And covers our valley with gloom! She who led all the Pleasures and Loves, Now joins the pale band of the Tomb. She whose beauty commanded the heart, Sunk, the innocent victim of art, Yet silent was she on the Swain Whose cruelty doom'd her to mourn; In secret her soul would complain, In secret her anguish would burn. Tho' faint was the blush on her cheek, And deep in her bosom the thorn; A smile 'midst her sorrows would break, She would sit near yon willow and sigh, And oft she would drink of the brook, Then around on the heights she would look, On her Dog she look'd down with a tear, "Poor FIDELLE! thou wilt suffer, I fear, When thy Mistress, who loves thee, is dead. "Thou hast ever been constant and kind; My fondness ne'er met with a slight : In thee a firm friendship I find; How unhappy when out of my sight! "When with speed I could travel the plain, With thy Mistress to sport was thy pride; And now I am weak and in pain, Thou art heartless and dull by my side. "When I'm gone, thou, poor fellow, wilt pine, And seek me, uneasy, around; Beseeching the swains, with a whine, To tell where thy Friend may be found. Near "Shouldst thou find my cold dwelling at last, my sod thou wilt mope the long day: Nor the night, nor the rain, nor the blast, Nay, nor hunger, will force thee away." Thus she spoke to her Fav'rite, whose eye Then he lick'd her fond hand at her sigh, As if conscious of all she had said! Sweet Nymph! What a sudden decay! Like the lily press'd down by the rain. At length on her pillow she fell; In silence we watch'd her last breath: When she bade us for ever farewell, How divine, tho' the whisper of Death! No struggle in dying she knew, Life pass'd with such sweetness away! So calm from the world she withdrew, Her last sigh seem'd the zephyr of May, Beneath a plain stone she is laid, For needless of praise is the tale; Since the virtues that shone in the MAID, TO THE READER. THE unfortunate subject of this ELEGIAC BALLAD was a young LADY, possessed of uncommon beauty, united with a highly-cultivated intellect, and the most fascinating manners. Α tender attachment, terminating in disappointment, so affected her spirits as to occasion a fatal decline. Her LOVER, from whose professions of regard she expected every happiness, deserted her almost in the hour of leading her to the Hymenæal altar. Deluded by the idea of im |