INTEMPERANCE.
 
I saw mid bowering shades a cottage home 
Where elegance with sweet simplicity 
Had blent her charms.—Around its graceful porch 
Twined the gay woodbine, while the velvet lawn 
Fresh roses sprinkled, and those snowy walls 
Seem'd through their leafy canopy to smile 
A welcome to the guest.—My heart was light,
As toward this bower of bliss I drew, to greet 
A friend who in my careless boyhood shared 
Each healthful sport, each hour of studious toil, 
With kindred emulation.—And I thought 
After my wanderings in a foreign clime, 
How sweet to rest as he hath, pleasantly 
In such pure paradise, and watch the bloom 
Of young affections.—Near that open door 
Two cherub children gamboll'd.—One display'd 
In such strong miniature the manly charms 
Of my long-parted friend, that in my soul 
Woke the warm pulses of remember'd joy.— 
There was the same bold forehead, where disguise 
Might never lurk,—the same full hazle eye 
Melting, yet ardent.— 
                                On with willing smile 
He led his fairy sister, murmuring low 
In varied tones of dovelike tenderness, 
And sometimes o'er her lily form would bend 
In infantine protection, with such grace, 
That in my arms I clasped him, and exclaim'd 
"Show me thy father."— 
                                  —On a couch he lay.— 
Who lay?—I dared not call him friend!—That wreck 
Of nature's nobleness!—Had dire disease, 
Or ruthless poverty thus changed a brow 
Where beam'd bright fancy,—intellectual light, 
And soaring dignity of soul?—Ah no!— 
For then I would have join'd my face to his 
And spoke of Heaven.—But Vice her hideous seal 
Had stamp'd upon those features, and the mind, 
The ethereal mind debased.—
                                           —She too was near, 
Who at God's altar gave her holiest vow 
In all the trusting confidence of love 
To this her chosen friend.—On her young cheek 
There was a cankering grief,—and the pale trace 
Of beauty's rosebud nipp'd.— 
                                          —Something I said, 
But faint and brokenly of former days, 
When in the paths of science and of hope, 
We walk'd, twin-hearted.—Then there came a peal 
Of vacant laughter from those bloated lips, 
And the swoll'n hand with trembling haste was stretch'd 
For friendship's grasp. 
                                 —Twas but a transient rush 
Of generous feeling.—At the shouting voice 
Of his young children sporting near his bed 
His fiery eye-ball flash'd,—and a hoarse threat 
Appall'd those innocent ones,—and that fair girl, 
From whom intemperance had reft the guide 
Which nature gave, in terror hid her face 
Deep in her mother's robe.— 
                                          —I would have cursed 
The poisonous bowl, but then in the meek eye 
Of her who loved him, shone such pleading tear 
Of silent, deep endurance, that all thought 
Of sternness breathed itself away in sighs. 
—I went my way,—for how could I sustain 
Such change in one so loved!—and as I went 
I mourn'd that widowhood and orphanage, 
Which hath nor hope nor pity.—Sad I roam'd 
Far down the violet-broider'd vale, and when 
No eye beheld me, to the earth I bow'd
My head, and said in anguish,—"Oh my God!— 
—What is the beauty and the strength of man,
His fairest promise, and his proudest powers 
Without thine aid?—So keep us from the sins 
Which in us lurk, that we at last may rise 
Where is no hurtful impulse, erring choice, 
Or dark temptation working baleful deeds 
For penitence to purge,—but Virtue dwells 
Fast by her Sire,—and finds a deathless joy."