Читать книгу The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 28, February, 1860 - Various - Страница 3

A SHETLAND SHAWL

Оглавление

It was made of the purest and finest wool,

As fine as silk, and as soft and cool;

It was pearly white, of that cloud-like hue

Which has a shadowy tinge of blue;

And brought by the good ship, miles and miles,

From the distant shores of the Shetland Isles.


And in it were woven, here and there,

The golden threads of a maiden's hair,

As the wanton wind with tosses and twirls

Blew in and out of her floating curls,

While her busy fingers swiftly drew

The ivory needle through and through.


The warm sun flashed on the brilliant dyes

Of the purple and golden butterflies,

And the drowsy bees, with a changeless tune,

Hummed in the perfumed air of June,

As the gossamer fabric, fair to view,

Under the maiden's fingers grew.


The shadows of tender thought arise

In the tranquil depths of her dreamy eyes,

And her blushing cheek bears the first impress

Of the spirit's awakening consciousness,

Like the rose, when it bursts, in a single hour,

From the folded bud to the perfect flower.


Many a tremulous hope and care,

Many a loving wish and prayer,

With the blissful dreams of one who stood

At the golden gate of womanhood,

The little maiden's tireless hands

Wove in and out of the shining strands.


The buds that burst in an April sun

Had seen the wonderful shawl begun;

It was finished, and folded up with pride,

When the vintage purpled the mountain-side;

And smiles made light in the violet eyes,

At the thought of a lover's pleased surprise.


The spider hung from the budding thorn

His baseless web, when the shawl was worn;

And the cobwebs, silvered by the dew,

With the morning sunshine breaking through,

The maiden's toil might well recall,

In the vanished year, on the Shetland Shawl.


For the rose had died in the autumn showers,

That bloomed in the summer's golden hours;

And the shining tissue of hopes and dreams,

With misty glories and rainbow gleams

Woven within and out, was one

Like the slender thread by the spider spun.


As fresh and as pure as the sad young face,

The snowy shawl with its clinging grace

Seems a fitting veil for a form so fair:

But who would think what a tale of care,

Of love and grief and faith, might all

Be folded up in a Shetland Shawl?


The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 28, February, 1860

Подняться наверх