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Oh strange return!-grew black, and gasped, Fair rounds of radiant points invest his

and died.

Horror of horrors! what! his only son! How looked our hermit when the fact was done?

Not hell, though hell's black jaws in sunder part

hair;

Celestial odors breathe through purpled air;
And wings whose colors glittered on the day
Wide at his back their gradual plumes dis-
play;

The form ethereal bursts upon his sight, And breathe blue fire, could more assault his And moves in all the majesty of light.

heart.

Confused and struck with silence at the deed, He flies, but trembling fails to fly with speed:

Though loud at first the pilgrim's passion

grew,

Sudden he gazed, and wist not what to do:
Surprise in secret chains his words suspends,

His steps the youth pursues. The country And in a calm his settling temper ends. lay But silence here the beauteous angel broke Perplexed with roads: a servant showed the (The voice of music ravished as he spoke): "Thy prayer, thy praise, thy life to vice un

way;

A river crossed the path; the passage o'er
Was nice to find: the servant trod before;
Long arms of oaks an open bridge supplied,
And deep the waves beneath the bending
glide.

The youth, who seemed to watch a time to
sin,

Approached the careless guide and thrust

him in;

Plunging he falls, and, rising, lifts his head, Then flashing turns, and sinks among the dead.

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"The Maker justly claims that world he
made:

Wild, sparkling rage inflames the father's In this the right of Providence is laid;
Its sacred majesty through all depends
He bursts the bands of fear and madly cries, On using second means to work his ends;

eyes;

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Than those which lately struck thy wonder- And 'twas my ministry to deal the blow. ing eyes? The poor fond parent, humbled in the dust, Yet, taught by these, confess the Almighty Now owns in tears the punishment was just. just,

And where you can't unriddle learn to trust. "But how had all his fortune felt a wrack Had that false servant sped in safety back! "The great, vain man who fared on costly This night his treasured heaps he meant to food,

Whose life was too luxurious to be good, Who made his ivory stands with goblets shine

And forced his guests to morning draughts
of wine,

Has, with the cup, the graceless custom lost,
And still. he welcomes, but with less of cost.

steal,

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"The mean, suspicious wretch whose bolted The sage stood wondering as the seraph flew door Thus looked Elisha when, to mount on high, Ne'er moved in duty to the wandering His master took the chariot of the sky:

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And, loose from dross, the silver runs be- But the scent of the roses will hang round it low.

still.

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Though far my

lot

The evening air—

Soft witness of the floweret's fragrant death—
Strays not so sweetly to me as thy breath;

The moonlight fair

On snowy waste sleeps not with sweeter ray
Than thy clear memory on my heart's decay.

I love thee still,

And I shall love thee ever, and above
All earthly objects with undying love:

The mountain-rill

Seeks with no surer flow the far bright sea
Than my unchanged affection flows to thee.

A year has flown,

My heart's best angel, since to thee I strung
My frail poetic lyre-since last I sung,

In faltering tone,

My love undying, though in all my dreams Thy smiles have lingered like the stars in streams.

On ruffled wing,

From thine, and though Time's onward-roll- Like storm-tossed bird, that year has sped

ing tide

May never bear me, dearest, to thy side.

I would forget;

Alas! I strive in vain in dreams, in dreams,
The radiance of thy glance upon me beams;

No star has met

away

Into the shadowed past, and not a day

To me could bring

Familiar joys like those I knew of yore,
But morn and noon and night a sorrow bore.

Alas for Time!

For me his sickle reaps the harvest fair My gaze for years whose beauty doth not Of hopes that blossomed in the summer air

shine,

Of youth's sweet clime,

Whose look of speechless love is not like But leaves to bloom the deeply-rooted tree Which thou hast planted, deathless Memory.

thine.

Beneath its shade

I muse, and muse alone, while daylight dies, Changing its dolphin hues in western skies;

And when they fade,

And when the moon, of fairy stars the queen, Waves her transparent wand o'er all the

scene,

I seek the vale,

And while inhaling the moss-rose's breath

Thine image in the loveliness that dwells 'Mid inland forests and sequestered dells.

I am thine own,

My dearest, though thou never mayst be mine;

I would not, if I could, the band untwine
Around me thrown

Since first I breathed to thee that word of fire

Less sweet than thine, unmatched Eliza- Re-echoed now-how feebly!--by my lyre.

beth

A vision pale

As the fair robes of seraphs in the night Rises before me with supernal light.

I seek the mount,

Love, constant love!

Age cannot quench it; like the primal ray From the vast fountain that supplies the day,

Far, far above

Our cloud-encircled region, it will flow

And there, in closest commune with the blue, As pure and as eternal in its glow.

Thy

spiritual glances meet my view;

I seek the fount,

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Oh, when I die

If until then thou mayst not drop a tearWeep then for one to whom thou wert most dear,

To whom thy sigh,

Denied in life, in death, if fondly given, Will seem the sweetest incense-air of heaven.

Dost thou not turn,

Fairest and sweetest, from the flowery way On which thy feet are treading every day, And seek to learn

Tidings sometimes of him who loved thee well

More than his pen can write or tongue can tell?

Gaze not thine eyes

O wild and lustrous eyes, ye were my fateUpon the lines he fashioned not of late,

But when the skies

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