LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Shelf, UNITED STATES OE AMERICA. Twilight Echoes EMILY STUART WEED Life's music ever fails us Till its saddest strains are sung; ' Tis only out of sorrow That the sweetest notes are rung. \ . / BUFFALO CHARLES WELLS MOULTON 1890 ^ ?S3I5 7 .W73 COPYRIGHT 1 890 BY EMILY STUART WEED, BI6ELOW PRE88 : BUFFALO. TABLE OF CONTENTS. If I Sailed Away, 1 Come Back, 2 Till You Come, ......... 3 Retrospect, 4 Christmas Chimes, 5 If We Only Knew, 6 Beyond the Sunset, 7 Yesterday — To-morrow, 8 Some One, 9 Good-night 10 For Aye, 11 How Strange, 12 All the Daylight, 13 Perhaps, 15 Shadows, 15 Promise, . 17 The "Old Love," 17 Frost Kissed, 18 Dreams, 19 Erewhile, 21 Love's Return, 21 The Reaper, 22 Prescience, 23 Daffies, 24 Premonition, . . 25 Spring- Time, 26 iv CONTENTS. The Dead Year, 27 My Sailor, 28 Fidus Achates, .29 Greeting, 30 Sub Silentio, 30 Mine, 31 The New Year, 32 Beautiful Hands, 33 Patience, 34 Maud, 35 Memory, 36 Life Colors, 38 April, 39 Promised, 40 Katydid, 41 Night, 42 Morte, 43 Aurora, . . 44 Charity, 44 My Dream, 45 Drifting Away, 46 I Wonder, 47 A Song of the Reapers, 48 Memories, 49 Under the Frost, 50 Unseen, 51 Beyond the Summer, 52 One Perfect Day, 53 Questioned, 54 My Twilight, 56 Lost, .57 CONTENTS. v Golden Harvest, 58 Autumn Blooms, . . . 59 Returned, . - 60 To a Buttercup, .61 Ah! You Wonder, '• . 62 Transmuted, 63 Glenville, .......... 64 To , 65 "So Keep My Memory Green," 65 Pictures, 67 Melody, 68 A Message, 69 Heart Echoes, ......... 69 When the Summer Dies, . . . . ■ .. . .70 Mile- Stones, . , 71 Reveries, 72 Heart-Ache, 73 May Blossoms, .74 When Do You Think of Me Most? . 74 To the Picture of Longfellow's Children, ... 75 Intuition, 76 Song of the Flowers, 76 Pilgrimage, 77 Unattained, 78 Incompleteness, 79 Sonnet, . 80 Lines To G. H. C, 80 My Boat 81 We Two, 82 Mrs. Browning, 83 Violets, 83 vi CONTENTS. How? 84 Her Portrait, 85 Pond Lilies, 87 To , 88 A Christmas Greeting, 89 Her Room, 90 Indian Summer, 91 Seedlings, 92 Birthday Flowers, 93 To Mrs. , 93 Saint Valentine, 94 A Dream Recalled, 95 To C. C. H. at Sea, 96 Somebody Loves Me in Dreams, 97 "Three-Score and Ten," 98 Forever, 99 In Vain, . 100 De Profundis, . 101 SONG WORDS. Drifting, . 103 Answered, 104 Lullaby— Rest, 104 Bird and Wind, 105 Donald, 106 When the Year Grows Old, 106 Sailing, 107 My King, 108 OCEAN LETTERS. To K. D, 109 To C. C. H., Ill CONTENTS. vii Christmas Letter, .114 The Sleeping Beauty, 115 Capture of Stony Point by General Wayne, . .121 POEMS FOR LITTLE ONES. Little Elsie to the Flowers, 125 The Little Dauphin of France, 126 The Mouse and the Bee, 128 Jack's New Year, 131 Mischief, 133 The Lily Fairy, 135 The Spider and the Fly, 138 Pushed Out of the Nest, 142 Christmas Carol, 143 DRAMA. FOR LITTLE ONES. Love's Victory, 145 IMPROMPTU LINES. To * * * . . . . . . . . . . 148 Omne Tempus, 148 Davis's Mill, 148 Thy Presence, 149 You, 149 St. Agnes Eve, 149 August Afternoon, 149 From Me to Thee, 150 Anon, 150 CHRISTMAS VERSES. To , . 151 To A. N., ■ . .151 viii CONTENTS. To * * * 151 To ...... 152 AUTOGRAPH SCRAPS. To S. M, 153 To A. M. W., •■ 153 To C. S, 154 To Alice A., 154 To Louie W., 154 To C. H, 154 To L. R, 155 To H. E. S., 155 To N. S, .155 To F. S, . . . 156 ACROSTICS. Garfield, . . .157 Neal, 157 May, 157 BIRTHDAY VERSES. To , 158 To C. C. H, 158 In Memoriam, 159 TWILIGHT ECHOES IF I SAILED AWAY. What would you do, Dear Heart, if to-day- Over the seas I sailed away, Out of sight of your earnest eyes, Out of sound of your low replies, Out of reach of your warm, white hand That lies in mine, with a golden band, Love's pledge that must bind us "forever and aye"— But, what, Dear Heart, if I sailed away ? Whisper it low, and whisper it clear, What would you do with all the year? How would you meet the days and hours, How could you visit our "Fern Land" and flowers? Could you wander alone the daisied fields, Or gather alone the " Autumn Shields " Of gold and yellow, of crimson and gray, If I sailed, Sweet Love, from your heart away ? TWILIGHT ECHOES. Let your answer, mine own, be sweet and low. Tell me, dear, you would miss me so That life, and light, would darker be If I sailed away on any sea. For sail I must, Dear Heart, some day, But my soul will claim you forever and aye. Love can not die, though Time may cease — Sweetheart, give, ere I sail, this peace. COME BACK. Ah, dear one, the sweet summer sunshine Still brightens the paths we have known, And my heart still waits for your coming, Though the shadows have longer grown. The moonlight that sleeps on the waters And silvered the crags by the sea, Still shines over mountain and meadow, As it used, dear, for you and for me. So come, ere my heart grows weary; The waiting has been so long; Bring the melody back to my singing, The music into my song. TWILIGHT ECHOES. TILL YOU COME. The nights are fair and sweet, love, And the morns, with fragrant dew, But what are nights and mornings, Dear one, without you? The fields are standing golden, The corn-flowers wave and bow, They lean for me to pluck them, But how, dear, can I, how? Without your eyes to look through, Without your helping hand, The golden fields must tarnish, The corn-flowers longer stand. My nights and all my mornings, However fair they be, Can hold no touch of beauty, Till you come back to me. TWILIGHT ECHOES. RETROSPECT. A dream, a vision of forest streams, Of sunny days, of golden gleams, Of wild-wood walks, of mossy glades One sees in dreams in forest shades, Comes o'er my soul like a west wind blown Over fields of bloom with clover sown, Comes over my heart this gladsome day, While I count the hours as they throb away Into the past, with the hours that died When the summer waned into autumn-tide, And left me to dream of the days to be, Which only come back in dreams, to me. The summer returned, but not as of old; The sunsets showed more gray, less gold, And the shadows cast from the steep hillside Seemed a mantle made for the summers that died. Ah! that they died, and only in dreams, The suuny days, and the forest streams Sweep over my heart like a west wind blown Over fields of bloom with clover sown. TWILIGHT ECHOES. CHRISTMAS CHIMES. The meadows are brown, the hills are all bare, And up through the valley the clear, crisp air Is singing a Christmas song; Like the song of the sea in the purple shell, If we list to its notes it will sweetly tell The secrets it kept so long. It tells of a time so sunny and fair, When we watched the clouds of the snowy air For the reindeer's tiny form, And saw in our dreams such pictures of light, As we slept through the hours of the long dark night- Away from the clouds and storm. Such pictures as glow in fairy tales, When told at the hour when daylight pales, And the crimson west grows gray, When we list for the chimes of fairy-bells, That are hung in the shades of haunted dells, And are rung by goblin and fay. It rings on the heart a tearful change Of a darkened time, so sad, so strange, When our dreams had lost their light; TWILIGHT ECHOES. It whispers and sings to the leafless trees Our secrets, that sigh in every breeze, Till the day wears into the night. Oh, Christmas chimes! ye are merry and sad, Ye wound the heart, and ye make it glad, With the music your ringing makes; And the merry heart that has dreamed so long Takes up the thread of the broken song, And sings till it, quivering, breaks! IF WE ONLY KNEW. If we only knew the heart-aches, The struggles and the tears, That follow like a phantom The wake of human years. Could we have known the shadows, That would cloud life's little day, Known the cruel thorns in ambush Along the weary way; How our tired feet would linger In the flush of early light— If we knew at early dawning What we learn so late at night! TWILIGHT ECHOES. But the daylight wanes so quickly, And the gloaming falls so fast, We are left with naught but shadows, Flying backward with the Past. So with weary hearts and aching, Eeaching out our souls have cried, "If we only knew at dawning What we learn at eventide!" BEYOND THE SUNSET. We can not know if, after death, Life's babble through the golden bars Shall float its doubts to the Far Beyond, That lies so dim beyond the stars. In the "After-Day," when our dreams are proved, Beyond the sunset's golden wall, If all our dreams of after-life Are proved but shadows after all, What dreary blank for all our love, So unfulfilled, so long to wait, So like the Peri, doomed to droop, And trail its wings outside the gate! TWILIGHT ECHOES. What though our waiting patient be, If naught remains but shadows pale, In the "Vast Beyond," from which no light Can pierce the Future's misty vail! And yet at times there wanders near The portal of our discontent A whisper to our dreams of doubt, A benediction sweetly sent To teach us that our fairest dreams Of all that lies beyond the "River," Are but the faintest gleams of light That trusting souls shall know forever. YESTEKD AY - TO-MORROW. YESTERDAY. Aye! the days are long since you held my hand, Long days that run their golden sand In sorrow and silence, in heart-ache and pain, For the face I looked for so long in vain, Long days, and weary, without the light, That fashioned to morning my darkest night. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 9 What broke our dream? Must I blame you, dear, For the- shadow that fell on love, so near? We drifted apart, and the waves unkind Left no track nor trace of our love behind, Till the winds blew low, and the tide came back, And "We Two" clasped hands from the wasteless track. TO-MORROW. With a blank marked out we'll begin anew; Just love me, dear, as you used to do; Watch for my coming' and wish me a-near; Dream of my face when you do dream, dear; And over the Past, with its pain and sorrow, We'll cast the joy of a glad To-morrow. SOME ONE. Never a wind that blows, E'en from the soft southwest, But blows across the grave Of Some One we've loved best. Some one sleeping too far Below the sweet sunshine To hear the zephyr's breath As it stirs the myrtle vine, 10 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Too far to know the footsteps That softly, sadly pass Above that quiet sleeping, Below the tangled grass. Some one, whose sandaled feet Grew tired by the way, Grew weary of the night, And went forth to meet the day. Oh, wild and wayward wind! Oh, fragrant, soft southwest! Ye kiss fair graves, in your roving, Of a Some One we've all loved best. GOOD-NIGHT. Dear one, when I have said my last good-night, If, stooping low to catch my latest breath, Thy fondest heart shall lose the flickering light I yield unto the shadowy boatman, Death, Will morning break all strangely pale for thee, And shadows hide thy heart away from dawn, Because a presence loved has ceased to be, Because a something out of life has gone? TWILIGHT ECHOES. 11 Thy loving words came burdened thus, and fell Close to my heart, as dew on summer eves Falls gently on the flowers it loves so well, At sunset hour, upon the drooping leaves. Mine own, and if the sun shall coldly shine On days that may no longer light my place, My soul shall wait for thee and know thee mine, Though years may hide me from my darling's face. FOR AYE. How will the roses know to bloom without thee, Thou who dids't mark their coming with thy light? How will the lilies know to wake without thee Near to caress them as they turn from night? The empty days draw out their weary length, And to their thresholds slowly wear away; The moments pale and shiver as they go Slow through the windows of the weary day. All through the amber hours the maple, sighing, Whispers and moans among the leafless trees For one beneath its lengthened shadows lying, No more to glean among the golden sheaves. 12 TWILIGHT ECHOES. One pulse in nature hushed, and silent, all.; One heart-throb stilled, and mute the surging throng, One chord but rudely swept, and moans the strain; One note in melody, and mute for aye, the song. HOW STKANGE ! And this is life, ah, me! So soon to lose the pearly light of dawn, To find ere noon our fairest flowers gone From life! Ah, me! Our light and flowers gone! So strange, so sad, to miss The blooming of the summer's first pale rose, To lose the lily's sweetness as it blows Its perfumed kiss To hearts its sweetness knows! To wander on the hills At early morn in search of something fair, And find at eve'n naught but dead leaves there By sleeping rills To twine among the hair, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 13 Or on the heart to lie In loving silence and in fragrance pressed, Close to the loving heart and throbbing breast, And there to die, And, dying there, to rest! Naught but dead locks! No clustered violets fair along the stream Where the pale wind-flowers doze and nod and dream, And the lily rocks All day upon the stream! Ah, me! 'Tis strange! 'Tissad! To watch the rosy hues of life depart, Behind the purple hills that stand apart, From light we've had Once on the aching heart. ALL THE DAYLIGHT. In this little dream and babble Mortals call the life of man, Lose no time, but quickly gather All the daylight that you can. 14 TWILIGHT ECHOES. For amid the hours of sunshine There are rays that all must lose; So before the shadows lower Catch the nearest brilliant hues. You will need them as you waken To the babble and the strife; You will need them at the closing Of the last, long sleep of life. When your eyelids grow too heavy For the day-beams to upraise, If you've carried any brightness From the light of vanished days, It will lead you through the shadows Each alone must surely tread, And reflected tint the flowers Growing at the foot and head Of the little mound that covers All that made the daylight fair To the hearts that vainly sought it, Till you told them it was there. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 15 PERHAPS. 'T was only a shadow, my heart said, As the sunlight fled away ; 'T was only a shadow, and yet that shade Darkened all my day. I watched so long for the daylight, And waited in vain for the dawn, And I wept so long and bitterly When I found my light had gone! Perhaps somewhere in the shadow, If I wait till it break o'er the lea, I shall find, though it be in the gloaming, That my light is shining for me. SHADOWS. In the track of every sunbeam Lies a shadow that will hide All the flowers it kissed at dawnin{ In the shade of eventide. 16 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Where the roses bloom at matin, Smiling by the lone wayside, Showers of petals, found at, vesper, Show us where the shadows hide. Not the flowers so shadow-hidden, Breathing out the sweets of light, Know alone the shade that follows Wearied hearts across the night, Far across the starless silence, Breaking into empty day, Bearing from our lives forever All the sunlight, far away; Hiding from us all our treasures, In the darkness of the years, Where it dashed the happy sunshine With a flood of blinding tears. And our wearied hearts grow silent, And our poor lips too mute for speech, As one by one our idols vanish, Or swiftly fly beyond our reach. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 17 PROMISE. Oh, grieve not that June- time and roses have vanished, And the soft airs of summer grown heavy and chill, Nor that green on the hillside for brown has been ban- ished, For a summer lies hid that the frosts can not kill. And as sure as the sunlight that now coldly glances, And stirs not a throb in the heart, sleeping low, Will it fall in caresses, and waken sweet fancies, For the summer must come, and the roses will blow. Then despair not, though slowly her eyelids shall open In the dreamland of flowers, her waking be late, For the sweet summer-time with her blossoming token Will surely return to the heart that can wait. THE] "OLD LOVE." Into the heart of the golden summer, Unfolded to the year, Into the soul of its throbbing bosom, Gilding its far and near, 18 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Has drifted the light of a golden glory, Fairer than light of day, That - 4 will live long after the summer 's gone, The summer that will not stay. And the days to come in the summers to be Will glow with the love-light left them, Ere the soul of the year had burned so low, In the altar-fires that bereft them. The self-same light will find its way To the heart of the wayside places, And the old love look out the same From all the wayside faces. FROST-KISSED. How chill the phantom breath of autumn Sweeps o'er the green of Nature's face, Turning to brown the hillside beauty, With dead leaves left to mark the place! Slowly and sadly they droop and fall, No sigh of blight, nor secret pain, As they are falling, silently falling, Never to rise from the earth again. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 19 The days grow sad and fall as the leaves, With the weight of sorrow to make them fall, And a cry goes up that ever is heard For the days that never come back at a call. Fall, many-hued and brilliant leaves, And sunny days with sorrow worn; Heart-break and frost-kiss are ever the same, Though born of June or October morn. Ever the same blight rests on each, Whether the heart of a leaf or a mortal; It banishes hope and slays for aye The seraph of life that lighted its portal. DREAMS. TO C. C. H. I have been thinking to-day, dear, Or perhaps I dreamed it so, As I watched the sun go out of the west, Watched, till he sank so low, That the crimson and gold grew purple, And the purple faded to gray, As I sat in the shadows that softly fell With the twilight that covered the day. 20 TWILIGHT ECHOES. And thought, or dreamed, it may be, Of a beautiful day in June, When the roses were blowing their sweetness out, And life seemed all a-tune With its fragrance, and joy, and sunshine, And the notes of a low, sweet rhyme, That was sung to me, dear, by lips not strange, In that lost sweet "summertime." I may look in the Junes to come, In the summers yet to be, But the light, and the music, and sweetness gone Will never drift back to me. And the dream of to-day in the sunset Was only a dream of the past, I reached for the sunlight, dear, but found Only the shadow it cast. If One shall break our idols, dear, To whom we mutely pray, ' Tis that our hearts may learn to serve The Master, not the clay. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 21 EREWHILE. Your dreams must lose their light, And the darkness bide awhile, And the music go out of the song, Ere your lips may learn to smile. The roses must bloom and fade, The blossoms lie dead at your feet; The bud be crushed in your hand Ere its heart will shed the sweet. Aye! Dreams, and roses, and life Must know some shadow of night, And-the heart bow low in the dust, Ere beauty and fragrance and light. LOVE'S RETURN. Love flew by one sunny day, Heard the call within my heart, Straightway turned and entered in, Yowing never to depart. 22 TWILIGHT ECHOES. All the day he touched to splendor, All the hours to music set; Soon my heart caught up the singing, Echoed: "Love can ne'er forget." But, alas! the days grew shadowed, Love proved truant to his trust, Spread his wings and lightly vanished, Left my spirit in the dust. All the days seemed turned to sorrow, Till again Love kissed my face, Came repentant, loved and claimed me, Smiling with a threefold grace. THE REAPER. He came in the watches of midnight, When the eyelids were folded down, And lifted the sable curtain, To proffer the golden crown To Mm who had soonest grown weary Among the tired train Of gleaners, whose arms had wearied, Gathering the scattered grain. TWILIGHT. ECHOES. 23 He passed the couch of manhood, Nor wakened youth's deep dream, But still searched on for the weariest By the light of the golden gleam, Till it fell on the brow of childhood, More tired than all the rest, In the cot of a little sleeper, Then paused by the throbbing breast That told who had soonest grown weary In the life-race scarce begun ; Told who of the gleaners had fainted, Leaving the task undone, And the Reaper stooped low with the jewel He had brought for the brow most fair, And placed it in the keeping Of the weariest gleaner there. PRESCIENCE. Where do the flowers stay, All the rare blooms of the year? Cans't tell me, where are they, Spring buds and blossoms gay, Whose coming; seems a-near? 24 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Mystery of daffodil, Crocus and violet fair Shadows the barren hill, Lingers beside the rill, Lives in the balmy air. Slumbering truants, I wis, Dainty with purple and gold, Lie waiting the soft spring kiss, And the sunshine they must miss, Under the darksome mold. DAFFIES. I send you some Daffies this morning, My earliest spring surprise; They will tell you of April sunshine, With a breath of April skies. They slept through the storms of winter, And dozed through the March wind's song, When the April sunshine waked them With the first of the flower-throng. So I send them to bear you a greeting, With the first the flowers may bring Of fragrance, and beauty, and sunshine, My "cuckoo song" of the spring. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 25 PREMONITION. You will know, dear, when I lie a-dying, Though no word should mind you as I go Into the silent Land. The wind's low music will be hushed to sighing, And all life's joyous notes to minor flow, As ebbs life's sand. Out of the vast and careless multitude, One heart will miss the echo of its own, And listen for its throbbing, Finding, but silence in the interlude, No answer but the weary undertone Of nature sobbing. Though no word be spoken, you will know, dear, Across the silence I will send the sign Of life's broken dream. As fall the darkness and the shadows drear Across the silent night, to you will shine Life's parting beam. Only an atom of God's infinite made mute, Yet all for love of it some heart will ache, Some soul make moan. And so, dear, where is hushed life's trembling lute, I shall not fear the sleep from which none wake, Under the stone. 26 TWILIGHT ECHOES. SPRING-TIME. The fair young Spring is here, Just waking from the Winter's snowy drifts, And slyly looking up; Out of the frozen mere, Out of the winter dream of bloomy rifts, Will wake some fairy cup. Some tiny flower bell, Pushing its dainty head to catch the light, Above the darksome mold Will softly, sweetly tell The Spring-time near and woo the sunshine bright,. Its beauty to unfold Some star-eyed flowret, pale From sleeping long amid the mosses sere, Will waken with a blush, Kissed by the roving gale That stoops him low to dry the dew-drop tear Distilled mid nature's hush. 1 WILIGHT ECHOES. 27 THE DEAD YEAR. The dead year lies with folded hands And silent, upturned face; Emptied the glass of its golden sands, Empty, and idle, and lone it stands. Alas! for the tender grace! Alas! for the broken bands! Wrapped in a robe of snow he lies; We may not break his sleep. His ear is dulled to our tenderest cries! As ever the same when a true heart dies: The old year slumbers deep, The dead year ne'er will rise. Gone to sleep with the buried years That hide in the misty past, The old year sleeps despite our tears; The dead year lies without our fears, The year that would not last Despite our warmest tears. 28 TWILIGHT ECHOES. MY SAILOR. How could I know my sailor had lain Fathoms deep in the ocean blue? How could I guess he had slept so long, Lulled by the notes of the sea's low song? On the coral bed of the ocean plain, How could I know of my sailor slain? I had watched each day till the sun ' s low beams Touched to gold the snowy sail, As each came up from the under world With prow high set, and sheets unfurled, Up from the sea, bringing golden dreams, Fair as the sunset's painted gleams. Out on the beach, I learned it late, Alone by the waves, in the moonlight pale, The ceaseless surge that washed the shore, Sang of the days that could come no more, Bringing golden dreams and a fairer freight, And my heart for its sailor forever must wait. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 29 FIDUS ACHATES. What gift from the mist and shadow, In the hurry and bustle of life, Do we reach for and long for most, Out of the dust and strife? Out of the coming and going, Amid the losses and gains, What do we ask as a recompense For a harvest of tears and pains? Only a hand to lead us Over the thorny way, Some patient heart to whisper When our feet shall go astray; Only a rest, by the wayside, When we've grown aweary of tears, A tenderness gleaned from the harvest of love, Be.st gift for our toilsome years. 30 TWILIGHT ECHOES. GREETING. Sweet heart, a kiss from the spring, In buds the March winds bring, A kiss with the promise of days to be, A song of the summer for you and me, As sung by bird, and blossom, and bee, And scent' of the sweet red clover. A song of the hidden June, When its world is all a-tune, Lies in the heart of the folded leaf, A promise of harvest and golden sheaf, In buds that sleep for a season brief, Till the March King's reign is over. SUB SILENTIO. If I lose my way and wander far From the sound of the music and dancing feet, You will find me alone in a quiet nook, With closed lids hiding a tired look, In a dream ' mid blossoming clover. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 31 Tired of the dancing, and very tired Of the song with the music all gone out, You will find me alone in a starless night, With a dream of you — the only light When the other dream is over. You will know me by signs that the silence will give, In the fold of gown and clasp of hand, With a white rose frozen in finger tips, With the trace of dead kisses long laid on dead lips. Hid away ' neath the blossoming clover. MINE. The Summer is ended, but not the song That the Summer hours sang low to me; It will float through the hours of the faded year, Till the Summer and song come back to me. I shall hear it all through the storm and shine Of the Autumn days, that will hide your face In the Winter winds, that will sing to the hills The self-same song with a Summer grace, 32 TWILIGHT ECHOES. And carry it down to meet the Spring, Whose fragrant breath from beyond the sea Shall kiss to life the Summer that died With the song on its lips that it sang for me. THE NEW YEAR. The New Year stands at the door, With holly branch and bough; Crowned with smiles he stands, Filled with gifts his hands; He wears no clouded brow For the year that is no more. Greet him with smiles as true As he brings in the breaking dawn: Outshining the morning stars, He beams through golden bars, And low! the night is gone, The New Year greeteth you ! TWILIGHT ECHOES. 33 BEAUTIFUL HANDS. Beautiful hands are not always white, Shapely and fair to see, But are often cast in an humble mold, And are brown as brown can be. Useful hands, that are ready to take Life's duties, one by one; Hands that are willing to reap and glean Till the reaper's work be done, Lifting the burdens we find so hard To bear through life's long day, Brushing the dead leaves, sorrow drops From out life's tangled way. Gentle hands, between whose palms The weary face may lie; Beautiful hands, that softly tell For sorrow the reason why. Hands whose touch remains for years, Dear hands, though folded low, Whose magic thrills within our souls, Whispering, "We loved you so." 34 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Warm human hands that once we held So close within our own; Though now clasped cold, their silent clay Still speaks in love's low tone, Telling the weary heart the song It learned in years gone by; Beautiful hands are always found Where the heaviest duties lie! PATIENCE. Just because 't is Winter, dear, And no flowers are seen, Don't forget the snow-drifts hide Germs of Summer green. Waiting for the Spring to come, Folded leaf and flower Patiently abide the time Of the opening hour. Waiting for the storms to pass, Waiting; for the sun TWILIGHT ECHOES. 35 To unfold the tiny leaves, Slowly, one by one. Just because you're tired, dear, And the night seems long, Don't forget the morning dawns With a restful song. Just beyond the sunset's gold, Where no snows are seen, You will find the whole year's buds In a Summer green. Look beyond the Winter drifts, You will find the Spring; Look through nature's storm and shine Up to Nature's King. MAUD. The name that is cut in this marble cold Is only the trace of a tale that is told, A silent history, Hiding its own Strange life mystery Under the stone. 36 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Only "Maud" in the marble white, "Our only one," no other light, Carved with the years On the silent stone, To tell of tears, Or echo a moan. Under the stars that watch her sleep, Far from life's babble, still and deep, She rests with the night And makes no moan, 'Neath the column white Of the sculptured stone. We only know, as we softly pass Through the tangled mesh of the drooping grass, Of a fair young life That went out alone, Leaving the strife To sleep 'neath the stone. MEMORY. There's a painter whose years are unnumbered, Whose talents are strange as his name, And he frescoes many a dwelling With pictures of ancient fame. TWILIGHT ECHOES. • 37 He visits the walls of the kingly, He dwells in the peasant's dream, He colors his picture with fancy, And tints with a golden beam. Sometimes in his mood they are darker, And often are covered with tears That he sheds like a mist o'er the picture, To mantle the buried years. Sometimes he brings sketches of childhood, Where laughter is blended with cries, And his pictures of youth and its pleasures Are formed on a canvas of sighs. He never grows weary of labor, Nor tires of his visits to man, Though he labors through wearisome ages And traverses years at a span. He calls not for title nor honor, Nor envies the scroll of Fame, But renown unbidden attends him, For "Memory" is his name. 38 TWILIGHT ECHOES. LIFE COLORS. It will never be what you dream, dear, Take my word, the colors will fade; The picture you've painted all sunshine Must be touched and re-touched with shade. You will sigh that so often the crimson Must be flecked here and there with the gray, But the morning, the noon and the evening Must be used to complete the full day. You are painting a picture of life, dear, Where sunshine and clouds must abide, And the shadows that come not at dawning Must fall with the dim eventide. Where those roses grow fair from the hedges Paint some thorns — make the picture complete; The bloom that the fingers may gather You will learn hides thorns for the feet. The gold that shines out from the sunset Must be tarnished by purple and gray, Ere the curtain of night is unfolded, Shutting out all that's left of the day. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 39 But, dear, when you've ended the dreaming, And life's weary pilgrimage made, You'll find it the picture you dreamed of, In colors that never will fade. APRIL. Crocus buds of white and gold, Shyly peeping through the mold, Now their beauty all unfold, Born of the April weather. Where hid they so long in the dark, Out of sight in garden and park, Not a sign their bed to mark, Now blowing all together? April showers kissed them sleeping, April breezes dried their weeping, April sunshine caught them peeping From the darksome net her. 40 TWILIGHT ECHOES. PROMISED. Athwart the chill November sky The leaden clouds hang dull and low, The pulseless air gives forth no sign Across the stubble brown with woe. The withered leaves in crumpled heaps Lie brown and dead on upland moor, And through the valley nature weeps Her life-blood tears on all she bore. High on the birchen tree-top swings The blue-bird's nest and summer home, Kocked no more by the soft south wind, Sheltered by naught but the pale blue dome. Blue-bird, and jay, and oriole fair Have flown to the cuckoo's warm retreat, And under sunny southern skies Their northern songs will soon repeat. Birch, and beach, and linden boughs Waived them adieu with many sighs; All lonely the oak in his sturdy grace Joined with the leafless forest cries. TWILIGHT ECHOES. . 41 But the south wind whispers of sunny hours, And a secret tells to the northern plain Of a day not distant, when smiling Spring Shall return with the cuckoo's joyous strain. KATYDID. Katydid, Katydid, how can you sing? Sing the long night through, making it ring, Ring forth the cadence on hours that are flying, "The Harvest is over, the Summer is dying." Long has she lingered in valley and plain, Long have we loved her, but wooed her in vain, Soon will she fly us, and naught of our crying Can call back the hours of the Summer that's dying. Katydid, Katydid, sing while you may, Sing while the night lasts, sing and be gay, Chant your own requiem, stop not for sighing, The Summer is fading, and soon you'll be dying. Dying alone as the leaves droop and leave you; Dying at night, the pale stars will grieve you; Gazing so pitiless, while you are crying "My Harvest is over, and now I am dying." 42 TWILIGHT ECHOES. NIGHT. The golden West had changed its hues, And amber faded into gray; The purple shadows fell like mist, And, lingering, hid the light of day. The dewy twilight kissed the hills, And wrapped the daisies in a dream; The pale young moon peeped shyly forth, And tipped the groves in silvery sheen. The katydid piped shrill and clear, The cricket sang his song of mirth, The breeze had lulled* the birds to rest, And night fell softly on the earth. Fair night, with all its silent hours Lighted with lamps from her starry dome, Bathing the lone and silent hills, Kissing the cot and the palace home. Falling alike on the happy and sad, Dropping her mantle to cover earth's breast, Wrapping the soul in her folds of peace, • Night lulls the weary ones sweetly to rest. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 43 MOETE. Oh, happy sleep that knows no waking! Oh, happy dream that knows no pain! Stoop low and fold us in thy keeping; Stoop low, sweet dream, with sweet retrain. Fold down upon the wearied heart The peace that follows after sleeping- Stoop low and dry the tears that start From eyes that once knew naught of weeping. \Kiss dry the moistened, troubled cheek. Oh, happy, restful, blessed dream, Clasp mute the weary hands and meek With life's last weary fading beam. Far through the hours of the fair young year And through the summer's changeful bloom, Into the autumn brown and sere, We watch and wait for sleep to come. And far adown the purple west Our sun sinks slowly out of sight, And far adown the earth we rest, In sleep and dreams of restful night. 44 TWILIGHT ECHOES. AURORA. Morn breaks in beauty from the curtained night, And throws her kisses back, And sends her silvery smiles of light Along the eastern track. The pale stars hide in creeping mist, And the fair young crescent fades; Fainter the twinkling train appears, As fly the ebon shades. Across the threshold of the night The golden glory falls; Aurora kisses all the hills With rosy shimmering calls. CHARITY, Live not for self, but strive for others' good, And if life's rue is dealt with hand unsparing, Put not the cup in haste, or wrath, away, Nor droop beneath the cross that thou art bearing. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 45 If for another's woe thy heart shall ache, One notes thy grief and marks the record true; And every tear that's wept for other's sake Is garnered to distill in heavenly dew. Life's darkened hours may find some ray of light To shed upon the sorrowing hearts that share them, If we but bear each other's burdens well, And lift the clouds of grief from souls that wear them. Let sunshine in; give all that thou cans't spare; And all thy bread upon the waters cast Will come again with life's returning billows, Laden with blessings from out the clouded Past. MY DREAM. Last night I dreamed of a fairy lake, And a boat by fairies made, And I cried to follow the silvery track The fairy boat had made. The bark was moored the long bright day, Till the sun went down in the west; The south wind bore me the word "Farewell," Shrouding my heart with unrest. 46 TWILIGHT ECHOES. A vision went out through the twilight mist With a "boatman pale" in the bark; My life-light went the self-same way And was lost in an echoless dark. DKIFTING AWAY. We are drifting away on the stream of life, Far from the shore of our childhood's time; We are leaving the banks of our sunny youth For an unknown port and a foreign clime. We've launched our bark on the drifting tide, That is bearing us out to the open sea; We can never return to those shores of youth, That echo the songs of our childish glee. We can only look back at the fading shore, Only dream over the happy past, Yet memory will keep the pictured dream Though the shadow of years o'er the dream is cast. And when we are tossed on the troublous tide By the pitiless waves, unseen and alone, When our cry for help is caught by the winds And echoed again by the sea's low moan, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 47 Faint not, though the night be long and dark; There's a calm that will visit the ocean's breast; And the gleam of light from our vanished years Shall beacon the care-worn and weary to rest. I WONDER. I wonder if I shall be missed, I wonder if any will grieve, When my task is ended, my mission done, When the circle is broken, and only one In life's woof shall have ceased to weave? I wonder if days will seem longer, If nights in their darkness more drear, When my voice is hushed, my mirth is stilled, When the rooms echo silence, that ever were filled With sounds of my gladness and cheer? I wonder, and wonder, and wonder, Till wondering wearies my brain, To know if the hearts that could love me here, Would love me when silent, and shed one tear, And if weeping would bring them pain? 48 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Alas for the hearts that shall mourn us! Alas for the tears of weeping! Ah, me! for the hearts that shall mutely pray Beside their loved ones, hid from day, In dreams of an endless sleeping! A SONG OF THE REAPEKS. The summer is ended, the harvest is o ' er And the Keapers are merrily singing Under autumn-flecked banners of russet and gold, Waving over the treasures they're bringing. What bring they, these Reapers, you ask as they sing, Through the autumn fields dressed in their glory? Go question the Summer that hid in her heart A song of "The old, old story." Go learn from the Summer that died in the lap Of the Autumn days waiting to crown her, The song that she sang of treasures untold To be found when the days grew browner. Days crowned at last with the gold they held, Hearts joined that naught could dissever, Hands clasped with a faith in the days to be, Of a love that would last forever. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 49 Aye, gleaners of hearts, these Reapers that tell Of the harvest of gold they are bringing, A song rings out o'er the fields they've gleaned, And Love is the song they're singing. MEMORIES. Only a memory of buried years, Only a dream that could not last, Only a thought, and yet these tears, Tears that will flow till the dream be past. Ah, me! the wonder of life's sad dream, There all must wake to endure and die, There all must learn of sorrow's sway And never may know the reason why ! Till we hear in the hush of a new-born day The "low, sweet song" that the seraphs sing, Beyond the night, where our darlings wait, Our hearts shall know before the King;. 50 TWILIGHT ECHOES. UNDER THE FROST. I mourn for the loss of my beautiful May, And June with her roses fair; I call in vain for the violets pale That scented the morning air. The harebell and the lily, too, Have drooped their beautiful heads, And the pink and the perfumed mignonette Are hid in their frosty beds. The aster and the sunflower, That stood by the garden wall, Have gone with the breath of the roses To answer the frost-king's call. And the crimson and gold of the maple Have changed to a russet brown, Since the icy sweep of the frost-king Through the heart of the drowsy town. It caught the flowers while napping, And bound them with a spell; It left them mute on the hillside And lifeless in the dell. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 51 They have gone to sleep, and the fairies Will revel till summer showers Shall bring me back my roses, And beautiful truant flowers. UNSEEN. The shadow falls across the hearth We thought no cloud could darken; Our loved ones vanish in the shade The while we would not hearken. Our hearts so loudly beat their love For those to whom we're clinging, We do not hear the whispered call, Nor heed the choral singing. We sing our quiet sabbaths, down Close to the kirk-yard kneeling; We only hear the solemn tones From the holy organ pealing. So close the shadow folds its wing, Beside our loved ones praying, Our eyes are dimmed, we only feel The shadow in its staying. 52 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Till, reaching for the loved one's hand That warmly clasped our own, We find but mute, unanswering clay, No echo but our moan! BEYOND THE SUMMER. I could not speak with your face so near, Though I knew the summer days would sleep. My words would form, and falter, and fall Unspoken, because my heart would weep. Do you think in the days that drifted by, With only the music your singing wrought, That I loved you less, though the songs were few, When love was the song your singing brought? Your every gift I keep in sight; Their treasured sweetness mutely tells Of a love that was mine, mine only, dear, Till I missed the music of "Fairy Bells." Life's path is short! Love's way is long! ' Twill live beyond the summer days, W T hen our lips are still, our hands are clasped, And our tired feet have learned other ways. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 53 ONE PERFECT DAY. So fair, so very fair, That one sweet perfect day, So fair, that never day on earth Can come again with so much light As came that one fair sunny day with thee. Each little flowret smiled, And every forest leaf Gave back through hazy autumn mists The look of love that, smiling, smiled on me. The far-off hills seemed near, So near to me that day, That every whispered word would seem To nestle in their far-off depths, To come to me again singing of thee. Their silent purple shade Grew light with look of thine, That wandered to the woodland's brow, And, smiling, kissed the flowers upon the lea. The maple's golden boughs Swung low to touch thy cheek, As passing near their scarlet lips * They fain would drop upon thine own, One pledge of faith in all thy loveliness. 54 TWILIGHT ECHOES. The river, slowly winding Through the autumn's blaze Of shining gold and purple bloom, Reflected with a smile thy perfect fairness. Oh, more than perfect day! That came with thee, and went Into my shadowed life and out, As fades the pale and quiet light Of far-off beams from out the evening star, Leaving remembered light Of loveliness and thee To mind me of the perfect rays That shine from "Heaven's forget-me-nots" afar. QUESTIONED. Daisies, did ye listen Last night to hear me pass, Brushing the bloom from the clover, The dew from the dripping grass? The bee had hid from the moonlight, And lay in the clover cup, And, daisies ye seemed to be sleeping, For your petals were folded up ! TWILIGHT ECHOES. 55 And your pale sweet faces nodded Among the tangled grass, But, daisies, tell me truly, Did ye list to hear me pass? For Harold and I went lightly As shadows through the flowers, As softly as the moonlight That kissed the sleeping hours. But I heard it from the plover, That jripes in the meadow grass, And the thrush sang loud from the hawthorn, "The daisies saw you 'pass, And heard your promise to Harold, As he whispered under a breath, To be constant, and tender, and loving, And faithful unto death!" Oh, modest, meek-eyed daisies! Ye told that ye heard me pass, Brushing the bloom from the clover, The dew from the dripping grass! 56 TWILIGHT ECHOES. MY TWILIGHT. I had not looked for the deepening Of shadows so soon in my sky; I had not thought that the crimson So quickly would fade and die. For my dreams had been so golden, As they cradled me through the night, I sang, " Naught of shadow can darken A day that must dawn so bright." But at waking my heart grew silent, Of the song that had filled it with glee, The song that seemed born of the brightness, The melody waiting for me. I had thought to walk where the roses Grew fairest without the thorn ; I had dreamed to find them at even As fair as I plucked them at morn. But the shadows fell, hiding the flowers, And my feet strayed into the night, While I gathered the thorns with the roses, In the misty and dim twilight. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 57 My heart bowed low in the gloaming 'Neath the mantle of twilight .gray, As the sunbeams I'd thought to garner With the crimson faded away. LOST. Oh! have you seen my baby fair, With bright brown eyes and sunny hair, Roaming the meadow-lands— A tiny form, with yellow hair That stole the sunshine and held it there, Prisoned in golden bands? There never was a fairer face; You'll know it by a nameless grace In dainty baby ways; With moistened ringlets out of place, Blown about in a butterfly chase- How long my darling stays! Knee-deep in the clover and grasses sweet, Where the violet blue and Mayflowers meet, I left my darling at play; 58 TWILIGHT ECHOES. At noontide I left her away from the heat, But I've lost the trace of her tiny feet, 'Mid the grasses and flowers gay. Oh ! pray you look on my baby fair, With folded hands, and tarnished hair, And brown eyes hid from the light! From the meadow lands she wandered where The river sands lay white and bare; — Ah, me! how dark the night. GOLDEN HARVEST. Walk forth in the light of to-day, To-morrow may never dawn; Scatter roses and smiles by the way, Bringing sheaves at eventide home. Lift the drooping and weary ones up, Leave no tired heart to the night; Press no bitterness into their cup, Bear them into the sunshine and light. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 59 For your harvest will golden be, If you scatter the sunlight and 'flowers, As the morn on the upland lea, As the sunshine after the showers. AUTUMN BLOOMS. The springtide woos from many vales The sweets so deeply hidden, And flowers along life's wayside bloom For many hearts unbidden. Kissed into life by summer showers, Their petals open wide; Softly they breathe their fragrance out While summer hours abide. But ere the coming of the frost, Sometimes the year forgets, And autumn brings a feast of blooms The springtide ne'er begets. Expectant hearts oft miss the hour The roses have for blowing, But find in Autumn sweeter buds Than come from springtide sowing. 60 TWILIGHT ECHOES. RETURNED. The spring is near: I know by the sound Of the soft wind through the trees; I know by the scent of the meadow-lands That is borne on the morning breeze; I know by the sound of the dancing brook As it leaps, and ripples, and sings, And hurries along from the mountain-top With the moistening life it brings. The distant hills so dim and far Seem near through the soft gray mist, And the brown valleys tinged with green, And the plains that spring has kissed, , The purple heather and violet blue, Are peeping through mossy beds, While the daffodil betrays her birth By the perfumed breath she sheds. The chirp of the robin at eventide, The swallows' twitter at morn, And tiny song of the humming-bee, Proclaim that spring is born. The tinkling bells of the distant folds, The lowing of herds in the gloaming, King out on the quiet evening air The music of spring's returning. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 61 TO A BUTTERCUP. Pale little flower plucked from the grasses, Hidden away in the daisies' shade, Hold thy wee face up, list while I tell thee Why thou wast plucked, and why thou wast made. Born for a mission, thy petals unfolded, Nurtured by sunlight and fed by the dew, Kissed by the butterfly, watched by the clover, Never, oh! never a sweeter bud grew. Called to the light, thy being was spoken, Thy daintiness culled for a casket of trust, And the sweet of thy blowing must mix with the treasure I leave in thy heart till thy petals are dust. I will write on thy leaves such a legend of love, As shall rival all tales of the "Old, old story"; I will sing to thy petals a song as sweet As the echoes might waft from the regions of glory. Let the secret, "I love her," be hid in thy heart, And held in thy keeping through life's long day, And whenever she looks on thy face, though faded, Sing to her softly the words I would say. 62 TWILIGHT ECHOES. AH ! YOU WONDER. Ah! you wonder that I love you! All the gold of earth is mine. In "the light of tender glances Earth's dark spots with glory shine. Else how could the sunlit hours With such golden beauty glow, Or the river in its singing With such music sweetly flow? How could every note of song-bird Seem a choral anthem sung In among the greenwood branches, Had not love the changes rung? How could I among the grasses Pluck the flowers His love has given, Had their sweetness not reflected In your love so much of Heaven? Ere you came my heart divined you, Love's low singing bade me wait, Whispering, "Patience! One is coming Who will ope you Eden's gate." TWILIGHT ECHOES. 63 TRANSMUTED. What set the days to music? What made the daylight fair? What waked my heart to singing Love's melody unaware? The yesterdays lie hidden Behind the glad to-day; The morrows seem to promise A love to last for aye. The night is filled with shining Of stars unseen before; New beauty gilds the morning, The shadows come no more. Dear heart, you hold the magic That makes December May; Your soul touched mine while sleeping, And turned the night to day 1 64 TWILIGHT ECHOES. GLENVILLE.. Do you remember, dear, That day we walked together Atween the hedges set with gold, And blooms like purple heather? Along the winding road That hid in many a hollow, And ankle-deep in ferny beds Our steps were wont to follow? And through the sweet excess The meadow-lands were rich in, We wandered to an upland slope And knelt among the lichen? The sunlight through the trees Showed touch of Autumn splendor, The marsh flowers glowed like fire among The grasses fresh and tender. I'll keep that day's fair splendor, Which all my soul did win, With Autumn Blooms, and Dear Brown Eyes That let the sunshine in. September 9th. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 65 TO You need not question if the^ past Sweeps o'er my soul to-day; The memory of that morn must last Through cloud and shine, alway. No morn can ever fairer be, Nor day, howe'er complete, Than when my soul awoke and found My treasure true and sweet. October 5, 1885-89. "SO KEEP MY MEMORY GREEN/ TO "So keep my memory green," Is all you'd ask of me? I could not have a fonder charge For all the years to be, For all the unknown future In the distant hidden years, To keep my heart from sorrowing, To charm away my tears, 66 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Than the boon that memory gives Through the love-light of its lays, Than just the joy of looking back To count the golden days; To mark where first thy sunlight Made rift within the cloud, And bade my darkened soul look up And be no longer bowed; To count the tiny chords Love touched and woke to song, To know just how the music came, From notes that slept so long. "Twill float a-down life's morning,. And brighten all life's day, ; 'Twill gild the evening shadows As the daylight fades away; And when in darkened silence Life's loves shall all depart, And life itself shall ebb away From out my tired heart, As the shadows fall and thicken, And I touch the twilight gray, "When my fluttering soul breaks forth at last From out its home of clay, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 67 I'll clasp and keep forever Thy memory's golden sheen, And in the far, far future Thou shalt find it fair and green. PICTURES. TO In the warmth and glow of evening fire-light I am sitting, dear, with thoughts of you Pressing closely through the fading twilight, Falling softly as the silent dew. Making pictures such as painters dream of, Pictures such as artist never drew, Touched with color, life and light, that seem of Something far beyond the painter knew. Woods and fields, and all the pleasant places, Dearest haunts my feet have trod with you, Meadow-lands aglow with flowering graces, Wildering hedges where the sweetest blew. Come with summer sunset's golden glances, Happy talks by brook and garden wall, Crowned with treasures from the poet's fancies, Love, that shed a halo over all. 68 TWILIGHT ECHOES. These are pictures that the gloaming brings me, While the evening shadows come and go; With a song the silence softly sings me Music from the unseen, soft and low. So, dear, through the frosty Winter twilight- Love keeps fresh the last year's buds and flowers, And brings again, across the Winter firelight, The splendor of the golden Summer hours. MELODY. My soul was wakened when first you spoke In a voice so sweet and low; It heard and knew as the morning broke In the flush of love's first glow. Over my heart your tenderness swept, Like a breath from a sunny clime, Drying the tears my soul had wept With the music of love's low rhyme. A music that drifted across the waste Of days with never a song, Till the echoes of love my heart embraced Made melody all the day long. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 69 A MESSAGE. I send to you, dear, this balmy morn, A message whose burden your heart will know, A song without words o'er the silence sent, Low notes, to be borne on the west wind's flow. You will know that it comes direct from me, As it kisses your cheek and forehead fair, And lingers to touch in its flight your lips Ere its last caress in your warm brown hair.* HEART ECHOES. I have wished thee well, in the dear, dead past, And the future can hold no fairer flowers Within the clasp of its sweetest years Than the past has hid in its buried bowers. No warmer love can gild the hours That may follow the wake of the days that are dead Than the tender gleam from the shadowy past Of all I've thought, or dreamed, or said. 70 TWILTGHT echoes. I can only add to the dreams for you The fairest gift that can come from me, A love that may brighten the future hours, And light all the days of the years to be. January 21st. WHEN THE SUMMER DIES. I shall miss you, love, in the coming days, When the summer is dead; I shall want your help in the lonely ways My feet must tread. I shall hunger oft for a kindly look, Or a word low spoken, And shall long again for the days that partook Of love's sweet token. My heart through .the silence will call you, dear, In the days that must fall, And I know that your own will feel me a-near And hear the call. I shall know if you answer, though none may hear The whisper that floats From the far off song that must dry my tears With its faithful notes. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 71 I shall know, be it morn or eventide When the echoes wake, For my heart in its beating will stop to hide The love it will take. MILE-STONES. Another birthday greets thee, love, Wherein to wish thee well; Another dawn upon the marge Of Time's broad circling swell, Across whose margin could I write All that its hours could hold, The fay's rich gifts could scarcely vie With the joys it should enfold. Within the present, now thine own, No shadow should abide; The future should all cloudless be, And fair life's eventide. January 21, 1880. 72 TWILIGHT ECHOES. REVERIES. There's a gloom that hovers o'er me While I sit and muse alone ; There's "a sadness lingers near me Wherever I may roam. In the busy haunts of pleasure, Through the solitude of night, In the coming hours of leisure, In the misty soft twilight, Still pursues this blighting sorrow That crushed my joyous heart In the days when each to-morrow Seemed for me a happy part. Ah! musings of my mother, Of an angel form that fled! Ah! dreams that clasp and cover The faces of our dead! Beyond you in the waking, Away from sorrow's night, When freed from earthly aching, Our hearts shall find the light. TWILIGHT ECHOES. ™ HEART-ACHE. I could not speak with your face so near, Though I knew the summer days would sleep; My words would form, and falter and fall Unspoken, because my heart would weep. Do you think, in the days that drifted by, With only the music your singing wrought, That I loved you less, though the songs were few, When love was the song your singing brought? Your precious gifts I keep in sight; Their treasured sweetness mutely tells Of a love that was mine, mine only, dear, Till I missed the music of fairy bells. Life's path is short, love's way is long; 'Twill reach beyond the summer days When our lips are still, and our hands are clasped, And our tired feet have learned other ways. 74 TWILIGHT ECHOES. MAY BLOSSOMS. These buds and blossoms that I send you, dear, The fragrance of the summer hours enfold; May all that's brightest, best within the year Lie hidden underneath the sweets they hold. Born of the sunshine and the soft south wind, I send them with a greeting warm and true; May every blossom bear a tender thought In all the balmy sweets they take to you. WHEN DO YOU THINK OF ME MOST? When do you think of me most, dear, Through all the hours of day? Is it when the morning's rosy light Is chasing the shadows away? Do I come to you then, or do I wait Till the noontide's drowsy hour, Climbing the stairs of your fancy, love, In your day-dream's castle tower? TWILIGHT ECHOES. 75 Perchance when the day is dying, dear, Your spirit encircles mine, And welcomes me most in the gloaming, sweet, When the day and night combine. TO THE PICTUKE OF LONGFELLOW'S CHILDREN. Grouped in a trio before me Three faces sweet and fair: "Grave Alice and laughing Allegra, And Edith, with golden hair," Look out from the halo of childhood Into these eyes of mine — Three gems of rarest promise Decking a poet's shrine. Three faces aglow with sunshine From the cloudless sky of youth, Telling the first sweet story From the years of love and truth. Three jewels of priceless value For a poet's heart to wear : " Grave Alice and laughing Allegra, And Edith, with golden hair." 76 TWILIGHT ECHOES. INTUITION. I looked on the moon at its full, The moon that looked down on me, In response to the many sweet fancies My heart was sending to thee. And I wondered, as upward they circled, If thy soul had power to see, And could read from the face of fair Luna The fancies there written by me. If it did, and the moon told truly, "What answer did'st thou send me?" Ah ! deary, the moonbeams told it, The message: "I'm thinking of thee." November 16, 1880. SING OF THE FLOWERS. The sunshine is kissing w r ith warm, glad light Our eyelids to waking from winter's long night ; The dewdrops are waiting a chrism to place In jewels of splendor on garments of grace. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 77 The south wind is calling, we know he ' s a-near ; We wait his caresses to welcome us here ; Fair blossoms we'll scatter of purple and gold, And the earth shall rejoice with the incense we hold. Earth's stars we are called, shining under the skies, Lighting meadow and mountain with rainbow dyes, Shedding brightness and beauty with lessons of peace That shall cling to the earth when our blossoms shall cease. Then welcome us back from our slumber and dreams ; We are born of the sunshine, we bring you its beams ; In daffodil splendor, and violet bloom, We brighten the earth and banish its gloom. PILGRIMAGE. W T hen first our feet are placed on Life's broad pathway, Fair flowers, molded by a master-hand, Scattered broadcast where e'er our footsteps wander, Illume the pathway to the silent land. As on we further tread, the heart grows 'wildered, Seeking an outlet from a labyrinth wild ; The flowers that bloomed so tenderly at dawning, At eve with thorns will wound the weary child. 78 TWILIGHT ECHOES. The warm, quick throb that in our pulses lingers Tells but the story of the heart's unrest, Speaks but the yearning of the tired pilgrim To reach the shining " Islands of the blest. " And as we wait, the mists of eve grow fainter, While through the haze there floats a golden light, Pointing the spirit with an unseen finger Out of the shadow unto the shining height. UNATTAINED. We are always living in hope, We are ever looking afar, We are always peering through darkness For the light of our favorite star. Sometimes we catch glimmers of brightness Through rifts in the clouds of our night, And it seems that the morning is breaking With gladness, and beauty, and light. And so, to some hearts it comes laden, But to others, so burdened with tears, That the light of their lives seems hidden In the cloud of their sorrowing years. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 79 But 'tis ever to hope through our weeping, Though the darkness of night covers all, And the morn of our lives still finds us Buried deep in the folds of its pall. INCOMPLETENESS. Out of our lives we miss some note, Something of melody fails us here ; Over the heart-strings floats a mist, Out of the music falls a tear. Something of melody out of the song, From the tremulous notes of the old refrain Something of weariness drifted in, Something very akin to pain Comes with the scent of the dewy cowslips, Blown from the meadows all a-bloom, Lives in the breath of the sweet red clover Drifted in silence across the gloom. Over the music, and buds, and blossoms, A shadow falls that closely clings, A something very akin to sorrow, A discord that trembles amid the strings. 80 TWILIGHT ECHOES. SONNET. When, from your earth-dream to that other life, Touched by some soft-palmed seraph, you shall wake, When Heaven's fair splendor on your soul shall break, Far from the babble of earth's jarring strife, In that new clime, with radiant glory rife, Will you, amid such joy, once long to take My heart within your clasp, to soothe the ache, Left captive in its clay, and moaning for your sake ? It may be you will miss some low, sweet word, And stoop to reach the love that once was yours, Before your soul had listened for and heard That sweeter music floating down that lures The spirit from its clay, whose fetters gird Only for a space the soul that clay endures. LINES TO G. H. C. The sweet summer-time, with its fair June roses And sweet-scented blossoms, lies dead at our feet, But robed like a queen, with pale hands folded, In purple and gold for a winding-sheet. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 81 The overblown roses, that fell from her clasping Lie on her heart with a meaning untold — All that is left for the heart that is silent, An incense that falls over purple and gold. Let not the roses of life droop and wither, With all of their tenderness left unsaid, Ere the summer-time dies, with its passionate longing, And the heart cease to hope when the summer is dead. MY BOAT. I built myself a magic boat That drifted out to sea, Bearing away on the wavelets' float All that was dear to me. It danced and rocked on the ocean wave As the winds blew light and free ; The white sails sped to some ocean cave, And my boat was hid from me. It will never, Oh! never, come back to me, And the waves a secret keep ; Far down its treasure lies hid in the sea, 'Neath the ocean mosses deep. 82 TWILIGHT ECHOES. And the sea- weed green waves over it all, While the salt-sands heave and moan For the treasure sunk fathoms beyond recall- For the bark that was all my own. WE TWO. Once in a summer not long gone, "We two made dreams for golden weather, We two clasped hands and sat us down Beside the summer days together. The air a thousand perfumes bore From meadow-lands afar and near, The woods a thousand anthems sung, So well they knew the summer near, The sweet June days, when roses bloom And daisies show their golden hearts, When nature seems a-tune with man, And man in tune with nature's arts. But clouds lay hid within the days, And storms behind the sunny weather, Our hands unclasped, might came between, And severed hearts so bound together. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 83 MKS. BROWNING. And she, the magic minstrel, still sings on; The echo of her melody flows in On every wind that sighs, and o'er the din Of earth the low mysterious music rings on Hearts athirst for love, her mystic Eon. The tuneful hand that swept love's lyre lies deep in Dust; yet earth is filled with strains iEolian, Still trembling with the fire of life's vibration, Struck from the harp that only knew her touch. A-down the infinite float new anthems, ringing Clearly above the tones of moan and mirth; Earth's choristers are mute while hearing such, And seraphs, 'neath their palm-trees sweetly singing, Hear naught more sweet than notes she left to earth. YIOLETS. TO MADGE. Faded, and yet so fragrant, Crushed, and faded, and dead, Yet fragrant of happy memories In the faintest breath they shed. S± TWILIGHT ECHOES. Pressed and kept for the love's sake Hid in their tiny leaves, Forming the thread so golden In the loom where memory weaves. Laden with the melody Of voices that are no more, Fraught with the music sweeping The heart-strings o'er and o'er. Sad music as it rises In sobs from the faded flowers, Sad music in its wailing For the hearts no longer ours. Oh! pale and fragrant flowerets, Ye waken from their sleep Bright dreams, with shadows mingled From out the misty deep. HOW? How shall I fashion a song from the summer, Waken sweet notes from days that are dead, Bring back the scent of the sweet June roses, Call back the music of sweet words said? TWILIGHT ECHOES. 85 How shall I call again out from the shadows Long sunny days, when the sunsets grew red, Hours when the shadows grew long on the hillsides, Hiding the valleys when daylight had fled? Tread through the corridors love has so hallowed, Waken the harp upon memory's walls, Note upon note from chamber to chamber Echo sweet music through memory's halls. List! How it sings of the blossoming June-time, The summer that lingered but could not stay, Lovingly lingered in sweet orchard closes, Left in the woodlands a blessing for aye. Thus do I fashion a song from the summer, A soulful song from the summer that died, From the melody left in the heart of the valleys, And dreams that flow in with the eventide. HER PORTRAIT. Darling May, Light of day, Chasing shadows far away! 86 TWILIGHT ECHOES. With surprise From brownest eyes Where a love-light ever lies! Holding looks, Like meadow brooks, Where the sunshine finds the nooks! In her face A tender grace Leads one captive, to a place Near her heart, To share a part Never found in other mart. How to tell The magic spell She wields, in winning hearts so well, Ask the flowers In the bowers Why the sunshine and the showers Ope their eyes To sunny skies — There the secret sweetly lies! TWILIGHT ECHOES. 87 True and sweet The looks you'll meet, If she turn your face to greet. Faith renewing, Ever doing All the lips could tell in wooing. True and tried, She's sweetest guide; Her love will crown life's eventide. One could never Wish to sever From her heart for aye and ever. May love enfold her In all I've told her, And love and I forever hold her! POND LILIES. Oh, lilies, fair starlings, ye hold me in thrall! Your magic uncurtains the past; Ye bear me memories sweeter than dreams, Such dreams as may not last. 88 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Ah! fairy touch of a wand unseen From petals now faded and dead! Mute singers, ye waken a melody new In a heart whence the music had fled Of first fair days when love awoke In the heart with a new-born joy A memory of reeds by a river's brink — A boat, — a girl,— a boy, — Green lily-pads with their freighted bloom That dimpled the waters, cool, And the mossy banks where we told our love Beside the silvery pool. Oh, fair pond lilies! Who fashioned the spell That binds with a music low? Would ye could hold me fettered for aye With my love of a long ago! TO Deal no unkind or cruel blow To wound the human heart, For years may come and years may go, It still retains the smart. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 89 Though time may heal, it. leaves a scar Which yields to every breath; It trembles with the slightest jar, And vibrates unto death. It gives sad music to the world When once its strings are broken, It yields a wail when its chords are swept By a word unkindly spoken. It echoes the breath in anger hurled, And breathes to the night its cries, And e'en in dreams its secret grieving Betrays itself in sighs. A CHRISTMAS GREETING. In the pearly hours of dawning, Between the gray and blue, A thought was born For Christmas morn, And the thought, dear, was of you. I thought of the gifts that others Would fashion with dainty grace, 90 TWILIGHT ECHOES. With greetings born For Christmas morn That time could ne'er efface. And I thought of the gift I ' d send you, 'Tvvas one I'd sent before, When Christmas morn Was sweetly born, A Christmas-tide of yore. But take the gift I send you, Though not a work of art, For Christmas morn Just newly born — I simply send my heart. HER ROOM. A sound like notes at dawning, From song of distant birds, Comes floating down the silence, A song of two sweet words: Two words — to wake from dreaming, Of palms and distant seas, Of blooms of purple heather And scent of flowery leas: 91 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Two words-to break my slumbers From dreamy night to day, A magic song to charm me, To make November May: "Her Room!" What haven like it? A refuge of delight; No clouds abide within it, Her sunshine makes it bright. INDIAN SUMMEE. A haze on the land, and a dream on the heart, A silence of mist on the hillside brown, A rosy light through the twinkling mist, A drowsy air o'er a sleepy town; ^ A rosy mist enwrapping the days, "The calm, mild days" that autumn holds, Brino-ing the summer again to our hearts, And hiding it there in its rosy folds; A -Lotus Land" where we sit us down On the golden sands to eat and dream; We sit us down where the tired fields, Ac n^ri thp singing stream And the weary woods, and tne sm & a 92 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Have rest from toil as we who sing Thro' the "Summer of Saints" that crowns the year With its sunny hours and amber skies, And all that a summer holds so dear. A "Lotus Land," and the dreamers we, Kesting from toil on the golden sands, Bringing us nearer the magic gate That leads our hearts to the sunset lands. SEEDLINGS. Among the relics of by-gone days Lay seedlings garnered by tired hands; A summer slept in the wee brown bits, Waiting to tell of sunny lands. A blushing bloom lay hid in the dark, A prescient fragrance of flowery May Slept through the hours of a starless night, Awaiting the sunshine and glory of day. Fair visions were dreamed of a blossoming grace, While they held the secret still unsung Of ferns, and mosses, and woodland streams, Of mountain heights when the year was young; TWILIGHT ECHOES. Till the sunlight touched with its magic wand The sleeping bits with a tender ray, And kissed to life from the winter of sleep The spring-time and fragrance of flowery May. 93 BIRTHDAY FLOWERS. A message within the folded leaves, A secret hid in the petals fair, A signet pressed 'neath purple wings, A seal my soul must ever wear; A dear remembrance fitly hidden My heart will find in the blossoms gay, A fragrance of thought in the sweetness sleeping, An incense of love to cherish for aye. March 6th. TO MRS. - — All through the hours of this quaint morn A fairy song comes faintly borne, Telling my heart, in love's own way, Of a Some One who strayed into life one day; 94 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Some one whose coming made glad the earth, While old Saint Yalentine sung at her birth; Some one to scatter the sunshine and flowers, Some one to brighten the darkest hours, Waked to the light one gladsome day, And hid in her heart the blossoms of May, Keeping them fresh for the years to be, And drifting their sweets in a song to me. February 14th. SAINT YALENTINE. This curious date of Cupid's chart Was graven once on a maiden's heart, In the days when love was young, And ever since, as the year rolls round, With maidens all this date is found With the song that love first sung. "From me to thee, faithful heart, Forever thine till death us part, Forever, ever thine!" Through all the world this self-same day Is ringing still; this self-same lay Still sings Saint Yalentine. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 95 A DREAM RECALLED. As 'tween the silent hours of day and dawn My spirit lay within the hush of sleep, In that pale twilight ere the night had gone, And day trod down the darkness with her feet. As one by one the golden stars grew pale Within the ether's dim expanse of blue, Ere dawn had broke the night's mysterious vail, Into my soul a dream came shining through. Within the borders of that pale shadow-land My spirit viewed you, sitting midst a throng Of white-winged seraphs, and with lifted hand Beckoning me near to hear the seraph's song. Sweet music floated like a distant murmur, And the soug I heard was chanted soft and low: "We are the guardian angels whose love enfolds her, To shield and comfort her while here below." Yainly I tried to enter at the portal, In vain my empty arms reached out to you; There seemed no room for any form of mortal Save yours, whereon I looked, while softer grew 96 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Those notes of love and tenderness that drew me Closer, but, ah, too far to touch your hand! Yet waiting, all expectant, for a voice to lead me Close to your side amid that guardian band. Amid the silence, from my weary heart Aloud I told my sorrow to the night: "She has so many, alone I must depart!" When, lo ! from out the dream your love brought light. TO C. C. H. AT SEA. Break now the seal of greeting, Sweet friend upon the sea; Unfold from out the darkness The thoughts I send to thee. Though last, I pray you count me Not least among the throng, Whose notes across the silence Now wake to friendship's song. Life's fairest benedictions I sing thee evermore, " Bon voyage" on the waters That stretch from shore to shore. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 97 The sea that now divides us Keeps only hands apart, No boundless sweep of ocean Can sever heart from heart. Nor times nor seasons alter The love of friend for friend, The bond that brightens ever, Abiding to the end. SOMEBODY LOVES ME IN DREAMS. Yes, somebody loves me in dreams, And I fancy your heart could tell Who it is that calls me "Darling," Who it is that loves me so well. But the name I never will mention, For I've strictly promised to keep This pretty secret of dreamland Where no one but I may peep. For the welcome of loving smiles And words that are tender and true, With sometimes the clasp of a soft, warm palm, And a kiss to banish life's rue. 98 TWILIGHT ECHOES. How strange and sweet to be loved! To be loved as in fancy it seems, To know that you're somebody's darling, Though somebody loves but in dreams; To feel that life is all sunshine, With nothing to banish its beams, To drink at the sweetest of fountains, Though' only drinking in dreams. " THREE-SCORE AND TEN." It seems but yester e'en Since youth and I kissed lips Across life's sunny stream. Lightly we kissed, nor wept At parting so forever, As on the river swept. In vain I call: "Come back, My sunny, sunny youth, Across life's frozen track!" The weary years have flown That drifted us apart, And I am left alone. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 99 With three-score years and ten, And youth forever fled, My days go sadly on. Waiting the twilight's beam, "I lay me down to sleep," And cross life's troubled stream. FOREVER. Forever, and forever! Long covenant to make, For hearts of clay, To bravely say: "Naught can our faith e'er break Forever, and forever." Yet hearts that love sing thus Love's lullaby complete; We say and sing, And offerings bring Close to our idol's feet, Whose love so clings to us. Forever, and forever! When the years are laid to sleep, 100 TWILIGHT ECHOES. As the ages go, I will love you so, Love's covenant to keep Forever, and forever! IN YAIN. We look in vain for the roses That bloomed in the hedges low, In vain through the scentless meadows, The west winds softly blow. They can not waken the flowers From their deep and silent sleep, Where they fell in their quiet beauty In the glen and on the steep. With their fragrance departed the summer, And their bloom that gladdened the hills; The west wind sighs in his searching For the flowers that fringed the rills. The vines and the faded blossoms, That lie so mute at our feet, Are only the sad reminders Of flowers that once were sweet. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 101 DE PROFUNDIS. Only the wail of an erring human heart Borne by the ether wave to touch thine ear; Why close the portals of thine inner self? Why stoop not low thy kindred's grief to hear, Calling from out the deep, "For mercy's sake, Bear with me yet a little longer here; Crush not to earth the bruised and broken vine, Trailing so low in anguish and in fear?" Call from its source the word of pity blest; Ope the warm fountain of tender human tears; Hearts that are aching needs must slowly break; Ah! pluck the thorns from out the weary years. Give from thy store of love some word of peace; Thy gift shall prove a blessing unto thee Tn hours of darkness, when the shadows fall, A light for all the years that are to be. SONG WORDS. DRIFTING. TO A. E. B. Drifting slowly, slowly drifting Through the shadowy realm of years, Some are drifting through the sunlight, Others through a mist of tears, Bitter, blinding tears. Drifting through the filmy vapors, Beaching for the sunny rays, Dreaming as they're slowly wafted, Dreaming of the happy days, Lost and happy days. Oh ! how sadly, vainly calling For the days that are no more! Aching hearts are holding only Echoes from the fading shore, Echoes, nothing more! 104 TWILIGHT ECHOES. ANSWERED. Oh, Jamie, the breezes are blowing My wishes far over the sea! Do you hear them, my Jamie? They're saying, "Come back to your own by the Dee!" The hills miss your music and murmur, From their purple there floats down to me The song that the valley is singing To the river that flows to the sea. The brightness has gone from the morning, And the days overshadowed will be, Till we meet where we parted, my Jamie, On the banks of the sweet River Dee. Oh, Jamie, alone I am weeping, Your answer has flown back to me; "We shall meet as we parted, my darling, But not on the banks of the Dee!" LULLABY — REST. Hushaby, hushaby, softly we sing, Hushaby, eventide, slumber will bring; Bird in the downy nest, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 105 Babe on the mother's breast, Sweetly earth's weary rest Under night's wing. Hushaby, heart of mine, slumber will come; Patience, the eventide comes to us all; Sunset and lullaby, Clasped hands and hushaby, Silent the heart cry, Sweet— rest for all. BIRD AND WIND. Oh, wind of the South, Blow gently this way, Gently, this way ! Oh, nightingale, sing what my lover would say, Sing it, I pray; And trust to the south wind to waft it this way, Waft me the words of his mouth! My heart waits the message; oh, make no delay, Bird and wind of the South! 106 TWILIGHT ECHOES. DONALD. Oh, list to me, dear! From afar you are near; You come to my dreams on the wings of sleep; You follow the wake That my day-dreams make Over the span of the mystic deep. You sit at my side, And naught can betide, Though a ghostly hand I clasp ere-while, For I feed on the dew Of a love so true, No shadow can darken the light of your smile. WHEN THE YEAB GROWS OLD. He left me when the summer, Grown tired of her reign, Laid down her royal scepter Amid the golden grain; When the reapers with their sickles Garnered up the autumn's gold. He left a troth-kiss on my lips, And softly sang the story old. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 107 "And fare you well, my own, A short farewell," sang he; "Again the year grows old, I'll be, my love, with thee." But thrice the autumn's gold has burned, And thrice the year has tired grown, And yet my love comes not to me, For lips are still that sang "my own." SAILING. There's a bark on the deep; It is sailing away, Sailing away, And the moon's looking down with a silvery ray, A silvery ray, On one who is sailing far out on the bay, While mother and I must weep. Oh! shine on his track with the light of day, For father sails over the deep. 108 TWILIGHT ECHOES. MY KING. I had thought, with the roses of June, That my love would come back to me; I had dreamed of two hearts atune, Floating out on a summer sea, That mystical summer sea. At gloaming I watched for the sail That should bear my love to the shore, But the sunset's gold grew pale, And the sea moaned "nevermore," And the cliffs sighed "nevermore!" Yet my heart from its silent tower Is still looking over the sea, For my King, with his magical power, "Who will some time come back to me, Bringing love and life to me. OCEAN LETTERS. TO K. D. Dear Kate : — I know your fancy For letters extra brief, And trust my humble efforts Upon this tiny leaf May prove an innovation, Supplying all your need Of love and loyal friendship From a small American Weed; And among the English flowers Your heart will soon embrace, Let none efface the memory, And none usurp the place You've given the humble blossom You leave this side of the sea, Nor break the bond of friendship Your love has forged for me. From out the vanished hours, Now hidden in the past, An incense will awaken From memories that must last 110 TWILIGHT ECHOES. As long as life shall give me New days, and months, and years, With time for joy and gladness, And the sadder time for tears— A fragrance that will heighten The joys, while joys abide, And lessen all life's shadows, Till falls life's eventide. Songs that the heart may fashion Reflect the music there ; The sweetness yours has sung me But makes my own more fair. And now, what time in silence Your heart may sit alone, Counting upon the ocean The friends you call your own, Turn back, my ocean rover, Turn heart-warm to the West, And whisper through the stillness The names you love the best. Do not forget the " Circle " Your presence made complete In a fair New England village, Where hearts shall hope to greet The friend whose absence darkens, Whose coming will relight The days that must be shadowed Till Love's returning flight. TWILIGHT ECHOES. HI And now, dear Kate, a message To yours beyond the sea, A message of remembrance Direct from mine and me, And to yourself, in closing, Find " Farewell " and " God-speed," With love enough to bring you back To your warm friends, Sisters Weed. Greenwich, Conn. TO C. C. H. Dear " Neal" .-—When your hand shall essay to unfold The thoughts which my love herein has enrolled, As you rock on the deep, may your spirit be stirred With echoes from home hid away in each word. Look back through the hours of the long summer days, And may fancy paint pictures to gladden your gaze Of kindred and friends whose love and devotion Have borne you companionship over the ocean And will follow you all through the hours of each day With wishes, heart-warm, that will shine on your way, Be it over the pave of a gay city street, Or afar from the sound of hurrying feet, Along the Khine Valley or Switzer's fair hills, By green English meadows or Erin's clear rills, 112 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Or into the heart of Italia's dear bowers, Where the nightingale sings through the moonlight and flowers, Or wherever your wandering footsteps may lead, With our love, dear, we'll faithfully wish you " God-speed. " But amid all the beauty of change and surprise, Which may greet you while dwelling 'neath far alien skies, Send back to the land and the friends left behind A memory of scenes your heart had enshrined, Ere you bade us adieu in the "Home of the free," To wander awhile in the " Land o'er the sea." Forget not, dear Neal, the hours of good cheer We spent in a cottage while you were anear, Our long, pleasant chats when the eventide fell, Our jolly late talks, till the midnight bell Warned us both to our slumber for sake of our health, Or, as sages have written, to get to us wealth ; But, whatever the reason, we finished the night In slumbers so peaceful we wakened as bright As if all the hours the night calls her own Had been hidden in dreams till the shadows had flown. Then remember the drive to "Belle Haven beach," On that morning of beauty beyond human speech, When nature, designing to win us, complete In her loveliest garments knelt at our feet, Beguiling our hearts and winning us quite, As we sat on the beach in the sand so white, With the tide coming in 'neath the blue summer sky, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 113 On that fair morn in June- time, dear Neal, you and I. And again, when at " Hawthorne," what joy was our own, As we gathered the shells while we talked quite alone, Looking out on the bay which, in jest, we dubbed Naples, Where the waves kissed the shore lined with beeches and maples. Do you think, dear, whatever new beauty may meet you, You will find dearer scenes than at home used to greet you? Some fairer you'll find, perhaps, but none dearer, Though the skies may be brighter, the streams may be clearer. There is naught in the world, wherever you roam, That can equal the beauty and dearness of home. You may walk by the Seine, and visit the Rhone, You may view the rich beauty of Bois de Boulogne, Ere you seek pastures new on the far Alpine hills, Whose glory with rapture the heart ever fills, Or your steps lead you southward to Venice or Rome, Ere your hearts and your faces again turn to home, But turn your heart back ere you reach the far shore, For while reading these lines, will your journey be o'er. Send over the waters that fill the deep sea Some sign that " My Neal " is thinking of me. And now, with " Adieu," best wishes be yours, On this or on any of life's varied tours, With health and good speed till the journey shall last, And a harbor of safety to rest in at last; Good bye, and pray let not this billet condemn me, But believe me, with love, dearest Neal, Your own " Emmie." Greenwich, Conn. 114 1 WIL1GHT ECHOES. CHRISTMAS LETTER. TO MISS N. I have not forgotten my promise, Miss N., To furnish you something direct from my pen, And though late in the season some chronicles show That the warmest thoughts oft come with the snow. At least let me hope that my honest intention May embody a sentiment worthy of mention, And that you, in recalling some thoughts of the past Reflected in this, may find one that shall last Beyond all the chances and changes of time. Re it summer or winter, you honor my rhyme With a glance at its meaning quite worthy the theme, Of a friendship engendering the warmest esteem. Enough, if these lines shall prove how sincere Is the memory I've kept and shall ever hold dear. I have thought of the days in the summer gone by, And wondered if ever again you and I Would meet and renew, in the same pleasant places, The same pleasant talks, and see the same faces, With the circle unbroken by sorrow or change, And if friends we knew then could ever grow strange. Such fancies will come as the seasons go round, And we find ourselves dreaming of friends we have found ; New links in the chain that bind hearts together, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 115 That tarnish nor rust not in life's stormy weather. The Christmas-tide glory falls low as I write, But my heart in its wishing looks up through a light, And sends o'er the distance that keeps us apart The wish that life's blessings may gladden your heart. Let me hope for you ever no sorrow may trouble you, And you find a new link in the love of Greenwich, Conn. E. W. THE SLEEPING BEAUTY. Many and many long years ago, Where the forest flowers were wont to blow Within an ancient wood, Long hidden from the waking world, With trumpet stilled and banner furled, A grand old castle stood. No sound within the castle walls, No note was echoed through the halls, No sign of life was heard, While all without was cold and still As water of a frozen rill. Nor grass nor leaflet stirred. A charm of fairy night and power That covered castle, wall and tower, At midnight on it fell, 116 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Which doomed a hundred years of sleep To seal in slumber, long and deep, The court by fairy spell. The cause of sucli enchantment rare Was wrought through Princess, young and fair, Within the castle old, Who, dreaming late one winter night Beside the ember's fitful light, Espied a key of gold, Which quickly from the fire she drew, And on her ermine robe she threw, To try the magic power. Through distant halls of oaken floor, By many a winding corridor, She sped at midnight hour. And while the king and nobles all Within the castle's festive hall The banquet hour were keeping, The Princess, on her lonely quest, Forgetting king and noble guest, Beguiled the hours of sleeping. And on through many a secret way, Deep hidden from the light of day, The magic key she bore, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 117 Till, glancing through a gallery wide That led to turret, she espied An ancient studded door. Within the lock of curious mold The Princess placed the key of gold, Seeking the tower to win. With trembling hand the bolt she sprung, And loudly through the castle rung The sound of midnight din. Buried beneath the dust of years The narrow stairway there appears, Leading to turret high, Where, in the moonlit chamber lone, Spinning, there sat a withered crone, Ne'er seen by mortal eye, Till on that lonely winter night, Beneath the moonbeams dusty light, The Princess first descried her Engaged with distaff, fleece and reel, And spindle formed of burnished steel, That drew the maid beside her. Who, gazing, longed to twine the thread Around the spindle's shining head And guide the skein so slender. 118 TWILIGHT ECHOES. When, lo ! the hand in haste to spin Just touched the polished pointed pin, Which pierced the palm so tender. Within, without, a silence deep, Borne on the shadowy wings of sleep, Wrapt all in close embrace — The king and guest in banquet hall, The restless steed within his stall, The warder at his place. And on an ivory couch was laid, In sleep, the Princess, peerless maid, Beneath a silken cover, Where, softened to a sweet repose, The snowy bosom sunk and rose In dreams of coming lover. The pale, sweet cuckoo flowers blew, The crocus bloomed, the daisies grew, The primrose blushed and died, And still within that castle old, Within that grim and ancient hold, No signs of life abide. A hundred times the fragrant spring Silently folded its perfumed wing, A hundred summers waned, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 119 A hundred autumns poured their gold Into earth's coffers manifold, A hundred winters reigned. The charm had spent its fatal power, A Prince had dreamed of castle bower Wherein the Princess lay, And, mounted on a gallant steed, With vow to "answer Lady's need," The Prince pursued his way. Resolved to ride without repose Till on his sight the castle rose Like vision of his dream, He journeyed on by day and night, By rosy dawn and fading light, Through vale, and mount, and stream. At last, as in a mist, he sees Above the green of forest trees The castle's ancient towers, And, pressing on through grasses dank, He spurs his courser's foaming flank, Through marsh and wildwood flowers. The golden beams of fading day Gilded the battlement grim and gray, And kissed the princely crest, 120 TWILIGHT ECHOES. As through the arched and massive gate The Prince rode on to find, though late, The object of his quest. With beating heart 'neath shield of gold Royally rode that knight of old Into the courtyard lone, Where, echoing through the silent place, The sound of hoof-falls' measured pace Fell on the courtyard stone. He leaves the court, he gains the stairs, He seeks the "Bower of Lady fair;" Through many a wildering way Love leads; he follows far and fast. The chamber door is reached at last, Love crowns the fading day. Into the dimly lighted room, Where perfumed tapers broke the gloom, Entered the princely lover. The slumbrous air was softly stirred, Yet naught the sleeping Princess heard Beneath the broidered cover. The gallant Knight stooped low to take One lingering look 'ere he should break The charm within his keeping. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 121 Then nearer to the peerless face He leaned, the pledge of love to place On lips so fair in sleeping. The charm was spent, the spell was broke, That fervent kiss the Princess woke, Love's touch aroused the sleeper; Love's summons rang through bower and hall, Love's echoes waked the slumberers all, From king to lowly keeper. All waked as years before all slept; A moment broke what years had kept, And loosed the bonds forever; A dream, a kiss, had wrought so much, All yielded to love's" magic touch, And crowned love's brave endeavor. CAPTURE OF STONY POINT BY GEN. WAYNE, JULY 16, 1779. The tramp of heroes since high noon Was heard on mountain steep and through ravine, And the dull echoes frighted from their lairs The timid races of the wood and brake. 122 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Onward they trod, nor wearied in the march Through deep morass and over pathless height That lay 'twixt them and victory. The summer Noon upon the silent hills made all The forests faint and left the vales athirst; Yet, in those patriot hearts a Spartan zeal Sustained and led them through the sultry hours Of that immortal day their valor won. The day was spent, and evening's grateful shade Covered the parched earth with cooling dews, And o'er the land a breezy incense bore, Refreshing the tired ranks that for a space Halted amid the Hudson's rugged steeps To learn and do their gallant leader's will. Anon a restless moving to. and fro Told that the hour had come, and the two columns, Formed for battle, advanced upon the foe. With muskets empty and with bayonets fixed, Silently they moved, unheeding aught That might arise to bar the way to victory. At midnight 'neath the fortress walls they stood, Undaunted by the rising tide that covered All the marshy plain. Upon the fort The watchful sentinel, pacing his quiet round, Heard naught but the plashing tide upon the shore, Till on the stillness fell a strange alarm TWILIGHT ECHOES. 123 As through the palisades the patriots broke, Making a breach for the ranks of liberty. A cry of terror from the startled sentinels Echoed their fear upon the midnight air, And roused the sleeping forces from their dreams Within the silent fort. "The foe! they come! They come!" was loudly shouted, and the call to arms Mingled with the din of hurrying feet now entering Right and left under the fire of cannon. Shot and shell filled all the night with war's Dread sounds. "On to the fort! my brave men, On to the fort!" rang out in clarion notes From the lips of noble Wayne, cheering his men To victory. Into the fort they swept, conquering Without a shot the enemy that poured relentless Fire into their midst. But in the flush Of triumph the gallant General, wounded by A random shot, fell bleeding to the earth. His faithful followers, obedient to his faint Command, now raised and bore him to the column's front, Where by his presence he might cheer and aid. Victor and vanquished, side by side they stood, And the deafening shout that rent the air told Of the patriots' glory. And they who fought and bled Their altars to defend from hand of alien 124 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Foe, won more than soldiers' guerdon in the Light of bravery, humanity and a nation's pride. The years have long since laid to sleep the hero Whose name and deeds shall live in every heart That throbs beneath our sky of freedom, and The generations yet to be shall learn To reverence, with a nation's love, the noble Name of Wayne. POEMS FOR LITTLE ONES LITTLE ELSIE TO THE FLOWERS. Daisies, do the flowers know When to go to sleep? Do they ever weary With the watch they keep? Do they know who loves them, Do they ever sigh, If no one is sorry When the roses die? 1 am sure the primrose sweet Smiles and tries to nod; So the purple aster And the golden-rod, When I step so lightly In among their leaves; If I crush a crocus, Pretty violet grieves. So I think the flowers know, Just like me, the way How to shut their pretty eyes At the close of day; 126 TWILIGHT ECHOES. And, like me, they'd sorrow If no one were nigh To watch them through their sleeping, Or love them when they die. A TRUE STORY OF THE LITTLE DAUPHIN OF FRANCE. Long years ago, when kings and queens Ruled the proud court of France, And loyal vassals bowed the knee Before their monarch's glance; When wisdom, with her scepter bright, Spread quiet through the realm, Monarch nor vassal dreamed of aught Their peace to overwhelm, Till fell the curse of discontent Amid the lowly train, And from a murmur of unrest Broke forth the wail of pain. The darkest era France e'er knew Stamped with a crimson shame The glory of her royalty, The honor of her name, With riot and rebellion The world can ne'er forget. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 127 When ruled King Louis and his queen, Fair Marie Antoinette, Sovereign and subject shared alike The ignominious death Who dared support the tottering throne By word, or act, or breath. And ere the wrath of that fierce time Its vengeance had allayed, The blood of nobles flowed in streams And dyed the hands that preyed, Nor stopped they in their loathsome task, Nor stayed the carnage wild, Till king and queen were sacrificed And the name of France defiled. Their little son, the fair child-prince, Torn from love's warmest clasp, Was placed within the keeping of A servile creature's grasp, Whose chief delight, from day to day, Was teaching grossest sin, And striving from the path of right The little prince to win. Who, often tempted, oft did yield, Yet oft the tempter spurned, For the spirit of the noble boy With the fire of right still burned. And when one day the tempter's cup To the captive's lips was held, 128 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Wearied with the sense of shame, The little heart rebelled. The princely boy stood proudly up, As under seraph's wing:, And said, "I can not do it, I was born to be a king!" And so, dear children, each of you, Like the little prince, may claim The honor of a noble act, The heritage of fame. If each, like him, will bravely look Temptation face to face, And say, "I can not do it," You may wear a prince's grace. THE MOUSE AND THE BEE. A mouse and a bee were discussing one day, In a very unamiable sort of a way, The virtues of each in his own estimation, Of animal beauty and insect creation. The sunshine swept in through the wide open door, Where the disputants sat on the warm oaken floor Of the cosy old barn, where the horse and the cow Had fed side by side from the sweet-scented mow, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 129 And ne'er had a thought that could lead to dissension, And utterly scorned the disgrace of contention. But the two tiny friends, as they sat in the sun, Continued to talk as at first they begun ; They prated of merits that each one possessed, And pride was the lever in each little breast. "I have been," said the bee, "over mountain and vale, I have sailed on the breeze and ridden the gale; I have traversed the plain where the wild flowers blow, And have lain in the blush of the rose's deep glow; The sweets I have tasted of each little flower That blows by the brook in sunshine and shower; And the sights I have seen would astonish you so, You would wonder and grieve you were made so low. Just think of the honor that's granted to bees, Of going on wings wherever they please, While you must sit moping the live-long day, And at most can do nothing but skip and play." The shy little mouse was sadly confused, As the bee smiled contempt and looked much amused, While he waited to hear what the mouse had to say Before spreading his wings to fly away. " I ' ve no doubt," said the mouse, " with the aid of your wings You have been where you've seen most wonderful things; But consider the privilege of being a mouse, And living at will in a barn or a house. While the summer time lasts I always stay here, But hide in the house as the winter draws near, 180 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Where I feed on the dainties that come from the table, Never heard of in hives nor found in a stable; And then, only think how much I must know Of the great busy world as it moves to and fro; For I listen to all that is talked of or read, And of course I remember the most that is said; While you, in your hive, can do nothing more Than devour through the winter your whole summer's store. Without any use for your fine pair of wings, You must live like the wasps and such stupid things." "You're very conceited, my friend," said the bee, "And the sauciest mouse one might wish to see; I will fly to the hive and report to our queen What a miserable, impudent creature I've seen." A pigeon, in passing, had heard the dispute, And caught up the bee with a sudden salute, Of "What a fine morsel, I'm really in luck, You might have been found by a turkey or duck." So saying, he swallowed the vain little bee, And quickly flew off to the top of a tree. In the meantime the old tabby cat had sneaked in And sprang for the mouse, who ran for the bin. But, alas! all in vain, he had lingered too late, And at once fell a prey to a most cruel fate. MORAL. Had these vain little creatures been doing their duty, Instead of disputing of virtues and beauty, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 131 They might have been happy, each in his way, And blessed the glad earth for many a day. Thus the world, in its blindness, oft misses the light That falls on the pathway of those who do right, And gropes in the darkness of folly and sin, Leading far from the track where the sunshine creeps in. JACK'S NEW YEAK. It's New Year's day to-morrow, and I've lots of things to do; I must carry that sled to Ben, and the skates to his brother Lou; And I promised to build a snow-fort for Burnie under the hill— The factory boy that lost his arm a year ago in the mill. So you see there ' s lots on my mind, and I ' m willing to do it, too, But, somehow, it don't seem the same this year that it used to do. For I used to be ever so anxious for Christmas and New Year's fun, For the jolliest of all the seasons that comes when the summer is done. 132 TWILIGHT ECHOES. I remember I always was wishing, from January till May, And J from May around to December, and from then to New Year's day, For the visit of dear old "Santy," with his sleigh and tiny reindeer; But to-night, 'though I'm sure he's coming, I'm sorry to know he's near. I wonder what is the matter? It must be I've done some- thing wrong, Or the day wouldn't lose its sunshine, and the music go out of my song; For I've whistled and sung till I'm tired, and thought of the fun with the boys; But something, that's just like a shadow, seems hiding the New Year's joys. The fellows all like me, I'm sure, and I like all of them except one, But I hate him, and never, no never, will I speak to him under the sun, For he struck me, and called me a coward because I woudn't strike back; And I never will do him a kindness as long as my name is Jack. But somehow I'm rather uneasy. I wish I had spoken last night, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 133 When he stopped and said he was "sorry," but, of course I thought I was right, As I turned from the gate without speaking and left the poor fellow outside, But I had the awfulest feeling, and almost could have cried. There's only one way to fix it. I must, now, go over to him, Though I said I never would do it, but then, I always liked Jim, So I'll just go to-night and tell him I shall lose all the New Year's joys If I start on the New Tear hating any one of the boys. MISCHIEF. How do you think I look In grandma's cap and gown, Sitting so prim in her rocking-chair With the knitting she's just laid down? I found it so still as I peeped Through the crack of the open door, I thought, "Now she's out, I '77 just step in And stay a minute, no more, 134 TWILIGHT ECHOES. And try on that funny old dress She keeps wrapped up in a cloth, All scented with lavender, clover and mint, She says is "to keep out the moth." The dress is too long, as you see, There's ever so much on the floor, And the cap's very large for such a small head, And the "specs" make the needles look more. But I guess I can take a few stitches, If I look far over the rim; Grandma herself couldn't make it look better, Nor draw in the edges so trim. But mercy! She's coming! How hateful; I've dropped every stitch in that row, And I ' ve stepped on her gown and rumpled her cap, And ruined her knitting, I know. I wish I had stayed down stairs, Playing school with Bessie and Ben, But if grandma will only forgive me this once I never will meddle again. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 135 THE LILY FAIRY. There lived in far-off Normandy, Across the sunny sea, A grandam old and little maid, As fair as child could be. Florette, her name, with golden hair And eyes of azure hue, That seemed reflecting from their depths The skies of Norman blue. Beside a mountain stream their cot Lay nestled in the vale, And at their fireside oft was heard A wondrous fairy tale, Of how an elfin king, that ruled The fairy realm of old, Unto an elfin witch's power A fairy princess sold, Who, for a weary space of years, Within a lily bell Should lie imprisoned in its heart, Till o'er the mystic spell 136 TWILIGHT ECHOES. A human hand should lift the wand And let the sunshine in, And from the flower prison-cell The fairy princess win. The little maid had pondered oft With grief the fairy's doom, And searched in vain the fields and woods To find the flower-tomb. And so the days wore on apace, Till spring and summer faded, And autumn smiled o'er all the land With gold and purple shaded. When through the fields one shining morn The little maid went singing, To fetch the water from the spring, She heard a distant ringing. She paused, then through the dewy flowers With haste she sped along, And as she neared the bubbling spring The ringing seemed a song Which grew to words, as close she pressed Beside the crystal fountain, Where in among the flowers lay hid The fairy of the mountain. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 137 "Oh! haste thee, haste thee, pretty maid; Release me, or I die ; A hundred years I've lain, and still A hundred more must lie, Unless from out my prison cell Some kindly hand shall free me; Pray, let the sunshine in, Florette, Push back the leaves and see me." Florette, amazed to hear her name, With trembling haste obeyed, When, lo! A lily-bell sprang up Before the wondering maid. The waxen petals opened wide As in the sunshine drifted, And from the enchanted flower-cell The fairy form was lifted. A tiny form with azure wings And robe of rainbow dyes, Held forth a crown of lilies fair Before the childish eyes. "This crown of shining flowers, child," The fairy softly said, "Is fashioned from the gems I love To place upon your head, 138 TWILIGHT ECHOES. "In token of a fairy pledge To keep your feet from straying, To light your path through storm and shine, At labor, or at playing; "And when your deeds are wrought with love, These lilies shall grow fairer, A shilling crown upon your brow, A glory to the wearer." And so it proved, As years sped on Kind acts brought golden treasure, With grace and beauty, light and love, O'erflowed Florette's life measure. And how, you ask, could crown of flowers Bring grace and love and beauty? Good deeds were written in her life; She simply did her duty. THE SPIDER AND THE FLY. MODERN. Have you heard the story, children, Of the spider and the fly; Of how a cruel monster, With a wicked, flattering lie, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 139 Inveigled to his "parlor" Up a mythic winding stair, The silly little insect, And dined upon her there? If not, then listen closely To the plan the spider laid To secure his little victim With a scheme so neatly made. Close to the spider ' s parlor, ■ One sunny summer's day, The pretty fly came buzzing, When she heard the spider say: " Good morrow, little stranger, Have you journeyed far," said he. "Just step into my parlor, ' Tis the prettiest one might see ; Up this curious winding ladder, Or I should say winding stair, Just follow and I'll lead you Where I keep my treasures rare. "You're looking very weary, I wish you ' d rest awhile ; Do dine with me, you're welcome," Then turned aside to smile, 140 TWILIGHT ECHOES. "And though I've never told it, You can not fail to see How you're lovely face has won me; Ah, you're surely meant for me." But the fly, suspecting mischief, Said, "I thank you, gentle sir; I have hardly time to tarry now, My visit I'll defer Till a more convenient morning, When, perhaps, I may drop in, Just to look upon those treasures You say you have within." The spider, nothing daunted, Said "Good morning" to his guest, And added: "When you come again, Be sure to stop and rest." Then to his "pretty parlor," Hungry back he ran with speed, Quite well assured his dainty guest Would soon supply his need. His web he readjusted With a netting extra strong; Then hastened to his doorway, With a most seductive song, TWILIGHT ECHOES. 141 And sang: "Come hither, pretty fly, I long to see your face And gaze into your diamond eyes, And view your form of grace. "With your handsome gauzy wings, And robe of rainbow dyes, You are counted very comely, Most clever, too, and wise. If you doubt it, you have only To step in and view yourself In a mirror at your service, Just upon my parlor shelf." Alas! the silly insect, Caught by the wily song, Thinking only of her beauty, Without a fear of wrong, Soon returned to view the "parlor," With its boasted "treasures rare," And to gaze upon her features In the little mirror there. The spider watched her coming, And hid within his den. She labored up his "winding stair," But ne'er came down again, 142 TWILIGHT ECHOES. And all too late she learned the truth, That wisdom ne'er is found, In listening to a tempter ' s song, "Where flattering words abound. PUSHED OUT OF THE NEST. Oh dear ! How I shiver, although it is May ! But they tell me that all ' s for the best, Yet I wonder What father and mother can mean By pushing me out of the nest! Since the day we came out of some tiny blue shells, In our soft little nest on the tree, They ' ve fed us with morsels of bugs and worms, My two little brothers and me. But to-day when they fed us our breakfast of bugs, Which they found in the field of clover, They coaxed me up to the edge of the nest, Then quietly pushed me over! What's that in the grass? A cat, as I live! Dear me! how I wish I could fly! But my wings are too small and my body so large, And the trees seem so very high ! TWILIGHT ECHOES. 143 But he's coming this way! He's seen me, I'm sure! I must try my wings at least! There! really, I'm safe on the top of this bush, And the cat's cheated out of a feast! Well, flying is easy, if one only tries, But one never learns in the nest; So, whenever pushed out by the old birds, be sure You will soon learn what's for the best. CHRISTMAS CAROL. Hail, holy morn! The advent of our King! To Christ the Savior born All glory bring ! Chant the anthem's heavenly strain, Sung of old on Bethlehem's plain, Glory in the highest sing, Glory ! Glory ! Glory ! Peace on earth proclaim, And good-will to men ! Hail the Princely Name, Chant His praise again ! 144 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Render now Thy will be done, Bow before the Holy One ! Glory ever to the same, Glory! Glory! Glory! Ye weary, loosed from sin, No longer prostrate lie ! Glad tidings enter in From heralds of the sky ! Earth's redeemed! With seraphs sin^ Hallelujahs to our King ! Glory be to God on high, Glory ! Glory ! Glory ! DRAMA FOR LITTLE ONES. LOVE'S VICTORY. DEAMATIS PERSON^: Prince Rudolph, of Castle Offenstein. Lady Constance, of Castle Waldenbeck. Otto, Page to the Prince. Zephyr, the Fairy Godmother, who presided at Lady Con- stance's birth. Scene I — In Waldenbeck Wood. Scene II— Chapel in the Wood. Scene III — The ball at Castle Offenstein. Finale— Fairy Ballet. The Drama to be used as a final production in a parlor entertain- ment, to consist of recitations, tableaux, music and charades, ad libitum. A century's feud broken by the marriage of Prince Rudolph to Lady Constance. Page Otto — ' Tis late, my Lord, why linger in this wood ? Surely from waiting cometh nothing good. Prince Rudolph — ' Tis never late while waiting for one ' s Love ! Have patience, Page of mine, all things above. 146 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Page Otto— And yet the hour is past, the tryst unkept, And all the bounds of patience overstepped. Prince Rudolph— Fear not, good Otto, for by yonder motm I'll wage my Lady Constance cometh soon. Page Otto — The midnight hour has tolled, the moon dips low; Methinks the Lady Constance rideth slow. Prince Rudolph — She rideth near, in sooth, the saints are good! E ' en now I hear her near the chapel wood. Page Otto — ' Tis true, my Lord ; no longer may you wait ; Love conquers time, though oft he conquers late. Enter from forest path Lady Constance, alone. Lady Constance — Ah, Rudolph! Patient lover! I am here at last, Though many dangers 'round my path were cast. Prince Rudolph — But safe at last, and free from baneful charm; We only wait fair Zephyr to shield us from all harm. Zephyr— No longer wait. Behold me at your side! What wouldst thou, Prince, my lady for a bride? TWILIGHT ECHOES. 147 Prince Rudolph— My Lady Constance and her constant love, A guerdon, Fairy, all other gifts above! Zephyr— The priest is waiting in the old Chapelle; Will wed ye ere the new day's matin bell. Prince Rudolph — A blessing, Fairy, we would crave of thee, At midnight here within the forest free. Zephyr's Blessing— The towers of Waldenbeck for thee shall shine, The Flower of Waldenbeck, my Lord, is thine. Prince Rudolph, Lady Constance and Page Otto sing thanks to Zephyr. All singing — Thanks to thee, Fay, for thy gentle grace! Long may ye reign in the greenwood place! Queen may ye~ reign in the greenwood bowers! Hover and guard over Waldenbeck Towers! IMPROMPTU LINES. rpr\ •»•»■» I know not how the coming days shall waken, Nor if to them their light will constant be; I only know that when your light is taken, It will be darkness till you dawn on me. OMNE TEMPUS. What shall I write, sweet friend, That Time shall not amend, Nor years distort? The Gold of life be yours, The love that best endures Through storms to port! DAVIS'S MILL. God sent the sunshine, fairest gift, To glad the heart of Nature, But left the gift to gladden life With one fair human creature. July 30, 1884. TWILIGHT ECHOES. 149 THY PRESENCE. There is no day without thee, There is no night complete; The glory of thy presence Makes all things fair and sweet. YOU. Write you "something sweet," Love, "I've nothing else to do"? All the sweet in life, Love, I write in writing "You." ST. AGNES EYE. I kissed you, Dear, in dreams On sweet St. Agnes Eve, And the night held rosy beams, Such as fays from sunlight weave. AUGUST AFTERNOON. The shadows lengthen, Oh, how sweet! The glories deepen, Oh, how meet For such a day! 150 TWILIGHT ECHOES. All that a life may hold These golden hours enfold, Now dying at our feet. FROM ME TO THEE. In love's language truly told, Read within the story old, Brief and quaint the tale will be; Read and find "From me to thee.' ANON Life's music ever fails us Till its saddest strains are sung; 'Tis only out of sorrow All the sweetest notes are wrung. CHRISTMAS VERSES. TO I send with the flowers This Christmas morn Love's greeting warm and true, With a blessing, Dear, that will last for aye, When the flowers and words have faded away, And my heart has no more to do. TO A. N. Open your heart to a little guest, Sent to greet you this Christmas day, In love's garment gaily drest; He will whisper what I say. With the chimes across the snow Peace and love to you will flow. r P(") * * * Accept my love this Christmas day; It will tell you all that the year could say Of a love that will last forever and aye, 152 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Beyond life's night and morning, Beyond the shadow of earthly bound, Where the light of all Christmas- tides is found, The celestial land adorning. TO No new love words can I say, Dear One, on this Christmas day; No new music can I bring With the words my heart will bring; But to words and music made, On love's altar for thee laid, Let me, to enrich the rest, To "I love thee" add "the best." AUTOGRAPH SCRAPS. TO S. M. In after years, when looking back Through memory's misty veil, Your weary heart shall idly count The shadows dim and pale, And, counting, call again the friends Your sunny girlhood knew; Let memory place me in the rank Among the tried and true. TO A. M. W. A bal masque is life on a very grand scale, And the maskers are thronging its portals; Some laugh as they enter, and some stop to sigh, And some are the saddest of mortals. r Now try to be gay, and laugh with the throng, Reach alway and ever for roses, And if hurt by the thorns, a balm you will find, In a sweetness each petal discloses. 154 TWILIGHT ECHOES. TO C. S. My name for this casket of flowers, I .assure you, is worthless indeed; You ask for a rose, but instead, Behold, you have naught but a " Weed" TO ALICE A. Carefully ponder the truth I give, With full permission to lend: There's nothing on earth so hard to find As a true and faithful friend. TO LOUIE W. In your heart's corridor, Ringing love's whisper, Carry my singing Down to life's vesper. TO C. H. My dear little girl, when you grow to a woman, And read o'er the wishes now written for you, May your heart in its search for a love yet unspoken, Find all it requires to banish life's "rue." TWILIGHT ECHOES. 155 May the links of love's forging be left in your keeping, And held still unbroken by time in its flight, And may all that can bless and brighten life's pathway Be yours, little girl, till the coming of night. TO L. R The violet blooms by the singing brook, And sheds its sweets for a day; The primrose buds in the wayside nook, Then blushing fades away. So I will not bring to wear on your heart The flower so soon forgot, But one that shall last till life shall cease, The treasured forget-me-not. TO H. E. S. Whenever you wander to this little spot, The very last one in the book, Look close and the floweret forget-me-not You'll find in this little nook. TO N. S. Along the path of life you tread, Though thorns may wound your feet, In the hedges low The roses blow, A healing balm of sweet. 156 TWILIGHT ECHOES. TO F. S. ' Tis better to have held the roses, Though the hand that held them bled, Than never to have known their sweetness Ere their fragrance all had fled. Better far to pluck the lilies, Rocking on their tiny stems, Than to let them droop and wither, Ruined, wasted diadems. Better 'tis to know the morning, Even though the shadows fall, Than forever dwell in darkness, And enjoy no rays at all. So grieve not if hurt by roses, Mourn not for the lilies slain, Morning comes and brings its healing And restores all sweets ag;ain. ACROSTICS. GARFIELD. Great-hearted hero ! A country's pride ! All nations mourn the quenching of his light; Round the vast globe the echoes still abide; Fond hearts are mourning still a nation's blight. Into the "Shadow-Land," with pilgrim-shoon, Entered the martyr-chief, life's battle o'er; Leaving earth's mystery for the heavenly rune, Dawn found him mid the glories of the better shore. NEAL. Not the seraphs above in that dreamland of glory, Ever sing without love in that region of bliss. All the choristers kneeling chant low the sweet story, Love reigns in that realm as it rules over this. MAY. May all the blessings life can hold Around thy pathway closely fold, and Yield love's magic gifts of gold. BIRTHDAY VERSES. TO Accept these violets, Dear; Their muteness may serve so well To tell you all in their quiet way What my heart is too far to tell. And may the sweets they breathe Pervade the coming years, And may each dawn be crowned with love, Each close undimmed by tears. TO C. C. H. Fair friend, I wish thee fair In all that life may send: Fond hearts thine own to wear, Life's years untouched by care, Be thine till life shall end. IN MEMORIAM. Oh, silvery tones now vanished, Borne down the waste to me, Through all life's day will echo, "My faith looks up to Thee." Our trembling lips will falter, Our tears we can not hide; Our empty hearts will weary, Calling till eventide. * All through the days unlighted, And through the years to be, Across the shadowed silence, Our hearts will reach to /Thee; And passionately calling, Will yearn once more to hear Thy fond voice softly whisper, Thy spirit draw anear. And far adown the silence, Across life's boundless sea, Will float for aye the murmur: "My faith looks up to Thee." 160 TWILIGHT ECHOES. Ah! that our warm earth-kisses, Close pressed to lips so mute, Might wake again life's music From out the silent lute, To teach us in our weeping, Low on the bended knee, With trusting hearts to murmur "My faith looks up to Thee." Greenwich, Conn., December 11, 1878, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 018 6030151