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for the overflowing of a proud spirit, grateful and pious, tears of sadness for this virgin soil, seeming to foreshadow the calamities, and devastation, with fire and sword, and blood and destruction, which the strangers were to bring with their pride, their knowledge, and their power.

14. It was the man that shed these tears; but it was the turth that was destined to weep. As Columbus raised his forehead from the dust, with a Latin prayer, which his com panions have handed down to us, he thus addressed the Sovereign Ruler of the world: (sl.) "Almighty and eternal God, who, by the energy of Thy creative word, hast made the firmament, the earth, and sea, blessed and glorified be Thy name in all places! May Thy majesty and dominion be exalted forever and ever, as Thou hast permitted Thy holy name to be made known and spread by the most humble of Thy servants, in this hitherto unknown portion of Thy empire."

15. He then gave to this land the name of San Salvador. His lieutenants, his pilots, and his seamen, full of gladness, and impressed with a superstitious respect for him whose glance had pierced beyond the visible horizon, and whom they had offended by their unbelief,—overcome by the evidence of their eyes, and by that mental superiority which overawes the minds of men,—fell at the feet of the Admiral, kissed his hands and his clothes, and recognized, for a moment, the power and the almost divine nature of genius; yesterday the victims of his obstinacy,-now the companions of his success, and sharers in the glory which they had mocked. Such is humanity,-persecuting discoverers, yet reaping the fruits of their inventions.

QUESTIONS.-1. What evidences had Columbus that land was near? 2. What did the mutineers do? 3. In what month and year was the neu world discovered? 4. What is said of the natives? 5. What did Columbus do on landing? 6. What was the conduct of the officers and seamen ?

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Don Gomez. WHAT! what is this you tell me? Columbus returned? A new world discovered? Impossible! Secretary. It is even so, sir. A courier arrived at the palace but an hour since with the intelligence. Columbus was driven by stress of weather to anchor in the Tagus. All Portugal is in a ferment of enthusiasm, and all Spain will be equally excited soon. The sensation is prodigious!

Don G. Oh, it is a trick! It must be a trick!

Sec. But he has brought home the proofs of his visit,gold and precious stones, strange plants and animals; and, above all, specimens of a new race of men, copper-colored, with straight hair.

Don G. Still I say, a trick! He has been coasting along the African shore, and there collected a few curiosities, which he is passing off for proofs of his pretended discovery. `

Sec. It is a little singular that all his men should be leagued with him in keeping up so unprofitable a falsehood. Don. G. But 'tis against reason, against common sense, that such a discovery should be made.

Sec. King John of Portugal has received him with royal magnificence, has listened to his accounts, and is persuaded that they are true.

Don G. We shall see, we shall see. Look you, sir, a plain matter-of-fact man, such as I, is not to be taken in by any such preposterous story! This vaunted discovery will turn out no discovery at all.

Sec. The king and queen have given orders for preparations on the most magnificent scale for the reception of Columbus.

Don. G. What delusion! Her majesty is so credulous' A practical, common-sense man, like myself, can find no points of sympathy in her nature.

Sec. The Indians on board the returned vessels, are said to be unlike any known race of men.

Don G. Very unreliable all that! I take the commonsense view of the thing. I am a matter-of-fact man; and do you remember what I say, it will all turn out a trick! The crews may have been deceived. Columbus may have steered a southerly course, instead of a westerly. Any thing is probable, rather than that a coast to the westward of us has been discovered.

Sec. I saw the courier, who told me he had conversed with all the sailors; and they laughed at the suspicion that there could be any mistake about the discovery, or that any other than a westerly course had been steered.

Don G. Still I say, a trick! An unknown coast reached by steering west? Impossible! The earth a globe, and men standing with their heads down in space? Folly! An ignorant sailor from Genoa in the right, and all our learned doctors and philosophers in the wrong? Nonsense! I'm a matter-of-fact man, sir. I will believe what I can see, and handle, and understand. But as for believing in the antipodes, or that the earth is round, or that Columbus has discovered land to the west, Ring the bell, sir; call my carriage; I will go to the palace and undeceive the king.

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1. WAKE your harp's music!—louder,—higher,
And pour your strains along;

And smite again each quivering wire,
In all the pride of song!

(f) Shout like those godlike men of old,
Who, daring storm and foe,

On this blessed soil their anthem rolled,
TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO!

2. From native shores by tempests driven,
They sought a purer sky;

And found, beneath a milder heaven,
The home of Liberty!

An altar rose, and prayers,-a ray
Broke on their night of woe,-
The harbinger of Freedom's day,
TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO!

3. They clung around that symbol too,
Their refuge and their all;

And swore, while skies and waves were blue,
That altar should not fall!

They stood upon the red man's sod,

'Neath heaven's unpillared bow,

With home, a country, and a God,—

—a

TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO!

4. Oh! 'twas a hard, unyielding fate
That drove them to the seas;
And Persecution strove with Hate,
To darken her decrees:

But safe, above each coral grave,
Each booming ship did go,-
A God was on the western wave,-
TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO!

5. They knelt them on the desert sand,
By waters cold and rude,
Alone upon the dreary strand
Of oceaned solitude!

They looked upon the high, blue air,
And felt their spirits glow,
Resolved to live or perish there,-

TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO!

6. The warrior's red right arm was bared,
His eyes flashed deep and wild:
Was there a foreign footstep dared

To seek his home and child'?

The dark chiefs yelled alarm, and swore

The white man's blood should flow,

And his hewn bones should bleach their shore,
TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO!

7. But lo! the warrior's eye grew dim,

His arm was left alone;

The still, black wilds which sheltered him,
No longer were his own!

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