1/ > LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. {' Chap. PS 17 73 SAetf ...S.Q... % UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. FEATHERS A MOULTING MUSE HENRY J. SARGENT, RESIDUARY LEGATEE OF THE LATE "WALTER ANONYM." " Various, that the mind Of desultory man, studious of change And pleased with novelty, may be indulged. BOSTON: CKOSBY, NICHOLS, AND COMPANY. Ill WASHINGTON STREET. 1854. 7$ 2>7 r n Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1854, by Crosby, Nichols, and Company, the Clerk's Ofiice of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. CAMBRIDGE: METCALF AND COMPANY, PRINTERS TO THE UNIVERSITY. CONTENTS PREFATORY 1 DEDICATORY. — TO MY WIFE 4 "Teypacpa o yey pacpa.^ — explanatory .. . 6 THE RUINS OF PALENQUE .10 A FEW MORE LEFT 26 PAST AWAY ! 29 A SOLILOQUY 32 SONNET TO .35 SOUP ! 37 SONG 41 SONNET TO ......... 43 CONTENTS. INSPIRATION 45 TRIUNE EPIGRAM 49 TO A VENERABLE HURDY-GURDY . . . .50 JENNY LIND'S GREETING TO AMERICA ... 54 SONNET 56 THE PRAYER OP THE PRAIRIE-FLOWER ... 58 SHADOWS 62 SONNET TO 65 ROMANZA 67 THE FESTIVAL OP TEARS 72 SONNET TO NOTHING .75 TO THE BOBOLINK 77 TO . A CAROL 81 THE LILY'S WOOING 84 SONNET. — OCEAN TWILIGHT 92 to the evening star 94 sonnet to the div'l 98 lines suggested by the return of the atlantic, supposed to have been lost . . . .100 the serenade 103 "god save the commonwealth!" . . . .105 the pilot 's there ! 107 lines to an ^olian harp in my window . .110 CONTENTS. V MISS SNOW TO HER PERSECUTORS . 113 TO BOSIO . 117 SONNET. — SUMMER RAIN .... 121 SEPARATION - . 123 THE FAIRY'S INVOCATION .... 126 A PROVERB AMENDED . 130 132 APRIL . 135 SONNET . 144 146 LOVE IS THE LIGHTEST . 148 150 ART THOU READY'? . . . . . . 151 DREAMS 155 . 159 JEALOUSY THE WARNING . 164 EGOTISM OF THE LETTER R 166 APOTHEOSIS . 169 172 WAKE FROM THY SLUMBERS ! . 178 EPIGRAM 180 CONTENTS. THE GORED HUNTER 182 TO 191 TO MY STEEL PEN 193 STARS AND FLOWERS 196 SONNET TO 201 THE FIRST FLY, — AND THE MORAL . . . 203 THE LOVER TO HIS BOUQUET 206 GENTLY ! GENTLY ! 209 LINES ON BRACKETT'S GROUP, " THE SHIPWRECKED MOTHER AND CHILD" 211 WHAT 'S FAME 1 ? 213 ARE YOU A "CONNOISSEUR" IN LOVE? . . . 216 THE CHALLENGE 219 A VALENTINE 221 REVERIES 224 "GOD SAVE THE COMMONWEALTH 1 ." — NO. II. . 227 I DREAMED THAT I WAS YOUNG AGAIN ! . . . 230 THE SEWING-BIRD TO HIS TYRANT .... 234 PROGRESS. — A VISION 237 SONNET. — TO ZEPHYRUS 240 THE BIRTH OF MUSIC . 242 " ERIN GO BRAGH ! " 246 SONNET. — THOUGHT 250 CONTENTS. Vll TO MY DAUGHTER ON HER BIRTHDAY . . . 252 SONNET TO THE MOON ....... 255 THE TRUE CREED 257 A THOUGHT OR TWO 261 " I STILL LIVE ! " 264 VALE 268 PREFATORY. The parent on his new-born heir Doth look with love-enkindled eyes ; Blinded, he finds attraction where The world would but despise. Some ray of unreflected light, Which other eyes may never see, To him appears a herald bright Of that which is to be. 1 PREFATORY. Thus look I on this child of rhyme, Though insignificant, mayhap, The offspring between thought and time, Rocked in my mental lap. It may contain full many a line The critic stern would wish to blot ; His soul has never entered mine, — I see what he does not ! Each is to me a register, Wherein the smile and tear, The sun and shadow of my thought, Suggestively appear. Though valueless to him they seem, As valueless they are, no doubt, He cannot rob me of the dream Which shut the cold world out. PREFATORY. Each was a free-will offering To the Thalia of the hour, Who fanned to life, with restless wing, The intellectual power. I 've called them to my fold again, To prove to them they 're not forsaken, To reunite the broken chain Whence they were taken. DEDICATORY. TO MY WIFE, Dear Maggie, come here ! Sit thee down by my side, I need a protector, a patron, a friend ! My boat is adrift on a critical tide, And Heaven only knows how the voyage may end. * My old friend, " Walter Anonym," would have dedicated this little book " To the Public," not having, I suppose, any wife of his own. He was very easily persuaded (just previous to his death), however, of the absurdity of his proposition, upon my representation that it would be deemed by the printer and publisher a most satirical compliment. — H. J. S. DEDICATORY. Or, in plain, prosy English, my desperate Muse Would dare, with your sanction, to wander in rhyme. Don't laugh, — I'm in earnest ! You cannot refuse To loan me your altar a very short time. On that altar unbribed, for your lot is mine own, And one fate, as one faith, doth our destiny prove, Are these garlands of fancy confidingly thrown, Not asking your favor, but speaking my love. Teypa