One day more
These muttering shoalbrains leave the helm to me:
God, let me not in their dull ooze be stranded:
Let not this one frail bark, to hollow which
I have dug out the pith and sinewy heart 270
Of my aspiring life’s fair trunk, be so
Cast up to warp and blacken in the sun,
Just as the opposing wind ’gins whistle off
His cheek-swollen pack, and from the leaning mast
Fortune’s full sail strains forward!
One poor day!—
Remember whose and not how short it is!
It is God’s day, it is Columbus’s.
A lavish day! One day, with life and heart,
Is more than time enough to find a world.
AN INCIDENT OF THE FIRE AT HAMBURG
The tower of old Saint Nicholas soared upward to the
skies,
Like some huge piece of Nature’s make, the growth
of centuries;
You could not deem its crowding spires a work of human
art,
They seemed to struggle lightward from a sturdy living
heart.
Not Nature’s self more freely speaks in crystal
or in oak,
Than, through the pious builder’s hand, in that
gray pile she spoke;
And as from acorn springs the oak, so, freely and
alone,
Sprang from his heart this hymn to God, sung in obedient
stone.
It seemed a wondrous freak of chance, so perfect,
yet so rough,
A whim of Nature crystallized slowly in granite tough;
The thick spires yearned towards the sky in quaint
harmonious lines,
And in broad sunlight basked and slept, like a grove
of blasted pines.
Never did rock or stream or tree lay claim with better
right
To all the adorning sympathies of shadow and of light;
And, in that forest petrified, as forester there dwells
Stout Herman, the old sacristan, sole lord of all
its bells.
Surge leaping after surge, the fire roared onward
red as blood,
Till half of Hamburg lay engulfed beneath the eddying
flood;
For miles away the fiery spray poured down its deadly
rain,
And back and forth the billows sucked, and paused,
and burst again.
From square to square with tiger leaps panted the
lustful fire,
The air to leeward shuddered with the gasps of its
desire;
And church and palace, which even now stood whelmed
but to the knee.
Lift their black roofs like breakers lone amid the
whirling sea.
Up in his tower old Herman sat and watched with quiet
look;
His soul had trusted God too long to be at last forsook;
He could not fear, for surely God a pathway would
unfold
Through this red sea for faithful hearts, as once
He did of old.
But scarcely can he cross himself, or on his good
saint call,
Before the sacrilegious flood o’erleaped the
churchyard wall;
And, ere a pater half was said, mid smoke and
crackling glare,
His island tower scarce juts its head above the wide
despair.
Upon the peril’s desperate peak his heart stood
up sublime;
His first thought was for God above, his next was
for his chime;
‘Sing now and make your voices heard in hymns
of praise,’ cried he,
’As did the Israelites of old, safe walking
through the sea!