The record of her blossoming age,)—appears Unveil'd, and on it dust to dust is thrown, The final rite. Oh! hark that sullen sound! Upon the lower'd bier the shovell'd clay Falls fast, and fills the void.-
AN AUTUMN SABBATH WALK.
WHEN homeward bands their several ways disperse, I love to linger in the narrow field
Of rest, to wander round from tomb to tomb, And think of some who silent sleep below. Sad sighs the wind, that from those ancient elms Shakes showers of leaves upon the wither'd grass: The sere and yellow wreaths, with eddying sweep, Fill up the furrows 'tween the hillock'd graves. But list that moan! 't is the poor blind man's dog, His guide for many a day, now come to mourn The master and the friend-conjunction rare! A man indeed he was of gentle soul,
Though bred to brave the deep: the lightning's flash Had dimm'd, not closed, his mild, but sightless eyes. He was a welcome guest through all his range! (It was not wide :) no dog would bay at him; Children would run to meet him on his way, And lead him to a sunny seat, and climb His knee, and wonder at his oft-told tales, Then would he teach the elfins how to plait The rushy cap and crown, or sedgy ship; And I have seen him lay his tremulous hand Upon their heads, while silent moved his lips. Peace to thy spirit! that now looks on me Perhaps with greater pity than I felt To see thee wandering darkling on thy way,
But let me quit this melancholy spot, And roam where nature gives a parting smile. As yet the blue-bells linger on the sod
That copes the sheepfold ring; and in the woods A second blow of many flowers appears; Flowers faintly tinged, and breathing no perfume. But fruits, not blossoms, form the woodland wreath That circles Autumn's brow: the ruddy haws Now clothe the half-leaved thorn; the bramble bends Beneath its jetty load; the hazel hangs
With auburn branches, dipping in the stream That sweeps along, and threatens to o'erflow The leaf-strewn banks: Oft, statue-like, I gaze, In vacancy of thought, upon that stream,
And chase, with dreaming eye, the eddying foam; Or rowan's cluster'd branch, or harvest sheaf, Borne rapidly adown the dizzying flood.
A WINTER SABBATH WALK.
How dazzling white the snowy scene! deep, deep, The stillness of the winter Sabbath day,Not even a foot-fall heard.-Smooth are the fields, Each hollow pathway level with the plain: Hid are the bushes, save that, here and there, Are seen the topmost shoots of brier or broom. High-ridged, the whirled drift has almost reach'd The powder'd key-stone of the church-yard porch. Mute hangs the hooded bell: the tombs lie buried, No step approaches to the house of prayer.
The flickering fall is o'er; the clouds disperse And show the sun, hung o'er the welkin's verge, Shooting a bright but ineffectual beam
On all the sparkling waste. Now is the time To visit nature in her grand attire; Though perilous the mountainous ascent, A noble recompense the danger brings. How beautiful the plain stretch'd far below! Unvaried though it be, save by yon stream With azure windings, or the leafless wood. But what the beauty of the plain, compared To that sublimity which reigns enthroned, Holding joint rule with solitude divine, Among yon rocky fells, that bid defiance To steps the most adventurously bold! There silence dwells profound; or if the cry Of high-poised eagle break at times the calm, The mantled echoes no response return.
But let me now explore the deep-sunk dell. No foot-print, save the covey's or the flock's, Is seen along the rill, where marshy springs Still rear the grassy blade of vivid green. Beware, ye shepherds, of these treacherous haunts, Nor linger there too long: the wintry day Soon closes; and full oft a heavier fall Heap'd by the blast, fills up the shelter'd glen. While gurgling deep below, the buried rill Mines for itself a snow-coved way. O! then, Your helpless charge drive from the tempting spot, And keep them on the bleak hill's stormy side, Where night-winds sweep the gathering drift away :
S the great Shepherd leads the heavenly flock From faithless pleasures, full into the storms Of life, where long they bear the bitter blast, Until at length the vernal sun looks forth, Bedimm'd with showers: Then to the pastures green He brings them, where the quiet waters glide, The streams of life, the Siloah of the soul.
LITTLE CHILDREN BROUGHT TO JESUS.
"SUFFER that little children come to me, Forbid them not: " Imboldened by his words, The mothers onward press; but, finding vain The attempt to reach the Lord, they trust their babes To stranger's hands: The innocents alarmed, Amid the throng of faces all unknown,
Shrink trembling,-till their wandering eyes discern The countenance of Jesus beaming love And pity; eager then they stretch their arms, And, cowering, lay their heads upon his breast.
THE LARK, THE MERLE AND THE MAVIS.†
WITH earliest spring, while yet the wheaten blade Scarce shoots above the new-fallen shower of snow, The skylark's note, in short excursion, warbles: Yes! even amid the day-obscuring fall,
I've marked his wing winnowing the feathery flakes, In widely-circling horizontal flight.
But, when the season genial smiles, he towers In loftier poise, with sweeter fuller pipe, Cheering the ploughman at his furrow end, The while he clears the share, or, listening, leans Upon his paddle-staff, and, with raised hand, Shadows his half-shut eyes, striving to scan The songster melting in the flood of light.
On tree, or bush, no Lark was ever seen; The daisied lea he loves, where tufts of grass Luxuriant crown the ridge; there, with his mate, He founds their lowly house, of withered bents, And coarsest speargrass; next, the inner work With finer, and still finer fibres lays,
Rounding it curious with his speckled breast. How strange this untaught art! it is the gift, The gift innate of Him, whithout whose will Not even a sparrow falleth to the ground. t Thrush.
And now the assiduous dam her red-specked treasure,
From day to day increases, till complete
The wonted number, blythe, beneath her breast, She cherishes from morn to eve,-from eve
To morn shields from the dew, that globuled lies Upon her mottled plumes: then with the dawn Upsprings her mate, and wakes her with his song. His song full well she knows, even when the sun, High in his morning course, is hailed at once By all the lofty warblers of the sky:
But most his downward-veering song she loves; Slow the descent at first, then, by degrees, Quick, and more quick, till suddenly the note Ceases; and, like an arrow-fledge, he darts, And, softly lighting, perches by her side.
When snowdrops die, and the green primrose leaves Announce the coming flower, the Merle's note, Mellifluous, rich, deep-toned, fills all the vale, And charms the ravished ear. The hawthorn bush, New-budded, is his perch; there the gray dawn He hails; and there, with parting light concludes His melody. There, when the buds begin To break, he lays the fibrous roots; and, see, His jetty breast embrowned; the rounded clay His jetty breast has soiled; but now complete, His partner, and his helper in the work, Happy assumes possession of her home; While he, upon a neighbouring tree, his lay, More richly full, melodiously renews.
When twice seven days have run, the moment snatch, That she has flitted off her charge, to cool Her thirsty bill, dipt in the babbling brook, Then silently, on tip-toe raised, look in, Admire: five cupless acorns, darkly specked, Delight the eye, warm to the cautious touch. In seven days more expect the fledgeless young, Five gaping bills. With busy wing, and eye Quick-darting, all alert, the parent pair Gather the sustenance which heaven bestows. But music ceases, save at dewy fall
Of eve, when, nestling o'er her brood, the dam Has stilled them all to rest; or at the hour Of doubtful dawning gray; then from his wing Her partner turns his yellow bill, and chaunts His solitary song of joyous praise.
From day to day, as blow the hawthorn flowers, That canopy this little home of love,
The plumage of the younglings shoots and spreads, Filling with joy the fond parental eye.
How much alike in habits, form, and size, The Merle and the Mavis! how unlike
In plumage, and in song! The thrush's song Is varied as his plumes; and as his plumes Blend beauteous, each with each, so run his notes Smoothly, with many a happy rise and fall. How prettily, upon his parded breast, The vividly contrasted tints unite
To please the admiring eye; so, loud and soft, And high and low, all in his notes combine, In alternation sweet, to charm the ear.
Full earlier than the blackbird he begins His vernal strain. Regardless of the frown Which winter casts upon the vernal day, Though snowy flakes melt in the primrose cup, He, warbling on, awaits the sunny beam,
That mild gleams down, and spreads o'er all the grove. But now his song a partner for him gains;
And in the hazel bush, or sloe, is formed The habitation of the wedded pair: Sometimes below the never-fading leaves Of ivy close, that overtwisting binds,
And richly crowns, with clustered fruit of spring, Some riven rock, or nodding castle wall; Sometimes beneath the jutting root of elm, Or oak, among the sprigs, that overhang A pebble-chiding stream, the loam-lined house Is fixed, well hid from ken of hovering hawk, Or lurking beast, or schoolboy's prowling eye; Securely there the dam sits all day long,
While from the adverse bank, on topmost shoot Of odour-breathing birch, her mate's blythe chaunt Cheers her pent hours, and makes the wild woods ring. Grudge not, ye owners of the fruited boughs, That he should pay himself for that sweet music, With which, in blossom time, he cheers your hearts! Scare, if ye will, his timid wing away, But, Ó, let not the leaden viewless shower, Vollied from flashing tube, arrest his flight, And fill his tuneful, gasping bill with blood!
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