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SUNLIGHT ON THE WATER.
| | THERE is nothing more beautiful than water. It has always the same pure flow, and the same low music, and is always ready to bear away your thoughts upon its bosom, like the Hindoos barque of flowers, to an imaginative heaven. |
| Unwritten Poetry. |
THERE is a balmy freshness in the air; | |
| And as the sunbeams on its surface gleam | |
| It seems as if upon the rippled stream | |
| A shower of diamonds fell: or as if there, | |
| Fantastic knit in frolic mood, some fair | 5 |
| Invisible Spirits in the instant wound | |
| On airy tiptoe through the measured round, | |
| And left their dazzling foot-prints everywhere. | |
| T is a glad sight! and many a time I ve stood | |
| Upon the fringed banks the streamlets lave, | 10 |
| Or perchd me where some rock oerhangs the flood, | |
| To see the light thus kiss each little wave: | |
| Ay! gaze even yet almost with the same joy | |
| As when I was a young gay-hearted boy. | |
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AUTUMNAL PICTURE: A SKETCH. SEE how the forest waves! The gnarled oak | 15 |
| Even bendsand as the unruly wind sweeps through | |
| Its sturdy branches, showers of leaves bestrew | |
| The ground, or diverse fly; the crow, just broke | |
| From out the warring wood, with ominous croak | |
| Wheels heavily through air; the glorious hue | 20 |
| Of the bright mantle summer lately threw | |
| Oer earth, is gone; and the sere leaves now choke | |
| The turbid fountains and complaining brooks; | |
| The oershadowing pines, alone, through which I rove, | |
| Their verdure keep, although it darker looks: | 25 |
| And hark! as it comes sighing through the grove, | |
| The exhausted gale a Spirit there awakes, | |
| That wild and melancholy music wakes. | |
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THE RAINBOW AFTER A SUMMER TEMPEST. SYMBOL of peace! lo, there the ethereal bow! | |
| And see, on flagging wing, the storm retreats | 30 |
| Far mid the depths of space; and with him fleets | |
| His lurid trainthe while in beauty glow | |
| Vale, hill and sky once more. How lustrous now | |
| Earths verdant mantle! and the woods how bright! | |
| Where grass, leaf, flower, are sparkling in the light | 35 |
| Prompt ever with the slightest breeze to throw | |
| The rain drops to the ground. Within the grove | |
| Music awakes; and from each little throat, | |
| Silent so long, bursts the wild note of love; | |
| The hurried babblings of the rill denote | 40 |
| Its infant joy; and rushing swift along, | |
| The torrent gives to air, its hoarse and louder song. | |
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EVENING SUNLIGHT. HOW beautifully soft it seems to sleep | |
| Upon the lap of the unbreathing vale, | |
| And where, unruffled by the gentlest gale, | 45 |
| The lake its bosom spreads, and in its deep | |
| Clear wave, another world appears to keep, | |
| To steal the heart from this! for through the veil | |
| Transparent we may see, tree, rock, hill, dale, | |
| And sapphire sky, and golden mountain steep, | 50 |
| That real seem, though fairer than our own: | |
| Still, picture faint of that pure region drawn | |
| By prophets pen, but not to mortal shown, | |
| Where flow rivers of blissand vale, and lawn | |
| Are strewn with flowers immortalwhere, alone, | 55 |
| Night never comes, and day is without dawn. | |
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