The Poetry Corner

On The Death Of A Lady.

By Maria Gowen Brooks

Thy home seemed not of earth - so blest But there has fall'n a shaft of fate The dove is stricken; and the nest She warmed and cheered is desolate. But fairest not for thee, we mourn: Blest from thy birth, thou still art so The tear must dew thine early urn For him whom thou hast taught to know The zest of joys - complete, as knows Thy vital flame, the pang that tost And changed thee past, where now it glows Knowing, yet feeling all is lost. There is a flower of tender white And, on its spotless bosom, play The moon's soft beams, one lovely night; But when appears the morning ray 'Tis shut and withered - even now Around your lime I see it wave; [FN#27] 'Tis pure, and fresh, and fair, as thou And sinks in beauty to its grave. [FN#27]The white convolvulus; it blossoms just after sun-set, and is seen in great abundance entwining the lime-hedges, about the plantations of Cuba.