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THE

CHILD'S BURIAL IN SPRING.

I.

WHERE Ocean's waves to the hollow caves murmur a low wild hymn,

In pleasant musing I pursued my solitary way; Then upwards wending from the shore, amid the woodlands dim,

From the gentle height, like a map in sight, the downward country lay.

'Twas in the smile of "6

noontide clear;

II.

green Aprile," a cloudless

In ecstasy the birds sang forth from many a leafing

tree;

Both bud and bloom, with fresh perfume, proclaim'd the awaken'd year;

And Earth, array'd in beauty's robes, seem'd Heaven itself to be.

VOL. I.

III.

So cheerfully the sun shone out, so smilingly the sky

O'erarch'd green earth, so pleasantly the stream meander'd on,

So joyous was the murmur of the honey-bee and

fly,

That of our fall, which ruin'd all, seem'd traces few

or none.

IV.

Then hopes, whose gilded pageantry wore all the hues of truth

Elysian thoughts — Arcadian dreams-the poet's fabling strain

Again seem'd shedding o'er our world an amaranthine youth,

And left no vestiges behind of death, decay, or pain.

V.

At length I reach'd a churchyard gate-a churchyard? Yes! but there

Breathed out such calm serenity o'er everything around,

That "the joy of grief" (as Ossian sings) o'erbalm'd the very air,

And the place was less a mournful place than consecrated ground.

VI.

Beneath the joyous noontide sun, beneath the cloudless sky,

'Mid bees that humm'd and birds that sang, and

flowers that gemm'd the wild,

The sound of measured steps was heard-a grave stood yawning by—

And lo! in sad procession slow, the Funeral of a Child!

VII.

I saw the little coffin borne unto its final rest; The dark mould shovell'd o'er it, and replaced the daisied sod;

I mark'd the deep convulsive throes that heaved the Father's breast,

As he return'd (too briefly given !) that loan of love to God!

VIII.

Then rose in my rebellious heart unhallow'd thoughts and wild,

Daring the inscrutable decrees of Providence to

Scan

How death should be allotted to a pure, a sinless

child,

And length of days the destiny of sinful, guilty

man!

IX.

The laws of the material world seem'd beautiful and

clear;

The day and night, the bloom and blight, and seasons as they roll

In regular vicissitude to form a circling year,

Made up of parts dissimilar, and yet a perfect whole.

X.

But darkness lay o'er the moral way which man is told to tread ;

A shadow veil'd the beam divine by Revelation

lent:

"How awfully mysterious are thy ways, O Heaven!"

I said;

"We see not whence, nor know for what fate's arrows oft are sent !"

XI.

Under the shroud of the sullen cloud, when the hills are capp'd with snow,

When the moaning breeze, through leafless trees, bears tempest on its wing—

In the Winter's wrath, we think of death; but not when lilies blow,

And, Lazarus-like, from March's tomb walks forth triumphant Spring.

XII.

As in distress o'er this wilderness I mused of stir

and strife,

Where, 'mid the dark, seem'd scarce a mark our tangled path to scan,

A shadow o'er the season fell; a cloud o'er human life

A veil to be by Eternity but ne'er by time withdrawn !

SPRING HYMN.

T.

How pleasant is the opening year!
The clouds of Winter melt away;
The flowers in beauty reappear;

The songster carols from the spray;
Lengthens the more refulgent day;
And bluer glows the arching sky;
All things around us seem to say—
"Christian! direct thy thoughts on high."

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