To be, or not to be, that is the question. Num vivam, moriarve omnis ! præstantius utrum H. H. Lines written by Langhorn under Mr. Bunbury's picture of the dead Soldier. (Sir Walter Scott had, once only, an interview with the poet Burns, whom he found wiping his eyes, having just read these lines.] Cold on Canadian hills, or Vinden's plain, Perhaps, that mourner weeps her warrior slain. Bends o'er her babe, her eyes o'erwhelm'd with dew, The big drops mingling with the milk he drew, Gave the sad presage of his future years — The child of misery baptized in tears. Langhorn. 23 Stricta gelu, lacrymisque madens, post proelia, mater Infantem tenero dum fovet alma sinu, Et tam dilecto se superesse viro. Combibit admixtum lac lacrymasque simul, Η. Η. 24 On a White Rose presented by the Duke of Clarence, a Yorkist, to the Lady Elizabeth Beauchamp, a Lancastrian lady- as the legend has it. If this white Rose offend thy sight, It in thy bosom wear, And turn Lancastrian there. Congreve is said to have added the following stanza: But if thy ruby lip it spy, To kiss it should'st thou deign, And Yorkist turn again. On the death of a young Lady named Rose. Choses ont le pire destin; L'espace d'un matin. Si, mea Cara ! tibi rosa non arriserit alba, Pone tuo nivibus candidiore sinu. Tùm, minùs alba, dabit manifesti signa pudoris, Atque erit ante oculos mox rosa rubra tuos. Tu cave purpureis formosi gratia floris Eliciat labris oscula crebra tuis, Palleat, et fiat, quæ fuit, alba rosa. Ah Rosa ! fata vocant et quicquid amabile, quicquid Formosum, aut præstans sit, cadit ante diem; Tuque peris, veluti rosa, flos suavissimus horti, Una dies flori contigit, una Rosæ. Η. Η. D |