'Twas Easter morn. The sanctuary long Had ope'd its doors to the fast ent'ring throng, Which soon had filled each space where seat was found, And e'en stood ranged, deep-row'd, expectant round. Magnificent assembly! Varied, tho', Its aspect was, as it was grand in show. For congregated there were gathered all Who in that day saw Freedom's broken thrall; And many more beside, of every heart, Some to take earnest and some trivial part; For as each one the season's gifts did price, Each came with hearts attuned to sacrifice: Gay Pleasure's priestesses and Fashion's fawn, Who only blessed the day because withdrawn Then was dull Lent's drear mask of penitence, Which forty fretful days the radiance Of their loved deities had hid from view; Enchanting, haughty, sweeping to their pew, Came Beauty, Pride and Wealth, to whom the time Seemed one for joy because spring's gentler clime, Succeeding sombre winter, ope'd fresh ways, By decking out in all soft, rich arrays, To wake new rapture, envyings and awe; While back in shadows, scarce within the door, Stood those who this dark life's worst burdens bear, Sorrow and want,the poor. What did @3they@1 there? Surely to them the day brought no great joy! It freed them not from poverty's annoy, Nor lifted sorrow's burden from their breasts, Save, 'chance, that while the hour they stood as guests In that high house, some gentler spirit of peace Instilled with music and perfumes that cease Not to rise from the trembling organ reed And the lilies and sweet blooms rich banked and spread Round chancel and round fanewith subtle charm, Shed o'er their troubled souls a transient calm. There men and youths, from pleasure brief unbound, Passed whispered jests or light-smiled greetings round; There, too, was sneer-lipped Infidelity, Gazing upon the scene with faithless eye And smile of scorn, forgetful that his own High-patterned life is possible alone Because the light of God's benignant law Through ages past hath drawn, and still doth draw, This moth-eyed and weak world into its rays, Lighting the paths to heaven-leading ways; Forgetting that his wisdom hath upgrown From seed that in dim historied time was sown, In patience planted, by lives for God lived firm. These seeds' rare fruits, of century-ripened term, He plucks, and on their health imbibed grown strong, Employs health's restless strength to find whence sprung Wide virtue's tree whose bough doth nourish him. With human memory weak and reason dim Which are themselves faulty reflections faint From that One Source of Light with which acquaint He strives with crooked vanity to be He, with eye distance-dimmed, essays to see, And seeing, mark and trace with sure descry, Amid the foliage thick-webbed on high, The proper stem and twig and bough and branch, Back to the Root of All from which all launch. So some do seek; but while the tangled twine Aloft, with 'magined sight and judgment fine, They thread,following false lines seeming true, And curving courses, which, while they pursue, Seem straight,their unwatched feet, with faulty stride, And many a 'wildered slip and stumble wide, Lead them through sloughs, 'gainst thorn and bruising rock, Bringing them toil and cruel stab and shock, Till, line all gone, weary, despairing, sick, Lost in the forest of their fancies thick, They hopeless die; and some of hardier mind, But wiser none, when they at last do find Their search, keen led with all the trusted light Of learning's lamp, with logic'd step aright Fruitless to follow virtue through time's shroud, Turn in presumptuousness of spirit, proud In man's paltry knowledge of five thousand years, And God and Heaven, and all the healthy fears And blessed hopes thereto connect, abjure; Declaring that what good doth now inure To child of man, spontaneous did spring, Was fostered, and now fruits in that base ring Of soil,which of itself ne'er bore but weeds Of folly, or the rank and poison beads Of evil's choking vine,the human heart. Ah! ye vain fools who take such haughty part For majesty of man! Why do ye rend From him his attribute of noblest bend; And turn on him your ignorant, vandal shears, Clipping his bough of the best bloom it bears, Pure Faith?faith, whose essence, whose fairest flower Is sweet belief past human sight's poor power: When Reason faints, Trust bright-eyed still on tower. But oh, my Muse, return to gentler themes! Sure some beneath those rainbow-tinctured beams That crept and blazed through yon bright sculptured glass, Sure some within those holy doors did pass With proper mind?sweet maids of simple way, And boys free, fresh and fair as morn in May; The new made widow seeking in her grief For some dim understood, far off relief; Gray men, still toiled-tossed, longing still for rest; These, like the poor, came with half ready breast; And lastbut oh, how sadly few were they! Were those who came to worship and to pray; Whose gentle mien and humble, reverent care, Seemed to ray out a peace upon the air, A tranquil breath, within whose circle small A quiet hush dropped softly upon all. But list! that hush is spreading, and still spreads! The rustling multitude, like barley heads Kissed by day's dying breath, did shift and bow, Trembled, and then hung motionless; for now, Commencing faint in distant alcoves dim, Rose the first notes of the procession hymn. Soft, sweet, yet clear they came; soft as a bell Sounding on summer eve from some far dell Where peaceful hamlet lies; clear as a horn Heard wound o'er Alpine vale at wake of morn; Sweet as the bird of sorrow's tend' rest note, When, pressing to the thorn her gentle, throat, She to the stars warbles her song of woe. So woke the strains; but they did ever grow And swell, falling but louder yet to prove, As with slow march th' advancing choir did move Through recess'd room and secret cell, until The cloister opened, and straightway did fill The whole grand lofty square such flood of song As our dull souls imagine that bright throng Struck forth, which hov'ring o'er Judea's plain, The night-bound shepherds charmed. On trod the train, Their robes of sabled snow brushing the crowd Which rearward pressed upon the aisles, while loud And louder, full of every grand and rich Involvement of sweet sound, with every pitch Of harmony's infinite subtleties Which Orpheus-taught musician, from the keys And pipes of organ, from loud tubes of brass, From bow-swept strings, the silver flute's soft pass, And the vocal reed of man, could skillful weld, With such rich range of music's wealth upswelled The mighty anthem, a wave of melody, A rolling torrent of tune, a grand, a free, A glorious peal of praise. Of praise? That form And fine array of pomp, that finer storm Of harmony,was all that praise? Ah no, 'Twas all a mockery! 'Twas all a show, Not for God's glory, but for man's delight! How could that hymn ascend to heaven's height If no hearts bore it there? And oh, alas! How many hearts, in all that human mass, Turned heavenward that anthem to upraise? (And if the heart doth not no lip can praise). For those who sat with silent breathéd lungs, But made a mock of praise through other's tongues; And those who sang,ah! listless seemed their eyes, Steps dull, and all their manner otherwise Than spirit held! And why not so? They did A duty well; and if at their trained bid, Music bestowed her every precious gift, 'Twas task enough. Then to assume and lift Those strains with soulful service to heaven's gate, Were meet for those who soft in cushions sate. But they, poor victims of a hungry pride, A flattered ear, a love of ease allied To laziness, or aught that hobbles man, Teth'ring his powers in an oft' cropped span, Each to his little clayey idol clung, Nor sought to rise to free those notes that rung In lingering echoes round the gilded roof, Waiting with heaven-bound hearts to wing aloof Waiting the chariots that never came. But stay, my hasty mind! thine is the blame Of those who, stubborn bent on censure, do, In blaming many, o'er look the noble few. How knowest thou but that thy travelling sight, In that great throng did miss the secret flight Of some good hearts?for ever noblest good Doth hide her head 'neath secrecy's large hood. Perchance that very robed, melodius line Of singers did contain some natures fine With hearts too noble from their tongues to part; For turn of manners points not every heart. Yea, e'en among the foremost of the fore, Where no just eye could ever have passed o'er And failed to notice him, there stepped a youth, A boy of rosy years, who, if forsooth Eye ever spake or poised head did hint, Was spirited above the common tint. His brow and reverent eyes were raised to heaven, His useless, well con'd print was never given A glance, but hung loose-claspéd by his side; His soul gave motion to his lips, their tide Of sweetness having that full, tender reach Of sympathy which only souls can teach. Ah, 'twas a sight no stern censorious frown Dare wrinkle on! 'Twould draw joy's bright tears down From smiling angels' eyes! But oh! the sound, When Silence laid her deadening finger round On voice and instrument, till, company By company and chord by chord, did die To dumbness all their notes, save his alone! Ah, then, and only then, was full made known Their single loveliness: e'en as the lark, Singing to coax the bright sun from his dark House of clouds when the June shower is past, But yet while still upon the sinking blast The remnant thunders roll, cannot be heard In all the music her sweet voice hath stirred, Till heaven's tremendous symphony is hushed. Thus, when to silence that great song was crushed, The lad's voice rose, exquisite in relief Upon the stillness. Ah! if ever grief Could enter heaven, then would it have come in, Led by that strongest, smallest of all sin That bland and smooth lieutenant Satan sends When other deputies, to gain his ends Of evil, all have failedthe subtle, sly, Insidious envy; for the hosts on high, That faultless, tireless celestial choir, Might well have grieved, envying earth such fire And spirit of true song as that young voice Poured richly forth;not that it was more choice In tone, sweeter in accent, or more clear Than song that many a mortal tongue could rear; Yet in each note such tenderness did dwell, As forced the ear to hark with honeyed spell, While every word such freight of feeling bore, As thrilled the heart and left it yearning sore Within itself for loftier nobleness. Such magic it did hold that it could dress With beauteous images the dullest brain That heard; could ease of half its guilty pain The blackest heart: and in the arctic soul Could cause love's sun to rise again and roll The icy fogs of selfishness away, Thaw mercy's spring and make its waters play In generous surfeit o'er its melting cup, And at each other virtue's roots warm up The sap of life once more, making them all, From charity's great oak, towering tall, To the sweet violet of pity, bloom Into full loveliness and sweet perfume, Filling a soul, once waste, with verdure rare; Turning Sahara into Eden fair. Sure these were wonders, wondrous wonders! Yet, Like many a seeming marvel that doth set Earth's wise to vainly beat high heaven o'er To find its cause, a cause which at the door Of their own vision plain in view doth lie Too plain, alas, for note of learned eye! They were not wrought by the mysterions touch Of any mighty power divine; not such Their origin; but their creation came From cause which no divinity could claim, Unless divineness lies in rarity, And whose best might was in simplicity: This was the cause of all, and this alone A human heart and human soul at one; For such a heart that young child's breast did bear, And such a soul was dwelling also there. Sweet child! Sign of promise, emblem of hope For future man, of all his strife the scope And final goal! God's steward upon earth! Would that thy song's great stream had had, a girth Wide as this whirling globe's; a life and motion Deathless and ceaseless as the beat of ocean! So might the lips of every human ear Be ever plunged deep within its clear, Life-giving waters, drinking in their strength, Till every heart should feel along the length Of all its arteries and veins the thrill Of purging power; feel the fresh blood fill Each scummed and reeking marsh and stagnant pool, Before its flushing torrent, sweet and cool, Sweeping their filth and heating poisons out, Making each alley, duct and channel spout With sanguine streams full, healthy, rich and bright As the swift rills, that, 'neath the dazzling light Of June's unclouded sun and blue heaven's steeps, Dart from their parent springs' green, moss-lined deeps; Making the heart itself all undefiled, And pulsing pure as heart of little child. Then might at last man, finished, perfect, creep From his outgrown cocoon, his weary sleep In wisdom blind and blinder love complete, And in the perfect love, whose two-fold seat Would be within the heart and in the soul, Making concordant peace in both, a whole From what were former warring parts, commence His happy life; his fears and griefs fled hence; His long, self-waged rebellion at an end; Himself in peace unto himself surrend, His own arch foe no more, but his own friend. |