4 Class _/^J'^^^ Book ___• S_3.lJ GopyiightN"-- COPVRIGHT DEPosrr. IN THE REALMS OF GOLD (Cy/^-^O^^. IN THE REALMS OF GOLD A BOOK OF VERSE 1891-1901 BY / LORENZO SOSSO ** They also serve 'who only stand and luait.** — Milton. D. P. ELDER AND MORGAN SHEPARD SAN FRANCISCO 1902 Edition limited to Jive hundred copies. Printed from type, and type distributed. ^^lS< COPYRIGHT, I90I BY LORENZO SOSSO THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, Two COH«t3 RECEfVEO OCT. 3! 1901 Copyright entry CLASs()^:i5«a' No. COPY B. The Murdoch Press • • • • • • • ••• • • « •• ••• • • • • • «• ••• « • • • • • « • • • • • • • • • • • • • t • • • • • c ' * ••? • • • • •• .•• ••• ••• • • C -• • • • ••• • • • • •• • • v..-.-: • • • • ••• • •• * • ••• • •• • 1 • • • • ••• •DEDICATION to her whose faith is still secure Through all incertitudes of life. The many days of joy, the few- Joyless, since she is joy thereof; to her, the purest of the pure, to her, the truest of the true, The mother wedded in the wife, I dedicate this book with love. Contents PROEM Page 7 THE OPEN DOOR 9 AT THE THRESHOLD lO THE POET 12 ON KEATS 13 THE ARTIST H URANIA 15 THE VOICE OF FREEDOM 16 POPPIES 18 <'kim" 19 THE THREE FAITHS 20 THE WANDERING MINSTREL 20 art's EVERLASTINGNESS 22 THE poet's art 22 A PURE WOMAN 23 TWO GIFTS 26 OUR FLAG 26 FAITH AND LOVE 28 WRITTEN IN A COPY OF *' SARTOR RESARTUS 28 TENNYSON 29 AMERICA TO ENGLAND 29 PENITENCE 30 WRITTEN IN A COPY OF '* EPICTETUS " 30 QUATRAIN 31 MY SONGS 31 OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES 32 Shakespeare's sonnets 32 Contents in memory of james russell lowell 33 A PRAYER 34 lullaby song 35 love's crown 36 ALL WORK IS prayer 37 ANACREON in OLD AGE 38 love's GIFTS 42 SAINT paulinus 43 A WORLD OF MIST 44 TWO LOVES 45 WARNING 47 AN EARTH— SONG 48 WHEN PEACE ON EARTH WILL COME AGAIN 50 A LITANY 53 MAXIMS 5 5 CITY OF THE SUNSET 56 TWILIGHT 56 life's GIFTS 57 ENCOURAGEMENT 57 A WORLD-SONG FOR PEACE 58 HOPE 61 I CANNOT MOURN 62 PSYCHE 63 LORD LOVE 68 DREAMERS ^ 69 PHANTOMS 69 ** PAPA, WILL YOU READ ? " 70 MAURICE THOMPSON 72 SHE KNOWS 73 STAR AND FLOWER 74 CofltentS VISIONS 7 5 ORNAMENTS 75 SAMSON-LABOR 76 PIVINE ORDINANCES 78 THE AWAKENING 79 BIRD AND FLOWER 80 AT THE WINDOW 8 1 THE DYING POET %% COME NOT, O DEATH 8 J FOREWARNINGS 86 RESURGAM 87 FATE 88 DESTINY 88 AUTUMN MORNING 89 THINK OF ME 9Z KINDNESS 93 THE CONSECRATION 94 I CHARGE THEE TO PREPARE 95 WERE I WORTH THY PRAISE 96 PATIENCE 97 IN ABSENCE 98 REMEMBRANCES 99 NATURE I 00 THE GRAVE I OX THE SILENT CITY IO3 HAPPY DAYS 105 TWOFOLD THE GIFT IO7 NEMESIS 108 Contents fortitude THE SOCIALIST PROTHALAMIUMS THE BEATEN PATH THE NEW LIFE THE MORGUE MOMENTS SONNETS THE INVETERATE YEARS THY WOMANHOOD MY FIRST ILLNESS YEARNINGS EASTER— DAY BEHIND THE VEIL HUMILITY SLUMBER MARK ANTONY ADMONITIONS THE BARK OF DEATH WORMWOOD THE MORNING STAR THE SUNSET IMMORTALITY THE DREAMER MISANTHROPOS I CHERISH THEE FAILURE OR SUCCESS ? THE VISIONS OF KING SOLOMON TO THE MUSE In the Realms of Gold PROEM Immortal Arbiters of Rhyme^ Who in your sunlit courts sublime And vast tribunals of all time Adjudicate And render judgments to each Muse^ (Since life was never mine to choose) Condemn me if with vain excuse I plead that fate Has bound me servitor to Song, Welding the golden links so strong, I wrought according to my weight; I sang according to my light; Still looking upward to the height To me denied. If some with amplitude of poiver^ The minstrels of both court and bower. To whom, the Muses gave their dower And glorified. Have sung a mightier^ loftier lay. How could I cope with such as they ? No ! — Yet though ever doomed to fail. Still will I strive those heights to scale^ Till everlasting death prevail Against my soul. If lowly reverence such as mine Can touch your natures so divine^ Assist me, goddesses benign. To reach the goal. Remote in glory though you are. Still, still I hail thee from afar! THE OPEN DOOR LO, at my open door I stand. And to each guest. As seemeth best. Whether an enemy or friend, I do extend To each and all a welcome hand. Frugal the fare upon the board: No gorgeous feast Is mine. At least. Though every guest should go his way. Some one may say, ** My heart with his did well accord." If some perchance should then return And find the door Closed evermore — And, silently communing, mark How all is dark. And seek the cause thereof to learn; To such as these now speaks my heart, O friends, that day Ye went away The light within my household died; For so spake Pride, *' Who love thee well will ne'er depart.*' AT THE THRESHOLD DAILY I grow more conscious still Of what vast work before me lies; Of what vast duties to fulfill. Impelling spirit to arise. Have I surrendered? Have I grown Oblivious to those duties near. And wrought an idol out of stone To which my spirit bowed in fear ? Have I forsaken what I knew To be all Life's eternal truth. Blazoned before my mortal view In temporary days of youth? Have I denied that God exists. With pale hps trembling as they spoke. Because surrounded by the mists Which veiled my skies ere morning broke? Have I defiantly expelled Whatever calls to duty came; And, by some subtler charm withheld. Lisped amorous complaints to fame? O then forgive me ! Ye who sway Our frail mortalities of earth; Which are but shadows of a day To which a day has given birth. lo Forgive me for the nobler vow -^^ ^^^ My lips articulate; my heart Threshold Hath even consecrated now To life's divinities of art. The lucent orbs of night serene Have made their benedictions mine: The balmy winds that flute unseen Their mystic melodies divine. These hear me, these respond, evoked By no weird music of the mind. And ere the steeds of Morning, yoked. Whose speed is swifter than the wind. Trample with golden-shodded feet Those paths but by immortals trod; And fair Aurora comes to greet Hyperion the matchless god; I do my spirit prostrate lay. As one departed being Hes, Before the portals of the day. That God's light may pervade my eyes! And so my resurrection seek In that vast urn which Nature holds In her eternal hands so meek. Within whose self our self infolds. She gives her benedictions thus; Most potently her wondrous draught The spirit doth revive in us. When once our earthly lips have quaffed. II At the Drained from the very light of light. Threshold An essence of essential things; That gives the spirit infinite Eternal regions for its wrings To spread in, to unfurl, to soar Through limitless, intense, inane Vast realms unbounded by a shore. For any landmarks that remain. Leave others anodynes demand. To drowse in unconsuming sleep; I still would climb — O God, Thy hand- Height after height, steep after steep ! THE POET SCORN not the poet, the immortal youth Of all the ages: living to proclaim The permanence of God and Love and Truth, And whence this cosmos of creation came. Whose Songs when fashioned from the heart of things. Wrought by his soul through passionate desire. Are to this world what all its luminous rings Are unto Saturn, girdHng it with fire.- 12 ON KEATS FAME that doth never quite recede with time. Glory that lives Through marvel of a music made sublime By v^hat it gives — All these he yearned and strove for. Though surpassed In power to do. Vaster his Song's horizon spread, more vast His vision too. But soon he faltered even where he trod. Nor worshiped long Apollo; in divinity a god, A god of Song. Then like a fadeless flower low he lay Amidst the weeds; Pale in the purple sunrise of the day That broke his reeds. And we who hear yet, as in some conch-shell Seas heard remote. Melodious songs as sweet as hydromel Burst from his throat; Wonder an oak towering in pride of place Ages should crown. While some fair violet in its modest grace A day treads down. 13 THE ARTIST IF he in honor hold erect The soul God gave to him to do Therewith things worthy, nor deflect. In arduous labor, from the true Bright path of duty. Art will sure Crown one with such ideals pure. For infinite aspirations hold True glory only. Meed and praise. In common parlance faintly doled; The laurel wreath, the crown of bays. The triumphs shouted, the acclaim Of multitudes, are empty fainc. Pure Art eternal only gives Reward eternal. Then she comes A goddess to the soul that lives A life of many martyrdoms; Wreathing around his mighty soul Her perfect gift as aureole. And then the burden sad, the weight Of the intolerable years; The days alone, disconsolate. The nights of solitude and tears; The bitterness of suffering. Change, as the winter into spring. H Change, and become a deeper joy The Artist Than the world yieldeth. God transmutes Earth's metals base, though with alloy. To richest gold; to precious fruits The perished weeds. Art thrones divine The artist kneeling at her shrine ! URANIA TO what dim bourne of unattained desire Leadest thou now my weary steps along. Mighty Urania, goddess of my Song ? What purer regions, ever higher and higher Gleaming, with holy feet that never tire, Wouldst thou prevail to bring my feet among. Dowered with thy gift, and with thy spirit strong. And with thy soul to guide me and inspire ? O far too weak am I; too low, too base. Although accompanied by thee, to climb The lofty steeps. Unveil thy beauteous face: Let me behold its glory but one time. Then I contented will my way retrace. Though blind forever from that sight sublime! 15 THE VOICE OF FREEDOM / am the voice of one crying in the ivilderness, St. John. YE have plated my breasts with gold. Against these cannot steel prevail ? And the might of my glory so manifold Become but a dotard's tale? Ye have throned me in splendor on high; Was it done so that I should see How in all lands men are still willing to die If only they may be free ? Lo, out from the forests of old There cometh a great white bear: Is it hunger alone that hath made him bold ? I cry to you all. Beware! And the lion once couchant, amain Now licketh his paws of blood. O whom are ye living by, Christ or Cain, Ye men of one brotherhood ? For up from the heart of man There goeth a great deep cry : *' We have fought our fight till the red blood ran; What more can we do but die ? " And when I behold the stain On the beautiftil banners they bore; And the tribute of all their blood in vain Spilt both upon sea and shore; i6 And some ye have chosen to rule, T^he Voice Grown proud of their place and power, of Freedom Keep prattling, like to a babbling fool. Of the destiny of the hour; Meanwhile they make laws to oppress My people who fought to be free. Shall I bow the head and then acquiesce. Nor ask how these things can be ? Turn, turn from your evil ways! The stars of the night grow dim; The sun breaks forth Hke a world ablaze. And the oceans chant their hymn. Turn, turn from your bitter strife. Whose horrors now seem to increase : There are greater guerdons than war in life. The greater guerdons of peace. Ye have harnessed the waves as a steed. And the lightnings ye make to bear; And the solar rays ye have sown for seed Through the darkness everywhere. And the thunder of God uppiled In cloud upon cloud above. Ye have taught to serve, as a little child Serveth a master for love. Great things ye have wrought for good. Great marvels have ye achieved; But the glorious gospel of Brotherhood Ye never have truly received. 17 The Voice O let me be one with my race : of Freedom Let me come down from the hills. And walk with you all in the market-place. Or where man in the fallow tills. I am weary of keeping aloof. Receiving the gifts that ye give : Far better beneath a poor laborer's roof Than within a palace to live. O let me come down to the forge. Or to labor at mine or mill; And if there are backs yet of rulers to scourge Ye have but to command, and I will ! POPPIES FLOWERS unto the flower. Sweets unto the sweet; Song to the bird in her bower. Bloom to the blossom complete. Joy for the eyes of beauty, » Faith for the soul of truth; Strength for the heart of duty. Love for the love of youth. i8 ^KIM' OUT of the East :— Magical, mystical; gaunt and grim; Dreamy of soul but fettered in limb. Where man is partly a god and beast — Out of the East Comes **Kim'M Out of the East: — Where every marvelous temple dim Still echoes to some Vedic hymn. And every Brahmin is a priest — Out of the East Comes ''Kim'M Out of the East: — Where men use drugs that overbrim Their soul, until the senses swim. And life's delirium is increased — Out of the East Comes ^^Kim'M Out of the East: — Diminutive in form and sHm, Companionable to cherubim; Living on crumbs w^hcre others feast — Out of the East Comes ^'Kim'M Out of the East : — What fire of soul, what life, what vim! How gladly do we welcome him. Of Kipling's creatures not the least — Out of the East Comes *'Kim"! ^9 THE THREE FAITHS *' A UGUST thy soul, nor moulded like its clod," iV The sage propounds, '* nor like its clod decays. Immortally created by thy God, Why render not to God thy meed of praise ? ' ' ** Because," pale lips reply, '* since life on earth Avails not, neither consummates the divine Life the life v^e mortals dream from birth. Therefore w^e worship not such God as thine." The fool replies not unto these: he weaves No such close \Voof; ties no such Gordian knot; But sayeth in his heart — and so believes — *^ There is no God, there is no God, I wot." THE WANDERING MINSTREL GO seek for the wandering minstrel, go seek him afar; O where is his spirit abiding, thou world like a star ? Lo, all the paths of the people are prone for his feet. Mage of the magical music to make their life sweet. Bowed with their burdens of labor they list for his voice. Yearning within them to hear him so they may rejoice When from the chariot of ages his soul shall descend. Poet and prophet, lover and laborer, father and friend! 20 Morning shall be as his herald, like music his speech; The All of the nations shall share in the glory bestowed Wandering unto each: Minstrel The rapture of song shall attend him and burn on his lips; The earth shall be his and its myriads, the sea and its ships. Coming to chant of the cosmos, the comrade of man; Breaking the fetters that bind us, the burdens that ban; Peer of the people, yet proving how grandly bestowed The gifts of the gods who have given him Song for a goad. And love from his eyes shall allure us, the light of their lord; And bread shall be broken between us who sit at his board; And tokens be given unto us, whose seal we shall find A bond to the broken in spirit to heal and to bind. Go seek for the wandering minstrel, go seek him afar; The chords of creation shall turn at his touch every soul to a star: Yea, and the temple awaits to receive him, the shrine is complete. And the millions of earth are all ready to spring to their feet! 21 ART'S EVERLASTINGNESS TO things of loftiest sense do thou appeal. Artist. Create thou in the marble block Thy soul's ideal; crumble will the rock. And perishable too is bronze or steel. Mutable language that can best reveal The spirit's inmost passion, or unlock The secret wards of sense, seems but a mock To Nature's changeless and eternal weal. Rather within the chalice of some flower Seek everlastingness. Evoke the reed To pipe thee Pan's sweet music; for thy power Is equally in the symbol and the deed. Since both possess their own immortal dower. And are of immortaUty the seed ! THE POET'S ART WHAT sculptor can through carven forms present The mighty pageantries that throng his heart ? There is a rigid limit to his art. Whether in marble bust or monument. The poet, through divine transfigurement 0£ thought, within the purlieus of the mart. Or when in soHtude he plays his part. Can make his songs express his soul's intent. The passionate, the sorrowful, the gay; The multitudinous forms that but abide The fleeting presence of the gaudy day. To him is their creation not denied. His is the Art that will outlast decay When all the other forms of art have died. 22 A PURE WOMAN WHEN grace in motion and in dress Assists with manners to express More perfectly her "loveliness : When diffidence, not indiscreet. Makes still more graceful and complete Her radiant womanhood so sweet: When kindness in her every look Shows purely limpid as a brook. Whose meaning cannot be mistook: And something nobler, undefined. Like fragrance in a flower enshrined. Reveals the virtue of her mind: Not too severe to banish grace. Not too divine for any place. Though love illumes her beauteous face: Whose consciousness is not too pure To suffer sorrow, or endure Whatever comes through love or lure: Who seeks in gladness unalloyed The fruit which leaves the lips uncloyed. Whereby true life may be, enjoyed: Who finds in motherhood reward. Reveres her husband as her lord. And shrines what gifts the years afford: Leaves commonplaces pass away. And deems one perfect flower to-day Can compensate for all decay: Measures not mercy meted out By sad delinquencies of doubt. But is divinely still devout: Leaves piety to prelates paid Who treat tradition as a trade. 23 A Pure Whilst true religion grows decayed: Woman Leaves wealth, fame, glory pass aside. And only will by truth abide. Pure Womanhood personified: Clasps her young children to her knee And, whatsoever gods may be. Teaches them truth and purity: Yet not indifferent to the ways In which the Lord of Ancient Days Affliction on the spirit lays: But strong in purpose to bestow A rose for every thorn of woe Makes all life's burdens lighter grow: Yet mourns in silence at the doom Of maidens trodden in their bloom With all their exquisite perfume: Though cloistered in her heart's recess May be the tender consciousness Of one ineiFable caress. One rapturous moment, when a kiss Brought, O what dreams of love and bliss I But could not lead her soul amiss. Yet left her chastened in desire: Purification as by fire Prepared her for the saintly choir. Whose every mortal hour of life In sorrow, poverty, or strife. Reveals the consecrated wife: Reveals the motherhood benign Whose faith and virtue are a sign For all nobility divine: Whose words are precious and whose will Seeks first and lastly to fulfill The duties she abides by still: Who passes in the paths of men 24 Beyond, yet not above them, when A Pure They seek divinity again: Woman Maker of nations and of deeds. Though she transcends them and precedes. An angel clothed in w^oman's weeds: The first in charity, the first To quench the fiery lips that thirst. To bless what evil hearts have cursed: Day after day her loving task To ever give and never ask. Humility her only mask: Whose dilty, both to God and man. Constrains her to do all she can To be life's pure Samaritan: And on the field or in the mart Offers the homage of her heart To Valor, Wisdom, and to Art: No crown of gold she cannot waive Acceptance of, like Christ, to save Each sinner and each passion's slave: No life so mean, no heart so base. No soul so fettered to its place. But she is fain to give it grace; Even as Magdalene made sweet Her sin, by kneeling at the feet Of life's divinest Paraclete: Not weak in being overfond. Since holy is for her the bond That links her to the life beyond: ^ Who then would doubt that in her eyes. Wherein the spirit's luster lies. Would shine the light of Paradise: That such a Woman in her worth Would far surpass all titled birth. And seem a saint upon the earth! 25 TWO GIFTS AS in the sun is centered fire. As splendor in the stars above; As music centered in a lyre. As in the soul is centered love: As precious jewels in the sea. As in the blossoms fragrance sv^eet. So in this gift of mine to thee Is centered all my heart complete. As from the swallow comes the song. As from desire comes forth delight; And from the day that tarrieth long The rich nepenthe of the night: As blissful balm to those who dream Pure love upon their bosom lay. To glorify and to redeem. Thy gift has come to me to-day! OUR FLAG OLET our bravest bring it Where'er the fates allot; Let every patriot sing it. In every hallowed spot; Our Flag! — No man must shame it. No nation shall defame it, 'Tis ours; as ours we claim it. By our best blood begot. On many a field of glory. Our Flag Through many a battle borne. Its stars have blazed their story Though all its stripes were torn. With heroes its defender It never v^ill surrender. Its immemorial splendor. Herald of Freedom's morn. O see it brightly gleaming! O see it grandly w^ave! Its glory still redeeming Each fallen hero's grave, — The symbol of a Nation Whose mightiest exultation Is in the Declaration Its banner-bearers gave. For those who died to save it Let it be now unfurled; And where we choose to wave it We choose against the world! Never let deed disgrace it Wherever we may place it; Against who would debase it Be stern defiance hurled. Still make it our endeavor. On every land and sea. That it shall be forever The Flag of Liberty! For this we have enshrined it. For Freedom marched behind it; So let the ages find it. Wherever man is free! 27 FAITH AND LOVE WHAT is faith but a star ? What is love but a sun ? Man's soul seeketh far. Yet the quest is not won. None richer, more great Than these, Jesus saith: If God means not fate — If life means not death! WRITTEN IN A COPY OF *