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The poetical works of George MacDonald in two volumes — Volume 2

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But where's the good? I shall never speed—
  Be one whit greater, in sooth!
 
 
If duty itself must fail,
  And that be the only plan,
How shall my scarce begun duty prevail
  To make me a mighty man?
 

The Father answers.

 
Ah, Willie! what if it were
  Quite another way to fall?
What if the greatness itself lie there—
  In knowing that you are small?
 
 
In seeing the good so good
  That you feel poor, weak, and low;
And hungrily long for it as for food,
  With an endless need to grow?
 
 
The man who was lord of fate,
  Born in an ox's stall,
Was great because he was much too great
  To care about greatness at all.
 
 
Ever and only he sought
  The will of his Father good;
Never of what was high he thought,
  But of what his Father would.
 
 
You long to be great; you try;
  You feel yourself smaller still:
In the name of God let ambition die;
  Let him make you what he will.
 
 
Who does the truth, is one
  With the living Truth above:
Be God's obedient little son,
  Let ambition die in love.
 

KING COLE

 
King Cole he reigned in Aureoland,
But the sceptre was seldom in his hand
 
 
Far oftener was there his golden cup—
He ate too much, but he drank all up!
 
 
To be called a king and to be a king,
That is one thing and another thing!
 
 
So his majesty's head began to shake,
And his hands and his feet to swell and ache,
 
 
The doctors were called, but they dared not say
Your majesty drinks too much Tokay;
 
 
So out of the king's heart died all mirth,
And he thought there was nothing good on earth.
 
 
Then up rose the fool, whose every word
Was three parts wise and one part absurd.
 
 
Nuncle, he said, never mind the gout;
I will make you laugh till you laugh it out.
 
 
King Cole pushed away his full gold plate:
The jester he opened the palace gate,
 
 
Brought in a cold man, with hunger grim,
And on the dais-edge seated him;
 
 
Then caught up the king's own golden plate,
And set it beside him: oh, how he ate!
 
 
And the king took note, with a pleased surprise,
That he ate with his mouth and his cheeks and his eyes,
 
 
With his arms and his legs and his body whole,
And laughed aloud from his heart and soul.
 
 
Then from his lordly chair got up,
And carried the man his own gold cup;
 
 
The goblet was deep and wide and full,
The poor man drank like a cow at a pool.
 
 
Said the king to the jester—I call it well done
To drink with two mouths instead of one!
 
 
Said the king to himself, as he took his seat,
It is quite as good to feed as to eat!
 
 
It is better, I do begin to think,
To give to the thirsty than to drink!
 
 
And now I have thought of it, said the king,
There might be more of this kind of thing!
 
 
The fool heard. The king had not long to wait:
The fool cried aloud at the palace-gate;
 
 
The ragged and wretched, the hungry and thin,
Loose in their clothes and tight in their skin,
 
 
Gathered in shoals till they filled the hall,
And the king and the fool they fed them all;
 
 
And as with good things their plates they piled
The king grew merry as a little child.
 
 
On the morrow, early, he went abroad
And sought poor folk in their own abode—
 
 
Sought them till evening foggy and dim,
Did not wait till they came to him;
 
 
And every day after did what he could,
Gave them work and gave them food.
 
 
Thus he made war on the wintry weather,
And his health and the spring came back together.
 
 
But, lo, a change had passed on the king,
Like the change of the world in that same spring!
 
 
His face had grown noble and good to see,
And the crown sat well on his majesty.
 
 
Now he ate enough, and ate no more,
He drank about half what he drank before,
 
 
He reigned a real king in Aureoland,
Reigned with his head and his heart and his hand.
 
 
All this through the fool did come to pass.
And every Christmas-eve that was,
 
 
The palace-gates stood open wide
And the poor came in from every side,
 
 
And the king rose up and served them duly,
And his people loved him very truly.
 

SAID AND DID

 
Said the boy as he read, "I too will be bold,
  I will fight for the truth and its glory!"
He went to the playground, and soon had told
  A very cowardly story!
 
 
Said the girl as she read, "That was grand, I declare!
  What a true, what a lovely, sweet soul!"
In half-an-hour she went up the stair,
  Looking as black as a coal!
 
 
"The mean little wretch, I wish I could fling
  This book at his head!" said another;
Then he went and did the same ugly thing
  To his own little trusting brother!
 
 
Alas for him who sees a thing grand
  And does not fit himself to it!
But the meanest act, on sea or on land,
  Is to find a fault, and then do it!
 

DR. DODDRIDGE'S DOG

"What! you Dr. Doddridge's dog, and not know who made you?"

 
My little dog, who blessed you
  With such white toothy-pegs?
And who was it that dressed you
  In such a lot of legs?
 
 
Perhaps he never told you!
  Perhaps you know quite well,
And beg me not to scold you
  For you can't speak to tell!
 
 
I'll tell you, little brother,
  In case you do not know:—
One only, not another,
  Could make us two just so.
 
 
You love me?—Quiet!—I'm proving!—
  It must be God above
That filled those eyes with loving:
  He was the first to love!
 
 
One day he'll stop all sadness—
  Hark to the nightingale!
Oh blessed God of gladness!—
  Come, doggie, wag your tail!
 
 
That's—Thank you, God!—He gave you
  Of life this little taste;
And with more life he'll save you,
  Not let you go to waste!
 
 
He says now, Live together,
  And share your bite and sup;
And then he'll say, Come hither—
  And lift us both high up.
 

THE GIRL THAT LOST THINGS

 
There was a girl that lost things—
  Nor only from her hand;
She lost, indeed—why, most things,
  As if they had been sand!
 
 
She said, "But I must use them,
  And can't look after all!
Indeed I did not lose them,
  I only let them fall!"
 
 
That's how she lost her thimble,
  It fell upon the floor:
Her eyes were very nimble
  But she never saw it more.
 
 
And then she lost her dolly,
  Her very doll of all!
That loss was far from jolly,
  But worse things did befall.
 
 
She lost a ring of pearls
  With a ruby in them set;
But the dearest girl of girls
  Cried only, did not fret.
 
 
And then she lost her robin;
  Ah, that was sorrow dire!
He hopped along, and—bob in—
  Hopped bob into the fire!
 
 
And once she lost a kiss
  As she came down the stair;
But that she did not miss,
  For sure it was somewhere!
 
 
Just then she lost her heart too,
  But did so well without it
She took that in good part too,
  And said—not much about it.
 
 
But when she lost her health
  She did feel rather poor,
Till in came loads of wealth
  By quite another door!
 
 
And soon she lost a dimple
  That was upon her cheek,
But that was very simple—
  She was so thin and weak!
 
 
And then she lost her mother,
  And thought that she was dead;
Sure there was not another
  On whom to lay her head!
 
 
And then she lost her self—
  But that she threw away;
And God upon his shelf
  It carefully did lay.
 
 
And then she lost her sight,
  And lost all hope to find it;
But a fountain-well of light
  Came flashing up behind it.
 
 
At last she lost the world:
  In a black and stormy wind
Away from her it whirled—
  But the loss how could she mind?
 
 
For with it she lost her losses,
  Her aching and her weeping,
Her pains and griefs and crosses,
  And all things not worth keeping;
 
 
It left her with the lost things
  Her heart had still been craving;
'Mong them she found—why, most things,
  And all things worth the saving.
 
 
She found her precious mother,
  Who not the least had died;
And then she found that other
  Whose heart had hers inside.
 
 
And next she found the kiss
  She lost upon the stair;
'Twas sweeter far, I guess,
  For ripening in that air.
 
 
She found her self, all mended,
  New-drest, and strong, and white;
She found her health, new-blended
  With a radiant delight.
 
 
She found her little robin:
  He made his wings go flap,
Came fluttering, and went bob in,
  Went bob into her lap.
 
 
So, girls that cannot keep things,
  Be patient till to-morrow;
And mind you don't beweep things
  That are not worth such sorrow;
 
 
For the Father great of fathers,
  Of mothers, girls, and boys,
In his arms his children gathers,
  And sees to all their toys.
 

A MAKE-BELIEVE

 
I will think as thinks the rabbit:—
 
 
   Oh, delight
   In the night
   When the moon
   Sets the tune
   To the woods!
   And the broods
   All run out,
   Frisk about,
   Go and come,
   Beat the drum—
   Here in groups,
   There in troops!
   Now there's one!
   Now it's gone!
   There are none!
And now they are dancing like chaff!
I look, and I laugh,
But sit by my door, and keep to my habit—
A wise, respectable, clean-furred old rabbit!
 
 
   Now I'm going,
      Business calls me out—
   Going, going,
   Very knowing,
      Slow, long-heeled, and stout,
      Loping, lumbering,
   Nipping, numbering,
   Head on this side and on that,
   Along the pathway footed flat,
   Through the meadow, through the heather,
   Through the rich dusky weather—
      Big stars and little moon!
 
 
  Dews are lighting down in crowds,
  Odours rising in thin clouds,
    Night has all her chords in tune—
  The very night for us, God's rabbits,
  Suiting all our little habits!
Wind not loud, but playful with our fur,
Just a cool, a sweet, a gentle stir!
And all the way not one rough bur,
But the dewiest, freshest grasses,
That whisper thanks to every foot that passes!
 
 
  I, the king the rest call Mappy,
  Canter on, composed and happy,
  Till I come where there is plenty
  For a varied meal and dainty.
  Is it cabbage, I grab it;
  Is it parsley, I nab it;
  Is it carrot, I mar it;
  The turnip I turn up
  And hollow and swallow;
  A lettuce? Let us eat it!
  A beetroot? Let's beat it!
  If you are juicy,
  Sweet sir, I will use you!
  For all kinds of corn-crop
  I have a born crop!
  Are you a green top?
  You shall be gleaned up!
  Sucking and feazing,
  Crushing and squeezing
  All that is feathery,
  Crisp, not leathery,
  Juicy and bruisy—
  All comes proper
  To my little hopper
  Still on the dance,
    Driven by hunger and drouth!
 
 
All is welcome to my crunching,
Finding, grinding,
Milling, munching,
Gobbling, lunching,
Fore-toothed, three-lipped mouth—
Eating side way, round way, flat way,
Eating this way, eating that way,
Every way at once!
 
 
Hark to the rain!—
Pattering, clattering,
The cabbage leaves battering,
Down it comes amain!—
Home we hurry
Hop and scurry,
And in with a flurry!
Hustling, jostling
Out of the airy land
Into the dry warm sand;
Our family white tails,
The last of our vitals,
Following hard with a whisk to them,
And with a great sense of risk to them!
 
 
Hear to it pouring!
Hear the thunder roaring
Far off and up high,
While we all lie
So warm and so dry
In the mellow dark,
Where never a spark,
White or rosy or blue,
Of the sheeting, fleeting,
Forking, frightening,
Lashing lightning
Ever can come through!
 
 
Let the wind chafe
In the trees overhead,
We are quite safe
In our dark, yellow bed!
Let the rain pour!
It never can bore
A hole in our roof—
It is waterproof!
So is the cloak
We always carry,
We furry folk,
In sandhole or quarry!
It is perfect bliss
To lie in a nest
So soft as this,
All so warmly drest!
No one to flurry you!
No one to hurry you!
No one to scurry you!
Holes plenty to creep in!
All day to sleep in!
All night to roam in!
Gray dawn to run home in!
And all the days and nights to come after—
All the to-morrows for hind-legs and laughter!
 
 
Now the rain is over,
We are out again,
Every merry, leaping rover,
On his right leg and his wrong leg,
On his doubled, shortened long leg,
Floundering amain!
Oh, it is merry
And jolly—yes, very!
 
 
But what—what is that?
What can he be at?
Is it a cat?
Ah, my poor little brother,
He's caught in the trap
That goes-to with a snap!
Ah me! there was never,
Nor will be for ever—
There was never such another,
Such a funny, funny bunny,
Such a frisking, such a whisking,
Such a frolicking brother!
He's screeching, beseeching!
They're going to—
 
 
Ah, my poor foot,
It is caught in a root!
No, no! 'tis a trap
That goes-to with a snap!
Ah me, I'm forsaken!
Ah me, I am taken!
I am screeching, beseeching!
They are going to—
 
 
No more! no more! I must stop this play,
Be a boy again, and kneel down and pray
To the God of sparrows and rabbits and men,
Who never lets any one out of his ken—
It must be so, though it be bewild'ring—
To save his dear beasts from his cruel children!
 

THE CHRISTMAS CHILD

 
"Little one, who straight hast come
Down the heavenly stair,
Tell us all about your home,
And the father there."
 
 
"He is such a one as I,
Like as like can be.
Do his will, and, by and by,
Home and him you'll see."
 

A CHRISTMAS PRAYER

 
Loving looks the large-eyed cow,
Loving stares the long-eared ass
At Heaven's glory in the grass!
Child, with added human birth
Come to bring the child of earth
Glad repentance, tearful mirth,
And a seat beside the hearth
At the Father's knee—
Make us peaceful as thy cow;
Make us patient as thine ass;
Make us quiet as thou art now;
Make us strong as thou wilt be.
Make us always know and see
We are his as well as thou.