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