I.
THE CRAIGIE HOUSE :
WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AND LONGFELLOW'S HOME .
Behold ! a double glory resteth here,
Wherein was housed in Revolution's time
A man who while a king refused a throne,
Save in his country's grateful heart alone;
And who by singleness of soul sublime
Has made his name to every people dear.
And he who fills the house with light to-day
Keeps the old relics in their primal place,
Reviving yet the age of Washington:
Poet and statesman, — how their fame is one
In greatness, goodness, and a world's embrace,
Though time and genius widely part their way!
A reverent love has kept the olden pile
Almost untouched by innovating hands;
Nor has Art stinted Nature, — here she lies
In ancient ampleness to bless the eyes.
Beyond are spread the open meadow-lands
That stretch away to catch the river's smile.
From massive clumps of lofty lilac-trees
Pours forth the searching fragrance of the spring,
Greeting the sense, while yet unseen the source;
And when the summer's glow hath spent its force,
And birds no more in elms and lindens sing,
Millions of winy leaves inflame the breeze.
And winter holds here an unwonted sway;
The towering trees with honors long since dead,
And charged with snows, still leave the fancy warm
To feel that Time's or Nature's chilling storm
By Fame eternal shall be buffeted,
Nor vital greatness suffer cold decay.
But let the pilgrim come what time he will,
Here is evoked Thought's majesty of mood;
Here she moves on with slow, imperial gait,
Since two such Presences upon her wait.
Lo! Past and Present mix, — a mighty flood
Beside whose stately flow the lips grow still.
II.
ON HIS BIRTHDAY .
A BOY is watching on his own fair shore
The harbor, with its multitude of ships;
He little thinks what greatness lies in store,
Though even now the soul hath touched the lips.
His boundless future, there, he gazes at,
His fame hereafter will be likest that.
It is to-day. Across the mighty deep
Of human souls his songs forever move;
Like freighted ships their destined ways they keep,
Yet soon or late, all harbors richer prove
When in there float the white sails of his thought.
Together, lo! the ends of earth are brought.
III.
AFTER READING " MORITURI SALUTAMUS. "
B E that sad year, O poet! very far
That proves thee mortal by the little star.
Yet since thy thoughts live daily in our own,
And leave no heart to weep or smile alone;
Since they are rooted in our souls, and so
Will live forever whither those shall go,
Though some late asterisk may mark thy name,
It never will be set against thy fame!
For the world's fervent love and praise of thee
Have starred it first with immortality.
THE CRAIGIE HOUSE :
WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AND LONGFELLOW'S HOME .
Behold ! a double glory resteth here,
Wherein was housed in Revolution's time
A man who while a king refused a throne,
Save in his country's grateful heart alone;
And who by singleness of soul sublime
Has made his name to every people dear.
And he who fills the house with light to-day
Keeps the old relics in their primal place,
Reviving yet the age of Washington:
Poet and statesman, — how their fame is one
In greatness, goodness, and a world's embrace,
Though time and genius widely part their way!
A reverent love has kept the olden pile
Almost untouched by innovating hands;
Nor has Art stinted Nature, — here she lies
In ancient ampleness to bless the eyes.
Beyond are spread the open meadow-lands
That stretch away to catch the river's smile.
From massive clumps of lofty lilac-trees
Pours forth the searching fragrance of the spring,
Greeting the sense, while yet unseen the source;
And when the summer's glow hath spent its force,
And birds no more in elms and lindens sing,
Millions of winy leaves inflame the breeze.
And winter holds here an unwonted sway;
The towering trees with honors long since dead,
And charged with snows, still leave the fancy warm
To feel that Time's or Nature's chilling storm
By Fame eternal shall be buffeted,
Nor vital greatness suffer cold decay.
But let the pilgrim come what time he will,
Here is evoked Thought's majesty of mood;
Here she moves on with slow, imperial gait,
Since two such Presences upon her wait.
Lo! Past and Present mix, — a mighty flood
Beside whose stately flow the lips grow still.
II.
ON HIS BIRTHDAY .
A BOY is watching on his own fair shore
The harbor, with its multitude of ships;
He little thinks what greatness lies in store,
Though even now the soul hath touched the lips.
His boundless future, there, he gazes at,
His fame hereafter will be likest that.
It is to-day. Across the mighty deep
Of human souls his songs forever move;
Like freighted ships their destined ways they keep,
Yet soon or late, all harbors richer prove
When in there float the white sails of his thought.
Together, lo! the ends of earth are brought.
III.
AFTER READING " MORITURI SALUTAMUS. "
B E that sad year, O poet! very far
That proves thee mortal by the little star.
Yet since thy thoughts live daily in our own,
And leave no heart to weep or smile alone;
Since they are rooted in our souls, and so
Will live forever whither those shall go,
Though some late asterisk may mark thy name,
It never will be set against thy fame!
For the world's fervent love and praise of thee
Have starred it first with immortality.