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WHITE JASMINE, ETC.


WHITE JASMINE.

White jasmine stretches far and wide,
Along the grey wall's southern side
Its graceful branches wreathe;
And winds of summer sweet and low,
Among its verdure and its snow,
Their tender music breathe.

The garden beds that once were gay
And fragrant all the summer day,
Are empty and forlorn;
The hungry bees afar have flown,
The gravel walks are weed-o'ergrown,
The trellis rose is torn.

Within the house each empty room
Is shut in silent, rayless gloom,
With cheerless hearthstone cold;
No pictures smile upon the wall,
No single trace is left of all
We cherished so of old.

But in the southern sunshine bright,
And by the jasmine, clad in white,
A youthful maiden stands,
With lips that speak of sad unrest;
A hunch of daisies on her breast,
And jasmine in her hands.

With farewell looks of aching love,
Her brown eyes wander round, above,
It is a sacred spot;
The home of childish grief and mirth,
The home whence dearest dead went forth
To share earths common lot.

Ah, maiden! as the jasmine snow
Doth vanish, so the years that go
Will take this grief away;
Will give thee older woes as sure,
As strong, and deep if not so pure
As this of thine to-day.

Yet let the daisies on thy breast
Teach thee that life's securest rest
In humble paths doth lie;
And let the jasmine in thine hand
Whisper of fairer blossoms fanned
By sweetest airs on high.

Fear not to muse when far away,
How summer sunshine gilds each day
These lonely garden bowers;
How sweetly yet the thrushes call,
How climb about the gray old wall
Thine own loved jasmine flowers.

So may the memory of this home,
Thy first and dearest, ever come
With healing strength to thee;
To mind thee, by its vanished grace,
Of one prepared abiding-place,
From sound of farewell free!

All The Year Round.




"SPRING'S SECRETS."

As once I paused on poet wing
In the green heart of a grove,
I met the spirit of the spring
With her great eyes lit of love.

She took me gently by the hand,
And whispered in my anxious ear
Secrets none may understand,
Till she made their meaning clear:

Why the primrose looks so pale;
Why the rose is set with thorns;
Why the magic nightingale
Through the darkness mourns and mourns.

She ceased: a leafy murmur sighed
Softly through the listening trees.
Anon she uttered, eager-eyed,
These her joyful mysteries:

How the angels, as they pass
With their vesture pure and white
O'er the shadowy garden grass,
Touch the lilies into light:

Or with hidden hands of love
Guide the throstles wavering wings,
But show theirfaces bright above,
Only where the skylark sings.

The author of "Songs of Killarney."
Spectator.




THE PASSING OF THE CLOUD.

There came a cloud over yonder hill,
When the wind was muttering low,
Round and white as the sails, that fill
When the winds o'er the ocean go.

And the skirts of the cloud were snowy white,
But the heart of the cloud was black;
And the sunshine fled, and the trees in fright
Murmured and bowed them back.

And the cruel north wind whistled shrill,
And the south wind sobbed in turn,
And the east wind shrieked, "Come down and kill!"
And the west wind sighed, "Return!"

But the cloud gave heed to sob nor cry,
But swept over bill and plain;
The cloud went by in the broad blue sky,
And the sunshine came again.

Spectator.F. W. B.