FAITH is a higher faculty than reason, Though of the brightest power of revelation, As the snow-peaked mountain rises o'er The lightning, and applies itself to heaven, We know in daytime there are stars about us Just as at night, and name them what and where By sight of science; so by faith we know, Although we may not see them till our night, That spirits are about us, and believe, That to a spirit's eye all heaven may be As full of angels as a beam of light
Of motes. As spiritual, it shows all Classes of life, perhaps above our kind, Known to tradition, reason, or God's word. As earthly, it imbodies most the life
Of youth; its powers, its aims, its deeds, its failings; And as a sketch of world-life, it begins
And ends, and rightly, in heaven, and with God; While heaven is also in the midst thereof. God, or all good, the evil of the world, And man, wherein are both, are each display'd; The mortal is the model of all men. The foibles, follies, trials, sufferings Of a young, hot, un-world-school'd heart, that has Had its own way in life, and wherein all May see some likeness of their own, 'tis these Attract, unite, and, sunlike, concentrate The ever-moving system of our feeling; Like life, too, as a whole, it has a moral, And, as in life, each scene too has its moral, A scene for every year of his young life, Shining upon it, like the quiet moon, Illustrating the obscure, unequal earth: And though these scenes may seem to careless eyes Irregular and rough and unconnected, Like to the stones at Stonehenge, still a use, A meaning, and a purpose may be mark'd Among them of a temple rear'd to God,-- It has a plan, no plot; and life has none.
GREAT THOUGHTS.
WHO can mistake great thoughts? They seize upon the mind; arrest, and search, And shake it; bow the tall soul as by wind; Rush over it like rivers over reeds, Which quaver in the current; turn us cold, And pale, and voiceless; leaving in the brain A rocking and a ringing,—glorious, But momentary; madness might it last,
And close the soul with Heaven as with a seal.
A LETTER. WHEN he hath had
A letter from his lady dear, he bless'd The paper that her hand had travell'd over, And her eye look'd on, and would think he saw Gleams of that light she lavish'd from her eyes, Wandering amid the words of love she'd traced Like glowworms among beds of flowers. He seem'd To bear with being but because she loved him; She was the sheath wherein his soul had rest, As hath a sword from war.
NIGHT brings out stars as sorrow shows us truths; Though many, yet they help not; bright, they light not.
They are too late to serve us; and sad things Are aye too true. We never see the stars Till we can see naught but them. So with truth. And yet if one would look down a deep well, Even at noon, we might see these same stars, Far fairer than the blinding blue: the truth Stars in the water like a dark bright eye,
But there are other eyes men better love Than truth's, for when we have her she is so cold And proud, we know not what to do with her... Sometimes the thought comes swiftening over us, Like a small bird winging the still blue air, And then again at other times it rises
Slow, like a cloud which scales the skies all breathless,
And just o'erhead lets itself down on us. Sometimes we feel the wish across the mind Rush, like a rocket roaring up the sky, That we should join with God and give the world The go-by; but the world meantime turns round, And peeps us in the face; the wanton world; We feel it gently pressing down our arm, The arm we raised to do for truth such wonders; We feel it softly bearing on our side;
We feel it touch and thrill us through the body; And we are fools, and there's an end of us.
WE live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths;
In feelings, not in figures on a dial.
We should count time by heart-throbs. He most
Who thinks most; feels the noblest; acts the best. And he whose heart beats quickest lives the longest: Lives in one hour more than in years do some Whose fat blood sleeps as it slips along their veins. Life is but a means unto an end; that end, Beginning, mean, and end to all things-God. The dead have all the glory of the world.
THE bard must have a kind, courageous heart, And natural chivalry to aid the weak. He must believe the best of every thing; Love all below, and worship all above. All animals are living hieroglyphs. The dashing dog, and stealthy-stepping cat, Hawk, bull, and all that breathe, mean something
To the true eye than their shapes show; for all Were made in love, and made to be beloved. Thus must he think as to earth's lower life, Who seeks to win the world to thought and love, As doth the bard, whose habit is all kindness To every thing.
THIS gentle, meditative poet, whose School of the Heart, and other poems, were published at Cambridge, in 1835, is a follower of WORDSWORTH. His School of the Heart is an "Excursion" in a minor key. It is in a vein of high religious feeling and attachment to the English church, of which Mr. ALFORD is a clergyman. It is such poetry as GOLD
A CHURCHYARD COLLOQUY.
STAND by me here, beloved, where thick crowd On either side the path the headstones white: How wonderful is death-how passing thought That nearer than yon glorious group of hills, Aye, but a scanty foot or two beneath This pleasant sunny mound, corruption teems;And that one sight of that which is so near Could turn the current of our joyful thoughts, Which now not e'en disturbs them.
Not, like the rest, full of the dazzling noon, But sober brown-round which the ivy twines Its searching tendril, and the yew-tree shade Just covers the short grave. He mourn'd not ill Who graved the simple plate without a name: "This grave's a cradle, where an infant lyes, Rockt faste asleepe with death's sad lullabyes." And yet methinks he did not care to wrong The genius of the place, when he wrote "sad :" The chime of hourly clock,-the mountain stream That sends up ever to thy resting-place Its gush of many voices-and the crow Of matin cock, faint it may be but shrill, From elm-embosom'd farms among the dells,- These, little slumberer, are thy lullabyes: Who would not sleep a sweet and peaceful sleep, Thus husht and sung to with all pleasant sounds? And I can stand beside thy cradle, child, And see yon belt of clouds in silent pomp Midway the mountain sailing slowly on, Whose beaconed top peers over on the vale ;- And upward narrowing in thick-timbered dells Dark solemn coombs, with wooded buttresses Propping his mighty weight-each with its stream, Now leaping sportfully from crag to crag, Now smooth'd in clear black pools; then in the vales, Through lanes of bowering foliage glittering on, By cots and farms and quiet villages
And meadows brightest green. Who would not sleep, Rock'd in so fair a cradle?
That one word "death," comes over my sick brain Wrapping my vision in a sudden swoon: Blotting the gorgeous pomp of sun and shade, Mountain and wooded cliff, and sparkling stream,
SMITH'S pure-hearted vicar would not have objected to. The dedication of these volumes is: "To the playmate of his childhood, the joy of his youth, and the dear companion of his cares and studies, these poems are dedicated by her affectionate husband." Mr. ALFORD has since written The Abbot of Machelnaye, published by Pickering.
In a thick dazzling darkness.-Who art thou Under this hillock on the mountain side? I love the like of thee with a deep love, And therefore call'd thee dear-thee who art now A handful of dull earth. No lullabyes Hearest thou now, be they or sweet or sad— Not revelry of streams, nor pomp of clouds; Not the blue top of mountain-nor the woods That clothe the steeps, have any joy for thee. Go to, then-tell me not of balmiest rest In fairest cradle-for I never felt One half so keenly as I feel it now, That not the promise of the sweetest sleep Can make me smile on death. Our days and years Pass onward-and the mighty of old time Have put their glory by, and laid them down Undrest of all the attributes they wore, In the dark sepulchre-strange preference To fly from beds of down and softest strains Of timbrel and of pipe, to the cold earth, The silent chamber of unknown decay : To yield the delicate flesh, so loved of late By the informing spirit, to the maw Of unrelenting waste; to go abroad From the sweet prison of this moulded clay, Into the pathless air, among the vast And unnamed multitude of trembling stars; Strange journey, to attempt the void unknown From whence no news returns; and cast the freight Of nicely treasured life at once away.
Come, let us talk of death-and sweetly play With his black locks, and listen for a while To the lone music of the passing wind In the rank grass that waves above his bed. Is it not wonderful, the darkest day Of all the days of life-the hardest wrench That tries the coward sense, should mix itself In all our gentlest and most joyous moods, A not unwelcome visitant-that thought, In her quaint wanderings, may not reach a spot Of lavish beauty, but the spectre form Meets her with greeting, and she gives herself To his mysterious converse? I have roam'd Through many mazes of unregistered And undetermined fancy; and I know That when the air grows balmy to my fee! And rarer light falls on me, and sweet sounds
Dance tremulously round my captive ears, I soon shall stumble on some mounded grave; And ever of the thoughts that stay with me, (There are that flit away) the pleasantest Is hand in hand with death: and my bright hopes, Like the strange colours of divided light, Fade into pale uncertain violet
About some hallow'd precinct. Can it be That there are blessed memories join'd with death, Of those who parted peacefully, and words That cling about our hearts, utter'd between The day and darkness, in Life's twilight time?
BEFORE the day the gleaming dawn doth flee:- All yesternight I had a dreary dream ; Methought I walk'd in desert Academe Among fallen pillars-and there came to me, All in a dim half-twilight silently,
A very sad old man-his eyes were red With over-weeping-and he cried and said "The light hath risen but shineth not on me." Beautiful Athens, all thy loveliness
Is like the scarce remember'd burst of spring When now the summer in her party dress Hath clothed the woods, and fill'd each living thing With ripest joy-because upon our time Hath risen the noon, and thou wert in thy prime.
THE Sweetest flower that ever saw the light, The smoothest stream that ever wander'd by, The fairest star upon the brow of night, Joying and sparkling from his sphere on high, The softest glances of the stockdove's eye, The lily pure, the marybud gold-bright, The gush of song that floodeth all the sky From the dear flutterer mounted out of sight,- Are not so pleasure-stirring to the thought, Not to the wounded soul so full of balm,
As one frail glimpse, by painful straining caught Along the past's deep mist-enfolded calm, Of that sweet face, not visibly defined, But rising clearly on the inner mind.
SLOWLY and softly let the music go,
As ye wind upwards to the gray church tower; Check the shrill hautboy, let the pipe breathe low- Tread lightly on the pathside daisy flower. For she ye carry was a gentle bud, Loved by the unsunn'd drops of silver dew; Her voice was like the whisper of the wood In prime of even, when the stars are few. Lay her all gently in the flowerful mould, Weep with her one brief hour; then turn away,- Go to hope's prison,-and from out the cold And solitary gratings many a day
Look forth: 'tis said the world is growing old,- And streaks of orient light in Time's horizon play.
"THE MASTER IS COME, AND CALLETH FOR THEE."
RISE, said the Master, come unto the feast :-- She heard the call, and rose with willing feet: But thinking it not otherwise than meet For such a bidding to put on her best, She is gone from us for a few short hours Into her bridal closet, there to wait For the unfolding of the palace gate That gives her entrance to the blissful bowers. We have not seen her yet; though we have been Full often to her chamber door, and oft Have listen'd underneath the postern green, And laid fresh flowers, and whisper'd short and soft: But she hath made no answer, and the day From the clear west is fading fast away.
OFT have I listen'd to a voice that spake Of cold and dull realities of life.
Deem we not thus of life: for we may fetch Light from a hidden glory, which shall clothe The meanest thing that is with hues of heaven. If thence we draw not glory, all our light Is but a taper in a chamber'd cave, That giveth presence to new gulfs of dark. Our light should be the broad and open day; And as we lose its shining, we shall look Still on the bright and daylight face of things. Is it for nothing that the mighty sun Rises each morning from the Eastern plain Over the meadows fresh with hoary dew? Is it for nothing that the shadowy trees On yonder hill-top, in the summer night Stand darkly out before the golden moon? Is it for nothing that the autumn boughs Hang thick with mellow fruit, what time the swain
Presses the luscious juice, and joyful shouts Rise in the purple twilight, gladdening him Who labour'd late, and homeward wends his way Over the ridgy grounds, and through the mead, Where the mist broods along the fringed stream? Far in the Western sea dim islands float, And lines of mountain coast receive the sun As he sinks downward to his resting-place, Minister'd to by bright and crimson clouds- Is it for nothing that some artist hand Hath wrought together things so beautiful? Noon follows morn, the quiet breezeless noon: And pleasant even, season of sweet sounds
And peaceful sights-and then the wondrous bird
That warbles like an angel, full of love, From copse and hedgerow side pouring abroad Her tide of song into the listening night. Beautiful is the last gleam of the sun Slanted through twining branches: beautiful The birth of the faint stars-first clear and pale The steady-lustred Hesper, like a gem
On the flush'd bosom of the West; and then Some princely fountain of unborrow'd light, Arcturus, or the Dogstar, or the seven That circle without setting round the pole. Is it for nothing at the midnight hour, That solemn silence sways the hemisphere, And ye must listen long before ye hear The cry of beasts, or fall of distant stream, Or breeze among the tree-tops-while the stars Like guardian spirits watch the slumbering earth?
A SPIRITUAL AND WELL-ORDERED MIND
Of some cathedral pile, ranged orderly, Rich tabernacles throng of sainted men, Each in his highday robes magnificent, Some tipp'd with crowns, the church's nursing sires, And some, the hallow'd temple's serving-men, With crosiers deep emboss'd, and comely staves Resting aslant upon their reverend form, Guarding the entrance well; while round the walls, And in the corbels of the massy nave, All circumstances of living child and man And heavenly influence, in parables Of daily passing forms is pictured forth : So all the beautiful and seemly things That crowd the earth, within the humble soul Have place and order due; because there dwells In the inner temple of the holy heart The presence of the spirit form above: There are his tabernacles; there his rites Want not their due performance, nor sweet strains Of heavenly music, nor a daily throng Of worshippers, both those who minister In service fix'd-the mighty principles
And leading governors of thought; and those Who come and go, the troop of fleeting joys- All hopes, all sorrows, all that enter in Through every broad receptacle of sense.
HYMN FOR ALL-SAINTS DAY IN THE MORNING.
STAND UP before your God
You army bold and bright,
Saints, martyrs, and confessors,
In your robes of white;
The church below doth challenge you To an act of praise; Ready with mirth in all the earth
Her matin song to raise.
Stand up before your God
In beautiful array,
Make ready all your instruments
The while we mourn and pray; For we must stay to mourn and pray Some prelude to our song;
The fear of death has clogg'd our breath And our foes are swift and strong.
Are hushed from all alarm,
Out through the grave and gate of death Ye have past into the calm; Your fight is done, your victory won, Through peril, and toil, and blood; Among the slain on the battle plain We buried ye where ye stood. Stand up before your God,
Although we cannot hear The new song he hath taught you With our fleshly ear;
Our bosoms burn that hymn to learn, And from the church below
E'en while we sing, on heavenward wing Some happy souls shall go. Ye stand before your God,
But we press onward still, The soldiers of his army,
The servants of his will: A captive band in foreign land Long ages we have been;
But our dearest theme and our fondest dream Is the home we have not seen.
We soon shall meet our God, The hour is wafting on,
The day-spring from on high hath risen, And the night is spent and gone; The light of earth it had its birth
And it shall have its doom; The sons of earth they are few in birth, But many in the tomb.
I KNOW not how the right may be :- But I give thanks whene'er I see Down in the green slopes of the West Old Glastonbury's tower'd crest.
I know not how the right may be :- But I have oft had joy to see, By play of chance, my road beside, The cross on which the Saviour died. I know not how the right may be :- But I loved once a tall elm tree, Because between its boughs on high That cross was open'd in the sky. I know not how the right may be :- But I have shed strange tears to see, Passing an unknown town at night, In some warm chambers full of light, A mother and two children fair Kneeling with lifted hands at prayer. I know not how it is-my boast Of Reason seems to dwindle down; And my mind seems down-argued most By freed conclusions not her own.
I know not how it is-unless Weakness and strength are near allied; And joys which most the spirit bless Are farthest off from earthly pride.
ELIZA COOK has been a frequent contributor to the English literary periodicals for several years, and her productions have been very generally reprinted in the gazettes of this country, so that her name is nearly as familiar to American readers as those of Mrs. HEMANS and Mrs. NORTON. Her poems are of that class which is most sure to win the popular favour. They have a social character, and portray with simplicity and truth, the kindly
KING Death sped forth in his dreaded power To make the most of his tyrant hour; And the first he took was a white-robed girl, With the orange bloom twined in each glossy curl, Her fond betrothed hung over the bier, Bathing her shroud with the gushing tear: He madly raved, he shriek'd his pain, With frantic speech and burning brain. "There's no joy," cried he, "now my dearest is Take, take me, Death; for I cannot live on!" The sire was robb'd of his eldest born, And he bitterly bled while the branch was torn : Other scions were round, as good and fair, But none seem'd so bright as the breathless heir. My hopes are crush'd," was the father's cry; "Since my darling is lost, I, too, would die." The valued friend was snatch'd away, Bound to another from childhood's day; And the one that was left exclaim'd in despair, "Oh! he sleeps in the tomb-let me follow him there!"
A mother was taken, whose constant love Had nestled her child like a fair young dove; And the heart of that child to the mother had grown, Like the ivy to oak, or the moss to the stone: Nor loud nor wild was the burst of wo, But the tide of anguish ran strong below; And the reft one turn'd from all that was light, From the flowers of day and the stars of night; Breathing where none might hear or see- "Where thou art, my mother, thy child would be." Death smiled as he heard each earnest word:
Nay, nay," said he, "be this work deferr'd; I'll see thee again in a fleeting year, And, if grief and devotion live on sincere, I promise then thou shalt share the rest
Of the being now pluck'd from thy doating breast; Then, if thou cravest the coffin and pall As thou dost this moment, my spear shall fall." And Death fled till Time on his rapid wing Gave the hour that brought back the skeleton king.
affections. They are free, spirited, animated by a generous, joyous feeling, yet feminine, quiet, tranquillizing.
Miss Cook is now about twenty-five years of age. She resides in London. The largest collection of her writings, "Melaia, and other Poems," was published by Tilt, in 1840, and has been reprinted in the present year, by Langley, of New York, in a very elegant edition.
But the lover was ardently wooing again, Kneeling in serfdom, and proud of his chain; He had found an idol to adore, Rarer than that he had worshipp'd before: His step was gay, his laugh was loud, As he led the way for the bridal crowd; And his eyes still kept their joyous ray, Though he went by the grave where his first love "Ha! ha!" shouted Death, "'t is passing clear That I am a guest not wanted here!" The father was seen in his children's games, Kissing their flush'd brows and blessing their names! And his eye grew bright as he mark'd the charms Of the boy at his knee and the girl in his arms: His voice rung out in the merry noise, He was first in all their hopes and joys; He ruled their sports in the setting sun, Nor gave a thought to the missing one. "Are ye ready?" cried Death, as he raised his dart. Nay! nay!" shriek'd the father; "in mercy depart!"
The friend again was quaffing the bowl, Warmly pledging his faith and soul; His bosom cherish'd with glowing pride A stranger form that sat by his side; His hand the hand of that stranger press'd; He praised his song, he echo'd his jest ; And the mirth and wit of that new-found mate Made a blank of the name so prized of late. "See! see!" cried Death, as he hurried past, "How bravely the bonds of friendship last!" But the orphan child! Oh, where was she? With clasping hands and bended knee, All alone on the churchyard's sod, Mingling the names of mother and God. Her dark and sunken eye was hid, Fast weeping beneath the swollen lid; Her sigh was heavy, her forehead was chill, Betraying the wound was unheal'd still; And her smother'd prayer was yet heard to crave A speedy home in the self-same grave. Hers was the love all holy and strong; Hers was the sorrow fervent and long;
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