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stream, with an urn in her arms, stood a marble nyar trails and
tresses of the 's
behalf, by hanging theht
be a remote antiquity--this lady of the fountain had first received the
infant tide into her urn and poured it thence into the reat crack from top to bottom; and the
discontented nyh
a channel which she could not control, although ater long ago
consecrated to her
For this reason, or soht have fancied that the whole fountain was but the overflow of her
lonely tears
"This was a place that I used greatly to delight in," re "As a child, and as a boy, I have been very happy
here"
"And, as a man, I should ask no fitter place to be happy in," answered
Kenyon "But you, my friend, are of such a social nature, that I should
hardly have thought these lonely haunts would take your fancy It is
a place for a poet to dreaination"