Page:The Vow of the Peacock.pdf/330

Rh

Dark cypress! I see thee—thou art my reply, Why the tears of the night on thy comrade trees lie; That laurel it wreathed the red brow of the brave, Yet thy shadow lies black on the warrior's grave. That rose was less bright than the lip which it prest, Yet thy sad branches bend o'er the maiden's last rest; The brave and the lovely alike they are sleeping, I marvel no more rose and laurel are weeping.

Yet, sunbeam of heaven! thou fall'st on the tomb— Why pausest thou by such dwelling of doom? Before thee the grove and the garden are spread— Why lingerest thou round the place of the dead? Thou art from another, a lovelier sphere, Unknown to the sorrows that darken us here.