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y, The fleet of Death rose all around. The moon and the evening star Were hanging in the shrouds; Every mast, as it passed, Seemed to rake the passing clouds. They grappled with their prize, At midnight black and cold! As of a rock was the shock; Heavily the ground-swell rolled. Southward through day and dark, They drift in close embrace; With mist and rain to the Spanish main; Yet there seems no change of place. Southward, forever southward, They drift through dark and day; And like a dream, in the Gulf-Stream, Sinking vanish all away. THE NIGHT. The day, the bitter day, divides us, sweet-- Tears from our souls the wings with which we soar To Heaven. All things are cruel. We may meet Only by stealth, to sigh--and all is o'er: We part--the world is dark again, and fleet; The phantoms of despair and doubt once more Pursue our hearts and look into our eyes, Till Memory grows dismayed, and sweet Hope dies. But the still night, with all its fiery stars, And sleep, within her world of dreams apart-- These, these are ours! Then no rude tumult mars Thy image in the fountain of my heart-- Then the faint soul her prison-gate unbars And springs to life and thee, no more to part, Till cruel day our rapture disenchants, And stills with waking each fond bosom's pants. M. E. T. THE BOB-O-LINK. BY GEORGE S. BURLEIGH. Merrily sings the fluttering Bob-o-link, Whose trilling song above the meadow floats; The eager air speeds tremulous to drink The bubbling sweetness of the liquid notes, Whose silver cadences arise and sink, Shift, glide and shiver, like the trembling motes In the full gush of sunset. One might think Some potent charm had turned the auroral flame Of the night-kindling north to melody, That in one gurgling rush of sweetness came Mocking the ear, as once it mocked the eye, With varying beauties twinkling fitfully; Low hovering in the air, his song he sings As if he shook it from his trembling wings. MY AUNT POLLY. BY MRS. E. C. KINNEY. Every body has had an Aunt Peggy--an Aunt Patty--an Aunt Penelope, or an aunt something else; but every body hasn't had an Aunt POLLY--i. e. _such_ an Aunt Polly as mine! Most Aunt Pollies have been th
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