
The Country-seat (Poem)
Wild spirit of
song, — midst the zephyrs at
play
In bowers of
beauty, — I bend to thy
lay,
And woo, while I worship
in deep sylvan spot,
The Muses’ soft
echoes to kindle the
grot.
Wake chords of my lyre,
with musical kiss,
To vibrate and tremble
with accents of bliss.
Here morning peers out,
from her crimson repose,
On proud Prairie Queen
and the modest
Moss-rose;
And vesper
reclines — when the dewdrop is
shed
On the heart of the pink
— in its odorous
bed;
But Flora has stolen the
rainbow and sky,
To sprinkle the flowers
with exquisite dye.
Here fame-honored
hickory rears his bold
form,
And bares a brave breast
to the lightning and
storm,
While palm, bay, and
laurel, in classical
glee,
Chase tulip, magnolia,
and fragrant
fringe-tree;
And sturdy
horse-chestnut for centuries hath
given
Its feathery blossom and
branches to heaven.
18Here
is life! Here is youth! Here the
poet’s world-wish,
—
Cool
waters at play with the gold-gleaming
fish;
While cactus a mellower
glory receives
From light colored softly
by blossom and leaves;
And nestling alder is
whispering low,
In lap of the pear-tree,
with musical flow.1
Dark sentinel hedgerow is
guarding repose,
Midst grotto and songlet
and streamlet that flows
Where beauty and perfume
from buds burst away,
And ope their closed
cells to the bright, laughing
day;
Yet, dwellers in Eden,
earth yields you her tear,
—
Oft plucked for the
banquet, but laid on the bier.
Earth’s beauty and
glory delude as the
shrine
Or fount of real joy and
of visions divine;
But hope, as the eaglet
that spurneth the sod,
May soar above matter,
to fasten on God,
And freely adore all His
spirit hath made,
Where rapture and
radiance and glory ne’er fade.
Oh, give me the spot
where affection may
dwell
In
sacred communion with home’s magic
spell!
Where flowers of feeling
are fragrant and fair,
And those we most love
find a happiness rare;
But clouds are a
presage, — they darken my
lay:
This life is a shadow,
and hastens away.