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THE LINDEN-LEAF.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


177

THE LINDEN-LEAF.

[_]

[Written on receiving a leaf brought from a tree standing near the house once occupied by Sir Isaac Newton.]

Leaf of the green and shadowy tree,
That guards the window where the eye
Of Newton once looked forth, to see
The glorious hosts arrayed on high,—
Thy root holds fast the distant sod
That gave his foot a resting-place;
Untiring, while his spirit trod
Ethereal heights, the spheres to trace.
Thou art to me a beaming page,—
Ay, volume!—and in radiant lines,
The story of a deathless Sage
On thy fair, verdant surface shines.
Whilst I peruse thee as a tome,
To Fancy's eye dear visions rise:
She hovers round his earthly home,—
She soars where he surveyed the skies.
I bend in homage to the worth,
The power, the beauty of the mind,
That shows where'er it moved on earth,
By brilliant tracery left behind.
And he, to whom a falling fruit
Mysterious Nature's problem solved,
Unerring, up through space could shoot,
And span the spheres as they revolved.

178

As through the solar world he moved,
Among its beaming mechanism,
His lucid thoughts at will he proved
To have the power of lens or prism.
And, measuring those proud realms afar,
With angel speed and prophet's sight,
He set his foot from star to star,—
His way-marks were the orbs of light!
Yet not alone for earth and time
His spirit rose to win the prize;
But for the science more sublime,
To bear the palm beyond the skies.
His soul, with love of Truth inspired,
No rest in baser love could find,
Till that vast mind, divinely fired,
Broke forth with light for all mankind.
He sought her, studying Nature's laws;
And these harmonious proved to men:
He traced her to her great First Cause,
By Prophet's voice, and Gospel pen.
And she then made so strong and clear
The crystal of his telescope,
It brought unearthly wealth so near,
'T was seen by Faith, and grasped by Hope!
Newton, to thee, where Truth unveils
Her lovely image to thy view,
Are not the philosophic scales,
Thou here hast used, proved just and true?
Did not her sweet, clear accents tell,
While she bestowed thy diadem,
That, when that earthly apple fell,
It was her angel snapped the stem?—

179

That, when she saw thy soul ascend,
To seek her, from the blushing fruit,
She bade that holy servant bend
His pinion, for thy parachute?
To that fair attribute of heaven,—
That daughter of the King Most High,—
When thy young heart so soon was given,
She gave to thee thy Seer's eye!
Then, many a bright celestial hue
She to thy vision made appear,
Which others ne'er discover, through
Earth's dust and vapory atmosphere.
She taught the fair analysis
Of rays, which made thy spirit mount,
Seeking a truer world than this,
Of Light's pure streams to find the Fount.
And thus, thy high discoveries made—
The science, so attained by thee,
Have made thy memory ne'er to fade,
Thy glory for eternity!
'T is from the freshness of the one,
My Leaf hath verdure not its own;
Whilst from the other, as a sun,
This radiance o'er the green is thrown.