A^ A A A ^0-;^^ ■^, 01 Vi* < '©• >.^--^ . "^. ..^' .--^^ -^ \ J"" '^^^'^o^'* O,^' *> V^ • "^ ^^Digitized by the Internet Archive^'. ^^ <^ /^ in 2010 with funding from vv 'o^ "* * G^ ^"^^ Tha-Ubrary of Congress. .^' ^ '^^_ •^^0^ ° • ' 1ittp''//'www.arcliive.org/details/iacobbrownotherp00stan %. ' ^-^■%^'\ •^0^ 'oK r^o^ ^^^ JACOB BEOWN AND OTHER POEMS By HENRY T. STANTON AUTHOR or "the moneyless man-, and OTIlr.K lOEMS' CINCINNATI ROBERT CLARKE & CO 1875 On I- a ^•^ 33 . Entered according- to Act of Congress, in the year 1S75, by HENRY T STANTON, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. Stereotyped by Ogden, Campbell & Co., Cir.c'.nnati . PREFACE, If any apology is necessary for the gathering together of these articles in verse, it should come from another source than the author. Those who have honored me by reading \r\y first vol- ume Avill discover a marked dilTerence in the character of the two books and it may be to my prejudice with some of them ; but a close observation has taught me that humor is more graciously received bj- the general reader than mere fine sentiment. If any- thing in these pages shall leave an impression that I have in- dulged a less worthy spirit, it must be regarded as growing out of an inability to make myself clearly understood. I have con- ceived no satire. I have given no individuality or special direc- tion to any line in the book, and those who know me best will readily acquit me c f any dosJL^n to be other than amiable and delicate in every allusion. My inclination h;ts been, and still is to a far different accom- plishment, but like most persons who love music, some songs I sing for myself and some for the audience. These are for those who like them. HENRY T. STANTON. (iii) Is Tenderly Inscribed TO KISSWEETHEART BV HER HUSBAND. CONTENTS Jacob Browx, ...... 7 Oct of the Om) Ykar into tiiu Xkw . . .23 Dowx THi; Road, ...... 29 Weeds, ...... .32 Going to School, , . . . . 34 A Mexsa et TiioRo, ...... 36 My Mother and I, .... . 37 The Sprixg, , . . . . . .44 True Yersiox, ...... 4G Drawixg it Fixe, ...... 4!) MCUDER, ....... 57 Metempsychosis, ...... 60 The Red Cross, ...... CI A Special Plea, ...... 6G The Midxigiit Rose, ..... 67 (v) vi CONTENTS. Self-Sacrifice, ...... 68 The Lost Curl, ...... 78 CULEX i\ Carmixe, ...... 80 The Court op Berlin, . . . . ' 88 The Last Leaf, ...... 90 May IX Mason, ...... 91 Pythian Lines, ...... 95 The Crown on Guard, ..... 100 Our Dead, ....... 101 Parson Giles, ...... 105 Omxipotens Veritas, . . . . .121 From me to You, . . . . . 131 Gambrinus, ....... 133 The Grove at St. Elmo, . . . . 148 The Photograph, ...... 150 Notes, ...... 153 JACOB BROWN AND OTHER POEMS JACOB BEOWN. MH|lTn a most unhappy thinking, Forward bent, and deeper sinking In the cushions of his chair, Jacob Brown sits in his study, Silent, gloomy-browed, and moody — Quite a picture of despair. Out beyond him stand the steeples, O'er the sected, casted peoples, Of a slumb'rous, shadowed town, Eeaching upward till their slimness Loses outline in the dimness Of a night-sky, clouded down, (vii) JACOB BROWN. Still beyond — a patch of river, That the vista lends no quiver, Lieth like a leaden plate ; Whilst a straying, faint air dandles With the distant chamber-candles, And the street-lamps scintillate. From their brawling in the beakers. He has seen the pleasure-seekers Swaying homeward to their cells ; He has heard the startled hours, From the sounding, hollow towers. Give their death-cry on the bells. It is just the time for sinking Under great excess of thinking, And the secret time for tears ; It is just the time for sorrow To be yearning for the morrow. From the watch-place at her biers. Oh, ye million quiet sleepers, Who have closed your weary peepers On an evening's purple light ! Little reck ye of the number Of your kind that can not slumber Through the horrors of the night 1 JACOB BROWN. Little reck yo of the peoples Staring outward on the steeples Of your dreamy city's wards ; Men who haunt the silent places, With the shadow on their faces, Like an army's outer guards ! Jacob Brown had cast no missile At the social law's epistle, Nor had ever harmed a dove ; He was simply in the illness And the sleej)-defying stillness Of a trying case of love. Many times had gone his distress To the proud heart of his mistress, In expression, honest, plain ; Many times he went appealing To her tenderness of feeling. And as many times in vain. Tho' the bee, in ever}'- hour, May forsake a chosen flower, Where the sweets are yielded not ; Tho' it go and nearly- smother In the sweetness of another, With the chosen one ibrffot — 10 JACOB BROWN. Jacob Brown's was not the nature To possess this vapid feature, And to seek another dear j He had set his altar burning, And his sighs were ever turning All its incense out to her. With his fingers interlacing, There he sat the city facing, In a vacant staring o'er — Brooding on the dead devices He had brought to break her ices In the bitter days before. Whilst a heavy gloom invaded Every crevice there, and shaded From the world his deep desjiair, With a bitterness of thinking, He was slowly, deeper sinking In the cushions of his chair, When from out the chamber silent Of his prisoned heart, servilent. Came a most unhappy tone ; Something spoken to the inner: " I would give my soul to win her,'' 'Twixt a whisper and a groan. JACOB BROWN. H It is said the King of Evil Is exceeding free and civil To the heart that utters this, And His Majesty Infernal, To possess a soul eternal, OflFers anything that 's his. Whilst it can not be that ladies Give their angel selves to Hades. For the wicked devil's sake, Yet, the fact we can not smother. That our pretty, primal mother Had a fancy for the " snake." Jacob Brown was somewhat flurried, When he found that Satan hurried There to close a trade with him ; For he could not be mistaken, When he felt his shoulder shaken By a person rather dim. It was scarcely worth his turning, When there came a sort of burning From the presence at his back ; And it needed not the vision To perfect a quick decision : " It '8 the Gentleman in Black !" 12 JACOB BROWN. " You can have the lady, Jacob — I am come the trade to make up By a very fair device ; I have thought of something better, Since you want a wife, to get her At a less expensive price. " If you give me daily labor. For yourself, or for j^'our neighbor — ■'■ Keep me constantly at work — I will run the sooty legions Of my underlying regions With a deputy or clerk, " Just agree to keep me busy, Or to make me faint and dizzy With a task I can not do. And I'll never hope in Hades — Though you take a score of ladies, For an after-time with you. " But be sure you keep me going. Like a flood of water flowing In and out a fountain's bowl — Never pause a single minute — Give mo work and keep me in^it, Or I take and keep your soul." JACOB BROWN. 13 Brown reflected just a little On the questionable title Under which he'd hold his wife — Just a little — then responded : "Sir, consider that we're bonded — It's a bargain, made for life." It may smack a bit of treason To the monarch Human Eeason, When we undertake to say Of the lesser things that burrow For their livings in the furrow : " They are truly better clay." That the very mole who scratches Underneath the paths and patches, Having neither point nor plan, Born, denied the eyes Elysian, In his perfect lack of v'sion, Is a greater thing flian man I It may smack, I jay, of treason To this reigning thing, called Eeason, Thus to ruffle up its pride ; Thus to bear its courtly ermine, To the shoulders of the vermin, And to put its rule aside ; 14 JACOB BROWN. But the human mind that reaches Over cultivated stretches, To the very far-away. Often dedicates to sorrow All its glorified to-morrow, For an aui-eate to-day ; And this heritor of treasure, For a momentary pleasure, Barters ofF its sacred right. Sinks a joyous sunny after, For a single day of laughter, In an unremitting night : Men are truly born immortal, But they struggle to the portal With the blindness of the moles — They j)artake of all the features Of the under-going creatures, That have neither sight nor souls. Having attributes of power Far beyond the common hour Of their probatory time. They prefer the baser level Of a passage to the devil. To the path they ought to climb. JACOB brown: 15 Now an early da}' came, bringing That peculiar, pleasant ringing, From the sanctuary bells, And the Ganymedes of Autumn Gathered up her "wines and brought 'era From the outer-lying dells. And the very streets, in bustle. Kept a silken under-rustle In theii- red leaves bedded down — It was sighing Nature shedding All her splendor for the wedding Of the happy Jacob Brown. Now the priest is in the chancel, Keady robed to blot and cancel All of Jacob's sadder life ; And the twain come at the altai*. There to stammer and to falter O'er the vows of man and wife. " Who does give him here the woman?" This was cruel and inhuman To the happy, guilty man ; For, he thought if any mortal Only knew — the fact would startle, And the world forbid the ban. 16 JACOB BROWN. He alone could tell the giver, But a sudden rush of fever Made his tongue exceeding dry, And the blood came up to blind him, Whilst a hollow voice behind him Uttered indistinctly — " I! " It was answered rather lowly, With an interval, and slowly, Like a whisper at his back ; Though the bi'ide herself was rather Of opinion 't was her father— 'T was the " Gentleman in Black." But it came at last to marriage. And the bride went to her cai-riage, Down a smiling line of friends; Here and there a little blissing. In the way of squeezing, kissing, As the common wedding ends. Brown had quite ignored the devil, "Whilst his joyous wedding revel Yet was only partly through ; It was scarcely in the vesper. "When he heard a hollow whisper : " Grive me something now to do," JACOB BROWN. 17 They were laughing then, tuul wining, In the pleasantry of dining, And the bride began to sing; BroAvn responded from his chalice : " Go and build me now a palace Fit to entertain a king." Ah ! we seldom note a fleeting Of the moments at our eating, Though the dial sliadow 's true — They were sitting still at dinner, When he came again — the sinner — '• Give me something else to do." Brown was startled, but responded : " Are we not together bonded ? This is jesting now and fun. You must go and do my bidding — Build the jialace for m}' wedding." Quoth the devil : '• It is done !" " What !" said Brown, his pulse diminished, "Is itbuilded? Is it finished ? Wall and roof, and ceil and floor ?" Said the devil : " Jacob, trul}', I have done your labor duly. And am waitinc: l-.erc for more." JACOB BROWN. Brown was object then of pity. " Go," said he, " and build a city Full of palaces and piles — Build me columns, build me arches, Plant me cedars, lindens, larches, On a hundred thousand miles !" When the company was fleeing, And at twelve o'clock the tea-ing Found the party very slim ; When the timid bride, uncertain, Sought the hiding of a curtain In her chamber's shadow dim, Brown was sitting there and boasting Of her beauty in the toasting With the still-remaining few, Full of joy, and all a flutter, When he heard the devil utter ; " Give me something else to do." This was torment dreadful, horrid, And the atmosphere grew torrid Though the Autumn night was late. "Am I waking ? Is it real ? Can he take a grand ideal And so readily create?" JACOB BROWX. 19 At his elbow darkly standing, Satan waited his commanding, And his shoukler leaning o'er, * Whispered : " Wasting time is pity; I have built your splendid city — Done ni}' duty — give mo more!" " Demon ! go and take the motion From the pulses of the ocean — Go and make the billows still ! Go to all the whitened beaches, Tell the sands in all their reaches — Count the leaves on every hill." Thus the spirit kept him worried, Always haunted, always hurried, Till a twelvemonth struggled by ; Finding work to give this sinner. Kept him wearing thin and thinner — He was ready near to die. Worst of all, unlia])py error! Brown, too late, had Ibund a teri'or In his costly lady's tongue; In their little j-ear of marriage She had quite another carriage. And another song she sung. 20 JACOB BROWN. It wsm now the " old, old story," Of a woman in the gloiy Of her kingdom over man ; She had passed the time of wiling, Of her sunlight and her smiling. And the reigning-day began. With the woman always rating, Always scolding him and prating Of the gloomy life he led, Was it strange the wretched fellow Should be growing thin and sallow, And be longing to be dead ? It was just about the coming Of a mellow Autumn gloaming, With its dewy, fruity air ; Jacob Brown again was sinking. With a bitterness of thinking. In the cushions of his chair. Out before him rose the steeples Over all the hapj^y peoples Of the underlying town ; He was gazing, gloomy, moody, When within his silent study Stalked the stately Lady Brown. JACOB BROWN. 21 " Always moping, always sighing — You arc very slow at dying — Will it never, never be? I would joy to see you buried — Every day that we are married Is a misery to me." He had scarce attention centered, "When the devil slowly entered From a gloomy passage through, And, with true i^oliteness, waiting Fur a pause about her prating — " Give my something else to do ! " Jacob rather liked the civil, Quiet manner of the devil, When his wife about hi;ii luiiig. So he answered rather slowlv, In a whisper, timid, lowly: "Please to stop the lady's tongue I" But, alas ! the spell was ended, And the devil, Bhocked, otfended, Out the open window flew ; lie was fairly there defeated, For he groaned as he retreated : " J hat is work lean not do ! " 22 JACOB BROWN. " This is truly most surprising ! " Uttered Jacob, there uprising : " Pray, your majesty, come back ! But the fatal word was spoken, And the bond of union broken With the " Grentloman in Black." Down he settled then, and sighing: " I am ready now for dying — I have nothing left in life — ■ I have lost my friend — the devil, And am in this world of evil At the mercy of my wife." After that, within his study, Silent, gloomy-browed, and moody, With his hands before his eyes, Jacob muttered, as a muser : *' I would give my soul to lose her ! " — But the devil did not rise. OUT OF THE OLD YEAE INTO THE NEW. jUT of his jacket and into his blouse, Out of the hxncs where linger the cows, Up from the stream where shy trout rise To the silent fall of the snaring flies; Squaring his shoulders, stroking his chin, Eying the boot with the breech-leg in, The b()3'-c-hild pippeth the egg so well, That Mau comes out of the broken shell. What shall he do in liis life begun? — Go to the bank where the brook-trout run? Go to the close and follow the cows The homeward way from the slopes they browse? Snare in the thicket? Trap in the field? Eide on the sweep at the cider yield? " Lord of Creation ! " What shall he do Out of his Old Year into his New? (23) 24 OUT OF THE OLD TEAR INTO THE NEW. Fuller the coveys than ever before — Hare in the warren, fish at the shore — The seed of the rag-weed falls full fast, But trapping days of the boy are past. The snows may come, but free is the hare To hold his track in the hiding tare — The hare-race now with the boy is done ; The hound-race hard with the man begun. Aye, square your shoulders and stroke your chin, The days of labor are crowding in. You play no hide-and-seek in the mows ; You beat no way with the browsing cows — Ho ! for the sickle and scythe and spade ! Into the Bun-heat out of the shade — Start in the furrow, travel it true Out of the Old Year into the !N"ew. II. Out of her under-coat, red and small, And out of her bib and her overall ; Hiding the rise of her ankles fair "With trailing drape of a fuller wear ; Binding her breast to steadier place In silken bonds of the corset-lace, The girl-child endeth her days of bliss, And Woman comes from the chrysalis. OUT OF THE OLD YEAR INTO THE NEW. 25 What shall she do in her life begun ? — Gather the buds that blow in the sun ? Fashion her garlands to quaint design Under the glint of the fielder's tine? Loiter the meadows and romp and cry, As the mower goes in the golden rye? Blossom of girlhood ! "What shall she do Out of the Old Year into the New? Go to the brook for the yestreen girl, With her sundown hat and leaf-brown curl ; Go to the glass of the opal lymph And widen your eyes, oh, new-born nymph I The meadow is sweet with fresh-cut hay. The odor the same as ycsterda}-, But never you '11 tread, with singing blithe. The scented bed of the mower's scythe. You loosen your zone and turn your eye To gleaning girls in the golden rye ; But tighten it now, and turn away, It's only a glimpse of yesterday — The distaff stands in the window-light. There's weft to weave in the warj^ to-night; The rye-field wa}' is not for you. Out of the Old Year into the New. 26 OUT OF THE OLD YEAR INTO THE NEW. III. Woman and man, at the start of life, A sunburnt spouse and a peach-cheeked wife, Kneeling and swearing the words that bind The twain in bonds of the archer blind ; Plucking the flowers they nursed so true In the gloaming walk where wild ones grew ; A man and woman with life begun, "Who w^ere two but now, and now but one ; — What will they do at their life's outstart ? — Meet in the meadow and smile and part? Walk in the sundown aisles of the day, Study the shades of the twilight gray? Eamble the fields where the roses are When the foot falls dry and sun shines fair? What will the twain in the blood-rite do Out of the Old Tear into the New ? When flax is ripe for the spinning-wheel There 's nothing left for the honey-meal ; In other bloom where the dew food lies Must loiter the bees with laden thighs — Now gather the flax and break it bright, The distaff's still in the window-light; Gather and garner it under roof, For still the warp is waiting the woof OUT OF THE OLD TEAR INTO THE NEW. 27 Be true to your plow and sweep 3'our scythe Witli sinew strong and muscle lithe; A cradle rocks on the homestead floor, One stranger there, and a chance for more ; Go deep in the sod and turn full fair, For youth is coming the 3"ield to share. Mother and father, there 's more to do Out of your Old Tear into your New. IV. Master and dame, at the close of life, A toil-bent spouse and a child-worn wife ; Sitting at eve in their westward s'.oop. Watching the sun to the westward droop ; Sitting alone, in their oaken chairs. Waiting the twilight, gray as their hairs; Olden and worn and ending the run Of days like that of the dying sun. Ah, still, as the suu that leaves the plain, The}' sink at the verge, to rise again ; Making the course from gold to gray. They turn the arc of a single day, And sink in the eve to rise again. In world of beauty, or world of bane. Mother and father, what world for you Out of the Old Day into New? 28 OUT OF THE OLD YEAR INTO THE NEW. Look to the life that is laid before. In fields bej'ond on the faint-lined shore ; It 's not a measure of labor now, A question of bread, and beaded brow ; A question of fields, and buds, and bloom, Of days of shining, and days of gloom; You '11 answer the Maker's gi^aver one, Not what shall you do — "What have you done ? Ah, woman and man, there lies the test For human souls of their final rest — What are your hojoes and what are your fears ? What have you done in the dry, dead years? What do you claim as a just reward At the hand of Him — the gracious Lord ? Mercy and love be given to you. Out of the Old Life into the New. DOWN THE EOAD. HE overhead blue of the summer is gone, The overhead canopy gray'd ; Tlio damp and the chill of the winter is on, And the dust of the highway laid. I sit in the glare of the simmering beech, At the hearth of the old abode, And I look with a sigh at the comfortless reach Of the farm-lands down the road. The Avind is astir in the camp of the grain, The tents of the grenadier corn ; The sentinel stalk at the break of the lane Hathawearisome look and lorn ; Yet it has n't been long since into the blades The sap of the summer-time flowed, When I and my ox-team loitered the shades Of the oak-trees down the road. (29) 30 DOWN THE ROAD. There was n' t a day that I did n' t go by The house at the swell of the hill — The cattle had broken the close of the rye, Or something was wanted at mill ; And Kittj^ — she stood in the porch at her wheel, And the gold to her shoulder flowed ; And what did I care for the " turn of the meal," Or the rye-field down the road? In the seeding-time, when I followed the plow And furrowed the mellow ground, There was n't that labor-like sweat of the brow That honester husbandry crowned ; For the fairy was there at her wheel and sjjun As I plowed or planted or sowed, And my labor was never right faithfully done In the grain-fields down the road. And then in the heat of the harvesting-daj', When the sickle and scythe went through, It was only the veriest time for play That ever a harvester knew ; For there was the maid at the humming wheel yet Just fronting the swath that I mowed, And the scythe ran slow, for my eyes w^ere set On the old porch down the road. DOWN THE ROAD. 31 Then the autumn at last came into the year, And life took a mellowei' mood : We gathered the grain, and the quail with a whin- Went out of the field to the wood. And I tried to be steady and brisk ; but ^till It was hard to bo plying the goad When my indolent oxen balked at the hill B}- the farm-house down the road. Now Kitty has eyes of the tenderest blue, And hair of the glossiest gold, But never a word of my loving so true To Kitt}- have ever I told. And the winter is here and the winter may go And still I can cany the load — The green of the spring cometh after the snow In the grain -fields down the road. WEEDS. ,ENT at the gate in her weeds, A trifle reduced and whiter — Some say of her heart : " It bleeds ; " Some say of her heart : " It 's lighter." A woman of mind and soul, And strong to the utmost straining — How should I know if her dole Be dole, or only a feigning ? Once I was weak to believe, And said : " G-od pity us madam ! You be a blossom of Eve, And I be a scion of Adam." The tide in her cheek ran red — Hed as the East in the morning. '' Sir, I be a wife," she said, In passion, and pride, and scorning. (32) WEEDS. 33 Forbidden, the ripe, fair fruit- Forbidden, but near to reaching. I stood in the garden mute, Abashed and stung wilh the teaching. A queen in her weeds is she. By the gate, in shadow leaning. Now tell mo if mask it be. Or grief in the real meaning? I pass on the other side, 1 make an obesiance to her — I wonder if he who died Was wiser than I, and — knew her. GOING TO SCHOOL. HIS knowledge we find in tlie flow of tlie street, From faces we see and from figures we meet, That men in tlieir callow, their ri2)ening and rime Are under the rod of the pedagogue Time ; And this we deduce, by a logical rule : However we go, we are going to school. Now, here is a brown little urchin of ten, Half hidden from sight in the sea of the men ; A steady-eyed, stout little lad in his looks, Tied up like his burdensome bundle of books, So mitted and buttoned that any poor fool May see, at a glance, he is going to school. Then here is a chap with a worrying stock Of wonderful wrangles from Bacon and Locke, Who, having been polished and plated and pearled, Somewhere at a college, comes out in the world, And, mixing with men in the slime of its pool, Is forced to admit he is going to school. (34) GOING TO SCHOOL. 35 And here is a priest, with tlie saintliest face — A pauper in pocket, a Croesus in grace ; He enters the pulpit, and opens the book, As wise as an owl and as grave as a rook ; But spite of the penitents bent at his stool, And though he may teach, he is going to school And there is a bridegroom with beautiful bride — The fact of her beauty is never denied ; He 's proud of his purpose and promise in life, — Is proud of his manhood, and proud of his wife : How long will he be under petticoat rule Till he saj's to himself, " I am going to school !" And here is a chance to look into the glass Of the wearisome eye of a woman you pass ; Her purpose is gone and her jn'omisc is dead, Hor life is a skein of the slenderest thread, And sorrow is winding it fast on a spool — Her husband 's a sot, and she 's going to school. But here is a person — no longer a slave To the pedagogue Time — at the brink of the grave. His course in the school of the world he has run, His summer is over, his session is done ; And now, as ho dies in the driftings at Yule, His children may say, " Ho is going to school !"' "A MENSA ET THORO." 4OTH of us guilty and both of us sad — ^"^^ And this is the end of passion ! And people are silly — jDeople are mad, Who follow the lights of Fashion ; For she was a belle, and I was a beau. And both of us giddy-headed — A priest and a rite — a glitter and show, And this is the way we wedded. There were wants we never had known before, And matters we could not smother; And poverty came in an open door, And love went out at another : For she had been humored — I had been spoiled, And neither was sturdy-hearted — Both in the ditches and both of us soiled. And this is the way we parted. "(36) MY MOTHER AND I. [IE wore finishing tea — my niothor and I— 'f^ Exactly at lialf after eight ; The noise in the kettle went down to a sigli, The muffin grew cold on the plate ; I looked in the cup as I toyed with a spoon, Attempting to balance it clear, And said to mj-sclf : " It 's the last afternoon Of the very last day of the year ; I '11 see if my fortune — for better, for worse — By drops of the tea will be told," And then, like a boy, I began to rehearse What I tried when I was n't so old, "Why, John," said mj" mother, a manifest smile Just lighting her lips and her eyes, "You seem to be dropping a very long while, The handle is slow to arise." My arm gave a lurch and it flooded the bowl, And down to the bottom it fell ; I'm forty! but farther than that from the goal, If tea-drippings honestl}* tell. (37) 38 MY MOTHER AND I. " No use for such folly at my time of life." Then I quietly said in repl}'' : " It is n't for me to be taking a wife As long as it 's — mother and I.'' Then something got under my lid like a mote; I rose at recalling my sire, And parting the points of a pigeon-tailed coat, Extended my palms to the fire. Then one after one of the last forty years, I soberly mustered them up ; A little of laughter, a little of tears. And the fortunes I tried in the cup. My mother, still dreamily keei:)ing her seat, Was thinking, no doubt of the one "Who left her, a stalk of the yellowing wheal, To ripen alone in the sun. The jDicture is clearly domestic, I know, And homely and common withal, A celibate, just in his midsummer glow, A widow, somewhat in her fall ; She is sixty and past, but having the air Of one who had reigned in her day — A trifle subdued, and the dusk of her hair Just broken with glintings of gray. Mr MOTHER AND I. 39 My mother's my sweetheart, my glory, my queen, My only true womun in life ; I wonder sometimes what an ass I have been To ever have dreamed of a wife. I said it waa half after eight, and the eve Of the very last day of the year ; The ghosts of my life at the time, I believe, I had soberly called to appear. A fig for the past ! Let the closets of time Forever their skeletons hide ; There 's nothing to gain from the mold and the grime, And the ghosts of the things that have died. So, breaking the chain of my mother's duress In the prison of days that were dead, I gave her the query : " Pray, what is your guess Concerning the twelvemonth ahead ?" It staggered her some, but she I'allied at last, And the sweet of her smiling arose ; " Well, John, if j^ou 're Avanting your horoscope cast, I 'm a proi:>er old witch, I suppose " — That's she, on the laughing and bantering side. When she passes from ■v\ 'nter to sj^ring. " Do n't trouble yourself abc t me," I replied, " For my destiny's not ii 'Our ring ; 40 MV MOTHER AND I. " I come to the brink of your beaker of age For a drop of its wine's overcharge, 'A cross on your pahn' for an honest presage Of the world and the people at large." " In any event, you would have me a witch Whilst yet in the flush of my prime. Ah, well, we are both of ns knotting a stich, To-night, in the stocking of time. And John, let me say of the stitches just here, Their making's perfection of art ; Unless there's a flaw in the yarn of the year We never can tell them apart. I look on the stitch we are finishing now, By others as evenly laid. And feel it's a trifle to estimate how The stitch of to morrow '11 be made. " That's witchery, fair as the best you have known, And as true as the best you will see; From nature to-da}^ it is readily shown What nature to-morroAV will be." Then, leaving the table, she came to a seat In the cushioned old rocker of state. And crossing her arms and extending her feet, Looked musingly into the grate. MV MOTHER AND T. 41 Slic burnished a thought I refused to exproBS, When I banished the past from my brain, Tho' cleverly said, I am free to confess It was not what I hojied to obtain. Continuing then : " It may do very well To be earnest]}' looking ahead For the something to buy, or something to sell, In the matter of making our bread. Wo 're not like tho sparrows tbat gather the crumbs Sown over the snow in the street; We put in our fingers to pull out the plums From the pie of the Earth — if wo eat. Wc may not foretell Avhat the season will bring B}' a rule of the previous yield ; A chill ma}" go down to the germ in the spring, Or summer may ashen the field. •' I do not refer to the physical world, With its bees, and its ants, and its moles; But the surface of time that 's blackened and pearled By a tireless passage of souls. The age, to my mind, is no better, no worse, Than it was in the century gone; Though we act in this year, 'tis to simply rehearse For the play of a year coming on. 42 MF MOTHER AND I. " The Father of All is abroad everywhei-e, But the bad ' little master ' is free ; There's evil and good in proportionate share, And long as we live it will be. "Now, mark it, my son, there are sections of Earth In excellence greatly advanced ; But equally, places much lessened in worth With ignorance sadly enhanced. We fluctuate, some in the scale, it is true — How could we be mortal without it ? — But taking the whole of our pilgrimage through, There 's always a sameness about it. What guess could I make on the twelvemonth ahead Excejjt on the basis of othei's? Men know that their bodies in time will be dead, Because they have buried their brothers." Then mother looked earnestly back in the blaze, And studied the glow of the coals ; ]Sro doubt they gave pictures of beautiful days To her, but to me they were ghouls. So I turned and abraded a match on the wall, And I lighted a Cuba cigar, And I said to myself: " There 's a doubt after all As to what sort of creatures we are. MV MOTHER AND I. 43 "Hero 's mother, so good tliat the angels above Might safely kneel down at her feet ; And I, of her blood, and her life, and her love, Not more than the dust of the street." THE SPEING. |UT of the hill there issued a spring, And into a moss'd retreat ; Lucent and cool, with eddy and swing, It came at our feet. Violet beds a trifle a-stir, A nd stray leaves driven about ; A low, sweet noise to me and to her As the stream ran out. Two great broad elms beclouded the sky And meted the ether through ; What care to us if a midnight dye Flowed over the blue ? Tremulous arms that circled me there, And pluvial eyes afloat ; And wanton tides of vagabond hair — They flooded my throat! (44) THE SPRING. 45 Then down the way the waters went, Together went 1 and she ; And on, and on, we followed the bent Till into the sea. The wide, high sea ! Oh, frail are the helms, And heavy the billows' fling! Oh, to go back to the sjoreading elms Where issued the spring ! TEUE YEESION. LITTLE vine about an oak Its lissom thread has run. To find, beyond the shadow-cloak, A fruitage in the sun. A scapeling from the prison-ground — Through heat and shower free — Now tenderly it twines around The roughness of the tree; And soon upon the upper air Its pliant jesses swing, Till, in the shine, it comes to bear, The children of the Spring. Proud mother to the multibloom, The canopy and cloak — That floods with such a rare perfume The precincts of the oak. (46) TRUE VERSION. 47 On steely wings the yellow bees Ply in and out the place ; The oriole there shakes the lees Of blossoms to her face. Now mellow Autumn days arc here, The ripening days and brown ; The leaves upon the trees are sere, The limbs are leaning doAvn — In clusters hang the winy globes Above the nether way, The vino is in its purple robes, The tree is in its gray. Then Winters pass, and Spring on Spring, "With blossoms blown and shed. The vino has grown a massy thing — The sturdy oak is dead — And silent, on the greening earth, A weighted monarch lies. The proudest of her forest birth. The noblest one that dies. 48 TRUE VERSION. No longer in the golden shine Her glowing life shall be, Until the widowed arms shall twine Another fated tree. And this, in season, too, shall die. And all that she encloaks; And still shall come the widow's cry, "Bring on your sturdy oaks ! " " — X^ DEAWING IT FINE. 3 jp^ 11 sliining cloud of meshes, f^ Where a marge of Summer rushes To a noisy water dipt, Dwelt a prim, maternal spider, "With her grim, brown spouse beside her, Like two mummies in a crypt. And except, perhaps, the shimmer Of a sunset's silver tremor. There was not the slightest breath — Not the faintest undulation. In the pendant, hooded station, "Where they simulated death. Every tentacle enfolded, Much as if the parts were molded, Or were carven so from stone ; There they sat, Avithout emotion, Staring down a woven ocean, From the funnel of their cone. (49) 50 DRA WING n FINE — When the dry, drawn spider's forces Puts its legion pulsate courses Thus suecessfully to rout, "Well, indeed, may Science marvel How it is this crimson travel Of the venous-tide goes out. We have no such tragic actors As these adept tissue-factors — ■ Since they never rant or rave — And there 's not a tiling in nature Wearing such a perfect feature Of the unrelenting grave. True, they act this tableau merely, But they mimic death so nearly — Being rigid there and still — That the Llinded insect rushes Down the silence of their meshes To escape some lesser ill. So these consorts sat in quiet, Watching ever for the diet To their finished talent due; Waiting patiently and stilly For the winged things and silly That were intermitting through. DRA WING IT FINE. 51 By-and-by, upon hex* vision Came a light of clear decision, And the sober matron spoke (She had something like that human, Active impulse of a woman, In her tongue — the common joke) : " Having trained our girl and taught her, As a spider should her daughter, All the proper things in life, It is time she had our blessing — Though the thought is sore distressing — As some decent person's wife. "I am sui'e the maid is able, Now, to run her line of cable. Unassisted, front the spool ; And as weaver, and as spinner. That there 's more than common in her, I believe, upon my soul 1 " Onl}" yesterday, I saw her. For our neighbor, Mistress Drawer, Darning ])laccs in her net; Busy there in giving issue To the fine-t solar tissue I have ever noticed yet. 52 DRA WING IT FINE. "She is skilled in all the graces Of the most exquisite laces — Quite invisible to me — And I think such work would kill me, With \ay eyes bo veiy film}^ I could never, never see. " There 's a wanton mass of bushes Just above our line of rushes, Where to spread the maiden's net; So, good man, though sad to miss her. Let us bless the child and kiss her. Whilst our lives are steady yet." And the grim old spider listened. Till upon his optics glistened Something not unlike a tear; And with quite a man's agreeing To a woman's way of seeing. Answered : "As j^ou think, my dear." Then the mother called her daughter From a-sporting on the water. In a little bay below ; And the ladylike young spider Came and settled down beside her, To the sorrow of her beau ; DRA WING IT FINE. 53 For Bho ceased at once her skating, Left the gallant there awaiting, Made a courtesy and flew — Ju8t as every little woman, When she hears her mother summon, Ought nndoul)tedly to do. It was charming in the tunnel. Of their silver-sided funnel. Thus the family to see ; Sitting close to one another Were the fixther and the mother And the daughter — happy three I There their plans were all unfolded, And the maiden's future molded In the fancy of the dame ; In the matted brier trellis She should have her silver palace And be given up to Fame. But alas ! like every other Living thing — that has a mother — How these fancies Avent astray! All the goodly things we nurture For the overburdened future Pass too fleetiugly away. 54 DRA WING IT FINE. So it was, this callow weaver, When her mamma let her leave her, Went a little bit too fast ; Though she made a fiair beginning With her cunning kind o' spinning, It was not a kind to last. She was full of life, and agile. But her shining threads were fragile And defective in their length ; For she made her woofing wider Than her warping justified her. And the fabric wanted strength. We have seen a thousand ladies On a rapid way to Hades By this very common force. And exactly like the spinner They persist in drawing finer, When they ought to draw it coarse. 'T is peculiar to the human — Where the debutant 's a woman — To exceed the parent mai^ge ; She rejects the frugal spirit She should properly inherit, And essays to "go it large." DRA WING IT FINE. 55 And the rule is just as certain, When it 's time to lift the curtain On the drama of her days, She has found her li^lit ambition At the margin of perdition, Through tlic saddest sort o' ways. Now, the highest aim that lillod her — And the very thinlank An hundred years ago. These fallow lands that laugh to-day In summer's mulling juices, From Avanlon sleep and idle play, Were brought to truer uses; And daring hands were on the plow That broke the primal row, To see the tasseled corn-tops bow, An hundred years ago. The settler found his savage foes. In every copse appearing, And death was in the smoke that rose. Above the earh^ clearing ; The toil was hard, the danger groat. The progress doubtful, slow; But these were men who made the State An hundred years ago. 94 MAT IN MASON, 1775. Now closures grand and pastures green Are blocked about the Granges, And goodly herds and homes are seen Along the olden ranges — The busy city rings with toil, The steamers come and go — God bless the brawn that broke the soil An hundred years ago. No longer in her bark canoe, The red maid skims the river ; The web-fowl's nestling from the sloo Has winged away forever ; A single line these lands abrade, The lick-bound buffalo Has left till now, the trace he made An hundred years ago. So let us leave our trace behind. And wear it broader, deeper, That coming man may bring to mind The courses of the sleeper — That after days may see our toil And women praise us so ; As brawny men who broke the soil An hundred years ago. PTTHIAlf LINES. •^^lli Kiii<;-hts, when first to social vvays •^^ Our early fathers turned, Ere in the rudo, primeval days Their forest altars burned ; Before the Druids felt the dawn Of reason at their feasts, Or brought to shoulders bare and brawn The pelts of preying beasts ; Before the compact of our kind, B}^ which, to human rules, Was bent tlie sway of savage mind In germinating schools, Man kept his law (tf force above. And lived by strength iilone, Nov kindred claim, nov common love Nor civil bond was known. (95) 96 PTTHIAN LINES. The faint traditions of tiie past, Brought up the tongues of Time Through maze of race, and creed, and caste, In dust, and rust, and rime, Have told how in the Asia-plains A virgin sod was thrown, How from its sparsel}^ scattered grains A cultured world has c;rown. The gray, historic stones that stand Along the backward aisles, To point the progress of the land. As though by measured miles. Are weather-stained, and still, and stark, And crumbling to the base. But still their iron closures mark The onward reach of G-race. Thus, step by step, the world has grown,- The civil creed prevailed ; Its grand estate, to-day, is shown For other heirs entailed. And generations yet to come Shall backward turn with smiles To point the solid shaft and dome We structure in the aisles. PYTHIAN LINES. 97 Whilst yet the Christian era slept Unopened to the years, And savage bands their victims swept To pai^an sepulchres; Some faitli from man to man was plight, Some sj-mpathies were born, And human kind from out the niirht, Beheld the break of morn. From ancient and luroic Greece ; From 'neath the walls of Rome; From times of war and times of peace, Our stately fables come. The annals of the olden world — For honor now avails — And give, in vellum scrolls unfurled, Their mythic moral tales. Of one of these was born the tic That binds the Pj'thic clan ; Was caught the heat of honor high That Aveldeth man to man — From out the forge of primal days Wc hear the hammer's beat, Where metal to the metal lays And makes the bond complete. 93 PYTHIAN LINES. Yo Pythic Pages here, who wear The myrtle in your breasts ; Te proved Esquires who proudly bear The shield above your crests; Ye brave, chivalric Knights, whose feet Have borne the test of steel, Who wear your helmets now to meet The foes of common weal. The misty days that lie beyond This cj^cle of your lives, Shall keep the record of your bond In golden -bound archives ; Shall tune for you their sweetest reeds, And lengthen and prolong The music-story of your deeds, To everlasting song. As hostoges ye stand to-day, Confiding to the last ; That yet shall come, from down the way The Damons of the past Though steeds may fail and foes may snare, And leagues may intervene ; 3!^o wall shall stay the friends that wear The sprigs of myrtle green. PYTHIAN LINES. 99 Then keep your friendship pure and true, With caution wear your shields; No foes shall strike their lances through The bravo hearts in the fields ; And when the living days have died And ritcd been and knelled, All coming Knights shall note with pride The confidence ye held. THE CEO WW ON GUAED HE Emperor Solyman, holding his Pleas, On taking the town of Belgrade, Observing a woman, bent down on her knees, Demanded what trouble she had? " My liege, I am widowed, alone, and in dole — Last night, as I lay in my sleep, Your soldiers came into my closure and stole The whole of my poultry and sheep." " Why slept you so well— and the robbers about ?" Then Solyman said with a sneer. " Oh, sire, when the Emperor watehetli without, How can a poor woman have fear?" (100) OUE DEAD. i ND slill a, mindful people turns To such as wear their crosses, Beneath a way of waving ferns And interwoven mosses. And still, with knots and crates of bloom. With soonest blowing roses, They come to break the night of gloom That o'er the hero closes. Here yet, by fingers deft from love. The wild vine's tendril 's matted, In tribute wreaths and crowns are wove, And lissom garlands plaited. Here yet, the new-strewn immortelles Of memory are saying, As tender-fresh as if the bells A dying chime were playing. (lOl) 102 OUR DEAD. And years have been, and years may be, And still shall gather yearly The fettered souls beside the free — The dead they love so dearly. And still shall freshest garlands fall From loving hands in showers, O'er fragments of the crumbled wall That closed the Land of Flowers. Here sleep the brave, the good, the true, The trusting and the daring ; The great, that in their living grew The laurels they are wearing. The battle-stains are on their breasts, The battle- currents clotted — An index on the outer vests Of inner men unspotted. An hundred mounds are circled near — An hundred heroes under; An hundred knights that ne'er shall hear Again the battle's thunder. OUR DEAD. 103 But o'er the turf in drooping fold, With broken staff, a banner Shall keep their knightly prowess told In true chivalric manner. Among the mounds are some whose names Upon the stones are missing — Who fell in front too soon for Fame's As for the motlier's kissinjr. The brave "unknown " in martial pride And honored here and knighte ] ; We only know a hero died — A soldier's home was bli