THE PIG. Were perfect in our kind! And why despise Is he obstinate? 35 We must not, Jacob, be deceived by words, And baconised; that he must please to give Woe to the young posterity of Pork! Again. Thou say'st Fancy it drest, and with saltpetre rouged. Rings round her lover's soul the chains of love. Of parts harmonious? give thy fancy scope, Shape such a foot and ancle as the waves Crowded in eager rivalry to kiss, When Venus from the enamoured sea arose. His pig-perfection. The last charge :—he lives A dirty life. Here I could shelter him To thrive by dirty ways. But let me rest No prejudice. Dirt? Jacob,-what is dirt? That stuffs him to the throat-gates, is no more. If matter be not, but, as sages say, Spirit is all, and all things visible Are one, the infinitely modified; Think, Jacob, what that pig is, and the mire And there! that breeze Pleads with me, and has won thee to the smile That speaks conviction. O'er yon blossom'd field Of beans it came, and thoughts of bacon rise. SOUTHEY. CASABIANCA. Casabianca, a boy about thirteen years old, son to the Admiral of the Orient, remained at his post, in the battle of the Nile, after the ship had taken fire, and all the guns had been abandoned. He perished in the explosion of the vessel, when the flames had reached the powder. THE boy stood on the burning deck, Yet beautiful and bright he stood, The flames rolled on-he would not go, He called aloud, "Say, father, say, He knew not that the chieftain lay "Speak, father!" once again he cried, And," but the booming shots replied, Upon his brow he felt their breath, And look'd from that lone post of death And shouted but once more aloud, "My father, must I stay?" While o'er him fast, through sail and shroud, The wreathing fires made way. They wrapp'd the ship in splendour wild, There came a burst of thunder-sound With mast and helm and pennon fair, But the noblest thing which perished there MRS. HEMANS. THE EBB-TIDE. SLOWLY thy flowing tide Came in, old Avon! scarcely did mine eyes, With many a stroke and strong The labouring boatmen upward plied their oars, Now down thine ebbing tide Now o'er the rocks that lay Avon ! I gaze and know The lesson emblem'd in thy varying way; Kingdoms which long have stood, And slow to strength and power attained at last, Thus from the summit of high fortune's flood They ebb to ruin fast. |