THE APRIL SHOWER. BY MRS. SEBA SMITH. · THE April rain! the April rain! I hear the pleasant sound, Now drenching all the ground. Is pleasanter to see I'm sure it is to me. I wonder if 'tis really so, Or only Hope, the while, And Summer's coming smile: Makes me a child again; As falls the April rain. 206 THE APRIL SHOWER. And sure, were I a little bulb, Within the darksome ground, So softly falling round; By Nature swaddled up, Would bathe my hidden cup! The small brown seed that rattled down On the cold autumnal earth, Rejoicing in its birth ; Are smiling in the light; As though it felt delight. The robin sings on the leafless tree, And upward turns his eye, Come filtering down the sky; About his home to see, Play in the full-robed tree. THE VOICE OF THE GALE. 207 The cottage door is open wide, And cheerful sounds are heard ; A song like the wildwood bird ; Peers out with winking eye, As the drops come spattering by. With bounding heart beneath the sky The truant boy is out, With many a merry shout; For yours is the April day; In your pure and healthful play! THE VOICE OF THE GALE. BY THOMAS J. CHARLTON. 'Tis the voice of the gale: I have heard it, at night, 208 THE VOICE OF THE GALE. 'Tis the voice of the gale: I have heard its deep moan Through the desolate halls of some fabric o’erthrowu; And the accents of those who once gladdened its hearth Seemed again to return to the place of their birth. 'Tis the voice of the gale: mid the desolate plain, 'Tis the voice of the gale, which, to fancy's fond ear, Yes; oft, mid its moanings, we dream they are nigh, 'Tis a vision of bliss, till, by reason o'erthrown, We hear the rude breath of the tempest alone. |