SONNET. WHILST in those eyes of mildest light, Say, my sweet Susan dost thou love (For much of grief thou sure hast known) To mark on care's dejected brow, The trace of sorrows like thy own? Or does thy heart, when a hard world Perhaps thou think'st a stricken heart, Yes, my sweet love-by hopes most dear, I swear (and heaven my witness be!) This heart, that wants a friend itself, Should bleed to purchase peace for thee. When thought sat sadly on thy brow, But trembling kiss the falling tear, And press thy hand, but never speak. And if thy friends should prove unkind, Nor be the pleasing hope in vain, Again the bright returning sun, The op'ning landscape shall illume; And the lorn flower, that seems to droop, Shall all its wonted sweets resume. Thy heart, when all its cares are past, Anonymous. MARY. WHEN first those beauties met my sight, Kind were your looks, if e'er I gaz'd, Mary Warm'd by your smiles, those hopes were rais'd While thus my thoughts deluded rov'd, But now you treat with cold disdain Then, dear deceiver! this shall be C Mary! Mary! 1 Mary! Mary! Though for no other 1 can prove, "Tis hard to lose the joys of love, Mary! Though all those hopes my heart forsake,. Mary! General Evening Post. INSCRIBED On the Wall of a Summer-house. YE wild waving woods, that now closing your shade, Ye flocks, that hang white on the side of yon hill; Ye herds who, beneath, crop the grass of the vale, Ye that chirp in the hedge, or skim light on the rill, Or fluttering, give your gay wing to the gale. Sweet inspirers of thought! and thou sweetest, thou dove, Ah why, as I gaze on the landscape around, Why suddenly starts the fond tear to my eye? Tho' smiling each object, and cheerful each sound, Why steals from my bosom the sorrowing sigh? Enchant the fair scenes, 'till enraptur'd I find That sweetest oblivion the muses bestow, Till the sun-shine that gilds you shall brighten my mind, And my fancy forget that my heart has a woe! So free may you flourish, fair scenes as ye rise, So when the glad seasons their blessings shall yield, And so, when the ev'ning's mild glories decline, Ere yet you are hid by the envious night. And whilst her fair form glitters bright in the flood, And sheds on its bosom a tremulous ray, Tips the top of the hill, gilds the gloom of the wood, And softens each beauty that glar'd in the day. |