Her voice was sweet and low; her face no words can make appear. Time makes us
eagle-eyed. Fame guards the wreath we call a crown, with other wreaths of fire. A
cunning and curious splendor glorifies the commonest things. A marvel of wise
madness passes our skill to define. While shines the sun, the storm even then has
struck its bargain with the sea – Oh, lives of women, lives of men, how pressed, how
poor, how pinched ye be! True worth is in being, not seeming, – in doing each day
that goes by some little good – not in the dreaming of great things to do by and by.
We get back our mete as we measure: justice avenges each slight. We cannot make
bargains for blisses, nor catch them like fishes in nets. Friendship’s watch is weary
grown; I lie alone. When night, fruitionless, descends, may we find our harvests white
on heavenly hills. Oh, life is so dreary & desolate, so sad & separate, so poor & pitiful,
so wayward & purposeless.
The Last Poems of Alice and Phoebe Cary. Mary Clemmer Ames, Ed. New York: Hurd and Houghton, 1873. https://archive.org/details/lastpoemsalicea00clemgoog/page/n5/mode/1up