Indian Legends and Other Poems | Page 7

Mary Gardiner Horsford
of Hope?Spans the ocean of Time;?High triumph and holy?Makes conflict sublime.
Work ever! Life's moments?Are fleeting and brief;?Behind is the burden,?Before, the relief.?Work nobly! the deed?Liveth bright in the Past,?When the spirit that planned?Is at rest from the blast;?Work nobly! the Infinite?Spreads to thy sight,?The higher thou soarest?The stronger thy flight.
And when from thy vision?Loved faces shall wane,?And thy heart-strings thrill wildly?With anguish and pain;?The voices that now?Are as faint as the tone?Of the Zephyr, that stirs not?The rose on its throne,?Shall burst on thy soul,--?An orchestra divine,?With seraph and cherub?From Deity's shrine.
"A DREAM THAT WAS NOT ALL A DREAM."
Through the half-curtained window stole?An Autumn sunset's glow,?As languid on my couch I lay?With pulses weak and low.
And then methought a presence stood,?With shining feet and fair,?Amid the waves of golden light?That rippled through the air,
And laid upon my heaving breast,?With earnest glance and true,?A babe, whose fair and gentle brow?No shade of sorrow knew.
A solemn joy was in my heart,--?Immortal life was given?To Earth, upon her battle-field?To discipline for Heaven.
Soft music thrilled the quiet room,--?An unseen host were nigh,?Who left the infant pilgrim at?The threshold of our sky.
A new, strange love woke in my heart,?Defying all control,?As on the soft air rose and fell?That birth-hymn for a soul!
And now again the Autumn skies,?As on that evening, shine,?When, from a trance of agony,?I woke to joy divine.
That boundless love is in my heart,?That birth-hymn on the air;?I clasp in mine, with grateful faith,?A tiny hand in prayer.
And bless the God who guides my way,?That, mid this world so wide,?I day by day am walking with?An angel by my side.
THE JUDGMENT OF THE DEAD.
Diodorus has recorded an impressive Egyptian ceremonial, the judgment of the dead by the living. When the corpse, duly embalmed, had been placed by the margin of the Acherusian Lake, and before consigning it to the bark that was to bear it across the waters to its final resting-place, it was permitted to the appointed judges to hear all accusations against the past life of the deceased, and if proved, to deprive the corpse of the rites of sepulture. From this singular law not even kings were exempt.
With sable plume and nodding crest,?They bore him to his dreamless rest,
A cold and abject thing;?Before the whisper of whose name?Strong hearts had quailed in fear and shame,
While nations knelt to fling?The victor's laurel at his feet;?Now gorgeous pall and winding-sheet,?Were all that royalty could bring?To mark the despot and the king:?In solemn state they swept the glowing strand,?To meet the conclave of the judgment band.
And soon, with bright, exultant eye,?Where fierce revenge flashed wild and high,
Accusers gathered fast;?From prison-keep and living grave?Came forth the mutilated slave,
With faltering step aghast;?And sightless men with silver hair,?The record of their dungeon air,?Who for long years had sought to die,?And wrestled with their agony?Till thought grew wild and intellect grew dim,?The clanking fetters' mark on every limb.
With pallid cheek and eager prayer?And maniac laugh of dark despair
The widowed mother stood;?And, with white lips, an orphan throng?Rehearsed a fearful tale of wrong
And misery and blood.?And strong in virtue others came,?Unnumbered victims to proclaim?Of vengeance, perfidy, and dread,?Who slumbered with the silent dead.?The world might start, the sable plumes might wave,?But for that haughty king there was no grave.
O! ye who press life's crowded mart,?With hurrying step and bounding heart,
A solemn lesson glean;?Beware, lest, when ye cross that stream?Whose breaking surges farthest gleam,
No mortal eye hath seen,?Discordant voices wake the shore?The struggling spirit would explore,?And to the trembling soul deny?Its latest resting-place on high;?Our acts are Judges, that must meet us there?With seraph smiles of light, or fiendish glare.
THE HIGHLAND GIRL'S LAMENT.
The ancient Highlanders believed the spirits of their departed friends continually present, and that their imagined appearances and voices communicated warnings of approaching death.
Oh! set the bridal feast aside,?And bear the harp away;?The coronach must sound instead,?From solemn kirk-yard gray.
I heard last eve, at set of sun,?The death-bell on the gale.?It was no earthly melody:--?The eglantine grew pale;
And leaf and blossom seemed to thrill?With an unuttered prayer,?As, fraught with desolateness wild,?The strange notes stirred the air.
And on the rugged mountain height,?Where snow and sunbeam meet,?That never yet in storm or shine?Was trod by human feet,
A weird and spectral presence came?Between me and the light;?The waving of a shadowy hand?That faded into night.
I felt it was the first who left?Our little household band,--?The child, with waving locks of gold,?Now in the silent land.
And when the mist at morn arose?From Katrine's silvery wave,?A form of aspect ominous,?With pensive look and grave,
Moved from the waters towards the glen?Where stands the holly-tree;?'T was the brother who is sleeping low?Beneath the stormy sea.
And while to-night the curfew bell?Rang out with solemn chime,?As soundeth o'er the buried year,?The organ peal of time,
And, near the fragrant jessamine,?I mused in garden glade,?A phantom form appeared
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 18
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.