The Project Gutenberg EBook of Bitter-Sweet, by J. G. Holland 
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**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** 
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1971** 
*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of 
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Title: Bitter-Sweet 
Author: J. G. Holland 
Release Date: September, 2004 [EBook #6442]
[Yes, we are more 
than one year ahead of schedule]
[This file was first posted on 
December 14, 2002] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
0. START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
BITTER-SWEET *** 
Produced by D. Garcia, Tom Allen, Charles Franks
and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team. 
BITTER-SWEET 
A Poem 
By J. G. HOLLAND 
CONTENTS. 
 
PICTURE 
PERSONS 
PRELUDE 
FIRST MOVEMENT--COLLOQUIAL. 
The Question Stated and Argued 
FIRST EPISODE. 
The Question Illustrated by Nature 
SECOND MOVEMENT--NARRATIVE. 
The Question Illustrated by Experience 
SECOND EPISODE. 
The Question Illustrated by Story 
THIRD MOVEMENT--DRAMATIC. 
The Question Illustrated by the Denouement
L'ENVOY 
PICTURE. 
Winter's wild birthnight! In the fretful East
The uneasy wind moans 
with its sense of cold,
And sends its sighs through gloomy mountain 
gorge,
Along the valley, up the whitening hill,
To tease the sighing 
spirits of the pines,
And waste in dismal woods their chilly life.
The 
sky is dark, and on the huddled leaves--
The restless, rustling 
leaves--sifts down its sleet,
Till the sharp crystals pin them to the 
earth,
And they grow still beneath the rising storm.
The roofless 
bullock hugs the sheltering stack,
With cringing head and closely 
gathered feet,
And waits with dumb endurance for the morn.
Deep 
in a gusty cavern of the barn
The witless calf stands blatant at his 
chain;
While the brute mother, pent within her stall,
With the wild 
stress of instinct goes distraught,
And frets her horns, and bellows 
through the night.
The stream runs black; and the far waterfall
That 
sang so sweetly through the summer eyes,
And swelled and swayed 
to Zephyr's softest breath,
Leaps with a sullen roar the dark abyss,
And howls its hoarse responses to the wind.
The mill is still. The 
distant factory,
That swarmed yestreen with many-fingered life,
And bridged the river with a hundred bars
Of molten light, is dark, 
and lifts its bulk,
With dim, uncertain angles, to the sky. 
 
Yet lower bows the storm. The leafless trees
Lash their lithe limbs, 
and, with majestic voice,
Call to each other through the deepening 
gloom;
And slender trunks that lean on burly boughs
Shriek with 
the sharp abrasion; and the oak,
Mellowed in fiber by unnumbered 
frosts,
Yields to the shoulder of the Titan Blast,
Forsakes its poise, 
and, with a booming crash,
Sweeps a fierce passage to the smothered 
rocks,
And lies a shattered ruin.
Other scene:--
Across the swale, half up the pine-capped hill,
Stands the old farmhouse with its clump of barns--
The old red 
farmhouse--dim and dun to-night,
Save where the ruddy firelights 
from the hearth
Flap their bright wings against the window panes,--
A billowy swarm that beat their slender bars,
Or seek the night to 
leave their track of flame
Upon the sleet, or sit, with shifting feet
And restless plumes, among the poplar boughs--
The spectral poplars, 
standing at the gate. 
And now a man, erect, and tall, and strong,
Whose thin white hair, 
and cheeks of furrowed bronze,
And ancient dress, betray the 
patriarch,
Stands at the window, listening to the storm;
And as the 
fire leaps with a wilder flame--
Moved by the wind--it wraps and 
glorifies
His stalwart frame, until it flares and glows
Like the old 
prophets, in transfigured guise,
That shape the sunset for cathedral 
aisles.
And now it passes, and a sweeter shape
Stands in its place. O 
blest maternity!
Hushed on her bosom, in a light embrace,
Her baby 
sleeps, wrapped in its long white robe;
And as the flame, with soft, 
auroral sweeps,
Illuminates the pair, how like they seem,
O Virgin 
Mother! to thyself and thine!
Now Samuel comes with curls of 
burning gold
To hearken to the voice of God without:
"Speak, 
mighty One! Thy little servant hears!"
And Miriam, maiden, from her 
household cares
Comes to the window in her loosened robe,--
Comes with the blazing timbrels in her hand,--
And, as the noise of 
winds and waters swells,
It shapes the song of triumph to her lips:
"The horse and he who rode are overthrown!"
And now a man of 
noble port and brow,
And aspect of benignant majesty,
Assumes the 
vacant niche, while either side
Press the fair forms of children, and I 
hear:
"Suffer the little ones to come to me!" 
PERSONS. 
Here dwells the    
    
		
	
	
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