Poems. John L. Stoddard

Poems - John L. Stoddard


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enough to repair

       In time to a Promenade Solitaire.

      Meantime the Earth speeds on through space,

       As the sun for a million years hath steered,

       And, an eon hence, the entire race

       Will have played its part and disappeared;

       But what will the lifeless planet care,

       As it follows its Promenade Solitaire?

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      I know not how, I know not where,

       But from my own heart's mystic lore

       I feel that I have breathed this air,

       And walked this earth before;

      And that in this, its latest form

       My old-time spirit once more strives,

       As it has fought through many a storm

       In past, forgotten lives.

      Not inexperienced did my soul

       This incarnation's threshold tread;

       Not recordless has proved the scroll

       It brought back from the dead.

      To certain, special lines of thought

       My mind intuitively tends,

       And old affinities have brought

       Not new, but ancient friends.

      What thrilled me in a previous state

       Rekindles here its ancient flame;

       What I by instinct love and hate

       I knew before I came;

      And lands, of which in youth I dreamed

       And read, heart-moved, and longed to see,

       When really visited, have seemed

       Not strange but known to me.

      When Mozart, still a child, untaught,

       Ran joyous to the silent keys,

       And with inspired fingers wrought

       Majestic harmonies,

      There fell upon his psychic ear

       Faint echoes of a music known

       Before his natal advent here,

       In former lives outgrown.

      In many a dumb brute's wistful eyes

       A dawning human soul aspires,

       For thus from lower forms we rise—

       Ourselves our spirits' sires.

      Full many a thought that thrills my breast

       Is fruit resulting from a seed

       Sown elsewhere—on my soul impressed

       By many an arduous deed;

      Full many a fetter which hath lamed

       My struggling spirit's upward flight

       Was once by that same spirit framed,

       When further from the Light;

      With justice, therefore, comes the pain

       That o'er the tortured world extends;

       And hopeful is the lessening stain,

       As each life-cycle ends.

      No changeless, endless states await

       The good and evil souls set free;

       Each grave is a successive gate

       In immortality.

      Too long this mighty truth hath slept

       Among the darkened souls of men—

       "Ye cannot see God's face, except

       Ye shall be born again."

      The God-like Christs and Buddhas yearn,

       However high their spirits' stage,

       For man's salvation to return,

       As Saviour or as Sage.

      On our benighted, groping minds

       Their noble precepts, star-like, shine;

       Each soul, that wisely seeks them, finds

       The truths that are divine.

      Misunderstood and vilified,

       Their aims and motives scarcely known,

       How many of these Saints have died,

       Rejected by their own!

      Yet, though their followers miss the way,

       In spite of precept and of prayer,

       And lead unnumbered souls astray,

       Committed to their care,

      Upon the lofty spirit-plane,

       Where all lies open to their sight,

       The Masters know that not in vain

       They left the Hills of Light.

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      O pallid spectre of the midnight skies,

       Whose phantom features in the dome of Night

       Elude the keenest gaze of wistful eyes,

       Till amplest lenses aid the failing sight;

       On heaven's blue sea the farthest isle of fire,

       From thee, whose glories it would fain admire,

       Must vision, baffled, in despair retire!

      What art thou, ghostly visitant of flame?

       Wouldst thou 'neath closer scrutiny resolve

       In myriad suns that constellations frame,

       Around which life-blest satellites revolve,

       Like those unnumbered orbs which nightly creep

       In dim procession o'er the azure steep,

       As white-winged caravans the desert sweep?

      Or art thou still an incandescent mass,

       Acquiring form as hostile forces urge,

       Through whose vast length continuous lightnings pass,

       As to and fro its fiery billows surge?

       Whose glowing atoms, whirled in ceaseless strife,

       Where now chaotic anarchy is rife,

       Shall yet become the fair abodes of life?

      We know not; for the faint, exhausted rays

       Which hither on Light's winged coursers come

       From fires which ages since first lit their blaze,

       One instant gleam, then perish, spent and dumb;

       How sad the thought that, howsoe'er we yearn

       Of life on yonder glittering orbs to learn,

       We read no message, and could none return!

      Yet this we know:—yon ring of spectral light,

       Whose distance thrills the soul with solemn awe,

       Can ne'er escape in its majestic might

       The firm control of omnipresent law;

       This mote descending to its bounden


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