aspects, the poetry which breathes from their streams, and dells, and airy hights, were a proud heritage to imaginative minds. But what are all these when the thought comes, that without mountains, the spirit of man must have bowed to the brutal and the base, and probably have sunk to the monotonous level of the unvaried plain? Look at the bold barriers of Palestine! see how the infant liberties of Greece, were sheltered from the vast tribes of the uncivilized north by the hights of Hamus and Rhodope! Behold how the Alps describe their magnificent crescent, inclining their opposite extremities to the Adriatic and Tyrrhine Seas, locking up Italy from the Gallic and Teutonic hordes, till the power and spirit of Rome had reached their maturity, and she had opened the wide forest of Europe to the light, spread far her laws and language, and planted the seeds of many mighty nations! Thanks to God for mountains! Their colossal firmness seems almost to break the current of time itself. The geologist in them searches for traces of the early world, and it is there too, that man, resisting the revolutions of lower regions, retains through innumerable years his habits and his rights. While a multitude of changes has remolded the people of Europe, while languages, and laws, and dynasties, and creeds, have passed over it like shadows over the landscape, the children of the Celt and the Goth, who fled to the mountains a thousand years ago, are found there now, and show us in face and figure, in language and garb, what their fathers were; show us a fine contrast with the modern tribes dwelling below and around them; and show us, moreover, how adverse is the spirit of the mountain to mutability, and that there the fiery heart of Freedom is found forever. HOWITT. LESSON CVIII. HYMN OF THE MOUNTAINEERS. FOR the strength of the hills we bless thee, Thou hast made thy children mighty, LESSON CIX. THE WINDS. WE come! we come! and ye feel our might, Like the spirit of liberty, wild and free, Ye mark, as we vary our forms of power, And whether our breath be loud and high, And ye list, and ye look; but what do you see? Our dwelling is in the Almighty's hand; MISS H. F. GOULD. LESSON CX. MUSINGS. I WANDERED out one summer night, "T was when my years were few, The breeze was singing in the light, And I was singing too. The moonbeams lay upon the hill, Was all that met my eyes, I clapped my hands and warbled wild, For I was but a careless child, The waves came leaping o'er the sea, They linked their dimpled hands. They kissed my feet as quick as thought; Away the ripples flew ! The twilight hours like birds flew by, Ten thousand stars were in the sky, For every wave with dimpled cheek, Had caught a star in its embrace, The young moon, too, with upturned sides, Her mirrored beauty gave, And as a bark at anchor rides She rode upon the wave. The sea was like the heaven above, Save that it seemed to thrill with love, The leaves, by spirit-voices stirred, Low murmurs, that my spirit heard, The flowers all folded to their dreams, By breezy hills and murmuring streams, No guilty tears had they to weep, They closed their eyes and went to sleep, No costly raiment round them shone, Yet Solomon, upon his throne, Was ne'er arrayed like these. I heard the laughing wind behind, The breezy fingers of the wind, How cool and moist they were! I heard the night bird warbling o'er I never heard such sounds before, Then wherefore weave such strains as these, When every bird upon the breeze, Can sing a sweeter lay? I'd give the world for their sweet art, I'd give the world to melt one heart, MRS. A. B. WELBY. |