-- Electronic text encoded by
Rey Chang
Copyright ©2008, University of California
This edition is the property of the editors. It may be copied freely by individuals for personal use, research, and teaching (including distribution to classes) as long as this statement of availability is included in the text. It may be linked to by internet editions of all kinds.
Scholars interested in changing or adding to these texts by, for example, creating a new edition of the text (electronically or in print) with substantive editorial changes, may do so with the permission of the publisher. This is the case whether the new publication will be made available at a cost or free of charge.
This text may not be not be reproduced as a commercial or non-profit product, in print or from an information server.
-- Managing Editor
Charlotte Payne
-- Founding Editor
Nancy Kushigian
-- by
This text was scanned from its original in the Shields Library Kohler Collection, University of California, Davis, Kohler I Suppl:940. Another copy available on microfilm as Kohler I Suppl:940mf.
All poems, line groups, and lines are represented. All material originally typeset has been preserved with the exception of original prose line breaks and line-end hyphens (except in headings and title pages), running heads, signature markings, smallcaps, and decorative typographical elements. Page numbers and page breaks have been preserved. The long "s" is displayed as a standard "s". Pencilled annotations and other damage to the text have not been preserved.
July 01, 2008
Jared Campbell
-- ed.
[Title Page]
BY A LADY.
LONDON:
To you, my preceptors, the wreath I here bring,
Compos'd of wild flow'rs, the first produce of spring;
If the Sov'reign of nature implanted the seed,
'T was the warmth of your care its expansion decreed.
But yet so unfinish'd, unstrengthen'd their form,
That the chill blasts of censure with ease may deform;
Unfit for the critic's, the satirist's view,
To good-nature I tend them, indulgence, and you.
Of beauty devoid, unpossess'd of a claim
That would bear the impression of nice-judging fame,
By genius unfashion'd, by grace unadorn'd,
Uncultur'd by time and by age uninform'd,
The sun of your smiles I may hope they will meet,
Should they ne'er gain the sanction, the smile of the great:
'T was the maxims you early implanted in youth
Bade me falsehood detest, love and cherish the truth;
Bade honesty's path seem our interest below,
As from thence 't is on high every blessing must flow;
Bade the sigh of ambition repose on content,
Bade the wish of the heart rest in moments well spent;
Bade the treasure of mind to all wealth seem superior,
Bade me rate ev'ry talent to virtue inferior.
If not wise by your care, if in learning not great,
Though no partial discernment enlightens my state,
Still blest is my lot, you have taught me the road
Which leads on to honour, religion, and God;
To happiness, end of all human pursuit,
Of virtue, mild virtue alone, the sweet fruit.
How vain should I seek to repay all the care,
Which rais'd my fond hopes to a promise so fair!
WHAT heavenly notes, what music dear,
Vibrate on my raptur'd ear!
Not the trumpet's freezing sound;
Not the drum's emphatic bound;
Not the clarion, or the horn,
On the wings of tumult borne;
Not the direful clang of arms,
Presaging woe, in war's alarms:—
'Tis the dulcet note of Peace!
Cease, every murmur! horror, cease!
Stern Oppression's reign is o'er,
France and Albion war no more!
Who shall now with these contend,
When their power, their forces blend?
WHILST nature's sweetest flowers I send
To you, my Emma dear,
Allow me moral truths to blend,
And deign these truths to hear.
See roses, emblem of your charms,
Which winter's frost shall blight,
That no returning suns shall warm,
When set in death's cold night.
Fleeting beauty, what art thou?
A simple fading flower:—
Now in the rose-bud's vernal hue,
Now in its full-blown hour:
Now faded every blushing grace,
Fled the sweet roses of thy cheek:....
Ah, Emma, heedless of the face,
The fruits of virtue early seek.
Store honour, wisdom, in your mind;
These shall more fragrant sweets diffuse
Than the fair flowers I here entwine....
Sweet as the rose-dropp'd morning dews.
These, e'en in age, shall charm each heart;
These shall ne'er feel the scythe of time;
But bliss-like fostering showers impart
When lucid suns in shades recline.
Cull then, my Emma, cull in youth
What years nor aught can e'er impair:
To live in all the grace of truth,
Be e'er your daily, hourly care.
Time, which shall silver o'er your head,
Shall still preserve unchang'd your name;
And Emma, tho' to beauty dead,
Shall bloom in virtue's fairer fame.
The flower the blossom, on the tree,
The fruit, that more luxuriant grows,
May lessons just convey to thee,
May teach thee how to find repose.
The supple ivy be in duty;
Seek in the wise, the strong support;
The humble violet be in mind:
Each native beauty, lowly shade,
Tho' e'er it lives conceal'd, you find
Its fragrance scents the neighbouring glade.
Let thy benevolence be warm;
Nor from the poor, th' opprest, depart;
But, as Sol smiles beneath the storm,
Do thou e'er cheer th' afflicted heart.
Let worth thy friendship e'er procure;
Let int'rest ne'er affection bind;
That, e'en to life's declining hour,
Ye find in two, one kindred mind.
Learn chaste discretion from the reed,
Which never quits its lowly sphere,
Content to lowly state decreed,
Unknowing proud ambition's fear;
It 'scapes the blasts which oaks destroy,
Secure in every rising storm:
No scandal shall thy peace annoy,
Suspicion wait not on thy form.
Let gratitude luxuriant rise,
To him—your guard, defence, and shield;
Rich as the juice the vine supplies,
To fostering man returning yields.
Then as the poplar be upright,
Nor stoop to falsehood's winding way;
Array'd in truth's celestial light,
Thou shalt not soon in error stray.
Firm as the rock let faith e'er guide,
Religion every action rule;
Humanity o'er thought preside;
Taste form, in reason, judgment's school.
Then, as the rock, thou'lt brave each storm,
Wilt rise superior to the tide;
Affliction shall not bow thy form;
For conscious virtue adverse fate derides.
A HALF-starv'd poet once began to muse—
Not on thin love, blank verse, or foreign news,
A weightier matter weigh'd his sinking heart—
He felt, alas! he felt cold hunger's smart:
His hoard was empty; all his little store,
That gave him scanty joy, was now no more;
Nay, every avenue of hope was clos'd,
And lost each stay, where hope had once repos'd.
Now only fill'd the store-house of his brain,
All else was vacant, or replete with pain.
"O nature!" he exclaim'd, "why, why bestow
With double sense to feel, still double woe?
Why leave the rich in mind, in fortune poor?
Why grant the liberal soul but little store?
Why with thy kindness ever cruel prove?
Why add the pangs of fear to hopes of love?
Why chasten fancy's bliss, by truth's stern hand?
Bid nature this, and fortune that, command?
Bid pleasure seek, necessity forego?
Delight anticipate, yet pain to know?
CLOSE by the covert of a mountain's side,
Where the stream dash'd, in gay immeasur'd pride,
Auburna watch'd her fleecy white-rob'd flocks;
Oft climb'd, with them, fair Sweden's flow'ry rocks;
Oft on her pipe would tune the joyful lay,
Whilst the troop gather'd round in sportive play.
One midst the flock, distinguish'd from the rest,
By name Jeannette, she lov'd, avow'd the best;
The nymph she'd follow as she pac'd the mead,
Come at command, and from her hand would feed:
Sometimes she'd turn the fugitive, and stray
Beyond her bounds, in mirth and frolic play.
How oft in search her mistress has she tir'd,
And in her gentle heart despair inspir'd!
But from the rocky margin of the deep,
The wood, the stream, where drooping willows weep;
From bounding o'er the variegated plain,
Dales and meads rifling of their sweetest gain;
Soon was Auburna call'd to scenes of sorrow,
Where joy ne'er cheer'd the night, nor wak'd the morrow:
The fiend Disease subdued her parent's frame,
Held every nerve a captive to its chain.
Yet whilst Auburna liv'd, she still was blest—
Still consolation felt, devoid of rest.
AS the wood-fuzz'd hill I climb'd,
By the parting solar ray,
Inhaling the refreshing wind,
Chanting heedless on my way,
As my flocks I gather'd home,
Void of anguish, care, or pain,
I heard a note, a note forlorn—
"Friend of my youth, return again."
The echoes round
Repeat the sound
It vibrates o'er the neighbouring plain:—
"Friend of my youth, return again!"
"Say," the lonely wanderer cried,
"Ye enlighten'd sons of earth,
Where does Constancy reside,
If ye find her not with worth?
I lov'd a maid, I was belov'd,
Equal were our joys and pain,
The tender tie on each improv'd—
"Friend of my youth, return again."
My heart ne'er own'd but her controul,
Nor other bliss it e'er had sought;
It was the union of the soul
By sympathetic virtue taught.
Soon was I envied all my pleasure,
Tho' I was neither proud nor vain
A maid more artful stole my treasure:
"Friend of my youth, return again."
How the warblers seem to say,
On the dew-girt blossom'd spray,
Chant in lowly plaintive strain,
"Friend of my youth, return again!"
Superior talents claim'd the fair,
But, ah! she could not love more true;
Professing more, with wily care
She gain'd my friend—to joy adieu!
Absent then; with hope sincere
To meet that friend, in heart the same,
I return'd: no longer dear
My promis'd bliss—unlook'd-for pain.
"Are ye, ye fair, ne'er firm then here?
To vows of friendship never true?"
I cried with sympathy sincere:
The wanderer heard me; heard, and flew.
I follow'd with a pitying eye,
My heart pursued her o'er the plain;
I long'd the lost friend to supply:
I hop'd—I sigh'd, "Return again!"
Now I hear the curfew toll
Peace to some departed soul.
But hope with life shall ever reign:—
Lovely wanderer, come again!
Seek in me a second friend;
I, if none else faithful prove,
I will love till life shall end,
I'll thine every care remove.
Banish, then, all vain alarms;
Constant, doubt not, I'll remain;
Let love supply lost friendship's charms:—
Lovely wanderer, come again.
Still she flies, nor hears my lay,
Yet my heart to hope I'll give;
Hope, nor distant hope, the day
In her partial smiles to live.
Time shall heal her woe-worn heart;
She may pity, then, the swain
Whom she taught, devoid of art,
To sigh "Return, return again."
Now the silver moon appears,
Guides my steps, my bosom cheers;
Omens, as she lights the plain,
The wanderer will return again.
Tune my pipe, the cherish'd strain:—
"Lovely wanderer, come again!"
Well I know, when friends betray,
To other kindred minds we fly;
The soul can never lonely stray,
Till the social feelings die.
WHAT various maxims for our sex are laid!
What poor respect to every system paid!
Each different author gives for all one rule,
And undistinguish'd we are put to school,
Without regard to nature, rank, or state,
The power of fortune and the gifts of fate.
All must conform to one immediate plan,
First to the author bow, and then the man.
Alas! my sisters, are we blest with reason,
And not allow'd its proper use, in season?
Sure we may judge ourselves—I see no cause
Why these should ever give to women laws.
The fair we're call'd, the fickle and the gay;
The soul of social life, and porcelain clay:
Now, as the treacherous weather, ever changing,
Mad after pleasure, e'er with folly ranging;
Now less than mortal, more than heavenly, thought,
Angelic, insignificant, or nought.
Alas! plain sisters, hard indeed the case is!
Man centres all our merit in our faces.
'T WAS the birth of rosy May,
Winter's frost no longer chill'd,
Sol check'd the dew-drop on the spray,
And warmth with joy each bosom fill'd:
'T was the birth of rosy May....
'T was Maria's natal day.
Roses now began to bloom,
Lilies grac'd the flow'ry scene,
The violet shed its sweet perfume,
All nature smiled in fairy green:
Warblers caroll'd on the spray;
Welcome, rosy birth of May!
But vain the rose had sought to vie
The radiance of Maria's cheek;
Vain would the lily's softer die
The whiteness of her bosom speak;
Vain the songsters of the spray
Equal her melodious lay.
Oh pride of nature! pride of may!
Wisdom's, beauty's, honour's pride!
Whose every smile could render gay,
Whose life the censure of a world defied!
'T was the birth of rosy May....
'T was Maria's natal day.
Just eighteen years the maid had seen,
Mark'd by truth the radiant course;
With virtue every step had been,
Untinctur'd with the thorn remorse.
Then, ah then! the birth of May
Prov'd Maria's funeral day.
Love, affection, friendship dear,
Come to hail her natal day,
Rais'd by joy, undamp'd by fear,
On the rosy birth of May:
But soon how chang'd their joyful lay!
It prov'd Maria's funeral day.
The dance began, the pipe, the lute,
Beat symphonious to the train;
The tabour, violin, and flute,
Responded to the jocund strain:
Welcome, rosy birth of May!
Welcome, Mary's natal day!
But fate forbade their joy to last,
Death seized Maria in the throng,
Dismay in every bosom cast,
The dirge usurp'd gay pleasure's song.
Unwelcome then thy birth, oh May!
That prov'd Maria's funeral day.
But death shall ne'er destroy her name,
Her name shall live to virtue dear;
E'en on her tomb sits mourning Fame,
Affection dews the sod with tears:
There grateful Mem'ry loves to stray,
To chant her worth in plaintive lay:
And there maternal love still hies,
First and superior in her woe!
Such woe while life remains ne'er dies;
Death can alone a hope bestow:
Will she not welcome then the day,
Emancipation from oppressive clay?
Ah! when she Mary clasps again,
When she beholds her offspring blest,
Will she not bid adieu to pain?
Will not each woe be then redrest?
She'll join the choir in joyful lay,
Welcome virtue's holiday!
Ah! let us think on rosy May....
Think on Mary's natal day;
Think every hour may be our last,
Prepare, repent our folly past:
That we in heaven may chant the lay....
Welcome virtue's holiday!
WHY, good folks, should you make such a pother
'Bout bach'lors, old maids, and the like?
'Tis a hard case indeed,
All the world seem agreed,
To have for the race a dislike.
Each petty author thinks he freely may scan
A woman unmarried, if she e'en live in peace;
Though the apostle have said
'T is as well not to wed,
If single we're happy, enjoy perfect bliss.
A good woman is sure more respectable single,
Than she who is married and kicks up a riot,
E'er scolding her dear,
And possessing with fear
The neighbours, who can't live in quiet.
Methinks there's more shame for a woman to marry,
When she feels for the object no partial esteem:
Now-adays 't is a trade
Thus approaching the altar, no grain of affection
To lighten the sorrows of life,
Discord will ensue,
And the lady may rue
That she e'er bore the name of a wife.
We all have our use in the grand chain of being;
No one, to be sure, was e'er made in vain;
And those who are stated,
Call'd falsely ill fated,
Old maids, have their office 't is plain:
If you find one in a hundred a little severe,
She has in the world no mean station;
She makes the young and fair,
The thoughtless beware
How they sport with the gem reputation:
Having nought else to do, do ye see, they refine
Their knowledge of right and of wrong;
To examine each thought,
With discretion e'er fraught,
Is their conduct amidst the gay throng.
Of the world's foolish censure, dear tabbies, ne'er think;
'T is the married in malice who envy our station;
They say we are curst,
But their fate is the worst,
Under man's, tyrant man's domination.
RICH in each grace that can adorn the heart;
Young without folly, prudent without art;
Friendship, affection, sway'd her youthful mind;
Chaste as the morn, beneficent and kind.
Heav'n saw her virtues with a godlike love,
And snatch'd the fair-one to the realms above;
Releas'd her spirit from this load of clay,
To mix with angels in eternal day.
THE sun was sinking in the shadowy west,
Spire, hill, and wave, his partial rays confest;
His milder radiance grac'd each distant scene,
His ev'ry smile forsook the lowly green.
Now the tir'd labourer from his labour goes,
To home, to happiness, to sweet repose;
There patient waits the glad return of day,
As the night ends, in morn begins to pray;
Then speeds to toil: around the rough winds blow:
He breathes content, that kings but seldom know;
Pure as the stream which by his cottage winds,
Pure as the wish which there his soul confines.
What happy lot! to him who in this tow'r
Ne'er sees the sun rise, its declining hour;
In one dull tedious night for ever cast,
Alike each day, the present and the past!
War made him captive, stern oppression chain'd,
And to one gloomy cell his feet restrain'd;
SOL rose again in glory from the east,
And blooming nature his glad smile confest.
"Shall herb," I cried, "shall tree, shall plant, and flower,
Thy influence feel, and man not own thy power?
Shall virtue, Bertrand, mourn thy cheering ray,
And taste but partially the breath of day?
A fate so hard than pity more demands,
It asks an int'rest, and redress commands."
Resolv'd to aid, I seek the ear of fame,
And loud his matchless beauty, praise, proclaim;
The curious seek the lonely prison's gloom,
Depart, in word compassionate his doom.
Edgar, not distant from the dark abode,
Heard of the name, and sought the dreary road....
Sought, yet unthinking that he there should find
A friend, a kindred soul, an honour'd mind.
He enter'd: and what grief, what sad surprise,
In the pale captive's form struck Edgar's eyes!
Is 't not," he cried, "my Bertrand that I view?
Or some illusive shade, or semblance true?
Come, sole possessor of thy Edgar's heart,
Come to my arms, thus let me feel thou art
"OH holy friendship! do thou guide my heart,
To act the real friend, the christian's part!
What tho' from Bertrand I have ne'er received
Proofs of his love, too strong to be deceived,
THE day arriv'd when Bertrand should depart,
Leave Albion's isle, with no dejected heart:
When fickle fortune deigns but once to smile,
Hope counts successive favours in the wile,
Affliction's storm believes for ever past,
And each surmounted woe still deems the last.
Thus expectation views the solar beam
Which breaks thro' April showers, illusive gleam!
Tempting the steps, the fancy on to stray,
But to beguile more deep in sorrow's way.
Bertrand claim'd one regret, by friendship form'd,
By love, superior love, chas'd, lessen'd, charm'd;
And in a neutral vessel bound to France
He braves of winds and seas the dang'rous chance.
Propitious breezes waft them from the coast,
Soon, betwixt sea and sky, the bark is lost;
The undulating waves soon lull to rest
All but the watch, who dare not feel opprest.
Bertrand in sleep forgot each prior pain,
Thought fled in dulcet joy and peace again.
Ah! short repose!....a night of tranquil ease!....
Who shall e'er seek for safety on the seas?
HOW shall I, my friend, all your bounty repay?
How e'en my due sense of that bounty pourtray?
I seek, long have sought, an occasion to prove
'T is no sordid ingrate you zealously serve.
When my heart would its gratitude warmly display,
My tongue, fondly fearful, opposes the lay;
To the pen I've recourse, in hopes 't will be kind,
And truly avow what I bear in my mind.
No time from the tablet of mem'ry shall rase,
No future impression your kindness efface:
Yet words you'll think vain; they are vain too I say,
For the soul of sensation in words dies away;
A proof I 'd bestow, yet in fortune too poor
To give what I owe, and what else you'd ensure.
A simple acknowledgment deign to receive,
Till hope shall no longer my wishes deceive:
Till fate shall empower to repay as I ought;
Be grateful in deed, as in word and in thought.
You know, my good friend, I possess a small art,
The life-inform'd trait on dead soil to impart:
Let me take you then off in a good-natur'd way;
You shall smile, and your sweetness I'll only betray.
Or have you some lover, whose shade you'd preserve,
That no time, that no absence, his charms could remove?
Would you not that he knew? His face I can steal,
With impunity too, should ill-nature reveal.
No crime, I think, justice the theft could e'er deem;
It could none or to honour, humanity, seem:
From the stealer of hearts 't is the evil ensues,
And, shame! that the law the base thief ne'er pursues.
I vote for reform; sure, ye will who 've lost...
You, my sisters, I pity, who 've prov'd to your cost,
That the want of a heart can ne'er be supplied,
Do n't you think, now, that hanging the rogue should betide?
I mean, when, intending your bliss to impair,
He runs off with your happiness, leaves you despair.
The case is quite alter'd...I 'm just, be it known,
When in chace
of your heart he loses his own.
Agree to this, won't ye, my sisters, who prove
How sweet 's the exchange, when ye gain love for love?
Though the mould'ring traits I preserve from decay,
I steal not a grain of original clay.
Thus the art I profess I can innocent prove;
Nay, 't is useful, in waking remembrance and love,
In preserving from time the bloom of our youth,
In shielding from death the idea of worth.
But no more of digression; 't is time I return
To my object and end, intent you should learn.
Though e'en not by thanks I your friendship have paid,
Though in no way my grateful sensations pourtray'd,
The hope to repay next my heart shall e'er live,
Till fortune prove kind, you conviction receive.
OH! bear me, Hope, on thy light wing,
Thou ever-flatt'ring vision, bear;
Raise every sense to pleasure's spring,
Undamp'd by wint'ry cold despair.
Thy sun-shine will revive my heart,
Bright joy and all its sweets impart;
Shall dissipate the clouds of grief,
Shall bid me seek and find relief.
Care shall not then disparage youth,
Nor ever chill invention's source;
But peace shall bloom, as lasting truth,
And aid each step to virtue's course:
No fear shall then, with mad controul,
Invert the order of my soul;
Each passion shall serenely glide,
Dejection thou shalt, Hope, deride.
Yet ere I give mine heart to thee,
Ah! tell me, ere I own thy power,
True to thy promise wilt thou be?
Befriend me in affliction's hour?
E'en so; unveil'd, and brought to light,
I view thee with deceit array'd,
Just as the transient meteor bright,
As quickly lost in night's dark shade:
Thou'lt gain the soul, and then betray,
Forsake it in oppression's day;
A while thou'lt cheer the drooping heart,
And heal, but to redound the smart.
Go then, thou treacherous phantom, go,
No longer welcome to my breast;
Seek not to interrupt my woe;
With thee is found no real rest.
Thou'lt give a momentary ease,
Suspend the pang but to increase;
Thou'lt give a time for grief to form,
To render doubly dire the storm.
Hence, no more mine heart thou'lt warm,
Nor aught but certainty shall ever charm.
OH, Eloquence! enchanting maid!
At whose shrine thousand hopes are laid!
Realms have confess'd thy powerful sway,
And sovereigns e'en thy laws obey.
Without thy soft persuasive art,
The hopes of love would languish in the heart.
Then but half-own'd were friendship's powers,
Then but half-charming social hours.
Without thy all-emphatic aid,
Tyrants had double slaughter made;
Pity had mourn'd oppression's rage,
And unrewarded virtue sunk in age.
Through thee the orphan's claims first reach the heart,
And in each nerve sensations new impart:
'T is in thy soil first heav'nly mercy grew,
'T is there she holds her sovereign empire too:
And like a summer softening shower,
Which temporises in the scorching hour,
LA fleur laissant tomber, sa tête languissante,
Semble dire au zephir, Pourquoi m'éveilles tu?
Zephir, ta vapeur bienfaisante
Ne rendra point la vie à mon front abattu.
Je languis; le matin a ma tige epuisée,
Apporte vainement le tribut de ses pleurs,
Et les bienfaits de la rosée
Ne ranimeront point l'éclat de mes couleurs.
Il approche le noir orage!
Sous l'effort ennemi d'un soufle detesté
Je verrai périr mon feuillage.
Demain le voyageur, temoin de ma beauté,
THE flower when cut down in its prime, as it dies,
Seems to say to the zephyrs that round its form play,
In vain would ye raise me, for life swiftly flies,
My strength and my beauty untimely decay;
I droop, am forlorn;
Not the smiles of the morn
Can my charms e'er restore, health awaken again.
In the noon-tide of life, in my bloom, I decline;
The tears of the sky on my head shower in vain,
Vain the dews all their sweets in my bosom resign.
The night quick approaches, the storm gathers round;
The breath of a pestilence hated
Disperses the plants which in friendship surround,
And the fairer each flower, the worse fated.
CHILL December's blasts blew keen,
Clouds obscur'd the rising day,
Nature no longer smil'd in green,
The vapid leaf forsook the spray:
Then on the thorn,
Of all forlorn,
A blooming rose appear'd;
No sister bud adorn'd its side,
No genial warmth its bosom cheer'd,
In storms it sprung, it liv'd, and died.
Omen dire! as stories tell,
That some who near it grew
Must soon to life bid long farewel:
It chanc'd to omen true.
Here liv'd a maid,
Beneath the shade,
Alike the day of birth and death,
A mother's care she never knew;
The hour that gave fair Ellen breath,
The parent bid to life adieu:
Alone she grew,
No sister true,
No guardian-brother near;
No kindred's love-protecting power,
Nor friend, to share delight, to cheer,
To sympathise in sorrow's hour.
Like the Christmas rose, forlorn,
Of the warm sun, no fortune smil'd;
She sprung in poverty's cold morn,
A moment wint'ry age beguil'd.
The father taught
Her infant heart
To vibrate to each honest measure;
Oft would her mother's worth proclaim,
Point to the spot where laid his treasure,
And bid her seek an equal name.
She lov'd, she sought, rever'd the sod,
She fenc'd it from each vagrant foot;
There oft at morn she early trod,
Implanted there each fragrant root.
By parting day,
Or lunar ray,
Near the tomb she'd fervent pray;
And this one, tender, pious strain,
Enchanted listeners often say,
She would repeat...repeat again...
"Though I ne'er saw thee, parent dear,
Like God, invisible to me,
Whom, next to him, I love, revere,
How oft I sigh with thee to be!
Ah! cast an eye
From yonder sky:
Thou liv'st, we know, in heavenly love;
Ah! gain then, for the wanderer here,
Gain favour from above,
Gain her thy grace, thy truth sincere!
"That, though below, depriv'd of thee,
We may in heaven delight;
That, when cold death the soul shall free,
Thou'lt bless our raptur'd sight.
Near the gently-dashing stream,
By her aged parent's side,
On the lute she'd swell the theme:
Softening o'er the wave, it died.
Enchanting lays!
Her Maker's praise!
No more on earth they seem'd to stray!
'T was rapturous virtue's heavenly strain,
That charm'd each mortal sense away,
And sooth'd to peace each care and pain.
Now she would lead him o'er the lawn,
To view the harvest's ripening sweet;
Rise with the lark, at early dawn,
And quick prepare his taste to greet.
Ah, cherish'd sire!
Each wish, desire,
Anticipated, lov'd, obey'd!
How bless'd, though poor! how bless'd thy lot,
Too soon the storm of fate arose...
Too soon obscur'd their peace by care;
As, on the blossom, east wind blows,
And blasts the promise of the year.
A neighbouring swain,
Of wealthy fame,
With envy eyed December's rose;
Tempting he oft would seek the fair,
His power, his riches, love, disclose,
And faith, eternal faith, he'd swear.
But what to one temptation proves,
Another ne'er may charm;
And when we truly virtue love,
Can pleasure's power disarm.
'All hearts are vain,' 's
The lasting strain;
Yet, sure, Religion shall preserve
In some humility's controul,
Correct ambitious mean self-love,
And truly dignify the soul.
Empower'd by fortune, skill'd in art,
He tried each means to lure, deceive;
But firm in God repos'd her heart,
She scorn'd his vows, nor would believe.
By angels lov'd,
By God approv'd,
Her faithful conscience said,
And what would mortal more desire?
Could e'er to merit more be paid?
Alike to Ellen and her sire.
The parent fear'd a foe so great;
For, painful thought! too well he knew,
That vice is sanction'd oft by state,
Nor dare the poor the rich pursue.
The Robin came
Athwart the plain,
The guileless messenger of sorrow,
Lit on the thatch-roof'd humble cot,
Foreboding long, from eve to morrow,
Misfortune to their peaceful lot.
It blush'd...perchance it blush'd to tell
That vice should virtue's peace assail;
That, e'en where lowly worth might dwell,
Power and pride would seek prevail.
Again the rich youth tempting came;
Again fair Ellen spurn'd each proffer;
But he'd resolv'd he'd not, in vain,
Neglected love unheeded offer:
He form'd a plan,
Degrading man,
To bear from off the parent stem
Its only rose, its sole delight,
All that it claim'd in this one gem,
All that could cheer its wint'ry night.
Forgetting, as he pluck'd the flower,
Depriv'd of its parental aid,
'T would lifeless shrink the very hour
To the keen blast, to woe betray'd.
One fatal day,
Conceal'd he lay,
'T was near the grave, the hallow'd sod,
The sacred spot where virtue laid,
With ready force, with aiding power,
The thief approached as Ellen came;
Believ'd the lovely prize secure....
Believ'd, approach'd, devoid of shame.
He seiz'd the maid,
She shriek'd for aid;
There quick some neighbouring shepherds flew.
Guilt, ever coward, soon retreated...
The sire had heard the voice he knew...
He came...he found all hope defeated.
Fear sudden check'd life's trembling source,
Death each sensation chill'd,
Arrested heavenly virtue's course,
With grief a father's bosom fill'd.
In horrors wild
He clasp'd his child;
Like her, he sunk...no art could save...
Vain every effort to restore.
They own'd but one, one common grave...
One equal loss must worth deplore.
Pluck'd was the rose, it droop'd, it died;
The parent-stem no more array'd,
How different then the murderer's fate!
Whom though no laws may seek t' undo,
Yet vengeance high his steps shall wait,
The hand of Heaven his crime pursue.
Should he e'er claim
A father's name,
Some wretch, like him, may try to steal
His only hope, his all betray;
For oft such crime such vengeance feels,
Though late, though distant prove the day.
The rose that blew in winter's morn,
Which death's cold hand so early chill'd,
The stem that droop'd, of joy forlorn,
Are now with life, with glory fill'd:
Beyond the tomb,
For e'er they bloom,
IN all the torture of suspense,
I think, my friend, of you;
And oft I ask, with doubt and fear,
If you, as wont, are true?
If, Mira, you believe the same....
Ah, surely, no, I sigh;
Or ne'er you'd give a bosom pain
That could your joy supply.
Say, has some foe, with wily art,
Pourtray'd me false to you and virtue;
Perceiv'd the way to wound your heart,
And learnt your partial love of duty?
Or has insinuating envy gain'd,
By seeming all that worth could be,
The love, the friendship once I claim'd,
Once hop'd would lasting prove to me?
Ah! tell me, if I aught have done,
Or heedless said, or guilty penn'd?
Or how, how else my peace undone?
Why am I call'd no longer friend?
Deign but to ease the doubts you taught;
You gave the pain, and you can heal:
No common worth my friendship bought,
No common sorrow 't is I feel.
Yet still I seek but to renew,
With pleasure, double share of pain;
Bitter the sweet shall still pursue,
The fear to lose defraud the gain.
AH! ye shepherds, who live on the plain,
Unknowing the cares of the great,
Unknowing what woes on the main
Attend the poor mariner's fate;
Give ear to my tale, 't was love led me astray:
By experience ere knowledge we gain,
Beware of false hope; with the passion 't will play,
For the end of its promise is pain.
Learn from me that no absence will ease,
Add no balm to the wounds of the heart,
When only one object can please,
E'en the one that the pang did impart.
I delight but in her who rejected my lay,
Who despis'd every vow that I made,
Who caus'd me to wander, to sorrow a prey,
Ever lost to the sweets of the glade.
No rival I'd then to contend,
My flocks and my herds were not few;
But pride would not led her descend,
To say to my love she'd be true.
She wish'd to forsake the sweet vale,
To be rais'd to an higher estate;
No more listen to each shepherd's tale,
But mix with the proud and the great.
Ah! why should I love one so frail?
Too late I call reason to aid:
Why should misery my fortune assail?
Why ambition attend such a maid?
Alas! 't was her fault, but she owned no more,
While charms she in thousands possess'd;
Could charity less than one failing look o'er?
Nay, love is half blind at the best.
I shall never forget the fond day,
When once she prov'd kind, when she danc'd,
When she gave me her hand, ah, how gay!
E'en lighter than air I advanc'd.
I date from that moment the source of my woe,
The kindness did cruelty prove;
No partial esteem caus'd her favour to show,
But caprice, undirected by love.
I painted my passion, I painted my grief,
Yet, alas! they were never conceal'd;
For, mine eyes told too plain, when my heart sought relief,
Had my tongue ne'er its sorrow reveal'd.
I forsook, in despair, the place of my birth,
Abandon'd each good, once enjoy'd;
My pipe and my crook are conceal'd in the earth,
My poor flocks, by neglect, are destroy'd.
In hopes to forget her I tempted the main,
Yet in vain was I wafted afar;
My sorrows increas'd as I thought of the plain,
My sighs pass'd unnumber'd in air.
I saw the poor mariner's toil, and I thought
Much greater the weight that I bore;
Tho' with hardships extreme their toil is oft fraught,
Yet 't is sweet to the woes I deplore.
I return'd to the vale, and Florella had fled,
Was united to one of degree;
With sorrow I learnt, tho' despis'd, that the maid
Had seal'd, in this union, her own misery.
She had no affection for this haughty swain,
She had wedded his wealth, his riches, his power;
She finds that contentment she cannot thence gain,
Her cheek fades...she lingers each hour.
Ah! beware, ye proud fair, how ye e'er seek to vie
To be rich, to be splendid, and great:
Pomp never with peace can your bosoms supply,
Nor alone e'er make happy your state.
From nought but from virtue we bliss ever know;
On an union so form'd no care would intrude,
Each hope of the heart would in unison grow,
No fear for the future the present o'ercloud.
And, ye shepherds, ere passion is rooted too deep,
Be sure that the fair will return you your love,
Ere that love shall condemn you to sorrow, and weep,
Let the maid share your joy, and your misery prove.
I Iov'd, was despis'd, was rejected, and scorn'd;
Despair is my portion, my claim upon earth:
By my fate, oh, ye shepherds! then ever be warn'd,
And found your esteem on the basis of worth.
YE proud, ye learned, who all rules confute,
Ye wiser still, who precedence dispute,
Ye most judicious, who all ranks would level,
The wise to ignorant, the good to evil;
With whom Equality's the general cry,
Who secret, solely, for distinction sigh;
Ye who on fortune's smiles your merit fix,
Who make respect a groom to coach and six;
Ye who give wealth what but to virtue's due,
List, for I speak impartially true;
Methought I heard some learned visions say,
And not too proud to heed, I turn'd that way:
I saw fair Justice, on a throne she sat,
Truth on the right, and on the left was Fate;
Crowds gather'd round, crowds were already plac'd,
All ranks, degrees, alike the circle grac'd.
A troop appear'd, equality they claim'd,
A troop that sigh'd sincerely to be fam'd.
These had nor fortune, talent, judgment, sense,
Nor aught that could ensure pre-eminence.
These with the sharpen'd edge of shallow wit
E'er point, where beauty, genius, virtue sit.
In vain around was light of Justice thrown,
They saw their neighbours' faults, but not their own;
What was bestow'd, to shield them from the storm,
They us'd the weak to oppress, the good deform.
"Why," said the Poet, "tho' you make a pother,
I ne'er knew Lawyers did the one or t' other.
I merit first the laurel wreath of Fame,
And hope to have in future age a name;
I by my song inspire and warm the heart,
I sympathise with woe; I peace impart."
"What thou, with ever woeful, whining rant,
Claim laurels? Better hadst thou cabbage plant;
Methinks thy labours then would useful prove:
'Faith, that old-fashion'd thing thou talk'st of, Love,"
The tradesman cries, "can never give thee bread,
'T was long since buried with the buried dead.
"What," said the Artist, "wouldst thou then persuade
That British glory springs on fustian trade?
Glory is mine, I save from tyrant Death,
I give to canvass all, in fact, but breath;
The mem'ry aid, and distant still preserve,
Th' expressive trait that chain'd the heart in love;
Now pity here, now there revenge descry,
Passion's 'soft embers' in the melting eye;
Now wake humanity, now fire the soul,
Now bid the hero in each act controul;
I honour's cause exalt, religion aid,
And bring to light what words but half convey'd.
'T is art, 't is science, dignified should reign,
Fortune must yield to genius' nobler claim.
The man who founds on paltry wealth his pride,
The truly generous soul must e'er deride."
"Artist most eloquent," rejoin'd a Tar,
Who'd boldly fought and conquer'd in the war;
Here loud applauses 'midst the circus rang,
But 't was some kindred powers who this began.
And see now bursting through the noisy group,
A sage Philosopher harangues the troop:
"Ill-judging mortals, cease, applause give o'er,
I have a right none ever had before;
A right from high, God gave me to discern,
How on their orbits wand'ring planets turn;
How spheres revolve, how night succeeds the day,
How seasons change, and e'en how realms decay.
I taught the mariner his noble art,
I gave the passport to each distant part;
And from the theories divine I give,
Men learn in wisdom, virtue's path to live."
"Here," the Physician cries, "pray what's your theory?
Mere drugs, that none digest, and all men weary;
Essential practice Justice must require,
And without this none glory should desire.
'T is I, the guardian of your life and health,
Who merit precedence, distinction, wealth;
Man but for me would be disease's prey,
Nor own one comfort in this load of clay;
For what's your wisdom, what's your name, your gold,
If we relief, in sickness, pain, with-hold?
These would avail you nought, ye still were poor,
If wanting health, with all Peruvia's store.
Give then, fair Truth, oh! give us honour due...
The Scripture says ye should, and e'er says true."
"Shall he who makes the body but his care,"
Cries the Preceptor, "more distinction share
Than he who thwarts diseases of the mind,
Who vice corrects, and every thought refines?
If guardians of the frail, the mortal part
Demand the sanction of the noble heart,
Sure he who guides, directs th' immortal soul
Has a superior claim in honour's roll!
Know that the mind will e'er o'er health prevail,
And injure one, the other you assail.
"As for your sense," replies the simple swain,
"What is 't without our labour in the main?
Say, can thy precepts fertilise the land?
Will it in bounty yield at thy command?
No; 't is the Husbandman, who sows the earth,
Should be first honour'd by impartial Truth;
Without him, man would lose his life's support,
And nature's wants the mind's improvement thwart;
A noble peasantry 's a nation's pride."
He spoke; but the last words in tumult died.
A buskin'd Hero came, inspiring wonder,
As thus he echoed, in a voice of thunder:
"Hence with all clowns! the 'hero comes, he 'comes,
'Sound the trumpets, beat the drums;'
'T is I who give to life its charm,
Ennui and all her train disarm;
I too can wake each sense to pity,
'In lowly suit, and plaintive ditty.'
I too can play the lover's part,
As much the lover in my heart,
As those who niggardly pretend,
Who passion feign for interest's end.
"What," cries the Author, "dost thou then pretend
Reason to aid, or virtue to befriend?
"You're wanting charity," retorts the Priest,
"And prove yourself of critics not the least:
Critics with critics ever will dispute,
And authors' wisdom authors still confute.
'T is I, religion's advocate, should share
The first of honours, crowns immortal wear;
All earthly claims must ever yield to mine,
All pay devotion at so fair a shrine.
I free the heart from vanity and strife,
I raise desire beyond this transient life;
Thus for precedence half the world contend,
Whilst each depreciates his common friend;
Blind to the good that each on each bestow,
The mutual aids that each from each e'er know.
Each lives on each dependent, howe'er great,
However high, however low, their state:
As limbs supported by the body's aid,
As is the body by the limbs convey'd.
"Mortals," said Justice, "having heard each claim,
Each separate candidate for power and fame,
List now, we speak impartially true,
And come to give mankind on earth their due.
"I judge in order, as disputes began.
First let me know, Equality, thy plan.
Wouldst thou that men alike should fortune share,
One common portion be the mean, the fair?
A troop advanc'd, a troop as quick retreated,
The self-deficient seen, all hope defeated;
Some bore the test of the all-searching light,
And in the balance pois'd the needed weight.
Wealth quick approach'd with ardent hope for fame;
"Whence the demand?" as swift the query came.
If but from hoards, from weight of gold proceeding,
Deep cunning, little honesty or breeding;
And if from ancestors the wealth be thine,
The hard-scrap'd pebbles of a saving line;
Who pinch'd themselves for unborn children's ease,
Check'd present wants the future whim to please;
Take what in truth thou only canst deserve,
To dress, to eat, to drink, without reserve;
Say now, to-day, thou'rt rich, adorn'd, and great,
That, if to-morrow, lost to pomp and state,
Wouldst thou, then poor, not think thou hadst a right
To love, respect, in cold affliction's night,
As when dame Fortune spread for thee her charms,
And each sensation cheer'd, illum'd, and warm'd?
Tho' lost thy wealth, yet thou art still the same:
Respect on wealth ask'd, is a tarnish'd claim;
From thine own industry if thou hast risen,
From virtuous efforts, from the gifts of Heaven;
"Now to great folks, to ancient names allied,"
A troop exclaim'd, "blood, birth, is on our side;
'T was with the Conqueror we landed here,
Strangers, like him, to any coward fear
Like him our ancestors had nobly fought,
And by their valour England's glory bought."
"Ye then," said Truth, "are surely their disgrace,
The last weak shoots, a poor degenerate race;
Their great example should have taught you better,
Than to fix honour as 't were on a letter.
Why are ye not like them in action great?
Why rest inactive in an active state?
The Wit next came, yet shunn'd the prying light;
The claim, the claimant, vanish'd out of sight:
Wit, with no solid sense, no worth-built power,
Shines but the transient meteor of an hour.
As before Judgment, so from Sol's bright rays
The vision flies, in night but seen the blaze.
Lawyers in order call'd, to try the test,
And here the world their grand dislike confess'd;
But Truth and Justice, void of vulgar error,
Held to the tribe the bright impartial mirror;
Amazement seem'd pervading every breast,
When some, tho' only few, bore virtue's test.
Lawyers dismiss'd in sighing, plaintive strain,
A numerous race of muse-befriended came,
Whose hollow eyes, lean cheeks, and languid looks
Bespoke them unbefriended by the cooks;
Of fortune poor, of course as poor in fame,
For thin-clad merit rarely gains a name.
These silent ask'd, could Justice then refuse
To grant a tribute to an honest muse?
She with Parnassian wreaths a fruit entwin'd,
A gift of fortune grac'd the rich in mind;
But mark, to virtue only render'd sweet,
To those in honour as in genius great.
A merchant train now ask'd for rank and place,
Calling their use the true essential grace;
Right, Justice, Truth, with emphasis exclaim,
"To-day, ne'er doubt it, you will gain a name.
Those who had misus'd talent, ill spent time,
With whom deformity was mark'd as crime,
Now were in order call'd a train of tars,
Who counted honours in their very scars.
"Well founded," Justice cries, "appears your claim;
Yet ere you reach precedence, power, and fame,
That ardour which you say you have display'd
Shall nicely in the glass be tried, betray'd.
If any here possess a coward heart,
We give him leave unprov'd to now depart;
If any when the fight, death's form, drew near,
Lopp'd their frail courage from the twigs of fear;
Since all must know that flying were in vain,
That death's the cry, or victory, on the main;
That, seeing no alternative, ye made
Of dire necessity a dastard shade;
Powerful enough to hide the real soul,
The selfish motives that might hold controul:
Approach who will, the mirror waits to show
For whom to cull, with whom shall honour grow."
"You physiognomist," the goddess said,
"Who all indicative the face have made,
Tell me who most to favour ye pretend,
The courtier, merchant, lover, or the friend?
Not sure the lover; for he e'er grows blind,
Nor sees defects in air, or shape, or mind;
Nay, ever fyoible
he converts to charms,
And thy fam'd science reason's power disarms;
And should it aid you how to choose a friend,
Whom to esteem, whom trust, or whom commend,
The want ye find ere you the knowledge gain,
Nice judgment need, before you can attain.
For you, ye happy philosophic band,
Who've trod the path o'er seas to distant land,
None can your claims dispute: then move ye on,
And reap the honours ye have justly won."
"To him that thwarts disease, who health restores,
"We ope," said Justice, "our most precious stores;
And these we give proportion'd to your sense,
These to your virtue equally dispense;
"Ye tutors, ye whom just we justly name,
Friends to mankind, to virtue, heaven the same;
Oh noble art! perhaps of arts most hard,
Least understood, and poor in man's regard;
A task unthankful, since the world will say,
You're fully recompens'd in scanty pay.
But when to worth ye raise the dawning soul,
When every precept holds its due controul;
Sown by your care, when seed matur'd shall shoot,
When virtue blossoms on the cultur'd root;
Say, can ye have a sweeter recompense?
Or what reward can joy like this dispense?
Enough 't is sure, the mind is satisfied,
But wants, corporeal wants must be supplied.
Mortal ye are, unequally ye're paid:
By fashion, worth's true birth-right is betray'd;
Presuming folly eats luxurious bread,
Whilst humble merit is but barely fed.
The humble peasant's claim the next was found,
Tho' lowly and unknown, he now was crown'd.
Those who were just in every given measure,
Who had not basely hoarded nature's treasure;
Who in monopoly had had no share,
Nor render'd nutriment in war so dear...
Now to their trial were the Critics brought,
Found more with malice than with justice fraught;
For private pique oft pamper'd judgment's rules,
And partial interest merit gave to fools.
But as to generalise was not the plan,
But to reward the individual man;
Truth some discover'd by pure reason led,
And Justice plac'd the laurel on their head.
Authors who'd greatly wrote in virtue's cause,
Now glory gain'd, now liv'd in due applause;
No envy pluck'd from merit well-won bays,
None durst dispute, for Truth bestow'd their praise.
Next came a worthy train of half-starv'd Priests,
Who long had mourn'd and sigh'd to be redrest;
But twenty pounds a-year they gain'd for preaching,
But twenty pounds for truth, for gospel teaching.
Shame! that a state no better recompense...
Shame! that ye not more equally dispense
The gifts of fortune to the sons of sense.
Sure, ye should shield them from the vulgar's scorn,
If not with luxury, with pomp adorn.
Now equal virtues equal honours gain'd,
And equal merits equally were fam'd;
There was equality of equal parts,
There reign'd the true equality of hearts.
But yet distinction was, e'er will be seen
In state, and fortune, as in mind and mien;
The good, the wise, were charm'd, they gain'd the day,
They bore the prize of precedence away.
"Such is," said Truth, "but right, and such will prove:
Yet know the All-seeing Power, the God of love,
Virtue will oft afflict the more to try,
Till life and all its transient glories fly;
With-hold your recompense, to double joy,
Bliss to bestow unmix'd with base alloy.
Some men ye see oft rise from lowest state,
Whilst others fall from fortune's topmost height;
Some too, thro' life, alternate changes prove,
Feel in each woe or good their Maker's love.
Would ye ask why Vice oft with power is drest,
Whilst Virtue unregarded sinks opprest?
They said—they flew—they gain'd their native sky:
My heart pursu'd them, and I sigh'd to fly;
But Fate forbad:
she wak'd me from the dream,
And turn'd my thoughts, from heaven to earthly scenes.
OH! fairy-liveried Spring, return,
And glad our eyes with living green!
How welcome is thy lenient sun,
The friend of mirth, the foe to spleen!
Then lengthening days attend thy way,
And airy pleasures greet thy stay.
Rosy May shall flow'rets bring,
The cheerful choristers shall vie,
To grace thy glad approach, O Spring!
To soothe the ear, to charm the eye:
Zephyrs shall thousand sweets convey
To bowers where Love and Friendship stray.
Brown Exercise shall health restore,
New life and vigour shall impart;
The invalid shall droop no more,
Hope shall revive the sick'ning heart;
Despair no more possess the soul,
But cheerfulness alone controul.
The evening promenade shall charm,
Doubly delight the expanding mind;
Its temper'd heat shall gaily warm
Pure converse, heighten joys refin'd.
Laura, what votive sweets for me!
In thy song what melody!
The vagrant bee shall sip the dew
Of every fragrant flower;
Oh Laura! I shall love but you,
And own no other power.
I have a choice, but they have none...
Coquettes must one day droop forlorn.
The bark which Winter tied in port,
Shall now be wafted o'er the main,
With winds and waves, fore'er at sport,
Till anchor'd safe at home again;
Treasures from distant lands shall bring,
To wait again returning Spring.
The gardener with joy shall glow,
To see his long-sown produce shoot;
Inhale the sweets his flowers bestow,
And watch the rising of the latent root:
Soon shall the rose the stem adorn,
And vie the blushes of the morn.
Ah! let us, Laura, whilst we love,
A lesson draw from Spring's gay prime;
The charms of youth and health improve,
And blessings store for our declining time:
Then, when the winter of our life shall come,
If we've cull'd virtue, peace shall wrap our tomb.
HENRY three years had his Eudora woo'd,
No care, no grief, had this triennial strew'd,
When to the battle call'd from peaceful home,
Midst war, midst slaughter and disease, to roam.
Equal their fortunes, equal were their minds,
Equal in constant love, in hope refin'd.
Unus'd the fair to courts, to pomp, or show,
The rouge which grac'd her cheek was health's pure glow.
Merit she oft would raise from lone distress,
The orphan's wants delighted to redress;
Each thought, each act, in charity approv'd,
Scandal she knew not, for she virtue lov'd;
Of grace, of wit, of worth, alike possest,
Still was humility her cherish'd guest.
Exterior charms may lustre add to virtue,
Yet only charms of mind can finish beauty...
A truth by those own'd, those by wisdom blest...
Liv'd in Eudora, and by her confest.
"Now," he exclaim'd, "the parting hour is come,
Say, ye three sisters, what shall be my doom?
Shall I in battle die a glorious death?
Or shall dread pestilence exhaust my breath?
Shall I be shipwreck'd in the stormy main?
Or, oh! inspiring thought! return again...
Return, be welcom'd by the voice of love;
Return, and justice, fame, my steps approve;
Return, and seal the vow to Heaven I've made;
From toil return, by truth, affection paid?
Whate'er my fate, receive, just God, my prayer...
Oh, let thy servant know no coward fear!
Let me ne'er shrink when in my country's cause,
Let love and honour prove my sacred laws!
Power thou hast given me: e'er let mercy guide,
Sway each command, and be its influence wide.
"Oh! say," she cried, "lov'd partner of my heart,
When in confusion's hour thou bear'st a part,
When war shall thunder horrors on thine head,
And thousands living mix with thousands dead,
Who then shall comfort to thy bosom bring,
Where, in affliction, consolation spring?
Who shall peace whisper to my boding breast,
Who lull each founded fear and doubt to rest?
Yet, oh! when danger stalks around thy form,
Threatens to leave me e'en of hope forlorn,
Let not Eudora then possess thy soul,
Let thine own safety then alone controul.
Or should she ever, in Truth's form array'd,
Glance by thy side thy sleeping vision's shade,
HENRY.
"Rest thou, fair spirit, who shalt courage give,
That as the rock my love shall firmly live;
Thy ever-present thought shall Henry save,
If not from death, from an inglorious grave.
Ah! rest assur'd, no time shall e'er efface
The cherish'd passion, ne'er thy worth erase;
Ne'er thy lov'd image from my soul depart,
Too deeply graven in this faithful heart:
Thy perfect semblance next that heart I'll wear,
In death's convulsive grasp retain it there.
EUDORA.
"Go, Henry, then, nor let my tears controul
The generous ardour of thy daring soul.
Go, gather laurels; them I will entwine...
Around thy brows shall thousand glories shine.
Go, noble friend; the hope thou giv'st I'll claim,
Nor by vain plaints distract thy search of fame."
HENRY.
"Rest then assur'd each post shall bring thee word
I live in faith, and look for my reward."
Sudden he flew like lightning o'er the plain,
Nor even ventur'd to revert again:
Too well he knew the influence that bound
His lingering heart to yonder favour'd ground.
Eudora's eyes pursu'd the wandering chief,
The sight outstretch'd long vainly sought relief.
At length, with trembling steps, she homeward turns,
Forgets resolve, in cheerless sorrow mourns...
"Ah, say, fond nymph! where now thy boasted pow'r,
To charm with hope each solitary hour?
Years didst thou feel the pangs which parting gave,
And oft these murm'rings died upon the wave:
"How long shall war o'er heav'n-born peace prevail,
And stern oppression hold Astræa's scale?
Must Henry's name, to every Briton dear,
Be still remember'd with a sigh or tear?"
Oft would she tune the lute with this lov'd strain;
Oft would surrounding echoes name the swain:
"From heroes sprung in story great,
For thee I hope, for thee I mourn;
To my heart in ancient state,
Dearest Henry, soon return.
Ah! to see that happy day,
How my throbbing bosom burns!
My lute shall tune the joyful lay,
When he for whom I mourn returns."
Not vain her prayers: soon gentle peace proclaim'd
Returning hosts, by courage, mercy fam'd:
The fav'ring winds quick waft them o'er the main,
The father, husband, sees his all again.
As to the shore with eager haste they fly,
Some cherish'd object waiting there descry;
To gentler feelings each his soul resigns,
Now paid by love, at past woe ne'er repines.
Truth courage pays, affection toil and strife,
And the sire clasps his child, the spouse his wife.
Oh joy ineffable! supreme delight!
Like the sun's splendor that succeeds the night.
Oh! mayst thou, Peace, long o'er this isle prevail!
May ports confess thy pow'r, each swelling sail!
Commerce shall flourish, arts in glory live,
And 'neath thine olive branch shall worth revive.
But let me turn to her whose joys exceed,
If it were possible, her Henry's speed.
Now safely wafted to the shore,
Where horror, discord stalks no more;
Yet ere his footsteps homeward stray,
Impatient love still chides his stay.
Eudora hears of his approach,
And stamps on time unjust reproach.
EUDORA.
"Am I then, Henry, to thy heart the same?
Now, rais'd by glory, dost thou own the flame?
Is thy desire for honours satisfied?
Or does the warrior's wish love's weakness chide?
Say, to mine every hope still art thou true?
Wilt thou soon ratify each gentle vow?
Does the soft passion glow as warm as ever,
And wilt thou never change?....Fond hope says, Never."
HENRY.
"Doubt not, Eudora, of my faith and truth,
Nor doubt the pow'r of virtue's matchless worth;
Doubt not my heart doth still remain the same,
Nor doubt thy love to merit gave me fame."
EUDORA.
"Enough; thy word mine every fear removes,
Which love creates, the passion doubly proves.
Humanity shall now assert her claim,
And ask in reason's voice, in pity's name,
HENRY.
"On Gallia's plain was seen Oppression's form,
In human slaughter led the rising storm;
E'en infants murder'd sunk, so dire the rage,
And beauty, mangled, fell with hoary age.
Yet soon, in justice to our honour'd cause,
We vict'ry gain'd, for mercy gain'd applause.
Yet still too dear we ev'ry conquest find;
Still retrospection pains the feeling mind."
EUDORA.
"How didst thou 'scape the fury of the day?
What god, what angel, led thee on thy way?
Oh, ruling Pow'r! great source of bliss supreme!
Shall not thy praise be e'er our constant theme?
Oh! let us join, in adoration join,
Our ev'ry thought, our ev'ry deed combine,
To render homage to that Pow'r above,
Author of life, Preserver of our love!"
HENRY.
"Yes, thou fair pattern of religion, we
Our God will thank, and then united be."
OH, heav'nly Friendship! virtue's aid,
Whose voice can soothe e'en pain to peace!
In courtly scenes, in silent shades,
Thy form shall ev'ry joy increase.
In thy lov'd bosom will I lodge mine ev'ry woe, mine ev'ry grief;
Thy sympathy shall ease each pang: communication gives relief.
Thou shalt advise, and I will lend
A raptur'd ear to ev'ry word;
When the instructive tale shall end,
Ah! what must then be thy reward?
In thy distress I'll grateful prove, and shed for thee the friendly tear,
I'll think of all thy former truth, and grateful save thee from despair.
Reserve we'll banish, all alarms
Shall fly each social tête-à-tête;
No envy base defraud the charms
Which e'er on real friendship wait:
No lynx-ey'd caution then shall hold the hour of converse; no restraint
Shall check the ever-rising thought, or gay imagination taint.
Ah, what were life without thy pow'r!
What all the pride, the pomp of state!
We ne'er could well enjoy an hour;
Imperfect were each gift of fate:
But, ah! how sweet with thee to seek the lonely cot, the distant cell,
And mild contentment's bliss implant where worth oppress'd and mis'ry dwell.
Shouldst thou before me, Mary, go
To regions of ethereal space,
And leave me here a prey to woe,
To mourn each buried worth and grace;
Thy semblance next my heart I'll wear, that heart where all thy precepts rest,
When time would ev'ry feature steal, it shall renew thy mem'ry blest.
I'll seek thee in each fav'rite haunt,
I 'll daily to thy tomb repair,
There will the drooping willow plant,
An emblem of the grief I bear.
No flow'r shall wither on the sod; the tears on it I shed for you
Shall trace their way to ev'ry root, and grateful prove as ev'ning dew.
And if it be my fate to leave
This earth ere thee, dear cherish'd maid,
I in thy mem'ry too may live,
E'en till thy last sad debt be paid.
Ah! may we both together quit this load of life, this mould'ring clay,
Seek, hand in hand, the realms of bliss, and find eternal day!
WHEN lull'd or rock'd upon the wave,
The sailor ne'er thinks danger near;
Though storms and tempests dire may rave,
He never owns a coward fear.
The midnight's gloom, the winter's cold,
Alike he braves, to doubt a stranger;
His hardship past, though seldom told,
The sailor laughs at every danger.
Now up aloft he hies with pleasure,
Nor thinks one step may prove his death;
To God he recommends each treasure,
And hopes till life's last parting breath.
Brave, honest race, you never shrink
Before the cannon's deaf'ning rattle;
Of future mis'ry seldom think,
Or dread the fate of war and battle.
Yet these stout hearts, our isle's support,
Feel for a fellow-tar's hard sorrow;
They rarely with misfortune sport,
Revenge ne'er harbour o'er the morrow,
Careless of want, from av'rice free,
They to each hapless shipmate lend
The needed purse, with heart-felt glee;
They gain with labour, and with pleasure spend.
Should fate on earth decree a doom
Less kind, perhaps, than what they sought,
Some friend shall leave them starboard room
In heav'n, the gen'ral hop'd-for port.
PENSIVE as I sat at night,
By the taper's glimm'ring light,
Distant then from all I lov'd,
Thought reverted where they mov'd;
Days and weeks I'd number'd o'er,
And from Mira heard no more,
As wont; no welcome letter came,
No dear impression of her name:
Doubt, suspense, my heart oppress'd,
Care, intruding, banish'd rest.
Lonely as I sat at night,
By the taper's glimm'ring light,
Alas! there came a winding-sheet,
To render all my fears more great;
For ancient dames have often said,
Approaching death is hence betray'd.
At length, the long-wish'd letter came,
But came not to relieve my pain;
YE modern artists, hard indeed your case is!
Ye must be dead ere valued are your graces.
Ye modern beauties, times are hard with you!
Your shades are more esteem'd than selves, I vow.
Would you know whence I talk upon the matter?
From seeing, hearing, and a love of chatter.
Let those who nonsense like give heed, I say,
And those who do n't, why, then, pass over they.
Patience not needed, for I'll brief relate
Factum factorum. I proceed to state...
The connoisseurs assembled t' other day,
With hopes to something learn...I mark'd their way...
In troops too would-be judges thither came,
Who, by their preaching, lost to taste their claim.
A saint to sale, amidst the rest, was brought,
An antique call'd, and in a moment bought.
Four thousand pounds, it griev'd mine heart to see,
Because 't was ancient call'd, bestow'd with glee.
But presently disputes were heard around,
And fancied errors in the piece were found.
Some swore 't was but a daub; while others said
They ne'er beheld the like by paint pourtray'd;
The artist here the art had e'en surpass'd;
'T was perfect nature on the canvas cast.
Those revil'd much who knew the matter least,
To make some think they understood the best.
"A copy!" cries, enrag'd, the connoisseur;
"Where will you, then, th' original procure?"
"Patience, good sir," the other quick replies,
"For what I say is just...I claim the prize.
These twenty years th' original is mine,
So well preserv'd, you see no taint of time.
Artists from far and near have prais'd the piece,
Have copied...but ne'er copied like to this.
You seem to doubt...proof ocular I'll give,
And, seeing, then you cannot but believe."
"Move on, I follow...if deceived here,
'T is the first time I 've paid for copies dear."
"Why, if your copy prove minutely true,
You, will not surely of your purchase rue."
"Yes, if no eye a diff'rence can discern,
I'll have the right one, and distinction learn."
"But for that one, believe not I will take
The trifle you have paid for your mistake."
"If double wilt content you, that I offer,
Will add the copy too...no paltry proffer."
"Agreed, sir, if th' original consent"...
"Why, what d' you mean?...do you give speech to paint?"
"You say, you know what is, what is not right,
So cannot blame, unless you blame your sight.
It is the moderns you should now befriend;
Ancients have had their day, and had their end."
With shame, regret, vexation, and surprise,
"The worthy amateur emphatic cries,
"Sir! sir! I 'd have you know"...then laughs aloud...
The joke subdued him, though his soul was proud.
"Sir," rejoin'd t' other, "will you not receive
Conviction of the truth?...I do n't deceive....
Come, you will see the real picture, living,
Her look, her voice, her air itself is heaven;
Her virtues and superior charms of mind,
A lovely chef d'œuvre, in all refin'd:
If the weak shadow thus impress your soul,
How shall the stronger substance then controul?"
"No, sir; enough I've seen to-day of beauty;
But if your daughter have, with wit and virtue,
An equal fortune...second thought, I'll go"...
"Oh! Mr. Connoisseur, you judge then so;
You'll buy the copy, and the self buy you...
This is odd traffic, though 't be common now:
You'd give four thousand, if she had been paint,
Yet double ask to take the living saint:
Why, sir, you're mad! Dead beauty's of no use;
Alive, perchance, it may to good conduce.
But, sir, to shew you that some folks have reason,
I tell you plain, your courtship 's out of season:
My child, with but small fortune to command,
Has made her purchase in a real friend.
Adieu, good sir, your love is out of season;
Try 'gainst we meet again to grow in reason;
In future let the modern artists share
Your praise, and, ere the dead, the living fair.
THE storm arose, the billows dash'd around,
Wrecks and the wreck'd increas'd the horrors round;
In death's cold form here was a parent laid,
And here a son, an aged mother's aid,
And here the husband who each tie supply'd,
Kinsman, friend, brother, guardian, and guide.
Ah, fatal day! that hundreds shall deplore,
Till life, till feeling, cease to vibrate more;
Till every chain that bound affection here,
Be lost, dissolv'd, in nature's common bier.
The *
Hope lay stranded in the searchless deep;
The tars her hopeless fate, their master's, weep:
Death in the wreck he now resolv'd to brave,
To meet with hope a joyless wat'ry grave.
In her he own'd his all, his whole support;
From her he peace deriv'd, and pleasure sought;
* The name of the ship.
From her a num'rous family he rear'd,
And a lov'd mother's aged bosom cheer'd;
With her, subsistence, plenty, peace, were lost,
And ev'ry joy he deem'd for e'er o'ercast.
Rash, fatal reas'ning! but 't were vain t' implore,
For reason, all that charm'd, could charm no more;
Useless united eloquence had prov'd
To save the master, father, friend, belov'd.
In the long-boat th' afflicted tars depart,
Each lost his hope to move their owner's heart:
Soon they in safety gain the wish'd-for shore,
There anchor cast, unship the lab'ring oar.
They kiss the hallow'd earth; now earth, now life
Grow doubly dear, their home, the faithful wife;
Their rapt'rous joy they only temper'd find
In the dire thought of him they'd left behind.
They bear the tidings to his wretched spouse...
She faints with horror at the cruel news,
Her shrieking children gather round her form,
Believe their parent dead, themselves forlorn.
Ellen, whose mind beam'd in th' expressive mien,
Ellen their first-born, that day seventeen,
Tries every pow'r affliction can suggest
To soothe the sorrows of a mother's breast.
In eager haste each sister soul she clasp'd,
Bade each adieu with like impassion'd haste;
Such is thy mighty force, oh love divine!
Such courage virtue gives, such faith is thine!
They leave the rocky margin of the deep,
Swiftly their oars o'er rattling breakers leap,
Sometimes the Hope they see, sometimes they lose
The sight of Hope, and hope no more repose.
Now the waves swell, and dashing o'er their head,
Promise to each a joyless, wat'ry bed;
Now in the deep a moment lost, they see
No more of day, no more of misery;
Quick on the surface soon again they float,
Borne by the winds, of winds the idle sport:
"Oh! canst thou, cruel father, leave a wife
A prey to all the cares of want and strife?
Wilt thou she be a widow ere God wills?
E'en at the name my boding bosom thrills.
"Ah! think not, Ellen, think not I can bear
To see you starve each long revolving year.
I lose mine all e'en ere the morning's tide;
No more for all I love, no more provide;
And since no hope is left for me on earth,
I'll seek above your claims, the claims of worth."
"No hope, my father! do you then dispute
The pow'r of God...his word, his truth confute?
Ellen, with new-born strength, clasps her faint sire,
Leaps in the bark, and gains her soul's desire.
Away the pilot rows, in joyous thought,
Darts o'er the wave, and gains the shore he sought.
I WAS torn from my friends, from my country, from home,
From all that by nature was dear,
From the land where a race of my fathers were born,
Where I knew not oppression nor fear.
Till the White, discontent with what Heaven allow'd,
Avariciously bent upon gain,
Of feature, complexion, too partially proud,
Of his wit, science, knowledge, how vain!
Alas! if extension of mind not conduce
To improvement in virtue, to mercy's mild sway,
Sure its beauty is lost, and its honour and use
As nature enwrapp'd in the clay,
Like the bow I extend, with no aim to pursue,
And exert the keen arrow at will,
Yet lost is the force, with no object in view,
If no foe we subdue by our skill.
And if pride, and if av'rice, with knowledge can reign,
If vice and if passion controul,
The depth of your learning, religion, proves vain,
She demands the true worth of the soul.
From the practice you swerve of the precepts you preach,
How doubly then guilty are you,
Whom God has empower'd the weak mind to teach,
Who the right know, the wrong e'er pursue.
I was torn from my friends, from my country, from home,
From what than all these was more dear,
Condemn'd from my wife, from my children to roam,
From love, from affection sincere.
Once fair liberty's child, I rang'd o'er the plain,
By love only wak'd in the morn;
But now, by barbarity's heart-freezing strain,
I rise ere the sun, of all comfort forlorn.
A slave to proud rulers, who mercy ne'er knew,
The scourge must weak nature revive,
When the thoughts of our parting, our long, long adieu,
Bid my strength fail, nor care more to live.
But time, which wrecks all, shall break misery's chain,
Death the tyrant I serve shall subdue;
The stroke shall conduct him to anguish and pain,
Shall lead me to bliss...my lov'd Cora, to you.
Oppression can ne'er long remain upon earth,
And he who exerts the rude sway,
For himself to eternal oppression gives birth,
When the weak pow'r of man dies away.
Oh! ye brothers of Afric, who mourn a like fate,
Who are sever'd from all that you love,
Reflect then how transient your cold wint'ry state,
Lasting 'day-spring' succeeds it above.
Oh, Cora! the hours which I once pass'd with you,
Were a picture of life, joy to come;
As the gay scene of nature surpasses art's view,
So superior shall then be our doom.
By the forms that attend me in visions by night,
By the voice that sounds deep in mine ear,
I know that my Cora e'en now dwells in light,
And the hopes of affection sincere.
Oh, soothing reflection! thou light'nest my woe,
No bondage, no slav'ry she proves;
One only regret she in heaven can know,
Lost when death shall unite us above.
Oh! welcome, sharp lash, sweet precursor to bliss,
To grief my infallible cure;
Ev'ry stroke but conducts me the nearer to peace,
The severer, the sooner ensures.
GENTLE shepherd, where d' you stray?
Turn, ah! turn your steps this way;
Hark, I've got a word to say,
Hear me, then, and hear to-day.
Time flies,
Your beauty dies:
If my pray'rs, my love you scorn,
You may live, may live to mourn;
Should none else sue, your charms decay,
You'll sigh, and think upon to-day.
Mistaken Colin, 't is in vain
You tune to me the love-lorn strain;
I can ne'er believe your pain,
You my heart shall never gain.
Time flies,
Occasion dies:
Quickly seek some other fair,
For of love I will beware;
Do you list to vague report?
Some may wander but in sport;
Say, what can charm, our age support,
If heart to heart can ne'er resort?
Time flies,
Occasion dies:
What is life without a friend?
Who better can your claims defend,
Than the lover, than the swain,
Who sighs but to be lov'd again?
Only beauty 't is you praise,
Yet how transient are its rays!
When no more, your love decays,
Or your love on others strays.
Beauty flies,
Such passion dies:
Love is but a fleeting dream,
If virtue bind not your esteem;
No other tie can lasting prove...
Adieu then, Colin, to your love.
Ah! turn, dear maid, nor further stray,
For something else I have to say;
Ah! now you play the fox's part,
But 't will not do to gain my heart;
True love is ever void of art,
Looks more than words betray the smart.
The tell-tale eyes
The soul surprise:
A rover in your face I read,
And fame has said...has said indeed,
You love to many nymphs have made,
And many vows you have betray'd.
Ah! trust not fame, she speaks not true;
I never lov'd a maid but you:
I might, perchance, in frolic vow,
But never serious was till now.
Time flies,
And fame lyes:
The faith which now to me you swear,
You have sworn to other fair;
I'll ne'er have you, I declare;
Deceivers ne'er my heart shall share.
Your passion flies,
False are sighs:
A little less of warm profession,
A little more of cool discretion.
Return, return then to the maid
Whom by vows you have betray'd.
Haughty nymph! perchance you'll mourn,
For, slighted once, I ne'er return;
You may sigh, may sigh forlorn,
May sigh for Colin to return.
Time flies,
Occasion dies:
I will seek some fairer fair,
Who my worthy heart shall share;
You're nought uncommon, I declare,
Now I see you as you are.
Go, seek the heart, the heart you've won,
Pity I for you have none;
Never would I list to one
Who has others' peace undone.
Her life flies,
Her beauty dies:
No gen'rous nymph will e'er approve
A youth who could so faithless prove.
Would you but my friendship gain,
Return, and love the maid again;
I will then, if that will do,
I will love both her and you.
Time flies,
Occasion dies:
Restore, restore, haste, haste away,
Too late may be another day.
THOUGH Heav'n's all-ruling pow'r should cause to cease
The joys of plenty and the earth's increase;
Though vines and all the labours of the field
Should ne'er again their golden harvests yield;
Though daily man by pestilence should fall,
And herds lie bleating in the tainted stall;
Yet thee, O Israel's God! in all thy ways,
The just shall worship, glorify, and praise.
Thou gav'st us life, and from thy power divine
We come, we go, we life
and all resign;
Through thee we move, enjoy, we rise and fall,
Of thousand worlds the God, the light of all;
Alike of ev'ry age the rock, the guard,
The christian's hope, defender, and reward.
Guide thou, great Spirit! guide my youth aright,
That retrospection brighten age's night;
IS then each hope for ever fled,
And ev'ry fond delusion o'er?
Alas! that knell too truly said
That Mary lives on earth no more.
No Æsculapian art could save,
No fost'ring care her health restore;
Heav'n doom'd her early to the grave,
And in her doom bade worth deplore.
Oh! promise fair of virtue great,
By wisdom, genius, beauty grac'd,
By ev'ry charm!...Relentless fate!
How soon hath death each charm defac'd!
Just in the joyful spring of life,
In all the bloom of youthful pride,
So yields the rose-bud to the knife,
In vain the weak the strong defied.
Oh! source of many an anxious fear,
Child of our hope, our love, our joy!
What deep regret pursues thy bier!
How ting'd thy memory with alloy!
When all that fortune's smiles could give,
Or all a parent's love bestow,
Invited thee on earth to live;
All that could mortal wait below.
Yet what at best is earthly bliss?
What every transitory good?
Ah! what to tasting heav'nly peace,
By thee, dear spirit, understood?
Some kindred angel mourn'd thy stay
Upon this chequer'd scene of earth,
And pitying Heaven, who heard her lay,
Thy passport sent to realms of worth.
There bless'd with her who gave thee life,
Bless'd with that heav'nly-smiling train,
Who led thee from this world of strife,
With "Welcome, Mary, home again!
But though religion, reason's voice,
Would bid us each regret resign,
Would bid us at thy fate rejoice,
Still fond affection dares repine;
Still Nature's claims superior rise,
Her sighs still murmur o'er thy bier,
Her hope pursues thee to the skies,
A hope to every virtue dear...
The hope to meet thee in that happier state,
Where pain, nor death, nor care, shall more await;
Where all is joy, security, and rest,
Bless'd beyond measure, beyond fancy blest:
That hope alone that blossoms in the grave,
Can sooth the pangs that parting with thee gave.
Time swiftly flies, the lapse of years is o'er,
And all that mourn for thee are soon no more;
How soon we know not...day succeeds the night,
Earth fades away, and glory springs to light,
Yet faith in sorrow rests secure of this,
Her woes are transient, and eternal bliss.