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There have been sweet singing voices

In your walks that now are still;

There are seats left void in your earthly homes, Which none again may fill.

Soft eyes are seen no more

That made spring-time in your heart; Kindred and friends are gone before,— And ye still fear to part?

-We fear not now, we fear not!

Though the way through darkness bends;

Our souls are strong to follow them,
Our own familiar friends!

28

THE BREEZE FROM LAND.

"As when to them who sail

Beyond the Cape of Hope, and now are past
Mozambic, off at sea north-east winds blow
Sabean odours from the spicy shore

Of Araby the Blest; with such delay

Well pleased they slack their course, and many a league, Cheer'd with the grateful smell, old Ocean smiles.

Paradise Lost.

Joy is upon the lonely seas,

When Indian forests pour

Forth to the billow and the breeze
Their fragrance from the shore ;
Joy, when the soft air's glowing sigh
Bears on the breath of Araby.

Oh! welcome are the winds that tell
A wanderer of the deep

Where far away the jasmines dwell,

And where the myrrh-trees weep! Bless'd, on the sounding surge and foam, Are tidings of the citron's home!

The sailor at the helm they meet,
And hope his bosom stirs,
Upspringing, 'midst the waves to greet
The fair earth's messengers,

That woo him, from the mournful main,
Back to her glorious bowers again.

They woo him, whispering lovely tales Of many a flowering glade,

And fount's bright gleam in island-vales Of golden-fruited shade ;

Across his lone ship's wake they bring A vision and a glow of spring!

And oh ye masters of the lay!

Come not e'en thus your songs, That meet us on life's weary way Amidst her toiling throngs? Yes! o'er the spirit thus they bear A current of celestial air!

Their power is from the brighter clime

That in our birth hath part,

Their tones are of the world which time
Sears not within the heart;

They tell us of the living light
In its green places ever bright.

They call us with a voice divine
Back to our early love,

Our vows of youth at many a shrine

Whence far and soon we rove :
-Welcome, high thought and holy strain,

That make us Truth's and Heaven's again!

*

*Written immediately after reading the "Remarks on the Character and Writings of Milton," in the Christian Examiner.

TO ONE OF THE AUTHOR'S CHILDREN

ON HIS BIRTHDAY, 27 AUGUST, 1825.

THOU wak'st from happy sleep to play
With bounding heart, my boy!
Before thee lies a long bright day
Of summer and of joy.

Thou hast no heavy thought or dream
To cloud thy fearless eye;—
Long be it thus-life's early stream
Should still reflect the sky.

Yet ere the cares of life lie dim
On thy young spirit's wings,
Now in thy morn forget not Him

From whom each pure thought springs!

So in the onward vale of tears,
Where'er thy path may be,

When strength hath bow'd to evil years-
He will remember thee.

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