THE RAINBOW.

“I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant between me and the earth.”—Genesis, ix. 13.

Soft falls the mild, reviving shower

From April’s changeful skies,

And rain-drops bend each trembling flower

They tinge with richer dyes.

Soon shall their genial influence call

A thousand buds to day,

Which, waiting but that balmy fall,

In hidden beauty lay.

E’en now full many a blossom’s bell

With fragrance fills the shade;

And verdure clothes each grassy dell,

In brighter tints array’d.

But mark! what arch of varied hue

From heaven to earth is bow’d?

Haste, ere it vanish!—haste to view

The rainbow in the cloud!

How bright its glory! there behold

The emerald’s verdant rays,

The topaz blends its hue of gold

With the deep ruby’s blaze.

Yet not alone to charm thy sight

Was given the vision fair—

Gaze on that arch of colour’d light,

And read God’s mercy there.

It tells us that the mighty deep,

Fast by the Eternal chain’d,

No more o’er earth’s domain shall sweep,

Awful and unrestrain’d.

It tells that seasons, heat and cold,

Fix’d by his sovereign will,

Shall, in their course, bid man behold

Seed-time and harvest still;

That still the flower shall deck the field,

When vernal zephyrs blow,

That still the vine its fruit shall yield,

When autumn sunbeams glow.

Then, child of that fair earth! which yet

Smiles with each charm endow’d,

Bless thou His name, whose mercy set

The rainbow in the cloud!