72
SUMMER ON THE LAKES.
III. |
O fair, but fickle lady-moon, |
Why must thy full form ever wane? |
O love! O friendship! why so soon |
Must your sweet light recede again? |
I wake me in the dead of night, |
And start, — for through the misty gloom |
Red Hecate stares — a boding sight! — |
Looks in, but never fills my room. |
Thou music of my boyhood's hour! |
Thou shining light on manhood's way! |
No more dost thou fair influence shower |
To move my soul by night or day. |
O strange! that while in hall and street |
Thy hand I touch, thy grace I meet, |
Such miles of polar ice should part |
The slightest touch of mind and heart! |
But all thy love has waned, and so |
I gladly let thy beauty go. |
Now that I am borrowing, I will also give a letter
received at this time, and extracts from others from
an earlier traveller, and in a different region of the
country from that I saw, which, I think, in different
ways, admirably descriptive of the country.
“And you, too, love the Prairies, flying voyager of a summer hour; but I have only there owned the wild forest, the wide-spread meadows; there only built my house, and seen the livelong day the thoughtful shadows of the great clouds color, with all-transient browns, the untrampled floor of grass; there has Spring pranked the long smooth reaches with