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spell of mad-ness lurks below; Tho' clear its depths and rich its glow, There's madness lurks below. dead-ly serpent unseen sleeps; Ay! but within its glowing deeps A dead-ly ser-pent sleeps. ry food to him; There's not a bubble at the brim But car-ries food to him. in those ro - sy depths below; 'Tis red and rich, but grief and woe Are in those depths below.

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COLD WATER SONG.

JOHN SELWYN. ALEXANDER Lee.

Allegretto.

far and near,

1. Blooming youth, sing the song, Loud its swelling notes pro- long; Cheer-i ly, happily 2. Why should we wretched be? It was made for you and me- Water cool

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from the spring! Cheer-i-ly, hap - pi - ly, let our voices ring: Blooming youth, sing the song,

Loud its swelling notes pro- long, Cheer-ily, hap- pi - ly, send the strain a - long.

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I COME, I COME.

V. BELLINI. FELICIA HEMANS.

1. I

come

o'er the mountains with

come, I come! ye have called me long; I 2. I have sent thro' the wood-paths a gentle sigh, And call'd out each voice of the

light and song; Ye may trace my steps o'er the wakening earth, By the winds which tell of the deep-blue sky, From the night-bird's lay thro' the star- ry time, In the groves of the soft Hes

vi-o- let's birth; By the prim-rose stars in the shad - owy grass; By the green leaves ope- ning pe rian clime, To the swan's wild note by the Ice- land lakes, When the dark fir bough in- to

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rein-deer bounds o'er the pas-tures free; And the pine has a fringe of soft er green, And the bounding foot-step, to meet me fly, With the lyre, and the wreath, And the joyous lay, Come forth

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moss looks bright where my step hath been; From the streams and the founts I have loosened the chain, They are

to

the sun-shine,-I may not stay.

way from the dwellings of care-worn men, The wa

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spar

ry caves, And the earth resounds with the joy of the waves. I
wild wood strains, And youth is a-broad in my green domains. I come!

come!

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come! I come! ye've called me long; I come! I come! I come! ye've called me long

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