| C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917. | | | | R. H. Stoddard |
| | | | A voice of greeting from the wind was sent; |
| The mists enfolded me with soft white arms; |
| The birds did sing to lap me in content, |
| The rivers wove their charms, |
| And every little daisy in the grass |
| Did look up in my face, and smile to see me pass! |
| 1 |
| | Around our pillows golden ladders rise, |
| And up and down the skies, |
| With winged sandals shod, |
| The angels come, and go, the messengers of God! |
| Nor, though they fade from us, do they depart |
| It is the childly heart: |
| We walk as heretofore, |
| Adown their shining ranks, but see them nevermore. |
| 2 |
| | Children are the keys of Paradise; |
| They alone are good and wise, |
| Because their thoughts, their very lives, are prayer. |
| 3 |
| | Day is the Child of Time, |
| And Day must cease to be: |
| But Night is without a sire, |
| And cannot expire, |
| One with Eternity. |
| 4 |
| | Divinest Autumn! who may paint thee best, |
| Forever changeful oer the changeful globe? |
| Who guess thy certain crown, thy favorite crest, |
| The fashion of thy many-colored robe? |
| 5 |
| | England, our mothers mother! Come and see |
| A greater England here! O come and be |
| At home with us, your children, for there runs |
| The same blood in our veins as in your sons; |
| The same deep-seated love of liberty |
| Beats in our hearts. We speak the same good tongue; |
| Familiar with all songs your bards have sung, |
| Those large men, Milton, Shakespeare, both are ours. |
| 6 |
| | Heaven is not gone, but we are blind with tears, |
| Groping our way along the downward slope of years! |
| 7 |
| | I am not alone, |
| For solitude like this is populous, |
| And its abundant life of sky and sun, |
| High-floating clouds, low mists, and wheeling birds, |
| And waves that ripple shoreward all day long, |
| Whether the tide is setting in or out, |
| Forever rippling shoreward, dark and bright, |
| As lights and shadows, and the shifting winds |
| Pursue each other in their endless play, |
| Is more than the companionship of man. |
| 8 |
| | I loved the Clouds. |
| Fire-fringed at dawn, or red with twilight bloom, |
| Or stretched above, like isles of leaden gloom |
| In heavens vast deep, or drawn in belts of gray, |
| Or dark blue walls along the base of day; |
| Or snow-drifts luminous at highest noon, |
| Ragged and black in tempests, veined with lightning, |
| And when the moon was brightening, |
| Impearled and purpled by the changeful moon. |
| 9 |
| | I loved the Wind. |
| Whether it kissed my hair and pallid brow; |
| Whether with sweets my sense it fed, as now; |
| Whether it blew across the scudding main; |
| Whether it shrieked above a stretch of plain; |
| Whether, on autumn days, in solemn woods, |
| And barren solitudes, |
| Along the waste it whirled the withered leaves; |
| Whether it hummed around my cottage eaves, |
| And shook the rattling doors, |
| And died with long-drawn sighs, on bleak and dreary moors; |
| Whether in winter, when its trump did blow |
| Through desolate gorges dirges of despair, |
| It drove the snow-flakes slantly down the air, |
| And piled the drifts of snow; |
| Or whether it breathed soft in vernal hours, |
| And filled the trees with sap, and filled the grass with flowers. |
| 10 |
| | If there is anything that will endure |
| The eye of God because it still is pure, |
| It is the spirit of a little child, |
| Fresh from His hand, and therefore undefiled. |
| Nearer the gate of Paradise than we, |
| Our children breathe its airs, its angels see; |
| And when they pray God hears their simple prayer, |
| Yea, even sheathes His sword, in judgment bare. |
| 11 |
| | Let me silent be; |
| For silence is the speech of love, |
| The music of the spheres above. |
| 12 |
| | Men can be great when great occasions call: |
| In little duties women find their spheres, |
| The narrow cares that cluster round the hearth. |
| 13 |
| | Not that the heavens the little can make great, |
| But many a man has lived an age too late. |
| 14 |
| | O wretched state of kings! doleful fate! |
| Greatness misnamed, in misery only great! |
| Could men but know the endless woe it brings, |
| The wise would die before they would be kings. |
| Think what a king must do! It tasks the best |
| To rule the little world within his breast, |
| Yet must he rule it, and the world beside, |
| Or king is none, undone by power and pride. |
| Think what a king must be! What burdens bear |
| From birth to death! His life is one long care. |
| It wears away in tasks that never end. |
| He has ten thousand foes, but not one friend. |
| 15 |
| | Summer of winter, day or night, |
| The woods are an ever-new delight; |
| They give us peace, and they make us strong, |
| Such wonderful balms to them belong: |
| So, living or dying, Ill take mine ease |
| Under the trees, under the trees. |
| 16 |
| | Tell me what is sorrow? It is a garden-bed. |
| And what is joy? It is a little rose, |
| Which in that garden grows. |
| 17 |
| | The misty earth below is wan and drear, |
| The baying winds chase all the leaves away, |
| As cruel hounds pursue the trembling deer; |
| It is a solemn time, the sunset of the year. |
| 18 |
| | The trumpet winds have sounded a retreat, |
| Blowing oer land and sea a sullen strain; |
| Usurping March, defeated, flies again, |
| And lays his trophies at the Winters feet. |
| And lo! where April, coming in his turn, |
| In changeful motleys, half of light and shade, |
| Leads his belated charge, a delicate maid, |
| A nymph with dripping urn. |
| 19 |
| | The wild November comes at last |
| Beneath a veil of rain; |
| The night wind blows its folds aside, |
| Her face is full of pain. |
| |
| The latest of her race, she takes |
| The Autumns vacant throne: |
| She has but one short moon to live, |
| And she must live alone. |
| 20 |
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| |
| | There is no death. The thing that we call death |
| Is but another, sadder name for life. |
| 21 |
| | There is no hopethe future will but turn |
| The old sand in the falling glass of time. |
| 22 |
| | We grow like flowers, and bear desire, |
| The odor of the human flowers. |
| 23 |
| Given the books of a man, it is not difficult, I think, to detect therein the personality of the man, and the station in life to which he was born. | 24 |
| We love in others what we lack ourselves, and would be everything but what we are. | 25 | | |
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