Page:Littell's Living Age - Volume 137.pdf/333

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322
SPRING SONGS, ETC.


SPRING SONGS.

Wake ye, oh! wake thro' the echoing wood,
Sweet birds with songs that are blither than laughter!
Tell us once more how the spring-tide's new blood
Flushes and mantles each dim forest rafter!

Did they not hear you, and know you full well,
They who once wandered thro' Eden's bright bowers?
Knew not the wisest of monarchs your spell,
Oft as ye woke by the temple's fair towers?

Constant your voice as the radiant stars
Shining in beauty far o'er the lone mountain,
Dear to all time as the summer-blue skies,
Fresh as the crystal light thrown from the fountain!

Yes, I can think of the millions of men
List'ning and loving your sweet songs before me.
Ay! and of millions more list'ning again,
When the long grass shall wave silently o'er me.

Blithe little birds! ye are singing to-day
Sweetest of all where our dear dead are sleeping;
There, by the old church walls, timeworn and grey,
Rising thro' bright ivy-wreaths round them creeping,

Over the cold dust that never again
Knoweth a care for the fast-coming morrow;
Lips that are silent, and hearts free from pain,
Eyes that have long closed forever on sorrow.

Well for us all that it rings out so clear,
This your glad song o'er the low graves before us!
Bravely you tell of that spring drawing near
When the dark winter of death shall pass o'er us.

Wake then, oh! wake thro' the echoing wood,
Sweet birds with songs that are blither than laughter!
Wake ye! and sing how the spring-tide's new blood
Flushes and mantles each dim forest rafter!

Cassell's Magazine.Robina F. Hardy.




WIND AND WEATHER.

METEOROLOGICAL IDYL.

"The sun bursts out in frequent blaze;
Shade flies, light flashes o'er the wold.
But yet in air there hangs a haze,
And what can make it blow so cold?

"The steeple cock points beak due west;
His tail the other way turns he.
Though that, meseems, is where his crest
In such a breeze as this should be.

"So cold has Christmas seldom been.
It ne'er was colder, e'en in May.
Why does the wind's edge cut so keen?
Turn, pensive shepherd, turn and say."

"Stranger, yon vaporous mountains note,
Cumuli, Alps on Alps, up there!
They're frozen clouds, aloft that float
As icebergs in the sea of air.

"Their rimy crags illumed, how fast
See how they change, and surge, and grow;
Whilst Zephyr apes an eastern blast,
Because the sky is full of snow."

"Thanks, guardian of the fleecy flock.
How rare, how pleasing, 'tis to find
'Mongst rustics reared from lowly stock
A cultured and observant mind!"

"Kind stranger, scant's the laborer's hire
In this inclement atmosphere;
And welcome — pardon the desire —
To his parched lips a draught of beer."

"Nay, shepherd, breathe not that request;
Banish strong drink from downs and plains:
Where Science wears the bumpkin's vest,
Let Temperance rule contented swains."

Punch.




TO ETHEL,

(Who wishes she had lived —
"In teacup-times of hood and hoop,
Or while the patch was worn.")

"In teacup times!" The style of dress
Would suit your beauty, I confess;
Belinda-like, the patch you'd wear;
I picture you with powdered hair, —
You'd make a charming shepherdess!

And I — no doubt — could well express
Sir Plume's complete conceitedness, —
Could poise a clouded cane with care
"In teacup-times!"

The parts would fit precisely — yes:
We should achieve a huge success;
You should disdain, and I despair,
With quite the true Augustan air;
But … could I love you more, or less,
"In teacup-times?"

Blackwood's Magazine.Austin Dobson.