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Bold in speech and bold in action
Be forever!-Time will test,
Of the free-soul'd and the slavish,

Which fulfils life's mission best.
Be thou like the noble ancient-

Scorn the threat that bids thee fear: Speak!-no matter what betide thee;

Let them strike, but make them hear! Be thou like the first apostles

Be thou like heroic PAUL:
If a free thought seek expression,
Speak it boldly-speak it all!
Face thine enemies-accusers;

Scorn the prison, rack, or rod;
And, if thou hast truth to utter,

Speak, and leave the rest to GoD!

AUGUST.

DUST on thy mantle! dust,

Bright Summer, on thy livery of green!

A tarnish, as of rust,

Dims thy late-brilliant sheen:

And thy young glories-leaf, and bud, and flowerChange cometh over them with every hour.

Thee hath the August sun

Look'd on with hot, and fierce, and brassy face; And still and lazily run,

Scarce whispering in their pace,

The half-dried rivulets, that lately sent
A shout of gladness up, as on they went.
Flame-like, the long midday,

With not so much of sweet air as hath stirr'd
The down upon the spray,
Where rests the panting bird,
Dozing away the hot and tedious noon,
With fitful twitter, sadly out of tune.

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The fleecy flock, fly-scourged and restless, rush Madly from fence to fence, from bush to bush.

Tediously pass the hours,

And vegetation wilts, with blister'd root,
And droop the thirsting flowers,
Where the slant sunbeams shoot:
But of each tall, old tree, the lengthening line,
Slow-creeping eastward, marks the day's decline.

Faster, along the plain,

Moves now the shade, and on the meadow's edge:
The kine are forth again,

The bird flits in the hedge.
Now in the molten west sinks the hot sun.
Welcome, mild eve!-the sultry day is done.

Pleasantly comest thou,

Dew of the evening, to the crisp'd-up grass;
And the curl'd corn-blades bow,

As the light breezes pass,

That their parch'd lips may feel thee, and expand,
Thou sweet reviver of the fever'd land.

So, to the thirsting soul,
Cometh the dew of the Almighty's love;
And the scathed heart, made whole,
Turneth in joy above,

To where the spirit freely may expand,
And rove, untrammel'd, in that "better land."

SPRING VERSES.

How with the song of every bird,
And with the scent of every flower,

Some recollection dear is stirr'd

Of many a long-departed hour,

Whose course, though shrouded now in night,
Was traced in lines of golden light!

I know not if, when years have cast
Their shadows on life's early dreams,
"Tis wise to touch the hope that's past,
And re-illume its fading beams:
But, though the future hath its star,
That olden hope is dearer far.
Of all the present, much is bright;
And in the coming years, I see
A brilliant and a cheering light,

Which burns before me constantly;
Guiding my steps, through haze and gloom,
To where Fame's turrets proudly loom.

Yet coldly shines it on my brow;

And in my breast it wakes to life None of the holy feelings now,

With which my boyhood's heart was rife: It cannot touch that secret spring Which erst made life so bless'd a thing.

Give me, then give me birds and flowers,

Which are the voice and breath of Spring! For those the songs of life's young hours

With thrilling touch recall and sing: And these, with their sweet breath, impart Old tales, whose memory warms the heart.

MAY.

WOULD that thou couldst last for aye,
Merry, ever-merry May!

Made of sun-gleams, shade, and showers,
Bursting buds, and breathing flowers;
Dripping-lock'd, and rosy-vested,
Violet-slipper'd, rainbow-crested;
Girdled with the eglantine,
Festoon'd with the dewy vine:
Merry, ever-merry May,

Would that thou couldst last for aye!

Out beneath thy morning sky
Dian's bow still hangs on high;
And in the blue depths afar
Glimmers, here and there, a star.
Diamonds robe the bending grass,

Glistening, early flowers among-
Monad's world, and fairy's glass,-
Bathing-fount for wandering sprite-
By mysterious fingers hung,
In the lone and quiet night.
Now the freshening breezes pass-
Gathering, as they steal along,
Rich perfume, and matin-song;

Is fairy's diamond glass, and monad's dew-drop

And quickly to destruction hurl'd

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Out beneath thy noontide sky,
On a shady slope I lie,

Giving fancy ample play;
And there's not more blest than I,
One of ADAM's race to-day.
Out beneath thy noontide sky!
Earth, how beautiful! how clear
Of cloud or mist the atmosphere!
What a glory greets the eye!
What a calm, or quiet stir,

Steals o'er Nature's worshipper

Silent, yet so eloquent,

That we feel 't is heaven-sent!

Waking thoughts, that long have slumber'd,

Passion-dimm'd and earth-encumber'd

Bearing soul and sense away,

To revel in the perfect day

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But hath swept the green earth's bosom;
Rifling the rich grape-vine blossom,
Dallying with the simplest flower
In mossy nook and rosy bower;
To the perfumed green-house straying,
And with rich exotics playing;
Then, unsated, sweeping over
Banks of thyme, and fields of clover!
Out beneath thy evening sky,
Groups of children caper by,
Crown'd with flowers, and rush along
With joyous laugh, and shout, and song.
Flashing eye, and radiant cheek,
Spirits all unsunn'd bespeak.

They are in life's May-month hours,

And those wild bursts of joy, what are they but life's flowers!

Would that thou couldst last for aye,
Merry, ever-merry May!

Made of sun-gleams, shade, and showers,
Bursting buds, and breathing flowers;
Dripping-lock'd, and rosy-vested,
Violet-slipper'd, rainbow-crested;
Girdled with the eglantine,

Festoon'd with the dewy vine:
Merry, ever-merry May,

Would that thou couldst last for aye!

OUR EARLY DAYS.

OUR early days!-How often back
We turn on life's bewildering track,
To where, o'er hill and valley, plays
The sunlight of our early days!

A boy-my truant steps were seen
Where streams were bright, and meadows green;
Where flowers, in beauty and perfume,
Breathed ever of the Eden-bloom;
And birds, abroad in the free wind,
Sang, as they left the earth behind
And wing'd their joyous way above,
Of Eden-peace, and Eden-love.
That life was of the soul, as well
As of the outward visible;

And now, its streams are dry; and sere
And brown its meadows all appear;
Gone are its flowers; its bird's glad voice
But seldom bids my heart rejoice;
And, like the mist as comes the day,
Its Eden-glories roll away.

A youth-the mountain-torrent made
The music which my soul obey'd.
To shun the crowded ways of men,
And seek the old tradition'd glen,
Where, through the dim, uncertain light,
Moved many an ever-changing sprite,
Alone the splinter'd crag to dare,
While trooping shadows fill'd the air,
And quicken'd fancy many a form
Traced vaguely in the gathering storm,
To tread the forest's lone arcades,
And dream of Sherwood's peopled shades,

And Windsor's haunted "alleys green"
Dingle" and "bosky bourn" between,
Till burst upon my raptured glance
The whole wide realm of Old Romance:
Such was the life I lived-a youth!
But vanish'd, at the touch of Truth,
And never to be known agen,
Is all that made my being then.

A man the thirst for fame was mine,
And bow'd me at Ambition's shrine,
Among the votaries who have given

Time, health, hope, peace-and madly striven,
Ay, madly! for that which, when found,

Is oftenest but an empty sound.

And I have worshipp'd!-even yet
Mine eye is on the idol set;

But it hath found so much to be

But hollowness and mockery,
That from its worship oft it turns
To where a light intenser burns,
Before whose radiance, pure and warm,
Ambition's star must cease to charm.

Our early days! They haunt us ever—
Bright star-gleams on life's silent river,
Which pierce the shadows, deep and dun,
That bar e'en manhood's noonday sun.

THE LABOURER.

STAND up-erect! Thou hast the form,
And likeness of thy God!--who more?
A soul as dauntless mid the storm
Of daily life, a heart as warm

And pure, as breast e'er wore.

What then?-Thou art as true a man
As moves the human mass among;
As much a part of the great plan
That with Creation's dawn began,
As any of the throng.

Who is thine enemy? the high

In station, or in wealth the chief? The great, who coldly pass thee by, With proud step and averted eye? Nay! nurse not such belief.

If true unto thyself thou wast,

What were the proud one's scorn to thee?

A feather, which thou mightest cast

Aside, as idly as the blast

The light leaf from the tree.

No:-uncurb'd passions, low desires,
Absence of noble self-respect,
Death, in the breast's consuming fires,
To that high nature which aspires

Forever, till thus check'd;
These are thine enemies--thy worst;
They chain thee to thy lowly lot:
Thy labour and thy life accursed.
O, stand erect! and from them burst!
And longer suffer not!

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THE mothers of our forest-land!
Stout-hearted dames were they;
With nerve to wield the battle-brand,
And join the border-fray.

Our rough land had no braver,

In its days of blood and strife-
Aye ready for severest toil,
Aye free to peril life.

The mothers of our forest-land!
On old Kentucky's soil
How shared they, with each dauntless band,
War's tempest and life's toil!

They shrank not from the foeman

They quail'd not in the fightBut cheer'd their husbands through the day, And soothed them through the night.

The mothers of our forest-land!
Their bosoms pillow'd men!

And proud were they by such to stand,
In hammock, fort, or glen,

To load the sure, old rifle

To run the leaden ball

To watch a battling husband's place,
And fill it, should he fall:

The mothers of our forest-land!

Such were their daily deeds.

Their monument!-where does it stand?
Their epitaph!-who reads?
No braver dames had Sparta,

No nobler matrons Rome-
Yet who or lauds or honours them,
E'en in their own green home?

The mothers of our forest-land!

They sleep in unknown graves: And had they borne and nursed a band Of ingrates, or of slaves,

They had not been more neglected!

But their graves shall yet be found. And their monuments dot here and there "The Dark and Bloody Ground."

OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.

[Born, 1809.]

OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES is a son of the late ABIEL HOLMES, D. D., and was born at Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the twenty-ninth day of August, 1809. He received his early education at the Phillips Exeter Academy, and entered Harvard University in 1825. On being graduated he commenced the study of the law, but relinquished it, after one year's appplication, for the more congenial pursuit of medicine, to which he devoted himself with ardour and industry. For the more successful prosecution of his studies, he visited Europe in the spring of 1833, passing the principal portion of his residence abroad at Paris, where he attended the hospitals, acquired an intimate knowledge of the language, and became personally acquainted with many of the most eminent physicians of France.

He returned to Boston near the close of 1835, and in the following spring commenced the practice of medicine in that city. In the autumn of the same year he delivered a poem before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, which was received with extraordinary and merited applause. In 1838 he was elected Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in the medical institution connected with Dartmouth College, but resigned the place on his marriage, two years afterward. Devoting all his attention to his profession, he soon acquired a large and lucrative practice, and in 1847 he succeeded Dr. WARREN as Professor of Anatomy in the medical department of Harvard University. His principal medical writings are comprised in his" Boylston Prize Essays," "Lectures on Popular Delusions in Medicine," and the "Theory and Practice," by himself and Dr. BIGELOW. His other compositions in prose consist of occasional addresses, and papers in the North American Review.

The earlier poems of Dr. HOLMES appeared in "The Collegian."* They were little less distinguished for correct and melodious versification than his more recent and most elaborate productions. They attracted attention by their humour and originality, and were widely republished in the periodicals. But a small portion of them have been printed under his proper signature.

In 1831 a small volume appeared in Boston, entitled "Illustrations of the Athenæum Gallery of Paintings," and composed of metrical pieces, chiefly satirical, written by Dr. HOLMES and EPES SARGENT. It embraced many of our author's best humorous verses, afterward printed among his ac

"The Collegian" was a monthly miscellany published in 1830, by the undergraduates at Cambridge. Among the editors were HOLMES, the late WILLIAM H. SIMMONS, who will be remembered for his admirable lectures on the poets and orators of England, and JOHN O. SARGENT, who has distinguished himself as a lawyer and as a political writer.

knowledged works.

His "Poetry, a Metrical Essay," was delivered before a literary society at Cambridge. It is in the heroic measure, and in its versification it is not surpassed by any poem written in this country. It relates to the nature and offices of poetry, and is itself a series of brilliant illustrations of the ideas of which it is an expression. Of the universality of the poetical feeling he says:

There breathes no being but has some pretence
To that fine instinct call'd poetic sense;
The rudest savage, roaming through the wild,
The simplest rustic, bending o'er his child,
The infant, listening to the warbling bird,
The mother, smiling at its half-formed word;
The freeman, casting with unpurchased hand
The vote that shakes the turrets of the land;
The slave, who, slumbering on his rusted chain,
Dreams of the palm-trees on his burning plain;
The hot-cheek'd reveller, tossing down the wine,
To join the chorus pealing "Auld lang syne;"
The gentle maid, whose azure eye grows dim,
While Heaven is listening to her evening hymn;
The jewell'd beauty, when her steps draw near
The circling dance and dazzling chandelier;
E'en trembling age, when spring's renewing air
Waves the thin ringlets of his silver'd hair-
All, all are glowing with the inward flame,
Whose wider halo wreathes the poet's name,
While, unembalm'd, the silent dreamer dies,
His memory passing with his smiles and sighs!
The poet, he contends, is

He, whose thoughts differing not in shape, but dress,
What others feel, more fitly can express.

In another part of the essay is the following
fine description of the different English measures:
Poets, like painters, their machinery claim.
And verse bestows the varnish and the frame;
Our grating English, whose Teutonic jar
Shakes the rack'd axle of Art's rattling car,
Fits like Mosaic in the lines that gird
Fast in its place each many-angled word;
From Saxon lips ANACHREON's numbers glide,
As once they melted on the Teian tide,
And, fresh transfused, the Iliad thrills again
From Albion's cliff's as o'er Achaia's plain;
The proud heroic, with its pulse-like beat,
Rings like the cymbals, clashing as they meet;
The sweet Spenserian, gathering as it flows,
Sweeps gently onward to its dying close,
Where waves on waves in long succession pour,
Till the ninth billow melts along the shore;
The lonely spirit of the mournful lay,
Which lives immortal in the verse of GRAY,
In sable plumage slowly drifts along,
On eagle pinion, through the air of song;
The glittering lyric bounds elastic by,
With flashing ringlets and exulting eye,
While every image, in her airy whirl,
Gleams like a diamond on a dancing girl!

In 1843 Dr. HOLMES published Terpsichore,” a poem read at the annual dinner of the Phi Beta Kappa Society in that year; and in 1846, « Urania, a Rhymed Lesson," pronounced before the

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Mercantile Library Association. The last is a collection of brilliant thoughts, with many local allusions, in compact but flowing and harmonious versification, and is the longest poem Dr. HOLMES has published since the appearance of his " Metrical Essay" in 1835.

Dr. HOLMES is a poet of art and humour and genial sentiment, with a style remarkable for its purity, terseness, and point, and for an exquisite

ON LENDING A PUNCH-BOWL.

Tais ancient silver bowl of mine-it tells of good old times

Of joyous days, and jolly nights, and merry Christmas chimes;

They were a free and jovial race, but honest, brave, and true,

That dipp'd their ladle in the punch when this old bowl was new.

A Spanish galleon brought the bar—so runs the ancient tale;

'Twas hammer'd by an Antwerp smith, whose arm was like a flail;

And now and then between the strokes, for fear his strength should fail,

He wiped his brow, and quaff'd a cup of good old Flemish ale.

'Twas purchased by an English squire to please his loving dame,

Who saw the cherubs, and conceived a longing for the same;

And oft, as on the ancient stock another twig was found,

'Twas fill'd with caudle spiced and hot, and handed smoking round.

But, changing hands, it reach'd at length a Puritan divine,

Who used to follow Timothy, and take a little wine, But hated punch and prelacy; and so it was, perhaps,

He went to Leyden, where he found conventicles and schnaps.

And then, of course, you know what's next: it left the Dutchman's shore

With those that in the May-Flower came-a hundred souls and more

Along with all the furniture, to fill their new abodes

To judge by what is still on hand, at least a hundred loads.

"T was on a dreary winter's eve, the night was closing dim,

When old MILES STANDISH took the bowl, and fill'd it to the brim;

The little captain stood and stirr'd the posset with his sword,

And all his sturdy men-at-arms were ranged about the board.

He pour'd the fiery Hollands in-the man that never fear'd

He took a long and solemn draught, and wiped his yellow beard;

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finish and grace. His lyrics ring and sparkle like cataracts of silver, and his serious pieces-as successful in their way as those mirthful frolics of his muse for which he is best known-arrest the attention by touches of the most genuine pathos and tenderness. All his poems illustrate a manly feeling, and have in them a current of good sense, the more charming because somewhat out of fashion now in works of imagination and fancy.

And one by one the musketeers-the men that fought and pray'd

All drank as 't were their mother's milk, and not a man afraid.

That night, affrighted from his nest, the screaming eagle flew:

He heard the Pequot's ringing whoop, the soldier's wild halloo;

And there the sachem learn'd the rule he taught to kith and kin:

"Run from the white man when you find he smells of Hollands gin!"

A hundred years, and fifty more, had spread their leaves and snows,

A thousand rubs had flatten'd down each little cherub's nose;

When once again the bowl was fill'd, but not in mirth or joy

'Twas mingled by a mother's hand to cheer her parting boy.

"Drink, JOHN," she said, "'t will do you good; poor

child, you'll never bear

This working in the dismal trench, out in the midnight air;

And if God bless me-you were hurt, 't would keep away the chill.".

So JOHN did drink-and well he wrought that night at Bunker's hill!

I tell you, there was generous warmth in good old English cheer;

I tell you, 't was a pleasant thought to drink its symbol here.

"Tis but the fool that loves excess: hast thou a drunken soul?

Thy bane is in thy shallow skull-not in my silver bowl!

I love the memory of the past-its press'd yet fragrant flowers

The moss that clothes its broken walls, the ivy on its towers

Nay, this poor bauble it bequeath'd: my eyes grow moist and dim,

To think of all the vanish'd joys that danced around its brim.

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