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60.-THE WARDEN OF THE CINQUE PORTS.

H. W. LONGFELLOW.

[See page 173.]

A MIST was driving down the British Channel,
The day was just begun,

And through the window-panes, on floor and panel,
Streamed the red autumn sun.

It glanced on flowing flag and rippling pennon,
And the white sails of ships;

And, from the frowning rampart, the black cannon
Hailed it with feverish lips.

Sandwich and Romney, Hastings, Hythe, and Dover,
Were all alert that day,

To see the French war-steamers speeding over,
When the fog cleared away.

Sullen and silent, and like couchant lions,
Their cannon, through the night,

Holding their breath, had watched, in grim defiance,
The sea-coast opposite.

And now they roared at drum-beat from their stations
On every citadel;

Each answering each, with morning salutations,
That all was well.

And down the coast, all taking up the burden,
Replied the distant forts,

As if to summon from his sleep the Warden
And Lord of the Cinque Ports.

Him shall no sunshine from the fields of azure,

No drum-beat from the wall,

No morning gun from the black fort's embrazure,
Awaken with its call!

No more, surveying with an eye impartial

The long line of the coast,

Shall the gaunt figure of the old Field-Marshal
Be seen upon his post!

For in the night, unseen, a single warrior,
In sombre harness mailed,

Dreaded of man, and surnamed the Destroyer,
The rampart wall has scaled.

He passed into the chamber of the sleeper,
The dark and silent room,

And as he entered, darker grew, and deeper,
The silence and the gloom.

He did not pause to parley or dissemble,

But smote the Warden hoar:

Ah! what a blow! that made all England tremble
And groan from shore to shore.
Meanwhile, without, the surly cannon waited,
The sun rose bright o'erhead;
Nothing in Nature's aspect intimated
That a great man was dead.

61.-CASA WAPPY.

DAVID MACBETH MOIR.

[Very familiar to the readers of "Blackwood's Magazine," under the signature of "Delta," the poems of this writer were always read with pleasure. By profession a surgeon, he still devcted much of his time to literature, and from the age of nineteen, when he first published a small volume of poems, to his death in 1851, his name was seldom absent from his favourite magazine. Besides his poems, he published "The Life of Mansie Wauch," a tale embodying the humorous side of the Scottish character, "Outlines on the Ancient History of Medicine," and "Six Lectures on the Poetic Literature of the last half century." He was born at Musselburgh in 1798.]

AND hast thou sought thy heavenly home,

Our fond, dear boy?

The realms where sorrow dare not come,
Where life is joy?

Pure at thy death as at thy birth,
Thy spirit caught no taint from earth;
Even by its bliss we mete our dearth,

Casa Wappy!

Despair was in our last farewell,
As closed thine eye;

Tears of our anguish may not tell,
When thou didst die;

Words may not paint our grief for thee,

Sighs are but bubbles on the sea

Of our unfathomed agony,

Thou wert a vision of delight,

To bless us given;

Beauty embodied to our sight,
A type of heaven;

Casa Wappy!

So dear to us thou wert, thou art
Even less thine own self than a part
Of mine and of thy mother's heart,

Casa Wappy!

Casa Wappy.

Thy bright brief day knew no decline,
'Twas cloudless joy;

Sunrise and night alone were thine,
Beloved boy!

This morn beheld thee blithe and gay,
That found thee prostrate in decay,
And, ere a third shone, clay was clay,
Casa Wappy!

Gem of our hearth, our household pride,
Earth's undefiled;

Could love have saved, thou hadst not died,
Our dear, sweet child!

Humbly we bow to fate's decree ;

Yet had we hoped that time should see
Thee mourn for us, not us for thee,

Casa Wappy!

Do what I may, go where I will,
Thou meet'st my sight;

There dost thou glide before me still—
A form of light!

I feel thy breath upon my cheek-
I see thee smile, I hear thee speak-
Till, oh my heart is like to break,

Casa Wappy!

Methinks thou smil'st before me now,
With glance of stealth;

The hair thrown back from thy full brow
In buoyant health:

I see thine eyes' deep violet light,
Thy dimpled cheek carnationed bright,
Thy clasping arms so round and white,
Casa Wappy!

The nursery shows thy pictured wall,
Thy bat, thy bow,

Thy cloak and bonnet, club and ball;
But where art thou?

A corner holds thine empty chair,
Thy playthings idly scattered there,
But speak to us of our despair,

Casa Wappy!

Even to the last thy every word—
To glad, to grieve-

Was sweet as sweetest song of bird
On summer's eve;

In outward beauty undecayed,
Death o'er thy spirit cast no shade,
And like the rainbow thou didst fade,

Casa Wappy!

231

We mourn for thee when blind blank night
The chamber fills;

We pine for thee when morn's first light
Reddens the hills;

The sun, the moon, the stars, the sea,
All, to the wallflower and wild pea,

Are changed-we saw the world through thee,
Casa Wappy!

And though, perchance, a smile may gleam
Of casual mirth,

It doth not own, whate'er may seem,
An inward birth;

We miss thy small step on the stair;
We miss thee at thine evening prayer,
All night we miss thee, everywhere,

Casa Wappy!

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[James Montgomery was born at Irvine, in Ayrshire, November 4, 1771. He commenced his literary career at the age of twenty as a newspaper editor. His principal poems are, "The Ocean," "The West Indies," "The World before the Flood," "Greenland," and "The Pelican Island." In his later years he wrote a number of very beautiful "Original Hymns." Died at Sheffield, 1854.]

ERE Pope resign'd his tuneful breath,
And made the turf his pillow,
The minstrel hung his harp in death
Upon the drooping willow;

That willow, from Euphrates' strand,
Had sprung beneath his training hand.

Long, as revolving seasons flew,
From youth to age it flourish'd,
By vernal winds and star-light dew,
By showers and sunbeams nourish'd;
And while in dust the poet slept,
The willow o'er his ashes wept.

Old Time beheld its silvery head,
With graceful grandeur towering,
Its pensile boughs profusely spread,
The breezy lawn embowering,

Till arch'd around, there seem'd to shoot,
grove of scions from one root.

A

Thither, at summer noon, he view'd
The lovely Nine retreating,

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