Page:The New Monthly Magazine - Volume 101.djvu/184

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In the osier bank the ouzel sitting

Hath heard her steps, and away is flitting

From stone to stone, as she glides along,

And then sinks in the stream with a broken song.

The lapwing, fearless of his nest,

Stands looking around with his delicate crest;

For a love-like joy is in his cry,

As he wheels and darts and glances by.

Is the heron asleep on the silvery sand

Of his little lake? Lo! his wings expand

As a dreamy thought, and withouten dread

Cloud-like he floats o'er the maiden's head.

She looks to the birch-wood glade, and lo!

There is browsing there the mountain roe,

Who lifts up her gentle eyes, nor moves,

As on glides the form whom all nature loves.

Having spent in heaven an hour of mirth,

The lark drops down to the dewy earth,

And a silence smooths his yearning breast

In the gentle fold of his lowly nest;

The linnet takes up the hymn, unseen

In the yellow broom, or the bracken green;

And now, as the morning hours are glowing,

From the hill-side cots the cocks are crowing,

And the shepherd's dog is barking shrill

From the mist fast rising from the hill,

And the shepherd's self, with locks of grey,

Hath bless'd the maiden on her way!

And now she sees her own dear flock

On a verdant mound beneath the rock,

All close together in beauty and love,

Like the small fair clouds in heaven above,

And her innocent soul, at the peaceful sight,

Is swimming o'er with a still delight—Edith and Nora.

Another tender passage of tearful retrospect and meek longing follows:

…. Sweet Rydal lake!

Am I again to visit thee? to hear

Thy glad waves murmuring all around my soul?

Methinks I see us in a cheerful group

Walking along the margin of the bay,

Where our lone summer-house

Sweet mossy cell!

So cool—so shady—silent and composed!

A constant evening full of gentle dreams!

Where joy was felt like sadness, and our grief

A melancholy pleasant to be borne.

Hath the green linnet built her nest this spring

In her own rose-bush near the quiet door?

Bright solitary bird! she oft will miss

Her human friends; our orchard now must be

A wilderness of sweets, by none beloved.

One blessed week would soon restore its beauty,

Were we at home. Nature can work no wrong.

The very weeds how lovely! the confusion

Doth speak of breezes, sunshine, and the dew.

I hear the murmuring of a thousand bees