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-Nor can'st thou, D'Arcy, feel resentment long;
For she herself shall plead, and I atone.
Henceforth," he paused awhile, unmanned,

For D'Arcy's tears bedewed his hand;

"Let each meet each, as friend to friend,

All things by all forgot, forgiven.

And that dear Saint-may she once more descend
To make our home a heaven!-

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All hearts shall sing Adieu to sorrow!'

St. Pierre has found his child to-day;

And old and young shall dance to-morrow."

Had Louis* then before the gate dismounted,
Lost in the chase at set of sun;

Like Henry when he heard recounted†

The

generous

deeds himself had done,

*Louis the Fourteenth.

Alluding to a popular story related of Henry the Fourth of France;

similar to ours of "The King and Miller of Mansfield."

(What time the miller's maid Colette

Sung, while he supped, her chansonnette)

Then when St. Pierre addressed his village-train,
Then had the monarch with a sigh confessed

A joy by him unsought and unpossessed,
-Without it what are all the rest?—

To love, and to be loved again.

LIBRARY

UNIVERSITY OF

CALIFORNIA.

ODE TO SUPERSTITION.

WRITTEN IN 1785.

I. 1.

HENCE, to the realms of Night, dire Demon, hence!

Thy chain of adamant can bind

That little world, the human mind,

And sink its noblest powers to impotence.
Wake the lion's loudest roar,

Clot his shaggy mane with gore,

With flashing fury bid his eyeballs shine;

Meek is his savage, sullen soul, to thine!

Thy touch, thy deadening touch, has steeled the

breast,

Whence, thro' her April shower, soft Pity smiled ; Has closed the heart each godlike virtue blessed, To all the silent pleadings of his child.*

At thy command he plants the dagger deep, At thy command exults, tho' Nature bids him weep!

*The sacrifice of Iphigenia.

I. 2.

When, with a frown that froze the peopled earth,*

Thou dartedst thy huge head from high,

Night waved her banners o'er the sky,

And, brooding, gave her shapeless shadows birth. Rocking on the billowy air,

Ha! what withering phantoms glare!

As blows the blast with many a sudden swell,

At each dead pause, what shrill-toned voices yell!
The sheeted spectre, rising from the tomb,
Points to the murderer's stab, and shudders by;
In every grove is felt a heavier gloom,
That veils its genius from the vulgar eye:

The spirit of the water rides the storm,
And, thro' the mist, reveals the terrors of his form.

I. 3.

O'er solid seas, where Winter reigns,

And holds each mountain-wave in chains,
The fur-clad savage, ere he guides his deer
By glistering starlight thro' the snow,
Breathes softly in her wondering ear
Each potent spell thou bad'st him know.

* Lucretius, I. 63.

By thee inspired, on India's sands,
Full in the sun the Bramin stands;
And, while the panting tigress hies
To quench her fever in the stream,
His spirit laughs in agonies,

Smit by the scorchings of the noontide beam.
Mark who mounts the sacred pyre,*

Blooming in her bridal vest:

She hurls the torch! she fans the fire!
To die is to be blest:

She clasps her lord to part no more,
And, sighing, sinks! but sinks to soar.
O'ershadowing Scotia's desert coast,
The Sisters sail in dusky state,†

And, wrapt in clouds, in tempests tost,

Weave the airy web of Fate;

While the lone shepherd, near the shipless main,‡

Sees o'er her hills advance the long-drawn funeral train.

*The funeral rite of the Hindoos.

The Fates of the Northern Mythology. See MALLETT'S Antiquities. An allusion to the Second Sight.

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