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Demeter and Cora

" Speak, daughter, speak; art speaking now?"
" Seek, mother, seek; art seeking thou
Thy dear-loved Cora?" " Daughter sweet,
I bend unto the earth my ear
To catch the sound of coming feet;
I listen long, but only hear
The deep, dark waters running clear."
" Oh! my great mother, now the heat
Of thy strong heart in thickened beat
Hath reached thy Cora in her gloom,
Is't well with thee, my mother — tell?"
" Is't well with thee, my daughter?" " Well
Or ill I know not; I through fate
Queen of a wide unmeasured tomb

Friends — With a Difference

O, ONE I need to love me,
— And one to understand,
And one to soar above me,
— And one to clasp my hand,

And one to make me slumber,
— And one to bid me strive,
But seven's the sacred number
— That keeps the soul alive.

And first and last of seven,
— And all the world and more,
Is she I need in Heaven,
— And may not need before.

'Tis Well to Wake the Theme of Love

'T IS well to wake the theme of love
When chords of wild ecstatic fire
Fling from the harp, and amply prove
The soul as joyous as the lyre.

Such theme is blissful when the heart
Warms with the precious name we pour;
When our deep pulses glow and start
Before the idol we adore.

Sing ye, whose doating eyes behold,
Whose ears can drink the dear one's tone.
Whose hands may press, whose arms may fold,
The prized, the beautiful, thine own.

But, should the ardent hopes of youth
Have cherished dreams that darkly fled;

On the Death of Mrs. Lynn Linton

Kind, wise, and true as truth's own heart,
A soul that here
Chose and held fast the better part
And cast out fear,

Has left us ere we dreamed of death
For life so strong,
Clear as the sundawn's light and breath,
And sweet as song.

We see no more what here awhile
Shed light on men:
Has Landor seen that brave bright smile
Alive again?

If death and life and love be one
And hope no lie
And night no stronger than the sun,
These cannot die

The father-spirit whence her soul
Took strength, and gave

I Loved Her When She Looked From Me

I LOVED her when she looked from me,
And hid her stifled sighs:
I loved her too when she did smile
With shy and downcast eyes,
The light within them rounding " like
The young moon in its rise. "

I loved her! — Dost thou love no more,
Now she from thee is flown,
To some far distant — distant shore,
Unfetter'd, and alone?
Peace, peace! I know her: She will come
Again, and be mine own.

The Might Of One Fair Face

The might of one fair face sublimes my love,
For it hath weaned my heart from low desires;
Nor death I need, nor purgatorial fires:
Thy beauty, antepast of joys above,
Instructs me in the bliss that saints approve;
For O, how good, how beautiful, must be
The God that made so good a thing as thee,
So fair an image of the heavenly Dove!
Forgive me if I cannot turn away
From those sweet eyes that are my earthly heaven,
For they are guiding stars, benignly given
To tempt my footsteps to the upward way;
And if I dwell too fondly in thy sight,

A Matrimonial Dialogue

WRITTEN ON THE WIFE'S BIRTH-DAY .

LOVE .

In tears, addressing the Husband and the Wife .

 W AS ever Infant so deceiv'd?
'Tis what I could n't have believ'd.

HUSBAND .

Can you , my dear, the cause explain,
Why Cupid should of us complain?

WIFE .

Alas!—not I—what he requires,
He does not ask —but he inspires .

Talk Not to Me of Love!

Talk not to me of love!
 The deer that dies
Knows more of love than I,
 Who seek the skies.
Strive not to bind my soul
 With chains of clay!
I scorn thy poor control;
 Away,—Away!

Now, wherefore dost thou weave
 Thy falsehoods strange?
Sad words may make me grieve,
 But never change.
A snake sleeps in thine eye;
 It stirs thine heart:
Why dost thou seem to sigh?
 Depart,—Depart!

Thy dreams, when Fortune flew,
 Did elsewhere range:
But Love is always true,
 And knows no change:

Wonders of Redemption, The. 1 Pet. 3. 18

I.

And did the holy and the just,
The Sovereign of the skies,
Stoop down to wretchedness and dust,
That guilty worms might rise?

II.

Yes, the Redeemer left his throne,
His radiant throne on high,
(Surprizing mercy! love unknown!)
To suffer, bleed and die.

III.

He took the dying traitor's place,
And suffer'd in his stead;
For man, (O miracle of grace!)
For man the Saviour bled!

IV.

Dear Lord, what heavenly wonders dwell
In thy atoning blood?
By this are sinners snatch'd from hell,