Poems. John L. Stoddard

Poems - John L. Stoddard


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Once more 'twas a sun-lit plain!

      But soon men saw, with deepening awe,

       That sea grow white with spray;

       Its brilliant hue was changed from blue

       To a deathlike, leaden gray;

       And a sullen roar approached the shore

       Whence the ship had sailed away.

      Huge waves rolled in with frightful din,

       And spat out hissing foam,

       And smote the sand along the strand,

       And swept off many a home;

       And lightnings flashed and thunder crashed

       From heaven's ink-black dome.

      "Alas!" they cried, "that our brothers died

       In the depths of the sea of peace;

       They have brought unrest to its quiet breast,

       Which nevermore shall cease;

       For the peace it lost we must pay the cost;

       And behold! our woes increase!"

      In truth, since then how many men

       Have learned that the mighty deep

       Can heave and swell to a seething hell,

       When storms its surface sweep!

       For its calm hath fled, and countless dead

       Are the spoils it loves to heap.

      But at its best, when it lies at rest

       On a cloudless summer day,

       And, tiger-like, forbears to strike,

       But, sated, basks at play,

       One seems to hear, with the psychic ear,

       Its murmuring wavelets say—

      "No real relief from care and grief

       Is found o'er distant waves;

       The men who sail to find it, fail,

       And sink to lonely graves;

       In the firm control of man's own soul

       Is alone the peace he craves."

       Table of Contents

      Dear, old-time tunes of prayer and praise,

       Heard first beside my mother's knee,

       Your music on my spirit lays

       A spell from which I should be free,

       If lapse of time gave liberty.

      I listen, and the crowded years

       Fade, dream-like, from my life, and lo!

       I find my eyelids wet with tears—

       So much I loved, so well I know

       Those plaintive airs of long ago!

      They tell me of my vanished youth,

       Of faith in what so flawless seemed,

       Before the painful quest of truth

       Had proved how much I then esteemed

       Was other than I fondly dreamed!

      They make my childhood live again;

       And life's fair dawn grows once more bright,

       While listening to the sweet refrain,

       Sung in the Sabbath's waning light—

       "Glory to Thee, my God, this night!"

      My mother's voice, so pure and strong,

       My father's flute of silvery tone,

       The little household's strength of song,

       The childish treble of my own—

       I hear them once more, but … alone!

      Sweet obligato to some hymn

       Whose words those vanished tones recall,

       Float o'er me, when earth's scenes grow dim,

       And life's last, lingering echoes fall,

       Till silence settles over all!

       Table of Contents

      O Buddha, of the mystic smile

       And downcast, dreamful eyes,

       To whom unnumbered sacred shrines

       And gilded statues rise,

      Whose fanes are filled with worshippers,

       Whose hallowed name is sung

       By myriads of the human race

       In every Eastern tongue,

      What means thy sweet serenity?

       Our planet, as it rolls,

       Sweeps through the starry universe

       A mass of burdened souls,

      Still agonized and pitiful,

       Despite the countless years

       That man has spent in wandering

       Through paths of blood and tears!

      O Lord of love and sympathy

       For all created life,

       How canst thou view thus placidly

       The world's incessant strife,

      The misery and massacre

       Of war's destructive train,

       The martyrdom of animals,

       The tragedy of pain,

      The infamous brutalities

       To helpless children shown,

       The pathos of whose joyless lives

       Might melt a heart of stone?

      Preeminently merciful,

       Does not thy spirit long

       To guard from inhumanity

       The weak against the strong?

      Thou biddest us deal tenderly

       With every breathing-thing—

       The horse that drags the heavy load,

       The bird upon the wing,

      The flocks along the riverside,

       The cattle on the lea,

       And every living denizen

       Of earth and air and sea;

      Yet daily in the shambles

       A sea of blood is spilled,

       And man is nourished chiefly

       From beasts that he has killed!

      And hunters still find happiness

       In seeing, red with wounds,

       A sobbing deer, with liquid eyes,

       Dragged down by yelping hounds!

      What is the real significance

       Of thine unchanging smile?

       Hast thou the secret consciousness

       That grief is not worth while?

      That sorrow is the consequence

       Of former lives of sin—

       The spur that goads us on and


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