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Home  »  Specimens of American Poetry  »  Samuel Ewing

Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.

By Reflections in Solitude

Samuel Ewing

TO me, no heedless, listless looker on,

The idle fashions of a thoughtless race

Are pleasant. Though my feeble voice swell not

The hum of crowds, nor do I judge it wise

To mingle in their scenes, I do not yet

Forget my kind. Lull’d to tranquillity

By charms that Nature, in a kindly mood,

Grants, in profusion, to the lover-breath

Of youthful spring, I seek the grassy side

Of this clear brook. I deem it not unwise

To woo seclusion at the morning hour.

What place, along the hedge, the op’ning rose,

Peeps through the trembling dews, while all the wood

Rings with the varied strains of gratitude

That nature’s children breathe, as flutt’ring light

From bough to bough, they make their duty, pleasure.

Driven, by a thankless world, to seek Content

In rural scenes, I sought and found her there.

With her it solaces me much to while,

In musings sweet, an idle hour away,

On gifts that God has lavish’d on mankind.

The last, the sweetest boon he gave to man,

Was Love. In Eden’s bowers the cherub first

Was found. What hour uncoffin’d ghosts steal out,

To sit by new-made graves, or stand behind

The village matron’s chair, to counterfeit

The clicking of the clock, or, yet more rude,

Tap at the window of the dreaming maid,

Or glide in winding-sheet across the room,

Borrowing the form that late her lover wore;

Upon a moon-beam, at such silent hour,

The boy descended, and, alighting soft,

Chose for his throne the mild blue eye of Eve.

On either pinion sat a fairy form

To guide the arrows, that, in wanton mood

The boy would hazard—This Romance was named,

And Fancy, that—One pluck’d, with busy hand,

Soft down from doves, and, artful, twined it round

The arrow’s head, to hide from mortal eyes

The scorpion sting that barb’d the weapon’s point.

While that, with syren smile, a mirror show’d

On whose smooth surface danced, in angel robes,

Perfection’s form. And ever from that night,

The sportful twins attend the train of Love.

Thus was the garden, first by Adam’s voice,

Call’d Paradise. And now what spot the boy

His transient visit pays, in wilderness

Or bower, or palace, or the lowly shed,

Man names it Paradise, nor errs he much

In such a name.

Though oft the side-long look,

The heavy sigh, that speaks the anxious doubt;

The flitting blush that lights the virgin’s cheek;

The mind, abstracted from the present scene;

Eyes, idly fix’d unconscious on the hearth;

The trembling lip, and melancholy mien;

Though these, no dubious signs, proclaim the boy

The city’s visitor, he yet prefers

To hold his court by moon-light, in the grove,

Or where the babbling brook winds through the wood,

Or where on shady side of sloping hill,

The green vine crawls, or where innum’rous boughs,

Raising each other’s leaves just over head,

Keep the rude sun-beam from the lover’s couch,

The grassy bank. Here Love his revels keeps,

While every breeze blows health, and every wind,

That sweeps the maiden’s locks, and shows new charms,

Makes music sweeter than Apollo’s lyre.

Sweet is the landscape, wild and picturesque,

To him, the youth, whose glowing fancy paints

The love-crown’d cottage as the seat of bliss!

Sweet is the forest’s twilight gloom, and sweet

The May-morn ramble! Sweet to pace along

The farm-boy’s path, that, winding through the wood,

Leads to variety, within whose bounds

Alone is found the food that never cloys!

But sweeter far than brook, or walk, or wood,

Or May-morn ramble, or the evening stroll,

Far sweeter than imagination’s stores,

The stolen interview with her he loves!

Sweet is the voice of Nature to his ear,

Long pain’d with list’ning to the tale of vice!

Sweet is the mock-bird’s counterfeited note!

And sweet the murm’ring of the busy bee!

Sweet is the distant bell, at silent eve,

That guides the cow-boy where the cattle stray!

Sweet is the lengthen’d, still increasing sound,

Of horn that calls from meadows, wood, or field,

The weary lab’rer to his healthful meal!

The flute may cheat his melancholy mind

Of many a fancied ill, and as its strains

Float on the evening breeze, may gather mild

And mellowing influence to his greedy ear,

By mingling with the moonbeams! Yet to him

No note so musical—no strain so sweet

As sighs that tell his fond—his doubting heart,

The love she would, but cannot hide from him!