THE WONDERS OF THE LANE.

Strong climber of the mountain's side,

Though thou the vale disdain,

Yet walk with me where hawthorns hide

The wonders of the lane.

High o'er the rushy springs of Don

The stormy gloom is rolled;

The moorland hath not yet put on

His purple, green, and gold.

But here the titling[5] spreads his wing,

Where dewy daisies gleam;

And here the sunflower[6] of the spring

Burns bright in morning's beam.

To mountain winds the famish'd fox

Complains that Sol is slow,

O'er headlong steeps and gushing rocks

His royal robe to throw.

But here the lizard seeks the sun

Here coils, in light, the snake;

And here the fire-tuft[7] hath begun

Its beauteous nest to make.

Oh! then, while hums the earliest bee

Where verdure fires the plain,

Walk thou with me, and stoop to see

The glories of the lane!

For, oh! I love these banks of rock,

This roof of sky and tree,

These tufts, where sleeps the gloaming clock,

And wakes the earliest bee!

As spirits from eternal day

Look down on earth, secure,

Look here, and wonder, and survey

A world in miniature:

A world not scorned by Him who made

E'en weakness by his might;

But solemn in his depth of shade,

And splendid in his light.

Light!—not alone on clouds afar,

O'er storm-loved mountains spread,

Or widely teaching sun and star,

Thy glorious thoughts are read;

Oh, no I thou art a wondrous book

To sky, and sea, and land—

A page on which the angels look—

Which insects understand!

And here, O light! minutely fair,

Divinely plain and clear,

Like splinters of a crystal hair,

Thy bright small hand is here!

Yon drop-fed lake, six inches wide

Is Huron, girt with wood;

This driplet feeds Missouri's tide—

And that Niagara's flood.

What tidings from the Andes brings

Yon line of liquid light,

That down from heaven in madness flings

The blind foam of its might?

Do I not hear his thunder roll—

The roar that ne'er is still?

'Tis mute as death!—but in my soul

It roars, and ever will.

What forests tall of tiniest moss

Clothe every little stone!—

What pigmy oaks their foliage toss

O'er pigmy valleys lone!

With shade o'er shade, from ledge to ledge,

Ambitious of the sky,

They feather o'er the steepest edge

Of mountains mushroom-high.

Oh, God of marvels! who can tell

What myriad living things

On these gray stones unseen may dwell!

What nations, with their kings!

I feel no shock, I hear no groan,

While fate, perchance, o'erwhelms

Empires on this subverted stone—

A hundred ruined realms!

Lo! in that dot, some mite, like me,

Impelled by woe or whim,

May crawl, some atom's cliffs to see—

A tiny world to him!

Lo! while he pauses, and admires

The works of nature's might,

Spurned by my foot, his world expires,

And all to him is night!

Oh, God of terrors! what are we?—

Poor insects sparked with thought!

Thy whisper, Lord, a word from thee,

Could smite us into naught!

But should'st thou wreck our father-land,

And mix it with the deep,

Safe in the hollow of thy hand

Thy little one will sleep.

Amulet.