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As keel is pressing fast on keel;
Oh! bright these glories still shall be,
But they shall never dawn for me.
E'en when a Realm's Congratulation
Sang Pæans for the Coronation;
Amidst the pleasure that was round me,
A melancholy Spirit found me;

And while all else were singing "Io!"
I couldn't speak a word but "Heigh ho!"
And so, instead of laughing gayly,

I dropped a tear, and wrote my "VALE."

VALE.

ETON! the Monarch of thy prayers
E'en now receives his load of cares
Throned in the consecrated choir,
He takes the sceptre of his sire,
And wears the crown his father bore,
And swears the oath his father swore;
And therefore sounds of joy resound,
Fair Eton on thy classic ground.
A gladder gale is round thee breathed,
And on thy mansions thou hast wreathed
A thousand lamps, whose various hue
Waits but the night to burst to view;
Woe to the poets that refuse

To wake and woo their idle Muse,

When those glad notes-" God save the King,' From hill, and vale, and hamlet ring!

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Hark, how the loved, inspiring tune
Peals forth from every loyal loon
Who loves his country, and excels
In drinking beer, or ringing bells!
It is a day of shouts and greeting,
A day of idleness and eating;
And triumph swells in every soul,
And mighty beeves are roasted whole;
And ale, unbought, is set a-running,
And Pleasure's hymn grows rather stunning;
And children roll upon the green,
And cry-" Confusion to the Queen!"
And Sorrow flies, and Labour slumbers,
And Clio pours her loudest numbers;
And hundreds of that joyous throng,
With whom my life had lingered long,
Give their gay raptures to the gale
In one united, echoing-" Hail!”

I took the harp, I smote the string,
I strove to soar on Fancy's wing;
And murmur in my Sovereign's praise
The latest of my boyhood's lays.
Alas! the theme was too divine
To suit so weak a Muse as mine;

I saw, I felt it could not be;

No song of triumph flows from me:

The harp from which those sounds ye ask
Is all unfit for such a task;

VOL. II.-9

And the last echo of its tone,
Dear Eton, must be thine alone!

A few short hours, and I am borne Far from the fetters I have worn; A few short hours, and I am free !— And yet I shrink from liberty, And look, and long to give my soul Back to thy cherishing control. Control! ah, no! thy chain was meant Far less for bond than ornament; And though its links be firmly set, I never found them gall me yet. Oh! still through many checkered years, Mid anxious toils, and hopes, and fears, Still I have doted on thy fame,

And only gloried in thy name.

How I have loved thee! Thou hast been
My hope, my mistress, and my Queen;
I always found thee kind, and thou
Hast never seen me weep-till now.
I knew that Time was fleeting fast,
I knew thy pleasures could not last,
I knew too well that riper age
Must step upon a busier stage;
Yet when around thine ancient towers
I passed secure my tranquil hours,
Or heard beneath thine aged trees
The drowsy humming of the bees,

Or wandered by thy winding stream,
I would not check my fancy's dream;
Glad in my transitory bliss,

I recked not of an hour like this;
And now the truth comes swiftly on,
The truth I would not think upon;
The last sad thought, so oft delayed,-
"These joys are only born to fade.”

Ye Guardians of my earliest days!
Ye Patrons of my earliest lays!
Custom reminds me that to you
Thanks and farewell to-day are due.
Thanks and farewell I give you,-not
(As some that leave this holy spot)
In laboured phrase, and polished lie,
Wrought by the forge of flattery,
But with a heart that cannot tell
The half of what it feels so well.
If I am backward to express,
Believe my love is not the less;
Be kind as you are wont, and view
A thousand thanks in one "Adieu!"
My future life shall strive to show
I wish to pay the debt I owe;
The labours that ye give to May,
September's fruits shall best repay.

And you, my friends, who loved to share Whate'er was mine of sport or care;

Antagonists at Fives or Chess,
Friends in the Play-ground or the Press,
I leave ye now, and all that rests
Of mutual tastes, and loving breasts,
Is the lone vision, that shall come,
Where'er my studies and my home,
To cheer my labour and my pain,
And make me feel a boy again.

Yes! when at last I sit me down,
A scholar, in my cap and gown,-
When learned Doctrines, dark and deep,
Move me to passion or to sleep,-
When Clio yields to Logic's wrangles,
And Long and Short give place to Angles,-
When stern Mathesis makes it treason

To like a rhyme, or scorn a reason,-
With aching head, and weary wit,
Your parted friend shall often sit,
Till Fancy's magic spell hath bound him,
And lonely musings flit around him;
Then shall ye come, with all your wiles
Of gladdening sounds, and warming smiles;
And naught shall meet his eye or ear,
Yet shall he deem your souls are near.

Others may clothe their Valediction With all the tinsel charms of fiction; And one may sing of Father Thames,

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