THE DEPARTED.
Or where the hurrying night-winds Pale winter's robes have spread Above their narrow palaces,
In the cities of the dead!
I look around and feel the awe Of one who walks alone
Among the wrecks of former days, In mournful ruin strown;
I start to hear the stirring sounds Among the cypress trees, For the voice of the departed Is borne upon the breeze.
That solemn voice! it mingles with Each free and careless strain; I scarce can think earth's minstrelsy Will cheer my heart again. The melody of summer waves,
The thrilling notes of birds,
Can never be so dear to me
As their remember'd words.
I sometimes dream their pleasant smiles Still on me sweetly fall, Their tones of love I faintly hear My name in sadness call.
I know that they are happy, With their angel-plumage on, my heart is very desolate To think that they are gone.
BY JAMES G. PERCIVAL.
Now the growing year is over, And the shepherd's tinkling bell Faintly from its winter cover Rings a low farewell :- Now the birds of Autumn shiver, Where the wither'd beech-leaves quiver,
O'er the dark and lazy river,
In the rocky dell.
Now the mist is on the mountains,
Reddening in the rising sun;
Now the flowers around the fountains
Perish one by one:
Not a spire of grass is growing, But the leaves that late were glowing, Now its blighted green are strowing With a mantle dun.
Now the torrent brook is stealing Faintly down the furrow'd glade Not as when in winter pealing, Such a din is made,
That the sound of cataracts falling Gave no echo so appalling,
As its hoarse and heavy brawling In the pine's black shade.
Darkly blue the mist is hovering
Round the clifted rock's bare height— All the bordering mountains covering
With a dim, uncertain light :
INCOMPREHENSIBILITY OF GOD.
Now, a fresher wind prevailing, Wide its heavy burden sailing, Deepens as the day is failing, Fast the gloom of night.
Slow the blood-stain'd moon is riding Through the still and hazy air, Like a sheeted spectre gliding In a torch's glare:-
Few the hours, her light is given- Mingling clouds of tempest driven O'er the mourning face of heaven, All is blackness there.
INCOMPREHENSIBILITY OF GOD.
WHERE art thou? Thou! Source and Support of all That is or seen or felt; Thyself unseen,
Unfelt, unknown-alas! unknowable!
I look abroad among thy works: the sky, Vast, distant, glorious with its world of suns, Life-giving earth, and ever-moving main, And speaking winds, and ask if these are Thee! The stars that twinkle on, the eternal hills, The restless tide's outgoing and return, The omnipresent and deep-breathing air- Though hail'd as gods of old, and only less- Are not the Power I seek; are thine, not Thee! I ask Thee from the past; if in the years, Since first Intelligence could search its source, Or in some former, unremember'd being
(If such, perchance, were mine), did they behold Thee?
INCOMPREHENSIBILITY OF GOD.
And next interrogate Futurity
So fondly tenanted with better things
Than e'er experience own'd-but both are mute; And past and future, vocal on all else, So full of memories and phantasies,
Are deaf and speechless here? Fatigued, I turn From all vain parley with the elements ;
And close mine eyes, and bid the thought turn inward. From each material thing its anxious guest,
If, in the stillness of the waiting soul,
He may vouchsafe himself, Spirit to spirit! Oh Thou, at once most dreaded and desired, Pavilion'd still in darkness, wilt thou hide thee? What though the rash request be fraught with fate, Nor human eye may look on thine and live? Welcome the penalty! let that come now
Which soon or late must come.
Who would not dare to die?
And hush the wish that knows not what it asks.
Await his will, who hath appointed this
With every other trial. Be that will
Done now as ever. For thy curious search, And unprepared solicitude to gaze
On Him-the Unreveal'd-learn hence, instead, To temper highest hope with humbleness. Pass thy novitiate in these outer courts, Till rent the veil, no longer separating The holiest of all; as erst disclosing A brighter dispensation; whose results Ineffable, interminable, tend
E'en to the perfecting thyself, thy kind, Till meet for that sublime beatitude, By the firm promise of a voice from heaven Pledged to the pure in heart!
"GO FORTH INTO THE FIELDS."
Go forth into the fields,
Ye denizens of the pent city's mart! Go forth and know the gladness nature yields To the care-wearied heart.
Leave ye the feverish strife,
The jostling, eager, self-devoted throng;— Ten thousand voices, waked anew to life, Call you with sweetest song.
Hark! from each fresh-clad bough,
Or blissful soaring in the golden air, Bright birds with joyous music bid you now To spring's loved haunts repair.
The silvery gleaming rills
Lure with soft murmurs from the grassy lea, Or gayly dancing down the sunny hills, Call loudly in their glee!
And the young, wanton breeze,
With breath all odorous from her blossomy chase, In voice low whispering 'mong th' embowering trees, Woos you to her embrace.
Go-breathe the air of heaven,
Where violets meekly smile upon your way; Or on some pine-crown'd summit, tempest-riven, Your wandering footsteps stay.
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