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uenceAlice Coventry
AND
Other Metrical Romances
BY
LINCOLN HULLEYLIBRARY OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIAWMlice Coventry
AND
Other Metrical Romances
BY
LINCOLN HULLEYCOPYRIGHTED
1925
BY
LINCOLN. HULLEY
ee ee ey ee ee
DELAND, FLA
PRESS OF THE
E. O. PAINTER PRINTING CO
DELAND FLAInscribed to my wife,
Eloise Mayham HulleyPOETIC PRODUCTIONS
BY
LINCOLN: AULLET
Lullabies and Slumber Songs
Annie-Laurie: Love-Lyrics
Hiram Abiff, the Builder
Sonnets on the Immortal! Bards
‘air Women
Shakespere’s Dream of
Moonlight Nights at Palm beach
King David: Israel’s Lyric Bard
Christina, or Christian Van Dusen’s Law-Suit
Chivalry in Dixie: Metrical Romances
Mike Murphy’s Dream
Campus Memories
Alice Coventry and Other Metrical Romances
he Eloise Chimes
Chapel Ly rics of Faith, Hope and Love
College Lyrics ot Idealism
Fables and Myths from the Sibyl’s Book
The Jubilate of Rabbi Ben Adam
Christian Hymns
The Children’s Hour and other Poems
St. Michael and the Dragon: An Epic of the War
Savonarola’s Visions of Judgment
A Confessional for Broken Lives
Vesper Songs of Joy, Trust and Praise
Brave Idylls of the Gallant South
Dwellers Beyond the Styx, or Tragedies of Love
Dixie Sketches in Chalk and Charcoal
Ghiberti’s Doors to Paradise and other Art Poems
A Maker of DreamsALICE COVENTRY
AND
OTHER METRICAL ROMANCES
CONTENTS
Alice Coventry, Preceptress
or
A Descendant of the Mayflower Pilgrims
2. William J. Delaney Pioneer
or
he Glory of the Commonplace
Lost in the Woods of Maine
or
he Mystery Man at Angler’s Inna
> SaiALICE COVENTRY, Preceptress
OR
A DESCENDANT of the MAYFLOWER PILGrims
+@-0-+-0e-0
\mong the noble women who endured
The rigors of the Mayflower’s stormy voyage
Was Mary Allerton, a little girl,
She was the first of all to set her foot
On Plymouth Rock. She also was the last
Survivor of the famous pilgrim band.
Her playmate on the ship, much better known,
Was fair Priscilla Mullins, in due time
The bride of young John Alden. Both were fair,
Beloved by all, and fated soon to lose,
On landing, both their parents.
Swept through his banking rooms. The market place
In every city heard from him the law.
His wife had views of life to match his own,
And everywhere she went, she felt the warmth
Bestowed by peoples’ hearty words and smiles.
Their heads had not been turned, but such a blaze
Of admiration warmed them to the world,
And soon they lost their old time views of God.
Prosperity enabled them to give
15
Toeae aR a ae
ee he nee eet Par es
A constant stream of princely gifts to schools,
To charities, and worthy civic ends,
But slowly drifting from their moorings, fast,
At length, they found themselves hurled by the tide
Of atheism toward the rushing falls,
Where thousands had made shipwreck of their faith.
Already they had left the mother church,
A Congregational establishment,
And joined, to be respectable, a branch
Composed of people like themselves, attached
To Unitarian principles and aims,
Young Mansfield shared his parents’ views. Their
lives,
Exemplary in all the virtues, made
Him feel their noble quality. His choice
From early years had been to make a name
In banking circles for himself. Careers
Like that his father had pursued were rich
In promise of a large return in wealth
And usefulness. When graduation came
He meant to settle down, and learn the game
As humbly as his father started in.
Indeed he was the envy of his friends,
Who knew the opportunity that knocked
So loudly at his door. And as he shared
His father’s aims in business, so too
He held the same religious views. A life
That trued itself with ethics on a plane
So high that bankers took the spoken word
Of David Mansfield as they would a bond
Appealed to Edward as a thing worth while.
And so his soul rang true to high ideals.
With energy he sought the good, the true,
But grounded his convictions not in God.
The noble woman starring in the role
16Of President of Wellesley gave her all
To make the most of character in each
Young student taken to her heart. Not one
Escaped the moulding touch of fingers grown
So deft she ran the grooves of deathless hope
And laughing loves upon their plastic souls,
Receptive and responsive to her will,
So beautiful she was in inward grace,
That when she gave herself to those she taught,
They caught the charm themselves, and strove to match
Her virtues with their own. Fair Alice vied
With Mary Allerton to climb the heights,
Whereon they saw the glorified ideal
Of perfect womanhood. Their lovely homes
Had paved the way for teaching of the kind
Their college gave. Their habits told for much
In choosing their companions. [Every course,
Before they came, had been considered well.
With earnest souls, and eyes made clear by truth,
Imbued in them around the altar’s fires,
Whereon their parents sacrificed to God,
They lifted up clean hands and guileless hearts,
In all the happy years of colleve life.
Then came the time to leave and each fared forth.
The day young Edward Mansfield joined the lark
That took his friends to visit Wellesley Hills
He lost his heart to Alice. She was fair
Beyond his power of speech to tell. Huis mind
Could not let go the vision he had caught.
It haunted him by day and night. It filled
His day-dreams. Everywhere he turned he saw
The beautiful lithe figure of a maid,
As fair as any dainty damosel
Rosetti ever drew. He dared to write,
And wondered if the angel of his dreams
17SSR Si epawetess se CSS es eee tae ss ~— ai ial
Would condescend to answer him. She did,
And then he walked on air. The college course
Was ending, and he meant to hit a pace
In business, as early as he could,
To make it possible to win the prize
That dangled as he thought before his eyes.
He did not dare to speak his inmost heart,
But as the next three years sped by the note
Grew ever bolder, and more intimate, in tone.
Besides he called to see her at her home.
While this was going on fair Alice thrilled
With all the wild excitement of a chase.
To have a lover, real and not in books,
Was not to be so much as dreamed of yet.
Still why not? She had asked herself. How old
Should girls be anyhow before they pledge
Their troth? And when he gently touched her hand
She trembled so from head to foot she lost
Her power of speech, and knew not aught to say.
On every point of honor he was true,
And, while she read his heart, he did not choose,
At this time, to disclose his full intent.
It was a happy friendship, and unless
Some perverse fate should overtake the two,
Would culminate in marriage vows and bonds.
Leave that to time. Although the days went by
On leaden wings their spirits did not lag.
The two girls were in all each other's schemes
And confidence. So Alice bared her soul
To Mary. Here she struck a chord of love
And sympathy. For Mary too was wooed
By one in every way her like, when things
Are estimated at their proper worth.
In joyful spirits both divulged the plans
They dreamed of future happiness. The world
18Was all before them, and their sky so blue
[nchantments of a summer time, in some
Great fairy land, were holding them in thrall.
The Christmas tide with all its hoy
And Edward Mansfield planned a merry call
At Alice Coventry’s. The drawing room,
A centre for all family gatherings,
Was full of warmth and cheer. A Christmas tree,
Hung full of pretty things, such as their taste,
Refinement, purse, and wish dictated. stood
At one end of the hall. A blazing hearth
Of yule logs sent its clow around the room,
And bathed them all in hallowed light. Such scenes
All over dear New England hold the hearts
Of thousands to sweet memories of home,
And keep alive the sacred truths embalmed
In that blest holiday. All through that day
Had Mary Allerton and Alice played
Together. By a custom old they spent
That evening at home. It was a rule
In both their houses that the great event.
The incarnation of the Christ, should be
Kemembered in a solemn serious way,
And not alone by gewgaws on a tree.
To this bright circle round the feet of Christ
Young Edward Mansfield came to pay his call,
The greeting Mrs. Coventry bestowed
On Mansfield was so cordial and so warm,
He knew he had a pleader on his side.
The father too was kind, though in the main
Quite formal. But from Alice went a thrill
That almost made his heart stop dead with joy.
Exchanges of good greetings went the rounds.
A volley of quick questions as to friends
Passed back and forth. The bits of gossip told
19
eS came round.ea ee ee oe
PHS tte ay > Venere ss
At church or in the bank were shared. ‘The tree
On which the family presents hung was scanned
With words of admiration, and by then
The father interposed to say the day
That once was full of holy thought was now
Degenerating into pagan rites.
To him it seemed that Christ should be revived,
And made to live again, as once of old,
When in the manger of the cattle shed,
At Bethlehem, God took the form of man,
And in the flesh grew up from infancy
Through all the stages of our earthly life.
With courtesy and ease, and yet with all
The vast assurance of a college man
But lately come from school, young Mansfield asked,
“Now truly, Doctor Coventry, must men
Believe in God at all, or, if they do,
Must they believe He came in human form,
Accepting all the limits first imposed
By God himself on man, and then, bereft
Of attributes that made him God, expect
To don again those attributes at will?
The thing that puzzles me is this: How may
We know there is a God? To plead a book
We call the Bible says there is but begs
The question. It assumes the very thing
You start to prove. To reason so, you go
In circles round and round. It gets nowhere.
To say the argument drawn from design
Proves anything is idle, for 1f that
Is used to prove a God, it proves as well
A devil. If the clear adjustments shown
Of eyes to light, and ears to sound, and all
The many thousand others, prove a God,
Why stop with these? Why not go on? The sin
20[n man, the hurricanes, the famines, zones
Of heat and cold, of barren deserts. wastes,
Destructive storms, and noxious plants, and wild
ferocious beasts, the fact that nature kills
By pestilence, and spreads disease in man,
That nature's work, defective through and through,
Puts blind spots in the eye, and in the brain,
Would prove a devil, not a God that’s good.
lt is a travesty on human sense
To think of God at all, or, when we do.
To think of Him in terms the Bible does.
He is portrayed with eyes, and hands, and feet,
With power to love and hate, to know and think.
As having all the body, powers, and wants
We humans have, in infinite degree.
Man makes his God in his own image quite,
The part creating what man calls the whole.
To me it all seems foolish. Why not hold
That force or law, impersonal and blind,
ls actively at work to bring to pass,
By certain strong necessities within
Itself, the ordered world of nature? Then
We do not stultify intelligence.”
His words fell like a bomb. He did not know
How deeply he had wounded those who heard,
Good-byes were said, and Alice pressed his hand.
The father sat as in a daze. He could
Not find expression for his thoughts at first.
The milk of kindness in him turned to curds.
Had then the centuries of Christian thought
Been brought to this? Were creeds to be piled up,
And burnt as Paul had burnt the sorcerer’s books?
Had Christ then died in vain? And was the God
He had been preaching all his life a myth?
The Christmas festival, was it a hoax,
2]A thing designed to tickle children with,
A fairy imposition of a sort?
What should he think the Bible was, for which
He gave his youth? Was it a tissue full
Of lies to scare men into being good?
Had wealth gone into churches, on a scale
That beggared calculation, to deceive
A world undone, and weary, wanting help?
Almost distracted by the painful shock,
He dropped upon his knees, and audibly
Poured out his soul to God, the self-same God
His fathers loved and worshipped, now reviled.
On rising from his knees he firmly said:
“My Alice, I shall never give consent
For you to marry any man who speaks
Such blasphemy as we have heard tonight.
Our father’s God was good enough for them,
And led them through the perils of the deep.
He gave us home, and liberty, and law
In this dear land, and we are ingrates base,
[f we forget Him now. I here forbid
This man the privilege of calling here.
You know your duty as a daughter reared
To give obedience in the things of right.”
Retiring to their rooms, with heavy hearts,
A sleepless night ensued to all. A blow
More crushing could not be conceived for one
Like Alice entering through the gates of joy
To that sweet paradise all lovers know.
She wept the whole night through. What bitter cup
Was this she had to drink! Her heart belonged
To Edward Mansfield. Now with all her soul
She knew she loved him. But her father’s will
Had always been the polestar of her life.
And in her heart she felt, as he, the sting
99Contained in the attack on Christian faith.
Her lover was a noble gentleman.
In spite of all he said, she knew his creed
Had not destroyed the bases of his life,
Nor marred the visions of his ardent youth
To serve humanity in all its needs.
The students who had closely known him praised
His honor, principles, integrity,
Fine manners, social grace, magnetic charm,
And personality beyond all speech.
lf he were mired in some foul slough of doubt,
Could not her own sure faith so anchor his
That he should never slip his moorings, but
Abide, as she, within her father’s love?
The fountains of the mighty deeps within
Her soul were broken up, and bitter tears
In agony she shed. She called to mind
The tender words of love he spoke to her,
[In whispers, at the door on passing out.
On New Year's day he meant to pledge her troth,
And give his own to her. Some ghostly imp
Of darkness from the pit had intervened
To blast their peace and love. The night dragged on,
And with the dawn of day her spirit writhed
In agony to such extent they called
The doctor in. Sweet Mary came in haste,
But holding back the joy that nearly burst
Her heart with happiness, betrothal’s gift,
She smoothed the aching head and weary heart
Of Alice with a loyal tenderness.
Three days passed by, a package came by post
Addressed to Alice, inside, Edward’s card,
And such a sparkling diamond the girls
Exclaimed they never saw its like. Besides
A letter came in which the sender said,
23pee oe rt Pate ee
ee Se ee ee
With protestations of his love, that he
Would come on New Year’s day to put it on.
Again the agony began. What should
She do? Her soul was torn with grief and love.
Her heart belonged to Edward. All her dreams
Of future blessedness were joined to him.
The birth of love in her had brought such joy,
With mingled pain, as, trembling like a leat,
She felt the new emotions sweep her soul,
That she had walked on air, and far above
The clouds had built her castles in the moon,
3ut there her father stood. She owed him all
The reverence a noble man deserved.
Through years of self denial, sacrifice,
And care he brooded over her young life,
Imparting all the gifts love’s thoughtfulness
Could purchase or devise. His words were strong,
“TI cannot give consent.” He was the priest
Of God, beside, who interposed his word
To safeguard that dear Christ she had been taught
To love from infancy. Her Puritan
Inheritance of generations past
Had schooled her to obedience to the laws
Of church and home. The stern, rock-ribbed beliefs,
So often thundered from the pulpit desk,
Had held her ancestors with vise-like grip,
And now a sense of duty seized her mind
That drove her like a martyr to the stake.
She sent the diamond back, wrote out the word
Her father spoke, and said she must obey.
That New Year’s day her spirit died, and she
Took up the burdens of a shattered life.
That New Year’s day sweet Mary gave her heart
To Philip Thayer, and the chimes began
That filled her soul with music till the day,
24In June, they pealed the wedding march that led
Through worlds of wonderful experience.
Eight years elapsed. When Christmas came around.
Fair Alice joined sweet Mary for the day.
The home abounded with the cheer of those
Who keep the old traditions full of life.
Three happy children, at the tree, appealed
To all with such outbursts of joy the thing
Beéame infectious, and the mirth grew gay,
The older ones becoming, as of yore,
But little children with their toys and games.
The husband, Philip, was a man of parts,
A devotee of mathematics, where
He shone with lustre that amazed the world.
Supreme within his field he treasured more
His lovely Mary Allerton. The three
Dear children of their love had knit their hearts
Inseparably as one. And both esteemed
Aunt Alice as the nearest to their throne.
She had become a teacher, and her skill
Had led her to the headship of a school.
“Miss Alice Coventry, Preceptress,’’ ran
The wording in the catalog. Blake Hall
Was one of that select and solid kind
Of private grammar schools New England grew
That stood for excellence. Among her girls
She was adored. They looked on her with awe.
Her study was a sacred room to all,
And when they sought the presence-chamber, where,
In grace and dignity, Miss Coventry
Performed her duties as the head, they had
The feeling thousands had before the mount
As Moses came to them, when he had left
The presence of Almighty God. They knew
A woman of rare power was here, who trod
25i
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The paths of sacrifice that lead to Him,
And felt a benediction when they sat
Before her and received her faithful words.
It was her rule to have the girls all sit
Together at the church. Among them there
She was serene, benign, and beautiful.
One New Year’s day, with those who went not home.
She heard a sermon full of faith and hope,
That pointed all another year along
The upward way. A heavy sorrow plunged
Her soul in bitterness and gloom that day.
The service ended. As they rose to go,
She turned, and faced young Edward Mansfield, come
To tell her of the change time wrought in him.
The shock of seeing him unnerved her so,
A deathly pallor showed upon her face.
She swooned, and fell, and falling, struck her head,
Nor did she even regain consciousness,
The utmost skill physicians knew proved vain
And while her Edward Mansfield knelt and prayed
Beside her couch, her spirit passed on through
The gates of death. She had gone home to God.WILLIAM J. DELANEY, Pioneer
OR
THE GLORY OF THE COMMON-PLACE
*@-0->-0-0-
Below the town of Stamford, near Grand Gorge,
In New York State, there lived a man who bore
A likeness to the Christ. He was unique
In gentleness, simplicity, and truth;
The world would say for faith and works that mark
A Christian man his equal was not found.
He did not join the church, because in youth
His time was spent far from his fellowman.
Humility was native to his soul.
No affectation, or pretense, or show
Had access to his mind, but like the Christ
He went about and healed the souls of men,
Not as a business, but in daily touch
With neighbors, friends, wherever he might be.
As men have looked on Anton Lang and seen
A painter's portrait of a gentle man
Who walked the shore of Galilee, and taught
Us how to pray to God the Father, so
Did William J. Delaney, not in looks,
But in the paths of duty, show the Christ.
Jelow him in a little town was born
A financier who rocked the banker’s world;
And in the same small town another man
Was born who loved the birds, and all the dear,
27ee ee ee ere
ee eee ee ee
Wild creatures of the happy fields and woods.
Their greatness may not be compared with his,
For he had power to incarnate the truths
That make for moral values among men.
| met him first in eighteen ninety-three,
At that time sixty-eight or nine years old.
His youngest grandchild, scarcely four, and named
For him, had toddled with him to the mills,
Where saws were ripping mountain pines apart,
And drivers, sledging others from the woods,
Were stacking them in piles. ‘Do not go near
Those logs, my boy, the top ones may roll down;
The place is dangerous.” Perhaps the word
Suggested the idea to the child,
And since our brains are furnished with acute
Hair triggers, and explode the minute touched,
So now the very notion pushed the child,
And hardly had grandfather turned his head,
When rolling logs and shouting men were heard,
And as he looked, he saw the little boy,
His mangled body buried underneath
A weight of mountain giants, crushed and dead.
The men removed the logs, and then in tears
Delaney lifted tenderly the child,
And pressed him to his heart. “Sweet Bunny boy,
This is a bitter cup, the blow will kill
His mother. Ah what evil luck! A curse
Could be no worse. What shall we do without
Our darling boy?” He carried him with love,
The while he rained warm kisses on his lips,
And laid him in his mother’s arms. “Marie,
It was a frightful accident, the child
Was not to blame, nor were the men to blame.
God’s ways are past our finding out. He gave
You this sweet baby for awhile to keep
ORFor Him, and now He takes it back. Can you
With other weeping sufferers say: The Lord
It was who gave, and takes away: I bless
His holy name?” Marie was like one dazed.
A scream of terror was the first response
She made, and then she swooned. On coming to,
Emotion had been paralyzed. A blank
Dumb stare was all her loved ones got, until
The little coffin in the parlor stirred
Her to a sudden consciousness of loss
That burst the doors, and fountains long pent-up
Poured forth a flood of tears. At moments, when
A realizing sense of Bunny’s death
Would seize her, she would fairly shriek and scream.
| was the preacher called to bury him,
Myself a newly settled pastor there,
And I was deeply touched to hear the words
Delaney in his quiet manner spoke
To all concerned: ‘God comforts those who mourn.
He gives them garlands for dead ashes, sends
The oil of joy for mourning, and the pure
White garments of the angels when our hearts
Are bowed with tears.’’ But to Marie he went,
os
And stroked her head and said: “Be brave and true,
My daughter, give your heart and will to God.
For He is like a father, and He knows
Our frame, remembering we are frail. He sends
Us sorrows, trials, pain, and loss, and woe,
For some good end. Against your grief set off
The many happy days God gave you with your child.”
To me the funeral was the saddest |]
Had ever seen, and yet the sweetest too.
The mother’s deep unutterable woe,
So poignant that it touched us all with grief,
Contrasted with Delaney’s peace and faith,
29Se25=
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Wess siegedensoss¢ FSS Seces ee
That strove to conquer pain inside himself,
And give Marie the grace to kneel and pray
“Thy will be done,” can never be forgot.
The husband of Marie was there, and, too,
Delaney’s wife, both stricken to the heart,
Both weeping for the little one now gone,
But they were negative compared to poor
Marie, and that old man, especially him,
For he had warmth and sunshine in his soul,
In spite of all the bitterness, the gall,
And wormwood in the cup they had to drink.
“There’s not a sparrow falls without Him. There
Are gains for all our losses, and the heart
Of God eternally is kind and good;
A wideness in His mercy, like the sea,
Embraces all His creatures; look to Him,
Marie, and trust His never failing grace.”
The little boy was laid at last to rest,
But, going home, it seemed | must return
Some day and get a nearer view of one
Who struck my fancy by his kindliness.
In just a fortnight I went round to make
A call, inviting them to come to church
Next Sunday, when a special preacher planned
To speak to us on providential care.
Delaney said they'd come but added this:
“There’d be no need to preach on Providence,
If men would rub their eyes, and view the world.
The earth is full of God. The sunlight bathes
Us all in smiles, the trees are full of praise,
And wave their foliage in happy moods.
The music of the birds is not their own,
But God is singing through them to the world.
His providential care! Why certainly,
No preacher is as eloquent as life
30Re et
In setting forth His care. There's not a thing
In all His universe remaining mute.
The year is crammed with evidence that God
Is good. The broken wing of every bird,
The bruised and twisted body of the deer
Stir up the loving kindness of the Lord.
‘Tis He who clothes the lily of the field
With beauty, and provides the raven’s meat,
And men who learn to take things as they come
Are pretty sure to learn the ways of God.”
Then, turning to his grandson twelve years old,
He said, ““Vhe teacher told him yesterday
He might be President at Washington
Some day, if he applies himself at school.
I tell him on the same condition too,
That some day, if he works industriously,
He may be master of the biggest farm
Here in the Catskills, and as far as |
Can see there is no difference in the two.
A man should do his best, and failing that,
No matter what the sphere, or high or low,
He brings dishonor on himself. But when
He does the best his circumstance allows,
’Tis well. The angels could no more. A man
Who gives his all, and then himself besides,
To further any honest work is on the side
Of God. He makes the action fine, because
He backs it with fidelity and grace.”
“My father, sir, was born at Kilhebegs,
The county Donegal, in Ireland,”
Delaney told me once. ‘The very year
George Washington became our President
My father saw the light. The nurse at first
Had trouble in persuading him to breathe.
But later on, his lungs made up for that
3]eg et ee eee
PESHS te sy ays Mona
DN se atk Se a oes
By most unearthly wails. He came across
The water to America at nine.
A sailing vessel brought them, and the trip
Consumed the best of seven weeks. The ship
Was twice on fire, and once they thought the end
Had come. The women and the children locked
Below, in cabins, men attacked the flames,
Subduing them at last. My father used
To say he never heard such oaths as those
That fell from women’s lips that awful day,
Nor, sandwiched in, such agonizing prayers.
My father settled west of Albany,
Where I was born in eighteen twenty-five.
When six months old I was a pioneer,
And moved from Blenheim township toward this gorge,
With all my worldly goods, and brought along
My father and my mother with me here.
They did the work, and | laid out the job.
To health and much good humor they ascribed
The victory over hillside farms and rocks.
These were their life preservers, throwing wide
The gates of paradise. They entered in
With music in their hearts and on their lips.
This tract of land was part of an estate
Belonging to the Rensselaers. Huge trees,
Great forests of them, covered all the heights
Throughout these Catskill Mountains, from the ridge
At Stamford to the Hudson river bank.
When nine years old I learned to swing an axe;
From which age on I was a lumberman,
And with the hardy pioneers that hewed
Their paths across the mountains I hewed mine,
And helped my father build this house; the one
We first lived in was burned; and so this spot
I’ve lived on since the first six months. Today
32A stranger asked me if I’d lived here all
My life. I told him no, not yet, and begged
Him if he ever came within a mile
Of here to stop. He’s thinking on it yet.
The Hudson valley in the early days
Was settled by the Dutch, and carved in great
Estates, set out to big Walloon proprietors,
This very spot, a few miles north by west
Of Grand Gorge, fell to one, who, like a lord
Or baron of the feudal times, laid claim
To titles, rents, annuities undreamed
By Blackstone in his commentaries’ days,
I recollect an incident full well,
Connected with the gathering of the tithe:
A big, fat agent of the Rensselaers,
Rotund as any cherub, though the cause
Was bibulous, not due to singing psalms,
Descended on the valley one fine day,
Demanding tithes. A neighbor, Mike O’Shea,
Induced him to regale himself with drink,
And in his stupor took his full receipt
For tithes accumulating for ten years.
My father took these acres with a string
Tied to his operations called a lease.
Beyond their rights, the big patroons began
Asserting feudal titles to the soil,
To service from the tenants, to a tithe,
And more, of all the usufruct, and took
Advantage of the least flaw in the deed
To work a forfeiture, or change the style.
A man might toil a lifetime to create
Farm values by improvements on a place,
By clearing, tilling, building, and the like,
And at the last discover some slight flaw
Deprived him of his title in the place.
33SESSSesss=
Sere
a
The landlord pleaded technicalities,
And ousted thrifty farmers by the score.
This went against the grain, and civil war
Was in the hearts of honest men throughout
The mountain counties where the thing was worst.
In eighteen thirty-nine I was a lad
Of fourteen years, and well remember how
The heirs of one patroon, Van Rensselaer,
Who claimed the title to these very lands
My father cleared under a lease, began
To quarrel with their tenants as to tithes,
Insisting on a fourth of all the sales.
Associations all at once took form
Among the farmers to resist the claims,
While landlords hurried into courts to press
Their suits. One night a band of Indians passed
Our house, and hailed my father, begging him
To join them. They were white men in disguise,
Intent on mischief. But my father did
Not join, preferring civil action, first,
At least. Such grievances broke up the peace
Of many sections, running into years,
But in the end the great estates were doomed,
Fee simple titles coming under law.
This was a culmination greatly wished,
Sut through the strife my father held the view,
That, on the subject of a legal claim
To titles, courts should hold for Rensselaer
My father was a perfect specimen
Of manhood. He was solidly put up.
Across his shoulders he would measure much
Above the biggest man for miles around.
His strength was like an ox’s strength. His hands
Were large, and had a powerful grip, and once
[ saw him handle two good men with ease,
o4As, grabbing each an arm, he thrust them both
Outside his mills, and bade them stay away.
| felt my father right but pitied them,
And later patched the matter up. Before
My father came here he had cleared two farms,
Beyond the ridge in old Schoharie Clove.
But father owned a magic lamp, called wit,
And kept it lighted daily, so the sweat
Of body, mind, and heart was all transformed
To diamonds in his humble cottage home.
lt was a toilsome business day by day.
He did not like the slowness of the Dutch,
But granted they were honest to the core.
He used to tell of one who fired up,
And poured his wrath upon his victim’s head.
‘If you don't got some beezaness,’ he said,
‘You better don’t had loaf around, aint it?’
The fellow thought so too, and got away.
I never think of father but the tears
Of gratitude begin to rise. He strove
With all his streneth of will to win success,
As pioneers before him always have.
He had the metal in him heroes show
Who join in battle for a better world,
The stuff that all the martys of the past,
Who gave their bodies to be burned, displayed.
To wring a living from these stony hills
Would challenge only daring volunteers,
\nd he succeeded. All I have I owe
To him who blazed the trail for us to take.
Old age he used to say begins at five
‘So cheer up children, drive dull care away,’
And here within the wilderness he urged
Us all to keep up happy hearts and sing.”
“But are you not a pioneer yourself?”
35te
PSSA O tw tesla eos eeaes Sse SSS
ee hee ee
Pants
Zz ee
To which Delaney answered, “] am that.
The mountains here were covered with the pine,
Wherein the wild-cat made his hidden lair.
The nights were hideous with their yowls at times.
No houses had been built for miles around
When we began to stake one in the woods.
It was good fun for all in building it.
The mountains either side the gorge had not
Been named, nor had the gorge itself, until
A score of years passed by. There on the leit,
As we look south, we see a point that jogs
The sky, and call it ‘Irish Mountain.’ There,
Across the pass, upon the right, we call
That knob, ‘Bald Mountain’ with Grand Gorge between.
We stand right now upon the water shed
Dividing, as the rain falls, all the flow
Along Schoharie Creek, or either branch
The Delaware thrusts out to tap the hills.
And here for sixty years we've laughed and joked,
For mirth is like good medicine, you know,
And every straw that tickled us eased off
The grinding gloom of utter loneliness.
[ go outside sometimes and seem to hear
Old Rip Van Winkle and his merry men
At bowls. The thunder is so eloquent
It makes one feel as David did of old.
It is the voice of God. The lightning flash
Is but the flashing of the great Almighty’s eye.
He clothes Himself with light, and veils His face,
He makes the winds His messengers. I hear
His foot upon the mountain side, and see
His breath upon the frosty window pane.
It makes me feel beside, that I] can know
A certain voice inside me is of God,
That He Himself abides within my soul.
36| find within myself the mystery
Of power, the miracle of life, the force
That drives the world. Of that I am a part,
To me is given a higher grace than that.
The sense to see the issues clearly drawn
Between the things of right and those of wrong.
In me is love, and John says love is God.
The thought that strikes me often as I talk
With men is that they seem to think the things
Worth while are far away or difficult.
The things that count for most are really those
That lie at hand, the nearest, simplest things.
An emphasis on common things would bring
Us all a good deal nearer to the Lord:
And that is what we need, the inner gift
That will transform to purest gold the dirt
Of common, daily toils, and frets, and cares:
A soul with skill to use the heavenly power
Of spiritualizing common things has won
The highest secret life can give or hold.
for absolute sincerity I plead,
Not only in church articles and creeds,
But also in the simplest modes of speech,
In seeing with our eyes, in doing deeds
Kach day along the routine of our tasks,
In setting up relations each to each,
In meeting face to face our fellowmen.”’
Observing how the neighbors at the church
Conducted argument he said: “They fight
As if they had been married. Each one brings
A brick-bat in his pocket, or a knife
Of verbal sharpness up his sleeve, and waits
His chance to get a well directed blow.”’
But this was said with twinkles in his eyes.
On hearing me one time address the church,
37eat eee ne el ee ee
tet vo
The subject being making all one can
Of self, he kindly said, now turn it round,
And make the most of all our ministers,
His humor was contagious, ready, bland.
At wakes and christenings he poked no fun,
But being forms he stayed away from both,
Inquiring always of the dead, with praise
For any virtue he might have. The child
He lifted in his arms, and spoke the name
As one who loved it, full of cheer and trust,
That it would measure up to all the hopes
The parents had indulged in for their child.
“Tf men had polish they might shine,” he said,
“Tn social circles.”’ When a man came home
And said he ran a splinter ‘neath his nail,
“You must have scratched your head,’ Delaney said.
He didn’t need a “‘coat of arms,’ because
He worked at all times “in his sleeves.” “How well
You look today!” “Yes certainly, | look
To find the man that owes me ten.” Replies
Like that were always on his lips, but none
Were dipped in vinegar. ‘The acid test
Which some men use in daggered repartees
Was not for him, but friendly humor flowed
Between his lips at all times without stint.
Four years before | met him, New York state
Was struck by storm, a blizzard with a gale
Of wind that blew a hundred miles an hour.
A mantle of fine snow, already deep,
Had covered us throughout the middle states,
It was the time that Conkling lost his life.
The March winds in the mountains were so fierce
None but the strongest dared to buffet them.
Remembering how the children of a friend
Were all alone in a secluded nook,
38Their parents fifty miles away, this man
Drove through the snow-drifts, seven miles, to reach
Those children, taking food and friendly words.
[f one should be disposed to say that such
An act was not uncommon, nor the man,
The answer simply is, no other man
Went near the little cottage in the glen.
The children might have starved. Their misery
Had grown acute when he came on the scene.
He glorified the common-place, | say,
In doing deeds of kindness every day:
That was his doctrine; if the great things call,
Why, do them. Till they do, don’t whine and mope,
Disdaining to be bothered with the small,
‘or in the end there is as much of God
In any little thing as in the great.
He often came to service where I[ preached,
Supporting with his money all our work,
Inclining men to godliness and grace.
He told me once the room in which we sat,
The living room at home, was full of folks
for him. He saw the dear old father whom
He loved beyond all other men, and who
Had been the inspiration of his life;
The mother who had borne and reared him sat
Beside the fire in her rocking chair,
He heard her voice, a gentle one pitched low,
Inquiring for her husband's comfort. This
Was always chief of her concerns. The help,
Employed about the place, was there, and like
The snow-bound cottage of the Whittier poem,
Shut in, they learned to think each other’s thoughts.
Reciting bits of conversation gleaned
From memory’s rich stores, he conjured up
Old times along the loved Schoharie Creek,
39a ee
Sete sy rss Sen
St et
Snr Ne Sere ee
Pra
eed
As on the Delaware. As age came on
He lived much in the dear, dead days of yore,
And ’twas a benediction just to hear
Him tell the struggles of the poor, who eked
A livelihood from hills so scant and steep.
The man who loved the birds in Roxbury town
Could not excel. Delaney on this score,
And when it came to live stock on the farm
He knew the names of all his sheep and cows.
They seemed like members of his family,
And all their names were coined with special care,
To mark their characters in looks, or else
Some inner quality their master knew.
His stables were the cleanest ones around,
For cattle are like people, he would say.
They prosper better when their stalls are fresh,
And they themselves have proper food and care,
Throughout the winter he was up eer day
Had lit the torches in the darkened East,
And in the summer he got out before
The birds were stirring in their nests. To him
The cattle were the creatures of His love
Who numbers all the stars, and knows their names,
Who paints the beauty on the violet’s bud,
And plants it in the early days of spring.
The silly sheep that needed some one’s care,
The feathered tribes, whose instincts all were dumb,
Depended on Delaney, and he spared
No labor on his farm to bring to these
Provisions for their daily pressing needs.
“They make me laugh, the beggars, when they tease
For food, or crowd around for sympathy,
[ feel as if the devil’s dead, when Jack,
Our house-dog, starts his frolic in the snow,
He leads the barnyard circus with his noise,
40)And sometimes I] have wondered if he prays.
For are we not God’s offspring, he and [?”
“I take the world just as [| find it
Without a fault or The earth is good
And needs no one’s apology.
, SiY,
flaw.
lf men
Have notions to the contrary, they have fooled
Themselves. Perhaps their doctrine must be proved
As that the world is under some vile curse,
Or else some creature dares to show the way
Our great Creator must have blundered, when
He made things as they are. But God be praised
For all His works! If we had eyes to see,
What wonders far beyond our present ken
Would grow! [ like to think the laws that grip
The stars, and swing the planets in their curves,
That send the winds forth singing on their ways,
il
That give the mother instinct to all life,
Distilling dew and rain, that feed the earth,
The lowest and the highest in the scale,
That turn the darkness into light, and set
The moon and stars on high when day is done,
Are daily, always, everywhere from God.
How 2ood a thing it 1s to be alive!
One's highest aim should be to so fulfill
The ends within one’s nature as a man,
That when he lays his gift of life aside
The world may say, there lived a noble man!”
One day we sat together on his porch,
And he was telling of the early days,
When trees were crowded close beside his home:
“No one has ever dreamed of half the charm
The woods contain. They fairly teem with life.
All sorts of timid creatures seek their shade,
As if they shrank from too close gaze,
Or feared they had in man an enemy.
4]
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a
Oe et eae ee ee ee
ee oc eat ee eas
Birds, never to be seen elsewhere, will seek
The sheltered darkness of the trees. The fox,
The hare, the wild-cat venture forth at times,
But other frightened things beware the sun.
That’s how some get their reputations soiled,
For instance, take the lizards. People creep
At mention merely of their names, and yet
What pretty bodies they possess, how marked
With beauty they have been, what useful thing's
They do! And so with all the denizens
That hide within the darkness of the woods.
The shadows may be needed to bring out
The finest qualities, as, in the lives
Of men, sometimes the darkness and the gloom
Are needed to perfect their souls in love.
And all the trembling creatures in this place
Are firmly linked to us with golden chains,
[ like the good Saint Francis who addressed
The birds as little brothers of the air.
The gift of life, that miracle of earth,
Has bound us to the lowest in the scale.
The blue-bell edging on the rocky cliff,
The tiniest insect lasting but a day,
Are, like ourselves, instinct with power divine,
And there are thoughts too deep for words wrapped up
Within the fragile petal of a rose.
When spring comes forth, and thaws release the
snow,
What sweeter music ever yet was heard,
Than that produced by nature’s orchestra!
The brook that purls and murmurs on its way,
In rippling laughter tumbling o’er the stones,
From out the mountain springs and down the slopes,
Is like the singing of the birds. The play
Of zephyrs, voicing pleasure ’mid the leaves
42That wave and dance their joy on every tree,
Invites the world to lay aside its gloom.”
He was as happy as a lark, and smiled
With many sallies of sweet wit, and said.
He thought the soul of things must have a sense
Of humor. “There is laughter everywhere.
from puppies, kittens, colts and lambs to geese
That cackle with hysterics, there are bumps
Of playful fancy, funny bones, and droll
Expressions of essential merriment.”
Unlike the common run of men, this man
Was highly gifted in the use of speech.
He had the brains to master what he would.
And in the early days when schools were scarce,
And teachers scarcer, he had taught the boys
And girls their letters. He himself had learned
To use a deal of time in mastering
The rudiments of common schools, and when
His son and daughter, all he had, grew up
He sent them both to college, and secured
The books they studied there, and in the lines
Of science, and philosophy, and such
He kept an even pace with them. A strain
Of Celtic with his Scotch had loosed his tongue,
And gave him fluency. He liked it too,
Especially when things worth while were on:
Then, opening up the stops, the organ played
And men were edified and pleased as well.
He kept his soul in touch with lofy themes,
Read Homer, Vergil, Dante, Goethe, Pope,
But most of all loved Scott and Bobby Burns,
Because their stories, poems could be placed
Among the deep ravines and glens throughout
His lovely Catskill Mountains. Hence, a wealth
Of pictured language sat upon his lips,
43eee ee
SSR tes Sy a awe
SE ne Ee ee
Delighting all who came to visit him.
He loved the mountains more than words can tell.
Pye known him talk to them as if they heard.
He knew their moods, and used to note their signs,
Predicting what the weather was to be.
“Old Utsayantha has its cap on now,
He said. when mist or fog or cloud or rain
Shut off the highest peak from view. Or, “Watch
Old Baldy scowl!”’ as, in a haze, the mount,
That guarded well the gorge, would hide its face.
Old Rip Van Winkle never knew the town
Of Falling-Water better than this man,
Delaney, knew his mountains, each and all.
Among the first to clear the pines away,
He knew them in their early grandeur well,
Had opened paths and roads along the streams,
And when the need was on would join the crews
In maple sugar making in the spring.
His house stood near the highway, hence, he knew
The people of the country-side for miles
Around. They stopped before his gate to hear
And give the latest news about the folks.
None ever left his door in need. Few left
Without an invitation to break bread.
When any movement was on foot to help
A neighbor in distress, Delaney first
Was sought and gave the movement his support.
The things he had were not his own, he said,
He was the steward only. Those in need
Were owners of the things they needed. ‘This
Philosophy had nearly beggared him,
His farms and mills producing annually
Supplies of lumber, flour, and things stood good
To make him rich, or well to do at least.
But such a soul of generosity
44Throbbed in him he gave freely without stint,
And when he died the only thing he had
Was what he started with, his simple farm.
And yet he used to say he owned the world,
And all things in it. All the houses, towns.
The mountains, rivers, earth and sky, were his.
He cared not who held title. It was good
That titles made care-takers of the world.
But all potentialities in things
Belonged to him, if he but use the same.
Beyond this wealth in stars, he prized yet more
The spiritual heritage of the past, the brain
Of Shakespere whom he read, the heart of John
Whose gospel had most deeply touched his soul,
The mighty hand of Moses who had rocked
os,
The world. Let children play with dolls and do
Heaven.
But grown up men should think the thoughts of
A neighbor's son was soon to be ordained
To preach. The service was an open one,
And so Delaney came to see the lad
Receive examination. At the first
The thing was stiffly formal. All the lights
Had asked about the doctrines of the creeds,
And whether Moses wrote the Pentateuch,
Had quizzed him as to Jonah and the whale,
And if Isaiah were a dozen men or one,
If seven days creation were a myth,
And how the Bible was inspired, and 1f
He knew the name of Moses’ second wife.
Delaney’s sense of humor saved the day,
For while he had no standing in the church,
They loved him for his solid worth, and hence
Were not averse when he requested leave
To ask the lad some questions of his own.
He asked him, if he truly loved his Lord,
45oreyts {opeteSs cepees tes ST Ee Te Pe ht eee oe ee - : ae
ee a
Se
eet eer es
Ne ee ee ee ee
Cr eet ey
And much about the Saviour’s walk and life,
And when he finished his sweet questioning,
The great examination stopped. The boy
Was consecrated to the ministry.
An erring daughter of a neighbor once
Had brought upon herself disgrace and shame.
The leading members of my church began
To speak of discipline. She must be brought
Before the church and publicly rebuked.
To me the thing was difficult indeed.
I had no liking for a course like that,
Nor could I meet the argument that creeds
Demanded such should be put out. Besides,
The officers who had much authority
Were openly against the frightened oir),
In doubt I sought Delaney. When | told
Him what the trouble was, he asked, if he
Might meet the deacons with me, which he did.
I never shall forget the way he read
The story of the woman men would stone.
The bitter tragedy was set before our eyes,
A woman whom a man had wronged was judged
By men, not women, who commit the wrong,
The logic of the Saviour’s statement burned
In every verse containing it, as |
Had never known its force, and what was more
The Saviour’s tender sentence which dismissed
The case was spoken with such melting power,
And backed by such an attitude of love,
The charge was stricken from the books, and she
Was lovingly restored to friendly hands.
The gospel stories made a warm appeal
To him, and frequently their words would leap
Up to his lips, as when the parables
Suggested sowing seed, or harvesting.
46The incidents of every story told
By Jesus in His talks to men he knew.
And felt their force, and used them too himself.
The Master’s character and life were both
So true and simple he was much impressed
By all details. But what theology
Had said of both he did not care to know,
Preterring for himself the simple words,
That holy men of old were pleased to write,
And holding he was much too dull to learn
The meanings since imposed by learned men,
“In terms they used to hide their ignorance,”
To quote his very words. The simple speech
Of any gospel preacher, to his mind,
Was more to be desired than all the shreds
And patches of their old theology.
A man can use religion, he would say,
In every single thing he does. The way
One eats illustrates well the vital point.
The tying of a shoestring gives a chance
To show the temper we have got. The dress
A man or woman wears reveals his mind.
The tones of voice one cultivates will show
What sort of mood is back of them. The face
Discloses how the artist of the soul
ls writing inner history on a page
That every one may read. The commonplace
Is more than nine-tenths anyway of all
That goes to make the life of man, and he
Is wise who learns to glorify the same.
Thus, on and on, he scattered far and wide
The seeds of sweet philosophy that Christ
Had planted in his life. At eighty-five,
Still hale and hearty, he was stressing strong
The worth of trifles in the art of life,
47eee
ee ee er ee
,
Hi
,
eh
th
i
Uy
2)
bi
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sf
*
Insisting little things are just as great
As big things in the searching eyes of God.
His life had not been written large in deeds
Attracting nation-wide applause. But when
He died, the room was full of perfume where
He lay. The odor of the ointment was
Like that inside the alabaster box
That Mary’s love poured out upon the head
Of one the world has worshipped ever since.
An incense of sweet smell, the aroma
Of kindly thoughts, was wafted to the skies,
For on the altar of a human life was laid
A sacrifice of love, a symbol of true prayer.
The fragrance was far richer than the flowers
That blushed in simple beauty on his bier.
As blossoms fill the air in early spring,
With odors blending delicately sweet,
So now distilled from many deeds of love
The savor of an earthly life well spent,
As when a wild rose garden scents the air,
Diffused itself about the room. And men
Who seldom prayed knelt down and sought the grace
That had transformed the farmer sleeping there.LOST IN THE WOODS OF MAINE
OR
THE MysTeERY MAN AT ANGLER’S INN
-0-0-}-0-0-
A man walked down a street in Hillsdale, onze,
In Oxford County, Maine, and everyone
Who passed him turned to look again. In size
He was a man of average height, about
ive feet, eight inches, and his size and form
Were not unusual, but the things that caught
Attention were his clothes which looked unkempt,
A trace of injury about his face,
Some movement of his leg that like a limp
Disturbed his balance. He was not a tramp.
There were no marks of dissipation on
His face or in his eye. He did not seem
To be a laboring man at all. The things
We all associate with labor are
he calloused hands, and so we call the men
Who work the horny-handed sons of toil.
But this man did not have the evidence
That proved he delved or digged. He had the thin
Pale fingers of an artist, or a man
Who preaches, doctors, teaches or the like.
seneath his outward mask was something fine,
sut what it was nobody seemed to know,
Nor could they puzzle out the air of strange
Though certain mystery about the man.
49a eee
Sa
<=
eee ee Le
ee Te
er
Pete e ssi aetiyedag ewe:
The town itself was small, not much above
The villages one sees in Maine far up
Among the mountains, near the lumber camps.
A single street ran through it lengthwise, end
To end, but this was crossed by four or five
Short streets right-angled to the main. On one
Of these side streets, if one may call them that,
There stood a large size | boarding house, but called
The Angler's Coat of Arms. Perhaps a sprig
Of gentry, now decayed, had thought to graft
A memory of by-gone days in such
Pretentious naming of the mountain house.
“Dew Drop Inn,” and names like that, perhaps,
Had been exhausted. Anyway none knew
Just how the hostlery had got its name.
The stranger crossed the street, pushed back the
gate,
And started up the yard to enter, when
He seemed to pause, as if he held debate
Within himself what next to do. He seemed
Composed. His hesitation was prolonged,
And seemed to settle nothing, for the marks
Of indecision showed in every move
He made. Continuing, he reached the steps.
Ascended them, looked round, and paused again;
Then, slowly passing though the door, he asked
Where he might find the dining-room. To this
He went at once, removed his hat, and called
For something, anything they had, to eat.
In ordinary circumstances men
Must first affix their signatures within
The register. But this man seemed so odd,
Amazement and the thought that some new thing
Would happen next took hold of everyone.
The waiter said “Good morning,” and to this,
50In lifeless tones, the stranger said, “Good day.”
Some food was brought. A mumbled “thank you’ text
And then the man, like one long starved, began
To eat his meal. Throughout it all he spoke
No word to anyone, nor asked for more.
He finished every crumb upon his plate,
Then rose, went out into the lobby, and
Sat down. Within about two minutes he
Was sleeping in his chair like one fatigued.
The clerk had been off duty at the time
Our stranger entered. When he came. he called
The landlord to inspect his new found guest,
And say what should be done. Mine host was one
Who took life easy, worried not at all,
Inclined to hospitality, and now
Took such a lively interest in the case
He called his wife who did the chamber work.
And then the cook and stable man, and such
As loitered round the porches and the yards,
To see the sleeper, and to hear their views.
Which proved as different as the clash of tongues
At Babel’s tower. One might have thought a ghost
‘rom some vast haunted shore of time had dropped
Upon them. Whispers went around the crowd
As though the place was haunted. Nameless dread
Crept into those inclined to omens, signs,
And fearful visitations, as if God
No longer ruled His universe, but gave
It up to devils, ghouls, and other sprites
Of darkness. Just a few said, “When he wakes
We'll find out all about him. Wait awhile:”
And wait they did, but still the sleeper slept.
When evening came it brought the stragglers in
From everywhere. A country inn is like
A rendezvous. It takes the place of caves
51oi ie ee Sens
Oe
SSS t se ay a eseee
s sass
ete te
StF POypessysetofedeesss=
In ancient times, where clansmen used to meet.
It is the club-house on Broadway, or den,
Or drinking cellar of the city dives,
Where men, gregareous in their natures, come
To while away the time, and swap eood yarns.
The Angler’s Coat of Arms had now a new
Peculiar kind of entertainment. All
Engaged in speculation on the man,
But none disturbed his rest. The landlord’s word
Was positive. ‘““The man is now my guest,
He will not sleep forever; when he wakes
It’s time enough to find out who he is,
And what he wants; till then respect his need
Of sleep; he must be very tired. Note,
How deep his breathing is. At ten o'clock,
Unless he wakes before that, I shall rouse
Him up and find out all about him, then,
If all is well, he stays here for the night.”
sut ten o'clock had come, and not a stir
Was made. The landlord came, and gently shook
His shoulder, but the man made no response.
He used more force, and spoke to him, but still
The man slept on in silence as before.
“Come lend a hand,” the landlord said, “‘and lift
Him to a side room on this floor, and put
Him into bed until he sleeps it off.
He must be drunk.” And yet there was no smell
Of liquor on his breath or person. But
The men stepped up, and lifted him, and off
They carried him to bed, with all the more
Deep interest in the case. “Tomorrow we
Shall see what is the matter with him sure.”
All night the man slept, giving no least sign
That he had for a minute waked. No noise,
No sound, except his heavy breathing, showed
52he man alive. A rumor spread throughout
That something terrible had happened up
At Hillsdale. Twelve miles out the gossips said
A drunken man was now exhibited
In “prohibition Maine” at Angler’s Inn.
Some said they saw him stagger into town,
While one avowed he saw him take a nip
From out a bottle, carried on his hip,
That officers were derelict, or drink
Could not be bought or sold in Maine. The state.
A few averred, was wetter than it was
Before the silly people voted dry.
And by the time the story made the rounds,
Returning in a day or two, the thing
Took on proportions very large. The truth
About the matter was, the landlord loved
His drink, and he was drunk, the people fooled,
Assured that he was playing off on some
Poor fellow to defend his own good name.
But rumor did not stop until it ran
The gamut up and down. A crazy man,
The next wild story went, had been picked up.
Another said a robber had been caught,
The goods upon him. One soft whisper was
An inmate of the county jail had slipped
Away, another said a lunatic
From some asylum was at large. And by
The time the thing was tossed about enough
Almost the whole community was caught
In one or other of the specious tales
Professing to explain the stranger come
To be the guest of Landlord Singleton,
The hearty host at Angler’s Coat of Arms.
The morning of the second day brought no
Solution of the problem. Sheriff Jones
53a ee
Oe ae
Ce ee er ee ee
ee ee
Rates Dg
Was sent for but explained he knew no cause
Why he should molest this or any man
For sleeping overtime. The law might be
On him for trespass or oppression, 1f
The man should be a lawyer of good parts.
That was the very crux in every mind—
This man was not a common man, ’twas plain,
In any sense. He bore the marks of wealth,
Good breeding, culture, so it seemed to all.
The sheriff made the sensible remark,
What harm could come to any man from sleep.
If Landlord Singleton was not concerned
To turn him out, whose business could it be ?
That seemed to settle that. The law had said
Its say; decision had been duly made;
Now leave to Mister Singleton the rest.
By afternoon the women turned out too
To solve the thing. They gathered in small groups,
Discussing the strange news, with strong desire
To see the roomer who was at ‘““The Arms.”
The gift of curiosity is strong
In women. They can almost match the men.
The drift was toward the inn. Before the clock
Struck three there was a good sized crowd on hand,
And Mrs. Singleton invited them
To come and see their boarder. Full of awe,
They gazed upon him sleeping there, but none
Were any wiser when they went away,
Or had the clew that reached the riddle’s heart.
The second day a doctor was called in.
He called it coma. That would settle it beyond
A doubt. But Aesculapius had yet
No reason to be proud of this young leech.
So later on an old herb doctor, known
And loved all over Oxford county, came
o4To see the strangest patient he had known
In all his life. This doctor, with the skill
That comes with years, began to feel his pulse,
To note his respiration, then to try
And rouse him. Next he stripped him to the waist
To see if there were any sort of wound
Upon his body. Then it was he found
The man was bruised and cut. His heavy hair
Had quite concealed a gash upon his head.
He had a fractured rib, and ugly scars
from blue to black upon his hips. Some sort
Of mental shock, paralysis perhaps,
Was ailing him. The man should have good care.
‘He stays right here and I will care for him,’
Said Landlord Singleton. Such generous word
[’xpressed mine host on all occasions. He
Was liked immensely for his noble heart.
A general interest in the man had spread
Among the lumbermen, and many said
They knew the man. So word was sent that such
Should drop in at the Angler’s Coat of Arms
And there identify the man. A score
Or so came in, but gave no aid. One said
He saw a man like that far up the glen,
In mid-stream fishing for the mountain trout.
3ut none got closer to the thing than that.
The door down at the grocery had been turned
Into a bill-board long ago on which
The sheriff pasted pictures of the toughs
Who violate the law and run away.
But no description ever read applied
To Hillsdale’s guest. No one had ever seen
The man before, or knew his name, or place
Of residence. Search how they would no man
Was found who saw him enter town, or knew
55a a See eee eh LE ns oe fe
=i = SP yisdegetoesecstsssS" CAS SF
A thing about him, sarlier than the time,
Four squares away, they saw him limping past
Until he landed at the gate that keeps
The entrance to the Angler’s Coat of Arms.
It proved a good investment in the end
To Landlord Singleton, though he was free
From every selfish motive in the part
He played. A man in need had sought his door,
Was welcome, had the choicest room, beyond
That he had no ulterior aim. But flocks
Of people came to patronize him now
And incidentally to get a peep
At one who baited curiosity.
The doctor who examined him took charge
Of this strange guest and had him nursed and fed.
A half a dozen times the man returned
To consciousness, but dozed away again.
Then on the thirteenth day he opened wide
His eyes. He slowly turned them round, and rubbed
Them well with both his hands. He then sat up,
And moved his neck from left to right, and next
He pressed both hands against his head, fell back,
And went to sleep again. The doctor said,
“The man is getting well. That sign is good.
Tomorrow we shall see him much improved,
And pretty soon his speech will be restored.’
Yes, sure enough, the next day once again
He woke, and asked ‘‘where am I?” “Don't you see,
You're here in bed?’ The doctor smiled. ‘The man
Repeated, “where am I?” The landlord said,
“In Hillsdale, at the Angler’s Coat of Arms.”
The man seemed much confused. It was too hard
For him to puzzle out, so once again
He laid his head down softly, shut his eyes,
And went to sleep. That kept the doctor keen
56‘To see the end. ‘Tomorrow when he wakes
We may expect much more. The medicine
And food are used in building up his strength,
Till nature has restored his nervous force,
And then we may expect a normal tone
To be resumed in all his functionings.”’
Each day the man made progress. Pretty soon
He showed an interest in the things about
His room. Again he asked, ‘‘Where am I now 2”
They told him, “Hillsdale.” ‘Never heard of it,
Some time before they had made search through all
9)
His pockets for some clew with which to fix
Identity, but all in vain. He brought
No luggage with him, just the clothes he wore
Were all he had, and in his pockets what
He had was valueless to show his name.
A scrap of paper had on it a scrawl,
A memorandum merely, “June the tenth
| caught a dozen trout,” but that was all.
The paper did not say with whom, nor where,
Nor if the man himself had caught the trout.
They were not certain he had written it.
Professor James of Harvard was called in.
He said the man had lost control of all
His processes by nervous shock, but thought
The wise old country.doctor understood
Just what to do, and said he was no doubt
An honor to his calling. ‘Think of that!”
The neighbors, hearing, said. Then Doctor James
Explained what disassociation means
In mental history. ‘The areas
Within the brain whose special function was
The holding and relating images
Had been suspended. Likely in due time
A re-establishment of function would
57Ce eee
De ne oe
ee ee ed
ba Se EL ee es
a I
Ensue. If not, the man was hopelessly
Insane. The case has many parallels.
Asylums hold their doors ajar for minds
That creak upon their hinges, like old gates,
But nature works a thousand cures to one
That perishes beneath her kindly care.
Thus did the great man analyze the case,
And leave the issue to old “Father Time.”
One morning Mr. Singleton had joined
The doctor in his visit. Once again
Their patient asked the same old formula,
Where am 1?” “Ol! yes,” he said, “T caugmt
A dozen mountain trout on June the tenth,
3ut that was only yesterday. Today
I hope to get a score. The streams are full,
And such a hungry lot of beggars |
Believe I never saw in all my life.
They snapped at bait as fast as | could cast.
It only took me half the afternoon
To land the dozen big ones. Where are they?
I found it hard to keep my feet, the stones
Were slippery, and the current swept its bed
As if the hounds of heaven were in its wake,
So fast and noisy that I heard their screams,
And saw the dogs come yelping in their rear.”
The man seemed tired by this, and Dr. Flood
Made up his mind to give him further time
To get his bearings. Now he ought to sleep.
Excitement was fatiguing. Now that life
Had set the particles to work within
Those areas in his brain once paralyzed,
The wisest course would be to wait their time,
Not hurry them. With that they both withdrew.
The doctor said, ‘““My friend, you have a guest
Worth while. That man is educated. How
58He reeled off figures from the rhetoric
And no profanity! Tomorrow we
Shall whip that trout stream end to end, and know
A good deal more than either know right now.”
Next day the same old question had been asked,
“Where am I[?’ with the answer as before.
Soon this was followed up with number two,
“How did I get here?” It was very plain
A new path now was opening in his brain.
They found the last eight weeks, however, blank.
It was but yesterday that he had fished
For trout. They asked him where the stream might be,
But that he did not know, nor how he reached
The Angler’s Inn, nor what the town was now
In which he lay, nor that he walked the street
To find a place in which to get some food.
All questions fell on ears that could not grasp
A single thread that led him through the maze.
The waxen tablet of the older schools
Of thinking, with nought writ thereon, found here
A perfect illustration of the claim.
The trout stream though was once again invoked,
And then the patient opened up the stops,
As if he were an organist, and played
A prelude for an opera on spring:
“Oh, what a glorious day it was! The sun
Had hardly kissed the hills, when | awoke;
The light was imperceptibly at work
To banish darkness from the earth. The leaves
Were all atremble in the trees, and dew
Was on the weeds and grass and mossy stones.
What birds were up at dawn were warbling notes
The like of which one never can forget,
While in the coolness of the morning air
One felt the breath of Pan, and looked to see
59Cn a a
ee eee ee ee
io ch) Te ee ad
ee eS
The great goat-god asleep within a cleft.
And then I took a reel, and cast my ily
While wading in the stream in early morn.”
The doctor interrupted here to ask,
If it were “‘ morning or in afternoon.”
“Why, did I say the afternoon? Oh! no,
It was in early morning. ‘Then the fish
Are biting best, and, too, the air invites
To exercise, and angling is the dream
The gods have sent their worshippers to change
Their prosy earth to one blest paradise.”
“The man must be a fisherman all right,
He nibbled at it strong, took hook and line,
The dipsy sinker, cork and everything,
In one big gulp,” the doctor said. “What words.”
Said Singleton, ‘he uses! Why, the man
Must be some school professor, or the like.”
The gossip turned, and, speculation rife
Again, the air was filled with flying imps
Of current rumor this time dressed in wings
The fairies use. He was a lawyer, or
A judge, perhaps, who had a falling fit
Or accident. He may have come from some
New England college, some lost president,
Professor, maybe, wandering in his sleep.
No one had come to claim him, and as yet
No word had come from any source to shed
A ray of light upon a puzzling skein
Of tangled threads of doubt and guess and hope.
Once more the doctor started in to quiz
His patient. By this time the man was strong,
Had gotten out of bed, and sat for hours,
At first within his room, then in the hall,
There was no need then to hold back the probe
For he was able to endure no small amount
60Of strain. He had beside so won their hearts
By gracious manners, unobtrusive ways,
And gratitude, that sympathy behind
The probe was all alert against a pain.
“What is your name?” the doctor asked. ‘““My name?
I do not know.”” “You don’t know who you are?”
The onlookers were knocked completely out,
To all unlettered minds the line is blurred
Between the sane and insane. How the two
May fuse and separate, and how to tell
Their marks is far too subtle for the crowd.
To one or two the man seemed stubborn. Why,
To everyone a name is pasted on,
And cannot be forgotten. In their hearts
These few believed the man a fraud, now bent
On fooling everyone. The very thought
That anyone should quite forget his name
Was proof enough the man was feigning it,
Deserved no pity, and was wholly bad.
“Where do you live?” The doctor pressed again.
“I do not know,” the man said, “‘Is it not
That I live here?” “Why no,’ they said, “You came
To us from somewhere. Tell us where you live.
You have a wife and children, do you not?
And they are waiting for you to return.
We want to take you home. Where do you live?”
“Oh! yes,” he said, “I do remember now,
[ live here in the Angler’s Coat of Arms.”
“No, not at all times,’ pressed his questioner,
“But sometimes you are home. The garden gate
Before your house is open, standing there
I see your wife. She waits for you. How long
Will you remain away? Your wife in tears
Is calling for you now.”’ He gazed distressed.
The doctor: “Do you live in town, or 1s
61Keres my on ecwawe ss
Se ee Pee
Sia etiyesaqiewegedensssSe clSesec
Your house out in the country?’ “Do you live
In Maine? In Boston? New York State?’ In vain,
The stranger’s mind was vacant. He just stared.
But he could talk of birds and flowers and trees,
And liked to do it too. Professor James
Returned and said, “The man is coming round.
To Doctor Flood the credit all is due.
Be patient yet. The spool will soon unwind.
The strands of consciousness are tangled up
Just like a bunch of yarn. But nature’s hands
And fingers are as nimble as our own
At least. She will not cut the Gordion knot,
In this case, but will loose and pull the twine
That all the twists and kinks and snarls will ease
Away, and in the end the man will find
Himself.” The host was of the same mind too.
Then Doctor James went on to say, “In sleep
We have a parallel to what we see
Is happening here. Disintegration starts
The moment we begin to doze. Then next
The deeper in we go we lose control
Of all our nervous force. Directing power
Is gone, and on the sea of dreams we float.
Caprice is at the helm, our ship becomes
A sport of every wave or gust of wind,
Across the field where consciousness once ruled,
By means of will, the ghosts and fiends of chance
Flit swiftly by, as playthings of the gods,
As in insanity, or else the night
Of Egypt settles down, and-all is dark.
In this man there is partial darkness now,
A small eclipse, but mostly this man shows
Derangement of an acute kind. It 1s
Not chronic, but is due to wounds. His mind
Will clear as ordered processes begin
62To reassert themselves. The spinal cord
In all of us is full of nodes, and each
Takes to itself the functions of a brain.
The reflex actions in this gentleman
Already have begun to show themselves.
You only have to stop and think how dreams
Unharness all the horses of the brain,
How alcohol will do the same, or drugs,
Like opium. These poisons deaden cells
In cases where narcotics are in use,
Or overstimulate them as in drink,
Or switch them into combinations crossed
By counter currents. Hypnotists produce
Dissociation of ideas by
Detaching cerebral functions in the brain
Effectively from all the lower groups
Of nerves or nervous centres, some at least,
And stroke the face or forehead to that end.”’
‘‘ Suppose we try our patient out by means
Of hypnotism. Let us see if sleep,
Not total but in part, will help him back.
We have to start with something that will help
The subject to completely concentrate.
Indeed the only ones immune from this
Hypnotic power are children, idiots,
And insane people. This man may be such,
gut we can try. Suppose we fix his mind
On catching mountain trout the tenth of June.”
With this Professor James addressed the man,
Adroitly pinning him to trout and June.
The man became a little more like one
In trance, and it was evident the scheme
Had so far met success. Then came the quiz.
“You went out early on the tenth of June,
I understand, and came back to your house’’—
63ee ee an te ee Tea ee eee eee eee eo Cs 1. ee
ee
SSSe te teas sohae
et ON eee ee i
eee ec
= Pe
He got no further e’er the man broke in:
“Tt was no house. It seemed to me a shack
Or cabin made of logs and mud. I went
Back to it when the day was done to sleep,
And, Oh! yes, now I quite remember what
A fight I had with tramps that night who came,
Set fire to everything, and beat me up.”
The man showed such excitement at that point
Professor James concluded not to press
His inquiry that day, but said the light
Had come, would increase fast, and soon would shine
As clear as summer sunlight at high noon.
The next day Doctor Flood was civen the tale,
Without hypnotic influence, with details,
Increasing as the story ran. He said
The tramps were two in number, partly drunk,
Who asked to share the cabin for the night.
They drank and fought together, spilled the lamp,
And set on him to rob him. “Where's my purse?
Look in my coat and see. It is not there.
My satchel, where is it? I had but one.
That must have gone up in the flames. I seem
To see the cabin burning, yes, it 1s
And those two villains pounding me with clubs.
3ut that is all I know. That happened just
A day ago. The tramps! Have they been caught ?”’
Here once again the man showed feeling, hence
The questioning was ended, and he slept.
The doctor thought they might make better speed,
If no one bothered him, but left him much
Alone. So he and Landlord Singleton
Agreed the convalescence should go on,
As nature led the way. The prod no more
Was to be used. If he were so inclined,
They would discuss his situation. But
64Until such time they thought it wise to wait.
A few more days passed by, and then the man
Began to thaw out beautifully. He talked
Of all the glory spread out on the hills.
September had arrived, and early fall
Was in the air. The nights were growing cool
To chilliness, and leaves had caught the frost.
And many changed in color, while the flowers
Of autumn were on hand. The man began
To walk out in the air, and climb the hills,
And bring home flowers, and once he said, “I do
This every year. You ought to see my huge
Herbarium of the flowers. ‘These astors note,
The earliest | have seen, except last year.”
When Doctor Flood reviewed the case he said,
‘The man is coming home. He'll soon be here.”’
September tenth he took a genial view
Of things, remarking it was strange that he
Should be off here in Hillsdale. Then he turned
To questioning on his own behalf, and asked
for all particulars of his being there.
They told him in detail about his wounds,
Relating how he limped along the street,
How hungry he had seemed, and how he slept,
And how he had been sleeping ever since,
“Twas clear the man was intellectual.
He said, “I thank you all for what you've done,
But now I’m going to find myself. Just leave
The thing to me; if rediscovery
Of self is possible, I'll know who |
May be, and why I’m here, and how | came.”
A few more days passed by and he was gay
In spirit, talking to himself, as if
He were a duel personality.
One day he asked for writing paper. ‘This
65CP ek ok es ee
He covered with descriptions of the hills.
His observations were minute and sane,
Poetic in conception, on the whole
Informed with beauty, color, fragrance, form.
He seemed to have a business-self as well,
And, as he further convalesced, he took
A social turn, with manners of the world,
A Chesterfield in courtesy and grace.
2ut still he could not tell his name, or find
The reason why he came to Hillsdale’s Inn.
The ice broke one day though, and he fell in:
“T reached that cabin in the woods on foot,
From Paris, with a satchel in my hand.
The road was lonely; no one passed; I pushed
On into the thick wooded parts to find
The trout streams, and so came upon the hut.
[ came to Paris Station on the train.
Oh! yes, got on at Portland. so it was.
My mind is blank beyond that though, but wait.
Where was 1? Why, in Maine. What could I do
In Maine? Ah! yes, I had been reading how
Thoreau described the lovely woods of Maine.
[ now remember well he had been bred
A mystic who had brooded on the streams.
He saw the mountains washed in air, and heard
The voice of centuries in the robins’ call;
He knew the time when violets came to play
Beside the roads, and blue-bells chime in tune,
And shepherd’s purses burst and scatter wealth;
He saw the eagle with the sky tied on
[ts back, and meadows full of melody.
Enigmas of the woods were quickly solved
By him who knew the stealthy tread of beasts,
And Indian lore, and arts and crafts, and skill
Of woodsmen. When, beneath his floor, the mouse
66Set up her home she ate from out his hand:
The common birds would perch upon his head
And shoulders. He could coax a wood-chuck from
Its hole or lift the fish from out its place.
I’ve read his books from end to end, and love
His “Maine Woods,” hence I find myself in Maine.”
The thread was leading through the labyrinth.
It all grew plain the man was full of thought
About the wild things of the woods and fields.
From Portland he worked back along a line
That led to Boston, where he had no friends,
But stayed a day or two to see the sights.
From there the backward trail was taken up
Which led him to a journey on a boat,
“Fall River Line’ across the sound. He took
It in New York, so back he went, now fast,
Through Hell-gate, under Brooklyn Bridge, to where
He caught a glimpse of Liberty, the maid
Enlightening all who come up New York Bay.
From there his thought worked back across the state
Of Jersey into Pennsylvania.
From Philadelphia he made his way
To Pittsburg, thence to Indianapolis
And on back to Chicago. Then it all
Flashed on him in a minute, ‘““why, my name
Is Henry M. MacFarland, and by choice
And calling I’m a naturalist. I write
The nature sketches for two separate firms,
Who syndicate the matter, with a quill
That is a nom-de-plume. Few know me by
My name MacFarland, barring family friends.
The big world out of doors is where I live,
And up and down the country I have been
In search of new material for my books,
And that is how I came to be in Maine.”
67Ce een
ee tee eee OLS te ee ea
ri
Se
hoe ON eee A oie aed
“A few things more require to be explained.
own through the mount in glens,
-
Angler’s Coat of Arms:
How did I get d
And make my way to
sMy mind retains no memory of that.
Somnambulism never was my forte,
And yet I must have slept along the way,
While walking too, and must have been asleep
On entering Hillsdale, walking up these steps,
And asking for the dining room. It seems
To me I must have eaten while I slept,
And thanked the waiter for the food, as you
Have told me. I remember not a thing.
My home is Minneapolis, not far
From where the University adorns
The heights along the Mississippi's banks.”
The friends back home had never missed the man,
Because his rambles were an every-year
Affair. He had no family, and
There was no wife or children to assail
The public ear with hue and cry, “A man
Is lost.’ He did not teach. Hf articles
Were all spasmodic, as one might expect.
He lived like Audubon, John Muir, and that
Fine bachelor Thoreau, a life apart.
Such men on tramps leave many things behind.
A knapsack will suffice. No change of clothes
Is needed. By the streams they wash their duds,
And sleep at times beneath the open sky.
This man was not so wild as that, but kept
Within the pale of social life, and knew
The ways of men who live in cultured homes.
But after all is said about details,
Connected with his strange mishap, this point
Stands out to me above all other truths,
That God has put within us all the means
68Ot self-determination, self-control,
The power to concentrate, and organize
Our inner life, to gather up the facts
Of sense perception, binding them as wholes,
That as our bodies are like clocks wound up
To run for seventy years, so in us all
A mechanism of a spiritual sort
Has gripped and used our nervous force for ends
Beyond our reason to explain. It saved
This man. Now God be praised for what we call
The continuity of consciousness,
That golden thread that reaches back and forth,
And binds the future with the past in one
Eternal now that gives to me myself
The gift of rediscovery, my ego
A unity and solidarity,
That is the pledge of immortality.0
3
Nee EtAnaels Chat Beckon Me
or
Che Costly Glories of the Hinher Life
Bp
Lincoln BHullepLIBRARY OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
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or
Che Costly Glories of the Higher Life
By
Lincoln HulleyCOPYRIGHTED
1926
BY
LINCOLN HULLEY
DELAND, FLA.
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PRESS OF THE
E. O. PAINTER PRINTING CO
DELAND, FLA.Inscribed to my wife,
Elotse Mayham Hulleyss Vtyosemetesese tess eS Se Sess Se SS eet eS ede see ye
PORTIC PRODUCTIONS
LINCOLN MULLEY
Lullabies and Slumber Songs
Annie-Laurie: Love-Lyrics
Hiram Abiff, the Builder
Sonnets on the Immortal Bards
Shakespere’s Dream of Fair Women
Moonlight Nights at Palm Beach
King David: Israel's Lyric Bard
Christina, or Christian Van Dusen’s Law-Suit
Chivalry in Dixie: Metrical Romances
Mike Murphy’s Dream
Campus Memories
Alice Coventry and other Metrical Romances
The Eloise Chimes
Chapel Lyrics of Faith, Hope and Love
Fables and Myths from the Sibyl’s Book
The Jubilate of Rabbi Ben Adam
Christian Hymns
St. Anne and the Children’s Hour
St. Michael and the Dragon: An Epic of the War
Savonarola’s Visions of Judgment
Broken Hearts and Lives
Vesper Songs of Joy, Trust and Praise
Brave Idylls of the Gallant South
Dwellers Beyond the Styx, or Tragedies of Love
Dixie Sketches in Chalk and Charcoal
Ghiberti’s Doors to Paradise and Other Art Poems
A Maker of Dreams and Poetic Fantasies
Gold-Fields, Gold-Skies and Gold-Seekers
A Farmer-Prince
Galloping Westward: A Ballad
A Disciple of Plato
Florida the Beautiful
Ariel and Cinderella
Eden, a Paradise of Love
College Lyrics of Idealism and Optimism
Chauncey and Kitty; also Bob’s Dilemma
Earth to Earth, or the Joy of Life
For Better For Worse
Aunt Jane and Her Niece; also the Boca Grande Sapphire
Hymns of the Dead Gods
Circe in Search of a Soul
The Crystal Christ
Gloria: A Summer Rendezvous
Angels That Beckon Me
Ave atque Vale, or Life and ImmortalityAngels
Achievement
Aggressiveness
Aims
Altruism
Aspiration
Beauty
sJenevolence
Books
Charity
Chastity
Cheerfulness
Chivalry
Church
Conscience
Courage
Decision
Devotion
Diligence
Duty
Endurance
Excellence
Fact
Faith
Fidelity
Forgiveness
Fortitude
Freedom
Friendship
Frugality
Good Humor
Goodness
Gratitude
Growth
Helpfulness
Home
Honesty
Honor
Hope
Humility
Ideals
Industry
Joy
Justice
Knowledge
Kindness
Law
Leisure
Life
Light
Limitations
Love
Loy alty
Magnanimity
Modesty
Nature
Pain
Patience
Patriotism
Peace
Perseverance
Philanthropy
CONTENTS
Piety
Politeness
Prudence
Purity
Reality
Religion
Responsiveness
Reverence
Right
Sacrifice
Self-Control
Self-Discipline
Self- Expression
Self-Sacrifice
Sincerity
Sorrow
Strength
Striving
Submission
Suffering
Sympathy
Tenderness
Toil
Tolerance
Trustworthiness
Truth
Veracity
Visions
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Angels
The principles that grip my life, a troop
Of shining angels, are: great truths, high aims,
Ideals of great worth, (whose substance shames
All vulgar things) choice books, fine friends, a group
Of virtues, qualities that will not stoop
To serve base ends or men, the glorious claims
Of duty life presents, which burn like flames
To lure our spirits onward, else they droop.
These are the angels looking from my sky,
White-robed and radiant, luring me with smiles,
Sometimes far off, and sometimes very nigh,
At home, abroad, within the dim church aisles,
Their eyes aglow, their parted lips, their hands,
All gestures pointing to the holy lands.
>
Achievement
Set up thy goal, and, e’er the day is spent,
Achieve with ardor all thy soul has sought
Of worthy deeds, first clothed in worthy thought!
Strive toward the end, with all that life has lent
Of courage, strength and hardness Heaven hath sent!
Seek not the prizes that are sold and bought,
But things eternal, as a good man ought,
And then lie down to rest within thy tent.
All other crowns will crumble into dust,
But when thy body turns to clay again,
The things unseen, in which was put thy trust,
Shall shine as yonder stars in mortal ken.
Achieve, or do thy utmost to attempt,
That from all blame thy soul may be exempt!
7
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Aggressiveness
Into earth’s strife one goes, and bares his breast
To sword or gun, and counts the danger meet
For those who sit with favor at God’s feet,
That, in this world of men, to fight is best,
Since each must save his soul in life’s high test,
By braving hardship, yielding no retreat,
Attacking daily every lie and cheat,
Nor thinking once of ease or peace or rest.
Take up the cudgels for the things worth while!
Upon thy heart let dreams and plans be sketched,
Then, on to battle for them with a smile;
Success in all life’s struggles must be fetched.
The Devil's one great virtue, energy,
Has brought full many a conquest to his knee.
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Aims
What part have we in all the old, dead kings,
Forgotten heroes, martyrs, sages, saints?
Some blessed the world, but others gave it taints,
That curse it yet with sin and other things;
Some loaded down their ladies with gold rings,
Fine jewels, castles, woes and vast complaints ;
Some taught the world the value of restraints;
To some in gratitude the heart still clings.
Their aims alone give value to their lives;
Now, while their ghosts go stalking down all roads,
I ask them, “‘Is the man worth while who strives,
And are you happy now in your abodes?”
Few in their ghostly haunts appear as chums;
I see one stoop, as if to pick up crumbs.
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2
Altruism
It moves my soul to see the struggling mass
Of men grope blindly in the dark for light
Upon their way, hedged in by fearful night ;
High heaven to them seems hard as beaten brass:
They hate the souls of all above their class:
At every turn they are prepared to smite
A foe for whom they have no word but fight,
Their sullen souls deep mired in a morass.
My brothers, thousands love you who are dumb
Before the vexing problems of the world:
They love you, fight for you, and often some
Strive on till reason from its throne is hurled.
Blood-fever in the mass has made it blind
To altruism, in a world that’s kind.
6
Aspiration
If I had David’s harp, or Jubal’s lyre,
And knew my way among the tuneful strings,
I would not use the songs my neighbor sings,
But, first, I'd ask the Lord for holy fire,
Then to seraphic music would aspire;
I’d soar above the hills on angels’ wings,
And touch the glory of the King of Kings,
And fill the earth with joy, and never tire.
These holy things above me, unattained,
Glimpsed in my visions of the good and true,
Have power to draw me, and, if ever gained,
Will likely bring still holier heights to view.
The strength with which we long for what is best
Is measured by endeavor as the test.
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Beauty
The curves of beauty in the earth and sky
Entrance the artist’s and the poet’s soul;
They are to him but parts in God’s great whole,
That haunt him night and day he knows not why;
But beauty first must lie within the eye
Of those who dream of beauty as their goal;
To serve her as an end becomes the role
To which they give themselves until they die.
All beauty is subjective, in the hearts
Of those affected by the world of sense;
It may be moral or esthetic arts
That make the chief appeal. Our recompense
Is this, to search objectively for schemes,
That fit in aptly with our inner dreams.
8
Benevolence
Good will to men, no matter what their state,
To high, to low, to those ot every creed,
Perceiving only what may be their need,
Regardless if their names be mean or great;
This is the essence of God’s love, not hate.
Oh, let me on such love and goodness feed,
That I shall hammer into every deed
Good will to men with love compassionate!
It was an angel’s song, that peace on earth
Should some day come to men, good in their wills;
Good wishes issue in kind deeds, whose worth
Is in their power for happiness, that spills
To other souls with healing in its power,
Till they aspire to serve God every hour.
189
Books
My book is fine companionship. JI tire
Sometimes of social life. and all it lends
To ennui, sham, and boredom, where one spends
Flis strength and time and change, when, by the fire,
Someone he really likes would stir desire,
More surely than the empty head that bends,
And bows, to serve the senseless, silly ends
Of drawing rooms, that only rouse one’s ire.
Shall I see those I read, and hear them talk
On those high themes within their cherished page?
Shall I be asked to join them in a walk,
While they discourse on all befits a sage?
Christ, Plato, Browning, Shakespeare, Paul,
Let me crowd in some corner near you all!
10
Charity
To all my neighbor’s faults may I be blind,
Or, cover them with charity, at least;
For in the light that shines from yonder East,
I find my own soul full of spots, my mind
Made hard by strictures, often too unkind;
Within the circle of my love I'll spread a feast
Of friendly words. None are as some low beast,
Unfit to live; I sought and now I find,
That Charity springs from God’s heart above,
His gift to earth, when winds are all adverse;
That needy hearts are yearning for my love,
Not alms, which sometimes proves a hurtful curse.
The mantle of sweet charity may well be thrown
Round other shoulders as around my own.
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Chastity
In purity and honor hold thy life
Where all the secret springs of virtue are;
Deep in the soul, reflected from afar,
Proceeds the happiness of man and wite;
If these hid sources are befouled, then, strife
Ensues among the motives, that will mar
The purest life, as clouds obscure a star,
And man has thrust into his heart a knife.
Chaste thoughts are first, and, next to these choice words ;
If these be pure, foul deeds cannot be done;
Our hearts are nests, one says, of unclean birds
Whose necks should all be wrung, excepting none.
In moral purity go make thy vow,
Chaste as a maid in holiness is now!
1 2
Cheerfulness
Up! Up! The day begins; ‘tis early dawn;
Good cheer shall greet us from the lord of day.
Cheer up! Cheer on! Good spirits make their way
Across the hills. *Tis not a time to yawn,
Or curse one’s fate, or wish the light withdrawn};
It is the time to wake, and rise, and pray!
[t is a time to work, and laugh, and play;
Cheer up! Get up! Go, gambol like a fawn!
3right summer smiles along the woods and fields;
She sends good cheer far out across the lakes;
Her harvests fairly burst with heavy yields;
She claps her hands with joy each breath she takes.
‘Tis only right that we with cheerful mirth
Should join the happy carols of the earth.
1213
Chivalry
When knighthood was in flower, in olden time,
The reign of chivalry made life seem good;
Fair ladies formed a noble sisterhood,
Inspiring men to sing their charms in rhyme,
And, chiefly, to avenge them against crime:
As fearless cavaliers, the men all stood
A unit, in a splendid attitude
Of service, that has made the age sublime.
Nor has the age been wholly lost in mist,
For in our confused brains the valors rise,
That then were pledged to ladies at the tryst,
And once again we read within their eyes
The happy trust they had when chivalry
Was sworn to honor and to chastity.
14
Church
The church, with all its holy gifts, gave light
And life and love and truth and joy and hope
When, in the darkness, I was left to grope,
It lit a candle that grew softly bright;
It led me out of darkness and the night;
It girded me with strength, that I might cope
With evil thoughts upon the downward slope
And win the victory in a deadly fight.
It guided, trained, and helped me in more ways
Than I can ever tell. It filled me full
Of aspirations, that no other force conveys,
And noble dreams, superb, and beautiful.
The church at large, from pulpit down to pew,
Is God’s great saving gift from every view.
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Conscience
Man’s conscience is the candle of the Lord
That shines in all to give us light divine;
Beside the great high altar, flickering fine.
I’ve seen the candles, and have heard the word
The minister has wielded like a sword,
That flashes, slashes, cuts right to the line,
Dividing good and evil by a sign,
Which makes us feel all evil is abhorred.
A simple intuition it may be,
Disclosing clearly what is right, what not,
But driving home conviction, as a bee
Thrusts in its sting, which burns us good and hot.
Analysis may call it this or that,
But every sinner knows it waxes fat.
16
Courage
Men face sure death who never wink an eye,
Leap freely into danger, as a pool,
Not like the frenzied foeman, or the fool,
Who have no brains to sense the danger nigh.
God matches such with Gabriel in the sky,
Who blows the trumpet for the charge by rule,
With eyes and heart made clear in honor’s school,
Who hold it often life’s best prize to die.
Let me move forward, when the clarion clear
Sounds out the charge against the hosts of sin;
Let none among us know the word of fear,
But feel the pulse beat quick amid the din
Of battle joined between the sons of light
And those whose evil spirits choose the night.
1417
Decision
The seat of character is in the will,
And will may issue in uncounted acts,
In words and thoughts each day, these mental facts
Becoming habits, hardened down until
They fix our destinies for good or ill;
Each spirit ever after that reacts
According as his character attracts
Ideals that his passions would fulfil.
Decision, firm and practical, on points
Arising in one’s life, puts in the will,
As iron in the blood, as oil in joints,
The strong and smooth perfection of our skill
In meeting questions under every test,
And solving them with promptness for the best.
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Devotion
Lord Christ, I give Thee all: my house, my land,
My money, goods of every kind, my vow!
Such earthly things, as once had value, now
I lay upon Thine altar. Take my hand,
And lead me by the word of Thy command!
Here, in Thy presence, I would humbly bow,
Give time, love, talents, all, and ask that Thou
Shalt use them, as Thy kingdom’s needs expand.
Then after these things I would throw my life,
My self, my body, soul, and challenge death
To use me in Thy service, if the strife
Should call on me to yield my dying breath,
Done in entire forgetfulness of self,
And solely seeking to exalt Thyself.
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Diligence
Be diligent to do thy daily task!
Let no soft dalliance change thy settled plan!
Be swift in action, prove thyself a man,
Who will not in the summer sunshine bask,
When duties all about his dwelling ask
That he conclude well what his hopes began!
On lazy bones and methods clap a ban,
1f with sweet wine or oil you fill the cask!
Since diligence is mother of good luck,
Apply thyself to duty with great care!
Thus one shall never need the aid of Puck;
He stands with God in answering his own prayer.
At once, today, now, drive the thing in hand,
And in thy grasp is held the magic wand!
20
Duty
Duty in law and morals, both, begins
In those relations we sustain as men
Within a universe of law. A pen
Of swine has no such word. They do no sins.
But men are not as beasts in fleshly skins:
To them the word holds fast. A robber’s den
May try to cast it off. No citizen
With conscience shirks clear duty, though he spins
Strange yarns, sometimes, to justify his ends;
Our duties rise from contacts with the world,
With God, with all relations among friends,
And in the things we owe ourselves. If hurled
Into the midst of devils down in Hell,
The word of duty in our ears would swell.
1621
Endurance
The light fell soft upon the patient dead,
Who had endured, until he broke at last;
His toil at end, his working days now past,
How soundly he could pillow now his head;
Endurance had availed to earn him bread;
A stoic hardness furrowed in him vast
Crow’s feet about his eyes and lips, aghast
Through life with pain, the while his spirit bled.
To suffer pain we deem a soldier’s lot,
Still, all around us, there are breaking hearts,
Who, in the course of duty, are forgot,
Yet carry on in pain till life departs.
These wear white garments, cleanly washed in blood,
Their steadfast patience little understood.
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Excellence
The best is none too good! Let excellence
Be stamped upon the crest of every school!
Though mediocrity may suit the empty fool,
Aristocrats in brains should build a fence
Against imperfect goods, and, then, commence
To agitate for nothing but the best,
That only excellence, in man and tool,
Shall have a true man’s love and confidence.
The things that are more excellent are these:
Faith, hope, and love, high honor, justice, right;
A program like to that the world agrees
Should challenge men who battle for the light.
The coward souls do shoddy work, and yield,
Without a blow. to better men, the field.
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Fact
Go, get things straight, and pare them down as facts,
Until they stand, shaved to their naked bones!
Yes, make them smooth, as smoothas polished stones ;
Not soft and yielding, as the fuller’s wax!
Then will they stand the blows a battle-axe
Might make against the Lord Almighty’s thrones;
The lying spirit looks at them, and groans;
They will his skill at every angle tax.
Like blue-edged swords they pierce opponents through,
Their bladed sharpness cutting clean and clear:
No coat of mail resists their steely, blue,
High-tempered quality. Straight through the gear
Of mailed knights their points are duly thrust,
Who, with their specious lies, must bite the dust.
24
Faith
A fool will mock at faith because a priest
Has set it forth, and bound it with a vow:
The fool turns round, and binds across his brow
Hypotheses and theories with the least
Pretense to reason, and will daily feast
His soul on guesses priests do not allow;
Religion, science should not raise a row;
Both live by faith, yet call each other beast.
Except upon the ladder of a creed
They neither can so much as raise a foot:
Each uses faith to serve his constant need,
And hugs a superstition close to boot.
Conviction 1s no guarantee of truth;
False teaching grips us all from early youth.
18Zo
Fidelity
May we be found among the faithful, Lord,
To whom the gifts of life have been a trust;
Who have not bartered them away in lust,
But treated them as Thine, in sweet accord.
May we be able to increase our hoard,
As all Thy servants with the talents, must,
[f they would meet with favor, not be thrust
Into the outer darkness, for the sword.
May we invest our time and talents both
In ways that shall attest entire good faith,
And prove to Thee we have not been in sloth,
Afraid to meet Thee, as one fears a wraith.
May our adherence to the Master’s law,
Prove our integrity without a flaw.
26
Forgiveness
Now who are we, that we should be so hard
Against the man who may have done us wrong?
Are we so perfect, we may dare prolong
A spirit of revenge, and disregard
The royal law of love, and still mount guard
Against our neighbors whom we live among?
To God all vengeance should by right belong;
Our hate may all His work of grace retard.
Remit your right of justice, your fair due!
Dismiss resentment from your inmost heart!
Restore your foe to favor, and renew
Your good-will toward him! — that, indeed, 1s art.
God’s mercy was not toward His friends, but foes;
Thus would the soul’s physician heal our woes.
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Fortitude
Rare strength and firmness in the human mind
To bear adversity, endure pain,
And other ills, that life is heir to, gain
The heights that rise above the vales unkind,
The groves of sorrow, and the cares that grind
Our bodies into dust, and on the plain
Leave skeletons to bleach in sun and rain,
Till scattered far and wide by every wind.
Hold steady, soul, with patient fortitude!
Like solid rock resist the wind and tide,
That would remove you from your place! Though rude
Your fate may seem, life’s ocean rough and wide,
To stand and hold your own with God 1s best;
The victors are the ones who bear the test.
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Freedom
Our freedom rests upon a righteous base,
Not brutal force, the tiger’s strength or claw,
The serpent’s fang, or bulldog’s ircn jaw,
But on a soul that looks into God’s face,
And daily seeks the thews that come from grace,
Obedient to the claims of sacred law;
All these rare virtues, John, the saint, foresaw
On Patmos, standing in the holy place.
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Paul's chiliarch bought a thing he could not own,
A Roman freedom not within his soul;
He thought it sprang from Czsar’s mighty throne,
Instead, it was within. Some men cajole
Themselves to thinking they can play a part,
For which in truth they have no soul or art.
2029
Friendship
Have you a friend who would give all he owns,
His goods or life, to save you in your need?
There are but few who answer to that creed:
Yet there are some who gladly yield their thrones,
That those they love may sit there. Their sweet tones
Sound in our ears in all our valorous deeds:
For one such friend my heart would gladly bleed;
To kiss his feet I’d kneel on cobble-stones.
One counts acquaintances by hundreds up;
Not one of whom, perhaps, would prove a friend.
They will in friendship’s name oft quaff a cup,
But when it comes to business, that’s the end.
The trusted, true, and tried. as an ally,
Will mount the scaffold for his friend. to die.
>
30
Frugality
Frugality is kin to toil and thrift,
A trinity of graces for the poor,
Good angels, every one, you may be sure;
Put money in your purse, and it will lift
You out of trouble in a pinch. No gift
ls worth much, in the struggle round your door,
When gaunt necessity calls out for more,
And you begin to feel yourself adrift.
Toil brings its own reward. On frugal lines
Live well within the limits of your means;
And then, if ever fate with chance combines
To smite your house, they will not find it leans,
But founded on a solid triple base,
You need not ask for any other brace.
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31
Good Humor
Good humor, not the cackling of a goose,
Nor empty cachinnation of a fool,
Nor merry jibes of circus clowns, at school
To vulgar thoughts and phrases floating loose
From lip to lip, that serve no worthy use,
Defiling hearts, as poison from a pool,
Alien in spirit to each wholesome rule,
That all right-minded people would produce.
But humor that is human, sound and sane,
Down to the very core, that springs from love,
The foe of morbid moods, a friend in pain,
That lifts its eyes from earth to heaven above,
The optimistic confidence that good
Prevails above, and joins earth’s brotherhood.
32
Goodness
The good die young? They do not die at all.
For crowns they wear the evergreens of God.
They lie not crushed beneath the grass-green sod;
Their figures grow to statures fine and tall,
Beside whom all the selfish souls seem small,
And fit to crumble into common clod;
The good indeed have only but to nod,
And all the paltry worlds before them crawl.
‘The good, the true, the beautiful,’ we say;
Note, goodness is the angel in the lead,
But what is goodness? Books and apples? Nay!
These things, and more, are good in books we read,
Yet are not good, although we prize them still,
For goodness is an attribute of will.
22a3
Gratitude
Shame on us that we fail in gratitude,
First, unto God, next, to the souls who help!
One gets no thanks who feeds a lion’s whelp,
Nor do we count its greedy actions rude;
Yet, how few men will leave the multitude
To thank the giver of good gifts! Scores yelp
‘or more, insistent, in their greed, for help,
And, thankless, eat their gains in solitude.
A lively sense of favors yet to come
May be mistaken for a heart of thanks;
Hold not your peace, O neighbors, be not dumb!
But let the Tiber overflow its banks,
And inundate the hot and parched plain
With gratitude to Him who sends the rain.
34
Growth
Each day shall add its little to the store
We treasure, as the miser builds his pile;
And from our hearts within shall come the smile,
That came to Midas from his golden lore.
By slow degrees, by adding more and more,
The builders of the pyramids, erstwhile,
Heaped up the stones, drawn many a weary mile,
And raised the wonder known from shore to shore.
Now shall our spirits grow less there than here?
Shall all our earthly striving reach an end
Or be engulfed, absorbed? Oh! have no fear!
The power that placed us here is our dear friend,
Who made us for Himself, as sons of God,
Who lifts us to Himself above the clod.
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35
Helpfulness
“Tf we can help, use us,” the women cried,
When war burst on the land like leaden hail.
O white-souled women! You, who never fail
To lift the fallen; you, whom no false pride
Has kept from kneeling at the sinner’s side,
To give him needed help, who took the veil,
And pressed a brimming cup, the holy grail,
To lips that but for you must sure have died;
‘Tis you shall save us yet, our mothers, wives,
Our sweethearts, daughters, by the grace of God;
In trouble you would gladly give your lives
For us, and sink beneath the lowly sod.
In helpfulness the holy women stood
With Mary watching Jesus on the rood.
36
Home
Within the sacred circle of the home,
Amid the joys and sorrows centering there,
A sane man makes, or finds, a world so fair,
There is none finer neath the sky’s blue dome,
From that rich soil, as from a fertile loam,
Spring flowers the rarest. These the millionaire
Cannot buy up with gold, but he may share
Them with the world, unless his footsteps roam.
No wonder “Home Sweet Home” wins from us all
That homage due to things we love the best;
It is the shrine of love, if hut or hall,
The place to which we go in need of rest.
No symbol carries more inside its heart
Than home wherein all social duties start.
24J/
Honesty
“An honest man’s the noblest work of God,”
Sang one who tried the human heart to search;
He was not speaking then for holy church,
But stood on even ground with all who plod;
Above our heads we see the sheriff’s rod,
And that may steady some who tend to lurch,
Who in their daily dealings plan to smirch
The angel, honesty, whose ways seem odd.
We owe to men straight words and honest hearts
In all our dealings with them on the earth,
Not double dealing, and dishonest arts,
But always thoughts and deeds of strictest worth.
Where fraud, deceit, and cheating hold full sway,
Black darkness settles down to quench the day.
38
Honor
“Choose death before dishonor, my dear child;
Honor’s a precious jewel of the soul;
If that is lost, there’s nothing can console
You in the latter years but God. Defiled,
A blot on your escutcheon made by wild
Adventures, treasons in your heart, your goal
Of honest living drops; naught but a role
Unworthy actors take is left.’’ He smiled,
But in the old man’s face high valor showed;
A gleam of holy light was in his eye;
It seemed that honor’s self within him glowed,
A power of God descending from on high.
And as that daughter chose the paths of life,
High honor ruled her actions in the strife.
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39
Hope
“Life is insanity; a fevered brain
Creates illusion,” one false teacher said;
He added. “When we die, we’re done, we're dead ;*
When young, his words had power to give me pain,
For were they true, life was bereft of gain,
And for the future there was naught but dread;
If life were an illusion of the head,
Reality was gone and all was vain.
Then Hope rose up, with beauty in her eye,
And of the mocking spirit sweetly asked,
“Will you permit me now to give the lie
To that illusion which your soul has tasked?”
We are not dust, blown up by chance of late,
But souls. like God, who mock at chance and fate.
40
Humility
The noisy lord of lands in vast estates
May lift his head, and hide it in the cloud;
His word and manner rudely style him proud;
He curses humble men as serfs, and rates
Himself so high above the beggar at his gates,
That when he passes him his voice 1s loud;
Each claims alike six feet, when in his shroud,
And death has leveled them and made them mates.
Then shall the equal sentence, “Dust to dust,”
Be meted out to them beside the grave;
The lord and lady to the grave-yard must
Be led to sleep beside the humble slave.
God’s courtiers lay their pride upon the shelf,
Each thinking of the other, not himself.
284]
Ideals
Things are not real, except to human tcuch?
OQ, say not so! The dreamers of all time
Have made of life a thing superb, sublime,
Because they loved the true, and hated much
The things of sense that fade away. All such,
Who to the heights of glory duly climb,
Will count a life lived in the senses crime,
Unless the senses serve but as a crutch
To help us toward ideals as our goals.
These fire our hearts, and challenge us to deeds,
That keep the light lit in our darkened souls,
And help enshrine the beauty in our creeds.
The flags and symbols of our world’s advance
Are high ideals for which men break a lance.
42
Industry
I dig and dig for gold, not in the hills
For that which tarnishes. My hungry mind
Bores into crypts of thought. I strive to find,
In Plato’s realm, the shining gold that fills
The crevices. And, ah! the miser thrills
[ have in counting nuggets of a kind
That many men pass by because they’re blind!
With eager soul I loose them with my drills.
Count time as gold, since life at best is brief:
Fill full the minutes as a crevice packed
With ore. ‘The toil will bring thee joy, not grief,
When thou shalt see the golden mountains stacked.
A thing worth doing should be done with zest,
As friend of God, in toil at His behest.
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43
Joy
Free from all tasks and cares that might annoy,
I plunged into the woods one summer day,
Intent on pleasure, stopping on the way
To revel in the things I loved, quite like a boy;
I saw a thousand creatures there employ
Such tender feet and hands and arms in play,
That from the heart | had to kneel and pray,
In thanks to God for giving them such joy.
It was the keynote of the afternoon;
Joy fairly clapped its hands in everything;
Sweet life to all was such a blessed boon,
The cup of joy was brimming at life’s spring.
It set my heart to singing truly then,
And in my mind | hear it oft again.
+4
Justice
Let justice be although the Heavens crack!
Steal no man’s right, and give the Devil his due!
As you have earned, so be it paid to you!
Press not your load upon another's back!
In judgments owed the rest be not thou slack!
Go, meet thy bond to Gentile or to Jew,
That thy just dealing, in the great review,
May show thy page to be clean, white, not black!
Strict fairness is the jewel of a judge
Who looks not to the right hand or the left,
But seeing where the right lies will not budge,
Until in twain the false view has been cleft.
The absolute, eternal God, at last,
In righteousness shall judge the world aghast.
2845
Kindness
Kor years he kept a tiny flaxen curl
Within the covers of his chapel book,
On which, at worship, he would cast a look,
And think of her, once owner, just a girl,
Since dead, an eddy in the current’s whirl,
While time flowed swiftly by, as in the brook.
To him that lock of hair peeped from its nook,
As precious to his heart as some choice pearl.
The reason was a kindness done to him,
By this sweet maid that touched his heart,
Because now, in his age, grown strangely grim,
All others looked on him as one apart.
The milk of human kindness tasted sweet,
And fed his life as daily bread and meat.
46
Knowledge
In superstition, ignorance, and sin
We have the triple foes of human growth,—
Against these foes let freemen take an oath
To wage a ceaseless war, and let light in;
These enemies may make a frightful din,
And do not stand convicted, yet, of sloth,
3ut can’t resist fair truth and knowledge both,
Which in the end are destined sure to win.
All knowledge gained will tend to make one wise,
Though many men who know a lot are fools;
Still, knowledge has the power to open eyes,
And wisdom justly issues from the schools.
Through all the world day now succeeds to night,
And truth is gaining ground like spreading light.
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47
Law
Law is a rule of action. It is more;
It carries obligation at its heart.
But where did law first get its forceful start?
God is its primal source and spring; therefore,
It well behooves us to give pause before
We scoff at it, and feel our spirits smart,
As they most surely shall in no small part,
Which is the way men learned in days of yore.
And this is for our good, as all may learn;
The universe is held in place by law,
The state would fly apart, and men would yearn
For order, which they always hold in awe,
If we should lose those principles that bind
Ourselves in just relations with our kind.
48
Leisure
Leisure to loaf, and to invite my wife
To stroll along out through the garden gate,
Nothing to hurry one, and time to wait
Until the dear grandchildren quit their strife,
Nothing to do, or say, my mind now rife
With memories I now and then collate,
And pass along to share them with my mate,—
Well, this comes fitly toward the end of life.
We made our home beside a running brook,
Drank water from a common earthen bowl,
Have eaten bread with tears, and had a book
With which to nourish well the hungry soul.
And now comes leisure, e’er I lay my head
To sleep beside my loved and aged dead.
3049
Life
O, Life, ‘twas you, then, knocking at the door,
Last night, when I called out to pause and wait!
[ would not keep you standing at my gate,
But gladly bid you welcome evermore;
] stood there, idly tapping on the floor,
While you were bearing on a silver plate
Rich gifts; I would not be a vile ingrate,
Though seeming so, since you knocked oft before.
The pulse that throbs within my heart and blood
Is but a symbol of the things I need,
Relations of my spirit with the good,
That shall fulfil God’s holy law and creed.
For that is life, to know God, and to be
Related to Him right, eternally.
50
Light
High o’er the hills I see a blaze of light
That shines from some far-distant central sun:
[ know for sure a new day has begun,
Eternal foe of darkness and the night;
Each moment now the glory grows more bright;
Dawn of a better day has surely won:
Much faster now the morning colors run,
That put the shades of terror all to flight.
Give me more light! and, with the light, more grace
To bear responsibility light brings,
That not with blinded eyes, and shame in face,
I shall look up to see the King of Kings!
Light in my soul, and light upon my way,
Grant me in larger measure, Lord, each day!
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Limitations
You never have seen me, nor yet I you;
This body is the house in which I live;
You look my way, your mind made sensitive,
But all you see, although you look me through,
Is just an image, which can give no clue
To you of me, it is so fugitive,
Made on the curtains of your eyes. Forgive
Me, if I still insist this thing is true.
Like one chained in a cave, I only see
The shadows cast upon my prison wall;
From these I may infer what you may be,
And just the same may find out God, that’s all.
It well behooves me, then, with humble mind
To judge the limits of all human kind.
52
Love
I think I heard love’s strains long, long ago,
While leaning softly on my mother’s breast;
A song of love she sang, and brought me rest,
With peace and satisfaction babies know.
In boyhood and in youth, when life’s aglow
With hope and passion, I next heard love best;
nobler test,
‘
And taught me love beyond all power to show.
Then manhood brought the fuller
Bound by the ties of kinship, life expands,
Increasing joy, and making earth more sweet;
Attachments of good-will make new demands,
3ut love lays all things at the loved one’s feet.
Its essence is unselfishness, that asks
No big returns, but only fresh, new tasks.
323
Loyalty
In all relations where men look for nice
Discriminations, made to serve love, truth,
And right, may I be faithful, and, in sooth,
Count loyalty to them above all price;
Disloyalty is such a loathsome vice,
That it should be impressed upon all youth;
A man in manners may be deemed uncouth,
3ut if he ring true, that fact should suffice
To lift him high above the vulgar crowd,
And stamp him as true coin in any realm;
He lives high up above the shining cloud
Where loyalties our little world o’erwhelm.
For him the shining ones reserve a crown,
And he shall glory in God’s smile, not frown.
54
Magnanimity
His magnanimity was just a spark
That hit the town, and burst into a flame;
It gave to him a safe, undying fame,
Dispersing light where all around was dark;
A host whose little souls were drear and stark
Would brighten up at mention of his name;
His spirit rested on them all, the same,
And brought from dumb lips always this remark:
“He shames me with my littleness; if he
Can be so big, pray tell, why may not I?”
And so from mean revenge he set men free,
Until their souls, redeemed, had touched the sky.
God, send us chevaliers of grace, big men,
Who strive for great-souled things with tongue and pen!
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Modesty
A modest grace in dress and gait and air,
Combined with that same quality within,
Which unto Beauty is the next of kin,
Will make its blest possessor wondrous fair ;
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Propriety in speech is all too rare;
How oft immodesty begins to spin
The web of folly she will flounder in
When once her feet are caught within the snare!
A sweet reserve of delicacy in thought
Will find expression in a decorous speech ;
These are the garments that cannot be bought,
But which beyond the queen’s white ermine reach.
“As modest as a nun!” Love coined that phrase
For use to stamp approval with high praise.
56
Nature
I know a spot, within an aged wood,
Where I may hold communion with the birds,
(Whose worship moves to silence, not to words,)
With leaves, and light in patches, and the mood
Midsummer heat in all that sisterhood
Induces. Here my soul oft girds
Itself with strength, as do those lowing herds,
That graze in sweet, rich meadows for their food.
Uplifts and inspirations from the flowers,
From sunsets, moon-rise, stars, and charming skies,
From all that summer broods, from summer showers,
Move me to worship with anointed eyes.
I saw a fairy climb a tiny leaf;
It talked to me confirming my belief.
347
Pain
Eternities were all those hideous hours
In agonies that seemed to have no end:
The tortures of black hell can never lend
Such pangs of pain, as in that den of ours,
We call a hospital, and bank with flowers,
Where chairs and cabinets and knives all send
A thrill of horror through you, as your friend,
The Doctor, saws you up with fiendish powers.
I lay there sweating blood while zons passed,
An infinite procession of long years;
I thought each breath I drew would be my last,
Stretched out upon a rack of woes and fears.
But, when it ended, I thanked God for pain,
And for Him would have suffered all again.
58
Patience
Serene and calm and still I see you, star,
The pole-star, just above the hill. I trust
Implicitly, in daytime, that you must
Be there next night, so patient and so far
You burn. Round you gay Phcebus wheels his car,
And shall until his axles turn to rust:
When Time has hurled earth's monaments to dust
God still shall see you shining where you are.
Soul, be, in your sphere, constant, loyal, true,
As patient as my star, the one [ love,
Out yonder, standing over in the blue,
My guardian angel in the sky above.
Run! Run your race with patience to the goal,
And win your crown of triumph, O my soul!
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Patriotism
I owe allegiance to a holy flag.
May all my loyalty be given the test
Of faithful service to that streaming crest,
On which a happy nation well may brag!
In dust and mire its folds shall never drag,
While loyalty beats in the patriot’s breast,
And faithfulness be not an idle jest
On foolish tongues that will not cease to wag.
My God, my native land, my flag, my home,—
These are the precious treasures of my life!
These symbols shrine the best beneath God's dome;
To these I pledge my all in holy strife.
The liberty I prize is dear because
It is defended by my country’s laws.
60
Peace
Peace comes at last with rest and sleep and dreams,
The neighbors hushed in silence rourtd the door,
A few choice friends tiptoeing oer the floor,
Across the carpet, playing, soft sunbeams,
Sweet flowers, heaped high from one who deems
The white face there, so often kissed before,
Still dearer in death’s arms than when of yore
They talked and laughed together of their schemes.
| ask no peace until the battles end;
Lite is the sweetest for its loads, of care;
Say not to me that death is man’s good friend;
| like the struggle and do not despair.
Don’t talk to me just now of peace and rest,
But I shall welcome both at last as best.
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oO61
Perseverance
He could not be defeated: men knew that,
Who saw the battler brace his foot on ground,
To strike at fate and chance, and quick rebound
Before the wrestlers had him on the mat:
Each time they hit he gave them tit for tat:
No weak spot in his armor could be found:
He clinched, and round their bloody bodies wound,
Until they let him go, a victor flat.
Caprice and fickleness will gain no ends,
But steadfast purpose, held with bulldog grit,
An iron will that neither breaks nor bends,
Will master all the foes that fly at it.
Dull scholars often win the longed-for prize,
Because they keep it well before their eyes.
62
Philanthropy
Brothers in blood we are the whole world o’er,
Allied by all the bonds cf pure friendship,
Shorn of exclusive merit by one clip,
Knit close together by blood ties that more
Than all things else here bound earth’s tribes of yore.
Therefore, ‘tis not too much, aboard one ship,
When life shall make us feel the painful whip,
To show affection at each other’s door.
Philanthropy, the love of human kind,
Is growing now by yearly leaps and bounds;
Its lovely flower commends the common mind,
And scents the air wherever it abounds.
The happiness of man throughout the scale
Of social life shall finally prevail.
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63
Piety
O Thou, for Whom the light is as a robe,
Who dwellest in the utmost parts of space,
Unveil Thy form, that I may see Thy face,
And into all my secret wishes probe!
My fathers in the past upon this globe
Have left within my tongue the forms of grace,
And in my memory faint gleams | trace
Of things that press my brain in every lobe:
Words, phrases, filled with joys and hopes and fears,
That I can not decipher, nor relate ;
They burst upon me amid smiles or tears,
And on my knees I praise my God, not fate,
Nor chance, two empty words that mock the facts,
That He attests His being by His acts.
64
Politeness
Not Chesterfieldian manners would I praise,
That often had their root in vile desire,
The studied art that aimed to light the fire
Of base, unlawful lusts, but those fine ways
That kindness prompts, which to the end ot days
Shall be the soul of manners in the squire,
As in the humblest. All whose hearts aspire
To do the kindly act, and form the phrase
That carries courtesy in deed, and look,
Shall be accounted worthy of the name
Of that great chevalier who wrote no book,
But lived a life of kindness without shame.
Politeness springs from deep and hidden pools
Within our hearts, and not from pedants’ rules.
Q
3865
Prudence
A prudent man will wisely choose his way,
And set his footsteps slowly, surely down;
He knows that undue haste may lose the crown,
That comes to wise men on the crowning day;
He follows not the call when asses bray,
Nor does he yield to antics of a clown;
He does not budge from truth when bullies frown,
Nor into wild forbidden pastures stray.
The wise man’s eyes are in his head, I’ve heard,
Not those two optics smiling in his face,
But mental eyes whose vision may be blurred,
Yet seldom fail to function in their place.
Discreet men get wise counsel from God’s throne:
He flashes wisdom to them from His own.
66
Purity
Lift up clean thoughts, clean lips, clean hands in prayer
To God, Who is the Holy One and pure!
Ask Him to touch each leprous spot, and cure
Thy soul, and make its purity His care!
In His white presence breathe the cleansing air,
That brings one moral health, and makes secure
The strength to combat evil, and endure
All vileness round, to which the flesh is heir.
No man can e’er see God through dirty eyes;
The pure in heart alone can view the light :
Impurity cuts off the blessed sky,
And shuts a man in darkness and in night.
A rigid cleanliness of inner life
May need the scissors, or the pruning knife.
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67
Reality
Life’s values are no whit less real because
They are invisible. The deepest bliss
High Heaven bestows upon our earth is this:
In virtue, love and faith there are no flaws;
Right, truth and justice are eternal laws,
And not material things. Analysis
Of all that’s best in life: a dead child’s kiss,
A prayer to God, Christ's love that overawes,
Are all as real as tangibles, no less.
Great Plato found ideas were most real;
We think to measure things, | must confess,
He found reality in things men feel,
And know not through the gates of fleshly sense,
But view within the mind, where things commence.
68
Religion
Religion fed my fancy with sweet dreamis ;
Awake, asleep, in reverie and trance,
Its holy symbols would before me dance,
Until they shot me through with blessed gleams
Of light and cheer, akin to soft sunbeams ;
A thousand silken threads of choice romance,
My swift imagination spun, enhance
My happiness, and enter all my schemes.
Faith deals with God and souls and destiny,
And when religion took in charge my life,
It stirred me to the depths with certainty,
That I should take a hand in all the strife
About the altars, and the keys, and golden gates,
Regarding God, and man, and future states.
4069
Responsiveness
Make me responsive to the world’s deep need:
Its tears and prayers, its joy and love and hate.
As all the winds that touched the harp, but late,
Of Aeolus, and found its strings gave heed,
May | the hearts of others daily read,
That I may ease the sorrows of their fate,
Fill them with love, and all their griefs abate,
And to the Father, in their service, plead.
To all the noble claims my friends may make
To all the world feels in its deepest need,
To all ideals Heaven may in me wake,
Make me responsive, both in word and deed.
And so J shall be, if I make Thee mine,
3y blending my will fully into Thine.
70
Reverence
By reverence true souls mean not only awe
For God. It is an attitude of mind
In science, art, philosophy, the kind
That keeps us humble when we search for law,
3efore bewildering facts, amid the raw
Experience of the senses, when we grind
With all the strength of Samson, and as blind,
Within the prison house. Hence, when we draw
Ourselves together for a day’s good fight,
‘Twere well to kneel in reverence, first, and pray
For proper attitudes toward life, that night
May find us still respectful toward the day,
Not like the souls who curse, and murder time,
And foul their hearts by every kind of crime.
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Right
Right is no empty word or idle dream,
Nor is it a provincialism here
On earth. It strongly holds, from year to year,
Orion and the Southern Cross. Its gleam
Is seen in every place, a holy scheme,
By which the souls of men are drawn more near
To God, who placed us on this rolling sphere,
And by a sense of right makes us supreme.
Wrought in the constitution of the world,
Are laws divinely sanctioned by our God;
Not till His reason from its throne be hurled
Shall men escape the strictures of His rod.
For right is right, since He is what He 1s;
In harmony with Him alone is bliss.
72
Sacrifice
I saw the blood that stained the battlefield
Of men who counted costs and paid the price,
Who gave their all, a living sacrifice,
And asked myself what more could honor yield?
I see in death how great the power they wield,
For, dying, they won victory in a trice.
’Twas not a game of pitch and toss or dice;
They died, and by their death the world is healed.
Yet in the sacrificial love of One
Who died upon a cross, I see the face
Of God. He made a claim to be His son,
Attested by a life of love and grace.
Here was the fairest flower and fruit of love,
Transplanted from God’s gardens up above.
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73
Self-Control
Who is the master in this house? Am I?
[ own the lease, and pay the rent, and hold
The key; the house, too, now is growing old;
The expiration of the lease draws nigh.
I have seen strange things crawling round to spy,
bold,
Cry out against my mastery, and scold,
But if they say they own the house, they lie.
And sometimes alien voices, growing
I am the captain, under God, who sails
This craft, and mean to steer it, till [ bring
My boat and cargo through life’s stormy gales,
Drop anchor at the wharf, and greet the King.
What other course shall I, a freeman still,
Attempt to do with freedom of the will?
74
Self-Discipline
Make of thy heart a threshing floor where flails
Shall hammer out the wheat from all the chaff!
At noon, when rest calls from thy labors, quaff
An honest brew of Adam’s purest ales!
Subdue the flesh, and teach thy soul the scales
That lead to higher things! Thine epitaph
Shall then read ‘‘Here lies one who learned to laugh
At pain and all misfortune, who trimmed sails
Before no harsh and stubborn winds, but held
Himself in fine command, master of fate,
A man who made environment, upheld
sy force of will that made him truly great.”
Taught to obey all higher laws within,
A chastened man to goodness is akin.
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Self-Expression
I heard a man, regarding fine arts, say:
“These arts, like those of speech and music, give
A field and means of self-expression.” Live,
Shut up within one’s self from day to day,
Not having learned the tools of work or play,
One’s inner powers repressed, with no active
Expression for one’s thoughts which might outlive
Our brief existence, is to lose ones way.
Enslaved to passion, that were surely death.
The senses are the gates through which come raw
Materials for the mind. With every breath
We ought to work according to the law,
“We learn by doing.” Thus, expressiveness
Is one of many virtues we should stress.
76
Self-Sacrifice
Not for themselves the noble warriors die,
But for some cause of great surpassing worth;
They love, as we, the beauty of the earth,
Yet gladly give themselves to crush a he;
Men brutish in their lusts would make a sty
Of earth to wallow in, and in their mirth
Forget that God brings nobler souls to birth,
Who trail the glory with them from on high.
These choose to mount the awful funeral pyre,
And give their bodies to the red-hot flame;
Their goods and honor never are for hire;
In self-denial they win a deathless fame.
Upon the threshold of immortal youth
They stand as willing martyrs to the Truth.
4477
Sincerity
True, sincere men are always candid, clear,
Not like the hypocrites who all wear mé asks,
Who dodge their duties, and the normal tasks,
That come to men throughout the circling year ;
A sincere man is not the slave of tear,
Nor wolf, who in sheep’s clothing always basks
In all the walks of life he merely asks
That he be taken as his looks appear.
The genuine is what knaves counterfeit,
Because they know its value in men’s eyes;
Sincerity is gold all deem as fit
To be the current coin of Paradise;
Deceit is alien to a sincere soul,
Who stands four-square, and plays no feigned role.
78
Sorrow
I have not had much sorrow in my life;
I’ve sat with death, and seen my loved ones pale,
And known the ache when little children ail,
Have lost dear friends, and met defeat in strife,
My house burned down, my work was sometimes rife
With woes, but one time, visiting the jail,
The lips of Christ that pressed the Holy Grail
I saw a-tremble in a country wife.
The son she nursed in childhood at her breast,
And cradled in her arms, the gift of leve,
Must hang for bloody deeds, adjudged a pest;
The mother called in prayer on God above;
Convulsive shrieks and sobs and tearful groans
Assailed my ears, she kneeling on the stones.
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Striving
For bread and meat men daily work and pray,
In all the shops, the marts of trade, the mills;
They sail the seas, and dig beneath the hills
Accept the dangers of the night and day,
Scarce taking time enough to love and play,
Attacking nature with the force of wills
Directed by deep needs. with various skills,
For which in rich rewards the others pay.
Match this, the physical with toil as great
For those supreme possessions of the soul,
That pass with us, through that fair, narrow gate,
To God’s eternal city as our goal;
Oh, agonize for these whose priceless worth
Surpasses all the glories of our earth!
SO
Strength
I saw a farmer, guiding straight his plow,
Strong-limbed, clear-skinned, and opal in his eyes;
He did not stop to gaze long at the skies,
But as he toiled, the sweat oozed from his brow;
His wet hair seemed like matted bits of tow,
His face at grips with fate, his sturdy thighs
Like beams resisting strains, their strong allies
Two arms that with the labor seemed aglow.
Unconscious of his power, he traced the field
In deep straight rows of splendid fallow soil;
He may have thought somewhat of Autumn’s yield,
But chiefly he was doubling at his toil.
Give me the moral thews that match such strength;
And I shall triumph over sin at length!
£681
Submission
A deadening routine often chills the blood ;
Yet life is full of routine for the crowd ;
The masses go to toil with spirits bowed,
And stream along the streets, a human flood,
Parts of a great machine not understood,
The purpose hid, as stars are hid by cloud,
Lips mute or dumb, a few declaiming loud
Against the lie of human brotherhood.
Give me the patience to accept the yoke,
That chafes the souls of other men so much!
Help me to use it, as the wooden one of oak,
To draw my load, nor feel its chafing touch!
I would endure misfortune, pain, and toil,
And to the flower of patience be the soil.
82
Suffering
Inside my mind there is a crucifix,
On which the wounded Christ is stretched out slain:
I see Him writhing there in awful pain;
With every squirm each nail with anguish pricks ;
I count the wounds: there must be five or six:
Like swords the nerves must cut within His brain.
Can human strength for long endure the strain?
His dying pains my love and life transfix.
Yes, that I carry in an inner shrine,
My crucifix, where Christ oft sees me kneel,
To bless His name, and make His spirit mine,
And enter into things He now must feel.
For joy, in direct ratio to one’s pain,
Mounts up the scale, in vast increasing gain.
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485
Tenderness
Your tenderness was perfect in my grief!
It drew the sting of that old serpent, death;
You held me close, until I felt your breath
Upon my aching head, and found reliet;
Your gracious words gave comfort past belief,
Restoring to me all my old-time faith;
That had been purloined by some devil's wraith,
E’er I could catch, and brand him as a thief.
You did not scold me for my bitter tears,
But told me [I should let them freely flow;
You did not chide me for the wasted years,
But told me only God and I should know.
Humane and merciful, you gave me power
To rise to better things from that sweet hour
86
Toil
Watch not the clock or dial! All the sweat :
Of labor, O ye toilers, prices bread;
Be glad, and bless the loving lips that said,
“By sweat ye all shall earn your ransom yet!”
The great Task-master’s lash ye shall forget,
For it was laid in love upon your head:
It quickens you to life, not slays you dead,
And happiness shall soon succeed to fret.
Toil is a gift of love, put in our hands
To save us from the ennui germ that kills ;
It holds us, with the force of golden bands,
To God, who equals labor to our wills.
Who eats his bread without the daily task,
Will find the Heavens deaf, if he should ask,
49Pe
ere Dee a ed Se eee : RI
87
Tolerance
The bigot holds his own creed orthodox,
As each man must, or else exchange his view.
The bigot goes beyond what he holds true,
And, setting up himself as standard, knocks
All others than his own, until he blocks
The paths of progress, running down the new,
At war with everything outside his pew,
An alien in his heart to other flocks.
The roles of cynic, censor, critic, next,
He or Lys W th il the venom in his heart;
For every aicked theme he finds a text,
And crowds his enemy with deadly art.
But tolerance yields to every man the right
To follow in his heart God’s granted light.
88
Trustworthiness
Make me trustworthy to my fellowmen!
A man who will not swerve, when face to face
With ugly facts, but show the grit and grace
To stand his sround, not seek a coward’s den;
Who will accept a trust, keep faith, and then
Be found a faithful guardian in his place,
Preferring death with honor, to disgrace,
And prove himself a noble citizen.
Within my hands God’s servants have put power,
Relying, in high confidence and trust,
On me to prove trustworthy every hour,
To keep the talent safe, nor let it rust
A charge like that, imposed with such good will,
Help me in faith to keep in honor still!
5089
Truth
Sweet truth is like a star, and dwells apart,
Though round her burns a glorious sisterhood
She has two sisters beautiful and good
All three in essence have the self-same heart:
These triple graces fill the world with art,
[xpressed in forms but little understood:
All science searches for the truth, and should
By every token be her counterpart.
sut what is truth? The question will not down.
[s moral truth, or truth of fact, here meant?
[s truth of being. sign or logic known?
In all these fields, and others, there is lent
A hallowed halo to the truth men hold,
That far exceeds the worth of goods or gold.
90
Veracity
To brand a man a liar provokes a fight;
It is a challenge to a combat straight :
The issue then is not of fact, but fate
Has hurled defiance strongly over night;
The man may be a liar, known on sight,
But that is waved. You now have stirred his hate.
Please tell me why his wrath should grow so great
Go to the proofs, and that should square it quite.
Veracity in thought, in word, in deed,
All one, in fact, considered at the core,
Is seldom found in men, except in creed;
Loose thinking, speaking, acting, evermore
Make truth and fact the lovelier to our eyes,
And lift veracity above the skies.
51]G1
Visions
The angels which have beckoned me began
In early childhood by my mother’s knee;
They used my mother’s voice, and made a plea
That caught me e’er my life had gone a span;
They make me feel that one, to be a man,
Must vision things which most men do not see,
Engaging them by steady, sure degree,
Compounding life upon a noble plan.
These angels wore white garments, and a ray
Of light, a halo, circled each one’s head;
They came to me oft in the light of day,
But many times I saw them by my bed!
be oe eh ee Se Re ee le ee ee ee
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Their faces, lighted with the sweetest smiles,
Have cheered, and haunted me through weary miles.
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The angels I have heard and hold most dear,
Who beckon me to climb the rocky heights,
I’ve sometimes seen through dim and misty lights;
Yet often in sweet tones made softly clear
I’ve heard them speak. Long since, for many a year,
They have been near my side, amid the sights
My Plato gave me, and the choice delights
The Man of Galilee imparts to those who hear.
Their music is more sweet to me than strains
Played in the great cathedral for the dead;
Their voices have the power to ease my pains;
Their words I prize as hungry men prize bread.
I'd walk through life with angel forms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52
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2 =is Stirs gedeesssSe caseAnnie Laurie
An Of10 Sweetheart of Mine
Lourc-Lurics.
By
LINCOLN HULLEY
Author of
LULLABIES AND SLUMBER SONGS
Published by the Author
LEWISBURG, PA.
1903.
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62TO MY WIFE
ELOISE MAYHAM HULLEY
‘They sang of love and not of fame,
Forgot was Britain’s glory,
Each heart recalled a different name.
But all sang Annie Laurie.”’
— Ta ylor.
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This book of love-lyrics is published for
the golden wedding anniversary of the
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author’s parents.
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‘¢ John Anderson, my jo John,
ei We clam the hill thegither,
And mony a canty day, John,
T We’ve had wi’ ane anither.
Now we maun totter down, John,
T Yet hand in hand we'll go,
And sleep thegither at the foot,
John Anderson, my jo.”’
— Burns.
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these, ——
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52CONTENTS
Whenever I Think of You -
O Gracious, Gentle, Lovely Nell
Her Promise True - - -
Spring’s Sweet Minstrelsies -
We Pledged Our Faith for Aye
Rosalie, My Rosalie . -
The Soul’s Awakening
A Harvest Love-Song
Xaipete Nikomen :
The Time for Love -
The Lover’s Tyrst
Lyric Love - -
The Gladness of Love
The Blind God - -
Sweet My Love With Eyes of Blue
E’er the Silver Cord Be Loosed_ -
A Boating Song - - -
Polly - - -
The Fairest Maid of All
The Moon and the Sea
The Span of Life .
The Land of Dreams
Dan Cupid - -
Sleighing -
Life and Love -
Love in the Cloisters
The Quest of Love
-
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Sing to Me, Sweetheart,
A Prayer for Thee
Sallie Lee
Winsome Nell
Love and Song
Alone in the World
The Power of Love
A Transformation
Love at the Gates of Dea
Love Universal
A Dream Face
Summum Bonum
The Eestasy of Love
Bitter-sweet
Golden Fancies
The Paralysis of Love
Her Bewitched Violin
She Was A Lovely Dream
The Sky is Enriched With Stars
Bonnie Annie Laurie -
A Mood -
My Golden Winsome Fleudelis
Love Never Dies
Apollo Belvidere
nd stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.AN OLD SWEERHEART OF MINE
WHENEVER I THINK OF YOU
A MATUTINAL
HE day begins with a rosy dawn
And colors of brightest hue;
But brighter far those colorings are
Whenever I think of you.
And every valley and every hill
That slowly comes to view
Is blessed with light that’s doubly bright
Whenever I think of you.
The birds are caroling in the trees—
Their notes ring sweet and true:
But sweeter far their carolings are
Whenever I think of you.
This one singeth an old old song,
And that one trilleth a new —
Both singer and song my joy prolong
Whenever I think of you.
The breath of the early morn is sweet.
It lifts like incense too;
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ANNIE LAURIE
But sweeter the breath on the smiling
heath
Whenever I think of you.
The fields are decked with many a flower
Impearled with shining dew;
But finer the flower and gayer the hour
Whenever I think of you.
The big round face of the jolly sun
Looks out of his palace blue;
But lovelier yet the sweet sunset
Whenever I think of you;
While fairy forms flit round my head
And thrill me through and through;
And rainbow gleams dance in my dreams
Whenever I think of you.
I’d walk through lite with angel Torms like these, =
nd stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
o2AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
QO GRACIOUS, GENTLE, LOVELY NELL
O GRACIOUS, gentle, lovely Nell !
My heart is lost to thee;
The love that lies within thine eyes
Awakens love in me;
My being fills, with rapture thrills,
The wildest joy I know;
And every hour I bless the power
Who could such love bestow.
O queenly, smiling, low-voiced Nell !
I hold thee in my heart;
In form and face, in soulful grace,
A fairy queen thou art;
And every day I steal away
To see thee passing by;
My love for thee is strong and free,
And shall be till I die.
Ten thousand thousand joys be thine,
And then ten thousand more;
May gladsome youth and peace and truth
Be thine forevermore;SSstepeesrestoeweyYetetese Se RS Se pS IS47 Fees este
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ANNIE LAURIE
The moon on high in yonder sky,
The stars in glory shine,
But brighter far than moon or star
Are eyes that dance like thine.
O gracious, gentle, lovely Nell,
My heart is lost to thee;
Thy love and life, my gentle wife,
Are all the world to me;
Thou art all fair, full rich and rare.
The gift of heaven to me;
Full sweet thou art within my heart,
And evermore shalt be.
10
I'd walk through life with angel forms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
HER PROMISE TRUE
‘Twas there that Annie Laurie
Gied me her promise true.”’
HE beautiful stars of midsummer above her,
The earth hushed to rest neath the new
silver moon,
I walked with my sweetheart, a glad-hearted
lover,
And whispered my story one clear night in June.
The roadside was sweet with the breath of the
clover,
But sweeter by far was the bloom by my side;
All my heart’s joy, hope, and love brimming
over,
Poured from my lips in a passionate tide.
There in the moonlight, the starlight, and
silence,
Modestly smiling she whispered consent,
Pledged me her life with her love, and the
silence
Treasured our vows that to Heaven were sent.
11ee ee eo Ey ee ee ne
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ANNIE LAURIE
Sweet as the light of a bright summer morning,
Violets blooming and song birds afloat,
All through: the years her sweet promise
T adorning,
She has been trilling that same clear rich note.
a Yet there on the roadside beside the sweet
TI clover
Memory lives in the thrill of that kiss;
Stars, moon, and sky are the same the world
C over,
. But brightest the scene of that moment of bliss.
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I’d walk through lite with angel Torms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
KO
vsAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
SPRING’S SWEET MINSTRELSIES
HE spring time’s pulse beat thrills
The leaf buds on the trees:
Her rich warm life blood fills
The blooms that lure the bees;
From winter’s deadly freeze
Burst forth the murmuring rills,
And every passing breeze
Brings glory to the hills.
And every living thing
Beneath the heaven’s blue
Makes earth with praises ring
Enraptured through and through.
The splendors burst anew
While untold myriads sing;
Our hearts with gladness view
The miracle of spring.
The spring’s sweet ministrelsies
My dearest maid be thine;
And may her melodies
Ring in thy heart benign;Pe ee ee te ed
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ANNIE LAURIE
May love and joy divine,
And all sweet things that please,
Enrich thee, Heart of mine,
With heavenly harmonies.
And as the flower slips past
Its sheath and shroud of death,
Where winter bound it fast
Till roused by spring’s sweet breath,
So, fair Elizabeth,
Do thou, when earth is past,
Slip through the gates of death
To life and love that last.
14
I’d walk through life with angel Torms Tike these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
WE PLEDGED OUR FAITH FOR AYE
HE harvest moon rose early,
Low in the evening sky,
When among the ricks of barley
We pledged our faith for aye.
We pledged our faith for aye,
While the tuneful nightingale
With music filled the woodlands
As he told the tender tale.
Our love with rapture thrilled us,
The silent stars on high
With gentle humors filled us,
And love beamed in each eye.
True love beamed in each eye,
And our hearts beat warm and true,
While the olden, golden gladness
Of lovers thrilled us through.
The silver moon was witness;-
It whispered sweet consent
To that eternal fitness
Expressed in our intent.
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
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ANNIE LAURIE
It whispered sweet consent,
And we pledged our faith for aye;
All the glory of the summer
Shone in her lovely eye.
To the same bewitching sweetheart,
Beneath the same sweet star,
To that genial winsome sweetheart,
My vows and pledges are.
She is dearer fairer far
Than the vision in my eye
When among the ricks of barley
We pledged our faith for aye.
ae
nd stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
ROSALIE, MY ROSALIE
‘T Hou art the rose of early dawn,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
The sweetest rose the sun shines on,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
The dews of May are on thy brow,
The early spring smiles on thee now,
Accept, dear heart, a lover’s vow,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
Thou art the rich sweet brier rose,
Rosalie, my Rosalie,
The rarest, sweetest bloom that grows,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
Thy face is modest, sweet, demure,
Thy heart is like the rose’s—pure,
Thy love is steadfast, firm and sure,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
To thee, the rich sweet brier rose,
Rosalie, my Rosalie —
To thee my heart full tender goes,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
17
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ANNIE LAURIE
The fragrance of thy speech is mine,
The music of thy voice is wine,
T And every gracious charm is thine,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
O gentle sweetheart, gentler wife
5 ) ?
- Rosalie, my Rosalie.
T To thee I pledge my heart for life,
Rosalie, my Rosalie.
By all the stars that shine above,
c No rose was e’er so fair, my love,
Thou dear sweet wife, I’m thinking of,
A Rosalie, my Rosalie.
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I’d walk through life with angel forms Tike these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE SOUL’S AWAKENING
HE knew the secrets of the wood,
Where liver leaf or sweet arbutus rises.
And all the tender blooms and glad surprises
Concealed like timid nuns beneath their hood:
She knew the squirrel’s haunts, the nuts he
prizes,
From what hid source the wood life gets it
food,
She knew the birds, their songs, and odd
disguises;
Yet knew not love, the richest, highest good.
But when sweet spring sends forth the leaves,
And buds give promise of June roses,
And fragrance steals through all the closes,
And birds sing under sheltered eaves,
She feels the joys that love,sweet love, discloses.
And busily her lively fancy weaves
A maze of dream wherein her heart reposes,
And finds the peace of quiet summer eves.
ON OTT
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ANNIE LAURIE
And now in joyous major moods,
Her heart pours forth its wild, sweet pleasure;
T In many a tender, tuneful measure
She carols love’s beatitudes;
And as sweet songs beguile one’s leisure,
Or dulcet, charming interludes,
Ae
Her lyric heart is my best treasure;
ee Life’s deepest joys her love includes.
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these, a
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
A HARVEST LOVE-SONG
HE harvest moon shines in the sky,
And lures us to the dance, O !
The light shines bright in Jeanie’s eye,
Then on with the harvest dance, O!
Love lends life enchanting grace;
Merrily beat the ground, O!
Life and love beam in each face:
Merrily, cheerily dance, O!
Every star that shines above
Is blinking on the dance, O!
And adds a glamour to the love
That lurks within the dance, 0 !
Rich the yield of every field,
Full rich the autumn tide, O!
But richer far than wealth of field
Is the gleam of the waltzer’s eye, O !
The frosty night is bright and clear,
Happily, cheerily dance, O !
Before the ending of the year
Ill have a bonnie wife, O!
21ee ee ee Pe ae ae ee eee a
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The dance is done, her heart is won,
And Jeanie is my star, O!
To wile me home where’er I roam,
And to guide me when I’m far, O!
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
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nd stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
oLAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
XAIPETE NIKOMEN
+
And mock at chance and fate.
We'll trust in God, till neath the sod,
Our spirits shall conquer the irksome clod
That fetters our souls elate.
E’ LL buffet the storms of life. my love,
For you’ll be mine, my own. my love,
) ° ~
And I'll be yours for aye;
Then merrily, cheerily on, my love,
Through earth and sea and sky.
The day may bring us rain, my love,
Or the day may bring us shine;
Through flood and fire, we’ll never tire,
The call of God to our hearts is ‘‘ Higher,”’
The spirit is not for time.
For you’ll be mine, my own, my love,
And I'll be yours for aye,
Then merrily, cheerily on, my love,
Through earth and sea and sky.ee A ae eae eee eee eee ee eee
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
nd stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
A
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ANNIE LAURIE
We have the vigor of youth, my love,
In body and soul and mind;
We'll pledge our truth, and trust our youth,
And never a care will reck in sooth
We'll battle until we’re blind.
For you’ll be mine, my own, my love,
And J’ll be yours for aye;
Then merrily, cheerily on, my love,
Through earth and sea and sky.
Then pluck up heart and sing, my love,
g with heart and soul;
We'll kiss the rod, with joy we’ll plod,
And love shall beckon us on to God,
And heaven shall be our goal
For you'll be mine, my own, my love,
And I’ll be yours for aye;
Then merrily, cheerily on, my love,
Through earth and sea and sky.
Sin
o2AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE TIME FOR LOVE
WH EN the golden lads and the golden lasses
Dance together upon the green,
When the heart beats high and the sly glance
passes,
And the eye lights up with a merry sheen,
When the May pole song is in the air,
O, then is the time for love, my Fair,
Tween the golden lads and the golden lasses
Who dance together upon the green !
When the golden lads and the lasses merry
Plight their troth in summer lanes,
When the sun’s kiss flames on the red rasp-
berry,
And the daisy longs for the soft warm rains.
When the silent shadows dance alone,
O, then is the time for love, my own,
When the golden lads and the lasses merry
Linger along the quiet lanes !
When the golden lads and the golden lasses.
Among the ripened shocks of corn,Cet ee ee re Nek ee a
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I’d walk through life with angel forms Tike these,
ANNIE LAURIE
Pull off the ears from the tall dead grasses,
And lilt their love from early morn,
When the harvest moon shines clear above,
O, then is the time for love, my love,
And the golden lads and the golden lasses
Pledge their love while shocking corn !
When the golden lads and lasses jolly
Merrily dance with Yule tide joy,
When the mistle-toe bough and the Christmas
holly
Abash the maiden sweet and coy,
Amid winter’s mirth and winter’s cheer,
O, then is the time for love, my Dear,
Nor count it weak, nor count it folly,
To tell the tale with Yule tide joy.
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE LOVER’S TRYST
WE met beneath the Lindens, —
They called it Lover’s Lane—
And our greeting was full tender
As ever lovers’ twain.
Behind the hills the sunset
With glory filled the sky,
But there shone a sweeter radiance
Within her tender eye.
The arch of night was bending
Above us lingering there,
The gracious stars were lending
A lustre soft and rare,
Swift winged the hours vanished,
The roadside flashed with dew.
Still we loitered neath the lindens
And spoke our pledges true.
ee
NG
SEES PE a 3
ee eeCee neem beter ey et wereiebeseSe a ioo3 peheesteyss
mee Se SSS
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I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
Her warm true heart was sending
Into her eyes a mist
When I asked her with emotion
Next night to keep the tryst.
The linden leaves were dancing
To hear our whispers low,
Her face was grace entrancing
Her words came sweet and slow.
And while our hearts beat tender,
The while her lips I kissed,
We promised to remember
Each night to keep the tryst.
The days passed into summer
True love beamed in her eye
When we pledged our heart’s devotion
To keep the tryst for aye.
Our irised dreams are ended,
But the years have brought us bliss
Since we met beneath the lindens
And shared the lover’s kiss.
OR
det \
ae
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
We shall meet no more at sunset
To wander down the lane,
Her footfall sounds no longer,
Her smile comes not again.
On the hills in yonder church yard
We shall keep the tryst, my love,
Side by side in yonder church yard
With the silent stars above.
We shall keep the tryst, dear sweetheart
Where the soul with rapture thrills,
Far beyond the evening sunset
Far beyond the golden hills.
’
5ee ea Se eet Sea ee ee Coe eee eae ee ‘E
fe
a eee er ey ee
ree ee Se Pee
MOK eWafavsesssSe CSSS Ss
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T
I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
LYRIC LOVE
Hark to the lark,
To the lark in the meadow,
Calling his mate from the valley below,
Caroling, caroling
Wildest of melodies,
Thrilled till his mad little body o’er flow!
Nesting and singing, or busily winging
His way across meadows and woodlands above
Oh the wild joy of his heart that goes ringing, |
Noisily, cheerily telling his love !
Oh the glad love,
The glad love that is welling,
Swelling my heart with its beauty and glow,
Whispering, murmuring
Sweetest of harmonies,
Filling my soul till its depths overflow!
Like to the lark, to the lark that goes winging |
Telling his joy to the woodlands above,
Dances my heart till its raptures go ringing
Merrily, joyously singing its love.
ae
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
a>
vaAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE GLADNESS OF LOVE
HE big round world is full of joy,
And nature’s heart is sweet and coy:
The daisies dance in the fields of heather.
The birds sing sweetly in tune together,
So come, my love, let joy and grace
Dance in thy heart, shine in thy face.
The storm and the rain drops hurry by,
The rainbow gleams in the sunny sky,
the wind sighs soft in the tall tree tops,
The leaves toss lightly the bright rain drops:
So come, my love, let life and light
Attune thy heart to visions bright.
The clouds chase through the fields on high,
The sunshine gladdens the blue blue sky,
The lily, the rose, the clover cup,
The grace and joy of life drink up;
So come, my love, and learn with me
The lilt of nature glad and free,reer ee ee Se
Pies Sis eeyedspewefodeeds sss CSS ese ces eee eee ss _— - -
ee ee ee a ea eee oe eee
pe ee a
ee re
ANNIE LAURIE
May all thy years with joy be rife,
May glad sweet thrills of love and life,
And summer dews, and summer skies
i Enrich thy soul, glow in thine eyes;
So come, my love, let joy and grace
Dance in thy heart, shine in thy face.
ad
IO
‘T
I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE BLIND GOD
HE crafty, winged, wary boy
Who speeds his fiery darts,
With twang of bow and deadly aim
To pierce young lover’s hearts,
Is blind to all a maiden’s faults,
And wears across his eyes
A bandage tied, and ever thus
His subtle trade he plies.
His lovely ways and gracious wiles,
His sweet and winsome urts,
With deadly poison tip the barbs
He aims at lovers’ hearts.
He starts a fire within the breast,
And daily feeds the flame;
With yearning, burning, wild desire
He fills and thrills the same.
The bitter-sweet, the pleasure-pain
That in the bosom smarts,
The crafty boy with sightless eyes
And ceaseless cunning starts.
te eeeleenanecammeeeneenenan eae eee eete ee Te Pat Pepe eS eee Sea ee
See eee hes
AS Ef
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ANNIE LAURIE
And with such aching arrows he
Unerring fills the mind,
One wonders that a lad so wise
Should be so awful blind.
34
Zl
I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
o2AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
x
SWEET MY LOVE WITH EYES OF BLUE
O SWEET my love with eyes of blue,
And the winning, winsome smile !
[’ll journey along the way with you
With never a weary mile;
Together we’ll travel the golden way
That lovers have gone this many a day,
The blithesome, gladsome, wholesome way
That leadeth along to God.
O sweet my love with eyes of blue,
And the gentle, genial soul !
I'll gladly journey along with you
Till we reach the shining goal.
Then sweet my love with dancing eyes
Above our heads the smiling skies
Shall lure us to the golden prize
Of love and life and God.
O sweet my love with eyes of blue,
And the winning, winsome smile !
I'll loiter along the road with you,
And every care beguile.
35
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I’d walk through life with angel forms Tike these,
ANNIE LAURIE
(’}] cull you flowers with rare delight,
And weave them into a garland bright, —
The reds and yellows, the blue, the white,
The aster and golden rod.
O sweet my love with eyes of blue,
And the tender, smiling face !
I’ll journey along life’s way with you,—
Teach me your gentle grace.
And though the road wind up the hill,
We’ll climb the summit with right good will}
And joy shall gladden our hearts until
We sleep beneath the sod.
O sweet my love with eyes of blue,
And the winning winsome smile !
I’ll travel the winding way with you
With never a weary mile.
Along the road we’ll run and race,
Though sun and wind be in our face
We’ll run the course at a blinding pace,
And then go home to God.
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
PER THE SILVER CORD BE LOOSED
E the moon and the stars be darkened,
And the gathering cloud expands;
B’er the grinders cease from grinding,
And the mill wheel idly stands;
EF’ er the walls of our house shall crumble,
lis foundation laid in the sands;
Let us build a house eternal,
A house not made with hands.
E’er the daughters of music shall perish,
That gladden our hearts with mirth;
And the almond tree shall flourish
In its white little mound of earth;
E’ er the doors be shut and the windows
In the house and land of our birth;
Let us strive for a life that is perfect,
A life of surpassing worth.
E’ er the pitcher break at the fountain,
And our shattered hopes prove vain;
E’ er the wheel be down at the cistern,
And the night begin in rain;
34ee ee ee a oe
oe
LSS e ese e sy testy ona
iHessgeressqewerfedsesssS se CSS Te ces yr eee ese eee Ee ye
T
I’d walk through fife with angel forms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
y)
’er the harp of life be stringless,
Or we halt on a single line;
Let us sing a song that is faultless,
A rhapsody all divine.
EK’ er the silver cord be loosened
By the gnawing effects of time;
Or the golden bowl be broken
That holds thy love and mine;
EK’ er the vigor of youth be ended,
And we bow beneath the strain;
Let us prove a love that is deathless,
With a passion akin to pain.
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
49)
VSAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
A BOATING SONG
OW, row, boatman, row,
Strongly pull the oar, ho! ho!
Merrily cut the water, oh!
Row, boatman, row.
Merrily through the waters glide,
Speeding away with wind and tide,
The moon for a guide we ride, we ride,
Row, boatman, row.
Love is sweet and eyes are bright
Under the vaulted arch of night,
Moon, moon, hide your light,
Row, boatman, row.
Plighted troth was ne’er so sweet,
Never a joy so near complete,
The world is conquered beneath our feet,
Row, boatman, row.
Row, row, boatman, row,
Happy of heart we homeward go,
Pull with a will, yo, ho! heave ho!
Row, boatman, row.
)
35Yed
et ee eee
ene ee Sas SS
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Ct ee Per ee
ee ee ee Se
Gas itasse
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I’d walk through life with angel forms Tike these,
ANNIE LAURIE
POLLY
VWWHEN light and lithesome Polly
Went tripping down the lane,
The little birds all sang to her,
The pretty flowers all bowed to her,
And every leaf did beckon her
To dance and dance again.
Her eye’s blue full of summer,
Her lip’s red full of grace !—
The berries nodded low to her,
The violets were good to her,
The wayside roses blushed to her,
So fresh and fair her face !
Now lithe and lightsome Polly
Sleeps yonder in the lane.
And still the birds all sing for her,
The roses bloom and wait for her,
The daisies mourn and fade for her
Who never comes again.
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
VLAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE FAIREST MAID OF ALL
O the one who is the nearest
In all the world to me
I would pledge a love, the dearest,
Through all eternity.
She hath snared me with her glances,
She hath slain me with her eyes,
And my heart with rapture dances
In a whirl of glad surprise.
In the month of June I wooed her,
In another June we wed:
For her head and heart I sued her,
Won her hand, and heart, and head.
In her face I see a glory
That makes her heart its shrine:
In her eyes I read a story
That kindles joy in mine.Vel cinta fobs SO se Peas Pehes eto ¥= b=
ee ee
et ee, re ee eS
ew ee eo ee ee es
a
I’d walk through lite with angel forms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
There’s a tender, winsome sadness
That lingers in her voice;
In her smile there is a gladness
That makes my heart rejoice.
And her soul informs a beauty
With grace and sweetness rife;
Love’s her law, and love’s a duty;
Law and love shall rule my life.
She is like the star of morning,
She shines so wondrous fair;
Like the rose her cheek adorning,
As rich and sweet and rare.
How the winter’s snows become her;
Though the years have dimmed her eye,
Still the warmth and glow of summer
Dwell within her heart for aye.
ae
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE MOON AND THE SEA
. ‘HE moon at the sea in a rapture was gazing
Ages, long ages, ago;
And the sea to the moon its own image upraising
Murmured a love song low.
The moon was ensnared in the sea’s surging
bosom,
The sea went in guest of the moon.
While the moon wandered over the deep blue
of heaven,
The sea wandered after the moon.
When the clouds veiled the face of the moon
high in heaven,
Loud was the moan of the sea:
But it smiled with delight on the midsummer
even
When the moon wandered cloudless and free.
As the love of the sea for the moon is enduring.
Mine, love, for thee shall be so;
As the love of the moon for the sea is alluring.
Thine, love, to me has been go.
_ - “ Sana ineepeenemeeselat eee ee ee
— oe —— =aIVise sr eesee pete? pehese lease ss
Seseceemeuwestasn sey
a te eat Lt FN de
Se Te
Se et ee ee es ee see a‘
ANNIE LAURIE
THE SPAN OF LIFE
A
BRIEF is the span of life allotted to us,—
A fleeting shadow, or a fading flower,
a A moth that weakly flutters in the sunlight,
T Or spreads its wings for one swift passing hour.
Yet in that span what joys and sorrows thrill us,
C What lofty hope, what spirit-heavy care !
We smile as children do o’er some new toy or
ol treasure,
Or weep with some deep, sudden, strong despair.
”
We lay our plans with merry shouts of laughter,
We build with joy, while love, sweet love,
‘TL inspires,
A We weep at last o’er heaped and tumbled ruins,
©’ er withered hopes,and baffled wild desires.
O Thou, whose heart is touched by our vain
fi striving,
When life is done, in that eternal day
Beyond the sunset; may we see Thee smiling,
an And follow there the One True Builder’s way !
1}
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I’d walk through life with angel Torms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
oO
vfAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE LAND OF DREAMS
N the land of dreams, the land of dreams,
Where fancy flits and fancy gleams,
Where rainbow tints and perfumes rare
©’ er-arch the sky and scent the air, —
Ah ! life is not just what it seems
In the land of dreams, the land of dreams.
In the land of dreams, of our waking dreams,
Where peace abides and love’s light streams,
Where castles grand against the sky
Enthuse the soul, enrich the eye,
Our life is not just what it seems
In the land of dreams, the land of dreams.
In the land of dreams, of our sleeping dreams,
Where strange lights shed uncanny beams,
Where shapeless forms and groundless fears
Deceive the heart, and start the tears ,—-
Oh ! life is not just what it seems
In the land of dreams, the land of dreams.ee ee ee ee
ae
SPW e Pr Sa es
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VHisPevefsdsnss ssh Close cet yr eees eters yes yt
pe Testes iseer
ANNIE LAURIE
In the land of dreams, the land of dreams,
Where hopes rise high and fancy teems,
T Where visions sought and victories planned
Allure the soul, make strong the hand, —
Dear, what were we without our dreams,
T Without our life in the land of dreams.
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I'd walk through life with angel Torms Tike these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
ofAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
DAN CUPID
W HAT mighty spirit is this
Riving my soul, and elate,
Jubilant, promising bliss,
Urging my being like Fate
Driving her fettered ones straight
Forward to Duty? The spell
Bindeth me fast like a great
Angel, or demon from Hell.
Longing and yearning the while.
Fancies are rife in my brain
Of her rich voice and her smile.
Thrilling my heart once again
Joy comes, a joy full of pain,
Born of an excess of bliss,
Heating the blood in my vein.
What mighty Spirit is this?
Then to my soul comes a peace
Bringing me rest, while my heart
Whispers to let go the keys
Of the blest palace of art,SoS ase pecees tess yerye testis the Seg Pas ees eer ss ksssts rs
ee ee eee eae ee ee eee ee ee
Soe
ANNIE LAURIE
Music, and mirth, and depart,
Heeding the call from above;
T Let go my day dreams and start
Swift on a journey of love.
T O the wild joy of the soul
Waking to love! How the fleet
£ Witcheries quivering roll
Over us like a flood. Sweet
Ecstacy, sudden, complete,
C Filleth the heart, till, in thrall,
1 Full at the worshipped one’s feet,
Mastered, submissive we fall.
qT
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48
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a
I’d walk through life with angel forms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
KO
vaAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
SLEIGHING
TIS a clear still night,
And the stars shine bright,
And the storm king is in hiding;
©’er the calm white earth,
’Mid the jolliest mirth,
Our sleigh goes smoothly riding.
To the crack ! crack ! crack !
Of the snow white track,
And the pitty, pitty, pat of the horses
We glide along
With shout and song,
Or leap o’er the bounding courses.
Our hearts beat free,
And thrill with glee,
With joy and jest abounding;
We lift on high
To the wintry sky
Our voices loud resounding;ee ee ee eh ee ee eeeoee Figg Peeeest= es has
eed ee OL ee ee oe
SPSS Sis oyes esto kass SSF sF FESTUS Ces reese ers se Sree ete
ANNIE LAURIE
To the clink! clink! clink !
Of the sleigh bell’s song,
Mid the roar of mingled laughter,
1. Away we go
O’er the sparkling snow,
And echo follows after.
a :
We race for the prize
a Of the two brown eyes
Of the fair one gaily glancing;
To the gleam and glow
o Of the lips aflow
T Our hearts begin a dancing;
While the tinkling bells
T To the dear moon tells
What hopes fond hearts are praying,
’Tis all made right
a ’Neath the bright star-light
yy When lovers go a-sleighing.
a
‘Vi
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1
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52
UvaAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
LIFE AND LOVE
1 Morning.
ONDER the sun in his glory is rising,
Dawn and her brightness are purplin
the gray,
Morning begins with her beauty surprising;
Innocent childhood is God’s bright new day.
Love is the angel, the good angel leading
Life like the dawn on the beautiful hills,
Gently the gracious one leadeth us, pleading,
Into the paths that the All-Father wills.
2 Noon.
High in the heavens the great sun is riding,
Blazing his pathway across the blue aky,
Full day is come and the stars are in hiding.
Manhood with vigor is mounting on high.
Love stronger, sweeter, is still the good angel
Leading life on in our manhood’s full tide.
Changing our harshness to sweetness, the an
Lip
Gives grace for hardness and beauty for pride,
ol
1
tee ee at ee
A oe ee
Sty testo Sons
$e e< PES Se oyster eeeewses
Cee re oie oe es
Fs ee
ANNIE LAURIE
38 Night.
i Into the West sinks the sun all a-golden;
Night winds are stealing up over the sea;
Day dies at last, and lost is the olden
q Glory that brightened for you and for me.
T What of the daylight? What has life given?
Have we the toil of the course fitly done?
Love strongest, sweetest, replies, ‘‘Thou hast
C striven
The crown and the crowning thou hast truly
Ay won.”’
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I’d walk through life with angel forms like these, Ss
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
a2AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
LOVE IN THE CLOISTERS
MAttuew, Mark, Luke and John,
Bless the ground that I walk on.
Bless the priest and bless the people,
Bless the church and bless the steeple.
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John,
Bless the ground that I walk on,
Bless the ————
Oh what lovely eyes
Like the dusk in evening skies !
And her form, what airy grace !
What a soul shines in her face !
From the red lines of her lips
To her blessed finger tips, —
Ah Maria! how divine !
She were counterpart of thine.
How these greedy eyes beheld her !
How these arms did long to hold her!
Treading these hard paving stones,
Zounds ! a fire burns in my bones
Kindled by the lightning flashes
Of her eyes neath soft eyelashes.
Curse the bishop’s rigid rules !
recor ne ee eePeenwe siciweyveleteis hehe se sy Jag pekSegrtesesessgecc5s
es
Swe
ee eer ees
Sis OOS Be epeds cass e CSS Sees eee eee teeee ese taratabiaa ka - Seen ne
ANNIE LAURIE
Curse the knaves and arrant fools
Who prescribe us bread and water !
Zounds ! but what a charming daughter !
How the lovely vision haunts me,
Steals my rest, disturbs, torments me,
Fronts me on the sacred pages
Of the holy saints and sayes;
Rises up before me kneeling
Where the Virgin’s look appealing
Shames me with her heavenly beauty,
Bids me shun the world for duty,
Wakes me in the still night season,
Robs me of my rest and reason,
Till a voice speaks low within me
Words that heal and woo and win me,
Till my Lord, the meek and lowly,
Visits me in visions holy,
Stills the tumult in my bosom
With the peace and calm of heaven—
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
Bless the ground that I walk on,
Bless the church and bless the steeple,
Bless the priest and all the people.
1
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bi)
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— . ~
I’d walk through life with angel forms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
~
vsAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE QUEST OF LOVE
Ore men may seek the bay and laurel,
Win the myrtle wreath and evergreen.
Theirs be all the chafing and the quarrel,
Mine the love of you, my gentle queen.
I shall struggle—aye and do a man’s part
In all the work the world may have to do:
Fame is not the motive of the true heart,
Mine to have the love and praise of you.
Men who miss the ivy, men who get it,
While admiring crowds applaud or frown,
Find its leaves have faded and regret it,
You’re my everlasting joy and crown.PES Se tye rth enw ee
ae a ee
PSE ee ee te Le A ee ie ee oe ee ee ee -
3
a
I'd walk through life with angel forms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
SING TO ME, SWEETHEART, SING
F you know a song that is sweet and true,
Sing it, my sweetheart, sing.
Like soft caresses a song that blesses
Becomes an uplifting thing.
If you know a song with a cheerful tune,
Sing it, my sweetheart, sing.
’Twill heal the sorrow our frail hearts borrow,
And burdens will all take wing.
If you know a song that is glad and strong,
Sing it, my sweetheart, sing.
Through God’s glad heaven, His bright blue
heaven,
Our spirits shall soar and sing.
If you know a song that is soft and low,
Sing it, my sweetheart, sing.
Life’s useless hurry and idle worry
Will lose their aching sting.
D6
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
vsAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
If you know a song with a gladsome ring,
Sing it, my sweetheart, sing.
The glad rich measure will sweeten pleasure,
And joy to our dull lives bring.
If you know a song that is rich and rare,
Sing it, my sweetheart, sing.
For never a singer was such a joy bringer,
Sing to me, sweetheart, sing.Serapgey—esmienGweeverereie he eeee pea Pas ee Se see SS hate esl S 3 t
Pog sees
os
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boas
let Cee ik aE LD a eee ae fed
ANNIE LAURIE
a
|
T A PRAYER FOR THEE
| T EAR one, loved one, far off, yet ever near,
For thee my heart repeats this prayer
sincere:
{ eg May He who led the Blessed Virgin through
{ the land
ay
Uphold thee with his kindly powerful hand;
\ May He who marks the sparrow in its fall
Be swift to bring thee aid when thou shalt call;
May He who stilled the storm on Galilee
T Allay the anxious thoughts that come to thee;
G May He who blessed the lily of the field
Inspire thy life with all that love can yield.
e eo
— use ‘
I’d walk through life with angel forms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
SALLIE LEE
(THERE'S a gentle, brown-eyed maiden
Waits for me, waits for me:
She’s a merry-hearted maiden,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee:
And I own her power entrancing
When I see the love light glancing,
From her eyes with rapture dancing,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee.
I first met her at the ferry,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee;
She was modest, she was merry,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee:
Yes, I met her at the ferry,
She was modest, she was merry,
She was ruddy as a cherry,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee.
Yonder sun was sinking slowly
©
O’er the hills, Sallie Lee:Wee eee
ee
ee a
ee eet
{Hess eryetapewerode esses PCS e secs ne ee
—
ANNIE LAURIE
When I saw the vision holy,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee;
aL Yes, the sun was sinking slowly
When I saw the vision holy
Of a maiden sweet and lowly,
Al Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee.
7 As the shades of night were falling,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee,
. could hear the crickets calling,
C “Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee;””
aT And my bliss was past recalling
When the echoes softly falling
ay Murmured low the cricket’s calling,
‘‘ Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee.”’
A The nightingale was singing,
i ‘< Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee; ”’
And he set the woodlands ringing,
‘(Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee; ”’
Heart to heart was fondly clinging
q| As the nightingale went winging
Through the woodlands sweetly singing,
‘Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee.”’
VI
She’s a tender, brown-eyed maiden
Fair to see, fair to see;
60
1
i
La
I’d walk through life with angel torms like these, a
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52,AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
She’s a gracious-hearted maiden,
Sallie Lee, Sallie Lee;
Though our heads are old and hoary,
Oh, the olden golden glory
That lights up that old love-story,
Sallie Lee. Sallie Lee!Sf ee ee te ee eo tee ee ee ea Ee Bee ee Be
SStyt ety ssnses
es
a NS i ee eed
F reer te
WINSOME NELL
- ITHIN my soul I reared a throne
Where she might reign supreme, alone,
With sweet devotion knelt to pay
C The homage she might thrust away.
An altar next I builded, she
Was radiant with all charms to me,
Ai
And there with rapt, beseeching eyes
I offered daily sacrifice.
7
H She took the gifts I offered her,
And gently raised the worshipper,
And now within her heart I dwell,
The heart of lovely winsome Nell.
al
VI
62
x
i
T
i
I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
vsAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
LOVE AND SONG
HE soul of a singer that soars
Escapes both metre and measure:
Bind him who can and will.
He roams the wide world at pleasure:
The songs that well from his heart
Are born of the spirit in silence
Issuing thence into life
Forth from the Infinite presence.
The soul of a mortal that loves
Defies all rhythm and reason, —
A tangle of wild delights,
Of infinite pains without reason:
Feelings too fine for speech
Longings elusive, unbidden:
Ever beyond one’s reach
Is the mystery subtle and hidden.
ES "S y
otek nicee ee ee ee a
bt Sf
a eae eee ee Pry
i oe ee ST ee
Pete oN LT te Po oe eee ee eee ee ee ee ee ee es
Vd walk through life with angel torms like these,
ANNIE
LAURIE
ALONE IN THE WORLD
SOME day a voice
Will call from the skies above
’ ‘eve.
Saying, ‘‘’tis time to sleep.’
One of us then shall turn the eyes,
And answer that voice calling from the
skies,
Our hands shall clasp, and after sweet
xood-byes,
Shall sever all the old dear tender ties.
One of us shall, which one?
Some day a hand
Will part us on the way:
One to share eternal day,
And one. bereft of all sweet love’s demand,
Lonely there in the road shall stand,
And, weeping, stretch a helpless hand
To one who watches in the spirit land.
Which shall it be, which one ?
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
ec
04AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE POWER OF LOVE
EAR Heart, the love that burns within our
bosoms,
That brings such wealth of happiness and bliss,
Shall beautify the heaven we reach to-morrow,
While lending deep significance to this.
The faith that clings to lofty spirit yearnings,
And holds within its grasp the things of truth,
That triumphs over doubt, and sin, and sorrow,
Our love shall strengthen with the strength of
youth.
The hope that soars the topmost heights of
glory,
That, rising boldly, tramples every fear,
That lifts the soul to grander higher levels,
Our love shall surely brighten year by year.
Se ee Saleceeteaeteaeintae lieth eet eeCe a ea
Sess.
LSSH ety ty ses Monee
a ee eS ee
a
Rc
I’d walk through life with angel torms like these,
LAURIE
ANNIE
The peace, that, like a quiet evening sunset,
Lights up a golden glory in the sky,
That brings a precious gentle benediction,
Our love shall deepen, soften, glorify.
The trust that never faults nor frets a lover,
But confident abides through every test,
That grounds itself deep in another’s honor,
Our love shall deepen into perfect rest.
The charity that hides another’s failings,
That faithful proves in spite of all defects,
That heals with sweet forgiveness every error,
Our love ennobles, justifies, perfects.
The joy that beats in gladsome, tuneful measure,
And with its rousing cadence stirs the soul,
That has its hidden springs in righteous
pleasure,
Our love shall gladden, brighten and control.
The will that moves to earnest strong endeavor,
That plants itself on right, and never swerves,
That urges on to do one’s simple duty,
Our love shall guide with strong and steady
nerves.
—
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
KO
vaAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
The life that serves all holy, high ideals,
That longing, yearning, striving looks to God,
That holds in trust His gracious gifts and
blessings,
Our love shall lift above the crumbling clod.
And go all grace and beauty, wisdom, power,
And whatsoever gifts His love imparts,
Our love to high and holy ends inspires,
And wakes a nobler purpose 1n our hearts.sf Raeewe wisi yieieteie hs hese se HS a3 Pek esses = Gs 5s
ee ae
tee mad tee ea ay eee
ie ys
ale ees
ee et
ee
ANNIE LAURIE
A TRANSFORMATION
SINCE first I saw the soul that hes
Within thy gracious earnest eyes,
My own has been made clear to see
The need of greater grace in me.
Os
1
a
oo - .
I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these, —_
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
KO
vaAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
LOVE AT THE GATES OF DEATH
UMB by her side I sat,speechless and weary:
Gone were the hopes of years, smiling in
far:
She whom I’d loved seemed lost, slain by t
fever,
Not once she spoke to me lone weeping there,
Once gladness filled her heart; joy like
summer
Danced in her lovely eyes tender and true;
Hushed was her gentle voice; and, in
silence,
Waiting the will of God closer we drew.
Weeks had we waited there, vainly we watch
her;
Closed was her lovely eye, her breathing s]
There on her love I mused, longing
yearning
For one sweet word of hope, I loved her so.| ANNIE LAURIE
] Then on my inner eye flashed all her beauty,
| All her soul’s radiant goodness anew,
| T All the sweet deeds she did proved how she
| loved me,
a | All the kind words she spoke then thrilled me
| T through.
: i aD Dumb with despair and gloom, lonely, for-
saken,
: | Kneeling beside her couch strongly I prayed,
i \ C When lo! she oped her eyes, vanquished the
; | fever !
. | T Faith, hope and love returned bright with
| ' \ the day.
' | T
i Out through the open door stole the death
3 rT angel,
i i Joy like a ray of light broke through the
sloom,
Back from the jaws of death closing behind her
, Came the sweet life I loved, cheating the
; a tomb.
é Now to my heart she speaks softly and gently,
: Y All the great love she has filling her voice
Lifts her sweet eyes to mine, tender, entreating,
T Bides me toil bravely on, work and rejoice.
ue 70
: T
: I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these, wr
H And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
All through my life she’ll go singing forever,
Part of my very self, deathless and free;
Her soul from my soul nothing can sever,
Best bliss of Eden by Heaven’s decree.Sesee= chien Sev Rhett ie fe eese ye PS es eseegelehe sas see
ee ee
potnCewesas — wwe
= Fetes is eeyesapewersdecssose case seceserartss
: i $5 ; Oot Se oe Seay 5s oe eee oe
SSS
SS
seas
ANNIE LAURIE
- 7
LOVE UNIVERSAL
T HAT subtle mysteries
Great Nature speaks to all !
- With what wild witcheries
She holds our hearts in thrall !
She holds our hearts in thrall
t With weirdest phantasies,
With hungers that appall,
With empty vanities.
q ’Neath leafy canopies
The feathered tribes are found,
rT Their carroled colloquies
1: Through all the woods resound.
Through all the woods resound
Their tuneful melodies;
)
And echo round and round
ll Their lyric symphonies.
Beneath the arching frieze
Yi With many flossy lines
Its gauzelike filagrees
The spider swift designs.
he
bm
1
T
—
I'd walk through iite with ange! torms like these, ane
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
vfAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
She weaves her bright designs
Of silken traceries
O’er bush and porch and vine
And hidden galleries.
Through vast immensities
The stars bend round the pole;
In shining galaxies
They, singing, onward roll.
They onward forward roll
With matchless minstrelsies
That fill the great world-soul
With deathless harmonies.
O Life, O Love, if these
Such joyous gladness find.
What rich, sweet melodies
Should ring within the mind !
There thrill within the mind
Such joyous symphonies
That life’s great end we find
In love’s humanities.
Soa ae erHeyy ape whey ee SSS SSS AGS eee tle eyelet eis Fe eo SS pe PS es eee leks ss
at
LNT PSwevegsessss yh CASS Ss oes eee ets esas Lee yy Tes Sy 2 oe
CS,
oe ee ed
ae
ANNIE LAURIE
a
A DREAM FACE
a 1
VY BABS, years ago,
tT With one whose love ne’er fades,
As a little child I played,
My heart aglow.
o
Years, years ago,
A In field flowers rich arrayed,
My heart he oft had made
With joy o’erflow.
TT Seen through the years,
1 Now that my head is grayed,
And life is stern and staid,
It brings the tears.
1 Years, years ago,
Our hearts then unafraid
From love’s law ne’er had strayed,
y Nor felt a blow.
1}
74
T
si
7
—
I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these, em
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
Years, years ago,
In a little room I prayed,
That God who all things swayed
Would spare us woe.
The distant years,
Now that life’s debt is paid,
And he to rest is laid,
Oft bring the tears.
I;Se ee LC ee ee
Ler iA ini ewafodsesssSk CSSe Set eter sete seeds ee ee yn
ANNIE LAURIE
i
ah SUMMUM BONUM
a HE best of all that earth imparts
Is just the love of human hearts,
The steadfast trust that never cloys,
C Nor tires with simple homely joys.
Ay are
[The common love that throbs and thrills
T Within the soul that virtue fills
Is like an anchor to the soul,
When passion’s billows o’er us roll.
i
H O blest are they and nobly wise
Who find the bliss of paradise
In lowly hearts, and daily prove
A humble faith and constant love !
i
Mi
1
76
f
Al
a
—
I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
THE ECSTASY OF LOVE
M* lips, thy lips
Pressed close together-
Light as a feather—
Two hearts are one.
Soul, hast thou felt the bliss ‘
Hath earth a joy like this ?
Ecstacy in a kiss—
There, the deed’s done!
My hand, thy hand
Clasped thus forever—
Joy beyond measure
Filling the life.
Who tell the whole of it ?
Oh the wild joy of it !
Never to part from it—
Husband and wife |!Se Geenwe shaewrcy yet ateie he ee Se ps iSag Lee SErsaksssss
See se ee
Pe Ee ne et ee ee Ct
Cty Rte et oe ee eek te ee ee ee ee eee F ae , =
JeTessssaers
ANNIE LAURIE
Dear heart, sweetheart,
Thy life with mine,
a My life with thine,
Deeply imbedded—
Earth holds no greater prize;
T Thus we shall win the skies;
Into our heaven rise,
Welded and wedded.
a
beste.
I’d walk througn ite with angel torms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
BITTER-SW EET
‘TOGETHER we have blended pain and
pleasure,
Drunk the cup of mingled joy and woe,
Danced the lilt of life in changing measure,
Learned its cadence running high and low.
Visions bright and lovely grief has saddened,
Stealing unaware upon us, dear,
Hearts bowed down with sorrow joy has
gladdened,
Driving from us peril, pain and fear.
Pale-eyed care with features wan and weary
Sat beside us morning, noon and night,
Threatened us with loss and, sad and dreary,
Stole away our gladness and delight.
Sweet-voiced joy then sought us in our mourn-
ing,
Sang us songs that cheered our darkened hour,
Sweeter grew her singing in the morning,
As the smiling sun lifts up the flower.Veeeeesiogyrssveiateis Geko le RTS ase Les Sere s Ss hetsi=
Sete oc ee Ok ee ee ee Lo es a ee ae ee en Pr a
i e
Se ee ee ea
So mye
———
ANNIE LAURIE
Thorns and roses strew the pathway ever,
Weeping, laughter, sojourn side by side,
T Thorns may serve to baffle our endeavor,
But the roses only shall abide.
Joys have lightened all our petty sorrow,
Ay Tears have changed to priceless pearls and gems,
7 Both will brighten softly on the morrow
Into starry crowns and diadems.
C
iE
1
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1
80
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——.
I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART, OF MINE
GOLDEN FANCIES
HE wild rose bursting its pinken petals,
Scenting the air with its mild perfume;
The violets waking from sleep in the meadow,
Spreading a carpet from nature’s loom;
The red robin trilling his April measures,
Filling the woodlands wild with tune;
The nightingale winging away to her treasures,
Telling her joy to the listening moon;
The day dawn that chases the fleeing shadows,
Flooding with gladness the night’s deep gloom;
The sunshine that dances with joy on the
heather,
Snared by the dew on the flowers in bloom;
The tender depths of the sky’s blue in Summer,
As slowly the days lengthen out in June;—
These are the fancies in which I enshrine thee.
Queen of my life and its richest boon.
Ra eRe eee eS ai atere CePA CL A Cee See eS!
ea
ee ees
= oo .e ee
nk ey te ae
=
eae ce SL
se es
Pe SP eo Lo ON tek ee a eo Lee See ee ea ee ee ee ee eer
a
Re
I’d walk through tite with angel torms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
THE PARALYSIS OF LOVE
‘TH ~ soul of man like a golden harp
Is strung with emotions fine
That respond to the touch of a player’s hand
In melodies soft, divine.
With rhythmic beat, and in major mood
Its music is all afire,
Expressing in many an interlude
Its hidden and deep desire.
In the days of youth when hope soars high,
The music is rich and strong,
And love is the chief of the wild desires
That waken the soul with song.
And love is the best of the golden strings
And love has the sweetest power
To lure the soul on to higher things
And quicken its flight each hour.
But age comes on and the heart grows chill
By the storms of winter swept,
And away goes the joy of the glad wild thrill
Of the feelings that long have slept;
82
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
KO
veAN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
For over the heart of the human soul
As over the heart of earth
The flowers of feeling first grow, then fade,
And death follows fast on birth.
No longer to love as we used to love
EF’ er the soul had been nipped by the frost,
And to see all the strings of the harp hang limp
Or jangled and twisted and cross’t,
To see all the feelings within us die,
And our spirits grow mute and still, —
Ah! this is a drama too dark and deep
For all but the Father’s will.Se a
as
oN FS
Se ee ee ay
ee
Se eee ed to Le Ne ed eaters
ee
F
hte.
I’d walk through lite with angel torms like these,
HER BEWITCHED VIOLIN
GEE played upon her violin,
The soul of music was within,
It thrilled one’s heart with mem’ ries rife
Of hope, and joy, and love, and life,
And mingled dreamy mysteries
With subtle, secret witcheries.
Her thrilling, singing violin
A dryad has his home within,
That left the wood when fell the tree,
And wandered homeless, friendless, free,
Till now he makes his home within
Her weeping, laughing violin.
Oh violin! sweet violin !
What rare old tunes there are within
Thy heart, heard long ago when grew
Thy fibres, vibrant through and through
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
With woodland notes, and mystic runes
That dryad hums, or wood sprite croons;
Such tunes of airy, lively grace
As jolly cupids dance apace;
And then such tunes of minor moods
As when sad winds steal through the woods;
Joy, and est, and mirth, and laughter,
Passion, pathos coming after!
That violin, her violin,
What witchery there was within,
Its tones were richer than the flute,
Its accents softer than the lute,
It whispered messages of love,
It sighed and sang of life and love,
The love that trembled on her lips,
And thrilled her to the finger tips,
Till in my soul the music lingers
Played by her light supple fingers
On my heart strings, vibrant, singing,
Love’s sweet joys unto me bringing!
Whene’er she plays her violin
My soul is all afire within;
While, lo! to see it press her cheek,
I envy so I scarce can speak,
So
iienemnimeneene ee eees ee 2 oe te —
Se ek tt Ue oe tie
ANNIE LAURIE
The music blending with my feeling,
T While all my senses go a-reeling;
Such mysteries haunt my being, till
My heart is slave to her sweet will;
She has such binding power within
Ai a: ake
Her violin, sweet violin!
ee
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ay
oc
i
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a
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I’d walk through tite with ange! torms like these, wa
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
SHE WAS A LOVELY DREAM
H! she was a lovely dream
The gods let fall from the sky,
And deep in my heart did the arrows smart
That shot from her twinkling eye.
I saw her first at the ford:
She pulled her bonnet away;
Twas love at a glance, my heart did dance.
And heaven seemed drawing nigh.
The birds in the trees above
Made merry they knew not why;
From all their throats their silvery notes
Called to us as we passed by.
But I was timid and slow,
And John was quick and spry;
His vows were said and they were wed,
And I was a goose was I.
7Siete ge se ye er pe iSa3 eee eee ey
ee oa ooo coe ea
a ee
ee
aS ee ite eR LL Le
Py ees a Ce ON ee ioe ee ae
Se
a
Se }
I’d walk through lite with ange! torms like these,
ANNIE LAURIE
THE SKY IS ENRICHED WITH STARS
HE sky is enriched with stars,
The sea has a million pearls,
But better than all the pearls or stars,
Are our three little sunny girls.
Like the light in a million stars,
Like the purity in sea pearls,
Are the smiling lips and the tender eyes
Of our three merry-hearted girls.
For their eyes shine as bright as stars,
Or distil great drops like pearls,
Yes. better than all the pearls or stars
Are our brown-eyed, blue-eyed girls.
oO
or
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
o2AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
BONNIE ANNIE LAURIE
HEY pitched their tents on yonder plain
Singing Annie Laurie;
They pitched their tents to the glad refrain,
Bonnie Annie Laurie.
The sentinel paced his weary round
Singing Annie Laurie;
He measured the distance on the ground
Singing Annie Laurie.
The wind was murmuring in the pines
Bonnie Annie Laurie:
List to the lilt of the lazy lines
Bonnie Annie Laurie.
She was the girl that loved him best,
Bonnie Annie Laurie:
Thinking of her his heart was blest.
Dear sweet Annie Laurie.Koss PSS Ss eS ee eete = secesire a ee ee errata .
: eS ESETE Te Se ee Pe ee ee
ete ea Le eos
ANNIE LAURIE
He dreamed of war and home by turn
And bonnie Annie Laurie;
She’d wait her soldier’s safe return,
T Faithful Annie Laurie.
And ever the heart of the soldier lad
a Singing Annie Laurie
Was stirried by the thought of the maiden glad,
T,
Dear sweet Annie Laurie.
3ut in a new grave beneath the hill
Bonnie Annie Laurie
Tv Is waiting her soldier laddie still
Who sang of Annie Laurie.
iT
1
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1
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90
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I'd walk through 'ite with angel torms like these, —
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
A MOOD
WE sit in the shadow thinking,
Yet our hearts are far away,
And the light in our sky is sinking,
So close, so close to-day.
We talk of the things abiding,
So close, so close to-day,
Yet each from the other is hiding
His soul which is far away.
Something has changed your manner.
Yet we sit so close to-day,
We are not beneath love's banner,
And our joy has passed away.
Your looks and tones grow colder,
Though you clasp me close to-day,
And my fears grow big and bolder,
Till they drive my peace away.eee ee ee a
OS FN fm
Se ee
ie ae eR eT
Se ee oh eS ee ee a Se Se ie ae oor a oe
ANNIE LAURIE
Yet you vow you love me truly,
And you pledge your faith, you say,
Can I take your promise fully,
i And trust you day by day?
I know not what comes o’er me,
a I know your heart to-day
T Is true. The trouble’s in me,
My heart is wrong to-day.
o
Le
aD
7c
ie
Ay
yi
r
92
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I’d walk through lite with ange! torms like these,
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
MY GOLDEN WINSOME FLEURDELIS
M* golden, winsome fleurdelis
I wear thee in my heart;
Within this shrine [ll keep thee mine
By every gentle art.
The heavens above are blue, my love,
And bright blue are thine eyes,
Thy smiling face wears tenderer grace
Than a summer in Paradise.
Had I the gift of minstrelsy,
Or could my feelings voice,
I'd sing a song of love to thee,
Thou dear one of my choice.
I’d sing the rose that fragrant grows
’Neath tender summer skies,
The fairy dells and bright blue bells
That bloom in Paradise.aT
ree eee ee eee ek oh ee
ee
eee ee Ee ar
i
b
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,
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2
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sp
a
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i
i
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i
i
tare
it
oe
ANNIE LAURIE
A dainty, dancing chansonette
I would with rapture try,
x Whose beauty you should ne’er forget
My charming Lorelei.
The pearly dew is clear and true,
v And crystal clear art thou,
T Thou bring’st me rest within my breast
Where I do wear thee now.
C
iv
i.
7
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I’d walk through te with angel torms like these, ewe
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
LOVE NEVER DIES
OVE never dies. It’s very essence
Is divine, and cannot die.
It springs immortal from His presence
Who is all love, and dwelleth nigh.
Our erring hearts know not its power
To vitalize each needy age;
Frail children ! we forget our dower,
And spurn our blessed heritage.
Within the soul] of every mortal
There flames a spark of love divine,
That darted out of heaven’s portal
And lodged within its human shrine.
And as beneath the leaves and mosses
Arbutus hides its blossoms sweet,
So hearts reveal beneath life’s crosses
A love as fragrant, tender, meet.eT Tee ee oe ee ROLES Te
Cree oe tee roe
SF
et eee eee Par et
te ee eT
ee 2 tes oe ay oe Sy ee SP er
=
ee
ee
T
I'd walk through lite with ange! torms like these,
ANNIE
LAURIE
APOLLO BELVIDERE
O* old Apollo walked the glades
Of sylvan bosky Arcadie,
The while his voice beneath those shades
Awoke a glorious harmony;
It thrilled the heroes into life,
More godlike than they erst had known,
And made them with great purpose rife
To gain a beauty lke his own:—
A beauty not alone of form,
Nor outward grace, nor strength of hmb;
Apollo’s followers sought the norm
Of that soul-grace they found in him.
They coveted the godlike poise,
The equal mind, the fearless heart,
The active peace true love enjoys,
The charity that’s life’s best art.
A Roman sculptor dreamed of him—
Apollo of the godlike mind—
And soon a block of stone did trim
To wake the soul that lurked behind;
96
And stoop to pick their crumbs up on my knees.
52AN OLD SWEETHEART OF MINE
The people saw the form and soul,
And cried, ‘‘The god himself is here’? !
And now we call this beauteous whole,
Our own ‘! Apollo Belvidere.’
Thy form is like his, O my own !
My lover with the human mind!
The spirit that informed that stone
Is kin to that thy form outlined
I wish for thee his godlike poise,
His equal mind, his fearless heart,
The active peace true love enjoys
The charity that’s life’s great art.
I wish thee more than Grecian god
Or Roman artist hath conceived:
The footsteps that the Christus trod,
The life the Nazarene hath lived.
May they be thine; and mayst thou teach
A clearer faith, a love more broad,
A manhood that shall dare to reach
And strive to see our Master’s God.ANNIE LAURIE
| And be thy character, dear one,
i The strongest, tend’ rest, sweetest, best, :
: | The product of thy pure deeds done; '
\ i. Thy soul be full of holiest rest; ,
3 | Be thine arm strong; thy mind be clear; 7
& | Be thy heart warm, thy spirit free; ’
: 1 a To God’s own life live ever near, :
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LIBRARY OF THE
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Eloise Mayham Hulley
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1926
BY
LINCOLN HULLEY
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POETIC PRODUCTIONS
LINCOLN HULLEY
Lullabies and Slumber Songs
Annie-Laurie: Love-Lyrics
Hiram Abiff, the Builder
Sonnets on the Immortal Bards
Shakespere’s Dream of Fair Women
Moonlight Nights at Palm Beach
King David: Israel’s Lyric Bard
Christina, or Christian Van Dusen’s Law-Suit
Chivalry in Dixie: Metrical Romances
Mike Murphy’s Dream
Campus Memories
Alice Coventry and other Metrical Romances
The Eloise Chimes
Chapel Lyrics of Faith, Hope and Love
Fables and Myths from the Sibyl’s Book
The Jubilate of Rabbi Ben Adam
Christian Hymns
St. Anne and the Children’s Hour
St. Michael and the Dragon: An Epic of the War
Savonarola’s Visions of Judgment
Broken Hearts and Lives
Vesper Songs of Joy, Trust and Praise
3rave Idylls of the Gallant South
Dwellers Beyond the Styx, or Tragedies of Love
Dixie Sketches in Chalk and Charcoal
Ghiberti’s Doors to Paradise and Other Art Poems
A Maker of Dreams and Poetic Fantasies
Gold-Fields, Gold-Skies and Gold-Seekers
A Farmer-Prince
Galloping Westward: A Ballad
A Disciple of Plato
Florida the Beautiful
Ariel and Cinderella
Eden, a Paradise of Love
College Lyrics of Idealism and Optimism
Chauncey and Kitty; also Bob’s Dilemma
Farth to Earth, or the Joy of Life
For Better For Worse
Aunt Jane and Her Niece; also the Boca Grande Sapphire
Hymns of the Dead Gods
Circe in Search of a Soul
The Crystal Christ
Gloria: A Summer Rendezvous
Angels That Beckon Me
Ave atque Vale, or Life and ImmortalityI
AUNT JANE AND HER NIECE
High on a ridge of wooded hills.
Half hid among the leafy trees,
An ancient college still fulfils
Its dream of culture, leisure. ease.
In front a fine bell-tower stands
And from its chimes rine out the unes,
That lure the youth to heed commands
Impressed ‘ mystic words and runes.
Below the hill a river flows
Amid sweet vales of peace and rest:
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Time round about the college 20es
As slowly as the years go west.
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Behind the building. standing guard,
A native forest of dense pine
And oak edges the cloistered yard,
Hach tree a scholar’s chosen shrine.
Straight up the walls the ivy climbs,
And densely crowds each window sill.
While trumpet creepers, full of chimes,
Attest the gardener’s care and skill.
The stones are looking soiled with age:
Gray liche url there, each a crust:
These are es ornaments that engage
Our admiration, not disgust.
Beloved by all who in the days
Gone by have trod its hallowed halls,
The college wins unstinted praise,
And blesses those inside its walls.
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Co-education was so rare,
When Kenmore opened up, men thought
The thing was senseless. What a care
To guide young lovers as one ought!
For men were monks and women nuns,
And should be taught behind high walls;
Since many long uncounted suns
[t had been so. All change appalls.
But here wise fathers said the rule
Should meet with one exception square;
They meant to found a different school,
[It’s doors wide open to the fair.
And so, beside the central pile,
On either wing, they made the plan
To form quadrangles, where in style
The dormitories later ran.
One group, those looking toward the west,
Was built for men, and soon was full
Of eager, dashing youth the best
The land could show, and wonderful.
The other group, built on the east,
\Vas prettier, for the fairer sex,
Who came in numbers to the feast,
Though some averred they came to vex.
Thus Kenmore College rose to view,
A wonder in its early days;
The more the critics scoffed it grew,
And won from thousands words of praise.
6The year the great war reached its close.
In nineteen hundred eighteen, came
To college Helen Grace Montrose,
As fair in feature as in name.
She entered with the Freshman class.
As modest as a lily bell,
A charming, dancing, smiling lass,
Whose gracious manners boded well.
She had prepared at Newgate Hall,
That knew the latest cut of frocks:
She learned cosmetics, art and all
The various ways to train her locks.
Such trifles though were but skin deep,
As beauty always is, you know:
She knew the arts with which to keep
Her charms before each special beau.
She stood five feet five inches tall,
Her age just eighteen years; you see,
By counting back, her infant bawl
Had started with the century.
For best of all her gifts by far
Was her fine voice, rich, full and clear;
She seemed a pilgrim from some star.
Kar out in space, when speaking near.
Girls envied Helen for her grace,
Lithe, supple, — what a queenly air:
A sunny soul shone in her face,
And like the full moon she was fair.
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She drove on past the entrance gate,
And gave a thrill to all the girls;
But what touched most, now who will state,
Her learned air, or dress or curls?
The flowers trembled on her hat;
She seemed as gay as fields in spring ;
She stepped as lightly on the mat,
As if she were a bird on wing.
She passed up through the outer door,
Gold bracelets dangling on her wrists;
She dropped her kerchief on the floor,
Recovering it with sundry twists.
A belt bejeweled, round the waist,
Gave her a jaunty air, a shawl
About her shoulders told of taste,
That caught the eager eyes of all.
She walked the hall, down to her room,
With dignity and pride and grace,
And as the ruby scatters gloom,
So did the laughter in her face.
She dressed for dinner, O’er her heart
She pinned some roses, on her hair
An ornament the goldsmith’s art
Had made resplendent, with great care.
Next, ear-rings made of filigree
She hung as pendants from her ears;
Arrayed thus, off in highest olee,
She in the dining room appears
8As open sesame, the name
Of Montrose loosened up all hearts;
It brought to Helen instant fame.
And stamped her as a girl of parts.
Her room-mate, by contrast, was slow,
But good as gold, and Helen found
Her true as steel, not made for show,
But best of all the girls around.
Their room was festooned with the things
A college girl likes well to have:
About the walls and chairs she flings
Pennants, pillows her lovers gave.
They had a cosy corner, where
Their books and school things all were kept —
And rugs from Persia made for wear.
O’er which their school-mates lightly stept.
Each had a drawer with lock and key,
In which were folded safe away
The lovely notes perfumed, that he
Had sent his sweet-hea
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To hers, and kept it safely closed:
No other eye should get the shock
Of reading how her beau proposed.
This room was next to heaven, and home.
The sweetest place to these two dears:
No matter where their feet might roam,
This room should follow through the years.
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Into her room, first day, pell-mell
Came scouts for three young women’s frats;
Fach wanted her to know the “‘yell
At heart each thought the others cats.
To Helen this was joy supreme,
The mystery, the secret great,
She floated off on some sweet dream,
And could not sleep till very late.
Obscure as riddles were their signs;
Their songs were full of hidden thought ;
She puzzled much to read the lines
On all their pins, so dearly bought.
“Where do they keep their goats?” she groaried,
Beneath her breath, to her dear chum
At midnight. But her friend just moaned,
And kept her lips shut meekly dumb
‘Which shall I choose?” “Oh. don’t ask me!”
Her room-mate answered, full of woe;
"4 ney all lo yk ood. You can't join three ;
Pick one. and let the others go!
A bright idea came at last,
Quite worthy of the Montrose wit;
She flipped a coin, when all was past,
And said the fates should govern it.
So once upon a time, at dark,
When ghosts were stalking through the lane,
She rode the goat, out in the park,
Which nearly addled up her brain.
1GShe idolized her social set.
Composed of sisters, to be sure,
Inside the sanctum, where she met
A lot she hardly could endure.
She had to like them for she swore
With hand uplifted on the book,
That she should love them, and adore
Their every virtue, act and look.
She fagged for one, and paid the bill
At supper for a full octette,
And just to show them her good will,
She squared a sister’s gambling debt.
She acted as the chapter’s whip
To bring each member to her place,
SP cay 6 es I RG SOE 37 eecarreaa
On meeting night, and gave the tip,
When others showed an angry face.
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The centre of a sort of cult:
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All loved her for her cenial airs,
And catered to her round the school;
She never moved, except in pairs,
And never seemed to play the fool.
Her heart inside was made of wax,
That melted with a sister’s tears; \F
None ever found her weak, or lax,
In calming academic fears.
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And as molasses catches flies,
So Helen had a dozen beaux,
Athletic heroes, in whose eyes
She read the stories of vast woes.
The trustees once had been so strict,
High walls and fences shut men out,
It took but little to convict
Intruders there without a doubt.
The genial rays of many a sun
Had melted all this snow and ice,
And Helen found the boys all fun,
But one particular chap quite nice.
[n all the college social life
None could compare with Helen's charm;
Among the boys she started strife,
And carried one on either arm.
Yet all the while her eyes were fixed
On Stanley Davis, who was head
And heels in love with her, so mixed
He wished the others all were dead.
This went on till her Junior year
When Stanley was a Senior, grave;
Were they engaged — well, never fear!
Her heart had found its hero brave.
Both lived high on the mountain top
In ecstasies of joy and pain;
Sometimes their hearts would nearly stop,
Then suddenly beat up again.
12One day in March the mail came in,—
Among the letters, one, with seal.
Mor Helen, reading which, a erin
Spread out and burst into a squeal :
“Aunt Jane is coming in a week.
To visit in the town, till June:”
She punctuated, with a shriek.
The reading like a trained buffoon.
She says she longs to see her niece.
And help her with some good advice:
>
She cackled like a flock of 2 cCcsc,
Hler dear Aunt Jane was very nice.
Who was Aunt Jane? Well, they should see!
The lady would herself be there:
Aunt Jane was full of dignity,
And she had lots of golden hair.
Aunt Jane, the youngest child of nine,
And Helen’s mother, born the first.
Brought Jane and Helen near a line
In age. In this both were well versed.
“She is my elder by two years,”
Said Helen, turning up her eyes;
~My silly ways will bring’ her tears,
And she will gaze in sad surprise.”’
“She always bossed me, when a child,’’
Said Helen, smiling to the girls;
“she thought me just a bit too wild,
And did not like my saucy curls.”
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For one whole week in Helen’s face
A radiance beamed, at work or play;
Within her smile there lurked a trace
Of smothered purpose to be gay.
She meant to teach Aunt Jane the tricks
That college girls count very wise ;
If possible, she would transhix
“Dear Auntie” with speechless surprise.
She planned just to cut loose, for once,
That Jane should see her social skill;
She might regard her as a dunce,
But learn how strong had grown her will.
AJl kinds of schemes went through her mind ;
Class duties had gone up the spout;
Wild pranks and tricks of various kind
Had put all serious thoughts to rout.
Why, she had bent the knee to Jane
All through her life! The word is true!
There comes a turn to every lane;
‘Twas time to put her own course through.
Confiding to her chum her plan,
To lead Aunt Jane through such a dance
That she should catch and hold a man,
She asked her how she viewed the chance.
Her chum was dumb, and did not know,
But Helen laughed, and showed a card,
That held ten names, each name a beau,
And said, “Aunt Jane, though, may die hard.”
14The day of all days had come round,
And Helen hurried to the train:
Her foot-steps hardly touched the ground
She scarcely noticed there was rain.
The schedule was an hour late:
It seemed her bulging heart must burst:
She knew she simply couldn’t wait:
The railroad lines were all accursed.
An hour passed, the whistle blew,
The cars drew slowly down the track:
Her eyes along the windows flew;
Her heart with joy was on the rack.
Ah, there she is, her dear, sweet aunt.
Her childhood’s monitor and friend!
Now let the fiends incarnate taunt.
And let the world come to an end!
They flew into each other’s arms,
(You know how college girls behave)
Each one a bundle of rare charms,
And each inclined to rant and rave.
~l'm glad to see you! Yes, I am!”
The workmen stopped to look and stare;
Jane urged, “Be still, my precious lamb,
Just see the men around us glare!”’
“Why, Helen, folks will inly curse,
And think us crazy in the head;
Our antics could not be much worse;
Such talking may wake up the dead
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Jane Woffington had eyes of blue,
A healthy color in her cheek,
A wealth of golden hair, waved too,—
She stood erect, not limp nor weak.
Two inches taller than her niece!
Two years her senior by the clock!
Yet clearly each was just a piece,
Chipped from the same old family block.
Though not austere, Jane showed command
Of every motion of her soul;
Power marked the gesture of her hand;
Her words came with a certain roll.
Rut when she smiled she drew all hearts;
None could resist her charm of face;
She used no tricks nor mincing arts,
But wore a grand consummate grace.
While Helen chattered, Jane stood still,
And looked into her niece's mind,
She noticed there a growth of will
And thought of a superior kind.
Yet she admonished her, ‘Speak low.”
Jane knew that itching ears would strain
To catch the conversation’s flow,
Repeating it with increased vain,
They hurried off to find her room,
Outside the campus, near the gate;
Between these souls there was no gloom,
But now they part, ‘twas getting late
16Keceptions, parties, tete-a-tetes,
lor days drew circles round Aunt Jane:
She had no lack of friends and dates.
\nd Helen steered her. that was plain.
\ “cookie-shine’ in Helen’s Hall.
\ grand reception at the Frat,
\n invitation to a ball.
Girl friends who came to loaf and chat:
These were the items on the Card.
\nd many more such rounds of fun:
\unt Jane was surely going hard
Till long hours past the set of sun
7 he boys streamed in. to show respect
lor Helen, but they all liked Jane;
She had the marks of the elect.
Was pretty, solid, sound and sane
She thought her niece, though, far too ‘“‘fresh,”’
\nd chided her from‘noon till night;
The “boys would catch her in their mesh,”’
ind really Helen got a fright
Jane was a woman worldly wise,
In every good sense of the word,
She filled poor Helen with surpriss
\t all the stories she had heard
Sometimes she scolded her, next praised
The pretty dimple in her chin:
Then, with sweet Helen’s face upraised,
She soothed her with a merry grin.SSeeeenweaseseseyeiareishehete ss fSag Pees sessbatstsici=
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Aunt Jane was critical, and keen
To analyze the college world;
Her words were never downright mean,
But spoken with her two thumbs twirled.
She thought that Kenmore ought to start
A school of manners, just to teach
The younger folks a long lost art,
That seemed to them quite out of reach.
“Coarse-grained and rude, the men,” she said,
“Would blow smoke in a lady's face,
\nd seize her arm, although unwed,
And never showed a courtier’s grace.
Some were too lazy quite to tip
Their hats in deference to her sex;
They were too loose in fellowship,
\ll troubled with a girl complex.”
Young Stanley Davis, Helen’s friend,
Seemed to Aunt Jane the very worst;
[f Helen married him, an end
fo all their love-—her heart would burst.
This fave poor Helen such a shock,
She stayed in bed, all day, and cried,
She heard a friend’s voice shout and mock,
\nd wished that she had early died.
But youth gets over things like these,
\nd soon again the skies were blue;
Fair shone the sun, and now wild geese
Were swimming in the river view.
18Aunt Jane had censored Helen’s clothes:
Her waist, her dress, in leneth and style,
Her gaudy scarf, her shoes, her hose.
And said her hat was simply vile.
The fact that others looked the same
Did not count much. It plainly told,
The age was courting grief and shame.
\nd hearts were growing coarse and bold.
‘Ill fares the land to hastening: ills
A prey,’ she quoted, with some stress:
“Some day the land will pay big: bills
For all its wild toolhardiness.”’
But Stanley Davis came in most
Of all for JTane’s sharp-pointed scorn;
He even had the brass to boast
That children now were better born.
He thought the age was gaining sense
With health and comforts made to match:
The school had torn the old board fence
\way. and hung outside the latch.
For Helen it was sacrilege
To differ much with Stanley's views;
7
But Jane began to lay hard siege
To all he thought, as his just dues.
The skies above were full of threat,
With arguments on right and wrong:
The heat would make poor Helen sweat,
When words blew up, both loud and stron
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Judged by the standards she had learned;
What Aunt Jane saw was bad clear through,
She was too old to take the new;
With pride of mind she inly burned.
She was a doomed old-fashioned girl,
Trained in the ways their mothers loved,
Whose hearts were gaily made to whirl
By lovers calling, neatly gloved.
The college set got her unnerved;
Its vulear forms of act and speech
Would split her ears. At last she swerved,
Resolved on lessons she should teach.
She lectured Helen, night and day,
On sundry forms of etiquette;
She called the old the nobler way,
\nd said the new would learn it yet.
‘The goo-goo eyes young ladies made
Would be their ruin. What a fall!
The lady had become a Jade,
\nd money mattered most of all
‘The girls inside fair Helen's frat
Were snobs and prudes and good for naught;
They slouched and drooped, but never sat
Erect. and tall, as she was taught.
‘Their common forms of speech were slang ;
The subject of their talk was boys;
They always bawled, but never sang,
Their hearts intent on vulgar JOYS.
ZUThese confidences in Jane’s room.
When Helen would come down to cal!
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Had sometimes filled the air with gloorn,
But goodness triumphed over all.
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Was this, ‘The rules were all too loose:
[hey were not drawn by man or maid,
But plainly by some addled goose
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[hey taught them every vulgar phrase
‘The faculty had gone to sleep.
‘li some red-blooded dean should la‘
The law down to that student mob,
He might, in conscience, earn his pay,
\nd too the sobriquet, a snob
‘The girls had far too many beaux
False freedom, laxity, and, worse,
Bad notions in their heads from shows,
Chat signified a devil's curse.”’
Old-fashioned rules of right and wrong,
Restrictions on their speech and dress,
Less freedom with the men, and strong,
[deal thought she would impress.
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March winds had given way to rains
Of April, and the buds of May;
Now Kenmore College was in pains
Before examination day.
The grounds around the college halls
Were redolent with roses,—J]une,
With all her many tuneful calls,
Was at the threshold coming soon.
The family home, at dear Montrose,
Was like the college, full of bloom;
Dear Helen’s heart with joy uprose,
In thinking of her cherished room.
Her standing in the class was sure
Not at the head, nor at the foot;
And in her soul she felt June’s lure
That like a sapling strikes deep root.
Three years had swiitly glided by;
Brimiul were they of joy supreme,
Above her was a summer sky;
Far off she saw a certain gleam.
She was a Junior, and had won
A place among her dear classmates
That should the world become undone,
She had the will to fight the fates.
All hailed her as the best of friends,
Tried by the tests her world held good;
No sky exceeds the one that bends
Above a college sisterhood.
29
—_——Her lover, Stanley Davis, knew
How close she held him to her heart:
He had not yet proposed, ’tis true,
But he had played a lover’s part.
He was a Senior now, at last:
His Kenmore days were near an end:
She mused on how the years, now past,
Had made him more and more her friend
His calls she counted as a nun,
Filled full of heavenly ecstasy,
Will count her beads o’er, one by one,
Those precious hours, her rosary!
Will he, the Senior, now propose?
This was the question in her mind.
And, if he did, do you suppose
Her lips the proper words would find?
These thoughts pressed on her till her rest
Was taken from her, night and day;
She could not ask him for the test,
That was not quite the maiden’s way.
Outside, at midnight, high the moon
Had cast a spell of borrowed light,
As, te ssing, sleepless, she took soon
Her window-seat, and blessed the night.
“Sweet moon! dear moon! is this the time
Young lovers plight their trust and faith?”
She saw, beneath an outspread lime,
Her lover walking like a wraith.
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How dear the hearts of happy youth
Within a college, where the calls
Are ever toward the claims of truth,
And courage conquers what appalls.
Commencement ended in a _ blaze
Of glory, dear to men and boys;
The world was waiting, full of pratse,
For those who tasted college joys.
Fair Helen hastened to Montrose,
“To see the rose and woodbine twine;
She viewed again the prized photo:
Of Stanley Davis, deemed divine.
She went straight to a cabinet,
Perfumed some paper, for a note
To Stanley ; while the ink was wet,
\ letter came that gripped her threat.
\unt Jane had married Stanley; think!
In less than one full week, beyond
Commencement time. She dried the ink,
\nd threw the letter in the pond.
She mused: ‘‘Aunt Jane has taught me well,
Old-fashioned girls are not so slow;
She kept her secret in a shell,
Hid close that none should ever know.
Blue eyes, a wealth of golden hair,
Clear speech, strong views, seem gvod to men:
lt might be well to change my air,
\nd not be such a dunce again.”
24L
THE BOCA GRANDE S AP Pre
At Greystone, on a certain day.
Jack Rawlinson came in from play,
And straightway took to bed:
(he microbes danced inside his throat,
Che influenza got his goat,
\nd pains shot through his he
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His roof caved in and fell:
(he rudder to his ship was gone:
iis face was absent. woe-be
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His name he could not tell
The fact showed clear his cat
His last curved ball was duly
\nd he was billed to oO:
He had no option on the world
pitched,
His reason from its throne was hurled.
\nd he was full of woe.
tis legs were changed to trolley poles ;
His brains were moth-bit, full of holes.
\nd he was shot clean through:
Uhe bugs danced hornpipes up and down
His crazy back and arms: the town
Was set against him too
But fate was kind, and, in ten weeks.
The red blood flowed inside his cheeks.
And he was on the mend:
He thanked the Doctors for their skill:
The Doctors praised his strength of will.
And soon his cares would end.
il was ditched a
Le
LSJack Rawlinson was known to tame
As full-back in the foot-ball game
When Woodbridge bit the dust;
With Jack away the Greystone team
Was like a plow without a beam,
The whole thing on a bust.
The illness he had just pulled through,
That nearly spelled tor him adieu,
Had broken his first term,
His strength was as the strength of ten,
But he was mired, and all the men
Of Greystone cursed that germ.
Che woes of men can never last,
\nd he was growing well now fast,
And feeling full of vim;
He knew the signs were full of hope;
He daily quaffed the Doctor's dope,
He soon would be in trim.
To help him on the upward path,
\nd pacify his rising wrath,
The fellows wrote him notes;
Each, in his own peculiar vein,
Was rightly striving to be sane,
And on his virtues dotes.
Jack read these letters day by day,
Which like a tonic made him gay,
And promptly brought him health ;
He thumbed them till the leaves were soiled,
Till all the microbes in him boiled,
He counted them his wealth.
26Jim wrote of studies in their clas.s
Assuring him the Dean would pa
55
A man so highly prized:
The boys would coach him for the quiz :
He ought to educate his phiz;
They'd keep him well advised.
“This is your Junior year, you know:
To lose you, Jack, would be a blow
The college couldn't stand ;
Hence do not worry oer your books:
Your foot-ball record and your looks
\re known throughout the land.
“Before | close ought tO Say,
A new girl registered. first day,
A Sophomore, mind that!
The boys are crazy on her sure,
©o sweet and comely and demure,
\nd such a stunning hat!
“In confidence I'll let you know
She looks on me as the whole show
She is most wise and fine!
She has the bluest kind of eyes,
| call her ‘Opal,’ like the skies,
‘ 17:
me seems almost divine.
“That is a secret we both keep;
| call her ‘Opal’ in my sleep;
She has an alto voice.
Your studies will be cared for, mind!
You have not gotten far behind!
You'll say the girl is choice!”Re a ee ee ean er ee ee CO ee eS
ey er ee rs
Sisssseesoes
ieee) ee eee
teTess=
Joe wrote to him about the frat,
Installed now in a special flat,
With everything quite swell:
A Negro servant at the door,
\ brand new carpet on the floor,
A butler who could spell.
They had the pick of all new men,
Had chased their rivals to their den,
\nd owned the town;
ancient foemen grit their teeth;
fairly
"(UIT
\We know it riled them underneath ;
\We sometimes see them frown.
‘Now keep it secret, Jack, old man,
| have the lead on all the clan,—
5 |
\ new girl came this fall!
joined the Sophomores’ dumb class
But is the little
\nd I have been to call.
dearest lass.
“She is a stunning looking girl;
Her teeth are white and choice as pearl ;
| call her ‘Pearl’ for short!
Che other fellows envy me,
| have the
| always liked her
inside track, you see,
sort.
“The frat sends greetings to you, Jack;
\ll will be glad to see you back;
They call you prince of men.
The chair is empty where you sit;
[t seems no other man will fit,—
Tonicht, I call again.”
oo °
28When Jerry wrote, the ink was “bad.”
But still he gave the best he had.
Foot-ball was on his brain:
“Without you, Jack, the team was ‘bum:’
We had to work the froth and scum,
Nobody else would train.
‘The quarter-back was slow and blue:
No fast ends CSvcr Came tO view
‘The CENniTe was: a post.
di : acl - anr ‘ } ‘ ]
Lhe guards were anchored where they stood:
The tackles would not do no
oO x
m" dt Df
The full-back Was a ohost
lhe season dragged on ul afraid
he students eorouch:
| he only thine | cle LI tway
The gloom was, on the opening day
\n angel came. | vouch
She toined the Sophomores. and al]
Weclare a dream dr pped on the mall,
lhe very day she came:
a ] ~y114 ‘
one gave me a deep curtesy
fonased
iS Tuy red: YUU SCC.
|
ler lips a
Kor t}
iat she’s not to blame
se ve had a do eT) chats OF St),
\nd call her ‘Ruby,’ don’t you know,
Because her lips are red:
She 1S the finest oir] Ly Ce SCE
There goes the squad out to the green
Keep secrets in your head
mane.
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BL a ee
Tom wrote on quite a different theme;
The glee-club was his daily dream,
And Jack was on it too;
They needed Jack’s fine tenor voice;
No other singer was so choice;
All thought that judgment true.
The practices had not been good;
None came on time, as each one should,
And each one tried to lead.
The tenors flatted far too much;
The bass sang off key like the Dutch;
It made his tough heart bleed.
“We miss you, Jack! Words cannot state
How much you mean to us, of late,
As always in the past;
So come back quick, and join the boys;
Each one will share with you his joys;
The time is going fast.
“Oh! by the way, Jack, on the square,
She has the sunniest eyes and hair
You ever saw in town;
She is the talk of every one,
\nd came when college was begun,
\ class below our Own.
‘T call her ‘Night-in-gale ; she sings
Just like a bird, that soars on wings;
She lifts you from the earth ;
She much prefers me to the rest;
She said she thought my voice the best ;
[ cannot speak her worth.”
30Jake wrote the class had organized,
And thought that Jack should be apprized,
They made him President.
\ll sent their best, and wished him well,
And wanted him — Jake —first to tell.
How all elections went.
The details were too much for hirn
So just pass up his trifling whim.
He did not like to write:
\s Jack’s room-mate, they thought he could
Make plain, the whole class wished h
They thought old Jack just right.
“Now keep this grave-yard if you can:
l've grown to be a different man.
Since term began this year:
[’ve lost my heart, Jack, think of that!
The lady in the case — that’s flat
Has got me by the ear.
” The boys have all gone crazy-mad:
To talk of her is now a fad.
Like cross-word puzzles, Jack.
She wears a dainty turquoise ring
[ call her “Turquoise’— in the spring,
| mean — well, man. come back!
"We need you here now all the time:
She sings ! Her voice is sweet, sublime!
Don’t wait till spring! Come now!
She likes me best of all the crowd!
Be sure you don’t say this out loud:
['m framing up my vow.”
e would,
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Bill wrote in several different styles,
Told stories, jokes, and put in smiies,—
Something was wrong with Bill!
The banquet had been held, and each
Had taken some one,—his a peach,
And he possessed her still.
The boys had waked up half the town;
Each girl had worn her prettiest gown;
The flowers and all were fine;
The first day college opened, he
Had thought to forestall rivalry,
\nd asked a girl to dine.
(fe had worked fast, the rest were slow ;
They envied him with eyes aglow,
While sitting at the feast.
\ new girl, lately come, had beamed
Upon him as the sunlight gleamed
Out yonder in the east.
Ter hair is golden, blonde! For this
She lets me call her ‘Blondy’ — bliss
Was never felt till now!
Just keep this all beneath your hat;
I’ve rolled the others on the mat;
The thing may cause a row.
“But ‘Blondy’ is so fine and sweet,
Her dainty fingers are so neat,
She twines them in my heart;
| cannot bear to go to class,
Until I see dear ‘Blondy’ pass,
Of all my joys a part.”Dick wrote to Jack about the girls:
Dick always called them ocean pearls,
And was a gallant youth.
Why pearls? Because they’re hard to keep ;
Why ocean? Since their hearts are deep,
And they are rich in truth.
Dick’s manners were above reproach;
No lady’s name would he dare broach:
Except to speak her praise.
He always proved a gentleman:
His eyes would always lightly scan
His fellow-classmen’s ways.
So now to Jack he named them all —
The girls | mean —the short, the tall —
Who made the Junior class:
He praised their brains and common sense:
He poured upon them frankincense;
He let no lady pass.
Then, just before his letter closed,
He said a figure interposed,
That quite upset his plan;
He had not meant to go outside
The Junior class, but there abide.
And end as he began.
“But, Jack, just keep this secret hid:
A new girl came; I made a bid:
[ call her ‘Cardinal :’
She keeps that secret —so do J —
Our little game played on the sly,
You'll share— none others shall.”
Ser TEE IRE
ei Lee
TES
Baar he
Ts
annex
RES
fleesoe ea
ee ee
De Nae eae
na
In due time Jack returned to school ;
He meant to study, not play fool,
And try to make the grade.
He found his room, and locked the door;
With book in hand he paced the floor,
And sought his room-mate’s aid.
Hard work had been his game through lite;
He entered boldly into strife,
And hit his studies hard.
Receptions, games, and outside play,
Loose, idle lounging day by day,
Were not down on his card.
He waited till he heard the bell
Announce the change of classes well,
And then he always ran;
He sat transfixed the lecture through,
Gave all the strict attention due,
A different sort of man.
Then back once more to that shut room,
Again to study in the gloom,
Until he caught his class.
When that was done he meant to quit,
Join in the sports that seemed most fit,
And be one of the mass.
His jaw was set; he had the will ;
So by great energy and skill
The work was all made up.
Then at the door, the bolt he drew;
“Come. fellows! Welcome!’ In they flew:
He frolicked like a pup.
34Jim came to help his friend pull through
His studies, but he missed his cue.
And talked of opals straight.
Their economics worked right in,
They started out to talk of tin,
But tin was out of date.
“Jack, have you seen her?” He would say ;
“She stands just five feet six today,
A figure neat and trim.
She's not too short; she’s not too tall:
She’s not too large: she’s not too small:
i
She’s neither fat nor slim.
‘But best of all, her eyes! That’s why
| call her ‘Opal,’ like the sky,
So blue and soft and fair!
They mirror back my thoughts to me:
Such eyes I'd go ten miles to see,
] ] ie i ‘ Maas
And, Jack, they are a pair !
‘““l would not talk this wavy, old man.
rn ‘ cil bi i.
Lo any but yourself: my plan
ls, own that ‘Opal’ sure!
No matter how my life may fail,
(hough fate may send me rain and hail,
att
With her I'll ne’er be poor.
‘I’ve made great progress since I wrote:
To-night I'll send this perfumed note
To tell her how I care.
To-morrow, notice how she’ll smile!
‘Twill raise the other fellows’ bile;
s79
ll wear a lofty air.
35
STs Ra EEL
aS RR
SANUS ETS
ics
s
e
2
Ren:
neSerr rah + soswe
See ee ee PT
a
————
Joe came to talk about the frat;
He mumbled on with this and that,
Which showed him ill at ease;
The boys had rough-housed, just last night,
And ended things in one grand fight,
None asking, if you please.
The landlord had been round to ass
How long these blackguards meant to task
The neighborhood with noise;
“We told him he should not be rude;
The boys at least had not been nude,
And they were only boys.”
One brother wore a fine, black eye;
One smeared another’s face with pie,
All done in love’s sweet name.
For were they not sworn brothers all:
Same pin, same secrets, same hid call,
Not known to general fame?
But pearls were chiefly in Joe’s mind,
To other sights his eyes were blind:
He owned for sure one “Pearl,”
A pearl of great unspoken price,
Fair to behold, and very nice;
He meant that lovely girl.
“None know I call her that, old friend,
So keep the secret to the end;
Will you be my best man?
The world is topsy-turvy now,
The snowbirds hop from bough to bough,—
Well, be there, if you can!"
36When Jerry sauntered in, Jack frowned,
lor he saw Jerry had been downed,
His tongue thrust in his cheeks:
He said athletics were the cause
Of all the school’s new fractured laws:
They had been dead for weeks.
They had no standing in the state;
Their coach was clearly out of date;
None thought they could come back:
He doubted that it could be done,
lf led by any other one,
Outside of Captain Jack.
With that he said, ‘It’s gone for me!
I’m up a different sort of tree,
For, Jack, I’m now in love:
The game of foot-ball may be tough,
But matrimony isn’t rough;
It comes from up above.
‘That girl I wrote you all about,
Last Fall, has left me in no doubt,
She means to link her fate
With mine, and give the thing a test;
| think with her the game is best,
Unless it’s started late,
It’s all dead secret, what ] SAY 5
I call her ‘Ruby,’ mind, in play;
She likes my style, I think;
Congratulations now, old Jack,
Are quite in order; don’t be slack,
We might go out, and drink.”’
)
ofre eae ee ee ee ee
Ee a
Jack heard a whistle. It was Tom;
His heart burst, shattered by a bomb;
Jack knew the glee-club crank.
Tom started in to chant his grief,
And then remembered Jack was chief,
Whereat his courage sank.
Tom soon revived, and then his tongue
Wagged on an hour, the while he Hung
Invectives round the place.
He aimed them all at lazy chaps,
Who nursed their golf sticks in their laps,
With singing in disgrace.
“T wish the girls could join the club!"
Said Tom, “But there’s the ugly rub,
They can’t, so that is that;
But, if they could, my ‘Night-in-gale
\Vould make each other bird turn pale,
Or change into a bat.
“Her ear is tuned to concert pitch;
Throw tuning forks into a ditch,
My ‘Night-in-gale’ sings true;
[ fancy I can hear, at night,
Her singing in the sweet moonlight,
On, on, the whole night through.
“Don’t tell the boys what you have heard
\bout my ‘Night-in-gale,’ the bird
That sings to me alone.
Some day, she says, I'll be a king,—
Now wasn’t that a pretty thing-——
And sit upon a throne.”
20
voJake came to Jack, and stormed in wrath,
Class matters and the primrose path
Were both alike in this:
None knew the turn that each might take,
Or when he might tread on a snake.
And so end all the bliss.
The class had not paid in their dues;
His head ached with conflicting views:
The “Annual” fell down flat:
The banquet had been such a bore
A lot declared they'd have no more:
He felt chased like a rat.
“But I have something to confide:
The ‘Turquoise’ knows the Spanish etide ;
She taught the steps to me:
She wears her turquoise, don’t foréét!
But, Jack, Ill wear that turquoise Yet,
Or drown myself at sea.
“I told her, just the other day,
How lonely I felt, now, some way,
And, Jack, I heard her sigh;
What would you think that could portend?
At least she holds herself my friend;
| saw her dry her eye.
"Il now see turquoise every where,
Not only in the sky, out there,
But also in the grass:
The woods, the lake, the roads, the flower,
Have all turned turquoise. Every hour
They tell me of my lass.”
39
oe SRT Ro SS ERR Ua Pear eeeet
PRT
sk
REPT RET STA Psy
CE Pe aR
Teer
NPA
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TRA
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ee Pe, ee
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I
n quite another lively vein,
sill stumbled in to take the strain
Off Jack’s unsettled mind;
Bill knew the arts that spring from bluff ;
He wore his lessons on his cuff,
And never dropped behind.
That banquet he averred was fine,
Due to his little valentine,
His ‘“Blondy,”’ if you please.
“Now mind, old man, it’s just to you
[ tell the secret. If all knew
My soul would lose its ease.”
The reason some were acting sore
Was, he got his work in before
The others were awake;
They branded him, with smiles, a thief,
And said his tricks would bring him grief;
He made their heads all ache.
That “Blondy” chose him, not the rest,
Had made them envy him, the best
Proof he was right, not they.
While they were grinding at the rules,
And proving all their betters fools,
Why, he was making hay.
“Tt won’t be long, old Jack,— two vears,—
Then ‘Blondy’ will turn all their sneers
To happy jests and smiles.
[ know I’m on the inside track;
They know it, too, behind my back,
And that is just what riles.”
10With even mind, but talking fast
About their good old times:
He put his thoughts in cultured phrase,
And gave the ladies all due praise,
And even quoted rhymes.
The girls had asked him to invite
A lot of boys for next Twelfth Night,
When they should have a spread.
They told him not to fail on Jack,
Or they should swiftly send him back,
To bring him quick or dead,
So Jack agreed to take a chance;
He knew the girls would not dare dance,
And pledged his word to go;
That led Dick, furthermore, to say
He wanted Jack to note the way
His ‘Cardinal’ would glow.
“The blushes in her cheeks are such
[ call her ‘Cardinal.’ She much
Prefers me to the rest.
Our girls are ladies, cultured, true,
But watch the ‘Cardinal,’ Jack, will you?
And say, if she’s not best.”’
He laid his finger on his lip,
And whispered, “Jack, this little tip
Is just between us two.
[ know that you will not betray
My confidence, and so good-day!
In time I’ll call for you.”
4]
Then Dick, good Dick, came round, at last,
BEN
-
LTRS FeeFer:
Sa eo oe a SHye Tere eee se
SS.
When Twelfth Night came, at last, around,
Jack Rawlinson was duly found
Surrounded by the fair;
He was a manly sort of chap,
Whom Fortune fondled in her lap,
With chestnut in his hair.
He had a firm-set, bulldog chin,
A long, sweet summer in his grin,
And iron in his will;
He had a quick, intensive mind,
The most audacious of its kind,
And he had lots of skill.
His conversation was the best,
Of all the boys, by every test,
And he was good beside;
In trouble he would never swerve,
And he had lots of vim and nerve
He never tried to hide.
The girls all worshipped at his feet;
With great respect he thought them sweet,
But gave his heart to none.
This made the crowd all wonder, why
To catch the secret, who should try?
ry
Chere could be only one.
> -
«
But where was she? Across the room,
Inside a circle, see her bloom,
A lily among thorns!
For there the lovely lady stood,
Adored by all the brotherhood,
Whose worship she adorns.
42“Miss Hale from Boca Grande, Jack,
The sweetest girl in all the pack,”
Jim whispered to him low;
“Come over! let me introduce
You two! you say you have no use ?”’
But Jack went over slow.
That night Jack was the last to leave;
He thought he never could believe
His heart had stopped before,
The way his lively fancy worked
Was nothing to the way he shirked
His work forevermore.
That winter, well on into spring,
He couldn’t do a blessed thing
But think of that sweet girl:
A blonde, a turquoise, nightingale,
A cardinal, ruby, opal pale,
Aud, too, a deep-sea pearl.
The Senior year was on in time,
And Jack was tuning in, sublime,
On all the lady said;
The race was on for fair, I'll say,
Jack growing stronger every day,
But crazy in his head.
The dress she wore,— this was her cue —
\Vas sapphire in its shade of blue,
When spring crept oer the hill;
His ‘“‘Boca Grande Sapphire,” now,
He called her, in a secret vow
He made with mighty will.
—
pmo
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She answered to it with a voice,
That made the Captain’s heart rejoice;
The lady showed good taste;
His letters now were all addressed,
Inside, to one he daily guessed,
That he should wed in haste.
His Senior year was at its close ;
When summer ended, all his woes
Should be submerged in bliss;
He tapped himself square on the head;
He said, “The boys will drop down dead,
When they all hear of this.”’
But “mice and men gang aft agley,
[| hear a brother poet say,
And that is surely true;
The lady had a different plan,
She knew that she could choose her man,
And meant to do it too.
While dreams were floating round Jack’s room,
And he was priming up, as groom,
Another took a hand.
The Boca Grande Sapphire wed,
Before the summer days were sped,
Her heart well in command.
A quiet tutor was her choice,
Who had a firm and certain voice,
And, too, he had the brains;
A lively girl and quiet man
Get on right well. Learn this who can:
It pours not till it rains.
44we - ited
yi Rola
Abe atque Wale
onnet Sequence :
on |
o re >
By those who stand this side the silent tomb,
Who gaze at it as somehow spelling doom
To all our plans, and friendly interchange.
Man uses here a body made to hand,
Supplied with all the tools he needs for work;
Another body in another land
| see out through the windows of the kirk.
To know, to love, to act with God is life,
Whether it be in peace or active strife.
SO
Growth
My choice would be for long continued growth,
When this world’s interests shall have reachedanend:
A. static Heaven, whose creatures never bend,
Would not appeal to me. | should be loth
To lose the castles | have built in both
My worlds, the one this side the grave, my friend,
\nd that bright one, where I expect to spend
ternity, pledged to me by an oath
i [In Revelation, and in consciousness :
My wish 1s this, to follow out the plan,
[In which I see the greatest power to bless,
| Of larger growth, conceived when here a man.
More light, more truth, more faith, more hope, more love,
In that celestial kingdom up above!
4681
Character
Vv character is all I have to take
~ Along with me, when | pass out beyond.
It is myself. My teatures correspond
To all my thoughts and deeds. It makes me quake
To think how every wild and vain mistake
Imbeds itself in me. I may be fond
Of thinking I can drown them in some pond,
Rut. lo! they will not drown. How like a snake
Fach crawls into my heart, and curls, and coils
With slimy folds, embracing every limb,
Until it has me fully in its tolls,
A part of me, myself its synonym!
‘Tis true my good thoughts follow me as well,
And God may in my nature truly dwell.
82
Tolerance
The vears have taught me tolerance and love;
A cynic has no welcome at my place;
The censor, with the sour, sickly face,
May join the critic for a spiteful shove
To crowd his neighbor, but | look above,
Where God dwells comprehending us and space,
And see Him taking all to His embrace,
Which teaches me wide tolerance and love
Bold cynic, censor, critic, who gave you
The key to universal truth? You all
Shall answer unto God for what vou do.
The rest of us, too, listen for our call.
ach sees as God has given him power to see,
And speaks up for himself in his degree
47ee ee ee ee ee ee
ae eet a
Tiss Sawa
aa ae ie tea
83
Judgment
The Judgment Day is ever now and here;
Each deed we do contains a boomerang,
That whirls back on us with a certain bang;
Cause and effect are shown here, working clear;
Within the seed is wrapped the corn in ear;
The poison in the deadly serpent’s fang
[Is bound to issue 1n a mortal pang,
[f in our blood. This truth we all revere.
A corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit;
There is the Judgment Day reduced to law;
An evil deed is evil at the root,
And sentence is pronounced against that flaw.
The courts are open, and the Judgment Day
Is here and now, not yonder far away.
84
Heaven
Beyond the grave, I fear no judge's wrath,
Who holds the scales and wields a flaming sword;
In harmony with him, I know his word
Shall open up to me a clearer path
Wherein to walk. What terrors, think you, hath
\ God of love and mercy, in accord
With us, who honor Him as Master, Lord,
Him in love and faith?
And strive to follow
To be with Him will be the greatest bliss,
Which in my soul, I fancy, will be Heaven.
With this in prospect, who on earth would miss
The greatest joy to mortals ever given?
[ do not think of Heaven in terms of rest,
But work, companionship, and love — the best.
4885
Hell
If Heaven’s a state, the same is true of Hell,
Whose hosts are there, each by his own accord.
My soul is Heaven or Hell. No prophet s word
Has ever yet described them half so well
< we know them. No poet’s pen can tell
How hot the flames, how sharp the keeper s sword,
In hearts that have defied a gracious Lord,
A
ES.
Revealed in consciousness one cant expel.
If in this life I revel with the beast,
Down there I drink the wormwood and the gall;
This is no word of human saint or priest;
It is the conscious witness in us all.
The punishment that most befits a liar
Is, that his lie shall burn him in its fire.
SO
Autumn
+
The summer of my life is now well past,
And autumn brings the sere and yellow leat;
The harvest of my years is in the sheaf,
And soon will come the winter's stormy blast;
My earthly life cannot much longer last,
Which makes me think my days here all too brief;
Now, as I count my blessings, this is chief :
The love of life, and all its program vast.
For I have been delirious with the spring,
With all its buds, and promises, and haope.
And I have caught the summer on the wing,
With optimism for the downward slope:
I face the winter, not with fear and gloom, \
For in the spring the flowers I lost shall bloont.
49eacewentnimreis hese k ee toeg ysk esi e52)22
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HSA Reto ete fede eas fs
sm, Ser
87
Sunset
The sunset brings me color in the skies,
A golden glory framed in floating cloud;
Are these the dying day’s new woven shroud,
Or are they islands out from Paradise?
They fill me, often, with a vast surprise
That men, thus blessed, should lift up spirits proud,
And join the thoughtless mob, a thankless crowd,
Who should, with eyes anointed, become wise.
That rosy glow lights up the heavens around;
[t reaches down, and touches cliff, and clod;
It ‘sanctifies the earth as holy ground,
And symbolizes here the love of God
[ face the sunset of my life that way,
Rejoicing that I have been given the day.
88
Age
Some day my vital forces shall be spent,
The doors closed in the street, perception fail;
My processes shall then begin to ail,
\nd I shall lose the talents God has sent,
With all the golden moments he has lent.
My voice shall sink to treble, while the hale
And hardy keepers of the house, grown frail,
Shall ache, and tremble, neath a body bent.
{ then shall know that I have reached old age,
When all the evil days, they say, draw nigh.
All right! In life I knew the poet’s rage,
And I have seen things with a prophet’s eye.
From that advantage point I call life good,
A glorious scheme of human brotherhood.
5089
The Change
When I am old, [ll humbly wait the change
That comes to all. God grant His peace and rest
To all who travel down the slope. “Tis best
That we should have a pleasant interchange
Of greeting, e’er we n.cet the passing strange
© , - . -
Experience of another life. ihe test
Of this life is the next. May it be blest,
Exceeding all we ask, or think, in range,
In depth, and richness. Brother, do not fear!
The change will bring you other things of joy
New tests, new duties, larger tasks than here,
Where all your soul’s large gifts you may employ
Hail, then, the change, and look not back, but straight
Before you, till you pass the narrow gate!
Q()
The Goal
Do things tend onward to a final goal,
Embracing this world and the next, I ask?
Through all the parts that make up this world’s task
Its growth and processes, when taken whole,
Is there a purpose showing plain, a sole,
Exclusive end, though hid behind a n
Of sense, as plain as wine within a flask,
1aSK
A purpose giving each a worthy role?
Yes! This goal: likeness unto God. My heart
Can never have the satisfaction sought.
Until it finds the high, religious art
Of knowing God completely as one ought
No other goal desired compares with this:
Absorption in God’s will and love and bliss.
51‘Cae ose ses tse
TESA SSS PSSST YE SY TY SE se ease
ia etives aya ofade ness
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QI
The Stars
And now the stars come out, and brightly shine,
The stars of faith, and hope, and love, the gleam
That never was on land or sea in dream,
Except as God has made them truly mine;
The night is here, but ah! my stars are fine;
To me their chastened glory 1s supreme,
Like vestal virgins set within a scheme,
\Vhere holiness and truth both intertwine.
My stars are blinking softly overhead;
Their golden starlight falls around me sweet,
As silently as snowflakes on the dead,
Or angels treading slow on whitened feet.
[ soon shall see God clearly, face to face,
And know the rapture of His kind embrace.
Q?
Vale
l‘arewell to earth, the scene of joy and pain,
To those | leave behind, to wait awhile!
[ go not on a horrid, long exile,
Rut follow down a sweet enchanted lane.
Farewell to you, my body, and that brain,
Which served me well, and made my life an isle,
Where blessed fruits and flowers, for mile on mile,
Have bound me to you with a golden chain!
arewell, with tears of happiness and joy
For all that life holds dear, both weal and woe,
For those sweet dreams that came to me, a boy,
And those fulfilments, now my joys oerflow!
Farewell, sweet life, I hate to say good-bye!
To-morrow [| shall meet you in the sky!
a2Brave Tdvlls
of the
Gallant South
BY
Lincoln HulleypA Pe ee a ee ee eee ee ae ee oe oe
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LIBRARY OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
GIFT OF
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Rode LANVUULIN eter eperersBrave Tdylls
of the
Gallant South
BY
Lincoln Hullepee an
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i eemeemcsdneet mse ALE TEAL Ae
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COPYRIGHTED
1925
BY
LINCOLN HULLEY
DELAND, FLA
PRESS OF THE
E. O. PAINTER PRINTING CO
DELAND, FLAInscribed to my wife,
Eloise Mayham Hulleyee ee ee a
ee ee ee
Tote ts Seis atest erSe tee
—————
= —
—
POETIC PRODUCTIONS
BY
LINCOLN HULLEY
Lullabies and Slumber Songs
Annie-Laurie: Love-Lyrics
Hiram Abiff, the Builder
Sonnets on the Immortal Bards
Shakespere’s Dream of Fair Women
Moonlight Nights at Palm Beach
King David: Israel’s Lyric Bard
Christina, or Christian Van Dusen’s Law-Suit
Chivalry in Dixie: Metrical Romances
Mike Murphy’s Dream
Campus Memories
Alice Coventry and Other Metrical Romances
The Eloise Chimes
Chapel Lyrics of Faith, Hope and Love
College Lyrics of Idealism
Fables and Myths from the Sibyl’s Book
The Jubilate of Rabbi Ben Adam
Christian Hymns
The Children’s Hour and other Poems
St. Michael and the Dragon: An Epic of the War
Savonarola’s Visions of Judgment
A Confessional for Broken Lives
Vesper Songs of Joy, Trust and Praise
Brave Idylls of the Gallant South
Dwellers Beyond the Styx, or Tragedies of Love
Dixie Sketches in Chalk and Charcoal
Ghiberti’s Doors to Paradise and other Art Poems
A Maker of Dreams$0-+-0->-e~0.
Brave Idylls of the Gallant South
l. A Palace on the Blue
Owned by a Virginia
2)
or
2. Mary Burns and Parson Brown
The Angel with the Smile
3. Oglethorpe Manor
Or
Cotton Fields in BloomPe
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nlA Palace on the Blue Ridge
OWNED BY
A Virginia Gentleman
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The civil war between the states, that raged
From eighteen sixty-one to five, had made
Such wastage of resources in the South
That only those could know who saw it all.
Virginia suffered most. She long had been
The great dominion, mother of great men,
Of presidents and states as well. But when
Her mighty spirit bowed to force of arms,
She found her state divided into two,
Her slaves, who tilled the soil and were her wealth.
Set free, her buildings burned, her homes destroyed
By rival armies marching through the land,
Her industries and schools laid low, and worse.
Those splendid men of hers shot down and dead
On countless battle-fields. The cavaliers
Of England had begun Virginia’s life
In those best days of British fighting men,
When Raleigh and the rest poured out their blood
And treasures without stint to make a state,
That like a polished gem should brightly shine
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In good Queen Bess’s royal diadem.
Once more the lordly cavalier had met
Great Cromwell’s “Roundheads,’”’ known as “‘Ironsides,”
And, like the noble Englishmen they were,
Accepted the conclusion as from God.
3ut when the war was over all began
In agony to bear the burdens cast
Upon the broken hearts and homes of men,
Whose natures were the noblest in the world.
They fairly starved at times for want of tood.
Of money there was none. The labor too
Was changed so in degree and kind by law
That new adjustments daily chafed them sore,
And deep resentment for awhile burned strong.
For years they were to eat their bread in tears,
To have their children go in rags, to hear
Themselves described as rebels, outlaws, knaves,
To have their offspring grow in ignorance,
Because their schools were gone, and all the grace
And charm of life, to old Virginians dear,
Now fading till they only took the forms
Of blessed memories. But beggars, no!
In them the blood of England’s gentry flowed.
From childhood they had all been taught to think
Man’s first allegiance bound him to his state.
Imbued with this for decades, when the shock
Of battle came between two principles,
They would have felt themselves vile traitors, worse,
Low cowards, knaves, and lost to honor, if
They had not voted for their state, and drawn
Their swords in her defense. They had to start
Life over. All they had was gone, except
Their honor, courage, lands and high ideals,
\mong the families wrecked by war was one
8That lived at Charlottesville. Their home had been
West of the great Blue Ridge. The family name
Was Lyndhurst. AIl the men had been shot down
On battlefields, except the youngest son,
Himself a soldier from the first. How he
Escaped the bullets would be hard to say.
A dozen miles southwest of Winchester
The manor house long stood within whose walls,
One day in June young Lyndhurst had been born.
His mother’s people were the Spottswoods, who
Had some connection with the Fairfax name,
At Greenway Court, on land derived by gift
From Culpepper. The surveys had been made
On these same Fairfax lands by Washington.
There in “The Valley of Virginia’’ lies
The finest piece of country in the world.
Full fifteen hundred miles it runs. It starts
In Alabama on the south, and goes
To where the broad Saint Lawrence spreads its mouth,
Virginia’s part three hundred miles or more.
Here Lyndhurst spent his boyhood, running wild
Among his kinsfolk. They were thrifty souls
Who founded towns and villages. and held
Estates from Winchester to Roanoke,
This boy was welcome in their homes, beloved
By all, because he had such winning ways
And sunny disposition. He was named
Charles Lamb for sentimental reasons. since
His mother wished it so. And always she
Would call him Lamb till others used the name.
The adverse winds that carried off the rest,
Took him, and dropped him down at Richmond. There
He had to face a world in poverty
And rags. But he was brave and not to be
Dismayed. He shared misfortune with the rest.
9= S2So Races els
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.efore the war his occupation was,
Like that of many others of his class,
A life of leisure as a gentleman.
He had been schooled, as often was the case,
In military science, and had been
Through all the horrors of the civil war,
Had won distinction in the field, and knew
Plantation life in all its varied parts.
Profession he had none. Nor did he have
A robust constitution, built to war
In deadly combat with the sons of strife
Among the marts of trade. But he had health,
A. friendly manner, even mind, and more,
Great love of life and warmth of heart, and poise,
And an imagination all compact
With great creative powers and fantasies.
He was not named for Lamb because he sprang
From that fine person’s body, for Charles Lamb
Had lived and died a bachelor. But who
Shall say he has not left a mighty host
Of children who are spiritually his kin?
No priest or saint or martyr in the world
Was ever more devoted than he proved,
When round his insane sister who had shed
Their mother’s blood he threw his sheltering arms.
His texture was so fine he softened all
Who knew him with his polished velvet phrase,
Evolved with ease and elegance, and threw
Round homely themes the mellow glowing lights
That shine like halos round the heads of saints.
This Lyndhurst, when a youth, had felt the spell
That Lamb binds on his devotees, and learned
To revel in the essays and the tales,
That keep the name of Lamb alive, and charm
A wide enlarging circle of his friends.
Lv
iIn Richmond at that time, in sixty-five,
The question every day was put to men,
What can a broken gentleman of parts,
Without a previous training, do to earn
His living? While the question asked was not
So hard, the answer was. But men were kind
And all were bound, as brothers in distress,
To lend a helping hand and did. A post
Was found for Lyndhurst in the bank, as clerk,
To keep the books. He took the place, and while
He was not scientific, at the start,
His native sense stood by him, and he learned
At length to be as skillful as the rest.
In this he was like Lamb, and thought of it
With pride, as bending over, hour by hour,
He filled his ledgers with the day’s accounts.
He was but twenty-three and Emily
His sweetheart but a girl. In five years time
He meant to marry her, that is, if fate
Should favor him with luck in his career,
Fair Emily was born at Charlottesville,
And all turned out as they had planned it should:
In five years time they took the marriage vows.
To Lyndhurst Emily surpassed his dreams
Of loveliness. Her exquisite attire
Was always in the best of taste. Her hair.
Once braided, when he met her first, now hung
In dreamy softness, chestnut brown, with eyes
To match. She needed not the opals, pearls,
And diamonds to add charm to throat and arms
And fingers. God had lent her grace. Her soul
Magnetic, strong in personality.
Had set her off above the common crowd.
The house he took to live in was a plain
Frame building on the edge of town, round which
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An acre of good ground invited him
To learn the art of gardening, at which
He soon excelled, as in the banking house.
A Negro servant born near Winchester
Attached himself to Lamb when sorrow came,
Who proved himself devoted to the last.
This Negro’s name was Amos, from the fact,
His father said, “The Lord predicted him.”
The very day that Lamb was born, the nurse
Brought in the tidings that Aunt Dinah’s child
Had called in at the negro quarters, just
An hour before, The children duly thrived,
And at the age of six the master called
Both boys together, and with kindly words
Gave Amos to young Lamb to be his own.
All through their boyhood days they played at games
Together. They behaved like chums. The white
Boy in the combination ruled, and set
The pace. But that was not resented, nor
Did Amos wish it otherwise. He loved
His dear young master better far than life,
And gladly would have died for him. One day,
When Lamb was in the army, he was blue
With homesickness, and wrote his father word
To send up Amos to the camp. But, no,
The father wrote in answer, he would not,
For fear young Amos might be shot. Such care
Had bound the servant to his master, for
The chains of love are stronger far than brass
Or iron fetters bound to hands or feet.
So in the garden both took up the game
Of life to play it there as they had done
Before the great war made the servants free.
“Marse Charles’? was Amos’ life, and he would slave
His head off to bring joy to him. The force
12
Se Te |
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or _ 5
]Of circumstances, not a guilty lite,
Him low in misery and woe. Lamb planned,
And Amos did the work. The garden thrived.
It was a dream of beauty. Some fruit trees,
A few, had been set out in earlier days.
In March the leaf buds drew the birds, and these
Gave Lamb as much delight as anything.
Ouite early every year he had the plough
Turn up the sod in half an acre. Then,
With spades, the flower beds were duly dug.
The April chill was hardly off the ground
3efore the crocuses peeped forth. ‘The wild
Anemones and violets, beside
Hepaticas and celandines, strove hard
To rival the domestic flowers, and quite
Outdid themselves in modest loveliness.
When lilacs were in bloom. and scented shrubs
Transplanted from the woodlands spread their feast,
He knew the spring’s sweet coronal was here.
In apple blossom time his cup was full of joy,
And when the ripe June fruits and berries hung
In luscious clusters on their loaded boughs
His heart was tuned to rhapsodies of praise.
One day his servant Amos said: ‘“Marse Charles,
When you get rich what will you do?” To which
His answer was: ‘‘The first thing I shall do
Is build a mansion like the one we owned.
And have a great big garden there for you,
Madonna lilies, hollyhocks, sweet peas,
And roses growing everywhere shall be
Our precious substance not earth’s sordid wealth.
And giant poppies, full of sleep and dreams,
Shall spread their petals for us, and the days
Of summer shall float o’er us like the clouds.”
13
Had burned his house down o’er his head, and brought
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43
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In making o’er again our broken lives;
He begged for strength and wisdom to devise
A plan whereby this blood revenge should cease,
While, in the dark, he groped among his thoughts
To find God’s way himself to bring it to
An end. At last, it seemed, the light he sought
Was on the way. He called a few good friends,
Who had the qualities he needed most,
Good sense, and heart, and back of both the strength
To put through any measure deemed the best.
The upshot of their meeting and debate
Resulted in a solemn form of vow,
To root the thing out stem and branch, and start
At once to do it too. They formed a league
And then called in two blackguards whose vile talk
Had kept the enmity from dying out.
They said: “Dave Allen, you and Jake Maguire
Have got to go away. We give you time,
Two days, no more, to settle your accounts.
[f after that we find you hereabout
We mean to break your necks.” That was enough..
Inside another week no person knew
What had become of Dave and Jake. The place
That knew them once ne’er heard of them again.
And where was Mary Burns? In Turkey Gorgé
She struggled with resentment in the men.
They felt they had been sold, the thing a trick,
That took them to the meeting, planned and staged
To cut their throats, and fill them full of shot,
And vowed they would get even in the end,
Or die. “The Angel with the smile’ began
A canvass, man to man, in all their homes,
Enlisting all the women on her side,
Who at the first were full of venom too,
And urged the men to settle every score.
44
sh SEBS EOE ROLL LETRA,With madness in their blood the thing was hard,
But, like a leech, “The Angel’’ meant to suck
The poison from them. if it took her life,
A victim to the curse of ignorance.
Like Parson Brown, she too had laid the blame
To certain idle loafers of the glen,
Who baited all the others with loud talk,
And bragged about their own exploits and deeds.
Around the general store, the loafing place,
One week-end evening gathered groups of men.
The talk was much as usual, Bill and ‘Tom
With boastful speech inciting evil thoughts.
Along came Mary Burns, and by design,
It was no accidental happening.
The smile for OnCe had faded from her face,
And, going straight to Bill and Tom, she said:
“You have been doing devil’s work so long,
Here in the glen, no work of righteousness
Can prosper. You have sown the seeds of hate,
And now the guiltless women bear the cross,
While little children, innocent of blame,
Have been bereft of loved ones. Shame! Shame!!
Shame!!!
I lay God’s curse upon you. He shall blast
Your hearts with lightnings of His wrath. Begone!
I say the curse is on you. Leave the place.”
While, in her face, the angel of the day
Of judgment seemed ‘‘The Angel with the smile.’’
The superstitions of the hills awoke
In all who heard the little lady speak,
And such subdued resentment stirred their hearts.
That Bill and Tom slunk off, with downcast eyes,
And left the glen forever. So it came
That Mary Burns had done the will of God.
The night before, Nick Biddle took his horse,
45ee Se ee ee a ee eee
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Rode forth, with murder in his heart, to give
A salutary lesson to the foe
By shooting one of Benton’s clan, who stole
The girl he loved, and now was also charged
With leading all the Benton men to fight.
He left the Hollow, climbed the Ridge, and rode
Across from Turkey mountain, where he hid
Till night and darkness sheltered his approach.
He had the cabin spotted, saw the smoke
That curled above the chimney, saw the lamp
And light that flickered from it, saw the logs
Piled on the grate, and slowly crept until
He had the distance wanted. Then he raised
His gun, a Winchester, and took a sight,
That all the mountain knew was deadly aim.
Nick Biddle was a young man fully grown,
But under twenty, and had gone to school
To Mary Burns the day she opened up.
He had been slow and ignorant and tough,
But Mary Burns had seen a noble man
Beneath his checkered shirt, and had appealed
To all the spirit in him to be good,
To lead a worthy life, and give to God
His heart, his thoughts, his feelings and his deeds.
He thought of this the moment he took aim,
To send the bullet on its deadly work;
He hesitated in the act, and then,
“The Angel with the smile’ had conquered death;
He dropped his arm, and turned away, and prayed.
In August Mary Burns was taken ill,
And school could not go on. ‘The doctor came,
Who said she had typhoid, and must be kept
In quiet till the fever ran its course.
At once she sent a message up the ridge
To Hollow Gorge, requesting Parson Brown,
46If he could get away, to come at once.
Neglecting eve erything, the parson came,
As “always to the bedside of the sick,
And now, especially, to one he knew
Was every way so worthy of his help.
“The Angel with the smile’’ said simply this:
“Your people asked us to a teast of Joy,
In that revival service on the Ridge,
And that was good of you. It was no fault
Of yours that Satan came to spoil the feast.
Now will you not return the ee lent,
By asking your chief men to came down here,
Tomorrow, next day, soon, I want to see
Them here? The parson promised and withdrew,
In three days Parson Brown returned, and brought
Six men who represented what was strong
And best in Hollow: Gorge. They all were awed,
As feeling they were in a room of death.
And with them came six men of Benton's gang.
“The Angel with the smile’? was smiling now,
Though burning up with fever. Then she said:
“My brothers, | have called you here today,
To ask you to join forces with my friends
And neighbors in this place, to kill the snake
Of hatred that has caused so much distress.
The work is slipping from my hands, I feel,
But Parson Brown and I. in full accord.
Would join the noble people in Our COVves
To work for peace and harmony. We owe
That much to all the boys and girls to come,
Our honor is at stake. Our traitor-lives
Deny the grace of God, and shut Him out.
And turn our prayers to mockery and sin.”
A solemn vow was taken by the men
To see that Mary Burns and Parson Brown
47Had not been loving them in vain. ‘They pledged
| Their best to stop the fighting of the clans.
| ~y All this was in the eighties. Long ago
| ) | Death claimed the leading figures in the play,
i | Ena¢@ted on the ridge. But Parson Brown
| | And Mary Burns survive the wrecks of time.
A thousand lives enshrine the soul of each,
; | And pass along their message to the world.
| | The gospel he proclaimed has won the day,
And has its grip on all the mountains still.
The other gospel, preached by Mary Burns
y To supplement her story of the Christ,
k The gospel of intelligence, and life
t | Delivered from dense ignorance and dirt,
s ) a
: | | Has spread through all the vales. The colleges
: | And schools of every sort have proved their worth,
And shown the splendid diamonds in the rough,
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The strong fine strains of Anglo-Saxon blood,
A hardy race of splendid thinking men,
With courage and with force to match their hills.
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Cotton Fields in Bloom
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i
The manor house was built upon a plan
Originating in the spacious days
When leisure was a luxury enjoyed
By every man of substance in the south.
Nobody knew the architect who drew
Upon his fancy for the vast details
But everybody knew who built the house,
And who the owner was that prospered there
It was a house baronial in its size
Intended to be used on royal lines
For comfort and for entertainment both.
Verandas ran around the spacious sides:
High columns graced it prettily in front:
Within the portico a balcony
Hung on the level of the second floor:
Great lawns and rows of trees, and drives, and clumps
Of shrubbery, laid out with taste and care.
Made such a picture of refinement. wealth.
And ease, a traveller wondered who the prince
Or potentate might be residing there.
It occupied a hill top, on a crest on
Of gently rolling land, near Milledgeville. .
In central Georgia. All the uplands, crowned
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With forests, filled with oaks and hickories,
Smiled down on valleys rich in bottom lands,
Edging a stream called Fishing Creek, that wound
Its crystal waters, like a silver thread,
Among the hills, along the capitol,
Before it paid its tribute to the fair
Oconee, then the Altamaha on
Unto the sea. The spot picked for the house
Was meant to give a wide survey on all
The country round. For this was in the days
Before the civil war, and all the big
Estates were managed in a lordly way.
The planter was a man of size himself.
He stood six feet, within an inch, in height,
His full broad shoulders marking him with strength.
The finely chiseled features of his face
Were made distinctive by a fiery eye,
In color brown. He wore a full length beard,
The fashion of his day, and he had hair
That hung in bushy locks of brownish black,
Which reached below his neck. In middle life,
Full blooded, vigorous, and strenuous,
He was not in the class of lazy dons
Inflamed imaginations gave the South.
The mistress of the manse was fully fit
To take her place beside so good a man,
She had been born a Rutherford, who had
As fine a line of ancestors as walked
The soil of Georgia. She was styled the belle
Of Fulton County in her younger days,
And still was in the thirties, not a hair
Yet showing gray, and not a prettier cheek,
Or mouth, or eye among the charming girls.
Abounding health had added special charms
To features, actions, spirit, all subdued
50By silken manners, lady-like address,
And all the lures of gracious womanhood.
But when her lovely children, six in all,
Disposed themseves about her on her chair
She then was glorified as when one sees
A halo round madonna and the child.
Two thousand acres, starting in the hills,
And stretched along the banks of Fishing Creek,
Comprised the vast plantation of this prince.
His name was Major Lawson, also called
The judge, both titles earned, not loosely given.
While resting in his easy chair at noon,
Placed on his front veranda, he could see
For miles around a sight that warmed his heart.
His fertile hills rolled slowly to the creek.
Upon his right and left the orchards stood
That yearly hung with bushels of ripe fruit -
While full in front, upon the lower slopes,
The cotton fields were placed. Still further on.
In bottom lands whose soil was full of wealth.
Great fields of waving corn enriched the eye,
The major though was not an idle man
Who loafed his time away, or spent a gun
In hand, pursuing game off in the woods.
He was a planter of the better sort.
Promoting industry, and civinge time,
Apart from strict employments on the place,
To raising civic standards in the state.
And giving close attention to the law.
Thee was a sense of order in the way
He placed his fruit trees, laid out cotton fields
And hemp, and planted rows of corn along
The meadow flats. He roused his hands on time
By clanging a huge bell, and had their work
Assigned the night before, so that all 1 cnew
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Their tasks, and time was never idly thrown
Away. A life like that was not a dream
Of idleness, of oriental ease
And luxury. He did not loll about
On lounges while his servants fanned the flies
And he imbibed mint julep by the hour.
His wife, but three years younger than himself,
He wedded when a girl of seventeen,
And now, in eighteen fifty-nine, they had
A son just twenty-one, whose name was Jim,
A daughter twenty named Louise, a son
Just two years younger, Tom, another, Dave,
About sixteen, and then two daughters, twelve
And fourteen—this in fifty-nine, the time
My story opens on the family lite,
Within the manor house of Oglethorpe.
The peach bloom gave such promise in the spring
Of fifty-nine the planter saw a crop
That seemed to him would net a tidy sum,
In apple blossom time the eldest son,
An image of his father, meant to wed,
And bring his bride to share the opulence
Abounding at the manor house and erounds.
Inside the family circle there was stir,
All members taking lively part in plans
To make the eldest happy bringing home
His bride. No less an interest had the slaves,
For Major Lawson always spoke to them
In fondness for his son young Master Jim.
His good old mammy Dinah seemed to feel
A due responsibility, and said:
“Why ain’t I raised him, Honey,” and her eyes
Would roll around to emphasize her words,
Describing with details his baby traits,
And prophesying great things in reserve.
92The wedding bells were ringing in due time,
So when the honeymoon was past,
And cotton fields in bloom had turned the rows
To fluffy beds of roses to the eye,
First white, then changed to red, until a sea
Of glory waved in billows on the slopes,
A great reception followed at the manse,
And planters with their families came for miles,
Felicitating Jim and Marjorie,
Rejoicing in their happiness. The lawn
Was gay with all the colors Iris boasts,
And women in their gorgeous hoop-skirts graced
The happy scene, as 1f they each and all
Had stepped out of a picture. Melody
From flutes and violins and other strings
Invited all to dancing, and the lead
Was taken by the bridegroom and his bride
Who danced a minuet with grace and skill.
And such a feast of good things followed next.
That neighbors said they never saw the like.
A host of servants had prepared the food,
Assembling the details weeks in advance.
Had set out tables near the hawthorne hedge,
And scoured the benches till they fairly shone.
The major, who was gifted with a voice
And fluency of phrase that won the name,
“The silver-tongued debater of the hills,”
(To set him off above the lowland plains)
Invited all to act as if at home.
And help themselves. The tables groaned with meats,
With spare ribs, bacon, beef and venison,
With ducks, wild turkey, chickens, quail and goose,
With vegetables, corn-pone, and breads and cakes,
Of various kinds, with jams, preserves and sweets,
Indeed it was pronounced the richest feast
53
ern
— wartiing
1Sve setessF2sehetetst
ee ed
= iA ewes eq ee ered stats:
The state of Georgia ever saw, and healths
Were drunk in classic style to bride and groom.
When, after all had gone, and evening came,
The moon arose, and shed its silver sheen
That made all things so beautiful, it seemed
As if a bit of fairy land had slipped
Across the night, and settled on the hills.
Then one by one the servants sauntered in
From all the nearby patches. Near the manse,
Off in the Negro quarters, there was joy
Beyond description. They had taken pains
To celebrate young master’s wedding too,
And started in with fiddle and the bow
And half a dozen banjos twanging strong
The old time melodies. Two scores of men
Endowed with singing voices swelled the songs,
Their tenors rising clear and musical,
Their bassos giving fundamental strength
Of tone. The women’s voices held the leads
And carried all the airs. All knew the worth
Of syncopated time, and twisted strains
Together with a skill that only comes
By nature. All their dances were the kind
Used everywhere in Georgia, first, the clog
With double shuffles, while some expert beat
His hands or patted juba on his knees,
Up to the great square dances where the beaux
All swung their partners to their places where
In streams of perspiration, laughing loud,
They called the fiddlers for the next quadrille,
And so the merry evening flew away,
A round of feasting and of merriment,
Sweet Marjorie was full of love’s romance;
She too had known the old plantation life,
For over on the fertile river banks
54Where Shellman Heights o'er look the Etowah,
|
Che had been reared among the Crawfords. names
Among the best, that live and shine above
The stars forever in the firmament.
And other suitors she had had. Indeed,
Such was her beauty, such her modesty,
That lovers vied with one another strong
To win her smiles and favor. But when Jim
Arrived upon the scene, the jig was up.
His manliness quite swept her off her teet
And Marjorie became his sweet-heart wife.
Upon the big plantation everywhere
The judge enforced respect for law on all,
As also for religion. Not the whites alone,
But black folks also were his daily care.
In business he was honest to the core.
His manners had been learned among the good
Refined old planters of the noblest sort,
Whose courtesy to inferiors was as marked
As was his chivalry toward the gentler sex,
On points of honor he was clear, clean-cut,
A gentleman deserving of the name.
The planters of the large estates, like lords
Of old surrounded by large retinues
Supreme within their vast domains, saw life
Upon a scale befitting many a king.
Another year rolled round, the famous one
In which the Democratic party split,
And Lincoln was elected President.
Men’s feelings ran so high the air was filled
With threats of quick secession. E’er the year
Had closed the great Palmetto State had led
The way. The new year, sixty-one, began
Amid the wildest interest through the South.
A great convention of the people met
53ee ee LN Be eo
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At Milledgeville to argue out the case.
Debate began and feeling ran so high
It soon became apparent that the die
Was cast. But not without a difference
Of strong opinion. Major Lawson joined
With Alexander Stephens to uphold
The rights of states, but urged the view to stay
Within the Union. In the end they lost.
“The states are older than the Union, sir,’
Flashed Toombs to Stephens in the great debate.
Majorities prevail, hence both men gave
Their full adhesion to the course pursued,
And, on the eighteenth day, the new year saw
The state of Georgia voting to secede.
The cotton fields in bloom that very year
Would see Louise a happy bride, for June
Was chosen as the loveliest month of all.
But drums of war were beating when the month
Of April brought the sections to a clash,
And dreams of weddings faded out of sight.
The major won his shoulder straps in days
Gone by, beyond the Rio Grande, when Polk
Was brought to war with Mexico. And now
He tendered to his state the services
Of one who knew the strategy of war.
His son, young Master Jim, was swift to join
A father whom he loved with all his heart,
And Marjorie was willing that he should,
Though all her soul went out to him in love.
Louise’s fiance, a William Lowndes,
Enlisted at Atlanta, so that when
The month of June arrived, and breathed and smiled
On cotton fields in bloom, instead of brides
And bridegrooms, there was seen the awful face
Of strife. The major and his two sons Jim
56
_ = ays, ~And Tom enlisted with their kin at home
At Milledgeville. The bugle call stirred blood
As nothing else had ever roused the South.
“My noble husband,”’ said his lovely wite
To Major Lawson, “you are more than life
To me, and [ would die to help your cause,
3ut if you did not do your duty now,
Upholding honor at the point of death,
I should not want to look on you again.”
This was the spirit of the daughters, born
In Dixie land, the free land long ago.
They breathed it in the air, and on their knee
Beside their mother’s couches, saying prayers,
They felt the sacred worth of Dixieland.
‘Twas boots and saddles, horse and off! |
Commissions came the majors rank was chat
Experience had made him brigadier.
The baton of a general now was his.
With troops from Georgia's mountains, hills,
He hastened north and joined Virginia’s men,
At that time sorely pressed with work to do.
Young Jim was with him too. He saw the te:
Stream down the cheeks of Marjorie, and felt
The separation fairly tore his soul.
But as a former knight had said to one
On going off to war, “I could not love
Thee dear so much loved I not honor more,”
So said the gallant Jim to Marjorie.
Before the summer waned young Tom |
All interest in the place. His thought went of
Beyond the cotton fields to where his kin,
Among the armies, camped along the hills
Just east the Blue Ridge mountains far away
One day they missed him from his room at hi
—
he day
ied.
and plains,
1ad lost
mie,
Before the year was out young Dave had slipped
--
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Away, and now in misery the wife
Of General Lawson saw she had to face
A world alone. Within her care she found
There were four lovely women with the bloom
That youth and girlhood gave them all. Just what
Her dangers were she did not know. ‘The slaves
Might start revolt now that the men were gone,
Or make attack upon her four choice girls,
Defenseless, weak, and wholly in their power.
No Lawson ever made surrender. More,
No Rutherford had ever failed to rise
In any crisis to her moral height.
When Mistress Lawson found herself bereft,
Her husband, sons, and men folks gone to war,
She summoned all her native strength to match
A situation charged with evil chance.
Assembling all the slaves, she told them plain
The judge would be away a good long time,
That she was left in charge, and every day
Would manage all details, and give commands
About the work, that none should be abused,
But all required to work as 1f the eyes
Of Major Lawson were upon them all.
When he came back she hoped the hands could show
How well they had behaved while he was gone.
The nervy woman firmly laid the law
In terms so clear and kind they all obeyed,
And from that day the agitators found
No chance of disaffection in the men.
3ut ah! the many nights she lay awake
Imagining the horrors round her home.
To pit her weakness and that of her girls
Against the brutal instincts of a race,
Who in their minds were children, in their lusts
Still savage as their kin in Africa,
58
Sy eg ne rast -She saw was utter folly. If she won
Her brain must master their brains, and her will
Must be imposed on theirs that all their thoughts
And actions should be governed from above.
|
Concocting schemes to fit each case that might
Arise, she schooled herself to instant thought
Regarding all details about the manse,
And all emergencies that might arise.
And so the summer passed on through July
With tardy tidings of the first attacks,
And when the new year, sixty-two, set in
She waited anxiously for news. None came
Until, the cotton fields in bloom once more
In June, a courier brought heart breaking word
That William Lowndes had been shot down and died.
(Ah! poor Louise!) at Seven Pines, and Jim
At Fair Oaks. Ah, the bitter loss to fair
Sweet Marjorie, a widow now, the bride
That yesterday had danced the minuet
With Jim out yonder on the grassy lawn!
Off in the negro quarters there was grief,
For Master Jim was such a favorite
All now remembered how his happy smiles
Rewarded them for service nicely done,
His kindness warmed the hearts of old and young,
And when his good old mammy heard his fate,
Poor Dinah took to bed, and mourned and wailed.
Because she’d “raised him, Honey, from a child.”’
To General Lawson men looked up, as men
Will always look when brains and strength of will
Grip situations calling for a rare
Unusual mastery of the art of war.
His skill was of a kind that showed in Lee,
In Stonewall Jackson, Johnston, Gi rdon, Hill,
Endearing him to those in his command
’
59
5 ee ytee ee a
Pr oe
ee eT
re eee eee
Who loved him as ‘“‘the bravest of the brave.”
No difficulty was too great for him
To try to overcome it. Sacrifice
Became the leader, hence he gave his time,
His strength, his money, influence, his all
To purchase victory. His planter days
Inured him to tasks that taxed his strength,
So night and day he struggled with the troops,
Accepting hardness as the soldier's lot.
They followed where he led, and Lee would say:
“T have no fear, when battles rage around,
That troops are losing ground, when once | think
Old Lawson leads off
Or holds his ground
To Lawson there was grief too deep for words
yonder on the right,
like adamantine rock.”
When messengers announced the fate of Jim.
But in the presence of his suffering men
He shed no tears. Still, in the midst of toil,
An image of the faithful wife, alone,
Bereaved. in need of consolation, rose
Before his mind, intensifying pain
Unutterably severe. However, days
Requiring all his thought and skill, that called
For action in the field, great armies soon
To clash and vast details to claim his mind,
Were now upon him with their cares, therefore,
He resolutely set himself to face
The duties next before him. Lee at grips
With Hooker was the next thing on the boards.
It seemed as if the cotton fields had bloomed
With greater beauty in the month of June,
In eighteen sixty-three. The Negro hands
Had taken special care, in April past,
That in the planting all the seeds should fill
The rows in straight alignment. Just three feet
60Apart they grew, and when they were set out
Some extra acres had been ploughed. Old Jake,
The Negro overseer, since whites were gone,
Had said to all the farm hands, ‘‘\We must work
Much harder now that master 1s away
To show our mistress what we think of her.”
All through the month of May the tiny plants
Had struggled through the soil out to the light
And tossing all their heads with hi Ap] NESS,
Had waved their leaves of green in merriment,
As salutations to the passers-by.
The early days of June had brought great showers
That drenched the thirsty earth for inches deep;
On top of that a few days’ suns had warmed,
And steamed the cotton rows. But at the end,
Responding to the air, the rain, the sun,
A thousand acres burst their hearts with joy,
And, lo! the wonder of the month of June
Had come to life arrayed in garments new.
A myriad of white blossoms opened up;
Next day they turned to red; a myriad more,
In snow white raiment clad, danced forth to take
The place their sisters had the day before,
For all the world like roses red and white
And shaking free their petals all the fields
Of cotton were in bloom, and, full of glee,
They laughed and clapped their hands, and danced with
joy.
As Mistress Lawson gazed out on the fields.
Surrounded by her lonely girls, she spoke
Of Jim and William Lowndes, now dead a year.
And while with aching heart she eased the wounds
Inflicted on Louise and } Vlarjorie,
She offered up a prayer of gratitude
That Henry, her dear husb and, wounded sore
C]es ee ee NE ke ee te ed
ee et ee LL Lt
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At Chancellorsville in early May, was well,
And, in the saddle once again, was gone
With Lee to press the fighting on the foe
In Pennsylvania. All the rest of June,
When evening came, they sought the porch, and watched
The fields of cotton, dreaming of their men,
And, on into July they waited word,
For everyone had learned a great attack
Above the line was imminent. July
The eighth, a horseman at full run was seen
Turn off the highway, take the lane, and make
Straight for the house. His message was quite brief :
“At Gettysburg, in action, fell, July
The third. our gallant General Lawson, killed.”
Louise and Marjorie reached out their arms,
And clasped their weeping mother to their hearts.
The younger children, Ella May and dear
Virginia, cried aloud, and ah! the tears,
The bitter tears of sorrow in that home.
Their prop was gone—the man of strength and heart
es
So good and brave and kind! “It cannot be,”
They said, ‘‘we shall not have him more, not
Hear his cheery voice, or know his words of love,
Or feel the pressure of his lips, his dear
Caresses, and feel safe, supported by
His wise and sweet provision for his home.
The summer lingers long within the state
Of Georgia. Sunshine, showers, fresh fruits and flowers
Are free there. Starting back in early March,
The days are warm, and stay so, till the short
November days draw near. Sweet April comes
And dances like a bride. And while her heart
Is in the hills the sweet magnolias bloom,
And peach trees are in bud, among the first:
Wild shrubs and mountain laurels come to life,
62Her call is heard, and so spring thaws begin
In upper Georgia, and the freshets start
To swell the rivulets that feed the streams,
And all go singing southward to the plains ;
While from their source along the slopes there comes
A sound of water, trickling from the springs.
The early flowers hear the voice and rouse,
And quickly starting rise to greet the sun,
The sweet warm sun of summer. In its rays
All things renew their youth, and take on life.
The birds are singing sweeter then. ‘Their cups
Are brimming full of joy, and, running oer
The lip, are spilled in liquid melodies
Of tone. All day the earth smiles till it weeps
Its joy in rain drops on the plain, and these
Sweet tears are seeds of other joys, that come
In music of the insect world, the hum
Of tunes the katydids and locusts know,
To sing in madrigals. The beetles boom
Their joy, and bumble-bees in bassos join
In singing tunes we sometimes hear when sung
On trips to Fairyland. The warm sweet days,
The gift of summer to our happy earth,
Were never sweeter than they are among
The old red tops, the clayey tops that smile
In Dixie land, among the Georgia hills,
The land of lilies, roses, pines and palms,
Of myrtle, ivy, vines and sycamores,
The year of eighteen sixty-three was fraught
With many dangers to the sunny South.
Emancipation at the start had set
The Negroes free as far as northern law
Could do so. In the south that law was null
And void. But who could say it might not work
63
. a > E > . . a > 1c.
From sleeping through the few short winter months
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ae
Much mischief? Agitators tried to use
It as a lever to pry loose the blacks,
And start an insurrection. All that spring
Had Mistress Lawson wondered what her fate
Would be, if, in the dead of night, her slaves,
Inspired by thoughts of liberty, misled
By base designing leaders, should revolt,
Attacking her and those four darling girls
Committed to her care. She did not know,
From day to day, what maggots in their brains
Might hatch a fearful brood of scorpions;
And should they sting, a deadly poison was
In wait for all. No slave had known a day
When love had failed in treatment of their needs.
[ll-usage never was allowed by those
Who were in charge as overseers. When death
Or sickness sought the Negro’s door, she first,
Had always gone to visit the distressed.
The sunshine and the shadows fell on all,
But Mistress Lawson, in her husband's days,
Had always diffused sunshine so it fell
Abundantly across the cabin floor.
Her servants all had been respectful, bowed
With marked good manners, done their work with skill,
But all were ignorant, impulsive, swift
Emotions sweeping through their souls at times,
And what sharp sudden turn affairs might take
Had taxed the wisest to predict.
The whites were in their power now; their lives,
Their fortunes, and their sacred honor too,
Were in the keeping of the southern slaves.
Would they prove true or false to such a trust?
The poetry in folks is never dead.
Hence, in the long drawn summer days, the songs
Of Negroes picking cotton in the fields,
64Or in the meadows hoeing corn, were good
To hear. The women felt much sater when
Thev heard the darkies singing. Holy bells
Would ring on Sunday mornings. To the church
The ladies in the carryall would go,
And lead the Negroes’ worship, as of yore
Old Master led them to the house of God.
For Mistress Lawson there could never be
Again such happy days as those now dead.
The dear old hills of Georgia still were full
Of poetry as in olden times, but now
She could not read the signs or sing the tunes,
3ut hope lives on eternally in men
And women who accept life’s gifts from God,
Two sons were left to comfort her, though both
Were in the army, and the worst might come.
The cotton had been picked, the corn was husked,
And winter ushered 1n another year.
News came from Tom that he was still in health,
That Yankee bullets were not made for him,
His regiment had fought its way across
Old Tennessee, and held the mission ridge,
And meant to see the struggle through till death.
Another letter came in May that said
His fellows had been sent to stem the tide
Of war that pressed its way on southward now.
In less than one full month another bomb
Came hurtling through the air, and once again
The old plantation turned to grief and tears.
Tom had been killed at Kennesaw. He fell
Just where the mountain meets the plains, and died.
And Dave was wounded, little Dave, the last
And youngest of her splendid men. Oh death.
Thou hast a sting! And grave thou hast for some
A crushing victory! But not for all.
65Ce ee So ee)
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SEIT
Poor Mistress Lawson long ago had been
Prepared to hear the worst, accepting such
As Heaven should send to be her lot in life.
Her heart had been so crushed and broken twice
3efore. no blow could blast her soul much worse,
Her hair had been turned gray, just over night,
When that dear husband of her youth was struck.
From gray to white it went, and now she seemed
Much older than her years would indicate.
But Dave was only wounded. ‘There was hope
That he would live, and in the end he did—
A hopeless imbecile, from wounds that wrecked
His nervous system past all human aid.
The Negroes in the cabins seemed to feel
Within themselves the sorrows of the manse.
As soon as word leaked through that they were free,
A nameless dread oppressed them. Did it mean
They had to leave the place at once, and go
From Oglethorpe, the manor they had loved?
The bulk of them were born upon the place,
And loved it as men love their childhood homes.
They owned these hills, had tilled this soil, had kept
The chief place in their hearts for all the whites,
Who loved them in return, and sought their good
With kindly ministries. What frightful thing
Was this that they were free? Where should they go?
‘Tis true some sensed their freedom as a prize,
And stole away. A few were lured off.
A big majority had come to plead
That Mistress Lawson still would keep them there,
And pledged her faithful service in return.
So now, in eighteen hundred sixty-four,
When cotton fields had burst in bloom again,
Outspreading all their rosy glory, fed
By springs of life eternally supplied
66From reservoirs in nature never drained,
The lady in the manse was forced to face,
By sad reminders of her noble dead,
The fact that life renews itself each year.
Her husband and her four dear sons had bloomed
In glory, like the cotton fields that bloomed
The vears they died. She fancied that the soul
Ot nature too was bleeding with her own
That even in their beauty cotton fields
Were sighing full of grief. Transferring thus
Her personal experience to the flowers
She easily imagined they were sad
While murmuring requiems for her holy dead.
The cotton fields had bloomed. and now the balls
Of fluffy cotton hung upon their stalks,
And must be picked. From early August on
Till Christmas time the burrs would ripen, then
Would burst their pods, unroll their fibrous wealth,
And thrust their glossy capsules from the stems.
The armies had been calling for supplies,
And all that could be spared was freely given.
It seemed that nothing was too good, that naught
Should be denied. Those whitened fields were picked
And laid upon the altars with their hearts,
A consecration of their lives without
A thought of sacrifice. The family plate
Was melted for the guns, or sold to keep
The army from impoverishment. Some gave
Until they hardly had enough to hold
Themselves together. Thus, at Oglethorpe,
Did Mistress Lawson. thinking of her dead.
A daughter of the cause they all held dear,
But when November came wild rumors flew
About the big plantation. Some unnamed,
Invisible atrocity had struck
6]See sess F2Serrte
ee ee en
Seer te ee ot
Them full of terror. Could it be defined:
Could any of the horrors be believed?
The day of Judgment was at hand, some said,
And strange, mysterious prophesies were made.
Within the Negro’s heart the strain was felt,
Until some fled as if a Nemesis
Was sounding in their ears. Atlanta was
The source that fed their superstitious fears.
In time the ugly shape took vital form.
‘Twas Sherman’s army headed for the sea,
To blaze a path across the cotton fields,
And leave the land a charnel house behind,
Which he called hell. Not down a country lane,
In single file, parading, did they march.
They cut a swath the width of sixty miles
Across the lovely state, its fairest part,
And left it desolate. Where all was bright,
A ruin smoked to heaven. The stores of food
Were seized as prizes fair in war. [states
Were looted, houses burned, and slaves removed,
Or urged to go away. ‘The fiery scourge
Poured down through Milledgeville, across the vast
Plantation where the Manor House with all
[ts precious inmates stood. The house was spared,
The women unmolested, but the slaves,
The live stock, crops, out-buildings, stores, supplies,
Were swept into oblivion. Not a trace
Of all their former loveliness was left,
Except the rolling hills, the same sweet air
And skies, and memory that bound the past
In golden chains of love and tenderness.
Some faithful servants in the house had stayed,
Also, a few old farm hands had remained,
And as the days went by some more returned,
3ut Oglethorpe was never more the same.
68Dear Marjorie, in time, returned to dwell
Among her kin along the Etowah. :
Louise, Virginia, Ella-May, and Dave,
: E Tay, 3 > | rpaTA sf “oO share
(Poor Dave no longer sane!) were left to s
With Mistress Lawson naught but misery.
Five years trailed slowly by, and mid the wreck
The woman, who had kept a heart ot oak
Through all the fiery trial of the war,
Was old at fifty, broken in her health, )
And felt the thread of life must soon be cut. ay
A family portrait, made when they were young,
Had shown the major in his handsome prime,
The bushy locks, the heavy beard, the eyes,
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The wondrous eyes of brown, the shoulders broad
And strong. The lady took the portrait, placed
It where she might behold it night and day,
Within the chamber where she slept and worked,
And, gazing at it longingly, would dream
All o'er again the happy days of yore. ie
Her strength of body failing fast it soon 2
Became apparent nature’s debt was due.
The claim was pressing, and it must be paid
Her in the spring. And so it was. The fields
Of cotton were in bloom again, but scant.
The Manor house unkept, much in decay,
And now the mistress failing too must yield.
Delirium toward the end had brought the past
Once more in vividness before her mind,
And much she talked of major, now away,
And wondered if he would not soon return.
Her fancies were pathetic. She would cal] Fe
In gentle tenderness for Jim and Tom, ; |
And raising up her head one evening, called : .
With all the love of youth in every word, |
“Yes, Henry, I am coming home.” With that
The mistress of the manse had passed away.
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COPYRIGHTED
1925
BY
LINCOLN HULLEY
DELAND, FLA.
PRESS OF THE
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ELOISE MAYHAM HULLEYee ee ee oe ey
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POETIC PRODUCTIONS
By
LINCOLN HULLEY
Lullabies and Slumber Songs
Annie-Laurie: Love-Lyrics
Hiram Abiff, the Builder
Sonnets on the Immortal Bards
Shakespere’s Dream of Fair Women
Moonlight Nights at Palm Beach
King David: Israel’s Lyric Bard
Christina, or Christian Van Dusen’s Law-Suit
Chivalry in Dixie: Metrical Romances
Mike Murphy’s Dream
Campus Memories
Alice Coventry and other Metrical Romances
The Eloise Chimes
Chapel Lyrics of Faith, Hope and Love
Fables and Myths from the Sibyl’s Book
The Jubilate of Rabbi Ben Adam
Christian Hymns
St. Anne and the Children’s Hour
St. Michael and the Dragon: An Epic of the War
Savonarola’s Visions of Judgment
Broken Hearts and Lives
Vesper Songs of Joy, Trust and Praise
Brave Idylls of the Gallant South
Dwellers Beyond the Styx, or Tragedies of Love
Dixie Sketches in Chalk and Charcoal
Ghiberti’s Doors to Paradise and Other Art Poems
A Maker of Dreams and Poetic Fantasies
Gold-Fields, Gold-Skies and Gold-Seekers
A Farmer-Prince
Galloping Westward: A Ballad
A Disciple of Plato
Pipes of Pan
Florida the Beautiful
Ariel and Cinderella
The Holy Land
Pegasus at the Springs of Helicon
Eden, a Paradise of Love
College Lyrics of Idealism and Optimism
Chauncey and Kitty; also Bob’s Dilemma
Earth to Earth, or The Joy of Life
For Better For WorseCONTENTS
Sally in the Valley
30rn Out of Wedlock
Old at Twenty
Earthen Vessels
Judas Iscariot
Mary Magdalene
The Madhouse
Laurel, Ivy and Myrtle
The Rich Man and the Beggar
The Tambourine Gir]
Six Ghosts
The Legion of the Lost
Kiss Thee I Will
The Suicide’s Ghost
Stifle the Brute
The Flesh Pots
A Ghost Rides Forth
The Will is King
The Hidden Self
Our Tribal Gods
Unseen Spirits
The Dead Heart
The Black Vulture1B Sea sh apse ge W
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LS oS Ss Cty ae epee oFede tat ssThere’s a dear, brown house in the valley,
And a light in the window for me;
The war can’t last, then, to Sally
I hope to return from the sea,
When I said good-bye to the valley,
Trees were in leaf, and the hills
Danced in their joy, while my Sally
Danced in my heart till it thrills.
How often I think of the valley,
And the cottage embowered in vines,
Where the flowers were trained by my Sally
From the rose to the sweet columbine.
Last month I dreamed of the valley:
A festival was held on the green:
But none were so sweet there as Sally:
She looked full as fair as a queen.
Last week I heard from the valley,
Loved ones were waiting for me:
First of them all, I said, Sally
Is nearest and dearest to me.
Then came a flash from the valley,
Swift as a bolt from the blue:
Death came and claimed lovely Sally,
Killing the joy in me too. =
SALLY IN THE VALLEY.
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Then, while they grind their teeth, we'll have a feast
To beat, Belshazzar’s in the amcient East,’
The thing was greased. The fellows shot it through;
Like lightning from the sky it hit us hard;
No finer stroke had come from out the blue,
And, so, the spread was on, the date, and card.
And all the while, remember, up my sleeve
[ had the sweet consent of Genevieve.
THE SEQUEL
At that class banquet all the things I said
Were saturated with an ego’s mighty I;
lor I was bound to get it in the head
Of Genevieve | was no common guy;
What fools we are when women are around,
Though in our own eyes heroes I'll be bound!
She heard my history from the ancient days
Of Noah’s ark, and all my valorous deeds;
[ wreathed myself in laurels, tvys, bays;
And exploits beating Samson grew like weeds;
She listened with abated breath, the while
She turned on me that Mona Lisa smile.
rom that time on my spirit felt a strain,
For [ was puzzled how to make her out;
Had all my eloquence been spent in vain?
Pshaw! Virtue is its own reward. “I doubt,
If any fellow has a chance to win her hand,
She seems to hold herself in full command.”
But when commencement came that first good year,
J found myself manoevered out of place;
20
ev tke
CueSome silly chap had edged me off. No tear
Was shed. I took it in the best of grace,
And made my mind up when next year began
To go hot-footed after her. Oh. man !
And so I did. She seemed to like it, too:
[ dared to ask if I might make a call ;
I wrote her several scented billet-doux,
And sent her flowers. and candy, yes, and, all
The while, I was so undone by that smile,
She once let fall on me, it still could rile,
Hope springs eternal, and | lived on hope;
My soul was addled, in a stupor, dazed;
Some fiend incarnate must have fed me dope;
My heart with anguish was now nearly crazed;
She loved me not, she loved me well, it seems,
And Genevieve filled all my waking dreams.
SOPHOMORE WISDOM
What place has study in a scheme like this?
Why, that was taken at our meals in speech ;
To some it came in sleep, to others. bliss!
It never came at all, was out of reach:
But most of us in deadly earnest fought
To master every subject we were taught.
It makes one sore when critics scowl and frown
At colleges, as though made up of bums;
The fellows burn the midnight oil. and crown
Their toil with music from the fife and drums:
The people hear the drums, and think that’s all:
They never know the work done in the hall.
21
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So, year by year, the college piles in heaps
The wisdom left upon its common tray;
The Sophomores contribute it for keeps,
The Seniors never take a bit away;
At least they say that’s so. We take the gaff,
And join good-naturedly the general laugh.
Our crowd was made to bend its back to work;
‘here were no simple courses offered us;
I had to labor like a hungry Turk;
All got their feathers ruffled in the fuss,
But when the thing was over we were glad
To don the Junior dignity like mad.
Our wisdom was beyond dispute, I know,
For were it not, a fist-fight had ensued;
We knew we knew a thing or two, I trow,
And stood to our opinions firmly glued;
Still when the year was over we unbent,
And advertised our learning as we went.
But Genevieve was modest as of old,
And just as charming, I would have you know;
Yet still to me her manner formal, cold,
Of any hidden fires would give no show;
In scholarship she led us with a whirl;
In beauty she excelled the fairest girl.
THE JUNIOR TRAGEDY
Now, by the time the Junior year had reached
Its apex, there were whispers to be heard
That I had hit the clover. It was preached
‘One morning loudly to me that a bird
22Had let the secret out. Go tell that dude
To shut his mouth, or he will find me rude.”’
What, rude? That puts it rather mild. My soul
Was wild to let the world know how J felt.
That was a week before. Just as the goal
Was neared, a Senior hit below the belt,
And knocked my breath away. Could I believe
My eyes? The fellow called on Genevieve.
Well, there I was, cut out! The sky turned black;
I kicked a dog that came to lick my hand:
That made me bluer still: why break the back
Of any brute for that? Go get the bland
Hidalgo of the Senior class, the same
We licked once in that Freshman scrapping game.
In time [ did, but now my heart was sore.
To think that she should chuck me in the street
I vowed I’d never go to see her more:
,
As Vergil said, her sex have fickle feet :
>
Why, hadn’t I lost sleep on her account?
My anger daily swelled a vast amount.
Yes sir, I said that I was through with her:
I had a jilted feeling, much the worse
Because I brooded on it. What a burr
A woman is, and also what a curse!
I could have shipped the lot to Borneo,
And then [ hit a better plan, heigh, ho!
I knew a pretty girl a class below:
What did I do, but ask her for a date?
She gave it too. That settled it. Yes? No?
The world should see I wasn’t so sedate,
23
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But could cut up high-jinks, and kick my heels;
You know of course how such a fellow feels.
A SUMMER REPENTANCE
Now it so happened, when school let out in June,
I stayed to work about the campus. Men
Were scarce, | landed a good job. My tune
Had mingled joy and sadness in it, when
I whistled of a morning, on my round,
And sadder still at twilight, I'll be bound.
For | felt glad to think how quick I'd been
Parading with another girl. It showed
How handy with the ladies I could win,
And saved my self respect. Why, man, the road
Was hardly wide enough when | went by!
And presents! say, the limit was the sky!
But just as surely as the crested wave
Drops to the trough, | hit the shallows too,
And wondered if my heart would ever rave
For any other girl; the best are few;
I wondered too, if I should e’er reprieve
The sentence | had fixed for Genevieve.
About midsummer I[ was taken to a show
By one or two good fellows of my class,
And out there came a singer, full of woe,
Whose song was all about a lovelorn lass,
Rejected by her lover, torn apart
With grief, that swelled and broke her trusting heart.
I thought of Genevieve, and fairly rose
Up from my seat. ‘Sit down’, the fellows said;
24They didn’t know the trouble, nor the blows
My conscience there was dealing on my head;
[ sat it out, but didn’t sleep a wink
That night ; I heard the hangman’s cell-keys clink.
A month remained before the new year brought
The college world together. What an age!
It seemed to me a century. I fought
Wild devils of impatience, nerves, and rage:
The weary days and nights crept slowly past,
But summer ended, school began at last.
A COLD RECEPTION
So now [ should see comely Genevieve,
And iron out the wrinkles I had made:
My soul was porous as a holey sieve
That wouldn't hold its feelings. But | staid
There on the campus till the crowds came in.
And watched the busses closely with a erin,
Ah! there she is, the girl I longed to see:
Just watch her eye me with an icy stare!
Her look was cold and glassy as could be:
To try to speak to her I wouldn't dare:
‘Twas just as plain as daylight she was done:
The mocking-devils played their game and won;
I slunk away far out of sight, and hid:
The world had lost its music. Out of tune,
I ambled round the corridors. and bid
Some guy to hit me for a crazy loon:
They noticed I was out of sorts, and gave
Me all the room ] bargained for, to rave.
25
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The thing had hit me midships. In the dark
I lost my bearings, carried out to sea,
And floated round, a drifting sailless bark,
Without a rudder, aimless, crewless, free;
The women hardly know the damage done,
When once they try to strangle any one.
I thought she ought to like to see me back ;
3ut she was like an iceberg. How could |
Not feel the chill deep down in every crack
Within my marrow-bones! I had to fly,
And keep away from her, and hide my face,
For fear she might ‘be gloating on my case.
How did it end? It didn’t end. J mooned
About for weeks. None knew the reason why.
Some said, ‘Poor Bill is working hard. He spooned
Too much the first three years. He has to try
To make it up, or lose his first degree ;”
I cuffed one man who said that heartily.
THE FOOTBALL GAME
Well, man is made to mourn, not lively youth;
I couldn’t hide the light I had and live,
For I was captain of the football booth,
And had to lick the country. So, forgive
Intrusions of an idle sort like those
That Genevieve imposed upon her beaux.
That football squad was out to beat the world:
It felt its oats, and champed hard on the bit,
And when we got the signal fair, and whirled,
The other side knew surely they were hit;
Each hide was tough as leather, and each head
Was just as hard as bullets made of lead.
26The usual games were played, and then at last.
Thanksgiving Day came round. Al] things were set
To trounce the State, and even up the past;
“I’m for the lumber jack,” [ heard one bet.
He little knew, the gambler, how my heart
Was broken. But his words gave me a start.
“They knocked me oft my feet,” I said; said I,
' I’m coming back.” The thief w ho stele my girl
Is out of luck against a hero. high
In confidence among the boys. Unfurl,
Ye gods, the standards! Here’s to win the game,
Or die attempting it—in glory, not in shame!
I clinched my teeth. and said, they'll know full well
They’ve had the bi iggest battle of their lives:
They may forget their Latin, how to spell,
But not this game. If any man survives
The dust and whirlwind of this crow ning day,
He'll tell his children’s children of the fray.
And so it was. The battle, good and hot.
Was waged relentlessly, while, up and down,
The fallen heroes died. all o’er the lot.
And glory, hallelujah! filled the town:
Then, as they grabbed me, could my eyes deceive?
I saw the happy face of Genevieve.
THE DOOR AJAR
The Mona Lisa smile was gone, an angel-face
Was beaming full of happiness. I saw
In her a radiance full of joy, no trace
Of anger, bitterness, and, so, a thaw
27
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Within my heart began, and soon the ice
Had melted quite away. Ah! She was nice.
Mine was not like the usual run of girls
Who throw themselves at men. I know of one
Who prunes her wings, and primps, or bobs, or curls
Her hair, and waits her prey. And when she’s done,
She has him, as a spider in his net
Has caught a fly, and keeps him as her pet.
That smile had healing in it. What it meant
I did not know. I heard she had declined
An invitation to the game, and went
Alone. What for? J] reasoned. And she dined
That day among the girls. No man could get
Within the charmed circle she had set.
That is, until I saw her smile, and knew,
Or thought | did, the bars would be let down,
If I should come her way. A fair wind blew
As certain as could be. Bring on the crown.
Still, not so fast; perhaps I had misjudged,
And had [| thought so long, I had not budged.
It never pays to be too quick, or soft.
I said unto myself. What if I jump
Right after her, and hang my flag aloft!
She might conclude I was an easy chump;
Go slow! Its just a nibble: wait until
The cork goes down, then hook her at your will.
But, somehow, thinking that of her, I felt
Condemned. It seemed to hold her light and cheap ;
No, no, she was not made of gold you melt,
But pearls and rubies. Man, I could not sleep!
28So eager was I now her smile to greet,
And throw myself most humbly at her feet.
THE RECONCILIATION
So I prepared to face the music. First,
I sent a note clandestinely. Now. look!
She sent it back, unopened: but she burst
Right through her cold reserve, and kindly took
Occasion to invite me to the Hall:
I went as blind as Samson to his stall.
She asked me where I’d been so long; mind that!
“I’ve missed you much, and wondered why you stayed
Away. Perhaps I have offended.” Scat!
I could have kicked myself, and was afraid
To open up, for fear my foolish tongue
Would spill my thoughts as water from a bung,
I told her I had been in torment worse
Than any in the catalog of sin:
That all my days were under some vile curse.
Because that Senior—and, so. “‘] begin
To paste him for his dastardly offense ;”’
Like that I chattered on without much sense.
“Why, Billy!’ That is what she said. Till then
I had been Mr. Deever. Think of that!
She said it twice. I thought about it when
I stumbled into silence in my flat.
That man, she said, was nothing to her heart:
He told me you had asked him take your part.
Well, I was sold! That Soph had cleaned me out;
I was an easy tenderfoot. a mark
29
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For that vile trick, an easy one to rout;
Then I remembered too how prompt that shark,
His roommate, was to fill me full of bunk
About the faithless girls,—the sly, old skunk!
Who laughs the last laughs best, they say; and so
The one-time Soph, and Senior, now a Grad,
Essayed once more to deal me a hard blow;
But I was wise—his effort made me glad.
I handed him the “horse-laff!’’ Up my sleeve
I had the whole thing cooked with Genevieve.
THE MASK AND WIG
The winter term though brought us both a thrill;
I nearly spilled the beans. It came about
This way. The “Mask and Wig” would have to fill
Their drama up by duly trying out
New men. They hit at once on me. I wrote
My name for one, and nearly lost my goat.
The play was melodrama. Some young lord
Made agonizing love to his sweet dame,
And clasped her in his arms, and pledged his word,
That he’d be true till death, and when that came
He still would love her in the other world.
Whereon a rival sundry missiles at him hurled.
The cast was promptly chosen, and I found
That Genevieve was picked to play the part
The sweetheart had; her lover was the hound
Who beat me out in speaking, with an art
That made me feel he might break through the door,
And run away with Genevieve, the bore.
80Besides, I didn’t like to think that yellow dog
Should put his arm around her, ashe did:
The playman coached him so. Then too the hog
Enjoyed the repetitions. Well, I slid
To get an egg or two, and so let fly,
And paste the brute, if haply, in the eye.
He saw me out for blood, and so resigned
But gave no reason. Still, I understood:
They gave the part to me, and | designed
To make it true to life. I knew I could
And so I did; and Genevieve would smile.
And seemed to like the part much after while.
)
,
It was not art to me; the thing was life:
I fell down on my knees, and plead with zeal,
That she should be my happy wedded wife:
Professor said: “To say it right, you feel
The part you play; ”’ I felt the thing all right,
And worshipped, as [| said it. in her sight.
THE COLLEGE PLAY
The fellows guyed me some; that didn’t hurt:
What counted was the way it took her ear:
For Genevieve was not your common flirt:
I had to watch the thing all through, for fear
It might offend proprieties in taste,
And so the whole good thing should go to waste.
She liked it though, I half-way understood ;
For I was such a boob in love my sense
Could not be counted on. She was so good;
She one day lifted all my grave suspense,
31
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And said I was so natural in the part,
She wondered where I’d mastered such an art.
Rehearsals often are a beastly bore,
But this one was not. Quite the other way;
‘The members of the caste all called for more:
And so we got the lines worked out to stay;
The last one found us ready, set to go;
Another night, and on would come the show.
The fame of it had spread out through the town,
Kar in advance. The seats with tickets sold
Like hot cakes. All the students came, and, down
In front, I saw a row of jokers hold
Suspicious-looking carrots in their hand,
And back of them I spied the college band.
But what the big idea was no guess
Of mine could ferret out. I asked a few
But none were wise to it. I do confess
As matters stood they worried me. I knew
Some job was on that night; but when, or what,
Quite bothered me and I was getting hot.
The first act ended, full of life, but tame
Compared to what should follow, by the book:
Nor was the second like the third; the game
Was meant to grow in interest. till we took
The house by storm, half way along the next:
It was a storm all right, not in the text,
THE CURTAIN CALL
“Hurrah for Bill!’ Some pippin duly yelled,
Just as I held the lady in my arms:
32A riot started, not so easy quelled:
The products of at least a dozen farms
Were hurled upon the st: ize in big bouquets,
Enough to fill a dozen good sized trays,
But I was not the only one of whom
They made a target. Girls were in it too:
“Hurrah for Genevieve!’ ’ they yelled.
Was full of fragrance from the
To smother her with glory. What a blow!
It stopped the act and busted up the show.
£2 bie room
A curtain call for Genevieve and me
Was urgent, and it couldn’t be denied :
So there we stood: I felt like ‘ ‘twenty-three.”’
The girls were shouting. singing, and some cried:
What was the point? But Genevieve with Joy
Said, “These are football laurels for you, boy.”’
Well, ’ll be hanged! It hadn’t yet leaked through:
I always was a nut. But now I saw
The boys were celebrating. What to do
Was quite beyond me. No bright, inner law
Had ever flashed its light on stupid me,
Or gifted Bill with happy repartee.
Next day I found I had been sadly fooled,
In part, at least. The lively jolly crowd
Had meant to crown my Senior year, and pooled
Their wits to do it, in a way so loud
That I should hear its echoes for all time,
As Jim, the cellege poet, said in rhyme.
But they had planned it e’er I reached the peak
Of making love to Genevieve: a few
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Were in this little game of hide-and-seek,
To rob me of the fun J had in view,
Of telling Genevieve, before that show,
How much I loved her, in the play, you know.
PRIZES AT COMMENCEMENT
Commencement burst upon us in a blaze
Of floral glory, music, speeches, gifts;
My stupid senses caught it through a haze
Of adoration. Even now it lifts
Me to a dazzling pinnacle of joy
That brings relief when other things annoy.
The fellows said, I won the greatest praise,—
A vast applause with voice and heart and hand;
The students started out, as if to raise
A shout that should re-echo through the land:
And when the Prex. gave me my degree,
He added words of kind felicity.
Not only did my own fraternity
Unite to make my exit one of pride;
The others were my friends; no enmity
Had ever caused our drooping heads to hide
In shame. And so, the wonder of it all,
A miracle took place within that hall.
A Junior, with a strong stentorian voice,
Arose, came up and asked the President,—
‘Twas all put up—if he might show the choice
Of all the fellows,—I supposed he meant
Some joke,—the choice of all, he said, to stand
For Alma Mater, born to hold command.
34He then delivered such a glowing speech
I didn’t know myself. He stuck me ful]
Of honors, badges, compliments, and each
Pinned on with flowers, ribbons. while his bull
Exalted me among the glorious line
Of graduates who in great glory shine.
I muddled through the whole thing, feeling licked:
The thing ran counter to my every rule:
If he had tried to bully me, or kick.
I might have felt at home, and then the school
Fad seen I knew just how to rise. and act,
And shunt his wordy phrases for a fact.
DESTINY
3ut, happy? Why, the best girl in the world
Sat through it all, and saw me get the crown:
My straight, black hair had turned to wool and curled
My face was livid, white, then red. and brown.
By turns. But I was thinking most of her.
Whose heart was gold and frankincense and myrrh.
For I had won, I knew. the greatest prize
In all the school that day. To me at least
The thing seemed settled. In her glorious eyes
She spread for me with royal air a feast
That waited for her silly captive’s word,
The which, before that day passed by, she heard.
Oh, boys! your picnics, feasts, and such are drab.
Compared to one half hour with such a girl;
The bell rang all too soon; I had to grab
My hat and go, my brain in such a whirl,
35
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I turned the dormy inside out, and swelled
To such a pitch of voice the fellows yelled :
“Well, what’s got into Bill? He must be sick;
Go, call the doctor, give him physic, such
A colic needs attention; boys, be quick!”
Before I settled, all the hall was much
In need of something settling to their nerves;
We all get,—they did,—just what each deserves.
“It happens, fellows, just a year from now
In June; that speaker, lads, has turned the trick,
His voice was so persuasive, and, | vow
He laid it on me there so good and thick,
The jury was converted to my mind;
Unanimous the verdict! He was kind!
The bullies caught my drift; though, I’m so dull
A speech like that to me would fill me up
With doubts and puzzles. But the boys were full
Of pep and ginger, filling up my cup
With all good wishes, hopes, and begging leave
To send their best to winsome Genevieve.
L ENVOI
The years have flown by swiftly, as on wings
Of eagles. But through all the passing days
My heart turns back, and holds the lovely things
That college gave me, high above all praise,
And campus memories come to me galore,
All hoarded as a miser holds his store.
The yellow gold of commerce won't compare
With that fine star-dust of the human soul:
36Imagination treads enchanted alr,
And as sweet incense rises from a bow]
Full of choice spices, so the human heart
Perfumes all past experience with high art.
But no days are so good as those we spent
In happy fellowship within the college halls;
roadway and Paris never yet have lent
A glamor half so rich as that which falls
Upon the campus in our college years,
Still full of fairy music in our ears.
I sit here now, at peace with all I know.
And wonder how the boys have fared with fate;
No stormy winds around my cabin blow.
And I am growing mellow, calm. sedate :
Sut Genevieve is fairer than the day
She stole my heart, and gave herself away.
And yonder by the fire sits little Bill-
He’s dreaming of the time. not far off, when
He too shall climb the dear. old hill,
And emulate the deeds his dad did then:
Sometimes he teases to be told once more
The things his father did in days of yore.
Ah me! how good those memories are to us—
To her I call my wife, the sweetest flower
In all the world. She rules me without fuss.
Or talking of it, every day and hour:
And every evening, now, she gives me leave
To sing to her and little Genevieve.
st eR en
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BUCKNELL: CLASS OF EIGHTY-EIGHT
jy
Dedicated to the Alumm of Bucknell
Lewisburgh, Pennsylvania
University,
Of eighteen eighty-eight | sing, the class that left Bucknell;
Excuse me, Vergil, if | crib your phrase we knew so well;
Exiled by rule, to tempt the fates they've wandered far and
wide,
And rigged the universe. What else should Alma Mater’s
pride
Attempt to do? Let other classes bide their time at home,
The class of eighty-eight went forth through every land to
roam,
Before we came—now stop and think—the school was on
the bum.
They mowed the campus once a year, but, since, they make it
hum,
The paths that led to yonder hill were washed with every
storm !
Since we arrived upon the scene they've always held their
form,
The chapel, too, was three by four, a class-room ever since:
Upon the rostrum teachers sat, and every man a prince;
But eighty-eight’s great dignity began to bulge the wall:
And so the Trustees said we'll have to build a Bucknell Hall.
39
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In those good days we used to play some marbles, too, with
State
And beat them, maybe, when we had enough from eighty-
eight
To run the bases, catch the ball, or beat it to the plate,
Or tag the umpire if he gave his judgments wrong or late.
We splintered bats in every game and made the crowd re-
joice
With singles, doubles, triples, too, and all with one big voice
Would roar their joy when one of eighty-eight, sent into bat,
Would land a homer in the creek, outcast from poker flat.
To throw the hammer, put the shot, to run, or climb, or swim,
To break the records on the track, folks said they need a gym;
How else can prodigies of worth in brain, or brawn, or mind
Be graduated from these halls and leave great names behind?
And so Professor Martin went with scowl, and growl and
erin
To separate the wealthy grads from their superfluous tin.
Said he, “The class of eighty-eight within this selfsame year
Will graduate and leave this place, and then, if all I hear
[s true, we'll never see their like in all the days to come,
Unless we build a ‘gym’ right now in which to grow us some.”
A goodly company we were. A fellowship of saints
Could not have shown more harmony, and if a body paints
That class in all the lurid reds and yellows, greens and blues
The half would not be told, for there would still be other
hues.
If boarding houses round this town could tell tales out of
school
Of how the fellows settle things by arguments and rule,
40late
Have settled half the problems solved by good old eighty-
eight.
What Plato was to Socrates they knew from a to z
And that the earth was round, not flat, why any fool could
SGC,
But why the world had waited so for Newton was a joke:
A man who can not see the force of gravity’s a bloke
If scientists had only thought to wait a few more years,
The men of this great class had saved them all their pains
and fears:
For genius oozed at every pore, and wisdom from their looks,
And what they didn’t know would fill a million good size
books.
Here first of all comes Addison Bartholomew Bow ser,
A tall and lean and lanky lad my rhyme here needs ‘“‘Tow
ser.
His merry spirit ran to jests, to poetry, and art:
He knew the tuneful songs of birds, their melodies, by heart
For every fellow in the class his soul threw off disgut
He brought a bright and smiling look to every cl;
eyes :
His hymn books sing like Lowrie’
Ds and his pulpit rino’s with
Joy.
Lavy
And Bowser when he’s ninety will be playing like a |
When Braker crossed the river |
days
It creaked beneath his weight, for he was stately in his ways;
He studied hard, had nimble wit. w
ridge in those momentous
as busy day and night:
1]
They'd own up on the spot that none of those who've come ofhehe ee ee ee
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‘There were no twilight zones in Jim; his logic clear and
bright
Would flash like lightning, roar like Jove, then pour in floods
like rain;
And when we thought the storm was o’er, he would begin
again.
They won’t beat Jim—No sir, not Jim—nor lay him on the
shelf,
And so with Riley; ‘Good bye Jim, take right good keer o’
yerself.”
To William Henry Clipman all the others give the prize;
He was the first to marry, and it happened on this wise:
The lady was a flower rare that bloomed in this same town,
A lovely miss, a radiant bride, and eke her name was Brown,
Now Clipman had just found a place wherein to pray and
preach ;
The things he learned at college were the things he longed to
teach ;
The Deacons said, ‘we want you sure. We think you're
pretty slick,
ut if you come, now mark us well, you must come ‘double’
quick.”
When Griffith left to take the train, the boys in old West
Wing
Called, ‘Farewell, Brother Griffith, we have liked to hear you
sing.”
‘The teachers all stood on the steps, and each and all would
say,
“Farewell, dear Brother Griffith, we’re sorry you cannot
stay.”’
And as he sauntered down the paths, the robins all sang out
42“Farewell, dear Brother Griffith, we
about.” ;
The leaves on every tree top lisped, and sobbed farewell to
him, es
Likewise the bull frogs and the flowers that lined the river's
brim.
The father of his country gave his name to quite a batch;
None wear it with more dignity than our George double u
Hatch,
A boy of broad proportions from his jacket to his hose,
He looks the part of Socrates in all except his nose.
In Central Pennsylvania he toils among the hills.
Where the Susquehanna’s sources trickle softly down in rills,
From the best the country offers he will feed his mountain
flock
When “the frost is on the pumpkin and the fodder’s in the
shock,”
The writer sat by Billy Hayes through all his college course.
In every class those four long years without a sole remorse.
No finer fibres, better lumps of earth’s most precious clays,
Were ever moulded into man than those in William Hayes.
His shingle hangs high in New York. and all who know him
say,
He heals men’s bodies, and their souls. in every proper way
He superintends the Sunday School in Calvin’s big brick
church,
He is an honor to his class, whose fame he'll never smirch.
The clock has struck eleven. and so.
We recall our absent member—as
T .
We hold this lodge of sorrow.
name:
dear Hollenbaugh.
‘tis written in the law
and we pause to speak youree ee ef ee
Your labors ended early in the days unknown to fame;
Inscrutable the plans of Him who gives the soul His face,
And then as suddenly removes the candle from its place:
)
We bow to Him who gave to us the chance of knowing you,
)
Who was one of earth’s true noblemen, a hero through and -
through,
When Eden bloomed, a paradise of birds and precious stones,
The first man was a Welshman—his name was Adam Jones;
His offspring, Danny, hit the trail that leads to Lewisburg,
And hibernated seven years before he dared emerge.
The diamond mines round Lansford used to hear his preacher
voice ;
He played upon their heart strings and he made their souls
re }¢ ice :
He would utter words of warning, in the Valley of Dry
Bones,
And all the miners doffed their hats to the Reverend D, M.
Jones.
In science, Kelley delved beneath our Susquehanna sods;
He'd track a crinoid to his lair, and lived on gasterpods;
The palaeozoic era shook throughout its mighty frame,
For Kelley knew its birds and beasts and called each one by
name ;
To reconstruct a glyptodon was easy, in the dark;
He’d shut both eyes, and build the brute, and frame it in a
park ;
His eagle eye and massive brain ransacked the woods and
streams,
And when they'd yielded all they had, he’d conjure more in
dreams.Then Bob McDanel, good old soul, his heart brimful of fun,
Had drained a golden goblet of the wine of lite; the sun
In giving him the joy ot youth got tangled in his hair,
Not very much, but just enough to put some ginger there;
Bill Shakespeare may have set a pace in writing this and that,
But even Bill could not beat Mac in talking through his hat;
lust touch him off, away he’d go, and that is why he stands
)
)
Ahead of all Kentucky in the Bluegrass Country lands.
Dave Minick took his household gods LO (Carolina's hills.
Got married, struck a rise in lands, quit teaching, pays his
bills
With turpentine, pine timber, corn, and other sordid wealth
He hardly could have missed it, for 1t came on him by stealth ;
You see Dave Minick had the grace, the grit, and gumption
too,
To put his hands square on the plow, and then to drive it
through ;
He girt his loins, stuck to his job, and as the adage states,
He proved that all things come to him who hustles while he
waits,
My neighbor, O. K. Pellman, was a fiddler of renown:
He knew more horn-pipes, jigs and reels than any man in
town;
He roomed next door, and every night his dear old violin
Would wake the echoes through the halls, and all the bovs
joined in. 7
Oh! somewhere in this vale of tears the hearts of men are
torn
By Pellman fiddling tangos for the maidens all forlorn,
And somewhere, when the shadows in our hearts grow dark
and long, |
We shall miss our minstrel’s music. both his fiddle and his
song,he Ll ee eee Se es
e, eer
pi ete ee ae ee me ee
Senge gE aR:
When Doctor Pontius joined the class we thought he meant
to preach,
But if he did, he changed his mind and soon became a leech,
The name, you understand, they used to give to doctors Wise,
And Pontius was a cracker-jack to look you in the eyes:
A Mason, thirty-third degree, of portly form and wit,
He rose through every style and rank by sheer deserving it;
A triend to all the boys he was, now Prexy of his class,
A jolly lad, a useful man; he’s big, but let him pass,
Dear Milton Reinhold, answer to your name as oft before:
We see you stalking through the halls, and to your class once
more;
Across the deep and dark divide that separates us now
We can see a radiant halo that encircles your fine brow;
Dear Reinhold, you too early passed to yonder realms of light ;
Your class-mates cherish tenderly your memory tonight;
Look through the blue, and answer us, and give us some sure
sion,
That you have not forgotten the dear days of “auld lang
syne.”
John Schreyer was a likely lad, with business in his head:
He hit the rolling mills, at first, and wrought in iron red:
The steel trust jogged along the road—the mill went up the
flume—
But Johnny Schreyer got his price; his clover’s now in bloom;
The valley here on either side where Susquehanna flows
Pays tribute to the genius of the man who always knows;
His farms and mills and stores and things, his stocks and
bonds and banks
Are pouring golden treasures into Johnny’s barns and tanks.Theres Freddie Senft, evangelist, who speaks with a, “thus
saith ;”
He has gone to Philadelphia to cure men by faith,
He was ever on the warpath hot against our earthly ills,
Which he said could all be cured without the aid of pills:
He clung stoutly to his principles, when others shrugged, and
said,
They would dance around his coffin when his views had
‘knocked him dead:
Which ones were right we do not know—nor which will win
the bet
For the rest are hale and hearty and our Freddie's living vet
When Soars came down from Muncy, why! the boys all called
fm, © Dad;”
He wasnt very pious then, nor was he very bad:
He had skipped the class before us, when his eyes went on
the blink,
Because he couldn't study hard and neither could he think:
But Soars made good, he alw ays did, and ever since has done:
He's a prince of right good fellows, and his size is number
one:
He now goes up and down and round the grand old Kevstone
State.
A strong big-hearted preacher, and the people call him great
When Billy Woodward left this place, he hied away to take
A course in medicine, and learn to give cold chills the shake:
He thumps your chest, and feels your purse, and shouts,
“hold out your tongue,”’
You've got ten thousand microbes in your liver and yout
lung ;
He can chase tuberculosis with a dose that’s hard to take
47
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pore timemennat sc meenti rman cae
And can scare you with gastritis when it’s just plain stomach |
ache ;
He has won much true affection in McKeesport on the hills
By his great big broad philanthropy, mixed in with liver pills.
When Doctor Hill was President the boys first came to town,
And graduated in those days without your cap and gown;
But to sit in “Davy’s” class-room was to us a daily feast:
No wonder Uncle Samuel said we need him further East:
He shifted all his baggage from the wild and wooly West,
And many lands have honored him, but we who like him best,
Through all the years have followed him, and to his love lay
claim,
And weave a glory round his head in Bucknell’s Hall of
‘ame.
Professor Tustin taught the boys the rules of ancient Greek,
And doubtless often wished to throw us headlong in the
Green
His patience would have made of Job a worthy Christian
Saint ;
It made of him a martyr to a lot of folks that aint;
His kindness was unfailing, and the way he used to prop
The candidates for pulpits should have made the sinners
stop,
And live up to his counsel which was always good and sound,
As a father’s to his children, whom the strongest ties have
bound,
Professor Loomis, both in French and German, was our
euide,
And then to add good measure taught us History on the side;
And what he didn’t know, we did—we added, each his dole—
And often proved the parts were sometimes greater than the
whole;
48re all a trifle oft
~ os - re , rt’ > 1c ae re
The big guys who wrote history W :
. . ea > ‘ c ¢ , ¢ cc i
In stating things about the past, and so with many a scoff
The boys of eighty-eight would prove old time was off his
base,
That things were either as they seemed, or such was not the
case.
No better crews of engineers have shone on dress parade
Than those same boys when Bartol came, and sought the
precious aid.
~
For when it came to polygons, to triangles, anchsquares,
They'd build a ladder into space and climb /itJ ayy
In measuring off the vertical from Montour st
Or calculating in cold terms the way to [urtle Creek,
He sought their aid, I said, and so it was to him great gam;
He did the mathematics, and t
Beneath the trees behind West Wing we skinned a dog and
cat,
To test their livers, and to see just where their lungs were a
For Doctor Groff. the good old soul, had filled us thro’ and
thro’
With vain desires to classify an animated zoo;
In just two days the stench that rose stirred up the Bo
of Health;
We beat it to our several rooms when they essayed by stealth
To track those odors to their source in that uncanny grove,
And scattered to the four great winds our hopes and treasure
trove.
Professor Rockwood lined 1S up without much pomp or fuss:
It might have seemed he did not know. and so kept asking us
The biggest lot of questions on the forms of nouns and verbs:
Indeed we lived on Latin roots. and other luscious herbs:
19
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The Odes of Horace lived once more in our inspired brains,
And grew new meanings like the shoots that follow April
rains :
While as for those orations that exploded Cataline,
We admitted they were classics, though they barely crossed
the- line.
The ‘Trustees saw what husky boys there were in eighty-
eight,
And that their zeal for le: imning’s lore was w axing ever great,
So they called Professor Owens with his bottles and his corks
To let loose the magic forces of the cosmic fire- works;
And then they held a meeting, and they passed around the hat,
And every man has wondered how they turned the trick at
that:
They raised a mighty purse of gold: ’Twas not hot air or gab;
They said, it’s mighty plain we’ve got to have a brand new
via.
But of all the jolly class-rooms sure the jolliest was Perrine’s;
His jokes were like good medicine but smacked like Rhenish
wines;
His laugh was most contagious and he had a nimble wit;
Nor was he short on metaphors nor similes to fit:
Like “Uncle Joe” he got “‘het up’ in arguments erstwhile,
But all his dander vanished in the brightness of his smile,
And when the ladies entered and the boys each gave their
chair,
Perrine looked o’er his goggles, and exclaimed. “oive each
three ‘cheers.’
Professor Martin in those days was our particular friend;
With winged words he talked to us whene’er we went to
spendAn evening in his study, where among his ay VS and books.
4 o> - ) : :
There was uplift in his counsel, there was kindness in his
looks ; |
He opened Browning to us, and he opened us to a |
And Professor Martin was as full as Browning to the brim,
With thoughts that breathed and words that burned we gave
old time the slip,
And the memories that linger are like honey to the lip.
A lady, Larison by name, ruled, in the days of yore,
Behind board fences, rows of pines, and watchmen there
galore ;
In yonder grove thrice-hallowed by the sweet forget-me-nots
That grew in all their glory there, in fairy garden spots,
With mild persuasives oft we went to plead some special case,
And just as often came away with joyful heart and face
Her genial spirit gripped us in a kindly, gentle way,
As the roses breathe their fragrance in the flowery month
of May.
“What makes the Tear rank breathe SO hard said I iles on pa-
rade?”
There must be a chicken in the yard, the ‘‘colored” sergeant
said:
And William Bell played sergeant, and braved the recreant
crew
That used to serenade the “Sem.” as later callants do:
But William was a diplomat, and scudded on his way.
When the boys declared for slavery inviting him to stay
The belle of Bucknell Institute he was. and all agreed _
That William knew his business, and stuck to it indeed
t
Did Gretz belong to eighty-eight? Why, he belonged to all!
The Jolliest German cherub when he first showed on the
Mall!
5]ee eee
Days in and out he flashed on us his merry-hearted grin
f )
And sent us all away to cherish warmer souls within ;
For twenty years he labored, in the wind and in the rain,
Though oft his tortured spirit writhed with agonizing pain:
And there are those, as in the dear dead days beyond recall,
Who still await his coming, and still listen for his call.
You should have seen how Bucknell slumped, when eighty-
eight went out;
The college and alumni all began to wail and shout:
So they sent for Doctor Harris, in his school across the State,
lo come and bolster up the work of good old eighty-eight;
[hey pulled together, he and they, and Bucknell took a jump;
She's been a-jumping ever since; say, can’t you see that
hump?
It is Bucknell getting ready for another move today:
There's a reason: it’s the Doctor; get the habit: on I say!
For when the leader gives the word the rank and file should
2QO,
And count it love’s great privilege their loyalty to show,
Since Alma Mater has in him a lion-hearted king,
Who wills, and dares, and does brave deeds, and so with Field
| sing:
“God bless you, Doctor Harris, may you live a thousand
years,
To kind o’ brighten up things in this vale of human tears.
And may we live a thousand too, a thousand less a day,
lor we should hate to live to say we'd seen you pass away.”
And now, dear Alma Mater, we assemble in this hall,
Our hearts responding warmly as we listen to your call;
We lift our souls in gratitude, for all your kindly ways,
When you rocked us in the cradle of our academic days.
5?Another milestone on the way we've covered, by God’s grace,
And still your smile is kindlier and gentler too your face;
Again we pledge our faith to those ideals of the past
Received from our young mother which her vigor made to
last.
ee ; :
Forgive the boys who criticize your wrinkles and gray hairs;
You have helped those very children as they climbed the
golden stairs
That led them to achievements in the various walks of life. |
And you buckled on their armor that equipped them for the
strife ;
Forgive the ugly tempers, and the hot words we have shown:
They are only on the surface, just as fitful gusts are blown:
The hearts of all your children turn to you; our hearts up- i
raise if
To the best of Alma Maters a most fervent hymn of praise. ’ee eee
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FAITH, HOPE and LOVE
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COPYRIGHTED
1925
BY
LINCOLN HULLEY
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ELOISE MAYHAM HULLEY
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POETIC PRODUCTIONS
BY
LINGOLN HOLLEY
Lullabies and Slumber Songs
Annie-Laurie: Love-Lyrics
Hiram Abiff, the Builder
Sonnets on the Immortal Bards
Shakespere’s Dream of Fair Women
Moonlight Nights at Palm Beach
King David: Israel’s Lyric Bard
Christina, or Christian Van Dusen’s Law-Suit
Chivalry in Dixie: Metrical Romances
Mike Murphy’s Dream
Campus Memories
Alice Coventry and other Metrical Romances
The Eloise Chimes
Chapel. Lyrics of Faith, Hope and Love
Fables and Myths from the Sibyl’s Book
The Jubilate of Rabbi Ben Adam
Christian Hymns
St. Anne and the Children’s Hour
St. Michael and the Dragon; An Epic of the War
Savonarola’s Visions of Judgment
Broken Hearts and Lives
Vesper Songs of Joy, Trust and Praise
Brave Idylls of the Gallant South
Dwellers Beyond the Styx, or Tragedies of Love
Dixie Sketches in Chalk and Charcoal
Ghiberti’s Doors to Paradise and Other Art Poems
A Maker of Dreams and Poetic Fantasies
Gold-Fields, Gold-Skies and Gold-Seekers
A Farmer-Prince
Galloping Westward: A Ballad
A Disciple of Plato
Pipes of Pan
Florida the Beautiful
Ariel and Cinderella
The Holy Land
Pegasus at the Springs of Helicon
Eden, a Paradise of Love
College Lyrics of Idealism and Optimism
Chauncey and Kitty; also Bob’s Dilemma
Earth to Earth or The Joy of Life
For Better For WorseCHAPE], LYRICS
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CONTENTS
The Trinity
The Chrysalis
Close up the Ranks
The Costly Glories
A Morning Prayer
The Health of the World
Master, Give Us a Sign
Water and Dust and Air
The Paradise of Fools
The Christian Spirit
The Comrade in White
Lost
The Road to Jericho
Jacob and the Angel
New Clothes for Old
The Lost V oice
Carry On
Architect and Tenant
I Sought Him in the Stars
The Four-Square Man
Ninety Years Old
Dead and Forgotten
Duty Learned Through Prayer
Four Levers That Lift
As the Dew
Thanks for Unrest
Wholly Thine
Jesus Made a Will
Far Above Rubies
Potter and Clay
The Philosopher’s Stone
[ am That Sisyphus
Lay on the Lash
Make Me Thy Harp
Open the Doors
What Is Truth
Borrowed Light
To God Above the Skies
I Saw Thee, Lord
The College Chapel+
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ee ee ee aeCHAPEL LYRICS
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THE TRINITY.
White light braided of seven strands,
Seen in the rainbow’s colored bands,
Showeth how many may be in one,
Blended completely, until the sun
Shoots the prisms, hurled from the cloud,
Spreading them fan-shaped, curved, and bowed.
Ah! how beautiful to the eye
Is the rainbow in the sky!
A bow of promise, that from the sod
Reaches the very throne of God,
Where the Trinity, Three in One,
Issues the white light seven in one.
So the soul of a mortal man
Thinks and feels and wills, a plan
Suggesting Trinity, Three in One.
In the tangle our minds have spun,
Enmeshed with feelings, and shot with will,
We see the unit—one man still.
He that commanded the light made me,
That selfsame God, the One in Three,
Made me think, and made me feel,
Gave me a will like tempered steel,
Made in His image, so when done,
I too imaged the Three in One.
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THE CHRYSALIS WAITED.
The Chrysalis waited the day of God,
That loomed not far away;
It seemed a desolate, queer-shaped pod,
But the resurrection day
Turned it into a butterfly,
That, out in the sunlight, gleams,
Irised with colors, like those on high,
Or pictured to men in dreams.
The nestlings trembled inside their shells,
Fulfilling the law of God,
With inner wisdom that soon foretells
The lift of His mighty rod;
A magic wand is waved, and, lo!
The tomb is rent in twain,
When, out of the grave, and singing low,
A miracle blooms again.
Shut up within this house of clay,
My spirit yearns for light;
Biding God’s time, I await the day
That chases away the night;
Leaving the shroud in an empty grave,
And winging my way on high,
I'll leave the earthen shell He gave
Its uses—next, the sky.CLOSE UP THE RANKS.
Close up the ranks where the men are shot,
And draw off the dead behind us:
Defenders at work within the trench
Must sweat ere the enemy find us:
Suitable graves for those that are slain,
And hospitals for the wounded ;
Never a shot but it gives us pain,
And shall till our arms are erounded.
These battles may count for little, I know,
In a war so long continued,
But every victory gives us strength,
And makes us better sinewed
Later to carry the line and the flag
Beyond the present border:
The Day of the Lord may slowly drag,
But leads to a better order.
The withering fire of enemy guns
Is a hurricane apt to blind us,
But faith in the cause of truth and right
Will strengthen the ties that bind us;
Never a battle was fought for God,
In the strife between fellow-mortals,
But lifted our souls from the lowly sod,
Some nearer to Heaven’s portals.
Whether the battle is one with swords,
Or fought in the halls of learning,
Those who have kept their hearts in truth
May look for the devil’s spurning:
Still press on to the hills of light,
Though the enemy guns may grind us;
Close up the ranks where the men are shot,
And draw off the dead behind us.
9Ce ee ee ee ee
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THE COSTLY GLORIES.
The costly glories that flash along
The paths of the higher life
Inspire the souls of chosen ones
To enter the arduous strife
By which alone they may be grasped,
And brought down to our earth—
These costly glories that lie along
The paths of higher worth.
The saints of God who hold the faith
That quickened the heart of Paul,
Who walk the ways that Jesus trod
And suffer the jibes of all—
These keep the road at any cost,
And count their losses gain,
Without a single regret to pay
For what they achieve through pain.
The heroes who have trod the earth
With heads erect and high,
Receiving the poisoned barbs of men
But willing to do or die—
These kept the faith in truth and love,
Nor swerved a single time,
Pressing along the stormy heights
Determined to rise and climb.
The martyrs and prophets who came to death,
As they struggled along the way,
Repented not, but gladly went
With faith in a better day;
The costly glories were worth the price,
And they paid it all in blood;
These were the ones who sealed the truth,
Accepting the blessed rood.
10A MORNING PRAYER.
Lord, grant Thy servant strength
To lift his load to-day,
That through the heat, and dust, and strain,
He faint not by the way.
And grant Thy servant taith
To pierce the darkest doubt,
That breeds despair, and chills the life ;
Lord, keep his soul devout.
Send out Thy light and truth
To clarify his mind
And teach him, that Thy servant be
A help to all his kind.
Oh!
Grant Thy servant love
To warm his heart for men.
That he may lead lost souls to Thee,
To make them whole again.
Then grant Thy servant peace,
The kind that follows strife,
And toil, and weariness, and woe
Throughout this mortal life.et be ee ae ee ee
St
——="
THE HEALTH OF THE WORLD.
I sing the health of a world where God
In holiness built His throne;
Where orchids and asters and goldenrod
Are smiling with health alone;
Where always the sunshine scatters tears,
And soft west winds are blown,
And like a Niagara through the years
The life of the Lord pours down.
I sing the goodness of God at heart,
Whose ethics are never wrong;
His word makes right, because His art
Flows out of His nature strong;
All of the sins of our erring lives
Are stabs at the heart of God;
And never a ghost in the soul He shrives
Shall rise from the crumbling clod.
I sing the love of the dying Christ
Who suffered that we might live;
Who came to our spirits when we were iced
And offered new life to give.
His low, sweet whispers are heard around
The hearths where men kneel in prayer;
One hears His love in the song's that sound
In ocean and earth and air.
I sing the beauty that lies along
The rim of the sky each day;
Beauty is kingly, and sits among
Those angels that light the way,
Studding it under with gems beneath,
And over with stars above,
Thus wedding the earth with a bridal wreath
For the bride He has wooed in love.
12
~MASTER, GIVE US A SIGN.
Master, give us a sign,” they plead;
But Scribes and Pharisees can’t be moved;
They knew the sign of the evening red,
Their minds were hardened, and fixed and grooved ;
With holy thoughts of His Father, God,
His words were hot, and sharp as swords
That pierce the crust of the matted sod ;
They might have seen His signs in words.
Give us a sign,” they asked again;
But Scribes and Pharisees can’t be taught ;
They hold themselves the elected men:
All others, in fine, they count for naught ;
He cleansed the lepers, and raised the dead ;
He lifted the fallen by others trod:
He healed the sick, and the hungry fed;
His signs were very pleasing to God.
“Give us a sign, that’s all we seek:”
But Scribes and Pharisees wear a mask;
In swollen pride they abhor the meek,
And, lazy, they also avoid the task:
On mountain heights, in midnight chills,
He sought the Father, day and night,
Flis sign was the stars, and the lonely hills,
And the face of His Father, shining bright.
“Give us a sign,” they glared at last,
Thrusting Him into the judgment hall:
But Scribes and Pharisees murder fast,
And so they jostled Him, great and small.
Then, on the top of a hill near-by,
He suffered and died with bitter loss:
They asked for a sign, we know not why,
And so He gave them the sign of the Cross.
13ee
WATER AND DUST AND AIR.
Water, and dust, and air I am,
Kneaded into a paste,
Born in the zodiac sign of the ram,
Starting the year with haste;
Of mud I was made, and they called me mud,
For that is what ““Adam’”’ means,
And into my body they poured the blood
That flows in both kings and queens.
How much better, then, is a man
Than a sheep? Now who will say?
Look at the bodies of both—the plan
Is the same in both to-day ;
Burn them in crucibles—count the kinds
Of elements, each and each,
And all will consider that, lacking minds,
Their bodies the same thing's teach.
Some of God’s creatures have better ears,
And some of them better eyes,
Than human beings; and some have fears,
And loves, and hates, likewise;
Then how are we better than beasts, I ask,
And who shall lay down the law
By which to settle the difficult task
Of choosing the best to draw?
Now note, they stood me upon my feet,
And called me the anthropos,
The only animal then complete,
Who could look all the way across
The measureless spaces, and call on God,
And equally laugh and pray,
Who rises up from the common sod
To the thought of a Judgment Day.
14THE PARADISE OF FOOLS.
Hood and bauble, cap and bells,
And asses’ ears to match,
Well become the fool who tells
Still other fools to catch
All gay pleasures on the wing
Swift as they come and go—,
Youth avails to pull the sting,
And age will never know.
The Paradise of Fools is built
Of fabrics light as air,
Tawdry tinsel, glittering gilt,
And ornaments seeming fair;
But when one is building a house to stay,
And not to go down in the flood.
Mud for mortar, and unbaked clay,
Are certainly not so good.
Ease, and pleasure, and feather-beds,
And wine with a daily feast,
Are not along paths a hero treads
In his journey out to the East;
Men who are light in their hearts and heels
Are light in the head as well;
Give them a monocle, cane, and seals,
And a dunce’s cap and bell.
‘Eat, drink, and be merry, boys,
To-morrow you all shall die,”
A creed like that give a child with toys—,
And feed the pigs in the sty:
But when a man has been told of God
To conquer the earth and rule,
Silly it is he should caper and nod
In the Paradise of a Fool.
15THE CHRISTIAN SPIRIT.
Not for an easy couch I pray;
Give me a bed of stone;
But with it give me grace each day
To make that bed a throne.
Not for release from grief and pain
I yearn; O, give me these!
But with them both give me the brain
To find in both Christ’s peace.
Not for a life denied the toil
That makes men grind, and sweat,
Do I repine. But with the oil
Of gladness smooth the fret.
Give me the daring heart to win
The battles heroes fight,
That high emprise and courage in
The martyrs for the right!
Give me the gracious soul to love
The man who stabs my heart,
That he may share Thy grace above
All earthly gains or art.
Give me the courage of the Man
Who faced pale death with calm,
The God-man, great of soul, whose plan
Poured on His foes sweet balm.I lay on a bed of pain,
Shot through the leg to die,
Was it the Marne or the Aisne?
I know not, for death was nigh,
A comrade came up, and knelt
Beside me. He heard me beg.
A strange sense of comfort I felt,
As he started to dress my leg.
He lifted me, then. in his arms,
To carry me off the field:
His life seemed girdled with charms;
He needed no gun nor shield.
Then I saw in his hand a wound:
The bullets had bored him through;
His feet bloodied up the ground:
And a slash in his side showed, too.
“You're wounded,” I said, and he
“Yes, this is an old. old sore,
And of late it has been to me
More painful than ever before.
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“Now when you get well,” he said,
“I have a great work for you;”
THE COMRADE IN WHITE.
’Twas he, the white Comrade, Who bled
On Calvary’s cross, ’tis true!a al
LOST.
I am lost, and there are no signs
To point out the way to take,
Since blinding lights and sudden frights
Beset me asleep or awake.
I am lost in a wilderness,
And cannot find a clew
To lead me out of sin and doubt,
And never a guide in view.
I am lost on a desert waste,
Where mirage to horizon dips;
Its promising gleam fades out, like a dream,
Tormenting my parched lips.
I am lost on a wild, wide sea;
The sun and the stars are dark;
The stormwind shrieks, and my rudder creaks,
And waves overwhelm my bark.
I am lost in a labyrinth,
Where terrors and specters are;
But only the clouds hover round like shrouds,
With never a guiding star.
I am lost in the snow and rain,
And my soul cries out with cold;
But the chill damp air answers not my prayer
For one to lead to the fold.
Lo! Out of the fog and the mist,
The darkness and dread of night,
As bright as the day, there shines on my way
God’s infinite, perfect Light.
18THE ROAD TO JERICHO.
Last year I went to Jericho
Along the selfsame road
On which the deadly work was done
To one outside the code:
And as I rode to Jericho
I fancied I could see
Still other deeds of violence
To poor humanity.
Our human hearts are still in bond
To rules of tooth and claw;
And we are slow of mind indeed
To learn the higher law:
The more we toil for what is best
For every needy soul,
The more we find in sympathy
Our rightful human goal.
Along that highway men of wealth
And poor men dail
So;
A thousand dangers lurking near
May teach both that they owe
A kindlier feeling, each to each,
For learn it, ye! who can,
The knightly souls are linked to serve
The brotherhood of man.
The road that leads to Jericho
Was trod by sundry knaves,
Who seemed hell-bent to work their will
On men they deemed their slaves:
But on that way sweet Mercy dwelt,
With winged sandals shod;
She knelt, and kneeling, taught the world
The fatherhood of God.
19Ce ee Soa Pet ee ee
——
JACOB AND THE ANGEL.
Jacob might wrestle with angels,
Elusive, and dim, or unseen,
The night-watches running through darkness,
Obscurely, to serve as a screen.
But Jacob held on to his vision;
He clung to the angel all night;
On through the midnight they wrestled,
On till the coming of light.
The ways of the Lord with our spirits
Are often so subtle and swift
He comes and departs in a moment,
So sudden one misses the drift;
We know from the flash in the darkness
That God has been seen very nigh;
We touch His hand oft in the shadow,
As passing He goes swiftly by.
Unto us all inspirations
Come like a flash and depart;
No one can fathom the stillness
That dwells in the human heart,
Or tell whence the source of the flashes
That light up the innermost cave
Except that the Lord, in His goodness
Blesses the natures He gave.NEW CLOTHES FOR OLD.
‘New clothes for old!” js what he said;
The thing can’t be, I thought within ;
But hat: that pedlar shouted led
My fancies into worlds akin.
New clothes for old each day gives out,
The old day passing on at night;
We shall new garments wear, no doubt,
When earth rolls forward into light.
New clothes for old each year affords,
The past ones worn and frayed a bit,
And from the old year’s S precious hoards
New styles will charm us, we admit.
New clothes for old! It all seems strange,
3ut quite in line with nature’s laws.
The brown earth makes its winter ch lange
Obedient to the first great Cause.
New clothes for old; again we see
The world’s old Seder fall away;
The garments of sweet liberty
The world shall wear some future day.
New clothes for old! The earth dissolves,
And then the man that is to be
Puts on the raiment of God’s praise
To wear it for eternity.Lith alia te Teer ee ee ee
Se ae Pee ae ee
THE LOST VOICE.
O, singer in God’s choir loft!
What ails thy voice, I pray?
Why do thy fingers strike the strings
In such a jangled way?
Thy song was once the joy of all,
And none could match thy skill;
Why has the music suffered change
Foreboding naught but ill?
The lyric outbursts of thy voice
In tremors ran along;
Strong-winged they soared above the crypt
In soul-uplifting song;
Aflame with passion and with fire,
In notes that praised the Lord,
Thy voice rang out; now what is wrong?
Hast thou, then, lost the chord?
A sunset’s beauty, then the stars,
And thy sweet voice were one;
Now all the richness of the sky
Is faded out and gone;
I fear it is not loss of voice,
Nor loss of chord—how odd!
It must be, in the ruin wrought,
That thou hast lost thy God.CARRY ON.
Carry on! the Captain bids thee
Though thy strength will shortly fail
Let no hardship crush or daunt thee!
Strive! let not thy spirit quail !
Is thy will in weakness bent ?
God is near thee with His aid
Rally all thy powers spent:
Carry on, nor be afraid.
I
Carry on! we have the orders
We must hold our gains, in fine:
Else, disaster through our borders
Sweep away the trembling line:
Farther than the eye can reach
Others may depend on thee,
Standing shoulder each to each
Carry on, in your degree.
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Carry on! the foe is sweeping
Downward on our ranks to-day -
See! the brave ones have in keeping
Barriers that must not give way;
Comrades, hold! give not an inch!
Yielding will begin retreat:
Steady, then, and do not flinch,
Carry on! the danger meet.
Carry on! Ah! see, you’re winning!
Glorious now the turning tide!
Rest will follow this beginning
Of the sudden change of side;
Stand your ground, and with the night
Bright shall shine the stars above:
With the morning comes sweet light;
Carry on, for those we love.
23be oe fe ee
ARCHITECT AND TENANT.
Architect and tenant both
Am I of this house of clay,
And to leave, my soul is loth,
When long years have made it gay:
But the sentence seemeth just,
Beauty dies and turns to dust.
When my spirit turns to go,
Locks the door, and takes the key,
Let no mortal talk of woe;
Life was passing sweet to me,
Now I leave because I must
Close the house that turns to dust.
Why the soul should have a house
Far surpasses me to tell;
Why a cat is not a mouse
Serves the same end just as well;
The house will soon be down, and thrust
Into earth to turn to dust.
While I lived, the golden mean
Was a rule that promised good;
Pleasures neither fat nor lean
Were the measure of my food:
Will restrained the body’s lust;
Now the body turns to dust.
But my spirit slips away
To a brighter world than this;
None dwell there in huts of clay,
But enjoy diviner bliss;
In that realm of love and trust
Bodies never turn to dust.
24I sought Him in the stars that shine,
And said, “Perchance He dwells
In silence far removed, and nid”
They held me with their spells,
Their calm great spaces taught me much:
Their figures, too, were odd:
They told me He had been there once ;
They did not show me God
I sought Him in the early spring ;
His breath was in the air:
The miracles of bud and bloom
Said plainly He was there:
The beauty painted on the rose,
The sweet smell on the sod,
Were proof His presence had been felt.
But these did not show God.
I sought Him in the tunes of birds:
Their calls were rich and sweet :
[ heard Him in the lowing herds,
And thought I saw His feet
Had left their prints across the fields
In every upturned clod
,
I SOUGHT HIM IN THE STARS.
3ut bird, and beast, and field. and flower
Could not say where was God.
I sought Him in the lowly Christ,
Whose life beside the sea
Transformed the earth, and drew all hearts
To walk in Galilee:
I saw His purity and love,
The humble paths He trod,
I saw His deeds, and heard His words,
And said: “Lo! here is God.”
25CE ee ee ee ee
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THE FOUR-SQUARE MAN.
Jesus increased in stature, waxing strong;
Three-storied the house we live in here;
Masters but not the owners long,
Gathering fresh strength every year;
Lay broad and strong the foundations, O sage!
In such an house as thine an angel dwelt;
He honored the house of his pilgrimage;
Bodies are divine, tho seen and felt.
Jesus increased in wisdom, that is, mind,
The second story, where the treasures are
That make us clear-eyed, or like bats, blind,
Not seeing beauty in earth, sea, sky, star;
Sitting one day with doctors, He asked the law;
They were surprised at His questions, and plied
Him with a few hard ones, hard on the jaw,
But He had a wisdom uncanny, clear-eyed.
Jesus increased in favor with God too;
Top-floor of all, it would seem, was fine!
Here He had heaven and earth too in view,
And saw everything as it was, divine;
Yes, He heard God’s voices in the sweet winds:
He felt God’s breath, too, in the cool evening air;
He saw God’s glory also in men’s minds;
It always moved His heart and lips to prayer.
Jesus increased in favor with men, last;
He was so social in all His ways, when,
On the street, or by the lake, the crowds passed,
That none were afraid there but loved Him then.
Ah! what a model in body, mind, soul,
Social, and all, which He held in fee,
Caught in life’s beautiful, golden bowl,
Example for us to eternity !
26
i ge re tan neNINETY YEARS OLD.
The days of man are three score years and ten;
In that we have the limit set by law;
Three score and ten, and after that, why then,
We face the iron gate and wait with awe.
By reason of great strength, sometimes the rule
Is lengthened to the limit of four score,
But all these days are sometimes to the fool,
And aggravate our miseries the more.
Sans eyes, sans teeth, sans hair, sans everything
Are promised those who go beyond life’s span,
Our youthful memories take sudden wing,
And leave our minds where infancy began.
With piping treble voices we are left:
The doors are closed that open to the street:
In twain the plans we laid in youth are cleft,
And to our graves we go with shuffling feet.
But I am ninety, Lord, and by Thy grace,
Shall reach a hundred years if all goes well,
I stand erect, and look men in the face,
And know the secret where the muses dwell.
There are no tears or grief or pain in mine;
Sweet joy is pleased to dwell beneath my roof;
And now I’ve lived full ninety, watch the sign;
Just how to live a hundred I’ve the proof.
I have no debts to mirth and wine to pay;
Nor have I cast my pearls before low swine;
But know just how the mind of God would say,
We ought to keep the soul within His shrine.
27Satetass
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- =
When we
DEAD AND FORGOTTEN.
are dead we are soon forgotten;
Quickly we pass from mind;
Changed are the times, and all we’ve gotten
Follow us
Brief was
Throwing
After the
down the wind.
the life we squandered,
our gold away;
will-o-the-wisp we wandered,
Chasing it night and day.
Yet it seemed long, for the dreary pining
After sin
lengthened the hours;
Why, I have lived a thousand years whining,
Wet with
Earlier ye
my tears like flowers.
ars were athrill with laughter,
Merrily beat the drums,
Not once a thought of the great hereafter,
Picking up pleasure’s crumbs.
Then came the years with the rainy weather
And winds with winter’s chill;
Little men think when carousing together,
Life will present its bill,
Now they
are gone—the swift years of plenty,
Like a dream when we awake;
Gone are my comrades, not one in twenty
Left to re
They are
Lonely an
Now I go
Up to the
view the stake.
forgotten, I am forsaken,
d sad I plod;
empty, hopeless, and shaken,
bar of God.
28DUTY LEARNED THROUGH PRAYER.
Low at the shrine his fathers loved one knelt
In penitence. He sought the peace of God;
Whereat into his heart the Holy Ghost
Shed golden light upon the way he trod.
Above him were the cherubim in song,
Uplifting him above all narrow creeds:
To breathe the breath of life into our words
We must embody them in daily deeds.
Around him sang the angels of the gates,
And all their voices trembled with the joy;
They open the pearly doors of Paradise
To those alone who all their sins destroy.
Beyond he heard the martyrs at their prayers,
Beseeching God’s forgiveness on their foes;
With faces turned toward the throne, they said,
“Charge not to their account our woes.”
Near by he saw the saints in order stand:
They had been shrived by God alone, not man:
Their holy thoughts with patience intertwined :
They ended praising God as they began.
Below the level of the lovely chapel’s floor,
He heard outside the people’s cries and groans;
The misery of the world he heard arise,
The sobs of children and the women’s moans.
Uproused from reverie, sublime and sweet,
He knew the cross invited him to strife:
That only through Christ’s conquest of Himself
Could any mortal enter into life.
29FOUR LEVERS THAT LIFT.
Reason, duty, law, and love—
Raise us from the earth, above
Meaner creatures of the field,
Whose brute strength must surely yield
To endowments such as men
Exercise with open ken.
Reason is the holy truth,
And it keeps perpetual youth
Lodged within the heart of God,
Lifting men above the clod.
Reason holds the true ideal,
Fixing it within the real.
Duty is divine. Her “ought”
Far exceeds what may be bought;
With gold chains she binds her own
To the bases of God’s throne;
Blest are all her devotees
Through the vast eternities.
Law depends upon God’s will,
And on His nature, better still.
Who obey His just decrees
Rise from low to high degrees;
Men applaud with happy voice
Law and order done from choice.
Love, the highest one in rank,
Moves the world. And when we thank
God for gifts of heavenly grace,
Love beams on us from His face;
Love lights up our earthly way,
Changing all our night to day.
30As the dew in silence
Settles on the leaves,
So do healing slumbers
Comfort him who erieves.
As the mist bank gathers,
So the Christian’s strength,
Bit by bit, increases,
Till it grows full length.
As the snowflakes softly
Fall to earth and lie,
So the grace of Heaven
Comes from Him on high.
As the light increases
In the early dawn,
So our visions open:
Else they are withdrawn.
As the sunset lingers
In the glowing west,
So our dreams continue,
And our hearts are blest.
As the stars shine sweetly,
Still, serene, at ease,
So the hearts of millions
Find in Christ their peace.
As in sleep the angels
Give God’s loved ones rest,
So the wise Creator
Gives us what is best.
3]
AS THE DEw.Se de ek ee ee ee ee
THANKS FOR UNREST.
Thanks for unrest and hungers, Lord;
Satisfied? No! not I,
That would spell death, and each one’s hoard
Needs swelling before he die.
Notions of all sorts in our minds
Are keeping us all alive;
Thanks for the spurs of various kinds
‘That into our leisure drive.
Spare us stagnation, and give us work
That taxes our strength and skill;
Give us the needle till no one shirk,
But braces his yielding will.
Make us insurgent against the claim
That this is a world of peace,
In any sense other than no man aim
At the heart of a brother at ease.
sarbs and stings that prick and bite
Develop in all the grit
To press along the sloping height
Until they have mastered it.
Peace will come at the end, mayhap,
But now the battle’s best;
We ask not good Dame Fortune’s lap,
But grant us, dear Lord, unrest.WHOLLY THINE.
Wholly thine | pray to be
In full mental sanity.
Not in mystic dream, O Christ,
Such as Kempis felt sufficed.
But in marts of busy trade
Where I feel men’s rapier blade.
Not that I would walk on air,
Rapt in constant thought of prayer,
But so full of love for Thee
All my actions should agree,
Having set my rudder true,
Help me keep Thee, Lord, in view.
Though I must face daily care,
And the woes of others bear,
Help me in these ministries
To advance them on my knees,
Help me to attend my work,
That my spirit never shirk:
Give the church its rightful place
And my duty its fair space.
Keep me from each morbid view
That belies Thy mission true,
Give me sane and healthful eyes
For the things in earth and skies.
33ee ek ee fae ee
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When the office toils grow stale,
And I see my plans may fail,
Fix on Thee this heart of mine,
Make me, keep me, wholly Thine.
JESUS MADE A WILL.
3efore He died, our Saviour made a will,
And sealed it with a very solemn word;
Recorded in the Gospels it holds still,
From which His mighty plans may be inferred.
The human weaknesses of those He chose
To be His inner circle, as He preached,
Were such the Master always feared to lose
A chance that all their interest might be reached.
‘““My peace I leave to you,’’ He sweetly said;
We always think of money, houses, land,
And other things that prove our spirits dead;
Material things He had not to command.
“Not as the others give, give I to you;”
He stressed it by the words upon His lips,
And by His emphasis, and heart, and view,
That His sweet gift the others should eclipse.
What was this peace the Saviour gave to man?
Did it mean ease, and luxury, and rest?
Did it mean mystic idleness, a plan
That seemed to suit a type of follower best?
34It did not mean a flowery bed of ease,
On which they might be lifted to the skies ;
It carried not a promise that disease
And death should never touch their mortal eyes.
In substance it did mean the devil lied,
Who thought to keep our world in war and pain,
That when their Master suffered, bled, and died,
The base was laid for peace that He might reign.
At once, a chart to guide them in their cause,
A weapon in their hand to use in fight,
A dear possession in their hearts. whose laws
Would lead them out of darkness into light,
FAR ABOVE RUBIES.
Far above rubies, or pearls, or gold,
Is wisdom, by God’s decree:
None of the things that are bought, or sold,
Compare with her in degree:
Men may dig in the hills and mines,
Or search in the uttermost parts
For precious metals—their worth declines
From the wisdom in human hearts.
She is a treasure more sacred than life,
To be guarded, and honored, and sought,
Sometimes distilled in the midst of strife,
And treasured in hidden thought:
Else, life itself would be fitful and false,
Rudderless, far out at sea,
Or, like a meaningless, aimless waltz,
Better, indeed, not to be.— at
Sweeter is wisdom than passion that burns
For the learning that lurks in books,
Piled in the shelves of the learned, like urns,
Or around in crannies and nooks;
For men are learned, sometimes, and fools;
And often the men who are wise
Have little learning to edge their tools,
But a wisdom that’s from the skies.
Wisdom, ’tis said, is the principal thing;
Hence, give me wisdom, Lord—
The kind that bubbles within the spring
Of Thine infinite, perfect word.
Help me to treasure it in my heart,
And live by it day by day,
For conduct is reckoned the highest art,
That never shall pass away.
POTTER AND CLAY.
Potter and clay we stand to each other,
Wholly, or only in part,
God of my life, Creator, my Brother—
Christ had a human heart—
What is the mystery binding together
Maker and man, I pray,
Each holding each in loving tether,
Now and forever alway?
Potter, I know from a monitor’s thunder,
Man, self-determined, lives;
Free acts of will come up, and dive under,
Freely as Heaven gives;
36Here in myself, a splinter, the Father
Gives in pledge to earth,
I find a law that helps me rather
Estimate my true worth.
Potter, I know Thy name is mighty ;
Multitudes bow the knee ;
Millions of men, scared and flighty,
Pay a lip tribute to Thee ;
This I know, beside Thy finger
Fashioning me to form,
[ have a will, myself, to ginger
Self to a perfect norm.
“Potter and clay’’ has excess vigor,
Teaching too much, and false,
Flattering us with too much rigor,
As manikins in a waltz:
False the figure, true the adage,
“Christ working in me”
We together fashion my image
For all eternity.
THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE.
Ah! this, then, is the philosopher’s stone,
Aflame with celestial fire,
Converting baser metals to gold,
And kindling high desire,
An elixir of life to invigorate,
And wash our hearts out pure,
To fill us with dream-stuff high, elate,
And to warrant these dreams stand sure.
37We spend our money for things indeed,
That satisfy not, our souls
Famished for bread; we inly need
Bigger and better doles ;
Eager we look for the things worth while,
And probe to the depths of space,
While the angels gaze at our search, and smile
To think we have missed the place.
Take the philosopher’s stone, and see,
If it will bring success.
Never a mortal has bent the knee,
But he would at last confess,
This is the key that unlocks the door,
The charm that will surely work
Miracles here on the cabin floor,
And miracles, too, at the kirk,
Prayer is the stone with the magic power,
Come down from the days of old,
Turning the soil to grass and flower,
And baser metals to gold;
Prayer is the gift that Jesus pressed
In sweet, heart-talks with the throne,
That changes the ore in a sinner’s breast
Into the gold of His own.IAM THAT SISYPHUS,
I am that Sisyphus, Lord, who strove,
In yon Greek myth, to roll uphill
The stone which ever turned, and drove
Him back, and Overcame his will.
Have I, as he, with sinful greed,
An avaricious spirit fed?
Then should the task be like the need,
And I to punishment be led.
Have I not fought the flesh, and found
The old sins flaming out again ?
I rolled the stone, and saw it bound
Down hill among my fellowmen.
Forgive me, Lord, that I repeat
My sinful practices so much ;
Then grant me strength, that I defeat
Them all, through Thy revealing touch.
Day after day I make my vow
To Thee, that I shall keep Thy laws;
But blushes redden on my brow,
When I count up my inward flaws.
The things I do are far outclassed
By those I ought to do, and don’t:
Omitted duties, when amassed,
Resolve themselves into—I won't.
I roll the stone up hill all day,
And find myself pushed back again;
Thy mercy is so great to men
That I shall keep my toilsome way.
39RE aie ee ee ee a ee
Sno
LAY ON THE LASH.
Lay on the lash! Spare not a single blow!
Excoriate my soul until I bleed!
To all my groans and crying pay no heed,
If only I may win the Christ I know.
His own soul was not given indulgent ease;
Nor did He beg a truce with death and pain;
He struggled on through cold, and wind, and rain;
He won His way to victory on His knees.
The precious metals all are proved by fire,
Whose hungry flames burn out the baser sorts,
The flaming furnace bubbles, cracks and snorts,
But last comes out the gold we much admire.
And so in human hearts, the very best
Possessions of our characters are found
To be the ones we got in griefs profound,
Or by some other almost torturing test.
Those golden chains, worn by the saints of God,
Were not obtained without the goldsmith’s aid:
They were not found one day on dress parade,
Nor were they picked up loosely on the sod.
A gaunt, pale figure looking like a ghost,
Arrayed against my soul a brood of care,
Disease, loss, pain, misfortune and despair,
Until the crowd amounted to a host,
But still lay on the lash, and spare me not!
Already have I measured all the loss;
Did not the crystal Christ die on the cross?
And shall His agony be soon forgot?
40)MAKE ME THY HARP.
Make me Thy harp, responsive, sweet,
To every breath the Spirit sends,
As when the zephyrs swept the strings
Of that Aeolian harp that blends
In such fine harmony of sound,
Which Lesbian poets used of old,
That echoes still the world around,
As softly in those days of gold.
Spirit of God, work in my heart
Those deep true changes, that Thy grace
Alone can make. Burn out the dross,
And in the change show me Thy face,
That when my lips shall speak the word,
Inspired by Thee in me to say,
The music of the message heard
Shall grow the sweeter day by day.
Shine in my mind, Celestial Light,
Till all its darkness pass away;
Or, as the whiteness of the dawn,
May truth come to me like the day;
Veil not Thy glory from my eyes;
But, seeing it, may I go forth,
And fetch that glory from the skies,
A boon to men of priceless worth.
O tune my voice, and make it Thine,
That I may join the hosts that praise
Thy matchless love through all the earth,
In countless hymns and countless ways!
Thee only would I worship, Lord,
Thy truth and light proclaim, until
The world shall know Thy holy word,
And do Thy righteous sovereign. will,
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OPEN THE DOORS.
Open the doors, and let me through;
It must be grand to die,
And enter again, as heroes do,
The lists for another try,
Out on the field of another life,
Where men may tilt a lance
In some such hearty, congenial strife,
As this world gave in advance.
Open the doors, and stand aside!
Welcome, O coming change!
The heroes come, a swelling tide;
This is a glad exchange.
Throw the gear of earth away!
Step out with a courage high!
This flesh-disguise is only clay;
It must be grand to die.
Open the doors, the sapphire walls
Of a city come to view
Where none of our earth-care ever appalls,
And souls shall live anew;
Out of this trembling house of dust
My spirit shall soon escape,
And test the strength of its daily trust
In God who gave it shape,
Open the doors! ah! see them swing!
It is just grand to die!
The life beyond is a blessed thing,
As it bursts upon my eye;
Under my feet I tread the stars,
And count them common clod:
To perfect life there are no bars
In the holy city of God.
42WHAT IS TRUTH?
~ What is truth?” the judge once asked ;
We echo him still, ““What ?”
And, then, in trutt
Men chase their phantoms hot.
One said, “The truth is dearer far
To me than hands or eyes,
And I would rank with Socrates,
Who in its service dies.”
Another: “Truth to me is sweet ;
‘Tis passion—sweet, and so,
ll cast all other things aside
And in its livery go.
One said, “The truth to me is far
More grand than liberty—
A sacred treasure, to be held,
For it will make men free.”’
Another said, “The truth is high
Above all things of price.
1’s wild, vain pursuit,
All pearls and gold, all joy and love,
For it I’d sacrifice.”
But, “What is truth’’? the judge once more
Demands; his words are iced
)
“I am the Truth,” speaks out our Lord,
And millions echo, “Christ.”ee ee er ee
BORROWED LIGHT.
The moon, though dark itself, reflects
The glory of the sun; :
From night till morn its pale light beams
Until the night is done.
The sea reflects the moon that sinks
Beneath the dancing wave;
Its heart is glad to show the moon
The glory that it gave.
So may my life give back to Thee
The brightness of Thine own,
As all the splendid angels do
Around Thy shining throne.
TO GOD ABOVE THE SKIES.
Beneath yon overarching dome
A million altars rise;
The smoke of sacrifice goes up
To God above the skies.
Amid our pain we summon help
With weeping voice and eyes;
Our prayers like incense float aloft
To God above the skies.
And when we suffer for our sins,
With groaning shouts and cries,
We lift our pleading voices up
To God above the skies.
44When rank oppression works us wrong,
And fills our hearts with sighs ;
Our sobs and loud complainings reach
To God above the skies.
But God is not so far away,
Our prayers His love belies:
God dwells in human Heri as well
As up above the skies.
I SAW THEE, LORD, TO-DAY.
I saw Thee, Lord, today
While on the way to church;
I saw Thee on the shaded way
In oak and ash and birch.
I heard Thee, Lord, today
While birds were on the wing;
Thy music was so bright and gay
My heart began to sing.
I found Thee, Lord, today
In beauty on the hills,
In sighing winds and weeping clouds,
And in the singing rills.
I sensed Thee, Lord, today;
Thy perfumes on the air
Were sweet as clover in the hay;
They stirred my soul to prayer.
I felt Thee, Lord, today
Upon my face; Thy breath
45Was warm as June, and like a spray
Of sea air o’er the heath,
I breathed Thee, Lord, today
In odors from the wood,
Blown up by soft sweet summer winds;
Thy breath to me was good.
I knew Thee, Lord, today;
I tasted that sweet wine
Of joy Thy holy grace doth pay
To those most truly Thine.
I grasped Thee, Lord, today
By faith, that best sixth sense;
Through it I learned to truly pray
Till Thou shalt call me hence.
THE COLLEGE CHAPEL.
Within this holy place
I hear the students singing:
“Praise ye the Father,”
With reverent voice and face.
Through many years
I've heard their voices bringing
Praise to the Father
For His unfailing grace.
Alone here in silence
I still can hear them phrasing
Their daily offering to
The Lord of life and love,
And all my soul joins in
46Their joyful praisin
§
The good Almighty Giver
Of blessings from above,
O blessed memory,
How sweet you make their singing,
O cherished friends,
My students, one and all!
O dearly loved!
My soul to you is cl
And shall on throug!
inging,
1 the years
Until the Father’s call.
And when strong hands
My body shall be br
To fill its narrow ni
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Beneath the lowly sod,
Across the lonely night
In that bright day your singing
Shall blend with mine
About the throne of
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ALDERMAN LIBRARY
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on the date
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