Let him enjoy his present state;
For he but double make his woes,
Who midst the future’s shadows goes
To meet the ills of murky fate.
MY EIGHTEENTH YEAR.
From the French.
Where is my eighteenth year? far back
Upon life’s variegated track;
Yet fondly oft I turn my eye,
And for my eighteenth year I sigh.
Each pleasure then I took with zest,
And hope was inmate of my breast—
Enchanting hope, consoling thing,
The plucker out of sorrow’s sting.
The sun above shone brighter then,
Fairer were women, kinder men;
If tears I shed, they soon were o’er,
And I was happier than before.
The minstrel-wight of ancient day
Wish’d that the twelve months all were May;
I wish that every year I see
The eighteenth of my life could be.
SONG.
From the Rommany or Gypsy Language.
The strength of the ox,
The wit of the fox,
And the leveret’s speed,—
Full oft, to oppose
To their numerous foes,
The Rommany need.