A Quiet Life
YOU scorn my dwelling as you pass it by;
I do not say, Come in ;
You are a stranger to the company
I entertain therein.
I do not say, Come in ;
You are a stranger to the company
I entertain therein.
My house is humble, yet within its walls
Contentment doth abide ;
And from the wings of Peace a blessing falls,
Like dew at eventide.
Contentment doth abide ;
And from the wings of Peace a blessing falls,
Like dew at eventide.
You think my soul is narrow, like the room
Wherein I toil for bread,
And that, because oblivion is my doom,
I might as well be dead.
Wherein I toil for bread,
And that, because oblivion is my doom,
I might as well be dead.
Yet are you sure the riches are not mine,
The poverty your own ?
Is he not rich who finds his lot divine,
In hovel or on throne ?
The poverty your own ?
Is he not rich who finds his lot divine,
In hovel or on throne ?
You judge me by the narrow boundaries
’Twixt which my body moves;
But I behold a wider land that lies
Free to the soul that loves.
’Twixt which my body moves;
But I behold a wider land that lies
Free to the soul that loves.
Is that not mine in which I hourly take
My largess of delight?
Are not all things created for his sake
Who reads their meaning right?
My largess of delight?
Are not all things created for his sake
Who reads their meaning right?
Is it not mine, this landscape I behold? —
Mine to enjoy and use
For all life’s noblest uses, though no gold
Has made it mine to lose?
Mine to enjoy and use
For all life’s noblest uses, though no gold
Has made it mine to lose?
I know the wood-paths where the feet of Spring,
Have left their prints in flowers ;
And all the carols that the wild birds sing
Through the long summer hours.
Have left their prints in flowers ;
And all the carols that the wild birds sing
Through the long summer hours.
I watch the changeful light upon the grass,
The wind-waves in the grain ;
I note the swift cloud-shadows as they pass
Above the breezy plain.
The wind-waves in the grain ;
I note the swift cloud-shadows as they pass
Above the breezy plain.
Mine are the stillness of the autumn noons,
The peace of tranquil eves,
The sunset splendors, and the glimmering moons,
The rain-fall on the leaves.
The peace of tranquil eves,
The sunset splendors, and the glimmering moons,
The rain-fall on the leaves.
I cannot count the half of daily joys
Which kindly Nature gives ;
For while some homely task my hands employs,
With her my spirit lives.
Which kindly Nature gives ;
For while some homely task my hands employs,
With her my spirit lives.
Nor these alone the pleasures that I know,
The riches I possess ;
Still other things are mine, and they bestow
A deeper happiness.
The riches I possess ;
Still other things are mine, and they bestow
A deeper happiness.
For unto me the past, with all its store
Of untold wealth, belongs ;
To me the singers and the saints of yore
Repeat their prayers and songs.
Of untold wealth, belongs ;
To me the singers and the saints of yore
Repeat their prayers and songs.
For me again the long-past centuries yield
The harvest of their thought;
My gleaning brings me sheaves from many a field
Where stronger hearts have wrought.
The harvest of their thought;
My gleaning brings me sheaves from many a field
Where stronger hearts have wrought.
Mine is the present, too ; nor let it be
Despised as little worth :
I could not tell of all the good I see
Each day upon the earth.
Despised as little worth :
I could not tell of all the good I see
Each day upon the earth.
What matters that my hands may never touch
The hands I venerate ?
I thank my God that he has given such
To guide and guard the state.
The hands I venerate ?
I thank my God that he has given such
To guide and guard the state.
And for the future,—but I may not speak
Of all I hope for then !
The glories of that city which I seek
No tongue can tell, or pen.
Of all I hope for then !
The glories of that city which I seek
No tongue can tell, or pen.
So the day rounds to fulness, and the night
Is blessed, like the day ;
For God, who makes the darkness and the light,
Keeps every fear away.
Is blessed, like the day ;
For God, who makes the darkness and the light,
Keeps every fear away.
E. D. Rice.