Page:The Universal Songster and Museum of Mirth.djvu/302

 And the jale that fens our brows. Then, wind n !tered tB0 yThntbemng foliage br, Though every flower of.somothinff gore, A tinge may wear; VENETIAN BOAT SONG. T Say beam is over the m, Oh haste every bark, to the shore; 1o joy in the mornin s can be, With moonlight our pleasure it o'er: Pothaps it is sweet on he hills To watch how the daylight appears, To see it all bright in the rills, And shbiing through night's dewy roars, But oh! in te wild !rour of night, When loud wimb are healled to a btfmo, With mue and moon-heroin so bright, 'TIS heaTon to flide o'or the sou, How swat 'tb to watch the bright And t  wid  f he How sweet 'tb to gme on To breathe the oot't fright r perfam*d With tho Jgb of the grovom on the To sore how tho moon hm fihim'd Thea hem overy. somlolet, on, Oh, who would rein&hi om the wvm

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