Poems (Toke)/An April snow storm

AN APRIL SNOW STORM.
HOW strange! to see the flowers of Spring,'Mid falling snow-wreaths bloom,And Winter, borne on April's wing,Reshadow earth with gloom.To feel the blast that rushes o'erYoung blossoms newly born;The chill that wraps in night once moreSpring's gay and joyous morn.
Fall as thou wilt, untimely snow,But short shall be thy reign;Soon must yon sun's meridian glowMelt thine unwelcome chain.Jut ah, in many a blasted leaf,In many a blighted flower,Long, long shall live, in tints of grief,The memory of this hour.
I see the crocus hues decayBeneath yon stormy skies;The violet lustre fades away,The gentle primrose dies. And though the sun of Summer hoursO'er lovelier tints may gleam,No more shall Spring's first blighted flowersRevive beneath its beam.
And sometimes thus, the heart, all brightWith youth's first opening bloom,Feels some dark cloud turn joy to night,And hope to cheerless gloom:And though the sun of life's best hoursMay burst that icy chain,Yet never can youth's spring-time flowersBloom fresh and pure again.
E.

Godinton, April 14, 1838,