Fill thy bright locks with those gifts of spring, For a day is coming to quell the tone Yet shall we mourn, gentle child! for this ? MRS. HEMANS. THE NEGLECTED CHILD. I NEVER was a favourite, My mother never smiled That bless'd her fairer child : While fondled on her knee; There was no kiss for me! And yet I strove to please, with all My little store of sense ; Can rarely give offence; A cold, ungentle check, In tears upon her neck. How blessed are the beautiful! Love watches o'er their birth; Oh, beauty! in my nursery I learn'd to know thy worth, For even there, I often felt Forsaken and forlorn; And wish'd—for others wish'd it toom I never had been born! I'm sure I was affectionate, But in my sister's face A smile or an embrace; The pressure children prize, They spoke not in my eyes. The anguish of neglect; With gems and roses deck'd; When wantonly reproved, Of being so beloved. A time of sorrow too- Her venom'd mantle threw The features once so beautiful, Now wore the hue of death ; From her infectious breath. I watch'd beside her bed, I pillow'd her poor head. My grief was at an end; T. H. BAILY. A POET'S FAVOURITE. Oh she is guileless as the birds That sing beside the summer brooks ; With music in her gentle words, With magic in her winsome looks. With beauty by all eyes confess’d, With grace beyond the reach of art, And, better still than all the rest, With perfect singleness of heart: With kindness like a noiseless spring That faileth ne'er in heat or cold; As innocent as it is bold. Where woman's best affections lie; But fix their resting-place on high. And if, with all that thus exalts A soul by sweet thoughts sanctified, This dear one has her human faults, They ever “ lean to virtue's side.” ANON. AURA VENI. BALMy freshness! heavenly air! Cool, oh! cool this burning browLoose the fiery circlet there Blessed thing! I feel ye now. Blessed thing! depart not yet Let me, let me quaff my fill: Leave me not, my soul, to fret With longing for what mocks me still. 0! the weary, weary nights I've lain awake and thought of thee! Of clouds and corn, and all sweet sights Of shade and sunshine, flower and tree. of running waters rippling clear, Of merry birds, and gipsey camp, Then how I loathed 10 see and hear That ticking watch—that sickly lamp. And long'd at least for light again ; For day-that brought no change to me; The weight was on my heart and brain, God might remove it-only He. But now and then the fount of tears, So seeming dry, was free to flow; 'T was worth the happiness of years, That short-lived luxury of woe! And in the midst of all my pain I knew I was not quite forgot ; I knew my cry was not in vain So I was sad, but fainted not. And now His merciful command Hath lighten'd what was worst to bear; And given of better days at hand A foretaste in this blessed air. Miss BOWLES FIRST INQUIRIES FATHER, who made all the beautiful flowers, And the bright green shades of the summer bowers ? Is it the warm beaming sun that brings The emerald leaves and the blossomingsFlowers to the field and fruits to the tree? -Not the sun, my dear child, but one greater than he! Father, whose hand form’d the blue-tinted sky, Its colour'd clouds and its radiancy? What are those stars we view shining in air ? What power ever keeps them suspended there? Was it man form’d the skies and the glories we see? -Not man, my dear child, but one greater than he! Father, from whence came our own lovely land, With its rivers and seas, and its mountains so grand; Its tall frowning rocks and its shell-spangled shore ? Were these not the works of some people of yore? Owe these not their birth to man's own good decree? -Not to man, my dear child, but one greater than he! From God came the trees, and the flowers, and the earth, To God do the mountains and seas owe their birth; His glory alone, love, created on high, The sun, moon, and stars, and the beautiful sky. C. SWAIN. VERSES INSCRIBED IN AN ALBUM. To meet the eye of lady gay? For page like this no fitting lay. |