see the weryt ng feelings chase 
Each other o’er oie pallid face, 
From shade to deepest gloom 
has been 2 Sa dark eyes speak 
Of sad and hopeless hou 
_ — pate cheek 
se ‘ini ye youthful flowers 
a such a soul regains its peaceful state, 
w often must it love, how often hate! 
cas often hope, despair, resent, regret, 
Conceal, disdain—do all things, but forget! ... 
ee 
CLOVER, Rep. . If little labor, little are our gains: 
2 Man’s fortunes are according to his pains. . . 
TRIFOLIUM PRATENSE.” 
One 
May do the task of neo ee the mind 
Is active in it . Sophocles’ Qdipus. 
Industrious wisdom often does Shgsy , 
What lazy folly thinks inevitable. . . Abdicated Prince. 
Absence of occupation is not rest, 
A mind quite vacant, is a mind distressed. . . Cowper. 
The keenest pangs the wretched aban 
re rapture to the dreary vo 
e leafless desert of the hot 
ted waste of feelings unemployed 
a coy maiden, ease, when 
ae ec retires —an idol, at whose shrine 
Who oft’ nest sacrifice are favor’d least 
Pee 
COCK’S COMB. ‘ . The kovte cock’ s comb, idly vain, 
n all its showy bloom..... 
Coxcombs are of all ranks and kind, 
They’re not to sex or age confined, 
Of rich, or poor, or great, or small, 
’Tis vanity besets the 
The leopard’s beauty, without the fox’s "ss is gti 
than a fop in a gay coa 
Ah! friend! to dazzle let the vain design, 
To raise the thought and teach the heart be thine. 
CELOSIA CRISTATA 
e 
saa 
REsoLvep To wix. This hand, T connagyt death resign! ... Dryden. 
inkest thou 
That I could live, and let thee go, 
oe e itself?—no—no.......... Moore. 
