Menella Bute Smedley (Менелла Бьют Смедли)
The Future
A figure wanders through my dreams And wears a veil upon its face, Still bending to my breast it seems, Yet ever turns from my embrace. And sometimes, passing from my sight, It lifts the veil as it departs, And eyes flash out with such a light As never dawned on waking hearts. There is no need of sound or speech Or toiling through the troubled years, The rapture of that smile can teach More than a century of tears. And this I know, if it could move Out of my dreams into my days, One service of unbroken love Should fill and crown my life with praise. Love with no doubts and no demands, But generous as a southern June,— Vast brotherhood of hearts and hands, Choir of a world in perfect tune— No shallow sunset-films to gild Far summits which we dare not climb, But ceaseless charms of hope fulfilled, Making a miracle of time. How sure, how calm, the picture seems! How near it comes, beheld, possessed! It is not only in my dreams I feel that touch upon my breast. It thrills me through the barren day, It holds me in the heart of strife, No phantom-grasp that melts away, It seems—it is—the touch of Life! We look into the heart of flowers And wonder whence their bloom can rise; The secret hope of human hours Is hidden deeper from our eyes. In helpless tracts of wind and rain The work goes on without a sound; And while you weep your weak “In vain,” The flower is growing underground. We know the lesson; but a cry, Bitter and vast, is in our ears; One life of fruitless misery Shakes all our wisdom into tears. Thronged by the clamorous griefs that say, “Behold what is, forget what seems,” I can but answer, “Welladay; There is that figure in my dreams.”
Menella Bute Smedley’s other poems:
Poems of other poets with the same name (Стихотворения других поэтов с таким же названием):