TO THE NUNS OF BODNEY.

By Matilda Betham

Ye holy women, say! will ye accept

The passing tribute of a humble friend?

Stranger indeed to you and to your faith,

But O! I hope not stranger to the zeal,

Which warm'd your bosoms in Religion's cause.

When impious men commanded you to break

The vow which bound your souls, and which in youth

Warm Piety's emphatic lips had made.

Say! will ye suffer me on that rude tomb,

Where she reposes ( whose benignant smile,

Whose animated, life-inspiring eye,

And faded form, majestic, still appears

In Thought's delusive hour ) to shed a tear?

On her, whose sainted look, though seen but once,

I never can forget, till Time shall wrap

The veil of Death around me, and make dumb

The voice of Memory. Ah! “how low she lies!”

No marble monument to speak her praise,

And tell the world that here a DILLON rests.

One, who in beauty's prime forsook the world,

And, self-bereav'd of all it holds most dear,

Retir'd, to pass the pilgrimage of life,

In solemn prayer and peaceful solitude.

Ah, vain desire! Ambition's scowling eye

Must see the cloister, as the palace, low,

And meek-ey'd Quiet quit her last abode,

Ere he can pause to look upon the wreck,

And rue the wild impatience of his hand.

Hail! blessed spirit! This rude cypher'd stone.

On which a sister's pensive eye shall muse

In sorrow, and another relative

In sweet, though mournful, recollection, bend,

Shall call a tear into the stranger's eye

Whene'er he hears the tale, yet make him proud

That Britain's hospitable land should yield

All that you could accept, an humble grave.