Alas! that so much kindness On thankless ground should fall, The young man's wicked heart, and hard, And thought but on the time when he And darker grew his evil thoughts, Till nought could quench his foul desire And, pitying not that hoary head, The thunders of that fearful night And morning showed a blighted scene Of black and ruined walls; All lightning-scorched and seamed were now The gilded palace halls. K Some courtiers of the monarch were Changed into hungry cats, And others sought the distant caves, In form of owls and bats. But one, who seemed the prince of all, Stood gazing from a rocky peak, That mountain-top is barren yet No trace of water or of tree In all that weary land. And, deathless 'mid his living tomb, With eye that cannot sleep, Until earth's final day of doom The vulture watch must keep. Alone, alone he stands, the sky The Mountain of the Bird. The Lotus. THE lotus from the wave looks up No angry wind nor heaving tides Oh thus, upon Life's billowy stream The flower of Hope is spread, Constant amid that changeful dream, Rearing its gentle head. It fears no storm nor darkening sky, Kind boon to mortals given: Through clouds it lifts a cheerful eye, With upward smile to heaven. The Raindrops. "They part, like raindrops in mid-air."-KEBLE. A TRANSIENT cloud obscured the ray Of Ethiopia's sun, But wept itself in dews away Ere light his course had run. And from the bosom of that shade One sank on Adel's burning plain, His brother's course afar was laid By mount and falling stream; He murmured through the forest glade, And sparkled in the beam. And, mingling with the mighty Nile Where wild acacias wept, He glittered by a lonely isle A long, long track of flowery lands He washed the feet of crumbling walls Where pride and power held sway, But they who raised those ruined halls Were sunk in mute decay. He flowed by many a giant tomb ;- In those far times of old. And on that little raindrop passed, In ocean's crystal tide. |