I've none to smile when I am free, Yet in my dreams a form I view, IF far from me the Fates remove FANNY! upon thy breast I may not lie! Indeed my lonely couch ?-Methought the breath Invested her pale forehead.-Sainted maid, My thoughts oft rest with thee in thy cold grave, Through the long wintry night, when wind and wave Rock the dark house where thy poor head is laid. Yet hush! my fond heart, hush! there is a shore Of better promise; and I know at last, When the long sabbath of the tomb is past, We two shall meet in Christ-to part no more. VERSES. THOU base repiner at another's joy, Whose eye turns green at merit not thine own; Oh far away from generous Britons fly, And find in meaner climes a fitter throne! Away, away, it shall not be, That thou shalt dare defile our plains; Thy meaner, lowlier fires, while he Joys at another's joy, and smiles at others' jollity. Triumphant monster!-though thy schemes succeed,— Schemes laid in Acheron, the brood of night, Yet, but a little while, and nobly freed, Thy happy victim will emerge to light; When o'er his head in silence that reposes, Which thou hadst planted with the thorn severe; Then will thy baseness stand confessed, and all Will curse the ungenerous fate that bade a poet fall. Yet ah! thy sorrows are too keen, too sure! O'er his pale features streams his dying lamp; * Does jocund health in thought's still mansion live? Lo, the cold dews that on his temples rest, That short quick sigh-their sad responses give! And canst thou rob a poet of his song; Snatch from the bard his trivial meed of praise? Small are his gains, nor does he hold them long; Then leave, O leave him to enjoy his lays While yet he lives,-for, to his merits just, Though future ages join his fame to raise, Will the loud trump awake his cold unheeding dust? * * * * * EPIGRAM ON ROBERT BLOOMFIELD. BLOOMFIELD, thy happy omened name Whilst fields shall bloom thy name shall live. FRAGMENTS. These fragments are the author's latest compositions; and were, for the most part, written upon the back of his mathematical papers, during the few moments of the last year of his life, in which he suffered himself to follow the impulse of his genius. I. "SAW'ST thou that light?" exclaimed the youth, and paused; "Through yon dark firs it glanced, and on the stream Keeps in the lights at this unwonted hour? No sprite deludes mine eyes,-the beam now glows Who, hidden long by the invidious veil That blots the heavens, now sets behind the woods?""No moon to-night has looked upon the sea Of clouds beneath her," answered Rudiger, "She has been sleeping with Endymion." THE pious man, In this bad world, when mists and couchant storms, Hide Heaven's fine circlet, springs aloft in faith Above the clouds that threat him, to the fields The earth's fair breast, that sea whose nether face III. Lo! on the eastern summit, clad in gray, IV. THERE was a little bird upon that pile; And made sweet melody. The song was soft, yet cheerful, and most clear, Sole tenant of the melancholy pile, Were a lone hermit, outcast from his kind, |