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Lorsque le document est trop grand pour Atre reproduit en un seul cliche, il est filmi i partir de Tangle sup^rieur gauche, de gauche d droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'images n^ceseaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la m^thode. 1 2 3 12 3 : 4 5 6 IJ - V ), y^\^ '■ = >- ^j'^joc^MA/V' L THE WATER LILY A POEM. m By "ALBYN." .^e^ ** ^ Go boldly forth, my simple lay, Whose accents flow with artless ease. Like Orient pearis at random strung : Thy notes are sweet, the damsels say; But oh ! far sweeter, L*' tijey please The one for whom these notes are sung.— Hapu. HALIFAX : PRINTED BY JAMES BOWES & SO.N- 1852. ~^'*"^*i'iirif"'n iSMi /I U)<^ A MARK or TIIE AUTHOR'S HIGH ESTEEM, THIS P02M te INSCP.IPRD TO THE HONOURABLE WILLIAM YOUNG. Speaker of the House of Assembly of Nova Scotia, HI HUMBLF. SERVANT, « ALBYN.'* Januar> 13th, 1851. 90\34 I t^o/CH ANALYSIS OF THE POEM. ^^^^^^*^*^*^^ The subject proposed— apostrophe to the Mayflower- inscribed to the Speaker-diiEculty to treat an original subject —beauties of the sacred oracles— natural tendency of events in this life to call attention to another scene of existence- some symbols of Heaven found in nature-the flower-mania in different a ges-the water-lily selected as the subject of the poem, its aspects and influence-a practical Ulustrauon of Divine Grace apparent in its analogy to man— poetical des- cription of it— effects on the imagination produced by it-% monitor to the poet-an useful study to the preachers of the Gospel-enthusiastic effects of it upon the Indians-the Micmac Chief— its influence upon the tribe— on the belie- on the peer and the peasant-contrary effects exemplified on a little orphan-fate of a disobedient son-the dying infant -influence of flowers exerted through life-their special uses-description of the water-lilies in full bloom -their poetical inspiration-the poet's longings to be like them- concludes by adverting to the time when they may be his only memorial. THE WATER IJLY. I Awed by the numbers of the martyr hos; Once crown'd with bays, now in obl.vion lost — By adverse fate a niche in fame denied, Nor epitaph— but that they sung and died ;— And oft admonish'd, by the distance still That is between me and the forked hill, (Where waves the laurel, with unfading leaves^ That half the theft of hoary time retrieves) How faint the hope, that e'er the sacred vine, May in its foliage wreathe a verse of mine — I pause to mark some wilding in the West, Whereon my mera'ry may hereafter rest; Not those by genius from Parnassus torn — But these the persevering may adorn — Some simple blossom, native and unsung, Of Nova Scotia's fragrant lineage sprung, Such as the woodman's hand may not deflow'r, Nor Micmac banish from his rustic bow'r ; And could I choose — how apposite appears That spotless plume the water lily bears. it [li ^ THE WATER LILY, Nurseling of Naturo ! Keepsake of the past ! Born in the storm, and cherish'd in the blasts- Record of lovers ! whether to thy name April or May paternity lay claim, A transcript of the Nova-Scotian's mind Is with the story of thy life entwined ; What time the school-boy finds thee in the shade. The doep foundations of his joy are laid, The pure emotions that ambition gives, Within his bosom then awakes and lives! Thy home, the wild, the frost thy swaddl'ng band, Thy beauty brightens by the tempest fann'd, A placid smile for ever on thy face, Tho' clasped firm in wmter's rude embrace- Thy purple blushes lavish'd on the snow, Rich in perfume and captivating glow. L'nfading still, as by the minstrel breathed. (») Abide the virtues upon thee en wreathed • The mirror, where Acadia's daughters see Their charms reflected, may be found in thee Our statesmen's ardour, and our patriot's fire, Thy sybil leaves can hush, or can inspire : Those aspirations, in the breast of Howe/ Their first beginnings to thy beauties owe' — The very manner, and the very mien. Brought "Ornus" homage, upon thee' are seen.in Sweetness like thine can tyranny restrain. Nor such a jewel despots dare profane ; J THE WATER LILY. 9 ■3 I And unpretending iho' thy form appear, No craven eye beholds it without fear ; O ! ever sacred unto freedom, be Tiie happy land that is embalmed by thee ! Legend of plighted troth— and broken vow Forgotten— but for thee forgotten now ; Those promises, that unperformed remain, Are in thy presence whisper'd o'er again, (Alas for these that wantonly impart A secret wound to a confiding heart) Hopes that have been, and happiness to be. Smiles— tears— and sighs, are register'd on thvo : Pathos and pleasure from thine odours rise, And pity's tale hid in thy blossom lies. Flow'r of the forest, by the muse controH'd, My numbers now may not thy lore unfold, But ev'n when kneeling at thy rival's shrine. I'he yearnings of the poets heart are thine. 'Tis not because that in the modern time A high regard seems higher set in rhyme, Nor, that the letterd and the learn'd may see How unforgoften friendship is by me, Nor euio; 'se your cultivated mind, Distinguish'd justly by a taste refined. Young— that the muse, auspiciously with nio, Connnends the labours of our love to thee,— Hut that ray own, m ly, witli the Speaker's name Become associate in tlie rolls of fame, ^0 THE WATER LILY. I i Be"th"l! t""""' '"=" '■^<"" ""»"'« spring Be shelter'd under erudiiion's wing. ^ In Earth or Heaven, (ha, prophets have not seen Wmt„„en.p,oy.dsi.ih.,,de';,hatsul "" Some sacred purpose is not called to eiP ^ hat mtght a hving majesty diffuse Upon the sculpture fashion'd by the muse i«-t apart, and syllables in rhvme VVah p,gmy fingers point to the ...Liime. Unto the lively oracles belong John s Revelation, and Isaiah's verse Various and vast ,n beams of glory sliine rheir images of Deity's design • ^or less the bold conception that appears [..What has tiiigled thro' E.eKieis'e'a";- , f"""' " «"""ing, Iho' the strokes be fe-v '" t uu appalling profile Nahum dretv ' And jn the Epic, Job has pcncill'd, liv^s A grandeur only inspiration gives — tmblcinsof Love, the flow'rs around us rise N:h'':::rT™''"'^^'-'''-'--""hes:i ■,. No have the elements a type tbat's free Or I nprofaned, ,f borrow'd now by me Look webeneath, Where torment never ends, ' And all that s terrible wuh us descends: I THE WATER LILY. U God's wrath poiir'd out; th' inhabitants that dwell In quenchless fire, prepared for them in hell. And if above, among salvation's heirs, Whate'er gives joy is consecrated theirs ; Nor is the sea of mingled glass and gold, And mighty angels, half that we behold. But, in the glow of metaphor, we seom To see the souls Messiah did redeem, And almost lift our voices to begin Thesongsof them that have been wash'd from sin. Can it be strange thp.t in a state like ours, Where day by day we lose life's cherish'd flow'rs: Where oftentimes the heart is rent m twain, And only closes to be cleft again. If in the visions of a world to come, And the frail tenure of our earthly home, O ! is it strange, if what may this succeed, Be sometimes forced upon our " ea'-nest heed ;" Or in reflecting where reflections yield. No information of the unreveald. If yet of Heav'n the poet's plastic eye. One figure more should labour to supply ; . Or that the harp uiterpreting his mind Should bid it live with melody enshrined. Need I exhaust, what may exhausted seem. The' still to poets an exhaustless 'leme; The attributes that to the Rose belong, Its very names lends sweetness unto song. 12 THE WATER LILY, Or bring the diamond from the distant mine, And bid It in celestial splendour shine- Or with the stars of morning for my guide, 1 he dew-drops gather from the mountain side • Ur make the pearls that strew the mighty deep, t nfoxd the secrets they are charged to keep. i\o— all to me are tokens from above And bear the impress of Almighty lo've, Hut more illustrious to poetic eyes— The glorious Lily on the water lies. The time has been— nor distant is the age, VVhen Roses were with amateurs the rage • The mania changed, and tulips next became ' ^® incarnation of undying fame ; Then rose an era when the Dahlia tribe Had all the virtues they to flow'rs ascribe. And now surpassing those that erst have been. Camellias and Japonica's are seen ; '^Vhat bold usurper's destined to efface This dynasty, it is not mine to trace: Or what exotic, with epiienvral pride, May o'er the hot-house multitude preside. As fancy dictat(3s, or caprice inclines, ^liail be the household Deity tliat shines. But water-lilies to my verse can give An annual verdure and a name to live. When from repose these peerless .^ems awake As the soft zephyrs kiss the tranquil lake. THE WATER LIUY. 13 i i And blushing wavelets to the shores confess, To them how pleasing felt the fond caress ; In strange astonishment the mind beholds A living type of Heav'n beneath thoir folds ; Meekness and peace and innocence and joy, At once the senses and ;he soul empby; They seem exempted from the awful doom That robb'd the earth of its primeval bloom, And in the incense that they breathe around, An atmosphere of holiness is found. Could spirits dwelling in the realms of bUss, Pass the fixed gulf and be our guests in this, How meet it were their communing with ours, Should be the speechless rhetoric of flow'rs, And what immortals would to mortals say— The water-lilies could to them convey. Another end — and more important still, (To us the most important they fulfil) Is to the senses evidence address, Of what the souls that's sanctified possess, And aid perceptions that we entertain. Of what they are that have been born again ; There Nicodemus might behold them stand, An illustration of the Lord's command ; Nor faith be stagger' d where the eye perceives His doctrine symbol'd on their snowy leaves, And the transforming influence of grace In " operation " on cur fallen race ; a THE WATER LILY. I tpon their structure vividly pourtray'd W.lhout-beyond imagination's aid Ahke to the wayfaring and tlie wise, rhe pleasing paraphrase tliat meets our eyes • In the,r transition from the vile of things ' And soaring sunward with rejoicing w.ngs Are we no. taught regenerating poter ^' And bliss begun by this enchanting flower. Ah ! had that emblem never bless'd the sieht Nor bared its bosom to the beams of ligh ^ What such a mirrcr to the sceptic sliows ■ i)s not by chance analogy became ^ c osely copied from the human frame ^or that a fabricthat in filth began, MiouM evidence affinity to man And without trenching upon hall'ow'd ground Mill stronger might the simile be found Pre-emment in attributes and grace Above its fellows of tiie floral r -e • ' A purer element than earth is given' 10 this imposing messenger of Heaven In attestation of the higher powers ' It manifests among the elect flow'rs ■ It bloom d for nothing but thatit mi-^ht fade Or count the musings that it may ii^pe' The empty flourish of a frenzied ly./' THE WATER LILV. )& Beauty is there — but is not there alone, The sister graces cluster round tliat throne: Quiescent some — some more with pomp appear, And the insiguia of their order wear. Tliere modesty still bashful, to be seen, Altho' at home — on loveliness doth lean. Whilst loveliness shows a confiding air, And lovelier seems to see her fav'rite there. Untouch'd by nature's pencil is the hue Of innocence — yet naked to the view. Her tresses are not braided up beneath. Such circlet as her fellow-virgins wreath; But in uncropt luxuriance at her feet. Unclasping thence the volumed ringlets meet; Nor are the charms that sweetness call her own There undistinguished or their power unknown; In vain her mantle's amplitude — and vain The measured distance that she would maintain. When thro' the blush of mingled "gold and green," The magic bracelets of the nymph are seen, And in her smile an amulet is found. 4 Disarms the envious of the power to wound. Can it be fancy, o: docs pleasure's voice Bid the faint pulses of the heart rejoice, \ hear a tone ascending from the lake. More exquisite than ev'n the harp can make; Ineffable thro' ev'ry nerve it thrills, And the rapt soul with deep emotion fills; 16 THE WATER LILY. IJ 'Tis tlie celestial visitants begun Their salutations to the rising sun • Whilst from the liquid temple every eye Instinctive opens to the orient sky • Tho,. leaves are vocal with the hymn of praise, 1 hat evn the floors to their creator raise. Woe to Bethsaida-to Chorazin woe, tjxalted high-their doom is to be low U Sodom and Gommorha against them ^e made the evidence that shall condemn Pausenot,0!Albyn, to record the sham'e Of infideis that bear the christian name- But tremble lest the water-lilies be In ihe last judgment found accusing thee. How oft distracted-and distracting flow The preacher's periods to an answering blow How oft the emphasis of deep alarm To tremblmg souls he seconds with his arm- Atestmg stamps the awful message seal, ' •Ihe text tho' tortured scarcely will reveal, And illustrations turn'd to ev'ry shape l-et not a shadow of the truth escape VVeie It uot christian tho' the pious storm, f^^^^^rom the UUes take ^rnilder form And earn from these ambassadors to mo;e Ihe harden d sinner with a voice of love. Not less Whc.ent what they do unfold, Iho Wi.lMhe meekness of a chernh told THE WATER l.ILY. 17 Mark yonder student in a reverie, i hi what has been — or what is yet to be : Some subtle thesis that he must explore. To guage his depth in Academic lore, Perchance the plague the seventh angel pours On this devoted atmosphere of ours ; Or v/hat is more mysteriously sublime, Prophetic Time and Times — and half a Time : ■Or if the last interpretation given, Of the eighth beast that cometh of the seven. Ev'n it that was and is not — shall be found In the Imperial President whett croxcn^d ; Or whether reprobation or free will, Require the mission that he mast fulfil ; All fruitful themes unto a student's mind, The more if either be to him assign'd. I Not now tlie subject that demands my son?; What exercises unto him belong; But mark him yonder in the noon-day heat, Ileside lake Manor seek a cool retreat; [there. How changed the footsteps that have brought him To quiet study and refreshing air; The task delay'd that he retired to con — And ev'ry trace of gravity is gone; The full-blown lilies on the waters brim. A more congenial sermon seem to him : Feeling and frame that thoughts profound benumb At once elastic and intense become. 2 1 18 THE WATEK LIf.Y. O'er fence and field he speeds with lighter pace Than the fleet moose tho' quicken'd by the chase Howe er forbidding at another time The hostile briurs-nor Jess appalling slime Impervious barriers in a leisure stroll Now goad their victim more than ihcv controul - bach tortur'd term that tells the owner's ire ' Adds to the frenzy that the flowers inspire- ' Woe to the grassy margin yet unmow'd Woe to the eluster'd berries dash'd abroad Woe to the rose leaves that around him fly Like flakes of snow descending from the skv And woe is his-the source of so much woel P ung d in the lake amongst the ooze below Ah . what advantage might not ardour gain If zeal and prudence were no longer twain • ' Not then-not then unto the swift and strong The race and battle henceforth would belong Aor enterprize Jess frequently obtain What lU-directed energy makes vain, VVhether the aim might be ephem'ral gems Or palms imperial— earthly diadems. O thou unerring Counsellor ! who still Delights in good, and frowns on what is ill V icegerent given in mercy unto man ' Attend my footsteps thro' life's less'ning span - Whilst others tread on honor's dizzy steep ' Or up the glaciers of ambition creep, »{ THE WATER LILT. 19 Bid me contented walk the lowly vale Where fame ne'er stoops — nor envy can assail ; Far from temptations that the rich ensnare, Nor agonized with over-anxious care, Where seeds of discord never yet have sprung Nor feeling hearts with misery are wrung; In faith unwav'ring — to my Country true, Nor grudge my neighbours ev'ry one his due — Such the example that a parent gave, Such the probation meet for me to crave, And if within my bosom there arise Another wish the muse may not baptize. Let kindred spirits read the sacred thought Which Heav'ns own pen upon the Lilies wrote. Not to the ken of connoisseurs consign'd The Lily's language — there the Indians find (Tho' native unto them) what never tires Tlie eagerness of unrestrain'd desires ; With eyes dilated, statue-like they stand, As if a sorc'rer stayed them with his wand ; Lost in a whirlpool of delight and awe, Seem the old warrior and his wither'd squaw, — Whate'er is blazon'd on the beauteous gem, * More must be present in the mind to them. The bow neglected lies upon the beach, The frail canoe is floating from their reach, Their wigwam distant — hunger's pressing claim — Uncertain always where to find the game, THE WATER LILY. Forgoiton these— and with the setting sun Their pleasure seems but only new begun. Here comes the chief— a man of many years(3> Beyond the scripture term his age appears- t irm and erect he treads the new-mown field— But m his eye, a tear is ill conceal'd ; In courteous bearing his advance is made To pray a favour not to be gainsay'd Brief is the parlance Indian audience needs And thus at once the embassage proceeds : ' xvu^ 'n^' ^^^^"^^'^-this land that now is yours. When Paul was young was woods, and it wasours, This naked h.ll was then a hunting ground. Where caraboo the Indians always found Here too the moose-but moose do never ioam Where the white man destroys their shady home • Nor are the nurselings of the forest seen Where corn is planted, or the scythe has been. Our game are gone-hut I remember when . / Beside this spring the bear did make his den And on that lake (the only thing I see That shows a friendly ccuitcance tn me ^ Upon that lake m nur S,. wuhout name; Prey d d„cKs and otters, or a prey became. On that loan barren where no bush now grows The pines and hemlocks in their might arose, ' And on their branches basking in the sun. THE WATER LILY. 21 The eagles rested when their flight was done. Here on this spot— can Paul this spot forget, Whore the first wigwam that he made was set 7 Can Paul forget when Aa-pa-tea became The children's mother who have borne his name? No — here each summer since she went away. I come for lilies on her grave to lay ; And here goodman, 1 come to ask of thee. That iny last wigwam on this spot may ho." " I know the winter i.s approaching nigh When the red leaves drop from theboughsand die, I know the tempest will be talking soon, When the broad belt is gathered round the moon, And when my people and my home are gone. (Kv'n to a dog companion, I have none) 1 know the arrow must have left the bow, That the Great Spirit shoots to bid me go, And in the shade of these remaining trees, ■; That look defiance at the northern breeze, With bush— and lake— and lilies in my view, (}oodman— I long to bid this world adieu.'" When scatter'd tufts of Summer's blissful green Amidst the wreck of Winter's reign are seen, From the recesses of the distant brake, The hunter brings his bow'r beside the lake, And the first leaves that on the waters rise Are unto him the highest earthly prize. How little Ip.titude to me appears 22 THE WATER LILY. I i.l And .hose h,s brother counted more refined W, abo„r cull. ,o g..„ry his mind, ' imb „r. ! """-'" ^^^P'^^^'-'Pen toys, Ambtuon s dream precuriofsly e„Ls ?rd^:r" ?'"^'f ^•'"^' " --'d no. bribe yon d.rk eyed ma.den of the duslcy tribe To yield the hly that her lover wove Amongst her tresses in the leafy grove. Umouch'd wuh joy, tho' blended wUhfl e vhoop- There savageness m miniature is seen ^' 1 hro eyes that might be envied by a m,ee„ • En .0 the least amongst them all'areTow„ • 1 he pagan altars that their patriarchs om, ' Mystertous gestures 'scaping\maj e ""' The sp„-u of their fallen faith declare And tho' they can some ritual fulfi" ' nie .valer lilies are their idols still. __^IVor has the belle an amulet of pow'r _J^o guard her from that faseinatu'g /!„;>,. fhose eyes that leave confusion in theiTwkke Uuquestjon'd rivals find upon the lake ""'' And m the tear-drops that disturb thei Raze Is seen the sceptre admiration sways. ' fPercLT" " ''"" '"' P^'"'""" ="'" 'he peer ^ (1 erchauce unconscious that they are so near,^ THE WATER LILY. 23 Tim bom to labour— ^A/5 with honors crown'd) Rapt in the labyrinth of delight are found. And in the speech that is not utter' d — tell What ecstasies within their bosoms dwell; The spell-bound fingers that spontaneous rise. From each forget their office in surprise, And only by their atiitude is told It is the lilies that they both behold. V- ^J Yet joy-inspiring as they do appear, To many a heart they painful mem'ries bear, Fountains of grief that time can ill restrain. How oft by them are open d up again. And in their season incidents arise Of deeper caste than fancy can devise. One morning early, as the July sun His journey thro' a cloudless sky begun, Beside the channel where the lake comprest Into a streamlet wanders to the west, A little orphan stood among the grass And wrung her hands in pitiful distress. To cv'ry question that the Bard could frame, She only answered Martha was her name. Who art thou, Martha 7 Tell me whence ye came 7 Why do you weep ?" The answer was the same, " What is it, child, that causes you such woe ^ Where is your liome or whither would you go? ii '44 THE WATER LILT. Have you a mother? Are you lost, or ill r- But-Martha-Martha-was the response .till. J hen Martha hnsh"-in sy.pathefic tone ihe prettiest Lily ni the lake you see.'' ; Oh . no, no, no/' the wailing one rephed. They are too like my mother when she died.' Twas noon at Preston on a sultry day And husbandmen were harvesting their hay. UFren young Loraine (an aged mother's pride Aud she a w.dow) threw his scythe aside And went to swim in a delightful porr? ' Ihat hes embosom'd in the vale beyond- a was a scene where nature's simple smiles Ihe fretted spirit to repose beguiles • A moss pavilion by the musquash rear'd Amongst the sedges on the shore rppear'd ^ome scatter-d fowl upon the surface play"d Aor of their new companion seem'd afraid. ' And Hora-s stars around the crystal throne in all their splendour prodigally shone. VV h.lst on a pine, the patriarch of a few Kemaimng still where once the forest ^rew A cam rous raven with ill-omen'd nofe ' ^Vlau. lalf tlie sense of solituie forgot • r' '"^''' "^^'^'"g '^^«^^h a ti-rni.ig sky is an oasis to the trav'ler's eye THE WATER LILY. 25 I . han to the youth was such a calm retreat. When overpower'd with Summer's fervent heat. Impatient, reckless, almost uncontroird. Indulged, until indulgence made him bold, What virtues in obedience are embraced, Were early from his filial creed effaced. And the beseechings of maternal tears Made faint impressions in maturer years; It was a crime— an insult, to persuade, And to advise (with him) was to degrade ; Thus plung'd amidst a paradise of joy, No dream of danger there restrain'd the boy, But as in heedless happiness he threw The foambells 'round him where the Lilies grew. Ere yet his fingers touch'd the tempting spoil He counted certain to reward his toil, The tangled roots his pliant limbs ensnar'd, And he was drown'd— alas ! how unprepared ! Vain was his cc^fliet with the mighty foe, And vain his shrieks of agonizing woe ; Oft in those moments when 1 would rejoice, I seem to hear that terrifying voice Screeching—" My brother, O my brother, oh ' /'m lost for ever,'' as he sank below. O'er his pale infant, on the bed of death. Thjt gasps and struggles for another bre^ith. Alive to every charm a partial eye I }; I 28 THE WiTKR LILV. •■'o'gn'd and unfeifi.-,! :„ i 1 1 The fa.her bends Iv' "''■"' '^" ''^'Y' And with a sZ ? . " ^''' '^^'^^ ^^^"ds, Lisps ::t:^r;;tr.^-;^^ -"'d not d.gu,se ^apa, o.,o L,iy now'-^anr! dies >'"st tl,. /irs niavmates If "' ^"'"^' I hat shared our smilp* ^n.? ^ years— '' '' '^'^"^^' S^^es' t Manorhill. THE WATKR LILY. • Be iinremember'd and no place be fonnd For what has made our homes like holy ground : ^ • crivc the halo that around them plays ^ '0 the herald of millenial days? Forbid it love — your empire still maintain : Forbid it hope— nor earthly bliss profane ; Forbid it gratitude— thou spark divine ; To guard affection's treasury be thine ; Let ev'ry star (for stars to me they bloom) Retain its splendour and its sweet perfume, Each has its virtues— and tho' various— each A mode of converse that the heart can reach. Their mission brief but opportune -to bless A present world and aid our happiness, And if devoid of faculties to know What adulations we on them bestoW; They have a glory— but no glory theirs Compared with that the water-lily shares. 'Tis not unlicensed thus the thought pursues A devious tract in fancy's avenues, Thus too returns— delighted to return And make life's taper more auspicious burn. Still pleased to find, however far it roam, The sweetest perfumes are the nearest home. When has the wildest of enthusiasts known Or dream d of banquets equal to our own ; m THE WATER LILY. Not banquets blent with bacchanalian rites, But these the soul to ecstasy invites ; When the briT^ht rainbow o'er the landscape cast In beauty stands magnificently vast, And soften'd sunlight mingling v/jth its rays. In ev'ry tint imaginable plays On the blue mirror of the vestal host That shone in paradise ere it was lost, Another sun there and another bow Look upward from the azure vault bc'^w, And other Lilies to another sky Display the glories that upon them lie. The diamond's lustre and the ruby's gleam, With gold and beryl involved and sep'rate seem. Onyx and Opal— and the various hues That em' raids yield and hving pearls infuse, Now one froiu one by discipline unseen Dividing spread and leave a space between. Now swept together like an ensign torn From the irradiant mantle of the morn, Or wove in bracelets clasping in the sky Stampt with the autograph of the Most High. Ah ! vain alike the poet's airy thought. And the achievements by the pencil wrought, To bind in verse or bid the canvas show, Millenial omens of a brighter glow. Touch'd by those transports that the trav'ler When lost Assyria rose before his view, [knew, * t THC WATBK LILV. 29 Nor less imperious these the pilgrim feels. When at his propl^cs sepulchre he kueelj..' Here in the forest— the antipodes Of antiquarians and of devotees. Where pagan riles nor heathen mythios mar The ligl.t'ning rays that shine from reason's star. In idle hours I wake the harp to tell What kindred feelings in my bosom dwell. A stranger to the knowledge that is hid In marble manuscript and pyramid, Yet on these Lilies undiscypher'd still. I see God's finger, and I read his will- Old as creation — yet for ever new, Year after year they open to my view. Nor can the critic's or the linguist's eye Find error there — nor expletive espy. Poet of Flora — how I long to be Cleansed from defilement and made like to thrc, Where such commanding miluence besides A fair and faultless symmetry abides. 'Tis not enough that blamelessness belong To t!ie remembrance of a child of song ; 1 would some principle of nobler claim. Should give an odour unto Albyn's naniP. If covetous — I covet without sin, The best of gifts — a holiness within. Studious — but studious with no vain dcsirr To emulate the Lily's pure attire ; THE WATER LILY. Tliat wlien my pilgrim years have passd away, 1 may rejoice in everlasting day. Who knows but Avheii the closing scene is o'er. When nniie the harp, and Albyn is no more. When the grey stone grown weary of its trust, Sinks down with age and crumbles into dust. When e'en the friends that sympathies endear, No longer deem rememb'rance worth a tear. And the last reliquc Manorhill forgoes, That now the spirit of the poet shows. Ah ! then, who knows but each returning Spring A living mirror of the Bard may bring, And this unchiseird epitaph of mine, In hieroglyphics on the lake recline; K'cn human frailties that create surprize. Seen thro' the telescope of human eyes. When filtered through .he purifier — Time — May flow out virtues faultlessly sublime. And the dishonor that attends the tomb. Lost in the beautv of tlie Lilv's bloom. fINIS. NOTES Note 1.— Page 8. '•' Unfading still as by ihe minstrel breathed, Abide the virtues upon the unwrealliod." The following Lyric was written by Albyn, at llie time of Queen Victoria's Coronation : — " The red Rose of England — th'^ Shamrock of Erin, And Scotia's proud Thistle, are symbols of pow^er ; But the emblem Fidelity lov°s to appear in, Is Beauty's own blossom — Acadia's Mayflower. How dear to our hearts when with dew-drons empearl'd. It peers through the snow-wreath that mantled it o'er ; O ! never has summer sent forth such a herald Aa Beauty's own blossom — i\cadia's Mayflower. At home in the forest our forefathers found it, Wherever the Micmac had planted his bow'r ; Their children have blazon'd their friendship around it, The blossom of Beauty — Acadia's Mayflower. Sweet gem of the West, with what rapttire we view it Bloom 'round u'^ in peace — and if battle should low'r. The blood often thousand brave hearts would bedew it. Ere tyrantt .nirbt tread on 't — Acadia's Mayflower. O ! green be thy leaf, lovely flow'ret for ever, And distant — far-distant — thy scent-fading hour; May the last step of Time be the signal to sever The shrine from its idol — Acadia's Mayflower. The red Rose of England— the Shamrock of Erin, And Scotia's proud Thistle, are symbols of power; But the emblem Fidelity loves to appear in, Is Beauty's own blossom — Acadia's Mayflower. Note 2. — Page 8. " The very manner and the very mien. Brought " Ornus " homage, upon thee are seen." " Ornus " was the poetical signature of Mr. Archibald, the late Master of the Rolls in Nova Scotia. / ^2 NOTES. Note 3.— Pao^e 20. '• Here comes the- Chief, a man of many ycnrs, Beyond the Scripture term his ajjo appears." A iQ« years ago, one of tlie Micmacs, by the name of I'aui. apparently of great a/re, remarkably strong- built for an Indian, and well proportioned (though not so tall and prepossessing as some of them), called upon me in the fields one day, and re- rjuetited permission to set his camp on tlie edge of Lake Manor. as (he said) he believed " death was near." Under such circum- stances the favour could not be refused; but I discovered That he built the wx^wain first, and came to seek ''a local iiabitation " *; tier wards. lii the latter end of har\'est, I understood he was sick, and sought a way through the woods to visit him ; it was a dark evening, and after some difficulty I found him, sitting upon his legs by the fire ir the middle of the camp, completely naked from the waist upwaids, and according to ray ideas suffering great pain, but he made no complaint ; upon asking how he did, he leplied— " I am waiting till death come." Although lialf sufibcated with smoke, it was sometime before I could drag myself away from a scene so original. This was our last interview, as i.i a few days subsequently the " arrow " found him Note 4. — Page 28. " Touch'd by those transports that the trav'ller knew. When lost Assyria 'rose before his view," The allusion in this couplet, is to "Layard'f? remains of Xincveh." NoTf. 5.— Page 21). " Nor less hnjjerious those the pilgrim feels. When at his prophet's sepulchre he kneels.'" The excitement of Mahometan pilgrims, is said to hi extraordinary as they approach the city of their propitct. % •'\ •o