Watched within a curtained room Round the sick and dreary. Roses, gathered for a vase, Beam and breeze resigning ; Love remains for shining. Other dogs in thymy dew Sunny moor or meadow ; Sharing in the shadow. Other dogs of loyal cheer Up the woodside hieing ; Or a louder sighing. And if one or two quick tears Or a sigh came double, In a tender trouble. And this dog was satisfied Down his dewlaps sloping- On the palm left open. This dog, if a friendly voice Than such chamber-keeping, “Come out !” praying from the door,Presseth backward as before, Up against me leaping. Therefore to this dog will I, Tenderly not scornfully, Render praise and favour : hand his head, Is my benediction said Therefore and for ever. Often man or woman, Leaning from my Human. Sugared milk make fat thee! Pleasures wag on in thy tail, Hands of gentle motion fail Nevermore, to pat thee ! Downy pillow take thy head, Sunshine help thy sleeping ! Set for drinking deep in. Whiskered cats arointed flee, Cologne distillations ; Nuts lie in thy path for stones, Turn to daily rations ! Thou art made so straitly Thou who lovest greatly. Pervious to thy nature ; Loving fellow-creature ! MY DOVES. My little doves have left a nest Upon an Indian tree Or motion from the sea ; The tropic stars looked down, With feathers softly brown, And glittering eyes that showed their right To general Nature's deep delight. And God them taught, at every close Of murmuring waves beyond And green leaves round, to interpose Their choral voices fond, Interpreting that love must be The meaning of the earth and sea. Fit ministers! Of living loves Theirs hath the calmest fashion, To lifeless intonation, My little doves were ta'en away From that glad nest of theirs, Across an ocean rolling grey, And tempest-clouded airs,My little doves, who lately knew The sky and wave by warmth and blue. And now, within the city prison, In mist and chilness pent, For sounds of past content, The stir without the glow of passion, The triumph of the mart, Man's cold metallic heart, Yet still, as on my human hand Their fearless heads they lean, And almost seem to understand What human musings mean, (Their eyes with such a plaintive shine Are fastened upwardly to mine) Soft falls their chant as on the nest Beneath the sunny zone ; Has not aweary grown, And love, that keeps the music, fills With pastoral memories ; All droppings from the skies, So teach ye me the wisest part, My little doves ! to move Assured by holy love, 'T was hard, to sing by Babel's stream More hard, in Babel's street : Their music not unmeet To me, fair memories belong Of scenes that used to bless, And lasting thankfulness ; |