176 TUE OCEAN. 



rock in a wcaiy lund." " Tliou liast been a shadow 

 from the heat, when the blast of the terrible ones 

 is as a storm n<:[ainst the wall. Thou shalt brinf? 

 down the noise of stram^jers, as the heat in a drv 

 place ; even the heat with the shadow of a cloud."* 



Yet, though day after day rolls on and leaves us 

 still in the same position, there are not wanting 

 many things to beguile the weariness of the time. 

 The gorgeous beauty of the sun's setting almost 

 makes amends for his unmitigated heat by day. As 

 his orb approaches the western horizon, the clouds, 

 which have been absent during the day, begin to 

 form in that quarter of the heavens ; and, as he sinks, 

 assume hues of the richest purjale edged with gold, 

 now hiding his disc, now allowing him to flash out 

 his softened effulgence through crimson openings, 

 till he falls beneath the massy mountain-like bed of 

 cloud that seems to lie heavily upon the surface of 

 the sea. Then the whole array begins to take the 

 appearance of a lovely landscape ; the clouds forming 

 the land, while the open sky represents calm water. 

 Sometimes we seem to see the long capes and bold 

 promontories of a broken and picturesque coast, 

 deeply indented with bays and creeks, and fringed 

 with groups of islands ; at others, silvery lakes, 

 studded with little wooded islets, appear embosomed 

 in mountains, or surrounded by gentle slopes, here 

 and there clothed with umbrageous woods. Such 

 an appearance of reality is given to these fleeting 

 scenes, that it is difficult, after gazing at them for 

 a few minutes, to believe they are mere shadows. 



* Isa. xxxii. 2 ; xxv. 4, 5 ; iv. 5. 



