Lorenze. You loved, and he did love? Were to affirm what oft his eyes avouch'd, As some high contest there were pending, 'twixt Himself and him, wherein her aid he needed. Lorenzo. This spoke impediment: or he was bound By promise to another; or had friends Whom it behoved him to consult, and doubted; Or 'twixt you lay disparity too wide For love itself to leap. Mariana. I saw a struggle, But knew not what it was.-I wonder'd still, Lorenzo. To follow him, You came to Mantua? Mariana. What could I do?— Cot, garden, vineyard, rivulet, and wood, To Mantua! to breathe the air he breathed, To look, perchance, on him!-perchance to hear hiın, From The Wife. THIS accomplished lady, who has written such beautiful and touching poetry, was born of a family in which genius may be said to be hereditary, being granddaughter to the celebrated Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Having lost her father at an early period of life, the education of Caroline, the future poetess, was chiefly conducted by her mother, who devoted herself to the happiness of her children with a zeal and affection, of which none but a woman and a mother can be susceptible. Her cares were nobly repaid by the genius and accomplishments of her daughters, and especially of the subject of this notice; and such was their early proficiency, that Caroline and her sister, before the age of twelve, had filled two manuscript volumes with their verses. As Mrs. Sheridan, how. ever, was a mother who studied the solid happiness rather than the celebrity of her children, she kept works of fiction carefully out of their way, and rather discouraged than promoted these efforts of genius; so that when Mrs. Norton published her poem, entitled The Undying One, she had read fewer novels aud romances than most young people of her age. At the age of nineteen, Miss Sheridan became the Honourable Mrs. Norton, by her marriage with the brother of Lord Grantley; but the infelicity of this union, and the unfortunate results, are too well known to require further mention. Of her poetry, it is almost impossible to speak in terms of sufficient commendation. It is not enough to say, that it possesses all the elegance and tenderness which are to be expected from a female pen; it also exhibits, with these qualities, a strength of thought, and a depth of feeling, which are generally looked for in the other sex only. As the charms of intellectual exertion, next to the duties of religion, form the chief solaces of the afflicted and persecuted, we trust that a still brighter literary career than the past is to be fulfilled by the future productions of Mrs. Norton. WOMAN'S DEVOTEDNESS. And be not thou cast down, because thy lot The glory of thy dream resembleth not. Nor yet to be man's idol, but his mate. With years of sorrow for an hour of joy; Too oft forgot 'midst Pleasure's circling wiles, Or only valued for her rosy smiles-) That, in the frank and generous heart of man, The place she holds accords with Heaven's high plan; Still, if from wandering sin reclaim'd at all, He sees in her the angel of recall; Still, in the sad and serious hours of life, From The Dream. RECOLLECTIONS. Do you remember all the sunny places, That gather'd round the hearth in wintry weather? In summer evenings round the open door Kind looks, kind hearts, kind words, and tender greetings, And clasping hands whose pulses beat no more? Do you remember them? Do you remember all the merry laughter; Do you remember them? Do you remember when we first departed From all the old companions who were round us, And talk'd with smiles of all the links which bound us? And after, when our footsteps were returning, With unfelt weariness, o'er hill and plain; How our young hearts kept boiling up, and burning, Do you remember this? Do you remember how the dreams of glory How we thought less of being famed in story, Do you remember this? Do you remember when no sound 'woke gladly, For we have nothing left but one another; Yet where they went, old playmate, we shall go— Let us remember this. WOMAN'S COURAGE. Warriors and statesmen have their meed of praise, But the long sacrifice of woman's days Passes without a thought-without a word; And many a holy struggle for the sake Of duties sternly, faithfully fulfill'd For which the anxious mind must watch and wake, And leaves no memory and no trace behind! In one meek heart which braves an adverse fate, Than his, whose ardent soul indignant swells Warm'd by the fight, or cheer'd through high debate: Answer, ye graves, whose suicidal gloom These were the strokes which sent your victims there. EVENING. Oh! dear to him, to all, since first the flowers Heard the low breeze along the branches play, Though earth by blighting storms be roughly cross'd, The holiest hour of earth. Then toil doth cease- From The Dream. MOSES AMONG THE BULRUSHES. When the mournful Jewish mother She knew not what the future No! in terror wildly flying, She hurried on her path; Of that wrath so blent with anguish, Those feeble little creatures Who seem more helpless still! |