Page:Sentimental reciter.pdf/3



NONE will dwell in that cottage, for they say

Oppression reft it from an honest man,

And that a curse clings to it: hence the vine

Trails its green weight of leaves upon the ground;

Hence weeds are in that garden; hence the hedge,

Once sweet with honey-suckle, is half dead;

And hence the grey moss on the apple-tree.

One once dwelt there, who had been in his youth

A soldier; and when many years had pass’d

He sought his native village, and sat down

To end his days in peace. He had one child——

A little laughing thing, whose large dark eyes,

He said, were like the mother’s she had left

Buried in stranger lands; and time went on

In comfort and content—and that fair girl

Had grown far taller than the red rose tree

Her father planted her first English birth-day;

And he had train’d it up against an ash

Till it became his pride;—it was so rich

In blossom and in beauty, it was call’d

The tree of Isabel. Twas an appeal

To all the better feelings of the heart

To mark their quiet happiness; their home,

In truth, a home of love; and more than all,

To see them on the Sabbath, when they came

Among the first to church; and Isabel,

With her bright colour and her clear glad eyes,

Bowed down so meekly in the house of prayer;

And in the hymn her sweet voice audible:——

Her father look’d so fond of her, and then

From her look’d up so thankfully to Heaven!

And their small cottage was so very neat;

Their garden filled with fruits, and herbs, and flowers;