Page:Felicia Hemans in Friendship's Offering 1827.pdf/10

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

From page 246 onwards



From Poems of Felicia Hemans, 1872, page 457


THE TOMB OF MADAME LANGHANS.

"To a mysteriously consorted pair
This place is consecrate; to death and life,
And to the best affections that proceed
From this conjunction."Wordsworth.


[At Hindlebank, near Berne, she is represented as bursting from the sepulchre, with her infant in her arms, at the sound of the last trumpet. An inscription on the tomb concludes thus:—"Here am I, O God! with the child whom thou hast given me."]


How many hopes were borne upon thy bier,
O bride of stricken love! in anguish hither!
Like flowers, the first and fairest of the year,
Pluck'd on the bosom of the dead to wither;
Hopes from their source all holy, though of earth,
All brightly gathering round affection's hearth.