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natural here." So saying, after a short prelude, he sung, with a tolerable voice and some taste, the following verses:

Mary.

“Farewell to Northmaven,
Grey Hillswicke, farewell!

To the calms of thy haven,
The storms on thy fell-
To each breeze that can vary
The mood of thy main,
And to thee, bonny Mary!
We meet not again.

"Farewell the wild ferry,

Which Hacon could brave,
When the peaks of the Skerry
Were white in the wave.
There's a maid may look over

These wild waves in vain,

For the skiff of her lover

He comes not again.

"The vows thou hast broke,

On the wild currents fling them

On the quicksand and rock

Let the mermaiden sing them.

New sweetness they'll give her

Bewildering strain;

But there's one who will never

Believe them again.

"O were there an island,

Though ever so wild,

Where woman could smile, and

No man be beguiled

Too tempting a snare

To poor mortals were given,

And the hope would fix there,

That should anchor on heaven."

"I see you are softened, my young friend," said Halcro, when he had finished his song; "so are most who hear that same ditty. Words and music both mine own; and, without saying much of the wit of it, there is a sort of—eh-ch -simplicity and truth about it, which gets its way to most folk's heart. Even your father cannot resist it—and he has a heart as impenetrable to poetry and song as Apollo himself could draw an arrow against. But then he has had some ill luck in his time with the woman folks, as is plain from his owing them such a

grudge-Ay, ay, there the charm lies-none of us but has felt the same sore in our day. But come, my dear boy, they are mustering in the hall, men and women both-plagues as they are, we should get on ill without them--but before we go, only mark the last turn

And the hope would fix there;'

that is, in the supposed island—a place which neither was nor will be

'That should anchor on heaven.'

Now you see, my good young man, there are here none of your heathenish rants, which Rochester, Etheridge, and these wild fellows, used to string together. A parson might sing the song, and his clerk bear the burthen-but there' is the confounded bell-we must go now-but never mind-we'll get into a quiet corner at night, and I'll tell you all about it."

CHAPTER XIII.

Full in the midst the polish'd table shines,
And the bright goblets, rich with generous wines;
Now each partakes the feast, the wine prepares,
Portions the food, and each the portion shares;
Nor till the rage of thirst and hunger ceased,
To the high host approached the sagacious guest.

Odyssey.

THE hospitable profusion of Magnus Troil's board, the number of guests who feasted in the hall, the much greater number of retainers, attendants, humble friends, and domestics of every possible description, who revelled without, with the multitude of the still poorer, and less honoured assistants, who came from every hamlet or township within twenty miles round, to share the bounty of the munificent Udaller, were such as altogether astonished Triptolemus Yellowley, and made him internally doubt whether it would be prudent in him at this time,

and amid the full glow of his hospitality, to propose to the host who presided over such a splendid banquet, a radical change in the whole customs and usages of his country.

True, the sagacious Triptolemus felt conscious that he possessed in his own person wisdom far superior to that of all the assembled feasters, to say nothing of the landlord, against whose prudence the very extent of his hospitality formed, in Yellowley's opinion, sufficient evidence. But yet the Amphytrion with whom one dines holds, for the time at least, an influence over the minds of his most distinguished guests; and if the dinner be in good style, and the wines of the right quality, it is humbling to see that neither art nor wisdom, scarce external rank itself, can assume their natural and wonted superiority over the distributor of these good things, until coffee has been brought in. Triptolemus felt the full weight of this temporary superiority, yet he was desirous to do something that might vindicate the vaunts he had made to his sister and his fellow-traveller, and he stole a look at them from time to time, to mark whether he was not sinking in their esteem from

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