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Sketches

Chapter 26: THE SOLDIER’S WIDOW.
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About This Book

A youthful collection of lyrical sketches and short poems composed during the author’s college years, blending poetic retellings of scriptural narratives with reflective prose on boyhood, idleness, dreams, dawn and twilight, and moments of private feeling. Many pieces adopt a devotional or contemplative tone, concentrating on nature imagery, familial affection, grief, and moral deliberation. Occasional sonnets, fugitive poems, a college address, and journal fragments intersperse the sketches, producing a varied sequence that foregrounds vivid description, sentimental mood, and earnest introspection rather than sustained narrative development.

FUGITIVE PIECES.

THE SOLDIER’S WIDOW.

Wo! for my vine-clad home!
That it should ever be so dark to me,
With its bright threshold, and its whispering tree!
That I should ever come,
Fearing the lonely echo of a tread,
Beneath the roof-tree of my glorious dead!
Lead on! my orphan boy!
Thy home is not so desolate to thee,
And the low shiver in the linden tree
May bring to thee a joy;
But, oh! how dark is the bright home before thee,
To her who with a joyous spirit bore thee!
Lead on! for thou art now
My sole remaining helper. God hath spoken,
And the strong heart I leaned upon is broken;
And I have seen his brow,
The forehead of my upright one, and just,
Trod by the hoof of battle to the dust.
He will not meet thee there
Who blest thee at the eventide, my son!
And when the shadows of the night steal on,
He will not call to prayer.
The lips that melted, giving thee to God,
Are in the icy keeping of the sod!
Aye, my own boy! thy sire
Is with the sleepers of the valley cast,
And the proud glory of my life hath past,
With his high glance of fire.
Wo! that the linden and the vine should bloom,
And a just man be gathered to the tomb!
Why, bear them proudly, boy!
It is the sword he girded to his thigh,
It is the helm he wore in victory!
And shall we have no joy?
For thy green vales, O Switzerland, he died!
I will forget my sorrow—in my pride!