ALPINE FLOWERS.

Meek dwellers 'mid yon terror-stricken cliffs!

With brows so pure, and incense-breathing lips,

Whence are ye? Did some white-winged messenger

On mercy’s missions trust your timid germ

To the cold cradle of eternal snows?

Or, breathing on the callous icicles,

Bid them with tear-drops nurse ye?

—Tree nor shrub

Dare that drear atmosphere; no polar pine

Uprears a veteran front; yet there ye stand,

Leaning your cheeks against the thick-ribb’d ice,

And looking up with brilliant eyes to Him

Who bids you bloom unblanch’d amid the waste

Of desolation. Man, who, panting, toils

O’er slippery steeps, or, trembling, treads the verge

Of yawning gulfs, o’er which the headlong plunge

Is to eternity, looks shuddering up,

And marks ye in your placid loveliness—

Fearless, yet frail—and, clasping his still hands,

Blesses your pencil’d beauty. 'Mid the pomp

Of mountain summits rushing on the sky,

And chaining the rapt soul in breathless awe,

He bows to bind you drooping to his breast,

Inhales your spirit from the frost-wing’d gale

And freer breathes of heaven.

Lydia H. Sigourney.