The Carver’s Lesson.

Trust me, no mere skill of subtle tracery,

No mere practice of a dexterous hand,

Will suffice, without a hidden spirit,

That we may, or may not, understand.

And those quaint old fragments that are left us

Have their power in this,—the Carver brought

Earnest care, and reverent patience, only

Worthily to clothe some noble thought.

Shut, then, in the petals of the flowers,

Round the stems of all the lilies twine,

Hide beneath each bird’s or angel’s pinion,

Some wise meaning or some thought divine.

Place in stony hands that pray for ever

Tender words of peace, and strive to wind

Round the leafy scrolls and fretted niches

Some true, loving message to your kind.

Some will praise, some blame, and, soon forgetting,

Come and go, nor even pause to gaze;

Only now and then a passing stranger

Just may loiter with a word of praise.

But, I think, when years have floated onward,

And the stone is gray, and dim, and old,

And the hand forgotten that has carved it,

And the heart that dreamt it still and cold:

There may come some weary soul, o’erladen

With perplexed struggle in his brain,

Or, it may be, fretted with life’s turmoil,

Or made sore with some perpetual pain.

Then, I think, those stony hands will open,

And the gentle lilies overflow,

With the blessing and the loving token

That you hid there many years ago.

And the tendrils will unroll, and teach him

How to solve the problem of his pain;

And the birds’ and angels’ wings shake downward

On his heart a sweet and tender rain.

While he marvels at his fancy, reading

Meaning in that quaint and ancient scroll,

Little guessing that the loving Carver

Left a message for his weary soul.

A. A. P.

William Hogarth:
PAINTER, ENGRAVER, AND PHILOSOPHER.
Essays on the Man, the Work, and the Time.