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MARIA LOWELL.

[Born towards 1820, daughter of Mr. White, an opulent citizen of Watertown, Massachusetts; married the poet Lowell in 1844 ; died towards 1856].

THE MORNING-GLORY.

WE wreathed about our darling's head
The morning-glory bright;
Her little face looked out beneath,
So full of life and light,

So lit as with a sunrise,
That we could only say,
"She is the morning-glory true,
And her poor types are they."

So always from that happy time
We called her by their name,
And very fitting did it seem―
For, sure as morning came,
Behind her cradle-bars she smiled
To catch the first faint ray,
As from the trellis smiles the flower
And opens to the day.

But not so beautiful they rear
Their airy cups of blue

As turned her sweet eyes to the light,
Brimmed with sleep's tender dew;

And not so close their tendrils fine
Round their supports are thrown
As those dear arms whose outstretched plea
Clasped all hearts to her own.

We used to think how she had come
Even as comes the flower,

The last and perfect added gift

To crown love's morning hour,

And how in her was imaged forth
The love we could not say,

As on the little dewdrops round
Shines back the heart of day.

We never could have thought, O God,
That she must wither up
Almost before a day was flown,
Like the morning-glory's cup;
We never thought to see her droop
Her fair and noble head,

Till she lay stretched before our eyes,
Wilted, and cold, and dead!

The morning-glory's blossoming
Will soon be coming round:
We see their rows of heart-shaped leaves
Upspringing from the ground;
The tender things the winter killed
Renew again their birth,

But the glory of our morning

Has passed away from earth.

Oh Earth! in vain our aching eyes
Stretch over thy green plain!

Too harsh thy dews, too gross thine air,

Her spirit to sustain :

But up in groves of paradise

Full surely we shall see

Our morning-glory beautiful

Twine round our dear Lord's knee.

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ALICE CAREY.

[Born in 1820, died in 1871. Miss Carey, who was mainly selfeducated, published her first volume of poems at the age of eighteen: her longest poetical work is named The Maiden of Tlascala, included in a collection issued in 1855. Her Clovernook Papers and other prose writings have earned considerable popularity, both in America and in England].

PALESTINE.

BRIGHT inspiration! shadowing my heart
Like a sweet thing of beauty-could I see
Tabor and Carmel ere I hence depart,
And tread the quiet vales of Galilee,

And look from Hermon, with its dew and flowers,
Upon the broken walls and mossy towers
O'er which the Son of Man in sadness wept,
The golden promise of my life were kept.

Alas! the beauteous cities, crowned with flowers,
And robed with royalty! no more in thee,
Fretted with golden pinnacles and towers,
They sit in haughty beauty by the sea:
Shadows of rocks, precipitate and dark,

Rest still and heavy where they found a grave;
There glides no more the humble fisher's bark,
And the wild heron drinks not of the wave.

But still the silvery willows fringe the rills,
Judea's shepherd watches still his fold;
And round about Jerusalem the hills

Stand in their solemn grandeur as of old;
And Sharon's roses still as sweetly bloom

As when the apostles, in the days gone by,
Rolled back the shadows from the dreary tomb,
And brought to light Life's Immortality.

The East has laid down many a beauteous bride
In the dim silence of the sepulchre,
Whose names are shrined in story, but beside
Their lives no sign to tell they ever were

The imperial fortresses of old renown

Rome, Carthage, Thebes-alas! where are they now?
In the dim distance lost and crumbled down ;
The glory that was of them from her brow
Took off the wreath in centuries gone by,
And walked the path of shadows silently.

But Palestine! what hopes are born of thee !—
I cannot paint their beauty; hopes that rise,
Linking this perishing mortality

To the bright deathless glories of the skies:
Where the sweet Babe of Bethlehem was born-
Love's mission finished there in Calvary's gloom,
There blazed the glories of the rising morn,
And Death lay gasping there at Jesus' tomb!

OLD STORIES.

No beautiful star will twinkle

To-night through my window-pane,
As I list to the mournful falling

Of the leaves and the autumn rain.

High up in his leafy covert
The squirrel a shelter hath;
And the tall grass hides the rabbit,
Asleep in the churchyard path.

On the hills is a voice of wailing

For the pale dead flowers again,
That sounds like the heavy trailing
Of robes in a funeral train.

Oh if there were one who loved me-
A kindly and grey-haired sire,
To sit and rehearse old stories
To-night by my cabin fire:

The winds as they would might rattle
The boughs of the ancient trees-

In the tale of a stirring battle

My heart would forget all these.

Or if by the embers dying

We talked of the past, the while, I should see bright spirits flying From the pyramids and the Nile.

Echoes from harps long silent

Would troop through the aisles of time, And rest on the soul like sunshine, If we talked of the bards sublime.

But hark! did a phantom call me,
Or was it the wind went by?
Wild are my thoughts and restless,
But they have no power to fly.

In place of the cricket humming,
And the moth by the candle's light,
I hear but the deathwatch drumming-
I've heard it the livelong night.

Oh for a friend who loved me-
Oh for a grey-haired sire,
To sit with a quaint old story,
To-night by my cabin fire!

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TO LUCY.

THE leaves are rustling mournfully,
The yellow leaves and sere;
For Winter with his naked arms
And chilling breath is here:
The rills, that all the autumn-time
Went singing to the sea,
Are waiting in their icy chains
For Spring to set them free;
No bird is heard the live-long day
Upon its mates to call,

And coldly and capriciously
The slanting sunbeams fall,

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