Offspring of heaven, fair Freedom! impartThe light of thy spirit to quicken each heart.Though the chains of oppression our free limbs ne'er bound,Bid us feel for the wretch round whose soul they are wound;Whose breast is corroded with anguish so deepThat the eye of the slave is too blood-shot to weep;No balm from the fountain of nature will flowWhen the mind is degraded by fetter and blow.The friends of humanity nobly have striven,But the bonds of the heart-broken slave are unriven!Whilst Religion extends o'er those champions her shield,May they never to party or prejudice yieldThe glorious cause by all freemen espoused.A light shines abroad and the lion is roused;The crush of the iron has struck fire from the stone;Bid them back to the charge—and the field is their own!Ye children of Britain! brave sons of the Isles!Who revel in freedom and bask in her smiles,Can ye sanction such deeds as are done in the WestAnd sink on your pillows untroubled to rest?Are your slumbers unbroken by visions of dread?Does no spectre of misery glare on your bed?No cry of despair break the silence of nightAnd thrill the cold hearts that ne'er throbbed for the right?Are ye fathers,—nor pity those children bereavedOf the birth-right which man from his Maker received?Are ye husbands,—and blest with affectionate wives,The comfort, the solace, the joy of your lives,—And feel not for him whom a tyrant can severFrom the wife of his bosom and children for ever?Are ye Christians, enlightened with precepts divine,And suffer a brother in bondage to pine?Are ye men, whom fair freedom has marked for her own,Yet listen unmoved to the negro's deep groan?Ah no!—ye are slaves!—for the freeborn in mindAre the children of mercy, the friends of mankind:By no base, selfish motive their actions are weighed;They barter no souls in an infamous trade;They eat not the bread which is moistened by tears,And carelessly talk of the bondage of years;—They feel as men should feel;—the clank of the chainBids them call upon Justice to cleave it in twain!—
Offspring of heaven, fair Freedom! impartThe light of thy spirit to quicken each heart.Though the chains of oppression our free limbs ne'er bound,Bid us feel for the wretch round whose soul they are wound;Whose breast is corroded with anguish so deepThat the eye of the slave is too blood-shot to weep;No balm from the fountain of nature will flowWhen the mind is degraded by fetter and blow.
The friends of humanity nobly have striven,But the bonds of the heart-broken slave are unriven!Whilst Religion extends o'er those champions her shield,May they never to party or prejudice yieldThe glorious cause by all freemen espoused.A light shines abroad and the lion is roused;The crush of the iron has struck fire from the stone;Bid them back to the charge—and the field is their own!
Ye children of Britain! brave sons of the Isles!Who revel in freedom and bask in her smiles,Can ye sanction such deeds as are done in the WestAnd sink on your pillows untroubled to rest?Are your slumbers unbroken by visions of dread?Does no spectre of misery glare on your bed?No cry of despair break the silence of nightAnd thrill the cold hearts that ne'er throbbed for the right?
Are ye fathers,—nor pity those children bereavedOf the birth-right which man from his Maker received?Are ye husbands,—and blest with affectionate wives,The comfort, the solace, the joy of your lives,—And feel not for him whom a tyrant can severFrom the wife of his bosom and children for ever?Are ye Christians, enlightened with precepts divine,And suffer a brother in bondage to pine?Are ye men, whom fair freedom has marked for her own,Yet listen unmoved to the negro's deep groan?
Ah no!—ye are slaves!—for the freeborn in mindAre the children of mercy, the friends of mankind:By no base, selfish motive their actions are weighed;They barter no souls in an infamous trade;They eat not the bread which is moistened by tears,And carelessly talk of the bondage of years;—They feel as men should feel;—the clank of the chainBids them call upon Justice to cleave it in twain!—
Dark spirit! who through every ageHast cast a baleful gloom;Stern lord of strife and civil rage,The dungeon and the tomb!What homage should men pay to thee,Spirit of woe and anarchy?Yet there are those who in thy trainCan feel a fierce delight;Who rush, exulting, to the plain,And triumph in the fight,Where the red banner floats afarAlong the crimson tide of war.Who is the knight on sable steed,That comes with thundering tread?Dark warrior, slack thy furious speed,Nor trample on the dead:A youthful chief before thee lies,Struggling in life's last agonies.Oh pause one moment in thy course,Those lineaments to trace;Dost thou not feel a strange remorse,Whilst gazing on that face,Where grace and manly beauty meet,To die beneath thy courser's feet?Those sunny tresses scattered wide,And soiled with dust and blood,Were once a mother's fondest pride,When at her knee he stood,A rosy, playful, laughing boy,Her lonely heart's sole hope and joy.But youth a glowing vision brought,And whispered glory's name,Renown, with every burning thoughtLinked to ambition, came:Like a young war-horse in his might,He panted for the desperate fight.For civil discord rent the land,His warrior sire, afar,Against his sovereign raised the brand,The leader of the war:By honour fired the stripling drawsHis weapon in the royal cause.Stretched bleeding on the battle-fieldHis first, last strife is done;No more his hand the sword shall wield,His eyes behold the sun,Or his pale lips repeat the cry,The thrilling shout of victory!—He struggles yet—the strife is o'er—The soul hath winged its flight,Again beholds its native shore,A spirit robed in light.What now avail his mother's cares—Her silent tears—her nightly prayers?On that young soldier's prostrate formThe warrior grimly smiled,As if he viewed in secret scornThat face so fair and mild;Why springs he to the fatal plainTo gaze upon that form again?Why does his eye in frenzy roll?Why is his clenched hand raised?What thought quick rushed across his soul,When on that boy he gazed?His quivering lip and swollen browHis mental agonies avow.Can sorrow touch that iron heart,So long to mercy steeled?From those fierce eyes the big drops start,He sinks upon the field.Night closes round, the strife is done,That warrior sleeps beside his son!
Dark spirit! who through every ageHast cast a baleful gloom;Stern lord of strife and civil rage,The dungeon and the tomb!What homage should men pay to thee,Spirit of woe and anarchy?
Yet there are those who in thy trainCan feel a fierce delight;Who rush, exulting, to the plain,And triumph in the fight,Where the red banner floats afarAlong the crimson tide of war.
Who is the knight on sable steed,That comes with thundering tread?Dark warrior, slack thy furious speed,Nor trample on the dead:A youthful chief before thee lies,Struggling in life's last agonies.
Oh pause one moment in thy course,Those lineaments to trace;Dost thou not feel a strange remorse,Whilst gazing on that face,Where grace and manly beauty meet,To die beneath thy courser's feet?
Those sunny tresses scattered wide,And soiled with dust and blood,Were once a mother's fondest pride,When at her knee he stood,A rosy, playful, laughing boy,Her lonely heart's sole hope and joy.
But youth a glowing vision brought,And whispered glory's name,Renown, with every burning thoughtLinked to ambition, came:Like a young war-horse in his might,He panted for the desperate fight.
For civil discord rent the land,His warrior sire, afar,Against his sovereign raised the brand,The leader of the war:By honour fired the stripling drawsHis weapon in the royal cause.
Stretched bleeding on the battle-fieldHis first, last strife is done;No more his hand the sword shall wield,His eyes behold the sun,Or his pale lips repeat the cry,The thrilling shout of victory!—
He struggles yet—the strife is o'er—The soul hath winged its flight,Again beholds its native shore,A spirit robed in light.What now avail his mother's cares—Her silent tears—her nightly prayers?
On that young soldier's prostrate formThe warrior grimly smiled,As if he viewed in secret scornThat face so fair and mild;Why springs he to the fatal plainTo gaze upon that form again?
Why does his eye in frenzy roll?Why is his clenched hand raised?What thought quick rushed across his soul,When on that boy he gazed?His quivering lip and swollen browHis mental agonies avow.
Can sorrow touch that iron heart,So long to mercy steeled?From those fierce eyes the big drops start,He sinks upon the field.Night closes round, the strife is done,That warrior sleeps beside his son!
There was no sound in earth or air,And soft the moonbeams smiledOn stately tower and temple fair,Like mother o'er her child;And all was hushed in the deep reposeThat welcomes the summer evening's close.Many an eye that day had wept,And many a cheek with joy grew bright,Which now, alike unconscious, sleptBeneath the wan moonlight;And mandolin and gay guitarHad ceased to woo the evening star.The lover has sought his couch again,And the maiden's eyes no longer glisten,As she comes to the lattice to catch his strain,And sighs while she bends to smile and listen.She sleeps, but her rosy lips still move,And in dreams she answers the voice of love.Sleep on, ye thoughtless and giddy train,Sorrow comes with the dawning ray;Ye never shall wake to joy again,Or your gay laugh gladden the rising day:Death sits brooding above your towers,And destruction rides on the coming hours.—The day has dawned—but not a breathSighs through the sultry air;The heavens above and earth beneathOne gloomy aspect wear—Horror and doubt and wild dismayWelcome the dawn of that fatal day.Hark!—'tis not the thunder's lengthened peal!Hark!—'tis not the winds that rise;Or the heavy crush of the laden wheel,That echoes through the skies—'Tis the sound that gives the earthquake birth!'Tis the heavy groans of the rending earth!Oh, there were shrieks of wild affright,And sounds of hurrying feet,And men who cursed the lurid light,Whose glance they feared to meet:And some sunk down in mute despairOn the parched earth, and perished there.—It comes!—it comes!—that lengthened shock—The earth before it reels—The stately towers and temples rock,The dark abyss revealsIts fiery depths—the strife is o'er,The city sinks to rise no more.She has passed from earth like a fearful dream;—Where her pomp and splendour rose,There runs a dark and turbid stream,And a sable cloud its shadow throws;Pale sorrow broods in silence there,To mourn the perished things that were.
There was no sound in earth or air,And soft the moonbeams smiledOn stately tower and temple fair,Like mother o'er her child;And all was hushed in the deep reposeThat welcomes the summer evening's close.
Many an eye that day had wept,And many a cheek with joy grew bright,Which now, alike unconscious, sleptBeneath the wan moonlight;And mandolin and gay guitarHad ceased to woo the evening star.
The lover has sought his couch again,And the maiden's eyes no longer glisten,As she comes to the lattice to catch his strain,And sighs while she bends to smile and listen.She sleeps, but her rosy lips still move,And in dreams she answers the voice of love.
Sleep on, ye thoughtless and giddy train,Sorrow comes with the dawning ray;Ye never shall wake to joy again,Or your gay laugh gladden the rising day:Death sits brooding above your towers,And destruction rides on the coming hours.—
The day has dawned—but not a breathSighs through the sultry air;The heavens above and earth beneathOne gloomy aspect wear—Horror and doubt and wild dismayWelcome the dawn of that fatal day.
Hark!—'tis not the thunder's lengthened peal!Hark!—'tis not the winds that rise;Or the heavy crush of the laden wheel,That echoes through the skies—'Tis the sound that gives the earthquake birth!'Tis the heavy groans of the rending earth!
Oh, there were shrieks of wild affright,And sounds of hurrying feet,And men who cursed the lurid light,Whose glance they feared to meet:And some sunk down in mute despairOn the parched earth, and perished there.—
It comes!—it comes!—that lengthened shock—The earth before it reels—The stately towers and temples rock,The dark abyss revealsIts fiery depths—the strife is o'er,The city sinks to rise no more.
She has passed from earth like a fearful dream;—Where her pomp and splendour rose,There runs a dark and turbid stream,And a sable cloud its shadow throws;Pale sorrow broods in silence there,To mourn the perished things that were.
"What hast thou seen in the olden time,Dark ruin, lone and gray?""Full many a race from thy native clime,And the bright earth, pass away.The organ has pealed in these roofless aisles,And priests have knelt to prayAt the altar, where now the daisy smilesO'er their silent beds of clay."I've seen the strong man a wailing child,By his mother offered here;I've seen him a warrior fierce and wild;I've seen him on his bier,His warlike harness beside him laidIn the silent earth to rust;His plumed helm and trusty bladeTo moulder into dust!"I've seen the stern reformer scornThe things once deemed divine,And the bigot's zeal with gems adornThe altar's sacred shrine.I've seen the silken banners waveWhere now the ivy clings,And the sculptured stone adorn the graveOf mitred priests and kings."I've seen the youth in his tameless glee,And the hoary locks of age,Together bend the pious knee,To read the sacred page;I've seen the maid with her sunny browTo the silent dust go down,The soil-bound slave forget his woe,The king resign his crown."Ages have fled—and I have seenThe young—the fair—the gay—Forgot as if they ne'er had been,Though worshipped in their day:And school-boys here their revels keep,And spring from grave to grave,Unconscious that beneath them sleepThe noble and the brave."Here thousands find a resting placeWho bent before this shrine;Their dust is here—their name and race,Oblivion; now are thine!The prince—the peer—the peasant sleepsAlike beneath the sod;Time o'er their dust short record keeps,Forgotten save by God!"I've seen the face of nature change,And where the wild waves beat,The eye delightedly might rangeO'er many a goodly seat;But hill, and dale, and forest fair,Are whelmed beneath the tide.They slumber here—who could declareWho owned those manors wide!"All thou hast felt—these sleepers knew;For human hearts are stillIn every age to nature true,And swayed by good or ill:By passion ruled and born to woe,Unceasing tears they shed;But thou must sleep, like them, to knowThe secrets of the dead!"
"What hast thou seen in the olden time,Dark ruin, lone and gray?""Full many a race from thy native clime,And the bright earth, pass away.The organ has pealed in these roofless aisles,And priests have knelt to prayAt the altar, where now the daisy smilesO'er their silent beds of clay.
"I've seen the strong man a wailing child,By his mother offered here;I've seen him a warrior fierce and wild;I've seen him on his bier,His warlike harness beside him laidIn the silent earth to rust;His plumed helm and trusty bladeTo moulder into dust!
"I've seen the stern reformer scornThe things once deemed divine,And the bigot's zeal with gems adornThe altar's sacred shrine.I've seen the silken banners waveWhere now the ivy clings,And the sculptured stone adorn the graveOf mitred priests and kings.
"I've seen the youth in his tameless glee,And the hoary locks of age,Together bend the pious knee,To read the sacred page;I've seen the maid with her sunny browTo the silent dust go down,The soil-bound slave forget his woe,The king resign his crown.
"Ages have fled—and I have seenThe young—the fair—the gay—Forgot as if they ne'er had been,Though worshipped in their day:And school-boys here their revels keep,And spring from grave to grave,Unconscious that beneath them sleepThe noble and the brave.
"Here thousands find a resting placeWho bent before this shrine;Their dust is here—their name and race,Oblivion; now are thine!The prince—the peer—the peasant sleepsAlike beneath the sod;Time o'er their dust short record keeps,Forgotten save by God!
"I've seen the face of nature change,And where the wild waves beat,The eye delightedly might rangeO'er many a goodly seat;But hill, and dale, and forest fair,Are whelmed beneath the tide.They slumber here—who could declareWho owned those manors wide!
"All thou hast felt—these sleepers knew;For human hearts are stillIn every age to nature true,And swayed by good or ill:By passion ruled and born to woe,Unceasing tears they shed;But thou must sleep, like them, to knowThe secrets of the dead!"
Thou beautiful Ash! thou art lowly laid,And my eyes shall hail no moreFrom afar thy cool and refreshing shade,When the toilsome journey's o'er.The winged and the wandering tribes of airA home 'mid thy foliage found,But thy graceful boughs, all broken and bare,The wild winds are scattering round.The storm-demon sent up his loudest shoutWhen he levelled his bolt at thee,When thy massy trunk and thy branches stoutWere riven by the blast, old tree!It has bowed to the dust thy stately form,Which for many an age defiedThe rush and the roar of the midnight storm,When it swept through thy branches wide.I have gazed on thee with a fond delightIn childhood's happier day,And watched the moonbeams of a summer nightThrough thy quivering branches play.I have gathered the ivy wreaths that boundThy old fantastic roots,And wove the wild flowers that blossomed roundWith spring's first tender shoots.And when youth with its glowing visions came,Thou wert still my favourite seat;And the ardent dreams of future fameWere formed at thy hoary feet.Farewell—farewell—the wintry windHas waged unsparing war on thee,And only pictured on my mindRemains thy form, time-honoured tree!
Thou beautiful Ash! thou art lowly laid,And my eyes shall hail no moreFrom afar thy cool and refreshing shade,When the toilsome journey's o'er.The winged and the wandering tribes of airA home 'mid thy foliage found,But thy graceful boughs, all broken and bare,The wild winds are scattering round.
The storm-demon sent up his loudest shoutWhen he levelled his bolt at thee,When thy massy trunk and thy branches stoutWere riven by the blast, old tree!It has bowed to the dust thy stately form,Which for many an age defiedThe rush and the roar of the midnight storm,When it swept through thy branches wide.
I have gazed on thee with a fond delightIn childhood's happier day,And watched the moonbeams of a summer nightThrough thy quivering branches play.I have gathered the ivy wreaths that boundThy old fantastic roots,And wove the wild flowers that blossomed roundWith spring's first tender shoots.
And when youth with its glowing visions came,Thou wert still my favourite seat;And the ardent dreams of future fameWere formed at thy hoary feet.Farewell—farewell—the wintry windHas waged unsparing war on thee,And only pictured on my mindRemains thy form, time-honoured tree!
"Tell me, thou grassy mound,What dost thou cover?In thy folds hast thou boundSoldier or lover?Time o'er the turf no memorial is keepingWho in this lone grave forgotten is sleeping?"—"The sun's westward rayA dark shadow has thrownOn this dwelling of clay,And the shade is thine own!From dust and oblivion this stern lesson borrow—Thou art living to-day and forgotten to-morrow!"
"Tell me, thou grassy mound,What dost thou cover?In thy folds hast thou boundSoldier or lover?Time o'er the turf no memorial is keepingWho in this lone grave forgotten is sleeping?"—
"The sun's westward rayA dark shadow has thrownOn this dwelling of clay,And the shade is thine own!From dust and oblivion this stern lesson borrow—Thou art living to-day and forgotten to-morrow!"
There is a pause in nature, ere the stormRushes resistless in its awful might;There is a softening twilight, ere the mornExpands her wings of glory into light.There is a sudden stillness in the heart,Ere yet the tears of wounded feeling flow;A speechless expectation, ere the dartOf sorrow lays our fondest wishes low.There is a dreamy silence in the mind,Ere yet it wakes to energy of thought;A breathless pause of feeling, undefined,Ere the bright image is from fancy caught.There is a pause more holy still,When Faith a brighter hope has given,And, soaring over earthly ill,The soul looks up to heaven!
There is a pause in nature, ere the stormRushes resistless in its awful might;There is a softening twilight, ere the mornExpands her wings of glory into light.
There is a sudden stillness in the heart,Ere yet the tears of wounded feeling flow;A speechless expectation, ere the dartOf sorrow lays our fondest wishes low.
There is a dreamy silence in the mind,Ere yet it wakes to energy of thought;A breathless pause of feeling, undefined,Ere the bright image is from fancy caught.
There is a pause more holy still,When Faith a brighter hope has given,And, soaring over earthly ill,The soul looks up to heaven!
Oh dread uncertainty!Life-wasting agony!How dost thou pain the heart,Causing such tears to start,As sorrow never shedO'er hopes for ever fled.For memory hoards up joyBeyond Time's dull alloy;Pleasures that once have beenShed light upon the scene,As setting suns fling backA bright and glowing track,To show they once have castA glory o'er the past;But thou, tormenting fiend,Beneath Hope's pinions screened,Leagued with distrust and pain,Makest her promise vain;Weaving in life's fair crownThistles instead of down.Who would not rather knowPresent than coming woe?For certain sorrow bringsA healing in its wings.The softening touch of yearsStill dries the mourner's tears;For human minds inheritA gay, elastic spirit,Which rises in the hourOf trial, with such power,That men, with wonder, findSorrow is less unkind;That human hearts can bearAll evils but despair,Or that anticipated griefWhich, for a season, mocks relief.Uncertainty still clingsTo earth's fair but fleeting things;And mortals vainly trustIn fabrics formed of dust!We look into life's waste,And tread its paths in haste;The past—for ever flown;The present—scarce our own;While, cold and dim, beforeStretches the shadowy shore,The dark futurity, which liesBeyond the glance of mortal eyes,Wrapped in the mystic gloomWhich canopies the tomb.But faith can pour a lightOn the spirit's earthly night,And break that sullen shroud;As a star bursts through the cloud,To show the upward eyeThe clear, but distant, sky;The land of joy and peace,Where doubts and sorrows cease.
Oh dread uncertainty!Life-wasting agony!How dost thou pain the heart,Causing such tears to start,As sorrow never shedO'er hopes for ever fled.For memory hoards up joyBeyond Time's dull alloy;Pleasures that once have beenShed light upon the scene,As setting suns fling backA bright and glowing track,To show they once have castA glory o'er the past;But thou, tormenting fiend,Beneath Hope's pinions screened,Leagued with distrust and pain,Makest her promise vain;Weaving in life's fair crownThistles instead of down.
Who would not rather knowPresent than coming woe?For certain sorrow bringsA healing in its wings.The softening touch of yearsStill dries the mourner's tears;For human minds inheritA gay, elastic spirit,Which rises in the hourOf trial, with such power,That men, with wonder, findSorrow is less unkind;That human hearts can bearAll evils but despair,Or that anticipated griefWhich, for a season, mocks relief.
Uncertainty still clingsTo earth's fair but fleeting things;And mortals vainly trustIn fabrics formed of dust!We look into life's waste,And tread its paths in haste;The past—for ever flown;The present—scarce our own;While, cold and dim, beforeStretches the shadowy shore,The dark futurity, which liesBeyond the glance of mortal eyes,Wrapped in the mystic gloomWhich canopies the tomb.But faith can pour a lightOn the spirit's earthly night,And break that sullen shroud;As a star bursts through the cloud,To show the upward eyeThe clear, but distant, sky;The land of joy and peace,Where doubts and sorrows cease.
When the eye whose kind beam was the beacon of gladnessFrom the glance of a lover turns coldly away,O'er the bright sun of hope float the dark clouds of sadness,And youth's lovely visions recede with the ray.Oh turn not where pleasure's wild meteor is beaming,And night's dreary shades wear the splendour of day,To the rich festive board where the red wine is streaming;—Can the dance and the song disappointment allay?Oh heed not the Syren! for virtue is weepingWhere passion is struggling her victim to chain,And Conscience, deep drugged, in her soft lap is sleeping,Till startled by memory and quickened by pain.Oh heed not the minstrel, when music is breathingIn the cold ear of fashion his heart-searching strain;And pluck not the rose round Love's diadem wreathing;The garland by beauty is woven in vain.The pleasures of life, like its moments, are fleeting;Oh let not its trifles your firm purpose move;But think as those moments are slowly retreating,How feebly against its enchantments you strove:Then turn from the world, and, its follies forsaking,Raise your eyes to the day-star of gladness above;There's a balm for each wound, though the fond heart is breaking,A Lethé divine in the fountain of Love!
When the eye whose kind beam was the beacon of gladnessFrom the glance of a lover turns coldly away,O'er the bright sun of hope float the dark clouds of sadness,And youth's lovely visions recede with the ray.Oh turn not where pleasure's wild meteor is beaming,And night's dreary shades wear the splendour of day,To the rich festive board where the red wine is streaming;—Can the dance and the song disappointment allay?
Oh heed not the Syren! for virtue is weepingWhere passion is struggling her victim to chain,And Conscience, deep drugged, in her soft lap is sleeping,Till startled by memory and quickened by pain.Oh heed not the minstrel, when music is breathingIn the cold ear of fashion his heart-searching strain;And pluck not the rose round Love's diadem wreathing;The garland by beauty is woven in vain.
The pleasures of life, like its moments, are fleeting;Oh let not its trifles your firm purpose move;But think as those moments are slowly retreating,How feebly against its enchantments you strove:Then turn from the world, and, its follies forsaking,Raise your eyes to the day-star of gladness above;There's a balm for each wound, though the fond heart is breaking,A Lethé divine in the fountain of Love!
Like a dew-drop from heaven in the ocean of life,From the morn's rosy diadem falling,A stranger as yet to the storms and the strife,Dear babe, of thy earthly calling!Thine eyes have unclosed on this valley of tears;Hark! that cry is the herald of anguish and woe;Thy young spirit finds a deep voice for its fears,Prophetic of all that is passing below.How short will the term of thy ignorance be!The winds and the tempests will rise,And passion will cover with wrecks the calm sea,On whose surface no shadow now lies.Unclouded and fair is the morn of thy birth,The first lovely day in a season of gloom;Whilst a pilgrim and stranger thou treadest this earth,May the sunbeams of hope gild thy path to the tomb.
Like a dew-drop from heaven in the ocean of life,From the morn's rosy diadem falling,A stranger as yet to the storms and the strife,Dear babe, of thy earthly calling!
Thine eyes have unclosed on this valley of tears;Hark! that cry is the herald of anguish and woe;Thy young spirit finds a deep voice for its fears,Prophetic of all that is passing below.
How short will the term of thy ignorance be!The winds and the tempests will rise,And passion will cover with wrecks the calm sea,On whose surface no shadow now lies.
Unclouded and fair is the morn of thy birth,The first lovely day in a season of gloom;Whilst a pilgrim and stranger thou treadest this earth,May the sunbeams of hope gild thy path to the tomb.
FOOTNOTES:[A]Infant son (since dead) of Mr. James Bird, author of theVale of Slaughden.
[A]Infant son (since dead) of Mr. James Bird, author of theVale of Slaughden.
[A]Infant son (since dead) of Mr. James Bird, author of theVale of Slaughden.
Ah! cold at my feet thou art sleeping, my boy,And I press on thy pale lips, in vain, the fond kiss;Earth opens her arms to receive thee, my joy!And all I have suffered was nothing to this:The day-star of hope 'neath thine eyelids is sleeping,No more to arise at the voice of my weeping.Oh, how art thou changed!—since the light breath of morningDispelled the soft dew-drops in showers from the tree,Like a beautiful bud, my lone dwelling adorning,Thy smiles called up feelings of rapture in me;I thought not the sunbeams all brightly that shoneOn thy waking, at eve would behold me alone.The joy that flashed out from those death-shrouded eyes,That laughed in thy dimples and brightened thy cheek,Is quenched—but the smile on thy pale lip that lies,Now tells of a joy that no language can speak.The fountain is sealed, the young spirit at rest,Ah, why should I mourn thee—my loved one—my blest?
Ah! cold at my feet thou art sleeping, my boy,And I press on thy pale lips, in vain, the fond kiss;Earth opens her arms to receive thee, my joy!And all I have suffered was nothing to this:The day-star of hope 'neath thine eyelids is sleeping,No more to arise at the voice of my weeping.
Oh, how art thou changed!—since the light breath of morningDispelled the soft dew-drops in showers from the tree,Like a beautiful bud, my lone dwelling adorning,Thy smiles called up feelings of rapture in me;I thought not the sunbeams all brightly that shoneOn thy waking, at eve would behold me alone.
The joy that flashed out from those death-shrouded eyes,That laughed in thy dimples and brightened thy cheek,Is quenched—but the smile on thy pale lip that lies,Now tells of a joy that no language can speak.The fountain is sealed, the young spirit at rest,Ah, why should I mourn thee—my loved one—my blest?
Sorrow has touched thee, my beautiful boy!And dimmed the bright eyes that were dancing with joy;Thy ruby lips tremble, thy soft cheek is wet,The tears on its roses are lingering yet.On thy quick-heaving heart is thy little hand pressed;There is care on thy brow—there is grief in thy breast,And slowly and darkly the shadow steals o'er thee,For the first time the vision of death is before thee!Meet emblem of childhood—that innocent doveWas the sharer alike of thy sports and thy love;Thy playmate is dead—and that tenantless cageHas stamped the first grief upon memory's page.And oh!—thou art weeping—Life's fountain of tears,Once unchained, will flow on through the desert of years;No joy will e'er equal thy first dawn of bliss,No sorrow blot out the remembrance of this!Though reason may smile at the anguish which nowConvulses thy bosom and darkens thy brow;The period may come, in thy journey through life,When sick of its falsehood, corruption, and strife,Thou vainly shall seek in thy desolate trackTo bring those sweet feelings and sympathies back;And thy spirit will murmur, when vexed and reviled,Oh would I could weep—as I wept when a child!But let us not darken the landscape with gloom,And fling round the cradle the shade of the tomb,The sorrows of youth are like April's rash showers,Which though rapidly shed, strew our pathway with flowers:On the soft downy cheek, while the tear glistens bright,The young heart is leaping, all wild with delight;The glance of a sunbeam will banish its pain,And it joyously breaks into laughter again!Oh, our early impressions are never forgot—And the wide earth contains not so lovely a spotAs the fields that encircled the home of our youth,With all its dear visions of beauty and truth:No meads are so green, and no flowers are so fairAs the wildings we gathered and garlanded there;And the dim eye grows bright whilst recounting the joy,The sorrows, and trials, and sports of the boy!
Sorrow has touched thee, my beautiful boy!And dimmed the bright eyes that were dancing with joy;Thy ruby lips tremble, thy soft cheek is wet,The tears on its roses are lingering yet.On thy quick-heaving heart is thy little hand pressed;There is care on thy brow—there is grief in thy breast,And slowly and darkly the shadow steals o'er thee,For the first time the vision of death is before thee!
Meet emblem of childhood—that innocent doveWas the sharer alike of thy sports and thy love;Thy playmate is dead—and that tenantless cageHas stamped the first grief upon memory's page.And oh!—thou art weeping—Life's fountain of tears,Once unchained, will flow on through the desert of years;No joy will e'er equal thy first dawn of bliss,No sorrow blot out the remembrance of this!
Though reason may smile at the anguish which nowConvulses thy bosom and darkens thy brow;The period may come, in thy journey through life,When sick of its falsehood, corruption, and strife,Thou vainly shall seek in thy desolate trackTo bring those sweet feelings and sympathies back;And thy spirit will murmur, when vexed and reviled,Oh would I could weep—as I wept when a child!
But let us not darken the landscape with gloom,And fling round the cradle the shade of the tomb,The sorrows of youth are like April's rash showers,Which though rapidly shed, strew our pathway with flowers:On the soft downy cheek, while the tear glistens bright,The young heart is leaping, all wild with delight;The glance of a sunbeam will banish its pain,And it joyously breaks into laughter again!
Oh, our early impressions are never forgot—And the wide earth contains not so lovely a spotAs the fields that encircled the home of our youth,With all its dear visions of beauty and truth:No meads are so green, and no flowers are so fairAs the wildings we gathered and garlanded there;And the dim eye grows bright whilst recounting the joy,The sorrows, and trials, and sports of the boy!
FOOTNOTES:[B]Written to illustrate a plate by Westall, inFriendship's Offering, for 1830. To those who have not seen the picture, it may be proper to state, that the subject is a child weeping over a dead dove.
[B]Written to illustrate a plate by Westall, inFriendship's Offering, for 1830. To those who have not seen the picture, it may be proper to state, that the subject is a child weeping over a dead dove.
[B]Written to illustrate a plate by Westall, inFriendship's Offering, for 1830. To those who have not seen the picture, it may be proper to state, that the subject is a child weeping over a dead dove.
"When will the grave fling her cold arms around me,And earth on her dark bosom pillow my head?Sorrow and trouble and anguish, have found me,Oh that I slumbered in peace with the dead!"The forests are budding, the fruit-trees in bloom,And the voice of the turtle is heard in our land;But my soul is bowed down by the spirit of gloom,I no longer rejoice as the blossoms expand."And April is here with her rich varied skies,Where the sunbeams of hope with the tempest contend,And the bright drops that flow from her deep azure eyesOn the bosom of nature like diamonds descend."She scatters her jewels o'er forest and lea,And casts in earth's lap all the wealth of the year;But the promise she brings wakes no transports in me,Still the landscape looks dim through the fast flowing tear."Thus sung a poor exile, whom Sorrow had banishedFrom Joy's golden halls, in those moments when careStruck deep in her soul and Hope's sunny smiles vanished,And her spirit grew dark 'neath the scowl of despair.But oh! there's a balm e'en for anguish like thine,And He who permitted the evil has given,In exchange for this lost earth, an Eden divine,Revealing to man all the glories of heaven.Then hush these vain murmurs, arise from the dust,Submit to the hand who the dark chain can severOf sorrow and sin:—God is faithful and just—Oh seek but his face and be happy for ever!
"When will the grave fling her cold arms around me,And earth on her dark bosom pillow my head?Sorrow and trouble and anguish, have found me,Oh that I slumbered in peace with the dead!
"The forests are budding, the fruit-trees in bloom,And the voice of the turtle is heard in our land;But my soul is bowed down by the spirit of gloom,I no longer rejoice as the blossoms expand.
"And April is here with her rich varied skies,Where the sunbeams of hope with the tempest contend,And the bright drops that flow from her deep azure eyesOn the bosom of nature like diamonds descend.
"She scatters her jewels o'er forest and lea,And casts in earth's lap all the wealth of the year;But the promise she brings wakes no transports in me,Still the landscape looks dim through the fast flowing tear."
Thus sung a poor exile, whom Sorrow had banishedFrom Joy's golden halls, in those moments when careStruck deep in her soul and Hope's sunny smiles vanished,And her spirit grew dark 'neath the scowl of despair.
But oh! there's a balm e'en for anguish like thine,And He who permitted the evil has given,In exchange for this lost earth, an Eden divine,Revealing to man all the glories of heaven.
Then hush these vain murmurs, arise from the dust,Submit to the hand who the dark chain can severOf sorrow and sin:—God is faithful and just—Oh seek but his face and be happy for ever!
My eyes have seen another springIn floral beauty rise,And happy birds on gladsome wingFlit through the azure skies.Though sickness bowed my feeble frameThrough winter's cheerless hours,Life's sinking torch resumes its flameWith renovated powers.Once more on nature's ample shrine,Beneath the spreading boughs,With lifted hands and hopes divineI offer up my vows.My incense is the breath of flowers,Perfuming all the air;My pillared fane these woodland bowers,A heaven-built house of prayer;My fellow-worshippers, the gay,Free songsters of the grove,Who to the closing eye of dayWarble their hymns of love.The low and dulcet lyre of spring,Swept by the vagrant breeze,Borne far on echo's spreading wingStirs all the budding trees—Again I catch the cuckoo's noteThat faintly murmurs near,The mingled melodies that floatTo rapture's listening ear.While April like a virgin paleRetreats with modest grace,And blushing through her tearful veilJust shows her cherub face.'Tis but a momentary gleamFrom those young laughing eyes,Yet, like a meteor's passing beam,It lights up earth, and skies:But, ere the sun exhales the dewThat sparkles on the grass,Dark clouds flit o'er the smiling blue,Like shadows o'er a glass.But ah! upon the musing mindThose varied smiles and tears,Like words of love but half defined,Give birth to hopes and fears.The joyful heart one moment bounds,Then feels a sudden chill,Whispering in vague uncertain soundsPresentiments of ill.When dire disease an arrow sent,And thrilled my breast with pain,My mind was like a bow unbent,Or harp-strings after rain;I could not weep—I could not pray,Nor raise my thoughts on high,Till light from heaven, like April's ray,Broke through the stormy sky!
My eyes have seen another springIn floral beauty rise,And happy birds on gladsome wingFlit through the azure skies.Though sickness bowed my feeble frameThrough winter's cheerless hours,Life's sinking torch resumes its flameWith renovated powers.
Once more on nature's ample shrine,Beneath the spreading boughs,With lifted hands and hopes divineI offer up my vows.My incense is the breath of flowers,Perfuming all the air;My pillared fane these woodland bowers,A heaven-built house of prayer;
My fellow-worshippers, the gay,Free songsters of the grove,Who to the closing eye of dayWarble their hymns of love.The low and dulcet lyre of spring,Swept by the vagrant breeze,Borne far on echo's spreading wingStirs all the budding trees—
Again I catch the cuckoo's noteThat faintly murmurs near,The mingled melodies that floatTo rapture's listening ear.While April like a virgin paleRetreats with modest grace,And blushing through her tearful veilJust shows her cherub face.
'Tis but a momentary gleamFrom those young laughing eyes,Yet, like a meteor's passing beam,It lights up earth, and skies:But, ere the sun exhales the dewThat sparkles on the grass,Dark clouds flit o'er the smiling blue,Like shadows o'er a glass.
But ah! upon the musing mindThose varied smiles and tears,Like words of love but half defined,Give birth to hopes and fears.The joyful heart one moment bounds,Then feels a sudden chill,Whispering in vague uncertain soundsPresentiments of ill.
When dire disease an arrow sent,And thrilled my breast with pain,My mind was like a bow unbent,Or harp-strings after rain;I could not weep—I could not pray,Nor raise my thoughts on high,Till light from heaven, like April's ray,Broke through the stormy sky!
YOUTH.Pilgrim of life! thy hoary headIs bent with age, thine eyeLooks downward to the silent dead,Wreck of mortality!—The friends who flourished in thy dayHave sought their narrow home;Their spirits whisper, "Come away!"—AGE.My soul replies, I come.—I tread the path I trod a child,The fields I loved of yore;The flowers that 'neath my footsteps smiledNow meet my gaze no more.I stand beneath this giant oak!It was an aged tree,Hollowed by time's resistless stroke,When life was green with me.Its lofty head it proudly rearsTo greet the summer sky,Whilst, bending with the weight of years,I feebly totter by.And hushed are all the thousand songsThat filled these branches high:Echo no more for me prolongsThe woodland minstrelsy.Silence has gathered round life's hall;My friends are in the clay;I hear no more the footsteps fall,That cheered my early day;I see no more the faces dear,Which shone around my hearth:Bereft of all—I sojourn here—Still happy, though on earth!—YOUTH.And canst thou smile when all are goneWho shared thy youthful prime;Content to wait and watch alone,To grapple still with time?How comes it that thou thus belowHast rest above the sod,Which brings to memory scenes of woe?AGE.It is the will of God!
YOUTH.
Pilgrim of life! thy hoary headIs bent with age, thine eyeLooks downward to the silent dead,Wreck of mortality!—The friends who flourished in thy dayHave sought their narrow home;Their spirits whisper, "Come away!"—
AGE.
My soul replies, I come.—I tread the path I trod a child,The fields I loved of yore;The flowers that 'neath my footsteps smiledNow meet my gaze no more.I stand beneath this giant oak!It was an aged tree,Hollowed by time's resistless stroke,When life was green with me.Its lofty head it proudly rearsTo greet the summer sky,Whilst, bending with the weight of years,I feebly totter by.And hushed are all the thousand songsThat filled these branches high:Echo no more for me prolongsThe woodland minstrelsy.Silence has gathered round life's hall;My friends are in the clay;I hear no more the footsteps fall,That cheered my early day;I see no more the faces dear,Which shone around my hearth:Bereft of all—I sojourn here—Still happy, though on earth!—
YOUTH.
And canst thou smile when all are goneWho shared thy youthful prime;Content to wait and watch alone,To grapple still with time?How comes it that thou thus belowHast rest above the sod,Which brings to memory scenes of woe?
AGE.
It is the will of God!