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VII.

I wish I were an Empress

Alas, my cruel fate!

I'm nothing but a pretty girl,

And toil both hard and late,

And waste my youth in sighing-
Too poor to find a mate!

93

SUPPOSITIONS.

THAT Earth's no Paradise
We know as well as you,

What then? you dark dull soul!
Suppose in the deep blue sky

There never was seen a star,
Suppose the bounteous Earth

No more brought forth a flower,
And trees were barren sticks-
Like you, my worthy friend!—

And never put out a leaf

To wave in the summer wind;

And suppose the free fresh air

Were stagnant as a pool ;

'Tis possible you might liveBut where would be the charm

Of the garden and the fields

And the beauty of the sky?

And, coming to nearer things,

Suppose there were no grass To cover the naked clay; Suppose the birds were mute, And nightingales and larks

Were dumb as perch or trout;

And suppose there were no dogs

To look in the face of man,

Confiding and beloved;

No horses and no kine

To minister to his use?

You could live-'twere vain to doubt

Like the oyster on the bank,

And prize your grovelling life

And cling to it, if Death

Untimely summon'd you

To quit its stagnant shore ;

But many a true delight,

And many an innocent charm,

And many a thing of joy

Would leave the world less fair

To men of finer mould,

Though fit enough for you.

Go away, grumbler! go!

And ere you talk again

Of the utter misery

And darkness of the world,

Be grateful for the flowers.

And if your purblind eyes, My most respectable friend!—

Can dare to look so high,

Be thankful for the stars.

THE COBBLER.

Ben Arthur, or the Cobbler, rises in great majesty and grandeur at the head of Loch Long to the height of 2,400 feet-his fantastic peak cracked and shattered into every conceivable form. From one point it resembles the figure of a cobbler. Hence the popular name of the mountain.

Tourists' Guide.

I.

FAR away! up, in his rocky throne,

The gaunt old Cobbler dwells alone.

Around his head the lightnings play

Where he sits with his lapstone, night and day,

No one seeth his jerking awl,

No one heareth his hammer fall;

But what he doth when mists enwrap

The bald and barren mountain-top,

And cover him up from the sight of man,

No one knoweth-or ever can.

H

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