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ON A WATCH.

WHILE this gay toy attracts thy sight,
Thy reason let it warn;

And seize, my dear, that rapid time,

That never must return.

If idly lost, no art or care

The blessing can restore;

And heav'n requires a strict account
For every mis-spent hour.

Short is our longest day of life,

And soon its prospect ends; Yet on that day's uncertain date, Eternity depends.

But equal to our being's aim,
The space to virtue given ;
And ev'ry minute well improv'd,
Secures an age in heav'n.

CARTER.

E

THE DROWNING FLY.

IN yonder glass behold a drowning fly!
Its little feet, how vainly does it ply!
Its cries we hear not, yet it loudly cries,
And gentle hearts can feel its agonies!

Poor helpless victim !—and will no one save?
Will no one snatch thee from the threat'ning wave?
My finger's tip shall prove a friendly shore.-
There, trembler, all thy dangers now are o'er.
Wipe thy wet wings, and banish all thy fear;
Go, join thy num'rous kindred in the air.

Away it flies; resumes its harmless play;
And lightly gambols in the golden ray.
Smile not, spectators, at this humble deed;
For you, perhaps, a nobler task's decreed:
A young and sinking family to save;
To raise the infant from destruction's wave!
To you, for help, the wretched lift their eyes;
Oh! hear, for pity's sake, their plaintive cries;
Ere long, unless some guardian interpose,
O'er their devoted heads the floods may close!

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THE WHALE.

SEE, the floundering bulky whale,
Giant of the Polar seas:

Who shall dare his strength assail ;
Who disturb his mighty ease?
Now a cataract spouting high,
Playful, through his way is seen;
Sparkling in the clear blue sky,
Foaming white o'er waves so green.
Sure the mark, the boatinèn's guide;
Stout they pull the bending our:
Near his blacken'd form they glide,

Fling the harpoon-then spouts the gore.

Deep beneath his blubber skin

Fast its hold the iron keeps;

Pain'd he dives, and hopes to win

Safety in his native deeps.

Vain the hope, the purple tide,

Open'd by the unerring dart,

Gushes from his wounded side,

Drains at length his fluttering heart.

Struggling fainter, see he floats;

Now they win the unwieldy prize;

Fast around him ply the boats,
With a thundering groan he dies.

52

POETICAL

Charlolle

THE BEGGAR-MAN.

AROUND the fire, one wintry night,
The farmer's rosy children sat;
The faggot lent its blazing light;

And jokes went round and careless chat.

When, hark! a gentle hand they hear,
Low tapping at the bolted door;
And thus, to gain their willing ear,
A feeble voice was heard t' implore:

"Cold blows the blast across the moor:
The sleet drives hissing in the wind;
Yon toilsome mountain lies before ;
A dreary treeless waste behind.

"My eyes are weak and dim with age;
No road, no path can I descry;
And these poor rags ill stand the rage
Of such a keen inclement sky.

"So faint I am-these tottering feet
No more my palsied frame can bear;
My freezing heart forgets to beat,

And drifting snows my tomb prepare.

"Open your hospitable door,

And shield me from the biting blast, Cold, cold it blows across the moor,

The weary moor that I have pass'd !”

With hasty step the farmer ran,

And close beside the fire they place
The poor half-frozen beggar-man,
With shaking limbs and blue-pale face.

The little children flocking came,
And chafed his frozen hands in theirs;
And busily the good old dame

A comfortable mess prepares.

Their kindness cheer'd his drooping soul
And slowly down his wrinkled cheek
The big round tears were seen to roll,
And told the thanks he could not speak.

The children, too, began to sigh,

And all their merry chat was o'er ; And yet they felt, they knew not why, More glad than they had done before.

;

LUCY AIKIN.

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