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ing storms; Who ne'er grows weary of her labor, And ne'er destroys, though slow she forms; Who, though but grains of sand she places To swell eternity sublime, Yet minutes, days, ay! years effaces From the dread reckoning kept by Time! THE YOUTH BY THE BROOK. [16] Beside the brook the boy reclined And wove his flowery wreath, And to the waves the wreath consigned-- The waves that danced beneath. "So fleet mine hours," he sighed, "away Like waves that restless flow: And so my flowers of youth decay Like those that float below." "Ask not why I, alone on earth, Am sad in life's young time; To all the rest are hope and mirth When spring renews its prime. Alas! the music Nature makes, In thousand songs of gladness-- While charming all around me, wakes My heavy heart to sadness." "Ah! vain to me the joys that break From spring, voluptuous are; For only one 't is mine to seek-- The near, yet ever far! I stretch my arms, that shadow-shape In fond embrace to hold; Still doth the shade the clasp escape-- The heart is unconsoled!" "Come forth, fair friend, come forth below, And leave thy lofty hall, The fairest flowers the spring can know In thy dear lap shall fall! Clear glides the brook in silver rolled, Sweet carols fill the air; The meanest hut hath space to hold A happy loving pair!" TO EMMA. Far away, where darkness reigneth, All my dreams of bliss are flown; Yet with love my gaze remaineth Fixed on one fair star alone. But, alas! that star so bright Sheds no lustre save by night. If in slumbers ending never, Gloomy death had sealed thine eyes, Thou hadst lived in memory ever-- Thou hadst lived still in my sighs; But, alas! in light thou livest-- To my love no answer givest! Can the sweet hopes love once cherished Emma, can they transient prove? What has passed away and perished-- Emma, say, can that be love? That bright flame of heavenly birth-- Can it die like things of earth? THE FAVOR OF THE MOMENT. Once more, then, we meet In the circles of yore; Let our song be as sweet In its wreaths as before, Who claims the first place In the tribute of song? The God to whose grace All our pleasures belong. Though Ceres may spre
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