Page:Littell's Living Age - Volume 139.pdf/395

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386
IN HARVEST DAY, ETC.


IN HARVEST DAY.

Thro' Farmer Gale's wide fields I passed
Just yestereve;
My week of holiday was spent,
And idly on the stile I leant,
Taking my leave

Of all the fair and smiling plain,
Wood, vale, and hill,
And all the homely household band
(The warm grasp of each kindly hand
Bides with me still);

And I was sad. The stricken grain
Around me lay;
I could but think of silent glade —
Of buds and blossoms lowly laid
That harvest day.

"And this is all!" I sadly said,
"These withered leaves —
This gathered grain! Spring's hours of bliss
And summer's glory turn to this —
Some yellow sheaves!"

Then Farmer Gale — that good old man,
So simply wise —
Who overheard, and quickly turned,
Said, while a spark of anger burned
In his grey eyes,

"Lad, thou art town-bred, knowing nought
Whereof thou pratest!
For, be the flower as fair as May,
The fruit it yields in harvest day
Is still the greatest!

"And thou — thy spring shall quickly pass;
Fast fall the leaves
From life's frail tree. In harvest day
See that before thy Lord thou lay
Some yellow sheaves."

He went his way; I mine; and now
I hear the flow
Of busy life in crowded street —
Of eager voices, hurrying feet,
That come and go.

Yet e'en while flashing factory looms
My hands engage,
I see that far-off upland plain —
Its long, long rows of gathered grain,
Its rustic sage,

And hear them say, "Let pleasures fair,
And passions vain,
And youthful follies fade and die;
But all good deeds, pure thoughts and high,
Like golden grain,

"Be gathered still." Blest harvest store,
That only grows
In hearts besprinkled with the blood
That evermore — a sacred flood —
From Calvary flows!

Lord, when thou callest, when this world
My spirit leaves,
Then to thy feet, oh, let me come,
Bringing, in joyful harvest-home,
Some yellow sheaves!

Sunday Magazine.Robina F. Hardy.





"AUS ALTEN MARCHEN WINKT ES."

From the realm of old-world story
There beckons a lily hand,
That calls up the sweetness, the glory,
The sounds of a magic land.

Where huge flowers droop in the splendor
Of closing day's golden red,
And gaze on each other with tender
Looks as of lovers new wed;

Where all the trees, too, have voices,
And all like a chorus sing,
And a sound as of music rejoices
In the babble of every spring;

On the air songs of true love are swelling,
Such as never elsewhere thou hast heard,
Till by yearnings divine beyond telling
Thy soul is divinely stirr'd.

Oh me, if I might go thither,
And gladden my careworn breast,
Shake off all the sorrows that wither,
Be happy and truly at rest!

Ah, many a time in my dreaming
Through that blessed region I roam!
Then the morning sun comes with its beaming,
And scatters it all like foam.

Heine.





THE UNBURIED CHURCH, PENMAEN.

Of thy unwritten records, faerie Gower,
O'ermounded sepulchre or cromlech grey,
Giddy hill-fortress perch'd above the spray
That beats thy cliffs with unrelenting power,
Or cavern never reach'd by sun or shower, —
One relic, open'd to the eye of day
Out of the wind-swept sand-drift, brings a ray
Of light to gild thy long bedarken'd hour.
Lo, the unburied church on Penmaen downs!
Token of prayer and praise and minist'ring hands,
Of penitence and shrift for lawless bands.
One roof the cross, 'mid the wild dwellings, crowns,
The vesper bell rings softly o'er the sands,
Nor all unblest the realm where Penard frowns.

October 2nd, 1878.Herbert New.
Spectator.