Fair cradle of a race for whom the unbounded heritage of
a future that no sage can conjecture, no prophet divine, lies afar in
the golden promise--light of Time!--destined, perchance, from the sins
and sorrows of a civilization struggling with its own elements of decay,
to renew the youth of the world, and transmit the great soul of England
through the cycles of Infinite Change. All climates that can best ripen
the products of earth or form into various character and temper the
different families of man is "rain influences" from the heaven that
smiles so benignly on those who had once shrunk, ragged, from the wind,
or scowled on the thankless sun. Here, the hard air of the chill Mother
Isle,--there, the mild warmth of Italian autumns or the breathless glow
of the tropics. And with the beams of every climate, glides subtle Hope.
Of her there, it may be said, as of Light itself, in those exquisite
lines of a neglected poet,--
"Through the soft ways of heaven and air and sea,
Which open all their pores to thee,
Like a clear river thou dost glide.
All the world's bravery that delights our eyes
Is but thy several liveries;
Thou the rich dye on them bestowest;
Thy nimble pencil paints the landscape as thou goest." (1)
Adieu, my kind nurse and sweet foster-mother,--a long and a last adieu!
Never had I left thee but for that louder voice of Nature which calls
the child to the parent, and wooes us from the labors we love the best
by the chime in the sabbath-bells of Home.
No one can tell how dear the memory of that wild Bush life becomes to
him who has tried it with a fitting spirit. How often it haunts him in
the commonplace of more civilized scenes! Its dangers, its risks,
its sense of animal health, its bursts of adventure, its intervals of
careless repose,--the fierce gallop through a very sea of wide, rolling
plains; the still saunter, at night, through woods never changing their
leaves, with the moon, clear as sunshine, stealing slant through their
clusters of flowers. With what an effort we reconcile ourselves to
the trite cares and vexed pleasures, "the quotidian ague of frigid
impertinences," to which we return! How strong and black stands my
pencil-mark in this passage of the poet from whom I have just quoted
before--!
"We are here among the vast and noble scenes of Nature,--we are there
among the pitiful shifts of policy; we walk here in the light and open
ways of the
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