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And on the shingles now he sits,
And rolls the pebbles 'neath his hands;
Now walks the beach; then stops by fits,
And scores the smooth, wet sands;

Then tries each cliff, and cove, and jut, that bounds
The isle; then home from many weary rounds.

They ask him why he wanders so,
From day to day, the uneven strand?
"I wish, I wish that I might go!

But I would go by land;

And there's no way that I can find-I've tried
All day and night!"-He look'd towards sea and sigh'd.

It brought the tear to many an eye,
That, once, his eye had made to quail.
"Lee, go with us; our sloop rides nigh;
Come help us hoist her sail."

He shook.-"You know the spirit-horse I ride!
He'll let me on the sea with none beside!"

He views the ships that come and go,
Looking so like to living things.
O! 't is a proud and gallant show
Of bright and broad spread wings

Flinging a glory round them, as they keep

Their course right onward through the unsounded deep.

And where the far-off sand-bars lift
Their backs in long and narrow line,
The breakers shout, and leap, an shift,
And send the sparkling brine

Into the air; then rush to mimic strife:-
Glad creatures of the sea! How all seems life!-

But not to Lee. He sits alone;

No fellowship nor joy for him.

Borne down by wo, he makes no moan,
Though tears will sometimes dim

That asking eye.-O, how his worn thoughts crave—
Not joy again, but rest within the grave.

The rocks are dripping in the mist
That lies so heavy off the shore.

Scarce seen the running breakers ;—list
Their dull and smother'd roar!

Lee hearkens to their voice.-"I hear, I hear
You call. Not yet!-I know my time is near!"

And now the mist seems taking shape,
Forming a dim, gigantic ghost,-
Enormous thing!-There's no escape;
'Tis close upon the coast.

Lee kneels, but cannot pray.-Why mock him so?
The ship has clear'd the fog, Lee, see her go!

A sweet, low voice, in starry nights,
Chants to his ear a plaining song.

Its tones come winding up those heights,
Telling of wo and wrong;

And he must listen till the stars grow dim,
The song that gentle voice doth sing to him.

O, it is sad that aught so mild

Should bind the soul with bands of fear;
That strains to soothe a little child,

The man should dread to hear!

But sin hath broke the world's sweet peace-unstrung The harmonious chords to which the angels sung.

In thick, dark nights he 'd take his seat
High up the cliffs, and feel them shake,
As swung the sea with heavy beat

Below-and hear it break

With savage roar, then pause and gather strength,
And then, come tumbling in its swollen length.

But thou no more shalt haunt the beach,
Nor sit upon the tall cliff's crown,

Nor go the round of all that reach,

Nor feebly sit thee down,

Watching the swaying weeds :-another day,
And thou 'It have gone far hence that dreadful way.

To night the charmed number 's told.
"Twice have I come for thee," it said.
"Once more, and none shall thee behold.
Come! live one, to the dead! ”—

So hears his soul, and fears the coming night;
Yet sick and weary of the soft, calın light,

Again he sits within that room;
All day he leans at that still board;
None to bring comfort to his gloom,
Or speak a friendly word.

Weaken'd with fear, lone, haunted by remorse,
Poor, shatter'd wretch, there waits he that pale horse.

Not long he'll wait.-Where now are gone
Peak, citadel, and tower, that stood
Beautiful, while the west sun shone,
And bathed them in his flood

Of airy glory?-Sudden darkness fell;
And down they sank, peak, tower, and citadel.

The darkness, like a dome of stone,
Ceils up the heavens.-'T is hush as death-
All but the ocean's dull, low moan.

How hard Lee draws his breath!

He shudders as he feels the working Power. Arouse thee, Lee! up! man thee for thine hour!

"Tis close at hand: for there, once more,
The burning ship. Wide sheets of flame
And shafted fire she show'd before;
Twice thus she hither came ;-

But now she rolls a naked hulk, and throws
A wasting light; then, settling, down she goes.

And where she sank, up slowly came
The Spectre-Horse from out the sca.
And there he stands! His pale sides flame.
He'll meet thee shortly, Lee.

He treads the waters as a solid floor:

He's moving on. Lee waits him at the door.

They 've met.-"I know thou com'st for me,"
Lee's spirit to the spectre said—

"I know that I must go with thee-
Take me not to the dead.

It was not I alone that did the deed!"

Dreadful the eye of that still, spectral steed!

Lee cannot turn. There is a force
In that fix'd eye, which holds him fast.

How still they stand!—that man and horse.
-Thine hour is almost past."

"O, spare me," cries the wretch, "thou fearful one!" -"My time is full-I must not go alone."

"I'm weak and faint. O, let me stay!"
"Nay, murderer, rest nor stay for thee!"
The horse and man are on their way;

He bears him to the sea.

Hark! how the spectre breathes through this still night!
See, from his nostrils streams a deathly light!

He's on the beach; but stops not there.
He's on the sea! --Lee, quit the horse!
Lee struggles hard.-'T is mad despair!—
'Tis vain! The spirit-corse

Holds him by fearful spell ;-he cannot leap. . Within that horrid light he rides the deep.

It lights the sea around their track-
The curling comb, and dark steel wave:
There, yet, sits Lee the spectre's back-
Gone! gone! and none to save!

They're seen no more; the night has shut them in.
May heaven have pity on thee, man of sin!

The earth has wash'd away its stain.
The seal d-up sky is breaking forth,
Mustering its glorious hosts again
From the far south and north.

The climbing moon plays on the rippling sea.
-O, whither on its waters rideth Lee?"

JAMES GATES PERCIVAL.

DR PERCIVAL was born on the 15th of September, 1795, in Kensington, a parish of Berlin, Connecticut. That parish had long been the residence of his paternal ancestors—the family of the Percivals having removed to that place from East Haddam in the same state, two generations before. His maternal ancestors had lived in the town of Kensington, so called at first, from the time of its earliest settlement. The father of the poet, whose name was James, was a highly reputable physician in Kensington, where he died 1807, in the midst of life, much lamented by the inhabitants. He left a widow and four children, one daughter and three sons, with a valuable estate, which he had acquired by his profession. The daughter, who was the eldest child, died two or three weeks after her father, and the three sons, all of tender age, were left to the assiduity and care of a mother.

Dr Percival is the second of the sons, and the only one that received a liberal education. From the earliest period at which he could read, he was fond of books; and in a short time treasured up in a remarkably retentive memory all the stores of school-boy learning. Among his companions at school, he was distinguished by the ease with which he could learn his lessons, by superior intelligence, by a gentle and retiring disposition, and by an abstracted turn of mind. He seldom engaged in the common sports of the school, even with the boys of his own age. He possessed also a share of that distressing diffidence, and sensibility to suffering from the rudeness of the older members of the school, which Cowper has so feelingly depicted in his own case.

The occasion of his learning to read, and the rapidity of his progress in the art, show strikingly the bent and powers of his understanding. At a time when he could only spell his words with difficulty, he received a book at school, which it was customary for the master on a Saturday to give to some deserving scholar, to be kept till the following Monday, and

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