• Four straight brick walls, severely plain,
      A quiet city square surround;
    A level space of nameless graves,—
      The Quakers’ burial-ground.

    In gown of gray, or coat of drab,
      They trod the common ways of life,
    With passions held in sternest leash,
      And hearts that knew not strife.

    To yon grim meeting-house they fared,...

  • There is no dearer lover of lost hours
                Than I.
    I can be idler than the idlest flowers;
                More idly lie
    Than noonday lilies languidly afloat,
    And water pillowed in a windless moat.
      And I can be
    Stiller than some gray stone
    That hath no motion known.
      It seems to me
    That my still idleness...

  • Good master, you and I were born
    In “Teacup days” of hoop and hood,
    And when the silver cue hung down,
    And toasts were drunk, and wine was good;

    When kin of mine (a jolly brood)
    From sideboards looked, and knew full well
    What courage they had given the beau,
    How generous made the blushing belle.

    Ah me! what gossip could I...

  • While i recline
    At ease beneath
    This immemorial pine,
    Small sphere!
    (By dusky fingers brought this morning here
    And shown with boastful smiles),
    I turn thy cloven sheath,
    Through which the soft white fibres peer,
    That, with their gossamer bands,
    Unite, like love, the sea-divided lands,
    And slowly, thread by thread...

  • Most men know love but as a part of life;
    They hide it in some corner of the breast,
    Even from themselves; and only when they rest
    In the brief pauses of that daily strife,
    Wherewith the world might else be not so rife,
    They draw it forth (as one draws forth a toy
    To soothe some ardent, kiss-exacting boy)
    And hold it up to sister, child,...

  • Calm as that second summer which precedes
      The first fall of the snow,
    In the broad sunlight of heroic deeds,
      The city bides the foe.

    As yet, behind their ramparts, stern and proud,
      Her bolted thunders sleep,—
    Dark Sumter, like a battlemented cloud,
      Looms o’er the solemn deep.

    No Calpe frowns from lofty cliff or scaur...

  • Sleep sweetly in your humble graves,
      Sleep, martyrs of a fallen cause;
    Though yet no marble column craves
      The pilgrim here to pause.

    In seeds of laurel in the earth
      The blossom of your fame is blown,
    And somewhere, waiting for its birth,
      The shaft is in the stone!

    Meanwhile, behalf the tardy years
      Which keep...

  • Tall, sombre, grim, against the morning sky
      They rise, scarce touched by melancholy airs,
    Which stir the fadeless foliage dreamfully,
      As if from realms of mystical despairs.

    Tall, sombre, grim, they stand with dusky gleams
      Brightening to gold within the woodland’s core,
    Beneath the gracious noontide’s tranquil beams,—
      But the...

  • For sixty days and upwards,
      A storm of shell and shot
    Rained round us in a flaming shower,
      But still we faltered not.
    “If the noble city perish,”
      Our grand young leader said,
    “Let the only walls the foe shall scale
      Be ramparts of the dead!”

    For sixty days and upwards,
      The eye of heaven waxed dim;
    And...

  • Between the sunken sun and the new moon,
    I stood in fields through which a rivulet ran
    With scarce perceptible motion, not a span
    Of its smooth surface trembling to the tune
    Of sunset breezes: “O delicious boon,”
    I cried, “of quiet! wise is Nature’s plan,
    Who, in her realm, as in the soul of man,
    Alternates storm with calm, and the loud...