The flowers that gaze upon the heavens, The bright streams leaping by, Are living with religion-deep On earth and sea its glories sleep, And mingle with the starlight rays, Like the soft light of parted days.
The spirit of the holy eve
Comes through the silent air To Feeling's hidden spring, and wakes A gush of music there!
And the far depths of ether beam So passing fair, we almost dream That we can rise, and wander through Their open paths of trackless blue.
Each soul is filled with glorious dreams,
Each pulse is beating wild;
And Thought is soaring to the shrine
Of Glory undefiled!
And holy aspirations start,
Like blessed angels, from the heart,
And bind-for earth's dark ties are rivenOur spirits to the gates of heaven.
LEEP on, sleep on! above thy corse
The winds their Sabbath keep;
The waves are round thee, and thy breast Heaves with the heaving deep.
O'er thee inild Eve her beauty flings, And there the white gull lifts her wings, And the blue halcyon loves to lave Her plumage in the deep blue wave.
Sleep on; no willow o'er thee bends With melancholy air-
No violet springs, nor dewy rose Its soul of love lays bare;
But there the sea-flower, bright and young, Is sweetly o'er thy slumbers flung, And, like a weeping mourner fair,
The pale flag hangs its tresses there.
Sleep on, sleep on; the glittering depths Of.ocean's coral caves
Are thy bright urn-thy requiem The music of its waves;
The purple gems forever burn In fadeless beauty round thy urn, And, pure and deep as infant love, The blue sea rolls its waves above.
Sleep on, sleep on; the fearful wrath Of mingling cloud and deep May leave its wild and stormy track Above thy place of sleep;
But when the wave has sunk to rest, As now, 'twill murmur o'er thy breast,
And the bright victims of the sea
Perchance will make their home with thee.
Sleep on; thy corse is far away,
But love bewails thee yet;
For thee the heart-wrung sigh is breathed, And lovely eyes are wet:
And she, thy young and beauteous bride, Her thoughts are hovering by thy side, As oft she turns to view, with tears, The Eden of departed years.
OH, the green and the graceful—the cocoa-nut tree
The lone and the lofty-it loves, like me,
The flash, the foam of the heaving sea,
And the sound of the surging waves In the shore's unfathomed caves: With its stately shaft and its verdant crown. And its fruit in clusters drooping down-- Some of a soft and tender green,
And some all ripe and brown between, And flowers, too, blending their lovelier grace Like a blush through the tresses on Beauty's face. Oh, the lovely, the free,
The cocoa-nut tree,
Is the tree of all trees for me!
The willow, it waves with a tenderer motion, The oak and the elm with more majesty rise; But give me the cocoa, that loves the wild ccean, And shadows the hut where the island-girl lies.
In the Nicobar Islands, each cottage you see
Is built of the trunk of the cocoa-nut tree,
While its leaves, matted thickly and many timeɩ o'er, Make a thatch for its roof and a mat for its floor; Its shells the dark islander's beverage hold- "Tis a goblet as pure as a goblet of gold. Oh, the cocoa-nut tree,
That blooms by the sea,
Is the tree of all trees for me!
In the Nicobar Isles, of the cocoa-nut tree They build the light shallop-the wild, the free; They weave of its fibres so firm a sail, It will weather the rudest southern gale; They fill it with oil, and with coarse jaggherry- With arrack and coir, from the cocoa-nut tree. The lone, the free,
That dwells in the roar
Of the echoing shore
Oh, the cocoa-nut tree for me!
Rich is the cocoa-nut's milk and meat, And its wine, the pure palm-wine, is sweet; It is like the bright spirits we sometimes meet-- The wine of the cocoa-nut tree;
For they tie up the embryo bud's soft wing, From which the blossoms and nuts would spring; And thus, forbidden to bless with bloom Its native air, and with soft perfume, The subtile spirit that struggles there Distils an essence more rich and rare- And instead of a blossom and fruitage birth, The delicate palm-wine oozes forth,
Ah, thus to the child of genius, too,
The rose of beauty is oft denied ; But all the richer, that high heart through, The torrent of feeling pours its tide; And purer and fonder, and far more true, Is that passionate soul in its lonely pride. Oh, the fresh; the free,
The cocoa-nut tree,
Is the tree of all trees for me!
The glowing sky of the Indian isles Lovingly over the cocoa-nut smiles, And the Indian maiden lies below, Where its leaves their graceful shadow throw: She weaves a wreath of the rosy shells That gem the beach where the cocoa dwells; She binds them into her long black hair,
And they blush in the braids like rosebuds there; Her soft brown arm, and her graceful neck, With those ocean-blooms she joys to deck. Oh, wherever you see
The cocoa-nut tree, There will a picture of beauty be!
Elizabeth Oakes-Smith.
THE BROOK.
66 WHITHER away, thou merry Brook, Whither away so fast,
With dainty feet through the meadow green And a smile as you hurry past ?"
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