Who, in the midnight dark and deep, Hath felt a voice of might
Come echoing through the halls of sleep From the lone heart of Night, And, starting from his restless bed, Hath watched and wept to know What meant that oracle of dread That stirred his being so;
He who hath felt how strong and great This Godlike soul of man,
And looked full in the eyes of Fate, Since Life and Thought began ; The armor of whose moveless trust Knoweth no spot of weakness, Who hath trod fear into the dust
Beneath the feet of meekness;- He who hath calmly borne his cross, Knowing himself the king
Of time, nor counted it a loss
To learn by suffering;
And who hath worshipped woman still
With a pure soul and lowly, Nor ever hath in deed or will
Profaned her temple holy
He is the Poet, him unto
The gift of song is given,
Whose life is lofty, strong, and true,
Who never fell from Heaven;
He is the Poet, from his lips
To live forevermore,
Majestical as full-sailed ships,
The words of Wisdom pour.
"HAIL be thou, holie hearbe, Growing on the ground, All in the mount Calvary First wert thou found;
Thou art good for manie a sore, Thou healest manie a wound,
In the name of sweete Jesus I take thee from the ground.'
When, from a pleasant ramble, home Fresh-stored with quiet thonghts, I come, I pluck some wayside flower And press it in the choicest nook
Of a much-loved and oft-read book; And, when upon its leaves I look In a less happy hour,
Dear memory bears me far away Unto her fairy bower,
And on her breast my head I lay, While, in a motherly, sweet strain, She sings me gently back again To by-gone feelings, until they Seem children born of yesterday.
Yes, many a story of past hours I read in these dear withered flowers, And once again I seem to be Lying beneath the old oak tree,
And looking up into the sky, Through thick leaves rifted fitfully, Lulled by the rustling of the vine, Or the faint low of far-off kine; And once again I seem
To watch the whirling bubbles flee, Through shade and gleam alternately, Down the vine-bowered stream; Or 'neath the odorous linden trees, When summer twilight lingers long, To hear the flowing of the breeze And unseen insects' slumberous song, That mingle into one and seem Like dim murmurs of a dream; Fair faces, too, I seem to see, Smiling from pleasant eyes at me, And voices sweet I hear,
That, like remembered melody,
Flow through my spirit's ear.
A poem every flower is, And every leaf a line,
And with delicious memories They fill this heart of mine: No living blossoms are so clear As these dead relics treasured here; One tells of love, of friendship one, Love's quiet after-sunset time, When the all-dazzling light is gone, And, with the soul's low vesper-chime, O'er half its heaven doth out-flow
A holy calm and steady glow.
Some are gay feast-song, some are dirges, In some a joy with sorrow merges;
One sings the shadowed woods, and one the roar
Of ocean's everlasting surges,
Tumbling upon the beach's hard-beat floor, Or sliding backward from the shore To meet the landward waves and slowly plunge once more.
O flowers of grace, I bless ye all
By the dear faces ye recall!
Upon the banks of Life's deep streams Full many a flower grows
Which with a wondrous fragrance teems,
And in the silent water gleams,
And trembles as the water floweth, Many a one the wave upteareth,
Washing ever the roots away,
And far upon its bosom beareth,
To bloom no more in Youth's glad May; As farther on the river runs,
Flowing more deep and strong, Only a few pale, scattered ones Are seen the dreary banks along;
And where those flowers do not grow, The river floweth dark and chill, Its voice is sad, and with its flow Mingles ever a sense of ill; Then, Poet, thou who gather dost Of Life's best flowers the brightest,
O, take good heed they be not lost While with the angry flood thou fightest !
In the cool grottos of the soul, Whence flows thought's crystal river, Whence songs of joy forever roll To Him who is the Giver-
There store thou them, where fresh and green
Their leaves and blossoms may be seen,
A spring of joy that faileth never;
There store thou them, and they shall be A blessing and a peace to thee, And in their youth and purity
Thou shalt be young forever!
Then, with their fragrance rich and rare, Thy living shall be rife,
Strength shall be thine thy cross to bear,
And they shall be a chaplet fair,
Breathing a pure and holy air,
To crown thy holy life.
O Poet! above all men blest, Take heed that thus thou store them; Love, Hope, and Faith shall ever rest, Sweet birds (upon how sweet a nest!) Watchfully brooding o'er them. And from those flowers of Paradise Scatter thou many a blessèd seed, Wherefrom an offspring may arise
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