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MISERERE, ETC.


MISERERE.

Ah, well I know 'tis wrong of me, who fain
Would hold my darling from the Lord that gave
Of his great love the boon my heart did crave,
And now would take unto himself again.

Ye do say well — 'tis wrong, I know, I know!
But all the agony of heart, the plann'd
Sweet joys laid waste, ye cannot understand,
Who ne’er gave up what you bid me forego.

Oh, do not ask a mother that hath known
The blissful bitter birth of him, if she
Were not more glad he should an angel be,
Than live on but a child to call her own!

No more with those soft locks of golden hair
To dally, and my fondling fingers weave;
No more to hearken every morn and eve
The pretty lisping of his infant prayer!

No more to soothe his little aches and cries,
Watch him at gambol or in rosy rest;
No more to catch him wildly to my breast,
And see all Heaven in his deep blue eyes!

Ah, never, never more to feel the fond
Soft tendril arms around my neck entwine,
And strain him in my own, all mine! all mine!
Fill'd with sweet joy, all other joys beyond.

Ye know not — God forgive me, if I dare
To plead with him! Father, oh, could he be
In Heaven with the angels and with thee,
Liker themselves than now, more pure, more fair?

Take him not from me, lest bereavement’s bane
Might slay my soul with cruel, hopeless grief,
And poison of rebellious disbelief,
So I should never see his face again!

For strongest faith is tried by fondest love,
That to its idol clings with heedless hold;
Dumb, blind, and blunted to the manifold
Warnings below, or whispers from above.

Lord, pardon me! That thou shouldst yearn to take
The blessed guerdon back, it is most meet;
Thyself it was who madest him so sweet,
Thou well may'st crave him for the sweetness' sake.

Yea, Lord, thy will be done! Still, if it be
Thine own good pleasure, who didst freely give
What I so grudge to render, let him live,
That I may know thou art not vex'd with me.

Yea, if but for a season. Haply I,
Sore striving, and in very overflow
Of my unbounded gratitude, may grow
Better, O God, and stronger, by-and-by.

Unless — and who may know? save thee, most dread,
Most merciful! for all ‘twere only right,
According to our poor weak human sight —
Thou shouldst be pleased to take me in his stead.

Nay, do not heed me, Lord — thy will be done!
Take to thyself, or suffer yet to live;
And — for thou knowest all my heart — forgive
The mother in the love of thy dear Son.

Month.




BEFORE THE SNOW.

AFTER ALBERT GLATIGNY.

Winter is on us, but not yet the snow;
The hills are etched on the horizon, bare,
The skies are iron grey, a bitter air,
With meagre clouds that shudder as they go;
One yellow leaf the listless wind doth blow
Like some new butterfly, unclassed and rare;
Your footsteps ring in frozen alleys, where
The black trees seem to shiver as you go.

Beyond lie church and steeple, and their old
And rusty vanes that rattle as they veer —
A sharper gust would shock them from their hold.
Yet up that path, in Maytime of the year,
And past that dreary ruined tower we strolled
To pluck wild strawberries with summer cheer!

Macmillan's Magazine.A. Lang.




"WIE KANNST DU RUHIG SCHLAFEN?"

Sleep, and in peace? How canst thou?
And know I am still alive?
Back comes the old wrath, and straightway
My yoke in sunder I rive.

Dost know the old-world legend,
How once a youth that was dead
At midnight drew his loved one
Down to his churchyard bed?

Oh trust me, thou beauteous wonder,
Of all sweet the sweetest far,
I live, yes, live, and am stronger
Than legions of dead men are!

Blackwood's MagazineHeine.