Oh! for one wand'ring breeze of Heav'n; KINDAR BURIAL SERVICE, VERSIFIED. We commend our brother to thee, oh earth! Oh air! he once breath'd thee, thro' thee he surviv'd, Oh fire! we commit his dear reliques to thee, Oh water! receive him; without thy kind aid He had parch'd 'neath the sunbeams or mourn'd in the shade; Then take of his body the share which is thine, 18 THE GRAVE. There is a spot so still and dreary, There life's storms can enter never; RUINS OF PALMYRA. (Written in her sixteenth year.) Palmyra, where art thou, all dreary and lone? flown; O'er thy temples, thy minarets, towers and halls The sands of the desert sweep by thee in pride, wave, Will rush o'er, and wrap thee at once in thy grave. Oh, where are the footsteps which once gaily flew O'er pavements, where now weep the foxglove and yew? Oh where are the voices which once gaily sung, While the lofty-brow'd domes with melody rung? They are silent; - and naught breaks the chaos of death; Not a being now treads o'er the ivy's dull wreath, Thou art fallen, Palmyra! and never to rise, Thou "queen of the east, thou bright child of the skies!" Thou art lonely; the desert around thee is wide, Thou 'rt forgotten, Palmyra! return thee to earth; And great be thy fall, as was stately thy birth; With grandeur then bow 'neath the pinion of time, And sink, not in splendour, but sadly sublime. THE WIDE WORLD IS DREAR. (Written in her sixteenth year.) Oh say not the wide world is lonely and dreary! There are often sweet dreams which will steal o'er the soul, Beguiling the mourner to smile through a tear, That when waking the dew-drops of mem'ry may fall, And blot out for ever, the wide world is drear. There is hope for the lost, for the lone one's relief, Which will beam o'er his pathway of danger and fear; There is pleasure's wild throb, and the calm "joy of grief," Oh then say not the wide world is lonely and drear! There are fears that are anxious, yet sweet to the 'Tis true, that the dreams of the evening will fade, When reason's broad sunbeam shines calmly and clear; Still fancy, sweet fancy, will smile o'er the shade, Oh then mourn not that life is a wilderness waste! FAREWELL TO MISS E. B (Written in her sixteenth year.) Farewell, and whenever calm solitude's hour, thine. When the dark brow of evening is beaming with stars, And yon crest of light clouds is the turban she wears, When she walks forth in grandeur, the queen of the night, Oh! then think that my spirit looks on with delight. O'er the ocean of life our frail vessels are bounding, Oh! then come, let us light friendship's lamp on the wave, If we're lost, it will shed its pure light o'er the grave, THE ARMY OF ISRAEL AT THE FOOT OF MOUNT SINAI. Their spears glittered bright in the beams of the sun; Their banners waved far, and their high helmets shone; And their dark plumes were toss'd on the breast of the breeze, But the war-trumpet slumbered the slumber of peace. He came in his glory, he came in his might, |