THREE PICTURES.

UUPON the threshold of his guarded homeStands Love the child.A thousand roses bloom above his headWith rain of dewy petals white and red;All fair and joyous things themselves arrayTo deck and soften for dear Love the way.He stands where often he has stood before;But now his face is pale, his eyes all wild,A strange and boding tread has caught his ear,An awful, hovering shape sweeps into view,And all his soul is rent with wrath and fear—What can Love do?Poor Love! brave Love! he nerves his feeble arm,He grasps his bow;The dreadful guest has seized the rainbow wings.In vain Love strives with tears and shudderings,In vain he lifts appealing eyes of prayer;There is no pity or relenting there.No power has Love to deprecate or charm,Vain are his puny wiles against this foe;The roses wither in the icy breathWhich eddies the defenceless portals through,And, brushing Love aside, in passes Death—What can Love do?

UUPON the threshold of his guarded homeStands Love the child.A thousand roses bloom above his headWith rain of dewy petals white and red;All fair and joyous things themselves arrayTo deck and soften for dear Love the way.He stands where often he has stood before;But now his face is pale, his eyes all wild,A strange and boding tread has caught his ear,An awful, hovering shape sweeps into view,And all his soul is rent with wrath and fear—What can Love do?Poor Love! brave Love! he nerves his feeble arm,He grasps his bow;The dreadful guest has seized the rainbow wings.In vain Love strives with tears and shudderings,In vain he lifts appealing eyes of prayer;There is no pity or relenting there.No power has Love to deprecate or charm,Vain are his puny wiles against this foe;The roses wither in the icy breathWhich eddies the defenceless portals through,And, brushing Love aside, in passes Death—What can Love do?

UUPON the threshold of his guarded homeStands Love the child.A thousand roses bloom above his headWith rain of dewy petals white and red;All fair and joyous things themselves arrayTo deck and soften for dear Love the way.He stands where often he has stood before;But now his face is pale, his eyes all wild,A strange and boding tread has caught his ear,An awful, hovering shape sweeps into view,And all his soul is rent with wrath and fear—What can Love do?

U

UPON the threshold of his guarded home

Stands Love the child.

A thousand roses bloom above his head

With rain of dewy petals white and red;

All fair and joyous things themselves array

To deck and soften for dear Love the way.

He stands where often he has stood before;

But now his face is pale, his eyes all wild,

A strange and boding tread has caught his ear,

An awful, hovering shape sweeps into view,

And all his soul is rent with wrath and fear—

What can Love do?

Poor Love! brave Love! he nerves his feeble arm,He grasps his bow;The dreadful guest has seized the rainbow wings.In vain Love strives with tears and shudderings,In vain he lifts appealing eyes of prayer;There is no pity or relenting there.No power has Love to deprecate or charm,Vain are his puny wiles against this foe;The roses wither in the icy breathWhich eddies the defenceless portals through,And, brushing Love aside, in passes Death—What can Love do?

Poor Love! brave Love! he nerves his feeble arm,

He grasps his bow;

The dreadful guest has seized the rainbow wings.

In vain Love strives with tears and shudderings,

In vain he lifts appealing eyes of prayer;

There is no pity or relenting there.

No power has Love to deprecate or charm,

Vain are his puny wiles against this foe;

The roses wither in the icy breath

Which eddies the defenceless portals through,

And, brushing Love aside, in passes Death—

What can Love do?

Theway is steep, and hard to tread, and drear;Piercing and bleak the icy atmosphere.My feet are bruised and bleeding, and my eyesCan only with dim questionings seek the skies.How could I walk a step without thine aid?How face the awful silence unafraid?How bear the star-rays and the moon-glance cold?Loose not thine hold!Earth and its kindly ways seem very far,And yet the shining skies no nearer are;Except for thee, dear Love, I could not goOver the hard rocks, the untrodden snow,But had sat down content with lower things,With scanty crumbs and waning water-springs,—A wingèd thing whose wings might not unfold:Loose not thine hold!Loose not thine hold! let me feel all the whileThe quickening impulse of thy tender smileLuring me on, and catch, as if in trance,The lovely reverence of thy downward glance,The pity and the splendor of thy face,The recognition like a soft embrace:Until my feet shall tread the streets of gold,Loose not thy hold!

Theway is steep, and hard to tread, and drear;Piercing and bleak the icy atmosphere.My feet are bruised and bleeding, and my eyesCan only with dim questionings seek the skies.How could I walk a step without thine aid?How face the awful silence unafraid?How bear the star-rays and the moon-glance cold?Loose not thine hold!Earth and its kindly ways seem very far,And yet the shining skies no nearer are;Except for thee, dear Love, I could not goOver the hard rocks, the untrodden snow,But had sat down content with lower things,With scanty crumbs and waning water-springs,—A wingèd thing whose wings might not unfold:Loose not thine hold!Loose not thine hold! let me feel all the whileThe quickening impulse of thy tender smileLuring me on, and catch, as if in trance,The lovely reverence of thy downward glance,The pity and the splendor of thy face,The recognition like a soft embrace:Until my feet shall tread the streets of gold,Loose not thy hold!

Theway is steep, and hard to tread, and drear;Piercing and bleak the icy atmosphere.My feet are bruised and bleeding, and my eyesCan only with dim questionings seek the skies.How could I walk a step without thine aid?How face the awful silence unafraid?How bear the star-rays and the moon-glance cold?Loose not thine hold!

Theway is steep, and hard to tread, and drear;

Piercing and bleak the icy atmosphere.

My feet are bruised and bleeding, and my eyes

Can only with dim questionings seek the skies.

How could I walk a step without thine aid?

How face the awful silence unafraid?

How bear the star-rays and the moon-glance cold?

Loose not thine hold!

Earth and its kindly ways seem very far,And yet the shining skies no nearer are;Except for thee, dear Love, I could not goOver the hard rocks, the untrodden snow,But had sat down content with lower things,With scanty crumbs and waning water-springs,—A wingèd thing whose wings might not unfold:Loose not thine hold!

Earth and its kindly ways seem very far,

And yet the shining skies no nearer are;

Except for thee, dear Love, I could not go

Over the hard rocks, the untrodden snow,

But had sat down content with lower things,

With scanty crumbs and waning water-springs,—

A wingèd thing whose wings might not unfold:

Loose not thine hold!

Loose not thine hold! let me feel all the whileThe quickening impulse of thy tender smileLuring me on, and catch, as if in trance,The lovely reverence of thy downward glance,The pity and the splendor of thy face,The recognition like a soft embrace:Until my feet shall tread the streets of gold,Loose not thy hold!

Loose not thine hold! let me feel all the while

The quickening impulse of thy tender smile

Luring me on, and catch, as if in trance,

The lovely reverence of thy downward glance,

The pity and the splendor of thy face,

The recognition like a soft embrace:

Until my feet shall tread the streets of gold,

Loose not thy hold!

Themighty blast which sweeps and girdles hellDrives us before it, whither none may tell.No pause, no goal, no time of respite,—well,We are together!Circling forever in a dark abyss,Linked by a fate as wild as passionless,One only thing is left us,—it is this:We are together!

Themighty blast which sweeps and girdles hellDrives us before it, whither none may tell.No pause, no goal, no time of respite,—well,We are together!Circling forever in a dark abyss,Linked by a fate as wild as passionless,One only thing is left us,—it is this:We are together!

Themighty blast which sweeps and girdles hellDrives us before it, whither none may tell.No pause, no goal, no time of respite,—well,We are together!

Themighty blast which sweeps and girdles hell

Drives us before it, whither none may tell.

No pause, no goal, no time of respite,—well,

We are together!

Circling forever in a dark abyss,Linked by a fate as wild as passionless,One only thing is left us,—it is this:We are together!

Circling forever in a dark abyss,

Linked by a fate as wild as passionless,

One only thing is left us,—it is this:

We are together!


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