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Home  »  The Poetical Works In Four Volumes  »  The Past and Coming Year

John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892). The Poetical Works in Four Volumes. 1892.

Appendix I. Early and Uncollected Verses

The Past and Coming Year

WAVE of an awful torrent, thronging down,

With all the wealth of centuries, and the cold

Embraces of eternity, o’erstrown

With the great wrecks of empire, and the old

Magnificence of nations, who are gone;

Thy last, faint murmur—thy departing sigh,

Along the shore of being, like a tone

Thrilling on broken harp-strings, or the swell

Of the chained winds’ last whisper, hath gone by,

And thou hast floated from the world of breath

To the still guidance of o’ermastering Death,

Thy pilot to eternity. Farewell!

Go, swell the throngful past. Go, blend with all

The garnered things of Death; and bear with thee

The treasures of thy pilgrimage, the tall

And beautiful dreams of Hope, the ministry

Of Love and high Ambition. Man remains

To dream again as idly; and the stains

Of passion will be visible once more.

The winged spirit will not be confined

By the experience of thy journey. Mind

Will struggle in its prison-house, and still,

With Earth’s strong fetters binding it to ill,

Unfurl the pinions fitted but to soar

In that pure atmosphere, where spirits range—

The home of high existences—where change

And blighting may not enter. Love again

Will bloom, a fickle flower, upon the grave

Of old affections; and Ambition wave

His eagle-plume most proudly, for the rein

Of Conscience will be loosened from the soul

To give his purpose freedom. The control

Of reason will be changeful, and the ties

Which gather hearts together, and make up

The romance of existence, will be rent:

Yea, poison will be poured in Friendship’s cup;

And for Earth’s low familiar element,

Even Love itself forsake its kindred skies.

But not alone dark visions! happier things

Will float above existence, like the wings

Of the starred bird of paradise; and Love

Will not be all a dream, or rather prove

A dream—a sweet forgetfulness—that hath

No wakeful changes, ending but in Death.

Yea, pure hearts shall be pledged beneath the eyes

Of the beholding heaven, and in the light

Of the love-hallowed moon. The quiet Night

Shall hear that language underneath the skies

Which whispereth above them, as the prayer

And the deep vow are spoken. Passing fair

And gifted creatures, with the light of truth

And undebarred affection, as a crown,

Resting upon the beautiful brow of youth,

Shall smile on stately manhood, kneeling down

Before them, as to Idols. Friendship’s hand

Shall clasp its brothers; and Affection’s tear

Be sanctified with sympathy. The bier

Of stricken love shall lose the fears, which Death

Giveth his awful work, and earnest Faith

Shall look beyond the shadow of the clay,

The pulseless sepulchre, the cold decay;

And to the quiet of the spirit-land

Follow the mourned and lovely. Gifted ones

Lighting the Heaven of Intellect, like suns,

Shall wrestle well with circumstance, and bear

The agony of scorn, the preying care,

Wedded to burning bosoms; and go down

In sorrow to the noteless sepulchre,

With one lone hope embracing like a crown

The cold and death-like forehead of Despair,

That after times shall treasure up their fame

Even as a proud inheritance and high;

And beautiful beings love to breathe their name

With the recorded things that never die.

And thou, gray voyager to the breezeless sea

Of infinite Oblivion—speed thou on:

Another gift of time succeedeth thee

Fresh from the hand of God; for thou hast done

The errand of thy destiny; and none

May dream of thy returning. Go, and bear

Mortality’s frail records to thy cold,

Eternal prison-house; the midnight prayer

Of suffering bosoms, and the fevered care

Of worldly hearts; the miser’s dream of gold;

Ambition’s grasp at greatness; the quenched light

Of broken spirits; the forgiven wrong

And the abiding curse—ay, bear along

These wrecks of thy own making. Lo, thy knell

Gathers upon the windy breath of night,

Its last and faintest echo. Fare thee well!

1829.