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For he had sailed six thousand years,
And knew each isle and bay;

And I thought that we, in my little boat,
Could merrily steer away.

The stores I took were plentiful:
The dew as it sweetly fell;

And the honey that was hoarded up
In the wild bee's summer cell.

"Now steer away, thou helmsman good,
Over the waters free;

To the charmèd Isle of the Seven Kings,
That lies in the midmost sea."

He spread the sail, he took the helm;
And, long ere ever I wist,

We had sailed a league, we had reached the isle That lay in the golden mist.

The charmèd Isle of the Seven Kings,

"Tis a place of wondrous spell;

And all that happed unto me there

In a printed book I'll tell.

Said I, one day, to the Nautilus,

As we stood on the strand,

"Unmoor my ship, thou helmsman good,

And steer me back to land;

"For my mother, I know, is sick at heart,

And longs my face to see.
What ails thee now, thou Nautilus?

Art slow to sail with me?

Up! do my will; the wind is fresh,

So set the vessel free."

He turned the helm; away we sailed
Towards the setting sun:
The flying-fish were swift of wing,
But we outsped each one.

And on we went for seven days,
Seven days without a night;
We followed the sun still on and on,
In the glow of his setting light.

Down and down went the setting sun,
And down and down went we;
'Twas a splendid sail for seven days
On a smooth descending sea.

On a smooth, descending sea we sailed,
Nor breeze the water curled:

My brain grew sick, for I saw we sailed
On the down-hill of the world.

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"Good friend," said I to the Nautilus,
"Can this the right course be?
And shall we come again to land?"
But answer none made he;
And I saw a laugh in his fishy eye
As he turned it up to me.

So on we went; but soon I heard
A sound as when winds blow,
And waters wild are tumbled down
Into a gulf below.

And on and on flew the little bark,
As a fiend her course did urge;

And I saw, in a moment, we must hang
Upon the ocean's verge.

I snatched down the sails, I snapped the ropes,

I broke the masts in twain;

But on flew the bark and 'gainst the rocks
Like a living thing did strain.

"Thou steered us wrong, thou helmsman vile!" Said I to the Nautilus bold;

"We shall down the gulf; we're dead men both! Dost know the course we hold?"

I seized the helm with a sudden jerk, And we wheeled round like a bird; But I saw the Gulf of Eternity, And the tideless waves I heard.

"Good master," said the Nautilus, "I thought you might desire To have some wondrous thing to tell Beside your mother's fire.

"What's sailing on a summer sea?
As well sail on a pool;

Oh, but I know a thousand things
That are wild and beautiful!

"And if you wish to see them now,
You've but to say the word."
"Have done!" said I to the Nautilus,
"Or I'll throw thee overboard.

"Have done!" said I, "thou mariner old,
And steer me back to land."
No other word spake the Nautilus,
But took the helm in hand.

I looked up to the lady moon,

She was like a glow-worm's spark; And never a star shone down to us

Through the sky so high and dark.

We had no mast, we had no ropes,

And every sail was rent;

And the stores I brought from the charmèd isle
In the seven days' sail were spent.

But the Nautilus was a patient thing,
And steered with all his might

On the up-hill sea; and he never slept,
But kept the course aright.

And for thrice seven nights we sailed and sailed;
At length I saw the bay

Where I built my ship, and my mother's house
'Mid the green hills where it lay.

"Farewell!" said I to the Nautilus,
And leaped upon the shore;
"Thou art a skilful mariner,

But I'll sail with thee no more!"

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BURIAL OF SIR JOHN MOORE.

CHARLES WOLFE.

Not a drum was heard, nor a funeral note,
As his corse to the rampart we hurried;
Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot
O'er the grave where our hero was buried.

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