"PRESS ON."

A RIVULET'S SONG.

"Just under an island, 'midst rushes and moss,

I was born of a rock-spring, and dew:

I was shaded by trees, whose branches and leaves

Ne'er suffered the sun to gaze through.

"I wandered around the steep brow of a hill,

Where the daisies and violets fair

Were shaking the mist from their wakening eyes,

And pouring their breath on the air.

"Then I crept gently on, and I moistened the feet

Of a shrub which infolded a nest—

The bird in return sang his merriest song,

And showed me his feathery crest.

"How joyous I felt in the bright afternoon,

When the sun, riding off in the west,

Came out in red gold from behind the green trees

And burnished ray tremulous breast!

"My memory now can return to the time

When the breeze murmured low plaintive tones,

While I wasted the day in dancing away,

Or playing with pebbles and stones.

"It points to the hour when the rain pattered down,

Oft resting awhile in the trees;

Then quickly descending it ruffled my calm,

And whispered to me of the seas!

"'Twas then the first wish found a home in my breast

To increase as time hurries along;

'Twas then I first learned to lisp softly the words

Which I now love so proudly—'Press on!'

"I'll make wider my bed, as onward I tread,

A deep mighty river I'll be—

'Press on' all the day will I sing on my way,

Till I enter the far-spreading sea."

It ceased. A youth lingered beside its green edge

Till the stars in its face brightly shone;

He hoped the sweet strain would re-echo again—

But he just heard a murmur—"Press on!"


[From Dickens's Household Words.]