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In our embraces we again enfold her;

  She will not be a child;



But a fair maiden; in her Father's mansion;

  Clothed with celestial grace;

And beautiful with all the soul's expansion

  Shall we behold her face。



And though at times impetuous with emotion

  And anguish long suppressed;

The swelling heart heaves moaning like the ocean;

  That cannot be at rest;



We will be patient; and assuage the feeling

  We may not wholly stay;

By silence sanctifying; not concealing;

  The grief that must have way。







THE BUILDERS



All are architects of Fate;

  Working in these walls of Time;

Some with massive deeds and great;

  Some with ornaments of rhyme。



Nothing useless is; or low;

  Each thing in its place is best;

And what seems but idle show

  Strengthens and supports the rest。



For the structure that we raise;

  Time is with materials filled;

Our to…days and yesterdays

  Are the blocks with which we build。



Truly shape and fashion these;

  Leave no yawning gaps between;

Think not; because no man sees;

  Such things will remain unseen。



In the elder days of Art;

  Builders wrought with greatest care

Each minute and unseen part;

  For the Gods see everywhere。



Let us do our work as well;

  Both the unseen and the seen;

Make the house; where Gods may dwell;

  Beautiful; entire; and clean。



Else our lives are incomplete;

  Standing in these walls of Time;

Broken stairways; where the feet

  Stumble as they seek to climb。



Build to…day; then; strong and sure;

  With a firm and ample base;

And ascending and secure

  Shall to…morrow find its place。



Thus alone can we attain

  To those turrets; where the eye

Sees the world as one vast plain;

  And one boundless reach of sky。







SAND OF THE DESERT IN AN HOUR…GLASS



A handful of red sand; from the hot clime

  Of Arab deserts brought;

Within this glass becomes the spy of Time;

  The minister of Thought。



How many weary centuries has it been

  About those deserts blown!

How many strange vicissitudes has seen;

  How many histories known!



Perhaps the camels of the Ishmaelite

  Trampled and passed it o'er;

When into Egypt from the patriarch's sight

  His favorite son they bore。



Perhaps the feet of Moses; burnt and bare;

  Crushed it beneath their tread;

Or Pharaoh's flashing wheels into the air

  Scattered it as they sped;



Or Mary; with the Christ of Nazareth

  Held close in her caress;

Whose pilgrimage of hope and love and faith

  Illumed the wilderness;



Or anchorites beneath Engaddi's palms

  Pacing the Dead Sea beach;

And singing slow their old Armenian psalms

  In half…articulate speech;



Or caravans; that from Bassora's gate

  With westward steps depart;

Or Mecca's pilgrims; confident of Fate;

  And resolute in heart!



These have passed over it; or may have passed!

  Now in this crystal tower

Imprisoned by some curious hand at last;

  It counts the passing hour;



And as I gaze; these narrow walls expand;

  Before my dreamy eye

Stretches the desert with its shifting sand;

  Its unimpeded sky。



And borne aloft by the sustaining blast;

  This little golden thread

Dilates into a column high and vast;

  A form of fear and dread。



And onward; and across the setting sun;

  Across the boundless plain;

The column and its broader shadow run;

  Till thought pursues in vain。



The vision vanishes!  These walls again

  Shut out the lurid sun;

Shut out the hot; immeasurable plain;

  The half…hour's sand is run!







THE OPEN WINDOW



The old house by the lindens

  Stood silent in the shade;

And on the gravelled pathway

  The light and shadow played。



I saw the nursery windows

  Wide open to the air;

But the faces of the children;

  They were no longer there。



The large Newfoundland house…dog

  Was standing by the door;

He looked for his little playmates;

  Who would return no more。



They walked not under the lindens;

  They played not in the hall;

But shadow; and silence; and sadness

  Were hanging over all。



The birds sang in the branches;

  With sweet; familiar tone;

But the voices of the children

  Will be heard in dreams alone!



And the boy that walked beside me;

  He could not understand

Why closer in mine; ah! closer;

  I pressed his warm; soft hand!







KING WITLAF'S DRINKING…HORN



Witlaf; a king of the Saxons;

  Ere yet his last he breathed;

To the merry monks of Croyland

  His drinking…horn bequeathed;



That; whenever they sat at their revels;

  And drank from the golden bowl;

They might remember the donor;

  And breathe a prayer for his soul。



So sat they once at Christmas;

  And bade the goblet pass;

In their beards the red wine glistened

  Like dew…drops in the grass。



They drank to the soul of Witlaf;

  They drank to Christ the Lord;

And to each of the Twelve Apostles;

  Who had preached his holy word。



They drank to the Saints and Martyrs

  Of the dismal days of yore;

And as soon as the horn was empty

  They remembered one Saint more。



And the reader droned from the pulpit

  Like the murmur of many bees;

The legend of good Saint Guthlac;

  And Saint Basil's homilies;



Till the great bells of the convent;

  From their prison in the tower;

Guthlac and Bartholomaeus;

  Proclaimed the midnight hour。



And the Yule…log cracked in the chimney;

  And the Abbot bowed his head;

And the flamelets flapped and flickered;

  But the Abbot was stark and dead。



Yet still in his pallid fingers

  He clutched the golden bowl;

In which; like a pearl dissolving;

  Had sunk and dissolved his soul。



But not for this their revels

  The jovial monks forbore;

For they cried; 〃Fill high the goblet!

  We must drink to one Saint more!〃







GASPAR BECERRA



By his evening fire the artist

  Pondered o'er his secret shame;

Baffled; weary; and disheartened;

  Still he mused; and dreamed of fame。



'T was an image of the Virgin

  That had tasked his utmost skill;

But; alas! his fair ideal

  Vanished and escaped him still。



From a distant Eastern island

  Had the precious wood been brought

Day and night the anxious master

  At his toil untiring wrought;



Till; discouraged and desponding;

  Sat he now in shadows deep;

And the day's humiliation

  Found oblivion in sleep。



Then a voice cried; 〃Rise; O master!

  From the burning brand of oak

Shape the thought that stirs within thee!〃

  And the startled artist woke;



Woke; and from the smoking embers

  Seized and quenched the glowing wood;

And therefrom he carved an image;

  And he saw that it was good。



O thou sculptor; painter; poet!

  Take this lesson to thy heart:

That is best which lieth nearest;

  Shape from that thy work of art。





PEGASUS IN POUND



Once into a quiet village;

  Without haste and without heed;

In the golden prime of morning;

  Strayed the poet's winged steed。



It was Autumn; and incessant

  Piped the quails from shocks and sheaves;

And; like living coals; the apples

  Burned among the withering leaves。



Loud the clamorous bell was ringing

  From its belfry gaunt and grim;

'T was the daily call to labor;

  Not a triumph meant for him。



Not the less he saw the landscape;

  In its gleaming vapor veiled;

Not the less he breathed the odors

  That the dying leaves exhaled。



Thus; upon the village common;

  By the school…boys he was found;

And the wise men; in their wisdom;

  Put him straightway into pound。



Then the sombre village crier;

  Ringing loud his brazen bell;

Wandered down the street proclaiming

  There was an estray to sell。



And the curious country people;

  Rich and poor; and young and old;

Came in haste to see this wondrous

  Winged steed; with mane of gold。



Thus the day passed; and the evening

  Fell; with vapors cold and dim;

But it brought no food nor shelter;

  Brought no straw nor stall; for him。



Patiently; and still expectant;

  Looked he through the wooden bars;

Saw the moon rise o'er the landscape;

  Saw the tranquil; patient stars;



Till at length the bell at midnight

  Sounded from its dark abode;

And; from out a neighboring farm…yard

  Loud the cock Alectryon crowed。



Then; with nostrils wide distended;

  Breaking from his iron chain;

And unfolding far his pinions;

  To those stars he soared again。



On the morrow; when the village

  Woke to all its toil and care;

Lo! the strange steed had departed;

  And they knew not when nor where。



But they found; upon the greensward

  Where his straggling hoofs had trod;

Pure and bright; a fountain flowing

  From the hoof…marks in the sod。



From that hour; t

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