Page:Ethel Churchill 2.pdf/75

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
ETHEL CHURCHILL.
73



CHAPTER X.


SUCCESS.


All things are symbols; and we find
    In morning's lovely prime,
The actual history of the mind
    In its own early time:
So, to the youthful poet's gaze,
    A thousand colours rise,—
The beautiful which soon decays,
    The buoyant which soon dies.

So does not die their influence,
    The spirit owns the spell;
Memory to him is music—hence
    The magic of his shell.
He sings of general hopes and fears—
    A universal tone;
All weep with him, for in his tears
    They recognise their own.

Yet many a one, whose lute hangs now
    High on the laurel tree,
Feels that the cypress' dark bough
    A fitter meed would be: