Spirit Song By Abram Joseph Ryan

    Thou wert once the purest wave
     Where the tempests roar;
    Thou art now a golden wave
     On the golden shore —
     Ever — ever — evermore!

    Thou wert once the bluest wave
     Shadows e’er hung o’er;
    Thou art now the brightest wave
     On the brightest shore —
     Ever — ever — evermore!

    Thou wert once the gentlest wave
     Ocean ever bore;
    Thou art now the fairest wave
     On the fairest shore —
     Ever — ever — evermore!

    Whiter foam than thine, O wave,
     Wavelet never wore,
    Stainless wave; and now you lave
     The far and stormless shore —
     Ever — ever — evermore!

    Who bade thee go, O bluest wave,
     Beyond the tempest’s roar?
    Who bade thee flow, O fairest wave,
     Unto the golden shore,
     Ever — ever — evermore?

    Who waved a hand, O purest wave?
     A hand that blessings bore,
    And wafted thee, O whitest wave,
     Unto the fairest shore,
     Ever — ever — evermore?

    Who winged thy way, O holy wave,
     In days and days of yore?
    And wept the words: “O winsome wave,
     This earth is not thy shore!”
     Ever — ever — evermore?

    Who gave thee strength, O snowy wave —
     The strength a great soul wore —
    And said: “Float up to God! my wave,
     His heart shall be thy shore!”
     Ever — ever — evermore?

    Who said to thee, O poor, weak wave:
     “Thy wail shall soon be o’er,
    Float on to God, and leave me, wave,
     Upon this rugged shore!”
     Ever — ever — evermore?

    And thou hast reached His feet! Glad wave,
     Dost dream of days of yore?
    Dost yearn that we shall meet, pure wave,
     Upon the golden shore,
     Ever — ever — evermore?

    Thou sleepest in the calm, calm wave,
     Beyond the wild storm’s roar!
    I watch amid the storm, bright wave,
     Like rock upon the shore;
     Ever — ever — evermore!

    Sing at the feet of God, white wave,
     Song sweet as one of yore!
    I would not bring thee back, heart wave,
     To break upon this shore,
     Ever — ever — evermore!

         *    *    *    *    *

    “No, no,” he gently spoke: “You know me not;
    My mind is like a temple, dim, vast, lone;
    Just like a temple when the priest has gone,
    And all the hymns that rolled along the vaults
    Are buried deep in silence; when the lights
    That flashed on altars died away in dark,
    And when the flowers, with all their perfumed breath
    And beauteous bloom, lie withered on the shrine.
    My mind is like a temple, solemn, still,
    Untenanted save by the ghosts of gloom
    Which seem to linger in the holy place —
    The shadows of the sinners who passed there,
    And wept, and spirit-shriven left upon
    The marble floor memorials of their tears.”

    And while he spake, his words sank low and low,
    Until they hid themselves in some still depth
    He would not open; and his face was sad.

    When he spoke thus, his very gentleness
    Passed slowly from him, and his look, so mild,
    Grew marble cold; a pallor as of death
    Whitened his lips, and clouds rose to his eyes,
    Dry, rainless clouds, where lightnings seemed to sleep.
    His words, as tender as a rose’s smile,
    Slow-hardened into thorns, but seemed to sting
    Himself the most; his brow, at such times, bent
    Most lowly down, and wore such look of pain
    As though it bore an unseen crown of thorns.
    Who knows? perhaps it did!

                                But he would pass
    His hand upon his brow, or touch his eyes,
    And then the olden gentleness, like light
    Which seems transfigured by the touch of dark,
    Would tremble on his face, and he would look
    More gentle then than ever, and his tone
    Would sweeten, like the winds when storms have passed.

    I saw him, one day, thus most deeply moved
    And darkened; ah! his face was like a tomb
    That hid the dust of dead and buried smiles,
    But, suddenly, his face flashed like a throne,
    And all the smiles arose as from the dead,
    And wore the glory of an Easter morn;
    And passed beneath the sceptre of a hope
    Which came from some far region of his heart,
    Came up into his eyes, and reigned a queen.
    I marveled much; he answered to my look
    With all his own, and wafted me these words:

    “There are transitions in the lives of all.
    There are transcendent moments when we stand
    In Thabor’s glory with the chosen three,
    And weak with very strength of human love
    We fain would build our tabernacles there;
    And, Peter-like, for very human joy
    We cry aloud: `’Tis good that we are here;’
    Swift are these moments, like the smile of God,
    Which glorifies a shadow and is gone.

    “And then we stand upon another mount —
    Dark, rugged Calvary; and God keeps us there
    For awful hours, to make us there His own
    In Crucifixion’s tortures; ’tis His way.
    We wish to cling to Thabor; He says: `No.’
    And what He says is best because most true.
    We fain would fly from Calvary; He says: `No.’
    And it is true because it is the best.
    And yet, my friend, these two mounts are the same.

    “They lie apart, distinct and separate,
    And yet — strange mystery! — they are the same.
    For Calvary is a Thabor in the dark,
    And Thabor is a Calvary in the light.
    It is the mystery of Holy Christ!
    It is the mystery of you and me!
    Earth’s shadows move, as moves far-heaven’s sun,
    And, like the shadows of a dial, we
    Tell, darkly, in the vale the very hours
    The sun tells brightly in the sinless skies.
    Dost understand?” I did not understand —
    Or only half; his face was very sad.
    “Dost thou not understand me? Then your life
    Is shallow as a brook that brawls along
    Between two narrow shores; you never wept —
    You never wore great clouds upon your brow
    As mountains wear them; and you never wore
    Strange glories in your eyes, as sunset skies
    Oft wear them; and your lips — they never sighed
    Grand sighs which bear the weight of all the soul;
    You never reached your arms a-broad — a-high —
    To grasp far-worlds, or to enclasp the sky.
    Life, only life, can understand a life;
    Depth, only depth, can understand the deep.
    The dewdrop glist’ning on the lily’s face
    Can never learn the story of the sea.”

         *    *    *    *    *

    One day we strolled together to the sea.
    Gray evening and the night had almost met,
    We walked between them, silent, to the shore.
    The feet of weird faced waves ran up the beach
    Like children in mad play, then back again
    As if the spirit of the land pursued;
    Then up again — and farther — and they flung
    White, foamy arms around each other’s neck;
    Then back again with sudden rush and shout,
    As if the sea, their mother, called them home;
    Then leaned upon her breast, as if so tired,
    But swiftly tore themselves away and rushed
    Away, and farther up the beach, and fell
    For utter weariness; and loudly sobbed
    For strength to rise and flow back to the deep.
    But all in vain, for other waves swept on
    And trampled them; the sea cried out in grief,
    The gray beach laughed and clasped them to the sands.
    It was the flood-tide and the even-tide —
    Between the evening and the night we walked —
    We walked between the billows and the beach,
    We walked between the future and the past,
    Down to the sea we twain had strolled — to part.

    The shore was low, with just the faintest rise
    Of many-colored sands and shreds of shells,
    Until about a stone’s far throw they met
    A fringe of faded grass, with here and there
    A pale-green shrub; and farther into land —
    Another stone’s throw farther — there were trees —
    Tall, dark, wild trees, with intertwining arms,
    Each almost touching each, as if they feared
    To stand alone and look upon the sea.
    The night was in the trees — the evening on the shore.
    We walked between the evening and the night —
    Between the trees and tide we silent strolled.
    There lies between man’s silence and his speech
    A shadowy valley, where thro’ those who pass
    Are never silent, tho’ they may not speak;
    And yet they more than breathe. It is the vale
    Of wordless sighs, half uttered and half-heard.
    It is the vale of the unutterable.
    We walked between our silence and our speech,
    And sighed between the sunset and the stars,
    One hour beside the sea.

                             There was a cloud
    Far o’er the reach of waters, hanging low
    ‘Tween sea and sky — the banner of the storm,
    Its edges faintly bright, as if the rays
    That fled far down the West had rested there
    And slumbered, and had left a dream of light.
    Its inner folds were dark — its central, more.
    It did not flutter; there it hung, as calm
    As banner in a temple o’er a shrine.
    Its shadow only fell upon the sea,
    Above the shore the heavens bended blue.
    We walked between the cloudless and the cloud,
    That hour, beside the sea.

                                But, quick as thought,
    There gleamed a sword of wild, terrific light —
    Its hilt in heaven, its point hissed in the sea,
    Its scabbard in the darkness — and it tore
    The bannered cloud into a thousand shreds,
    Then quivered far away, and bent and broke
    In flashing fragments;

                            And there came a peal
    That shook the mighty sea from shore to shore,
    But did not stir a sand-grain on the beach;
    Then silence fell, and where the low cloud hung
    Clouds darker gathered — and they proudly waved
    Like flags before a battle.

                                 We twain walked —
    We walked between the lightning’s parted gleams,
    We walked between the thunders of the skies,
    We walked between the wavings of the clouds,
    We walked between the tremblings of the sea,
    We walked between the stillnesses and roars
    Of frightened billows; and we walked between
    The coming tempest and the dying calm —
    Between the tranquil and the terrible —
    That hour beside the sea.

                                There was a rock
    Far up the winding beach that jutted in
    The sea, and broke the heart of every wave
    That struck its breast; not steep enough nor high
    To be a cliff, nor yet sufficient rough
    To be a crag; a simple, low, lone rock;
    Yet not so low as that its brow was laved
    By highest tide, yet not sufficient high
    To rise beyond the reach of silver spray
    That rained up from the waves — their tears that fell
    Upon its face, when they died at its feet.
    Around its sides damp seaweed hung in long,
    Sad tresses, dripping down into the sea.
    A tuft or two of grass did green the rock,
    A patch or so of moss; the rest was bare.

    Adown the shore we walked ‘tween eve and night;
    But when we reached the rock the eve and night
    Had met; light died; we sat down in the dark
    Upon the rock.

                    Meantime a thousand clouds
    Careered and clashed in air — a thousand waves
    Whirled wildly on in wrath — a thousand winds
    Howled hoarsely on the main, and down the skies
    Into the hollow seas the fierce rain rushed,
    As if its ev’ry drop were hot with wrath;
    And, like a thousand serpents intercoiled,
    The lightnings glared and hissed, and hissed and glared,
    And all the horror shrank in horror back
    Before the maddest peals that ever leaped
    Out from the thunder’s throat.

                                    Within the dark
    We silent sat. No rain fell on the rock,
    Nor in on land, nor shore; only on sea
    The upper and the lower waters met
    In wild delirium, like a thousand hearts
    Far parted — parted long — which meet to break,
    Which rush into each other’s arms and break
    In terror and in tempests wild of tears.
    No rain fell on the rock; but flakes of foam
    Swept cold against our faces, where we sat
    Between the hush and howling of the winds,
    Between the swells and sinking of the waves,
    Between the stormy sea and stilly shore,
    Between the rushings of the maddened rains,
    Between the dark beneath and dark above.

    We sat within the dread heart of the night:
    One, pale with terror; one, as calm and still
    And stern and moveless as the lone, low rock.