Poems (Fields)/Children in Exile
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CHILDREN IN EXILE.
Two Indian Boys were carried to London not long ago for
Far in the dark old forest glades, Where kalmias bloom around, They had their place of youthful sport, Their childhood's hunting-ground,— And swinging lightly in the vines That o'er the wigwam hung, The golden robins, building near, Above their dwelling sung. Each morn their little dusky feet Sprang down the sparkling lea, To plunge beneath the glowing stream Beside the chestnut tree; And when the hiding squirrel's nest They sought, far up the hills, They bathed their reeking foreheads cool Among the mountain rills. They saw the early silver moon Peep through her wavy bower, And in her beams they chased the bat Around his leafy tower; And, when the stars all silently Went out o'er hill and plain, They listened low to merry chimes Of Summer evening rain. These haunts they missed,—the city air No healthful music brings,— They longed to run through woodland dells, Where Nature ever sings; And, drooping, mid the noise and glare, They pined for brook and glen, And, dying, still looked fondly back, And asked for Home again. |