In a hard time of frost and snow, sparrows took Now and then, as 't were by stealth, A part of their abundant wealth, Nor evermore would feed his sparrows. Thus ignorance a kind heart narrows. I wish I had been there, I would Have told the child rooks live by food In the same way that sparrows do. TO A REDBREAST. - Langhorne. LITTLE bird with bosom red, MARINER'S HYMN. 75 Daily near my table steal, spy MARINER'S HYMN. - Mrs. Southey. Christian, God speed thee! Good angels lead thee! Set thy sails warily, Tempests will come; Steer thy course steadily, Christian, steer home! Look to the weather bow, Breakers are round thee; Let fall the plummet now, Shallows may ground thee. Reef in the foresail, there ! Hold the helm fast! So, let the vessel wear, There swept the blast. What of the night, watchman? What of the night? “Cloudy, all quiet, No land yet, - all 's right.” The children of the rich man, no carking care they know, Like lilies in the sunshine, how beautiful they grow ! And well may they be beautiful ; in raiment of the best, In velvet, gold, and ermine, their little forms are drest. With a hat and jaunty feather set lightly on their head, And golden hair, like angels' locks, over their shoul ders spread. THE TWO ESTATES. 77 And well may they be beautiful ; they toil not, neither spin, Nor dig, nor delve, nor do they aught their daily dread to win. They eat from gold and silver all luxuries wealth can buy ; They sleep on beds of softest down, in chambers rich and high. They dwell in lordly houses, with gardens round about, And servants to attend them if they go in or out. They have music for the hearing, and pictures for the eye, And exquisite and costly things each sense to grat ify. No wonder they are beautiful! and if they chance to die, Among dead lords and ladies, in the chancel-vault, they lie, With marble tablets on the wall inscribed, that all may know The children of the rich man are mouldering below. The children of the poor man, around the humble doors wheel, And eat with feeble appetite their coarse and joyless meal. They rise up in the morning ne'er dreaming of de light, And weary, spent, and heartsore they go to bed at They have no brave apparel, with golden clasp and gem; So their clothes keep out the weather, they 're good enough for them. Their hands are broad and horny; they hunger and are cold ; five old.' The poor man's child must step aside if the rich man's child go by ; And scarcely aught may minister to his little vanity. And of what could he be vain ? — his most beautiful array Is what the rich man's children have worn and cast away. The finely spun, the many-hued, the new, are not for him, He must clothe himself, with thankfulness, in garments soiled and dim. He sees the children of the rich in chariots gay go by, And,“ What a heavenly life is theirs," he sayeth with a sigh. Then straightway to his work he goeth, for, feeble though he be, His daily toil must still be done to help the family. Thus live the poor man's children; and if they chance to die, In plain, uncostly coffins, 'mong common graves, they lie; Nor monument nor headstone their humble names de. clare ; But thou, O God, wilt not forget the poor man's chil dren there ! |