Page:The Universal Songster and Museum of Mirth.djvu/294

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And wJn3e I wa?eh my ? ? ? You will fi?, &? THE MER?'S ? Co?z, roefiner, do? in the ?p wi? ?, And hb th? under ?e wave; �or I have i ? oF ?ral ?or ?, ? quiet and ? sh?i thy altair ? h a ?11 h the me?d's ?e? On apillow o? ?s ?m eye oh?! de?, Andnothi? dbt?b tb tb? The fieh? their ?!ent ?ils sh?l k?p; T? shall ? no ? thy ?ve to swap, And she, who b waiting with eheeks so pale, As the tempest and ocean tom', And weeps when she hears the menssing gab, Or ?ghs to behold her mariner's mdi -- (?ome whiteninf up to the shore. She has not IQng tO linger for theo! Her'sorrows will soon be o'er; For the chord sl?il be broken, the prisoner froo; Her eye shalt close, end be' dreams will be So sweet she will wake no morel A V/F, ARY LOT IS TIHlqF? A WEARY lot ?s tldne, fair maid, A weary lot b thine; To pull the thorn thy brow to !?rftid, And prem the rue for -?ne. A lightsome eye, a soldier?a mein, A feather of tho bluo, - '