A Few More Verses. Coolidge Susan

A Few More Verses - Coolidge Susan


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keep it, now you are not here.

      I cannot add the lightest thing

      To the full sum of happiness

      Which now is yours; nor dare I try

      To frame a wish for you, since I

      Am blind to know, as weak to bring,

      All impotent to aid or bless.

      And yet it is your day, and so,

      Unlike all other days, one bead

      Of gold in the long rosary

      Of dull beads little worth to me.

      And I must keep it bright, and show

      That what is yours is dear indeed.

      How shall I keep it here alone? —

      With prayers in which your name is set;

      With smiles, not tears; and sun, not rain;

      With memories sweeter far than pain,

      With tender backward glances thrown,

      And far on-lookings, clearer yet.

      The gift I would have given to you,

      And which you cannot need or take,

      Shall still be given; and it shall be

      A secret between you and me, —

      A sweet thought, every birthday new,

      That it is given for your sake.

      And so your day, yours safely still,

      Shall come and go with ebbing time, —

      The day of all the year most sweet, —

      Until the years so slow, so fleet,

      Shall bring me, as in time they will,

      To where all days are yours and mine.

      DERELICT

      ABANDONED wrecks they plunge and drift,

      The sport of sea and wind,

      The tempest drives, the billows lift,

      The aimless sails they flap and shift

      With impulse vague and blind,

      As tossing on from wave to wave

      They seek – and shun – the yawning grave.

      The decks once trodden by busy feet

      Man nevermore shall tread;

      The cargoes brave of wine or wheat,

      Now soaked with salt and drenched with sleet,

      And mixed and scatterèd,

      No merchant shall appraise or buy

      Or store in vat or granary.

      The wet ropes pull the creaking sails,

      As though by hands drawn tight.

      Echoes the hold with ghostly wails,

      While daylight wanes, and twilight pales,

      And drops the heavy night,

      And vast and silent fish swim by,

      And scan the wreck with cruel eye.

      Ha! lights ahead! A ship is near!

      The dumb wreck makes no sign;

      No lantern shows, returns no cheer,

      But straight and full, without a veer,

      Sped by the urging brine

      She goes – a crash! her errand done,

      The deadly, lonely thing drives on.

      Oh, hopeless lives, distorted, crushed,

      Which, like the lonely wreck,

      Lashed by the waves and tempest-tossed,

      With rudder gone and cargo lost,

      Torn ribs and leaking deck,

      Plunge on through sunshine and eclipse,

      A menace to the happier ships.

      All oceans know them, and all lands.

      Speechless they drift us by;

      To questioning voices, friendly hands,

      Warnings or counsels or commands,

      Still making no reply.

      God send them help if help may be,

      Or sink them harmless in his sea.

      H. H

      WHAT was she most like? Was she like the wind,

      Fresh always, and untired; intent to find

      New fields to penetrate, new heights to gain;

      Scattering all mists with sudden, radiant wing;

      Stirring the languid pulses; quickening

      The apathetic mood, the weary brain?

      Or was she like the sun, whose gift of cheer

      Endureth for all seasons of the year,

      Alike in winter’s cold or summer’s heat?

      Or like the sea, which brings its gifts from far,

      And still, wherever want and straitness are,

      Lays down a sudden largess at their feet?

      Or was she like a wood, where light and shade,

      And sound and silence, mingle unafraid;

      Where mosses cluster, and, in coverts dark,

      Shy blossoms court the brief and wandering air,

      Mysteriously sweet; and here and there

      A firefly flashes like a sudden spark?

      Or like a wilful brook, which laughs and leaps

      All unexpectedly, and never keeps

      The course predicted, as it seaward flows?

      Or like a stream-fed river, brimming high?

      Or like a fruit, where those who love descry

      A pungent charm no other flavor knows?

      I cannot find her type. In her were blent

      Each varied and each fortunate element

      Which souls combine, with something all her own,

      Sadness and mirthfulness, a chorded strain,

      The tender heart, the keen and searching brain,

      The social zest, the power to live alone.

      Comrade of comrades, giving man the slip

      To seek in Nature truest comradeship;

      Tenacity and impulse ruled her fate,

      This grasping firmly what that flashed to feel, —

      The velvet scabbard and the sword of steel,

      The gift to strongly love, to frankly hate!

      Patience as strong as was her hopefulness;

      A joy in living which grew never less

      As years went on and age drew gravely nigh;

      Vision which pierced the veiling mists of pain,

      And saw beyond the mortal shadows plain

      The eternal day-dawn broadening in the sky.

      The love of Doing, and the scorn of Done;

      The playful fancy, which, like glinting sun,

      No chill could daunt, no loneliness could smother.

      Upon her ardent


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