a?s5£if ih ■ 1 . - *w>, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. %P-~ ^rig^|u Shelf._d 7t>^Cf UNITED STATES OF AMEKICA. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/cherrybloomsofyeOOarth "MY GRANDMOTHER'S HOUSE, WERE YOU EVER THERE?" I THE CHERRY-BLOOMS OF YEDDO AND OTHER POEMS BY CLARA M. ARTHUR " The infinite bliss of Nature I feel in every vein, The light and the life of summer Blossom in heart and brain." BOSTON 11 'ofw D. LOTHROP & COMPANY FRANKLIN STREET ' Copyright, 1881, By D. Lothrop & Company. CONTENTS. The Cherry-Blooms of Yeddo 9 My Grandmother's House . 12 Changing Pastures .... l6 The Patchwork Quilt . ' 20 Patience Prim 2 5 On the Beach at Newport 29 Charity Cross 33 Santa Claus .... 40 The Park Street Clock 43 The Legend of Thor . 47 My Roadside Friend . 52 The old Elm on the Common 57 The Bumblebee's Story 62 Josie . 67 Blossom Bennett .... > 70 The Carrier Fish 74 Contents. Friar's Head, Campobello .... 80 The Ballad of Pussy Dot .... - 8S Herring Cove ...... 90 The Dwarf Oak 94 The Bird in the Rain .... 100 Ruth ........ 103 Mary 107 The Pilgrim of Gongen .... 109 The Woman of Samaria .... 117 The Prayer ....... 1 2 1 The Sails are set ..... 123 The Baptism ...... 125 The Island of Enoshima .... 128 Easter ........ l 33 At the Lotus Gate 136 NOTE. A few miles from the centre of the old city of Yeddo, now called Tokio, the capital of the Empire of Japan, is a place called Mukojima. There is a river with arched bridges, and along the bank a road bordered on either side, for miles and miles, with cherry-trees. They have no fruit ; only blossoms. Off at the right are gardens, and among them tea-houses, and everywhere pleasant resting- places. When April comes the newspapers report the cherry-trees in bloom, and it seems as if the influence of those far-off blossoms finds its way through the dustiness and dinginess of that great city ; for the workman leaves his work, and the merchant his store, and they go to spend the pleasant April clays in the meadow, by the river — under the cherry-trees of Mukojima. 7 THE CHERRY-BLOOMS OF YEDDO. O ACRES and acres of cherry-blows, That bloom in a far-off meadow ! O acres and acres of land where grow The cherry-blooms of Yeddo ! The wind stole sweetness and gave it me, As it rollicked home belated, As by the garden tsubach-tree I worked and dreamed and waited. O acres and acres of white-tiled roofs, And miles of dusty going, Between me and the cherry-blooms, By the meadow river growing ! 9 10 THE CHERRY-BLOOMS OF YEDDO. I laid beneath the tsubach-tree My dreams and work together, And went to find the cherry-blooms In the pleasant April weather. merrily on! sweet odors come With every breeze that passes; 1 reach the gate, my tired feet Press down the meadow-grasses. O acres and acres of cherry-blows Rustling all together, Courting the sun in their gala dress In the pleasant April weather! On every breeze your sweetness fling To distant field and meadow, And rustling sing, and singing die, Ye cherry-blooms of Yeddo, THE CHERRY-BLOOMS OF YEDDO. 11 While down beneath life's tsubach-tree I will place each vain endeavor, And go to find the cherry -blooms That grow in heaven forever. I hear them ring, I hear them sing, And call in very pity Earth's tired workers at their toil In life's great dusty city. joyfully on ! sweet odors come With every breeze that passes ; 1 will reach the gate ; my tired feet Shall press the heavenly grasses. O glorious rest ! I will not care For miles of dusty going, When I shall find the cherry-blooms By the heavenly river growing. MY GRANDMOTHER'S HOUSE. BUILT years ago, large, quaint, and square, Things old-fashioned everywhere ; Grandmother's house, were you ever there ? In quest of a place on a summer's day, When they went to build did they lose their way, Among daisies and buttercups go astray? Lose their way and say to each, "We will put it here by the rocky beach, Just from the waters out of reach ? " 12 MY GRANDMOTHER'S HOUSE. 13 And so they built it; large and square, Cosy corners here and there, Old-fashioned wonders everywhere. Unlooked-for nooks on every side, Queer old places where one might hide, Grandmother's house, our childish pride. Old-fashioned dishes, fit for elves, Stowed away on closet shelves: Unmatched platters by themselves. Curious china, quaint and old, Thirteen stars in blue and gold Two gilt doves in circle hold. On topmost shelf, without a mate, All alone there stands a plate, Relic of an ancient date. 14 MY GRANDMOTHER'S HOUSE. Oft have I turned from dainties spread, Forgot my slice of wheaten bread, To con that pictured plate instead. Its full rigged ships of deepest blue, The seas unruffled sailing throusrh, Towards a distant landscape view. Flying pennants at mast-head each, Ships that sail, but never reach The bluish pebbles on the beach. In its red case, standing tall, Ticks the clock against the wall, Its benediction on us all. On braided mat in a cosy chair, The glory of the . house is there, Time's gathered snow upon her hair. MY GRANDMOTHER'S HOUSE. 15 The story of her life is told ; She is drifting away in the mist and the gold Of a life beyond that never grows old. Drifting away, and out of sight, Into the glory of a greater light, Into a day that hath no night. •3 And in all the world there never will be Among daisies and buttercups down by the sea A house old-fashioned, like this, for me. CHANGING PASTURES. HOW calm and still the night is; shadows gray Wrap up the outlined hilltops, far away, Of rugged Scotland's coast. A lonely island among the Hebrides, A desert waste, which cannot leafy trees Nor thrifty verdure boast — Only a pasture-land for grazing herds, A princely mansion, where the wild sea-birds May safely build their nest. All day the faithful shepherd leads his flocks, At twilight, now among the cliffs and rocks, He waits with them to rest. 16 i CHANGING PASTURES. 17 " To-morrow will my herds bleat sad complaint For fresher fields, my tender lambs will faint For food they cannot find." So to the water's edge he leads the way ; Of all his gathered charge none gone astray, Nor truant left behind. They wait around the boat in clustering bands, In gentle sport upon the shining sands, With restless feet they tread. And all are gathered in, none willful stay, Unmindful if to death or pasture they Are by the shepherd led. Soft in the gloaming sounds the dip of oars ; It breaks the shadowed outline of the shores, And bleatings of affright Float through the twilight with the boatman's song, While darkness, at some banquet tarrying long, Comes tardily at midnight. 18 CHANGING PASTURES. * Scarce doth the boat from shadows of the rock Creep out, e'er its dull bow, with gentle shock, Slides up a sandy beach. Fresh island pastures for the boatman's herds, Welcome is given by the wild sea-birds, In strange, unearthly speech. The boat unladened, by the shepherd led, The flocks with restless feet sweet music tread From out the singing sands, The whispered greetings of the shells and rocks, A song of welcome for the passing flocks, To their wild pasture-lands. And up the path, among cliffs by springing rills They feed, nor bleat complaint upon its hills For pastures left behind. When we as the} 7 in life's rough pastures feed Till our Great Shepherd sees that we have need For food we cannot find, CHANGING PASTURES. 19 And our souls hunger on life's rugged hills For food, an^l faint beside its wasted rills, Shall not our footsteps tread A. prelude welcome from the singing sands Of vast eternity's fresh pasture-lands, And be forever fed ? Note : — Among the Hebrides, the herdsmen convey their flocks in large boats, from one island to another, for pasturage, THE PATCHWORK QUILT. LIGHT and shadows rise and fall In the room with the rosy-papered wall, Room to me that is best of all. Wind, lift up the muslin screen! Let in the light that comes between The maple leaves of shining green. Fall soft upon the patchwork spread, Quilt of blue and white and red, Upon a carved old-fashioned bed. 20 THE PATCH 'WORK QUILT. 21 Your worn-out squares are quilted through With thoughts of all I used to do, When I wore the dresses now in you. I was a girl with braided hair, — I think of the time I gave the tear, The zigzag rent beyond repair, — As 1 went through fields, a girlish rover, In a dress of white, all dotted over With sprigs of wheat, and sprays of clover. O dress ! that once was mine to wear, Your clover blooms are scattered there In the pink and white of that patchwork square. Wind, lift up the muslin screen ! Let in the light that comes between The maple leaves of shining green. 22 THE PATCHWORK QUILT. Fall soft upon the patchwork spread ; For a little child that now is dead, Sewed your squares of white and red. One summer's day she wrought in you, And left her needle half-way through, With a knotted, twisted thread of blue. Before she slept that summer's night, She laid away, and out of sight, Your folded squares of red and white. She sought for blooms that fadeless grow, And left for other hands to sew The clover blossoms here below. And still the light, through windows small, Throws shadows on the rosy wall, On the quaint, old-fashioned bedstead tall ; THE PATCHWORK QUILT. 23 And falls in waving bars of gold Across each faded, wrinkled fold Of clover blossoms, growing old ; While into life's great patchwork spread, I sew with many a knotted thread, Time's clover blooms of white and red. And by and by, when night shall fall, To dim the roses on the wall, If through the dark I hear a call, My work unfinished here below I will lay aside, and softly go To seek for blooms that fadeless grow. What matters it? I will not grieve If other hands shall interweave And smooth the tangled threads I leave. 24 THE PA TCH WORK Q UIL T. Beyond the dark, in fields of bliss I'll gather flowers, and will not miss The clover blossoms left in this. I will backward look through all the shade, To see in full completeness laid Life's patchwork squares which I have made, And heavenly light will softly shine, Till planned by One with thought divine Will seem these unmatched squares of mine. ?T-A ■ : PATIENCE PRIM. >ATIENCE PRIM, aged ten, Have you seen her? — Where, and when? Quaker hat and gingham gown. Cherry cheeks and eyes of brown ; Ankle-deep in trodden clover, Bowl of berries spilling over. 25 26 PATIENCE PlilM. Where the buttercups are growing In the far-off meadow mowing, Tired of going up and down, Patience Prim, in gingham gown, Fast asleep among the clover, — Bowl of berries all tipped over. Out beneath the fern leaves creeping, Fairies came and found her sleeping ; Changed her Quaker cape of brown Into wings like thistle down, While her homespun tunic grew Into dress of elfin blue. Up a slanting sunset ray She with fairies went away ; As they flew, they talked together, Patience Prim and " White Bird Feather." " Fairy, tell me, as we go, All the wonders that you know. PATIENCE PRIM. 27 "I have left the daisies growing In the far-off meadow, mowing, Down among the trodden clover Left my berries tipping over — Left them all that I might see What those sunset clouds can be." So they went, on rays of light, Until earth was out of sight — Went through mists around them lifting, Reached a cloudy island drifting, Rosy tinged with sunset hue, Floating in a sea of blue. "Fairy, let us try and clamber Up that mountain cliff of amber, Maybe in its ridgy hollow- There are butterflies to follow ; Caves in which through all the day Moon and stars are hid away." 28 PATIENCE PBIM. In the far-off meadow mowing, Where the buttercups are growing, Patience Prim, in gingham gown, Opened wide her eyes of brown, Woke, and found her dream was over, Pier berries spilled among the clover. Grieved because she had not time Up the sunset hills to climb, Went home through the meadow mowing, Where the buttercups are growing, Finger-tips as red as cherries, Blushes stolen from the berries, Fair among the blossoms fair, Daisy-crowned and chestnut hair, All the flowers downward bent, Nodding to her as she went Down the lane and through the gate, Where the morning-glories wait. ON THE BEACH AT NEWPORT. SURELY the stars, had their eyes been bright, Would have laughed to see so queer a sight, When the bathing season was at its height. Sometimes even the staid old sun, Up in the sky, seemed to think it fun, To look through the clouds and see us run. O, the wind blew .strong from out the east ! It capped the waves with a foamy yeast ; But did it frighten you ? Not in the least. 29 30 ON THE BEACH AT NEWPORT. There conies a huge one ! give us your hand ; Oh ! ah ! ugh ! Isn't it grand ? But my eyes are brim full of salt and sand. So all of us dressed in the gray of Quakers, Laughed and talked among the breakers, Guessed old Neptune had joined the Shakers. Thought that each particular whale, Down from the north on a midsummer's sail, Must be blowing in rage to raise such a gale. And waiting there, in the seething tide, One told us a story, as side by side We watched for a wave to give us a ride. How Neptune once took a sudden whim, When a Newport belle was learning to swim, That her solitaire diamond suited him. ON THE BE A CH A T NE WPOB T. 3 1 So he stirred up the waves in foamy strife ; She sought the shore to save her life ; He slipped off her ring for his mermaid wife. But her lover vowed, as he trod the strand, That at next high tide, upon her hand Would glimmer the gold of the wedding band. We heard the story in the surf out there, And, drenched with waves, we breathed our share Of salt water mixed with Newport air. As out in the east the gray fog lifted, A breeze from the west the dense clouds rifted ; Landward through foam and surf we drifted To the shore dotted over with spans of grays, Barouches and teams with gold-mounted bays, Ladies in silks and white piques, 32 ON THE BEACH AT NEWPORT. Who loved the grace of carriage ease, Thought perhaps they would shiver and freeze In the rougher sports of the tumbling seas. So we said "good-by" to the surf and spray, To our broad-rimmed hats, and our suits of gray, And up the hill as we rode away We backward looked, and said to each That none had told in song or speech Half the frolic and fun of Newport bead;. CHARITY GROSS. TINTED are her cheeks with rose She is waiting in the snows Of the falling apple-blows. Tinklings of a drowsy rill Come from the upland orchard hill, Niches in her dreams to fill. Dotted is her rustic shawl With the apple-leaves that fall ; Twilight splendors cover all. 33 34 CHARITY CROSS. Deeper lined than earthly grace, Rest of heaven doth in her face Rejoice in its abiding-place. Charity Cross, it groweth late ; Household duties for you wait Just beyond the garden gate. Leave the apple-blooms to fall, Far-off brook to vainly call ; Lightly climb the orchard-wall. All your dreamings softly fold ; Let them drift away untold In the dying sunset's gold. Down the path that leads between Ferns and mosses shaded green, The gabled house is dimly seen. CHARITY CROSS. 35 Winds, with poplar trees at play, Chafe with tossing boughs all clay Weather-beaten walls of gray. Open wide the trellised door : Sunset glories go before, Fall upon the kitchen floor, Turn to gold the swinging loom Standing in the corner's gloom, Of the low, brown-raftered room. Brazen dogs that ever sleep, Silenthy the entrance keep Of- the fire-place, huge and deep. Charity, stop no more to dream ; Covers lift with puffing steam ; Waiting; stands the risen cream. 36 CHA RITT CROSS. Change to white your apron gray, Sprinkled clothes to fold away Ready for another . day. . Quickly now the table spread With its home-spun cloth of red, Savory meats and snowy bread. On the shelf a pink-lipped shell, That forever tries to tell Ocean-music learned so well. Tiptoe on the cricket stand ; Take it in your sun-browned hand, Shell from eastern tropic land. Let your clear voice through it ring, Homeward the hired help to bring From the distant meadow spring. CHARITY CROSS. 37 Far away they hear the call ; Look ! they come by orchard wall, Where the apple-blossoms fall. One that foremost leads the plough Sees you in the doorway now — Breaks a bending apple-bough, Waves it by the meadow creek; Answering flushes on your cheek Tell the words you do not speak. Out upon the rippling river Purple lights of sunset quiver, Rustling leaves reflected shiver. Shell in hand, she goes to greet Her lover, where the turf-grown street And the meadow pathway meet. 38 CHARITY CROSS. Insect voices far away, Hushed in silence through the day, Whisper in the night of May. While in vain the pink-lipped shell, Murmuring in its hollow cell, Would its own love story tell. Through the drifting apple-snow, Where the four-leafed clovers grow, Hand in hand they homeward go, And they vow, whate'er the weather. 'Mid the brier, through the heather, The}- will walk life's way together, Parting, when the day grows late, If a moment, at the gate, One is left, alone to wait, CHARITY CROSS. 39 Yet each other they will greet, Where life's shadeless, dusty street And the heavenly pathway meet. SANTA GLAUS IN his crystal palace in the Polar Sea, Santa Glaus harnessed, in tandem three, The Ursa Major and the Minor Bear, Witli the Flying Horse to lead the pair. They snuffed the wind of sleet and snow, They pawed the ground in their haste to go : Santa Glaus 1 team in tandem three At his palace gate in the Polar Sea. That palace, built of ice and snow, Begun in the ages long ago, — Its walls were laid the very day The Christ-child in the manger lay ; 40 SAJSTTA CLAUS. 41 And all its crystal bells were rung When first the Bethlehem shepherds sung. And Santa Claus now, in the Christmas cold, Gathers his gifts for young and old; Lights up his palace on every side And opens the icy shutters wide; Puts on the frostwork steps a star To keep the swinging door ajar, And show the way for his tandem three To find the gate of the Polar Sea. Because the icebergs are rough and tall, He takes his course above them all ; And his tandem three, as if at play, Go dashing down the milky way. The northern lights are blazing high — His palace lamps on the midnight sky ! That flash of light is a shooting star, A spark from the wheel of his rolling carl 42 SANTA CLAUS. Tis Santa Glaus coming which looks like day, And pales the stars of the milky way ! You hear not the sound of the north wind cold, But the whiz and whir of his car of gold ! So put out the fires, lest they should melt The icicle sword in his starry belt ; We will take a nap and then we'll see If Santa Glaus brought for you and me Some wondrous gift, with his tandem three, From his crystal halls in the Polar Sea. THE PARK STREET CLOCK. I AM Park Street Clock just striking three , With a time-worn face I look to see The people come and the people go Over the sidewalk just below. Much I think, but little I say Of all I see across the way ; For it is not best that a clock like me Should always talk of the things I see. With ungloved hands I pointed four A week ago or a little more, When through the storm and blinding sleet, Looking down on the busy street, 43 44 THE PARK STREET CLOCK. I saw a child in the bitter cold, In garments thin, and worn, and old. I gave a tick and then a sigh, Because nry hands were up so high. Thought if my works had only power To do something more than tell the hour, She had not gone unfed and chill, By Park Street Church and up the hill. She had not gone through storm and sleet ' With a look so tired, as if 'twere sweet If she could rest beneath the snow In Park Street church-yard, just below. Pardon me, friends, a clock like me Ousfht not to talk of the things I see, My hands are cold, my speech is slow, The weights are heavy that make me go. THE PARK STREET CLOCK. 45 North, and south, and east, and west, Over the graves of those who rest And sleep so calm beneath the snow, In Park Street church-yard, just below, I look to see, but not to say, Of all that happens across the way. Mine is the work to tell the hour A time-worn clock in the old church tower, With hands and face to outward show The power within that makes me go, Night and day to watch the town, To tick, and strike, and not run down. A word, my friends, as to and fro Around the dial-plate I go; If you will only show as true The hidden power that works in you, 46 THE PARK STREET CLOCK. I will not care if my hands are high, Because the poor are passing by, For they will not go unfed and chill, By Park Street Church and up the hill. But now I start, and whiz, and whir, All my wheels begin to, stir ; I, Park Street Clock, am pointing four, I strike, and tick, and say no more. THE LEGEND OF THOR. SAID the mighty King Thru-, " r Tis break of day, Wrap up my castle in storm-clouds gray, Gather me thunderbolts many and strong — Jotunheim's road, is rough and long, Split the rocks in our way asunder, Make me a path the mountains under ! " They harnessed his steed with a lightning chain ; And the giant King Thor and his followers twain Left far behind, at early day, His casfcle wrapped in storm-clouds gray. Traversed great deserts, and came at last To Neptune's pasture, an ocean vast, 47 4S THE LEGEND OF THOR. Where Hymer's cattle, the icebergs tall, By spring let loose from their northern stall, Are watched and tended as they roam at large By a giant herdsman with icy barge, - Who ferried King Thor to the opposite shore, In a crystal boat with an icicle oar. Leagues inland then Thor journeyed on Through waste chaotic, till Luna shone, And softened with light from her crescent hand The weird shadows of Giant-land. Said Thor, as he reined his hail-cloud steed, " Here stands a castle to suit our need." Substance among shadows it stood alone, Deserted, empty, built of stone ; And mighty Thor and his followers twain Made fast the steed with a lightning chain, And slept till midnight. There came a roar Of a raging foe at the castle door. THE LEGEND OF THOR. 49 Tlior seized his thunderbolts, many and strong, He guarded the entrance all night long — Till the stars paled out. When break of day From Giant-land rolled the mists away, He found the noise was only the roar Of Skrymir, asleep beside his door — The great Earth-giant wrapped in a cloud ; Like fiery Etna, he breathed so loud The echoes caught and carried the sound In notes redoubled, for leagues around : The castle at night that seemed so grand Was a cast-off glove from Skryniir's hand. Thor's followers both in sore affright, In its empty thumb had staid all night. Thor gathered his brow with an angry frown, In rage he brought a thunderbolt down, While the Earth-giant said, in dreamy sleep, " The summer clouds begin to weep, 50 THE LEGEND OF TIIOR. I feel a drop upon my cheek." Said Thor, " A stronger bolt I'll seek." He hurled the fiercest of them all. Said Skrymir, " Doth a sere leaf fall ? " And the vanquished Thor, in sore dismay, Left the giant asleep at break of day. For what great power, what arm can break, What mighty force can even wake Or startle to creative birth, This breathing, rugged, grand old earth ? Bolts are but dew-drops on its cheek, Till Deity itself shall speak. And like the mighty, kingly Thor Do earth's philosophers wage their war, With mind and thought for bolts of thunder, Time-honored systems hewing asunder. THE LEGEND OF THOR. 51 They find a theory and call it their own — Think it substance among shadows standing alone ; But their rest is broken for they hear the roar Of some Giant Truth outside of their door. And knowledge is crescent ; what now seems grand, In a future's fuller light may stand As Truth's cast-off glove. When he shall walte, What mighty force his arm can break? And but as dew-drops on his cheek Are Error's darts when God shall speak. MY ROADSIDE FRIEND. I WALKED, one clay, the maple boughs October frosts had kissed; They blushed, and looked with rosy cheeks Through Indian-summer mist. The winding path curved out and in, Past fields of ripened corn, Across the tumbling hillside brook Of autumn freshets born. But where along the roadside bank, The golden-rods bend low Their crowned heads, radiant in the light Of the after-summer's glow, 52 MY ROADSIDE FRIEND. 53 I met a butterfly, "and I said, " Upon what mission bent butterfly, with colored wings Of brown and yellow blent? " How can it be that April day Your memory forgets ! 1 met you in your coat of fur Among the violets. " I did not think in dress so rough, Such beauty could abide ; The thickness of your winter coat Unfolding wings might hide. " You went your way, how happened it You found a dress like this? Gould see to weave it in the dark, Within the chrysalis? 54 MY ROADSIDE FRIEND. " O flutter here and flutter there, Along this green grass sea, And by yon reach of thistle hills, Give me your company ! "I'll tell you of a little child, One of my dearest pets, Who walked out through the fields of life, Among its violets. " We went through all the April days Together side by side ; And I forgot an earthly dress Unfolding wings might hide. "She left us, went away to find Some freer life than this; Pushed wide the door, and left for us The empty chrysalis. MY ROADSIDE FRIEND. 55 "Among daintier flowers than violets That edge the heavenly sea, She flatters in sweet freedom now, With angel company. "But hark! O butterfly, I hear A call for you to rest ! The golden-rods along the way Are nodding the request. " Then tarry now, before the frost Some crisp October day, Within the dark of that green bank Shall hide their gold away. "And I will take the homeward path, That leads down by the mill, To where the blushing maples stand Upon the far-off hill. 36 MY ROADSIDE FRIEND. "I will go life's way until from out Its chrysalis I see Some freer life, where I may go With angel company." THE OLD ELM ON THE COMMON. I PASSED that way ; the summer's heat Had moved the ancient tree To whisper through its rustling leaves Its storied life to me. " I am very old ; my outstretched arms Have braved full many a storm ; Yet still I wrap the leaves of green Around my rugged form. " Two hundred years I backward look — I am a sturdy tree ; The wigwams on the tenting ground My topmost boughs can see. 57 58 THE OLD ELM ON THE COMMON. "And camp-fires gleam beside the brook, Where ripples now the pond ; I watch their lights flash up against The tangled breaks beyond, "While plumed, painted chieftain braves Have war in council made, And vengeance vowed on every foe Who would their soil invade. " I see the ships ! I hear a cry ! The war-whoop on the plain ; The blood of friend and foe alike Is shed as summer rain. " But conquered is the dusky race ; Their wounded chief is laid Upon the daisy-sprinkled turf, To die beneath my shade. THE OLD ELM ON THE COMMON. 59 " I rustle all my swinging leaves To muffle distant sounds, That in a calm his soul may go To far-off hunting grounds. "I onward look one hundred years; Events are crowding fast ; I see upon the trodden snow My leafless shadow cast. "For blustering is the winter's wind, And bitter is its chill ; The Redcoats pitch their camping tents Upon the sloping hill. " I overlook my comrades all ; I view the busy town ; The ensign red, St. George's cross, Is every flag-staff's crown. THE OLD ELM ON THE COMMON. "I shiver in my sturdy limbs! "lis not the chilling blast, But sounds I hear on every side Of elm-trees falling fast. " First martyrs they ! My heart was stirred As never yet by storm, To see their funeral fires blaze up To keep the Redcoats warm. "They passed me by! I stand to-day A loyal elm and true, To clap with all my leafy hands For the Red and White and Blue ! "I outward reach my stalwart arms; I brave the winter's storm ; In summer wrap the leaves of green Around my rugged form: THE OLD ELM ON THE COMMON. 61 "And many years may homeless birds A shelter find in me, To chirp and sing among rny boughs Their chorus jubilee. u While in my trunk, with embryo leaves, Down deep I'll fold away, The records of my storied life To tell another day." THE BUMBLEBEE'S STORY. WHERE Stumpland reaches out of sight, Where weeds grow tall, and frogs all night Talk together in marshes low, And thick rank clumps of thistles grow, In a pearly nest of wondrous form, Secure from wind and safe from storm, In a log grown old with time's decay, I, Bumblebee, buzzed my youth away. • A stump stood tall beside my door. And at its feet, from the mossy floor, A berry grew, all tinged with red, By sun and rain and dew-drops fed. 62 THE B U3IBLEBEE' S 8 TOR Y. 6: It grew in beauty and blushes fair ; I thought my glances brought them there ; Knew not that sun, and earth, and sky, Had loved the berry as well as I. But older and wiser, when the da} r s were long, I said in my heart, "My wings are strong: Beyond the rim of Stumpland over, Surely there lies some field of clover." I said " good-by " to the thistle and frogs, To the moss-grown stump and hollow logs. The thistles nodded their airy heads, The frogs looked out of their sleepy beds. I said "good-by" to the berry that grew Nestled in leaves and drops of dew ; I thought it wept at the words I said, My sweet little berry, blushing red. <>4 THE BUMBLEBEES STORY. And on that early summer day, For miles and miles I flew away, And found those far-off fields of clover Beyond the rim of Stumpland over. ; ? f Sfe; I -" . ■■■■•a-- ■■ , i : — , , 1 1 — . ... -i.ji}| All through the long, bright summer hours I hummed and buzzed among the flowers, And gathered honey and laid in store For days when roses should bloom no more. THE BUMBLEBEE'S STORY. 65 I flew through the window, open wide, Of an old stone church the road beside, And sought for hone}' in flowers that grew On the children's hats in the old square pew. I heard the story of one who told Of words in a book that were better than gold; Sweeter than honey, and happy his look, As if he had tasted the words of the book. High over their heads I buzzed away Into the light of the outer day ; The children, laughing, looked at me, Called me the old church bumblebee. And now in the chill, late autumn time, By the old stone church where ivies climb, Happy and wise, and learned, and old, I wait for the coming of winter's cold. m THE BUMBLEBEE'S STOBY. I wait for the fields of blissful clover, Where bumblebees dwell when this life is over I wait to find in its beaut} - fair, My Stumpland berry growing there. T JOSIE. H.RICE the summer queen of flowers Has counted out her golden hours For Josie. Dipped her moments all in glory, Linked them into life's sweet story, For Josie. Told the sunlight, and the air, To sprinkle gold upon the hair Of Josie. 67 68 JOSIE. Breezes the} r must wander over All the perfumed fields of clover, To Josie. Gathering freshness, this their duty, To leave their fragrance and their beaut} r With Josie. Eyes the sky should give of blue, That was all that it could do For Josie. So the sunlight left its play, And the breezes came this way, To Josie. Sprinkled with its golden light, The dainty 'broidered dress of white, For Josie. JOSIE. 69 Kissed the dimples on his hand, As with shovel piling sand, Stood Josie. O thou summer queen of flowers, Count out years with golden hours, For Josie ! Let the ending of life's story, Be the gateway into glory, For Josie. BLOSSOM BENNETT. I AM Blossom ! and I waited On the three-step meadow stile, In the shadow of the alder^ Resting for a little while. Caged-up winds in cloudy caverns, From the sunset wandering hence, Tipped my empty basket balanced On the cedar-knotted fence. Going downward as a missile, By the spirit breezes hurled, Did my basket in its falling Crush a dandelion world. 70 BLOSSOM BENNETT. 7i Crushed, but loosed a hundred spirits, Germs of flowers yet ungrown ; Up and. over on the hill-tops, In the valleys, were they sown. To myself I said, " O Blossom, Why so linger ? it is late ; Huge as gia'fits grow the shadows Slanting eastward as you wait." But my basket rustling, falling, Stirred a cricket in the grass, Brushing up his dusty jacket At a dew-drop looking-glass. Roused, he left his coat undustecl, Tiny dew-drop-glass forsook, Lost his way among the grasses, Down beside the meadow brook. BLOSSOM BENNETT. And I heard him calling, calling, Chirping, chirping, loud and long; Answering frogs in pools and marshes, Gave the echo of his song. Then I listened; from a million Cranny nooks and petal caves, Intonated insect music Came in rising, surging waves. And I went home through the meadow, Where the tangled grass is deep, Where from out their green leaf curtains Blushing sun-kissed strawberries peep. Said, " O Blossom, let your words, Falling down among earth's weeds, Put in motion germs of action, Like the dandelion seeds ! BLOSSOM BENNETT. So indeed your life may waken Some heart to a newer birth, Freshen up some soul grown dusty In the weariness of earth/' ■HP ^.M*& ? ttfi lip ;^ SMI - m THE CARRIER FISH. I A.M a codfish, white and brown ; 9 1 live in the water — down, away down Where rock weed flowers 74 and mosses grow, THE CAEBIEli FItiH. 75 In Neptune's garden down below. Oh, it is glorious to be a fish, And drink from out some dainty dish Of hollowed rock or fluted shell, Down, away down where mermaids dwell ! Wondrous are the things I've seen, In the water world that lies between Those far-off gardens blooming fair, And the upper light which some call air; There are little fish with starry eyes, And shining coats of wondrous dyes, And I am a codfish, white and brown, I live in the water — down, away down Where rockweed flowers and mosses grow, In Neptune's garden down below. Long crimson bars of yellow light, A boat at sea, a shadow white 76 THE CARRIER FISH. Of a flapping sail, like a bird of air With outspread wings, is painted there ; One wing above of canvas white, One shadowed on the waters bright. And the fisher's heart was glad and gay, For wondrous luck had come that day. While the wake of his boat on the water's bright, Wrinkled the crimson bars of light, Through shadowed clouds upon the bay, His heart, like his boat, went drifting away. Sunset wrap in a purple fold, Wrap in a shroud of mist and gold, The little codfish, white and brown, Who is dying for love of his home away down Where rockweed flowers and mosses grow, In Neptune's garden down below. Dying for a breath of native air In those far-off gardens blooming fair ; TEE CABBIEB F1SE. 7 Of thirst for a drink from the fluted shell, And the hollowed rocks where mermaids dwell. A fisher's stall in a seaport town : Long rows of codfish, white and brown, Halibut, haddock, very cheap, Fresh-caught from the waters deep. The fisher's heart was glad and gay ; He said, " I will send to my love to-day That little plump one, white and brown, In the row of codfish half way down." He took the fish and tried to think ; He dipped his pen in purple ink ; He thought, and thought — what could he say? Tell him, breeze, from off the bay, Whisper it, codfish, white and brown, Who died for love of your home away down Where rockweed flowers and mosses grow In Neptune's garden down below. 7S THE CARRIER FISH. A little house quite out of town, With walls and fences painted brown, Off from the road, and just below A little brook where alders grow. A kitchen with a sanded floor, Pictured hills through an open door ; A maid with eyes like skies of blue, From clouds in summer looking through, Taking from a basket down A little codfish, white and brown ; Breezes blowing from off the sea Over her shoulder look for me ; Tied to the fish — what do you think? A letter written in purple ink ! The little note was pondered well, What the maiden thought, I cannot tell, ' But all day long, in a drifting boat, The fisher dreamed of his purple note ; Wondering if the prize he sought With the bait of a carrier fish was caught. THE CARRIER FISH. 79 And this is the story of the little fish "Which was served up as a dainty dish, The little codfish, white and brown, Who died for love of its home away down Where rockweed flowers and mosses grow, In Neptune's garden down below. There came this way from off the sea, A little breeze which said to me : " Not every fish with starry eyes Lives in story when it dies." FRIAR'S HEAD, CAMPOBELLO. THE days were bright, the days were long, The tide was swift, the breeze was strong, To Friar's Head, with jest and song, Happy and gay, We sailed away. We boiled the chowder on the beach, A spoon and a bowl were given to each, While there stood the pickles just out of reach ; And some played a tune With their bowl and spoon. 80 • FRIARS HEAD, CAMPOBELLO. SI Some doffed their hats to the Friar gray, And said, "A penny for your thoughts to-day! You look so wise, have you nothing to say? Give us a speech, As we sit on the beach ! " Then the old Friar of Friar's Head, Standing up in his rocky bed, Said, "What to me are pickles and bread? For I heed not Your chowder hot ! " But I am a Friar old and gray, And keep my vigils night and day, Over the waters of 'Quoddy Bay, Standing alone In my suit of stone. 82 FBIAR'S HEAD, CAMPOBELLO. " I watch the boats that come and go, Their sails gleam like the drifts of snow, Hither and thither, to and fro, They sail away Over the bay. " Ships in harbor at anchor ride, Boats that smuggle, softly glide, Drifting slowly with the tide ; , I see them creep Through shadows deep. " On summer nights I see you float, Ladies gay, in your pleasure boat, Till far away you seem but a mote The shadows among, Drifting along FRIAR'S BEAD, (JAMl'OBELLO. 83 " To the homes that stand in the twilight gray, To the hearts whose hopes have been all clay With you, as you sailed out over the bay, Out of my sight You go in the night. " But who is the boatman to guide you through The fogs of the world, which hide from view That other home which is waiting for you, Out of your sight, Beyond the night ? " No home awaits the Friar old. I stand in the winter's bitter cold, Wrapped in the sea-fog's briny fold, Winds of the sea Mv litany ! 84 FRIAR'S HEAD, CAMPOBELLO. " I am rocky and stony, old and grim, Standing here on the water's rim, While the years go by to the ages dim, Watching still Under the hill." Much we wondered, for so it would seem That the smoking coffee and chowder's steam Had wakened the Friar out of his dream. What else could unlock The heart of a rock ? So we made the Friar a buttercup crown, And we left him there in his rockweed gown, While the fog came in when the sun went down, And we sailed for the light Through the fog and the night. THE BALLAD OF PUSSY DOT. THE old clock on the kitchen wall Struck ten on New Year's night, Its time-worn face grew radiant In nickering fire-light. And as it ticked Miss Pussy Dot The burning embers eyed, She purred and purred, then dozed awhile In silence dignified. Her coat was of the blackest fur, With collar white and clean, And dotted eyebrows overhung Her eyes of sober green. 85 THE BALLAD OF PUSSY DOT. Fresh from a frolic up and down The wide old-fashioned house, Where leave of absence, when she came, Was begged by every mouse. In depths of meditation now All solemnly she sat, And pawed the shadows as they played Upon the braided mat. No trace was on her quiet face Of grief for time misspent, Nor ghost of broken platters came To mar her look content. The clock ticked loud, the fire blazed up, I watched the dying year ; Puss washed her face, I thought I saw Her wipe away a tear. THE BALLAD OF PUSSY DOT 87 " One } T ear ago last Christmas night," So purred the pensive Dot, " If I should live a hundred years, It will not be forgot. " There was not in the house around So gay a kitten rover ; It mattered not though box or book, I tumbled round and over. " But Christmas came, the children hunj Their stockings in a row, The biggest one the}" put me in, I curled down in the toe. " I grieved all night, I had not tried My mistress' love to win, I mourned the countless pans of milk That I had tumbled in ; SS THE BALLAD OF PUSSY DOT " For all the misdeeds of the day, The broken bowl and cup, Unnumbered spools of endless thread That I had tangled up. " The morning dawned, the children came With merry laugh and shout, Called me a funny Christmas gift, When I came purring out. " They brought me to a city home, I live a puss in clover ; The kitchen and the parlor chairs Alike I frolic over. "I spring from out behind the door At every trailing dress ; My mistress says I must not so Propriety transgress ! THE BALLAD OF PUSSY DOT. 89 '•And thus I spend my winter days, And grow in wisdom too, My fun and frolic and my griefs, Some day I'll tell to you. "The moral of my life has been To evil ways reject, To be when hostile mice are round, Alert and circumspect." HERRING COVE. WOODS the distant hill-tops crown, Westward reach the shadows brown Of CampObello's rocky town. We'll sing the song, Grod save the Queen, We'll take the road that leads between Thick-set trees of shaded green. Never the light of summer's day, Over the nodding; tree-tops gay, Gleamed so bright upon our way. 90 HERRING COVE. 91 Through opening trees — what can it be ? An island of blue, a glimpse of the sea, Sparkling and waiting for you and me ! Carved is the beach that stretches away, Atlantic, wash with glittering spray Its pebbles white, and brown, and gray ! Long ago, when the world was new, Indians in their birch canoe, Paddled over your waters blue. Waves roll in with crest-tops high, Shining, sparkling, while you die, What does it matter, if, by and hy, Some one else shall think it bliss, Upon a day as bright as this, To watch the waves the pebbles kiss ? 92 HERRING COVE. The chowder is done, our play is o'er; Pebble-gatherers seeking more Up and down the rocky shore Echo clear the boatman's call ; Eastward now the shadows fall ; Gather up the baskets all ! We have gathered early and gathered late, The pebbles small and pebbles great, — They weary with their heavy weight. So one by one we toss them away, They are only pebbles brown and gray, Brightened np with glittering spray. Footprints only of us each, From the waters out of reach, Are left upon the rocky beach. HERRING COTE. We'll sing the song, God save the Queen, We'll take the road that leads between Thick-set trees of shaded green, While sunset gleams of waning day, Through the nodding tree-tops gay, Shall light us on our homeward way. Out upon life's rocky shore We'll go to gather pebbles more, Till work is done and play is o'er. Time's long waves are rolling high, Shining, sparkling, while they die, Is there for us, by and by, More than footprints out of reach, Of waves upon a rocky beach, Pebble-gatherers, for us each? THE DWARF OAK. In Japan, young trees are sometimes transplanted into huge vases. The roots thus dwarfed, the trees develop, not in size, but in fineness and density of foliage, and are often marvels of symmetrical beauty. AN acorn awoke, and said, "It is dark, O brown earth mould, Give me your strength that I may grow Out of the cold ! For I have dreams of a princely tree Among oaks the king ; Once heaven was mine, on the oak tree's bough I used to swing. 94 THE DWARF OAK. 95 Air was my friend, and light my lover, Life seemed divine : Down through the crisp of the autumn leaves What a fall was mine ! But I feel the moisture — it must be tears The sky has shed ; It loved me once, and now it weeps That I am dead. But I will not die, O rich brown soil, With bursting heart I thrill to grow, and in the world To share my part. Then gave the earth its hidden power, Nor tarried long Thus down in depths of dark and cold A life so stronsr. 96 THE DWARF OAK. And up, still up, a month and a day, Thrice told it grew; It said, "And soon my topmost bough Shall touch the blue. " O light and tempest, earth and air, Supply my need ! Unbounded strength and space to grow- ls life indeed.'" But evening saw the oak-tree torn From out the earth, Its rootlets clipped that strongest loved Their place of birth. Transplanted in a foreign soil, A home it found; The dwarfed roots, with an iron wall, Were prison bound. THE DWARF OAK. "O air, my friend, and light, 1113^ lover! What need have I Now of your help ? yon can but come To see me die." And every leaflet drooped in grief, Each fibre cell, Held pent up in it, agony It could not tell. It did not die, for nature came To heal its wounds, But could, not give it strength to burst Its prison bounds. It saw the oaks stand huge against The eastern gray ; It felt within the power to be As great as they. THE DWARF OAK. Yet all in vain — its roots were cramped For space to grow ; In vain the hope to gain the heights It longed for so. But when it could not reach the place For which 'twas meet, It sought in fullest symmetry, To grow complete. And struggling on it tried to be Not what it would, But grew until in miniature It perfect stood. We see, as oaks, some great souls loom Against life's sky, And feel within the latent power To stand as high. THE D WARF OAK. 99 The outward dwarfs the inward life, We cannot grow, To burst our bounds, and reach the heights We long for so. But greater marvel if as those For glory meet, Our bound souls yet in symmetry, Shall grow complete. THE BIRD IN THE RAIN. SWEET little bird, in the Summer rain, Out in the apple-tree down in the lane, Tell me the story over again — Sweet little bird, in the Summer rain ! In the Summer rain, under the lee Of the dripping leaves of the apple-tree, Why so merry ? Say, what can it be ? Chirp and twitter and tell it to me ! Gay little robin, where is your mate? Do you watch for him at the garden-gate ? Does your bird-heart wonder he tarries so late In the Summer rain, as you sing and Wait? 100 THE BIRD IN THE RAIN. 101 Sing, little robin, all red and brown ! Sing, though the heavens above you frown ; Sing, though the rain is coming down, Sweet little robin, all red and brown ! Your mate will come, the gay little rover, By and by when the rain is over, And the sun drinks the rain-drops off the clover, And your little red-coat wet all over. The rain is over, the light shines through The rifting clouds, the sky is blue ; The joy of an earth by the rain made new, Sweet little bird, is waiting for you. We, as the bird in the summer rain, In life's sorrow and in its pain, Glad for the joys that will come again, Should sinff as the bird in the summer rain. 102 THE BIRD IN THE RAIN. Not long will it be ere the light shine through, The storm be over, and the sky be blue, And the joy of a life all fresh and new, Out of sorrow will come to you. RUTH. RUTH of Gentile country born, Went to glean at early morn, In Boaz' fields of ripened corn. " With my maidens at thy side, Only here shalt thou abide ; " So Ruth gleaned till eventide ; Gleaned all day from early morn, Glory of a Christ unborn She gathered with the sheaves of corn. 103 104 RUTH. Did she know with honor fraught Was the gleaning that she wrought ? Know the prize her labor brought ? Ruth of Gentile country born, All the clay from early morn, Thou hast gleaned the ears of corn. Mists are up the valley creeping, Night is on the hill-tops sleeping, What the gain of all thy reaping ? Let thy faith the gates unbar ; Down the ages looking far, See the rising Bethlehem star. Looking onward through the night, See by faith the future, bright In the radiance of the light, RUTH. 105 From the cross of Calvary beaming, Backward through the ages gleaming, Down upon thy pathway streaming, As o'er Bethlehem's corn-fields wide, With thy gleanings at thy side, Thou goest home at eventide. Glean, to-day, O soul of mine ! Christ for thee is bread and wine, To give thee power and strength divine. Glean all day from early morn, Gather of life's ripened corn ; Out of weakness strength is born. Looking onward out of sight, See by faith the future bright, In the radiance of the light 106 RUTH. Streaming from the Crucified, Brighter than all else beside, Going home at eventide. MARY. "They came unto the sepulchre, at the rising of the sun." HOW slowly the dark night creepeth, I would see where my Lord sleepeth, I wait the cock to usher morning, Some ray of light the east adorning, To welcome day. " The stars pale out, and day is breaking, But gladness in me hath no waking. O slumbering faith ! I cannot see Aught in the cross of Calvary To comfort me." She went through dews of Easter, born Of that glad resurrection morn, 107 108 MARY. But all the spices were as naught, Without the broken heart she brought Unto the sepulchre. "Why weepest thou?" and morning light Rolled back the mists of that dark night, She found the chosen Christ she sought — With words divine on Calvary bought, To comfort her. O thou who wakest in life's night, And tarriest for the coming light, Seek now the Christ, nor wait the morn, For glorious light of Calvary born Will show the way ! Yea, not perchance, but sure will be One there divine, to comfort thee ; The mists ' of life will backward roll, To show unto thy seeking soul Thy waiting Lord. THE PILGRIM OF GONGEN.* The Shinto devotees of Japan, dressed in white, make pilgrimages to the almost inaccessible summit of the sacred mountain of Fusiyama, and return- ing, stop to worship at the temple of Gongen. ON the far-off hills of old Japan, For every blade of grain, Dear Mother Earth a million drops Had drank of summer rain. And green were all the fields of rice, And down the far-off hills, With future drink for thirsty flowers, There rushed a hundred rills. * Gongen, pronounced Gongane . 109 110 THE PILGRIM OF GONGEN. And Kaji looked ; his grain waved high Above the rich brown soil ; Presage of days to garner in The fruitage of his toil. He looked beyond the fields of rice, Beyond the hills of green, Saw Niphon's sacred mountain stand The heavens and earth between. And Kaji as a pilgrim went, And votive offerings made ; At eveiy wayside shrine he stopped, To every god he prayed. And day by day the mountain top Loomed nearer into view, And every day, through grass and brake, His path more rugged grew. THE PILGRIM OF GONGEN. Ill One night he rested, but not long, Half up the lava slope, And saw concealed in higher clouds The goal of all his hope. Not yet the summer moon had paled Before the coming day ; Through weird shadows of the night He toiled his upward way. The goal was reached, O glorious sight ! The clouds beneath his feet, And grandeur far beyond the grand, And desolateness complete ! Then suddenly from out the east The radiant Sun-god rose, And night and whirlwind hurried back To gain a day's repose. 112 THE PILGRIM OF GONGEN. The clouds rolled seaward, and the rocks As gold-mailed warriors stood, While morning breezes hung away Each misty cloak and hood ; Till Niphon, Land of Sunrise, seemed A paradise on earth, And Kaji prayed, " Ye mighty gods, That gave this land its birth, O, shower your blessings on my life As never yet before , O glorious Sun-god, shine on me, And comfort evermore ! " And Kaji prayed till past high noon, The shadows eastward fell, ' Then, staff in hand, he girded on His pilgrim cloak and bell : THE PILGRIM OF G ON GEN. 113 And heeded not the jagged rocks, The tired pilgrim's foes, But gained upon the plain below A dreamless night's repose. Next day he journeyed up and on Across Hakone's range, Grand nature's storehouse, where are kept Things wonderful and strange. And musically the little bell Soft tinkled as he stepped, So merrily with brook and bird In unison it kept. O, blessed was the pilgrimage He did not take in vain ! For up the rocky path he went, A pilgrim to Gongen, — 114 THE PILGRIM OF G ON GEN. A glorious place, where one might dream The long bright summer day, By temples, on whose thatched roofs grow Green verdure from decay; Where tall the Cryptomerias stand, By ancient Shoguns sown, Through wind and storm a hundred years The kingly race have grown. And sitting at the temple gate, In that old forest dim, One told him of the blessed Christ Once crucified for him ; The grand old story of the Cross, That grander yet shall roll Down every age, to meet the want Of everv human soul. THE PILGRIM OF GONGEN. U5 Again on hills of old Japan, For every blade of grain, Dear Mother Earth a million drops Hath drank of summer rain. And green are all the fields of rice, And green the far-off hills, While odor out of raindrops born The air with fragrance fills. And Kaji walks in pilgrim dress, Bought with a sum unpriced, For now his garments all are white In the righteousness of Christ. He climbs not mount or sacred hill To find his god in them, But touches with a daily faith The Master's garment-hem. 116 THE PILGBIM OF GONGEN. O godlike words, on human souls, That fall as summer rain! O blessed Christ, that came to meet The pilgrim of Gongen ! THE WOMAN OF SAMARIA. HIGH noon looked down on Gerizim, Where olive shadows fell, Its fiercer heat on Shechem's plain By Jacob's sacred well. woman of Samaria, Tread with a holy fear ! Behold, a heaven-sent thirst is thine, Because thy Christ is near. One lowly-born of Bethlehem, Thy Lord, now waits to rest So lowly, yet if he should make To heaven but one request, 117 ■ 118 THE WOMAN OF SAMARIA. Swift legions of archangels would, With wings that never tire, Have wafted Him to Galilee, In a chariot of fire. But rather would he take for us The weight of every grief; From weariness he asks not Heaven To send him its relief. For where would be the story now In words on sacred page, Like living waters springing up, The comfort of the age ? O woman of Samaria, A blessed thirst was thine ! As thou didst drink unconsciously Those promises divine. THE WOMAN OF SAMARIA. 119 Thy life from its obscurity, Did into greatness spring, Because it touched the purer life Of thy Redeemer King. Christ waits no more by Gerizim, Where olive shadows fall ; The mount of blessing for us now May echo not His call. Yet in life's noontide heat we find Where our Lord waits to rest, When souls with heaven-sent thirst shall make To us the same request — " Give me to drink ; " O heart of mine, Be thou in holy fear ! . There speaks to thee a burdened one In him thy Christ is near. 120 TEE WOMAN OF SAMARIA. Give, and thy soul will surely drink The living streams that flow ; Thy life will touch thy Master's, And in its likeness grow. THE PRAYER. WITH doubting heart, with tired thought and mind, One breathed a prayer , It drifted up through seeming dark to "find If God was there. The heart's deep prayer ! Up to God's throne it went, With tears inwrought, The sinless stain upon the Cross had once Its answer bought. 121 122 THE PRAYER. And he who wills not that the reed should break, Nor sparrow fall Without his care, in love for Christ's dear sake Has heard the call. Through deepest night the spirit came to save From guilt and sin ; The weary heart into his warmth and light He gathered in. THE SAILS ARE SET. r ~P*HE sails are set, the anchor weighed, A Our ship goes sailing, sailing: Come, north wind, from your cloudy caves In breezes never failing ! 'Tis break of day, and far astern I watch the seaweed drifting ; The coming dawn from off the sea The shades of night are lifting. O rays of light from out the East, Ye bring the voice of wailing! Come, Holy Spirit, breathe on me Thy comfort never failing ! 123 124 THE SAILS ARE SET. To lands far-off for thee, O Christ, I go to tell the story, - Shine thou upon that sea of souls, And flood it with thy glory ! The joys I leave are but to me As seaweed idly drifting, For on that sea of human souls I watch the shadows lifting. Ye north winds, blow ! Thou ship, speed on ! My hopes with thee are sailing. O, Holy Spirit, breathe on me Thy comfort never failing ! So shall my heart for work so great Be strong in its endeavor. Until my soul, above its fears, Is lifted up forever. THE BAPTISM. WE go through fields of wheat and rice, Fresh meadow-lands of green ; A valley reaching to the sea, The oak-crowned hills between. Our pathways, winding to the beach, By many a cottage run ; Soft down on Niphon's island shines The April's Sabbath-sun. And one is with us who has turned From Buddha's mystic lore ; To-day he takes the Christian's vow, Upon Homoka's shore. 125 126 THE BAPTISM. In vain for him the idols wait, Or Shinto temples stand ; He turns from them with faith to grasp A heavenly Father's, hand. We sing- the consecration hymn, His voice and ours accord ; With radiant face he goes to meet His burial with his Lord. And Yeddo bay grows calm, as if With clearer sight than we, It saw One with him who had stilled The waves of Galilee. From sj^mbolled grave with sacred song The risen one we greet ; And shadowed clouds come down to make A pathway for his feet. THE BAPTISM. 127 Rejoice, Japan ! for on thy shore, One earnest soul to-day Has vowed than heathen rites to show To thee a better way. We go home through the fields of wheat, To work, and love, and pray ; To be in Christ's perfected strength, Baptized anew each day. And all our lives are calm, because In clearer light we see One walking with us who has stilled The waves of Galilee. THE ISLAND OF ENOSHIMA. In the Pacilic Ocean on the coast of Japan is the island of Eno- shima, pronounced En-o-shee-ma. It is of volcanic origin,, and by the Japanese is supposed to have arisen in a single night at the command of the heathen goddess Benton, to whose worship its temples are dedi- cated, while the cavern of Enoshima, approached only by water, is the Mecca of religious pilgrims. OH! it is grand, rugged, rocky, Crested with green, On a granite throne, foliage-crowned, She sits a queen, The island of Enoshima. The tide goes down, an outstretched arm Of silvery sand, With sea-foam drapery, in wedlock joins To far-off land The island of Enoshima. 128 THE ISLAND OF ENOSHIMA. 129 Ages ago, under the sea, A goddess spoke ; She loosed the bands of coral and pearl, From dreams awoke The island of Enoshima. Pushed back the curtain of sea-green waves And feathery spray, With earthquake shock, through surf arose, At break of day, The island of Enoshima. The goddess Benten, cloud-enthroned, Stood draped in mist, She blest the land, she blest the sea, Each wave that kissed The island of Enoshima. 130 THE ISLAND OF ENOSHIMA. An old-time story ! but to-day With thatched-roof town, And cypress trees, and heathen shrines, The centuries crown The island of Enoshima. And now from off the sea-girt cliffs That wall it round, The children dive for coral and pearl, The chain that bound The island of Enoshima. The ocean steps with thundering tread, To guard the door, Among wave-washed crags, where hidden stands With shell-paved floor, The cavern of Enoshima. THE ISLAND OF EN SHIM A. 131 An. echoing cave, where tapers burn, Where idols stand, And white-dressed pilgrims serve with gifts. From sea and land, The goddess of Enoshima. O idols of a heathen shrine, Your lights shall fail ! There comes a dawn from out the east, Whose day shall pale The tapers of Enoshima. Then what if in the salt sea air Your tapers die? Or what if on some tidal wave Your idols lie, cavern of Enoshima ! 132 THE ISLAND OF ENOSHIMA. Across the sea Pacific comes A light for thee! Within your hearts, the "Prince of Peace" Thy God would be, O pilgrims of Enoshima ! What matter if your outward dress Be soiled to sight, For if your soul shall touch the Christ, It shall be white, O pilgrim of Enoshima ! EASTER. IN MEMOEIAM. N the far-off Land of the Sunrise, In the early Easter-morn, Where the winds of heaven breathe softest, My sweet heart-flower was born. Did I stand between it and heaven, That it faded away so soon? Or the warmth of my heart-love scorch it Like the heat of a burning noon ? For it faded, it faded — I watched it, And the plant from which it grew, 133 134 EASTER. It withered, it withered before me, For the lack of the heavenly dew. I carried my plant and my flower, 1 carried them over the sea, 1 thought perhaps in the home-land They would bloom again for me. But they faded, oh, they faded ! And I stand at the Easter-dawn — But what if my plant has withered, And what if my flower has gone? I will work through all life's harvest, And will hide the secret pain, While I care for the flowers of others, And help to gather the grain. I will wait till the south winds blow In the time of the springing corn; EASTER. 135 I will wait to see my flower again At its resurrection morn. In the love of the holy Christ, I will watch for that Easter-day When glorious will be the beauty Of the flower I laid awa}\ And glorious will be the beauty Of the plant that once was mine, At that celestial sunrise, Bathed in the dews divine. For the love of my plant and flower, To the Easter glories born, In the love of Christ I wait For that resurrection morn. AT THE LOTUS GATE. N Yeddo, feudal ruins stand Above the castle wall, Their shadows in the moat below On the lotus-blossoms fall. I O, many a mile of parapet, And rood of palace ground, A lake with feathery bamboo fringed, A turf-built, sacred mound. While Fusiyama in the west, With sunset vistas blent, Like the celestial city stands With tower and battlement. 136 AT THE LOTUS GATE. 137 Beyond the castle's Lotus Gate, By dingy, dusty ways, Through Yeddo's streets with black tiled walls, Of the olden feudal days, I saw a hundred horsemen ride In dress of silken white, And every rider's steed was black As the dark of a moonless night. I heard the rustling of their dress, The sound of their horses' tread ; And a hundred white-clad maidens rode, Who mourned the princely dead. A dazzling sight, a vision, dream, But the crowd around me press, And with their soil-worn garments hide The white of their silken dress. 138 AT THE LOTUS GATE. But I think, if, in a dingy street, So glorious is the sight Of a hundred men who bear their dead In dress of silken white, How unto John of Patraos old, More beautiful the sight, Of the multitude innumerable In righteousness made white. In Yeddo still the ruins stand Above the castle wall, Their shadows in the moat below On the lotus-blossoms fall. The snow-tipped sacred mountain stands With sunset vistas blent, A picture of celestial walls With tower and battlement. AT THE LOTUS GATE. 189 The horsemen in their silken dress Have laid their dead to rest, In Yeddo's consecrated ground, By Buddhist requiems blest. But unto men and angels, Still beautiful the sight, Of those who walk this sin-stained earth In righteousness made white. Who go life's dusty, dingy ways, And pass its Lotus gate, -And at its burial-ground of hope, In consecration wait, And see the soul's great future stand, With heavenly vistas blent, With joy its wall, and peace its tower, And truth its battlement. 140 AT THE LOTUS GATE. The dust of earth ! it shall not dinge Their dress ; nor shall they wait, Nor pass it by, but enter in The heavenly Lotus Gate^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 015 785 339 9