THE SUGAR BIRD.

By Susanna Moodie

Thou splendid child of southern skies!

Thy brilliant plumes and graceful form

Are not so precious in mine eyes

As those gray heralds of the morn,

Which in my own beloved land

Welcome the azure car of spring,

When budding flowers and leaves expand

On hawthorn boughs, and sweetly sing.

But thou art suited to the clime,

The golden clime, that gave thee birth;

Where beauty reigns o'er scenes sublime,

And fadeless verdure decks the earth;

Where nature faints beneath the blaze

Of her own gorgeous crown of light,

And exiled eyes, with aching gaze,

Sigh for the softer shades of night,

That memory to their dreams may bring

Past scenes, to cheer their sleeping eye,

The dark green woods where linnets sing,

And echo wafts the faint reply.

Ah, from those voiceless birds that glow,

Like living gems‘ mid blossoms rare,

The captive turns in sullen woe

To climes more dear and scenes less fair!