Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre. Voltairine De Cleyre

Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre - Voltairine De Cleyre


Скачать книгу
heart go out with you,

       And every drop of agony that drips

       From my nailed hands adown this bitter cross,

       Cries out, 'O God! accept the sacrifice,

       And ope the gates of heaven to the world!'

       Ye vermin of the garret, who do creep

       Your weary lives away within its walls;

       Ye children of the cellar, who behold

       The sweet, pale light, strained through the lothsome air

       And doled to you in tid-bits, as a thing

       Too precious for your use; ye rats in mines,

       Who knaw within the black and somber pits

       To seek poor living for your little ones;

       Ye women who stitch out your lonely lives,

       Unmindful whether sun or stars keep watch;

       Ye slaves of wheels; ye worms that bite the dust

       Where pride and scorn have ground you 'neath the heel;

       Ye Toilers of the earth, ye weary ones—

       I know your sufferings, I feel your woes;

       My peace I give you; in a little while

       The pain will all be over, and the grave

       Will sweetly close above your folded hands!

       And then?—Ah, Death, no conqueror art thou!

       For I have loosed thy chains; I have unbarred

       The gates of heaven! In my Father's house

       Of many mansions I prepare a place;

       And rest is there for every heart that toils!

       Oh, all ye sick and wounded ones who grieve

       For the lost health that ne'er may come again;

       Ye who do toss upon a couch of pain,

       Upon whose brow disease has laid his hand,

       Within whose eyes the dull and heavy sight

       Burns like a taper burning very low,

       Upon whose lips the purple fever-kiss

       Rests his hot breath, and dries the sickened palms,

       Scorches the flesh and e'en the very air;

       Ye who do grope along without the light;

       Ye who do stumble, halting on your way;

       Ye whom the world despises as unclean;

       Know that the death-free soul has none of these:

       The unbound spirit goes unto its God,

       Pure, whole, and beauteous as newly born!

       Oh, all ye mourners, weeping for the dead;

       Your tears I gather as the grateful rain

       Which rises from the sea and falls again,

       To nurse the withering flowers from its touch;

       No drop is ever lost! They fall again

       To nurse the blossoms of some other heart!

       I would not dry one single dew of grief:

       The sorrow-freighted lashes which bespeak

       The broken heart and soul are dear to me;

       I mourn with them, and mourning so I find

       The grief-bowed soul with weeping oft grows light!

       But yet ye mourn for them not without hope:

       Beyond the woes and sorrows of the earth,

       As stars still shine though clouds obscure the sight,

       The friends ye mourn as lost immortal live;

       And ye shall meet and know their souls again,

       Through death transfigured, through love glorified!

       Oh, all ye patient waiters for reward,

       Scorned and despised by those who know not worth,

       I know your merit and I give you hope;

       For in my Father's law is justice found.

       See how the seed-germ, toiling underground,

       Waits patiently for time to burst its shell;

       And by and by the golden sunlight warms

       The dark, cold earth; the germ begins to shoot.

       And upward trends until two small green leaves

       Unfold and wave and drink the pure, fresh air.

       The blossoms come and go with Summer's breath,

       And Autumn brings the fruit-time in her hand.

       So ye, who patient watch and wait and hope,

       Trusting the sun may bring the blossoms out,

       Shall reap the fruited labor by and by.

       I am your friend; I wait and hope with you,

       Rejoice with you when the hard vict'ry's won!

       And still for you, O prisoners in cells,

       I hold the dearest gifts of penitence,

       Forgiveness and charity and hope!

       I stretch the hands of mercy through the bars;

       White hands—like doves they bring the branch of peace!

       Repent, believe—and I will expiate

       Upon this bitter cross all your deep guilt!

       Oh, take my gift, accept my sacrifice!

       I ask no other thing but only—trust!

       Oh, all ye martyrs, bleeding in your chains;

       Oh, all ye souls that live for others' good;

       Oh, all ye mourners, all ye guilty ones,

       And all ye suffering ones, come unto me!

       Ye are all my brothers, all my sisters, all!

       And as I love one, so I love you all.

       Accept my love, accept my sacrifice;

       Make not my cross more bitter than it is

       By shrinking from the peace I bring to you!"

      St. Johns, Mich., April, 1887.

       Table of Contents

      Grand eye of Liberty, light up my page!

       Like promised morning after night of age

       Thy dawning youth breaks in the distant east!

       Thy cloudy robes like silken curtains creased

       And swung in folds are floating fair and free!

       The shadows of the cycles turn and flee;

       The budding stars, bright minds that gemmed the night,

       Are bursting into broad, bright-petaled light!

       Sweet Liberty, how pure thy very breath!

       How dear in life, how doubly dear in death!

       Ah, slaves that suffer in your self-forged chains,

       Praying your Christ to touch and heal your pains,

       Tear off your shackling irons, unbind your eyes,

       Seize the grand hopes that burn along the skies!

       Worship not God in temples built of gloom;

       Far sweeter incense is the flower-bloom

       Than all the fires that Sacrifice may light;

       And


Скачать книгу