THE BELLS OF OSTEND.

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WRITTEN ON A BEAUTIFUL MORNING AFTER A STORM,

BY W. L. BOWLES,

THE MUSIC COMPOSED AND RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED TO

SAMUEL MOFFAT JR. ESQ. OF ALBANY,

BY J. HILTON JONES.

No, I never, till life and its shadows shall end,

Can forget the sweet sound of the bells of Ostend!

The day set in darkness, the wind it blew loud,

And rung as it pass’d thro’ each

murmuring shroud.

My forehead was wet with the foam of the spray,

My heart sighed in secret for those far away;

When slowly the morning advanc’d from the east,

The toils and the noise of the tempest had ceased:

The peal from a land I ne’er saw seemed to say,

Let the stranger forget all his sorrow to-day.

SECOND VERSE.

Yet the short-lived emotion was mingled with pain—

I thought of those eyes I should ne’er see again;

I thought of the kiss, the last kiss which I gave,

And a tear of regret fell unseen on the wave;

I thought of the schemes fond affection had planned,

Of the trees, of the towers of my own native land;

But still the sweet sounds, as they swelled on the air

Seemed tidings of pleasure, though mournful to bear;

And I never, till life and its shadows shall end,

Can forget the sweet sound of the bells of Ostend.


Transcriber’s Notes:

For illustrations, some caption text may be missing or incomplete due to condition of the originals available for preparation of the ebook. In the story The Wager of Battle, the Chapter VI heading is missing due to being absent from the original publication. Hyphenation and archaic spellings have been retained. Punctuation has been corrected without note. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected as noted below.

page 90, leaves are sear, ==> leaves are sere,

page 93, to make their ==> to make to their

page 104, whispered a page ==> whispered to a page

page 106, cylinders and guaging ==> cylinders and gauging

page 107, for the denouÉment ==> for the dÉnouement

page 107, I glad ==> I am glad

page 110, from all wordly ==> from all worldly

page 111, none was politec ==> none was politic

page 111, of their Lupercalla ==> of their Lupercalia

page 113, the wordly advantages ==> the worldly advantages

page 113, Mendelsshon’s music ==> Mendelssohn’s music

page 114, Druid chorusses ==> Druid choruses

page 119, Greydon, then she ==> Greydon, than she

page 121, tonge of flame ==> tongue of flame

page 125, from a regime forcÉ ==> from a rÉgime forcÉ

page 127, merchans of celebrity ==> merchants of celebrity

page 128, ask him them ==> ask him then

page 132, sod have been ==> sod had been

page 132, sear turf of ==> sere turf of

page 145, havn’t told us ==> haven’t told us

page 146, physican arrived ==> physician arrived

page 150, maiden-thought be- becomes ==> maiden-thought becomes

page 151, style and rythm ==> style and rhythm

page 152, invaluabte companion ==> invaluable companion

page 153, with the orginal ==> with the original

page 154, down and mak ==> down and make

page 155, was her’s ==> was hers

page 155, an open sessame ==> an open sesame

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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