Poems (Acton)/On the Departure of some Relatives for Africa
Appearance
ON THE DEPARTURE OF SOME RELATIVES FOR AFRICA.
Ye leave us, oh! beloved ones, In our anguish and our fear,And vainly we shall listen Each cherished tone to hear.No face will smile upon us, In all our sorrow lone,For the silence of your household roof Will tell us ye are gone.
No footsteps lightly ringing Shall steal our senses o'er;The voices we so dearly loved Must gladden us no more.In vain each bright and smiling face We yearn to gaze upon;For mem'ry to our aching hearts Will whisper, "Ye are gone."
Ye seek a strange and distant land— Another home afar;And, oh! may peace with gentle ray, Be still your guiding star.
For mournfully, as in a dream, The time will linger on,And our thoughts will haunt that foreign home When from us ye are gone!
Ye leave us—oh! beloved ones; But night and day our prayersWill cling around the distant bark Our pilgrim-band that bears.
And oh! may ye, in brighter days, When coming years have flown,Return to those whose sun will set, When from them ye are gone!H. A.