THE QUIET LAND. Death is the privilege of human nature, And life, without it, were not worth our taking. How sweet to sleep where all is peace, That quiet land where, peril past, A balm for all its woes,— And lowly grief and lordly pride Lie down, like brothers, side by side! The breath of slander cannot come To break the calm that lingers there; Unkindness cannot wound us more, And all earth's bitterness is o'er ! There the maiden waits till her lover come, They never more shall part!· And the stricken deer has gained her home, And passion's pulse lies hushed and still, The mother-she is gone to sleep, With her babe upon her breast,— She has no weary watch to keep Over her infant's rest; His slumbers on her bosom fair Shall never more be broken-- there! For me-for me, whom all have left, Why should I linger idly on, Amid the selfish and the cold, A dreamer-when such dreams are gone As those I nursed of old! Why should the dead tree mock the spring, A blighted and a withering thing! How blest-how blest that home to gain, From which we never rise to pain, To win my way from the tempest's roar, STANZAS TO A LADY. Affliction had touched her looks with something that was scarce earthly. Elle avait un air plus ancien que vieux. MARIVAUX. STERNE. THE rose that decked thy cheek is dead, Thy brow has lost its gladness; And the pure smiles that used to play Yet sorrow's shadows o'er thy face, And grief has given to thine eye A beauty, such as yonder sky Thy low sweet voice, in every word, Breathes-like soft music far-off heard, The soul of melancholy! And oh! to listen to thy sigh !— The evening gale that wanders by The rose is not so holy! But none may know the thoughts that rest In the deep silence of thy breast! For oh! thou art, to mortal eyes, Like some pure spirit of the skies, |