledge. Its sparkles I in garlands weave, And fling you this, by friendship's leave. God bless the days that are to be ! May each one open perfectly. When leaves must wither, may they fall So soft you miss them not at all ; The unused mantle cast aside When you are heaven's groom and bride. The gold, the diamond, and far more Be yours, from out the Father's store. Soul riches, infinite and free, Metes out its own eternity. THE SONS OF THE RIVER ST. JOHN. We sailed, we sailed on the river, The day as a picture was fair ; Before was the sun, the light-giver ; Behind were all echoes of care. We sailed as the eider, no morrow, No yesterdays stored in the hold ; Enough that the river was peaceful And fringed with the green of the wold. 58 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Enough ; but the Micmacs have stories That border the river St. John. At Kennebecasis the cedars Still burden the ground they are on. A freak of old Glooscup, the mighty, They tell who have legends in mind ; Malsunsis he slew with a fern-root. Then came there three brothers to find " Great strength, long life, and much stature." These asked they of Glooscup, the king. "You want force," he said, "to help mankind; To give wrong and sorrow the wing?" The brothers they answered, "We do not. What care we for others, forsooth?" "I offer," and Glooscup spoke slowly, "You wisdom, rare genius, and truth." They hearkened not, loudly protesting. Then Glooscup in anger found vent : "Stature and length of days !" roared he; " Begone, then !" And lo ! as they went, Their feet sank down and were rooted, While their heads shot up and they grew, Grew, grew to three cedars majestic That never have tasted the dew. THE SONS OF THE RIVER ST. JO /IN. 59 The islands, the bays, and the inlets ; The dreamy delight of the way. At noontime the half-distance landing, And we just an hour to stay. Descending the steep from the steamer, Where, close to the river St. John, A float swinging, dipping, is waiting, We pass, and the steamer is gone. " Stand closer ! We carry full twenty.' ' We dip, but we balance the square. The oarsmen are four, at the corners, Youth comely, alike, and so fair That Danger, her reckoning forgetting, Laughs out as we anchor to shore. We toss off the sparkle of water, And half wish the distance was more. We walk and we sit by the river ; The sward is like down at our feet. Our oarsmen, they tell us, are brothers, But part of a family complete. Twelve brothers, twelve brothers, twelve brothers ; Twelve sons of the river St. John, Who dwell, with their parents, beside it And honor the land they are on. 60 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS, No longer at Kennebecasis, With Glooscup and cedar-trees tall, My thoughts, as wild roses, will clamber; These sons of St. John have them all. A BURIAL HYMN. Sang at the funeral of Ezra Evans, in Lionville, Pennsylvania, December 24, 1886. Just before the dawn of Christmas, When our souls should fill with glee, Lord, oppressed by sorrow's burden, Bring we heavy hearts to Thee. We have lost a son most faithful, We have lost a brother dear ; Lost a friend whose life and purpose Were most truthful and sincere. We have lost, and yet the memory Of his conscientious ways Lingers, hallowing our sorrow For all coming Christmas-days. Though his life is early finished, It was filled with work well wrought In his chosen line of duty, And rare steadfastness of thought. ANNIE. 6 1 We are sure that unaccomplished Was no errand he had known. Lord be with us, soothe and bless us, While we yield to Thee Thy own. ANNIE. Annie, my niece, sat down by the sea: A beautiful foreground picture she. The sand was as white as sand could be ; The wind and waves coquetted free. My niece was pure as the white, white sand. The billows reached out to kiss her hand, Then, blushing, they seemed to understand Not unto the sea, but to the land Belonged this nice little niece of mine ; And, doffing their caps of summer rime, They said, " Sweet maid, we had no design Except to say that the day was fine. ,, My nice little niece beside the sea Looked coyly up from the waves to me : " I wonder mermaids' lovers should be So close to the shore, dear aunt," said she. 62 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. POLYSOPHONIA ELONGATA. Only fairy folk may guess Where I found the soft brown tress : How it rode the lapsing tide, Whence it came, and all beside. Elves, upon the shining bay, Let the secret out to-day, How the king of waters deep Went one summer day to sleep On a coral couch, while pearls Were a pillow for his curls. Mermaids, in caressing jest, Combed the soft locks o'er his breast ; Golden brown and straight, with care, Lay awaiting ringlet there ; But the king, in ire, awoke, Raged impatient at the joke, Clutched his locks and fiercely cried, " Vanish, mermaids, from my side ! Better far be bald," he said. " Be ye separate, hair and head." Ever since the hair floats round. Hither, thither locks are found ; On the strand, or in the sea, Always combed most perfectly. YESTER-MORN ON MOUNT RIG I. 63 YESTER-MORN ON MOUNT RIGI. But yesterday I stood on Rigi's height And caught the first blush of the eastern sky. A pageantry akin to heaven passed by Which filled my soul o'erbrimming with delight. The moon rose from the bosom of the night, An aureole of mist about her hair. As her bright violet eyes unclosed, she shook Her unbound tresses. Golden sparks lodged on Each Alpine height, and blazed in lustrous balls ; The smooth green mountain-sides, by valleys broke, Laughed out in amber lakes and water-falls ; The great old peaks, in slumber-caps of white, Flushed scarlet, while the clouds, as great gray shawls, Disused, discarded, fell beneath us quite. AN UNSATISFACTORY PHOTOGRAPH. All night, in dreams, I saw my own dead face. The silent shadows on my fancy preyed, And I, who dread not transit, seemed afraid. Life's colors dimmed as though a veil of lace Fell over them, and superstition's race With phantasies complaisant rest dismayed. The daylight, chary of her smiles, delayed With winter solstice, marking narrowest space. 64 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. At last the sun, with gold and daffodil, Frames in my eastern window views divine. How beautiful ! I will forget, the still, Grim photograph the artist held as mine Last eve, and ask God's glory thus to fill My foolish discontent with His design. THE FLAGS OF FRANCE. In Paris. Oh, the flags of France wave high, The flags of France wave free ; The boulevards so broad and wide Are shaded perfectly. The Arc de Triomphe spans the way, The streets laugh out in glee, While white-robed buildings, wreathed in green, Are fair as brides to see. The flags of France o'er memories float, Many and grave are they. The flags stoop over palace walls, Caressing them in play. A wealth of beauty and art has France ; Her years seem as a day. She lays aside whatever is past, And wears the blithe and gay. CONFLUENCE OF THE ARVE AND RHONE. 65 The flags of France forget, perhaps, The battles they've fought and won, While glittering monuments Paris holds Glisten and mock the sun. France is fair with her graceful flags, She never can be outdone ; We greet her flag, but the stars and stripes Forever, the many in one ! THE CONFLUENCE OF THE ARVE AND RHONE. Written in Geneva, Switzerland. The Arve from Mont Blanc carries The wear and waste of Snow With leap and dash and gallop, And then, with placid flow, It reaches from the mountains Into the vale below. Untamed and angry water, All turbulent with haste, It passes green and vineyard, Quaint chalets interlaced With latticed porches, stairways, And peasants blooming-faced. 6* 66 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Through rocky chasm or woodland, Through fair or sloping land, It runs to greet its kindred As nature doth command. The Rhone, with Alpine wisdom, Its needs may understand. Clear as the air the Rhone flows, Blued by the tint of sky ; If cloud or frown e'er touched it, The lake, with lullaby, Hushed them to oblivion — The dashing Arve is nigh. The rivers touch and mingle, Or touch and mingle not, At first is our impression ; For on the confluence spot The channel simply broadens : Each has its own allot. The Rhone along the left bank, The Arve upon the right, Flow on as cloud and crystal, And wed without delight, Until dividing colors They gradually unite. Then, each lost in the other, The rivers glide as one. IN WARWICK COURT. 67 Contentment wakes and blesses The marriage ill begun ; The Rhone and Arve together Dance lightly in the sun. IN WARWICK COURT. Beside the placid Avon's flow, Where Ethelfleda long ago Spurred her great war-horse to and fro To watch her gray-stone donjon grow, We walk. Of castle strong with age and care, The son of Anak's treasure there, Guy's porridge-pot and armor bare, Of master paintings charming, rare, We talk. Around the velvet sward we pace Of the court at the castle's face; Upon our narrow canvas space The splendid picture Warwick trace For time. Yes, it is there in gold and light, Cedars of Lebanon to the right, 68 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Queen Anne's bedroom near them quite. Outside, inside, perfect, bright, Sublime. From Guy's and Caesar's towers of brown That guard the keep, and towards the town We turn to find the arch leads down To garden gay in floral gown. But lo ! Beside us royal peafowls trail Their gaudy, glossy coats of mail, And mild eyes lift which dimly veil The mute appeal. Although words fail, I know Their winning, semi-timorous way Of asking food, and so I say, " Birdilla, come ! M They brush away A dozen years this summer day From me. A slight bill in my hand is pressed, My heart responds with love unguessed ; A petted fowl, long since at rest, Seems present. I am richly blessed, And see Bird, country, home, and friends in this, That panorama past of bliss, A GLIMPSE OF FAIRIES. 69 With undimmed vision. I could kiss The Warwick peafowl and not miss One day. The beckoning garden I forget, The antique vase within it set ; My brain an unschooled heart has yet : Love wears itself the coronet For aye. A GLIMPSE OF FAIRIES. On the Isle of Man. Lonely is Manhanan's Isle. Fairies once, in sweet beguile, Here were wont, with merry smile, To illuminate the shore. They, with face and presence fair, Tiny ivory feet, full bare, And a halo gold of hair That went scintillating o'er Graceful shoulders, necks of snow, Somehow, somewhere, seemed to go. Centuries the fairies held Undisputed right and eld To this land, whence they dispelled Or drew down the veil of mist. 70 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Unapproachable and weird As their elfin life appeared, Touch of humankind they feared. Lovely realm, enchantment kissed, Help the present now to be Buried fathoms deep in sea ! Let the fairy time of old Blossom from the early mould, Where its footprints scarce are cold. Years and wrappings loose their hold. Fairies, upon wings of light, Render luminous the night, And bewilder now my sight. Ages past have backward rolled. All the space, the air, the trees Are alive with symphonies. Motions, with bewitching grace, Rainbow lines of color trace ; And a charming form and face Laughs out at me everywhere, Till the very breath I take Is with fairy life awake, And I wave my hand to make Positive no form is there. Slight the movement as a charm ; Yet the elves, in half alarm, A GLIMPSE OF FAIRIES. 7 J Dance, as flakes of snow wind -tossed, Hither, thither, pathways crossed ; Ne'er alighting, never lost ; Sailing, circling, not away ; Just as birds near nestlings' bower, Or dreams of a happy hour Hover o'er love's perfect flower. Thus the air is full and gay, And Manhanan, on his isle, Has enchantment's reign the while. All the softest shades are here Blended, yet distinct and clear. Ivory, blush, and sky are mere Hints of words' unequal task. While, with siren sweetness caught, Fragrant to the sense and thought, Comes celestial music, fraught With unuttered sounds that bask Near the inner jasper gate, Which has been unlatched of late. With the wing of silver tide Ocean sweeps the island's side, And a fisherman, who tried Bravely on her breast to hide, Strands and lands. The fairies rise Swift, in couples, to the skies ; Mists to him, their old disguise : I alone unpacified. 72 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Thus the present's claim is strong. Centuries past return not long. THE AVON'S SONG. At Windsor, Nova Scotia. I pulse into the channel And fill it to the brim ; I bear the heaviest tonnage That rides the ocean dim. I am Acadia's river ; Her lover, wealth in hand ; Her restless, living river, Awaiting swift command. I doff my hat, my gallop Has been a merry race. As usual, I'm delighted To see Acadia's face. My treasure and my tribute I anchor to the strand, And turn — oh, sweet Acadia, I cannot bide the land ! There's many a laggard river Whose race-course ne'er is dry, And aptly many a lover Whose pulse is never high. THE WHITE HOUSE GLESTS. 73 Acadia, I, your river, Am emissary grand ; John Alden of the Fundy, Be pleased to understand. Your faithful, faithless Avon At Windsor, as you see, Atlantic, Fundy, Minas In personality ; Your pilgrim, as to Mecca, Who kneels upon the sand, And comes forever daily To kiss your dimpled hand. THE WHITE HOUSE GUESTS. Washington, February 5, 1890. Unexpected, welcome, they, — Vases fair of fragile clay With the incense burned away. In an awful moment's space, Mortal time cannot efface, Passed the gleams beyond our trace. It is meet the vases rest Here upon the nation's breast. Death has been the nation's gucet. 7 74 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. AFTER READING ALICE AND PHCEBE CARY'S POEMS. I've taken your sweet, sweet lessons, Alice and Phoebe dear, Close to my heart, and hope to keep Contentment ever near. I've read, when clouds pressed nearest The storm with chargers free, And bore, in his flaming chariot, My best-beloved from me, The beautiful consolations Which, thick as buds in June, Bestrew the garden of your words For midnight, morn, and noon. I wish you were still among us To beckon the sweetest blooms, And weave life's ragged edges smooth In your melodious looms ! You are years beyond our hearing, And yet your notes are ours ; They fill the air as "singing leaves," And perfume it as flowers. I've gathered your sweet, sweet music, Alice and Phoebe dear, Close to my heart, and pray to keep Contentment ever near. AN AUTUMN LESSON. 75 AN AUTUMN LESSON. Awaking with the morning, To face the east I turned, While through my leaf-screened window The scarlet sunrise burned. The altar-fires of promise That smouldered all the night, Shot up, in gleams victorious, Their heraldry of light. I reached the window quickly To let the brightness in, And saw the orange gather Where scarlet lines had been — A glorious panorama Of pyrotechnics free, Crimson, orange, and golden, All shifting rapidly. The kindly breeze that met me Grouped back my fading leaves ; I watched the consecration An autumn day receives. A perfect halo followed, Illumination rare Of softest light pervaded The ambient morning air. 76 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. " A marvellous sight !" I whispered, As God and Nature blessed. But as I spoke a shadow- On the horizon pressed ; The brilliancy of color Was lost in ash and gray ; A wreath of smoke encircled Each disappearing ray. A baptism of rain fell Upon the parched earth. " 'Twill storm to-day/ ' I murmured. " What's morning's promise worth ? Such sacrifice and halo For tiny drops of rain — Such pageantry and gladness For gray of smoke and pain." " We need the rain, beloved," A voice said that I heard ; " 'Tis not alone by grandeur Dame Nature's heart is stirred. Not by unbroken brightness Do souls of men grow strong. Exemplified this morning Is truth established long." Forever fresh I saw it, God's lesson unto men. With patience, as He teaches, I fain would learn again THE PIGEON'S FRUITLESS SEARCH. 77 That every brand of color Illuming east or west Precedes or follows darkness, And that what is is best. THE PIGEONS FRUITLESS SEARCH. An incident of a neighboring fire. The flames leaped high, the lurid light Made weirdly beautiful the night ; Bound by the fire-king's ruthless chain Were barn and horses, cattle, grain ; Timber and beast together fell A sacrifice to Vulcan's spell. Out of the darkness, while the flame Raged highest, a white pigeon came And circled round the blazing pyre, Her precious brood was in the fire. With white wings spread and piteous mien, Sailing the hot air, she was seen Go round and round the flaming mass, Until ten times she seemed to pass ; When the scorched wings refused her will And darkness caught her panting still To save her fledglings and her nest. Heroic effort ! At our best We are but birds of passage too, Guided by instinct deep and true. 7* 78 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. The fire burned out, her brood was lost. So little of the heavy cost Of soulless life that fed the blaze. The ruins smoulder nights and days. The pigeon mourns with crippled wings ; We con the lesson that she brings, The old, old lesson, mother love Can soar the holocaust above, And a winged spirit strives to be Close to her own in misery, Watching and guarding, mourning last When every hope is overcast. THE GLASS-BLOWERS. The melting-pots, pale with force of heat, * From parched lips puff, as we pass, " Retreat V With fire-proof batons, the blowers of glass Lift balls of flame from the molten mass To poise and swing, and to mould at ease Crystalline, wonderful mysteries. No time is wasted ; each man in place His baton swings with an air and grace Of one who knows that the laborer's arm Is the nation's pendulum; that labor's charm 1HE GLASS-BLOWERS, 79 For fullest action is sweetest rest ; That every man in his niche is best. The finger-like, pipe-like baton swings Its ball of fire, and the blower sings,- Thro* the whispering crevice, " Fire, take wings ! M The ball into larger compass springs. Its heart, at a breath, is cleft in twain. The blower repeats his whispered strain, The ball, transformed, is a scarlet bell, Swift fading to pink cylindric swell. Then, lost to color and heart and ball, Transparent sits by its neighbors tall, While the blower swings his baton anew . Into the furnace whence this he drew. Another, another, with like surprise, Expands as breath from scarlet guise. The brawny blower's accustomed skill To us is a perfect miracle. We bunch but flowers that meed our way, While the country's arm of strength are they. Blow on, ye men of the robust might, We by your glass keep bloom in sight. 80 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS, The key-note of God's eternal plan Is this dependence of man on man. Each, who in place does his level best, May safe with the future trust the rest. Blow we the glass or the perfumed leaves, It is work well wrought reward receives. FRIENDS ON THE TURRET. To my kinswoman. Slumbering on the northern seas, Fanned and kissed by ocean breeze, Are the heather-clad Orkneys. Autumn brought but harvest there ; Green the oats stood everywhere In the beckoning Christmas air. Flowers were not, and trees were not, Save perchance in sheltered spot Which the salted breeze forgot. Kirkwall turning towards the bay, In her heavy stone array, Uninviting looked and gray ; But she smiled and understood The pure Quaker womanhood ; Reached the two a greeting good. FRIENDS ON THE TURRET. Christians they of good intent, On love's ministry outsent From America, and bent On the Gospel spreading wide. They had stemmed the storm and tide Of the waters, and beside Felt the cross they inly bore Growing heavier than before, As they neared the Mainland shore. Sweet was welcome to them then From those Orkney Island men, And they blessed each denizen. Five the islands did they grace, That the dangerous channel face ; Westra last in their embrace. Left they each the preached word ; And the people's souls were stirred With the Scripture news they heard. Bleak and barren seemed the isles To the women, but for smiles. How love all things reconciles ! Memory with Shapinsha stays, Fondest kissed of ocean sprays ; Softest wrapped by autumn haze. 82 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Owned and swayed by wedded pair, Fair in silver-blossomed hair, Rich in gold and rubies rare. High upon his castle tower See I, with a mystic power, Him, the ruler of an hour, And my friends, whose plainest dress But enhances comeliness, Listening with attentiveness. He explains, with jewelled hand Pointing to his sea-bound land, That its scope they understand. Then beyond he calls their view To the brown-capped retinue Cropping from the ocean blue. Southward, too, he bids them turn, Where the hills of Scotland burn, Dim in distance, as they learn, Sixty miles away. The sky, With her galleon headlight high, Drops a charm to beautify. From the turret comes a voice, " Let us pray !" He has no choice But to hearken and rejoice. A BIRTHDAY JINGLE. 83 Woman, praying close to God, There above Shapinsha's sod, For a man whose every nod Is an understood command ! Brave art thou in castled land As upon thy native strand. Palace, tower, and cottage low Thou alike hast left aglow With good-will and peace below. Long will Orkney memories fair Follow thee, while lingers there Still the turret prayer in air. A BIRTHDAY JINGLE. Read at the celebration of the eightieth birthday of Catharine Oberholtzer, March u, 1891. How wildly Time rolls and tumbles and tosses Over the world with its joys and its losses ! Winters and Summers, Octobers and Marches, Frowning and smiling and garlands for larches. Nature, untiring, her wind-harps is thumbing ; Beckoning to birthdays that ever are coming. Progress is laughing, and counting her measures ; Past is receding, and hiding her treasures. 84 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. The Present forever, but never delaying, Is here, and is gone, the while we are saying, Time, in his flurry, but tumbles and tosses, Jumbling our hopes with crowns and with crosses. Of birthdays and birthdays that reach to fourscore, We never have had such a good one before. We welcome and bless it, our mother, for thee ; And four generations, delighted to see The length of thy days and the youth of thy ways, Have gathered their smiles in thy parlor to praise The Giver of years, and the mile-stone to meet As children again, and they sit at thy feet. We follow thy lead, but may not overtake, Though coming and coming as new birthdays break. Thy record of mile-stones we number with pride, And cheer on our comrades to walk in thy guide. March on ! while we follow thy steps as we may, And strength for our leader unitedly pray. TIN-WEDDING LINES. Having now, my friends, the tin, You a fuller score can win. Seeing how the years have sped, You can look with joy ahead, And with wisdom, faith, and tin Strive a silver cord to spin. TO THE DONOR OF A BOUQUET 85 Life is not a game of chance ; 'Tis the worthy who advance; Those who justly understand Motive power of brain and hand, And with energy begin Early to collect their tin. You have all things, I opine ; Unto you all hearts incline, Youth and talents, love and health, And two blossoms that a wealth — Diamond, silver, gold, or tin — Never from your hearts can win. Let me wish you only this, A continuance of bliss, An immunity from pain ; And that hand in hand again You may gather silver in As you do to-day the tin. TO THE DONOR OF A BOUQUET. Beautiful roses white, and pinks, Of your fragrance my soul drinks. Kindly, lovingly somebody thinks Of me. 8 86 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Love is more than gold or fame, Kindness better than titled name ; Sympathy stronger force than blame We see. Woman's friendships, firm and clear, Gather fragrance year by year, Till they blossom thus in cheer So free. Beautiful thoughts, beautiful bloom, How you fill the pleasant room ! Giver dear, bide never a gloom With thee. LIFE'S CONSOLATION. On the death of our neighbor, Harvey Shaw. October 19, 1888. Softly drift the gold and brown Of the maples on the town ; Winged, as birds, the leaves set free Skim the air half timidly ; Then they wreathe the sloping street, Pause and 'nestle at our feet. Bright, unconscious souvenirs they Of the summer passed away. Grieved, as empty nests, the trees Seem that late were crowned with these, LIFE'S CONSOLATION. 87 And the autumn's low refrain Has an undertone of pain. Though the sunlight stoops and wooes, All in vain, the days refuse The fresh brightness held before — Loneliness is near our door. The accustomed ways are drear, Lacking that sweet smile of cheer Our good neighbor from his face Shed abroad with ready grace. Falling leaves and fading joys — God creates and Time destroys All things mortal, till we see Nothing but futurity. Leaves and lives must fade and fall — Change, the destiny of all, Meets us often unaware With a parting and a care. How we miss the neighbor, friend, Who had happiness to lend ; The true, honest man whose thought Ever seemed with kindness fraught ! He has crossed the lines of space Compassing our earthly race, And his spirit smiles to-day Where the winds of heaven play. Though unfathomed, not afar Is the realm where spirits are, 88 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. And the boundary marked as death We approach with every breath. When we reach the jasper gate Where the joyful angels wait, Go beyond the season's rounds, Where no parting cry resounds, All life's clouds will disappear And its mysteries be clear ; Greeting, we'll forget the while We have mourned our neighbor's smile. LAID TO REST. October 9, 1889, Tenderly, silver moon, look down On the new grave to-night ! Stars that symbol our home above, Oh, shine with softest light ! Angels, stoop to the friends bereft And kiss all tears away ! An earthly veil has covered lips Of sweetest smile to-day. Come closer, Lord, to mourning hearts Than Thou hast been before ! The life was Thine. The memory we Will treasure evermore. LAST NIGHT'S SNOW. 89 THANKSGIVING. A shower of gold is falling, The yellow tints of air Are lodging on the tree-tops And twinkling everywhere. The emerald wreath of summer, The mild perfume of spring, Are as the down of thistle At autumn's hallowing. And this is all thanksgiving ; This breath of heaven let down, When summer's soul ascended, That rests upon the town. Thanksgiving. God, our Father, Renew our lives in Thee ! That we may value justly Thy generosity. LAST NIGHT'S SNOW. January 9, 1889. As flocks of birds the snow-flakes flew Among the trees, and the whiteness grew To mountains of down, 8* 90 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. A world redeemed in a single night And robed in garment of purest white As a slumber-gown. Yesterday's marks of struggle and sin Are all washed out, or folded in, And the perfect snow Covers the grave of the dear old year We laid to rest in the golden clear Only a week ago. The sycamores bald that guard the street And shrubberies near have an odd conceit — 'Tis their trysting-day — That the crystal wreaths the wind-sprite tied Has garlanded each for a winter bride In her own wild way ; And the spangled air that clustering clings To the busy world, with myriad wings, Is rose leaves riven To bless their troth. So they smile and bend. 'Tis the loving Lord Himself doth send The bloom from heaven. APROPOS, 91 APROPOS. They say it's bitter weather ; But, while we sleigh together, Why care ? The wind may be alarming ; To me it is a charming Affair. The blast we push behind us : The snow can never find us In here. We are tucked in securely. I see you smile demurely, My dear. I'm sure you like this weather, Because we are together, Annette. While merry bells are ringing And steeds are onward winging, My pet, Just whisper "Yes, forever," And tell me I am clever To-day. I never can remember That you, on last September, Said "Nay." 92 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. THE "ROBERT MORGAN." The ship " Robert Morgan" was washed into a street in At- lantic City, New Jersey, during a storm and high tide in January, 1884, where she sat high and dry seven months, until a mid- summer high tide, when with long effort she was got into the water. The ocean throws her burden oft Upon the silvery sand, And in a January storm She swept, with angry hand, The " Robert Morgan' ' from her breast, "Because," she said, "it is not best For you to float. You'd better rest, 'Robert Morgan.' " She edged the beach with drifts of sand, Those blossoms of the sea Which on the smooth gray canvas line Stand out enchantingly. She swept all barriers away : Man's work became her balls of play, And you the trophy of a spray, "Robert Morgan." Now in Atlantic City street You rest at her command. I doubt if e'er her arms outreach To draw you from the strand. THE WASHER-WOMAN. 93 She laughs afar and tosses back A mocking echo on her track : " The land is still. You'd better tack, 6 Robert Morgan.' " THE WASHER-WOMAN. Under the laughing trees, Catching the blossom breeze, In tubs of white or blue, Where draperies soft pass through, Stands the woman of toil, Battling with suds and soil. Blind to the bloom is she, And birds that merrily Chirp and woo and wed, In branches overhead, Move not the woman of toil, Battling with suds and soil. The sapphire dome of sky, With changeful pendants high, Is naught, if sun but shine When clothes are on the line, Thinks the woman of toil, Battling with suds and soil. 94 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Whatever of bloom or spring, Of charm of voice or wing, Of amber tint of air, Of delicate vision fair Touched the woman of toil, Battling with suds and soil, Passed by so long ago They left no trace or glow On wrinkled face and form That meet half way each storm. Hapless woman of toil, Battling with suds and soil. The angels stoop so low, In flitting to and fro Near the cleaner of clothes, How near she little knows, Blind, deaf woman of toil, Battling with suds and soil. I wonder if gray Death, That drinks all human breath, Can reach her with his wand, And make her understand We end with mortal coil This battle of suds and soil. MY VALENTINE. 95 MY VALENTINE. When hyacinths were ringing Their fragrance on the air, I wandered through the garden And sought you everywhere ; When wild azaleas clustered And summer days were fair, I lingered in the woodland And thought to find you there ; When sacrificial autumn Made leaflet lanterns glare, The gold and scarlet glimmer I hoped would touch your hair ; When snow-flails broke the lanterns And warmth and light were spare, I groped, almost discouraged, In shadows of despair ; But winter's cheeks are blushing To spring most debonair ; Saint Valentine discovers To me your beauty rare. 96 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. AN INDELIBLE POSTER. Co-operative is creation. We cannot of ourselves exist, Nor for ourselves. On obligation We continually subsist. Our independence is unreal. We are a part of the great whole, And can but reach our high ideal Through the wide longing of the soul. We are the tenantry who tarry Uncertain days or years, at best. The richest landed cannot carry A crumb beyond the poorest guest \ When moving hence. No distribution Unto the lessee, great or small, When he vacates this institution, Is made ; he simply leaves it all. Only the soul's accumulations, Developments of the divine, Are ours, and God's sure consolations That Jesus Christ is yours and mine. ON THE SAGUENAY. 97 ON THE SAGUENAY. Impotent, hurricane blackness. Styx, where dead centuries stood Pledging their word to infernals ; Phantom defiant, that should, Ignored by men in its fastness, Condemned to silence and vastness, Be mourning denial of wood. Rifted and wrinkled the mountains, Deformed by terrible sights. Trinity Cape and Eternity Brazen with records of blights ; Marked by the ages and smitten To have indelibly written On foreheads the list of their frights. Cloud-racks of capes, whose abutments Anchor in dregs of ill fate With fathomless depths, where there plunges Torrents besieging Hell's gate. Solemn, gigantic, as thunders, Winds hush, and the Diable wonders Who now on the Saguenay wait. Awful the silence at Trinity, Our boat but a scallop at play ; The echoing paean of silence Descends from the cloud of gray, 9 98 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Cleaving the bottomless river. We shudder, and whisper, " Deliver ! Good captain, oh, steer us away !" HA HA BAY. Into the gladness of sunshine, Into the Bay's fond embrace Glide we, and fancies distorted Blush as the beauty they face. Silence dethroned, unattended ; Rainbows of promise, extended From cliffs to the Ha Ha, we trace. A BELATED LEAF. Little leaflet, in satin brown, High on a sycamore-tree in town, Swinging aloft, on the highest bough, Into the winter ; I wonder how You quietly hold your summer place, The most enduring of all your race ! Flaunting your sail in the northern breeze That floats seolian on the trees ; Guarding a motley of mottled boughs ; Every morning, as I arouse, I gain fresh courage from you to be Faithful, although alone on a tree. SABBATH AT OCEAN GROVE. 99 AN INVALIDS PLAINT. Only a woman, weak and frail, Only a hand of fragile clay. How can I eke the whole year out, If thus I feel in the sunny May ? How can the summer bring me strength That spring-time's heart refused to give? Oh, it is bitter to lay life down When the whole world is crying "Live!' SABBATH AT OCEAN GROVE. Peace and silence and the Sabbath, Triune blessing, seems to rest On this grove the great Atlantic Clasps so softly to her breast. All the glamour, gold, and glitter Of the yester-eve so gay Have been folded, with the swan's wings, And are anchored safe away. Peace and silence and the Sabbath. Angels kiss the Lord's seal down, And their lips have touched our spirits In this love-lake, sea-side town. loo SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. THE SENTINEL SUNFLOWER. Standing alone in the mellow light, Sunflower sentinel, golden bright. Turned to the eastward disk and leaves, Child of the morning, that receives Into its heart the gold of days, And miniatures the sun's own rays. A growth of chance. The wild winds threw A seed on the new-made lawn : it grew A sturdy stalk of fibre tough. The sea beat near and the winds were rough ; The grass on the lawn it centred burned To a sickly color and earthward turned. Sand-tossed, as snow, on the simoon air ; Salt mists, as tears, dropped everywhere ; The grass we had nurtured for years grew brown ; But the sunflower, sentinel of the town, Fronting our cottage by the sea, Has grown and blossomed perfectly. Only a single stalk it stands, Lower leaves crumpled as sea-weed strands. With borders singed, three green ones sway, Emerald flags for the color gay. Spiked and perfect, the disk is spired With arrows the sun has tipped and fired. DISPOSITION OF A GRINDSTONE, 101 Set as a light-house on the shore. Beyond is the ocean's break and roar, The pulsing water with ermine edge, The blue expanse with ledge on ledge Of softest clouds that stoop and play With sails that dot the deep to-day. Sunflower sentinel, bloom of gold, Lessons of strength you hold, enfold ; A sermon rests on your open face ; It is this : by God's and Nature's grace, We may each, though winds blow east and west, Attain alone our height, be blest. AN OLD WOMAN'S DISPOSITION OF HER GRINDSTONE. It's most amazin' dangerous, An' I never dreamed afore I harbored sich a dreadful thing Right under my room floor. I'd not 'a' slept a wink at nights If I'd 'a' knowed about it. The stone's deceivin' anyway; I'll live an' die without it. Harmless ! No, I reckon not. Why, one but lately bursted An' sent four men tu better lands, Or where prospects is worsted. 9* 102 SO UVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. You don't ketch me a-keepin' round No sich misleadin' critters : I've nosed the grindstone long enough, Bakin' the old man's fritters. You wouldn't mind it ! Well, we'll see. Lift out that gray stone, Thomas, An' put it clean into the road. There, it won't scuff your wamus. I'll keep the pie-board screenin' me, While you, with wise controlling Git from the cellar this 'ere stone. Stop ! I'm afeard it's rollin'. It's only 'cause you cannot read You don't know 'bout these dangers ; The scientific 'scoveries made Make us old people strangers. We've got tu caution tu the times. Dig a deep hole, I tell ye, An' put the old gray grindstone in 'Fore it explodes tu fell ye. Them hand-grenades what's fangled new Might be good tu surround it ; But plant it deep, an' plant it safe, That yards of earth may bound it. DISPOSITION OF A GRINDSTONE. 103 A streak of luck we've had these years, An* fate has been propitious Tu hold the evil forces dumb While we were unsuspicious. We'll du our duty, Thomas, well; A monument protective Shall rise above the grindstone's grave, That others grow reflective. What ain't fit fur our cellar, man, Ain't fit fur other people's. That's good sound doctrin' that I larnt Where churches had no steeples. Du as you'd be did, that's the p'int. The good old Bible teachin' Is better ner high-soundin' talk And vastly further reachin'. Laws ! jist tu think, I used tu turn That grindstone by the handle, While gran.'ther ground the butcher-knives An' grandma held the candle. It didn't burst. It wasn't ripe, I reckon, fur explodin' : It seemed the civillest thing on 'arth, An' we had no forebodin'. 104 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. That's jist the way the times will change. The old folks long a-slumber ; While wonders wakened since they went Puzzle my brain tu number. There's telegraphs, an' telephones, An' lightnin' train expresses, Electric lights, an* phonographs, An* things nobody guesses. Discoveries is hatchin' fast, An* peckin' fur existence. The hen of years has set her time With patience an* persistence. She's got a brood, but scarcely clucks, Because her work's unfinished. She'll set fur centuries tu be With ardor undiminished, An' what she'll hatch, an* what she won't Is beyond our conceivin'. The shells, like grindstones, tu our view Is commonplace, deceiving Till they all burst, as burst they must When with life's atoms loaded. Our old conceits is like the shells, All worthless an' exploded. DISPOSITION OF A GRINDSTONE. 105 We're lucky if we git along, Among these hatched inventions, 'Thout being lost or gobbled up Tu feed their best intentions. I reads me papers, yes, I does, An* that's how I knows, Thomas, The things what give us rightful fears An* things what ought tu calm us. We'll bury grindstones an' all ill That's likely ripe fur hat chin'. There, touch the gray stone quiet-like, An' don't its edge be scratchin' ! You'd like tu grind your scythe ag'in, An' mow the medder rushes, The elder an* the alder clumps Where flood-time water gushes ! Your scythe ! Why, Thomas, you know well The brier-hook's long rusted ; The medder drained's a field of corn. Your memory can't be trusted. You needn't kere fur sich a stone. It was no human critter, That you should mourn an' make its grave A-sheddin' tears so bitter. 106 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS, We'll du our duty, as I said, Nor hug old-fashioned notions. The world ain't goin' tu stop fur us Its various locomotions. We'll jog along as best we kin, An' call the changes pleasant ; Because there ain't no age, ye see, Like this 'ere blessed present. A grindstone buried good and tight Kin make no further trouble ; An' rather' n be careless-like I'd have me caution double. We'll all live till we die, ye see, An' longer if designin' Tu keep all dangers out uv sight An' lights o' safety shinin'. It ain't no matter when we find Our notions need a-mendin', If we but quickly patch 'em up, With wisest thought intendin'. We'll have reward, uv course we will, The good book's full uv promise And comfort sure fur you an' me, So mark the grave well, Thomas. GOING BY THE MORNING TRAIN. 107 GOING BY THE MORNING TRAIN. Written in the winter at a country station, where the only morning train passes at six o'clock. We are going, yes, we're going, Going by the morning train ; And the clouds that hung at bedtime Grayly grim, predicted rain. By the chickens gauged we bedtime, And because a skiff of snow Sailed between them and their time-piece, Ranged they early in a row. So the night was long before us, And the daylight scarce behind, When upon our couch of feathers We expectantly reclined. After various cogitations On the prospect of a rain, O'er us fell a slumber, troubled Lest we should not wake again. We had slept, it seemed a lifetime, When we started in affright And broke matches half a dozen In our haste to get a light. 108 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Down the steps, the clock consulted, For its strike we could not wait. Oh, I wonder what makes people Ever, ever sit up late ! There, amid their books and papers, Sat our family of five, Till I dashed, half blind, amid them : "Robbers, boys, as I'm alive !" Shouted father, "Seize your pistols, And tread carefully the stair ! Daughter, fawn -like, trembling creature, How did highwaymen get there ? n " Only ten o'clock !" I uttered, Gazing upward in dismay. " Night is robber of the daytime ;" That was all I had to say. But the joke was turned upon me, And the laugh that followed fast Seemed to get up-stairs before me, Though I know not how it passed. Covered we up then our faces, Half abashed and yet amused, And the next time my companion Wanted clock-time, I refused. GOING BY THE MORNING TRAIN. 109 Somewhat later I, half dreaming, Heard an army softly tread, And the tinkling laughter-music Had a hush-word at the head. It was our belated household Marching to the "Land of Nod," While the mother was the captain Bidding mirth be lightly shod. So we closed our eyes the tighter And determined on a sleep, But we thought it must be raining, And arose to outward peep. Yellow stars looked down upon us, And we turned away content, Sighing, as we pressed the pillow, " If this weary night was spent V Then we dreamed of dreams a hundred, Just about a minute long, Full of all the ills of travel, Such as through a nightmare throng. One and two we heard the clock say, Ghosts of stillness filled the house > Nervous, our disordered fancies Swelled the gay steps of a mouse 10 no SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. To the walk of a hobgoblin, Till we shook with terror wild. There, the cock crows ; it is morning ! At the knowledge how we smiled ! Clocks may err, but chickens never, For they call the breaking day. " Rise, my friend, we'll miss the milk train. Rise, for darkness fades away." Nothing loath, we made our toilets, Chuckling in our own delight That we stealthily had risen While the household thought it night. Then my friend — a moralizer — Thus descanted while we dressed : " If we always retired early, We'd have more refreshing rest, " And if always we rose early, Winter days would longer be ; Thus we'd waste less gas and coal oil," She pursued most logic' ly. I assented, though confessing I felt neither fresh nor long, And that nights, at best, were tedious, Though much sleep should make us strong, GOING BY THE MORNING TRAIN. ill We were ready ! and victorious Swept we, hatted, gloved, and furred, To the hall ; to wake the family For a second we demurred ; But the car-time is un courteous, So we loudly called, " Good-by !" "What the deuce is up?" cried father. "It's we girls." He said, "That's high !" " Never, never mind the breakfast, We can get it all in town. There, we are entirely ready ; Please not one of you come down !" "You lie down !" out shouted father; " Why, you'll catch your death of cold ! As I live, it's scarce past midnight, And an old bird's never sold." " Neither is a chicken, father," With due meekness answered I, " And the rooster has been crowing To the daylight in the sky." One, two, three, the hammer struck it, Just the moment that I spoke, And a laugh that grew contagious From the silent chambers broke. 112 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. " Go to sleep, that's dear, good children," Said a soft voice through it all. " Oh, these awful, awful milk trains !" Smothered from my lips did fall. Then a disappointed slumber Came upon us deep at last ; Slumber that had not departed Till the train was steaming past. A FRAGMENT. Whatever you do, do right, my boy ; Whatever you do, do right. The reward you'll have's delight, my boy; The reward you'll have's delight. WALT WHITMAN. Written at his funeral, Camden, New Jersey, March 30, 1892. Mild eyes veiled, and silence, White with bloom, on his cheeks ; Nature's close translator Slumbers, and yet he speaks. Humanity, swaying, listens. Sorrow and faint adieu Halo the air, but clearly The poet's love breaks through : WED AMONG THE LILIES. 113 Love to echo and linger Along the walls of time, Tender, — democratic, — A universal chime. WED AMONG THE LILIES. April 28, 1892. Wed among the lilies, Sweet and sunny May. Wed among the lilies On an April day. Perfect as the lilies; Pure and fair as they, In the breath of violets, Be your onward way. Hark ! prophetic lilies Voices lift and say, " Solomon, in glory, Had not such array " As God gives the lilies/ ' Lingering on for aye Will this bridal blessing Echo for you, May, Wed among the lilies On an April day. Spoken to by lilies, Sweet and sunny May. 10* cscsioTvs PHILADELPHIA'S GREETING TO LADY HENRY SOMERSET. Read at the luncheon given by Mrs. J. R. Jones to Lady Henry Somerset, on her arrival in Philadelphia, November 21, 1891. Welcome, gracious lady, free Philadelphia gives to thee. Never from its Quaker heart Will the grateful thought depart Of its founder, William Perm, Ours of all the Englishmen. For his sake the rose of cheer Blossoms for thee, lady, here ; For thy own all blooms expand, And the white flowers of the land Grow more fragrant, seem more fair With thy sunshine in the air. Streets he fashioned, without curve, Unto us as pointers serve 117 Il8 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS, Up to level, clean-cut ways, Wherein moral standards raise ; And our very name is love, Brotherly as Christ's above. We, alas ! have gone awry, Careless, as the days go by, Of the name, the treaty, street ; Purpose, promise incomplete ; We have failed fulfilments best. England is again our guest ; And in thee, fair lady, we Winning back to promise see. Eastnor castle gate, ajar, Beckons to thee from afar ; Family, tenantry, and friends Watch and wait, while there ascends From thy noble heart a prayer That omniscient, tender care Bide with people everywhere. Welcome, gracious lady fair. Penn's long streets need ribbons white Stretched their length and breadth to-night, THE W.C.T.U.: ITS WAND OF POWER. 119 And the love our name portrays To grow purer with the days. Welcome thou, thrice welcome here, Blessed messenger of cheer. Philadelphia never yet, Lady Henry Somerset, Had such English mother-care As thou bringest now, with prayer. Grateful welcome, broad and free, We extend, beloved, to thee. THE W. C. T. U. : ITS WAND OF POWER. Read on the historic rock at Indian Spring, Georgia, November 19, 1890, as Pennsylvania's word on the occasion of the Atlanta Press excursion given the five hundred National W. C. T. U. dele- gates ard their friends, from Atlanta to that point. Men may fail in undertakings, Nations see no way to rise, But the women, Men and Nations, Know the secrets of the skies: Know that love, the spark immortal That has lit the ages down, Is the grandest power momentum From the cradle to the crown. 120 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. We have waited, but no longer Are the silent, dormant power ; For our love has blossomed prayers That wreathe heaven every hour. Seen, and heard, and felt, we're coming, Asking blessings all the way ; Gaining strength with each endeavor To advance the dawn of day. We, the mothers, sisters, sweethearts Of the men and nations dear, Will not falter in allegiance Until victory is here. A RESPONSE. Spontaneously given at the opening of the National W. C. T. U. Convention at Atlanta, Georgia, November 14, 1890, immedi- ately after the invitation of Governor and Mrs. Northen to a recep- tion in the executive mansion, and the presentation of a resolution by a committee of Georgia legislators offering the Convention the use of the capitol building for some meetings of the organization. From the cold and frozen northland, From the sunset of the west, From the early eastern morning, We are here at your behest. Here, oh, sweet, beloved southland ! Here, forgetting all the rest ; We, your own, through reunition, Gathered to your pulsing breast. OVER THE KINZUA VIADUCT. J 2 1 OVER THE KINZUA VIADUCT. Written after crossing the Kinzua Viaduct, en route to Bradford, Pennsylvania, October 15, 1890, and read at the opening of the Pennsylvania W. C. T. U. Annual Convention at Bradford, on the morning of October 16. Over the dizzy height we swung, Poised, and moved with a cautious gait. A stream, that wandered the trees among, Laid like a silver dream await For budding gold On the autumn wold. We counted its singing ripples dim, Voiceless, save to our inner ear ; We caught the sound of a deep-down hymn By a sense of sight, so far, so near, Balancing there On the Kinzua fair. We poised and swung, we crossed and met The rugged earth with its prose of place ; And mountains fair as Olivet, With a touch of sun on beard and face, Grown beauty wild, A welcome smiled. A vision passing, the dream, the deep, The stream, the tree-tops, the world beneath, A Swiss-like picture, sketched to keep Framed and fair in a memory-wreath Till time is gray And darkness day. 11 122 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. A chasm spanned with a bridge of steel, Reaches and glitters and bears the weight ; The builders' promise is ours ; we feel White thoughts and ribbons will, soon or late, If welded strong, Bridge over wrong. Our courage is fresh, our courage is new, Each gap of beauty or evil dire Admits of cover, and labor true Achieves whatever it may aspire To reach or span That blesses man. Nature's torches, aflame, are bright, And spire-like derricks doff hats of gray ; Skill and the elements unite. Over the viaduct, and away, We pause, — are blessed, As Bradford's guests. AN ENCAMPMENT POEM, Read at the opening of the W. C. T. U. Encampment at Valley- Forge, Pennsylvania, July, 2, 1890. Our tents are pitched. As doves they rest Upon this hill with memories blessed. Emblems of woman's love confessed For homes where purity is guest. AN ENCAMPMENT POEM. 123 Emblems of strength and patience grand To wait till right possess the land ; Emblems of labor, as they stand, Sentinels of action, faith in hand. The musketry of long ago, The pickets walking to and fro, Scanning the line for English foe, That in the light of history glow, Served well their purpose, and we see Their records in a country free ; While this old camp-ground seems to be Our patriot fathers' legacy. Their service, struggle, sufferings here Make Valley Forge a keepsake dear, And this great nation's heart is near These sheltering trees that whisper cheer. This little army's wings of white, Outspread to-day as flecks of light, Seem beckoning us to greater height Where poise in balance wrong and right. Men strong in daring, stanch and true, Have cleared the country, had to do With laws and problems. Honor to Their stouter courage through and through ! 124 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. We women, bound by love's strong ties To family life, were slow to rise And by our instincts equalize The outer thought to means devise Whereby our children, nurtured pure, Might go beyond our voice secure Of home protection, and mature Unto their best, without allure. Somehow, rome way there must be place For purity to walk apace With culture. Civilization's face Broadens to smiles in western space. Beyond, anear, afar, God knows, Are better times where wrong's bars close, And Christ Himself will interpose To conquer right's ignoble foes. Perhaps this ancient camping wold May some great secret for us hold. We wait, as Samuel did of old, The Lord's voice here. He has foretold This message through the ages past : No trust on Him is vainly cast. His power is wondrous, loving, vast, And prayers have answer sure at last. A BLOSSOM OF MOTHER-LOVE. 125 A BLOSSOM OF MOTHER-LOVE. An impromptu read at the opening of the Pennsylvania W.C.T.U. Convention at Scranton, October 15, 1890. The breezes blow, the grate fires glow ; October homes are fair to see, And a mother's heart is ever a part Of the babe upon her knee. Her life is bound to the child ; around Its motions the tendrils cling ; She screens it there from blight and care, And yearns that years may bring A wealth of joy to her girl or boy. The mother-love, great and free In its close embrace, through time we trace Into immortality. For soon, from rest on the parent's breast, The active child descends, And reaches out, with a laugh and shout, For toys the world but lends. The innocent one, the daughter or son, Is watched, as the months elapse, With trembling fear. There are brambles near* And yawning, open traps. 126 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. The dangers haunt. There is woe and want, The eyes of the mother see, And she leaves her chair, in tender care For the child that outgrew her knee. She guides her own, by God's grace shown, Mayhap in the path of light ; Then, with loving care for the motherless there, She reaches into the night. There are boys and girls, bright eyes and curls That have known no soft embrace ; There is crying need for a hand to lead, With love, to a surer place. The mother kneels, her soul she feels Pulse warm with grand desire ; Her voice uplifts, " Take, God, my gifts, And all my powers inspire " Unto Thy will/' she prays, " and fill My courage to the brim. That child of mine, the world is Thine. Enlarge my vision dim." With pleas and thanks, to higher ranks The nation's mothers glide ; In heart and hand together band To stay temptation's tide. A BLOSSOM OF MOTHER-LOVE. 127 The breezes blow, the forces grow, From strength and struggle born, Till woman's arm can shield from harm, Her love rose-tip the thorn. The darker past is fading fast, When she, in helpless ease, Sat wrapped in thought and, all untaught, Lost opportunities. We gather here, good Scranton ; cheer From many homes we bring; The Keystone State will, soon or late, Off license shackles fling. Your trees unfold their flags of gold, While hills, in scarlet dress, Whisper of faith ; October saith, "Persistence wins success. " The nation's power, her budding flower, Is well-trained mother-love. The opening bloom haloes the gloom. God watches still above. 128 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. FREE COUNSEL. Of course, dear girls, you never give A thought to matrimony. You may, if forty years you live, Though 'twould be rare and funny. But what has been may be again, And, lest you chance to marry, I'll tell you something known of men To muse on while you tarry. Some of them will drink brandy, And whiskey, if it's handy. Sad woe will sure betide her Whose lover sips hard cider. It's best to bear this news in mind, And watch, while you are waiting, The various grades of humankind. (I am not idly prating.) Whether or not you wish to wed, Some temperance bread be brewing ; Some better food than wine, so red, Be to the nation strewing. Lest men should drink of brandy, And whiskey, when it's handy; Lest woe should stand beside her Whose lover sips hard cider. FREE COUNSEL. 1 29 Mankind is strong, mankind is weak ; Time's plough turns out the axiom, And every furrow bears a streak To prove the old, old maxim. Support the weak ! Women have tried, Dear girls, for weary ages, And, borne down by the burden, died, Laid by, the drunkard's wages. Some men will drink of brandy, And whiskey, if it's handy. Sad woe will sure betide her Whose lover sips hard cider. Cling to the strong ! make others strong ! Have pity for their weakness. Don't let pity drag love along To any tippling meekness. And if you wed, the temperate wed ; Be upheld while upholding. Then pray for those through darkness led, A stronger love enfolding. Pray, pray they drink no brandy, Or have of whiskey handy, And that no girl beside her Has lover sipping cider. 130 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. A WILD-ROSE SPRAY. Part of a poem read at the unveiling of a banner, containing a spray of wild roses, at Ambler, Pennsylvania, November 5, 1891. Pale and pink is the wild, wild rose that garlands the way-side free ; Its breath is sweet to the mendicant there as it is to you and me. It is not for the favored the wild rose grows ; it is not for the few it blows ; But for the multitude, as they pass, it smiles, the sweet wild rose. Although we have prisoned a spray in type of work we aim to do, It is only a type : its breath was left with the way- side it passed through. A memory gathered to tell of life and its dream of bramble-wood ; Its leaves and thorns, that are half forgot when the blossom-time is good. A memory ! yes, there is many a rose of the past for you and me, Bannered safe in our hearts that only God can see. VOICES OF THE NIGHT. 131 VOICES OF THE NIGHT. Read at a mothers' meeting at Norristown, the day following the incident. Softly swung the air of May-time, And the borough clock struck ten. Gowned and slippered sat I, reading At my library-table, when On the breath of night there reached me From the street a helpless cry, As of some tired child, bewildered. " Wants its rest and nest," thought I. Then I read mistakes of Russia, Social remedies proposed ; But the troubled cry repeated Through the door and window closed. Up I sprang, and from the porch-way Peered into the darkened night ; Paced the length of my dominion, Listened, heard naught. To the light Turned I silent then, and took up Economic lines of thought, Dross and problems of the nations That are being weighed and wrought ; 132 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Until roused again by sobbing Of a child that was without ; That same weakling plaint continued, Broken cries of loss and doubt. " Surely I must find that baby," Said I, rising, flinging wide Open the broad door beside me, "Find and have it pacified." 'Neath the sentinel line of maples That o'erhung the pavement red With the unfurled flags of May-time And dropped shadows on my head, Close beside the porch there tottered A wee child, of summers two, Making doleful lamentations. Lost ! " Oh, babe, come hither, do !" And I reached my arms, enticing, Through the darkness to the child ; But the little face turned from me, Toward the maple trunk it smiled. There my scrutiny discovered, As it tried to catch his hand, Leaned the father of the baby, By the strength of rum unmanned. VOICES OF THE NIGHT. 133 When it found the hand unanswering, Bitterly it cried again, Pulling at his trousers faintly. Pityingly I spoke out then, " Can you see and hear your baby ? Can you take it home to rest?" Vaguely stooped he down and kindly Pressed the baby to his breast. With a pleading, sleepy prattle The tired child had fain beguiled ; But the man looked helpless at me : "I can't understand my child. M " Home and sleep it wants," I answered. Then, with long, uncertain stride, Criss-cross to the fence and maples, Gained he little length beside ; Trying to take home the baby, But it seemed beyond his ken ; And he put it down to rest him : How the hushed child cried again For the arms too weak to hold it, For protecting parent care That should meet the hungry pleading Of the babies everywhere ! 12 134 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. He looked back at me and took it, Staggering 'gainst another tree. " I will help you home," I answered. " Wait; I'll be back presently/' Off my slippers flew and quickly Shod for street I reappeared, Took the baby, said, "Now, comrade, We are off. The way is cleared.' ' Half afraid, the child's hand reaching From my shoulder back to him, Felt secure but in his holding. Thus we walked through shade and dim, Stopping as we need to rest him, Going at the child's demand, Till we neared an open door-way And beheld a woman stand Peering out into the darkness, Calling " Bertha ! where are you?" " Mamma," sobbed the child I sheltered, " Me was lost and papa too." Slipping from me to the pavement, Little form by mother clasped. Baby, father, mother happy, For they each had what they asked. THE KITCHEN GRACES.. 1 35 Turned I in the street unnoticed, Gained with ease my library light, Pondering not on Russian troubles, But these voices of the night. THE KITCHEN GRACES. An impromptu written and read at a meeting, March i, 1889, on the given subject. There's a little group of graces • That within the kitchen dwell When we bend with smiling faces To perform each duty well. And the lily fingers slender Of the matron or the maid, That with ready deft surrender The white key-board they have played For the music of the kitchen, And with harmony imbue Humble, common things, those which in Discords often make ado, Have caught movement of the graces. There's an adage we have heard : " Joy with labor interlaces When our energies are stirred. " 136 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Tasks are light if hearts be willing, And performed with cheerful ease. Why, a penny seems a shilling, Burnished by a thank or please. If we've frowns and thoughts that wrangle With our visions of content, They will easiest untangle 'Neath the open firmament. Sun and wind will temper settle That a range fire would explode. Laughter best will coax the kettle All along the boiling road. We will hear it singing, singing To the glad coals at its feet, While the moments, onward winging, Fan the graces that we meet. There are numerous kitchen crosses, Every housewife must confess, But we never count life's losses When we woo its peacefulness. In the high or lowly places, As our duty may reside, We would ask the kitchen graces To continually abide. HOW IT IS. 137 HOW IT IS. An equal-suffrage song. Music by " Silver Lake Quartette." Cultured, beautiful, and fair; Black and brown and golden hair ; Daughters of my fondest care, Freedom's a deluding snare. Half the human race, you see, Is deprived of liberty. Cook or coachman, butler, he Says he'll vote for you and me. Represent us as before The emancipation war Masters up the suffrage bore Of the slaves they held in store. Half the human race, you see, Is deprived of liberty. Man from Ireland, Germany, Says he'll vote for you and me. Once your father voted too, But my fortune winged and flew ; Then with, banks he had to do Till he disappeared from view. Half the human race, you see, Is deprived of liberty. Man in Canada, though free, Cannot vote for you and me. 12* 138 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. Wards of legal slavery, Cultured daughters, we must be Voiceless by the world's decree, Though the African is free. Half the human race, you see, Still deprived of liberty. Whiskey drinkers, negroes, they Vote and we the taxes pay. A CALENDAR. JANUARY. Not a moment Time has stilled, With his cornucopia filled To the brim. Not a moment : years, the pages, Pass the full horns down the ages Shaped by him. And the new, before unchristened, That have in the future glistened, Smile to place. This the order of progression ; This the triumphal procession Known to space Not a moment may we borrow From the past or the to-morrow For the now. Ours the present, ours the forces That may fit its best resources To earth's brow. 141 142 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. FEBRUARY. Soft the snow-flakes fall and cover All unsightly things that be ; Crystal-winged as birds from heaven ; Voiceless, yet they sing to me. Sing so low my soul but listens, As it waits on wave of thought. " Perfect love and faith/' the words are, " Child, behold what God has wrought !" Pure and white the singers flutter, Nestle in earth's heart and mine, Little snow-flakes, and their message Is a glad world's valentine. THE LADY MARCH. 143 THE LADY MARCH. March so fickle, March so fair, Pouting, shy, with wind-blown hair, Nut-brown shawl and crocus cup, Smile that lights the whole world up, Frown that sends a quiver chill Through the pulse of vale and rill. Promises are in her eyes', And, coquetting, she denies All the gossip of the frost. Every icy key is lost. While affecting search, she sings " Open Sesame," and flings Veils from Nature's fairy throng. Green and gold, though hidden long, Dance out at the magic call ; " March and Easter !" shout they all. 144 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. APRIL COURAGE. An April day is waking. God's promises are true. The crocus buds are breaking, With smiles, the brown earth through. Take courage, you who* re sowing Good seed for future hours Where adverse winds are blowing : They'll germinate in flowers. Although the soil seems fallow You plant with fondest care, And blind rocks make it shallow, An April will be there. A MAY PARABLE. 145 A MAY PARABLE. The earth throws back her slumber-robe, And, kissed awake by showers, Reaches her emerald banners out And laughs a wealth of flowers. Dear, gladsome May ! how sweet, how fair Your parable appears ! An oft-read lesson, yet how fresh It blossoms through the years ! The frosts, we know, are not for long, The snows melt as they fall, The torpor of a winter dark But waits a May-day's call. Life cannot die, nor efforts freeze ; Great natural laws control : This is the season's parable, And God directs the whole. x 3 146 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. DAYS OF JUNE. The birds sing low, the birds sing high, The lights of June are in. the sky. The roses fringed eyelashes raise To meet the longest, sweetest days. The sun holds camp-fires east and west, The darkness comes, a hurried guest, Who dares not pause amid the throng Of color, fragrance, joy, and song. Dear days of June ! sweet days of June ! May human pulse to yours attune ! Even, true to the longest light; Even, true to the shortest night ; Tireless, full to the veins' extent, Rich in compass and glad content ! A FOURTH OF JULY PROPHECY. 147 A FOURTH OF JULY PROPHECY. When will come the declaration That will make us wholly free ? When the July independence Of our fuller liberty ? We are cramped with heavier taxes Than could ever rest on tea ; We are bound by chains, close welded To degrading slavery. Where is freedom, bought by struggle, Which should paean out its glee ? Where, oh men who claim the nation, Can this precious purchase be ? Floundering in the cup of license, Parasite of industry, We have found it, heavy-hearted, Linked to dregs of misery. On some Fourth, with cannon booming, Will the old cup burst in three ; An emancipated people Shout, rejoicing, "We are free! Free from all the past dishonor ; Free with wrong to disagree ; Free to ask a July blessing On our rescued purity. 7 ' 148 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. AN AUGUST LULLABY. Lullaby, lullaby, lullaby; Rest for a moment, love ; The August sun is dropping His firebrands from above. Rest in the elm-tree's shadow; Rest by the cooling rill That dances through the meadow. Be, for a moment, still. Lullaby, lullaby, lullaby; A slumber-touch, a dream To the weary, cheerful worker Enhances autumn's gleam. Hush, by the elm-tree's shadow; Hush, by the cooling rill ; Kiss the buds of the meadow To keep thy heart-throbs still. \ Lullaby, lullaby, lullaby, Nor think the rest unblest. In nature's hours of silence We sometimes heed God best. Beneath the elm-tree's shadow, Beside the cooling rill, Abroad and in the meadow Are records of His will. SEPTEMBER. 149 SEPTEMBER. Sweet September, I remember All the happy days of yore. You were rich in purse and color ; You were lavish of your store. Blessed season ! We have reason To give thanks forevermore, As the wealth of grain is garnered And fruit mellows to the core. We are gleaning half the meaning Of repeated autumn lore ; Gathering up the rightful product Of seed planted heretofore. Spring for sowing, summer growing, Autumn gathering into store All the golden wealth perfected In the fields we travel o'er. Liberal treasure without measure, Volumes greater than before Of September's grateful incense. Reach the Giver we adore ! 150 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. OCTOBER RECKONING. Studying out the problem O'er which nations blunder, With a strength of purpose Ages cannot sunder, Are the Union soldiers ; While, in crimson raiment, Ripe October offers Earth her gold in payment. Gold for all the green leaves, Fruit and grain attendant ; Gold for power existing And for bloom resplendent ; \ Settlement of nature, With no marked delay. Time and progress pause not In their onward way. Pattern we, and reckon March of volunteers ; Summing up the service As in other years; Gathering in convention For a grand review, Golden fruit to offer And our vows renew. NOVEMBER. 15 1 NOVEMBER. There's nothing like November, With its no, no, no ; Its nomenclature notions, Notices of snow. Noctambulist the Summer, Nodding no, no, no, Is from her wigwam noting Kisses she may throw. The nomads of November, Singing no, no, no, Are nominees of promise, While the northers blow. The noctograph presented, Notched with smiles and no, Of notable November We would now noise so : Notation for November And for wrongs no, no. Nodosity is nothing, Noetic notions grow. 152 SOUVENIRS OF OCCASIONS. DECEMBER. The birds fly north, south, east, and west ; Sins and blessings come home to rest ; But the year we lose at Christmas-tide Is never again the Summer's bride. THE END. BKmRH WSmr sfflunnL BWgWlWM| mBlifffllBH— 1111 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 012 074 700 9 111