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SERAPION.

OME hither, Child! thou silent, shy
Young creature of the glorious eye!
Though never yet by ruder air

Than father's kiss or mother's prayer
Were stirred the tendrils of thy hair,
The sadness of a soul that stands
Withdrawn from Childhood's frolic bands,
A stranger in the land, I trace
Upon thy brow's cherubic grace
The tender pleading of thy face,
Where other stars than Joy and Hope
Have cast thy being's horoscope.

For thee, the threshold of the world
Is yet with morning dews impearled ;
The nameless radiance of Birth
Imbathes thy atmosphere of Earth,
And, like a finer sunshine, swims
Round every motion of thy limbs:
The sweet, sad wonder and surprise
Of waking glimmers in thine eyes,
And wiser instinct, purer sense,
And gleams of rare intelligence
Betray the converse held by thee
With the angelic family.

Come hither, Boy! For while I press
Thy lips' confiding tenderness,
Less broad and dark the spaces be

Which Life has set 'twixt thee and me.

Thy soul's white feet shall soon depart
On paths I walked with eager heart;
God give thee, in His kindly grace,
A brighter road, a loftier place!
I see thy generous nature flow
In boundless trust to friend and foe,
And leap, despite of shocks and harms,
To clasp the world in loving arms.
I see that glorious circle shrink
Back to thy feet, at Manhood's brink,
Narrowed to one, one image fair,
And all its splendor gathered there.
The shackles of experience then
Sit lightly as on meaner men:
In flinty paths thy feet may bleed,
Thorns pierce thy flesh, thou shalt not heed,
Till when, all panting from the task,
Thine arms outspread their right shall ask,
Thine arms outspread that right shall fly,
The star shall burst, the splendor die !
Go, with thy happier brothers play,
As heedless and as wild as they ;
Seek not so soon thy separate way,
Thou lamb in Childhood's field astray!

Whence camest thou? what angel bore
Thee past so many a fairer shore
Of guarding love, and guidance mild,
To drop thee on this barren wild?
Thy soul is lonely as a star,
When all its fellows muffled are,
A single star, whose light appears
To glimmer through subduing tears.
The father who begat thee sees

In thee no deeper mysteries
Than load his heavy ledger's page,
And swell for him thy heritage.
A hard, cold man, of punctual face,
Renowned in Credit's holy-place,
Whose very wrinkles seem arrayed
In cunning hieroglyphs of trade,
Whose gravest thought but just unlocks
The problems of uncertain stocks, -
Whose farthest flights of hope extend.
From dividend to dividend.

Thy mother,

but a mother's name

Too sacred is, too sweet for blame.

No doubt she loves thee,

loves the shy,

Strange beauty of thy glorious eye;

Loves the soft mouth, whose drooping line
Is silent music; loves to twine
Thy silky hair in ringlets trim;
To watch thy lightsome play of limb;
But, God forgive me! I, who find
The soul within that beauty shrined,
I love thee more, I know thy worth
Better, than she who gave thee birth.

Are they thy keepers? They would thrust The priceless jewel in the dust;

Would tarnish in their careless hold

The vessel of celestial gold.

Who gave them thee?

What fortune lent

Their hands the delicate instrument,

Which finer hands might teach to hymn The harmonies of Seraphim,

Which they shall make discordant soon,

The sweet bells jangled, out of tune?

Mine eyes are dim: I cannot see
The purposes of Destiny,

But than my love Heaven could not shine
More lovingly, if thou wert mine!
Rest then securely on my heart :

Give me thy trust: my child thou art,
And I shall lead thee through the years
To Hopes and Passions, Loves and Fears,
Till, following up Life's endless plan,
A strong and self-dependent Man,
I see thee stand and strive with men :
Thy Father now, thy Brother then.

JOAN, ye wild winds! around the pane,
And fall, thou drear December rain!
Fill with your gusts the sullen day,
Tear the last clinging leaves away!

Reckless as yonder naked tree,
No blast of yours can trouble me.

Give me your chill and stern embrace,
And pour your baptism on my face;
Sound in mine ears the airy moan
That sweeps in desolate monotone,
Where on the unsheltered hill-top beat
The marches of your homeless feet.

Moan on, ye winds! and pour, thou rain!
Your stormy sobs and tears are vain,

If shed for her whose fading eyes
Will open soon on Paradise:

The eye of Heaven shall blinded be,
Or ere ye cease, if shed for me.

TAURUS.

I.

HE Scorpion's stars crawl down behind the sun,

And when he drops below the verge

of day,

The glittering fangs, their fervid courses run,
Cling to his skirts and follow him away.
Then, ere the heels of flying Capricorn

Have touched the western mountain's darkening
rim,

.I mark, stern Taurus, through the twilight gray The glinting of thy horn,

And sullen front, uprising large and dim, Bent to the starry hunter's sword, at bay.

II.

Thy hoofs, unwilling, climb the sphery vault;
Thy red eye trembles with an angry glare,
When the hounds follow, and in fierce assault

Bay through the fringes of the lion's hair.
The stars that once were mortal in their love,

And by their love are made immortal now,

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