Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Key Notes (1879). IV. MidnightLouisa S. Guggenberger (18451895)
T
And yet nothing sense can mark;
For a mist fills all the midnight
Adding blindness to its dark.
From the life of yesterday:
Not the vaguest stir foretelling
Of a morrow on the way.
In the absence of the sun;
’Tis the hour of endings, ended,
Of beginnings, unbegun.
Bids my waiting spirit hark;
There is action in the stillness,
There is progress in the dark.
Comes the better from the worse,
Swings the whole of Nature upward,
Wakes, and thinks—a universe.
And of life, more life that knows;
Though the sum of force be constant
Yet the Living ever grows.
And step strongly on our ways;
And we live through nights in patience,
And we learn the worth of days.
Is revealed to me this thing:
Nothing hinders, all enables
Nature’s vast awakening.