THE BLIND HARPER.

Rest thee—companion of my toilsome way—

And thou, my gentle guide. Beside the fount

That with its plashing coolness bathes my hand,

And sends its dewy moisture to my brow,

We’ll sit—till the fresh breath of evening comes

To cool the burning air;—for I am faint

Beneath the burden of the summer’s day—

And feel my limbs bowed down with weariness.

And thy step too, my boy, has been less light,

Thy tone less buoyant, than when morning’s flowers

Were fresh beneath thy feet.—How faintly now

Rustles the drooping foliage—as the wind

Comes like the breath of infancy, when hushed

In quiet slumber on the mother’s breast.

How beautiful must be this visible world

To those whose sense can drink the glorious light

Shed over nature’s face! for whom the day,

Fresh dawning, brings in newer loveliness—

The rich and treasured beauties which the earth

Pours forth in glad profusion!—For my soul,

A world of unpierced darkness lies before;

The past, a waste where memory cannot pluck

One solitary blossom. Closed to me

Are nature’s stores of joy. In vain the sun

Sheds blessings down from his ambrosial throne

Upon a thousand charms—the lone old man

Beholds them not. The voice of birds in spring,

The whispered melody of murmuring streams,

The hum of insects, and the myriad tones

Of love and life, that on the liberal air,

Fraught with the perfumes of the breezy flowers,

Float like the breathings of some heavenly dream—

Are tuneless music to a weary heart.

And thou, my harp—last solace! though thy notes

Are dear to him who wakes them—though the wild,

Sad melody thou utterest brings back

The visions of my youth and all I loved;

Yet soon the hand that trembles o’er thee now

Shall strike thy chords no more;—withered and rent,

Like me, thou’lt lie neglected—rudely swept

By stern and wintry winds, or crushed beside

Thy master’s grave—his fitting monument.