MY LIBRARY

By John Lawson Stoddard

Shrine of my mind, my Library!

Each morn I greet thee with delight,

When, soul-refreshed, I bring to thee

The benediction of the night;

Encompassed by thy sheltering walls,

‘ Mid books whose interest enthralls,

Life's shadow from my spirit falls.

Behold! above the wooded height

The sun-god's glittering disk appears,

And at a bound its flood of light

The intervening valley clears;

Enveloped in its noiseless tide,

Each castle on the mountain side

Stands forth in splendor, glorified.

How welcome are the yellow waves

That through the eastern windows pour

And, with a warmth my nature craves,

Transmute to gold the polished floor!

Then mount to gild my desk, my chair,

And e'en the spotless paper there,

Which soon my written thought must bear.

In serried ranks around me rise

Two thousand tried and trusty friends;

Instructive, famous, witty, wise,

Each gladly his assistance lends

To suit, at will, my varying mood;

But none that aid will e'er intrude,

Or break, unsought, my solitude.

Some speak of problems of the soul,—

Profound, insoluble, sublime;

Some tell of Law's supreme control;

And some retrace through distant time

The evolution of mankind,

And in its ever-broadening mind

A hope for future triumphs find.

A few the noble deeds rehearse

Of heroes famed in peace or war;

While many in inspiring verse

Show heights to which the soul may soar;

But all with serious thoughts are filled,

And some hold truths, from life distilled,

Whose power my heart hath often thrilled.

By such companions cheered and blest,

How vapid seems the listless throng

Of those who, tortured by unrest,

Find life too dull and days too long,

And idly frittering time away,

As scandal-mongers, rend and slay

The friends they dined with yesterday!

My Library! to thee I turn,

As turns the needle toward the pole,

And feel my heart within me yearn

For all thou offerest to the soul;

Why should I join in feverish haste

The crowd for which I have no taste,

The precious boon of life to waste?

Yet not as an austere recluse,—

Still less as one who hates mankind —,

Do I thy peaceful precincts choose;

But as a student, who can find

No joys in Vanity's gay Fair

That for an instant can compare

With those thou askest me to share.

Moreover, welcome as the sun

Are friends whose love I prize and hold;

Their visits I would never shun;

To them my heart grows never cold;

And whether they have wealth, or fame,

Or bear a plain or titled name,

To me will always be the same.

Nor am I ever quite alone

When thus ensconced among my books;

A kindred mind there meets my own,

And with me toward the sunset looks;

With blazing logs the hearth is bright,

A treasured volume is in sight;

Hence to the outer world good night!