A Brief Memoir with Portions of the Diary, Letters, and Other Remains, - of Eliza Southall, Late of Birmingham, England by Eliza Southall
page 103 of 177 (58%)
page 103 of 177 (58%)
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Blight them on a funeral morn.
Buds of their perennial nature Need a region where to blow, Where the stalk has loftier stature Than it reaches here below. Not like us they dread the bosom Of chill earth's sepulchral gloom; They will find them where to blossom, And perhaps select a _tomb_. Yes, a _tomb_; so thou mayst deem it, With regretful feelings fond; _Not_ a _tomb_, however, seems it, If thou know'st to look _beyond_. 10th of 7th Month, 1847. _8th Mo. 8th_. We alone. Pleasant and quiet schemes have arisen (partly from reading Pyecroft, partly from having felt so much my own deficiencies) for thoroughly industrious study, and for keeping, if possible, externals and mentals in more order. Order, I believe, would enable me to do much more than I do in this way, without lessening those little "good works" which my natural, unsanctified conscience requires as a sedative; (alas that this is so nearly all!) but I have got such an impression of selfishness in sitting down to read to myself, that this, added to |
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