1. WAKE your harp's music!-louder,-higher, And smite again each quivering wire, (f) Shout like those godlike men of old, On this blessed soil their anthem rolled, 2. From native shores by tempests driven, And found, beneath a milder heaven, An altar rose, and prayers,-a ray 3. They clung around that symbol too, And swore, while skies and waves were blue, They stood upon the red man's sod, 'Neath heaven's unpillared bow, With home, a country, and a God,→ 5. They knelt them on the desert sand, They looked upon the high, blue air, TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO! 6. The warrior's red right arm was bared, To seek his home and child'? The dark chiefs yelled alarm, and swore And his hewn bones should bleach their shore, 7. But lo! the warrior's eye grew dim,- The still, black wilds which sheltered him, Time fled,—and on the hallowed ground And cities swell where forests frowned, 8. Oh! stay not to recount the tale,— The firmest cheek might well grow pale, The God of Heaven who prospers us, Could bid a nation grow, And shield us from the red man's curse,- 9. Come, then,-great shades of glorious men, O bravest of the brave! We call you from each moldering tomb, And each blue wave below, To bless the world ye snatched from doom,- 10. Then to your harps!—yet louder,—higher And smite again each quivering wire, (f.) Shout for those godlike men of old, On this blessed soil their anthem rolled, QUESTIONS.-1. Who are meant by godlike men of old? they flee to this country? 3. Who warred against them? 2. Why did LESSON CVI. SE RENE LY, calmly; quietly. EB' ON, black, as ebony. GUARD I AN, defender; protector. MAIL, defensive armor. BLIGHT ED, blasted. RE NOWN', fame; celebrity. IN TER VENE', (INTER, between VENE, to come;) come between; interpose. SUC CEED', SUC, after; CEED, to come;) come after; follow. PRESS ON. PARK BENJAMIN. 1. PRESS ON! there's no such word as fail! 2. Press on! surmount the rocky steeps, Tramp on eternal snows its way, 3. Press on! if once and twice thy feet Danger and death, they're sure to fly. To coward ranks the bullet speeds; 4. Press on! if Fortune play thee false Makes up her follies past and gone: 5 Press on! what though upon the ground The sweetest, which is born of pain. 6. Therefore, press on! and reach the goal, To thine own self be true, and keep Thy mind from sloth, thy heart from soil; A heavenly harvest for thy toil! QUESTIONS.-1. What encouragement is given to those who press on? 2. Who fails, and who wins? 3. What is said of those who never dread to meet danger and death? 4. How are they rewarded, who press on? |