Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
IV. Comfort and CheerSomething Beyond
Mary (Clemmer) (Ames) Hudson (18391884)S
The life-task falleth from thy weary hand,
Be brave, be patient! In the fair beyond
Thou ’lt understand.
Couch sorrowful slaves bound by low nature’s greed;
Why the celestial soul ’s a minion made
To narrowest need.
The imperfect fragment of a beauteous whole,
For yon rare regions, where the perfect meet,
Sighs the lone soul.
It hath no half-fed friendships perishing fleet,
No partial insights, no averted eyes,
No loves unmeet.
In this dark dwelling, in its shrouded beams,
Our best waits masked, few pierce the soul’s disguise;
How sad it seems!
Darker would be thy face, O brief To-day;
Earthward we ’d bow beneath life’s smiting woe,
Powerless to pray.
Above the night; clear shines her precious brow;
The pendulous star in her transfigured hands
Brightens the Now.