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<title>The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal, Part III.&#8212;Summer 1896</title>
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<editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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<author>Jane Hay</author>
<title>The Dance of Life</title>
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<date>Spring 1896</date>
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    edited by Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2016-2018.
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<head><title level="a">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;THE DANCE OF LIFE</title></head>
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<ref target="#Dance">The Database of Ornament</ref>
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<div type="prose">

<p>THE sorrow was bitter and hard to forget, but life<lb/>  
                   and its duties remain; so to gain fresh strength <lb/> 
                   we went to the peaceful island of Iona. At first it <lb/> 
                   seemed as though earth's loveliness intensified <lb/> 
                   the loss, but that was before we reached the <lb/> 
                   Holy Island: for there Peace fell upon us, even as <lb/> 
                   the shades of evening crept silently over the land. </p>
<p>Amongst the sacred ruins how small the bitterest personal <lb/> 
                   grief became! The grand old earth was the same as it had <lb/> 
                   been even in Columba's days: the mornings were just as bright, <lb/> 
                   &#8212;the waves danced just as merrily,&#8212;the larks sang just <lb/> 
                   as sweetly,&#8212;nor were the gambolling lambs less happy because <lb/> 
                   of those who had lived, suffered, and slept Nay rather did <lb/> 
                   Life's tragedy sink into its proper place; the pain was stilled, <lb/> 
                   and one could see how the life and death of dear ones were <lb/> 
                   but part of the grand endless cycle of Nature. Why cavil at <lb/> 
                   Fate? Life is but as a glimpse seen through the mist of <lb/> 
                   years. The world will be young when we are old. Let us <lb/> 
                   play our part bravely, be it short or long, and rejoice in <lb/> 
                   the thought of the eternal youth of our bounteous Mother <lb/> 
                   Nature. </p>
<p>Every morn she gems the earth afresh with dew or frost, every <lb/> 
                   Spring she scatters fiowers and blossoms o'er the earth, and <lb/> 
                   every day she sends fair babes to prattle of the joy and beauty <lb/> 
                   of the world. Yet night follows day, and Winter kills the<lb/>
<pb n="37"/>
<fw type="runningHead2">33</fw> 

                   Autumn flowers: but only that the dawning of another day <lb/> 
                   may be gladdened by the opening of fresh baby buds. </p>
<p>Why for us should the perfect order be reversed? We share <lb/> 
                   in the dance; is not that enough? We are part, however <lb/> 
                   small, of the wondrous beauty of the day and night&#8212;the Spring <lb/> 
                   and Summer: we have indeed a place midst the starry firma- <lb/> 
                   ment For us, and with us, is the motion of the waves, the <lb/> 
                   song of the wind, the glowing of the sunset glamour, the hush <lb/> 
                   of expectant twilight, the cold and glittering moonlight, the <lb/> 
                   dark floating clouds of night, the stirring morning breeze, <lb/> 
                   and the grand ever-new, ever-creating glory of another day. <lb/> 
                   For this were we born to be in very sooth. Children of Heaven, <lb/> 
                   to share in its glories here, and to know that when they have <lb/> 
                   passed us by they will go on and on circling upwards and <lb/> 
                   ever upwards to gladden myriads of others. To know this, <lb/> 
                   if but for a little, is to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Let <lb/> 
                   us but feel the rhythmic measure of the universe and there <lb/> 
                   is no longer a gruesome Dance of Death but the joyous Dance <lb/> 
                   of Life, with the music of the Spheres as part of Nature's <lb/> 
                   endless chorus. </p>
<p>To this the whole earth moves. The tiniest atoms dance to <lb/> 
                   the measured beat. If we listen intently we can almost hear <lb/> 
                   the invisible gathering and grouping of dainty crystal dancers, <lb/> 
                   so delicate are the mystic echoes which the ether waves bear to <lb/> 
                   us. The glorious golden sunlight is but a faster movement of <lb/> 
                   the dance, which, when fevered, makes the cold earth warm. <lb/> 
                   The magic spark, which can slay without a struggle, flows <lb/> 
                   along a glittering thread, its potential thunderings reduced to <lb/> 
                   a childish tap, tap: and thus it plays its part. </p>
<p>When we feel the rhythmic measure, the sea is never silent <lb/> 
                   The waves no longer moan or fret, but roll on fraught with deep <lb/> 
                   messages of peace and wisdom. As of yore they tell of stead- <lb/> 
                   fast faith and brave endurance, of losses grander than victories, <lb/> 
                   and deaths nobler than any lives; but they also tell of never- <lb/> 
                   ending energy, of rest after storm, the smiling morning after <lb/> 
                   the wildest night, the inflooding main as surely as the gently<lb/>
<pb n="38"/>
<fw type="runningHead2">34</fw> 

                   ebbing tide. Day after day, year after year, ever the same <lb/> 
                   onward rhythmic movement. </p>
<p>The towering tree-tops bend to the measured song; light<lb/>  
                   leaves answer to its faintest murmur, waving grasses sway <lb/> 
                   to the rhythmic sound, and every fragile flower, with tiny <lb/> 
                   tinted bell, rings out Life's endless melody. </p>
<p>Nature's humblest offspring keep time with the dance and song. <lb/> 
                   The sweep of the delicate Cilia, the opening and shutting of <lb/> 
                   some pale medusae, the dreamy movement of a fish's fins, the <lb/> 
                   rise and fall of a golden butterfly, the beating of a linnet's wings. <lb/> 
                   Are they not rhythmic? </p>
<p>Birds rise and fall to the measured theme of the Universe. <lb/> 
                   The white gulls languidly swing to it as they rest on the <lb/> 
                   tranquil sea; to it they dart as they lightly kiss the foam- <lb/> 
                   tipped waves; and the downward sweep of the swallow, the <lb/> 
                   upward flight of the lark, are part of the dance, while the song <lb/> 
                   from every sweet bird's throat swells the wondrous chorus to <lb/> 
                   which they wing their flight. All good manly labour marks the <lb/> 
                   rise and fall of the song: the blacksmith hammering on his <lb/> 
                   anvil, the sailor pulling on his rope at sea, and the steady <lb/> 
                   tramp of soldiers. Even when men try to escape from the <lb/> 
                   dance, the rhythm only reappears,&#8212;though they may choose to <lb/> 
                   listen to the clink of coins rather than to the lap of the sea, or <lb/> 
                   the beat of a bird's light wing. Those who vainly try to stem <lb/> 
                   the onward movement, or to break from the line of dancers, <lb/> 
                   bring discord into the glorious theme: then rippling mirth is <lb/> 
                   lost, and heart-strings are broken. But, let the song again be <lb/> 
                   taken up, Harmony reigns once more; and, so natural is the <lb/> 
                   concord of sweet sounds, that straightway men forget the dis- <lb/> 
                   cord and think only of the perfect rhythm. Does not the <lb/> 
                   written story of the world tell this? How many wild chaotic <lb/> 
                   lives have been made perfect by harmonious ends? When the <lb/> 
                   singer once more takes his place, unsteady steps turn to the <lb/> 
                   measured tread; and the grand world-song hushes the trivial <lb/> 
                   voices of his past.</p>
<p>But with her newly-born Nature herself is happiest Watch <lb/> 
               her little babes. See how they open and shut their shell-<lb/>  
                   pink fingers in sleep, how the dimpled legs move in the <lb/>
<pb n="39"/>
<fw type="runningHead2">35</fw> 

                   dance. See how they love her, how they pat and kiss her,<lb/> 
                   and nestle to her. How happy they are when they can press <lb/> 
                   their bare feet against her bosom. They feel that they are <lb/> 
                   part of her,&#8212;they have no fear of her,&#8212;it is only when men <lb/> 
                   have grown away from Nature, when they have shut them- <lb/> 
                   selves in cities and grown aliens in their proper home-land that <lb/> 
                   they cease to feel themselves her children, and fear to meet her <lb/> 
                   in death. Then they forget, and fail to see her glory, and build <lb/> 
                   themselves fancies of a world beyond, the very images of which <lb/> 
                   are drawn from the simple life which is within the reach of all <lb/> 
                   who will quietly and reverently listen. </p>
<p>The cycle of the year, or seasons, can easily be traced; but <lb/> 
                   the universal spiral is indeed so vast, that mortals, seeing but <lb/> 
                   a part, thought it was a straight and narrow path with a goal <lb/> 
                   at the end. If goal there be, let it be that of singing our part <lb/> 
                   in the chorale, so as to strengthen the weary and cheer the <lb/> 
                   sad. </p>
<p>For the measure of the dance is varied. For the young it is <lb/> 
                   'Allegro'; for enthusiasts it must needs go faster: but Peace is <lb/> 
                   with the silvery-headed old folks who glide quietly along, softly <lb/> 
                   crooning their song to the end. For some it is always 'Andante'; <lb/> 
                   while for the old, life's 'Ritardando' has imperceptibly begun. <lb/> 
                   But weary or glad the dance must yet go on&#8212;for how shall <lb/> 
                   Summer follow if Spring delay? </p>
<p>Then let us sing clearly as we go, and generations yet unborn <lb/> 
                   shall hear the echoes of our song; and many a watchful mother <lb/> 
                   seeing the wistful smile and moving limbs shall know that her <lb/> 
                   little one is with those who went before. Even as we can some- <lb/> 
                   times touch the spirits of the mighty dead. Not always&#8212;not <lb/> 
                   often&#8212;but in these rare and blissful moments, when we rest in <lb/> 
                   peace and humbly listen for the faintest murmur of their echo- <lb/> 
                   ing song. Then, indeed, do we rise refreshed and gladdened, <lb/> 
                   &#160;&#160;&#160;ready once more to join the dance, to chant aloud the <lb/> 
                   &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;rhythmic chorus, to share in all the mystic wonders, to <lb/> 
                   &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;spend ourselves for the ever-living Mother, and so <lb/> 
                   &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;earn for ever and ever that perfect dreamless <lb/> 
                   &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;sleep which has no rude awakening.</p>

<p><ref target="#JHA">&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;JANE HAY</ref></p>

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