I For surely once, they feel we were Now round us spreads the watery plain- TO ITALY. FELT the wind soft from the land of souls; One straining past another along the shore, And stare on voyagers. Peak pushing peak They stood I watched, beyond that Tyrian belt And still disclosing some brown convent-tower Like a fallen star upon so high a point, AN EVENING RIDE. Was stealing on us. Genoa broke with day, The Doria's long pale palace striking out From green hills in advance of the white town, A marble finger dominant to ships, 185 Seen glimmering through the uncertain gray of dawn. Mrs. Browning. AN EVENING RIDE. From Glashütte to Mügeln, in Saxony. WE ride and ride. High on the hills The fir-trees stretch into the sky; Beside the road a shallow stream A fire-fly sparkles, fluttering bright Read the arrest of dire alarms That press me close; from thy embrace View the sweet earth as on we ride. Already night is spreading wide Owen Innsly. SAUN THE SEA-GULL. AUNTERING hither on listless wings, Little thou heedest the surf that sings, The bar that thunders, the shale that rings,— Give me to keep thy company. Little thou hast, old friend, that's new, Storms and wrecks are old things to thee; Sick am I of these changes, too; Little to care for, little to rue, I on the shore and thou on the sea. All of thy wanderings, far and near, Lazily rocking on ocean's breast, Something in common, old friend, have we; Thou on the shingle seek'st thy nest, I to the waters look for rest, I on the shore, and thou on the sea. THE CREED OF LIFE. Bret Harte. ANONS and rubrics own I none, CAN Save one upon the granite writ : "I, Lord of Lords, have fashioned it, And graved it with my rains and sun." AMONG THE FIR-TREES. One creed, all other creeds above Till, flashing through me with desire, It is my beating heart! I turn, I face the streams, I brave the hills: 187 John Tunis. Ο AMONG THE FIR-TREES. N the bare hill-top, by the pinewood's edge, how joyously rang the noise Of the mountain wind in the topmost boughs! a spell there was in its voice. It drew me to leave the goodly sight of the plain sweeping far away, And enter the solemnly shaded depths to hear what the trees would say. But no sooner I trod the russet floor than hushed were the magic tones: No stir but the flight of a startled bird, no sound but my foot on the cones. All silently rose the stately shafts, kirtled with lich ens gray, And the sunlight-flakes on their reddening tops were as still and unmoved as they. Was it joy or dread that pressed my heart? I felt as one who must hear Some long-kept secret, and knows not as yet if it bring him hope or fear; I stood as still as the solemn firs, and hearkened with waiting mind; Then I heard far away in the topmost boughs the eternal sough of the wind. And the thrill of that mystic murmur so entered my listening heart, That the very soul of the forest trees became with my soul a part; I seemed to be raised and borne aloft in that ever ascending strain, With a throb too solemn and deep for joy, too perfect and pure for pain. Many voices there are in Nature's choir, and none but were good to hear Had we mastered the laws of their music well, and could read their meaning clear; But we who can feel at Nature's touch cannot think as yet with her thought, And I only know that the sough of the firs with a spell of its own is fraught. For the wind when it howls in the chimneys at night hath a heavy and dreary sound Of the dull everlasting treadmill of life, which goes so wearily round; |