University of Virginia Library


290

KATHARINE A. WARE.


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THERE IS A VOICE.

There is a voice in the western breeze,
As it floats o'er spring's young roses!
Or sighs among the blossoming trees,
Where the spirit of love reposes:
It tells of the joys of the pure and young,
Ere they wander life's wildering paths among.
There is a voice in the summer gale,
Which breathes amid regions of bloom!
Or murmurs soft, through the dewy vale,
In moonlight's tender gloom:
It tells of hope, unblighted yet—
And of hours, that the soul can ne'er forget!
There is a voice in the autumn blast,
That wafts the falling leaf,
When the glowing scene is fading fast—
For the hour of bloom is brief:
It tells of Life—its sure decay—
And of earthly splendors, that pass away!
There is a voice in the wintry storm,
For the blasting spirit is there—
Breathing o'er every vernal charm,
O'er all that was bright and fair;
It tells of death, as it moans around,
And the lonely hall returns the sound.
And there 's a voice—a small, still voice,
That comes, when the storm is past
It bids the sufferer's heart rejoice!
In the haven of peace at last;
It tells of joys, beyond the grave,
And of Him who died a world to save!

GREECE.

Where Art's wide realm in mouldering ruin sleeps,
And Science o'er departed glory weeps—
Where wreathing ivy shrouds in dark array,
The desolating progress of decay—

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Where time is ranging with remorseless tread,
Amid the trophies of the mighty dead,
There, Grecia's genius hovers o'er the scene
Of ruin'd grandeur—glories that have been
Views the vast wreck of power with kindling eye,
And kneels beside the tomb of Poesy.
Where fame's proud relics strew her classic ground,
In gloomy majesty she glides around,
Pausing, with rapt devotion, to survey
The prostrate splendors of her early day.
Those ancient courts, where erst with wisdom fraught,
Her senate listen'd, and her sages taught;
Where that bold patriot, firm in virtue's cause,
The immortal Solon, thunder'd forth his laws!
The temple raised to Theseus' mighty name—
The storied arch of Hadrian's deathless fame!
Raises her eye to where, with beam divine,
Apollo blush'd upon the Delphic shrine—
As bow'd that chief, to learn a nation's fate,
Who gave his royal life, to save the state.
With pride, she seeks Dodona's sacred grove,
Where towers the temple of imperial Jove,
Frowning, in ruin'd majesty sublime,
The proudest wreck that braves the blast of time!
Shows the broad Stadium, where the gymnic art,
Nerved the young arm, and energized the heart—
Gave a bold race of warriors to her field,
Whose godlike courage was their only shield!
Surveys that grot, where still her olives twine
In wild luxuriance o'er its fallen shrine—
Where Dian's vestal daughters came to lave
Their snowy bosoms in Ionia's wave.
All dark and tuneless are those laurel shades,
Which once enshrined Castalia's classic maids—
For barbarous hands have raised their funeral pyre
And hush'd the breathings of their seraph lyre—
Save when the light of heaven around it plays,
And wakes the hallow'd chant of other days!
Oh! then, 'mid storied mounds, and mouldering urns,
Once more, the flame of inspiration burns!
Here, pilgrim Genius comes to muse around,
To wake one strain o'er consecrated ground!
From prostrate fanes, and altars of decay,
He learns the glory of their former day—
And, in the tender blush of twilight gloom,

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He writes the story of some ruin'd tomb;
From dark oblivion snatches many a gem,
To glisten in his own fair diadem.
Immortal Byron! thou, whose courage plann'd
The rescue of that subjugated land—
Oh! hadst thou lived to rear thy giant glaive,
Thou 'dst bid the Christian cross triumphant wave!
Mark'd the pale crescent wave 'mid seas of blood,
And stamp'd proud Grecia's freedom in the flood.
But, Oh! 't was fate's decree thou should'st expire,
Swan-like, amid the breathings of thy lyre—
Even in the sacred light of thine own song—
As sinks the glorious sun amid the throng
Of bright robed clouds, the pageantry of Heaven—
Thy last retiring beam to earth was given.
Where Scio's isle blushes with Christian gore,
And recreant fiends still yell around her shore;
Where Missolonghi's bloody plain extends,
'Mid war's red blots, Athena's Queen descends.
Mark, where she comes—in all the pomp of wo—
Darkling around her sable vestments flow—
With throbbing bosom in the tempest bare—
Wild, on the breeze, floats her unwreathed hair,
Though learning's classic diadem is there.
Where fate's dark clouds the face of heaven deform—
With steadfast brow—she meets the bursting storm,
Turns to Olympus with imploring eye,
And claims the ægis of her native sky.
Hark! round its base th' eternal thunders roll,
And Jove's own lightnings flash from pole to pole—
His voice is there! he bids creation save
Minerva's “first born,” from a barbarous wave.

THE PARTING.

She loved him e'en in childhood, with that pure
Devotion, which the bosom feels secure
In youthful innocence—when first the heart
Elects its idol, sacred and apart
From other beings:—oh! there is a truth,
A beam, that wakes not when the glow of youth
Is past,—'t is like the ray that morning throws,
Upon the bosom of the blushing rose.

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She was a creature—such as painters love
To draw,—like her who to imperial Jove
The nectar'd goblet bore; just such an eye,
And such a cheek was hers—its roseate dye
Seem'd borrow'd from the morning—her bright hair
Like braided gold, wreath'd round a brow as fair
As Parian marble—all those curving lines
That mark perfection—and which taste defines
As beautiful, gave to her youthful form
A loveliness, a grace, so thrilling warm
That every motion seem'd to speak a soul
Whose inborn radiance illumed the whole.
He too, was in life's joyous spring; the glow
Of sunny health was on his cheek—his brow
Was bold and fearless,—his keen eagle eye
Was looking forth to scenes of victory;
For War had plumed his crest—and nerved his arm—
And there was breathing round him, all the charm
Of high devotion to his country's weal;—
While the bright panoply of gold, and steel,
That mail'd his breast—and flash'd upon his brow—
Gave proud assurance of the soldier's vow.
[OMITTED]
He dream'd not that he loved her—for in truth
He knew the child e'en from her earliest youth.
Oft had he look'd upon the young Eloise
As a sweet being whom he wish'd to please—
To gather roses for, and braid her hair,
To guard her with a brother's tender care—
But never dream'd of love, for haply he
Had fix'd his hopes on higher destiny.
With pride he heard his summon to the field:
Yet, had his heart its secret thoughts reveal'd,
Some shades of sadness had been lingering there,
On leaving home, and friends, and scenes so fair
He came to bid adieu—'t was a mild night
Of softest moonshine—and its dewy light
Was on the shrubs, and flowers that bloom'd around—
And there was music in the soothing sound
Of the bright rill that murmur'd through the glade,
And sparkled 'neath the willow's pensile shade,
The summer breeze was sighing through its boughs
In whispers, soft as youthful lovers' vows.
She was reclining in the latticed bower—
Musing, as 't were upon the stilly hour.

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“Dear Eloise!” he said—(the sudden flush
Of new-born feeling call'd a crimson blush
On her young cheek, that made the life-blood start
In thrilling eddies round his conscious heart,)
“Dear Eloise—I come to bid adieu—
To these fair scenes, to happiness, and you.
Hast thou no wish—no blessing, for thy friend?
Who, far from thee, and all he loves, shall wend
His pilgrimage, through wilderness and toil,
Uncheer'd by friendship's voice—or Beauty's smile.
He laid his hand upon her seraph head,
Press'd a warm kiss upon her brow, and said—
“May heaven preserve thee, pure, as angels are—
The world is wicked—lovely one—beware!
Thou art an orphan—would that title might
Protect thy innocence from the fell blight
Of those who hover in fair virtue's way,
To tempt the steps of guileless youth astray.
Would I could guard thee—but my path of life
Lies through the ranks of war, 'mid battle's strife—
There duty calls me—should I ne'er return,
Say—wouldst thou sorrow o'er thy soldier's urn?
Yet if some future day I dare to claim
The dear bought honors of a hero's name—
May Eloisa's fond remembrance prove
Her youthful friendship ripen'd into love?”
Pure as a vestal's hymn that breathes to heaven!
That night, their vows of mutual faith were given.
[OMITTED]
Years have roll'd on—but yet no warrior came
With laurell'd brow, his youthful bride to claim—
Years have roll'd on—the wintry frosts have shed
Their sparkling crystals o'er his lowly bed.
Where proud St Lawrence wreathes his crested wave,
That youthful hero found an early grave.
But though unwept by fond affection's tear—
A soldier's honors graced his funeral bier.
Years have roll'd on since Nature's loveliest child,
Within her garden bower in beauty smiled—
Years have roll'd on, and spring with annual bloom
Still twines her wreath o'er Eloisa's tomb,
While kindred spirits hymn her requiem there,
And freight with sweetest sounds the balmy air.