Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By The DirgeJames G. Brooks (18011841)
I
In youth and beauty brightly gay,
And little thought the savage tomb
So soon would steal her charms away:
I saw her when her eye was bright
As the blue vestment of the sky,
And little thought the fearful night
Of the death angel was so nigh!
To see her wither day by day;
And it was mine to see her laid
Beneath the cold, repulsive clay;
And then the sad funereal bell
Bore the death music to my ear—
’T was hope’s and love’s expiring knell.
Yet I was left to linger here.
To think that she was fair and kind;
White were the lilies on her brow,
And stainless was her gentle mind.
Her’s was the holy, heavenly love,
Which beacons life’s beclouded way,
Such as the seraphs feel above,
Where heaven’s eternal sunbeams play.
As woman moved at Eden’s birth,
And seem’d an angel sent to bless
The weary wilderness of earth.
Too soon the earth received her form:
Nor worth, nor innocence could save
Her bosom from the earthy worm—
Her bonny blossoms from the grave!
And many wept beside her bier—
By heaven!—too soon she was forgot,
And time full early chased the tear;
Yes! ere the grass began to spread
Its verdure o’er her, fresh and green,
Her memory from their breasts had fled,
As if the loved one ne’er had been!
On whom her trusting heart relied,
Whose soul clung fondly to her spell,
Nor cared for all the world beside:
And on his heart the seal is set;
That image dwells for ever more,
To cherish still its fond regret,
Till life’s last agony is o’er.