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Seem to thank the Lord;

More than man's spoken word。



Near at hand;

From under the sheltering trees;

The farmer sees

His pastures; and his fields of grain;

As they bend their tops

To the numberless beating drops

Of the incessant rain。

He counts it as no sin

That he sees therein

Only his own thrift and gain。



These; and far more than these;

The Poet sees!

He can behold

Aquarius old

Walking the fenceless fields of air;

And from each ample fold

Of the clouds about him rolled

Scattering everywhere

The showery rain;

As the farmer scatters his grain。



He can behold

Things manifold

That have not yet been wholly told;

Have not been wholly sung nor said。

For his thought; that never stops;

Follows the water…drops

Down to the graves of the dead;

Down through chasms and gulfs profound;

To the dreary fountain…head

Of lakes and rivers under ground;

And sees them; when the rain is done;

On the bridge of colors seven

Climbing up once more to heaven;

Opposite the setting sun。



Thus the Seer;

With vision clear;

Sees forms appear and disappear;

In the perpetual round of strange;

Mysterious change

From birth to death; from death to birth;

From earth to heaven; from heaven to earth;

Till glimpses more sublime

Of things; unseen before;

Unto his wondering eyes reveal

The Universe; as an immeasurable wheel

Turning forevermore

In the rapid and rushing river of Time。







TO A CHILD



Dear child! how radiant on thy mother's knee;

With merry…making eyes and jocund smiles;

Thou gazest at the painted tiles;

Whose figures grace;

With many a grotesque form and face。

The ancient chimney of thy nursery!

The lady with the gay macaw;

The dancing girl; the grave bashaw

With bearded lip and chin;

And; leaning idly o'er his gate;

Beneath the imperial fan of state;

The Chinese mandarin。



With what a look of proud command

Thou shakest in thy little hand

The coral rattle with its silver bells;

Making a merry tune!

Thousands of years in Indian seas

That coral grew; by slow degrees;

Until some deadly and wild monsoon

Dashed it on Coromandel's sand!

Those silver bells

Reposed of yore;

As shapeless ore;

Far down in the deep…sunken wells

Of darksome mines;

In some obscure and sunless place;

Beneath huge Chimborazo's base;

Or Potosi's o'erhanging pines

And thus for thee; O little child;

Through many a danger and escape;

The tall ships passed the stormy cape;

For thee in foreign lands remote;

Beneath a burning; tropic clime;

The Indian peasant; chasing the wild goat;

Himself as swift and wild;

In falling; clutched the frail arbute;

The fibres of whose shallow root;

Uplifted from the soil; betrayed

The silver veins beneath it laid;

The buried treasures of the miser; Time。



But; lo! thy door is left ajar!

Thou hearest footsteps from afar!

And; at the sound;

Thou turnest round

With quick and questioning eyes;

Like one; who; in a foreign land;

Beholds on every hand

Some source of wonder and surprise!

And; restlessly; impatiently;

Thou strivest; strugglest; to be free;

The four walls of thy nursery

Are now like prison walls to thee。

No more thy mother's smiles;

No more the painted tiles;

Delight thee; nor the playthings on the floor;

That won thy little; beating heart before;

Thou strugglest for the open door。



Through these once solitary halls

Thy pattering footstep falls。

The sound of thy merry voice

Makes the old walls

Jubilant; and they rejoice

With the joy of thy young heart;

O'er the light of whose gladness

No shadows of sadness

From the sombre background of memory start。



Once; ah; once; within these walls;

One whom memory oft recalls;

The Father of his Country; dwelt。

And yonder meadows broad and damp

The fires of the besieging camp

Encircled with a burning belt。

Up and down these echoing stairs;

Heavy with the weight of cares;

Sounded his majestic tread;

Yes; within this very room

Sat he in those hours of gloom;

Weary both in heart and head。



But what are these grave thoughts to thee?

Out; out! into the open air!

Thy only dream is liberty;

Thou carest little how or where。

I see thee eager at thy play;

Now shouting to the apples on the tree;

With cheeks as round and red as they;

And now among the yellow stalks;

Among the flowering shrubs and plants;

As restless as the bee。

Along the garden walks;

The tracks of thy small carriage…wheels I trace;

And see at every turn how they efface

Whole villages of sand…roofed tents;

That rise like golden domes

Above the cavernous and secret homes

Of wandering and nomadic tribes of ants。

Ah; cruel little Tamerlane;

Who; with thy dreadful reign;

Dost persecute and overwhelm

These hapless Troglodytes of thy realm!

What! tired already! with those suppliant looks;

And voice more beautiful than a poet's books;

Or murmuring sound of water as it flows。

Thou comest back to parley with repose;

This rustic seat in the old apple…tree;

With its o'erhanging golden canopy

Of leaves illuminate with autumnal hues;

And shining with the argent light of dews;

Shall for a season be our place of rest。

Beneath us; like an oriole's pendent nest;

From which the laughing birds have taken wing;

By thee abandoned; hangs thy vacant swing。

Dream…like the waters of the river gleam;

A sailless vessel drops adown the stream;

And like it; to a sea as wide and deep;

Thou driftest gently down the tides of sleep。



O child! O new…born denizen

Of life's great city! on thy head

The glory of the morn is shed;

Like a celestial benison!

Here at the portal thou dost stand;

And with thy little hand

Thou openest the mysterious gate

Into the future's undiscovered land。

I see its valves expand;

As at the touch of Fate!

Into those realms of love and hate;

Into that darkness blank and drear;

By some prophetic feeling taught;

I launch the bold; adventurous thought;

Freighted with hope and fear;

As upon subterranean streams;

In caverns unexplored and dark;

Men sometimes launch a fragile bark;

Laden with flickering fire;

And watch its swift…receding beams;

Until at length they disappear;

And in the distant dark expire。



By what astrology of fear or hope

Dare I to cast thy horoscope!

Like the new moon thy life appears;

A little strip of silver light;

And widening outward into night

The shadowy disk of future years;

And yet upon its outer rim;

A luminous circle; faint and dim;

And scarcely visible to us here;

Rounds and completes the perfect sphere;

A prophecy and intimation;

A pale and feeble adumbration;

Of the great world of light; that lies

Behind all human destinies。



Ah! if thy fate; with anguish fraught;

Should be to wet the dusty soil

With the hot tears and sweat of toil;

To struggle with imperious thought;

Until the overburdened brain;

Weary with labor; faint with pain;

Like a jarred pendulum; retain

Only its motion; not its power;

Remember; in that perilous hour;

When most afflicted and oppressed;

From labor there shall come forth rest。



And if a more auspicious fate

On thy advancing steps await

Still let it ever be thy pride

To linger by the laborer's side;

With words of sympathy or song

To cheer the dreary march along

Of the great army of the poor;

O'er desert sand; o'er dangerous moor。

Nor to thyself the task shall be

Without reward; for thou shalt learn

The wisdom early to discern

True beauty in utility;

As great Pythagoras of yore;

Standing beside the blacksmith's door;

And hearing the hammers; as they smote

The anvils with a different note;

Stole from the varying tones; that hung

Vibrant on every iron tongue;

The secret of the sounding wire。

And formed the seven…chorded lyre。



Enough! I will not play the Seer;

I will no longer strive to ope

The mystic volume; where appear

The herald Hope; forerunning Fear;

And Fear; the pursuivant of Hope。

Thy destiny remains untold;

For; like Acestes' shaft of old;

The swift thought kindles as it flies;

And burns to ashes in the skies。







THE OCCULTATION OF ORION



I saw; as in a dream sublime;

The balance in the hand of Time。

O'er East and West its beam impended;

And day; with all its hours of light;

Was slowly sinking out of sight;

While; opposite; the scale of night

Silently with the stars ascended。



Like the astrologers of eld;

In that bright vision I beheld

Greater and deeper mysteries。

I saw; with its celestial keys;

Its chords of air; its frets of fire;

The Samian's great Aeolian lyre;

Rising through all its sevenfold bars;

From earth unto the fixed stars。

And through the dewy atmosphere;

Not only could I see; but hear;

Its wondrous and harmonious strings;

In sweet vibration; sphere by sphere;

From Dian's circl

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