W. H. MAGEE.
(A friend of early days.)
You saw, my friend, when last we met,Time’s sober reckoning on my face;But neither time nor change of placeCan cause my spirit to forgetOne honest throb, one living traceOf friendship, till life’s sun shall set,—Such friendship as I’ve found in you,—A glory that unites and bindsThe poetry of kindred minds,Forever stedfast, ever true.The years are drifting fast and far;We half-way hear the haunted riverWhose monody is,Never, never!We half-discern the misty barPast which no soul returneth ever;Our lamp is not the morning star.Nor can we of our lot complain;We’ve had of bliss an ample share;We banquet on ambrosial fareAnd nectar wines of heart and brain.No heritage of goods or landsWe owe to an ancestral line;Obedient to the voice divine,We earn our bread with willing hands.No drones nor parasites are we;And hence brave comrade, you and ICan lift our foreheads to the skyAnd plead our lawful right,to be,—To be, enjoy, and sternly tryTo leave the world more fair and freeThan when upon its round we fell,—Two feeble rays that wandered farFrom nebula, or hidden star—Whence? wherefore? whither? who can tell?We only know that we are here,That life is brief and death is sure;That it is noble to endure,And keep the eye of conscience clear.Will love and knowledge ever cureThe evils of this troubled sphere?We look in Nature’s face, and doubtWhether she means us good or ill;We know that she can stab and kill,And blow our taper-joys all out.An angel and a fiend by turns,A grace, a fury,—all we findAs shapings of the human mindIn her strange aspect shines and burns;One moment infinitely kind;The next, a breaking heart she spurns.Her lightnings smite; her arctic breathCongeals the traveller’s blood, and lo,He sinks into a tomb of snow!No prayer can bribe the clutch of death.She lets her savage cyclones loose,She bids her flaming lavas flow,And sudden as a ruffian’s blowGreat cities perish! What excuse?Does God, indeed, ordain it so?Is not the problem more abstruse?If we but mark how finely blendThe foul and fair, the dark and brightThat in this Mother-Sphinx unite,We may believe her still our friend.Excessive beauty floods the sky,And earth is fair through all the year;—In autumn, when the woods are sere,In winter, when the white winds fly,And blow their trumpets far and near,There’s beauty for a loving eye.The sculptor, in long ages past,Enamoured, taxed his glorious artThat he might press his hungry heartTo Nature’s charms, and hold her fast.Like him, we shall not fail to findOn earth, in sky, in air, in sea,Many a dazzling deity,If pure in heart, and great in mind.Then let us live as best we may,And bid our souls ascend, and singLike birds and brooks that greet the spring.Shall we be found less wise than they?Hence, Care, upon thy ebon wing!I’m happy with my friend to-day.
You saw, my friend, when last we met,Time’s sober reckoning on my face;But neither time nor change of placeCan cause my spirit to forgetOne honest throb, one living traceOf friendship, till life’s sun shall set,—Such friendship as I’ve found in you,—A glory that unites and bindsThe poetry of kindred minds,Forever stedfast, ever true.The years are drifting fast and far;We half-way hear the haunted riverWhose monody is,Never, never!We half-discern the misty barPast which no soul returneth ever;Our lamp is not the morning star.Nor can we of our lot complain;We’ve had of bliss an ample share;We banquet on ambrosial fareAnd nectar wines of heart and brain.No heritage of goods or landsWe owe to an ancestral line;Obedient to the voice divine,We earn our bread with willing hands.No drones nor parasites are we;And hence brave comrade, you and ICan lift our foreheads to the skyAnd plead our lawful right,to be,—To be, enjoy, and sternly tryTo leave the world more fair and freeThan when upon its round we fell,—Two feeble rays that wandered farFrom nebula, or hidden star—Whence? wherefore? whither? who can tell?We only know that we are here,That life is brief and death is sure;That it is noble to endure,And keep the eye of conscience clear.Will love and knowledge ever cureThe evils of this troubled sphere?We look in Nature’s face, and doubtWhether she means us good or ill;We know that she can stab and kill,And blow our taper-joys all out.An angel and a fiend by turns,A grace, a fury,—all we findAs shapings of the human mindIn her strange aspect shines and burns;One moment infinitely kind;The next, a breaking heart she spurns.Her lightnings smite; her arctic breathCongeals the traveller’s blood, and lo,He sinks into a tomb of snow!No prayer can bribe the clutch of death.She lets her savage cyclones loose,She bids her flaming lavas flow,And sudden as a ruffian’s blowGreat cities perish! What excuse?Does God, indeed, ordain it so?Is not the problem more abstruse?If we but mark how finely blendThe foul and fair, the dark and brightThat in this Mother-Sphinx unite,We may believe her still our friend.Excessive beauty floods the sky,And earth is fair through all the year;—In autumn, when the woods are sere,In winter, when the white winds fly,And blow their trumpets far and near,There’s beauty for a loving eye.The sculptor, in long ages past,Enamoured, taxed his glorious artThat he might press his hungry heartTo Nature’s charms, and hold her fast.Like him, we shall not fail to findOn earth, in sky, in air, in sea,Many a dazzling deity,If pure in heart, and great in mind.Then let us live as best we may,And bid our souls ascend, and singLike birds and brooks that greet the spring.Shall we be found less wise than they?Hence, Care, upon thy ebon wing!I’m happy with my friend to-day.
You saw, my friend, when last we met,Time’s sober reckoning on my face;But neither time nor change of placeCan cause my spirit to forgetOne honest throb, one living traceOf friendship, till life’s sun shall set,—
Such friendship as I’ve found in you,—A glory that unites and bindsThe poetry of kindred minds,Forever stedfast, ever true.
The years are drifting fast and far;We half-way hear the haunted riverWhose monody is,Never, never!We half-discern the misty barPast which no soul returneth ever;Our lamp is not the morning star.
Nor can we of our lot complain;We’ve had of bliss an ample share;We banquet on ambrosial fareAnd nectar wines of heart and brain.
No heritage of goods or landsWe owe to an ancestral line;Obedient to the voice divine,We earn our bread with willing hands.
No drones nor parasites are we;And hence brave comrade, you and ICan lift our foreheads to the skyAnd plead our lawful right,to be,—To be, enjoy, and sternly tryTo leave the world more fair and free
Than when upon its round we fell,—Two feeble rays that wandered farFrom nebula, or hidden star—Whence? wherefore? whither? who can tell?
We only know that we are here,That life is brief and death is sure;That it is noble to endure,And keep the eye of conscience clear.Will love and knowledge ever cureThe evils of this troubled sphere?
We look in Nature’s face, and doubtWhether she means us good or ill;We know that she can stab and kill,And blow our taper-joys all out.
An angel and a fiend by turns,A grace, a fury,—all we findAs shapings of the human mindIn her strange aspect shines and burns;One moment infinitely kind;The next, a breaking heart she spurns.
Her lightnings smite; her arctic breathCongeals the traveller’s blood, and lo,He sinks into a tomb of snow!No prayer can bribe the clutch of death.
She lets her savage cyclones loose,She bids her flaming lavas flow,And sudden as a ruffian’s blowGreat cities perish! What excuse?Does God, indeed, ordain it so?Is not the problem more abstruse?
If we but mark how finely blendThe foul and fair, the dark and brightThat in this Mother-Sphinx unite,We may believe her still our friend.
Excessive beauty floods the sky,And earth is fair through all the year;—In autumn, when the woods are sere,In winter, when the white winds fly,And blow their trumpets far and near,There’s beauty for a loving eye.
The sculptor, in long ages past,Enamoured, taxed his glorious artThat he might press his hungry heartTo Nature’s charms, and hold her fast.
Like him, we shall not fail to findOn earth, in sky, in air, in sea,Many a dazzling deity,If pure in heart, and great in mind.
Then let us live as best we may,And bid our souls ascend, and singLike birds and brooks that greet the spring.Shall we be found less wise than they?Hence, Care, upon thy ebon wing!I’m happy with my friend to-day.