As the child sat, the tendrils shook round
her;
And, blended tenderly in middle air,
Gleamed the long orchard through the ivied
gate:
And slanting sunbeams made the heart elate,
Startling it into gladness like the sound,—
Which echo childlike mimicks faintly round
Blending it with the lull of some far
flood,—
Of one long shout heard in a quiet wood.
A gurgling laugh far off the fountain
sent,
As if the mermaid shape that in it bent
Spoke with subdued and faintest melody:
And birds sang their whole hearts spontaneously.
When from your books released, pass here
your hours,
Dear child, the sweet companion of these
flowers,
These poplars, scented shrubs, and blossomed
boughs
Of fruit-trees, where the noisy sparrows
house,
Shaking from off the leaves the beaded
dew.
Now while the air is warm, the heavens
blue,
Give full abandonment to all your gay
Swift childlike impulses in rompish play;—
The while your sisters in shrill laughter
shout,
Whirling above the leaves and round about,—
Until at length it drops behind the wall,—
With awkward jerks, the particoloured
ball:
Winning a smile even from the stooping
age
Of that old matron leaning on her page,
Who in the orchard takes a stroll or two,
Watching you closely yet unseen by you.
Then, tired of gambols, turn into the
dark
Fir-skirted margins of your father’s
park;
And watch the moving shadows, as you pass,
Trace their dim network on the tufted
grass,
And how on birch-trunks smooth and branches
old,
The velvet moss bursts out in green and
gold,
Like the rich lustre full and manifold
On breasts of birds that star the curtained
gloom
From their glass cases in the drawing
room.
Mark the spring leafage bend its tender
spray
Gracefully on the sky’s aerial grey;
And listen how the birds so voluble
Sing joyful paeans winding to a swell,
And how the wind, fitful and mournful,
grieves
In gusty whirls among the dry red leaves;
And watch the minnows in the water cool,
And floating insects wrinkling all the
pool.
So in your ramblings bend your earnest
eyes.
High thoughts and feelings
will come unto you,—
Gladness will fall upon your
heart like dew,—
Because you love the earth and love the
skies.
Fair pearl, the pride of all our family:
Girt with the plenitude of
joys so strong,
Fashion and custom dull can
do no wrong:
Nestling your young face thus on Nature’s
knee.
“Jesus Wept”
Mary rose up, as one in sleep might rise,
And went to meet her brother’s
Friend: and they
Who tarried with her said:
“she goes to pray
And weep where her dead brother’s
body lies.”
So, with their wringing of hands and with