Page:Poems Sigourney, 1834.pdf/230

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A FATHER TO HIS MOTHERLESS CHILDREN.
229


Begin, sweet birds, the accustomed strain,
    Come, warble loud and clear;
Alas! alas! you're weeping all,
    You're sobbing in my ear;
Good night—go say the prayer she taught,
    Beside your little bed,
The lips that used to bless you there,
    Are silent with the dead.

A father's hand your course may guide
    Amid the thorns of life,
His care protect those shrinking plants
    That dread the storms of strife;
But who, upon your infant hearts
    Shall like that mother write?
Who touch the strings that rule the soul?
    Dear, smitten flock, good night!