LINES

To a Friend who had spent some days at a Country Inn, in order to be near the Writer.

BY MISS MITFORD

The village inn, the woodfire burning bright,

The solitary taper's flickering light,

The lowly couch, the casement swinging free,—

My noblest friend, was this a place for thee?

No fitting place! Yet there, from all apart,

We poured forth mind for mind and heart for heart,

Ranging from idle words and tales of mirth

To the deep mysteries of heaven and earth

Yet there thine own sweet voice, in accents low,

First breathed Iphigenias tale of wee,

The glorious tale, by Goethe fitly told,

And cast as finely in an English mould

By Taylor's kindred spirit, high and bold: [21]

No fitting place! yet that delicious hour

Fell on my soul, like dewdrops on a flower

Freshening and nourishing and making bright

The plant, decaying less from time than blight,

Flinging Hope's sunshine o'er the faint dim aim,

Thy praise my motive, thine applause my fame.

No fitting place! yet (inconsistent strain

And selfish!) come, I prithee, come again!

Three Mile Cross, Feb 1829.

Sharpe's Magazine.