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LIFE OF MARY BAKER G. EDDY AND
Then wildly through the skies of blue, |
To spread thy wings of dappled hue, |
As if forsooth this frozen zone |
Could yield one joy for bliss that's flown; |
While sunward as thine eager flight, |
That glance is fixed on visions bright. |
And grief may nestle in that breast, |
Some vulture may have robbed its rest, |
But guileless as thou art, sweet thing, |
With melting melody thou'lt sing; |
The vulture's scream your nerves unstrung, |
But, birdie, 'twas a woman's tongue. |
I, too, would join thy sky-bound flight, |
To orange groves and mellow light, |
And soar from earth to loftier doom, |
And light on flowers with sweet perfume, |
And wake a genial, happy lay— |
Where hearts are kind, and earth so gay. |
Oh! to the captive's cell I'd sing |
A song of hope—and freedom bring— |
An olive leaf I'd quick let fall, |
And lift our country's blackened pall; |
Then homeward seek my frigid zone, |
More chilling to the heart alone. |
Lone as a solitary star,[1] |
Lone as a vacant sepulchre, |
Yet not alone! my Father's call— |
Who marks the sparrow in her fall— |
Attunes my ear to joys elate, |
The joys I'll sing at Heaven's |
Rumney, June 20, 1862.
- ↑ Byron's “Prisoner of Chillon,” when relating how the bird perched and
sang upon the grating of his donjon, exclaims:
“ I sometimes deem'd that it might be My brother's soul come down to me; But then at last away it flew, And then 'twas mortal well I knew, For he would never thus have flown, And left me twice so doubly lone, Lone as the corse within its shroud, Lone as a solitary cloud,—” etc.