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The Thorn
(For the Rev. Charles L. O'Donnell, C. S. C.)The garden of God is a radiant place,And every flower has a holy face:Our Lady like a lily bends above the cloudy sod,But Saint Michael is the thorn on the rosebush of God.David is the song upon God's lips,And Our Lady is the goblet that He sips:And Gabriel's the breath of His command,But Saint Michael is the sword in God's right hand.The Ivory Tower is fair to see,And may her walls encompass me!But when the Devil comes with the thunder of his might,Saint Michael, show me how to fight!
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Sol Canadien, Terre Cherie.
(From the French of Isidore Bedard.) O soil Canadian, cherished earth, The brave, the noble, peopled thee; They left the country of their birth, And sought a land of liberty. It was from glorious France they came: They were the pick of warriors, they; The shining lustre of their fame Is kept untarnished till to-day. How beautiful thy fields appear! How much thou hast to give content! All hail, ye mountains that uprear Your lordly heights magnificent! All hail, St. Lawrence' noble tide! Hail, land by Nature richly deckt! Thy children's hearts should throb with pride, Thy sons should walk with head erect. Still honor the protecting hand<...
W. M. MacKeracher
The Lost Battle
It is not over yet-the fight Where those immortal dreamers failed.They stormed the citadels of night And the night praised them--and prevailed.So long ago the cause was lost We scarce distinguish friend from foe;But--if the dead can help it most-- The armies of the dead will grow.The world has all our banners now, And filched our watchwords for its own.The world has crowned the "rebel's" brow And millions crowd his lordly throne.The masks have altered. Names are names; They praise the "truth" that is not true.The "rebel" that the world acclaims Is not the rebel Shelley knew.We may not build that Commonweal. We may not reach the goal we set.But there's a flag they dare not steal. Forwar...
Alfred Noyes
The Quesion
Brethren, how shall it fare with meWhen the war is laid aside,If it be proven that I am heFor whom a world has died?If it be proven that all my good,And the greater good I will make,Were purchased me by a multitudeWho suffered for my sake?That I was delivered by mere mankindVowed to one sacrifice,And not, as I hold them, battle-blind,But dying with open eyes?That they did not ask me to draw the swordWhen they stood to endure their lot,That they only looked to me for a word,And I answered I knew them not?If it be found, when the battle clears,Their death has set me free,Then how shall I live with myself through the yearsWhich they have bought for me?Brethren, how must it fare with me,Or...
Rudyard
Preface
To all to whom this little book may come,Health for yourselves and those you hold most dear!Content abroad, and happiness at home,And, one grand secret in your private ear:,Nations have passed away and left no traces,And History gives the naked cause of it,One single, simple reason in all cases;They fell because their peoples were not fit.Now, though your Body be mis-shapen, blind,Lame, feverish, lacking substance, power or skill,Certain it is that men can school the MindTo school the sickliest Body to her will,As many have done, whose glory blazes stillLike mighty flames in meanest lanterns lit:Wherefore, we pray the crippled, weak and ill,Be fit, be fit! In mind at first be fit!And, though your Spirit seem uncouth or small,S...
Translation From Horace.
Justum et tenacem propositi virum. HOR. 'Odes', iii. 3. I.1.The man of firm and noble soulNo factious clamours can controul;No threat'ning tyrant's darkling brow Can swerve him from his just intent:Gales the warring waves which plough, By Auster on the billows spent,To curb the Adriatic main,Would awe his fix'd determined mind in vain.2.Aye, and the red right arm of Jove,Hurtling his lightnings from above,With all his terrors there unfurl'd, He would, unmov'd, unaw'd, behold;The flames of an expiring world, Again in crashing chaos roll'd,In vast promiscuous ruin hurl'd,Might light his glorious funeral pile:Still dauntless 'midst the wreck of earth he'd ...
George Gordon Byron
Farewell.
To break one's word is pleasure-fraught,To do one's duty gives a smart;While man, alas! will promise nought,That is repugnant to his heart.Using some magic strains of yore,Thou lurest him, when scarcely calm,On to sweet folly's fragile bark once more,Renewing, doubling chance of harm.Why seek to hide thyself from me?Fly not my sight be open then!Known late or early it must be,And here thou hast thy word again.My duty is fulfill'd to-day,No longer will I guard thee from surprise;But, oh, forgive the friend who from thee turns away,And to himself for refuge flies!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Sword Of Surprise
Sunder me from my bones, O sword of God,Till they stand stark and strange as do the trees;That I whose heart goes up with the soaring woodsMay marvel as much at these.Sunder me from my blood that in the darkI hear that red ancestral river run,Like branching buried floods that find the seaBut never see the sun.Give me miraculous eyes to see my eyes,Those rolling mirrors made alive in me,Terrible crystal more incredibleThan all the things they see.Sunder me from my soul, that I may seeThe sins like streaming wounds, the life's brave beat;Till I shall save myself, as I would saveA stranger in the street.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
All For The Cause.
Hear a word, a word in season,for the day is drawing nigh,When the Cause shall call upon us,some to live, and some to die!He that dies shall not die lonely,many an one hath gone before;He that lives shall bear no burdenheavier than the life they bore.Nothing ancient is their story,e'en but yesterday they bled,Youngest they of earth's beloved,last of all the valiant dead.E'en the tidings we are telling,was the tale they had to tell,E'en the hope that our hearts cherish,was the hope for which they fell.In the grave where tyrants thrust them,lies their labour and their pain,But undying from their sorrowspringeth up the hope again.Mourn not therefore, nor lament it,that the world outlives ...
William Morris
Power.
Power that is not of God, however great,Is but the downward rushing and the glareOf a swift meteor that hath lost its shareIn the one impulse which doth animateThe parent mass: emblem to me of fate!Which through vast nightly wastes doth onward fare,Wild-eyed and headlong, rent away from prayer--A moment brilliant, then most desolate!And, O my brothers, shall we ever learnFrom all the things we see continuallyThat pride is but the empty mockeryOf what is strong in man! Not so the sternAnd sweet repose of soul which we can earnOnly through reverence and humility!
George MacDonald
Wisdom
When I have ceased to break my wingsAgainst the faultiness of things,And learned that compromises waitBehind each hardly opened gate,When I have looked Life in the eyes,Grown calm and very coldly wise,Life will have given me the Truth,And taken in exchange, my youth.
Sara Teasdale
Behind The Bars
I am a pilgrim far from home, A wanderer like Mars,And thought my wanderings ne'er should come, So fixed behind the bars!I left my sunny Southern home Beneath the silver stars;A northward path began to roam, Not seeking prison bars.I sought a higher, holier life, Which never virtue mars;But Fate had spun a net of strife For me behind the bars!My mother's lowly thatched-roofed cot My nobler senses jars;And so I seek to aid her lot, But not behind the bars!'Tis said, forsooth, the poet learns Through sufferings and warsTo sing the song which deepest burns Behind the prison bars!Thus I resign myself to Fate, Regardless of her scars;For soon she'll op...
Edward Smyth Jones
The Serpent.
Canada, the time approaches, And is even now at hand,When thou must declare what ruler Thine allegiance shall command.In thy midst there creeps a Serpent-- Deadliest of all thy foes--Gliding in among thy councils, Spreading venom where she goes.Like the fatal boa-constrictor Charming those who soon must die,She can so transfix her victim By the glitter of her eye,That the greatest of thy statesmen Dares not question her decree,But in meek humiliation Bows to her, abjuring thee.Rise, Canadians! and boldly Thrust the Serpent from your land;And should any strive to help her, Crush them with your martial hand.Rise unanimous, and fear not In your country's c...
Wilfred Skeats
Apostasy
Et Judas m'a dit: Traître!- Victor HugoITruths change with time, and terms with truth. To-dayA statesman worships union, and to-nightDisunion. Shame to have sinned against the lightConfounds not but impels his tongue to unsayWhat yestereve he swore. Should fear make wayFor treason? honour change her livery? frightClasp hands with interest? wrong pledge faith with right?Religion, mercy, conscience, answer, Yea.To veer is not to veer: when votes are weighed,The numerous tongue approves him renegadeWho cannot change his banner: he that canSits crowned with wreaths of praise too pure to fade.Truth smiles applause on treason's poisonous plan:And Cleon is an honourable man.IIPure faith, fond hope, sweet love, with God f...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
My Trust
A picture memory brings to meI look across the years and seeMyself beside my mothers knee.I feel her gentle hand restrainMy selfish moods, and know againA childs blind sense of wrong and pain.But wiser now, a man gray grown,My childhoods needs are better known,My mothers chastening love I own.Gray grown, but in our Fathers sightA child still groping for the lightTo read His works and ways aright.I wait, in His good time to seeThat as my mother dealt with meSo with His children dealeth He.I bow myself beneath His handThat pain itself was wisely plannedI feel, and partly understand.The joy that comes in sorrows guise,The sweet pains of self-sacrifice,I would not have them otherwise...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Battle Of Chateauguay.
There is a valley where the wheat fields waveIn autumn like a gold ymolten sea;There is a river whose cool waters laveSweet-scented gardens, groves, and rolling lea,And homes of people worthy to be free;There is a name whose sound is like a songOn lips of its own maidens - Chateauguay;Yet mighty as the combat of the strong,And glorious as the march of Freedom over Wrong.And here they fought; and each encountered ten,With war-steed and artillery arrayed;But righteous was their cause, and they were men, -Dark plumes of Iroquois, and Scotia's plaid,But most, the brothers of the arm which madeNapoleon terrible with triumphing.Between the foe and heaven they knelt and prayed,Then, rising, heard their leader's summons ring -"Such is our d...
An Invocation.
Spirit, bright spirit! from thy narrow cell Answer me! answer me! oh, let me hear Thy voice, and know that thou indeed art near!That from the bonds in which thou'rt forced to dwell Thou hast not broken free, thou art not fled, Thou hast not pined away, thou art not dead.Speak to me through thy prison bars; my lifeWith all things round, is one eternal strife,'Mid whose wild din I pause to hear thy voice; Speak to me, look on me, thou born of light!That I may know thou'rt with me, and rejoice.Shall not this weary warfare pass away?Shall there not come a better, brighter day? Shall not thy chain and mine be broken quite, And thou to heaven spring, With thine immortal wing, And I, still following, ...
Frances Anne Kemble
Refuge
From my spirits gray defeat,From my pulses flagging beat,From my hopes that turned to sandSifting through my close-clenched hand,From my own faults slavery,If I can sing, I still am free.For with my singing I can makeA refuge for my spirits sake,A house of shining words, to beMy fragile immortality.