Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 150 pages of information about Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick.

Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 150 pages of information about Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick.

    THE LOST CHILDREN.

    At early morn a mother stood,
      Her hands were raised to heaven. 
    And she praised Almighty God
      For the blessings He had given;
    But far too deep were they
      Encircled in her heart,—­
    Too deep for human weal,
      For earth and love must part. 
    She looked with hope too bright
      On the forms that by her bent,
    And loved, by far too fondly,
      Those treasures God had sent. 
    They bound her to the earth,
      With love’s own golden chain,
    How were its bright links severed
      By the spirit’s wildest pain? 
    She parted the rich tresses,
      And kissed each snowy brow,
    And where, oh! happy mother,
      Was one so blest as thou? 
    The summer sun was shining
      All cloudless o’er the lea,
    When forth her children bounded,
      In childhood’s summer glee. 
    They strayed along the woody banks,
      All fringed with sunny green,
    Where, like a silver serpent,
      The river ran between. 
    Their glad young voices rose,
      As they thought of flower or bird,
    And they sang the joyous fancies
      That in each spirit stirred. 
    Oh! sister, see that humming bird;
      Saw ye ever ought so fair? 
    With wings of gold and ruby,
      He sparkles through the air;
    Let us follow where he flies
      O’er yonder hazel dell,
    For oh! it must be beautiful
      Where such a thing can dwell. 
    Yet to me it seemeth still,
      That his rest must be on high;
    Methinks his plumes are bathed
      In the even’s crimson sky: 
    How lovely is this earth,
      Where such fair things we see,
    And yet how much more glorious
      The power that bids them be! 
    Nay, sister, let us stay
      Where those water lilies float,
    So spotless and so pure
      Like a fairy’s pearly boat. 
    Listen to the melody
      That cometh soft and low,
    As through the twining tendrils
      The water glides below. 
    Perchance ’twas in a spot like this,
      And by a stream as mild,
    Where the Jewish mother laid
      Her gentle Hebrew child. 
    Then rested they beneath the trees,
      Where, through the leafy shade,
    In ever-changing radiance,
      The broken sun-light played;
    And spoke in words, whose simple truth
      Revealed the guileless soul,
    Till softly o’er their senses
      A quiet slumber stole. 
    Lo! now a form comes glancing
      Along the waters blue,
    And moored among the lilies
      Lay an Indian’s dark canoe. 
    The days of ancient feud were gone. 
      The axe was buried deep. 
    And stilled the red man’s warfare,
      In unawaking sleep. 
    Why stands he then so silently,
      Where those fair

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Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.