Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By Spirit of SpringGeorge Washington Doane (17901859)
S
Art wafted hither on dewy wing,
By the soften’d light of that sunny eye,
And that voice of wild-wood melody,
And those golden tresses wantoning,
And the perfumed breath of that balmy mouth.
We know thee, Spirit of Spring—
Spirit of beauty, these thy charms, Spirit of Spring!
The slumbering energies of earth;
The zephyr’s breath, to thee we owe,
Thine is the streamlet’s silver flow,
And thine, the gentle flowerets’ birth,
And their silence, hark! the wild birds break,
For thy welcome, Spirit of Spring!—
Spirit of life, thy triumphs these, Spirit of Spring!
There is health in thy balmy air,
And peace in that brow of beaming bright,
And joy in that eye of sunny light,
And golden hope in that flowing hair:
Oh! that such influence e’er should fail,
For a moment, Spirit of Spring—
Spirit of health, peace, joy and hope, Spirit of Spring!
And it may not shame its place of birth,
Where the best can bloom but a single day,
And the fairest is first to fade away.
A world of peace, and joy, and love,
Where, gather’d from the tomb,
The holy hopes that earth has cross’d,
And the pious friends that we loved and lost
Immortally shall bloom.
That his longing soul may soar away,
On faith’s untiring wing,
To join the throng of the saints in light,
In that world, for ever fair and bright,
Of endless, cloudless S