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Stars of the jasmine its pillars crowned,
Vine-stalks its lattice and walls had bound;
And brightly before it a fountain's play
Flung showers through a thicket of glossy bay,
To a cypress which rose in that flashing rain,
Like one tall shaft of some fallen fane.

And thither Ianthis had brought his bride,
And the guests were met by that fountain-side.
They lifted the veil from Eudora's face-
It smiled out softly in pensive grace,
With lips of love, and a brow serene,
Meet for the soul of the deep wood-scene.
Bring wine, bring odours !-the board is spread;
Bring roses! a chaplet for every head!

The wine-cups foamed, and the rose was showered
On the young and fair from the world embowered;
The sun looked not on them in that sweet shade,
The winds amid scented boughs were laid;
And there came by fits, through some wavy tree,
A sound and a gleam of the moaning sea.

Hush! be still! Was that no more
Than the murmur from the shore?
Silence!-did thick rain-drops beat
On the grass like trampling feet?

Fling down the goblet, and draw the sword!
The groves are filled with a pirate horde!
Through the dim olives their sabres shine!-
Now must the red blood stream for wine!

The youths from the banquet to battle sprang, The woods with the shriek of the maidens rang;

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THE BRIDE OF THE GREEK ISLE

Under the golden-fruited boughs

There were flashing poniards and darkening brows-
Footsteps, o'er garland and lyre that fled,
And the dying soon on a greensward bed.
Eudora, Eudora! thou dost not fly?—

She saw but Ianthis before her lie,

With the blood from his breast in a gushing flow,
Like a child's large tears in its hour of woe,
And a gathering film in his lifted eye,

That sought his young bride out mournfully.
She knelt down beside him-her arms she wound
Like tendrils, his drooping neck around,
As if the passion of that fond grasp

Might chain in life with its ivy-clasp.

But they tore her thence in her wild despair,
The sea's fierce rovers they left him there:

They left to the fountain a dark-red vein,

And on the wet violets a pile of slain,

And a hush of fear through the summer grove.—
So closed the triumph of Youth and Love!

III

GLOOMY lay the shore that night,
When the moon, with sleeping light,
Bathed each purple Sciote hill-
Gloomy lay the shore, and still.
O'er the wave no gay guitar
Sent its floating music far;
No glad sound of dancing feet
Woke the starry hours to greet.
But a voice of mortal woe,

In its changes wild or low,

Through the midnight's blue repose

B

From the sea-beat rocks arose,
As Eudora's mother stood
Gazing o'er the Ægean flood,
With a fixed and straining eye-
Oh! was the spoilers' vessel nigh?
Yes! there, becalmed in silent sleep,
Dark and alone on a breathless deep,
On a sea of molten silver, dark

Brooding it frowned, that evil bark!
There its broad pennon a shadow cast,
Moveless and black from the tall still mast;
And the heavy sound of its flapping sail
Idly and vainly wooed the gale.

Hush'd was all else-had ocean's breast
Rocked e'en Eudora that hour to rest?

To rest? The waves tremble !-what piercing cry
Bursts from the heart of the ship on high?
What light through the heavens, in a sudden spire,
Shoots from the deck up? Fire! 'tis fire!
There are wild forms hurrying to and fro,
Seen darkly clear on that lurid glow;
There are shout, and signal-gun, and call,
And the dashing of water-but fruitless all!
Man may not fetter, nor ocean tame
The might and wrath of the rushing flame!
It hath twined the mast like a glittering snake,
That coils up a tree from a dusky brake;

It hath touched the sails, and their canvass rolls
Away from its breath into shrivelled scrolls;
It hath taken the flag's high place in the air,
And reddened the stars with its wavy glare;
And sent out bright arrows, and soared in glee

THE BRIDE OF THE GREEK ISLE

To a burning mount midst the moonlight sea.
The swimmers are plunging from stern and prow——
Eudora Eudora! where, where art thou?

The slave and his master alike are gone.-
Mother who stands on the deck alone?
The child of thy bosom !—and lo! a brand
Blazing up high in her lifted hand!

And her veil flung back, and her free dark hair
Swayed by the flames as they rock and flare;
And her fragile form to its loftiest height
Dilated, as if by the spirit's might;
And her eye with an eagle-gladness fraught-
Oh! could this work be of woman wrought?
Yes! 'twas her deed!-by that haughty smile,
It was hers she hath kindled her funeral pile!
Never might shame on that bright head be:
Her blood was the Greek's, and hath made her free!

Proudly she stands, like an Indian bride

On the pyre with the holy dead beside :

But a shriek from her mother hath caught her ear,
As the flames to her marriage-robe draw near,
And starting, she spreads her pale arms in vain

To the form they must never enfold again.
-One moment more, and her hands are clasped-
Fallen is the torch they had wildly grasped-

Her sinking knee unto Heaven is bowed,

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And her last look raised through the smoke's dim shroud, And her lips as in prayer for her pardon move;Now the night gathers o'er Youth and Love!

THE SWITZER'S WIFE

[WERNER STAUFFACHER, one of the three Confederates of the Field of Grutli, had been alarmed by the envy with which the Austrian Bailiff, Landenberg, had noticed the appearance of wealth and comfort which distinguished his dwelling. It was not, however, until roused by the entreaties of his wife, a woman who seems to have been of a heroic spirit, that he was induced to deliberate with his friends upon the measures by which Switzerland was finally delivered.]

"Nor look nor tone revealeth aught

Save woman's quietness of thought;
And yet around her is a light

Of inward majesty and might."-M. J. J.

"Wer solch ein Herz an sienen Busen druckt

Der kann fur Herd und Hof mit Freuden fechten."
WILHELM TELL.

It was the time when children bound to meet
Their father's homeward step from field or hill,
And when the herd's returning bells are sweet
In the Swiss valleys, and the lakes grow still,
And the last note of that wild horn swells by
Which haunts the exile's heart with melody:

And lovely smiled full many an Alpine home,
Touched with the crimson of the dying hour,

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