Tell me, in your earnest prattle, Of the olive branch and dove; Call me from the cannon's rattle; Take my thoughts away from battle; Fold me in your dearest love.
Darlings- I am weary pining: Shadows fall across my way; I can hardly see the lining
Of the clouds the silver lining, Turning darkness into day.
BY SAMUEL ECKEL, OF EAST TENNESSEE.
LONE upon the mountain summit, Watching through the weary night, For the cheering heart-glow glimmer Of the Union camp-fire's light;
Starting at the slighest rustle
In the leaves above my head; Seeing foes in every shadow,
While the morning light I dread;
THE REFUGEE.
In the distance, far below me, Tented foes I dimly trace; · The oppressors of my children, And the tyrants of my race.
I sadly know it,
And for that I am a slave; But I have a soul within me
That will live beyond the grave.
Oft at noon, when I've been sitting 'Neath some shady orange tree, Every breeze would whisper to me That I must, I would be free.
Sadly I have mourned for freedom, But its breath I never drew; Sadly mourn I for my children, They, alas! are chattels too.
Look! the morning dawns upon me; In the distant vale afar,
I behold a banner floating,
I can see each stripe and star.
There I'll go and seek protection; And I ask, O God, of Thee,
DEAREST, to-night upon our hearth See the first fire of Autumn leap, The first that we with festal mirth For loving Memory keep.
Sweet Fairy of the Fireside, come And guard our altar-flame of Home!
Without, October breathes the night, Cold dews below, cold stars on high; The chilly cricket sees our light Reach welcoming arms a-nigh, And sighs to sing his evening song Upon our hearth the winter long.
Blithe cricket! welcome, singing, here! I half recall dead Autumn's cold, Half-close my eyes to dream, my dear, Their sadness vague and old :
The Fireside Fairy laughs and tries With bursting sparks to shell my eyes!
Ill-timed the gay conceit, I know:
On the dark hills that near us lie, (The Real will not, need not go,) Beneath the Autumnal sky Stand battle-tents that everywhere Keep ghostly white the moonless air.
The sentinel walks his lonely beat, The soldier slumbers on the ground; To one, hearth-glimmers far are sweet, - One dreams of fireside sound! From unforgotten doors they reach, Dear sympathies, more dear than speech.
I think of all the homeless woe, The battle-winter long;
Alas, the world - the hearth's a-glow! And lo, the cricket's song
Within the Fairy's minstrel sings Away the ghosts of saddest things!
The fire-smile keeps our walls in bloom; Home's summer-light a flower, I deem; And look, the pictures in the room,
How beautiful! a-gleam;
A window there with rose and bee, The Olive-Dove in from the sea!
A cottage in a summer land,
And one whose shadow walks before, (Snow-peaks afar in sunset stand); Vines flutter o'er the door, Half-hiding in a sunlit place, But cannot hide a sunlit face.
And, yonder, bending o'er a child, An angel with a yearning grace, Rosy with fire-bloom lingers mild, A mother's tender face!
Her wings (the boy has dreaming eyes) Show that she came from Paradise.
Near by, the same; her arms about A child just kissed from summer sleep (Still rocks the cradle): laugh and shout Within her bosom keep
Sweet echoes dancing. Which is best, The angel, blessing-mortal blest?
A torrent lost in rainbow spray;
A flock (its shepherdess the moon)
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