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The sunshine and the flowers,

And the old trees that cast a solemn shade;

The pleasant evening,-the fresh, dewy hours, And the green hills whereon your fathers played:

The grey and ancient peaks,

Round which the silent clouds hang day and night;
And the low voice of water, as it makes,
Like a glad creature, murmurings of delight.

These are your joys! Go forth,—
Give your hearts up unto their mighty power;
For in His spirit God has clothed the earth,
And speaketh solemnly from tree and flower.

The voice of hidden rills

Its quiet way into your spirits finds;

And awfully the everlasting hills Address you in their many-tonèd winds.

Ye sit upon the earth

Twining its flowers, and shouting, full of glee;
And a pure mighty influence, 'mid your mirth,
Moulds your unconscious spirit silently.

Hence is it that the lands

Of storm and mountain have the noblest sons;

Whom the world reverences,—the patriot bands Were of the hills, like you, ye little ones!

Children of pleasant song

Are taught within the mountain solitudes;

For hoary legends to your wilds belong, And yours are haunts where inspiration broods.

Then go forth,-earth and sky

To you are tributary; joys are spread

Profusely, like the summer flowers that lie In the green path, beneath your gamesome tread !

THOMAS KIBBLE HERVEY was born on the banks of the river Cart, near the town of Paisley, in Scotland, on the 4th February, 1799. He was the oldest of his family by his father's second marriage, and was taken to Manchester by his parents while yet an infant. In that town he resided many years, and passed a portion of them in the office of a solicitor there, as a preparatory step in his education for the bar: he was entered at one of the inns of court, but was never called;" having been compelled, probably, like most literary men, to the sacrifice of future prospects to present necessities.

Mr. Hervey obtained a considerable portion of his reputation by contributing to various periodical works. He collected his poems into a volume, under the title of "The Poetical Sketch Book:" it consisted chiefly of short pieces: their merit has been largely acknowledged,—and although his appearance among the Poets was at an unfavourable period, his work obtained considerable popularity. Mr. Hervey also published the "Book of Christmas," a work which displays great industry and research; a poem, the "Devil's Progress," written after the model of the celebrated lines attributed to Southey and Coleridge; and the "Illustrations of Modern Sculpture," which are introduced by an essay, giving a sketch of the history of that art from the earliest times. They were issued in numbers, but were afterwards formed into a volume: they contain the choicest specimens of the British school, and each is accompanied by a poem from the pen of the Editor. We apprehend this publication was not successful. While every other class of art had prospered in this country, but little encouragement was given to sculpture. With two or three exceptions, its professors were compelled to limit their chisels to "the making of busts;" and where loftier attempts were tried they were rarely profitable. Mr. Hervey's volume was calculated to direct towards it the attention of wealthy patrons. It was produced in a manner creditable to all parties; and could not fail to impress upon the public a more just estimate of the genius of our artists. Hitherto their pecuniary advantages have been for the most part derived from the dead. The churches, and not the palaces, of England have been made the depositories of their works. A few noblemen have indeed given "commissions," and the good Earl of Egremont has filled every nook of his galleries with them; but efforts, either private or public, to render the art prosperous in this country, were unhappily rare. Happily, however, the art is now in a very different state from that in which it was when these remarks were written. Mr. Hervey died on the 17th Feb., 1859.

The poetry of Mr. Hervey may not be of the highest order; but among the minor Poets of England he must hold a foremost rank. His imagination is rich and vigorous; and his versification exceedingly easy and graceful. He has avoided the error into which so many of his contemporaries have fallen, -the effort to be effective by the sacrifice of nature, under the idea that the artificialities and affectations of the old Poets were the secrets of their success,-forgetting that imitation is always perilous; and that it is far less easy to copy perfections than defects. Within the last twenty years, thousands of "Books of Poems" have issued from the press. It would be difficult to find a dozen that have made their way beyond the friendly and indulgent circles of their respective authors. Yet half a century ago, a large proportion of them would have been received with favour, and have conferred repute. The public is usually correct in its judgment: few recent poetical productions are addressed to the heart; and the mere act of dealing with a subject in verse, although it may have the aid of knowledge and fancy, is insufficient to render a poem popular. It would, however, be easy to select from the numerous poetical productions to which we refer, and which have been consigned to unmerited oblivion, specimens of merit sufficient to form a valuable and interesting volume; and the Editor who undertakes such a task will render good service to literature. That which Mr. Sergeant Talfourd describes as the "freezing effect of the scientific spirit of the age," has had its depressing influence upon the best and greatest of our Poets; it has completely destroyed the ambitious hopes of those who were seeking after distinction. We trust, nevertheless, that a time will come when in poetry, as in art, some portion of celebrity may be attained by all who deserve it.

If we must place Mr. Hervey somewhat below the great "makers," whose names precede his in this volume, we must class him considerably above the host of minor Poets, of whom our age has been so amazingly fertile. Some of his productions, indeed, verge upon the higher standard; and none of them are much beneath it.

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OH! come at this hour, love! the daylight is gone,
And the heavens weep dew on the flowers;
And the spirit of loneliness steals with a moan
Through the shade of the eglantine bowers:
For, the moon is asleep on her pillow of clouds,
And her curtain is drawn in the sky;

And the gale, as it wantons along the young buds,

Falls faint on the ear-like a sigh!

The summer-day sun is too gaudy and bright

For a heart that has suffer'd like mine;

And, methinks, there were pain, in the noon of its light, To a spirit so broken as thine!

The birds as they mingled their music of joy,
And the roses that smiled in the beam,

Would but tell us of feelings for ever gone by,
And of hopes that have pass'd like a dream!

And the moonlight,-pale spirit! would speak of the time
When we wander'd beneath its soft gleam,

Along the green meadows, when life was in prime,
And worshipp'd its face in the stream:

When our hopes were as sweet, and our life-path as bright,
And as cloudless, to fancy's young eye,

As the star-spangled course of that phantom of light,
Along the blue depths of the sky!

Then come in this hour, love! when twilight has hung

Its shadowy mantle around;

And no sound, save the murmurs that breathe from thy tongue,

Or thy footfall-scarce heard on the ground,

Shall steal on the silence to waken a fear!

When the sun that is gone, with its heat,
Has left on the cheek of all nature a tear,-
Then, hearts that are broken should meet!

THE CONVICT SHIP.

MORN on the waters !-and, purple and bright,
Bursts on the billows the flushing of light!
O'er the glad waves, like a child of the sun,
See the tall vessel goes gallantly on:

Full to the breeze she unbosoms her sail,

And her pennant streams onward, like hope in the gale
The winds come around her, in murmur and song,
And the surges rejoice, as they bear her along!
Upward she points to the golden-edged clouds,
And the sailor sings gaily, aloft in the shrouds!
Onwards she glides, amid ripple and spray,
Over the waters-away, and away.
Bright as the visions of youth, ere they part,
Passing away, like a dream of the heart!
Who-as the beautiful pageant sweeps by,
Music around her, and sunshine on high-
Pauses to think, amid glitter and glow,

Oh! there be hearts that are breaking, below?

Night on the waves !-and the moon is on high,
Hung, like a gem, on the brow of the sky;
Treading its depths, in the power of her might,
And turning the clouds, as they pass her, to light.
Look to the waters,-asleep on their breast,
Seems not the ship like an island of rest?
Bright and alone on the shadowy main,

Like a heart-cherish'd home on some desolate plain !
Who-as she smiles in the silvery light,
Spreading her wings on the bosom of night,
Alone on the deep, as the moon in the sky,
A phantom of beauty!-could deem with a sigh,
That so lovely a thing is the mansion of sin,
And souls that are smitten lie bursting within?
Who as he watches her silently gliding,
Remembers that wave after wave is dividing
Bosoms that sorrow and guilt could not sever,—
Hearts that are parted and broken for ever?
Or deems that he watches, afloat on the wave,
The death-bed of hope, or the young spirit's grave ?

"Tis thus with our life, while it passes along,
Like a vessel at sea, amid sunshine and song!
Gaily we glide, in the gaze of the world,

With streamers afloat, and with canvass unfurl'd;
All gladness and glory to wandering eyes,-
Yet charter'd by sorrow, and freighted with sighs.
Fading and false is the aspect it wears,

As the smiles we put on-just to cover our tears;

And the withering thoughts which the world cannot know,

Like heart-broken exiles, lie burning below;

While the vessel drives on to that desolate shore

Where the dreams of our childhood are vanish'd and o'er.

1 AM ALL ALONE.

I AM all alone!—and the visions that play
Round life's young days have pass'd away:

And the songs are hush'd that gladness sings,

And the hopes that I cherish'd have made them wings; And the light of my heart is dimm'd and gone,

And I sit in my sorrow,-and all alone!

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