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In Memoriam C. G. Gordon
Devotion! When thy name is named,What matchless visions rise!The Hebrew, leaving Pharoahs house,To Israels rescue flies;The Moabitess, gleans, content,Beneath the burning skies.The flower of Christendom is givenTo gain the Holy Grave;Oer Acre and oer AskelonThe blessed banners wave;By Edwards bed I see thee kneel,O Queen beloved and brave!Who art thou, girl, in warrior garb,St. Catherines sword in hand?Tis La Pucelle, and France is free;O shame that thou must standBound, helpless, at the cruel stake,To wait the headmans brand!And now upon the wild North SeaFrom Lindisfarnes bleak shore,To save the lives of shipwrecked menA maiden plies the oar;Seamen and landsmen honour thee,G...
Mary Hannay Foott
Readjustment.
After the earthquake shock or lightning dartComes a recoil of silence o'er the lands,And then, with pulses hot and quivering hands,Earth calls up courage to her mighty heart,Plies every tender, compensating art,Draws her green, flowery veil above the scar,Fills the shrunk hollow, smooths the riven plain,And with a century's tendance heals againThe seams and gashes which her fairness mar.So we, when sudden woe like lightning sped,Finds us and smites us in our guarded place,After one brief, bewildered moment's space,By the same heavenly instinct taught and led,Adjust our lives to loss, make friends with pain,Bind all our shattered hopes and bid them bloom again.
Susan Coolidge
Bereavement.
(Job iii. 26)It was not that I lived a life of ease, Quiet, secure, apart from every care;For on the darkest of my anxious days I thought my burden more than I could bear.The shadow of a coming trouble fell Across my pathway, drawing very near;I walked within it awestruck, felt the spell Trembled, not knowing what I had to fear.The hand that held events I might not stay,But creeping to His footstool I could pray.With sad forebodings I kept watch and ward Against the dreaded evil that must come;Of small avail, door locked or window barred, To keep the pestilence from hearth and home.The dreadful pestilence that walks by night, Stepping o'er barriers, an unwelcome guest,Came, and with scorching touch t...
Nora Pembroke
Frederick Douglass
A hush is over all the teeming lists,And there is pause, a breath-space in the strife;A spirit brave has passed beyond the mistsAnd vapors that obscure the sun of life.And Ethiopia, with bosom torn,Laments the passing of her noblest born.She weeps for him a mother's burning tears--She loved him with a mother's deepest love.He was her champion thro' direful years,And held her weal all other ends above.When Bondage held her bleeding in the dust,He raised her up and whispered, "Hope and Trust."For her his voice, a fearless clarion, rungThat broke in warning on the ears of men;For her the strong bow of his power he strung,And sent his arrows to the very denWhere grim Oppression held his bloody placeAnd gloated o'er the mis'ries of...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Fortitude Of The North
Under the Disaster of the Second ManassasThey take no shame for dark defeatWhile prizing yet each victory won,Who fight for the Right through all retreat,Nor pause until their work is done.The Cape-of-Storms is proof to every throe;Vainly against that foreland beatWild winds aloft and wilder waves below:The black cliffs gleam through rents in sleetWhen the livid Antarctic storm-clouds glow.
Herman Melville
Then And Now
When battles were foughtWith a chivalrous sense of Should and Ought,In spirit men said,"End we quick or dead,Honour is some reward!Let us fight fair - for our own best or worst;So, Gentlemen of the Guard,Fire first!"In the open they stood,Man to man in his knightlihood:They would not deignTo profit by a stainOn the honourable rules,Knowing that practise perfidy no man durstWho in the heroic schoolsWas nurst.But now, behold, whatIs warfare wherein honour is not!Rama lamentsIts dead innocents:Herod breathes: "Sly slaughterShall rule! Let us, by modes once called accurst,Overhead, under water,Stab first."1915.
Thomas Hardy
The Eagle.
Nature, what heart may here by thee, Most truly brave be styled?The tender mother's it must be, When struggling for her child!A Scottish tale, of serious truth, Will make the maxim clear,I heard it from a shepherd youth, As nature's self sincere.On Scotland's wildest, loneliest ground, The subject of my taleLiv'd, where incumbent mountains frown'd High o'er her peaceful vale.The heroine of nature, she No vain ambition knew,Her bairns and goats she nurs'd with glee, To love and labour true.Her hut within the valley stood, Where thin grass grew alone,No shade had she from lofty wood. But much from towering stone.For o'er her vale a mountain's crown, In lo...
William Hayley
The Unconquered Dead
". . . defeated, with great loss."Not we the conquered! Not to us the blameOf them that flee, of them that basely yield;Nor ours the shout of victory, the fameOf them that vanquish in a stricken field.That day of battle in the dusty heatWe lay and heard the bullets swish and singLike scythes amid the over-ripened wheat,And we the harvest of their garnering.Some yielded, No, not we! Not we, we swearBy these our wounds; this trench upon the hillWhere all the shell-strewn earth is seamed and bare,Was ours to keep; and lo! we have it still.We might have yielded, even we, but deathCame for our helper; like a sudden floodThe crashing darkness fell; our painful breathWe drew with gasps amid the choking blood.<...
John McCrae
To Mr. Harley - Wounded By Guiscard
In one great now, superior to an age,The full extremes of nature's force we find:How heavenly virtue can exalt, or rageInfernal how degrade the human mind.While the fierce monk does at his trial stand,He chews revenge, abjuring his offence:Guile in his tongue, and murder in his hand,He stabs his judge, to prove his innocence.The guilty stroke and torture of the steelInfix'd, our dauntless Briton scarce perceives:The wounds his country from his death must feel,The patriot views; for those alone he grieves.The barbarous rage that durst attempt thy life,Harley, great counsellor, extends thy fame;And the sharp point of cruel Guiscard's knife,In brass and marble carves thy deathless name.Faithful assertor of thy country's cau...
Matthew Prior
Elegy IV. Anno Aetates 18. To My Tutor, Thomas Young,[1] Chaplain Of The English Merchants Resident At Hamburg.
Hence, my epistle--skim the Deep--fly o'erYon smooth expanse to the Teutonic shore!Haste--lest a friend should grieve for thy delay--And the Gods grant that nothing thwart thy way!I will myself invoke the King[2] who bindsIn his Sicanian ecchoing vault the winds,With Doris[3] and her Nymphs, and all the throngOf azure Gods, to speed thee safe along.But rather, to insure thy happier haste,Ascend Medea's chariot,[4] if thou may'st, Or that whence young Triptolemus[5] of yoreDescended welcome on the Scythian shore.The sands that line the German coast descried,To opulent Hamburg turn aside,So call'd, if legendary fame be true,From Hama,[6] whom a club-arm'd Cimbrian slew.There lives, deep-le...
William Cowper
The Waiting Soul.
Breathe from the gentle south, O Lord,And cheer me from the north;Blow on the treasures of thy word,And call the spices forth!I wish, thou knowst, to be resignd,And wait with patient hope;But hope delayd fatigues the mind,And drinks the spirit up.Help me to reach the distant goal,Confirm my feeble knee;Pity the sickness of a soulThat faints for love of thee.Cold as I feel this heart of mine,Yet, since I feel it so,It yields some hope of life divineWithin, however low.I seem forsaken and alone,I hear the lion roar;And evry door is shut but one,And that is mercys door.There, till the dear Delivrer come,Ill wait with humble prayr;An when he call...
Arms And The Man. - Welcome To France.
But, in that fiery zoneShe upriseth not alone,Over all the bloody fieldsGlitter Amazonian shields;While through the mists of yearsAnother form appears,And as I bow my headAlready you have said: - 'Tis France!Welcome to France!From sea to sea,With heart and hand!Welcome to all within the land -Thrice welcome let her be!And to FranceThe Union here to-dayGives the right of this array,And folds her to her breastAs the friend that she loves best.Yes to France.The proud Ruler of the WestBows her sun-illumined crest,Grave and slow,In a passion of fond memories ofOne hundred years ago!France's colors wave againHigh above this tented plain,Stream and flaunt, and blaze...
James Barron Hope
A Mother's Prayer.
I knelt beside a little bed,The curtains drew away,And, 'mid the soft, white folds beheld,Two rosy sleepers lay;The one had seen three summers smileAnd lisped her evening prayer;The other, - only one year's shadeWas on her flaxen hair.No sense of duties ill performedWeighed on each heaving breast,No weariness of work-day careDisturbed their tranquil rest;The stars to them as yet were inThe reach of baby hand,Temptation, trial, grief, were wordsThey could not understand.But in the coming years I sawThe turbulence of lifeO'erwhelm this calm of innocenceWith melancholy strife;"From all the foes that lurk without,From feebleness within,What Sovereign guard from Heaven," I asked,"Will strong bese...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Advice To A Young Author
First beginTaking in.Cargo stored,All aboard,Think aboutGiving out.Empty ship,Useless trip!Never strainWeary brain,Hardly fit,Wait a bit!After restComes the best.Sitting still,Let it fill;Never press;Nerve stressAlways shows.Nature knows.Critics kind,Never mind!Critics flatter,No matter!Critics curse,None the worse.Critics blame,All the same!Do your best.Hang the rest!
Arthur Conan Doyle
Davids Lament for Jonathan
Thou wast hard pressed, yet God concealed this thingFrom me; and thou wast wounded very sore,And beaten down, O son of Israels king,Like wheat on threshing-flour.Thou, that from courtly and from wise for friendDidst choose me, and in spite of ban and sneer,Rebuke and ridicule, until the endDidst ever hold me dear!All night thy body on the mountain lay:At morn the heathen nailed thee to their wall.Surely their deaf gods hear the songs to-dayOer the slain House of Saul!Oh! if that witch were here thy father sought,Methinks I een could call thee from thy place,To shift thy mangled image from my thought,Seeing thy souls calm face.I sorrowed for the words the prophet spoke,That set me rival to thy fathers line;
Stanzas
Oh, weep not, love! each tear that springsIn those dear eyes of thine,To me a keener suffering brings,Than if they flowed from mine.And do not droop! however drearThe fate awaiting thee;For my sake combat pain and care,And cherish life for me!I do not fear thy love will fail;Thy faith is true, I know;But, oh, my love! thy strength is frailFor such a life of woe.Were't not for this, I well could trace(Though banished long from thee,)Life's rugged path, and boldly faceThe storms that threaten me.Fear not for me, I've steeled my mindSorrow and strife to greet;Joy with my love I leave behind,Care with my friends I meet.A mother's sad reproachful eye,A father's scowling brow,But he ma...
Anne Bronte
Fragment
Denis, whose motionable, alert, most vaulting witCaps occasion with an intellectual fit.Yet Arthur is a Bowman: his three-heeled timber'll hitThe bald and bóld blínking gold when áll's dóneRight rooting in the bare butt's wincing navel in the sight of the sun.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
The Reward
Who, looking backward from his manhood's prime,Sees not the spectre of his misspent time?And, through the shadeOf funeral cypress planted thick behind,Hears no reproachful whisper on the windFrom his loved dead?Who bears no trace of passion's evil force?Who shuns thy sting, O terrible Remorse?Who does not castOn the thronged pages of his memory's book,At times, a sad and half-reluctant look,Regretful of the past?Alas! the evil which we fain would shunWe do, and leave the wished-for good undoneOur strength to-dayIs but to-morrow's weakness, prone to fall;Poor, blind, unprofitable servants allAre we alway.Yet who, thus looking backward o'er his years,Feels not his eyelids wet with grateful tears,If he hat...
John Greenleaf Whittier