Whether the young, vain hope, that led By him, the sweetest minstrel, trod, And bless the greener rings his fairy feet have traced. Examiner. FRIENDS. BY JAMES MONTGOMERY, ESQ. FRIEND after friend departs; Beyond the flight of time,- Beyond the reign of death,— There is a world above Where parting is unknown! Formed for the good alone; Thus star by star declines Till all are past away; As morning high and higher shines To pure and perfect day: Nor sink those stars in empty night, But hide themselves in heaven's own light. Literary Souvenir. SOLITUDE. BY JOHN MALCOLM, ESQ. SPIRIT of the lonely scene, Desert shore, and distant sea! On the Pyramids sublime, Towering o'er a thousand graves,— And silent empire held. Gleaming high on Greenland's coast, Hoar Winter's diadem, List'st thou to the rending roar Or dost thou rather love to dwell Peals through Palmyra's domes? Buried in oblivious gloom, Whose tower hath crumbled from the skies Into a desert tomb! From thy deep and dread repose, 'Midst primeval, starless Night, To restore thine ancient reign, Literary Souvenir. THE CYPRESS TREE. A slender tree upon a height in lonely beauty towers, I've thought of Oriental tombs, of silent cities, where And thought, beneath the evening star, how many a maiden crept I've thought, thou lonely cypress tree, thou hermit of the grove, How many a heart, alas! is doomed forlorn on earth to rove; When all that charmed the morn of life, and cheered the youthful mind, Have like the sunbeams passed away, and left but clouds behind! Thou wert a token unto me, thou stem with dreary leaf, A few short years shall swiftly glide, and then thy boughs shall wave, When tempests beat, and breezes sigh, above my silent grave! Blackwood's Magazine. A STANZAS. BY THE LATE BISHOP HEBER. If thou wert by my side, my love! If thou, my love, wert by my side, How gaily would our pinnace glide I miss thee at the dawning grey, I miss thee when by Gunga's stream But most beneath the lamp's pale beam, I spread my books, my pencil try, But when of morn and eve the star I feel, though thou art distant far, Then on!-then on !-where duty leads, My course be onward still, O'er broad Indostan's sultry meads, O'er bleak Almorah's hill. That course, nor Delhi's kingly gates, Nor wild Malwah detain, For sweet the bliss us both awaits, Thy towers, Bombay, gleam bright, they say, But ne'er were hearts so light and gay, DOMESTIC LOVE. DOMESTIC LOVE! not in proud palace halls Of woody hills some little bubbling spring, Shining along through banks with harebells dyed; And many a bird to warble on the wing, When Morn her saffron robe o'er heaven and earth doth fling. O, love of loves!-to thy white hand is given. Of earthly happiness the golden key! Thine are the joyous hours of winter's even, |