She knows no English; yet I speak
That language, and her paling cheek
With watery floods is overcast.—
Fair maid, we talk of times long past;
A friend we often mourn in vain—
A knight in distant battle slain,
Whose bones had moulder’d in the earth
Full many a year before thy birth.
He fed our ears with songs of old,
And one was of a heart of gold,—
A native ditty I would fain,
But never yet could hear again.
It spoke of friendship like his own,
Once only in existence known.
My prime of life the blessing crost,
And with it life’s first charm I lost!’
“’Chieftain, allow
me, on my knee
To sing that English song
to thee!
For then I never
dare to stand,
Nor take the harp
within my hand;
Sacred it also is to me!
And it should please thy fancy
well,
Since dear the lips from whence
it fell;
’And dear the language
which conveys
The only theme of real praise!
O! if in very truth thou art
A mourner for that loyal heart,
A lowly minstrel maid forgive,
Who strives to make remembrance
live!’
Song.
“’Betimes my heritage
was sold
To buy this heart of solid
gold.
Ye all, perchance, have jewels
fine,
But what are such compar’d
to mine?
O! they are formal, poor,
and cold,
And out of fashion when they’re
old;—
But this is of unchanging
ore,
And every day is valued more.
Not all the eye could e’er
behold
Should purchase back this
heart of gold.
“’How oft its
temper has been tried!
Its noble nature purified!
And still it from the furnace
came
Uninjur’d by the subtil
flame.
Like truth itself, pale, simple,
pure,
Yielding, yet fitted to endure,—
No rust, no tarnish can arise,
To hide its lustre from our
eyes;
And this world’s choicest
gift I hold,
While I can keep my heart
of gold.
“’Whatever treasure
may be lost,
Whatever project may be crost,
Whatever other boon denied,
The amulet I long have tried
Has still a sweet, attractive
power
To draw the confidential hour,—
That hour for weakness and
for grief,
For true condolement, full
belief!
O! I can never feel bereft,
While one possession shall
be left;
That which I now in triumph
hold,
This dear, this cherish’d
heart of gold!
“’Come, all who
wish to be enroll’d!
Our order is, the heart of
gold.
The vain, the artful, and
the nice,
Can never pay the weighty
price;
For they must selfishness
abjure,
Have tongue, and hand, and
conscience pure;
Suffering for friendship,