"Depart ye cursed,-I know ye not!" Oh, startling question!-who? Under the lamp-light, watch them come, Some that pierce your very soul Lean and haggard,— God! what misery! See them watch yon rich brocade, And the price that it will fetch Gems that glitter, hearts that shine,→ Ere the storm shall o'er thee roll, Though with jewels bright bedecked, God protect thee,-keep thee right, Under the lamplight, watch them come,- His handsome face I'm sure doth make Yet where shall this lover, Till the moon grows dim; Oh turn back, youth! NUMBER THREE. Thy mother's prayer Entice thee there. Under the lamplight, watch them come, And some with a look of anguished pain Altar and priest; Some from a death-bed, Some from a feast; Some from a den of crime, and some Some bowed down with age and woe, Praying meekly as they go; Others, whose friends and honor are gone,— Those who had best in childhood died, -on they go, Close to the good; Some to joy, and some to woe, Under the lamplight, watch them glide,— THE SAILOR'S FUNERAL.-LYDIA H. SIGOURNEY, The ship's bell tolled, and slowly o'er the deck Came forth the summoned crew. Bold, hardy men, Far from their native skies, stood silent there, With melancholy brow. From a low cloud That o'er the horizon hovered, came the threat Of distant muttered thunder. Broken waves Heaved up their sharp white helmets o'er the expanse On hoarded wrongs, or wakes the wrathful war. The ship's bell tolled, and lo! a youthful form, And the big tears that o'er his mother's cheek But there came a tone, Clear as the breaking morn o'er stormy seas, "I am the resurrection." Every heart Suppressed its grief, and every eye was raised. There was a plunge! The riven sea complained,— Death from her briny bosom took his own. The awful fountains of the deep did lift FOES UNITED IN DEATH. There was no fierceness in the eyes of those men now, as they sat face to face on the bank of the stream; the strife and the anger had all gone now, and they sat still,-dying men, who but a few hours before had been deadly foes,— sat still and looked at each other. At last one of them spoke: "We haven't either of us a chance to hold out much longer, I judge." "No," said the other, with a little mixture of sadness and recklessness, "you did that last job of yours well, as that bears witness," and he pointed to a wound a little above the heart, from which the life-blood was slowly oozing. "Not better than you did yours," answered the other; with a grim smile, and he pointed to a wound a little higher up, larger and more ragged,-a deadly one. And then the two men gazed upon each other again in the dim light; for the moon had come over the hills now, and stood among the stars like a pearl of great price. And as they looked a soft feeling stole over the heart of each toward his fallen foe, a feeling of pity for the strong manly life laid low,-a feeling of regret for the inexorable necessity of war which made each man the slayer of the other; and at last one spoke: "There are some folks in the world that'll feel worse when you are gone out of it." A spasm of pain was on the bronzed, ghastly features. "Yes," said the man in husky tones, "there's one woman with a boy and girl, away up among the New Hampshire mountains, that it will well nigh kill to hear of this;" and the man groaned out in bitter anguish, “O God, have pity on my wife and children!" And the other drew closer to him: "And away down among the cotton fields of Georgia, there's a woman and a little girl whose hearts will break when they hear what this day has done;" and then the cry wrung itself sharply out of his heart, “O God, have pity upon them!" And from that moment the Northerner and the Southerner ceased to be foes. The thought of those distant homes on which the anguish was to fall, drew them closer together in that last hour, and the two men wept like little children. And at last the Northerner spoke, talking more to himself than to any one else, and he did not know that the other was listening greedily to every word: "She used to come-my little girl, bless her heart!-every night to meet me when I came home from the fields; and she would stand under the great plum tree that's just beyond the back door at home, with the sunlight making yellow brown in her golden curls, and the laugh dancing in her eyes when she heard the click of the gate,—I see her now, and I'd take her in my arms, and she'd put up her little red lips for a kiss; but my little darling will never watch under the old plum tree by the well, for her father, again. I shall never hear the cry of joy as she catches a glimpse of me at the gate. I shall never see her little feet running over the grass to spring into my arms again!" "And then," said the Southerner, "there's a little browneyed, brown-haired girl, that used to watch in the cool afternoons for her father, when he rode in from his visit to the plantations. I can see her sweet little face shining out now, from the roses that covered the pillars, and hear her shout of joy as I bounded from my horse, and chased the little flying feet up and down the veranda again." And the Northerner drew near to the Southerner, and spoke now in a husky whisper, for the eyes of the dying men were glazing fast, “ We have fought here, like men, together We are going before God in a little while. Let us forgive each other." The Southerner tried to speak, but the sound died away in a murmur from his white lips; but he took the hand of |