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-So bid the willow lift its head, And brave the tempest's wrong!

Thou reed! o'er which the storm hath pass'd-
Thou shaken with the wind!
On one, one friend thy weakness cast―
There is but One to bind !

HYMN BY THE SICKBED OF A MOTHER.

FATHER! that in the olive-shade, When the dark hour came on, Didst, with a breath of heavenly aid, Strengthen thy Son;

Oh! by the anguish of that night,
Send us down bless'd relief;
Or to the chasten'd, let thy might
Hallow this grief!

And Thou, that when the starry sky
Saw the dread strife begun,
Didst teach adoring faith to cry,
"Thy will be done;"

By thy meek spirit, Thou, of all

That e'er have mourn'd, the chiefThou Saviour! if the stroke must fall, Hallow this grief!

WHERE IS THE SEA?

SONG OF THE GREEK ISLANDER IN EXILE.

[A Greek Islander, being taken to the Vale of Tempe, and called upon to admire its beauty, only replied-“ The seawhere is it ?"]

WHERE is the sea?-I languish here-

Where is my own blue sea?

With all its barks in fleet career,

And flags, and breezes free?

I miss that voice of waves which first
Awoke my childhood's glee;

The measured chime-the thundering burst-
Where is my own blue sea?

Oh! rich your myrtle's breath may rise,
Soft, soft your winds may be;
Yet my sick heart within me dies-
Where is my own blue sea?

I hear the shepherd's mountain flute,
I hear the whispering tree;
The echoes of my soul are mute,
-Where is my own blue sea?

[All this time, her imagination was at work more busily than ever; new thoughts and fresh fancies seemed to spring up "as willows by the water-courses:" and the facility with which her lyrics were poured forth, approached, in many instances, to actual improvisation. When confined to her bed, and unable to use a pen, she would often employ the services of those about her, to write down what she had composed. "Felicia has just sent for me," wrote her amanuensis on one of these occasions, "with pencil and paper, to put down a little song, (Where is the Sea ?") which, she said, had come to her like a strain of music, whilst lying in the twilight under the infliction of a blister; and as I really think a scrap' (as our late eccentric visitor would call it) composed under such circumstances, is, to use the words of Coleridge, a psychological curiosity,' I cannot resist copying it for you. It was suggested by a story she somewhere read lately, of a Greek islander, carried off to the Vale of Tempe, and pining amidst all its beauties for the sight and sound of his native sea."Memoir, p. 134.]

TO MY OWN PORTRAIT.

How is it that before mine eyes, While gazing on thy mien,

All my past years of life arise,

As in a mirror seen?

What spell within thee hath been shrined To image back my own deep mind?

Even as a song of other times

Can trouble memory's springs; Even as a sound of vesper-chimes

Can wake departed things; Even as a scent of vernal flowers Hath records fraught with vanish'd hours,—

Such power is thine! They come, the dead,
From the grave's bondage free,
And smiling back the changed are led
To look in love on thee;

And voices that are music flown
Speak to me in the heart's full tone:

Till crowding thoughts my soul oppress―
The thoughts of happier years-
And a vain gush of tenderness

O'erflows in child-like tears;
A passion which I may not stay,
A sudden fount that must have way.

But thou, the while-oh! alınost strange,

Mine imaged self! it seems

That on thy brow of peace no change

Reflects my own swift dreams; Almost I marvel not to trace

Those lights and shadows in thy face.

To see thee calm, while powers thus deepAffection, Memory, Grief

Pass o'er my soul as winds that sweep

O'er a frail aspen leaf!

Oh, that the quiet of thine eye

Might sink there when the storm goes by!

Yet look thou still serenely on,

And if sweet friends there be
That when my song and soul are gone
Shall seek my form in thee,-
Tell them of one for whom 'twas best
To flee away and be at rest!

[In the autumn of 1827, at the urgent request of Mr Alaric Watts, who was then forming a gallery of portraits of the living authors of Great Britain, Mrs Hemans was prevailed upon to sit for her picture. The artist selected on this occasion was Mr W. E. West, an American by birth, who had passed some time in Italy, and painted the last likeness ever taken of Lord Byron, and also one of Madame Guiccioli, which was engraved in one of the annuals. During his stay at Rhyllon, where he remained for some weeks, he finished three several portraits of Mrs Hemans-one for Mr Alaric Watts, one which is now in the possession of Professor Norton, and a third, which he most courteously presented to Mrs Hemans' sister, to whom it was even then a treasure, and is now become one of inestimable value. This likeness, considered by her family as the best ever taken of her, is the one which suggested Mrs Hemans's affecting lines, "To my own Portrait." It is, however, only fair to repeat the remark already made, and in which all those who were accustomed to study the play of her features must concur-that there never was a countenance more difficult to transfer to canvass; so varying were its expressions, and so impossible is it to be satisfied with the one which can alone be perpetuated by the artist. The great charm of Mr West's picture is its perfect freedom from any thing set or constrained in the air; and the sweet, serious expression, so accordant with her maternal character, which recalls her own lines

"Mother! with thine earnest eye

Ever following silently;"

and which made one of her children remark, in glancing from it to the bust, executed some years after by Mr Angus Fletcher" The bust is the poetess, but the picture is all mother."-Memoir, p. 129-130.]

NO MORE.

No more! A harp-string's deep and breaking tone, A last, low, summer breeze, a far-off swell,

1 An engraving from Mr Fletcher's admirable bust forms the frontispiece to the present volume.

A dying echo of rich music gone,

Breathe through those words-those murmurs of farewell

No more!

To dwell in peace, with home-affections bound,
To know the sweetness of a mother's voice,

To feel the spirit of her love around,
And in the blessing of her eye rejoice-
No more!

A dirge-like sound! To greet the early friend
Unto the hearth, his place of many days;

In the glad song with kindred lips to blend,
Or join the household laughter by the blaze-
No more!

Through woods that shadow'd our first years to rove
With all our native music in the air;

To watch the sunset with the eyes we love,
And turn, and read our own heart's answer there—
No more!

Words of despair!-yet earth's, all earth's the woe
Their passion breathes-the desolately deep!
That sound in heaven-oh! image then the flow
Of gladness in its tones-to part, to weep-
No more!

To watch, in dying hope, affection's wane,
To see the beautiful from life depart,
To wear impatiently a secret chain,
To waste the untold riches of the heart-
No more!

Through long, long years to seek, to strive, to ycarn
For human love—and never quench that thirst;
To pour the soul out, winning no return,
O'er fragile idols, by delusion nursed-
No more!

On things that fail us, reed by reed, to lean,

To mourn the changed, the far away, the dead; To send our troubled spirits through the unseen, Intensely questioning for treasures fledNo more!

Words of triumphant music! Bear we on
The weight of life, the chain, the ungenial air;
Their deathless meaning, when our tasks are done,
To learn in joy,-to struggle, to despair-

No more!

2 "Jamais, jamais, je ne serai aimé comme j'aime!" was

a mournful expression of Madame de Stael's.

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