Last Verses
LAST VERSES
Copyright, 1906 , By Little, Brown, and Company. ———— All rights reserved Published October, 1906 THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.
SARAH CHAUNCEY WOOLSEY (Susan Coolidge) was born in Cleveland, Ohio, January 29, 1835. Her father, John M. Woolsey, a New Yorker, had come to Cleveland to attend to property owned by his father, and had there met Jane Andrews, a charming and graceful girl from Connecticut, whom he made his wife.
Their home was on Euclid Avenue, and comprised about five acres in house-lot, garden, orchard, pasture, and woodland. Here came into the world a family of four girls and a boy,—all vigorous and active and full of life. Sarah was the eldest and the predestined leader of the little tribe. They grew up as children of that day did under similar conditions. There was the regular old-fashioned schooling, not too exacting or strenuous, and much wholesome out-of-door life. There were horses and dogs and cattle and birds for the children to care for and play with, and much climbing and romping were permitted in a place where no near neighbors could be disturbed. To the other children life was a joyous holiday, diversified with small disappointments and dismays; but to Sarah the sky and the earth held boundless anticipations and intentions, and the world was a place of enchantment.
She was always individual from the moment she first opened her big brown eyes—passionately loving and passionately wilful, with heroic intentions and desires, and with remorse and disappointments in proportion. Part of the woodland where the axe had not yet done its work of cutting and clipping was given to the children for a playground. They called it “Paradise,” and for all of them it was a place of rapture and mystery. To the others it was full of hiding places,—to little Sarah the hiding places were bowers. They looked for eggs and birds’ nests, and had thrilling encounters with furry wild creatures, which fled at their approach; but her intercourse was all with the fairies and elves and gnomes which peopled the place. After a time they felt the presence of the fairies too; but it was under the influence of her enthusiastic imagination, which controlled their own more mundane perceptions. With her for a leader they often passed into a new world of romance and adventure and high undertakings. They lived in battlemented castles, attended by knights and squires, with danger on all sides met by lofty courage; or they rode on elephants in India, always on dignified missions, attended by great pomp and ceremony; or they lived with fairies, whose gifts might crop up under every toadstool. To be sure, the elephant on which they made their proud progress might at other times, stripped of his trappings, be serviceable as a nursery table, and the fairy gifts were apt to bear a prosaic resemblance to certain well-known and well-worn nursery properties; but invested with the mystery and romance cast upon them by Sarah’s vivid imagination, the little band went, as she led them, into the land of dreams, and felt no incongruity.
Susan Coolidge
LAST VERSES
SUSAN COOLIDGE
CONTENTS
HELEN KELLER
“A CLOUD OF WITNESSES”
COR CORDIUM
MARTHA
TEMPERAMENTS
THE HOLY NAME
“I AM THE WAY”
TWO ANGELS
LIMITATION
THE MIRACLE OF FRIENDSHIP
ROSE TERRY COOKE
INTO THE DEEP
THROUGH THE CLOUD
NEARER HOME
ROOTED
THE BURIED STATUE
FAR AND NEAR
GREECE
IF YOUTH COULD KNOW
THE SOUL’S CLIMATE
THE BETTER PRAYER
SUPPLY
A THOUGHT
HOLGER DANSKE
VASSOS
MUTINY
UNFORGOTTEN
DENIAL
ASTORIA BY TWILIGHT
THE PRICE OF FREYA
A SUMMER SONG
AN EVENING PRIMROSE
A ROSE IN A GLASS
SNOWBOUND
SHELTERED
THE OLD PINE
IN THE FOREFRONT
INTERRUPTED
SAINT CHRISTOPHER
THE YEAR AND THE CENTURY
“THE LAND THAT IS VERY FAR OFF”
THE HEAVENLY AIRS
IN THE FOG
THE PORCH OF LIFE
THE LIGHTHOUSE
ONCE AND FOREVER
LIGHTS
ON THE LAWN
IF ONLY
PRELUDE
WHOM NO MAN HATH HIRED
ON EASTER EVEN
PALM SUNDAY
THE PASCHAL FEAST
A NEW YEAR PRAYER
HOW SHALL I PRAY?
GOOD-NIGHT
A SPRING PARABLE
“THY RIGHTEOUSNESS IS LIKE THE STRONG MOUNTAINS”
LIVING OR DEAD
A MORNING SONG
THE STONE OF THE SEPULCHRE
TOO LITTLE AND TOO MUCH
THE MESSENGER WITH THE BOW-STRING
RELEASED
A PARADISE SONG
LITTLE BY LITTLE
TWO YEARS
TEMPERED
VIRGINIA
LIFT UP YOUR HEARTS