Page:Littell's Living Age - Volume 131.djvu/72

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MIDSUMMER, ETC.


MIDSUMMER.

Along the uplands waves the grain
In golden billows, and below
Upon a level stretch of plain
The whitened fields of buckwheat grow.
The leafy boughs with apples bend,
The green is on the chestnut-burs,
The locust-buds their perfume send,
The breeze now scarce a ripple stirs
Above the surface of the lake,
And in the silence*of the brake,
O'ergrown with ferns, the cat-bird screams,
The brown thrush and the robin sing,
The air with light is half ablaze,
And underneath the dazzling beams
Of the noontide's exultant rays.
The bluebird spreads his azure wing.

Down where the dusty roads divide,
The little, old red schoolhouse stands,
And here upon the shady side,
The children group in happy bands,
Let loose at noon. The open door,
The battered porch, the well-worn floor,
The row of nails, on which a score
Of rimless hats are hung by day.
The grass is trodden by the feet
Of merry urchins at their play,
And heedless of the summer heat,
For life to them is very sweet,
The intermission glides away.
Oh gleesome hearts, in after years
These scenes to you will bring no tears
When life is not a holiday.

Franklin W. Fish.




NICHOLAS ST. JOHN GREEN.

Died Sept. 8, 1876.

I.

Dear friend! the ancient elegiac strain
For death — was death itself and dark despair;
Each word a sob — the vain lament in vain
Fell on the careless air!

II.

Better our teaching, though they teach as well,
How deathless atoms in eternal flow
Compose the mortal bodies where we dwell,
And all things high and low.

III.

Can senseless atoms live? forever live?
Aild that which animates them ever die?
Can we — together brought, without our leave,
Then forc'd apart to fly —

IV.

Be worse for immortality? Our loss
Cannot be lasting while He lasts to tell
What glory shines behind His better cross,
Who doeth "all things" well!

Advertiser.George Sennott.




GOING SOFTLY.

She makes no moan above her faded flowers,
She will not vainly strive against her lot,
Patient she wears away the slow, sad hours,
As if the ray they had were quite forgot;
While stronger fingers snatch away the sword,
And lighter footsteps pass her on the ways,
Yielding submissive to the stern award
That said, she must go softly all her days.

She knows the pulse is beating quickly yet,
She knows the dream is sweet and subtle still,
That struggling from the cloud of past regret,
Ready for conflict live Hope, Joy, and Will
So soon, so soon to veil the eager eyes,
To dull the throbbing ear to blame or praise,
So soon to crush rewakening sympathies,
And teach them she goes softly all her days.

She will not speak or move beneath the doom,
She knows she had her day, and flung her cast,
The loser scarce the laurel may assume,
Nor evening think the noonday glow can last.
Only, oh youth and love, as in your pride,
Of joyous triumph your gay notes you raise,
Throw one kind glance and word where, at your side,
She creeps, who must go softly all her days.

All The Year Round.




A QUESTION.

Beyond the fields with summer glowing
I see a grave where flowers are growing,
Where grateful hands are always throwing
Bright laurels one by one.
A splendid heart at rest is lying,
A brave heart, victor in its trying,
That left humanity when dying,
A great work grandly done.

Within those fields with sunlight burning,
His scanty living daily earning,
A man the fragrant hay is turning
Into many a heap;
Slow are the eyes that watch his raking,
Or idly signs of weather taking,
The heart to impulse only waking,
The soul still dumb, asleep.

Which is the death? We are receiving
New courage from a soul yet giving,
A blessing from a heart yet living,
An inspiration still.
Which is the life? A dull, blind straying?
A toil no grander thought obeying?
Heart, live thy best, thy questions laying
On some far broader will.

Transcript.Mary G. Morrison.