Plunges, until its far-off echoes come
Fainter and fainter, like the dying roll
Of thunders in the distance.
... Beautiful
Are all the thousand snow-white gems that lie
In these mysterious chambers, gleaming out
Amid the melancholy gloom, and wild
These rocky hills and cliffs, and gulfs, but far
More beautiful and wild, the things that greet
The wanderer in our world of light—the stars
Floating on high, like islands of the blest,—
The autumn sunsets glowing like the gate
Of far-off Paradise; the gorgeous clouds
On which the glories of the earth and sky
Meet, and commingle; earth’s unnumbered flowers,
All turning up their gentle eyes to heaven;
The birds, with bright wings glancing in the sun,
Filling the air with rainbow miniatures;
The green old forests surging in the gale;
The everlasting mountains, on whose peaks
The setting sun burns like an altar-flame.
* * * * *
=_Charles Constantine Pise, 1802-1866._= (Manual, p. 532.)
From “The Pleasures of Religion.”
=_353._= THE RAINBOW.
Mark, o’er yon wild, as melts the
storm away,
The rainbow tints their various hues display;
Beauteous, though faint, though deeply
shaded, bright,
They span the clearing heavens, and charm
the sight.
Yes, as I gaze, methinks I view—the
while,
Hope’s radiant form, and Mercy’s
genial smile.
Who doth not see, in that sweet bow of
heaven,
Circling around the twilight hills of
even,
Religion’s light, which o’er
the wilds of life
Shoots its pure rays through misery and
strife;
Soothes the lone bosom, as it pines in
woe,
And turns to heaven this barren world
below?
O, what were man, did not her hallowed
ray
Disperse, the clouds that thicken on his
way!
A weary pilgrim, left in cheerless gloom,
To grope his midnight journey to the tomb;
His life a tempest, death, a wreck forlorn,
In sorrow dying, as in sorrow born.
* * * * *
From “The Tourist”
=_354._= VIEW AT GIBRALTAR.
And from this height, how beauteous to
survey
The neighboring shores, the bright cerulean
bay:
Myriads of sails are swelling on the deep,
And oars, in myriads, through the waters
sweep.
Behold, in peace, all nations here unite,
Their various pennons streaming to the
sight:
The red cross glows, the Danish crown
appears,
The half-moon rises, and the lion rears,
But mark, bold-towering o’er the
conscious wave,
The starry banners of my country brave,
Stream like a meteor to the wooing breeze,
And float all-radiant o’er the sunny
seas!
Hail, native flag! for ever mayst thou
blow—
Hope to the friend, and terror to the
foe!
Again I hail thee, Calpe! on thy steep