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      COLUMBUS

      Steer on, bold Sailor—Wit may mock thy soul that sees the land,

      And hopeless at the helm may drop the weak and weary hand,

      YET EVER—EVER TO THE WEST, for there the coast must lie,

      And dim it dawns and glimmering dawns before thy reason's eye;

      Yea, trust the guiding God—and go along the floating grave,

      Though hid till now—yet now, behold the New World o'er the wave!

      With Genius Nature ever stands in solemn union still,

      And ever what the One foretels the Other shall fulfil.

      THE ANTIQUE TO THE NORTHERN WANDERER

      And o'er the river hast thou past, and o'er the mighty sea,

      And o'er the Alps, the dizzy bridge hath borne thy steps to me;

      To look all near upon the bloom my deathless beauty knows,

      And, face to face, to front the pomp whose fame through ages goes—

      Gaze on, and touch my relics now! At last thou standest here,

      But art thou nearer now to me—or I to thee more near?

      THE ANTIQUE AT PARIS

      What the Grecian arts created,

      May the victor Gaul, elated,

      Bear with banners to his strand.45

      In museums many a row,

      May the conquering showman show

      To his startled Fatherland!

      Mute to him, they crowd the halls,

      Ever on their pedestals

      Lifeless stand they!—He alone

      Who alone, the Muses seeing,

      Clasps—can warm them into being;

      The Muses to the Vandal—stone!

      THE POETRY OF LIFE

      "Who would himself with shadows entertain,

      Or gild his life with lights that shine in vain,

      Or nurse false hopes that do but cheat the true?

      Though with my dream my heaven should be resign'd—

      Though the free-pinion'd soul that now can dwell

      In the large empire of the Possible,

      This work-day life with iron chains may bind,

      Yet thus the mastery o'er ourselves we find,

      And solemn duty to our acts decreed,

      Meets us thus tutor'd in the hour of need,

      With a more sober and submissive mind!

      How front Necessity—yet bid thy youth

      Shun the mild rule of life's calm sovereign, Truth."

      So speak'st thou, friend, how stronger far than I;

      As from Experience—that sure port serene—

      Thou look'st; and straight, a coldness wraps the sky,

      The summer glory withers from the scene,

      Scared by the solemn spell; behold them fly,

      The godlike images that seem'd so fair!

      Silent the playful Muse—the rosy Hours

      Halt in their dance; and the May-breathing flowers

      Pall from the sister-Graces' waving hair.

      Sweet-mouth'd Apollo breaks his golden lyre,

      Hermes, the wand with many a marvel rife;—

      The veil, rose-woven by the young Desire

      With dreams, drops from the hueless cheeks of Life.

      The world seems what it is—A Grave! and Love

      Casts down the bondage wound his eyes above,

      And sees!—He sees but images of clay

      Where he dream'd gods; and sighs—and glides away.

      The youngness of the Beautiful grows old,

      And on thy lips the bride's sweet kiss seems cold;

      And in the crowd of joys—upon thy throne

      Thou sitt'st in state, and harden'st into stone.

      CALEB STUKELY

      PART XII.

      THE PARSONAGE

      It was not without misgiving that I knocked modestly at the door of Mr Jehu Tomkins. For himself, there was no solidity in his moral composition, nothing to grapple or rely upon. He was a small weak man of no character at all, and but for his powerful wife and active partner, would have become the smallest of unknown quantities in the respectable parish that contained him. Upon his own weak shoulders he could not have sustained the burden of an establishment, and must inevitably have dwindled into the lightest of light porters, or the most aged of errand-boys. Nothing could have saved him from the operation of a law, as powerful and certain as that of gravitation, in virtue of which the soft and empty-headed of this world walk to the wall, and resign, without a murmur, their places to their betters. As for the deaconess, I have said already that the fact of her being a lady, and the possessor of a heart, constituted the only ground of hope that I could have in reference to her. This I felt to be insecure enough when I held the knocker in my hand, and remembered all at once the many little tales that I had heard, every one of which went far to prove that ladies may be ladies without the generous weakness of their sex,—and carry hearts about with them as easily as they carry bags.

      My first application was unsuccessful. The deacon was not at home. "Mr Tomkins and his lady had gone to hear the Reverend Doctor Whitefroth,"—a northern and eccentric light, now blazing for a time in the metropolis. It is a curious fact, and worthy to be recorded, that Mr Tomkins, and Mr Buster, and every non-conformist whom I had hitherto encountered, never professed to visit the house of prayer with any other object than that of hearing. It was never by any accident to worship or to pray. What, in truth was the vast but lowly looking building, into which hundreds crowded with the dapper deacon at their head, sabbath after sabbath—what but a temple sacred to vanity and excitement, eloquence and perspiration! Which one individual, taken at random from the concourse, was not ready to declare that his business there that day was "to hear the dear good man," and nothing else? If you could lay bare—as, thank Heaven, you cannot—your fellow-creature's heart, whither would you behold stealing away the adoration that, in such a place, in such a time, is due to one alone—whither, if not to Mr Clayton? But let this pass.

      I

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<p>45</p>

To the shore of the Seine.