“I AM THE WAY”

ART Thou the way, Lord? Yet the way is steep!

And hedged with cruel thorns and set with briars;

We stumble onward, or we pause to weep,

And still the hard road baffles our desires,

And still the hot noon beats, the hours delay,

The end is out of sight,—Art Thou the way?

Art Thou the way, Lord? Yet the way is blind!

We grope and guess, perplexed with mists and suns;

We only see the guide-posts left behind,

Invisible to us the forward ones;

The chart is hard to read, we wind and stray,

Beset with hovering doubts,—Art Thou the way?

Art Thou the way, Lord? Yet the way is long!

Year follows year while we are journeying still,

The limbs are feeble grown which once were strong,

Dimmed are the eyes and quenched the ardent will,

The world is veiled with shadows sad and gray;

Yet we must travel on,—Art Thou the way?

Art Thou the way, Lord? Then the way is sweet,

No matter if it puzzle or distress,

Though winds may scourge, or blinding suns may beat,

The perfect rest shall round our weariness,

Cool dews shall heal the fevered pulse of day;

We shall find home at last through thee, the way.


HER HEART WAS LIKE A GENEROUS
FIRE
(S. P. C.)

HER heart was like a generous fire,

Round which a hundred souls could sit

And warm them in the unstinted blaze.

Those who held nearest place to it

Had cheer and comfort all their days;

Those who, perforce, were further still

Yet felt her radiance melt their chill,

Their darkness lightened by her rays.

Her heart was like a generous fire!

The trivial dross of thought and mind

Shrivelled when brought too near its heat,

The hidden gold was caught, refined;

A subtle effluence keen and sweet

From every creature drew its best;

Gave inspiration, strength, and rest,

Quickened the moral pulse’s beat.

Her heart was like a generous fire!

Circled by smaller fires in ring,

Each lit by her infectious spark

To send forth warmth and comforting

Into hard paths and by-ways dark.

The little fires, they still burn on;

But the great kindling flame is gone,

Caught up past our imagining.

Her heart was like a generous fire!

How changed the summer scenes, how chill,

How coldly do the mornings break,

Since that great heart is quenched and still,

Which kept so many hearts awake!

O Lord the Light! shine Thou instead,

Quicken and trim the fires she fed,

And make them burn for her dear sake.


THE LEGEND OF THE ALMOST SAVED
FROM THE RUSSIAN

ONCE a poor soul, reft from a dull, hard lot

(Which yet was dear, as even dull life may be),

Found herself bodiless in that dread spot

Which mortals know as “Hell” and fearfully

Name in a whisper, while the Saints name not.

“I was not wicked; they have told God lies

To make him send me here,” she moaned in pain,

Then suddenly her wan, reproachful eyes,

Raised to the Pity never sought in vain,

Beheld a hovering shape in aureoled guise.

It was Saint Peter, guardian of the gate,

The shining gate where blessed ones go in.

“Why thus,” demanded he, “bewail your fate?

What good deed did you in your life to win

The right to Heaven? Speak ere it be too late!”

Then the poor soul,—all downcast and dismayed,

Scanning the saint’s face and his austere air,

In vain reviewed her life, in vain essayed

To think of aught accomplished which might bear

Heaven’s scrutiny. At length she answer made.

“Poor was I,” faltered she, “so very poor!

Little I had to spare, yet once I gave

A carrot from my scanty garden store

To one more poor than I was.” Sad and grave

Saint Peter questioned, “Didst thou do no more?”

“No,” said the trembling soul. He bent his head.

“Wait thou until I bear thy plea on high;

The angel there who judges quick and dead

Shall weigh thee in his scales, and rightfully

Decide thy final place and doom,” he said.

So the soul waited till Hell’s doors should ope.

It opened never, but adown the sky

There swung a carrot from a slender rope,

And a voice reached her, sounding from on high,

Saying, “If the carrot bear thee, there is hope.”

She clutched the rescue by the Heavens sent.

The carrot held—small good has mighty strength;

But one, and then another, as she went

Caught at her flying garments, till at length

Four of the lost rose with her, well content.

The smoke of Hell curled darkly far beneath,

The blue of Heaven gleamed fair and bright in view,

Life quivered in the balance over Death.

Almost had life prevailed when, “Who are you,”

The soul cried out with startled, jealous breath,

“Who hang so heavily, going where I go?

God never meant to save you! It is I,

I whom he sent for from the Place of Wo.

Loosen your hold at once!” Then suddenly

The carrot yielded, and all fell below.

The pitiful, grieved angels overhead

Watched the poor souls shoot wailing through the air

Toward the lurid shadows darkly red,

And sadly sighed. “Heaven was so near, so fair,

Almost we had them safely here,” they said.