Views Of Life
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- When sinks my heart in hopeless gloom,
- And life can show no joy for me;
- And I behold a yawning tomb,
- Where bowers and palaces should be;
- In vain you talk of morbid dreams;
- In vain you gaily smiling say,
- That what to me so dreary seems,
- The healthy mind deems bright and gay.
- I too have smiled, and thought like you,
- But madly smiled, and falsely deemed:
- TRUTH led me to the present view,--
- I'm waking now--'twas THEN I dreamed.
- I lately saw a sunset sky,
- And stood enraptured to behold
- Its varied hues of glorious dye:
- First, fleecy clouds of shining gold;
- These blushing took a rosy hue;
- Beneath them shone a flood of green;
- Nor less divine, the glorious blue
- That smiled above them and between.
- I cannot name each lovely shade;
- I cannot say how bright they shone;
- But one by one, I saw them fade;
- And what remained when they were gone?
- Dull clouds remained, of sombre hue,
- And when their borrowed charm was o'er,
- The azure sky had faded too,
- That smiled so softly bright before.
- So, gilded by the glow of youth,
- Our varied life looks fair and gay;
- And so remains the naked truth,
- When that false light is past away.
- Why blame ye, then, my keener sight,
- That clearly sees a world of woes
- Through all the haze of golden light
- That flattering Falsehood round it throws?
- When the young mother smiles above
- The first-born darling of her heart,
- Her bosom glows with earnest love,
- While tears of silent transport start.
- Fond dreamer! little does she know
- The anxious toil, the suffering,
- The blasted hopes, the burning woe,
- The object of her joy will bring.
- Her blinded eyes behold not now
- What, soon or late, must be his doom;
- The anguish that will cloud his brow,
- The bed of death, the dreary tomb.
- As little know the youthful pair,
- In mutual love supremely blest,
- What weariness, and cold despair,
- Ere long, will seize the aching breast.
- And even should Love and Faith remain,
- (The greatest blessings life can show,)
- Amid adversity and pain,
- To shine throughout with cheering glow;
- They do not see how cruel Death
- Comes on, their loving hearts to part:
- One feels not now the gasping breath,
- The rending of the earth-bound heart,--
- The soul's and body's agony,
- Ere she may sink to her repose.
- The sad survivor cannot see
- The grave above his darling close;
- Nor how, despairing and alone,
- He then must wear his life away;
- And linger, feebly toiling on,
- And fainting, sink into decay.
- * * * *
- Oh, Youth may listen patiently,
- While sad Experience tells her tale,
- But Doubt sits smiling in his eye,
- For ardent Hope will still prevail!
- He hears how feeble Pleasure dies,
- By guilt destroyed, and pain and woe;
- He turns to Hope--and she replies,
- "Believe it not-it is not so!"
- "Oh, heed her not!" Experience says;
- "For thus she whispered once to me;
- She told me, in my youthful days,
- How glorious manhood's prime would be.
- "When, in the time of early Spring,
- Too chill the winds that o'er me pass'd,
- She said, each coming day would bring
- a fairer heaven, a gentler blast.
- "And when the sun too seldom beamed,
- The sky, o'ercast, too darkly frowned,
- The soaking rain too constant streamed,
- And mists too dreary gathered round;
- "She told me, Summer's glorious ray
- Would chase those vapours all away,
- And scatter glories round;
- With sweetest music fill the trees,
- Load with rich scent the gentle breeze,
- And strew with flowers the ground
- "But when, beneath that scorching ray,
- I languished, weary through the day,
- While birds refused to sing,
- Verdure decayed from field and tree,
- And panting Nature mourned with me
- The freshness of the Spring.
- "'Wait but a little while,' she said,
- 'Till Summer's burning days are fled;
- And Autumn shall restore,
- With golden riches of her own,
- And Summer's glories mellowed down,
- The freshness you deplore.'
- And long I waited, but in vain:
- That freshness never came again,
- Though Summer passed away,
- Though Autumn's mists hung cold and chill.
- And drooping nature languished still,
- And sank into decay.
- "Till wintry blasts foreboding blew
- Through leafless trees--and then I knew
- That Hope was all a dream.
- But thus, fond youth, she cheated me;
- And she will prove as false to thee,
- Though sweet her words may seem.
- Stern prophet! Cease thy bodings dire--
- Thou canst not quench the ardent fire
- That warms the breast of youth.
- Oh, let it cheer him while it may,
- And gently, gently die away--
- Chilled by the damps of truth!
- Tell him, that earth is not our rest;
- Its joys are empty--frail at best;
- And point beyond the sky.
- But gleams of light may reach us here;
- And hope the ROUGHEST path can cheer:
- Then do not bid it fly!
- Though hope may promise joys, that still
- Unkindly time will ne'er fulfil;
- Or, if they come at all,
- We never find them unalloyed,--
- Hurtful perchance, or soon destroyed,
- They vanish or they pall;
- Yet hope ITSELF a brightness throws
- O'er all our labours and our woes;
- While dark foreboding Care
- A thousand ills will oft portend,
- That Providence may ne'er intend
- The trembling heart to bear.
- Or if they come, it oft appears,
- Our woes are lighter than our fears,
- And far more bravely borne.
- Then let us not enhance our doom
- But e'en in midnight's blackest gloom
- Expect the rising morn.
- Because the road is rough and long,
- Shall we despise the skylark's song,
- That cheers the wanderer's way?
- Or trample down, with reckless feet,
- The smiling flowerets, bright and sweet,
- Because they soon decay?
- Pass pleasant scenes unnoticed by,
- Because the next is bleak and drear;
- Or not enjoy a smiling sky,
- Because a tempest may be near?
- No! while we journey on our way,
- We'll smile on every lovely thing;
- And ever, as they pass away,
- To memory and hope we'll cling.
- And though that awful river flows
- Before us, when the journey's past,
- Perchance of all the pilgrim's woes
- Most dreadful--shrink not--'tis the last!
- Though icy cold, and dark, and deep;
- Beyond it smiles that blessed shore,
- Where none shall suffer, none shall weep,
- And bliss shall reign for evermore!
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