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ARABELLA STUART.

A step!-a voice!-or but a rising breeze?
Hark-haste!-I come to meet thee on the seas.

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Now never more, oh! never, in the worth
Of its pure cause, let sorrowing love on earth
Trust fondly-never more!-the hope is crush'd
That lit my life, the voice within me hush'd
That spoke sweet oracles; and I return
To lay my youth, as in a burial urn,
Where sunshine may not find it. All is lost!
No tempest met our barks-no billow toss'd:
Yet were they sever'd, even as we must be,
That so have loved, so striven our hearts to free
From their close-coiling fate! In vain-in vain,
The dark links meet, and clasp themselves again,
And press out life. Upon the deck I stood,
And a white sail came gliding o'er the flood,
Like some proud bird of ocean; then mine eye
Strain'd out, one moment earlier to descry
The form it ached for, and the bark's career
Seem'd slow to that fond yearning: it drew near,
Fraught with our foes! What boots it to recall
The strife, the tears? Once more a prison wall
Shuts the green hills and woodlands from my sight,
And joyous glance of waters to the light,

And thee, my Seymour, thee!

I will not sink!

Thou, thou hast rent the heavy chain that bound thee !

And this shall be my strength-tne joy to think

That thou may'st wander with heaven's breath around thes And all the laughing sky! This thought shall yet

Shine o'er my heart a radiant amulet,

Guarding it from despair. Thy bonds are broken,
And unto me, I know, thy true love's token
Shall one day be deliverance, though the years
Lie dim between, o'erhung with mists of tears.

VII.

My friend my friend! where art thou? Day by day
Gliding, like some dark mournful stream, away!
My silent youth flows from me. Spring, the while,
Comes and rains beauty on the kindling boughs
Round hall and hamlet; Summer with her smile,

Fills the green forest; young hearts breathe their vows;
Brothers long parted meet; fair children rise

Round the glad board; Hope laughs from loving eyes:
All this is in the world!-These joys lie sown,

The dew of every path. On one alone

Their freshness may not fall-the stricken deer
Dying of thirst with all the waters near.

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VIII.

Ye are from dingle and fresh glade, ye flowers!
By some kind hand to cheer my dungeon sent;
O'er you the oak shed down the summer showers,
And the lark's nest was where your bright cups bent,
Quivering to breeze and raindrop, like the sheen
Of twilight stars. On you heaven's eye hath been,
Through the leaves, pouring its dark sultry blue
Into your glowing hearts the bee to you

Hath murmur'd, and the rill.-My soul grows faint
With passionate yearning, as its quick dreams paint
Your haunts by dell and stream-the green, the free,
The full of all sweet sound-the shut from me!

IX.

There went a swift bird singing past my cell-
O Love and Freedom! ye are lovely things!
With you the peasant on the hills may dwell,

And by the streams; but I-the blood of kings,
A proud unmingling river through my veins
Flows in lone brightness, and its gifts are chains;
Kings! I had silent visions of deep bliss,
Leaving their thrones far distant, and for this
I am cast under their triumphal car,

An insect to be crush'd!-Oh!-Heaven is far-
Earth pitiless!

Dost thou forget me, Seymour! I am proved
So long, so sternly! Seymour, my beloved!
There are such tales of holy marvels done
By strong affection, of deliverance won

Through its prevailing power! Are these things told
Till the young weep with rapture, and the old
Wonder, yet dare not doubt; and thou! oh, thou!
Dost thou forget me in hope's decay!--

Thou canst not!-through the silent night, even now,
I, that need prayer so much, awake and pray
Still first for thee.--Oh, gentle, gentle friend!
How shall I bear this anguish to the end?

Aid!-comes there yet no aid ?-the voice of blood
Passes heaven's gate, even ere the crimson flood
Sinks through the greensward-is there not a cry
From the wrung heart, of power, through agony,
To pierce the clouds? Hear, Mercy!-hear me! None
That bleed and weep beneath the smiling sun

Have heavier cause-yet hear!-my soul grows dark-
Who hears the last shriek from the sinking bark
On the mid seas, and with the storm alone,
And bearing to the abyss, unseen, unknown,

Its freight of human hearts?-th' o'ermastering wave!
Who shall tell how it rush'd-and none to save.

Thou hast forsaken me! I feel, I know,

ARABELLA STUART.

There would be rescue if this were not so.

Thou 'rt at the chase, thou 'rt at the festive boara,
Thou 'rt where the red wine free and high is pour'd,
Thou 'rt where the dancers meet!—a magic glass
I set within my soul, and proud shapes pass,
Flushing it o'er with pomp from bower and hall;
I see one shadow, stateliest there of all-

Thine !-What dost thou amidst the bright and fair
Whispering light words, and mocking my despair?
It is not well of thee !-my love was more
Than fiery song may breath, deep thought explore ;
And there thou sm lest, while my heart is dying,
With all its blighted hopes around it lying;
Even thou, on whom they hung their last green leaf-
Yet smile, smile on! too bright art thou for grief!
Death!-what? is death a lock'd and treasured thing,
Guarded by swords of fire ?2 a hidden spring,
A fabled fruit, that I should thus endure,
As if the world within me held no cure?
Wherefore not spread free wings-Heaven, Heaven control
These thoughts-they rush-I look into my soul
As down gulf and tremble at the array
Of fierce forms crowding it!
So shall their dark host pass.

Give strength to pray,

The storm is still'd.

Father in Heaven! thou, only thou, canst sound
The heart's great deep, with floods of anguish fill'd,
For human line too fearfully profound.
Therefore, forgive, my Father! if thy child,
Rock'd on its heaving darkness, hath grown wild
And sinn'd in her despair! It well may be,
That thou wouldst lead my spirit back to thee-
By the crush'd hope too long on this world pour'd,
The stricken love which hath perchance adored
A mortal in thy place! Now let me strive
With thy strong arm no more! Forgive, forgive!
Take me to peace!

And peace at last is nigh.

A sign is on my brow, a token sent

The o'erwearied dust from home: no breeze flits by.
But calls me with a strange sweet whisper, blent
Of many mysteries.

Hark! the warning tone

Deepens-its word is Death! Alone, alone,
And sad in youth, but chasten'd, I depart,
Bowing to heaven. Yet, yet my woman's heart
Shall wake a spirit and a power to bless,
Even in this hour's o'ershadowing fearfulness,
Thee, its first love!-oh! tender still, and true!
Be it forgotten if mine anguish threw

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Drops from its bitter fountain on thy name,
Though but a moment.

Now, with fainting frame,
With soul just lingering on the flight begun
To bind for thee its last dim thoughts in one,
I bless thee! Peace be on thy noble head,
Years of bright fame, when I am with the dead!
I bid this prayer survive me, and retain
Its might, again to bless thee, and again!
Thou hast been gather'd into my dark fate
Too much too long, for my sake, desolate
Hath been thine exiled youth; but now take back,
From dying hands, thy freedom, and retrack
(After a few kind tears for her whose days
Went out in dreams of thee) the sunny ways
Of hope, and find thou happiness! Yet send,
Even then, in silent hours, a thought dear friend!
Down to my voiceless chamber; for thy love
Hath been to me all gifts of earth above,
Though bought with burning tears! it is the sting
Of death to leave that vainly-precious thing
In this cold world! What were it then, if thou,
With thy fond eyes, wert gazing on me now?
Too keen a pang!-Farewell! and yet once more,
Farewell! The passion of long years I pour
Into that word: thou hear'st not-but the woe
And fervor of its tones may one day flow
To thy heart's holy place; there let them dwell
We shall o'ersweep the grave to meet-Farewell!

THE BRIDE OF THE GREEK ISLE.*

"Fear !—I'm a Greek, and how should I fear death?

A slave, and wherefore should I dread my freedom?

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COME from the woods with the citron-flowers,
Come with your lyres for the festal hours,

Sardanapalus.

Maids of bright Scio! They came, and the breeze
Bore their sweet songs o'er the Grecian seas;

They came, and Eudora stood robed and crown'd,

The bride of the morn, with her train around.
Jewels flash d out from her braided hair,
Like starry dews 'midst the roses there ;

*Founded on a circumstance related in the Second Series of the Curiosities of Literature, and forming a part of a picture in the "Painted Biography" there described.

THE BRIDE OF THE GREEK ISLE.

Pearls on her bosom quivering shone,
Heaved by her heart through its golden zone;
But a brow, as those gems of the ocean pale,
Gleam'd from beneath her transparent veil;
Changeful and faint was her fair cheek's hue,
Though clear as a flower which the light looks through :
And the glance of her dark resplendent eye,
For the aspect of woman at times too high,
Lay floating in mists which the troubled stream
Of the soul sent up o'er its fervid beam.

She look'd on the vine at her father's door,
Like one that is leaving his native shore;
She hung o'er the myrtle once call'd her own,
As it greenly waved by the threshold stone;
She turn'd-and her mother's gaze brought back
Each hue of her childhood's faded track.
Oh! hush the song, and let her tears
Flow to the dream of her early years!
Holy and pure are the drops that fall

When the young bride goes from her father's hall;
She goes unto love yet untried and new,
She parts from love which hath still been true;
Mute be the song and the choral strain,

Till her heart's deep well-spring is clear again!
She wept on her mother's faithful breast
Like a babe that sobs itself to rest;
She wept-yet laid her hand awhile
In his that waited her dawning sinile-
Her soul's affianced, nor cherish'd less
For the gush of nature's tenderness!
She lifted her graceful head at last-
The choking swell of her heart was past;

And her lovely thoughts from their cells found way
In the sudden flow of a plaintive lay.3

THE BRIDE'S FAREWELL.

WHY do I weep?-to leave the vine
Whose clusters o'er me bend;
The myrtle-yet, oh! call it nine !-
The flowers I loved to tend.

A thousand thoughts of all things dear,
Like shadows o'er me sweep,

I leave my sunny childhood here,
Oh, therefore let me weep!

I leave thee, sister? we have play'd
Through many a joyous hour,

Where the silvery green of the olive shade

Hung dim o'er fount and bower.

Yes, thou and I, by stream by shore,

In song, in prayer, in sleep,

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