POEMS,
BY
THOMAS HALL SHASTID,
AUTHOR OF
“Newspaper Ballads.”
————
PITTSFIELD, ILLINOIS:
THE AUTHOR.
1881.
{2}
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1881, by
THOMAS HALL SHASTID,
In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
—————
Printed and Bound by
H. E. Hanna, Book Printer,
Pittsfield, Illinois.
| Table of Contents |
PREFACE.
To my many friends who have been so lenient in their criticisms of my former work, and to the several editors and literary men who have given me so much encouragement, I wish to return my sincere thanks.
All the request I have to make, is, that I hope my efforts this time will receive no more condemnation than my other.
I take pleasure in launching my little volume upon the wide sea of literature. The author is fourteen years of age, but many of the poems were written at a much earlier age.
Yours, most respectfully,
THOMAS HALL SHASTID.
POEMS.
CHRISTMAS NIGHT.
And let this now our carol be:
If on the land, or on the sea,
We still will sing the glad refrain;
And in the closing light of day
Good words of peace and cheer will say.
Has risen high above the star,
To judge in peace, or judge in war,
To judge at night or judge at morn.
The star that told us of his birth
Has given us joy and lasting mirth.
Is risen high above all men;
Then swell the glad refrain again—
He died for me, He died for thee:
Then peace be ever on the earth
To one and all of human birth.
FALLING OF THE APPLE TREE.
The axe has laid it low;
The blossoms sparkled ere it fell,
But now they wither so.
The spot we loved so well
Has vanished since the apple tree
So loudly crashing fell.
The song so dear to me;
Ah! yes, that rustling far above
Was one of melody.
The axe has laid it low,
And much we’ll miss it, evermore,
That fall was one of woe.
THE ANGELS.
And the country was wild with glee;
And she stilled the wave in the stormy night
On a rolling and restless sea.
And a babe was taken that night.
And an angel sweet in heaven appeared
In the land of glory and light.
THE SPECTRES.
Flit two spectres all the day—
Spectres chasing joy and brightness
From each window far away.
Sombre as the shades of night,
While her trailing robes of darkness
Chase away each ray of light.
Clad in blackness, clad with woe,
Sorrow’s only sad companion,
Flitting ever to and fro.
Filling all with thoughts of pain;
All who gaze are doomed forever,
Ne’er to see bright joy again.
THE YEARS.
Silently yet swiftly on,
Pass the years in quick succession—
Years that are forever gone.
Years of gladness or of woe;
We can never stop their fleeting
But forever they will go.{8}
Dark and dreary as the night.
Years of gladness quickly follow
Bringing thoughts all fair and bright.
Swiftly as the years can be,
Till we leave our pains and sorrow;
Till we find eternity.
MY THOUGHTS.
That would my thoughts convey.
There were a mighty pen that would
The world astound to-day.
Unceasing, always flowing,
For while some thoughts are coming fast
The others fast are going.
BY THE FIRESIDE.
Pictures come and pictures go—
Pictures of the waiting future
Filled with gladness or with woe.
To myself my destiny.
Who knows but these golden raptures
May be real unto me.{9}
And the snowflakes drift on high;
By the fireside I am safely
Counting on what may be nigh.
Coiling into every form.
Fairies circle ever round me
Heedless of the outside storm.
Of the golden dream so nigh.
Let us love our happy fancies
E’er the time has passed us by.
THE HAUNTED HOUSE.
See the ivy on its wall;
Vacant are its crumbling windows,
Vacant is its mossy hall.
Shall resound along no more,
For the spirits of the dead ones
Ever flit about the door.
Of the spirits of the dead;
Those of friends and enemies
Ever murmur ’round your head.{10}
Spirits walk the crumbling floor;
Light their step, but oh! their voices
Haunt the building evermore.
THE KINGDOM OF THE DEAD.
Lighter, lighter ever tread,
’Tis a sacred spot and hallowed:
’Tis the kingdom of the dead.
Though so many in it dwell.
Who can number all its people?
Who, ah! who can ever tell?
In their last and humble bed.
Tread ye lightly, ’tis the kingdom
Of the sacred holy dead.
THE WIND.
Sad and wild?
In its wake come dismal fancies
Never mild.
Of the night,
Howling, with their dismal groaning
In their flight.
Evermore,
As the demons flee from Hades
Rush and roar.
Moan and quiver
Like the moaning of the lost—
Lost forever?
THE SONG OF THE WIND.
I.
Over meadows rich and green,
Playing with the summer grasses—
Fairer sights were never seen.
Though I see THEM ev’ry day;
Passing like a viewless spirit
On my happy singing way.
Chasing fast the cloudlets there,
And I drive them headlong onward
Till they all in fragments tear.{12}
’Mid the storm that works them woe,
Do I cheer ’mid cannon’s rattle,
Kissing both the friend and foe.
To me as I whistle on,
Thinks of home and friends and parents
And of days that now have gone.
And toss the hunter’s hair.
He sits him down upon a log,
While I caress him there.
He feels my cooling sway,
I toss about his silver locks;
That deck his head of gray.
The farmer in his field;
I whistle o’er his garnered store
The willing land doth yield.
And thus I am to him;
I never pass without I cheer
His features calm and grim.
Beside some flowing stream,
And looks upon the dim, dim past,
A vision or a dream.
II.
In accents clear and free.
I answer in an unknown tongue
And pass on cheerily.
He watches till I find
His resting place where he may leave
All earthly cares behind.
I hear their vows of love;
The bright green grass is all below—
The sky of blue above.
As only lovers know;—
They think the world a paradise
And all things bright below.
III.
I raise the dust on high,
And whirl it like a water-wheel,
As ever on I fly.
And whistle by the house—
Then to a gentle zephyr turn,—
As quiet as a mouse.{14}
I whistle by the bell
That hangs within the steeple tall—
And sound a faint, low knell.
I tear the ivy vines,
And fill with dust and sand and dirt
The ancient sculptured lines.
IV.
And toss those waves of blue;
I scare the boasting mariner
And tear the sails in two.
Are dropping to the sea,
The waves as mountains now become—
I roar out in my glee.
With terror in his eyes—
The fork-ed lightning strikes its wings
That waft it from the skies.
The waves are resting now;
The gallant ship before my breath
With magic speed doth plow.
V.
That angels were before—
The storm has quit, you curse again,
You’re sinners wild once more.
And the thunders roll and roar,
You drop upon your knees again—
Art sainted then once more.
Europa’s golden coast—
The Spanish pride;—the English tar
Makes well his frequent boast.
VI.
The dark man’s native home;
I love that central, torrid zone
Wherever I may roam.
Auroras glisten there—
I love the regions still and cold,
The icebergs standing bare.
I waft them towards the south;
The walrus suns him as we go,
And opes his giant mouth.{16}
When all in green they stand,—
In winter do I move their boughs
While roaming o’er the land.
Between the earth and sky;
And it is true where’er I go
A jolly one am I.
And roar out ev’rywhere,
And superstitious people, too,
I often sadly scare.
I’ve seen the first of man,
And I shall see the last of him—
I saw how he began.
VII.
I heard the angels sing;
I saw the manger and the Christ—
The great and goodly king.
Who raised her towers on high;
She raised those towers aloof from earth,
She rose, and but to die.{17}
I saw Napoleon’s day;
I saw the time when he did rise,
And when he fell away.
Who for his country fought.
“I’ll free my country from her bonds,”
That was his only thought.
And if I brought to light,
These things ’twould make the stoutest heart
To start aback with fright.
By any human eye;
I’ve seen the very best of men
By violence to die.
I’ve kissed the brow in vain;
No sign of life upon the face,
So dark and black with pain.
VIII.
IX.
When at midnight’s solemn reign;
Like a ghost or howling demon
Will I sing it oft again.
And will live for many more,
Blowing by the stormy ocean,
On the sea and on the shore.
Still a jolly friend am I,
Ne’er deserting, always constant,
As my zephyrs gently fly.
Just as I have always been—
Free from all unjust transgressions—
Free from any kind of sin.
From the fields of clover sweet;
When with breath of sweetest perfume,
Do I all the woodlands greet.
X.
Stirring up the Autumn leaves;
I must visit now the farmer
As he binds his golden sheaves.
And his anvil ringing clear,—
Even now his clanking irons
Do I faintly seem to hear.
Where the wild wings swiftly fly,
And the clouds go by me floating,
So I bid you all “good-bye.”
HASTINGS.
Came forth to crown the king;
And in the minds of those around
It seemed no trifling thing.
“Or my good sword shall pay,
With heavy thrust and bleeding cut,
For this you’ve done to-day.”
To grace stern William’s head,
But Harold too had claimed the right,
And for that right he bled.{20}
He’d struggled so to save,
And ah! that struggle led him to
His solitary grave.
To chase and not to fly,
And he was born for Hasting’s fate,
And that fate was to die.
The last king of your line
Shall sleep the cold, still sleep of death,
That solemn sleep divine.
Doth reign supreme around,
And music seems in every noise
And ev’ry passing sound.
There lies the human clay,
The spirit to its rest has gone
Where brighter shines the day.
That bears us from the earth;
How few the years that stand between
Our death-call and our birth.
Carousing in the tent,
His joy was great, but ’morrows light,
His knee in suppliance bent.{21}
Upon the next day’s fight,
That Harold soon in death should lie
Within the waning light.
But heads were bent in prayer,
And plans were laid; then silence kept
Its peaceful reigning there.
And solemn was the scene;
The archers with their bows stood by
With grave and silent mien.
Stood silent as the dead;
The battle-axes in their hands
Did rise far overhead.
Stood Harold with his sword,
And far and near around stood those
Who waited at his word.
Its warrior stood on high,
And precious stones did mark him there
That scarcely wealth could buy.
And gave them to the fray,
Ah, many of those heroes there
Ne’er saw another day.{22}
And flashed on armor bright,
And all around were mangled men—
It was an awful sight.
And bore him to the ground;
Ah! then was heard a trampling noise—
A wildly flying sound.
And dyed were they in blood
No more the Saxon’s sang their shout:
“God’s rood! aye, holy rood!”
THE TEMPERANCE SHIP.
Nay! we hoist the sail;
Speeding fast and faster still
With the blowing gale.
And leave behind your woe,
For the sky is bright, and the gale is right,
As like the wind we go.
On the waters shining breast;
Oh! sign the pledge and the ribbon don
And forever you’ll find rest;{23}
And leave behind your woe;
For the sky is bright and the gale is right,
As like the wind we go.
THE HALL OF MEMORY.
Within a happy land;
The walls are high and marble clear
With wealth on every hand.
Are made of purest gold;
The marble steps below them
Are hard and stern and cold.
I love to linger there;
Sweet visions coming evermore,—
Its pictures bright and fair.
Made by a Masters hand;
The marble figures far and near
Alive they seem to stand.
I love to gaze upon;
It is the picture of a time
That is forever gone.{24}
Its walls are stern and high;
The treasures it contains for me
No wealth can ever buy.
PEACE.
The tall trees shadows throw,
And all is spectral far and near
As far as eye can go.
The clouds no longer fly.
The busy world is hushed and still—
Its cares have passed us by.
Then comes the care and pain—
The strife and warfare of our lives
Is rushing on again.
And Peace is reigning on;
But soon the beauty of the night
Will fade and fast be gone.
THE SUNSET LAND.
Where flows a mighty river;
It flows right o’er the crimson clouds
And it follows the sun forever.{25}
They chase and they twinkle and play,
And they love the clouds of the sunset land
That soon will be far away.
Comes down with his robes of gray,
And he chases the light of the sunset land
Far from the west away.
STANZAS.
With its cares and strife is past;
While the angels vigils keep,
Of the doings of the day.
Ere my being seeks repose.
“What hast thou performed this day?”
Many does each man inherit.
Ere I calmly seek repose,
“What hast thou performed this day?”
THE SHIPWRECK.
And hied him to his home;
The breakers dashed upon the shore—
Their crests were filled with foam.
Where reeled a ship; the gale
Had shorn her of her masts, and torn
In shreds each flying sail.
The ship is sinking fast—
The mighty mountains of the sea
Are aided by the blast.
The storm at sea is o’er;
The elements are calm and still;
The wreck is on the shore.
While near the billows roll;—
Take care lest your own self be lost
By shipwreck of your soul.{27}
To whelm the bark within,
As in the world you sail around
The blackened sea of sin.
CLEOPATRA’S NEEDLES.
Two sisters stood alone,
And what they witnessed was a sight
To melt a heart of stone.
One sister, far away;
And now in London’s haunts she stands
And sorrows all the day.
Where she was wont to stand,
And placed her in a foreign clime,
Within a foreign land.
Than on bright Egypt’s shore;—
She stands where she had never been—
To stand for evermore.
Her sister, too, they brought,
To grace America’s bright parks
Where pity ne’er was thought.{28}
That sister is to be;
Between the two the waters lie—
A dark and stormy sea.
Do wend my careful way,
I’ll seek the spot where once they stood,
And there respect I’ll pay.
The sisters are not there,
Insulted by a grosser race,
They stand where naught is fair.
SONNETS.
SONNETS.
WINTER.
And naught disturbs the quiet, bitter air
Except the distant jingling sleigh bells sound,
Which seems to banish from my heart all care.
The trees are barren of their waving leaves,
The limbs are swaying sadly to and fro;
It seems as though it for its verdure grieves,
As down it shakes the flakes of shining snow.
Oh, thou to me forever art a friend—
I would that you were for the whole year round,
And He on high those blessings by you send
That always in your bounteous lap are found;
And you and I would be as angels here
And sorrow never know nor ever shed a tear!
SUNSHINE.
Dost cheer me on my onward path through life,
You show to me more clear my stumbling way{34}
And lighter make my almost ceaseless strife.
Thou art to me a greater friend indeed,
Than others I have loved up to this hour;—
They are oft but a wildly growing weed—
But thou art like a shining summer flow’r.
The world could not exist if not for thee,
The Ice-King would possession then obtain;
The light and beauty from all things would flee,
And naught but lasting, dark’ning chaos reighn.
But now we have the cheerful, glittering light
That keeps the universe alive and bright.
POEMS.
PAST AND PRESENT.
Waiting not for something more;
For the past is gone forever
And its troubles all are o’er.
Golden days will be at hand;
Try, keep trying, for that country,
In a fairer, better land.
Waiting not for something more;
For the past is gone forever
And its troubles all are o’er.
Those who act are always blest;
Up, be doing, still be acting,
This is not a time for rest.{36}
Waiting not for something more;
For the past is gone forever
And its troubles all are o’er.
GONE TO REST.
To that land above,
Where no trouble ever comes;
All is brightness, all is love.
In that land of light;
Cheer up, oh, afflicted ones,
She is gone where all is bright.
Help them now to bear the woe;
Pity us, thy simple children,
In this land so far below.
Clothed her in their robes of light;
She is gone, but not forever,
From the loving parents’ sight.
To that land above,
Where no trouble ever comes,
All is brightness, all is love.
A DREAM.
Stood I in the twilight gray,
There were many standing with me
In the closing light of day.
One to lands so clear and bright,
And the other to a dark land
Where reigned eternal night.
Pathway leading down to hell;
Few there were that took the other—
They that chose it, chose it well.
But ’tis real every day;
Many take the downward path,
Few that go the brighter way.
THE LAST DRINK.
He staggerd and stumbled in;
His face was as hard as granite,
His hair was light and thin.
In a dress of purest white,
And she looked as sweet as could be
In her nice new clothes that night.{38}
For his own dear child he knew
Was shoeless and cold and ragged
And his wife was starving, too.
Bought bread for his wife that night,
And the old bar-keeper’s daughter
Still dressed in her snowy white.
The drunkard was drunkard no more,
And the wife and child were happy
As they never had been before.
IN SPRING TIME.
The breath of the beautiful spring;
And the gentle zephyrs that float about
Scents from the meadow and forest bring.
And in every tree
A robin in glee
Is chanting a joyous melody.
And the azure sky is bright above,
And the warm sunshine makes the whole world glad
For every beam is a message of love.
And in every tree
The robin in glee
Is chanting a joyous melody.{39}
But ah, the wild winds will be raving amain,
And the cold gray winter will ravish our joys—
The beauties of earth will be vanished again.
From every tree
The robin will flee
And fly to the South with his melody.
And gaze on their beauty while linger they here.
Let us thank our dear Father such grandeur may come
While spring claims her place in every year;
And in every tree
A robin will be
Chanting a beautiful melody.
THE RAIN STORM.
Comes the thunder in the night,
While the bold electric flashes
Dazzle for a while the sight.
Streaming down the window-pane.
On the roof, unceasing, patter
Noisy little drops of rain.
And the cresent is no more;—
When will come the day and sunshine
As it came in days of yore?{40}
Music to my thoughts they make,
When the rumbling peals of thunder
Rhyme and even rhythm break.
May we thankful be for rain;—
Come again, oh patt’ring rain-drops,
With your music come again.
SOLFERINO.
A Poem of Six Stanzas in Blank Verse.
SOLFERINO.
I.
The bright green grass and here and there were seen
The golden hues of flow’rets shining fair,
The bright, warm sunshine sparkled on the world
And all the cloudlets of the azure sky
Dark shadows threw upon the happy scene.
II.
The battered walls the battlements and tow’rs,
And in the castle Solferino’s prince
Walked to and fro and ’round him stood his men.
And ere the heart had time to falter once
Was heard the deafening rolling cannon’s roar.
III.
The echoes quite had died away, they gave
Forth shot for shot and shout for shout.
Then was thy life-blood spilt! That day
Was one of woe to thee Sardinia!
Those lives have left forevermore this earth.
IV.
The cannon’s roar, the dying’s groan, the sounds of war.
And ev’rywhere was blood—the verdure was
Beneath the hard foot trampled and the day
Turned dark beneath the reign of chaos wild.
V.
But ever on its bosom wild was borne
The life-blood of the soldier’s in the fray.
Ah! red as blood its once clear waters were,
And on its banks the same dread curse prevailed.
VI.
The time when his wild fury thus unchecked
Shall spend itself and once relapse away.
Oh! may man’s conscience soon awake to learn
The wild disaster that his fury wrought.
POEMS.
THE TEMPEST.
And hung about the bay;
We saw the foaming of the surf
Within the twilight gray.
We heard the hum from yonder town;
We saw the path around the hill
Come winding ever slowly down.
We heard the waves beat on the shore;
The tempest wailed and moaned about
Above the distant roar.
Who, on the dreary ocean wide
Heard far and near the tempest come—
The wailing winds on either side.{46}
It swept the wrecks ashore;
It was a time—a dreadful sight—
Forgotten nevermore.
The wild wind whistled by;
And seemed to be as it did pass
Some struggling sailor’s drowning cry.
THE PEACEFUL LAND.
Where the golden sunset fades away,
And fast as the twilight shadows come
The sunset bids farewell to day.
And the gold-edged clouds near the sunset move;
But the twilight, dim and dark and gray,
Steals fast from sight this land of love.
And sigh for the loss of the sunset sky;
But even the beauties that shine in the west
Must ever fade till the glories die.
THE LONELY CITY.
Where flows a deep dark river;
On the farther shore a city stands,
Where the tide flows on forever.{47}
By day in the valley yonder;
By night in the streets, devoid of light,
Wild phantoms ever wander.
That gleam in the quiet air.
No living thing breaks the solitude—
But the phantoms wander there.
Where flows a rolling river,
But the phantoms wander by its side
As time flies by forever.
THE COURSE OF THE STREAM.
Gilds the landscape far and near
Wraps the sun within his shroud
Dies he on a glorious bier.
Comes the cresent from the sky;
Silence reigns upon the scene,
As the brooklet hurries by.
Falls upon the earth below—
Falls upon the church-yard hill,
By the saddened brooklets flow.{48}
Ceasing once their noisy glee.
As it passes by it sings on
In a plaintive melody.
O’er the beds of those who sleep;—
Ever in the night or day time
Still their solemn vigils keep.
Gilds the sky with flames of light,
Runs the brooklet fast to meet
With its waters ever bright.
And its waters mingle there;
Oh! when shall they return agan
To the brooklet shining fair?
THE STAR.
Then wise men the star did guide,
Till with riches they appeared
By the great Messiah’s side.
Songs of happiness again,
And a voice from heaven answered
Peace on earth good will to men.{49}
Round the sun of heat and light,—
Saw the earth in years advancing—
Watched her in her rapid flight.
When we think not what is near,
Still the star’s light shineth ever
All its beams are bright and clear.
Still it shineth as of yore,
And shall be a guide and helper
Through the ages evermore.
FINIS.
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