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Tale iter omne cave. Propert. lib. iv. eleg. 8. I PRAY you, let us roam no more Along that wild and lonely shore, Where late we thoughtless strayed; 'Twas not for us, whom Heaven intends

To be no more than simple friends,
Such lonely walks were made.

That little bay where, winding in
From Ocean's rude and angry din
(As lovers steal to bliss),
The billows kiss the shore, and then
Flow calmly to the deep again,
As though they did not kiss!

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Heard you the wish I dared to name To murmur on that luckless night, When passion broke the bonds of shame,

And love grew madness in your sight?

Divinely through the graceful dance, You seemed to float in silent song, Bending to earth that beamy glance, As if to light your steps along!

Oh how could others dare to touch That hallowed form with hand so

free,

When but to look was bliss too much, Too rare for all but Heaven and me! With smiling eyes, that little thought How fatal were the beams they threw,

My trembling hands you lightly caught,

And round me, like a spirit, flew. Heedless of all, I wildly turned,

My soul forgot-nor, oh! condemn, That when such eyes before me burned, My soul forgot all eyes but them! I dared to speak in sobs of bliss, Rapture of every thought bereft me, I would have clasped you-oh, even this!

But, with a bound, you blushing

left me.

Forget, forget that night's offence;

Forgive it, if, alas! you can; 'Twas love, 'twas passion-soul and

sense

"Twas all the best and worst of man! That moment did the mingled eyes

Of heaven and earth my madness view,

I should have seen, through earth and skies,

But you alone, but only you! Did not a frown from you reprove, Myriads of eyes to me were none; I should have-oh, my only love! My life! what should I not have done?

A DREAM OF ANTIQUITY. I JUST had turned the classic page,

And traced that happy period over, When love could warm the proudest sage,

And wisdom grace the tenderest
lover!

Before I laid me down to sleep,
Upon the bank awhile I stood,

1 Gassendi thinks that the gardens which Pausanias mentions in his first book were those of Epicurus; and Stuart says, in his Antiquities of Athens: Near this convent (the convent of Hagios Assomatos) is the place called at present Kepoi, or the Gardens; and Ampelos Kepos, or

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And now the downy hand of rest
Her signet on my eyes imprest,
And still the bright and balmy spell,
Like star-dew, o'er my fancy fell!
I thought that, all enrapt, I strayed
Through that serene luxurious shade,1
Where Epicurus taught the Loves

To polish Virtue's native brightness, Just as the beak of playful doves

Can give to pearls a smoother whiteness !2

'Twas one of those delicious nights

So common in the climes of Greece, When day withdraws but half its lights,

And all is moonshine, balm, and peace!

And thou wert there, my own beloved! And dearly by thy side I roved Through many a temple's reverend gloom,

And many a bower's seductive bloom, Where beauty blushed and wisdom taught,

Where lovers sighed and sages thought, Where hearts might feel or heads dis

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Where all that bard has ever dreamed | While others, waving arms of snow

Of love or luxury bloomed around!
Oh! 'twas a bright bewildering scene-
Along the alley's deepening green,
Soft lamps, that hung like burning
flowers,

And scented and illumed the bowers,
Seemed, as to him, who darkling roves
Amid the lone Hercynian groves,
Appear the countless birds of light
That sparkle in the leaves at night,
And from their wings diffuse a ray
Along the traveller's weary way!
'Twas light of that mysterious kind,
Through which the soul is doomed

to roam

When it has left this world behind,

And gone to seek its heavenly home!
And, Nea, thou didst look and move,
Like any blooming soul of bliss,
That wanders to its home above

Through mild and shadowy light
like this!

But now, methought, we stole along Through halls of more voluptuous glory

Than ever lived in Teian song,

Or wantened in Milesian story!1
And nymph 3 were there, whose very eyes
Seemed almost to exhale in sighs;
Whose every little ringlet thrilled,
As if with soul and passion filled !
Some flew, with amber cups, around,
Shedding the flowery wines of Crete,2
And, as they passed with youthful
bound,

The onyx shone beneath their feet !3

The Milesiacs, or Milesian fables, had their origin in Miletus, a luxurious town of Ionia. Aristides was the most celebrated author of these licentious fictions. See Plutarch (in Crasso), who calls them ακολαστα βιβλια.

2 'Some of the Cretan wines, which Athenæus calls ovos aveoσuias, from their fragrancy resembling that of the finest flowers.'-Barry on Wines, chap. vii.

3 It appears that, in very splendid mansions, the floor or pavement was frequently of onyx. Thus Martial: Calcatusque tuo sub pede lucet onyx.'-Epig. 50, lib. xii.

4 Bracelets of this shape were a favourite ornament among the women of antiquity. Oi emiкаρmiо οφεις και αἱ χρυσαι πεδαι Θαιδος και Αρισταγόρας και Λαίδος φαρμακα. Philostrat. epis. xl. Lucian, too, tells of the Spaxioioi Spaкovтes.

Entwined by snakes of burnished gold, 4

And showing limbs, as loth to show. Through many a thin Tarentiau foll Glided along the festal ring With vases, all respiring spring, | Where roses lay, in languor breathing And the young bee grape, round them wreathing,

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Hung on their blushes warm and meek,
Like curls upon a rosy cheek!

Oh, Nea! why did morning break

The spell that so divinely bound me? Why did I wake? how could I wake, With thee my own and Heaven around me !

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See his Amores, where he describes the dressingroom of a Grecian lady, and we find the silver vase,' the rouge, the tooth-powder, and all the mystic order of a modern toilet.

5 The inhabitants pronounce the name as if it were written Bermooda. See the commentators on the words 'still-vexed Bermoothes,' in the Tempest.-I wonder it did not occur to some of those all-reading gentlemen, that possibly the discoverer of this island of hogs and devils' might have been no less a personage than the great John Bermudez, who about the same period (the beginning of the sixteenth century)

was sent Patriarch of the Latin Church to Ethiopia, and has left us most wonderful stories of the Amazons and the Griffins which he encountered Travels of the Jesuits, vol. i. I am afraid, however, it would take the Patriarch rather too much out of his way.

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If I were yonder wave, my dear,
And thou the isle it clasps around,
I would not let a foot come near

My land of bliss, my fairy ground!
If I were yonder conch of gold,
And thou the pearl within it placed,
I would not let an eye behold

The sacred gem my arms embraced! If I were yonder orange-tree,

And thou the blossom blooming there,

I would not yield a breath of thee,

To scent the most imploring air! Oh! bend not o'er the water's brink, Give not the wave that rosy sigh, Nor let its burning mirror drink

The soft reflection of thine eye. That glossy hair, that glowing cheek, Upon the billows pour their beam So warmly, that my soul could seek Its Nea in the painted strean. The painted stream my chilly grave And nuptial bed at once may be ; I'll wed thee in that mimic wave, And die upon the shade of thee!

Johnson does not think that Waller was ever at Bermuda; but the Account of the European Settlements in America affirms it confidently (vol. ii). I mention this work, however, less for

Behold the leafy mangrove bending O'er the waters blue and bright, Like Nea's silky lashes, lending Shadow to her eyes of light!

Oh, my beloved! where'er I turn. Some trace of thee enchants mine eyes; In every star thy glances buro,

Thy blush on every floweret lies. But then thy breath!-not all the fire That lights the lone Semenda's death In eastern climes, could e'er respire An odour like thy dulcet breath! I pray thee, on those lips of thine

To wear this rosy leaf for me, And breathe of something not divine, Since nothing human breathes of thee! All other charms of thine I meet

In nature, but thy sigh alone; Then take, oh! take, though not so sweet,

The breath of roses for thine own! So while I walk the flowery grove, The bud that gives, through morning dew,

The lustre of the lips I love,

May seem to give their perfume too!

THE SNOW SPIRIT.
Tu potes insolitas, Cynthia, ferre nives?
Propert. lib. i. eleg. 8.

No, ne'er did the wave in its clement steep

An island of lovelier charms; It blooms in the giant embrace of the deep,

Like Hebe in Hercules' arms! The tint of your bowers is balm to the eye,

Their melody balm to the ear; But the fiery planet of day is too nigh, And the Snow Spirit never comes here!

The down from his wing is as white as the pearl

Thy lips for their cabinet stole,

its authority than for the pleasure I feel in quoting an unacknowledged production of the great Edmund Burke.

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meet

I knew not what, but something sweet!

Blest be the little pilot dove!
He had indeed been sent by Love,
To guide me to a scene so dear
As Fate allows but seldom here :
One of those rare and brilliant hours,
Which, like the aloe's lingering flowers,
May blossom to the eye of man
But once in all his weary span!
Just where the margin's opening shade
A vista from the waters made,
My bird reposed his silver plume
Upon a rich banana's bloom.

What spell, what magic raised her there?
Oh, vision bright! oh, spirit fair!
"Twas Nea! slumbering calm and mild,
Whose spirit in Elysium keeps
And bloomy as the dimpled child
Its playful sabbath while he sleeps!

The broad banana's green embrace
Hung shadowy round each tranquil

grace;

One little beam alone could win
The leaves to let it wander in,
And stealing over all her charms,
From lip to cheek, from neck to arms,
It glanced around a fiery kiss,
All trembling, as it went, with bliss!

Her eyelid's black and silken fringe
Lay on her cheek, of vermil tinge,
Like the first ebon cloud that closes
Dark on Evening's Heaven of roses!
Her glances, though in slumber hid,
Seemed glowing through their ivory
lid;

And o'er her lip's reflecting dew
A soft and liquid lustre threw,

The sea-side or mangrove grape, a native of Such as, declining dim and faint,

the West Indies.

The lamp of some beloved saint

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