Pocahontas and Other Poems (New York)/Farewell to a Rural Residence

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
4053713Pocahontas and Other Poems (New York)Farewell to a Rural Residence1836Lydia Huntley Sigourney


FAREWELL TO A RURAL RESIDENCE.



How beautiful it stands,
    Behind its elm-tree’s screen,
With simple attic cornice crown'd,
    All graceful and serene;
Most sweet, yet sad, it is
    Upon yon scene to gaze,
And list its inborn melody,
    The voice of other days;

For there, as many a year
    Its varied chart unroll'd,
I hid me in those quiet shades,
    And call'd the joys of old;
I call'd them, and they came
    When vernal buds appear'd,
Or where the vine-clad summer bower
    Its temple-roof uprear'd,

Or where the o'erarching grove
    Spread forth its copses green,
While eye-bright and asclepias rear'd
    Their untrain'd stalks between,
And the squirrel from the boughs
    His broken nuts let fall,
And the merry, merry little birds
    Sang at his festival.


Yon old forsaken nests
    Returning spring shall cheer,
And thence the unfledged robin breathe
    His greeting wild and clear;
And from yon clustering vine,
    That wreathes the casement round,
The humming-birds' unresting wing
    Send forth a whirring sound;

And where alternate springs
    The lilach's purple spire
Fast by its snowy sister's side;
    Or where, with wing of fire,
The kingly oriole glancing went
    Amid the foliage rare,
Shall many a group of children tread,
    But mine will not be there.

Fain would I know what forms
    The mastery here shall keep,
What mother in yon nursery fair
    Rock her young babes to sleep:
Yet blessings on the hallow'd spot,
    Though here no more I stray,
And blessings on the stranger-babes
    Who in those halls shall play.

Heaven bless you, too, my plants,
    And every parent bird
That here, among the woven boughs,
    Above its young hath stirr'd.

I kiss your trunks, ye ancient trees,
    That often o'er my head
The blossoms of your flowery spring
    In fragrant showers have shed.

Thou, too, of changeful mood,
    I thank thee, sounding stream,
That blent thine echo with my thought,
    Or woke my musing dream.
I kneel upon the verdant turf,
    For sure my thanks are due
To moss-cup and to clover-leaf,
    That gave me draughts of dew.

To each perennial flower,
    Old tenants of the spot,
The broad-leaf'd lily of the vale,
    And the meek forget-me-not,
To every daisy's dappled brow,
    To every violet blue,
Thanks! thanks! may each returning year
    Your changeless bloom renew.

Praise to our Father-God,
    High praise, in solemn lay,
Alike for what his hand hath given,
    And what it takes away:
And to some other loving heart
    May all this beauty be
The dear retreat, the Eden-home
    That it hath been to me.