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And the Irish rose on the purple quartz

Bends over the waves below

Where the ramaline clings, and the samphire swings, And the long laminaria trails,

And the sea-bird springs on his snowy wings,

To blend with the distant sails.

I leaned on a rock, and the cool waves there
Plashed on the shingles round,

And the breath of Nature lifted my hair-
Dear God! how the face of thy child is fair!
And a gush of memory, tears, and pray'r,
My spirit a moment drowned.

I bowed me down to the rippling wave-
For a swift sail glided near-

And the spray as it fell upon pebble and shell
Received, it may be, a tear.

For well I remember the festal days,

On this shore, that Hy-Brassil seemedThe friends I trusted, the dreams I dreamed, Hopes high as the clouds abovePerchance 'twas a dream of a land redeemed, Perchance 'twas a dream of love. When first I trod on this breezy sod,

To me it was holy ground,

For genius and beauty, rays of God,

Like a swarm of stars shone round.

Well! well! I have learned rude lessons since then,
In life's disenchanted hall;

I have scanned the motives and ways of men,
And the skeleton grins through all.
Of the great heart-treasure of hope and trust
I exulted to feel mine own,
Remains, in that down-trod temple's dust,
But faith in God alone.

I have seen too oft the domino torn,

And the mask from the face of men,

To have aught but a smile of tranquil scorn
For all believed in then.

The day is dark as the night with woes,
And my dreams are of battles lost,
Of eclipse, phantoms, wrecks, and foes,
And of exiles tempest-tost.

No more! no more! On the dreary shore
I hear a caoina-song;

With the early dead is my lonely bed-
You shall not call me long;

I fade away to the home of clay,

With not one dream fulfilled;

My wreathless brow in the dust I bow,

My heart and harp are stilled.

Oh! would I might rest, when my soul departs,

Where the clustering sea-pinks blow, And the Irish rose on the purple quartz

Droops over the waves below

Where crystals gleam in the caves about,

Like virtue in human souls,

And the victor Sea, with a thunder-shout,
Through the breach in the rock-wall rolls!

ADIEU TO INNISFAIL.

Adieu! The snowy sail
Swells her bosom to the gale
And our bark from Innisfail
Bounds away.

While we gaze upon thy shore
That we never shall see more,
And the blinding tears flow o'er,
We pray:-

Ma vuirneen! be thou long
In peace the queen of song-
In battle proud and strong
As the sea.

Be saints thine offspring still,
True heroes guard each hill,
And harps by every rill
Sound free!

Though round her Indian bowers
The hand of nature showers
The brightest blooming flowers
Of our sphere;

Yet not the richest rose

In an alien clime that blows,
Like the briar at home that grows
Is dear.

Though glowing breasts may be
In soft vales beyond the sea,
Yet ever, gra ma chree,
Shall I wail

For the heart of love I leave,
In the dreary hours of eve,
On thy stormy shores to grieve,
Innisfail!

But mem'ry o'er the deep
On her dewy wing shall sweep,
When in midnight hours I weep
O'er thy wrongs;

And bring me, steeped in tears,
The dead flowers of other years,
And waft unto my ears
Home's songs.

When I slumber in the gloom
Of a nameless, foreign tomb,
By a distant ocean's boom,
Innisfail!

Around thy em'rald shore
May the clasping sea adore,

And each wave in thunder roar,
"All hail!"

And when the final sigh
Shall bear my soul on high,
And on chainless wing I fly
Through the blue,
Earth's latest thought shall be,
As I soar above the sea,
"Green Erin, dear, to thee
Adieu!"

MY COUSIN.

This summer my cousin came up from the South, Just because a "strange kiss" was annoying her mouth;

And now-a-days ladies think nothing of hopping Fifty miles after breakfast to go an hour shopping. Sweet Mary, my cousin, from Heaven inherits Good-nature and beauty, good sense and high spirits;

Without affectation of fashion or lore,

She is just what you see her, no less and no more;
With wit rich and brilliant as summer-dropt rain,
To the breast of the weakest she never caused pain;
Yet the passion and pride and the love of Tipp'rary
At intervals flash from my wild cousin Mary-
No prude on the one hand, nor flirt on the other,
And, in fact, I'm her cousin-thank God !—not
her brother.

'Twas natural, of course, in my gladness and haste, That somehow my arm should encircle her waist; It stole round, and was met with such artless good will,

That I wish from my soul it were trembling there

still.

Well, we chatted a long time, as cousins will chat,
Of friends and relations-of this one and that;
And between every story of that one and this,
I kissed her as surely a cousin may kiss.

Here I can't quote the Fathers for aid, to be sure,
But I could the less nice and more musical Moore.
They say contiguity aids inflammation,
But here it spared not my complete isolation,
Who, in bachelor loneliness, all the year round
Live shut up from my kind, like a bull in a pound.
"Come, tell me," said Mary, displaying her glove
And the little hand in it, "were you ever in love?
The truth the whole truth-no concealment

should be

Between you and a friend-I mean cousin-like me."

"In love! my dear Mary! ay, dozens of times, And I've thereupon written some acres of rhymes; But, though arrows were fixed in my bosom as

thickly

As fruit in plum-pudding, I convalesce quickly,
Unaided by aught save philosophy's pure ray
And the youthful heart's vis medicatrix naturæ.
When a lover is gridironed thoroughly brown,
Let him try homoeopathy sooner than drown,
And with this dose of folly drive the other one
down.

Talk of gunshots and stabs!-but there's nothing, by gorra, kills

A man off so sure as hypertrophied auricles—
That fatal derangement, so surely advancing
In the train of pic-nics, Valentining, and dancing.
Some men have their hearts, between flirts and
flirtation,

In a state of perpetual acute inflammation."

But Mary liked not such a jesting reply,
And the dawn was o'ercast in the blue of her eye,
And, as cloudlets career from the summer wind's
chase,

The ghost of a frown flitted over her face;
But deponent avers, on his harp, 'twas about
The most wretched attempt ever made at a pout.
Still, presto! at once to the dismal I glided;
For poets are prisms, and all many-sided.
So let us look gloomy, and classic, and blue,
And cut with the comic the anapæsts too.

"My cousin! if the poet's heart

Unveil to human eyes

The wound of memory's poisoned dart,
That every balm defies,

'Tis not to soothe a morbid gloom,
Or cause thy tears to flow,
That I unbar the bosom's tomb

And wake the buried woe.'
Beneath, in funeral darkness hid,

Young Hope encharnelled liesNor would I lift the coffin lid

Except to Mary's eyes.

And yet my tale is briefly told

A tale of every day

The heart in boyhood e'en made cold,

Too early thrown away.

Some hearts there are will twine their strings
Like tendrils of the vine,
Round all contiguous lovely things,

And such, alas! was mine.

I worshipped all things beautiful—
I loved the low wind's tune;

I loved at night to hear the bird
That serenades the moon;

I loved the roaring cataract

That thunders from the rock,
And breaks its solid prison walls
In fragments with the shock.

I loved the bounding thunderbolt
Among the Irish hills—

I loved to see its lurid glare
Illume the whitened rills.
And faery minstrels round me played
Upon the midnight breeze,

And from the founts I called up sylphs
And syrens from the seas.
Aglaia, fair Euphrosyne,

Thalia-Graces three

With linked limbs, from Tenedos
Came o'er the silver sea;
And all the bright Castalides,

From cool Pierian caves,

With zoneless bosoms, sang to me,

And Tritons from the waves.

The waves!-the waves!-the Atlantic waves! Like plumed hosts that bound,

And, like thy tides, my spirit swelled,

Dark Ocean! at thy sound.

But not the fires that flash on high,

Nor streams beneath that roll,
Like woman's hallowed beauty made
The music of my soul.

And her sweet smile o'er all my dreams
Like stars on fountains played,
And in the vesper hour I heard

Her whispers thrill the shade;
And round her graceful form I flung
The purple clouds of song,
Until the vision dazzled me,
Although it lived not long.

Now undeceived, no more a lover,

Life's brightest, saddest dream is over.

I toiled up Love's Vesuvius, resolved to die or win it,

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Now, all this time, in love being a wretched tactician,

I forgot that the keyhole commands our position, And the landlady, crouched like a cat in a passion, And one eye closed up in the sharpshooter fashion,

And, like L'Homme Blasé, find 'it only smokes, Was squinting-no eye ever squinted as can hers—

there's nothing in it.'

I only hope for friendship now,

To cheer my lonely way,

And chase remembrance from my brow,
With gently winning ray;

Then sun me in thy cloudless eyes,
Be all the past forgiven,

And should remorseful mem'ries rise,
Oh, speak of Hope and Heaven!"

(Mem. This fusillade of pathos I have always

found victorious,

At our simple endearments and primitive manners. Till her glance, that would turn new milk into cider,

Flashed fire through the keyhole, and murdered a spider,

Who therein, like Napoleon, with gusto and skill, Was applying geometry merely to kill.

The mine was exploded-she says, in a fume, She wouldn't have such goings on in her room. "You romp with the housemaid, you flirt with my nieces,

If properly supported by the muscle amatorius. 1) And have broken the peace of my daughter to

"But truce to sadness and digression.

Voici, ma chère, the entire confession. Thrice my shafts the Fates have parried;My first flame's dead, my second marriedThe third (she's gone to France) one day In tears and sofa-cushions laySo, drawing innocently near her, I tried to rally, soothe, and cheer her. Why spin the tale? In that blest hour Long-prisoned Love proclaimed his pow'r; Wild words I spoke, the most sincere That song e'er poured in Beauty's ear; And oh her words, remembered dearly, Still ring within my bosom clearlyAnd though the links are broken now That bound us then with mutual vow, I know that then her words were trueHer feelings' springs were fresh and newHer melting lips, Love's very shrine, Then ever warmly welcomed mine. No practised airs had she t' assist her, Sweet rose! she trembled when I kissed herAnd as the tides forth from my soul Of love and song would mingled roll, She clasped in tears her minstrel lover, Like flow'rs from which the dews rill over." Here, to make the tale impressive, my arm again stole round her.

1 A muscle of the orbit used in ogling.

pieces."

Now, reader, there's far less connection between her
And me than there is 'twixt a carpus and femur;
But this was a piece of artistical dodging
To keep Mary away evermore from my lodging.
Yet I answered her calmly and pleasantly-"Ah!
80!"

Hitching up, with a smile, my retiring Tommaso, "Pray, ma'am, would you think me so very imprudent,

If a poet, a brick, and a medical student, Received at her hands that indulgent humanity Which, with shower-baths and time, soothes both love and insanity?

But as to her peace, Major Thunderbolt broke it. Put that in your pipe, my dear madam, and

smoke it.

And to prove that I know your pet lobster, I wager A month's rent that I give a true sketch of the

Major:

He has gooseberry eyes, and a conical head,
With an elephant's snout, but amazingly red;
Long, lank, incoherent, with swaggering pace,
Supercilious and dont-care-a-pin-for-you face,
And a nursery of whisker from dewlap to pole,
Like a garrisoned rampart defending the whole."
But here her brow flushed to a sort of a curious
Anti-teetotalish atropurpureus,

2 Vulgo, Tommy.

And she faced me full front, wheeling swiftly Or a private, indeed, than a quack, should engage

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books, but no longer witnessed on the real stage of life. Of course we should expect to find it modified according to the conditions of modern civilized existence. Nobody desires to see a Hercules, a Theseus, or a Perseus going about in England slaying monsters, and robbers, and dragons for the public good; nor do we expect to hear of Sir Galahad riding through a forest (shall we say St. John's Wood?) in search of distressed maidens to defend with sword and lance.

[One of the favourite subjects of Miss | sundry other tragic passions, to be read of in Cobbe's pen is that which, by a somewhat misleading synedoche, is called "woman's rights." She has maintained in many an essay the claims of her sex to have a place in the professions and a share in the political activity of her time. In her own self she is, perhaps, one of the strongest arguments in favour of her view, for she has shown in literature an activity that is paralleled by few men, and a grace of style and freshness of thought for which more than one masculine writer might vainly sigh.

Frances Power Cobbe is the daughter of Mr. Charles Cobbe of Newbridge House, county Dublin, and was born on December 4, 1822. She received her education at Brighton. For many years she has been a frequent contributor to the periodical literature of the day, and her essays republished in volume form make up a goodly list. She has published amongst other things Essays on the Pursuits of Women, 1863; Broken Lives, 1864; Cities of the Past, reprinted from Fraser's Magazine, 1864; Italics: Brief Notes on Politics, People, and Places in Italy; Darwinism in Morals and other Essays, 1872; The Hopes of the Human Race Hereafter and Here, 1874. The work from which we quote, entitled Re-echoes, appeared in 1876. It is a republication of essays which she contributed to the Echo, and which formed for many years one of the most attractive features in that journal.]

CHIVALRY OF THE PERIOD.

We have been tempted sometimes to ask whether the sentiment of chivalry were not defunct, along with revenge and remorse, and

We smile, not only at classic and mediaval chivalry, but at the reflection of it in the Elizabethan age, when the gallant Lord Herbert of Cherbury solemnly debated whether his vow as a Knight of the Bath did not compel him to "succour" a small damsel of six, from whom a romping schoolboy had stolen a blue ribbon. Yet a stage further, and we find the chivalry of the eighteenth century represented by Lord Chesterfield, whose "ruling passion strong in death" manifested itself in his last expiring groan, "Give Mr. Dayrolles a chair!" That was an ebb of chivalry at all events. Has the tide turned in our day, or has it still further receded?

In more respects than one we fear the appearances are against us. The non-intervention policy, sound as it usually is, as regards nations, is certainly carried in these busy days rather too far into private life. We have time enough, alas! to spread scandalous stories; but to take the trouble to contradict and cram them down the scandal-monger's throat is a thing for which we profess to have no leisure. We give our money freely enough to men in distress; but to obey a summons for help in

1 Bustle.-epi, upon, and gloutos.
2 A muscle of the tongue.

the case of a brawl or a robbery, or to run the | is talk of admitting women to new professions, risk of appearing in a court of justice or in the columns of a newspaper-this is a chivalry for which we have no taste. Still more largely does the critical spirit which pervades all modern life detract from the generous enthusiasm of loyalty and admiration with which men used to look up to their leaders in the world of thought and action. So clear is this, that it is now actually startling in common discourse to hear a man speak in anything like the spirit of chivalry even of his friend and ally.

But it is especially in the treatment of women by men that chivalry is always supposed to show itself. How may this be with us now? We fear it is a very enigmatical thing, this same masculine chivalry of the nineteenth century. In the humbler ranks it never induces men to prevent women from doing the coarsest and hardest labour. They may sweep crossings, and fill coal trucks, and dance on tight ropes, and no chivalry says "Leave it for me!" But when women work so long that their small strength competes with men after the fashion of the tortoise and the hare, then chivalry limits the hours of female labour; and when women by chance discover that they can earn a good deal of money in some new way-say by painting on china-then the chivalry of their male companions induces them to seize their maul-sticks and forbid them to do any work but that for which the smallest pay is to be obtained. Chivalry is not in the least shocked at the sight of a woman dressed in male attire dancing on a public stage, but chivalry is disgusted beyond measure at the spectacle of a modest lady attending the sick as a physician in a hospital. Chivalry has not lightened any single tax, succession duty, or other burden in favour of women. There is nothing for which a woman pays less, and gets the same thing as a man. But there are a great many things for which women pay as much (or, from their ignorance, more) than a man, and obtain less in the way of accompanying rights and privileges, without chivalry being in the remotest degree concerned with the matter. All this, to our thinking, is rather unchivalrous chivalry. But, then, there is to balance it that masculine "politeness" of which we always hear so much. A woman has, indeed, generally to pick her steps with some difficulty through the mire of life, but then she is sure to be offered an arm to go down a broad carpeted staircase to dinDo we not always hear, whenever there

ner.

that in such case they must be prepared to forego the "chivalry" with which they have hitherto been treated, and find it exchanged for some unprecedented mode of behaviour which (it is grimly added) they "won't like"? But do men, then, really feel that it would be a luxury to treat women rudely?-an enjoyment from which this same "chivalry" somehow cruelly debars them so long as women do nothing (at least, nothing remunerative) in the way of work? Will it be a release to them from the irksome bondage of good manners when they may brush past a feeble lady with a dig of their elbows in her side, and keep a poor old woman standing while they lounge in a rocking-chair, or puff tobacco in the face of another, and bid a pretty girl "go to Jericho?" We really do not quite believe it, at least not in the case of the pretty girl, however it may be with the old women.

The truth seems to be, that though the outward forms of chivalrous courtesy are not lost, the self-sacrificing part of it, which constitutes its true beauty and value, is in some danger of being forgotten amid our modern press of business and general struggle for existence. In the leisure of the drawing-room every one is courteous; in the hurry of quitting a steamboat not one in a dozen is moderately goodmannered. The young, the well-dressed, and (of course, as nature will have it) the beautiful, are treated with a care often quite superfluous; the aged, the feeble, and the solitary are rudely pushed aside. When a train draws up at a terminus, and there is ample time for descent, many a well-bred man will offer his hand to the lady passengers to aid them to alight. When a train is going to start, and an "unprotected" seeks to take her ticket and climb into her carriage, it too often happens that one man will push before her to the ticket-window, and a second give her a poke with his umbrella; while a third, with agility quite remarkable, jumps before her into the carriage and takes the corner seat. The true spirit of chivalry was never better exemplified, though somewhat awkwardly expressed, than by a poor dull school-boy home for the holidays, amid a party where there were many pretty young girls, and one deaf, decrepid old lady. The other boys in company bore off the girls to dinner, each with many juvenile compliments. "And I," said the dull lad, offering his arm to the astonished old lady-"I'll take you, Miss D., because you are little, and because you are old!"

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