FOR THE PORT FOLIO. SONG. WHEN the heart that slowly dies OSCAR. TO A SMILE. Swelling bud of op'ning blisses, Yes in vain I oft have sought thee, The following versification was from the pen of a very young, an interesting woman, in reply to the solicitations of her family not to accorpany her unfortunate husband into exile. The lovely author of these lines, whose beauty can only be exceedd by her retiring modesty, is wholly unconscious of their publication, and we vell know will blush at a celebrity which the accomplishments of her mind, the graces of her person, and the misfortunes of her destiny, have rendered inevtable. Still, still undaunted will I be, That people whom thou call'st thy own, Where'er thy last expiring breath, FOR THE PORT FOLIO, SONG. : THERE is a spot where slow decays OSCAR. FOR THE PORT FOLIO. SONG. IN IMITATION OF WALLER'S "GO, LOVELY ROSE!" Go, idle lays! Tell her whose youthful heart beats high To future days That now so fair in prospect lie, How soon our dearest transports die. Tell her whose cheek The blush of conscious pleasure wears, To find delights unmix'd with cares Say that while charms The bosom warms, With ruddy blushes high illumes, Disease to palid wrinkles dooms, Tell her whose form The partial hand of Beauty gave, Kind Pity's touch shall never save The charms that moulder in the grave! Go, idle lays! Tell her whose youthful heart beats high To future days That now so fair in prospect lie, How soon our dearest transports die! Then softly say That, when terrestrial joys and pains The soul, absolv'd from sensual stains, OSCAR. FOR THE PORT FOLIO. -BRISTOL SPRINGS. THE town of Bristol, romantically situated on one of the most verdant margins of the Delaware, is one of those enchanting spots in the bosom of nature, on which the philosopher, the lover, the studious and the social, with equal rapture repose. Separated from Burlington on the Jersey side, the eye of the painter, the poet, and the enthusiast is at once refreshed and recreated by all the sylvan honours of Bristol. Among its rural joys, at this enchanting season, the liberal establishment which the taste and judgment of Dr. Minnick have conspired to enhance in the estimation of the man of pleasure, or the victim of disease, may be justly enumerated. The mineral spring, which the analysis of science has demonstrated so salutary to many a sufferer; the sporting country in the vicinage, so gladsome to the robust hunter, or the patient fisherman; the variegated landscape, the aliment of the naturalist; the bird's eye view of Burlington, the delight of every traveller, every scholar, and every friend, all unite to convince him, whose soul is corroded by the cares of a crowded city, that here, at least for a season, something like contentment, some |