Alfred H. Miles, ed. The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Sonnets and Other Poems, Chiefly Religious (1890). I. A Thought of StoicismJoseph John Murphy (18271894)
I
To wish the present life were all;
That death upon the soul might fall,
And darkness overwhelm the mind.
Which never thinks of good or ill,
And only cares to eat his fill
At mighty Nature’s bounteous feast;
And free our choice and clear our way,
The law of conscience to obey,
Whether to act or to endure;
To conquests in the battle won;
To say at last, “My work is done;
I die, and seek for no reward.”
That faith should look beyond the grave
On Him who died the world to save,
And rose to be the Polar Star,
To guide us on through death and night.
To realms of deathless life and light,
To mansions of the blest above.
Who makes the buried seeds to bloom
That He will raise me from the tomb
As summer’s breath awakes the flower;
Or lay what was my friend in dust,
And feel a reverential trust
That He who made them both to be,—
And maketh children grow to men,—
Will give us other life again,
More blessèd than the life on earth.