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THOMAS WILLIAM PARSONS.

HUDSON RIVER.

RIVERS that roll most musical in song
Are often lovely to the mind alone:
The wanderer muses, as he moves along
Their barren banks, on glories not their own.

When, to give substance to his boyish dreams, He leaves his own, far countries to survey, Oft must he think, in greeting foreign streams, “Their names alone are beautiful, not they."

If chance he mark the dwindled Arno pour
A tide more meagre than his native Charles;
Or views the Rhone when summer's heat is o'er,
Subdued and stagnant in the fen of Arles:

Or when he sees the slimy Tiber fling
His sullen tribute at the feet of Rome,
Oft to his thought must partial memory bring
More noble waves, without renown, at home.

Now let him climb the Catskill, to behold
The lordly Hudson, marching to the main,
And say what bard, in any land of old,

Had such a river to inspire his strain.

Along the Rhine gray battlements and towers
Declare what robbers once the realm possessed;
But here Heaven's handiwork surpasseth ours,
And man has hardly more than built his nest.

No storied castle overawes these heights;
Nor antique arches check the current's play;
Nor mouldering architrave the mind invites
To dream of deities long passed away.

No Gothic buttress, or decaying shaft
Of marble, yellowed by a thousand years,
Lifts a great landmark to the little craft,

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A summer cloud: that comes and disappears.

But cliffs, unaltered from their primal form
Since the subsiding of the deluge, rise
And hold their savins to the upper storm,
While far below, the skiff securely plies.

Farms, rich not more in meadows than in men Of Saxon mould, and strong for every toil, Spread o'er the plain, or scatter through the glez Boeotian plenty on a Spartan soil.

Then, where the reign of cultivation ends,
Again the charming wilderness begins:
From steep to steep one solemn wood extends,
Till some new hamlet's rise, the boscage thins.

And these deep groves forever have remained

Touched by no axe, - by no proud owner nursed; As now they stand they stood when Pharaoh reigned, Lineal descendants of creation's first.

No tales, we know, are chronicled of thee

In ancient scrolls; no deeds of doubtful claim Have hung a history on every tree,

And given each rock its fable and a fame.

But neither here hath any conqueror trod,
Nor grim invaders from barbarian climes;
No horrors feigned of giant or of god

Pollute thy stillness with recorded crimes.

Here never yet have happy fields laid waste,
The ravished harvest and the blasted fruit,
The cottage ruined and the shrine defaced,
Tracked the foul passage of the feudal brute.

"Yet, O Antiquity!” the stranger sighs;
"Scenes wanting thee soon pall upon the view;
The soul's indifference dulls the sated eyes,
Where all is fair indeed, — but all is new."

False thought! is age to crumbling walls confined ?
To Grecian fragments and Egyptian bones?
Hath Time no monuments to raise the mind,
More than old fortresses and sculptured stones?

Call not this new which is the only land

That wears unchanged the same primeval face Which, when just dawning from its Maker's hand, Gladdened the first great grandsire of our race.

Nor did Euphrates with an earlier birth

Glide past green Eden towards the unknown south, Than Hudson broke upon the infant earth.

And kissed the ocean with his nameless mouth.

Twin-born with Jordan, Ganges, and the Nile!
Thebes and the pyramids to thee are young;
Oh! had thy waters burst from Britain's isle,
Till now perchance they had not flowed unsung.

THE GROOMSMAN TO HIS
MISTRESS.

EVERY wedding, says the proverb,
Makes another, soon or late;
Never yet was any marriage
Entered in the book of Fate,
But the names were also written
Of the patient pair that wait.

Blessings then upon the morning
When my friend with fondest look,
By the solemn rites' permission,

To himself his mistress took, And the Destinies recorded

Other two within their book.

While the priest fulfilled his office,
Still the ground the lovers eyed,
And the parents and the kinsmen

Aimed their glances at the bride; But the groomsmen eyed the virgins Who were waiting at her side.

Three there were that stood beside her;

One was dark, and one was fair;

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Where the bride were such as she!"

Then I mused upon the adage,

Till my wisdom was perplexed, And I wondered, as the churchman Dwelt upon his holy text, Which of all who heard his lesson Should require the service next.

Whose will be the next occasion

For the flowers, the feast, the wine? Thine, perchance, my dearest lady; Or, who knows?-it may be mine: What if 't were-forgive the fancy What if 't were both mine and thine ?

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WOULD Wisdom for herself be wooed, And wake the foolish from his dream,

She must be glad as well as good, And must not only be, but seem. Beauty and joy are hers by right; And, knowing this, I wonder less. That she's so scorned, when falsely dight

In misery and ugliness.

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Not these; but souls found here and here,

Oases in our waste of sin, When everything is well and fair,

And God remits his discipline; Whose sweet subdual of the world

The worldling scarce can recognize; And ridicule, against it hurled,

Drops with a broken sting and dies. They live by law, not like the fool, But like the bard who freely sings

What's that which Heaven to man In strictest bonds of rhyme and rule,

endears,

And that which eyes no sooner see

And finds in them not bonds but wings.

JAMES GATES PERCIVAL.

[From Prometheus, Part II.] APOSTROPHE TO THE SUN.

CENTRE of light and energy! thy way Is through the unknown void; thou hast thy throne, Morning, and evening, and at noon of day,

Far in the blue, untended and alone; Ere the first-wakened airs of earth had blown,

On thou didst march, triumphant in thy light;

Then thou didst send thy glance,

which still hath flown

Wide through the never-ending worlds of night, And yet thy full orb burns with flash as keen and bright.

Thy path is high in Heaven; -we cannot gaze

On the intense of light that girds thy

car;

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