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The years that were, the dim, the gray,
Receive this night, with choral hymn,
A sister shade as lost as they,

And soon to be as gray and dim.

Fill high she brought us both of weal and woe, And nearer lies the land to which we go.

On, on, in one unwearied round
Old Time pursues his way:

Groves bud and blossom, and the ground
Expects in peace her yellow prey:
The oak's broad leaf, the rose's bloom,
Together fall, together lie;

And undistinguish'd in the tomb,

Howe'er they lived, are all that die. Gold, beauty, knightly sword, and royal crown, To the same sleep go shorn and wither'd down.

How short the rapid months appear,
Since round this board we met
To welcome in the infant year,

Whose star hath now for ever set!

Alas! as round this board I look,

I think on more than I behold,

For glossy curls in gladness shook

That night, that now are damp and cold. For us no more those lovely eyes shall shine,

Peace to her slumbers! drown your tears in wine.

Thank heaven, no seer unblest am I,
Before the time to tell,

When moons as brief once more go by,
For whom this cup again shall swell.

The hoary mower strides apace,

Nor crops alone the ripen'd ear;

And we may miss the merriest face

Among us, 'gainst another year.

Whoe'er survive, be kind as we have been,

And think of friends that sleep beneath the green.

Nay, droop not being is not breath:
"Tis fate that friends must part,
But God will bless in life, in death,
The noble soul, the gentle heart.
So deeds be just and words be true,
We need not shrink from Nature's rule;
The tomb, so dark to mortal view,

Is heaven's own blessed vestibule;

And solemn, but not sad, this cup should flow, Though nearer lies the land to which we go. J. G. LOCKHART.

THE EAR-RINGS.

O, MY ear-rings, my ear-rings;
"T was thus a maiden sung,
A fair and lovely maiden,

With a gentle northern tongue;
O, my ear-rings, my ear-rings,
I've dropt them in the well,
And what to say to my true love,
I cannot, cannot tell;

The tittering damsels, as I go,
They say both free and loud,
Young William gave these ear-rings,
And Miss may well be proud-
He gave to her these ear-rings,

Her sallow neck to touch

A little with their lustre,

And her beauty needs it much.

My love gave me those costly rings,
My plighted vow to keep,

And there they glitter in the well,
I wot three fathom deep;

He gave to me these splendid gems,
To sparkle on my neck,

And there they lie-my heart is stone,
Else it would surely break.

I wore them at the market,

In the dance they threw a spell
On all the lads who saw them,

And my looks became them well.
My love gave me these precious rings,
And gave me, little loth,

At parting, such a heart-warm kiss,
"I was richly worth them both.
A kiss, alas! is but a touch,
The rings no more will shine
Around me in their glory,

And my love will ne'er be mine.

J. G. LOCKHART.

FOR A LADY'S ALBUM.

Grace is deceitful, and beauty vain.-Solomon.

Oн, say not, wisest of all the kings

That have risen on Israel's throne to reign!
Say not, as one of your wisest things,
That grace is false, and beauty vain.

Your harem beauties resign! resign

Their lascivious dance, their voluptuous song! To your garden come forth, among things divine, And own you do grace and beauty wrong.

Is beauty vain because it will fade?

Then are earth's green robe and heaven's light vain ;

For this shall be lost in evening's shade,

And that in winter's sleety rain.

But earth's green mantle, prank'd with flowers,
Is the couch where life with joy reposes;

And heaven gives down, with its light and showers
To regale them, fruits; to deck them, roses.

And while opening flowers in such beauty spread,
And ripening fruits so gracefully swing,
Say not, O king, as you just now said,

That beauty or grace is a worthless thing.

This willow's limbs, as they bend in the breeze,
The dimpled face of the pool to kiss;
Who, that has eyes and a heart, but sees
That there is beauty and grace in this!

And do not these boughs all whisper of Him,
Whose smile is the light that in green arrays them;
Who sitteth, in peace, on the wave they skim,
And whose breath is the gentle wind that sways
them?

And are not the beauty and grace of youth,
Like those of this willow, the work of love?
Do they not come, like the voice of truth,
That is heard all around us here from above?

Then say not, wisest of all the kings

That have risen on Israel's throne to reign!
Say not, as one of your wisest things,
That grace is false, and beauty vain.

PIERPONT.

THE EAR OF CORN AND THE POPPY.

OVER the fertile far-spread plain,

Like billows of the sea,

The undulating harvest waved

In rich luxuriancy.

And haughtily its stately crest
A ripen'd ear upraised;
As, gaily flaunting to the sun,
Its golden glories blazed.

Swoll'n with the pride of conscious worth,
It mark'd, with tossing head,
A poppy, rising by its side,

Its vermeil petals spread:

And with its sharp and stridulous awns,
Goading its tender breast;

In hoarse and scornful accents thus
The blooming flower addrest.

"Oh, symbol thou of sluggishness!
To whose dark juice a prey-
Victims alike, the strongest mind
And stoutest frame give way.

Thou of lethargic torpors sire,
Which o'er the senses creep,
And freeze them-such their potency-
In fix'd and death-like sleep:

How dost thou dare near me to spring,

In Ceres' wide domain

Me, who with needful food do still
Man's toiling race sustain?"

To whom the poppy tranquil thus:-
"Dear sister, spurn me not:
But venerate the high behests,
That rule man's chequer'd lot.

Of his exhausting labours thou
The staff, the solace I:

Thus seems dread Providence to speak,
Which placed us twain so nigh:

Mortals, no more with thankless wail,
O'er human sorrows weep;
Since yours are still, of Nature's boon,
Twin blessings-bread and sleep.

WRANGHAM.

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