Hymn

Make us, O God! in whom we breathe, and move,
Worthy to love Thee, and to win thy love!
Thy word informs us how thy love is won,
By grateful trust in thy beloved Son!
Through every season may such trust encrease!
We know it duty, and we feel it peace.

Love's Morning Lark

The Lark mounts up to greet the dawn,
Midway between the earth and sky,
The glad morn yearns and smiles upon
The bright-winged spirit, whose song fills
The pulsing air with music rills,
Glad'ning the Angels that pass by.

For never morn comes down to earth,
That is not borne on Angels' wings;
Music is of celestial birth,
And like the Lark, with voice of love,
Pure as God's light, it soars above,
When Woman from her full heart sings.

So, Maiden, thou shalt be the Lark,
And I, the long-expectant Morn;

Eldorado

The yellow thirst that maddens men,
Doth lead them over bog and fen,
Through sullen seas to climes of cold,
Where wait the fertile fields of gold.

O life, O love, O hope, O fate,
Unceasing ever, early, late,
We see in dreams, by night, by day,
Some Eldorado—far away.

Trust not Love

Oh , trust not Love—the wayward boy,
But haste, if you'd detain him,
Ere time can beauty's bond destroy,
Or other eyes and lips decoy,
With Hymen to enchain him.

The humming-bird the blossom leaves
Whene'er its sweets are failing;
The silken web the spider weaves
Yields up the prey to which she cleaves,
When autumn winds are wailing.

And Love, when beauty's bloom decays,
Will spread his fickle pinion,
And prove the web in which he plays
Too weak against the rude world's ways
To hold the roving minion.

Love Is Kind

Each man is limited by inborn traits;
—Beyond a certain point he cannot go;
The wise excel in high or low estates;
—The good mock not good workers just below.

If one can lift a weight of half a ton,
—Give him full credit, yet not praise him more
Than one who, lifting less, his best has done,
—Nor give the latter less than actual score.

We grant that each has striven toward the best,
—Yet judge by failure, not by worth or toil.
The “highest” is not worthier than the rest,
—And none should other's worthy effort spoil.

Pleasant to the Sight

Behold the tree, the lordly tree,
That fronts the four winds of the storm,
A fearless and defiant form
That mocks wild winter merrily!
Behold the beauteous, budding tree
With censers swinging in the air,
With arms in attitude of prayer,
With myriad leaves, and every leaf
A miracle of color, mold,
More gorgeous than a house of gold!
Each leaf a poem of God's plan,
Each leaf as from His book of old
To build, to bastion man's belief:
Man's love of God, man's love of man.

The Love of Human Kind

O fast we hold to those we love
And clutch them to our hearts
But still the soul desires the whole—
And what are these but parts?

O fast we hold to those we love
As we would drink them dry—
But still our hearts are not sufficed
And still for hunger cry—

Sweet is the love of man and maid—
The mother for the child
But there's a love more tender far;
More passionate and wild.

Close is the love of one for one
But there is larger worth
In the dear love of human kind
All over the green earth.

Love Song

When the sweet air grows bitter,
And the leaf falls from the branch,
And the birds change their chatter,
I also sigh and sing here
Of love which holds me tied and bound,
For I have never had it in my power.

Alas! I have never gained anything from love
Except the suffering and the anguish,
And nothing is so hard to win over
As that which I desire;
And nothing fills me with such desire
As does that which I cannot have.

I exult for a fine jewel,
And nothing have I ever loved as much;

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