STRIFE AND PEACE.

By Jean Ingelow

The yellow poplar-leaves came down

And like a carpet lay,

No waftings were in the sunny air

To flutter them away;

And he stepped on blithe and debonair

That warm October day.

“The boy,” saith he, “hath got his own,

But sore has been the fight,

For ere his life began the strife

That ceased but yesternight;

For the will,” he said, “the kinsfolk read,

And read it not aright.

“His cause was argued in the court

Before his christening day,

And counsel was heard, and judge demurred,

And bitter waxed the fray;

Brother with brother spake no word

When they met in the way.

“Against each one did each contend,

And all against the heir.

I would not bend, for I knew the end —

I have it for my share,

And nought repent, though my first friend

From henceforth I must spare.

“Manor and moor and farm and wold

Their greed begrudged him sore,

And parchments old with passionate hold

They guarded heretofore;

And they carped at signature and seal,

But they may carp no more.

“An old affront will stir the heart

Through years of rankling pain,

And I feel the fret that urged me yet

That warfare to maintain;

For an enemy's loss may well be set

Above an infant's gain.

“An enemy's loss I go to prove,

Laugh out, thou little heir!

Laugh in his face who vowed to chase

Thee from thy birthright fair;

For I come to set thee in thy place:

Laugh out, and do not spare.”

A man of strife, in wrathful mood

He neared the nurse's door;

With poplar-leaves the roof and eaves

Were thickly scattered o'er,

And yellow as they a sunbeam lay

Along the cottage floor.

“Sleep on, thou pretty, pretty lamb,”

He hears the fond nurse say;

“And if angels stand at thy right hand,

As now belike they may,

And if angels meet at thy bed's feet,

I fear them not this day.

“Come wealth, come want to thee, dear heart,

It was all one to me,

For thy pretty tongue far sweeter rung

Than coinèd gold and fee;

And ever the while thy waking smile

It was right fair to see.

“Sleep, pretty bairn, and never know

Who grudged and who transgressed:

Thee to retain I was full fain,

But God, He knoweth best!

And His peace upon thy brow lies plain

As the sunshine on thy breast!”

The man of strife, he enters in,

Looks, and his pride doth cease;

Anger and sorrow shall be to-morrow

Trouble, and no release;

But the babe whose life awoke the strife

Hath entered into peace.