PHYLLIDA'S LETTER (1708) Yr Letter came ; before me laie Ye Exercise with long Array Of foreign Wordes, whose Verbs despise Ye proper Tense, & wax in Size As Nouns with Prepositions play. Ye Grammar spread its dreary Sway Till all Ye Worlde seeni'd old & gray, & while I cursed Ye Exercise, Yr Letter came. & then—Ye book was cast away, ror Skies were bright & Life was gay ; I saw againe Yr laughing Eyes, I heard Yr musical Replies— It was a very pleasant Day Yr Letter came. Writ all her Afajisly's Roial Collage of William 6" Mary. " THE Blindness of Us The Exalted " in the/I/niters/ Lit favorable comment. We take the following from the ye the issue : The wind grows calm, subdues its angry might ; The sea subsides and slowly collies to rest ; And " rosy-fingered dawn," a welcome guest, Throws off her uncongenial robe of night. The sun tears through its veil of fleeing mists To gaze upon the ocean's broad expanse ; It . seeks an object—that escapes its glance. Nought save the Stormy Petrel here exists. Some timbers rise and fall upon the sea, Some spars and planks, a corpse or two—that's all The sighing waters are a funeral pall ; The waves croon low a dreary elegy. PASTE-POT AND SHEARS A A .4 AFTER THE STORM