Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE POET'S JOURNAL: CONCLUSION, by BAYARD TAYLOR Poet's Biography First Line: Thus came the poet's journal to an end Last Line: Worthy of the father's love! Alternate Author Name(s): Taylor, James Bayard | ||||||||
Thus came the Poet's Journal to an end. His heart's completed music ceased to flow From Ernest's lips: the tale I wished to know Was wholly mine. "I am content, dear friend," I said: "to me no voice can be obscure Wherein your nature speaks: the chords I hear, Too far and frail to strike a stranger's ear." With that, I bowed to Edith's forehead pure, And kissed her with a brother's blameless kiss: "To you the fortune of these days I owe, My other Ernest, like him most in this, That you can hear the cries of ancient woe With holy pity free from any blame Of jealous love, and find your highest bliss To know, through you his life's fulfilment came." "And through him, mine," the woman's heart replied For Love's humility is Love's true pride. "These are your sweetest poems, and your best," To him I said. "I know not," answered he, They are my truest. I have ceased to be The ambitious knight of Song, that shook his crest In public tilts: the sober hermit I, Whose evening songs but few approach to hear, -- Who, if those few should cease to lend an ear, Would sing them to the forest and the sky Contented: singing for myself alone. No fear that any poet dies unknown, Whose songs are written in the hearts that know And love him, though their partial verdict show The tenderness that moves the critic's blame. Those few have power to lift his name above Forgetfulness, to grant that noblest fame Which sets its trumpet to the lips of Love!" 'Nay, then," said I, "you are already crowned, If your ambition in the loving pride Of us, your friends, is cheaply satisfied, We are those trumpets: do you hear them sound?" And Edith smilingly together wound Light stems of ivy to a garland fair, And pressed it archly on her husband's hair; But he, with earnest voice, though in his eyes A happy laughter shone, protesting, said: 'Respect, dear friends, the Muse's sanctities, Nor mock, with wreaths upon a living head, The holy laurels of the deathless Dead. Crown Love, crown Truth when first her brow appears, And crown the Hero when his deeds are done: The Poet's leaves are gathered one by one, In the slow process of the doubtful years. Who seeks too eagerly, he shall not find: Who, seeking not, pursues with single mind Art's lofty aim, to him will she accord, At her appointed time, the sure reward." The tall clock, standing sentry in the hall, Struck midnight: on the panes no longer beat The weary storm: the wind began to fall, And through the breaking darkness glimmered, sweet With tender stars, the flying gleams of sky. "Come, Edith, lend your voice to crown the night, And give the new day sunny break," said I: She listening first in self-deceiving plight Of young maternal trouble, for a cry From Arthur's crib, sat down in happy calm, And sang to Ernest's heart his own thanksgiving psalm. Thou who sendest sun and rain, Thou who spendest bliss and pain, Good with bounteous hand bestowing, Evil for Thy will allowing, -- Though Thy ways we cannot see, All is just that comes from Thee. In the peace of hearts at rest, In the child at mother's breast, In the lives that now surround us, In the deaths that sorely wound us, Though we may not understand, Father, we behold Thy hand! Hear the happy hymn we raise; Take the love which is Thy praise; Give content in each condition; Bend our hearts in sweet submission, And Thy trusting children prove Worthy of the Father's love! | Other Poems of Interest...NATIONAL ODE; INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA by BAYARD TAYLOR THE ARAB TO THE PALM by BAYARD TAYLOR THE QUAKER WIDOW by BAYARD TAYLOR THE SONG OF THE CAMP by BAYARD TAYLOR THE WRITER'S JOURNAL: POSSESSION by BAYARD TAYLOR A BACCHIC ODE by BAYARD TAYLOR A DAY IN MARCH by BAYARD TAYLOR A FUNERAL THOUGHT by BAYARD TAYLOR |
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