Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Master and Scholar (1866). GilboaEdward Hayes Plumptre (18211891)
Before the inward eye,
Like soft dew falling on the tender grass,
When all around is dry.
Of childhood’s earliest day;
Through war’s wild din, and battle’s torrent rush,
I hear the children play.
When I, and one with me
Who bore my shield, were conquerors in the fight,
And made the aliens flee.
And leapt from rock to rock;
Till from the height we looked on all the land,
And dared the battle’s shock.
The thirst that fired the brain;
I taste the golden stream that trickled sweet,
And brought life back again:
When Saul in sternness strove
An iron mantle round his heart to fold,
And crush a father’s love;
And offered up my life,
As Isaac bowed of old, with calmest breath,
To meet the glittering knife:
There rose the awe-struck cry;
Their strong resolve through hill and forest rung,
“This day shall no man die!”
I smote the craven foe;
And year by year the crown of victory won,
Requiting blow for blow:
We brought for Israel’s maids;
The ruby circlet, and the golden crown,
Rich harvest of our raids.
And all men sang my praise;
Yet darker far than night without a moon,
Was fame’s full daylight blaze.
My hopes and thoughts to share;
A soul to live with me the life divine,
And half grief’s burden bear.
My glory and my joy;
When lo! there stood in brightness by my side,
The minstrel shepherd-boy.
Welled from my soul in one abounding flood;
The sun shone brighter on the hoary mountains,
A sweeter music murmured through the wood.
The golden locks that flowed like sunlight down;
Through eye’s wild flash there gleamed the star of duty,
And on his brow Truth set her kingly crown.
Voice soft as maiden’s, stirring men to tears,
A soul that knew no fear of death or danger,
Wide thoughts of wisdom ripening with the years:
His hand brought music from the soulless lyre;
And lo! the spell chased all the clouds of madness,
Wrath passed away as wax before the fire.
The wonders of the nobler days of old;
And strong, deep music thrilled through all the story,
Stirring all hearts to deeds of prowess bold.
The starry night, the cloud-built tent of God,
The wild, dark storm on wings of tempest driven,
The snow-clad heights where never man has trod:
New voices mingled with the streamlet’s song;
Men’s hearts rose up to meet the Eternal Giver,
The slave found freedom, and the weak grew strong.
The hymns that made the brain and spirit thrill;
I found the prize for which my soul had panted,
The friend and guide of thought, and heart, and will.
And still my heart is with him to the last,
Though all our glory wane as his advances,
His the bright future, ours the failing past.
His people’s love unpriced;
Long line of kings, great names renowned in story,
The far-off, coming Christ.
My robe, and sword, and shield;
And ofttimes since in every secret greeting,
In forest or in field,
I, of free choice, renewed;
Nor shall my spirit fail or purpose falter,
With woman’s varying mood.
What need for that to bless?
Though he should stand a foe against me fighting,
I should not love him less;
I could not him deny;
No other love have I whereon to stay me,
And when that fails I die:
Above my fameless grave;
I trust my orphaned child to his true keeping
From shame and death to save:
Yet faithful to the end,
He still, through kingly state and strife, may cherish
The memory of his friend.