oe,
One word,--and the bitter-brimm'd heart would o'erflow:
But speechless, and moveless, and stony of eye,
Scarce conscious of aught in the earth or the sky,
In a swoon of the heart, all her senses have reeled,--
But she prays for endurance,--for here is the field.
The flight and pursuit, so harassing, so hot,
Have drifted all combatants far from the spot:
And through the sparse woodlands, and over the plain,
Lie gorily scattered, the wounded and slain.
Oh! the sickness,--the shudder,--the quailing of fear,
As it leaps to her lips,--"What if Douglass be here!"
Yet she frames not a question; her spirit can bear
Oh! anything,--all things, but hopeless despair:
Does her darling lie stretched on the slope of yon hill?
Let her doubt--let her hug the suspense, if she will!
She watches each ambulance-burden with dread;
She loots in the faces of dying and dead:
And hour after hour, with steady control,
She bends to her task all the strength of her soul;
She comforts the wounded with pity's sweet care,
And the spirit that's passing, she speeds with her prayer.
She starts as she hears, from her stout-hearted boy,
A wild exclamation, half doubt and half joy:--
"Oh! Surgeon!--some brandy! he's fainting!--Ah! now
The colour comes back to his cheek and his brow:--
He breathes again--speaks again--listen!--you are
'An orderly'--is it?--'of Colonel Dunbar?'
'He fought like a lion!' (I knew it!) and passed
Untouched through the battle, 'unhurt to the last?'
--My father is safe,--mother!--safe!--what a joy!
And here is Macpherson,--our barefooted boy!"
Poor Alice!--her grief has been tearless and dumb,
But the pressure once lifted, her senses succumb:
Too quick the revulsion,--too glad the surprise,--
The mists of unconsciousness curtain her eyes:
'Tis only a moment they suffer eclipse,
And words of thanksgiving soon thrill on her lips.
To Beechenbrook's quiet, with tenderest care,
They hasten the wounded, wan soldier to bear;
And never hung mother more patiently o'er
The couch of the child, her own bosom that bore,
Than Alice above the lone orphan, who lay
Submissively breathing his spirit away.
He knows that existence is ebbing; his brain
Is lucid and calm, in the pauses of pain;
But his round boyish cheek with no weeping is wet,
|