Brown Leaves
Brown Leaves
Brown Leaves
AND
OTHER VERSES
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Brown leaves
and other verses
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.
Language: English
ALTAVISTA
16 ROCKLEDGE ROAD
MONTCLAIR
COPYRIGHT 1912 BY
ELLA STEVENS HARRIS
From time to time, for many years, some of these verses have appeared in
newspapers and periodicals. They are here collected at the request of friends.
E. S. H.
TO E. P. H.
The language of the human heart,
Nor tongue nor pen may tell;
But other eyes look into ours,
And understand us well.
No gift is worthy, my Beloved,
Of what thou art to me;
But these frail children of my love,
I would bestow on thee.
The years will come, the years will go,
As poets oft have sung;
But Love is Life, and Life is Love,
And Love, is ever young!
CONTENTS
PAGE
Brown Leaves 3
To the Daisies 5
Absence 7
To Florence 9
Nature’s Influence 11
A Valentine 13
A Spring Reverie 15
To Her Dolly 19
My Prayer 21
Anniversary Ode 23
Our Heroes 25
A Call To Spring 27
Upper Air 29
Dreams 31
The Old Year and the New 33
Columbus 35
Lost Days 37
Mother’s Prayer 39
Expectation 41
The Silence of the Rosebud 43
Seed-time and Harvest 45
To a Blue-Fringed Gentian 47
A Fragment 49
My Christmas Wish 51
To a Rosebud 53
Trees 55
BROWN LEAVES
From the pipes of old Winter, has come a shrill blast,
And upon the gray earth a pure mantle is cast.
’Tis a garment of snow-flakes come down from the skies
And beneath it, in silence, the patient earth lies.
The moaning and rustling of dead leaves is past—
The comforter came, they are sheltered at last.
O, brown leaves of autumn! ’Tis a wise hand that leads,
And he sends what is best, who best knoweth our needs.
He gives and he takes, and in taking he gives:
From life cometh death, and in dying we live.
From mists of the river, the brooklet and sea
This beautiful shroud has been woven, and ye
Of its coming wist not, for from out the still air
It as silently fell as an answer to prayer.
O, could ye but creep from your coverlet white
And visit your home, a most wonderful sight
Would gladden your hearts, for the sun met the snow,
And the frost followed on with his cold breath, and lo!
Your home is a palace of crystal more bright
Than Aladdin beheld with his magical light.
Ye glow and ye fade—but as wondrous to me
Is the leaf on the ground as the leaf on the tree:
For links in time’s chain clasp eternity fast
And the chain becomes endless. Ever the past
Pays its debt to the future, leaf-life, or man’s,
So perfect the system that surely no hands
But of Infinite wisdom and love could be
The author of such an unerring decree.
Who knoweth the end? Little leaflets, not we!
Enough for ourselves, as we hang on life’s tree,
To gather the sunshine and freely bestow
Our shade to the weary and faint ones below.
And when we grow brown, as, surely we must,
The end will be glorious can we but trust
That the Infinite love, which careth for all,
Forgets not the little brown leaves when they fall.
TO THE DAISIES
O Daisies, with your golden hearts
And petals white as snow,
Ye are, indeed, fond Summer’s eyes
O speak! for I would know
The secrets of this month of June
Of all months of the year,
And not one June of all my life
Was ever half so dear.
The secrets of this month of June
With your soft eyes declare:
What is it makes the roses bloom,
And beauty everywhere?
Is it the longing in the seed
That speaketh in the flower;
And is this longing satisfied
To breathe for one short hour,
And vanish? Nay: the hidden power,
In seed-life unto me
Seems deathless, as the human-soul,
Was, and will always be—
And what though on the silent air,
The perfume dies away
Of the June roses, and they fade—
Behold! shall any say,
However wise, that this is loss:
Alas! shall any deign
Deny, that Nature’s wondrous laws
May not restore again?
The waves roll in upon the shore,
Recede, and come again
And thirsty clouds drink in the floods,
To give them back, in rain.
O Daisies, when bright June is past,
And all your beauty fled;
If in my memory ye but live,
I dare not call ye dead,
For ye have led me to the fount
From whence all beauty springs,
Your silence filled my soul with awe,
And gave my spirit wings.
The self-same tint in morning’s glow
And in the crimson flush
Of the June roses, I behold
In timid maidens’ blush.
O Daisies, listen unto me,
My secret I impart—
Love’s sweetest flowers are all ablow;
’Tis June-time in my heart!
Go tell my secret to some bird,
The bob-o-link were best—
Tell him to ask his patient wife
To sit upon the nest;
And him unto my lover go,
And, as my minstrel sent,
Ask him to sing that song he sang
When he a-wooing went.
Thou think’st he might not find him?
It might be well to say,
My love, like light, will go before
To ’luminate the way.
ABSENCE
Thou art away and I am here.
The one that’s left is lonesome, dear.
I long to look into your face.
I long to-night for your embrace.
Like hopeless grief, the wind and rain
Beats at my darkened window pane.
There’ll come a time, my love, I know,
When one of us must surely go.
Beyond the call of voice or tear—
Which shall it be? I question, dear.
O, coward heart, find hope and rest—
Whatever comes to thee is best!
TO FLORENCE
(To E. P. H.)
A Valentine—Now if I might
But somehow tempt her to alight—
I mean my Muse—I’d try to say
Some word to cheer thy heart, to-day.
I know the meaning they attach
To Valentines: but then I’ll scratch
That off, and write, as to a friend—
’Tis fair, if so we comprehend.
How strange, that certain days and hours,
That certain trees and certain flowers,
Alone possess, as ’twere, a key
To certain rooms in memory.
When but a child, they used to say
That birds, like lovers, went away
In search of mates: and even now
I dimly can remember how
Their words I doubted, till one day
Our purple pigeon flew away,
Returned at night, and by his side
Fluttered his little snow-white bride.
And ne’er this day comes ’round to me
But flutters in my memory
The purple and the snow-white dove
Cooing their tender notes of love.
Some word to cheer thee, did I say?
Words—what are words? As helpless they
As blinded eyes to lead the feet
O’er tangled pathways, did they meet
Not some felt need, or if they be
Not warm with loving sympathy.
If magic were my art, and I
Could banish from thine inner sky
All clouds of sorrow and of pain,
I would not do it. Following rain
Is brighter sky; at sorrow’s fire
Our joys are tempered. Mounting higher
Than human wish is human need,
And wrapped beneath the husks of creed
Is what we think, and feel, and know,
Of the deep things of God. And so
My best and only wish shall be
That thou mayst solve life’s mystery.
A SPRING REVERIE
Winter has at last unlocked the portals of his icy castle and ushered into our presence
the very queen of all the seasons. Let us fling open the doorways of our hearts and give
a generous welcome. How silently she moves among us, and yet our finer ear may hear
her in the springing grass and opening blossoms. We feel her magic touch in everything
about us. She whispers, and the slumbering earth awakes to new life and beauty. Would
we might sing her praises with hearts as full as the happy, joyous birds.
I wonder, if we would, we could not make our daily lives fuller of praises and
thanksgiving-songs; clothe wearying, unlovely care, with beauty? And I wonder, too, if
we are not ourselves to blame, if in the pleasant walks of life we gather not enough of
sunshine up to last through cloudy weather? And yet, we must dream our own dreams
and live our own lives.
The hearts of little children drink in the spring sunshine as freely, even, as the birds and
flowers. And are not their voices sweeter than the song of birds and their lives dearer
than all the blossoms?
A maiden sits and dreams, and in her fancy she weaves the golden meshes of a nest that
will one day be her own, and if her morning and evening carol shall be sweeter than the
bird’s it is not strange, for is not her nest dearer and her love deeper?
In the spring sunshine a mother muses, and her thoughts have flown backward. She sits
’mid blasted buds and voiceless birds, in a springtime of long ago; and though her whole
pathway is strewn with flowers, it is not so much to her as to know that on those little
graves the violets are come again. She tends them with a loving care, for they speak
precious promises unto her soul.
The aged couple number over and over again the many springtimes their lives have
known in light and shadow. They drink not in the full sunshine of these delicious days,
for their nest and nestlings are all gone, and they are waiting for a more glorious
springtime yet to come—waiting for eternal sunshine and perpetual blossoms.
Upon the faces of men of great crime, through all the scars of sin, may be found traces
of happy days of innocence and pleasure. Doubtless, as the springtime sun streams
faintly into the cell of many a criminal, memory is quickened to life by its soft rays, and
flowers of tenderness which have long slumbered bloom again, in the garden of his
heart. Perhaps he may remember days all sunshine, days of loving—when a dear face
and the light of glad eyes transfigured everything into a world of glory. But temptation,
like sorrow, overtakes us when we are least prepared, and on the stream of life we either
drift with its current, or with strength of will and determined purpose, pull our fragile
bark against it.
None need so much human sympathy and divine love and favor as the poor in spirit.
The poor in purse may vie in happiness with the rich; but to a life from which the light
of hope has all gone out, the journey to the end is drear and desolate. Thus, it is we
dream our own dreams and live our own lives, however much we may live for others.
For myself—
To feel that the springtime is coming,
That the wildwood is all full of song;
That the leaves, and the grasses and blossoms,
In beauty are creeping along,
Thrills my soul with a deep song of gladness;
And the depths of my being are stirred,
Till I feel that the Master is tuning
My voice to the voice of the bird.
And what harmony thrills all creation,
From the brooklet’s musical flow
To the wonderful tide of the ocean,
With its ceaseless murmur of woe.
Yet, He who made earth, sky and all things,
Reckons man of Himself, a part—
And what to nature is budding and bloom,
Symbols love in the human heart.
And I look at the world as I see it,
With its mingled sorrow and strife,
And my lips cry out the thought of my heart,
What a wonderful thing is life!
With eyes to behold the glory of God
In the stars or the blossoms of Spring,
And hearts feel a love, that lips may not tell,
Of a glorified Presence, within.
TO HER DOLLY
Come here, poor little Dolly,
And sit upon my knee,
I will smooth your tangled tresses,
For I feel in sympathy.
You say your own little mamma
Has gone away, and so
You must be very lonely,
For you always used to go.
I can tell you a secret, Dolly,
I am sorry it is true,
But since your mamma has grown so tall
She cannot play with you.
Yet she’ll never forget you, Dolly,
She told me so to-day,
And said that you, and all your things,
She was going to put away.
And often, very often,
She would come and look at you,
Would take you up, and smooth your hair
And I’m sure that this is true.
For the mother heart never forgets us
Whatever you hear dolls say,
It always loves and forgives us
E’en when we go astray.
Perhaps, dear little Dolly,
In the days that are to be,
Other little pink hands will dress you,
And fondle you tenderly.
It may be her own little daughter
Will fold you to her breast,
And softly whisper, “I love you, dear,
I love you the very best.”
’Twere pleasant to dream of Dolly
As you lie in the dark up there,
Though it n’er come true, ’Twere better to hope,
For it saves us from despair.
MY PRAYER
How shall I pray to Thee, my God,
Out on the troubled sea;
Where billows rage and tempest roars—
How shall I pray to Thee?
How shall I pray to Thee, my God;
No beacon-light I see;
And I am far, so far, from home—
How shall I pray to Thee?
*******
My life, nor wind, nor wave, can harm
Wherever I may be;
For here, or there, I am Thy child,
Through all eternity.
Still, I must pray to Thee, my God,
Whate’er Thy plan may be;
Till thought of Thee shall calm for me
The raging of the sea!
ANNIVERSARY ODE
(To E. P. H.)
A Fragment