Page:Summer on the lakes, in 1843.djvu/168

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158
SUMMER ON THE LAKES.

those about to die. She saw in mirrors, cups of water; in soap-bubbles, the coming future.

We are here reminded of many beautiful superstitions and legends; of the secret pool in which the daring may, at mid-moon of night, read the future; of the magic globe, on whose pure surface Britomart sees her future love, whom she must seek, arrayed in knightly armor, through a difficult and hostile world.

 A looking-glass, right wondrously aguized,
Whose virtues through the wyde world soon were solemnized.
 It vertue had to show in perfect sight,
Whatever thing was in the world contayned,
 Betwixt the lowest earth and hevens hight;
So that it to the looker appertayned,
 Whatever foe had wrought, or friend had fayned,
Herein discovered was, ne ought mote pas,
 Ne ought in secret from the same remayned;
Forthy it round and hollow shaped was,
Like to the world itselfe, and seemed a World of Glas.
Faerie Queene, Book III.

Such mirrors had Cornelius Agrippa and other wizards. The soap-bubble is such a globe; only one had need of second sight or double sight to see the pictures on so transitory a mirror. Perhaps it is some vague expectation of such wonders, that makes us so fond of blowing them in childish years. But, perhaps, it is rather as a prelude to the occupation of our lives, blowing bubbles where all things may