Page:The Emigrants.pdf/55

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[ 51 ]

For bread, and scanty bread, is all he earns
For him and for his household­—Should Disease,
Born of chill wintry rains, arrest his arm,
Then, thro' his patch'd and straw‐stuff'd casement, peeps
The squalid figure of extremest Want;
And from the Parish the reluctant dole,
Dealt by th' unfeeling farmer, hardly saves
The ling'ring spark of life from cold extinction:
Then the bright Sun of Spring, that smiling bids
All other animals rejoice, beholds,
Crept from his pallet, the emaciate wretch
Attempt, with feeble effort, to resume
Some heavy task, above his wasted strength,
Turning his wistful looks (how much in vain!)
To the deserted mansion, where no more
The owner (gone to gayer scenes) resides,