Stanzas, Written Upon Robert, the Son of Captain S. Shaw, of the
Royal Artillery, Now a Resident in the East Indies—a Child
                        Five
Years of Age.
                        
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
1.
A witching child, to whom ’tis given1
                        
                        All hearts to challenge as thy due—2
                        
                        Thou fairest print of childhood’s Heav’n3
                        
                        That ever Nature’s pencil drew !4
                        
                        Delightful, as the holy hymn5
                        
                        Of meek and sainted cherubim,6
                        
                        And gladdening, as the fountain near7
                        
                        That greets the desert’s wanderer—8
                        
                        Thy countenance I still behold9
                        
                        Pure, as if earth, and earth’s despising,10
                        
                        Composed—as if from marble cold11
                        
                        Thou wert but just to life arising—12
                        
                        Still do I see thy silk-fring’d eyes13
                        
                        With innocence and archness dawning—14
                        
                        Thy cheek, which health’s rich painting dyes15
                        
                        With all the loveliest hues of morning—16
                        
                        The rose, which blushes on a skin17
                        
                        Transparent as the mind within ;18
                        
                        Thy mouth, whose upper lip, to smother19
                        
                        Its rival, hides its under brother,20
                        
                        As if too jealous to reveal21
                        
                        The prisoner of its coral seal ;22
                        
                        Till sund’ring, when it shows beneath23
                        
                        A lip where heav’n itself might breathe—24
                        
                        As leaves, when by the breeze untwin’d,25
                        
                        They show the downy peach behind.26
                        2.
Born, where the giant Ganges pours27
                        
                        His streams magnificent along,28
                        
                        ’Mid sunny groves and golden bow’rs,29
                        
                        Which breathe aloft immortal song ;30
                        
                        ’Mid solemn glades and thickets lorn,31
                        
                        By Brachman’s worshipp’d footsteps worn ;32
                        
                        And now a flow’r of Eastern birth33
                        
                        Transplanted to a colder earth—34
                        
                        Torn from its parent genial stem35
                        
                        To grace the Western diadem,36
                        
                        Oh !  o’er its head, may each rough gale37
                        
                        Unhurting pass with arrowy fleetness—38
                        
                        The gentlest breezes of the vale,39
                        
                        And but the gentlest, kiss its sweetness :40
                        
                        May o’er that flower some Sylph of Air41
                        
                        With more than parent’s fondness hover ;42
                        
                        Hang o’er its sweets with watchful care,43
                        
                        And all its budding charms discover—44
                        
                        Unfold its beauties one by one,45
                        
                        And open its blossoms to the sun.46
                        3.
Far, far from thee be sorrow’s blight,47
                        
                        Remorse, or heart-corroding sadness ;48
                        
                        Thy way may joy for ever light49
                        
                        With bounding mirth and heav’nly glad-
ness ;50
                        
                        ness ;50
For sure thou should’st a temple be,51
                        
                        From such inviolate and free—52
                        
                        An angel-like constructed fane,53
                        
                        With nought of earthly mould or stain—54
                        
                        A mirror only sent from high,55
                        
                        To catch the glories of the sky ;56
                        
                        
                        And sure that forehead, white as snow,57
                        
                        That smooth and yet unwrinkled brow—58
                        
                        That face eternally serene—59
                        
                        That eye where Eden’s self is seen—60
                        
                        To wound, to mark, destroy, deface,61
                        
                        And all their characters of grace,62
                        
                        With grief or sorrow’s piercing edge,63
                        
                        ’Twere sin—’twere more than sacrilege.64
                        4.
Tho’ Sorrow’s lot is borne by each,65
                        
                        And Man’s sad cup on earth is care,66
                        
                        And bold is he who Pain will teach,67
                        
                        To torture these, and those to spare,68
                        
                        Yet some should sure be left Mankind,69
                        
                        The solace of their woes behind,70
                        
                        To gild this Lazar House with beams71
                        
                        That emanate from Light’s pure streams,72
                        
                        On life to throw one transient ray,73
                        
                        And give its night the blaze of day ;74
                        
                        Some, some there are, to whom their weak-
ness75
                        
                        ness75
Itself, should strong protection yield,76
                        
                        Whom Innocence, and Angel Meekness,77
                        
                        Should cover as a seven-fold shield.78
                        
                        The great, unmourn’d, may fall or die,79
                        
                        But such shall have our sympathy.80
                        
                        When tempest’s force, or lightning’s stroke,81
                        
                        Cleaves from its base the lofty oak,82
                        
                        Unmov’d we see the mighty bound83
                        
                        That throws its greatness to the ground ;84
                        
                        But who can see, and see unheeding,85
                        
                        The rose, but op’ning, fade away,86
                        
                        The mildew on its beauties feeding,87
                        
                        And blights corrode its sweets away ?—88
                        
                        Or who can see, with eyes unwet,89
                        
                        Uptorn the lovely violet ?90
                        5.
Such, oh !  may such be ne’er thy fate ;91
                        
                        Thy couch may withering anguish flee :92
                        
                        May all that decks the good and great,93
                        
                        Its trophies lend to honour thee,94
                        
                        And render thee while here a guest95
                        
                        Of joy the giver and partaker,96
                        
                        A thing not blessing more than blest,97
                        
                        An angel made, and angel maker,—98
                        
                        An orb, whose glorious course of fire99
                        
                        No clouds can veil, or length can tire,100
                        
                        Whose lamp of light, and sundrawn flame101
                        
                        Shall, like its source, be still the same ;102
                        
                        Or, as the symphony that springs103
                        
                        From some unseen, ethereal strings,104
                        
                        Which hearing, man in wonder lost,105
                        
                        That sounds so sweet should stray below,106
                        
                        Gives to the breeze his soul, as tost107
                        
                        Its magic whispers come and go,108
                        
                        Lists to its notes, as sweet they play,109
                        
                        And hears his grosser parts away.110
                        6.
’Tis sweet to pause as on we creep,111
                        
                        Up Life’s precipitous ascent,112
                        
                        
And turn to view, from summit steep,113
                        
                        A new race go where once we went,114
                        
                        In youth’s glad days, and journeying all,115
                        
                        As guests to some rich festival ;116
                        
                        To watch them stray from side to side,117
                        
                        Nor fear the bandit gang of pain,118
                        
                        And then, with minds new purified,119
                        
                        Resume our pilgrimage again.120
                        
                        Yes, such a gladd’ning sense of glee121
                        
                        Hath oft thy presence shed on me ;122
                        
                        
                        And while to earth’s enduring race123
                        
                        This mind and mem’ry shall belong,124
                        
                        In them, thy beaming charms and face125
                        
                        Shall ever live and linger long.126
                        
                        Charms which, as some bright form,—some 
spark127
                        
                        spark127
Of light and life our youth that met,128
                        
                        ’Tis man’s first work, and best, to mark,—129
                        
                        His last, and hardest to forget.130