Poems (Lambert)/Mistletoe
For works with similar titles, see Mistletoe.
MISTLETOE.
ON yonder oak, upon its lordliest height,Is fastened the destroying parasite;His mighty arms caress his fawning foe,And yield their life-sap to the mistletoe.
Through bark, through wood, the fatal roots extend;The parasitic verdure seems a friend,O'erspreading the gnarled trunk with livelier green—Alas decay, and death soon end the scene!
First dies the oak, and then the parasiteCannot survive its royal patron's blight;And when I look abroad among mankind,Close semblance, and fit moral do I find.
God feared that poor, weak mortals here belowBy chance might be too fond of earth's vain showIn hopes to draw our hearts from earth to heavenThe monster jealousy to us was given.
Search where you may, this wide, wide world around,The green-eyed thing in every house is found;In truth, it bitters every sweet of life,And creates discord between man and wife.
To some it wears the winning garb of love,And seems as sweet as any cooing dove:Look closely, and perchance you can discoverThe thing has other form than that of lover.
To sisters, brothers, fathers, mothers too,As friend it goes, and seems so kind and true,That they would fain believe all that it says,And take, for pattern, its own noble ways.
Like mistletoe, it seems so green and bright,At first you'd view it with unfeigned delight;Examine it again, and you will seeIts nature with its looks does not agree.
For jealousy from out the tree of loveIts verdure draws, and like the plant above,The roots, instead of dying, as they shouldWith age, become embedded in the wood.
And thus it lives, long, weary months and years,And causes sorrow, guilt, and heartfelt tears,—The boisterous winds of sorrow bear the seed,And plant on other trees the loathsome weed.
Alas! in mercy sent, no tender handCan take this parasite from our good land;It stays, and from its birth-place never hies,Until it kills the tree, and then it dies.