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The very lowest of them all
Doth act an angel's part,

And bear a message home from God
Unto the listening heart.

And thou may'st hear-as Adam heard
In Eden's flowery shades,

When angels talked, at falling eve,
Amid its silent glades—

The hallowing rush of spirit-wings,
And murmur of immortal strings

Truths such as guide the comet cars
On fiery mission driven,
Or in their beauty light the stars
Along the floor of heaven:
One choral theme, below, above,
One anthem near and far-
The daisy singing in the grass,

As through the cloud the star-
And to the wind that sweeps the sky

The roses making low reply.

For the meanest wild-bud breathes to swell,

Upon immortal ears—

So hear it, thou, in grove or dell !—

The music of the spheres.

49.-AN OLD MAN'S IDYLL.

RICHARD REALF.

[Richard Realf was born at Uckfield, in Sussex, in 1835. His poetical talents attracting the attention of a lady at Brighton, in whose service he resided, she was induced to publish for him a volume of his poems, "Guesses at the Beautiful," by which he obtained some local repute. Since then he appears to have led a roving life; he was with John Brown at Harper's Ferry, was reported dead, returned to England, and after being seen at several places in his native county, suddenly disappeared.]

By the waters of Life we sat together,
Hand in hand, in the golden days

Of the beautiful early summer weather,

When skies were purple and breath was praise-
When the heart kept tune to the carol of birds,
And the birds kept tune to the songs which ran
Through shimmer of flowers on grassy swards,
And trees with voices Eolian.

By the rivers of Life we walked together,
I and my darling, unafraid;

And lighter than any linnet's feather
The burdens of Being on us weighed.

And love's sweet miracles o'er us threw
Mantles of joy outlasting Time,
And up from the rosy morrows grew

A sound that seemed like a marriage chime.

In the gardens of Life we strayed together,
And the luscious apples were ripe and red,
And the languid lilac and honeyed heather
Swooned with the fragrance which they shed.
And under the trees the angels walked,
And up in the air a sense of wings
Awed us tenderly while we talked
Softly in sacred communings.

In the meadows of Life we strayed together,
Watching the waving harvests grow;
And under the benison of the Father

Our hearts, like the lambs, skipped to and fro.
And the cowslips, hearing our low replies,
Broidered fairer the emerald banks:
And glad tears shone in the daisies' eyes,
And the timid violet glistened thanks.

Who was with us, and what was round us,
Neither myself nor my darling guessed;
Only we knew that something crowned us
Out from the heavens with crowns of rest;
Only we knew that something bright
Lingered lovingly where we stood,
Clothed with the incandescent light
Of something higher than humanhood.

O the riches love doth inherit!
Ah, the alchemy which doth change
Dross of body and dregs of spirit
Into sanctities rare and strange!
My flesh is feeble and dry and old,
My darling's beautiful hair is
grey;
But our elixir and precious gold
Laugh at the footsteps of decay.

Harms of the world have come unto us,

Cups of sorrow we yet shall drain; But we have a secret which doth show us Wonderful rainbows in the rain.

And we hear the tread of the years move by,

And the sun is setting behind the hills;

But my darling does not fear to die,

And I am happy in what God wills.

So we sit by our household fires together,
Dreaming the dreams of long ago;
Then it was balmy summer weather,
And now the valleys are laid in snow.
Icicles hang from the slippery eaves,
The wind blows cold, 'tis growing late;
Well, well! we have garnered all our sheaves,
I and my darling, and we wait.

50.-GILDEROY,

THOMAS CAMPBELL.

[See page 195.]

THE last, the fatal hour is come
That bears my love from me;
I hear the dead-note of the drum,
I mark the gallows-tree!

The bell has toll'd-it shakes my heart-
The trumpet speaks thy name;
And must my Gilderoy depart

To bear a death of shame ?

No bosom trembles for thy doom,
No mourner wipes a tear;
The gallows' foot is all thy tomb,
The sledge is all thy bier!

Oh! Gilderoy, bethought we then
So soon, so sad, to part,

When first in Roslin's lovely glen

You triumphed o'er

my heart!

Your locks they glittered to the sheen,
Your hunter-garb was trim,

And graceful was the ribbon green
That bound your manly limb!

Ah! little thought I to deplore
Those limbs in fetters bound;
Or hear, upon the scaffold floor,
The midnight hammer sound.

Ye cruel, cruel, that combined
The guiltless to pursue!
My Gilderoy was ever kind,
He could not injure you!

moor.

A long adieu!—but where shall fly
Thy widow all forlorn,

When every mean and cruel eye
Regards my woe with scorn?

Yes, they will mock thy widow's tears,
And hate thy orphan boy!
Alas! his infant beauty wears
The form of Gilderoy.

Then will I seek the dreary mound
That wraps thy mouldering clay,
And weep and linger on the ground
And sigh my heart away!

51.-THREE FISHERS WENT SAILING.

THE REV. CHARLES KINGSLEY.

[The Rev. Charles Kingsley was born, 1819, at Holme Vicarage, near DartHe was educated at King's College, London, and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He abandoned the law for the Church, and became the rector of Eversley, Hampshire. His writings are very numerous, and include "The Saint's Tragedy," 1848; "Alton Locke," a novel, 1850; "Yeast, a Problem," 1851; "Westward Ho," a novel; Glaucus, or the Wonders of the Shore;" "Andromeda," and other poems (1858), &c. &c. He is the editor of "Macmillan's Magazine," and professor of Literature in Cambridge University. Still living.] THREE fishers went sailing out into the West, Out into the West as the sun went down;

Each thought on the woman who loved him best,

And the children stood watching them out of the town:
For men must work, and women must weep,
And there's little to earn, and many to keep,
Though the harbour-bar be moaning.

Three wives sat up in the lighthouse tower,

And they trimm'd the lamps as the sun went down;
They looked at the squall, and they looked at the shower,
And the night-rack came rolling up ragged and brown ;
But men must work, and women must weep,

Though storms be sudden, and waters deep,
And the harbour-bar be moaning.

Three corpses

lie out in the shining sands,

In the morning gleam, as the tide went down,

And the women are weeping and wringing their hands,
For those who will never come home to the town.

For men must work, and women must weep,
And the sooner it's over, the sooner to sleep,
And good-bye to the bar and its moaning.

52.-THE MOTHER'S LAMENT.

GERALD GRIFFIN.

[See page 153.]

My darling, my darling, while silence is on the moor,
And lone in the sunshine I sit by our cabin door;
When evening falls quiet and calm over land and sea,
My darling, my darling, I think of past times and thee.

Here, while on this cold shore, I wear out my lonely hours,
My child in the heavens is spreading my bed with flowers:
All weary my bosom is
grown of this friendless clime,
But I long not to leave it; for that were a shame and crime.

They bear to the churchyard the youth in their health away,
I know where a fruit hangs more ripe for the grave than they;
But I wish not for death, for my spirit is all resigned,
And the hope that stays with me, gives peace to my aged mind.

A

My darling, my darling, God gave to my feeble age
prop for my faint heart, a stay in my pilgrimage:
My darling, my darling, God takes back his gift again—
And my heart may be broken, but ne'er shall my

will complain.

53.-NAPOLEON'S MIDNIGHT REVIEW.
MERY AND BARTHELEMY.

AT midnight, from his grave,
The drummer woke and rose,
And beating loud the drum,
Forth on his rounds he goes.

Stirred by his faithful arms,
The drumsticks patly fall,
He beats the loud retreat,
Reveillé and roll-call.

So grandly rolls that drum,
So deep it echoes round,
Old soldiers in their graves,
Start to life at the sound.

Both they in farthest North
Stiff in the ice that lay,
And who too warm repose
Beneath Italian clay;

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