| If all the ships I have at sea |
| Should come a-sailing home to me, |
| Weighed down with gems, and silk and gold, |
| Ah! well, the harbor would not hold |
| So many ships as there would be, |
| If all my ships came home from sea. |
| |
| If half my ships came home from sea, |
| And brought their precious freight to me, |
| Ah! well, I should have wealth as great |
| As any king that sits in state, |
| So rich the treasure there would be |
| In half my ships now out at sea. |
| |
| If but one ship I have at sea |
| Should come a-sailing home to me, |
| Ah! well, the storm clouds then might frown, |
| For, if the others all went down, |
| Still rich and glad and proud I'd be |
| If that one ship came home to me. |
| |
| If that one ship went down at sea |
| And all the others came to me |
| Weighed down with gems and wealth untold, |
| With honor, riches, glory, gold, |
| The poorest soul on earth I'd be |
| If that one ship came not to me. |
| |
| O skies, be calm; O winds, blow free! |
| Blow all my ships safe home to me, |
| But if thou sendest some awrack, |
| To nevermore come sailing back, |
| Send any, all that skim the sea, |
| But send my love ship home to me. |
| |
| Ella Wheeler Wilcox. |
| Bowed by the weight of centuries he leans |
| Upon his hoe and gazes on the ground, |
| The emptiness of ages in his face, |
| And on his back the burden of the world. |
| Who made him dead to rapture and despair, |
| A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, |
| Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? |
| Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? |
| Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow? |
| Whose breath blew out the light within this brain? |
| Is this the Thing, the Lord God made and gave |
| To have dominion over sea and land; |
| To trace the stars and search the heavens for power; |
| To feel the passion of Eternity? |
| Is this the dream He dreamed who shaped the suns |
| And pillared the blue firmament with light? |
| Down all the stretch of Hell to its last gulf |
| There is no shape more terrible than this— |
| More tongued with censure of the world's blind greed— |
| More filled with signs and portents for the soul— |
| More fraught with menace to the universe. |
| |
| What gulfs between him and the seraphim! |
| Slave of the wheel of labor, what to him |
| Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? |
| What the long reaches of the peaks of song, |
| The rift of dawn, the reddening of the rose? |
| Through this dread shape the suffering ages look; |
| Time's tragedy is in that aching stoop; |
| Through this dread shape humanity betrayed, |
| Plundered, profaned and disinherited, |
| Cries protest to the judges of the world, |
| A protest that is also prophecy. |
| |
| O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, |
| Is this the handiwork you give to God, |
| This monstrous thing distorted and soul-quenched? |
| How will you ever straighten up this shape; |
| Touch it again with immortality; |
| Give back the upward looking and the light, |
| Rebuild it in the music and the dream; |
| Make right the immemorial infamies, perfidious wrongs, immedicable woes? |
| |
| O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, |
| How will the Future reckon with this man? |
| How answer his brute question in that hour |
| When whirlwinds of rebellion shake the world? |
| How will it be with kingdom and with kings— |
| With those who shaped him to the thing he is— |
| When this dumb Terror shall reply to God, |
| After the silence of the centuries? |
| |
| Edwin Markham. |
| Did you say you wished to see me, sir? Step in; 'tis a cheerless place, |
| But you're heartily welcome all the same; to be poor is no disgrace. |
| Have I been here long? Oh, yes, sir! 'tis thirty winters gone |
| Since poor Jim took to crooked ways and left me all alone! |
| Jim was my son, and a likelier lad you'd never wish to see, |
| Till evil counsels won his heart and led him away from me. |
| |
| 'Tis the old, sad, pitiful story, sir, of the devil's winding stair, |
| And men go down—and down—and down—to blackness and despair; |
| Tossing about like wrecks at sea, with helm and anchor lost, |
| On and on, through the surging waves, nor caring to count the cost; |
| I doubt sometimes if the Savior sees, He seems so far away, |
| How the souls He loved and died for, are drifting—drifting astray! |
| |
| Indeed,'tis little wonder, sir, if woman shrinks and cries |
| When the life-blood on Rum's altar spilled is calling to the skies; |
| Small wonder if her own heart feels each sacrificial blow, |
| For isn't each life a part of hers? each pain her hurt and woe? |
| Read all the records of crime and shame—'tis bitterly, sadly true; |
| Where manliness and honor die, there some woman's heart dies, too. |
| |
| I often think, when I hear folks talk so prettily and so fine |
| Of "alcohol as needful food"; of the "moderate use of wine"; |
| How "the world couldn't do without it, there was clearly no other way |
| But for a man to drink, or let it alone, as his own strong will might say"; |
| That "to use it, but not abuse it, was the proper thing to do," |
| How I wish they'd let old Poorhouse Nan preach her little sermon, too! |
| |
| I would give them scenes in a woman's life that would make their pulses stir, |
| For I was a drunkard's child and wife—aye, a drunkard's mother, sir! |
| I would tell of childish terrors, of childish tears and pain. |
| Of cruel blows from a father's hand when rum had crazed his brain; |
| He always said he could drink his fill, or let it alone as well; |
| Perhaps he might, he was killed one night in a brawl—in a grog-shop hell! |
| |
| I would tell of years of loveless toil the drunkard's child had passed, |
| With just one gleam of sunshine, too beautiful to last. |
| When I married Tom I thought for sure I had nothing more to fear, |
| That life would come all right at last; the world seemed full of cheer. |
| But he took to moderate drinking—he allowed 'twas a harmless thing, |
| So the arrow sped, and my bird of Hope came down with a broken wing. |
| |
| Tom was only a moderate drinker; ah, sir, do you bear in mind |
| How the plodding tortoise in the race left the leaping hare behind? |
| 'Twas because he held right on and on, steady and true, if slow, |
| And that's the way, I'm thinking, that the moderate drinkers go! |
| Step over step—day after day—with sleepless, tireless pace, |
| While the toper sometimes looks behind and tarries in the race! |
| |
| Ah, heavily in the well-worn path poor Tom walked day by day, |
| For my heart-strings clung about his feet and tangled up the way; |
| The days were dark, and friends were gone, and life dragged on full slow, |
| And children came, like reapers, and to a harvest of want and woe! |
| Two of them died, and I was glad when they lay before me dead; |
| I had grown so weary of their cries—their pitiful cries for bread. |
| |
| There came a time when my heart was stone; I could neither hope nor pray; |
| Poor Tom lay out in the Potter's Field, and my boy had gone astray; |
| My boy who'd been my idol, while, like hound athirst for blood, |
| Between my breaking heart and him the liquor seller stood, |
| And lured him on with pleasant words, his pleasures and his wine; |
| Ah, God have pity on other hearts as bruised and hurt as mine. |
| |
| There were whispers of evil-doing, of dishonor, and of shame, |
| That I cannot bear to think of now, and would not dare to name! |
| There was hiding away from the light of day, there was creeping about at night, |
| A hurried word of parting—then a criminal's stealthy flight! |
| His lips were white with remorse and fright when he gave me a good-by kiss; |
| And I've never seen my poor lost boy from that black day to this. |
| |
| Ah, none but a mother can tell you, sir, how a mother's heart will ache, |
| With the sorrow that comes of a sinning child, with grief for a lost one's sake, |
| When she knows the feet she trained to walk have gone so far astray, |
| And the lips grown bold with curses that she taught to sing and pray; |
| A child may fear—a wife may weep, but of all sad things, none other |
| Seems half so sorrowful to me as being a drunkard's mother. |
| |
| They tell me that down in the vilest dens of the city's crime and murk, |
| There are men with the hearts of angels, doing the angels' work; |
| That they win back the lost and the straying, that they help the weak to stand, |
| By the wonderful power of loving words—and the help of God's right hand! |
| And often and often, the dear Lord knows, I've knelt and prayed to Him, |
| That somewhere, somehow, 'twould happen that they'd find and save my Jim! |
| |
| You'll say 'tis a poor old woman's whim; but when I prayed last night, |
| Right over yon eastern window there shone a wonderful light! |
| (Leastways it looked that way to me) and out of the light there fell |
| The softest voice I had ever heard: it rung like a silver bell; |
| And these were the words, "The prodigal turns, so tired by want and sin, |
| He seeks his father's open door—he weeps—and enters in." |
| |
| Why, sir, you're crying as hard as I; what—is it really done? |
| Have the loving voice and the Helping Hand brought back my wandering son? |
| Did you kiss me and call me "Mother"—and hold me to your breast, |
| Or is it one of the taunting dreams that come to mock my rest? |
| No—no! thank God, 'tis a dream come true! I can die, for He's saved my boy! |
| And the poor old heart that had lived on grief was broken at last by joy! |
| |
| Lucy M. Blinn. |