Poems Sigourney 1827/With wild Flowers to a sick Friend

For other versions of this work, see With wild Flowers to a sick Friend.
Poems Sigourney 1827 (1827)
by Lydia Sigourney
With wild Flowers to a sick Friend
4012565Poems Sigourney 1827With wild Flowers to a sick Friend1827Lydia Sigourney


WITH WILD FLOWERS TO A SICK FRIEND.


Rise from the dells where ye first were born,
From the tangled beds of the weed and thorn,
Rise! for the dews of the morn are bright,
And haste away with your brows of light.—
—Should the green-house patricians with gathering frown,
On your plebeian vestures look haughtily down,
Shrink not,—for His finger your heads hath bow'd,
Who heeds the lowly and humbles the proud.—
—The tardy spring, and the frosty sky,
Have meted your robes with a miser's eye,
And check'd the blush of your blossoms free,—
With a gentler friend your home shall be;

To a kinder ear ye may tell your tale
Of the zephyr's kiss and the scented vale;—
Ye are charm'd! ye are charm'd! and your fragrant sigh
Is health to the bosom on which ye die.