Behind him his four sisters, each wrapt in sable veil, Between the tambour's dismal strokes take up their doleful tale ; When stops the muffled drum, ye hear their brother less bewailing, And all the people, far and near, cry," Alas! alas, for Celin!” O, lovely lies he on the bier above the purple pall, The flower of all Granada's youth, the loveliest of them all ; His dark, dark eyes are closed, and his rosy lip is pale, The crust of blood lies black and dim upon his burnish'd mail, And evermore the hoarse tambour breaks in upon their wailing, Its sound is like no earthly sound,—“Alas! alas, for Celin!" The Moorish maid at the lattice stands, the Moor stands at his door, One maid is wringing of her hands, and one is weep ing sore : Down to the dust men bow their heads, and ashes black they strew, Upon their broider'd garments of crimson, green and blueBefore each gate the bier stands still, then bursts the loud bewailing, From door and lattice, high and low" Alas! alas, for Celin!" An old, old woman cometh forth, when she hears the people cry; Her hair is white as silver, like horn her glazed eye. "T was she that nursed him at her breast, that nursed him long ago; She knows not whom they all lament, but soon she well shall know With one deep shriek she through doth break, when her ears receive their wailing“Let me kiss my Celin ere I die-Alas! alas, for Celin!” LOCKHEART. ODE. O MELANCHOLY Moon, Queen of the midnight, though thou palest away Far in the dusky west, to vanish soon Under the hills that catch thy waning ray, Still art thou beautiful beyond all spheres, The friend of grief, and confidant of tears. Mine earliest friend wert thou: My boyhood's passion was to stretch me under The locust tree, and, through the chequer'd bough, Youth grew; but as it came, To gaze, and dream, and breathe perchance the And manhood, though it bring eyes from thy lone loveliness; still spring Would it were so; for earth name And her sweet chimes, that once were woke to mirth, Would it were so; for still Mine eyes can have no bitter shame to fill, A boyish thought, and weak: And in the land of palms, and on the peak Let it be so indeedEarth hath her peace beneath the trampled stone: And let me perish where no heart shall bleed, And naught, save passing winds, shall make my No tears, save night's, to wash my humble shrine, And watching o'er me, no pale face but thine. DR. BIRD. moan ; THE CORAL INSECT. Toil on! toil on! ye ephemeral train, Who build in the tossing and treacherous main; Toil on--for the wisdom of man ye mock, With your sand-based structures and domes of roek; Your columns the fathomless fountains lave, And your arches spring up to the crested wave; Ye're a puny race, thus to boldly rear A fabric so vast, in a realm so drear. Ye bind the deep with your secret zone, But why do ye plant 'neath the billows dark 1 With mouldering bones the deeps are white, Ye build-ye build—but ye enter not in, MRS. SIGOURNEY. Next time he put in Alexander the Great, A long row of alms-houses, amply endow'd bounce. By further experiments (no matter how) plough. sense ;A first-water diamond, with brilliants begirt, Than one good potato just wash'd from the dirt ;Yet not mountains of silver and gold would suffice, One pearl to outweigh-'twas 'the pearl of great price! At last the whole world was bowl'd in at the grate With the soul of a beggar to serve for a weight ;When the former sprung up with so strong a rebuff, That it made a vast rent, and escaped at the roofWhile the scale with the soul in 't so mightily fell, That it jerk'd the philosopher out of his cell. Miss J. TAYLOR. |