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O say not with the voice of scorn,
"The lilies of thy neck are fled,
Thine eyes their vanish'd radiance mourn,
The roses of thy cheek are dead."

Too cruel youth, with tears I own
The rose and lily's sad decay;
And sorrowing, wish for thee alone,
Their transient bloom a longer day.

Yet though thine eyes no longer trace
The healthful blush of former charms,
Remember that each luckless grace,
O Colin, faded in thy arms!

MADRIGAL.

WHEN Love and Truth together play'd, So cheerful was the shepherd's song! How happy, too, the rural maid!

How light the minutes wing'd along!
But Love has left the sighing vale,
And Truth no longer tells her tale.

Sly stealing, see, from scene to scene,
The watchful Jealousy appear!
And pale Distrust with troubled mien,
The rolling eye, and list'ning ear!
For Love has left the sighing vale,
And Truth no longer tells her tale.

Ah! shall we see no more the hour,
That wafted rapture on its wing?
With murmurs shall the riv'let pour,

That prattled from its crystal spring? Yes, yes, while Love forsakes the vale, And Truth no longer tells her tale.

A PASTORAL SONG.

FAREWELL, O farewell to the day,
That smiling with happiness flew !
Ye verdures and blushes of May,
Ye songs of the linnet, adieu!

In tears from the vale I depart,

In anguish I move from the fair ;
For what are those scenes to the heart
Which fortune has doom'd to despair?

Love frowns, and how dark is the hour!
Of rapture, departed the breath!
So gloomy the grove and the bow'r,
I tread the pale valley of death.

With envy I wander forlorn,

At the breeze which her beauty has fann'd; And I envy the bird on the thorn,

I

Who sits watching the crumbs from her hand.

envy the lark o'er her cot,

Who calls her from slumber, so blest;

Nay, I envy the nightingale's note,

The Syren who sings her to rest.

On her hamlet once more let me dwell,-
One look! (the last comfort!) be mine!

O pleasure, and Delia, farewell!

Now, Sorrow, I ever am thine.

SONG.

O NYMPH! of Fortune's smiles beware,
Nor heed the Syren's flattering tongue;
She lures thee to the haunts of care,
Where sorrow pours a ceaseless song.

Ah! what are all her piles of gold?
Can those the host of care controul?
The splendour which thine eyes behold,
Is not the sunshine of the soul.

To Love alone thy homage pay,
The queen of ev'ry true delight;

Her smiles with joy shall gild thy day,
And bless the visions of the night.

ECONOMY.

ECONOMY's a very useful broom,

Yet should not ceaseless hunt about the room
To catch each straggling pin to make a plum;
Too oft economy's an iron vice,

That squeezes e'en the little guts of mice,

That peep with fearful eyes, and ask a crumb.

Proper economy's a comely thing;
Good in a subject,- better in a king:

Yet push'd too far, it dulls each finer feeling-
Most easily inclin'd to make folks mean;
Inclines them, too, to villany to lean,

To over-reaching, perjury, and stealing.

E'en when the heart should only think of grief,
It creeps into the bosom like a thief;
And swallows up th' affections all so mild,—
Witness the Jewess, and her only child.

Poor Mistress Levi had a luckless son,
Who, rushing to obtain the foremost seat,
In imitation of the ambitious great,
High from the gall'ry, ere the play begun,
He fell all plump into the pit,
Dead in a minute as a nit;

In short, he broke his pretty Hebrew neck;
Indeed, and very dreadful was the wreck!

The mother was distracted, raving, wild,—
Shriek'd, tore her hair, embrac'd and kiss'd her child;
Afflicted every heart with grief around:
Soon as the show'r of tears was somewhat past,
And moderately calm th' hysteric blast,

She cast about her eyes in thought profound;
And being with a saving knowledge bless'd,
She thus the play-house manager address'd:

"Sher, I'm de moder of de poor Chew lad,
Dat meet mishfarten here so bad;
Sher, I muss haf de shilling back, you know,
Ass Moses haf nat see de show."

ROBERT POLLOK was born in 1799, at Eaglesham, in Renfrewshire,-where his parents were occupied in agricultural pursuits. He gave early promise of the ability for which he was afterwards distinguished, and his friends determined to educate him for the church. He was accordingly entered at the University of Glasgow, where he applied himself with ardour to the study of theology; but had scarcely commenced the exercise of his professional duties, when his health became so seriously impaired, that a visit to the south of Europe was recommended as the only means of preserving his life. In August, 1827, he quitted Scotland, and proceeded to Southampton, with a view of embarking for Italy. His malady, however, continued to increase, and in the September of that year he died, at Shirley common. His early death is to be lamented; for probably a wider intercourse with mankind would not only have matured his natural talents, but would have produced a healthier state of mind as well as body. "Retired in voluntary loneliness," he saw only that which is cheerless în Nature, and depressing in Religion:

"To pleasure deaf,

And joys of common men, working his way

With mighty energy, not uninspired,

Through all the mines of thought; reckless of pain,

And weariness, and wasted health."

Soon after the death of the writer, his poem, "The Course of Time," attracted very general attention. He had previously published two stories in prose, "Ralph Gemmel," a tale for youth, and "The Persecuted Family," a narrative of the sufferings of the Presbyterians during the reign of Charles the Second. He was, however, beyond the influence of criticism, when his book became largely the subject of it. It has been highly lauded,-we think too highly; and find it difficult to account for the popularity it has obtained. The poem is in blank verse; and is nearly as long as the "Paradise Lost." Its aspect is, therefore, uninviting; yet that it has been extensively read cannot be doubted,-several editions having from time to time appeared. If we may not describe the author as of a sickly mind, we perceive abundant proof that he was of a diseased constitution. He arrays Religion in dark robes, and considers it unnecessary to pourtray her features as both gentle and beautiful. "Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." The Poet, however, exerts himself to show how rugged he can render the one, and how gloomy he can make the other. His volume, from beginning to end, is an awful picture of wrath and vengeance; it contains little to cheer, and nothing to gladden; and would tempt the reader to imagine that man was created only to be tormented.

Such is unhappily too much the mode with Poets who occupy themselves with the treatment of sacred subjects. Instead of striving to direct and controul, they labour either to subdue or crush the natural sensations and desires of man. They therefore clip the wings of their own fancy; and, if they soar, it is with the painful flutter of a wounded bird. Religious poetry is, for the most part, prejudicial to the cause it professes to advocate. It may influence the head; but it rarely touches the heart. Men are drawn from low thoughts and vicious habits, far less by fear than persuasion. If Religion be in "Gorgon terrors clad," and "circled with a vengeful band," the effect produced must be unnatural and transitory. The Poets, therefore, who so introduce, never recommend it. Such a course is to be deprecated the more, because the very opposite is so accessible. The best auxiliaries to piety are abundant throughout Nature; the themes that most readily present themselves to the Poet are those which, by the surest and safest way, lead the heart to virtue, and they are all graceful, and beautiful, and cheerful. There are, undoubtedly, many glorious exceptions to the rule we have ventured to lay down; but we believe they are not to be found among writers who have exclusively devoted themselves to the treatment of Religion in verse. Religion, therefore, is deprived of one of its most powerful and effective advocates. It is made most influential, indeed, by those who are indirectly its supporters-who describe natural objects, and excite love as well as veneration, by leading the mind through Nature up to Nature's God:-" the meanest flower that blows" has been made to teach a lesson; and he best instructs the reason, and directs the heart, who finds

"Good in every thing."

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MATERNAL LOVE. FROM "THE COURSE OF TIME."

HAIL, holy love! thou word that sums all bliss,
Gives and receives all bliss,-fullest when most
Thou givest! spring-head of all felicity,
Deepest when most is drawn! emblem of God!
O'erflowing most when greatest numbers drink!

Eternal, ever-growing, happy love!

Enduring all, hoping, forgiving all;

Instead of law, fulfilling every law:

Entirely blest, because thou seek'st no more,

Hopest not, nor fear'st; but on the present livest, And hold'st perfection smiling in thy arms.

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