Thing
  • What Man Is There of You?
  • Bell Upon Organ
  • O Wind of God
  • Shall the Dead Praise Thee?
  • One with Nature
  • A Year Song
  • Song: Why Do the Houses Stand
  • For Where Your Treasure Is, There Will Your Heart Be Also
  • The Asthmatic Man to the Satan That Binds Him
  • Song-Sermon: Lord, What Is Man
  • Shadows
  • A Winter Prayer
  • Song of a Poor Pilgrim
  • An Evening Prayer
  • Song-Sermon: Mercy to Thee, O Lord, Belongs
  • A Dream-Song
  • Christmas, 1880
  • Rondel: I Do Not Know Thy Final Will
  • The Sparrow
  • December 23, 1879
  • Song-Prayer
  • December 27, 1879
  • Sunday, December 28, 1879
  • Song-Sermon: In His Arms Thy Silly Lamb
  • The Donkey in the Cart to the Horse in the Carriage
  • Room to Roam
  • Cottage Songs
    1. I: By the Cradle
    2. II: Sweeping the Floor
    3. III: Washing the Clothes
    4. IV: Drawing Water
    5. V: Cleaning the Windows
  • The Wind and the Moon
  • The Foolish Harebell
  • Song: I Was Very Cold
  • An Improvisation
  • Equity
  • The Consoler
  • To ⸻
  • To a Sister
  • Contrition
  • The Shortest and Sweetest of Songs
  • Russell Gurney
  • To One Threatened with Blindness
  • To Aubrey de Vere
  • General Gordon
  • Written for One in Sore Pain
  • Christmas, 1873
  • Christmas, 1884
  • A Song for Christmas
  • To My Aging Friends
  • Christmas Song of the Old Children
  • Christmas Meditation
  • The Old Castle
  • Christmas Prayer
  • Song of the Innocents
  • Christmas Day and Every Day
  • Rondel
  • A Prayer: When I Look Back Upon My Life Nigh Spent
  • Home from the Wars
  • God; Not Gift
  • To Any Friend
  • Winter Song
  • At My Window After Sunset
  • A Father to a Mother
  • The Temple of God
  • Going to Sleep
  • To-Morrow
  • Foolish Children
  • Love Is Home
  • Faith
  • Waiting: I Waited for the Master
  • Our Ship
  • My Heart Thy Lark
  • Two in One
  • Bedtime
  • A Prayer: Thou Who Mad’st the Mighty Clock
  • A Song Prayer
  • Reciprocity
  • What the Lord Saith
  • How Shall He Sing Who Hath No Song
  • This World
  • Saint Peter
  • Zacchaeus
  • After Thomas Kemp
  • To Gordon, Leaving Khartoum
  • Song of the Saints and Angels
  • Failure
  • To E. G., Dedicating a Book
  • To G. M. T.
  • In Memoriam Lady Caroline Charteris
  • A Mammon-Marriage
  • A Song in the Night: A Brown Bird Sang on a Blossomy Tree
  • Love’s History
  • The Lark and the Wind
  • A Dead House
  • Master and Boy
  • The Clock of the Universe
  • The Thorn in the Flesh
  • Lycabas
  • In the Night
  • The Giver
  • False Prophets
  • Life-Weary
  • Approaches
  • Travellers’ Song
  • Love Is Strength
  • Coming
  • A Song of the Waiting Dead
  • Obedience
  • A Song in the Night: I Would I Were an Angel Strong
  • De Profundis
  • Blind Sorrow
  • Angels
  • The Father’s Worshippers
  • A Birthday-Wish
  • To Any One
  • Waiting: Lie, Little Cow, and Chew Thy Cud
  • Lost but Safe
  • Much and More
  • Hope and Patience
  • A Better Thing
  • A Prisoner
  • To My Lord and Master
  • To One Unsatisfied
  • To My God
  • Triolet
  • The Word of God
  • To the Life Eternal
  • Hope Deferred: Where Is Thy Crown, O Tree of Love?
  • Forgiveness
  • Dejection
  • Appeal
  • Mother Nature
  • King Cole
  • Said and Did
  • Dr. Doddridge’s Dog
  • The Girl That Lost Things
  • A Make-Believe
  • The Christmas Child
  • A Christmas Prayer
  • No End of No-Story
  • Endnotes
  • Colophon
  • Uncopyright
  • Imprint

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    To My Father

    With My Second Volume of Verse

    I

    Take of the first fruits, Father, of thy care,
    Wrapped in the fresh leaves of my gratitude
    Late waked for early gifts ill understood;
    Claiming in all my harvests rightful share,
    Whether with song that mounts the joyful air
    I praise my God; or, in yet deeper mood,
    Sit dumb because I know a speechless good,
    Needing no voice, but all the soul for prayer.
    Thou hast been faithful to my highest need;
    And I, thy debtor, ever, evermore,
    Shall never feel the grateful burden sore.
    Yet most I thank thee, not for any deed,
    But for the sense thy living self did breed
    That fatherhood is at the great world’s core.

    II

    All childhood, reverence clothed thee, undefined,
    As for some being of another race;
    Ah! not with it departing⁠—grown apace
    As years have brought me manhood’s loftier mind
    Able to see thy human life behind⁠—
    The same hid heart, the same revealing face⁠—
    My own dim contest settling into grace
    Of sorrow, strife, and victory combined.
    So I beheld my God, in childhood’s morn,
    A mist, a darkness, great, and far apart,
    Moveless and dim⁠—I scarce could say “Thou art:”
    My manhood came, of joy and sadness born⁠—
    Full soon the misty dark, asunder torn,
    Revealed man’s glory, God’s great human heart.

    G. M. D. Jr.

    Algiers, April, 1857.

    A Hidden Life

    Proudly the youth, sudden with manhood crowned,
    Went walking by his horses, the first time,
    That morning, to the plough. No soldier gay
    Feels at his side the throb of the gold hilt
    (Knowing the blue blade hides within its sheath,
    As lightning in the cloud)

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