Page:Littell's Living Age - Volume 128.djvu/652

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642
CHANGING GUIDES, ETC.


CHANGING GUIDES.

Along the road the travellers go,
A motley cavalcade;
At midnight, 'midst fast-falling snow,
The march awhile is stayed.

And great and small, and one and all,
Hot youth and lagging age,
They gather waiting round the stone
Which marks another stage.

The journey’s done, the stage is run,
The guide must say farewell.
(Hark! down the wind the travellers deem
They hear a passing-bell.)

A stage behind, when wailed the wind
Across a snowy wold,
They halted, and they halt this night,
Upon a midnight cold,

Till this same guide, who stands beside
The stone, now midnight's near,
Came, muffled — none his face could see,
And none his voice could hear.

If he were glad, if he were sad,
Not one of them could know;
But ever as he went along
His veil he lifted slow.

If he were sad, if he were glad,
If he brought good or ill,
They did not know; but, day by day,
He told his tale; and still,

Some called it sad, some said 'twas glad —
So wondrous was the tale.
Each saw him as none other saw,
Who looked behind his veil.

The stage is run, the tale is done,
The guide must say farewell;
And on the wind there comes the sound,
As of a passing-bell.

Now he must go; the winds wail low
Across the snowy wold;
He takes each traveller by the hand —
His hand is very cold.

Of one and all, both great and small,
How loth soe'er they be,
Whatever’s false of all they have,
He claims it for his fee.

They plead in vain, for, loth or fain,
They thus his fee must pay;
But nothing that was truly theirs
The guide can take away.

And when he goes none ever knows;
Their grasp is strong and warm —
They think they hold him still — but he
Is whirling down the storm.

Ere they can say, "Farewell for aye!"
Far down the storm he's gone.
The new guide stands with muffled face
Beside the halting-stone.

At midnight thus the cavalcade
Is halted on the plain.
When midnight's past, to meet the morn
The march sets forth again.

Mary A. M. Hoppus
Good Words.




UNDER THE APPLE-TREE.

A dome of blossom rises overhead,
Piled like the snows upon some Alpine height,
And blushing with such tints of pink and red
As summer clouds may wear in vesper light.

Dew-spangled — pierced with sudden shafts of gold
That slide between the latticed boughs below;
A little world of bloom, that seems to fold
Birds, bees, and sunbeams in a tender glow.

Life is so sweet beneath this fairy bower
That the full heart must tremble in its bliss,
And fear lest wanton breeze or hasty shower
Should harm one petal by a careless kiss.

.   .   .   .   .   .   .   .


Under the apple-tree I stand alone,
In the strange stillness of an autumn day:
Where have the swallows and the brown bees flown?
What cruel hand hath snatched my blooms away?

The sullen, silver-rifted sky looks down
Between grey branches, — not a golden gleam
Falls on the scanty leaves, grown sere and brown;
And I am haunted by that flowery dream!

O foolish heart I — beside the mossy root
Lie the rich spoils that put thy grief to shame!
He takes the blossom, but He gives the fruit,
That men may magnify His worthy name.

He gives a treasure for a vanished toy,
Filling the soul before its void is known;
A solid blessing for a fragile joy
His hand bestows: — make thou His gifts thine own.

Sarah Doudney
Good Words.




THE YEARS.

Why do we heap huge mounds of years
Before us and behind,
And scorn the little days that pass
Like angels on the wind?

Each, turning round a small sweet face
As beautiful as near,
Because it is so small a face
We will not see it clear.

And so it turns from us, and goes
Away in sad disdain;
Though we could give our lives for it,
It never comes again.

Miss Mulock