Page:Poems Sigourney, 1834.pdf/240

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239



AN EXHIBITION OF A SCHOOL OF YOUNG LADIES.


How fair upon the admiring sight,
    In Learning's sacred fane,
With cheek of bloom, and robe of white
    Glide on yon graceful train!
Blest creatures! to whose gentle eye
    Earth's gilded gifts are new,
Ye know not that distrustful sigh
    Which deems its vows untrue.

There is a bubble on your cup
    By buoyant fancy nurst,
How high its sparkling foam leaps up!
    Ye do not think 't will burst:
And be it far from me to fling
    On budding joys a blight,
Or darkly spread a raven's wing
    To shade a path so bright.

There twines a wreath around your brow,
    Blent with the sunny braid,
Love lends its flowers a radiant glow,
    Ye do not think 't will fade;
And yet 't were safer there to bind
    That plant of changeless die,
Whose root is in the lowly mind,
    Whose blossom in the sky.