Page:Littell's Living Age - Volume 125.djvu/16

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2
GOOD-NIGHT, ETC.


GOOD-NIGHT.

If I could only lay me down to rest.
Crossing my weary hands upon my breast,
And shut my troubled eyes without a fear,
Knowing that they would never open here —
How blissful it must be, both worlds in sight,
To say my tired good-night.

If only, from the fretting cares of Time,
To truths eternal I at once may climb,
No longer count the graves whereon I tread,
But in one moment be all comforted —
If such could be, what joy, in upward flight,
To sing my tired good-night.
 
I watch the sweetest flowers throughout the morn,
I look, and lo! at noontide they are gone;
The wings of sorrow are forever spread;
I weep, but weeping brings not back my dead.
If God would but reveal the breaking light.
How sweet to say good-night.

This flooding tide of yearnings will not cease;
I cannot reach to touch the lips of Peace;
Nor can I gather to my sobbing heart
The white-winged angels God has set apart,
Yet haply I may find them all in sight
After some tired good-night.

What wonder, then, that I should long to rest,
Crossing my weary hands upon my breast;
To shut my troubled eyes without a fear,
Knowing that they would never open here;
To say to earth, with heaven alone in sight,
My rapturous good-night.

Portsmouth Journal."C. E. W."




IN BONDAGE.

Dumb hearts that have not known Love's bliss or bane,
Nor guessed what it may mean, yet yearning stand
Touching the border of the unknown land.
Hearing the silence stirred by that sweet strain
Of which their sad and prisoned souls are fain;
These, with wan faces, waiting the command,
Whose sound shall never break upon that strand,
Where, with the wind's breath, through the driven rain
Come memories of a life that was not theirs;
Vexed ghosts of hope, with cries unwearying,
Chilled with the darkness of unanswered prayers.
Worn with long watching through a youthless spring
By love and light forgotten. Shall these come
At last to God's peace and Love's perfect home?

Good Words.C. Brooke.




VALENTINE VERSES.

I send a sign of love; the shower sends
The breeze before it, whispering, "He is coming!"
And the glad field her leaves and flowers bends.
And hushes all her myriad insects' humming.

I send a sign of love; the morning sends
A rosy cloud, his mounted messenger;
And the glad earth in ecstacy attends,
Sure now her love himself will come to her.

O fairer than the field, than the whole earth,
Would that thy lover's coming in thy sight
Were as the rain-cloud to a land of dearth.
Were as the morning to a world of night!

Spectator.F. W. B.




THE HUT.

FROM THEOPHILE GAUTIER.

Under thick trees, about it swaying,
A humped-backed hovel crouches low;
The rooftree bends — the walls are fraying,
And on the threshold mosses grow.

Each window-pane is masked by shutters,
Still, as around the mouth in frost
The warm breath rises up and flutters,
Life lingers here — not wholly lost.

One curl of silver smoke is twining
Its pale threads with the silent air.
To tell God that there yet is shining
A soul-spark in that ruined lair.

Cornhill Magazine.F. H. Doyle