Cartoons by Bradley/The Legend of the Windows

2229392Cartoons by Bradley — The Legend of the WindowsLuther Daniels Bradley

(Verses written by Luther D. Bradley when he was in college, and published in Frank Leslie's Monthly)

THE LEGEND OF THE WINDOWS

"For who hath despised the day of small things"


At length upon the crowning towers were placed
The topmost stones, and the cathedral fair
Rose in its carven beauty, interlaced
With wreathed flowers and arches light as air;
And with its wise, majestic oriel faced
The rising sun, and seemed as standing there
Worthy, almost, an offering to be made
To Him who once was in a manger laid.

Dense vines and branches cluster round its base,
Dark, seamed and weather-stained, while further on
Green mosses cling; then for a little space
The stones are bare, and further, one by one
The lines drawn by the years still mark the place
Where toiled each life until its sands were run;
The tide-marks left by generations spent
Rearing the glory of this monument.

And he whose lot came last was striving now
To add the final grace, that ere the day
When they should rear upon the pavement low
The sacred altar, all that marble gray
Might with new, myriad-tinted sunbeams glow;
And there where now the shameless daylight lay,
Thro' his rich window's softened air might fall
A halo o'er that holiest spot of all.

With lavish hands he wrought the colors rare,
High screened among the traceries of stone;
And as the glittering fragments here and there,
Fell from his hand while toiling on alone,
A young apprentice gleaned them up with care,
And half afraid and to the rest unknown,
Wove them in figures strange, and all unseen
Fixed them behind a vacant window's screen.

And as these two thus labored on, at last
Came that great day whereon to consecrate
With ceremonial high and prayer and fast,
This holy church; came dignitaries great,
And priest and prelate in procession passed,
With incense sweet and perfume delicate,
And moving down the flower-strewn pathway's bloom
Entered the dim cathedral's sombre gloom.

And the proud master stood exultingly,
To mark when they should on the altar gaze,
The flaming glory of his window see,
And smiled within himself at their amaze
To think that such the work of man could be;
Then the low-breathing organ softly plays,
And as its throbbing voices fill the air,
All kneel upon the marble floor in prayer.

But when again they rise all eyes are turned,
Not where the eager master's loved to dwell—
Where high amid the pointed arches burned
The colors that his hand had wrought so well,
But to that corner which his pride had spurned—
Where softly now a mellow radiance fell,
So beautiful that his fierce pride of heart
Vanished before the glory of his art.

Upon no sacred cross its light is thrown,
But the worn pavement and the crumbling tomb
Are flooded with a glory all their own;
While the vast shadows of the chancel loom
Dim 'round that place of light, as shadowed down
Over that greatest tragedy the gloom
That veiled the grief, the anguish, the despair,
But not the love divine that suffered there.

And the robed prelate turned, and smiling, said:
"'T is strangely beautiful, and it were meet
Rather that to such scene our steps were led,
To bow ourselves low at the Saviour's feet,
And as we pray behold that thorn-crowned head,
Than 'mid yon blazoned throng and incense sweet;
For ne'er too oft do we when kneeling down,
For thought of that sad cross forget the crown."

Burst forth the master, "Father, 't is but nought;
'T is only from the meanest fragments made
That fell from out my hand there as I wrought;
There is the altar, see the saints arrayed
In colors of the light, and gold, I thought
To touch them with a lustre ne'er to fade."
But on the youth who stood with low-bowed head
The father, turning, laid his hands and said:

"From thy low place thou hast above us all
Risen and taught us; may'st thou ever be
With such small fragments as thou seest fall
Ready to labor long and patiently,
Knowing that so a voice one day will call
And say, 'Well, done,' and thou as here shall see
Thy works of worth and fair. Our lesson brings
Us this: Scorn not the day of smallest things."

L. D. B.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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