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Poem by Lydia Huntley Sigourney


Mrs. Joseph Morgan


Died at Hartford, August, 1859.


I saw her overlaid with many flowers,
Such as the gorgeous summer drapes in snow,
Stainless and fragrant as her memory.

Blent with their perfume came the pictur'd thought
Of her calm presence,--of her firm resolve
To bear each duty onward to its end,--
And of her power to make a home so fair,
That those who shared its sanctities deplore
The pattern lost forever.

                    Many a friend,
And none who won that title laid it down,
Muse on the tablet that she left behind,
Muse,--and give thanks to God for what she was,
And what she is;--for every pain hath fled
That with a barb'd and subtle weapon stood
Between the pilgrim and the promised Land.
But the deep anguish of the filial tear
We speak not of,--save with the sympathy
That wakes our own.
                    And so, we bid farewell.

                *   *   *   *   *

Life's sun at setting, may shed brighter rays
Than when it rose, and threescore years and ten
May wear a beauty that youth fails to reach:
The beauty of a fitness for the skies,--
Such nearness to the angels, that their song
"Peace and good will," like key-tone rules the soul,
And the pure reflex of their smile illumes
The meekly lifted brow.
                    She taught us this,--
And then went home.



Lydia Huntley Sigourney


Lydia Huntley Sigourney's other poems:
  1. Mrs. Mary Mildenstein Robertson
  2. Madam Williams
  3. A Summer Morning
  4. Samuel G. Ogden, Esq.
  5. Rev. Dr. T. M. Cooley


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