FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32  
>>  
ther a wreath of fresh flowers. Feeling a very natural curiosity to know what she could do with these bright things, in a place that seemed to partake so much of sadness, I watched her light motions. Reaching a retired grave, covered with a plain marble slab, she emptied the seed, which it appeared the cup contained, into the slight cavities which had been scooped out in the corners of the level tablet, and laid the wreath on its pure face. "And why," I inquired, "my sweet child, do you put the seed in those little bowls there?" "It is to bring the birds here," she replied with a half-wondering look: "they will light on this tree," pointing to the cypress above, "when they have eaten the seed, and sing." "To whom do they sing?" I asked: "to you or to each other?" "Oh! no," she quickly replied, "to my sister: she sleeps here." "But your sister is dead?" "Oh! yes, sir; but she hears the birds sing." "Well, if she does hear the birds sing, she cannot see that wreath of flowers." "But she knows I put it there; I told her, before they took her away from our house, I would come and see her every morning." "You must" I continued, "have loved that sister very much; but you will never talk with her any more, never see her again." "Yes, sir," she replied, with a brightened look, "I shall see her always in heaven." "But she has gone there already, I trust." "No, she stops under this tree till they bring me here, and then we are going to heaven together." "But she has gone already, my child: you will meet her there, I hope; but certainly she is gone, and left you to come afterward." She cast to me a look of inquiring disappointment, and the tears came to her eyes. Oh! yes, my sweet child, be it so, That, near the cypress-tree, Thy sister sees those eyes o'erflow, And fondly waits for thee; That still she hears the young birds sing, And sees the chaplet wave, Which every morn thy light hands bring, To dress her early grave; And in a brighter, purer sphere, Beyond the sunless tomb, Those virtues that have charmed us here In fadeless life shall bloom. * * * * * THE LITTLE FLOWER-GARDEN. In yonder village burying-place, With briers and weeds o'ergrown, I saw a child, with beauteous face, Sit musing all alone. Without a shoe, without a hat, Beside a new-raised mound, The little Willie pensive sat, As if to guard the ground. I asked him why he lingered thus Withi
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32  
>>  



Top keywords:

sister

 
replied
 

wreath

 
cypress
 

heaven

 

flowers

 
inquiring
 

chaplet

 

erflow

 

fondly


disappointment

 
afterward
 

Beside

 

raised

 

Without

 

musing

 

lingered

 
ground
 

Willie

 

pensive


beauteous

 

virtues

 

charmed

 

fadeless

 

sunless

 
brighter
 
sphere
 

Beyond

 
burying
 

briers


ergrown
 

village

 

yonder

 

LITTLE

 
FLOWER
 

GARDEN

 

cavities

 

scooped

 
slight
 

emptied


appeared

 
contained
 

corners

 

inquired

 

tablet

 
marble
 

curiosity

 
natural
 

Feeling

 

bright