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With its little lone music so silvery and meek,

And the sweet lisping fall, and the landscape so

still,

Seem'd as first infant essays of Silence to speak

The moon slowly rising behind the tall trees,

Her silver globe seem'd to suspend from the pine'T was the calm lamp of Silence—the leaves felt no

breeze,

And the world at that moment seem'd form'd but to

shine.

All soothed and subdued in the midst of the scene,
God of Nature! I cried, here Religion may kneel-
This temple thou fillest!-majestic, serene-
On this turf let me worship!—the GODHEAD I feel.

LOVE.

THEY sin who tell us Love can die :
With life all other passions fly,

All others are but vanity.

In heaven Ambition cannot dwell,
Nor Avarice in the vaults of hell;
Earthly these passions of the earth,
They perish where they have their birth;
But Love is indestructible.

Its holy flame forever burneth,

From heaven it came, to heaven returneth;

Too oft on earth a troubled guest,

At times deceived, at times oppress'd,

It here is tried and purified,

Then hath in heaven its perfect rest;
It soweth here with toil and care,
But the harvest-time of Love is there.
Oh! when the mother meets on high
The babe she loved in infancy;

Hath she not then, for pains and fears,
The day of wo, the watchful night,
For all her sorrow, all her tears,
An over-payment of delight!

THE ORPHAN'S HYMN.

WHERE shall the child of sorrow find
A place for calm repose?
Thou Father of the fatherless,
Pity the orphan's woes!

What friend have I in Heaven or earth,
What friend to trust but thee?
My father's dead-my mother's dead;
My God, remember me!

Thy gracious promise now fulfil,
And bid my trouble cease;
In thee the fatherless shall find
Pure mercy, grace and peace.

I've not a secret care or pain,
But he that secret knows;
Thou, Father of the fatherless,
Pity the orphan's woes!

"O THAT I HAD WINGS LIKE A DOVE!"

O, COULD the soul oppress'd with care
Shake off her deadly load;

Spring upward to the realms of air,

And seek a new abode;

Where misery's gnawing pang should cease, And hope forever dwell with peace.

Methinks 't were sweet to soar on high,

And feel the heart grow light,

To see the gloomy cloud pass by,
And all around look bright;

To leave behind the weight of pain,
And sorrow, with her fearful train.

How would the spirit joy to look
On all she left below,

And, as her parting glance she took,
With hope triumphant glow;

And think that all her toils were o'er,
When she had gain'd that peaceful shore.

God of eternity! from thee

This feeble being came,

Thine eye its hidden springs can see,
Thou know'st its inmost frame;
And in its ways and wanderings still
'Tis but the creature of thy will.

O! if o'er all its varying fate

Thy hand supreme presides,

And tempering affliction's weight,
The stroke in mercy guides,
With meek submission let me bend,
And thy unseen design attend.

AUTUMN.

NAY, William, nay, not so; the changeful year
In all its due successions to my sight
Presents but varied beauties, transient all,

All in their season good. These fading leaves
That with their rich variety of hues

Make yonder forest in the slanting sun

So beautiful, in you awake the thought

Of winter, cold, drear winter, when these trees
Each like a fleshless skeleton shall stretch

Its bare brown boughs; when not a flower shall spread

Its colors to the day, and not a bird

Carol its joyance, but all nature wear
One sullen aspect, bleak and desolate,
To eye, ear, feeling, comfortless alike.
To me their many-colored beauties speak
Of times of merriment and festival,
The year's best holiday: I call to mind
The schoolboy days, when in the falling leaves
I saw with eager hope the pleasant sign
Of coming Christmas, when at morn I took
My wooden kalendar, and counting up
Once more its often-told account, smooth'd off

Each day with more delight the daily notch.
To you the beauties of the autumnal year
Make mournful emblems, and you think of man
Doom'd to the grave's long winter, spirit-broke,
Bending beneath the burden of his years,

Sense-dull'd and fretful, "full of aches and pains,"
Yet clinging still to life. To me they show
The calm decay of nature, when the mind
Retains its strength, and in the languid eye
Religion's holy hopes kindle a joy

That makes old age look lovely. All to you
Is dark and cheerless; you in this fair world
See some destroying principle abroad,
Air, earth, and water full of living things,
Each on the other preying; and the ways
Of man, a strange perplexing labyrinth,
Where crimes and miseries, each producing each,
Render life loathsome, and destroy the hope

That should in death bring comfort. O, my friend,
That thy faith were as mine! that thou couldst see
Death still producing life, and evil still

Working its own destruction; couldst behold
The strifes and tumults of this troubled world

With the strong eye that sees the promised day
Dawn through this night of tempest! all things then
Would minister to joy; then should thy heart
Be heal'd and harmonized, and thou shouldst feel
God always, everywhere, and all in all.

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