190
AT SEA IN 1876.
eight or nine miles, returning in very good spirits. At 3 a.m., on the following day, he awoke "as well as ever he was," but on sitting up, a dreadful pain seized his chest. He dressed himself, however, and went down-stairs, moving with accustomed ease. At nine o'clock, sitting alone "in his arm-chair, wrapped in his gown," he died silently.
From The Philadelphia Press.
AT SEA IN 1876.
BY S. H. M. BYERS.
| 1. | 
| Ten days and nights our gallant ship  | 
| 2. | 
| We were a hundred there, and more,  | 
| 3. | 
| It was so quiet there — at last  | 
| 4. | 
| "Is there among us, none, not one,  | 
| 5. | 
| I do bethink me now, there stood  | 
| 6. | 
| And soon an old man tottered in  | 
| 7. | 
| "Good friends," the boatswain said, "I bring  | 
| The Harpist. | 
| 1. | 
| "Give me the harp," the singer said,  | 
| 2. | 
| He swept the cords through many a strain,  | 
| 3. | 
| Have we not lived at times above  | 
| . . . . . . . . 1. | 
| "Enough — enough" — the harpist said.  | 
| 2. | 
| They came — and soon their axes rung  |