We met as strangers, Lady, tho' the scenes On which thine eyes first opened, were the same To which the sports of childhood, and the hopes Of Manhood's flattering dawn, had bound my heart With cords of filial love indissoluble. We part as strangers, tho' the self-same roof So long has sheltered both. I hear thy voice— I hear thy fairy step—and trace the print Of the soft kiss, with which thy lip has prest My infant's cheek; and see her little hands Rich with the gifts thy kindness has bestowed. And this is all: but there is more than this That with a link of sympathy connects My heart with thee, as if some common lot, Some common spell of destiny had bound Our fates in one. And we have much in common. The hope that guides thy steps to distant lands, In quest of pleasures, such as boundless wealth, And friends, and youth, and peerless beauty promise— How much unlike the stern necessity, Which drove me forth to roam thro' desarts wild, And on the confines of society, Where the fierce savage whets the vengeful knife 'Gainst cultivated brutes more fierce than he, Through hardship, toil and strife, to win my bread!
But O! to leave the scenes of happy youth— The Father's sheltering roof, the Mother's care, The blithe play-fellows of our childish sports, The gay companions of our gladsome hours, The cherished friend, whose sympathy consoled The petty griefs, that, like a fleecy cloud, But dimmed the sunshine of our spring of life, And, having shed its freshness on the heart, Melted away, leaving the scene more fair;— To lose all these!—what is it but the type Of that last fatal wrench, that tears the heart At once from all we love; and in one doom, One common bond of sympathy, unites The unnumbered victims, who in every rank, Through every walk, throng to the gates of Death? May we not deem that the fond Mother's heart, Though couched in bliss celestial, yet will yearn To her deserted Child? And will not thine, Where'er thy steps may roam, true to the pole Of all thy young affections, point thy thoughts To the fair scenes, clothed by thy fairy hand With every charm of hue, and scent, and shade, Thyself the brightest ornament? O yes! From the rich isle, where science, art and wealth Have crowded every joy, the ravished sense, And heart, and mind can covet; from the plains Of France the beauteous; from the vine-crowned hills That in the glassy bosom of the Rhine Their blushing fruitages reflected see; From classic Italy, the "marble waste" Of desecrated fane, and ruined tower, And silent palaces, where once the doom Of empires was decreed, the heart will turn To Home. The trackless wild, where foot of man Has never broke the silence with its tread, Is not more lonely than the thronging scene, The "peopled solitude," where jostling crowds Elbow their way, regardless that we look Upon their strife—unconscious that we live. The moss-grown rock, that in the savage dell Has frowned for ages on the silent scene, In its drear loneliness reflects our own, And seems to give a kind of sympathy; But stony hearts have none.
Known! yet unknown! There is a strange mysterious interest Follows the form, that flitting through the gloom Of twilight, half concealed, and half disclosed, Glides silently away; and such a spell Upon my memory, thy shadowy image In traces faint but indestructible Has sketched. And I would be remembered too, Not as I am, for thou hast never known me, But as I fain would have thee fancy me. And I shall be remembered—for the scenes On which thy memory will love to dwell, Are now my care. 'Tis mine to dress the vine Which trained by thee its graceful foliage, Gratefully spread to shelter thee: The flower That mourns thy absence, watered by my hand, Shall lift its drooping head and smile; and thou In fancy shalt behold its blue eye glistening Brighter through tears; and, with an answering smile, And answering tear, thine own bright eye will bless me. Then mayst thou think how I, my wanderings o'er, Have found my way back to my native bowers, Among the few whom Time and Fate have left Of early friends, to render up my breath, And lay my bones beneath the turf, where once My musing childhood strayed. And thou wilt think, That fortune yet may have in store for thee, Like destiny. For who so well may claim To rest beneath the shade, to pluck the rose, Or, on the mossy bank reclined, inhale The violet's balmy breath? And trust me, Lady, Should clouds o'ercast the sunny sky that shines So bright above thee; should a stormy fate, Whelming thy hopes, cast thee a shipwrecked wanderer, Wounded and bleeding, on thy native shore, These are the scenes in which thy heart will seek And find its consolation. Where besides Is Sympathy so tender—Love so kind— Religion so sincere? Where else has Hope So learned to look, with cheerful confidence, On worlds beyond the grave? Where else does Faith So show its Love to God by Love to Man? |