? THE DEAD MARINER. Go there with all the birds, and seek A happier clime, with livelier flight, And mark where all its glories shone- 205 THE DEAD MARINER. BY GEORGE D. PRENTICE. SLEEP on-sleep on-above thy corse And the blue halcyon loves to lave Her plumage in the holy wave. Sleep on-no willow o'er thee bends With melancholy air, No violet springs, nor dewy rose Its soul of love lays bare But there the sea-flower bright and young 206 THE DEAD MARINER And, like a weeping mourner fair, The pale flag hangs its tresses there. Sleep on-sleep on-the glittering depths Sleep on-sleep on-the fearful wrath But when the wave has sunk to rest, As now 't will murmur o'er thy breast; And the bright victims of the sea Perchance will make their home with thee. Sleep on-thy corse is, far away, But love bewails thee yet, For thee the heart-wrung sigh is breathed, And lovely eyes are wet: And she, the young and beauteous bride, As oft she turns to view with tears TO THE DAUGHTER OF A FRIEND. 207 TO THE DAUGHTER OF A FRIEND. BY J. G. C. BRAINARD. I PRAY thee by thy mother's face By every decent matron grace That hovered round the resting place And by the voice that soothed thine ear, Is not the nestling, when it wakes Its eye upon the wood around, And on its new fledged, pinions takes Its taste of leaves and boughs and brakesOf motion slight and sound, Is it not like the parent? Then Be like thy mother, child, and when Thy wing is bold and strong; As pure and steady be thy lightAs high and heavenly be thy flightAs holy be thy song. 208 THE SEA BOY TO HIS BARQUE. THE SEA BOY TO HIS BARQUE BY GEORGE D. STRONG. GLIDE gaily forth, my gallant barque The dolphin sports along thy track Unfolds its crimson dress, How beauteous floats thy swan like form Along the mighty deep, While the moon's rays in silent pomp Upon the billows sleep! To rival thee, earth's loveliest charms In vain display their store, As from thy prow in sparkling gems The liquid treasures pour. THE SEA BOY TO HIS BARQUE. The breeze is fair, the anchor's weighed, And, as recedes the land, Headland and cliff, in distance dim, Like giant shadows stand. His matchless pinions first surpassed When from their chambers in the skies And, borne upon the whirlwind's wrath, With fearless steps I tread thy deck, Thou proudly rear'st thy form. We go, my barque, where incense floats And from the cushioned mosque is heard Resounds the solemn cry "To Allah!' wafted on the breeze, Fair Venice too, with mirrored bay, 209 |