Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

TO A CITY PIGEON.

BY NATHANIEL P. WILLIS.

STOOP to my window, thou beautiful dove!
Thy daily visits have touched my love,
I watch thy coming, and list the note
That stirs so low in thy mellow throat,
And my joy is high

To catch the glance of thy gentle eye.

Why dost thou sit on the heated eaves,

And forsake the wood with its freshened leaves?

Why dost thou haunt the sultry street,

When the paths of the forest are cool and sweet? How canst thou bear

This noise of people-this sultry air?

Thou alone of the feathered race

Dost look unscared on the human face;
Thou alone, with a wing to flee,

Dost love with man in his haunts to be;

oly gift is thine, sweet bird!

ou'rt named with childhood's earliest word!

ou'rt linked with all that is fresh and wild

he prisoned thoughts of the city child, And thy glossy wings

its brightest image of moving things.

no light chance. Thou art set apart, sely by Him who has tamed thy heart, stir the love for the bright and fair

t else were sealed in this crowded air; I sometimes dream

elic rays from thy pinions stream.

e then, ever, when daylight leaves
page I read, to my humble eaves,
wash thy breast in the hollow spout,
murmur thy low sweet music out!
I hear and see

sons of Heaven, sweet bird, in thee!

WRITTEN AT MY MOTHER'S GRAVE.

BY GEORGE D. PRENTICE.

THE trembling dew-drops fall

Upon the shutting flowers, like souls at rest,
The stars shine gloriously, and all,

Save me, is blest.

Mother, I love thy grave!

The violet, with its blossoms blue and mild,
Waves o'er thy head-when shall it wave
Above thy child?

'Tis a sweet flower, yet must

Its bright leaves to the coming tempest bow,

Dear mother, 'tis thine emblem-dust
Is on thy brow!

By thee, as erst in childhood, lie,

And share thy dreams.

And must I linger here,

tain the plumage of my sinless years, And mourn the hopes to childhood dear With bitter tears!

Ay, must I linger here,

ely branch upon a blasted tree, Whose last frail leaf, untimely sere, Went down with thee!

Oft from life's withered bower,

l communion with the past I turn, And muse on thee, the only flower In memory's urn.

nd, when the Evening pale

like a mourner on the dim blue wave, stray to hear the night-winds wail

Around thy grave.

'here is thy spirit flown?

above-thy look is imaged there,

T

Oh come, while here I press My brow upon thy grave-and, in th And thrilling tones of tendernes Bless, bless thy chi

Yes, bless thy weeping child,

And o'er thine urn-religion's holiest Oh give his spirit undefiled

To blend with thine.

« AnteriorContinuar »