FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   >>  
A quiet is over the Cottage,--a dread Clouds the children's sweet faces,--Macpherson is dead! VII. 'Tis Autumn,--and Nature the forest has hung With arras more gorgeous than ever was flung From Gobelin looms,--all so varied, so rare, As never the princeliest palaces were. Soft curtains of haze the far mountains enfold, Whose warp is of purple, whose woof is of gold, And the sky bends as peacefully, purely above, As if earth breathed an atmosphere only of love. But thick as white asters in Autumn, are found The tents all bestrewing the carpeted ground; The din of a camp, with its stir and its strife, Its motley and strange, multitudinous life, Floats upward along the brown slopes, till it fills The echoing hollows afar in the hills. 'Tis the twilight of Sabbath,--and sweet through the air, Swells the blast of the bugle, that summons to prayer: The signal is answered, and soon in the glen Sits Colonel Dunbar in the midst of his men. The Chaplain advances with reverent face, Where lies a felled oak, he has chosen his place; On the stump of an ash-tree the Bible he lays, And they bow on the grass, as he solemnly prays. Underneath thine open sky, Father, as we bend the knee, May we feel thy presence nigh, --Nothing 'twixt our souls and thee! We are weary,--cares and woes Lay their weight on every breast, And each heart before thee knows, That it sighs for inward rest. Thou canst lift this weight away, Thou canst bid these sighings cease; Thou canst walk these waves and say To their restless tossings--"Peace!" We are tempted;--snares abound,-- Sin its treacherous meshes weaves; And temptations strew us round, Thicker than the Autumn leaves. Midst these perils, mark our path, Thou who art 'the life, the way;' Rend each fatal wile that hath Power to lead our souls astray. Prince of Peace! we follow Thee! Plant thy banner in our sight; Let thy shadowy legions be Guards around our tents to-night." Through the aisles of the forest, far-stretching and dim As a cloister'd Cathedral, the notes of a hymn Float tenderly upward,--now soft and now clear, As if twilight had silenced its breathing to hear; Now swelling, a lofty, triumphant refrain,-- Now sobbi
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   >>  



Top keywords:

Autumn

 

twilight

 
weight
 

upward

 
forest
 

tossings

 
tempted
 
sighings
 

restless

 

breast


presence
 
Nothing
 

Father

 

snares

 

stretching

 
aisles
 

cloister

 

Cathedral

 
Through
 

shadowy


legions

 

Guards

 
swelling
 

triumphant

 

refrain

 

breathing

 

silenced

 
tenderly
 
banner
 

Thicker


Underneath

 

leaves

 

perils

 
treacherous
 
meshes
 

weaves

 

temptations

 
astray
 

Prince

 

follow


abound

 
purple
 

enfold

 
curtains
 

mountains

 
peacefully
 

purely

 

asters

 

bestrewing

 

breathed