Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre. Voltairine De Cleyre

Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre - Voltairine De Cleyre


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thy solitary moan!

      For out of sorrow joy comes uppermost;

       Where breaks the thunder soon the sky smiles blue;

       A better love replaces what is lost,

       And phantom sunlight pales before the true!

      The seed must burst before the germ unfolds,

       The stars must fade before the morning wakes;

       Down in her depths the mine the diamond holds;

       A new heart pulses when the old heart breaks.

      And now, Humanity, I turn to you;

       I consecrate my service to the world!

       Perish the old love, welcome to the new—

       Broad as the space-aisles where the stars are whirled!

      Greenville, Mich., 1885.

       Table of Contents

      O'er the sweet, quiet homes in the silent grave-city,

       Softly the dewdrops, the night-tears, fall;

       Broadly about, like the wide arms of pity,

       The silver-shot darkness lies over all.

       Heroes, asleep 'neath the red-hearted rose-wreaths,

       Leaf-crowned with honor, flower-crowned with rest,

       Gently above you each moon-dripping bough breathes

       A far-echoed whisper, "Sleep well; ye are blest."

      Oh! never, as long as the heart pulses quicker

       At the dear name of Country may yours be forgot;

       Nor may we, till the last puny life spark shall flicker,

       Your deeds from the tablets of Memory blot!

       Spirits afloat in the night-shrouds that bound us,

       Souls of the "Has-Been" and of the "To-Be,"

       Keep the fair light of Liberty shining around us,

       Till our souls may go back to the mighty SOUL-SEA.

      St. Johns, Mich., 1886 (Decoration Day).

       Table of Contents

      (The two following poems were written at that period of my life when the questions of the existence of God and the divinity of Jesus had but recently been settled, and they present the pros and cons which had been repeating themselves over and over again in my brain for some years.)

      We contrast light and darkness—light of God,

       And darkness from the Stygian shades of hell;

       Fumes of the pit infernal rising up

       Have clouded o'er the brain, laid reason low;—

       For when the eye looks on fair Nature's face

       And sees not God, then is she blind indeed!

       No night so starless, even in its gloom,

       As his who wanders on without a hope

       In that great, just Hereafter all must meet!—

       No heart so dull, so heavy, and so void,

       As that which lives for this chill world alone!

       No soul so groveling, unaspiring, base,

       As that which, here, forgets the afterhere!

       And still through all the darkness and the gloom

       Its voice will not be stilled, its hopes be quenched;

       It cries, it screams, it struggles in its chains,

       And bleeds upon the altar of the mind—

       Unwilling sacrifice to thought misled.

       The soul that knows no God can know no peace.

       Thus speaketh light, the herald of our God!

       In that far dawn where shone each rolling world

       First lit with shadowed splendor of the stars,

       In that fair morning when Creation sang

       Its praise of God, e'er yet it dreamed of sin,

       Pure and untainted as the source of life

       Man dwelt in Eden. There no shadows came,

       No question of the goodness of our Lord,

       Until the prince of darkness tempted man,

       And, yielding to the newly born desire,

       He fell! Sank in the mire of ignorance!

       And Man, who put himself in Satan's power,

       Since then has wandered far in devious ways,

       Seeing but now and then a glimpse of light,

       Till Christ is come, the living Son of God!

       Far in his heavenly home he viewed the world,

       Saw all her sadness and her sufferings,

       Saw all her woes, her struggles, and her search

       For some path leading up from out the Night.

       Within his breast the fount of tears was touched;

       His great heart swelled with pity, and he said:

       "Father, I go to save the world from sin."

       Ah! What power but a soul divinely clad

       In purity, in holiness and love,

       Could leave a home of happiness and light

       For this lost World of suffering and death?

       He came: the World tossed groaning in her sleep;

       He touched her brow: the nightmare passed away;

       He soothed her heart, red with the stain of sin;

       And she forgot her guilt in penitence;

       She washed the ruby out with pearls of tears.

       He came, he suffered, and he died for us;

       He felt the bitterest woes a soul can feel;

       He probed the darkest depths of human grief;

       He sounded all the deeps and shoals of pain;

       Was cursed for all his love; thanked with the cross,

       Whereon he hung nailed, bleeding, glorified,

       As the last smoke of holocaust divine.

       "Ah! This was all two thousand years ago!"

       Two thousand years ago, and still he cries,

       With voice sweet calling through the distant dark:

       "O souls that labor, struggling in your pain,

       Come unto me, and I will give you rest!

       For every woe of yours, and every smart,

       I, too, have felt:—the mockery, the shame,

       The sneer, the scoffing lip, the hate, the lust,

       The greed of gain, the jealousy of man,

       Unstinted have been measured out to me.

       I know them all, I feel them all with you!

       And I have known the pangs of poverty,

       The cry of hunger and the weary heart

       Of childhood burdened with the weight of age!

       O sufferers, ye all are mine to love!

       The pulse-beats


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