Coolidge Susan

Verses


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heavens serene,

        Assured Thy faithfulness cannot betray,

                   Thy love decay.

        I may not know, my God; no hand revealeth

                   Thy counsels wise;

        Along the path a deepening shadow stealeth,

                   No voice replies

        To all my questioning thought, the time to tell,

                   And it is well.

        Let me keep on, abiding and unfearing

                     Thy will always,

        Through a long century's ripening fruition,

                     Or a short day's.

        Thou canst not come too soon; and I can wait

                   If thou come late.

      ON THE SHORE

          The punctual tide draws up the bay,

          With ripple of wave and hiss of spray,

        And the great red flower of the light-house tower

          Blooms on the headland far away.

          Petal by petal its fiery rose

          Out of the darkness buds and grows;

        A dazzling shape on the dim, far cape,

          A beckoning shape as it comes and goes.

          A moment of bloom, and then it dies

          On the windy cliff 'twixt the sea and skies.

        The fog laughs low to see it go,

          And the white waves watch it with cruel eyes.

          Then suddenly out of the mist-cloud dun,

          As touched and wooed by unseen sun,

        Again into sight bursts the rose of light

          And opens its petals one by one.

          Ah, the storm may be wild and the sea be strong,

          And man is weak and the darkness long,

        But while blossoms the flower on the light-house tower

          There still is place for a smile and a song.

      AMONG THE LILIES

          She stood among the lilies

            In sunset's brightest ray,

          Among the tall June lilies,

            As stately fair as they;

        And I, a boyish lover then,

        Looked once, and, lingering, looked again,

           And life began that day.

          She sat among the lilies,

            My sweet, all lily-pale;

          The summer lilies listened,

            I whispered low my tale.

        O golden anthers, breathing balm,

        O hush of peace, O twilight calm,

            Did you or I prevail?

          She lies among the lily-snows,

            Beneath the wintry sky;

          All round her and about her

            The buried lilies lie.

        They will awake at touch of Spring,

        And she, my fair and flower-like thing,

            In spring-time—by and by.

      NOVEMBER

            Dry leaves upon the wall,

        Which flap like rustling wings and seek escape,

        A single frosted cluster on the grape

            Still hangs—and that is all.

            It hangs forgotten quite,—

        Forgotten in the purple vintage-day,

        Left for the sharp and cruel frosts to slay,

            The daggers of the night.

            It knew the thrill of spring;

        It had its blossom-time, its perfumed noons;

        Its pale-green spheres were rounded to soft runes

            Of summer's whispering.

            Through balmy morns of May;

        Through fragrances of June and bright July,

        And August, hot and still, it hung on high

            And purpled day by day.

            Of fair and mantling shapes,

        No braver, fairer cluster on the tree;

        And what then is this thing has come to thee

            Among the other grapes,

            Thou lonely tenant of the leafless vine,

        Granted the right to grow thy mates beside,

        To ripen thy sweet juices, but denied

            Thy place among the wine?

            Ah! we are dull and blind.

        The riddle is too hard for us to guess

        The why of joy or of unhappiness,

            Chosen or left behind.

            But everywhere a host

        Of lonely lives shall read their type in thine:

        Grapes which may never swell the tale of wine,

            Left out to meet the frost.

      EMBALMED

        This is the street and the dwelling,

          Let me count the houses o'er;

        Yes,—one, two, three from the corner,

          And the house that I love makes four.

        That is the very window

          Where I used to see her head

        Bent over book or needle,

          With ivy garlanded.

        And the very loop of the curtain,

          And the very curve of the vine,

        Were full of the grace and the meaning

          Which was hers by some right divine.

        I began to be glad at the corner,

          And all the way to the door

        My heart outran my footsteps,

          And frolicked and danced before,

        In