Poems (Botta)/The Dying Sycamores

New York: G. P. Putnam and Company, pages 120–121

THE DYING SYCAMORES.


A beauty like young womanhood’sUpon the green earth lies,And June’s sweet smile hath waked againAll summer’s harmonies.
The insects hum their dreamy song,The trees their honors wear,And languid with its perfume spoilsSighs the voluptuous air.
A gorgeous wealth of leaf and bloomEnchants the dazzled sight;And over earth and sky there smilesA Presence of delight.
From yon sad dying Sycamores,Alone a shadow falls,—As from the ghastly form of Death,In Egypt’s banquet-halls.
Against the soft blue sky they stand,Their naked limbs outspread,And to the throbbing life around,They murmur of the dead.
Spring, with her soft and odorous breath,Hath sighed o’er them in vain,Nor sun, nor dew, nor summer shower,Awakes their bloom again.
Oh stately monarchs of the wood,What blight hath o’er ye passed?What canker wastes your noble hearts?What spell is on ye cast?
I watch ye where a thousand formsWith life and beauty glow,Till half I deem that on ye liesSome weight of human woe.
Sad emblems are ye of those heartsIn this fair world of ours,Who live unloving and unloved,Oh dying Sycamores.