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ny a cherish'd dream had past, The one sweet hope, that o'er us cast Its rainbow'd form of life and light, And smiled defiance on the blast, Hath vanished from our eager sight. Oh, sudden was the wrench that tore Affection's firmest links apart; And doubly barb'd the shaft we wore Deep in each bleeding heart of heart; For, who can bear from bliss to part Without one sign--one warning token; To sleep in peace--then wake and start To find life's fairest promise broken. When last this cherish'd day came round, What aspirations sweet were ours! Fate, long unkind, our hopes had crown'd, And strewn, at length, our path with flowers. How darkly now the prospect lowers; How thorny is our homeward way; How more than sad our evening hours, That used to glide like thought away. And half infected by our gloom, Yon little mourner sits and sighs, His playthings, scatter'd round the room, No more attract his listless eyes. Nutting, his infant task, he plies, On moves with soft and stealthy tread, And call'd, in tone subdued replies, As if he feard to wake the dead. Where is the blithe companion gone, Whose sports he lov'd to guide and share? Where is the merry eye that won All hearts to fondness? Where, oh where? The empty crib--the vacant chair-- The favourite toy--alone remain, To whisper to our hearts' despair, Of hopes we cannot feel again. Ah, joyless is our 'ingle nook,'-- Its genial warmth we own no more; Our fireside wears an alter'd look,-- A gloom it never knew before; The converse sweet--the cherish'd lore-- That once could cheer our stormiest day,-- Those revels of the soul are o'er; Those simple pleasures past away. Then chide me not, I cannot sing A song befitting love and thee;-- My heart and harp have lost the string On which hung all their melody; Yet soothing sweet it is to me, Since fled the smiles of happier years; To know that still our hearts are free, Betie what may, to mingle tears!" _Literary Souvenir for_ 1830. * * * * * NOTES OF A READER. CURIOSITIES OF FRANCE. _Noted by John Locke_. At Lyons, "they showed us, upon the top of the hill, a church, now dedicated to the Virgin, which was formerly a temple of Venus; near it dwelt Thomas a Becket, when banished from England....
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