For friends supported not her parting soul, And whispered words of comfort kind and sweet, When treading onward to that final goal Where the still bridegroom waited for her feet Alone she walked, yet with a fearless tread, Down to Death's chamber, and his bridal bed! Thomas Buchanan Read. THE STRANGER ON THE SILL. BETWEEN broad fields of wheat and corn Is the lowly home where I was born; There is the barn-and, as of yore, There is the orchard-the very trees There bubbles the shady spring below, With its bulrush brook where the hazels grow; "Twas there I found the calamus-root, And watched the minnows poise and shoot, And heard the robin lave its wing, But the stranger's bucket is at the spring. O ye, who daily cross the sill, And when you crowd the old barn-eaves, Deal kindly with these orchard-trees; The barn, the trees, the brook, the birds, A PASSING THE ICEBERGS. FEARLESS shape of brave device, Our vessel drives through mist and rain, Between the floating fleets of ice The navies of the northern main. These arctic ventures, blindly hurled Long shattered from its skyey course. These are the buccaneers that fright The middle sea with dream of wrecks, And freeze the south winds in their flight, And chain the Gulf-stream to their decks. At every dragon prow and helm There stands some Viking as of yore; Grim heroes from the boreal realm And oft beneath the sun or moon Their swift and eager falchions glowWhile, like a storm-vexed wind, the rune Comes chafing through some beard of snow. And when the far north flashes up With fires of mingled red and gold, They know that many a blazing cup Up signal there, and let us hail Yon looming phantom as we pass Note all her fashion, hull, and sail, Within the compass of your glass. See at her mast the steadfast glow Of that one star of ODIN's throne; Up with our flag, and let us show The Constellation on our own! And speak her well; for she might say, If from her heart the words could thaw, Might tell of channels yet untold, That sweep the pole from sea to sea; Of wonders which alone prevail Where day and darkness dimly meet ;Of all which spreads the arctic sail; Of FRANKLIN and his venturous fleet: How, haply, at some glorious goal His anchor holds-his sails are furled; That Fame has named him on her scroll, "COLUMBUS of the Polar World." Or how his ploughing barks wedge on Through splintering fields, with battered shares, Lit only by that spectral dawn, The mask that mocking Darkness wears;— Or how, o'er embers black and few, The last of shivered masts and spars, He sits amid his frozen crew In council with the Norland stars. No answer but the sullen flow Of Ocean heaving long and vast ; An argosy of ice and snow, The voiceless North swings proudly past. THE SEA-KING. (FROM "THE HOUSE BY THE Sra.”) A MONARCH reigned beneath the sea On the wreck of a myriad thrones,— The collected ruins of Tyranny, And scattered abroad with maniac glee, Alone, supreme, he reigned apart, On the throne of a myriad thrones,— Where, sitting close to the world's red heart Which pulsed swift heat through his ocean mart, He could hear each heavy throe and start, As she heaved her earthquake groans. He gazed through the shadowy deep which shields His throne of a myriad thrones,— And saw the many variart keels Driving over the watery fields, Oft, like an eagle that swoops in air, Along his realm lie mountainous bulks, The tribute to his throne of thrones, |