THE BEAUTIFUL STRANGER. I COULD not choose but gaze And then thank God! So goddess-like her figure was, so sure So firm and white her shapely throat, so pure And not thank God. For beauty is His gift, In flesh or stone: Statue of Milo, that superbly glows, Or that supreme of Michael Angelo's, The wondrous Night, who holds in state The pregnant secret of divine repose,— The seeing soul uplift Toward His own! So, stranger of to-day, You serve me well: Your temperate eyes, lit by a tranquil joy, You serve me well! Aye, beauty is of God And speaks His praise. The marble glory of the sculptor fills The living woman from His grace distills THE PAGEANT. THE world its treasures freely opes The world all that it hath reveals, In night the solemn clew that saves. The world its battle still repeats, The world its palling pageant shifts; WITH A COPY OF SHAKESPEARE. He knew where the sweet springs of love began, The compass of our triumph and defeat; FLORENCE EARLE COATES. TH HE poetry of Florence Earle Coates is characterized by a genuineness, a sincerity, a grasp of the deeper meanings of life, which show that her utterances come from no mere graceful impulse to poetize her impressions of the world and of herself, but rest on the sober foundation of a real experience and a clear analysis of the passion and aspirations that move humanity. She takes her subject not to embellish it with charming conceits, but to draw from it thoughts of joy, of strength, of consolation. The critic, finding in her writings much to denote that they are the product of a mature and disciplined mind, might ask how it happens that so comparatively untried a writer has learned to discard the fluent versification which generally accompanies the passionate enthusiasm of youth, and mastered so firm and delicate a method, so fastidious a selfrestraint. The truth is that Mrs. Coates's first strong artistic bent found its expression in other arts than that of poetry. A Philadelphian by birth, and carefully educated both in this country and in Europe, at an early age she attained a high degree of excellence as a musician. In addition to technical skill, and delicacy and precision of style, she possessed an insight and power of interpretation of the great masters, denied to all but real artists. Besides being an exquisite musician, she was endowed with rare dramatic talent. The special needs and aspirations of the poet developed later. The writings of Matthew Arnold were a great inspiration to her. Later she was destined to know the master who had revealed so much to her, and to receive from him sympathy and encouragement. At their house in Germantown, which was his home during his visits to Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. Coates formed with him a friendship which lasted until his death. Mrs. Coates has acknowledged her debt to Mr. Arnold in many ways, and has perhaps in manner of treatment and in large utterance gained something from him. Florence Earle Coates belongs to a well-known Philadelphia family; the founder, Ralph Earle, having come from England to America in 1634. Her father, George H. Earle, is an eminent lawyer, and her grandfather, Thomas Earle, was noted as a philanthropist and a worker for the public good. Her husband, Edward H. Coates, is a well-know and influential man, and is connected with a number of the charitable and other institutions of Philadelphia. He is chairman of the schools of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and is one of the most generous patrons of art and artists. What time Mrs. Coates is able to give to her literary pursuits, is snatched from the duties and obligations of an unusually full social and domestic life. Yet none of her work is hurried, or marred by over haste and a desire to see it in print. Many of her poems have, no doubt, been written at her summer retreat at Camp Elsinore, charmingly situated on the Upper St. Regis Lake, in the Adirondacks. Mrs. Coates is still a young woman, with a beautiful, brilliant face and a charming manner. Those who know her best, if called upon to give the final touch in describing her, would be inclined to add, that of her many gifts, her most fortunate endowment is, perhaps, that of being a delightful conversationalist. E. O. K. DEATH. I AM the key that parts the gates of Fame; I am the storm-tossed spirit's resting-place: The messenger of sure and swift relief, Welcomed with wailings and reproachful grief; The friend of those that have no friend but me, I break all chains, and set all captives free. I am the cloud that, when Earth's day is done, I am the brooding hush that follows strife, REJECTED. THE World denies her prophets with rash breath, While to his spirit, slighted and misprised, IN DARKNESS. I WILL be still; The terror drawing nigh Shall startle from my lips no coward cry; For oh! I know. Though suffering hours delay, As when the imperial bird wide-circling soars A force which he unconsciously adores Tempts to o'erleap their changeless boundaries The waves that tumble, foaming, to those shores,So thou, my soul! impatient of restriction, With deathless hopes and longings all aglow, Aspirest still, and still the stern prediction Stays thee, as them, "No further shalt thou go!" But, ah! the eagle feels not thine affliction, Nor can the broken waves thy disappointment know. MORNING. I WOKE and heard the thrushes sing at dawn,- Fragrant, as springtime breaths, of wood and lawn. DIDST THOU REJOICE? DIDST thou rejoice because the day was fair,- crest The sun complacent smiled? Ah! didst thou dare The careless rapture of that bird to share Which, soaring toward the dawn from dewy nest, Hailed it with song? From Ocean's treacherous breast Didst borrow the repose mild-mirrored there? Thou foolish heart! Behold! the light is spent; Rude thunders shake the crags; songs timorous cease; Lo! with what moan and mutinous lament FREDERICK. "RESPECT the Future, which belongs to me!" So speak thy yearning and imperious will, Making the Present distant faiths fulfil, And raised from falling kingdoms - Germany. No idle name, no doubtful dream to thee That Future: actual, its clasp grown chill, It led thee, and thy soul sublimed it still,Heir of a more than earthly dynasty! O didst thou think, untimely called to rest, The preparation of a life o'erthrownTo lose what thou so bravely didst resign? Forevermore the Fatherland shall own |