THE STATUE OF THE EMPRESS ELIZABETH. MERAN

By John Lawson Stoddard

She is seated by the river

In a robe of spotless white,

With her lovely face illumined

By the evening's tender light;

But her eyes are full of sadness,

As if weary of the day,

And her gaze is toward the ocean,

While the river glides away.

At her feet are beds of flowers,

Overhead are stately trees

Whose protecting branches murmur

With the passing of the breeze;

Though her hand retains a volume,

From its page her glances stray,

For her thoughts are with the ocean,

As the river flows away.

As I view her chastened features,

I can feel the rising tears

At the thought of all her anguish

Through a martyrdom of years;

For her joys were writ in water,—

Too impermanent to stay,

And were swept toward sorrow's ocean,

Ere her youth had passed away.

She was captured in the morning

Of her childhood's careless age,

And imprisoned in a palace

Like a linnet in a cage;

And its gilded bars confined her

To a Court's prescribed display,

Which her simple nature hated,

As the slow years crept away.

Thus her heart grew always sadder,

Till her sorrows, one by one,

Reached at last their tragic climax

In the murder of her son;

And this broken-hearted woman,

As a madman's victim, lay

By Geneva's placid waters,

While her life-blood ebbed away!

Hence her marble face seems troubled,

As she gazes down the stream,

Like an angel who hath wakened

From a fearful, earth-born dream;

She is waiting for the sunset

Of her tempest-darkened day,

But her soul is with the ocean,

Where all rivers wend their way.