Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By There Is a VoiceKatharine A. Ware (17971843)
T
As it floats o’er spring’s young roses!
Or sighs among the blossoming trees,
Where the spirit of love reposes:
It tells of the joys of the pure and young,
Ere they wander life’s wildering paths among.
Which breathes amid regions of bloom!
Or murmurs soft, through the dewy vale,
In moonlight’s tender gloom:
It tells of hope, unblighted yet—
And of hours, that the soul can ne’er forget!
That wafts the falling leaf,
When the glowing scene is fading fast—
For the hour of bloom is brief:
It tells of Life—its sure decay—
And of earthly splendors, that pass away!
For the blasting spirit is there—
Breathing o’er every vernal charm,
O’er all that was bright and fair;
It tells of death, as it moans around,
And the lonely hall returns the sound.
That comes, when the storm is past—
It bids the sufferer’s heart rejoice!
In the haven of peace at last;
It tells of joys, beyond the grave,
And of Him who died a world to save!