TWILIGHT MUSINGS.

BY AMELIA.

I wandered out one summer night,

'Twas when my years were few,

The wind was singing in the light,

And I was singing too.

One fleecy cloud upon the air,

Was all that met my eyes,

It floated like an angel there,

Between me and the skies.

I clapped my hands and warbled wild,

As here and there I flew,

For I was but a careless child,

And did as children do.

I heard the laughing wind behind,

'Twas playing with my hair;

The breezy fingers of the wind,

How cool and moist they were.

The twilight hours came stealing by,

And still I wandered free;

Ten thousand stars were in the sky,

Ten thousand on the sea.

For ev'ry wave with dimpled face,

That leaped upon the air,

Had caught a star in its embrace,

And held it trembling there.

But wherefore weave such strains as these,

And sing them day by day,

When every bird upon the breeze

Can sing a sweeter lay.

I'd give the world for their sweet art.

The simple, the divine;

I'd give the world to melt one heart,

As they have melted mine.