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THE APPROACH OF SPRING. REJOICE, my little merry mate,

The blithesome spring is coming, When thou shalt roam, with heart elate, To hear the wild bee humming ; To hear the wild bee humming round The primrose, sweetly blowing, And listen to each gentle sound Of gladsome music flowing.

The birds shall sing from many a bower, Joy like thy own obeying ;

And, round full many a blooming flower,
The butterfly be playing;—

Be playing, love on wings as light
As heart in thy young bosom,
And showing tints as fair and bright
As does the opening blossom.

The snowdrops by our garden walk,
Long since to life have started;
They wither now upon the stalk;
Their beauty is departed:
Their beauty is departed, but
Flowers in the fields are springing,
Which by-and-by shall ope and shut,
As to the glad birds' singing.

The robin from the pear-tree bough,
Gives us of song our ear-full;
The morns are getting lightsome now,
The evenings growing cheerful :

And soon they'll be more long and light,

With warm and pleasant weather;

And we, to see the sunset bright,

May go abroad together.

Then shall our summer haunts again
Renew their former pleasures;

The poplar grove, the shady lane,
For thee be full of treasures:

For flowers are treasures unto thee,
And well thou lov'st to find them;
To gather them with childish glee,
And then in posies bind them.

Spring is to me no merry time;
Its smiles are touched with sadness;
For vanish'd, with life's early prime,
Is much that gave it gladness.
Yet, merry playmate, for thy sake,
I will not sing of sorrow;

But since thou canst its joys partake,
I would 'twere spring to-morrow.

Bernard Barton: 1784-1849.

Bernard Barton was employed in a bank at Woodbridge, in Suffolk, when he published his first volume of poems in 1820. The success of his venture tempted him to renounce business for a literary life, but Lord Byron and Charles Lamb, though they encouraged him to continue writing, dissuaded him from trusting entirely to the pen. Barton produced several other volumes of poetry, and in his latter days received a government pension of £100 a year. He was a member of the Society of Friends.

TO SPRING.

O THOU, delicious Spring!

Nursed in the lap of thin and subtle showers,
Which fall from clouds that lift their snowy wing
From odorous beds of light-enfolded flowers,
And from enmassèd bowers,

That over grassy walks their greenness fling,-
Come, gentle Spring!

Come to us: for thou art

Like the fine love of children, gentle Spring!
Touching the sacred feeling of the heart,

Or like a virgin's pleasant welcoming;

And thou dost ever bring

A tide of gentle but resistless art
Upon the heart.

Red Autumn from the South

Contends with thee; alas! what may he show?
What are his purple-stain'd and rosy mouth
And brownèd cheeks to thy soft feet of snow,
And timid, pleasant glow,

Giving earth-piercing flowers their primal1 growth,
And greenest youth?

Gay Summer conquers thee,

And yet he has no beauty such as thine:
What is his ever-streaming fiery sea,
To the pure glory that with thee doth shine?
Thou season most divine !

What may his dull and lifeless minstrelsy
Compare with thee?

Come, sit upon the hills,

And bid the waking streams leap down their side,
And green the vales with their slight-sounding rills!
And when the stars upon the sky shall glide,

And crescent Dian 2 ride,

I too will breathe of thy delicious thrills,
On grassy hills.

Alas! bright Spring! not long

Shall I enjoy thy pleasant influence:

For thou shalt die the summer heat among, Sublimed to vapour in his fire intense,

And, gone for ever hence,

Exist no more; no more to earth belong,
Except in song.

So I who sing shall die:

Worn unto death, perchance, by care and sorrow;
And, fainting thus with an unconscious sigh,
Bid unto this poor body a good-morrow-
Which now sometime I borrow,

1 primal-earliest.

2 Dian-the moon, (see notes on Hymn to Diana.) 3 sublimed-rarefied, made light or ethereal.

And breathe of joyance keener and more high,
Ceasing to sigh!

Albert Pike: born, 1809.

American. The son of a journeyman shoemaker, 'who worked hard, paid his taxes, and gave all his children the benefit of a good education.' After leaving Harvard College, Pike became a schoolmaster, then an editor, and finally a lawyer.

He was a general in the Confederate army during the late civil war, and lost his life in the course of the struggle. chief work was a volume of Hymns to the Gods.

Pike's

WRITTEN IN MARCH.

THE Cock is crowing,
The stream is flowing,
The small birds twitter,
The lake doth glitter,

The green field sleeps in the sun;
The oldest and youngest

Are at work with the strongest,
The cattle are grazing,

Their heads never raising;

There are forty feeding like one!

Like an army defeated
The snow hath retreated,
And now doth fare ill

On the top of the bare hill;
The plough-boy is whooping-anon-anon :1
There's joy in the mountains;

There's joy in the fountains;

Small clouds are sailing,

Blue sky prevailing ;

The rain is over and gone!

William Wordsworth: 1770-1850.

(See page 52.)

1 anon—anon—repeatedly, again and again.

THE FIRST OF APRIL.

Now the golden_morn aloft

Waves her dew-bespangled wing;
With vermeil1 cheek, and whisper soft,
She woos the tardy spring;
Till April starts, and calls around
The sleeping fragrance from the ground;
And lightly o'er the living scene
Scatters his freshest, tenderest green.
New-born flocks, in rustic dance,
Frisking ply their feeble feet;
Forgetful of their wintry trance,

The birds his presence greet;
But chief the skylark warbles high
His trembling, thrilling ecstasy;
And, lessening from the dazzled sight,
Melts into air and liquid light.

Thomas Gray: 1716-1771.

A native of London, educated at Eton and Cambridge. His poems are simple and unaffected in thought, but very elaborate in form, showing, perhaps, more of culture than of inspiration. The best-known is Elegy in a Country Churchyard. Gray spent most of his life at Cambridge, for the enjoyment of learned society and literary pursuits.

MAY-DAY.

QUEEN of fresh flowers,

Whom vernal stars obey,

Bring thy warm showers,
Bring thy genial ray,
In nature's greenest livery drest,
Descend on earth's expectant breast,
To earth and heaven a welcome guest,
Thou merry month of May !

1 vermeil-red, blushing.

2

ecstasy-unbounded delight.

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