A Few More Verses. Coolidge Susan

A Few More Verses - Coolidge Susan


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      A Few More Verses

      GIVING to all, thou gavest as well to me.

      A myriad thirsty shores await the tide:

      They drink and drink, and will not be denied;

      But not a drop less full the brimming Sea.

      One tiny shell among the kelp and weed,

      One sand-grain where the beaches stretch away, —

      How shall the tide regard them? Yet each day

      It comes, and fills and satisfies their need.

      What can the singing sands give to the Sea?

      What the dumb shell, though inly it rejoice?

      Only the echo of its own strong voice; —

      And this is all that here I bring to thee.

      A BENEDICTION

      GOD give thee, love, thy heart’s desire!

      What better can I pray?

      For though love falter not, nor tire,

      And stand on guard all day,

      How little can it know or do,

      How little can it say!

      How hard it strives, and how in vain,

      By hope and fear misled,

      To make the pathway soft and plain

      For the dear feet to tread,

      To shield from sun-beat and from rain

      The one beloved head!

      Its wisdom is made foolishness;

      Its best intent goes wrong;

      It curses where it fain would bless,

      Is weak instead of strong, —

      Marring with sad, discordant sighs

      The joyance of its song.

      I do not dare to bless or ban, —

      I am too blind to see, —

      But this one little prayer I can

      Put up to God for thee,

      Because I know what fair, pure things

      Thy inmost wishes be;

      That what thy heart desires the most

      Is what he loves to grant, —

      The love that counteth not its cost

      If any crave or want;

      The presence of the Holy Ghost,

      The soul’s inhabitant;

      The wider vision of the mind;

      The spirit bright with sun;

      The temper like a fragrant wind,

      Chilling and grieving none;

      The quickened heart to know God’s will

      And on his errands run;

      The ministry of little things, —

      Not counted mean or small

      By that dear alchemy which brings

      Some grain of gold from all;

      The faith to wait as well as work,

      Whatever may befall.

      So, sure of thee, and unafraid,

      I make my daily prayer,

      Nor fear that my blind zeal be made

      Thy injury or snare:

      God give thee, love, thy heart’s desire,

      And bless thee everywhere!

      TO ARCITE AT THE WARS.

      1759

      A THOUSAND leagues of wind-blown space,

      A thousand leagues of sea,

      Half of the great earth’s hiding face

      Divides mine eyes from thee;

      The world is strong, the waves are wide,

      But my good-will is stronger still,

      My love, than wind or tide.

      These sentinels which Fate has set

      To bar and hold me here

      I make my errand-men, to get

      A message to thine ear.

      The winds shall waft, the waters bear,

      And spite of seas I, when I please,

      Can reach thee everywhere.

      Prayers are like birds to find the way;

      Thoughts have a swifter flight;

      And mine stream forth to thee all day,

      Nor stop to rest by night.

      Like silent angels at thy side

      They stand unseen, they bend and lean,

      They bless and warn and guide.

      There is no near, there is no far,

      There is no loss or change,

      To love which, like a fixèd star,

      Abideth in one range,

      And shines, and shines, with quenchless eyes,

      And sends long rays in many ways

      To lighten distant skies.

      Where sight is not, faith brighter burns;

      So faithfully I wait,

      Secure that loyal loving earns

      Its guerdon soon or late, —

      Secure, though lacking word or sign,

      That thy true thought keeps as it ought

      Tryst with each thought of mine.

      NEW EVERY MORNING

      EVERY day is a fresh beginning,

      Every morn is the world made new.

      You who are weary of sorrow and sinning,

      Here is a beautiful hope for you, —

      A hope for me and a hope for you.

      All the past things are past and over;

      The tasks are done and the tears are shed.

      Yesterday’s errors let yesterday cover;

      Yesterday’s wounds, which smarted and bled,

      Are healed with the healing which night has shed.

      Yesterday now is a part of forever,

      Bound up in a sheaf, which God holds tight,

      With glad days, and sad days, and bad days, which never

      Shall visit us more with their bloom and their blight,

      Their fulness of sunshine or sorrowful night.

      Let them go, since we cannot re-live them,

      Cannot undo and cannot atone;

      God in his mercy receive, forgive them!

      Only the new days are our own;

      To-day is ours, and to-day alone.

      Here are the skies all burnished brightly,

      Here is the spent earth all re-born,

      Here are the tired limbs springing lightly

      To face the sun and to share with the morn

      In the chrism of dew and the cool of dawn.

      Every


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