The Project Gutenberg eBook of A spray of lilac, by Marie Hedderwick Browne This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: A spray of lilac and other poems and songs Author: Marie Hedderwick Browne Release Date: July 21, 2022 [eBook #68579] Language: English Produced by: Charlene Taylor, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SPRAY OF LILAC *** A Spray of Lilac _Printed by_ BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO. _London and Edinburgh_ A Spray of Lilac _And Other Poems and Songs_ BY MARIE HEDDERWICK BROWNE LONDON ISBISTER AND COMPANY LIMITED 15 & 16 TAVISTOCK STREET COVENT GARDEN 1892 _Oh, lilac bloom! strange that so slight a thing As thou is strong to roll away the stone From memory’s grave, and set the dead past free To claim again brief kinship with its own._ PREFATORY NOTE _Most of the Poems contained in this volume have appeared during the past ten years, in “Atalanta,” “Chambers’s Journal,” “London Society,” “Little Folks,” “The Girl’s Own Paper,” and other serials._ _If an apology for venturing to offer them to the public in collected form be deemed necessary, I can only urge the plea of the poor but hospitable Dervish, “He is a generous host who freely giveth his best, be his best but clear water and a crust.”_ _M. H. B._ _London, December 1892_ CONTENTS PAGE A SPRAY OF LILAC 1 IN AN OLD GARDEN 3 A MOTHER’S GRIEF 5 A SUMMER MEMORY 8 UNSATISFIED 11 MY SONG 12 IN AN OLD CHURCHYARD 13 SECRETS 15 REVEALED--NOT SPOKEN 16 BURIED TREASURES 19 AFFINITY 20 “MY HOUSE IS LEFT UNTO ME DESOLATE” 21 AN OLD MAN’S DREAM 22 A SUMMER WOOING 24 WEE ELSIE 26 BIDE WI’ MITHER 28 CHILD ANGELS 30 MY LOVE OF LONG AGO 32 IN SUMMER TIME 34 TWIN-SISTERS 36 AT LAST 38 TRYSTING-TIME 40 BESIDE THE DEAD 41 HER FIRST SEASON 43 ANTICIPATED 46 WHEN THOU ART NEAR 47 A PORTRAIT 48 DOROTHY 49 DAFFODILS 51 THE BLACKBIRD 52 “WHOM THE GODS LOVE DIE YOUNG” 53 GRANNIE’S BAIRN 54 LOVE’S POWER 56 A JUNE MEMORY 57 A MESSAGE 59 HER WINDOW 61 SHATTERED HOPES 62 HAND IN HAND 64 “AND FOR THE WEARY, REST” 65 IN AN OLD ORCHARD 67 BY THE SEA 68 REGRET 69 WAE’S ME 70 THE REASON WHY 71 DOWN BY THE SEA 73 A VENTURE 74 WATER LILIES 75 THE SENTINEL 76 A LOVE SONG 77 AUTUMN 78 A QUAKER MAID 79 THE TIME, THE PLACE, THE BELOVED 81 DAY DREAMS 82 SONG OF THE SEASONS 83 ONE SUMMER DAY 84 THE INSCRUTABLE 85 DELILAH 86 A BABY’S GRAVE 87 A CHILD’S FAVOURITE 88 RICH OR POOR? 89 DOLLY’S GARDEN 90 IN A DREAM-SHIP 91 THE FLOWER-QUEEN’S FALL 93 A VETERAN 95 TO A BUTTERFLY 96 WHEN AND WHERE 96 WHEN LOVE IS YOUNG 100 A CHARACTER SKETCH 101 FRIENDS 102 BED-TIME 104 _A SPRAY OF LILAC_ Pale cluster, thy faint perfume comes to me Laden with memories of long ago, And all the present dims as o’er my soul The waves of tender recollection flow. With Spring’s young blood again my veins are thrilled, My hands are stretched to meet the coming years, The world holds all the glory that it held Ere yet mine eyes had looked on it thro’ tears. With deftest fingers fancy weaves once more Her fairy fabrics; vast horizons glow With fires of promise, for behind their veils They hid rich treasures in that long-ago. The subtle sweetness of the vanished days, The rapture of the old ecstatic bliss, All, all are mine, as once again I cling To ripe warm lips in love’s first passion-kiss. The long delicious Summer slowly weaves For Autumn’s brows a crown of living gold; Sad Winter follows with his winding-sheet, For all the glory has grown grey and old. Oh, lilac bloom, strange that so slight a thing As thou, is strong to roll away the stone From memory’s grave, and set the dead past free To claim yet once brief kinship with its own. _IN AN OLD GARDEN_ Yellow roses, purple pansies, Tufts of heavy-headed stocks; Either side the quaint old gateway Blazing, torch-like hollyhocks. Sweet peas tossing airy banners, Saintly lilies bending low, Daisies, powdering all the green sward With a shower of summer snow. Boxwood borders--yews fantastic-- Wallflowers that with every sigh Spill such scent that e’en the brown bees, Reel with rapture wandering by. And the pear trees, long arms stretching O’er the sunny gable wall, Scarce can hold their ruddy nurslings Ripening where the warm beams fall. Oh, the ecstasy of living! How it thrills my life to-day! I can almost hear the flower-bells Tinkle where my footsteps stray! In a garden God first placed man, There first woke Love’s magic thrill; And methinks a breath of Eden Clings to earth’s old gardens still. _A MOTHER’S GRIEF_ To a great wide city all alone, Long, long ago went our baby queen-- No name but hers on the white headstone, That gleams to the moon from its mound of green! None of her own did welcome her there-- Not a grain of kindred dust doth wave In the flowers that out of the tears of despair Have arched a rainbow over her grave. Out from the shelter of loving arms, Out from the warmth of a mother’s breast, Heedless of darkness and night’s alarms, On to the silent city she pressed To take her place ’mong the mighty throng That people its myriad streets. Ah, me! I felt my God had done me a wrong, When He loosened love’s cords and set her free! And my passionate moan that broke in tears, Like a burdened wave on a desert shore, Seemed all too feeble to reach His ears And the pain grew old that my bosom bore; But the faith that I once had thought mine own Rose up to mock where it could not save, And my heart grew hard as the carven stone That was crushing my darling in her grave. Whenever a child’s sweet flower-like face Met mine, a sickness would o’er me creep, And I’d turn wild eyes to the lonely place Where she was lying alone--asleep. At strife was I with the world, and God Had drawn around Him an angry cloud; Earth held no green but the churchyard sod, And the daisies wore the gleam of a shroud. But a time there came when about my breast With a wand’ring touch small fingers stole, And feeble lips to its fountains pressed, And stirred with a vague sweet joy my soul; And the floodgates opened, and blessèd tears Of repentance fell from my eyes like rain, And after the barren and prayerless years I knelt to the Giver of All again! _A SUMMER MEMORY_ I remember an evening, An evening in one far June, The sun seemed loth to leave the sky To a young impatient moon. The yellow sands lay waiting For the sea’s long cool embrace; We watched the ripples breaking, Like smiles upon its face. The green trees nestled closer To the broad breast of the hill; The twilight’s glamour gathered, And the day was with us still. And a sadness born of beauty, And a joy to pain akin, Touched all that lay without us, And hushed my soul within. A silence stepped between us, We seemed to stand apart; Yet I thought your eyes grew tender, And I know what filled my heart. But the words were never spoken; And the distance wider grew, Till the world of waves was lying Between me, love, and you, No bridge might ever cross it. I watched you turn away, And I went back to duty-- ’Tis all a woman may. But I never shall be nearer The thrilling heights of bliss-- Unless the next world gives us The love we lose in this-- Than when in that far June-time, We seemed to stand apart, And I thought your eyes grew tender, And I knew what filled my heart. _UNSATISFIED_ Oh, “dear dead days” that dearer grow, I look behind, and thro’ my tears, Across a wide, wide gulf of years, I see you now and now I _know_. When I was yours, you mine, alas! I did not know your real worth, And, longing for the future’s birth, Found time so slow, so slow to pass. The joys I hoped for never came, While those I held slipped from my clasp, As I stretched yearning hands to grasp Shadows--’tis evermore the same! We strain dim eyes up to the stars, Nor heed the blossoms at our feet; Like puny birds we beat and beat Our lives out ’gainst Fate’s prison bars. _MY SONG_ “When love is mine,” said I, “I’ll make a song In praise of love that maketh life so sweet; One worthy such a grand and noble theme-- Worthy to lay at my belovèd’s feet. “Pure, perfect pearls of poesy I’ll string On Music’s silken thread, so rhythmic-sweet That those who hear shall feel as though each word Were but an echo of my heart’s warm beat.” Now love _is_ mine; but where my boasted song? My heart is full--too full, ah me! for words; And yet methinks my new-found joy has lent Fresh rapture to the voices of the birds. And I am dumb; the world will never hear The music filling all this life of mine. Oh! love is too sublime a theme for me; I can but kneel in silence at love’s shrine. _IN AN OLD CHURCHYARD_ In one of England’s sweetest spots, A little old grey church I found; Around it lies--dear restful ground! God’s garden with its sacred plots. With myriad arms the ivy holds Its time-worn walls in close embrace: So Memory sometimes keeps a face Half-veiled in tender misty folds. With sleepy twitter and with song The tower, bird-haunted, is alive; In leafy seas they dip and dive, Those tiny warblers all day long. Like sentinels grown hoar with age, The crumbling headstones guard the graves Which softly swell--green voiceless waves That will not break though tempests rage. “Concerning them that are asleep” In this sweet hamlet of the dead, In broken sentences I read The record those old tablets keep; Each told its tale, for hath not Grief A voice whose echoes never die? Adown the ages, Rachel’s cry Still rings o’er some God-garnered sheaf. Mine eyes, ne’er prodigal of tears, Did fill with such as seemed to rise And drown the glory of the skies, O’er those who’d slept the sleep of years. _SECRETS_ July roses wet with rain Tap against the window-pane; There is something they would seek, Had they voices and could speak. Silence seals their crimson lips, And the dull rain drops and drips. Th’ other side the streaming glass Stands a little sad-eyed lass; There is something she would seek, But a maiden may not speak-- Silence seals her longing lips, And the dull rain drops and drips. And salt tears in showers stain Her side of the window-pane; And the crimson roses grow Pale as dreams dreamt long ago; (Hearts may break behind sealed lips), And the dull rain drops and drips. _REVEALED--NOT SPOKEN_ The little maiden that I love, I met in yonder lane; A flood of sunshine seemed to fall Around her as she came. Methought the very hedgerows took A tenderer, livelier green, And blossoms burst from every bud As she passed on between! And gladder, madder, merrier notes A skylark round him threw, As high above her golden head, He poised amid the blue. I meant to tell her all my heart, And yet--I know not why, Upon the threshold of my lips The story seemed to die. It might have been the witchery, The magic of her smile, That in a spell held all my soul, And kept me dumb the while! It might have been that all too pure For earth-born love seemed she; From her white height of maidenhood How could she stoop to me? But eyes can prove more eloquent, And though the tongue may fail, In potent language they reveal The old, old tender tale. For, placing her slim hand in mine, Methought I heard my name So softly, murmurously breathed, I scarce knew whence it came! No need for words between us now; A subtle sweetness stole Through all our being, and we felt That soul had answered soul. And with the sunshine in our hearts, The bird’s song in our ears, We left the lane, my love and I, To meet the coming years. _BURIED TREASURES_ ’Tis true my later years are blest With all that riches can bestow, But there is wealth, wealth cannot buy, Hid in the mines of “Long Ago.” There jealous guard does Memory keep; Yet sometimes, when I dream alone, She comes and takes my hand in hers, And shows me what was once my own. I revel ’mong such precious things; I count my treasures o’er and o’er; I learn the worth of some, whose worth, Ah me! I never knew before. And then all slowly fades away, And I return to things you know, With empty hands and tear-filled eyes, Back from the mines of “Long Ago.” _AFFINITY_ But little converse have we held, Our hands have scarcely ever met, With just a formal word or two You come and go; and yet--and yet-- I have a dream we two were one Ere garb of flesh these spirits wore; The soul that speaks within your eyes Tells mine they’ve met and loved before. And so I am content to wait, Knowing the day will surely dawn When, as the first man woke, you’ll wake From your soul-sleep, and looking on My face will know that I am she, Your Eve, your other self, your fate. Till then, till then, come weal or woe, I am content, content to _wait_. “_MY HOUSE IS LEFT UNTO ME DESOLATE_” A little while, you say, a little while, And I shall be where my belovèd are; And with your eyes aglow with faith, you say, “Thy dear ones have not journeyed very far.” “Not very far.” I say it o’er and o’er, Till on mine ear mine own voice strangely falls, Like some mechanic utterance that repeats A meaningless refrain to empty walls. “Not very far;” but measured by my grief, A distance measureless as my despair. When from the dreams that give them back to me, I wake to find that they have journeyed there! “Not very far.” The soul surmises, hopes, Has hoped, surmising, since the first man slept; But, oh, the heart, it knoweth its own loss, And death is death, as ’twas when Rachel wept. _AN OLD MAN’S DREAM_ With idle hands and misty eyes, I sit alone to-night and dream; Upon the hearth, like elfin sprites, The red flames dance, and twist, and gleam. A dimness gathers in my room, The pictured faces on the wall Pale, and o’er each familiar thing A strangeness slowly seems to fall. With noiseless step there comes to me, One whom I loved in days gone by. The same is she, unchanged by time-- Unchanged--but oh, how changed am I! Her hair, which long, long years ago Was like spun threads of living gold, Still clusters round a brow that wears Immortal youth--and I am old. No look of recognition lights Her eyes, that meet mine o’er and o’er; And yet she loved me once--and love, I know, is love for evermore. She looks around in anxious quest; I think I know for whom she seeks. She only sees a strange old man, With snow-white hair and wrinkled cheeks. And then like wings of birds that preen For flight, a soft stir moves the air, It is the whisper of her gown-- She goes to look for me elsewhere. A sudden glory fills my eyes, It is the firelight’s ruddy gleam; Thank God she did not pass me by I only saw her in a dream! _A SUMMER WOOING_ A SONG Up and away!--up, up, and away! The hedgerows are foaming with blossom to-day; Its bonfires the golden gorse lights on the hill, And the wanton wind’s wooing wherever it will. Up and away!--up, up, and away! The cuckoo’s name rings through the woodlands to-day; The warm blood of Summer runs rioting through The veins of each leaflet--then why not of you? Up and away!--up, up, and away! There’s Passion and Poetry stirring to-day. Half blinded with rapture, the heavy bees dart From the lily’s white breast to the rose’s red heart. Up and away!--up, up, and away! The old world’s begun a fresh courting to-day. I wooed you all winter, but found you as cold As the snowdrift that gleamed on the ridge of the wold. Up and away!--up, up, and away! Your eyes tell me “Yes,” though your lips say me “Nay.” The tears, so long frost-bound, are ready to flow, And she melts in my arms, my proud maiden of snow! _WEE ELSIE_ O’ a’ the bonny wee bit lasses That e’er I’ve kent, not ane surpasses My Elsie. An’ oh, she has sic denty ways, Auld farrant a’ she does and says; Just watch the bairnie as she plays “At mither,” dressed in mither’s claes! Like twa sweet rosebuds on ae stalk, Her lips part in her guileless talk; She hauds a key that wad unlock Yer heart were’t hard as granite rock. Sae fearless are her een o’ blue, They seem tae look ye through an’ through; But though sae brave, an’ frank, an’ true, Wi’ happy fun they’re brimmin’ fu’. Adoun her shoulders floats her hair, Sae long, sae silken, an’ sae fair,-- In truth it seems a verra snare That’s caught an’ kept a sunbeam there. But better faur, those graces meet Aroun’ a nature just as sweet; Methinks the bairnie is complete Frae wise wee heed tae willin’ feet. _BIDE WI’ MITHER_ Oh bide a wee, my bonny lass, Nor seek to lea’ the auld hame-nest; O’ a’ earth’s luvs ye yet will fin’ A mither’s highest is, an’ best. She watched you like a rose unfauld, She reads you like an open buik; You scarce need speak, she is sae quick Tae understan’ yer ev’ry luik. The han’ that aye fan’ time tae pat The wee bit face sae aft turned up For “mither’s kiss,” has workit late An’ early for your bite an’ sup. An’ oh! it was a struggle sair Tae mak’ twa unco scrimp en’s meet; In her first days o’ weedowhood She scarce could spare the time tae greet. Oh dinna lea’ her yet awhile; The laddie’s young, an’ he can wait; There was a time, when you were wee, _She_ micht hae had anither mate. But she was feert he micht na be As guid’s the fayther you had lost; An’ though she could hae boucht her ease, _She_ wad na’ dae it at the cost. An’ noo she’s auld an’ growing frail, Your strong young arm should be her stay; Life’s dounward slope is hard eneuch, Be yours the han’ tae smooth the way. Oh, bide wi’ her, an’ you will fin’ That duty done brings sweet reward; The Maister, Christ, pleased na’ Himsel’, Although He was creation’s Lord! _CHILD ANGELS_ Oh, there are happy angels That go on missions sweet; They have no wings to bear them, Just little human feet. When I had grown aweary, And all my faith was dim, ’Twas one of them that led me, And brought me back to Him. When ’tween you and a loved one There lay a widening breach, And you were coldly drifting Beyond each other’s reach, A child’s hand ’twas that bridged it-- A child’s soft, rosy palm Held both your souls united, And life grew sweet and calm. When sorrows closely gathered, And heart and head were bowed, The blue eyes of a baby Made rifts in pain’s dark cloud. Oh, happy, earth-born angels, Who go on missions sweet, If ye had wings to bear you, Instead of little feet, I fear me ye would use them, Altho’ ye love us much, To soar to Him who tells us His “Kingdom is of such.” _MY LOVE OF LONG AGO_ There are faces just as perfect; There are eyes as true and sweet; There are hearts as strong and tender As the heart that’s ceased to beat; There are voices just as thrilling; There are souls as white, I know, As hers was when she went from me-- My love of long ago. New lips are ever telling The tale that ne’er grows old; Life’s greys are always changing For some one into gold; But amid the shine and shadow, Amid the gloom and glow, She walks with me, she talks with me-- My love of long ago. When I think of all the changes That the years to me have brought, I am glad the world that holds her Is the world that changes not. And the same as when she left me, She waits for me, I know-- My love on earth, my love in heaven, My love of long ago. _IN SUMMER TIME_ Daisies nod and blue-bells ring, Streamlets laugh and song birds sing, To the clover bees close cling. Cornfields wave their locks of gold, Poppies burn and wings unfold, Earth-stars twinkle on the mould. Butterflies--live blossoms, blown From that Eden once our own-- Make of every flower a throne. And a royal purple dyes Yonder heather-hill, that lies Fitting footstool for the skies. And the gorse is all ablaze, Lighting up the moorland ways, And the days are golden days. E’en the myriad-mooded sea (Earth-bound, yet than earth more free) Wears a look of _constancy_. And your love, that in the spring Was a shy, uncertain thing, Like a bud just blossoming, With the summer’s growth has grown, Till our two lives, lived as one, Make a summer of their own. _TWIN-SISTERS_ Two girls--before me now they stand, Twin tender rosebuds, hand in hand, Fashioned as one--scarce known apart; I see each face, God sees each heart. I look on ripe red lips, and eyes That hold the blue of summer skies, And hair like finest gold refined; I see the beauty, God the mind. In womanhood’s first faint sweet dawn Oh! they are fair to look upon; Perfect from crown to dainty foot; I see the bloom, God sees the fruit. What though a rose is each soft cheek, If theirs be not that spirit meek? What though their eyes are heaven’s own hue, If never wet with pity’s dew? The plainest casket may enshrine A gem that will for ever shine. Oh, may this outward beauty be But type of inward purity! God grant when Time its tale hath told, And backward swing the gates of gold, Before the Master they may stand, Twin tender rosebuds hand in hand! _AT LAST_ She is waiting for his coming, As she waited long ago, Ere her sweet eyes were pain-haunted Or her hair was touched with snow; Ere that look of patient pathos Downward curved her tender lips, Or across her life’s young morning Fell a shadow of eclipse. He is coming--but his footsteps Know not now youth’s bounding grace, And a world of sin and suffering Is recorded in his face; Airy dreams of high ambition That he cherished in the past-- All have vanished--and aweary He returns to her at last. In the old familiar garden Where he first breathed love’s fond vow, With new hopes, like the new roses Sprung from old roots, they stand now; And the past is past for ever, She forgives, and he forgets, For the present peace has buried Years of sorrows and regrets. _TRYSTING-TIME_ ’Tis only when the wooing west Has drawn the tired sun to her breast, I seek my darling’s place of rest. In twilight-time we used to meet-- Ah me, how lag our listless feet When we have but a grave to greet! And yet, this daisy-dappled grave So like a soft white-crested wave Is all beneath the skies I have. On broken wings the years have flown, Oh love, since in the long agone I left you sleeping here alone! _BESIDE THE DEAD_ Touch not her hand, let not your tear-drops stain The show-white purity of her dead brow; Withhold your lips, their passion or their pain Can thrill her nor with love nor pity now. The empty years that followed your farewell-- The joyless dawns, the nights that brought no rest Are ended,--and those weary eyelids fell O’er eyes that had grown dim in one vain quest. Thank God for this; her woman’s faith remained Steadfast, unshaken to the very last, And with her idol undefaced, unstained, To place it in a “niche in Heaven” she passed. But yesterday, your lightest whispered word Had thrilled her heart, as spring’s first breath awakes The rapture in the bosom of a bird Till winter’s silence with a song he breaks. And I,--whose love for her was purified In the fierce crucible of human pain, Had felt that I was more than satisfied If loss of mine had ended in her gain. For her soul’s sustenance you only left The memory of a lightly plighted vow, To take one kiss from those dead lips were theft, The jewel was yours,--I claim the casket now. _HER FIRST SEASON_ Cloud-like laces softly float Round a dainty snow-white throat-- Fastened here and flutt’ring there With a careless cunning care; Blue-bells, blue as summer skies are. Or her own sweet sunny eyes are, Cluster close beneath her chin, As if love--and not a pin-- Kept them fondly nestling in! Gown of some transparent thing, Like a dragonfly’s clear wing Full of whispers vague and sweet, Falls in white folds to her feet. Light as moss veils drape their roses, Round her flower-like form it closes-- Every graceful curve it shows us. Silken mittens soft and quaint, Of a shade æsthetic, faint, Weave a jealous network o’er Two pink palms that I adore; And a musical mixed jangle Comes from bracelet and from bangle As it fetters each slim wrist (Made but to be clasped and kissed), With fantastic coil and twist. Hair a-ripple like ripe corn Wind-kissed on a summer morn. What, you say you see the glint Of a reaper’s blue scythe in’t? Nay, ’tis but a silver arrow Wand’ring through a golden furrow, Where the sun-shafts bore and burrow. Like a bright plumed bird is she, From the home-nest just set free; Knowing neither grief nor wrong, In her heart and lips a song. ’Tis not I would wish to make her Prim and drab-gown’d like a Quaker! All fair things are beauty’s dower-- Doth not God’s hand paint the flower? (Youth is but a fleeting hour!) _ANTICIPATED_ Oh I have wealth, and could have placed Upon your head a golden crown, But Nature, having had my taste, And being first, has set one down. I could have given you rubies rare, And sapphires of a heavenly hue, And pearls all shimmering soft and fair; But here she’s been before me too. For ruby lips to you she’s given, And strung two pearly rows between, And sapphire eyes more blue than heaven She’s dowered you with, my queen, my queen! I needs must be content to lay My heart’s best treasures at your feet: Without love’s gem, which shines for aye, The fairest crown were incomplete. _WHEN THOU ART NEAR_ A SONG When thou art near no other face I see, Thy voice is all the music I can hear; My heart’s desire is granted unto me When thou art near. When thou art near I am content, nay more, I’m blest in breathing the same atmosphere. To higher heights my aspirations soar When thou art near. When thou art near, though yet I dare not lay My lips on those I hold so very dear, I know that heaven is not so far away When thou art near. _A PORTRAIT_ A sadness lingers round her lips, A shadow ever haunts her eyes; Like dusky pools are they on which The mystery of the moonlight lies. Her voice is sweet, but grave in tone, No ring hath it of joyous mirth; Yet somehow when she speaks, methinks A benediction falls on earth. A sense of rest her presence brings, She moves with such a quiet grace; And ’tis the pitying soul within Makes tender twilight of her face. Methinks the Virgin-mother must Have looked like this when to her breast The Babe, who was to save a world, With mingled joy and pain she pressed. _DOROTHY_ Dorothy is debonair; Little count hath she or care; All her gold is in her hair. And the freshness of the Spring Round this old world seems to cling When you hear her laugh or sing. On her sunny way she goes; Much she wonders--little knows, Love’s as yet a folded rose. All her smiles in dimples die; Glad is she, nor knows she why: Just to live is ecstasy! Lightly lie the chains, methinks, That have daisies for their links; Youth’s the fount where Pleasure drinks. Dorothy is debonair; Little count hath she or care, Sunshine in her heart and hair. _DAFFODILS_ Oh, wild is the daffodils’ dance To the tune that the March pipes blow, Heads a-tossing--lances crossing, Curtsies sweeping and low. Like waves in a flaming sunset They tumble, and twist, and turn, What tho’ from its slender pillar Droppeth one golden urn? Short-lived is their joy and reckless, Never a pause for breath. Ah, well!--are _we_ too not whirling As blind, in our “dance of death”? _THE BLACKBIRD_ When baby buds begin to shoot Then hey! the blackbird’s golden flute; All steeped in love seems every note Let loose from his mellifluous throat. No wild rhapsodic bursts proclaim What rapture thrills his tiny frame, His heart is like a brimming cup, Where pearls of joy keep bubbling up. The lark like some delirious thing At heaven’s far gate may soar and sing, But oh, methinks the blackbird brings Heaven down to earth what time he sings! “_WHOM THE GODS LOVE DIE YOUNG_” Her voice is hushed, her hands are still, I, from the summit of the hill, Look down, and marvel at God’s will. Her foot was planted at the base All eager for the upward race, Her genius shining in her face. She felt the soul within her leap, She yearned to scale the steepest steep, And now--she’s fallen upon sleep! God knoweth best!--I must descend The downward slope. Good-bye, sweet friend, Life’s myriad ways meet in the end. _GRANNIE’S BAIRN_ When oor wee Elspeth’s in the hoose I scarce hae use for hauns or feet-- An’ after a’, why _should_ I fash When she’s sae nimble an’ sae fleet? “I wonner whaur I laid my specs!” The words hae haurdly left ma mooth Afore I fin’, across my nose, She has them set astride forsooth. She threeds ma needle, winds ma woo’, Picks up the steeks that whiles _will_ drap-- She slips aboot like some wee moose For fear she’ll wauke me frae ma nap. Her wee three-leggit stool ye’ll aye Fin’ drawn up close tae granny’s chair; She learns her task an’ sews her seam, An’ sups her cog o’ parritch there. An’ mony’s the lang crack we twa hae; But whiles, sic puzzlin’ things she’ll spier, The verra Meenister himsel’ Waud be dumbfounded could he hear. She _has_ her bit camsterie turns, But just eneuch tae show that she Is no a being that is made O’ diff’rent clay tae you an’ me. But that she’s no by-ord’nar wean The neebors roon aboot agree, And sae ye ken it is na just Ma _ain_ opeenion that I gie. _LOVE’S POWER_ When you did leave me, love, The whole world seem’d with you to ebb away, And like a broken stranded wreck I lay. But you returned; and lo! A fresh tide thrill’d my life’s deserted shore; And Love was conqueror over Death once more. _A JUNE MEMORY_ ’Twas June, the roses were reigning In regalest splendour and pride. Sweet peas, like butterflies tethered, Were flutt’ring on every side. Like smouldering fires the wallflowers Burned dull in the sun’s strong glow, And the yellow bees, like meteors, Went flashing to and fro. No lordly pleasaunce was it, But an old-world garden wild, Where purple-hooded pansies And long-lashed daisies smiled. And there in June we parted; And the sad years hurtle by Like birds whose wings are broken When they just have learned to fly. And I think,--Do you remember In the life that’s yours to-day, That garden and its glamour, And the time that _would not_ stay! Oh, amid the faces around you, Does one face never arise And for a moment hold you With the old spell of its eyes? Ah no! You men forget us, And we!--we must be dumb. And life’s June goes for ever And the snows of winter come. _A MESSAGE_ In a little broken flower-pot High up on a window-sill, ’Mid grime and gloom and squalor, Grew a golden daffodil. It seem’d in the gloom of the alley Like a sunbeam that had strayed Out from the light of heaven Into a land of shade. And close in a cage beside it A skylark sweetly sang Till all the narrow alley With its wild rapture rang. And one poor weary sinner Paused, as her wild eyes turned To where, on its humble altar, The flower-flame upward burned. And something stirred in her bosom; ’Twas the heart that had long lain dead, As the bird’s song rose from its prison In the shadow overhead. God’s angels are birds and flowers, And oh! methinks they preach At times with a power and pathos We men can never reach. _HER WINDOW_ Up the gable the roses creep, Eager to get a little peep Behind the curtain of snowy lace That hangs, like a bridal veil, over the face Of a shy wee window, whose panes glint through A network of creepers, like eyes of blue. I needs must stand below, below, And see them high and higher go Till their lips are kissing the lattice sill, And their tendrils toy at their own sweet will With the casement, so full of tender charms Since _her_ shadow has lain within its arms. _SHATTERED HOPES_ This morn upon the birken tree The mavis carolled blithe and free; But--ah, his song was not for me! Each wild note of his glad refrain Pierced like an arrow thro’ my brain; I could have cursed him for his strain. I saw the sunshine and the flowers, Each proof of a Creator’s powers; Yet dull and hateful were the hours. I cannot weep--the fever dries The tears within my burning eyes-- The past before my vision flies. Once more I feel his deep-drawn kiss; Once more my being thrills with bliss; Once more I melt with tenderness. I hear the trembling words that hung Deep fraught with passion on his tongue, Till heart and soul with pain are wrung. All nature smiles--and yet to-day In memory’s grave I’ve laid away My idol that has turned to clay. _HAND IN HAND_ Hand in hand through the flow’ry ways Went Dora and I in the bygone days; A wee girl she, her boy lover I, Ready to fight for her and die. Hand in hand through this vale of tears Went Dora and I in the after-years; She was my wife and her husband I Ready to fight for her and die. Hand in hand to the very last As her dear eyes dimmed, and her spirit passed; An angel is she,--alone am I Ready, O, God! and I _cannot_ die. “_AND FOR THE WEARY, REST_” Of all God’s precious promises The sweetest and the best Is, that to weary laden ones Who come, He giveth _rest_. ’Tis not of glad Hosannas And streets of shining gold We think so much when we are sick And sorrowful and old. Ah! there are times we feel too sad To contemplate the joy, The great and glorious themes of heaven That angel-minds employ. And weak, and worn, and weary, We long to lay us down, Feeling we scarce could bear the weight Of e’en a glory-crown. That He is “very man,” I need None other proof than this,-- That He has “rest” for those who feel Almost too tired for bliss. _IN AN OLD ORCHARD_ Sweet avalanches of scented snow Bury one deep, as I lie below The laden white boughs abloom and ablow In the dear old orchard, where long ago My grand-dame dreamed, as I’m dreaming now, With love in her heart and youth on her brow. O, blossom-time passes too soon, too soon! And grey night follows the golden noon, And Autumn though ruddy brings ruin and rune, And passion ne’er warms the cold heart of the moon. So let me dream on, ’mid the apple-blooms sweet, For noontide and bloomtide are fair as they’re fleet. And then when the blue of the sky is o’ercast, And Summer is ended, and harvest is past, And the loosened leaves earthward are fluttering fast, And the sleep that is dreamless is mine at last, O, make my grave here; and lay me to rest Where the sweet-scented snow shall fall light on my breast. _BY THE SEA_ I think, as the white sails come and go, Of the welcomes loud, and the farewells low; Of the meeting lips, and the parting tears, Of the new-born hopes, and the growing fears, Of the eyes that glow, and the cheeks that pale, As the hazy horizon’s mystic veil Is silently parted, and to and fro The white sails come and the white sails go. And a grey mist gathers, and all grows dim As I watch alone by the ocean’s rim. For a dream is mine--ah me! ah me! That salt with _tears_ is the salt salt sea. O, yearning eyes and outstretched hands! O, divided lives, and divided lands! As long as the waters ebb and flow Shall the white sails come and the white sails go. _REGRET_ “It might have been,” is the sad refrain That forever haunts my weary brain, Till heart and soul grow weak with pain. “It might have been,” are the words I hear In the curlew’s cry from the lonely mere; In the whisper of leaves when woods are sere. “It might have been,” says the sea’s long moan, As if a breaking heart of its own Wailed out in that strange low undertone. “_It might have been._” Ah, the hungry cry As the leaden years crawl slowly by! It will ring through my life till I die, I die. _WAE’S ME_ Aroun’ my bit bieldie the cauld win’ is soughing, The dull rain is patt’ring amang the deid leaves, The mist-wreaths are swirling about the grey mountains, The wee drookit birds huddle close ’neath the eaves. Alang the bleak shore the lane sea gangs a sobbin’ Like some wander’d bairnie that fain wad win hame, Aye seekin’ an’ seekin’, an’ never yet findin’,-- Sure man, in his pilgrimage here, is the same. The sky has nae promise, the earth hauds nae pleesure. I look north an’ south, an’ I look east an’ west, An’ I envy the folk i’ the kirk-yaird out yonder, For there, ’mang the mools, there is rest--there is rest! _THE REASON WHY_ I ken the lassie’s winsome, An’ blithe as she is braw; But ’tis not worth nor beauty aye That steal the heart awa’. Her cheek is like the wild-rose, Her lips are like the haw; But neither ane nor t’ither ’twas That stole my heart awa’. Her locks are black as midnight, Her brow like driven snaw; And yet it was na’ these I vow That stole my heart awa’. Her smile is like the sunshine, ’Twad gar an iceberg thaw; But ’twas na’ this by my guid-faith That stole my heart awa’. Ilk lad’s lass the fairest is, For Beauty kens nae law; (Though _some_ folk maun be easy pleased Wha’s hearts are stown awa’!) Ah weel! maybe the pearl I’ve foun’ Is no wi’out a flaw! But just because she’s her ain sel’ She stole my heart awa’. _DOWN BY THE SEA_ O, mighty organ of a thousand keys, O’er which the Master’s fingers ever stray! I, listening, hear a myriad melodies Played in the space of one short summer day. The long, low plash of little languid waves, The sweet, sad dirge of softly dying swell, The deep, delicious gurglings in the caves, Hold music that this soul of mine loves well. Full as the human heart of mysteries, Like it responsive to His touch alone, For only He can wake the harmonies Which sleep within thy bosom and mine own. _A VENTURE_ Her mouth looks like a scarlet flower And I feel like a hungry bee, I long to dart straight to its heart, But--what would be the fate of me? The bravest ’tis should win the prize, And yet I dare not risk her scorn, And who but knows the reddest rose May hide the very sharpest thorn? Yet who can tell but she might yield Its sweetness up in one long kiss? So I, who dare not risk her scorn, Can risk still less to lose such bliss. And when she feels my parchèd lips Athirst with long long years of drouth, She will forgive me, that I sought That dewy chalice, her sweet mouth. _WATER LILIES_ A fleet of fairy vessels All freighted with pure gold, The lilies lie at anchor On the lake’s breast, calm and cold. Their soft, white sails, seem waiting The zephyr’s first faint kiss To waft them to another world, More bright and fair than this. Methinks, it were no marvel, If I should find, one day, They’d drifted from their moorings, And in silence sailed away. _THE SENTINEL_ “Tick! tick! tick!” goes the old clock in the hall; The merry hours, the mournful hours Alike he counts them all As he stands erect at his post, Time’s solemn Sentinel. All that he hath to say he saith, And on, with never a pause for breath, He hurries us nearer the day of death. Though his warning voice is ofttimes drowned In the whirr, as the wheels of life run round, Yet, whether or no we _hear_ the sound,-- “Tick! tick! tick!” goes the old clock in the hall; The merry hours, the mournful hours Alike he counts them all, As he stands erect at his post, Time’s solemn Sentinel. _A LOVE SONG_ Upon a bosom snowy white A little dimpled chin drops down, While trembling shy lids hide the light Of love, new born in eyes dark brown. A tiny timorous hand seeks mine For shelter, fluttering like a dove; And with a rapture half divine I burn my kisses through its glove. June’s rosy treasures sweetly blend Upon her cheek and modest brow, But only Cupid’s self could lend The crimson stealing o’er them now. Her voice makes music of my name, A heaven of love is in her smile, Her pure mind, like an altar-flame, Burns clear and steady all the while. _AUTUMN_ Red as blood is Autumn’s gown, And a flaming fire her crown. And her fingers sere and scorch, Each one a destroying torch. Fever follows in her wake, Nor the dews her thirst can slake. In her kisses there is death, And decay in every breath. She makes tombs of what were bowers, Strewn with corses of dead flowers. To the loftiest leaves that wave She but whispers of a grave. _A QUAKER MAID_ Just a pair of green-grey eyes, With a knack of changing Like the sea, when shine and shower O’er its breast are ranging. Just a pair of green-grey eyes Each one a heart-breaker, Who would think that they belonged To a little Quaker? Prim her bonnet, drab her gown, And she walks sedately, With a sort of lily-mien-- Drooping, and yet stately. And her voice sounds, oh, so meek! “Thou” and “thee” and “thying,” Yet the while those grey-green eyes Seem to be belying. All these airs of calm repose,-- This sad suit and sober, Why _should_ Spring’s young sapling be Brown-leaved like October? Gown her in the lilies’ white! Crown her curls with roses! Wreath her neck with daisy-chains! Fill her hands with posies! Laughter-loving green-grey eyes, Young limbs girt with gladness, How they mock this dismal drab Livery of sadness! “_THE TIME, THE PLACE, THE BELOVED._” You and I among the roses-- You and I and love and June-- All without and all within us Set to one sweet happy tune! You and I among the roses! Drowsy bees go blundering by; ’Mid the tresses on your temples Little breezes swoon and die. You and I among the roses! Overhead a sapphire dome; ’Neath our feet a sea of emerald, Flecked with daisies for its foam. You and I among the roses-- ’Tis for love the time and place! What a world of rapture can be Crowded into one small space. _DAY-DREAMS_ I am dreaming of you, belovèd, In my home among the hills; Your eyes meet mine in every flower; Above the highest height you tower, Yet the glamour of your presence The lowest valley fills. I hear your voice in the river That sings on its way to the sea; And when the wind sweeps over The low beds of the clover, ’Tis the breath of my belovèd Its wide wings bear to me. I am dreaming of you, belovèd, But though sweet these day-dreams be, ’Tis the deeper dreams of sleeping That restore you to my keeping, And so the world of shadows Is the dearest world to me. _SONG OF THE SEASONS_ Sing, oh sing, ’tis summer time! Sing it ’mong the roses,-- Sing it till each sleeping bud, Dewy-eyed, uncloses. Sing it through the woodlands, till All the song-birds hear it! Sing,--till every blade of grass Finds a voice to cheer it. * * * * * Sigh, oh sigh, ’tis winter drear! Sigh it through the flowing Shroud that over earth’s dead breast Falls in time of snowing. Sigh it through the bare brown stems That once held the roses! Sigh it round the grave, that o’er Summer’s glory closes. _ONE SUMMER DAY_ The sky stretched blue above us, The sea slept at our feet, As still, as if its mighty heart Had almost ceased to beat. A trembling hush seemed slowly Across the earth to steal, As when after benediction The priest and people kneel. It was as though God’s finger Lay on the pulse of life, And stilled, for one brief moment, Its tumult and its strife. _THE INSCRUTABLE_ A glad young girl amid the sunshine flitting, Like a bright bird let loose from Paradise-- A weary woman, in the shadow, sitting With haggard face and dry despairing eyes. * * * * * The one in death’s dark chamber now is lying, Stricken to marble her warm pulsing breast: And God denies the luxury of dying To the sad soul whose one cry is for _rest_. _DELILAH_ Why comest thou with those grand eyes of thine To lure me as the cruel light the moth, To my destruction.--Long ago my wrath Cooled its white heat in pity’s depths divine. There was a time when full of bitter hate I could have crushed thee--but that time is past, And tho’ I needs must love thee to the last, Tempt me not now--it is too late, too late. Apart for evermore our paths must lie, Such love as thine can only bring a curse. I would be better for my love, not worse, So go while I have strength to say “Good-bye.” _A BABY’S GRAVE_ I could not lay her down to sleep In a death-crowded place, With grim black yews to keep God’s sun From shining on her face. With softest greenest moss I lined For her a little nest; No crushing marble slab I laid Upon her tender breast. Nor iron rails like prison-bars Her sacred form enclose, The sternest guardian of her grave Is just a fragile rose. _A CHILD’S FAVOURITE_ Only an old wooden dolly, With an arm and a leg a-missing, The point of her nose rubbed off, I suppose, Through too much washing or kissing. In a frock of faded satin, With tinsel lace tarnished and tattered; Her “coal-scuttle” bonnet holds, alas! A head that’s a trifle battered. Oh, no, she has not lost her locks, She _never_ had curls black or golden; A doll’s wig was safely painted on In the days that _you_ call “olden.” You laugh, and think her “too funny;” Yet _once_ she was just as much cherished As _your_ dolly is--by a wee girl Whose dolly-days long ago perished. _RICH OR POOR?_ Only a string of cold white pearls, Or diamond drops, like frozen tears, Has clasped my lady’s slender neck Through all the barren empty years. Only wee warm white baby arms Have clasped _my_ neck thro’ the sweet years; Yet she is rich and I am poor-- Or so it to the world appears. _DOLLY’S GARDEN_ This is Dolly’s garden, All her “very own,” Every flower that’s in it By her hand was sown-- Never out of Eden Were such blossoms blown. Like her eyes those pansies, Deep and dark and blue-- As her soul those lilies, Pure and white and true; Frail earth-flowers and fading-- Dolly’s fading too. This _was_ Dolly’s garden, Here I stand _alone_, Dolly’s tending blossoms Near the Great White Throne: Dolly now has heaven For her “very own.” _IN A DREAM-SHIP_ She sailed away one summer day In a ship of shining shell: Her cloak was a butterfly’s gauzy wing, Her bonnet a big blue-bell, Her bed was a lady’s slipper, Her blankets the leaves of a rose, And a cushion of thistledown had she, Just to rest her tiny toes. With golden oars from the earth’s dark shores She was borne o’er a silver sea; And she never feared as the captain steered For the land where she wished to be. And this was the song, As they drifted along, That she sang from the ship of shell-- “Oh, we are bound For enchanted ground; It’s _there_ that the fairies dwell.” But a storm swept over the silver sea, And the little maid awoke As against the side of the fair frail barque A cruel billow broke; And she rubbed her eyes, and she pinched her arm, And fearfully peeped around; But instead of a ship “for fairyland” She had boarded a “homeward-bound.” _THE FLOWER-QUEEN’S FALL_ A rebel rose climbed to the top of the hedge, And watched the people go up and down The winding highway, dusty and grey, That stretched from the village away to the town. And an anger surged in her passionate heart, ’Gainst the humble garden where she was born, And her red lips curled at the old flower world, And she cast around her such looks of scorn That the lilies drooped ’neath her withering glance, And the pansies huddled together with fear, And the poor pinks paled, and each daisy quailed, And dropped from her lashes a big round tear. For of the flower-kingdom this rose was queen, And never were subjects more loyal than they-- And they fondly dreamed she was good as she seemed, And because they had loved they were proud to obey. But lo! as she towered in haughty disdain High over their heads, with an angry gust The wind swooped down and tore off her crown, And its jewels went whirling away with the dust. _A VETERAN_ In his niche in the hall, the old clock stands, But hushed is his voice, and still are his hands. He ceased from his labours long years ago, And he’s only a “pensioner” now, you know. He did his duty as long as he could, For a brave heart beat in his breast of wood, And you could depend on _all_ he said Till age, at last, turned him queer in the head. With a visor of glass o’er his grim old face, In his armour,--a straight, stiff, oaken case, He “stands at ease” in his sentry box, And leaves time-telling to younger clocks. _TO A BUTTERFLY_ Butterfly, O butterfly, With gaily-jewelled wings, You make me think of fairy folk And of enchanted things. You once were held a prisoner In a castle grim and grey-- A “chrysalis” folk called it-- But you escaped away. And now you flutter ’mong the flowers, A restless roving elf, Or fold your wings and lie so still-- A very flower yourself. Or hoisting high two gauzy sails, You softly float away, Just like a tiny fairy barque Bound for a fairy bay. The bees must work, the birds must sing, The flowers yield perfumes rare; But you were born a trifler, Frail thing of light and air! _WHEN AND WHERE_ I wonder “when” and I wonder “where” The Angel of Death will come, And, laying a finger on lids and lips, Will strike me blind and dumb. I wonder “when” and I wonder “where”! Like the skeleton at the feast, ’Mid laughter and mirth this thought finds birth Where it is welcome least. I wonder “when” and I wonder “where”-- In my prime or old age hoar, At home, with my loved ones round my bed, Or alone on an alien shore. I wonder “when” and I wonder “where!” Is God not over all? He knows the time and He knows the place Who marks a sparrow’s fall. _WHEN LOVE IS YOUNG_ The red and russet of Autumn die, In the lap of winter their ashes lie, And the earth is wan and grey the sky. But the noon of a wondrous joy is mine, And my pulses thrill with the glowing wine That flows from the grape of Love’s deathless vine. What care have I that the brown stems bear Nor leaf nor bloom, and the mad winds tear The last poor tatters the forests wear? Is not the heart in mine own glad breast A garden of roses, a haven of rest, A bird that has builded a warm love-nest? _A CHARACTER SKETCH_ Womanly-sweet in all her ways, Slow to condemn, and swift to praise; Ready to help in hour of need, Generous in thought as well as deed. Pitiful, tender, yet firm and strong To uphold the right and put down wrong; Never a thought of self or gain, Proud of her God-given gifts--not vain. Laughter-loving, and fond of fun, When the “daily round” and task are done; Modest and maidenly, yet no prude; Perfect enough, but not “too good.” Half an angel, yet wholly human; No ideal--a living woman. _FRIENDS_ We are such friends, my little girl and I, That, though her summers number scarcely nine I need none other, as I go my ways With her small fingers closely clasping mine. A little world we two make of our own, And people it with all things fair and sweet; The stars that twinkle overhead at night Drop down at dawn in daisies at our feet. My smiles are hers;--my tears are all my own, I keep my sighs and give her all my song, Because she is so trusting and so weak I feel that I can suffer and be strong. The while I try to keep the narrow way, ’Tis wide enough for both. And my white dove, With untried wings, knows little love but this, That “Mother” is another name for “Love.” _BED-TIME_ The sleepy daisies have said “Good night,” And tied up their wee frilled nightcaps tight. The summer day’s been hot and long And daisies, although they are so strong, Are always tired and ready for bed Ere the stars, heaven’s daisies, awake o’erhead. The roses have rocked themselves to sleep. Awake they could no longer keep-- They’ve been astir since the dawn of day, Sighing their sweet perfume away, And feeding the hungry beggar bees That never say “thanks” nor “if you please!” And, baby darling, ’tis time that you Had shut your drowsy eyes of blue-- Wee busy hands, wee busy feet Must rest sometime, you know, my sweet-- The flower-bells _all_ have chimed “Good night.” They’ll ring to wake you with the light. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SPRAY OF LILAC *** Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will be renamed. Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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