parent tree which shadowed, nourished, and supported the fresh young tendrils that twined around it; now there was a deep, deep void within her heart. Death had breathed upon her paradise; he had laid his cold hand upon those delicate vines; he had torn them asunder; had gather. ed all but three young blossoms to twine around and wither on his clay-cold brow. Her affection for the dead was now transferred with tenfold ardour to the living; the buoyancy and hope of youth was gone; but love, a mother's love, can never perish, and her spirit, chastened and subdued by the hand of affliction, clung to Melanie as to some guardian angel, some being of superior mould, who seemed unfitted for the cares and buffetings of life, and yet foreboding fancy had never dared to whisper she could die; and now the dreadful summons had arrived; she saw it in the flushed and fevered cheek, the throbbing pulse, the eye of piercing brilliancy; she heard it in the tremulous accents of her beloved one, they mingled all the sweetness of heaven, and all the sad. ness of earth; and the memory of those tones stole over her mind like a soothing murmur, as she buried her face in her hands, and the tears stole silently between them. She was startled from her revery by a sound like the distant trampling of horses' feet; she turned-the sound came nearer-" It is he!" and she rushed down the steps of the piazza, and with her hand upon the gate leaned anxiously over the little enclosure. She scarcely breathed. It was a horseman riding furiously down the little hill to the right, and as he passed in the moonlight, hope could deceive her no longer; it was not he, it was the express; he dashed along through the row of sentinels, and waving his cap in the air, his hoarse voice broke painfully upon the silence of the night. "The enemy! the enemy!" he shouted, "they have come on by forced marches; they are now encamped within two miles; they will be here by daybreak," and he dashed on, arousing the sleeping echoes, till the trampling of his horse's feet, and the tones of his stentorian voice were alike lost in the distance. Mrs. Mentreville slowly and mechanically returned to the piazza, and a thousand agonizing thoughts swept like a burning torrent through her brain. The British army was rapidly approaching; the conflict would probably take place at day. break; her husband had gone to secure them a place of refuge, but he returned not; perhaps he was a prisoner in the British camp, and she, a helpless woman, with one young and timid daughter, and one, so dear a one, just dying, was left alone in the deserted village, exposed to the cruel insults of the British soldiery, should they conquer, and to all the terror and tumult of a desperate conflict even should they fail. Oh! that was a night of agony, and never, through all the vicissitudes of after life, did one thought, one feeling then endured fade from the volume of her memory. As the thoughts of danger and the necessity of exer. tion passed through her mind, she wiped the tears from her eyes, and whispered within herself, "This weakness will not do; I have a part to perform. I am the only guardian of my three dear ones; we cannot fly, and if the British conquer, as I fear they must, I will appeal for protection to their officers! they have wives and children." * * * * * * * 1 POETICAL REMAINS. TO MY MOTHER. MOTHER! thou bid'st me touch the lyre, And light the torch of poetry. Mother! how sweet the word, how pure, Deep in the heart's recess it dwells; It lives with being's earliest dawn; Then will I wake my sleeping muse, PRIDE AND MODESTY. Just where a wild and rapid stream Shaded by many a bending tree, Nature's fair daughters blushing stood, Oh, 't was a wild and lovely spot, Which well might seem a spirit's home! Within a broad and open glade, With proud and haughty mien, she spoke: "Then hie thee to some lonely nook, "Hast thou assurance thus to gaze On one who nature's self beguiles? Hence! haste thee hence! and hide that face, Where parent nature never smiles." She ceased-a sad, sweet whispering rose, Which thrill'd the zephyrs list'ning ear; Soft as an angel's gentlest tone, Too heavenly for this mertal sphere. 'T was the pale lily's silvery voice, Which rose in low and thrilling tone, Like breath of wild Eolian lyre, Moved by the wind-god's tenderest moan. "Great queen!" the lovely gem replied, "I view thy charms, I own their power, And void of envy, shame, or pride, Admire thy beauties of an hour. "Full well I know my pallid brow Can never match the hues of thine; Nor my white robes the colours wear, Which on thy dazzling garments shine. "But the same hand hath form'd us both; And heaven-born nature smiled as sweet As on thy form, when the low flower "Here was I planted! let me here "Receive the lily's kind advice,- In accents bland, but nobly firm, "Come hither, pure and lovely one, "Come to my bosom! what so pure, "Let the proud tulip glitter still, Cheer'd by her smile, and nurtured by her dew." VERSIFICATION OF THE TWENTY-THIRD PSALM. My shepherd is the faithful Lord, 1831. I wander through the vale of death, Even in the presence of my foes TO BROTHER L-. THE vessel lightly skims the wave, Yon islands see! so fair and bright, Like gems upon the azure sea; FOR MAΜΜΑ. THE rippling stream serenely glides, The moon hath hid her silvery face, A gem upon the azure sky! 1831. ΤΟ ΜΑΜΜΑ. FAREWELL, dear mother, for awhile May the almighty Father spread |