Truth.

A rock, for ages, stern and high,

Stood frowning ’gainst the earth and sky,

And never bowed his haughty crest

When angry storms around him prest.

Morn, springing from the arms of night,

Had often bathed his brow with light,

And kissed the shadows from his face

With tender love and gentle grace.

Day, pausing at the gates of rest,

Smiled on him from the distant West,

And from her throne the dark-browed Night

Threw round his path her softest light.

And yet he stood unmoved and proud,

Nor love, nor wrath, his spirit bowed;

He bared his brow to every blast

And scorned the tempest as it passed.

One day a tiny, humble seed—

The keenest eye would hardly heed—

Fell trembling at that stern rock’s base,

And found a lowly, hiding-place.

A ray of light, and drop of dew,

Came with a message, kind and true;

They told her of the world so bright,

Its love, its joy, and rosy light,

And lured her from her hiding-place,

To gaze upon earth’s glorious face.

So, peeping timid from the ground,

She clasped the ancient rock around,

And climbing up with childish grace,

She held him with a close embrace;

Her clinging was a thing of dread;

Where’er she touched a fissure spread,

And he who’d breasted many a storm

Stood frowning there, a mangled form;

A Truth, dropped in the silent earth,

May seem a thing of little worth,

Till, spreading round some mighty wrong,

It saps its pillars proud and strong,

And o’er the fallen ruin weaves

The brightest blooms and fairest leaves.

Death of The Old Sea-King.

’Twas a fearful night—the tempest raved

With loud and wrathful pride,

The storm-king harnessed his lightning steeds,

And rode on the raging tide.

The sea-king lay on his bed of death,

Pale mourners around him bent;

They knew the wild and fitful life

Of their chief was almost spent.

His ear was growing dull in death

When the angry storm he heard,

The sluggish blood in the old man’s veins

With sudden vigor stirred.

“I hear them call,� cried the dying man,

His eyes grew full of light;

“Now bring me here my warrior robes,

My sword and armor bright.

“In the tempest’s lull I heard a voice,

I knew ’twas Odin’s call.

The Valkyrs are gathering round my bed

To lead me unto his hall.

“Bear me unto my noblest ship,

Light up a funeral pyre;

I’ll walk to the palace of the braves

Through a path of flame and fire.�

Oh! wild and bright was the stormy light

That flashed from the old man’s eye,

As they bore him from the couch of death

To his battle-ship to die,

And lit with many a mournful torch

The sea-king’s dying bed,

And like a banner fair and bright

The flames around him spread.

But they heard no cry of anguish

Break through that fiery wall,

With rigid brow and silent lips

He was seeking Odin’s hall.

Through a path of fearful splendor,

While strong men held their breath,

The brave old man went boldly forth

And calmly talked with death.