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These all wait upon Thee.

INNOCENT eyes not ours Are made to look on flowers, Eyes of small birds and insects small:

Morn after summer morn

The sweet rose on her thorn Opens her bosom to them all.

The least and last of things That soar on quivering wings, Or crawl among the grass blades out of sight,

Have just as clear a right
To their appointed portion of delight
As Queens or Kings.
22 January 1853.

'Doeth well . . . doeth better.'

My love whose heart is tender said to me,

'A moon lacks light except her

sun befriend her.

Let us keep tryst in heaven, dear Friend,' said she,

My love whose heart is tender.

From such a loftiness no words could bend her:

Yet still she spoke of 'us' and spoke as 'we,'

Her hope substantial, while my hope grew slender.

Now keeps she tryst beyond earth's utmost sea,

Wholly at rest, tho' storms should

toss and rend her;

And still she keeps my heart and keeps its key,

My love whose heart is tender.

Before 1886.

OUR heaven must be within ourselves,

Our home and heaven the work
of faith

All thro' this race of life which shelves
Downward to death.

So faith shall build the boundary

wall,

And hope shall plant the secret
bower,

That both may show magnifical
With gem and flower.

While over all a dome must spread,
And love shall be that dome
above;

And deep foundations must be laid,
And these are love.

Before 1886.

Vanity of Vanities.

OF all the downfalls in the world,
The flutter of an Autumn leaf
Grows grievous by suggesting
grief:

Who thought, when Spring was first
unfurled,

Of this?

The wide world lay em

pearled; Who thought of frost that nips the world?

Sigh on, my ditty.

There lurk a hundred subtle stings
To prick us in our daily walk :
An apple cankered on its stalk,
A robin snared for all his wings,
A voice that sang but never sings;
Yea, sight or sound or silence stings.

THE hills are tipped with sunshine, while I walk

In shadows dim and cold: The unawakened rose sleeps on her stalk

In a bud's fold,

Until the sun flood all the world with gold.

The hills are crowned with glory, and the glow

Flows widening down apace : Unto the sunny hill-tops I, set low, Lift a tired face,

Ah happy rose, content to wait for grace!

How tired a face, how tired a brain, how tired

A heart I lift, who long

For something never felt but still desired;

Sunshine and song,

Song where the choirs of sunny heaven stand choired.

Before 1893.

SCARCE tolerable life, which all life long

Is dominated by one dread of death;

Is such life, life? if so who pondereth

May call salt sweetness or call discord song.

Ah me, this solitude where swarms a throng!

Life slowly grows and dwindles breath by breath:

Death slowly grows on us; no word it saith,

Kind Lord, show pity. Its cords all lengthened and its

5 August 1858.

pillars strong.

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True life that wooes us with a silver 'Love-lies-bleeding' was all m

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And the grass bowed when airs of O Christ, my Life, pour in Thine oil

heaven would pass,

Lifting itself again when it had

bowed.

That grass spake comfort; weak it

was and low,

and wine

To keep me Thine ;

Me ever Thine, and Thee for ever

mine.

Yet strong enough and high Watch by Thy saints and sinners,

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