In childhood, when with eager eyes The season-measured year I view'd, All, garb'd in fairy guise, Pledged constancy of good. | Spring sang of heaven; the summer flowers Bade me gaze on, and did not fade; Ev'n suns o'er autumn's bowers Heard my strong wish, and stay'd. | They came and went, the short-lived four; Yet, as their varying dance they wove, To my young heart each bore Its own sure claim of love. | Far different now;--the whirling year Vainly my dizzy eyes pursue; And its fair tints appear All blent in one dusk hue. 284 | Then what this world to thee, my heart? Its gifts nor feed thee nor can bless. Thou hast no owner's part In all its fleetingness. | The flame, the storm, the quaking ground, Earth's joy, earth's terror, nought is thine; Thou must but hear the sound Of the still Voice Divine. | |