Lut, companions of spring-time ! 'tis vain thus repining My spirit is link'd with your phantom-like band; I feel the last fibre of strength is declining That binds me to life in this desolate land. In the grave of my kindred soon, soon shall I be ! " the last leaf of the tree !" THE GIPSY'S TENT. ELIZA Cook.] [Music by S. GLOVER. same; THE GRECIAN DAUGHTER. T. H. Bayly.] [Music by J. P. KNIGHT. Oh, never heed, my mother dear! T'he silent tears I shed; But ask me not to wed ! Oh, never heed, &c. My last love he will prove : Name not another love. Oh, never heed, &c. THE OLD MARINER. J. E. CARPENTER.] [Music by J. P. KNIGHT, There was a brave old mariner Kept watch upon the deck, And thrice survived the wreck; That mariner to be, That dashes o'er the sea. Yet deem not that he only gazed Upon the waters green, And many a woodland scene, And 'mid the raging seas, And the waving of the trees. Were gather'd on the strand; Her sailors sprang to land; His eyes were sad and dim, No kind voice call'd for him. He oft had braved the deep, Now turn'd aside to weep; His early friends were gone; The old man stood alone! THE RETURN OF THE ADMIRAL. , BARRY CORNWALL.] [Music by H. PAILLIPS. How gallantly, how merrily We ride along the sea ! The wind is blowing free; And bounding in the light, The blood is running bright. Strange birds about us sweep; a Strange things come up to look at us, The masters of the deep: Follows even the bold shark. Of such a bonnie bark ! (Though he is pale to-lay), Of twice five hundred iron men, Who all his nod obey; Who fought for him, and conquered; Who've won, with sweat and gore, Nobility !-which he shall have Whene'er we touch the shore. To order with a word- And so rise up a lord ! Who follows in our lee, " Some day I'll make thee carry me Like lightning through the sea.' And paler as he flew: upon his crew; And he look'd up at the heavens, And he look'd down on the sea, And at last he spied the creature That kept following in our lee. He shook-'twas but an instant; For speediiy the pride Till all chances he defied : It gave firmness to his breath; And he stood like some grim warrior New risen up from death. נו That night a horrid wnisper Fell on us where we lay; Was changing into clay ; Though nothing could we sce. Among the billows in our lee! In its dead and ghastly sleep, It was slung into the deep. Save one shudder through the sea- That had followed in our lee! THE CURFEW BELL. H. W. LONGFELLOW.] [Music by S. GLOTIR. Solemnly, mournfully, dealing its dole, The curfew bell is beginning to toll. Cover the embers, and put out the light; Toil comes with the morning and rest with the night. Dark grow the windows, and quench'd is the fire; Sound fades into silence, all footsteps retire. No voice in the chambers, no sound in the hall ! Sleep and oblivion reign over all. The book is completed and closed like the day, And the hand that has written it lays it away; Dim grow its fancies—forgotten they lieLike coals in the ashes they darken and die. Song sinks into silence, the story is told, The windows are darken'd, the hearthstone is cold; Darker and darker the black shadows fall; Sleep and oblivion reign over all. |