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THE MORNING-GLORY.

WE wreathed about our darling's head the morning-glory

bright;

Her little face looked out beneath, so full of life and

light,

So lit as with a sunrise, that we could only say,

She is the morning-glory true, and her poor types are

they.

So always from that happy time we called her by their

name,

And very fitting did it seem, for, sure as morning came

Behind her cradle-bars she smiled to catch the first faint

ray,

As from the trellis smiles the flower and opens to the

day.

But not so beautiful they rear their airy cups of

blue,

As turned her sweet eyes to the light brimmed with sleep's tender dew;

And not so close their tendrils fine round their supports are thrown,

As those dear arms whose outstretched plea clasped all hearts to her own.

We used to think how she had come, even as comes the

flower,

The last and perfect added gift to crown love's morning

hour,

And how in her was imaged forth the love we could not

say,

As on the little dew-drops round shines back the heart

of day.

We never could have thought, O God, that she must

wither up,

Almost before a day was flown, like the morning-glory's

cup;

We never thought to see her droop her fair and noble

head,

Till she lay stretched before our eyes, wilted, and cold, and dead.

The morning-glory's blossoming will soon be coming

round,

We see their rows of heart-shaped leaves upspringing from the ground;

The tender things the winter killed renew again their

birth,

But the glory of our morning has passed away from

earth.

O Earth, in vain our aching eyes stretch over thy green

plain!

Too harsh thy dews, too gross thine air, her spirit to

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But up in groves of Paradise full surely we shall

see

Our morning-glory beautiful twine round our dear Lord's

knee.

STUDIES FOR TWO HEADS.

I.

SOME Sort of heart I know is hers,-
I chanced to feel her pulse one night;

A brain she has that never errs,

And yet is never nobly right;
It does not leap to great results,

But, in some corner out of sight,
Suspects a spot of latent blight,
And, o'er the impatient infinite,

She bargains, haggles, and consults.

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