THE ARK. THERE is no change of time and place with THEE; Where'er I go, with me 'tis still the same; Within thy presence I rejoice to be, And always hallow thy most holy name; The world doth ever change; there is no peace Among the shadows of its storm-vex'd breast; With every breath the frothy waves increase, They toss up mire and dirt, they cannot rest; I thank THEE that within thy strong-built ark My soul across the uncertain sea can sail, And, though the night of death be long and dark, My hopes in CHRIST shall reach within the veil; And to the promised haven steady steer, Whose rest to those who love is ever near. NATURE. THE bubbling brook doth leap when I come by, His ear shall catch each sound with new delight, THE TREE. I LOVE thee when thy swelling buds appear, And one by one their tender leaves unfold, As if they knew that warmer suns were near, Nor longer sought to hide from winter's cold; And when with darker growth thy leaves are seen To veil from view the early robin's nest, I love to lie beneath thy waving screen, With limbs by summer's heat and toil oppress'd; And when the autumn winds have stript thee bare, And round thee lies the smooth, untrodden snow, When naught is thine that made thee once so fair, I love to watch thy shadowy form below, And through thy leafless arms to look above On stars that brighter beam when most we need their love. THE SON. FATHER, I wait thy word. The sun doth stand The tongue of time abides the appointed hour, The heavy cloud withholds the pelting shower, Then every drop speeds onward at thy call; The bird reposes on the yielding bough, With breast unswollen by the tide of song; So does my spirit wait thy presence now To pour thy praise in quickening life along, Chiding with voice divine man's lengthen'd sleep, While round the unutter'd word and love their vigils keep. THE ROBIN. THOU need'st not flutter from thy half-built nest, Whene'er thou hear'st man's hurrying feet go by, Fearing his eye for harm may on thee rest, Or he thy young unfinish'd cottage spy; All will not heed thee on that swinging bough, Nor care that round thy shelter spring the leaves, Nor watch thee on the pool's wet margin now, For clay to plaster straws thy cunning weaves; All will not hear thy sweet out-pouring joy, That with morn's stillness blends the voice of song, For over-anxious cares their souls employ, That else upon thy music borne along And the light wings of heart-ascending prayer Had learn'd that Heaven is pleased thy simple joys to share. THE RAIL-ROAD. THOU great proclaimer to the outward eye Of what the spirit too would seek to tell, Onward thou goest, appointed from on high The other warnings of the Lord to swell; Thou art the voice of one that through the world Proclaims in startling tones, "Prepare the way;" The lofty mountain from its seat is hurl'd, The flinty rocks thine onward march obey; The valleys, lifted from their lowly bed, O'ertop the hills that on them frown'd before, Thou passest where the living seldom tread, Through forests dark, where tides beneath thee roar, And bidd'st man's dwelling from thy track remove, And would with warning voice his crooked paths reprove. THE LATTER RAIN. THE latter rain,-it falls in anxious haste Upon the sun-dried fields and branches bare, Loosening with searching drops the rigid waste As if it would each root's lost strength repair; But not a blade grows green as in the spring, No swelling twig puts forth its thickening leaves, The robins only mid the harvests sing, Pecking the grain that scatters from the sheaves The rain falls still,-the fruit all ripen'd drops, It pierces chestnut-burr and walnut-shell, The furrow'd fields disclose the yellow crops, Each bursting pod of talents used can tell, And all that once received the early rain Declare to man it was not sent in vain. ALFRED B. STREET. [Born, 1811.] MR. STREET was born in Poughkeepsie, one of the most beautiful of the many large towns upon the Hudson, on the eighteenth of December, 1811. General RANDALL S. STREET, his father, was an officer in active service during our second war with England, and subsequently several years a representative in Congress; and his paternal grandfather was a direct and lineal descendant of the Reverend NICHOLAS STREET, who came to this country soon after the landing of JoHN CARVER, and was ordained minister of the first church in New Haven, in 1659. His mother's father was Major ANDREW BILLINGS, of the revolutionary army, who was connected by marriage with the influential and wealthy family of the LIVINGSTONS, which has furnished for some two centuries so many eminent citizens of the State of New York. When the poet was about fourteen years of age his father removed to Monticello, in the county of Sullivan. Up to this period he had been in an academy at Poughkeepsie, and had already written verses in which is exhibited some of that peculiar taste, and talent for description, for which his later works are so much distinguished. Sullivan is what is called a "wild county," though it is extremely fertile where well cultivated. Its scenery is magnificent, and its deep forests, streams as clear as dew-drops, gorges of piled rock and black shade, mountains and valleys, could hardly fail to waken into life all the faculties that slumbered in the brain of a youthful poet. Mr. STREET studied law in the office of his father, and, in the first years after his admission to the bar, attended the courts of Sullivan county; but in the winter of 1839 he removed to Albany, and has since successfully practised his profession in that city. His "Nature," a poem read before the literary societies of the college at Geneva, appeared in 1840; "The Burning of Schenectady and other Poems," in 1843, and "Drawings and Tintings." a collection of pieces chiefly descriptive, in 1844. The last and most complete edition of his poems was published by Clark and Austin, of New York, in 1845. Mr. STREET, as has been intimated above, is a descriptive poet, and in his particular department he has, perhaps, no superior in this country. He has a hearty love of rural sports and pastimes, a quick perception of the grand and beautiful, and he writes with apparent ease and freedom, from the impulses of his own heart, and from actual observations of life and nature. The greatest merits of any style of writing are clearness, directness and condensation. Diffuse ness is even more objectionable in verse than in prose, and in either is avoided by men of taste. A needless word is worse than one ill chosen, and scarcely any thing is more offensive than a line, though never was other one so musical, which! could be omitted without affecting the transparency or force of the attempted expression. The beauty of Mr. STREET's poems would sometimes! be greater but for the use of epithets which serve no other purpose than to fill his lines, and his singular minuteness, though the most extreme particularity is a fault in description only when it lessens the distinctness and fidelity of the general impression. Occasionally his pictures of stiil nature remind us of the daguerreotype, and quite as often of the masterly landscapes of our COLE and DOUGHTY. Some of his exhibitions of the ordinary phenomena of the seasons have rarely been equalled. What, for example, could be finer than these lines on a rain in June? Wafted up, The stealing cloud with soft gray blinds the sky, His works are full of passages not less picturesque THE GRAY FOREST-EAGLE. WITH storm-daring pinion and sun-gazing eye, For he hears in those haunts only music, and sees Of the fierce, rock-lash'd torrent, he claims as his home: There he blends his keen shriek with the roar of the flood, And the many-voiced sounds of the blast-smitten wood; From the crag-grasping fir-top, where morn hangs its wreath, He views the mad waters white writhing beneath: On a limb of that moss-bearded hemlock far down, With bright azure mantle and gay mottled crown, The kingfisher watches, where o'er him his foe, The fierce hawk, sails circling, each moment more low: Now poised are those pinions and pointed that beak, His dread swoop is ready, when, hark! with a shriek, His eye-balls red-blazing, high bristling his crest, His snake-like neck arch'd, talons drawn to his breast, With the rush of the wind-gust, the glancing of light, The gray forest-eagle shoots down in his flight; One blow of those talons, one plunge of that neck, The strong hawk hangs lifeless, a blood-dripping wreck; And as dives the free kingfisher, dart-like on high With his prey soars the eagle, and melts in the sky. A fitful red glaring, a low, rumbling jar, Proclaim the storm demon yet raging afar: [red, The black cloud strides upward, the lightning more And the roll of the thunder more deep and more A thick pall of darkness is cast o'er the air, [dread; And on bounds the blast with a howl from its lair: The lightning darts zig-zag and fork'd through the gloom, And the bolt launches o'er with crash, rattle, and boom; The gray forest-eagle, where, where has he sped? Away, O, away, soars the fearless and free! The breeze bears the odour its flower-kiss has won, brow? There's a dark, floating spot by yon cloud's pearly wreath, With the speed of the arrow 't is shooting beneath! Down, nearer and nearer it draws to the gaze, Now over the rainbow, now blent with its blaze, To a shape it expands, still it plunges through air, A proud crest, a fierce eye, a broad wing are there; 'Tis the eagle-the gray forest-eagle-once more He sweeps to his eyrie: his journey is o'er! Time whirls round his circle, his years roll away, But the gray forest-eagle minds little his sway; The child spurns its buds for youth's thorn-hidden bloom, Seeks manhood's bright phantoms, finds age and a tomb; But the eagle's eye dims not, his wing is unbow'd, Still drinks he the sunshine, still scales he the cloud! The green, tiny pine-shrub points up from the moss, The wren's foot would cover it, tripping across; The beech-nut down dropping would crush it beneath, But 'tis warm'd with heaven's sunshine, and fann'd by its breath; The seasons fly past it, its head is on high, He has seen the proud forest melt breath-like away, He sees the green meadow-grass hiding the lair, And his crag-throne spread naked to sun and to air; And his shriek is now answer'd, while sweeping along, By the low of the herd and the husbandman's song; He has seen the wild red man off-swept by his foes, And he sees dome and roof where those smokes once arose; But his flaming eye dims not, his wing is unbow'd, An emblem of Freedom, stern, haughty, and high, Deep terror, deep heart-shaking terror it brings; When lightnings gleam'd fiercely, and thunderbolts rung, How proud to the tempest those pinions were flung! Though the wild blast of battle swept fierce through the air With darkness and dread, still the eagle was there; Unquailing, still speeding, his swift flight was on, Till the rainbow of Peace crown'd the victory won. O, that eagle of Freedom! age dims not his eye, He has seen Earth's mortality spring, bloom,and die! He has seen the strong nations rise, flourish, and fall, He mocks at Time's changes, he triumphs o'er all: He has seen our own land with wild forests o'er And the turkey, too, smoothing his plumes in your face, Then ruffling so proud, as you bound from the place And a moss-couch is spread for my foot on the ground: beneath. The hickory hardens, snow-white, in its burr, [fir; And the cones are full grown on the hemlock and The hopple's red berries are tinging with brown, And the tips of the sumach have darken'd their down; The white, brittle Indian-pipe lifts up its bowl, And the wild turnip's leaf curls out broad like a scroll; The cohosh displays its white balls and red stems, And the braid of the mullen is yellow with gems; While its rich, spangled plumage the golden-rod shows, And the thistle yields stars to each air-breath that blows. A quick, startling whirr now bursts loud on my ear, The partridge! the partridge! swift pinion'd by fear, Low onward he whizzes, Jupe yelps as he sees, And we dash through the brushwood, to note where he trees; I see him! his brown, speckled breast is display'd On the branch of yon maple, that edges the glade; My fowling-piece rings, Jupe darts forward so feet, While loading, he drops the dead bird at my feet: I pass by the scaurberries' drops of deep red, In their green, creeping leaves, where he daintily fed, And his couch near the root, in the warm forestmould, Where he wallow'd, till sounds his close danger foretold. On yon spray, the bright oriole dances and sings, With his rich, crimson bosom, and glossy black wings; And the robin comes warbling, then flutters away, For I harm not God's creatures so tiny as they; But the quail, whose quick whistle has lured me along, No more will recall his stray'd mate with his song, And the hawk that is circling so proud in the blue, Let him keep a look-out, or he'll tumble down too! He stoops-the gun echoes-he flutters beneath, His yellow claws curl'd, and fierce eyes glazed in death: Lie there, cruel Arab! the mocking-bird now Can rear her young brood, without fear of thy blow; And the brown wren can warble his sweet little lay, Nor dread more thy talons to rend and to slay; And, with luck, an example I'll make of that crow, Formy green,sprouting wheat knew no hungrier foe; But the rascal seems down from his summit to scoff, And as I creep near him, he croaks, and is off. The woods shrink away, and wide spreads the morass, With junipers cluster'd, and matted with grass; Trees, standing like ghosts, their arms jagged and bare, And hung with gray lichens, like age-whiten'd hair. And clumps of dense laurels, and brown-headed flags, And thick, slimy basins, black dotted with snags: Tread softly now, Carlo! the woodcock is here, He rises his long bill thrust out like a spear; The gun ranges on him-his journey is sped; Quick scamper, my spaniel! and bring in the dead! We plunge in the swamp-the tough laurels are round; No matter; our shy prey not lightly is found; Another up-darts, but unharm'd is his flight; Confound it! the sunshine then dazzled my sight; But the other my shot overtakes as he flies: Come, Carlo! come, Carlo! I wait for my prize; One more still another-till, proofs of my sway, From my pouch dangle heads, in a ghastly array. From this scene of exploits, now made birdless, I pass; Pleasant Pond gleams before me, a mirror of glass: The boat's by the marge, with green branches supplied, From the keen-sighted duck my approaches to hide; A flock spots the lake; now crouch, Carlo, below! How graceful their dipping-how gliding their way! Are they not all too lovely to mark as a prey? One flutters, enchain'd, in those brown, speckled A FOREST WALK. A LOVELY sky, a cloudless sun, A wind that breathes of leaves and flowers, Traced by the browsing herds, I choose, The spruce its green tent stretches wide, While scowls the hemlock, grim and dark, The maple's scallop'd dome beside: All weave on high a verdant roof, That keeps the very sun aloof, Making a twilight soft and green, Within the column'd, vaulted scene. Sweet forest-odours have their birth From the clothed boughs and teeming earth; Where pine-cones dropp'd, leaves piled and dead, Long tufts of grass, and stars of fern, With many a wild flower's fairy urn, A thick, elastic carpet spread; There, wrench'd but lately from its throne, The screening branches, and a glow Down the dark stems, and breaks below; Chirps as the quick ray strikes her breast; I see the rabbit upward bound, Then scamper to the darkest nook, Where, with crouch'd limb, and staring eye, A narrow vista, 'carpeted With rich green grass, invites my tread; Whirrs to the sheltering branches near; |