When thy hues catch, amid the growing corn? The traveller's eye, "Weeds! weeds!" he cries, and shakes his head in scorn: But when on high The grain uplifts its harvest-bearing crest, The Poppy's hidden, and the taunt suppress'd. So, when our early state is poor and mean, Our portion small, Our scarlet-blushing moral weeds are seen, And blamed by all; But as we rise in rank we win repute, Why does the Poppy with its chaliced store Of opiate rare,* Flush in the fields, and grace the hovel door, But to declare That, from the City's palaces forlorn, Sleep flies to bless the cottage in the corn? *The opium is principally extracted from the white poppy. And Oh! how precious is the Anodyne Its cells exude, Charming the mind's disquietude malign To peaceful mood, Soothing the body's anguish with its balm, Lulling the restless into slumbers calm. What tho' the reckless suicide-oppress'd By fell despair, Turns to a poison-cup thy chalice, bless'd With gifts so rare; And basely flying, while the brave remain, Such art perverted does but more enhance That higher power, Which, planting by the corn-(man's sustenance,) The Poppy flower, Both in one soil, one atmosphere their breath, Rears, side by side, the means of life and death! Who, who can mark thee, Poppy, when the air Fans thy lips bright, Nor move his own in sympathetic prayer To Him whose might Combined the powers-O thought-bewildering deed! Of death-sleep-health-oblivion-in a weed! THE MURDERER'S CONFESSION. I PAUSED not to question the Devil's suggestion, But o'er the cliff, headlong, the living was thrown; A scream and a plashing, a foam and a flashing, With heart-thrilling spasm I leant o'er the chasm; There was blood on the wave that closed o'er his head, And in bubbles his breath, as he struggled with death, Rose up to the surface. I shudder'd and fled. I stole to my dwelling, bewilder'd, dismay'd, Till whisperings stealthy said—" Psha! he was wealthy, Thou'rt his heir-no one saw thee-then be not afraid." I summon'd the neighbours, I join'd in their labours, We sought for the missing by day and by night; We ransack'd each single height, hollow, or dingle, Till shoreward we wended, when starkly extended, His corpse lay before us- -Oh God! what a sight! And yet was there nothing for terror or loathing. They stared at me, flared at me, angrily glared at me, Yet my guilty commotion seem'd truth and devotion, When I shudder'd and fainted. |