Page:Poems Sigourney, 1834.pdf/182

Rh Its ponderous limbs unfold. On arid sands Thus the gorged boa, from some deep repast Uncoils his length. Heaven smileth on those spires; But their loud bells, and organ-pipes, and hymns Of high response, are silent. Flame hath fallen Wherewith to kindle incense, but man locks His bosom's altar, and doth sell for sleep What Esau sold for pottage. Stately domes, And marble columns greet the rising sun, Yet not like Memnon's statute utter forth A gratulating tone. Aurora glides, Gaily pavilioned, on a purple cloud. Sworn worshippers of beauty, where are ye? Why Egypt's queen came not so daintily, When, on the Cydnus, her resplendent barge Left golden traces. But your eyes, perchance, Are dim with splendours of some midnight hall, And curtained close, forego this glorious sight. Hark, life doth stir itself! The dray-horse strikes His clattering hoof, and eyes with quivering limb The tyrant-lash. And there are wakeful eyes That watched for dawn, where sickness holds its sway, Marking with groans the dial-face of time. Half-famished penury from its vigil creeps, The money-getter to his labour goes, Gaunt avarice prowls—but where is wealth and power, The much-indebted, and the high-endowed? Count they heaven's gifts so carelessly, that morn With kindred blush no gratitude doth claim? Lo! from their plenitude, disease hath sprung, The dire disease that ossifies the heart, And luxury enchains them, when the soul With her fresh, waking pulse, should worship God.