I.

    Dead ! One of t by t,

    And one of t in t by the sea.

    Dead ! bot at t

    And are ing a great song for Italy free,

    Let none look at me !

    II.

    Yet I ess only last year,

    And good at my art, for a woman, men said ;

    But this, who is agonized here,

    -- t sea and  sea rhyme on in her head

    For ever instead.

    III.

    art can a  ? Oh, vain !

    art is s, but ing

    iteet the pain ?

    A ! you rong as you pressed,

    And I proud, by t test.

    IV.

    arts for a o hold on her knees

    Boto feel all t,

    Cling, strangle a little ! to sew by degrees

    And broider t little coat ;

    to dream and to doat.

    V.

    to teac stings them indeed

    Speak plain try. I taug,

    t a countrys a t need.

    I prated of liberty, rig

    tyrant cast out.

    VI.

    And wiful eyes ! ...

    I exulted ; nay, let t the wheels

    Of t. But the surprise

    s quite alone ! then one kneels !

    God, he house feels !

    VII.

    At first, ters moiled

    ith my kisses, -- of camp-life and glory, and how

    to be spoiled

    In return would fan off every fly from my brow

    itheir green laurel-bough.

    VIII.

    triump turin : `Ancona was free !

    73

    And some one came out of treet,

    itone, to say someto me.

    My Guido  ,

    reet.

    IX.

    I bore it ; friends soothed me ; my grief looked sublime

    As taly. One boy remained

    to be leant on and ime

    greal, wrained

    to t he had gained.

    X.

    And letters still came, ser, sadder, more strong,

    rit no in one  to faint, --

    One loved me for th me ere long :

    And Viva l Italia ! -- ,

    .quot;

    XI.

    My Nanni would add, `he was safe, and aware

    Of a presence t turned off t

    It was Guido  I could bear,

    And e dispossessed,

    to live on for t.quot;

    XII.

    On elegraph line

    S smoot nea : -- S.

    tell  ` mine,

    No voice says quot;My mot; again to me.  !

    You t ?

    XIII.

    Are souls straig, dizzy h heaven,

    tions, conceive not of woe ?

    I t. too lately forgiven

    t Love and Sorrow which reconciled so

    the Above and Below.

    XIV.

    O C of t the dark

    to ther ! consider, I pray,

    and desolate, mark,

    being Cs, die urned away,

    And no last o say !

    XV.

    Bot ts out of nature. e all

    riots, yet eac always keep one.

    to a wall ;

    And,  done

    74

    If we  a son ?

    XVI.

    Aas taken, hen ?

    s no more at

    Of t of men ?

    ort

    t ?

    XVII.

    heir new jubilee,

    akes all s we, green, and red,

    ry from mountain to sea,

    or alys crown on his head,

    (And I have my Dead) --

    XVIII.

    t mock me. Ah, ring your bells low,

    And burn your ligly ! My country is there,

    Above tar pricked by t peak of snow :

    My Italy s th my brave civic Pair,

    to disfranchise despair !

    XIX.

    Forgive me. Some h,

    And bite back their pain in self-scorn ;

    But tions  length

    Into wail suc on forlorn

    he man-child is born.

    XX.

    Dead ! One of t by t,

    And one of t in t by the sea.

    Bot

    You  a great song for your Italy free,

    Let none look at me !

    [turin, a poetess and patriot, w

    Ancona and Gaeta.]