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Oh, Huon! when my brow sat cloudy oft O'er my cold eye, that look'd askant at thee, Thou little thought what friend there was within

Would make that brow clear as a summer sky,

That eye, bright glowing as a summer's sun, To kindle thee-as they, their world, with

life,

And health, and wealth, and gladness.

J. S. KNOWLES.

THE ROSE.

Of all flowers,

Methinks the Rose is best.

It is the very emblem of a maid:

For, when the west wind courts her gently,
How modestly she blows and paints the sun
With her chaste blushes! When the north
comes near her,

Rude and impatient, then, like Chastity,
She locks her beauties in her bud again,
And leaves him to base briers.

BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER.

SHE DWELT AMONG THE UN

TRODDEN WAYS.

SHE dwelt among the untrodden ways
Beside the springs of Dove,

A maid, whom there were none to praise,
And very few to love :

A violet by a mossy stone
Half hidden from the eye
Fair as a star, when only one

Is shining in the sky.

She lived unknown,-and few could know

When Lucy ceased to be:

But she is in her grave, and, oh!

The difference to me!

WORDSWORTH.

SONNET.

Go, Valentine, and tell that lovely maid
Whom fancy still will portray to my sight,
How here I linger in this sullen shade,
This dreary gloom of dull monastic night.
Say, that, from ev'ry joy of life remote,
At evening's closing hour I quit the throng,
Listening in solitude the ring-dove's note
Who pours like me, her solitary song.
Say, that her absence calls the sorrowing
sigh,

Say, that of all her charms I love to speak,
In fancy feel the magic of her eye,

In fancy view the smile illume her cheek, Court the lone hour when silence stills the

grove,

And heave the sigh of Memory and of Love.

SONG.

SOUTHEY.

Go, lovely Rose !

Tell her that wastes her time and me,

That now she knows,

When I resemble her to thee,

How sweet and fair she seems to be.

Tell her that's young,

And shuns to have her graces spy'd,
That hadst thou sprung

In desarts where no men abide,

Thou must have uncommended dy'd.

Small is the worth

Of beauty from the light retir'd:
Bid her come forth,

Suffer herself to be desir'd,

And not blush so to be admir'd.

Then die! that she

The common fate of all things rare
May read in thee;

How small a part of time they share,
That are so wondrous sweet and fair!

WALLER.

STANZAS ON WOMAN.

WHEN lovely woman stoops to folly,
And finds too late that men betray,
What charm can soothe her melancholy?
What art can wash her guilt away?

The only art her guilt to cover,
To hide her shame from every eye,
To give repentance to her lover,
And wring his bosom is-to die.

LOVE.

GOLDSMITH.

LOVE is a plant of holier birth

Than any that takes its root on earth;
A flower from heaven, which 't is a crime
To number with the things of time;

Hope in the bud is often blasted,

And beauty on the desert wasted;
And joy, a primrose early, gay,
Care's lightest foot-falls treads away.

But love shall live, and live for ever,

And chance and change shall reach it never; Can hearts in which true love is plighted By want or woe be disunited?

Ah no! like buds on one stem born,

They share between them e'en the thorn,

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