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inmates of the Black Hound hurried up stairs; and stood round the traveller's bed, peeping dubiously over one another's shoulders, and prepared for immediate flight if there should arise occasion for it.

The stranger called for a pipe. It was brought to him; and in half a minute he was hidden from their gaze in a veil of impenetrable smoke. Then they heard his solemn and sonorous voice, speaking thus from the darkness.

"I have marred your mirth, my friends, this evening; I will revive it by a song. An old stave it is, and there is a moral in its rhymes. If ye find it not, I beseech ye remember that there are mysteries in heaven, and earth, and the wide ocean, which move the sage to meditate, and the poet to dream, and the fool to laugh ;—but they are inscrutable alike to all." And without further preface he began his strange song; renewing between every stanza the cloud in which he was enveloped.

SONG.

There is a traveller on a steed,
Riding away with valiant speed

From the city of his birth;

Spur on, spur on!--but the leaves of the limes

Shall come and go a thousand times;

And the sands shall gush with leaping rills,

And the vales be turned to lofty hills,

Ere ever he loose a girth.

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There is a mariner in a bark,

While the wave is rough, and the night is dark,

Ploughing the billows hoar;

Sail on, sail on!-but the light of day
And the mist of night shall pass away,

And the sea be dry beneath his prow,

And the winds be dead that cheer him now,

Ere ever he come to shore.

There is a race that was never won;
There is a tale that was often begun,
But no man knows the ending;
There is a suit in a Court of Law,

The gravest the Chancellor ever saw,

It was entered for trial long ago,

When the world was made with its mirth and woe,

And still that suit is pending.

What is the life of mortal man?
Just what it was when time began,

A welcome and farewell;

The dreariest road must have a turning;
The dullest task is got by learning:

The greenest leaf must soon be sear;

And the pipe, good friends, that was lighted here
May be finished perhaps"-

The stranger's never was finished!

distant monastery struck twelve.

motionless,-dead.

The clock of the

He was silent,—

"For mercy's sake! Frank," said Lady Olivia, "do let me know something of your hero. What was his name? and what was there in his crimson bag? and what had he to confess? and whence did he come, and whither did he go?"

"His name, Lady Olivia, was never ascertained; for the signature upon the will was perfectly illegible. His crimson bag was empty. And for his confession, of course it was between his conscience and his ghostly comforter. It was never divulged. I might have invented a confession on purpose for him, full of murders and treasons, ghosts and hobgoblins, sulphur and brimstone, but I scorn such frauds. I will add nothing to the truth."

"Then you have nothing more to tell us?"

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'Nothing. Unless you are interested in the fate of the dead man's horse. There never was such an untameable beast. It ran away with a minister of state, dislocated a bishop's collar-bone, and flung, successively, a whole regiment of Walloons. At last, it came into the possession of a functionary of the Holy Inquisition, and in his hands was as quiet as a lamb."

It was voted too late to begin another story that evening; and the following morning, upon hearing that Sir Jacob had resigned, the party broke up by common consent, and returned to Town. Lady Olivia has grieved ever since for the failure of her scheme; though she has consoled herself by hanging up a large piece of canvas in her drawing-room, in which she is framed and glazed, in the character of Pampinea.

TO A CHILD BLOWING BUBBLES.

BY ALARIC A. WATTS.

Ah, that I were once more a careless child.

Coleridge.

I.

THRICE happy Babe! what golden dreams are thine,
As thus thou bidd'st thine air-born bubbles soar;

Who would not Wisdom's choicest gifts resign,
To be, like thee, "a careless child" once more!

II.

To share thy simple sports, thy sinless glee,
Thy breathless wonder, thy unfeigned delight,—
As, one by one, those sun-touched glories flee,
In swift succession, from thy straining sight!

III.

To feel a power within himself to make,

Like thee, a rainbow wheresoe'er he goes;
To dream of sunshine, and like thee to wake
To brighter visions, from his charmed repose!

IV.

Who would not give his all of worldly lore,-
The hard-earned fruits of many a toil and care,-
Might he but thus the faded past restore,—

Thy guileless thoughts and blissful ignorance share!

V.

Yet life hath bubbles too,-that soothe awhile
The sterner dreams of man's maturer years;
Love-Friendship-Fortune-Fame-by turns beguile,
But melt, 'neath Truth's Ithuriel-touch, to tears!

VI.

Thrice happy Child! a brighter lot is thine!
(What new illusion e'er can match the first!)
We weep to see each cherished hope decline;
Thy mirth is loudest when thy bubbles burst!

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