| Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829. | | | | The Huma | | By Louisa P. Smith |
| | | FLY 1 on! nor touch thy wing, bright bird, | |
| Too near our shaded earth, | |
| Or the warbling, now so sweetly heard | |
| May lose its note of mirth. | |
| Fly onnor seek a place of rest, | 5 |
| In the home of care-worn things, | |
| T would dim the light of thy shining crest, | |
| And thy brightly burnishd wings, | |
| To dip them where the waters glide | |
| That flow from a troubled earthly tide. | 10 |
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| The fields of upper air are thine, | |
| Thy place where stars shine free, | |
| I would thy home, bright one, were mine, | |
| Above lifes stormy sea. | |
| I would never wanderbird, like thee, | 15 |
| So near this place again, | |
| With wing and spirit once light and free | |
| They should wear no more, the chain | |
| With which they are bound and fetterd here, | |
| For ever struggling for skies more clear. | 20 |
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| There are many things like thee, bright bird, | |
| Hopes as thy plumage gay, | |
| Our air is with them for ever stirrd, | |
| But still in air they stay. | |
| And happiness, like thee, fair one! | 25 |
| Is ever hovering oer, | |
| But rests in a land of brighter sun, | |
| On a waveless, peaceful shore, | |
| And stoops to lave her weary wings, | |
| Where the fount of living waters springs. | 30 |
| | | Note 1. A bird peculiar to the east. It is supposed to fly constantly in the air, and never touch the ground. [back] | | |
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