240 
THE LANGUAGE OF FLO WEES. 
“ ‘Alas for thy fate ! thou must suffer, poor tree, 
For standing when others were bending the knee. 
Thou rt doomed for thy fault an atonement to pay: 
Hencefortli be a rush for the wild winds to sway. 
Sigh, sport of their fury, and slave of their will 1 
Bow, e’en in a calm, when all others are still ! 
And shivering, quivering, droop evermore, 
Because thou wouldst not with thy brothers adore.’ 
T. he weak aspen trembled, turned pale with dismay, 
And is pallid with terror and grief to this day. 
Each tremulous leaf of the penitent tree 
Obeys to this moment the heavenly decree. 
’Tis the sport of the wild winds, the slave of their will, 
E en without a breeze bends, when all others stand still • 
And full of emotion, its fault doth deplore, 
Sigh, shiver, and quiver, and droop evermore.” 
THE ASPEN-TREE. 
CHARLES SWAIN. 
Why tremblest thou, Aspen ? no storm threatens nigh; 
Not a cloud mars the peace of the love-beaming sky ; 
'Tis the spring of thy being—no autumn is near 
Thy green boughs to wither, thy sweet leaves to sear ! 
The sun, like a crown, o’er thy young head shines free, 
Then wherefore thus troubled ? what fearest thou, fair 
tree ? 
I have watched through the mildest, the stillest of hours, 
When Nature slept soft on her pillow of flowers; 
When, though all things appeared ’neath her influence 
blest, 
Thou alone wert disturbed, thou alone couldst not rest 1 
But still, as lamenting some dreadful decree, 
Thou groanedst in the calm, like an outcast, lone tree 1 
