Be cheerful as the lark that o'er yon hill, Who, that lives, Mrs Robinson. *THE WANDERER'S ROUNDELAY. Earth does not bear another wretch So helpless, so forlorn as I; And not for me a heart will sigh. Will not a thought to woe incline ; And few shall be The tears for me, There was a time when joy ran high, And every sadder thought was weak; Tears did not always dim this eye, Or sorrow always stain this cheek; When sunk in feverish broken sleep, And friends that love, then wake to weep That few shall be The tears for me, Travellers lament the clouded skies, The moralist the ruined hall, mark and mourn its fall ! But, ah I no dirge for me will ring, No stone will mark my lonely spot ; And few shall be The tears for me, Yet welcome, hour of parting breath, Come sure unerring dart—there's room For sorrow in the arms of death, For disappointment in the tomb : What though the slumbers there be deep, Though not by kind remembrance blest, To slumber is to cease to weep, To sleep forgotten is to rest ; Oh sound shall be The rest for me, Henry Neele. TO THE MEMORY OF A VERY PROMISING CHILD. Written after witnessing her last moments. I cannot weep, yet I can feel The pangs that rend a parent's breast ; Thy griefs, and wake the slumberer's rest? What art thou, spirit undefined, hat passest with man's breath away; That givest him feeling, sense, and mind, And leavest him cold, unconscious clay? A moment gone, I looked and lo! Sensation throbbed through all her frame; The next, a nameless change was wrought, Death nipt in twain life's brittle thread, And, in an instant, feeling, thought, Sensation, motion-all were fled ! Those lips shall never more repeat The welcome lesson conned with care; Or breathe at even, in accents sweet, To heaven the well-remembered prayer ! Those little hands shall ne'er essay To ply the mimic task again, A mother's promised gift to gain ! That heart is still no more to move ; That cheek is wan—no more to bloom, Or dimple in the smile of love, That speaks a parent's welcome home. And thou with years and sufferings bowed, Say, dost thou least this loss deplore ? Ah! though thy wailings are not loud, I fear thy secret grief is more. |