TI1E ORIENTAL LANGUAGE, AND 
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Thought, Pansy. 
“ Pensez a moil” oifr Uallic neighbours say, 
Pansies in Shakspere’s verse will live for aye. 
Heart’s-ease some call the flower,—some, sweet 
pensee. 
Tendrils. 
Ties, 
The ties of affection, how closely they cling, 
Like tendrils a loved one encircling. 
White Poplar 
Time. 
Dark above with silver lining;, 
Ever are thy leaves in motion. 
Like the day and nieht entwining; 
checkered dance o*er laud and ocean. 
Marvel of Peru. 
Timidity, 
La Belle de Nuit, when Sol’s bright eye 
Shines full upon thee, thou dost shrink. 
Like some fair bather on the brink 
Of crystal fount, who doth espy 
A shadow stealing o’er the sky. 
And fears intrader may be nigh,— 
Sweet emblem of timidity! 
Tranquility, Stonecrop. 
In olden times ’twas thought this plant had power 
To tranquillize the wild distempered mind ; 
A cure for hydrophobia, hence’twas deemed, 
And tuns ’tis likened to tranquility. 
