1.
Children are the keys of Paradise. They alone are good and wise, because their thoughts, their very lives are prayer.
Richard Henry Stoddard
2.
A voice of greeting from the wind was sent; The mists enfolded me with soft white arms; The birds did sing to lap me in content, The rivers wove their charms, And every little daisy in the grass Did look up in my face, and smile to see me pass!
Richard Henry Stoddard
3.
Once, when the days were ages, And the old Earth was young, The high gods and the sages From Nature's golden pages Her open secrets wrung.
Richard Henry Stoddard
4.
There are gains for all our losses, There are balms for all our pain: But when youth, the dream, departs, It takes something from our hearts, And it never comes again.
Richard Henry Stoddard
5.
Silence is the speech of love, The music of the spheres above.
Richard Henry Stoddard
6.
We love in others what we lack ourselves, and would be everything but what we are.
Richard Henry Stoddard
7.
A face at the window, a tap on the pane, who is it that wants me tonight in the rain?
Richard Henry Stoddard
8.
Day is the Child of Time, And Day must cease to be: But Night is without a sire, And cannot expire, One with Eternity.
Richard Henry Stoddard
9.
We grow like flowers, and bear desire, the odor of the human flowers.
Richard Henry Stoddard
10.
There is no death. The thing that we call death
Is but another, sadder name for life.
Richard Henry Stoddard
11.
There is no hope the future will but turn the old sand in the falling glass of time.
Richard Henry Stoddard
12.
Heaven is not gone, but we are blind with tears, Groping our way along the downward slope of Years!
Richard Henry Stoddard
13.
We have two lives about us,Two worlds in which we dwell,Within us and without us,Alternate Heaven and Hell:-Without, the somber Real,Within, our hearts of hearts, the beautiful Ideal.
Richard Henry Stoddard
14.
Given the books of a man, it is not difficult, I think, to detect therein the personality of the man, and the station in life to which he was born.
Richard Henry Stoddard
15.
Pale in her fading bowers the Summer stands,
Like a new Niobe with claspèd hands,
Silent above the flowers, her children lost,
Slain by the arrows of the early Frost.
Richard Henry Stoddard
16.
With no companion but the constant Muse, Who sought me when I needed her ah, when Did I not need her, solitary else?
Richard Henry Stoddard
17.
Joy may be a miser,
But Sorrow's purse is free.
Richard Henry Stoddard
18.
Day and night my thoughts incline To the blandishments of wine, Jars were made to drain, I think; Wine, I know, was made to drink.
Richard Henry Stoddard
19.
There is no death-the thing that we call death Is but another, sadder name for life, Which is itself an insufficient name, Faint recognition of that unknown life- That Power whose shadow is the Universe.
Richard Henry Stoddard