I would not forget them, They 're dear to my heart, And often my fancy Will still take a part; Still play on the hill-side, Still roam in the grove; A father and mother, That cherish and love. J. M. F. Departed Friends. The beautiful, - the beautiful For an iron sleep hath bound them ΑΝΟΝ. Album. My name is Album, pretty name, I tell of beauty, love, and fame, Come, give to me, that I may give Bright visions which in thought do live, Cull me the sweetest of the sweet, That all that 's brightest, best, may meet HAYNES. If I could Love. If I could love, I'd find me out A roguish, laughing eye, A cheek to blush, a lip to pout, A fairy hand, to touch and glance, A soul to share in all my fun, And 0, when follies all have fled Such thoughts are vain, too vain, yet why Should you such thoughts reprove; O pity, pity me, for I Am poor, and cannot love. BRAINARD. The pity of the Park Fountain. "T was a summery day in the last of May, And the hours went by as the poets say, The Fountain played right merrily, And the world look'd bright and gay; And a youth went by, with a restless eye, Whose heart was sick and whose brain was dry; And he prayed to God that he might die, And the Fountain played away. Up rose the spray like a diamond throne, And a rainbow spanned it changefully, And the pale, fair girl who stopped to see, And from hunger to guilt she chose to flee And all was gay, on another day, The morning will have shone; And at noon, unmask'd, through bright Broadway A hearse will take its silent way; And the bard who sings will have passed away, And the Fountain will play on! N. P. WILLIS. |