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ick heart's fancies, And lend thy little voice To the silver song of glory That bids the world rejoice. VERSE: GIVE See the rivers flowing Downwards to the sea, Pouring all their treasures Bountiful and free-- Yet to help their giving Hidden springs arise; Or, if need be, showers Feed them from the skies! Watch the princely flowers Their rich fragrance spread, Load the air with perfumes, From their beauty shed-- Yet their lavish spending Leaves them not in dearth, With fresh life replenished By their mother earth! Give thy heart's best treasures-- From fair Nature learn; Give thy love--and ask not, Wait not a return! And the more thou spendest From thy little store, With a double bounty, God will give thee more. VERSE: MY JOURNAL It is a dreary evening; The shadows rise and fall: With strange and ghostly changes, They flicker on the wall. Make the charred logs burn brighter; I will show you, by their blaze, The half-forgotten record Of bygone things and days. Bring here the ancient volume; The clasp is old and worn, The gold is dim and tarnished, And the faded leaves are torn. The dust has gathered on it-- There are so few who care To read what Time has written Of joy and sorrow there. Look at the first fair pages; Yes--I remember all: The joys now seem so trivial, The griefs so poor and small. Let us read the dreams of glory That childish fancy made; Turn to the next few pages, And see how soon they fade. Here, where still waiting, dreaming, For some ideal Life, The young heart all unconscious Had entered on the strife. See how this page is blotted: What--could those tears be mine? How coolly I can read you, Each blurred and trembling line. Now I can reason calmly, And, looking back again, Can see divinest meaning Threading each separate pain. Here strong resolve--how broken; Rash hope, and foolish fear, And prayers, which God in pity Refused to grant or hear. Nay--I will turn the pages To where the tale is told Of how a dawn diviner Flushed the dark clouds with gold. And see, that light has gilded The story--nor shall set; And, though in mist and shadow, You know I see it yet. Here--well, it does not matter, I promised to read all; I know not why I falter, Or why my tears should fall; You see each grief is noted; Yet it was better so-- I can rejoice to-day--the pain Was over, long ago. I read--my voice is failing,
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