Page:Poems Hornblower.djvu/117

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

105

Youth, beauty, rapture, gaiety, these are not for thee,
Ah! lightly pass the tranquil homes where happy spirits be.

But if, insatiate as thou art, thy victims still must fall,
O'er those whose dearest ones are gone, extend thy fatal pall;
The weeping orphan will not shrink, all fearful though thou prove,
If thou wilt yield her once again a parent's smile of love.

And she whose dreams, whose fondest dreams, lie low within the grave,
Who o'er the most beloved on earth, now sees the green grass wave;
The fever and the pestilence—oh! what are they to her?
The heart that lives o'er such a loss—hath it aught to fear?

Then come in all thy horrors—there are hearts that will not quail;
There are faces that will smile on thee, as other cheeks turn pale;
And briefly do thy cruel work: soon, soon as it is o'er,
Immortal hopes, immortal joys, shall spring beyond thy power!