386
MISCELLANEOUS WRITINGS
“Intensely grand and glorious life's sphere, — |
Beyond the shadow, infinite appear |
Life, Love divine, — |
Where mortal yearnings come not, sighs are stilled, |
And home and peace and hearts are found and filled, |
Thine, ever thine. |
“Bearest thou no tidings from our loved on earth, |
The toiler tireless for Truth's new birth |
All-unbeguiled? |
Our joy is gathered from her parting sigh: |
This hour looks on her heart with pitying eye, — |
What of my child?" |
“When, severed by death's dream, I woke to Life, |
She deemed I died, and could not know the strife |
At first to fill |
That waking with a love that steady turns |
To God; a hope that ever upward yearns, |
Bowed to His will. |
“Years had passed o'er thy broken household band, |
When angels beckoned me to this bright land, |
With thee to meet. |
She that has wept o'er thee, kissed my cold brow, |
Rears the sad marble to our memory now, |
In lone retreat. |
“By the remembrance of her loyal life, |
And parting prayer, I only know my wife, |
Thy child, shall come — |
Where farewells cloud not o'er our ransomed rest — |
Hither to reap, with all the crowned and blest, |
Of bliss the sum. |