Poems by Walter R. Cassels
page 33 of 155 (21%)
page 33 of 155 (21%)
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Earth's bosom heaved, and in man's heart a voice
Echoed the anthem--"Spring is come! Rejoice!" THE BITTERN. The reeds are idly waving o'er the marshy ground, The rank and ragged herbage rots on many a mound, And desolate pools and marshes deadly lie around. There is no life nor motion, save the winds that fly With the close-muffled clouds in silence through the sky, There is no sound to stir it, save the Bittern's cry; The Bittern, sitting sadly on the fluted edges Of pillars once the prop and pride of palace ledges, Now smear'd with damp decay and sunk in slimy sedges; Shatter'd and sunken, with the sculptured architrave Peering above the surface of the sluggish wave, Like a gaunt limb thrust fleshless from a shallow grave. The Bittern sitteth sadly on the time-worn stone, Upon life's mouldering relics, fearfully alone, Searing the silence ofttimes with his solemn tone. |
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