Page:Poems Angier.djvu/235

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THE TREE'S LESSON.
221
The sower must lie in his bed of dust,
As slept that brown seed long ago;
But of good deed done, 'neath that tropical sun,
Will thousands of grateful hearts know.

The Upas and deadly night-shade fling
Their withering chill on the air;
But this tree's pure breath is a foe to death—
It, balm-laden, banishes care.

Youth, manhood, and age 'neath its branches repose,
As glide the years silently by;
While the sower, perchance, looks smilingly down
From the "sky above the sky."

O pilgrim, so weary—O toiler, so faint—
Take heart, for this wonderful tree,
Though voiceless, hath speech, though dumb, it can teach,—
A mentor-friend proving to thee.

Its lesson so holy I leave thee to guess,
E'en now hath thy soul it divined,—
In meekness, faith, patience, in silence, hope, trust,
Toil on for the good of thy kind.