The h.o.a.ry head with joy to crown; In short, the right to work and pray, "To point to heaven and lead the way."
The Mother"s Evening Prayer
O gentle presence, peace and joy and power; O Life divine, that owns each waiting hour, Thou Love that guards the nestling"s faltering flight!
Keep Thou my child on upward wing to-night.
Love is our refuge; only with mine eye [10]
Can I behold the snare, the pit, the fall: His habitation high is here, and nigh, His arm encircles me, and mine, and all.
O make me glad for every scalding tear, For hope deferred, ingrat.i.tude, disdain! [15]
Wait, and love more for every hate, and fear No ill,-since G.o.d is good, and loss is gain.
Beneath the shadow of His mighty wing; In that sweet secret of the narrow way, Seeking and finding, with the angels sing: [20]
"Lo, I am with you alway,"-watch and pray.
No snare, no fowler, pestilence or pain; No night drops down upon the troubled breast, When heaven"s aftersmile earth"s tear-drops gain, And mother finds her home and heavenly rest. [25]
[Page 390.]
June
Whence are thy wooings, gentle June?
Thou hast a Naiad"s charm; Thy breezes scent the rose"s breath; Old Time gives thee her palm. [5]
The lark"s shrill song doth wake the dawn; The eve-bird"s forest flute Gives back some maiden melody, Too pure for aught so mute.
The fairy-peopled world of flowers, [10]
Enraptured by thy spell, Looks love unto the laughing hours, Through woodland, grove, and dell; And soft thy footstep falls upon The verdant gra.s.s it weaves; [15]
To melting murmurs ye have stirred The timid, trembling leaves.
When sunshine beautifies the shower, As smiles through teardrops seen, Ask of its June, the long-hushed heart, [20]
What hath the record been?
And thou wilt find that harmonies, In which the Soul hath part, Ne"er perish young, like things of earth, In records of the heart. [25]
[Page 391.]
Wish And Item
Written to the Editor of the _Item_, Lynn, Ma.s.s.
I hope the heart that"s hungry For things above the floor, Will find within its portals [5]
An item rich in store;
That melancholy mortals Will count their mercies o"er, And learn that Truth and wisdom Have many items more; [10]
That when a wrong is done us, It stirs no thought of strife; And Love becomes the substance, As item, of our life;
That every ragged urchin, [15]
With bare feet soiled or sore, Share G.o.d"s most tender mercies,- Find items at our door.
Then if we"ve done to others Some good ne"er told before, [20]
When angels shall repeat it, "T will be an item more.
[Page 392.]
The Oak On The Mountain"s Summit
Oh, mountain monarch, at whose feet I stand,- Clouds to adorn thy brow, skies clasp thy hand,- Nature divine, in harmony profound, With peaceful presence hath begirt thee round. [5]
And thou, majestic oak, from yon high place Guard"st thou the earth, asleep in night"s embrace,- And from thy lofty summit, pouring down Thy sheltering shade, her noonday glories crown?
Whate"er thy mission, mountain sentinel, [10]
To my lone heart thou art a power and spell; A lesson grave, of life, that teacheth me To love the Hebrew figure of a tree.
Faithful and patient be my life as thine; As strong to wrestle with the storms of time; [15]
As deeply rooted in a soil of love; As grandly rising to the heavens above.
Isle Of Wight
Written on receiving a painting of the Isle
Isle of beauty, thou art singing [20]
To my sense a sweet refrain; To my busy mem"ry bringing Scenes that I would see again.