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es so fair did from me now retreat; Like as the mirage travellers see upon the desert waste, In view where cooling waters seem to rise, And which the body longs to reach, the parched tongue to taste-- Alas! alas! such fancy is not wise. COUNTRY RAMBLES. Well do I love to ramble Among the golden heath, To roam, and rove, and scramble On the soft turf beneath. 'Tis there that health is ever Abounding to be found, And beauty faileth never In full charms to abound. I pity oft and sorrow For the poor city child, That ne'er the chance can borrow To ramble free and wild; It looks so pale and feeble, Its cheek is thin and white, Its sicknesses are treble, Its joys are never bright. How different is the childling That roams the open lea! A rosy little wildling, And gay, and blithe, and free. THE OWL. Thou hermit bird of tender sight! Ha! well thou fliest from the light, To lie in secret and repose, Hid in some crevice no one knows; And, wrapt in slumber's lightest sleep, Thy ears their vigils ever keep, Lest some stray wanderer may intrude, To mar thy sacred solitude. Thy pinions only bear thee out To search for plunder and to scout For prey, in soft and noiseless flight, When earth lies in repose, and night Has drawn her curtain o'er the sky. 'Tis then, 'tis then thy tender eye Is keen to see, reviewing all Which under its quick glance may fall. MINNIE LEE. A PICTURE. A maiden came to Castletown; A tear stood in her eye; Soon on her cheek it trickled down; Sore did the maiden cry. I called her to my side, and said, "Why, maiden, do you cry?" A while her weeping then was stayed, But she made no reply. I spoke to her, in kindly tones, Of friendship and of love; I asked about her loved ones, And where she meant to rove. She, with a voice in sadness lost, And choked with many a sigh, Said that her father's form was toss'd Beneath the billows high. Her mother had for many years Been silent in the grave; Her brother, too, she told in tears, Was killed--a soldier brave. And now her father's friends withheld The friendship once they gave; And she, an orphan lone, beheld No succour but the grave. She then besought some menial form Of duty to fulfil, And gladly would the child conform To many a trying ill. I said, "De
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