THE ARGUMENT. Introduction-Ringing of bells in a neighbouring Village on the Birth of an Heir-General Reflections on Human Life-The Subject proposed-Childhood– Youth - Manhood - Love- Marriage -- Domestic Happiness and Affliction --- War- Peace-Civil Dissension-Retirement from active Life-Old Age and its Enjoyments-Conclusion. The lark has sung his carol in the sky; And, crowding, stop the cradle to admire A few short years—and then these sounds shall hail And soon again shall music swell the breeze; Soon, issuing forth, shall glitter through the trees Vestures of nuptial white; and hymns be sung, And violets scattered round; and old and young, And once, alas, nor in a distant hour, And such is Human Life; so gliding on, Yet is the tale, brief though it be, as strange, Born in a trance, we wake, observe, inquire; grow in stature, and in wisdom too! Yet, all forgot, how oft the eye-lids close, And from the slack hand drops the gathered rose ! How oft, as dead, on the warm turf we lie, While many an emmet comes with curious eye; And on her nest the watchful wren sits by! Nor do we speak or move, or hear or see; So like what once we were, and once again shall be ! And say, how soon, where, blithe as innocent, The boy at sun-rise carolled as he went, An aged pilgrim on his staff shall lean, Tracing in vain the footsteps o'er the green; The man himself how altered, not the scene ! Now journeying home with nothing but the name; Way-worn and spent, another and the same ! K |