VIII. POEMS IN HONOR OF EMERSON. I. SONNET OF 1884.-MISS EMMA LAZARUS. TO R. W. E. As, when a father dies, his children draw Not for his sake, but theirs, whose feebler feet In thine own elm-roofed, amber-rivered town, NEW YORK, May, 1884. If we should rake the bottom of the sea And heap our measures, If we should ride upon the winds, and be By day and through the night, Intent upon this business, to find gold, Yet were thy story perfectly untold. Such waves of wealth are rolled up in thy soul, Such swelling argosies Laden with Time's supplies, Such pure, delicious wine shines in the bowl, Upon the glittering shore, Drink of the pearl-dissolvèd, brilliant cup, This vessel richly chased about the rim The utmost art of bliss; With figures of the azure gods who swim Contrived for deity, Floating in rounded shells of purple hue; Some dry uprooted saplings we have seen, This grove of Heaven, This sacred forest where the foliage green Or silver-coated flutes, Or the concealing winds that can convey Some weary-footed mortals we have found They, rooted, as a tree Pursues a swift breeze o'er a rocky ground, - Sweeping thee far from sight, As sweeps the movement of a southern blast The circles of thy thought shine vast as stars; No plummet sound them, They hem the observer like bright steel-wrought bars; Yet limpid as the sun, Or as bright waters run From the cold fountain of an Alpine spring, The piercing of thy soul scorches the thought, Or sunlight turning Into a focus; in its meshes caught, |