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(ttftKMS or THe (oftST. |ii|p^ATrilAL ATTRACTIONS of the Coast have been described now ai‘d then in prose and verse, yet the story is never an old one. Frorn season to season and from year to year, they are acontin-ual source of enjoyment to visitors and tourists, as well as to the y'’ 9 ‘ J G resident population. The founder, and life-long editor of the Louis- >r ville Journal, (now the Courier-Journal,) Geo. D. Prentice, portrayed some of these attractions in an exquisite poem written to his wife in 1846, with the caption “To One Afar,’’ while taking a summer vacation at Biloxi. These glowing lines are apposite in this connection; are as true to nature now as then, and are here reproduced. TO ONE AFAR. 'Tis morn : the sea-breeze seems to bring Joy. health and freshness on its wing; Bright flowers to me all strange and new, Are glittering in the early dew, And perfumes rise from out the grove As incense to the clouds that move • Like spirits in yon welkin clear; Hut I am sad—tliou art not here. ‘Tis noon: a calm unbroken sleep Is on the blue wave of the deep; A soft haze like a fairy dream Is floating over wood and stream, And many a broad magnolia flower Within its shadowy woodland tower Is gleaming like a lovely star, But I am sad—thou art afar. 'Tis eve: on earth the sunset skies Are painting their own Eden dyes; ^ The stars come down ^nd trembling, glow-. Like bright gems in the wave below; *’ '
Mexican Gulf Coast The Mexican Gulf Coast on Mobile Bay and Mississippi Sound - Illustrated (15)