In fancifully plumed array, And showering thick perfume, Has kindled into bloom, Blest Flowers! Tnere breathes not one unfraight With lessons sweet and new ; The Wall-flower, tried and true; But golden-bright, As gems of night, The flowers are culled; and each lithe stem With Woodbine band we braidWith Woodbine, type of Life's best gem, Of Truth, that will not fade : The Wreath is wove; do Thou, blest Power, That brood'st o'er leaflet, fruit, and flower, Embalm it with thy love ; Whilst, free in Eden's grove, THE USE OF FLOWERS. BY MARY HOWITT. God might have bade the earth bring forth Enough for great and small, The oak-tree and the cedar-tree, Without a flower at all. He night have made enough, enough, For every want of ours; And yet have made no flowers. The ore within the mountain-mine Requireth none to grow, Nor doth it need the lotus flower To make the river flow. The clouds might give abundant rain, The nightly dews might fall, Might yet have drunds them all. Then, wlierefore, wherefore were they made All dyed with rainbow light; Up-springing day and night ; Springing in valleys green and low, And on the mountains high, And in the silent wilderness, Where no man passes by ? Our outward life requires them not Then wherefore had they birth? To minister delight to man, To beautify the earth; To comfort man-to whisper hope Whene'er his faith is dim ; Will much more care for him! FLOWERS: BY RICHARD H. DANA. I loved you ever, gentle flowers, The while your spirit stole In secret to my soul, To shed a softness through my ripening powers, And lead the thoughtful mind to deepest truih. And now, when weariness and pain With each a smiling face, In all your simple grace, And with your looks of joy To wake again the boy, And to the pallid cheek restore its bloom, And o'er the desert mind pour boundless wealth. And whence ye came, by brimming stream, 'Neath rustling leaves, with birds within, Again I musing tread Forgot my restless bed, And long, sick hours.--Too short the blessed dream! I woke to pain !--to hear the city's din!! But time nor pain shall ever steal And blessings on ye, Flowers. Though few with me your hours, THE SENSITIVE PLANT. BY SHELLY. PART 1. And the spring arose on the garden fair, |