THE OLD AND THE NEW.


NOT to the beauteous maid who weeps

And wails in broken numbers,

Where ’neath the solemn cypress sleeps

The brave in dreamless slumbers.

Oh, not to her whose pallid cheeks

With form all bent and broken

An utter loss of promise speaks

And perished hopes betoken.

Ah, not to her!—the sorrowing maid

Who sighs so sad and lowly,

Where our “Lost Cause and Cross” were laid,

Keeping their memories holy.

Ah, not to her whose sons have passed

To rest in peace sedately,

To glory and the grave at last,

In soldier phalanx stately;

That sleep beneath the mountain sod

Or by the murmuring rivers,

Beneath the blooming prairie clod

Or where the sea breeze quivers.

The past is God’s, the future ours,

And o’er our plains and mountains

The young spring comes with thousand flowers

And music in bright fountains.

Oh, let the bugle and the drum

Pass to the halls of glory,

Where time has made our passions dumb

And fame has told its story.

But let no High Priest of despair

Wed us to shades of sorrow,

Or bind our younger limbs and fair

In all our bright to-morrow.

Oh, not for her our younger years

Whose beauty bloomed to perish—

Enough a whole decade of tears,

Sad memories that we cherish.

But thou, sweet maid, whose gentle wand

Doth bring the May-time blossom—

We kiss thy lips and clasp thy hand

And press thy beauteous bosom.

Thou who dost teach us to forgive

The red hand of our brother,

And binds us closer while we live

To Country, as a mother.

Ah, wedded to this Newer South

We’ll find peace, love and glory,

And in some future singer’s mouth

Freedom will boast the story.

J. M. Gibson.

Vicksburg, January 14, 1890.