An emigrant's home letters/The Emigrant's Farewell to His Country

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3749414An emigrant's home letters — The Emigrant's Farewell to His CountryHenry Parkes


THE EMIGRANTS FAREWELL TO HIS COUNTRY.


I go, my native land, far o'er
 The solitary sea,
To regions, where the very stars
 Of Heaven will strangers be,

To some untrodden wilderness
 Of Australasia's land,—
A home, which man has here denied,
 I seek at God's own hand.

I have a mother, ill and poor,
 A father, too, in years,
And have no parting gift for them,
 No! nothing save my tears.

I leave them in a busy town,
 Where pale mechanics toil
In irksome manufactories,
 Shut from the sun and soil.

Fair visions yet, my native land,
 Will o'er my lone heart come.
Whene'er I think of friendship's haunts,
 Or childhood's peaceful home.

Or love's delightful wanderings,
 When she, who shares my lot.
First plucked from 'mong the violets
 The sweet forget-me-not.

And then the beauty of such dreams
 Will radiate o'er my heart.
Till bitterly I weep, to think
 That we were forced to part.

And Heaven two sinless infants lent,
 Whose graves are told with thine—
They came and went so angel-like,
 I dare not call them mine.

And memory, when her mystic chain
 Back o'er the past she flings.
Nothing so beautiful as they
 From all her treasures brings.

For their sweet sakes, my native land!
 Even if I loved not thee.
My heart would hover o'er thee still.
 Where'er my home might be!

Where will my home be? I'll not ask;
 I would not now be told!
Enough to know 'tis God who will
 In all my being hold,

I do not know what lovely flowers
 May deck the new world's vales;
But, though the brightest bloom abound,
 If spring no primrose hails,

Its absent beauties I shall mourn,
 For I have loved that flower;
And my heart's friends have loved it too
 From childhood's earliest hour.