XI.
If audible utterance then was mine
I know not; but my spirit cried
To her who from the far confine
Of bliss had wander'd to my side —
" O, earliest, latest, only love,
Forgive the heart where thou wast throned,
Its lapses from the life above,
Thy better influence disown'd!
XII.
" Forgive me for the scoffer's taunt,
The worldling's greed of wealth and power,
Or mean supremacies that vaunt
Their pageant state, their transient hour;
Forgive the doubt of human worth, —
How could he doubt, who knew thine own? —
Forgive the will that found in earth
The immortal spirit's goal and zone.
XIII.
" Lo, here at thy dear feet I fling
This sordid self — again aspire,
Again count love a holy thing,
And duty dearer than desire;
And doing good in humble ways
A joy beyond the reach of fame,
And right more blest with God to praise
Than wrong with all the world's acclaim! "
XIV.
The vision waned; I gained the steep;
The moonlit hamlet smiled below;
A path of splendour cross'd the deep;
From far I caught its musing flow.
With chasten'd heart, and self-accused,
I bless'd Him who, in forms of sense,
Or grand or lovely, has infused
For man redeeming influence.
XV.
For still, as taught bard's earliest lays,
A spirit-life in Nature dwells,
And mystic power the soul doth raise
When sunset fades or ocean swells;
And tender tones from stream and grove
With life's pathetic memories blend,
And lift the heart through human love
To Him who is love's source and end.
If audible utterance then was mine
I know not; but my spirit cried
To her who from the far confine
Of bliss had wander'd to my side —
" O, earliest, latest, only love,
Forgive the heart where thou wast throned,
Its lapses from the life above,
Thy better influence disown'd!
XII.
" Forgive me for the scoffer's taunt,
The worldling's greed of wealth and power,
Or mean supremacies that vaunt
Their pageant state, their transient hour;
Forgive the doubt of human worth, —
How could he doubt, who knew thine own? —
Forgive the will that found in earth
The immortal spirit's goal and zone.
XIII.
" Lo, here at thy dear feet I fling
This sordid self — again aspire,
Again count love a holy thing,
And duty dearer than desire;
And doing good in humble ways
A joy beyond the reach of fame,
And right more blest with God to praise
Than wrong with all the world's acclaim! "
XIV.
The vision waned; I gained the steep;
The moonlit hamlet smiled below;
A path of splendour cross'd the deep;
From far I caught its musing flow.
With chasten'd heart, and self-accused,
I bless'd Him who, in forms of sense,
Or grand or lovely, has infused
For man redeeming influence.
XV.
For still, as taught bard's earliest lays,
A spirit-life in Nature dwells,
And mystic power the soul doth raise
When sunset fades or ocean swells;
And tender tones from stream and grove
With life's pathetic memories blend,
And lift the heart through human love
To Him who is love's source and end.
Reviews
No reviews yet.