SONNET.
TO ............
ON HER RECOVERY FROM ILLNESS.
Fair flower! that fall’n beneath the angry blast,
Which marks with wither’d sweets
its fearful way,
I grieve to see thee on the low earth cast,
While beauty’s trembling tints fade
fast away.
But who is she, that from the mountain’s head
Comes gaily on, cheering the child of
earth;
The walks of woe bloom bright beneath her tread,
And nature smiles with renovated mirth?
’Tis Health! she comes, and hark! the vallies
ring.
And hark! the echoing hills repeat the
sound;
She sheds the new-blown blossoms of the spring,
And all their fragrance floats her footsteps
round.
And hark! she whispers in the zephyr’s voice,
Lift up thy head, fair flower! rejoice!
rejoice!
A FRAGMENT
Oh, Youth! could dark futurity reveal
Her hidden worlds, unlock her cloud-hung gates,
Or snatch the keys of mystery from time,
Your souls would madden at the piercing sight
Of fortune, wielding high her woe-born arms
To crush aspiring genius, seize the wreath
Which fond imagination’s hand had weav’d,
Strip its bright beams, and give the wreck to air.
Forth from Cimmeria’s nest of vipers, lo!
Pale envy trails its cherish’d form, and views,
With eye of cockatrice, the little pile
Which youthful merit had essay’d to raise;
From shrouded night his blacker arm he draws,
Replete with vigor from each heavenly blast,
To cloud the glories of that infant sun,
And hurl the fabric headlong to the ground.
How oft, alas! through that envenom’d blow,
The youth is doom’d to leave his careful toils
To slacken and decay, which might, perchance,
Have borne him up on ardor’s wing to fame.
And should we not, with equal pity, view
The fair frail wanderer, doom’d, through perjur’d
vows,
To lurk beneath a rigid stoic’s frown,
’Till that sweet moment comes, which her sad
days
Of infamy, of want, and pain have wing’d.
But here the reach of human thought is lost!
What, what must be the parent’s heart-felt pangs,
Who sees his child, perchance his only child!
Thus struggling in the abyss of despair,
To sin indebted for a life of woe.
Still worse, if worse can be! the thought must sting
(If e’er reflection calls it from the bed
Of low oblivion) that ignoble wretch,
The cruel instrument of all their woe;
Sure it must cut his adamantine heart
More than ten thousand daggers onward plung’d,
With all death’s tortures quivering on their
points.
Oh! that we could but pierce the siren guise,
Spread out before the unsuspecting mind,
Which, conscious of its innocence within,
Treads on the rose-strew’d path, but finds,
too late,
That ruin opes its ponderous jaws beneath.
Lo! frantic grief succeeds the bitter fall,
And pining anguish mourns the fatal step;
’Till that great Pow’r who, ever watchful
stands,
Shall give us grace from his eternal throne
To feel the faithful tear of penitence,
The only recompense for ill-spent life.