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Back to my heart my guileless love of praise,
The blossomy hours of life's all-beauteous spring,
When joy and hope were ever on the wing,
Chasing the redstart for its flamy glare,
The corn-craik for its secret. Who can wring
A healing balsam from the dregs of care,
And turn to auburn curls the soul's gray hair ?

II.

YET, Abbey pleased, I greet thee once again;
Shake hands, old friend, for I in soul am old.
But storms assault thy golden front in vain;
Unchanged thou seemest, though times are changed and
cold;

While to thy side I bring a man of pain,

With youthful cheeks in furrows deep and wide,
Ploughed up by Fortune's volleyed hail and rain;
To truth a martyr, hated and belied;

Of freedom's cause a champion true and tried.
O, take him to thy heart! for Pemberton

Loves thee and thine, because your might hath died,
Because thy friends are dead, thy glories gone,
Because, like him, thy battered walls abide

A thousand wrongs, and smile at power and pride.

III.

O, BID him welcome then! and let his eyes
Look on thy beauty, until blissful tears
Flood the deep channels, worn by agonies,
Which leave a wreck more sad than that of years.
Yes; let him see the evening-purpled skies

Above thy glowing lake bend down to thee;
And the love-listening vesper-star arise,
Slowly, o'er silent earth's tranquillity;

And all thy ruins weeping silently:

Then, be his weakness pitied and forgiven,

If, when the moon illumes her deep blue sea,
His soul could wish to dream of thee in heaven,
And, with a friend his bosomed mate to be,

Wander through endless years by silvered arch and tree.

Ebenezer Elliott.

Rokeby.

ROKEBY AND THE VALLEY OF THE GRETA.

TERN Bertram shunned the nearer way,

STE

Through Rokeby's park and chase that lay,

And, skirting high the valley's ridge,
They crossed by Greta's ancient bridge;
Descending where her waters wind
Free for a space and unconfined,

As 'scaped from Brignall's dark-wood glen,
She seeks wild Mortham's deeper den.
There, as his eye glanced o'er the mound,
Raised by that Legion long renowned,
Whose votive shrine asserts their claim,
Of pious, faithful, conquering fame,
"Stern sons of war!" sad Wilfrid sighed,
"Behold the boast of Roman pride!

What now of all your toils are known?
A grassy trench, a broken stone!" -
This to himself; for moral strain
To Bertram were addressed in vain.

Of different mood, a deeper sigh
Awoke, when Rokeby's turrets high
Were northward in the dawning seen
To rear them o'er the thicket green.
O then, though Spenser's self had strayed
Beside him through the lovely glade,
Lending his rich luxuriant glow
Of fancy, all its charms to show,
Pointing the stream rejoicing free,
As captive set at liberty,

Flashing her sparkling waves abroad,
And clamoring joyful on her road;
Pointing where, up the sunny banks,
The trees retire in scattered ranks,
Save where, advanced before the rest,
On knoll or hillock rears his crest,
Lonely and huge, the giant oak,
As champions, when their band is broke,
Stand forth to guard the rearward post,
The bulwark of the scattered host, -
All this, and more, might Spenser say,
Yet waste in vain his magic lay,
While Wilfrid eyed the distant tower,
Whose lattice lights Matilda's bower.

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The open vale is soon passed o'er.
Rokeby, though nigh, is seen no more;

Sinking mid Greta's thickets deep,
A wild and darker course they keep,
A stern and lone, yet lovely road,
As e'er the foot of minstrel trode!
Broad shadows o'er their passage fell,
Deeper and narrower grew the dell ;
It seemed some mountain, rent and riven,
A channel for the stream had given,
So high the cliffs of limestone gray
Hung beetling o'er the torrent's way,
Yielding, along their rugged base,
A flinty footpath's niggard space,

Where he who winds 'twixt rock and wave
May hear the headlong torrent rave,
And like a steed in frantic fit,

That flings the froth from curb and bit,
May view her chafe her waves to spray
O'er every rock that bars her way,
Till foam-globes on her eddies ride,
Thick as the schemes of human pride
That down life's current drive amain,
As frail, as frothy, and as vain!

The cliffs that rear their haughty head
High o'er the river's darksome bed
Were now all naked, wild, and gray,
Now waving all with greenwood spray;
Here trees to every crevice clung,
And o'er the dell their branches hung;
And there all splintered and uneven,
The shivered rocks ascend to heaven;

Oft, too, the ivy swathed their breast,
And wreathed its garland round their crest,
Or from the spires bade loosely flare
Its tendrils in the middle air.

As pennons wont to wave of old
O'er the high feast of baron bold,
When revelled loud the feudal rout,
And the arched halls returned their shout;
Such and more wild is Greta's roar,
And such the echoes from her shore;
And so the ivied banners gleam,
Waved wildly o'er the brawling stream.

Now from the stream the rocks recede,
But leave between no sunny mead,
No, nor the spot of pebbly sand,
Oft found by such a mountain strand;
Forming such warm and dry retreat,
As fancy deems the lonely seat,
Where hermit, wandering from his cell,
His rosary might love to tell.

But here, 'twixt rock and river, grew
A dismal grove of sable yew,

With whose sad tints were mingled seen
The blighted fir's sepulchral green.

Seemed that the trees their shadows cast
The earth that nourished them to blast;
For never knew that swarthy grove
The verdant hue that fairies love;
Nor wilding green, nor woodland flower,
Arose within its baleful bower:

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