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Course one another o'er thy silver bosom : And yet thy flowing is through fields of blood, And armed men their hot and weary brows Slake with thy limpid and perennial coolness. Even with such rare and singular purity Mov'st thou, oh Miriam, in yon cruel city. Men's eyes, o'erwearied with the sights of

war,

With tumult and with grief, repose on thee
As on a refuge and a sweet refreshment.
Thou canst o'erawe, thou in thy gentleness,
A trembling, pale, and melancholy maid,
The brutal violence of ungodly men.
Thou glidest on amid the dark pollution
In modesty unstain'd, and heavenly in-
fluences,

More lovely than the light of star or moon,
As though delighted with their own reflection
From spirit so pure, dwell evermore upon
thee.

Oh! how dost thou, beloved proselyte To the high creed of him who died for men, Oh! how dost thou commend the truths I teach thee,

By the strong faith and soft humility Wherewith thy soul embraces them! Thou prayest,

And I, who pray with thee, feel my words wing'd,

And holier fervor gushing from my heart, While heaven seems smiling kind acceptance down

On the associate of so pure a worshipper.

But ah! why com'st thou not? these two long nights

I've watch'd for thee in vain, and have not felt The music of thy footsteps on my spirit

(Voice at a distance.)-Javan !

Jav. It is her voice! the air is fond of it, And enviously delays its tender sounds From the ear that thirsteth for themMiriam !

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``granate,

The skin all rosy with the emprisoned wine; All I can bear thee, more than thou canst bear Home to the city.

Mir. Bless thee! Oh my father! How will thy famish'd and thy toil-bow'd frame

Resume its native majesty! thy words, When this bright draught hath slak'd thy parched lips,

Flow with their wonted freedom and command.

Jav. Thy father! still no thought but of thy father!

Nay, Miriam! but thou must hear me now, Now ere we part-if we must part again, If my sad spirit must be rent from thine.

Even now our city trembles on the verge
Of utter ruin. Yet a night or two,
And the fierce stranger in our burning streets
Stands conqueror; and how the Roman

conquers,

Let Gischala, let fallen Jotapata
Tell, if one living man, one innocent child,
Yet wander o'er their cold and scatter'd ashes.
They slew them, Miriam, the old gray man,
Whose blood scarce tinged their swords
(nay, turn not from me,
The tears thou sheddest feel as though I
wrung them

From mine own heart, my life-blood's dearest drops)

They slew them, Miriam, at the mother's breast,

The smiling infants ;-and the tender maid, The soft, the loving, and the chaste, like thee,

They slew her not till

Mir. Javan, 'tis unkind!

I have enough at home of thoughts like these, Thoughts horrible, that freeze the blood, and make

A heavier burthen of this weary life. I hop'd with thee t' have pass'd a tranquil hour!

A brief, a hurried, yet still tranquil hour! But thou art like them all! the miserable Have only Heaven, where they can rest in peace,

Without being mock'd and taunted with their misery.

Jav. Thou know'st it is a lover's wayward joy

To be reproach'd by her he loves, or thus Thou would'st not speak.

On her return, the maiden sings a hymn, of which the following beautiful verses form a part. They scarcely shrink from a comparison with the divine Christmas hymn of Miltonthe lovely melody of which, indeed, has evidently been on the ear of the author.

For thou wert born of woman! thou didst

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To lay their gold and odours sweet

Before thy infant feet.

The Earth and Ocean were not hush'd to

hear

Bright harmony from every starry sphere;
Nor at thy presence brake the voice of song
From all the cherub choirs,
And seraphs' burning lyres
Pour'd thro' the host of heaven the charmed

clouds along.

One angel troop the strain began,
Of all the race of man
By simple shepherds heard alone,
That soft Hosanna's tone.

And when thou didst depart, no car of
flame

To bear thee hence in lambent radiance

came ;

Nor visible Angels mourn'd with droop-
ing plumes:

Nor didst thou mount on high
From fatal Calvary

With all thine own redeem'd out bursting
from their tombs.

For thou didst bear away from earth
But one of human birth,
The dying felon by thy side, to be
In Paradise with thee.

Nor o'er thy cross the clouds of vengeance
brake;

A little while the conscious earth did shake

as it binds together the whole series of events, and places the reader in the best position to survey the impending burst of ruin. The chamber of Amariah is disturbed immediately afterwards, by the alarm that the Romans have forced the wall, and that the temThe bridegroom rushes forth;-havple is wrapped in unquenchable flames. ing ascertained the measure of the calamity, he returns only to bury his sword in the bosom of his bride, as her sole protection from "the Gentile ravisher," and to wash away the pain of the wound with his last burning tears. Salone comes out in her nuptial veil, and dies in the arms of Miriam in the porch; and ere long the light of the conflagration shews the halfarmed body of her husband stretched bloody by her side. At the moment when nothing seems to be reserved to save the Christian maiden from the common ruin, a Gentile soldier approaches her with a demeanour of unexpected gentleness, and in silence constrains her to follow him. He leads her, half unconscious whither she is going, over the burning frag

At that foul deed by her fierce children done; ments of the city on to the rampart,

A few dim hours of day

The world in darkness lay;
Then bask'd in bright repose beneath the
cloudless sun;

While thou didst sleep within the tomb,
Consenting to thy doom;

Ere yet the white-robed Angel shone
Upon the sealed stone.

And when thou didst arise, thou didst not
stand

With Devastation in thy red right hand,
Plaguing the guilty city's murtherous crew;
But thou didst haste to meet
Thy mother's coming feet,
And bear the words of peace unto the faith.

ful few.

Then calmly, slowly didst thou rise
Into thy native skies,

Thy human form dissolved on high
In its own radiancy.
In the interval which elapses be-
tween the commencement of Salone's
Bridal-song and the final alarm, Mi-
riam, who is standing in her father's
gate, meets with an old Jew, who re-
counts to her that he had been pre-
sent when Christ was led to the cross
-that he had mingled in the fierce
outcries of the Jews against the Mes-
siah-and had heard with his own
cars the last prophetic annunciation of
the doom which awaits the city. The
introduction of such a recital at that
moment, shews great art in the poet,

and thence down the path, with
which she had supposed herself alone
to be acquainted, to the fountain of
Siloe. She starts on finding that she
is once more at that haunted scene;
and half suspects that Javan has as-
sumed the disguise of a Roman soldier,
and braved the dangers of the storm
as a last effort for her protection.
The Fountain of Siloe.-Miriam, the Sol-
dier.

Mir. Here, here-not here-oh! any
where but here-

Not toward the fountain, not by this lone

path.

If thou wilt bear me hence, I'll kiss thy feet,
I'll call down blessings, a lost virgin's bless-
ings

Upon thy head. Thou hast hurried me along,
Through darkling street, and over smoking

ruin,

And yet there seem'd a soft solicitude,
And an officious kindness in thy violence-
But I've not heard thy voice.

Oh, strangely cruel!
And wilt thou make me sit even on this stone,
Where I have sate so oft, when the calm
moonlight

Lay in its slumber on the slumbering foun

Ah!

tain ?

where art thou, thou that wert ever with me, Oh Javan! Javan!

The Soldier. When was Javan call'd By Miriam, that Javan answer'd not?

Forgive me all thy tears, thy agonies.
I dar'd not speak to thee, lest the strong joy
Should overpower thee, and thy feeble limbs
Refuse to bear thee in thy flight.

Mir. What's here?
Am I in heaven, and thou forehasted thither
To welcome me? Ah, no! thy warlike garb,
And the wild light, that reddens all the air,
Those shrieks and yet this could not be
on earth,

The sad, the desolate, the sinful earth.
And thou could'st venture amid fire and death,
Amid thy country's ruins to protect me,
Dear Javan !

Jav. 'Tis not now the first time, Miriam,
That I have held my life a worthless sacrifice
For thine. Oh! all these later days of siege
I've slept in peril, and I've woke in peril.
For every meeting I've defied the cross,
On which the Roman, in his merciless scorn,
Bound all the sons of Salem. Sweet, I boast
not;

But to thank rightly our Deliverer,

We must know all the extent of his deliver

ance.

Mir. And I can only weep! Jav. Ay, thou should'st weep, Lost Zion's daughter.

Mir. Ah! I thought not then

Of my dead sister, and my captive father Said they not" captive" as we pass'd?-I thought not

Of Zion's ruin and the Temple's waste.
Javan, I fear that mine are tears of joy;
"Tis sinful at such times-but thou art here,
And I am on thy bosom, and I cannot
Be, as I ought, entirely miserable.

Javan. My own beloved! I dare call thee mine,

For Heaven hath given thee to me-chosen out,

As we two are, for solitary blessing,
While the universal curse is pour'd around

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Even so shall perish,

In its own ashes, a more glorious Temple, Yea, God's own architecture, this vast world, This fated universe-the same destroyer, The same destruction Earth, Earth, Earth, behold!

And in that judgment look upon thine own!

The Christian spectators then sing together the following sublime chorus, which, as we have hinted before, completes, in the most felicitous manner, the whole of the tragic picture, by extending the interest of the catastrophe, and carrying on the mind of the reader to the contemplation of the greatAs a specimen of composition, it is, er catastrophe which it symbolizes. we think, superior to any thing Mr Milman ever has produced, and indeed inferior in very little to any thing we remember in the poetry either of his English or of his German contemporaries. When taken together with cannot fail to impress our readers with the passages we have already quoted, it this youthful poet, and to fill them a high sense of the native power of with the brightest hopes concerning what he may hereafter aspire and dare

to execute.

HYMN.

Even thus amid thy pride and luxury, Oh Earth! shall that last coming burst on thee,

That secret coming of the Son of Man. When all the cherub-throning clouds shall shine,

Irradiate with his bright advancing sign: When that Great Husbandman shall wave his fan,

Sweeping, like chaff, thy wealth and pomp

away:

Still to the noontide of that nightless day, Shalt thou thy wonted dissolute course maintain.

Along the busy mart and crowded street, The buyer and the seller still shall meet, And marriage feasts begin their jocund strain: Still to the pouring out the Cup of Woe; Till Earth, a drunkard, reeling to and fro, And mountains molten by his burning feet, And Heaven his presence own, all red with furnace heat.

The hundred-gated Cities then, The Towers and Temples, nam'd of men Eternal, and the Thrones of Kings; The gilded summer Palaces, The courtly bowers of love and ease, Where still the Bird of pleasure sings: Ask ye the destiny of them? Go gaze on fallen Jerusalem! Yea, mightier names are in the fatal roll, 'Gainst earth and heaven God's standard is

unfurl'd,

The skies are shrivell'd like a burning scroll, And one vast common doom ensepulchres

the world.

Oh! who shall then survive?
Oh! who shall stand and live?
When all that hath been, is no more:
When for the round earth hung in air,
With all its constellations fair

In the sky's azure canopy;
When for the breathing Earth, and spark
ling Sea,

Is but a fiery deluge without shore,
Heaving along the abyss profound and dark,
A fiery deluge, and without an Ark.

Lord of all power, when thou art there alone
On thy eternal fiery-wheeled throne,
That in its high meridian noon
Needs not the perish'd sun nor moon:
When thou art there in thy presiding state,
Wide-sceptred Monarch o'er the realm of
When from the sea-depths, from carth's

doom:

darkest womb,

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Yes, 'mid yon angry and destroying signs, O'er us the rainbow of thy mercy shines, We hail, we bless the covenant of its beam, Almighty to avenge, Almightiest to redeem! Such is the conclusion of the Fall flight that Mr Milman has ever hithof Jerusalem-by far the most soaring

erto sustained. As a master of the high, serene, antique flow of lyrical declamation, we are free to say, that we consider him as far superior to any his past experience, by devoting himliving poet; and he should profit by self more to the rare path in which nature seems to have offered him success so pre-eminent. With regard to the drama, much as we admire Mr Milman's genius, we cannot say that we entertain for him any so very sanguine expectations. He is a poet highly refined, and sometimes his conceptions are profound; but he has not as yet exhibited any proof of that noble reliance on the simplicity of natural associations, without which we cannot hope to see the slumbering spirit of the British stage bidden from of his dialogue, the language is rather its lethargy. Throughout the whole elaborately poetical, and artificially moulded, than inspired by the immediate feelings and impulses of the passing scene. To qualify, in some measure, these remarks, it should, however, be held in remembrance, that the sacredness and dignity of the subject may perhaps have acted, in the present instance, as a species of more than common restraint on the more of his language. With every flow of the poet's imagination-still deduction the rigour of criticism can make, there still remains abundance of praise, which no one can refuse to this performance. The highest compliment to the genius of the author is to be found, not in the admiration excited by any particular passage, but in the deep gravity and grandeur of the impression which the whole tenor of the poem is calculated to produce. The Terror and the Pity which agitate the mind throughout the earlier parts of the drama are subdued and softened, in the closing scene, into a profound repose of humility and Christian confidence; and he that lays down the volume will confess, that Mr Milman has, in the first fruits of his genius, offered a noble sacrifice at the altar to whose service he has devoted his life.

R

TALES OF THE CLOISTER.

MR NORTH,

FROM the perusal of "the Monastery," and the gratifying annunciation of an approaching sequel, under the title of "the Abbot," I was lately induced to turn back to a collection of Catholic legends already introduced to your notice-the "Prato Fiorito di varj Esempj"-and have found it to contain (as might be expected) a great number of stories relative to the different monastic orders, calculated not more for the edification of pious believers, than for the amusement of such infidels as may chance to have enrolled themselves among the "lovers of hoar antiquity," to whom, and to yourself, I shall make no apology for thus briefly introducing a few specimens to their notice.

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TALE THE FIRST.

Of the terrible chance that befell one who, with evil design, took upon himself the religious habit."

Marianus, in his Chronicle of the Minorites, relates of a certain sorry and wicked person, whom we shall name Bernardin, that, after having consumed his substance, and wasted the better years of his life in vain and riotous living, immersed in sin and iniquity, under the guidance of his sovereign lord and master the devil, he was at length induced, by the suggestions of the same terrible potentate, to seek admission into the order of minor friars, for the express purpose of disturbing the peace and contaminating the morals of that holy brotherhood. With this view he addressed himself to St Anthony, who was then preaching at Padua, and who, having examined him touching his pretensions, and finding him (as he thought) sufficiently apt for the sacred func tions of the profession, received him accordingly, and afterwards perceiving him to have some knowledge of human sciences, constituted him a clerk, and took upon himself the charge of preparing him, by his efficacious instruc tion and exhortation, to become a shining light among those of the order to which he had thus been admitted. Bernardin, on his part, pushed his dissimulation to the utmost extremity, in the semblance of devout humility with which he listened to the saint's teaching, while he secretly plotted the destruction of that religion to which he appeared to be so zealous a convert; but Satan, whose jealousy is ever awake, and who began to entertain serious apprehensions lest the lessons to which he was a daily listener might, in the end, prevail with him to become

a practiser also, began to devise means to secure his allegiance, or at least to deprive St Anthony of the glory of a conquest, by cutting short the days of the sinner before he should have lived to extricate himself from the toils of hell, in which he had hitherto remained a willing captive. He, therefore, infused into his ears a beginning fastidiousness of the religious life to which he had addicted himself, and a contempt of the instructions to which he had listened till he had almost yielded to the conviction they were calculated to produce; and, having thus infected his mind with the desire of change, he at last appeared before him one day in the likeness of a beautiful horse, ornamented with the fairest trappings, and furnished with every accoutrement necessary to the equipment of an honourable cavalier, which, when the false novice saw, as he issued forth from his cell to cross a meadow that lay between it and the refectory of his monastery, he cast thereon an admiring and covetous eye, accounting it the best and most gallant steed that it had ever fallen to his lot to behold. Accordingly, finding himself alone and unobserved, he went up to the noble animal and began to caress him, from whence he fell to examine his harness and accoutrements, when, in a portmanteau which was appended to the saddle, he discovered a complete suit of armour, with rich vestments, suited to a person of honour-and hard by a purse full of golden coin. Bernardin marvelled greatly at the sight, and began to conjecture who might be the fortunate possessor of such treasure, whom he imagined, without doubt, to be some one among the honourable knights of the vicinage. He did not, however, stop long in thinking about it, but soon threw off the religious

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