A Few More Verses. Susan Coolidge. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Susan Coolidge
Издательство: Bookwire
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066137762
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world is strong, the waves are wide,

      But my good-will is stronger still,

      My love, than wind or tide.

      These sentinels which Fate has set

      To bar and hold me here

      I make my errand-men, to get

      A message to thine ear.

      The winds shall waft, the waters bear,

      And spite of seas I, when I please,

      Can reach thee everywhere.

      Prayers are like birds to find the way;

      Thoughts have a swifter flight;

      And mine stream forth to thee all day,

      Nor stop to rest by night.

      Like silent angels at thy side

      They stand unseen, they bend and lean,

      They bless and warn and guide.

      There is no near, there is no far,

      There is no loss or change,

      To love which, like a fixèd star,

      Abideth in one range,

      And shines, and shines, with quenchless eyes,

      And sends long rays in many ways

      To lighten distant skies.

      Where sight is not, faith brighter burns;

      So faithfully I wait,

      Secure that loyal loving earns

      Its guerdon soon or late—

      Secure, though lacking word or sign,

      That thy true thought keeps as it ought

      Tryst with each thought of mine.

       Table of Contents

      EVERY day is a fresh beginning,

      Every morn is the world made new.

      You who are weary of sorrow and sinning,

      Here is a beautiful hope for you—

      A hope for me and a hope for you.

      All the past things are past and over;

      The tasks are done and the tears are shed.

      Yesterday’s errors let yesterday cover;

      Yesterday’s wounds, which smarted and bled,

      Are healed with the healing which night has shed.

      Yesterday now is a part of forever,

      Bound up in a sheaf, which God holds tight,

      With glad days, and sad days, and bad days, which never

      Shall visit us more with their bloom and their blight,

      Their fulness of sunshine or sorrowful night.

      Let them go, since we cannot re-live them,

      Cannot undo and cannot atone;

      God in his mercy receive, forgive them!

      Only the new days are our own;

      To-day is ours, and to-day alone.

      Here are the skies all burnished brightly,

      Here is the spent earth all re-born,

      Here are the tired limbs springing lightly

      To face the sun and to share with the morn

      In the chrism of dew and the cool of dawn.

      Every day is a fresh beginning;

      Listen, my soul, to the glad refrain,

      And, spite of old sorrow and older sinning,

      And puzzles forecasted and possible pain,

      Take heart with the day, and begin again.

       Table of Contents

      TO have touched Heaven and failed to enter in!

      Ah, Elsa, prone upon the lonely shore,

      Watching the swan-wings beat along the blue,

      Watching the glimmer of the silver mail,

      Like flash of foam, till all are lost to view—

      What may thy sorrow or thy watch avail?

      He cometh nevermore.

      All gone the new hope of thy yesterday—

      The tender gaze and strong, like dewy fire,

      The gracious form with airs of Heaven bedight,

      The love that warmed thy being like a sun:—

      Thou hadst thy choice of noonday or of night;

      Now the swart shadows gather, one by one,

      To give thee thy desire!

      To every life one heavenly chance befalls;

      To every soul a moment, big with fate,

      When, grown importunate with need and fear,

      It cries for help, and lo! from close at hand,

      The voice Celestial answers, “I am here!”

      Oh, blessed souls, made wise to understand,

      Made bravely glad to wait!

      But thou, pale watcher on the lonely shore,

      Where the surf thunders, and the foam-bells fly,

      Is there no place for penitence and pain,

      No saving grace in thy all-piteous rue?

      Will the bright vision never come again?

      Alas, the swan-wings vanish in the blue,

      There cometh no reply!

       Table of Contents

      ONE stitch dropped as the weaver drove

      His nimble shuttle to and fro,

      In and out, beneath, above,

      Till the pattern seemed to bud and grow

      As if the fairies had helping been—

      One small stitch which could scarce be seen.

      But the one stitch dropped pulled the next stitch out,

      And a weak place grew in the fabric stout;

      And the perfect pattern was marred for aye

      By the one small stitch that was dropped that day.

      One small life in God’s great plan,

      How futile it seems as the ages roll,

      Do what it may, or strive how it can

      To