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O'er each French trashy dish as I bend,
My heart feels a patriot's grief!

And the round tears, O England! descend
When I think on a round of thy beef.

Yes, my soul sentimentally craves

British beer. Hail, Britannia, hail!
To thy flag on the foam of the waves,
And the foam on thy flagons of ale.

Yet I own, in this hour of my drought,
A dessert has most welcomely come;
Here are peaches that melt in the mouth,
And grapes blue and big as a plum.

There are melons too, luscious and great,
But the slices I eat shall be few,
For from melons incautiously eat
Melancholic effects may ensue.

Horrid pun! you'll exclaim; but be calm,
Though my letter bears date, as you view,
From the land of the date-bearing palm,
I will palm no more puns upon you.

TO A YOUNG LADY,

WHO ASKED ME TO WRITE SOMETHING ORIGINAL FOR HER ALBUM.

AN original something, fair maid, you would win me
To write but how shall I begin?

For I fear I have nothing original in me
Excepting Original Sin.

FRAGMENT OF AN ORATORIO,

FROM THE BOOK OF JOB.

Having met my illustrious friend, the composer Neukomm, at Algiers, several years ago, I commenced this intended Oratorio at his desire; but he left the place before I proceeded further in the poem, and it has been thus left unfinished.

CRUSHED by misfortune's yoke,

Job lamentably spoke

"My boundless curse be on

The day that I was born;

Quenched be the star that shone

Upon my natal morn!

In the grave I long

To shroud my breast;

Where the wicked cease to wrong,

And the weary are at rest.”

Then Eliphaz rebuked his wild despair :

"What Heaven ordains 't is meet that man should bear.

Lately, at midnight drear,

A vision shook my bones with fear;

A spirit passed before my face,

And yet its form I could not trace;

It stopped-it stood it chilled my blood,

The hair upon my flesh uprose

With freezing dread!

Deep silence reigned, and, at its close,

I heard a voice that said.

'Shall mortal man be more pure and just
Than God, who made him from the dust?
Hast thou not learnt, of old, how fleet
Is the triumph of the hypocrite;

How soon the wreath of joy grows wan
On the brow of the ungodly man?
By the fire of his conscience he perisheth
In an unblown flame:

The Earth demands his death,

And the Heavens reveal his shame.""

JOB.

Is this your consolation?

Is it thus that ye condole

With the depth of my desolation,
And the anguish of my soul?
But I will not cease to wail
The bitterness of my bale.-
Man that is born of woman,
Short and evil is his hour;
He fleeth like a shadow,

He fadeth like a flower.

My days are passed-my hope and trust

Is but to moulder in the dust.

CHORUS.

Bow, mortal, bow, before thy God,
Nor murmur at his chastening rod;
Fragile being of earthly clay,

Think on God's eternal sway!

Hark! from the whirlwind forth

Thy Maker speaks"Thou child of earth,

Where wert thou when I laid

Creation's corner-stone?

When the sons of God rejoicing made,

And the morning stars together sang and shone?

Hadst thou power to bid above

Heaven's constellations glow;

Or shape the forms that live and move

On Nature's face below?

Hast thou given the horse his strength and pride?

He paws the valley, with nostril wide

He smells far off the battle;

He neighs at the trumpet's sound —
And his speed devours the ground,
As he sweeps to where the quivers rattle,
And the spear and shield shine bright,
'Midst the shouting of the captains
And the thunder of the fight.

TO MY NIECE, MARY CAMPBELL.

OUR friendship's not a stream to dry,
Or stop with angry jar;
A life-long planet in our sky -
No meteor-shooting star.

Thy playfulness and pleasant ways
Shall cheer my wintry track,
And give my old declining days
A second summer back.

Proud honesty protects our lot,

No dun infests our bowers;
Wealth's golden lamps illumine not
Brows more content than ours.

To think, too, thy remembrance fond

May love me after death, Gives fancied happiness beyond

My lease of living breath.

Meanwhile thine intellects presage
A life-time rich in truth,

And make me feel the advance of age
Retarded by thy youth!

Good-night! propitious dreams betide
Thy sleep-awaken gay,

And we will make to-morrow glide
As cheerful as to-day!

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