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Now spinning like a millwheel round, Now hunting Echo's empty sound, Now climbing up some old tall tree

For climbing's sake: 'tis sweet to thee
To sit where birds can sit alone,
Or share with thee thy venturous throne.

Child of the town and bustling street,
What woes and snares await thy feet!
Thy paths are paved for five long miles,
Thy groves and hills are peaks and tiles,
Thy fragrant air is yon thick smoke,
Which shrouds thee like a mourning-cloak,
And thou art cabined and confined
At once from sun and dew and wind;
Or set thy tottering feet but on
Thy lengthened walks of slippery stone:
The coachman there careering reels
With goaded steeds and maddening wheels,
And Commerce pours each prosing son
In pelf's pursuit, and halloos "Run!"
While flushed with wine and stung at play
Men rush from darkness into day;

The stream's too strong for thy small bark:
There naught can sail save what is stark.
Fly from the town, sweet child, for health
Is happiness and strength and wealth;
There is a lesson in each flower,

A story in each stream and bower;
On
every herb o'er which you tread
Are written words which, rightly read,
Will lead you from earth's fragrant sod
To hope and holiness and God.

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And lockt men's looks within her golden Hath from the cunning workman's pencil flown

hair,

These lips look fresh and lively as her own,

Seeming to move and speak. Alas! now I Neither to be so great as to be envied,

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Nothing of her but this! This cannot speak; Love is much in winning, yet is more in It has no lap for me to rest upon,

leesing;

No lip worth tasting. Here the worms will Love is ever sick, and yet is never dying; feed,

As in her coffin. Hence, then, idle art! True love's best pictured in a true love's heart.

Here art thou drawn, sweet maid, till this be
dead,

So that thou livest twice, twice art buried.
Thou figure of my friend, lie there.

Love is ever true, and yet is ever lying; Love does dote in liking, and is mad in loathing;

Love indeed is anything, yet indeed is nothing.

THOMAS MIDDLETON.

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But cannot shield the tempest from them- Thou prayest God to hasten to thine aid;

selves.

I love to dwell betwixt the hills and dales,

Immortal is thy soul: thy heart will heal.

By longing and regret thy life is torn,

The past shuts out the future from thine
eye;

Grieve not for yesterday: await the morn;
Immortal is thy soul: time passes by.

Thy form is bent beneath oppressive thought,
Thy brow is burdened, and thy limbs give

way;

Oh, bow the knee! fall prostrate, thing of naught!

Then I'll not be proud of my youth nor my beauty,

Since both of them wither and fade,
But gain a good name by well doing my
duty:

This will scent like a rose when I'm dead.
DR. WATTS.

OH, NANNY, WILT THOU GANG
WI' ME?

Immortal is thy soul: death frees thy clay. OH, Nanny, wilt thou

Thy mouldering form its mother-earth will feed,

Thy glory, name and memory must die, But not thy love: if thou hast loved indeed,

gang wi' me,
Nor sigh to leave the flaunting town?
Can silent glens have charms for thee,

The lowly cot and russet gown?
Nae langer drest in silken sheen,
Nae langer decked wi' jewels rare,

Thy deathless soul will cherish it on high. Say, canst thou quit each courtly scene

HOW

Translation of HURD & HOUGHTON.

THE ROSE.

OW fair is the rose! what a beautiful
flower,

The glory of April and May!

But the leaves are beginning to fade in an hour,

And they wither and die in a day.

Yet the rose has one powerful virtue to boast
Above all the flowers of the field:

When its leaves are all dead and its fine
colors lost,

Still how sweet a perfume it will yield!

So frail is the youth and the beauty of men,
Though they bloom and look gay like the

rose,

But all our fond care to preserve them is vain :

Time kills them as fast as he goes.

Where thou wert fairest of the fair?

Oh, Nanny, when thou'rt far awa',

Wilt thou not cast a look behind?
Say, canst thou face the flaky snaw,

Nor shrink before the winter wind?
Oh, can that soft and gentle mien

Severest hardships learn to bear,
Nor, sad, regret each courtly scene

Where thou wert fairest of the fair?

Oh, Nanny, canst thou love so true

Through perils keen wi' me to gae,
Or when thy swain mishap shall rue

To share with him the pang of wae?
Say, should disease or pain befall,

Wilt thou assume the nurse's care,
Nor, wishful, those gay scenes recall

Where thou wert fairest of the fair?

And when at last thy love shall die,

Wilt thou receive his parting breath?

Wilt thou repress each struggling sigh

And cheer with smiles the bed of death? And wilt thou o'er his much-loved clay Strew flowers and drop the tender tear, Nor then regret those scenes so gay Where thou wert fairest of the fair?

DR. THOMAS PERCY.

L'AMOUR TIMIDE.

F in that breast, so good, so pure,
Compassion ever loved to dwell,

IF in that breast,

Pity the sorrows I endure;

The cause I must not, dare not, tell.

The grief that on my quiet preys,

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That rends my heart, that checks my WHO sleeps below? who sleeps below?

tongue,

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It is a question idle all! Ask of the breezes as they blow:

Say, do they heed or hear thy call? They murmur in the trees around, And mock thy voice, an empty sound.

A hundred summer suns have showered
Their fostering warmth and radiance bright,
A hundred winter storms have lowered
With piercing floods and hues of night,
Since first this remnant of his race
Did tenant his lone dwelling-place.

Say, did he come from East, from West, From southern climes, or where the pole With frosty sceptre doth arrest

The howling billows as they roll? Within what realm of peace or strife Did he first draw the breath of life?

Was he of high or low degree?

Did grandeur smile upon his lot?

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Came the swift bolt that dashed him Then what is life, when thus we see

down,

When she, his chosen, blossoming

In beauty, deemed him all her own,
And forward looked to happier years
Than ever blessed this vale of tears?

By day, by night, through calm and storm,
O'er distant oceans did he roam,
Far from his land, a lonely form,

The deck his walk, the sea his home?
Tossed he on wild Biscayan wave,
Or where smooth tides Panama lave?

No trace remains of life's career? Mortal, whoe'er thou art, for thee

A moral lesson gloweth here. Puttest thou in aught of earth thy trust? 'Tis doomed that dust shall mix with dust.

What doth it matter, then, if thus,

Without a stone, without a name, To impotently herald us,

We float not on the breath of fame, But like the dewdrop from the flower Pass after glittering for an hour?

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