The Sculptured Children.
On Chantrey's Monument at Lichfield
Felicia Hemans
Thus lay
The gentle babes, thus girdling one another
Within their alabaster innocent arms.
SHAKESPEARE
(
Richard III, IV.iii.9-12
)
|
| Fair images of sleep! |
| Hallow?d, and soft, and deep! |
| On whose calm lids the dreamy quiet lies, |
| Like moonlight on shut bells |
| Of flowers in mossy dells, 5 |
| Fill?d with the hush of night and summer skies; |
| How many hearts have felt |
| Your silent beauty melt |
| Their strength to gushing tenderness away! |
| How many sudden tears, 10 |
| From depths of buried years |
| All freshly bursting, have confess?d your sway! |
| How many eyes will shed |
| Still, o?er your marble bed, |
| Such drops, from Memory?s troubled fountains wrung! 15 |
| While Hope hath blights to bear, |
| While Love breathes mortal air, |
| While roses perish ere to glory sprung. |
| Yet, from a voiceless home, |
| If some sad mother come 20 |
| To bend and linger o?er your lovely rest; |
| As o?er the cheek?s warm glow, |
| And the soft breathings low |
| Of babes, that grew and faded on her breast; |
| If then the dovelike tone 25 |
| Of those faint murmurs gone, |
| O?er her sick sense too piercingly return; |
| If for the soft bright hair, |
| And brow and bosom fair, |
| And life, now dust, her soul too deeply yearn; 30 |
| O gentlest forms! entwin'd |
| Like tendrils, which the wind |
| May wave, so clasp?d, but never can unlink; |
| Send from your calm profound |
| A still small voice, a sound 35 |
| Of hope, forbidding that lone heart to sink. |
| By all the pure, meek mind |
| In your pale beauty shrined, |
| By childhood?s love?too bright a bloom to die! |
| O?er her worn spirit shed, 40 |
| O fairest, holiest Dead! |
| The Faith, Trust, Light, of Immortality! |
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