THE Lord shall slay
or the Lord shall save !
He
is righteous whether He save or slay—
Brother ! give
thanks for the gifts He gave,
Though the gifts He gave He hath taken away.
Shall we strive for that which is nothing ? Nay.
Shall we hate each
other for that which fled ?
She
is but a marvel of modelled clay,
And the smooth,
clear white, and the soft, pure red
That we coveted, shall endure no day.
Was it wise or well
that I hated you
For
the fruit that hung too high on the tree ?
For the blossom out
of our reach that grew
Was
it well or wise that you hated me ?—
My
hate has flown and your hate shall flee.
Let us veil our
faces like children chid—
Can
that violet orb we swore by see
Through that violet-vein'd,
transparent lid ?—
Now
the Lord forbid that this strife should be.
Would you knit the
forehead or clench the fist,
For
the curls that never were well caress'd—
For the red that
never was fairly kiss'd—
For
the white that never was fondly press'd ?
Shall we nourish wrath while she lies at rest
Between us ? Surely
our wrath shall cease.
We
would fain know better—the Lord knows best—
Is there peace
between us ? Yea, there is peace,
In
the soul's release she at least is blest.
Let us thank the
Lord for His bounties all,
For
the brave old days of pleasure and pain,
When the world for
both of us seem'd too small—
Though the love was void and the hate was vain—
Though the word was bitter between us twain,
And the bitter word
was kin to the blow,
For
her gloss and ripple of rich gold rain,
For her velvet
crimson and satin snow—
Though we never shall know the old days again.
The Lord !—His mercy
is great, men say ;
His
wrath, men say, is a burning brand—
Let us praise Him,
whether He save or slay,
And
above her body let hand join hand.
We
shall meet, my friend, in the spirit land—
Will our strife
renew ? Nay, I dare not trust,
For
the grim, great gulf that cannot be spann'd
Will divide us from
her. The Lord is just,
She
shall not be thrust where our spirits stand.