30 APRIL 1887, Page 14

POETRY.

TO ALFRED I. CHURCH.

AUTHOR OF THE LEGEND OF ST. VITALIS, AND OTHER POEMS..

As happy children who in careless play Scatter bright blossoms on their homeward way, So thou on life's rough path haat scattered flowers, To lighten some dark day, or bitter hours, Unto thy brothers, who, with weary feet, Pause in the toil of life thy voice to greet, That as an organ pealing, loud then low, Like the loved voices silent long-ago, Lingers within our hearts, and never we Its echoes may forget as long as time shall be.

And now these fadeless blossoms thou haat twined Into a wreath ; and ever shall the wind Of time blow softly o'er them, and the air Seem sweeter for the gift of things so fair.

The lowest place thou wert content to win, So thou couldst find but room to enter in, And lay thy chaplet there before that shrine, Amid so much the world doth deem divine.

Yea, thou hast passed the portal, and hest found That with the laurel green thy brow is bound. F. P:.