REPROACHES

By “FRIK”

(Died 1330)

O God of righteousness and truth,

Loving to all, and full of ruth;

I have some matter for Thine ear

If Thou wilt but Thy servant hear.

Lo, how the world afflicteth us

With wrongs and torments rancorous;

And Thou dost pardon every one,

But turnest from our woes alone.

Lord, Thou wilt not avenge our wrong

Nor chase the ills that round us throng;

Thou knowest, we are flesh and bone,

We are not statues made from stone!

We are not made of grass or reeds,

That Thou consumest us like weeds;—

As though we were some thorny field

Or brushwood, that the forests yield.

If that ourselves are nothing worth—

If we have wrought no good on earth,

If we are hateful in Thy sight

That Thou shouldst leave us in this plight—

Then blot us out;—be swift and brief,

That Thy pure heart may find relief;

This well may be, by Thy intent,

Great Lord and good, omnipotent.

How long must we in patience wait

And bear unmurmuringly our fate?

Let evil ones be swept away

And those whom Thou dost favour, stay!

A TRIAL OF ORTHODOXY

(Sonnet on Armenia)

By WILLIAM WATSON

The clinging children at their mother’s knee

Slain; and the sire and kindred one by one

Flayed or hewn piecemeal; and things nameless done,

Not to be told: while imperturbably

The nations gaze, where Rhine unto the sea,

Where Seine and Danube, Thames and Tiber run,

And where great armies glitter in the sun,

And great Kings rule, and man is boasted free!

What wonder if yon torn and naked throng

Should doubt a Heaven that seems to wink and nod,

And having mourned at noontide, “Lord, how long?”

Should cry, “Where hidest Thou?” at evenfall,

At midnight, “Is He deaf and blind, our God?”

And ere day dawn, “Is He indeed at all?”

THE EXILE’S SONG

FOLK SONG

Belovèd one, for thy sweet sake,

By whirlwinds tossed and swayed I roam;

The stranger’s accents round me wake

These burning thoughts that wander home.

No man such longings wild can bear

As in my heart forever rise.

Oh that the wind might waft me there

Where my belovèd’s vineyard lies!

Oh that I were the zephyr fleet,

That bends her vines and roses sweet.

For I am piteous and forlorn,

As is the bird that haunts the night;

Who inconsolably doth mourn

Whene’er his rose is from his sight.

O’er earth and ocean, everywhere

I gaze in vain, with weary eyes.

Oh that the wind might waft me there

Where my belovèd’s vineyard lies!

Oh that I were the zephyr fleet

That bends her vines and roses sweet.

I would I were yon cloud so light,—

Yon cloudlet driven before the wind.

Or yonder bird with swift-winged flight:

My heart’s true way I soon would find!

Oh, I would be the wind so fleet

That bends her vines and roses sweet.

THE APPLE TREE

FOLK SONG

The door of Heaven open seemed

And in thy house the sunlight gleamed.

As through the garden’s willow’d walks I hied

Full many a tree and blossom I espied.

But of all trees, the Apple Tree most fair

And beautiful did unto me appear.

It sobbed and wept. Its leaves said murmuringly:

“I would that God had ne’er created me!

The badge of sin and wickedness I am

E’en at thy feast, O Father Abraham.[1]

The apple growing on me first

From Eden came ere it was cursed,

Alas, alas, I am undone!

Why fell I to that evil one?”


[1] The “feast of Father Abraham” means plenty. [↑]