'Tis strange to me, who long have seen no face, That was not like a book, whose every page I knew by heart, a kindly common-place— And faithful record of progressive age- To wander forth, and view an unknown race; Of all that I have been, to find no trace, No footstep of my by-gone pilgrimage. Thousands I pass, and no one stays his pace To tell me that the day is fair, or rainy— Each one his object seeks with anxious chase, And I have not a common hope with any— Thus like one drop of oil upon a flood, In uncommunicating solitude-
Single am I amid the countless many.
IF I have sinn'd in act, I may repent; If I have err'd in thought, I may disclaim My silent error, and yet feel no shame- But if my soul, big with an ill intent, Guilty in will, by fate be innocent,
Or being bad, yet murmurs at the curse And incapacity of being worse
That makes my hungry passion still keep Lent
In keen expectance of a Carnival;
Where, in all worlds, that round the sun revolve And shed their influence on this passive ball, Abides a power that can my soul absolve? Could any sin survive, and be forgiven- One sinful wish would make a hell of heaven.
THE Soul of man is larger than the sky, Deeper than ocean-or the abysmal dark Of the unfathom'd centre. Like that Ark, Which in its sacred hold uplifted high, O'er the drown'd hills, the human family, And stock reserved of every living kind, So, in the compass of the single mind,
The seeds and pregnant forms in essence lie, That make all worlds. Great Poet 'twas thy art, To know thyself, and in thyself to be Whate'er love, hate, ambition, destiny, Or the firm, fatal purpose of the heart,
Can make of Man. Yet thou wert still the same, Serene of thought, unhurt by thy own flame.
WHY should I murmur at my lot forlorn? The self-same Fate that doom'd me to be poor Endues me with a spirit to endure
All, and much more, than is or has been borne By better men, of want, or worldly scorn. My soul has faith, my body has the nerve To brave the penance that my sins deserve. And yet my helpless state I deeply mourn : Well could I bear to be deserted quite,- Less should I blame my fortune were it worse,— But taking all, it yet hath left me friends, For whom I needs must mourn the wayward spite That hides my purpose in an empty purse,
Since what I grateful wish, in wishing ends.
WHAT can a poor man do but love and pray? But if his love be selfish, then his prayer, Like noisome vapour melts in vacant air. I am a debtor, and I cannot pay.
The alms which drop upon the public way,- The casual tribute of the good and fair, With the keen, thriftless avarice of despair I seize, and live thereon from day to day, Ingrate and purposeless.—And yet not so: The mere mendicity of self contempt Has not so far debased me, but I know The faith, the hope, the piety, exempt From worldly doubt, to which my all I owe. Since I have nothing, yet I bless the thought,- Best are they paid whose earthly wage is nought.
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