Page:Once a Week Volume V.djvu/336

 . 14, 1861.]

, dear—on neither lawn nor hill, Nor in our forest mazes, Dwell those child-loved flowers of home Your bright-eyed English daisies.

I used to wish my babes could play About your grass-plot mossy, With king-cups strewn upon their hair, As golden and as glossy:—

Or sit beneath your trellised bower Where the roses bloomed so early, Weaving long strings of daisy chains, Gold-boss’d, pink-tipp’d, and pearly.

I vainly craved that they should feel Your fond and warm caressing, And share the love that thro’ long years To me brought priceless blessing.

Oft have I counted o’er my lost, With tears of wistful sorrow; And, full as oft, new happiness Brought smiles upon the morrow.

Now, ’tis my Faith, for one denied, Another boon is given; If we have fewer stars on Earth We have a brighter Heaven.

For daisies we have lilies sweet, And, for the city’s riot, The silence of untrodden hills, Folded in sunny quiet.

Near one (now long-left) sea-side home, I lovingly remember The glorious wealth of lily-blooms In summer-crown’d December.

And still, their perfume (like the mists Of fragrant incense, stealing Around a wizard’s mirror’d scene, Distance, or death revealing)

Shows softly to my memory, how One summer-eve, we rambled Along the beach, and o’er the cliffs, And how the children scrambled!

And where we sat upon the rocks, While the drowsy air was bringing Adown the shady inland slopes The she-oat’s plaintive singing.

The blue, bird-dotted sea, asleep, Murmur’d its dream-thoughts inly; And on its ever-heaving breast Cloud-shadows lay serenely.

Three sister-islets in the bay With lichens many-tinted (Like painter’s palette freshly sot), In sunset splendour glinted.

Five silv’ry lights were on the sea, ’Twixt shore and islets floating:— An argosy from fairy land!— Titania, out a boating!

The white sails flap, and furl away— The prows are like old galleys— All imaged in the glassy deep That softly round them dallies.”

Ah! see—while we with idle dreams People the scene entrancing, Five pelicans are rising, where The mullet-shoal is glancing!

With grey and silver plumes up-borne, And well-provisioued pouches, Our stately neighbours wing their way Off, to their beach laid couches.

Now, children—home! The sun has set, The evening breeze is chilly:— Alas! I fear you have not left A single summer-lily!

They laugh, and point:—I cannot miss (So bountiful the treasures) The many handsful that have gone To yield the evening’s pleasures.