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So I just got into a nice little doze, when in came I never was so mortified in all my life - never! my mother;

And "for shame, Peter," she said, “to be a-bed now! well, you can't go with your brother!"

ZEDEKIAH.-You sent them off, I should think, with
a famous swither!

PETER. Grunting and tumbling one over the other,
I cared not whither.

Well, as I was just then standing, grieving over the
ruin,

Then out of the door she went, without another word; And just then a sound of wheels, and of pawing horses' hoofs I heard; So I jumped up to the window to see what it was, I heard Thomas call, "Master Peter, come and see and I declare what the rats have been doingThere was a grand party of fine folks setting off They've eaten all the guinea-pigs' heads off!” somewhere: ZEDEKIAH.-Oh, Peter, was it true?

There was my brother, mounted on the pony so sleek PETER.-Away I ran, not knowing what in the world and brown; to do!

And Bell in her white frock, and my mother in her And there — I declare it makes me quite shudder to satin gown;

And my father in his best, and two gentlemen beside; And I had never heard a word about it, either of drive or ride!

the boneLay all my pretty little guinea-pigs as dead as a stone! "It's no manner of use," says Thomas, "setting traps; for you see

I really think it was very queer of them to set off in They no more care for a trap, than I do for a pea;

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If I'd only known over-night, I'd have been up by break of day!

As you may think, I was sadly vexed, but I did not choose to show it,

So I whistled as I came down stairs, that the servants might not know it;

I'll lay my life on 't, there are twenty rats now down in that hole,

And we can no more reach 'em, than an underground mole!"'

I declare, Zedekiah, I never passed such a day be

fore - not I;

It makes me quite low-spirited, till I'm ready to cry. Then I went into the yard, and called the dog by his All those pretty guinea-pigs! and I've nothing left at all,

name,

For I thought if they were gone, he and I might have Only the hawk, and I've just set his cage on the wall. a good game; ZEDEKIAH.-Hush! hush, now! for Thomas is saying something there,

But I called and called, and there was no dog either

in this place or th' other;

PETER-What d'ye say, Thomas?

And Thomas said, "Master Peter, Neptune's gone THOMAS.-The hawk's soaring in the air! The with your brother."

Well, as there was no dog, I went to look for the fox, And sure enough the chain was broke, and there was no creature in the box;

But where the fellow was gone nobody could say, He had broken loose himself, I suppose, and so had slipped away;

cage-door was open, and he 's flown clean away! PETER.-There now, Zedekiah, is it not an unfortunate day?

I've lost all my favourites-I've nothing left at all, And my garden is spoiled, and I've had such a dreadful fall!

I wish I had been up this morning as early as the sun, I would give anything I have but to find the fox And then I should have gone to Canonley, nor have againhad all this mischief done!

And was it not provoking, Zedekiah, to lose him just I'm sure it's quite enough to make me cry for a yearthen? Let's go into the house, Zedekiah; what's the use of sitting here?

ZEDEKIAH.-Provoking enough! Well, Peter, and

what happened next?

PETER. Why, when I think of it now, it makes me quite vexed;

I went into the garden, just to look about

To see, if the green peas were ready, or the scarletlychnis come out;

And there, what should I clap my eyes on but the

old sow,

And seven little pigs, making a pretty row!
And of all places in the world, as if for very spite,
They had gone into my garden, and spoiled and
ruined it quite!

The old sow, she had grubbed up my rosemary and
old-man by the root,

And my phlox and my sunflowers, and my hollyhocks, that were as black as soot;

And every flower that I set store on was ruined for

ever;

THE YOUNG MOURNER.
LEAVING her sports, in pensive tone,

"T was thus a fair young mourner said,
"How sad we are now we 're alone, —
I wish my mother were not dead!
"I can remember she was fair;

And how she kindly looked and smiled,
When she would fondly stroke my hair,
And call me her beloved child.
"Before my mother went away,

You never sighed as now you do ;
You used to join us at our play,
And be our merriest playmate too.

"Father, I can remember when
I first observed her sunken eye,
And her pale, hollow cheek; and then
I told my brother she would die!

"And the next morn they did not speak,
But led us to her silent bed;
They bade us kiss her icy cheek,
And told us she indeed was dead!

"Oh, then I thought how she was kind,
My own beloved and gentle mother!
And calling all I knew to mind,

I thought there ne'er was such another!

"Poor little Charles, and I! that day
We sate within our silent room;
But we could neither read nor play,-
The very walls seemed full of gloom.

"I wish my mother had not died,

We never have been glad since then ; They say, and is it true," she cried,

"That she can never come again?"

The father checked his tears, and thus
He spake, "My child, they do not err,
Who say she cannot come to us;
But you and I may go to her.
"Remember your dear mother still,

And the grey pony that can dance so well;
And then there is the wee, wee man,
That in seven languages can read and spell,
Though scarcely bigger than a lady's fan;
And crowds of people staring in amaze,
And thronging twenty different ways,
And pushing you against the wall,
Till you can scarcely keep your legs at all.

Well, unto this same fair,
There came, the night before,

A famous dancing bear,

And several monkeys on his back he bore;
But with the monkeys we have nought to do—
The bear alone concerns our story.

Now as night's curtain had begun to drop,

And they had travelled far,

The master of the bear resolved to stop,

Just where the town lay stretching out before ye, Until the morning, at the Golden Star;

So, without more ado,

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The bear was led

And the pure precepts she has given; Like her, be humble, free from ill, And you shall see her face in heaven!"

THE BEAR AND THE BAKERS.

A TRUE STORY.

IN the old town in which I live,
The event occurred of which I mean to speak;
To know what town that is, ye need not seek;
No further information shall I give.

In this town is an annual fair,

Such as, I will be bound to say,

May not be met with everywhere.

Then all the people look extremely gay,
And all the children have a holiday:

Then there are cows, and sheep, and pigs to sell,
And more than I can tell;

And booths are ranged in rows,
Full of all sorts of pretty things,
Glass necklaces, and copper rings,

And pins, and gloves, and bracelets, combs, and boxes;
And then there are such quantities of shows,
All crammed with lions, elephants, and foxes!
And for the little people, dolls and balls,

Horses and coaches, whips and penny trumpets :
And many different sorts of stalls,

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Filled with sweet cakes and ginger-bread and crum- But on he went,

pets;

And then there is the learned pig,

And the great "Mister Bigg,"

The famous English Patagonian;

Down to a neighbouring lane,
Picking his way as best he could.-
But in my second part, I will explain
The nature of the place whereon he stood.

PART II.

"T WAS on the confines of that common hoary,
Which, like a wall, stood up against the lane-
Because the common was much higher ground -
So that the houses standing there,
Seemed at the back only one single story,
Though, in the front, they all of them were twain.
I'm very much afraid this will be found
An explanation rather dark and lame;
But as you read you'll understand it better,
If you attend, at least, unto the letter.
But, let us now unto the bear:-

"I was to the back of such a house he came,
Built 'gainst this higher ground,
So that he found,

Without being in the least to blaine,
His nose against a window-grate
Which opened straight

Into a well-stored larder.

In this small house there dwelt another baker,
A famous man for penny pies :

Of cakes and ginger-bread, a noted maker,
And sausages likewise.

No wonder let it be, therefore,

That there was such a store
Of legs of mutton, dainty pork,

And pies just ready for the knife and fork.

These things just standing under bruin's nose,
You may suppose

Would make him long to have a little taste;
So, through the grate,

Headlong he plunged - a lumbering weight-
And many jingling tins displaced.
Poor bruin never thought, not he,
The window was just at the ceiling,

And he should fall so far and heavily;
And after all, be taken up for stealing!

The baker being awakened by this din,
Blunder on blunder, tin on tin,
Thought twenty thieves were breaking in!
He was a tall and sturdy fellow,
And to his only son,

Most stoutly he began to bellow-
"Jack, get the double-barrelled gun,
A host of thieves is in the pantry —
Twenty they are, or more;
Do you go out and keep strict sentry,
And shoot the first who ventures out,
The while I guard the door!"
As soon as said, the thing was done,-
Jack took the double-barrelled gun,
And stood before the broken grate :

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All this poor bruin heard,

And much he marvelled at his case;
Thus prisoned in that trap-like place;
Yet so the baker scolded if he stirred;
And so much did he fear his master's stick,
Heavy and thick,

He dared not reconnoitre, nor look out,
Lest something worse should come about;
Therefore, he lay quite still,

Though it was very much against his will.
Jack was outside, a watchful sentinel,
He noted all that happened in the night:
He heard the asses braying on the common;
He saw the earliest streak of morning light;
He heard the watchmen in the town,
With their dull voices passing up and down,
And the Exchange clock, with its heavy bell,
The hours with quarters tell:

He saw the earliest passing countrywoman;
And now a man, and now a boy he saw;
And now the morning grew so keen and raw,
He wished his task was o'er;

And now he heard the clocks strike four;

And now,-O welcome sight,

He, in the Golden Star, beheld a light!

While Jack, to notice all these things was able,
His father made

A very decent sort of barricade,

Of chair and table;

So that the foe, if he had been inclined
To issue forth, might find

The thing impracticable.

This done, soon as the clock struck four,

The baker left his door;

But all so silently,

That the trapped enemy

Might still suppose him watching at his post,
As powerful as a host.

Down to the Golden Star in haste he ran,
And there he found them bustling all about,
Fetching and carrying, mistress, maid, and man,
Though 't was so early, going in and out.
To them he told the adventures of the night,
And all were in a great affright;

And all indignant at the thieves' audacity:
"Is it not wonderful?" said they,
"But in the present day,

All men, even thieves, have an improved capacity!"
This said, with sudden haste

They called up every guest,

Carter, and cattle-driver, groom and jockey,

And the bear's master, wild and black;
Until the baker thought he was most lucky

To muster such a party at his back.

Unto the house they came, and pulled down, first, The formidable barricade;

And then they grew afraid,

Lest out the dreadful enemy should burst.

At length each heart grew bolder,

And o'er his neighbour's shoulder

Each held a lighted candle; and, en masse,
They rushed into the place where bruin was!
There, skulking in his shaggy coat, they saw
A frightful something with a paw!
"Up, up with you at once!"
Shouted poor bruin's master in his ears;
And he, who was no dunce,
And had so many fears,
And knew that voice so well,

Sprang in a moment to his hinder legs,
Just like a little dog that begs,
And danced a hornpipe to a miracle!
Half angry was the baker, seeing thus,
That after all his fuss,

The thieves were nothing but a dancing-bear!

And yet he took it in good part,

And tried to laugh with all his heart,
And said it was a joke most capital!
And through all the fair

"T was told at every booth and every stall,
What fancy bruin had for dainty store;
And many people gave him ginger-bread;
And he with buns and penny-pies was fed,
So that he never fared so well before!

THE SOLDIER'S STORY.

"HEAVEN bless the boys!" the old man said, "I hear their distant drumming,Young Arthur Bruce is at their head,

And down the street they 're coming.

"And a very noble standard too

He carries in the van;
By the faith of an old soldier, he
Is born to make a man!"

A glow of pride passed o'er his cheek,
A tear came to his eye;
"Hurra, hurra! my gallant men!"
Cried he, as they came nigh.

"It seems to me but yesterday
Since I was one like ye,
And now my years are seventy-two,—
Come here, and talk with me!"

They made a halt, those merry boys, Before the aged man;

And "tell us now some story wild," Young Arthur Bruce began;

"Of battle and of victory

Tell us some stirring thing!" The old man raised his arm aloft, And cried, "God save the king!

"A soldier's is a life of fame,

A life that hath its meed

They write his wars in printed books, That every man may read.

"And if you'd hear a story wild,

Of war and battle done,

I am the man to tell such tales,
And you shall now have one.

"In every quarter of the globe

I've fought by sea, by land; And scarce for five and fifty years

Was the musket from my hand.

"But the bloodiest wars, and fiercest too, That were waged on any shore, Were those in which my strength was spent,

In the country of Mysore.

"And oh! what a fearful, deadly clime

Is that of the Indian land,

Where the burning sun shines fiercely down On the hot and fiery sand!

"The life of man seems little worth,

And his arm hath little power

His very soul within him dies,

As dies a broken flower.

"Yet spite of this, was India made
As for a kingly throne;
There gold is plentiful as dust,
As sand the diamond stone;

"And like a temple is each house,
Silk-curtained from the sun;
And every man has twenty slaves,
Who at his bidding run.

"He rides on the lordly elephant,
In solemn pomp ;-and there
They hunt the gold-striped tiger,
As here they hunt the hare.

"Yet it is a dreadful clime! and we

Up in the country far

Were sent, we were two thousand men,
In a disastrous war.

"The soldiers died in the companies

As if the plague had been; And soon in every twenty men,

The dead were seventeen.

"We went to storm a fort of mud
And yet the place was strong-
Three thousand men were guarding it,
And they had kept it long.

"We were in all three hundred souls,
Feeble and worn and wan;

Like walking spectres of the tomb,
Was every living man.

"Yet Arthur Bruce, now standing there,

With the ensign of his band, Reminds me of a gallant youth,

Who fought at my right hand.

"Scarce five and twenty years of age,
And feeble as the rest,

Yet with the bearing of a king,
That noble soul expressed.

66

But a silent grief was in his eye,
And oft his noble frame
Shook like a quivering aspen leaf,

And his colour went and came.

"He marched by my side for seven days,
Most patient of our band;
And night and day he ever kept
Our standard in his hand.

"They fought with us like tigers.
Before that fort of mud;
And all around the burning sands
Were as a marsh with blood.

"We watched that young man,—he to us

Was as a kindling hope;

We saw him pressing on and on,

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But he seized the banner with his left, Without a moment's stand.

"He mounted upward to the wall; He waved the standard high,— But then another smote him!

And the captain standing by

"Said, "Of this gallant youth take care,
He hath won for us the day!'
I and my comrades took him up,
And bore him thence away.

"There was no tree about the place,
So 'neath the fortress shade
We carried him, and carefully
Upon the red sand laid.

"I took the feather from my cap,
To fan his burning cheek;

I gave him water, drop by drop,

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MARIEN LEE.

NOT a care hath Marien Lee, Dwelling by the sounding sea! Her young life's a flowery way :Without toil from day to day, Without bodings for the morrow,— Marien was not made for sorrow!

Like the summer-billows wild
Leaps the happy-hearted child;
Sees her father's fishing boat,
O'er the waters gaily float;
Hears her brother's fishing-song
On the light gale borne along;
Half a league she hears the lay,
Ere they turn into the bay,
And with glee, o'er cliff and main,
Sings an answer back again,
Which by man and boy is heard,
Like the carol of a bird.
Look! she sitteth laughing there,
Wreathing sea-weed in her hair,
Saw ye e'er a thing so fair?

Marien, some are rich in gold,
Heaped-up treasure-stores untold;
Some in thought sublime, refined,
And the glorious wealth of mind:
Thou, sweet child, life's rose unblown,
Hast a treasure of thine own-
Youth's most unalloyed delights;
Happy days, and tranquil nights;
Hast a brain with thought unvexed;
A heart untroubled, unperplexed!
Go, thou sweet one, all day long,
Like a glad bird, pour thy song;
And let thy young, graceful head,
Be with sea-flowers garlanded;
For all outward signs of glee,
Well befit thee, Marien Lee!

THE CHILD'S LAMENT.

I LIKE it not- this noisy street

I never liked, nor can I now-
I love to feel the pleasant breeze
On the free hills, and see the trees,
With birds upon the bough!
Oh, I remember long ago,-

So long ago, 'tis like a dream -
My home was on a green-hill side,
By flowery meadows, still and wide,
'Mong trees, and by a stream.

Three happy brothers I had then,

My merry playmates every day

I've looked and looked through street and square, But never chanced I, anywhere,

To see such boys as they.

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