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RAPHAEL'S DEATH-BED.

BY L. E. L.

How can the grave be terrible to those

Whose spirits walk the earth, even after death,

And have an influence on humanity,

In their undying glory.

L. E. L.

'Twas a twilight of Italy and spring,

With those pale colours that the sunsets fling,
Of shadowy rose, or ever they are bright

With the rich purple of their summer light!
A vaulted chamber was it,-where the day
Lingered, as it were loth to pass away,
Fainter and fainter falling, till the glare
Of taper, torch, and lamp, alone, were there,
Shining o'er glorious pictures, which were fraught
With all the immortality of thought,

And o'er a couch's canopy, where gold

Broidered and clasped the curtain's purple fold.

And is that silken pillow thus bespread

For those who cannot feel its down-the dead!

Around that couch gathers a princely train,
And swells the holy anthem's funeral strain;
Sweeps the rich incense round it, like a cloud,
While the arch prelate's hand uplifts the shroud,—
Flings, from the silver cup, the sacred wave,
Which sains and smooths the passage to the grave.

Aye, one sleeps there, if sleep it can be named,
By which one half of waking life is shamed.
Is that death, where the spirit stays behind,
With much as ever influence on its kind!
How can he die, he who has left his soul
On the rich canvass, or the breathing scroll!
What is our life-our being-but the spirit,
All of our native heaven we inherit!
How can we die,-yet leave behind us all

The intellect that lit our earthly thrall!

That seems like death, which leaves behind it

nought;

No void in nature,-no remembering thought;

Or, but the tenderness affection keeps,

Frail as itself-forgetting while it weeps!

That seems like death, the many thousands die,
Their sole memorials, a tear-a sigh!

But thus it is not to the mighty name,

Whose death was as the seal affixed to fame ;-
And he who sleeps there, dust returned to dust,
Paler and colder than the marble bust
Beside-now strangely like the face of death,
As rigid as itself, unwarmed by breath,--

It hath death's semblance ;-but, how can depart The soul, yet leave its influence on the heart!

No! when the timid prayer for heaven's grace
Shall warm its zeal no more, at the sweet face
Of thy Madonnas; nor the patient tear
Shall fall before thy Magdalen, with less fear;
When never more a saint's pure brow shall speak
Hope to the trembling,-mercy to the weak;
When the last hue is from thy canvass fled,

Their memory past,-then, Raphael, thou art dead!

THE IDIOT BOY.

A MOUNTAIN ADVENTURE.

LAST year, I made a tour through the Highlands. One day, I set forth, without any other companion than a large Newfoundland dog, to explore a new scene in the immediate vicinity of my own temporary dwelling-place. I found fresh materials for my mind to work upon, at every step; but, though nature here presented her most savage aspect, my sensations were altogether joyous. Mine was the firm step of youth and health; and as I rudely dashed the dew from the blossoming heath on which I trod, followed by my dumb friend, as he took rash leaps over many a dangerous precipice,-I felt a pleasure for which I could find no sufficient reason in my philosophy.

Man is but a miserable animal, and shrinks into mere nothingness when contrasted with the magnificence of nature. He is part of the earth he treads upon-part of the machinery of the universe; but less grand, less beautiful, and less powerful than all else around him. Who can gaze on the countless myriads of stars that deck the deep-blue firmament,

or on the gorgeous sun-rising, or glowing sun-set,-on moon-light, on twilight, -a cloud,-a tree, -a flower, and not yield, to what we call inanimate nature, the palm of beauty! And is there one presumptuous slave among us who can strive with the proud ocean,-who can endure like the rock and mountain, warring with time itself! I knew this; I had often, with deep humility, pondered on the insignificance of our species, on the degradation of our nature. But, on this morning, my sensations were all pleasurable. I was alone, yet I experienced no sensation of loneliness. I seemed lord of the grand creation around me. My heart swelled with proud emotions; and I, willingly, forgot that another being of my nature was in existence. I was out of sight of any human habitation-out of the hearing of any human being. My eye could not reach the blue misty tops of the mountains which half encircled me. My ears were stunned with the roar of mingling waters. Their loud and angry noise, as they dashed over the jutting rocks that retarded-not obstructed-their progress, would have aroused a Morpheus from his deepest sleep, had he imprudently chosen such a resting place.

I stood on a rock that overhung the sea, full of glad thoughts. I had, heedlessly, advanced too far, on an insecure foundation;-for the piece on which I was standing trembled beneath my light pressure, and threatened, with the slightest movement, to ingulph me in the waters of oblivion. Shall I be

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